10
Wlthonf (he rapport of tlia~ best element of tho communi- ties in which It circnlatci, no* nuwnpaper can attain iiont uucccsfi. - I l l E 8TAR aims to merit this support. - 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH WASHINGTON, WARREN COUNTY, N. J., THUKSDAY, SEJPTEMI5EK 18, 1902. Hope Girl Flees With a Lover Secured Through Agency. CAME FROM FAR WEST Sent Her a Ticket (o Come to Him Out Was Saved by Relative. The Lover Then Came East and Carried Her . . : Miss Rose Ooibnrn, a pretty sevon- j teen-year-old orphan ,„ girl ..who. has -"lived withi hor. grandmother in Hope nearly all her life, is among the miss- Ing and all efforts to locate her have so | : far failed. WIthont the slightest warn- ing or preparation, she eloped Saturday : with a man whom she had never in her ltfe seen before. It is learned that he gave his name to one man as Smith . but tfaia was probably only used for the '•- occasion. It Is believed that he came ;,.. from tbe vioinlty of Shawnee, Pa,, a town that Is neither reached by rail, telegraph or telephone and which Is In the wilds of Pike county. Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is the cause of the girl's present situation, whatever it may be. There are a lot of other girls In Warren county that are boy-struck, but as Rudyard'Kipling says, that's another story. This Is tho lesson and thoao who are affocted with the com- plaint can draw their own moral. When Rosey was sixteen, only a year ago, someone told her about matrimo- nial agencies and she speedily got Into communication with ouq. In due time she, found horCafiinity through tho moans of this institution. He. was a cowboy who lived away out In tho wild and untamed West. Some of the neighbors say he was in the Indian Territory, while others affirm that he was from Arizona^but. that's neither : ; here nor ther&' Photographs were os- "changed and the''letters that have paosed between the two became more and more loving. Ho was Rosey'a ideal to <i tee and she did not hesitate to tell her girl friends BO. She never mentioned tho Bubject to her grand- mother, however, and It is noi prob- . able that that relative would ever bave known of the facts had she not dis- covered one of the billet donx. _ It was a very important one at that, for en- r eloHfld: in . the enyelopo jwnfl-a ticket from Bridgeviile to aome point in the far WoBt and the fellow had given the minutest directions as to how she should como to ?,his country whore ho '•''• OBBured her they would be married upon her arrival. William Qurvatt Missed- Footing in Cioss- Ing Jackson Valley Trestle. Aged,-Man Had done Forth la the Dark I Meet a Visiting Daughter. Whilo.In a bowildered condition, William Gurvatt, an aged and respect* ed cltizin of this community, walked off a Lackawanna bridge in Jackson Valloy on Saturday night. Death fol- lowed thirty-elx hours later from tho effects of his Injuries. Mr. Gurvatt for many yearn Jived noar Ohangewater but fur the p.ist two years ho has residod with hla scn-in- law, Alex. Hough, la Jackson Valley. Hough is foreman In the office of tho Warren Tidings. Ho had grown some- what feeble, of lata, and as a result of being injured in a blast several years Physician of the Peary Arctic Expedition Landed Today. TELEGRAPHS THE STAR Cables Wife Earlier tn Accept No Favors Prom tire Arctic Club. Mrs- Dedrlck Calmly Receives Word of His Coming—Teaching tt Arlington. SYDNKV, OA PR UHETO.N-, N. S. The grandmother quietly extracted the ticket and by the next mall return- ed it to tho sender, advising him not to continue his correspondence any longer. She then gave her grand- daughter a lob of good advice and thought sho had permanently cured her of her foolish ways. It seems, however, that such was not the cnae for on Saturday a good looking young man drove into Hope in a. traveled tid i d ^stained .rig , Land.., .on,, tho. ...outskirts -.of L w --.! DR. THOMAS S. '.DEDfUCK OF THE PEAflY.EXPEDITION. and not crazy enough to bring home. These friends have scouted the in- sanity story from the first. Mr. Henarlo Dedrlck Bald on Tues- day that judging from tho newspaper accounts his brother had carried out his intention a to the letter. In the laat communications tbe family had from him he had stated that ho proposed to remain near to Peary where his medi- cal servicbj"could bo available If re* required. He had undoubtedly offer- ed the explorer these services during the winter and had been repulsed. Dr. Dedrlck left here on July 8th, 1898, and therefore has been absent from homo and friends four years and two months. His wife told a New York Herald reporter on Tuesday that she did not know what tbe Doctor's plans wero for the future nor just what courso sho would pursue, until ' * hRd had a talk with her hnoband. ORDINATION LAID OVER Baptist Association Postpones Action In Rev. Stoiil'B Case. FELL TO DEATH Committee Named to Examine the Candidate for Jonctlon Church'. ts of j ~ - town mot Rose uolburn. Sho was seen to got into tho buggy and rldo away with tho stranger. The next heard of the pair was at StroudBburg where a citizen of Hope thought he saw then: but hoyond that point all traco wat lost. In 'some undefined manner the impression prevails that the stranger is now living in Shawnee and that the coupln wfint- tfiero. _It waaloprned last night'that.no marriago license had beon granted for persona of the names given in either Monroo or Pike counties. 1 ^ Washington, A T . J. _ _ Dca"rSlr7 .There's ft Jlttlo bit of a Stato down oast—a Rhodo Ialalid 11:511 was flood $100 the other day_.for selling potatoes— reason a close watch had beon kept on his movements and bo was not per- mitted to go far from tbe house with- out an escort. On Saturday evening, however, he went away without say- ing anything and the supposition was that he was spending the evening with some"of. the neighbors. The first knowledge the family had of tho acci- dent was when the injured man was brought to the door in a wagon. . Miss Lizzie, the deceased man's only other daughter, lives in Washington, and it has boon hor custom to walk out to see her father on Saturday evenings. She has usually gone by way of Vthe railroad track, a fact of which tho n man was aware. About seven o'clock Saturday evening he walked over tc the track and stnrtod toward tho bor ough, bin evident intention boing tc meet hiB daughter on her way out. Having walked nearly to town without meeting hor, it is presumed ho re- traced hiB steps. At the trestle cross- ing the Oxford road he must have bee, _.^a.9.k_a.ild_.in: bis buBhol was Hko his Stnto: abort ^moasuro. It Isn't'fair to punish a man for short- biiahol potatoes, and not foc^hort-gallon painty There la short-gallon paint in many stores in your soctlon. If you got sent to tho loglHlaturo, will —yuuVltliu law fixed? - " - ' Dovoo load and zinc doesn't measure short; and doean'tjiuafc. ehort. It's full- measuro both ways. Yours truly, 53 - F. W. DKVOH&CO. P. 3.—M. A. Maslon sells our paint, J: B. Hampton thla.wook rouudod out, 19 years as a Washington merchant, and in 'lils advertisement bo very properly rofera to tho constant growth and presant largo . proportions of hla business, andj attributes | ___..„ - _- hla markod success to"publlo~app~reolation~ 25th7for~$5.00j~good for fivo day u|" including ateHU of stepping on tho tieB he plung- ed beadlong to the roadway, eighteen feet below. Messrs. Petty and Lee of Karrsyille, driving along the Valley road to thoi homoH at about 7.30 : that nigliL; : diac6y- ered tho uncouBcioun man and recog- nized him aa Mr. Gurvatt. Placing him tonderly in the wagon they drove ' "" to his r home... Dr, O..B, Smiih was at his bedside within an hour and fcund__..tbat the left arm had '.been broken and that the patient was suffer- ing from concussions of the brain. It was also concluded that the skull waB probably fractured. The man ,.was ;>apidjy-andullttlo:rhopo could be held out to the family that he would survive. His condition continued to grow worse,untll Monday morning at 3 o'clock when ho died without for a moment having regained conacious- .CHS. •• ... The deceased man waai about sovcuty years old and had long beon a farm employeo.i Ho-possessed but one eye, having loBt the other infills"early •yoars. The'funeral was hold at tho honie of lils son-in-law ya'aterday after- noon and waB largely attended. Roy.. D. B. F. Randolph of the,Washington" M.JE. church conducted tho serviced The interment was nmdo iu the Wash- ingtou;cenietory. Cheap Trip to Nlitgurn Falls. f\ Tho D., L. & W. R. R. Co. will sell round trip Uokotu from Washington to Niagara Falls and return onJ3epJt. 25th nmlj)ct. ol hl9 goods and up-to-dato methods,- ~ J date of sale. cle laetyear. Send cnt of myself ti St. Den nig Hotel, New York. 'T. S. DEDRICK. By. the time this issue of the STAR has reached the majority of its readers, the Peary Arctic Expedition 'accom- panied by Dr. Thomas S. Dedrick oi this placo will have reached New York, and it is not improbable that Dr. Ded rick will be in Washington yec this week. The firab intimation that the Pear; party was on itB way home camo In the forn'Jof a telegram from Dr. Dedrick to his wife, whom he supposed was In Washington. The message was dated t Chateaux Bay, Labrador, and ac- cording to the "New York papers read about as follows : "Reached hero. Telegraph $50 to Sidney, Cape Breton, at once. Have nothing to do with Bridgman. Is ray enemy. Accept no favors from him. Insanity story oruel libel. Am in good health. Grossed Cape Sabine Jan. tith withrparty of Esquimaux. Offered services to Peary. Refused Lhoin.—Rgturned to-"titan"and""•win- tered there. In Sydney very short- ly. Give facts to Associated Press at once. Important that you obey. "THOMAS S. PEDRICK." The Weatoru Utiiim Teiegrnpif man" agement hero refuses to nlHrm or ad- mit that Buch a telegram came here for Mrs. Dodrick, bub there appears to bo no doubt that it did and that it was for- warded to Mrs. Dedrick at Arlington, whore she is now teaching school. A STAR representative who called at her boarding pluce there on Tuesday learned that she received news .i'rora The Rev. Amos Stout was not or- dained as pastor of the Baptist church "n Junction yesterday although twen- ty-three representatives, from ton churches of tbe Central BoptiBt Asso- ciation and a church full of people gathered there to witness the cere- mony. After a short open session, the church representatives went Into ei- icutlve sesaion and finally dismissed ;he audience,' The subject of the ordi- nation waa placed in the hands of a soramittee of five, with tho moderator, ;o report nt some future time. Iiov. Stout has been In the EaptiBt ministry only a short time and it seems was not very familiar with the doctrine of the church. He WBB for several yenra connected with the Methodist ministry and later was In the under- taking business at Lambertville. He was also at one. timn interested in the iron ore trade in High Bridge. A bhort timo ago he took charge of the Baptist churches in Junction and Beth- lehem end noon mads himself popular with .this congregations r of both churches. ..The Junction people were much disappointed yesterday when It was announced that the ordination would not take place. It is possible there may bo somo interesting devel- opments in the case and it Is Intimated that the executive seBsion prevented these developments yesterday. FAIL TO GET-TOGETHER Greenwich Cominlttefl ami Trolley Cu. Not Able to Agree ou One Point. Next Meeting In October. - The trolley situation •»vhU;h ; seemed about to clear up a week ago is still a little clouded in Greenwich township and the whole subject has taken a back icafc down there for a month. Mr. Brady, one of the Eaeton & Washing- ton Traction Company's attorneys, hns assured the committee that he wonld do his best to get his principles to ao- iept the franchise offered and the lommittae had agreed to recede from ts position in all but one point, fcli<_ .mendinent allowing the use of the 2ompany's tracks by any other com- jany that might desire to enter the Drunken Hungarian Meets Tragfi Fate at Hotel New Windsor. LIVED OXLY FEW HOURS Tumbled into Dark Room on Third Flooi and Fell Out Open Window.' Taken fo Easlon Hospital Where Death Re- lieves Him From Sufferings. A drop of thirty or more foot out of a third-story window at the Hotel New Windsor so badly injured a Hun- garian at an early hour Saturday morn- ing that he died in tho Eaaton Hospital a few hours later. The unfortunate man was Frank Leptacka, a railroad workman, and a drink-befuddled brain was probably more responsible for his tragio end than anything else. Tbe Hungarian, together with three companions, came to the hotel late Friday night. They had been drink- ng and wanted* more. Having been employed on the Lackawanna railroad, each had received a check for his wages that day. The party was to leave for some point in Pennsylvania and expected to take an early morning train. They were celebrating and did not care who knew it. 'Squire Drove- ling was behind the bar in tbe New Windsor and he remonstrated with them several times about the quantity of liquor they were disposing of, but hlB good advice was ignored. About midnight the Hungariaus decided to go to bed and two of them were as- signed to Room".», and Frauk Lep- tacka and Martin Oil«ld to Room 22. The men in Room''!;9 vvoct to bed peaceably enough and little t'ore waa heard from them, but the otl'er two proceeded to make rnerry^ in true Hungirian fashion. They bombarded each other with pillows and wrestled when tho bell rang and lie H to the hotel. . Upon the arrival of the.'pbyaioli. the Injured man was placed on a mat tress and romoved to the wagon ahed where he remained in greal agon; until morning. Dr. Williams found bad scalp wound but no broken bones. To all appearances, however, the fellow had Buffered severe internal injurii Ho was placed fa a wagon and taken fr the Lackawanna station where he was put In a baggage car and upon reach- ing Easton was" hurried Iu" an aov bulance to the Easton Hospita!; when he died the same afternoon. An effort was mndo by the Eaato; authorities on Monday to make a mui der mystery out of the unfortunate linn's death but It fnMod. Tt in claimed that ho made a statement before .hi died in which he said he was ptishe< from Uie window by his companions. Coroner Schleicher of Easton tele- phoned Coroner Shrope on the subject but tho Washington official assnred him that he bad made the fullest Inves- :igation and ho was satisfied there was not the slightest evidence of foul play, The dead man has a brother who has also been working here and who had an experience Saturday night which he will not soon forget. He was com. ing down the Port Colden road and when noar tho Washington avenue inlvert was held np at the point of a evolver by two men. They relieved him of his pay check and other valuables and, finally taking his bat, rdered him to run hot-foot for town. VB soon as he disappeared they ran in the other direction. It Is thought the work was dono by other Hungarians who knew that the man bad money in is pocket and who had planued to rob him at that point. Tho facts were •eported to the police but no arrests iave as yet been made. 3 RUF. KLUPPELBERG'S DEATH Well Known mid Aged Mtisleliin Passes Away ut Ills Home lu Hacketts- town—An Ilouomlilo Career. [Prom Our Iliu-kctttuown Com-.-pomli'iit.] Prof. Frederick W. Kluppslburir, linown all over this section as n musician and inusi- . cal instructor, died at bis homo on until the building shook as one or the [ Friday of rupture of the bladder. other went down and out. After in- dulging iu this horseplay for aome time Leptacka wont ont into the hall. Some of those about the house say he was put out by his roommate, who pro- ceeded to lock the door, but the Hun- garian says his fellow went out to look fora toilet room. The room occupied by the two men was on the third floor and was near the rear of the new portion of the hotol. •Leptacka felt his way along the hall and finally ennae-to Lhadoor of Room 27, which ia unoccupied and which looks out into the rear yard. He entered this room and felt his way along the wnll until he came to an open winc'ow mnst havo been moving rathc*r rapidly, for tha next Mr. Kluppelborg came hero from hia bom? In Germany about 40 years ago and began giving inar-actions on- the various musical instruments, being a skilled per- former on nearly every instrument in use. He made for himself a reputation ae a com- poser for tho piano, organ and violin, and was tbe author of sevoral ploces of more than ordinary merit. flisbu&ioefifl ab'& dealer in musfcalin- struraentB made him a host of friends ii Warren, Morris and Sussex counties am through eastern Pennsylvania, but we whi mot him at homo aa a friend, companio; and neighbor, knew best how to appn ciato him. Bis sympathetic and kind! nituro, his genial manner and good fellov ibip, his companlonablo ways with bot roung end old, endeared him to all wit] whom he came in contact, and hla cheer morning greeting as he went : frotii-'h; A. H. Sarson Brutally Assaulted by Thugs From Oxford. ATTACKED FROM REAR Dazed Beyond Resistance He is UnmercN fully Pummelled. Nose Broken, EyeInjured and Toolh Knocked Out In the Scuffle. Tho meeting to discuss the subject ivas'held in the Odd Follows' building in Tuesday morning and Mr. Hay.ami iia associates were present. The si tu- ition was gone over carefully and in '16uuu MWHiiy said that the people r ho were ready to put the money into* e road he proposed to build, were lot inclined to accept tbo ordinance iroposed and therefore it would not be ;ood policy to accept it. The STAR'S orrespondent says that Mr. Brady in "matod that an acceptance of the fran- ihiae would probably come later. A6 ihe_requeat of the railroad people the her hiiBband about_ fl_o I clock~ruourlayrh*f"iichi8e was laid over until the next night but that she came homo calmly and went to bed.^ JTho following mornr ing she sent a™~frK>Bd to New York with the money tc^ be telegraphed North .and then wee 6 to her work. She was the least excited of any h?.;the household, according to her friends at ;he boarding house. Tho New York papers* surmiao that ih^Windward which is bringing tho Arctic party homo wiil laud at Sydney 3omotimo today, and'ib. ^understood ;hey have all dispatched special cor- respondouts to that point to interview the members of tho expedition.^Ii is expected that Dr. Dedrick will bo'riaore dinn'-willing to talk and his friends ex- iecc that what he has to say will orefifca considerable of a sensation. It will be remombsred that the intimation given aut last year by the Peary Arctic Olnb was that Dr. Dedrick had lost his mind. AB some of tho physician's friends put J t, tue~inference was thPt he was too 1 regular mooting which will be hohl ou October G. Thorailroad. company's request for a franchise in Franklin township comes up late '.tills month and a representa- tive^ the corporation assured a STAR reporter a fow days ago. that it would doubtless be passed without a hitch. The same was~f Fue inrLopatcong town- ship, ho claimed, If the work of se- curing the franchises can boCclosed up by tho middle of October, as now seems possible, there IB littlo doubt that'the work of building will begin-shortly therenfter. — iiiiL^.;. '^._lora?.y to havo about^the ship "br camp Used Organ Burgulua, ''* $75 Noedbam, -i'stopa, onr-i nrlco"? 7 §<)0 Wildrlcka, 6 " " " 10 5100 Hornbaker, 6 " " " 1C Jl'25 Piilnoo, —"-•- 6 " " " 15 $125 Standard, 8 " !I ',' IS Al9o many other splendid bareilna iu used piauoa aiid orgaus. Don't miss tbem. All wtd. a ftlualo House, Eaaton, Pa. used piauoa aii All warrantod. ' E ' The Sto^nfl N. Y.' World, $2.00 per year THE LATHftEDERICK W. KLUFPEUERG. instant he plnugetl head foremost out homo to hla placo of business will bo the window and landed with a dull; va\sit& by many. .;-.-.•-. Ho was a member' of Indopendonco Lodge, P. and A,}M,, of HacJrnt'ftfnwrn thud on the cobble atones in front of the kitchen door, ^ - , When the force at the hotel reached! h(ld P flB ^ d . tho the side of the injured man, it waB' lifo ' SJ ' oltriloyi11 ! A • . . , ,n , , , i -. -• , . "-I at his homo on-Grand avonuu on August about 1:10.o'clock Saturday morniug,.!;--...^ •^z:, , r^ » u ** = t?,> aIi r «PpWntceBrthe^Hdn-was]--^l^fied^Tiion. and^angbtor in a 'dying condition. Tho...slightestiwuiiam and Louisa-wher actually so attomptjt.o, move him.brought forth a j ccedecThTm In biihlijyas aonio years ago, ai; cry of piiin and nftor a hasty consul 11> j by two ^Kriindchildrcn—Louisa oamii •tion it wao decided to let him lie thoroiMcOIolIan^of this place and' Bdv.inOsuiu in the heavy rain, which"'at the timoT of N °wnrk. ' = was falling, and'' rurry. for a doctor. I Tho flintwl-ocrtieeawere aqndnctedat Dr. Williams had beoa cut on a r night call and must havo passed the hotel while the Httloiicrow'd waa lean- •ing^o3^er£tlHWj^r;«(rKto i ,.'form;/,^At,'an'y rate, he had^oniy reached^hii'.honio Monday afternoon by Hova. Ghnpman of the Presbyterian church, whore tho decoased for many yop.r3 acted ao orfi-aiiist ftbd mubical director, and by Fattier MHcliam of St, James' Episcopal Three toughs, "Bald to bo from'tho "•'•• neighborhood of Oxford, set upon A. H, Sarson of Tort, Colden .shortly be- fore midnight on Saturday and so bad- ly beat him that it waa necessary to call a physician. The unfortunate victim suffered the loas of a front loofcu aa a result of tbe assault. . His nose was also broken and one eye consider- ably injured. His faco and head, in fact, were one mass of bruises and it is his'belief that his assailants used a ''blackjack" on him. Mr. Sarson Is the conductor of the Port Colden Oornet Band and is the principal of the public school of that place. He has been an enterprising ind honored citfzon of the town for leveral years and so far as he knows ie has no enemies there. The band which he established and which he has ipent ao much timo in trafning Is now >ne of the foremost institutions of Port Jolden, and the entire population of ;he village takes pleasure in helping inpport it. On Satnrday night a festi- al for the benefit of the musical irganization was given in the second itory of the school house and It was at -he conclusion of this event that the as3ault occurred. There was a large crowd present at ;he festival and, as is often the case at auch affairs in a country aectioa, a few tough characters from Oxford and Washington put in an appearance. They had been drinking before they Lme and continued to "drink from lasks .whloh.,th«y.b'a'd brought, with them. Afi?r*_ s'' time they became obnoxious and'Mr, Sarsoa and some of ils friends were compelled to put them mtuf-the room. There was not much 'back talk" from the crowd but rather n ominous sullenneBs that meant •ouble 1 later on. Some of the Port Colden folks remarked this fact but Mr. Sarson gave the matter'no farther thought. •;; ;••;;-:'•.. ••*-:••:.-;:•' •' --- ---• Most of those who had attended had left the hall by 11 o'clock, and Mr. Sar- Bon and a few others remained to clean up the room. About 11:45 he.:came down stairs with hia hands full" of dishes and had stepped out^of the building when: he was suddenly at- tacked from the rear. He thinks he must hayo been hit on ; the head: with " • some blunt object, for.he'was stunned forthe moment., The dishes fell from his hands and the next instant some one hit him between thoeye3. Thentha blows poured in from all sides and for two or three minutes it looked to the school tsacher as if he were to be the victim of a gang of blood thirsty mur- derers. His cries brought some of his . fWends .to. h: is .rancwo ba'fc oii Lhe'appear- i "'-'- f ' : " an"ce""of tho I first of"th^ee tho~t6ughB (led. ' : " ^ ~ > •••;,",'• Dr. Williams was subsequently sent for and-hp drossed the ^unfortunate man's many wounda. It was feared at the timo.that-Mr;*Sai'Sdu-was"iiuft'ebni.' 11 '"" liderably more than proved to be the , mse, but ho was able fco take charge of _jt? his school on Monday morning, . Hia*^ 1 --—" 'ace:.wits~8omowhati--patclied-up with- iticking plaster and he was compelled 0 :Qwear 'dark glnBses but he managed ;o take care of his workasTiBual. He lolieves he can ; identify at least two r threo of his assailants and arrests will probably be made before the__end •_ Oxford May Get Two'.BIg Plants. Therein of.,Jenson Brothora of Oxford 'fltled to agree with tho Patorson sUk mill men on Kprice for tho old nail mill prop- • /,' trty In that town, and the STAKES Oxford iorrespondoat reports that tho silk mill iromotors will now/purebntio a lot and put p R building for th'olr own use. Healnu ' inyn that Jensen Brothors havo.concluded o put machinery for manufacturing nuts L»a bolts In the old.mill building and that in a short timo two nowplants will thus be „.„•„. ' led to tho town's list of industries. Tho two^uHtent consecutive hetits over incod on flihalf-mila. track woro nin^at 'etblohem last week. 'ii*rinQe Alert drew •io polo and waa nbvof. headed In cither oat by'Anaconda. ^Tue first heat wns'in .OSJilat, tho last half being dono in 1,01. 'ho second heat waa paced in 2,05j, Thoro •as ono of tbe largest crowds tbat evor at- mded tho Betblebom Pair present to EGG '<&:<-'

35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

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Page 1: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

Wlthonf (he rapport of tlia~best element of tho communi-ties in which It circnlatci, no*nuwnpaper can attainiiont uucccsfi. - I l l E 8TARaims to merit this support. -

35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38.

ELOPED WITHWASHINGTON, WARREN COUNTY, N. J., THUKSDAY, SEJPTEMI5EK 18, 1902.

Hope Girl Flees With a LoverSecured Through Agency.

CAME FROM FAR WESTSent Her a Ticket (o Come to Him Out

Was Saved by Relative.

The Lover Then Came East and Carried Her

. . : Miss Rose Ooibnrn, a pretty sevon-j teen-year-old orphan ,„ girl . .who. has

- " l i v e d withi hor. grandmother in Hopenearly all her life, is among the miss-Ing and all efforts to locate her have so |

: far failed. WIthont the slightest warn-ing or preparation, she eloped Saturday

: with a man whom she had never in herltfe seen before. It is learned that hegave his name to one man as Smith

. but tfaia was probably only used for the'•- occasion. I t Is believed that he came;,.. from tbe vioinlty of Shawnee, Pa,, a

town that Is neither reached by rail,telegraph or telephone and which Is Inthe wilds of Pike county.

Roeey -was boy-struck. There is nodoubt of that and It Is the universalopinion in the neighborhood of Hopethat this one fact Is the cause of thegirl's present situation, whatever itmay be. There are a lot of other girlsIn Warren county that are boy-struck,but as Rudyard'Kipling says, that'sanother story. This Is tho lesson andthoao who are affocted with the com-plaint can draw their own moral.

When Rosey was sixteen, only a yearago, someone told her about matrimo-nial agencies and she speedily got Intocommunication with ouq. In due timeshe, found horCafiinity through thomoans of this institution. He. was acowboy who lived away out In thowild and untamed West. Some of theneighbors say he was in the IndianTerritory, while others affirm that hewas from Arizona^but. that's neither

:; here nor ther&' Photographs were os-"changed and the' ' letters that have

paosed between the two became moreand more loving. Ho was Rosey'aideal to <i tee and she did not hesitateto tell her girl friends BO. She nevermentioned tho Bubject to her grand-mother, however, and It is noi prob-

. able that that relative would ever baveknown of the facts had she not dis-covered one of the billet donx. _ It wasa very important one at that, for en-

r eloHfld: in . the enyelopo jwnfl-a ticketfrom Bridgeviile to aome point in thefar WoBt and the fellow had given theminutest directions as to how sheshould como to ?,his country whore ho

'•''• OBBured her they would be marriedupon her arrival.

William Qurvatt Missed- Footing in Cioss-Ing Jackson Valley Trestle.

Aged,-Man Had done Forth la the Dark IMeet a Visiting Daughter.

Whilo.In a bowildered condition,William Gurvatt, an aged and respect*ed cltizin of this community, walkedoff a Lackawanna bridge in JacksonValloy on Saturday night. Death fol-lowed thirty-elx hours later from thoeffects of his Injuries.

Mr. Gurvatt for many yearn Jivednoar Ohangewater but fur the p.ist twoyears ho has residod with hla scn-in-law, Alex. Hough, la Jackson Valley.Hough is foreman In the office of thoWarren Tidings. Ho had grown some-what feeble, of lata, and as a result ofbeing injured in a blast several years

Physician of the Peary ArcticExpedition Landed Today.

TELEGRAPHS THE STARCables Wife Earlier tn Accept No Favors

Prom tire Arctic Club.

Mrs- Dedrlck Calmly Receives Word of HisComing—Teaching t t Arlington.

SYDNKV, OA PR UHETO.N-, N. S.

The grandmother quietly extractedthe ticket and by the next mall return-ed i t to tho sender, advising him notto continue his correspondence anylonger. She then gave her grand-daughter a lob of good advice andthought sho had permanently curedher of her foolish ways. It seems,however, that such was not the cnaefor on Saturday a good looking youngman drove into Hope in a. traveledt i d i d^stained .rig ,Land.., .on,, tho. ...outskirts -.of Lw--.!

DR. THOMAS S. '.DEDfUCK OF THE PEAflY.EXPEDITION.

and not crazy enough to bring home.These friends have scouted the in-sanity story from the first.

Mr. Henarlo Dedrlck Bald on Tues-day that judging from tho newspaperaccounts his brother had carried outhis intention a to the letter. In the laatcommunications tbe family had fromhim he had stated that ho proposed toremain near to Peary where his medi-cal servicbj"could bo available If re*required. He had undoubtedly offer-ed the explorer these services duringthe winter and had been repulsed.

Dr. Dedrlck left here on July 8th,1898, and therefore has been absentfrom homo and friends four years andtwo months. His wife told a NewYork Herald reporter on Tuesday thatshe did not know what tbe Doctor'splans wero for the future nor justwhat courso sho would pursue, until' * hRd had a talk with her hnoband.

ORDINATION LAID OVERBaptist Association Postpones Action In

Rev. Stoiil'B Case.

FELL TO DEATH

Committee Named to Examine the Candidatefor Jonctlon Church'.

ts ofj ~ - town mot Rose uolburn. Sho was seen

to got into tho buggy and rldo awaywith tho stranger. The next heard ofthe pair was at StroudBburg where acitizen of Hope thought he saw then:but hoyond that point all traco watlost. In 'some undefined manner theimpression prevails tha t the strangeris now living in Shawnee and that thecoupln wfint- tfiero. _I t waaloprned lastn i g h t ' t h a t . n o marriago license hadbeon gran ted for persona o f thenames given in either Monroo or Pikecounties. 1

^ Washington, AT. J. _ _Dca"rSlr7 .There's ft Jlttlo bit of a Stato

down oast—a Rhodo Ialalid 11:511 was flood$100 the other day_.for selling potatoes—

reason a close watch had beon kept onhis movements and bo was not per-mitted to go far from tbe house with-out an escort. On Saturday evening,however, he went away without say-ing anything and the supposition wasthat he was spending the evening withsome"of. the neighbors. The firstknowledge the family had of tho acci-dent was when the injured man wasbrought to the door in a wagon. .

Miss Lizzie, the deceased man's onlyother daughter, lives in Washington,and it has boon hor custom to walk outto see her father on Saturday evenings.She has usually gone by way of Vtherailroad track, a fact of which tho nman was aware. About seven o'clockSaturday evening he walked over tcthe track and stnrtod toward tho borough, bin evident intention boing tcmeet hiB daughter on her way out.Having walked nearly to town withoutmeeting hor, it is presumed ho re-traced hiB steps. At the trestle cross-ing the Oxford road he must have bee,

_. a.9.k_a.ild_.in:

bis buBhol was Hko his Stnto: abort^moasuro.

It Isn't'fair to punish a man for short-biiahol potatoes, and not foc^hort-gallonpainty

There la short-gallon paint in manystores in your soctlon.

If you got sent to tho loglHlaturo, will—yuuVlt l iu law fixed? - " - '

Dovoo load and zinc doesn't measureshort; and doean'tjiuafc. ehort. It's full-measuro both ways.

Yours truly,53 - F. W. D K V O H & C O .

P. 3.—M. A. Maslon sells our paint,

J: B. Hampton thla.wook rouudod out, 19years as a Washington merchant, and in'lils advertisement bo very properly roferato tho constant growth and presant largo

. proportions of hla business, andj attributes | _ _ _ . . „ - _- —hla markod success to"publlo~app~reolation~ 25th7for~$5.00j~good for fivo day u|" including

ateHU of stepping on tho tieB he plung-ed beadlong to the roadway, eighteenfeet below.

Messrs. Petty and Lee of Karrsyille,driving along the Valley road to thoihomoH at about 7.30: that nigliL;:diac6y-ered tho uncouBcioun man and recog-nized him aa Mr. Gurvatt. Placinghim tonderly in the wagon they drove

' "" to his rhome... Dr, O..B, Smiihwas at his bedside within an hour andfcund__..tbat the left arm had '.beenbroken and that the patient was suffer-ing from concussions of the brain. Itwas also concluded that the skull waBprobably fractured. The man ,.was

;>apidjy-andullttlo:rhopo couldbe held out to the family that he wouldsurvive. His condition continued togrow worse,untll Monday morning at3 o'clock when ho died without for amoment having regained conacious-

.CHS. •• ...The deceased man waai about sovcuty

years old and had long beon a farmemployeo.i Ho-possessed but one eye,having loBt the other infills"early•yoars. The'funeral was hold at thohonie of lils son-in-law ya'aterday after-noon and waB largely attended. Roy..D. B. F. Randolph of the,Washington"M.JE. church conducted tho servicedThe interment was nmdo iu the Wash-ingtou;cenietory.

Cheap Tr ip to Nlitgurn Falls. f\Tho D., L. & W. R. R. Co. will sell round

trip Uokotu from Washington to NiagaraFalls and return onJ3epJt. 25th nmlj)ct.

ol hl9 goods and up-to-dato methods,- ~ J date of sale.

cle lae tyear . Send cn t of myself tiSt. Den nig Hotel, New York.

'T. S. D E D R I C K .By. the time this issue of the STAR

has reached the majority of its readers,the Peary Arctic Expedition 'accom-panied by Dr. Thomas S. Dedrick oithis placo will have reached New York,and it is no t improbable that Dr. Dedrick will be in Washington yec thisweek.

The firab intimation that the Pear;party was on itB way home camo In theforn'Jof a telegram from Dr. Dedrickto his wife, whom he supposed was InWashington. The message was datedt Chateaux Bay, Labrador, and ac-

cording to the " N e w York papersread about as follows :

"Reached hero. Telegraph $50 toSidney, Cape Breton, a t once. Havenothing to do with Bridgman. Isray enemy. Accept no favors fromhim. Insanity story oruel libel. Amin good health. Grossed Cape SabineJan. tith w i t h r p a r t y of Esquimaux.Offered services to Peary. RefusedLhoin.—Rgturned to-"titan"and""•win-tered there. In Sydney very short-ly. Give facts to Associated Press atonce. Important that you obey.

"THOMAS S. P E D R I C K . "The Weatoru Utiiim Teiegrnpif man"

agement hero refuses to nlHrm or ad-mit that Buch a telegram came here forMrs. Dodrick, bub there appears to bono doubt that it did and that i t was for-warded to Mrs. Dedrick at Arlington,whore she is now teaching school. ASTAR representative who called a t herboarding pluce there on Tuesdaylearned that she received news .i'rora

The Rev. Amos Stout was not or-dained as pastor of the Baptist church"n Junction yesterday although twen-ty-three representatives, from tonchurches of tbe Central BoptiBt Asso-ciation and a church full of peoplegathered there to witness the cere-mony. After a short open session, thechurch representatives went Into e i -icutlve sesaion and finally dismissed;he audience,' The subject of the ordi-

nation waa placed in the hands of asoramittee of five, with tho moderator,;o report nt some future time.

Iiov. Stout has been In the EaptiBtministry only a short time and it seemswas not very familiar with the doctrineof the church. He WBB for severalyenra connected with the Methodistministry and later was In the under-taking business at Lambertville. Hewas also at one. timn interested in theiron ore trade in High Bridge. Abhort timo ago he took charge of theBaptist churches in Junction and Beth-lehem end noon mads himself popularwith .this congregations r of bothchurches. ..The Junction people weremuch disappointed yesterday when Itwas announced that the ordinationwould not take place. It is possiblethere may bo somo interesting devel-opments in the case and it Is Intimatedthat the executive seBsion preventedthese developments yesterday.

FAIL TO GET-TOGETHERGreenwich Cominlttefl ami Trolley Cu.

Not Able to Agree ou One Point.Next Meeting In October. -

The trolley situation •»vhU;h; seemedabout to clear up a week ago is still alittle clouded in Greenwich townshipand the whole subject has taken a backicafc down there for a month. Mr.Brady, one of the Eaeton & Washing-ton Traction Company's attorneys, hnsassured the committee that he wonlddo his best to get his principles to ao-iept the franchise offered and thelommittae had agreed to recede fromts position in all but one point, fcli<_.mendinent allowing the use of the2ompany's tracks by any other com-jany that might desire to enter the

Drunken Hungarian Meets TragfiFate at Hotel New Windsor.

LIVED OXLY FEW HOURSTumbled into Dark Room on Third Flooi

and Fell Out Open Window.'

Taken fo Easlon Hospital Where Death Re-lieves Him From Sufferings.

A drop of thirty or more foot out ofa third-story window at the HotelNew Windsor so badly injured a Hun-garian at an early hour Saturday morn-ing that he died in tho Eaaton Hospitala few hours later. The unfortunateman was Frank Leptacka, a railroadworkman, and a drink-befuddled brainwas probably more responsible for histragio end than anything else.

Tbe Hungarian, together with threecompanions, came to the hotel lateFriday night. They had been drink-ng and wanted* more. Having been

employed on the Lackawanna railroad,each had received a check for hiswages that day. The party was toleave for some point in Pennsylvaniaand expected to take an early morningtrain. They were celebrating and didnot care who knew it. 'Squire Drove-ling was behind the bar in tbe NewWindsor and he remonstrated withthem several times about the quantityof liquor they were disposing of, buthlB good advice was ignored. Aboutmidnight the Hungariaus decided togo to bed and two of them were as-signed to Room".», and Frauk Lep-tacka and Martin Oil«ld to Room 22.

The men in Room''!;9 vvoct to bedpeaceably enough and little t 'ore waaheard from them, but the otl'er twoproceeded to make rnerry^ in trueHungirian fashion. They bombardedeach other with pillows and wrestled

when tho bell rang and lie Hto the hotel. .

Upon the arrival of the.'pbyaioli.the Injured man was placed on a mattress and romoved to the wagon ahedwhere he remained in greal agon;until morning. Dr. Williams foundbad scalp wound but no broken bones.To all appearances, however, the fellowhad Buffered severe internal injuriiHo was placed fa a wagon and taken frthe Lackawanna station where he wasput In a baggage car and upon reach-ing Easton was" hurried Iu" an aovbulance to the Easton Hospita!; whenhe died the same afternoon.

An effort was mndo by the Eaato;authorities on Monday to make a muider mystery out of the unfortunatelinn's death but It fnMod. Tt in claimedthat ho made a statement before .hidied in which he said he was ptishe<from Uie window by his companions.Coroner Schleicher of Easton tele-phoned Coroner Shrope on the subjectbut tho Washington official assnredhim that he bad made the fullest Inves-:igation and ho was satisfied there wasnot the slightest evidence of foul play,

The dead man has a brother who hasalso been working here and who hadan experience Saturday night whichhe will not soon forget. He was com.ing down the Port Colden road andwhen noar tho Washington avenueinlvert was held np at the point of aevolver by two men. They relieved

him of his pay check and othervaluables and, finally taking his bat,

rdered him to run hot-foot for town.VB soon as he disappeared they ran inthe other direction. It Is thought thework was dono by other Hungarianswho knew that the man bad money inis pocket and who had planued to rob

him at that point. Tho facts were•eported to the police but no arrestsiave as yet been made.

3RUF. KLUPPELBERG'S DEATHWell Known mid Aged Mtisleliin Passes

Away ut Ills Home lu Hacketts-town—An Ilouomlilo Career.

[Prom Our Iliu-kctttuown Com-.-pomli'iit.]Prof. Frederick W. Kluppslburir, linown

all over this section as n musician and inusi-. cal instructor, died at bis homo on

until the building shook as one or the [ Friday of rupture of the bladder.other went down and out. After in-dulging iu this horseplay for aome timeLeptacka wont ont into the hall. Someof those about the house say he wasput out by his roommate, who pro-ceeded to lock the door, but the Hun-garian says his fellow went out to lookfora toilet room.

The room occupied by the two menwas on the third floor and was nearthe rear of the new portion of thehotol. •Leptacka felt his way alongthe hall and finally ennae-to Lhadoorof Room 27, which ia unoccupied andwhich looks out into the rear yard. Heentered this room and felt his wayalong the wnll until he came to an

open winc'ow mnst havo beenmoving rathc*r rapidly, for tha next

Mr. Kluppelborg came hero from hiabom? In Germany about 40 years ago andbegan giving inar-actions on- the variousmusical instruments, being a skilled per-former on nearly every instrument in use.He made for himself a reputation ae a com-poser for tho piano, organ and violin, andwas tbe author of sevoral ploces of morethan ordinary merit.

flisbu&ioefifl ab'& dealer in musfcalin-struraentB made him a host of friends iiWarren, Morris and Sussex counties amthrough eastern Pennsylvania, but we whimot him at homo aa a friend, companio;and neighbor, knew best how to appnciato him. Bis sympathetic and kind!nituro, his genial manner and good fellovibip, his companlonablo ways with botroung end old, endeared him to all wit]whom he came in contact, and hla cheermorning greeting as he went:frotii-'h;

A. H. Sarson Brutally Assaultedby Thugs From Oxford.

ATTACKED FROM REARDazed Beyond Resistance He is UnmercN

fully Pummelled.

Nose Broken, Eye Injured and Toolh KnockedOut In the Scuffle.

Tho meeting to discuss the subjectivas'held in the Odd Follows' buildingin Tuesday morning and Mr. Hay.amiiia associates were present. The si tu-ition was gone over carefully and in'16 uuu MWHiiy said that the peoplerho were ready to put the money into*e road he proposed to build, were

lot inclined to accept tbo ordinanceiroposed and therefore it would not be;ood policy to accept it. The STAR'Sorrespondent says that Mr. Brady in"matod that an acceptance of the fran-ihiae would probably come later. A6ihe_requeat of the railroad people the

her hiiBband about_ fl_oIclock~ruourlayrh*f"iichi8e was laid over until the nextnight but that she came homo calmlyand went to bed.^ JTho following mornring she sent a™~frK>Bd to New Yorkwith the money tc^ be telegraphedNorth .and then wee 6 to her work.She was the least excited of any h?.;thehousehold, according to her friends at;he boarding house.

Tho New York papers* surmiao thatih^Windward which is bringing thoArctic party homo wiil laud at Sydney3omotimo today, and'ib. ^understood;hey have all dispatched special cor-respondouts to that point to interviewthe members of tho expedition.^Ii isexpected that Dr. Dedrick will bo'riaoredinn'-willing to talk and his friends ex-iecc that what he has to say will orefifca

considerable of a sensation. It will beremombsred that the intimation givenaut last year by the Peary Arctic Olnbwas that Dr. Dedrick had lost his mind.AB some of tho physician's friends putJt, tue~inference was thPt he was too

1 regular mooting which will be hohl ouOctober G.

Thorailroad. company's request fora franchise in Franklin township comesup late '.tills month and a representa-t i v e ^ the corporation assured a STARreporter a fow days ago. that it woulddoubtless be passed without a hitch.The same was~f Fue inrLopatcong town-ship, ho claimed, If the work of se-curing the franchises can boCclosed upby tho middle of October, as now seemspossible, there IB littlo doubt that'thework of building will begin-shortlytherenfter.

— iiiiL^.;. '^._lora?.y to havo about^the ship "br camp

Used Organ Burgulua, ''*$75 Noedbam, -i'stopa, onr-i nrlco"? 7§<)0 Wildrlcka, 6 " " " 105100 Hornbaker, 6 " " " 1CJl'25 Piilnoo, —"-•- 6 " " " 15$125 Standard, 8 " !I ',' IS

Al9o many other splendid bareilna iuused piauoa aiid orgaus. Don't miss tbem.All w t d .

a ftlualo House, Eaaton, Pa.

used piauoa aiiAll warrantod.

' E '

The Sto^nfl N. Y.' World, $2.00 per year

THE LATHftEDERICK W. KLUFPEUERG.

instant he plnugetl head foremost out homo to hla placo of business will bothe window and landed with a dull; va\sit& by many. .;-.-.•-.

Ho was a member' of IndopendoncoLodge, P. and A,}M,, of HacJrnt'ftfnwrn

thud on the cobble atones in front ofthe kitchen door, ^ - ,

When the force at the hotel reached!h( ld P f lB^d . t ho

the side of the injured man, it waB' l i fo 'SJ 'ol t r i loy i11! • A

• . • . , ,n , , , i -. -• , . "-I at his homo on-Grand avonuu on Augustabout 1:10.o'clock Saturday morniug,.!;--...^ •^z:, , r^»u**=t?,>aIi r « P p W n t c e B r t h e ^ H d n - w a s ] - - ^ l ^ f i e d ^ T i i o n . and^angbtorin a 'dying condition. Tho...slightestiwuiiam and Louisa-wher actually soattomptjt.o, move him.brought forth a j ccedecThTm In biihlijyas aonio years ago, ai;cry of piiin and nftor a hasty consul 11> j by two ^Kriindchildrcn—Louisa oamii•tion it wao decided to let him lie thoroiMcOIolIan^of this place and' Bdv.inOsuiuin the heavy rain, which"'at the timoTof N°wnrk. ' =was falling, and'' rurry. for a doctor. I T h o flintwl-ocrtieeawere aqndnctedatDr. Williams had beoa cut on a rnight call and must havo passed thehotel while the Httloiicrow'd waa lean-•ing^o3^er£tlHWj^r;«(rKtoi,.'form;/,^At,'an'yrate, he had^oniy reached^hii'.honio

Monday afternoon by Hova.Ghnpman of the Presbyterian church,whore tho decoased for many yop.r3 actedao orfi-aiiist ftbd mubical director, and byFattier MHcliam of St, James' Episcopal

Three toughs, "Bald to bo from'tho "•'••neighborhood of Oxford, set upon A.H, Sarson of Tort, Colden .shortly be-fore midnight on Saturday and so bad-ly beat him that it waa necessary tocall a physician. The unfortunatevictim suffered the loas of a front loofcuaa a result of tbe assault. . His nosewas also broken and one eye consider-ably injured. His faco and head, infact, were one mass of bruises and it ishis'belief that his assailants used a''blackjack" on him.

Mr. Sarson Is the conductor of thePort Colden Oornet Band and is theprincipal of the public school of thatplace. He has been an enterprisingind honored citfzon of the town forleveral years and so far as he knowsie has no enemies there. The band

which he established and which he hasipent ao much timo in trafning Is now>ne of the foremost institutions of PortJolden, and the entire population of;he village takes pleasure in helpinginpport it. On Satnrday night a festi-al for the benefit of the musicalirganization was given in the seconditory of the school house and It was at-he conclusion of this event that the

as3ault occurred.

There was a large crowd present at;he festival and, as is often the case atauch affairs in a country aectioa, a fewtough characters from Oxford andWashington put in an appearance.They had been drinking before they

Lme and continued to "drink fromlasks .whloh.,th«y.b'a'd brought, withthem. Afi?r*_ s ' ' time they becameobnoxious and'Mr, Sarsoa and some ofils friends were compelled to put themmtuf-the room. There was not much'back talk" from the crowd but rathern ominous sullenneBs that meant•ouble1 later on. Some of the Port

Colden folks remarked this fact butMr. Sarson gave the matter 'no farther

t h o u g h t . •;; ;••;;-:'•.. ••*-:••:.-;:•' •' --- - - -•

Most of those who had attended hadleft the hall by 11 o'clock, and Mr. Sar-Bon and a few others remained to cleanup the room. About 11:45 he.:camedown stairs with hia hands full" ofdishes and had stepped out^of thebuilding when: he was suddenly at-tacked from the rear. He thinks hemust hayo been hit on ; the head: with " •some blunt object, for.he'was stunnedforthe moment., The dishes fell fromhis hands and the next instant someone hit him between thoeye3. Thenthablows poured in from all sides and fortwo or three minutes it looked to theschool tsacher as if he were to be thevictim of a gang of blood thirsty mur-derers. His cries brought some of his

. fWends .to. h: is .rancwo ba'fc oii Lhe'appear-i"'-'-f':"an"ce""of tho I first of"th^ee tho~t6ughB(led. ' : " ^ ~ > • • • ; , " , ' •

Dr. Williams was subsequently sentfor and-hp drossed the ^unfortunateman's many wounda. It was feared atthe timo.that-Mr;*Sai'Sdu-was"iiuft'ebni.'11'""liderably more than proved to be the ,mse, but ho was able fco take charge of _jt?

his school on Monday morning, . Hia*^1--—"'ace:.wits~8omowhati--patclied-up with-iticking plaster and he was compelled 0:Q wear 'dark glnBses but he managed;o take care of his workasTiBual. Helolieves he can; identify at least twor threo of his assailants and arrests

will probably be made before the__end •_

Oxford May Get Two'.BIg P lan t s .Therein of.,Jenson Brothora of Oxford

'fltled to agree with tho Patorson sUk millmen on K price for tho old nail mill prop- • /,'trty In that town, and the STAKES Oxford •iorrespondoat reports that tho silk milliromotors will now/purebntio a lot and putp R building for th'olr own use. Healnu '

inyn that Jensen Brothors havo.concludedo put machinery for manufacturing nutsL»a bolts In the old.mill building and thatin a short timo two now plants will thus be „..„•„.

' led to tho town's list of industries.

Tho two^uHtent consecutive hetits overincod on flihalf-mila. track woro nin^at'etblohem last week. 'ii*rinQe Alert drew•io polo and waa nbvof. headed In citheroat by'Anaconda. ^Tue first heat wns'in.OSJilat, tho last half being dono in 1,01.'ho second heat waa paced in 2,05j, Thoro•as ono of tbe largest crowds tbat evor at-mded tho Betblebom Pair present to EGG

'<&:<-'

Page 2: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

THE WASHINGTON STAR, WASHINGTON, N. J., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1902.

New Shoesfor Fall

and Winter.We have them ready to show now.

Our store is very much crowded with

this new stock on account of so many

new arrivals in the past two weeks,

but when we begin to show them we

will soon have plenty of room, for one

cannot help but buy when they see

our styles and prices..

®

S" THE HAY BOOT AND SHOE COOPPOSITE THE OPERA HOUSE

§ 339 Northampton Street, Easton Penna.

AUTUMN'S ATTRACTIVE, . . MERCHANDISE.. . .Fresh autumn goods are very much in evidence in the

different sections of the shop. To tell you about this mer-chandise, to endeavor to impress you with its worthiness isthe mission of this "ad." News of this character is alwaysof paramount interest to our buying public. Need we againemphasize the fact that styles, qualities and prices are justas you would have them? Need we again emphasize the factthat first choosing is always most satisfactory.

THE NEW DRESS GOODS. -1You will find all the newest

weaves in cloth—Zibalins, Henri-ettas. >

Over fifty-styles in 54-inch WoolSuitings, plain, striped, mixed;"98c

Large assortment of waist pat-terns, only one of a kind, irj FrenchFlannels and Striped Flannels.

THE NEVvVAUTUMN DOMESTIC

HOSIERY. HOSIERY.for men, women and children'swear. All weights and all prices.

See our Sampson Hose for chil-dren's school wear.

READY-TO-WEAR MILLINERY.These goods play a most impor-

tant part in your fall outfitting,We have them in a variety of styles,beauties, from; 49c to $2.49

STOCK IS COMPLETE;"""""Domet Flannels of every quality

and color.'Percales in endless variety. -• •

--. -Calicoes by-the.c.i«._:: L;.:;

Shaker Flannel from 5c up.Sheets and Pillow Cases, Mus-

lins, etc., etc.

AUTUMN WALKING SKIRTS. V<Short, long and medium, of end-

less variety.. . . . .$1.98 to $6.00

SHOES. SHOES.Enough said. Our stock is com

plete and sold under the same guar-antee as. before. A new pair- inot as.warranted. ,.t

Men's, women's and children'sat all prices.

TRUNKS, VALISES, TELESCOPESWe have just put in a full line o:

these goods. ;They'-were bough'so the prices will be lower thanever before for reliable goods.

-Always early-to the.front.with -the .new... season's" goo.ds. If it ilit i i l h f d f t f ! J b t !

• that the Bee:Hive is the only.place:.to part vvith j^our money when iineed of goods in pur line. ' • ''[ /,' '"

Your money's wortH or your money back, but.for cash only.

•The/' . / /The only Strictly Dry j Goods Store in Washington,-'..

=33 EAST WASHINGTON/J. WARREN; FITTS, Proprietor.

BLOOMSBUKY.Edward Sborer of Phllllpabui-jf, was theo guest or bin parouia, Mr, and Mrs.'ni. dhorur, on SuncUy.Mini Nellie Pldcoclc, who baa recently

jturnod from Moultrlcfl, Oeorgla, nan tboucat nn Sunday of Mr. ntid Mrs. G. ftl.Mdccck.Mlwi Edna Schoolcy of Joraey City Isjoudln^ hor vocation nt ttio home of"r. mid Mrs. Victor Y, Schooloy.

r r l Wilson and Bit-tor.of Toledo,lo; ivere cuests lust wo-k of Mrs. J. W.

ilinrt and Mm. Djrlrl U trrlson.J.C. Wulsb, Wolcey Rutt. Frank Hoff-i.in and Erccst Wlilovt-r httotided tho

hl lb in Pair luetThuredny,Tho funeral of Sartb Barcla, Infant child" Mr. and Mrs. John Barclti, wan bold on.outlay afternoon at tho 51. E. church,.ov. J. II. J. Khodea conducting tho eor*ICl'S.Miss Emma Eick passed Saturday nud

lunday with hor parents at Haw German*iwn.!tov. J. B. J. Rhodes will pi each In thofckory FCliool houso next Sunday after-oon H; 3 o'clock.Miss Flora Meratnper of Philadelphia

jB svd Sunday of lu»t wetk with horIster, Mm. G. B. Krcmor.Whiter G. SmltU attended tho Bethlehem

'air last Wednesday.Mm. Randolph and daughter, Elslo of1

outh East on, wore cuests of Mrs. Wra,flour on Sunday of last week.A b&soball Raoie, clam stew and dnnco

.111 be held at West Portal on tho oflor-and evening of Sept. 2Sth,

Mr. nnd Mrs. Oscar Stamot«woro among,he number to attend tho Bethlohom Fair

Thursday. ." ,..-.-;Tho pastor of the M. E. church will

iroach Sunday morning from tho theme,'Thu Christian's True Glory," and In tnoivenlnc his subject will bo: "Matthew,be Publican."Mr. and Mri.John Jenkins and famih b b di l k

ily,In,vho bavo been spending several weeks ...

own, bavo returned to their homo in"rooklyn.

MIBS Bertha Hall, Mr. and Mra. Wm.'ulmor, Bon Jack and daughter Emollno,.avo returned to Brooklyn nfter upendingho summer months with Mr. and Mrs.'boo. Melick.

Mrs. Adalaldo Thatcher. Mrs. JamesJougle nnd daughter, Adalnlde, attended;he funoral of Mra. Samuel dtowart atGrange last Thursday. Mrs. Stewart diedjuddonly, prctmmnabiy of heart trouble.Less than ono week previous to her deathhe visited bcr fitster, Mra. Thatcher, andiroUier, Joseph Do?s of this plnco, bosldcR'thor relatives, and seemed iu bcr usunlicaltb, enjoying her visit to tho fulleBtutent. A low days after her return home,lotice WHS received of her death. Sho isurvived by a husband, daughter and two

Ramon's Iron Tt/nfe has an Ideal resultm tho system, It makes a rich, strongilood which protects all the otbor organsrom disease. F. N. Jonlllns, Warronbounty Drug Store.

Mrs. Orin Howell of Long Bridge, whosojuabnnd baa a position in New York,moved to that city on Thursday laat.

The Messrs. Townsend and their wives•ere among those of our village who at-inded tbe Fair held at Bethlehem last'eek, •• •Mrs. McCormlek of Morrlatown will visit

jer daughter, Mrs. John Dunn, tbla week,10 wo-hear.Lovi Kittle has lately been repairing hia

farm buildings situated near the Settle-ment.

Ford Staples is shipping cord wood to;he city market.

Mr. and Mrs. Clark Staples left our Til-lage last Sunday for a drive to Morrlatown.

Nate Cramer and wife were visitors in>ur village laat Saturday, returning Sun;'lay afternoon. . '•The Wilson and Adams trial is booked) be called on the 23rd inst., so reported.A Mr. Grey and family moved Into one

>f Mr. Rutherfurd's houses In '.'oar village.st Wednesday. <-Mr. and Mrs. John Whitsell of the Farmsere guests of Hackettstown friends last

lunday. • • . • . - •Mrs. Stanton and son Frank returned to

'biladelphla laat Wednesday. - • :

Mrs. Hattio Adams visited friends atJelvidore last Saturday. . .

During Mine Host Hyder'a attendance atje Bethlehem Fair, Mahlon Starr wassartender of Hotel Brunswick.

Mr. and Mrs. Rutherfurd StuyveBant ar-.ved at the Mansion last Wednesday. Mr.ituyveBant ia apparently enjoying goodlealth. '; -• ••Owing to the boarding Beaaon befog

iloaed at Lake Hopatcong, Thos. Haggertyvill probably resume his fish route at anjarly date

Mrs. Alfred Buckley and her two sons,Ufrerf and Joel, are spending a two weeks'racaUon at Newark and Coney Island.

POl tXTboro has boon coolih f l h

the lrat woekl b t

Tboro has boon cool DlghU the lrat woekwith he»vy froat la the mcroloK but as yotno damngo baa been dono to vcjjeutlon.

Mrs. Arthur MoEwan spent laat weekwith her parents, Mr, and Mra. JauioqAnderson.\. MIM Julli Carllpg of Joraoy City Is bolngcntortalnod by hor aunt, Mr*. David Nunn.

Miss Sara E. Bird of Vicuna, an accom-plished elocutionist, will Klvo a recital intbo church xt Port Cotdon on Saturdayoverling, Bopt. 30th, Too Port ColdeuSand will be la attendance and ihoro willbe aiQiilna. solos and other selections, nlto-gother miklngauovouiDd of Rreat enjoy-ment. Aitiniialon 15 couts for adults, undlOcenU for chlidruu. All are Invltodtonttuud. Frocoeiia for theEp<vorth Leayuoaociety.

Mro. Ella Hlgglns and eon of your townspoilt Saturday und Sunday at tho homoof Mr. ind Mrs. Cb.na. Uuary.

Miss Bertha Wodver Is making n visit ofSOVUMI wcoka witb hor unclwt at Hobofcunand Weohawkon.

Mm. floury Starker entertained severalof htr frluudd at dlndiT on WcdncHttay,Among ttiu numbur wuro Rw, and Mrs.Uaggerty and M». Nel^u Sklunor.

Tbo topic for tho Epworth League moot-ing uoxttiunday «veiling will tie "Tlio full-ness of God—bow secured." Loader, MissAnniu Qolgley.

Mrs. Kutrono Hazel and son. Into of NovaSco:U,\vili visit hor sfsttr, Mrs. N.atln-tier, this week.

Mr. Dell Starker visited friends at As-bury on Sunday.

MISB Sadlo Nunn roturnod laat week fromLake Mobegan.

Mr. and Mrs. David Sbafer and son ofNewark aro making a visit of utjvemlweeks with friends in this place and vi-cinity.

Mr. and Mrs. Howell of Hopo visitedRev, and Mra. Hnjjgorty on Tuesday.

Mrs. Hen), Opdyke vlsitod her sick niocoin Buttzvllio on Wednesday.

A number of our people attended theHarvest Homo at Ohangowator last nightand partook of tbo roast pig supper.

Prof. Saraon was struck In tho faco by arowdy on Saturday nlgbt at the Band Fes-tival and seriously hurt. Whon men andboys attend sucti uUccs only to mako dis-turbanco a constiblo ought to bo In attoud-anco, as tho lock-up is tho safest placo forthem.

rateof Kpet-d oimo i scldent at tho Luvoll

d l k

A Communication.Mit. EDITOR—Allow me to spoak a fow

words iu favor of ChumborUln'a CouchRtmcdy. I Buffjrcd for three years ulththe bronchitis nnd could not sleep atnlgbts. I tried several doctors and variouspHteut medicines, but could get nothing togivo any relief until ray wifo got a bottleof this valuable medicine, which lint com-pletely relieved me.—W. a. BKOCKM.YN,U U M Thi r e d y is for aMt: byU c U , Mall druggists.

r e l i e v e d m e . W . a . B O C M ,, M o . T h i s r e m e d y is f o r aMt: b yi t

HAINESBUKG.A p^rty assembled at tho homo of Lcetor

d ThurpHay evening to join with himA p

Brand

led at tho homo of Lcetorevening to join with himi b u warmig in

'lo dealing with man, remember that aspoonful of oil will EO farther than a gal-lon of ylnepp.r.". The Bame mny be Bald ofibiiurttu.—Tultjru-iri-iioth[nK-:eo-^ooil"fo^jblldren aa the old-fashioned castor oil.However much they miy abhor it,1;it Is'heir best medicine for disorders of the)owela. In the more severe cases of dlar-'boea nnd dysenterj, however, Chamber-"ain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea, Rem-idy should be given after tho oil operates,and a quick .euro, is euro to follow,: Forlale by alldruggists.

TRANQCILITY.;IRH Helen Hamilton and! her parents,

Mr. and-Mra. Benj. Hamilton of Newarkare'the1 cuests of the latter'a" daughter,Mrs. GeoiCooper. ; ; • •.;•-•••-.:--;-;.

George Hlbler of Mot-ristown is beingentertained at the home of h.s uncle,John Hlbler. .'* • '

Misii Laura Hill haB been spending twoweeks with her.uncle, Wm._ Price, nearHnKtayflle.^.,.^...:^:^.^^.:;^.;, _ . : „ ;.••.

Mr. jind Mrs. Irvin Labar"entertainedMr. ndMrarirVinXabafehtertainedPeter Beers of GreouBviUe on Suiiday.^. ~j

Mr. end Mrs. George Colenun nre visit-ing xelatlvea and friends at Plttatown andWind Gap. t {,' :

The Epwortli Luague services wore leadby George Huff on Sunday evening.' NextSunday George Ooleman leads; topic,"The ^Fullness of God. How Socured.'*Bph.3:'14-21. :...';

;Mrn.-5irah Drake has;be/°n-JM-.the pastweek. She 1s Improving now and wo hopofor her recovery. "V?

fj-f!i: SUFFICES

cures. to»tnr'p.iTOl, all illmniiM

H w poc""5r to5r,i"nd w™iii'HlatU'r \yliatlorsnnH uro dlHonflod. ITomjit, i?narantced g

• clireH 'iiy>nlt-.,V'>yr:1'arlIcll|iir:"attention to-tj^nlto-Urlnnry •

jtrpnliliij/l^CoiiauitiitlonlPree., ..'..'-.-...,2:' .. - . . ^ | ' ' ; . . . : .- ."^ :,,_:*

S n j j j i ' S ' 3 t?Vl2.2 to SJT> (Tto B. "Sunday^: IO to 2^'^' : J1 ThirdJStrcai

GOODHORSE,SENSED

will teach, yon thatcoffee in an air-tight,scaled packageurer, cleantisand

fPA. IB

An automobile driven nt na unlawful

Brands Thurpay evening to join with hiand his good wile in a bouse warming in-cident to their tukhu po^esafon of tbeirnewly completed home.

Mr. and Mrs. Josoph Andrew of Hcpospent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and -Mrs.Joseph Brickner. Sir. B., who Is employ-ed at Elizabeth, is homo for a few days.

Severn! cars were loaded with apples attho station last week. J. W. Tnorne haspurchased nearly every orchard In thisneighborhood.

Mr. and Mrs.'Wm. Randall and two ladyfriends of PnllllpHburg spent Sunday withAlp. and Mrs. John L. Beck.

Mrs. Emma Ward, Mrs. Elbert Albert-son and Jabez Walters attended church atMarksboro and spent Sunday with friendsthere.• Mr. and MTB. George Hall of Kerr'B Cor-ner were entertained Sunday at the homeof Mr. and Mrs. Dopew Walters.V The Leblgh & New England R. It. Co.will run excurtrious from Brugler's Crossing:o Nazareth this week on account of theofg fair. On Thursday and Friday theyexpect to carry a large number of peoplu.The people from thlG placo nhr, \ formerlywent to the fair by the D., L. & W. will:bls time go by the L. & N. E. at) the abovementioned crossing; is only a short distance*rom town. The train leaves at S:20 a. m,

Mrs. Hannah Snyder and Mr. and Mrs.Bertsel Snyder drove over to tho CountyHouse and visited Mr. and Mrs. Goodward

eldn;^- . • ii,Mr.'and Mrs. John B. Allen left on Tues-

day to spend two weeks at Niagara Fallsil^ht seeing. Harry Snyder of Stroude-jurg will have charge of the station duringMr. Alton's absence. ,

Eugene Beck, dealer in poultry, has sentseveral coops of Buff Rocks to NuzJrethFair. He will undoubtedly take severalprizes,

Mr. and M's. Jacob Andreas and VincentTltman were entertained »t the home ofrelatives at Johnsonvllle, Pa., on Sunday. |

A surprise party 'trembled at tho homo Iof Nelson L. Brands on Saturday to joinwith him in the celebration ot his USchbirthday anniversary. About 50 relativesand friends wore prosent and they had agrand time. ;

The gain of Knowlton for this year IsS1S4.000 over last year.iOn,real estate$162,000 and "penona|-$£2,UUur- ThUs is- uHood showing for Assessor Wm. B. Moore.The rate per $1,000 will be ?10.50 and dogtax SO cents. Tnero are ISO dogs in thel o h i

.. „ a" bad .. _ . street school liouho

ono day last wceh. Children fled In all dl«reciluusaucta dorso played h&voo wltti uhardware display on tbo Bidowalk. ,. ...

Tho Alpba Athlotlo A-sicUtlon dedi-cated Its new hall on Thursday nlRht.Tiiore wire a number of prominent menpreBunt from PhiiHp&burjr und Euton nndbo alTdr proved a very oi joynblooccaaloa.It lt» holiovod that Olflccr KanoorTny-

lor will be chosen to su.ceed tne lato Chief jof Police Nixon, who died last week.

A flrenian named Mlllor living In McuchChunk Hud work log on tlio Central rail-road WBBHtruck by an onaltie In tlio yardhero on Saturday and dmigorout-ly In-jured, llo was tutcn to tbo Eastou hos-pital.

Mra. Win. Eckhnrdt, died on Pildeymorning nt hor homo on Alnln stieot nf u:ompllti-iliuii of dlsuascn. Hho WHH fifty*hreu yeara old nnd had been in poor

jwHlih (or n year. 8be In survivsd i>y anumber of children and brothers nnd Bis-tore. . : .

Georgo Kino, ton of Mr. nnd Mrs.Georgti KHUO, died at Morrla Plains onFriday, He WAR forty yours old and badbeon In the hospital thera for heveral years,Tbo body was brought hero for burial.

Miss R*y Asbmore ti acting as principalof the ttltgrcavca street sobool. ClarcticoSloan who was recontly elected to tbatpOBitlOU IS tOO 111 tO tOrtCb.

The choir of tho Mulu Street M. K.church on Thursday evening tendered naurprlso visit to Mr, and Mrs, RaymondRichards and presented them wltii a hand-some chair. The presentation speech was.mado by ROT. R. V. King. .. * v j

Henry Quick on Thursday discovered it inail In his horse's hoof. Ho had It drawn Iout at once at a blacksmith shop but tho :

animal Immediately developed lock-jawand it la feared It will die. I

Tholngersoll Drill Co. hao already be-'gun tbe construction of tbelr now plantnear bore. It la Raid a million dollars will'bo expended. Nearly alt tho coal teams!In the neighborhood bavo gone there to]haul earth, . ... • •....

Seventy porsons woro received into mom-burahip at tbo Woaloy M. E. church onSunday. This is tbo largest number thatever Joined a cburcb in Wftrron county at

no time.Goorgo Lutr, an englnoor who was blown

up In a locomotive explosion in JorsoyCity on Suiidiy, was a brother of DavidLutz of tnlfl placo and was quite well 'known here.

Mr. and Mr<", Warren' ;B. Sbimer of,ViiabiniiLon are spoiidiiiR'a few days io

town aa tho guests of Mrs, Shimor'a pnr-mts, Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Loidy.

James Speirs of Washington was in townon Monday. He isjuBt recovering from anattack of appendicitis.

Christopher UnaiiRSt dlod at bis homohero on Sunday morning from an attack ofblood pofaonlng. Ho leavos two daughtersnnd four sisters. Two of tbo lnttor aroMrs. Elizabeth Smith of Harmony nndMrs. Catharine Doremor of llocksburg.Ho was a member of tbo Sr. Mi'cnnulcannd the Hoval Arcanum as well ns tboMain Street Methodist church.

James Gallagher, a boarder, died at tbeUnion Hotel here on Sunday eveiutia of'heart failure. He bad loug been tinjjloy- jod io tbe PhlllipBOurg ttovo foundry. A Iwife and two brothers survive. ]

The North End management is tryli p toarrange a series of two itiiues with t n« In- jgereoli team, one of wtilcn will be pUyodhere and the other in Eaaton.

The political stuff that Cougr^Ti-manFowler is pouring in here has so cloggedthe local post-ofiice that an txtra carrierhas been hired.

I. .\7. Richards Intends noon to open ahorse baziar here. He Is now In Buffalopurchasing a carload of western stock.

Tbo dedication of the WestminsterPresbyterian church will take place nextSunday. Rov. Dr. Edsall Ferrler willpreach the dedicatory sermon at 10 30 Intbe morning and Prof. W. B. Owen ofLafayette College will deliver the addre6aiu the evening.

Already tbe IngerBoll proapect Is maklneita presence felt. One man has aold hisatore to become a night watchman at theplant.

Chaplain Morrison of the U. S. Navy,who committed auicide In New York lastweek, was at. one time rector of St. Luke'sEpiscopal church here. ' H e Is well re-membered by many members of thatchurch,

Richard Stevens, a former resident ofthis place, was killed in Pittaburg on Mon-day. No details of bis death are known attbia writing. - ' , : .;-,.

H O P K ._.Dr. and Mrs. Storm and.son spent partof last week with hia mother at Mt. Fo-ono. AlMrs. M. A. Ball and Mrs, Itoudehush of

East Orange and Mrs. Whltlock and daugh-ter, Miss JiiydaHagny,Jof Newark, return-ed to their homea from-O. C. Howell'd onSaturday,

Rev. E.G. Hall will-give a descriptionnext Sunday evonjng o( a young lady bortiin Mt. Lebanonto Christianity

, Syria, wand ia nc

ho Is" a convertiw a mlsulouary.

The concert will include a missionary ex-cruise together with songs.

Ray Black of Mt. Freedom spent part oflast wetjit'vviLiiiilS'paroats hBrc.'Vi-.-;-^r^;i

Miss Sadie Glbbs went on Monday toTrenton whore sho will attend the StateNormal School.

Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Hildebrant andchild were guests of A; A, ..Van;- Horn andfamily on Sunday,

- . < : • "

OXFOKD.

Free Excursion to Washingtsn.

Thousands of persona ...New Jersey,New York and Pennsylvania vicit thoCornish Factories overy year to selecttheir rianoanml Organs from tho imnienso stock always on view. Visitoraaro always welcomo and may view Iho

i entire process of manufacture, from thorough lumber to tlio flnlsned InBtru-

F1 ment. We are so anxions to encourage - — ^

aa inspection of our plant nml nmchinery by our friends nnd patronsthat wowillcneorfully pay any intendingpurchaser's enr-faro within a reasonabloradius from our town. Vouchers sent onapplication with full particulars as totransit, route, etc, Como nnd seo uswhether, you buy or not.

\\*licn you Ivy a Corn i sh pluno or orcan on thoCornish PUn you rccoivo an liibtrument-ox-(liiisltoln toiio, brniitlfnl lannl'li.porlDetinaction—

"_ atfnctory nrlccwItliontOonlers' prollts nriiloil, andvontiuy HwUUtliocI.r.iri.unlaotltntir ran nro notatlsflod niter 12 niomtis* trial wo will take It back.' i year's trial, yon nro not satisfied, and

istrunicnt lack to us. wo will refund

ratlsflod niterH. nftor tno yictiil tho Inst

'lth lnt«r«3l al six petaso wo will dt> nnytliinjt In

nd

It you |iur-

on lioiior nml wo havo nintio a happy rrleiidof ovcryono ot our ?.v»,ooo euslomont.

All )'nti need to do la to drop us n postal card ro«quest nml «'« will solid you our nnw souvenir• • ' • ' ' - ' "n i l dotnlls nnd lmrtlcitlnrsalioiit both

• • • ind our Rront oiler. With tho.... ..mlnsctof finbosscil mlubturo

IM.WKI.1 an<l organs, also free, exactly lllto our Enn(ls'Ju coiorliiR^ nnO designs, to nld you In makingselection tit just ttio instrument you wnnt In jourliumo. .

. •" Wln-'theryonwnnta lilch-prlcrd or a low-pricedr y A n|;u:oor orRnn, wrltt1 to us and lt-t w toll you nil* " about what wo have nml linn- you can have a tioauti-

ful irislrmtiPiil on free trial for onti year.Write at once. Or hotter still, come and see

ui. Mention this paper,

ANDCORNISH CO.,

Washington, Now Jortay.SO yean' succets la American homt§.

250,000 satisfied cuitcmen.

"Ready!"

Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Lewis of Slatington,Pa., spent Sunday in town with theirdaughter, Mrs. Ctias. E. Ficntel.

Jacob Kline of Newton full from a scaf-fold on which he waa working one day lastweek and besides breaking hia log eaataln-ed bodily injuriod. He waa a former resi-dent of town.

Eugene Walters, who waa badly Injuredat the Basic iron mines, Is now somewhatImproved. The doctor has hopo of eavlnghlB leg which was so badly crushed.

Thomaa Carter .colored jdlf?d nth InhriniHon Mechanic sir out, last Thursday ofBright's disouao. He is survived by a wife.The funbral took pUce Saturday servicesboing held at bis late home by ltov. blo-wbiuney. In^ermtnt iu Hillside cemetery.Tho widow thanks tho neighbors for theirkindness during hor bereavement..,— Thurtiday night-last titleveu-gained-cn-tranco to Charles Borroughs' house onBucklov avenue by brewing open a sldowindow. They gut away with about$50worth of booty and without disturbing thofamily., Tho thieves then called on HarryHooker but only got aa fur as the kitchen, iand only took, so far as 1H known, a plug of'tobacco. V( • .

Father McCo^cell has postponed his pic-nic from Siiturda^jeveuinc, Sept. 20th toSaturday evenf-fi, Sopti 27th, owing to theMethodist congregation holding a festivalthe coming Saturday evening.

Wm. Knapp'of Nowark la spending his7acs t lGa^ .v i t f c :h !3 - . : e t sMEdMrChristian Knapp.

A. hack load of Jonestown poOplo droveto Portland on Saturday and spent tho daywith Mr. and'Mra. Samuel Cooper. ~- •'•••

The Bllk-rsllLuooplo have been unable toj.piirchaao the dldpailmill of JanBOU BroB.,

Mr'and Mre. Wm. Addis of: Delaware'tto"latter intending" to .operate it them'

n t " o n S u n d a y . . - . • ^ - • • . ^ • ^ - ^ n , • . - • • • "---r-^z^- ••••"•..lies Nollle Love rotnrnud to hia homo In

Brooklyn on"Monday, after spending amonth at I. 0. Reacts., ^ '"'

John 0. Dill has recently had Erected ahandsome monument over the grave of hiewifo, who died last spring.

Mr. and Mrs,~Van Oleve Newman oflNewton bnriod their Infant child in theold Uulou cemetery on Saturday.

MIBS Rota Colburn left for parts unknownon Saturday. It seems;that ahe imd RD-aworod & njatrlmomial- advertlsoment nnda correspondojicc followed. Photoa wereozchsugod, and last oprlng a ticket readiedBrldpeville,with-which she waa to travelto mset'-Tiw prcspentlve husband in thofar Wogb,'but frlendtiof hers in town learn-ing of the sobeme, had the tickot returned.Tnis time, however, her afllanced came tohor home in a carriage, and as soon aa she

coaldiflbaussrhn'-wardrobo^ahe^entorcdthe vohiole and wlth~a"mtin whom'she hadnever mot boforo drovo off in, the directionoc Johnaonburg; ' Tho goasipB of town aro icompletelymyatifled aa-Wtheir whoroa-1b o U t S J • • • « • •;• • "• ^ . :

lot here and build a factory. ' 'Word was reoeivod in town Tuesday that

R'obard Stephens, a former keeper of tbeEmpire blast furnace, bad been killed atPittsburg, Pa., whore he waa employed.The body was brought'to: Franklin r•ace on Wednesday for burial. "

Mra. John Saharrer Ia credited with havIng the blihas on

e blggeat iexhibition

apples hereabouts.,1 Sheat Alton's drug store two

apples'one of which'wclghVsib ounces andtho other 31 ounces;/*-'' —r-1- "•*1 . •'-'-" '-•• • • •

Mr, Wm. Scharror and MISB Eva A.Hartman spent last Sunday In PhlllipH-burg uu tbe guests of Frank OwonB,-£•;

-y Not "Doomed For Ijlfe,"I was treated fov. throo yoare by good

doctors," writes W. A, Greer, McConuolls-vllle, O., "for Piles and Fistula, but, whenairfaUed*;" Buokien'B"Arr)icB.irBhivfi curedme In two weeks," Ouroa Burnu, Bruises,Cats, CornQ,Soro3, Eruptions, Salt Rheum,Pllea or no pay. 2Cc. at F. N. Jenkins'Warron County Drug Store. .

Yolla'tho flmnll boy at-hia game of"hide nnd seek," nndsoetiy we. Readyto meet the dpmandB that will be madeupou us for Oiirptita :ln tho weeks tocomo. Just wish you could see ft few

•* of the many bright, now patterns wenro placing on our floors these fall(lays. Fcr instance, In yard goods,,which embraces all grades In IngrainOarpeta, -we have more than 35 pat-terns from which to select. Hore laone for the bedroom: Earn ground withBhell and Bcroll in two shades of red;another, a green floral design. Thenthere >is the Biibdned brown and woodcolors, used in dining or sitting room-no better colorings for service.

IN THREE-QUARTER GOODSTapestries, ,Velvete, Axminsters, BodyBrussels, etc!; there are really so manygood things it is hard to make a begin-ning. For 50c .a..Tnppfltry Ciirpetas ,good as yon will find for" the moneythey cost. 65c gets a much better Car-pet; in fact, a Carpet you will not regret,having bought. We ahow them in 15patterns. The 75c, 80c and 85c gradesare, an their pricea indicate, not onlybetter and finer in quality, but moreartistic in colorings and designs. Weahow them in 30 patterns.

ThOyVelvets come in for their full. shore 'of praise and they are well

worthy of it, for a batter Carpet forhard service is not to bo found. 20 pat-terns, several with borders.

The handsome AxmioBtere for theparlor or drawing room, either with or

' without bordpr, must not go by with-out notice. We are making them upinto rugs of any deeired size; so easilycleaned. If you prefer, we have ready :to use Rugs iu small, medintn and thelarger sizes for rooms. •_. t., :.,

The reliable Body Brubaols need norecommendation. They do their owntalking. You just cant wear thorn out.Several patterns,1 moBtly with .borders.

Ford's Furniture and Carpet Store-.•=.- (Formerly Ford & Fleming) ;

.ttt—— m — w -

EA^fON, PA. |

New Addition-ta^Builfling-Almost-GompleteJM^I

Early ShowingNew Fall Dress Goods.

New Fall Drtes^Skirts^

. - . . . .. . . • * •

"'•. New Fall Undecwear. '"

ALLBN: ;£ Af PENTER.229 NORTHAMPTON ST., EASTON, PA.

6

BELOW THE SQUAKE.;.,

•P . Vf

|

Page 3: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

THE WASHINGTON STAR, WASHINGTON, N. J., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1902.

©ell & m,MEN'S OUTFITTERS, WASHINGTON, N. J.

After passing through a very prosperous summer, every monthof which showed large increases over last year, we now

: enter upon our THIKD FALL SEASON here.

ADVANCE FALL STYLES IN

MEN'S AND BOYS' CLOTHINGare now here and more coming right along. We intend to excelall previous efforts and will have the largest and most attractivestock in this vicinity.

Every worthy grade and all the newest styles will be repre-sented at our well-imowii LOW PRICES. Each week brings manycases of new fall merchandise, so that all lines are graduallybeing filled up.

NEW FALL NECKWEAR.A great variety of all the newest silks in..the popular narrow,

reversible Hour-in-Hands and the latest shapes in Tecks.

25c and 49c.

THE NEW FALL SHOES..........ARE PLEASING....

Everything about them is. Shoes that are different from thoseyou come across at most stores; have a smart style about them.

Queen Quality Shoes forWomen's Autumn Wear

arehavlngthdrfirstshowlnK. Theyare for women of correct taste—lov«ers of shoe luxury. Price $3 .00 .

Our Famous $2.00Women's Shoe

deserves prominence, Proper Inshape, making and quality. Thegreatest shoe that ever sold for $2.00

Good, Strong, Reliable School Shoes for Boys and Girls$1.00, $1.25, $1.35 and $1.50.

MEN'S SHOES in all leathers and all shapes,98o to $4.00.

Dell & Marxsen,Washington, N. J.

Why i s itthat we are selling more Tea and Coffee than allother houses in town combined?*-

Simply this:We are Jiving better goods than can be boughtelsewhere for the same money.

We guaranteethem to be pure, and will refund your money ifyou are not satisfied.

Give them a trial.- - Coffees and Teas are specialties with us, and no

-— .line-in:jtowR:approaches:ours*iR'.vii!uc. " - - . —

J. D. CORNISH.

***£***********+**********************************,

FOOD FOR THOUGHT i!\ WHAT $65,00 WILL DO FOR YOU. \r\\ It will pnyyonr tuition tit Newton UUHIHCHH Collect1 for NINE •MONTHS, I ti wilt wiiltlc you t o Instruction tullookkeepliik'. 1'onmunnliln, Arithmetic,Shortlinnilr

yiiCMvrlliiiK7C6rruH|>oriuum!L'; UUHIIIDHH Law,Tmctlcul Urnim'wir, Hujrtrt Additionnd general olllco work. " - "<"-• '-- ,.;

A U TEEM BEGINS MONDAY, SEPT. 8, 1902. ii

, , HuninoHH activity crmtOK ndenmiiil for IHIHIIII'HH expert^ TIIIH lH-fu||y liumoit"--!, , HtDited right tn onr colluir*;. IIH, nt_t!iL'^l)ri;t!y»t.tImt>.;..w.(iriiivi'>not::i."grailUftto of.,

r*triie>Mr tliu Ciuniitercmlmill sSliortlmml DupartmuntH without a por t ion . ' _ , ,' ' Individual uud CIUBH Instruction. Kxceptional faclllttcB for nlacfntr irradiiaWfl ' '«' In HiitlHfactory poHttlonn.- Krunlnfr SOHNIOIIH. Mo.lern MetlioilK In nil Dcimrtinont*. <'

..' .:.Esiierleiiced and J ' radical Teudiern, Suml for I-lst of Students Ktnployail, Col!t;«o ' '1 ' J o u r n a l n n d C a t a l o g • •" -^ . . - • • . . - . • : . •••- ••••;- - • ' n

NEWTON BUSINESS COLLEGE, :- • F. O. H O p i ' l N S , Pre3lc!*nt. - J_ ; ' • ''

*****************«•»-»«»»•»*»»»•»•«»»»»»«»»»»••«»••' I, „ <•'< " ' . . •:, . ._ . . . ._ :„ . ; ; :=• •

M. A. MASTERS HARDWARESTORE. • ' I !

= ::± DEPOT "FOR '•"'^

•..QUIHHIPIAC FERTILIZER,

JItltERWiAJLFIELD FENCING,

.,' HEADQUARTERSvFOR —

CHOICE HE-CLEANED^ CLOVER SEED,

HARDWARE.JOOLS, CUTLERY,

LAKH MOWERS, PAINTS, OILS,'

'ETC* "

An Aged Washington ResidentTells of Early Customs.

LIVED NEARBY SINCE '37

How Schools Were Conducted and Farm-

fug Was Done in the Twenties.

Sonic I Mug About Undertaking sad the Makingof Coffins in the Early Days.

Eighty years back to a long tlmoand ItBooms almost Impossible that nny personwould bo flblo tu sit down fiud talk ofwvonta thai occurred Bfiernucb a lapse oftime as complacently us thouph thoy worenccurroncCH of yefltordny. John ClarkIloworn, a rcHldcnt of Washington, whowill booighty-ievcn.voHra old uoxt Octo-bor, la ono of the fow men living In tbiasection who can go bnck to tho '20J and'303.of tbo nineteenth century and talkfrom actual experience of tbo hablta andouatoma of tboBo days. Not nnny monoryounjioryoars can boast of Much a re-tontlvo mind as can be, either.

"Want mo to toll you.somothlnff-nhontujyuolf mid tho earJy history of Washing-ton ? Why. I'll bo only too glad. Walkright ID." Tula waa tho manner In whichhe welcomed a no warn an from tho STAKwho called at his homo on West Washing-ton avenue a fow dnya ngo. The news-paper man mentally noted tho reeom-bianco In fuaturoi hotwoon Mr. Bowersand tbo lato John I, DIalr. These twomen, raoro than a half century ago, per-sonally know each other. Mr. Bowerscan romombor when tbo great millionairewas llko . the majority of ordinarymortals—whon be was only a commoncountry storekeeper and dealor In farmproduco.

'Wow, first, I suppoae you want me totell you something about my early life,"said Mr. Bowers. "Well, I was born nearBrldgevlllo and wont to acbool in thatneighborhood. There wero no schools Inthose days auch as wo now term publicschools. There was a building wed foreducational purposeR which was placed ntthe disposition of any teachcrthntchancedtocomo tbrouith and wanted to assumeohargo. Tbo usual custom WHS for HOOK-HChoolmaster from a distance to canvu»Kamong tho farmers of the neighborhoodand enroll scholars. If ho got enough tomako It pay,lie opemd up thero nt thebeginning of tho ccbool year. If hedidn't, ho abandoned the project. Hi*terms were two dollnra per quartor foreach scholar* Tho various farmers of thedistrict contributed wood for heating pur-poses nnd tho biggest boys In the schooltook turns In spllttlrg It after :aohoolhours, Thofi'ova in the school house wo*somewhat diflorent from those we set*nowadays. It burned wood only andwould accommodate a Ptluk fully Ore feetlong. Each parent WHS oblieed to buvbooks for hla own children. We bad novacation In those days and school was heldthe year around unless the teacher beenmedlshenrtoned dnrlne tbo.summer, whichwas tho usual time for blm to got out pro-viding bo intended to teach In a now lo-cality during tho next year.

"Many amusing things took place dur-

"Farmlag waa followed thon Jnomochnlffortut manner than uow. Tho ryo wasflailed out by band and tbo wheat wnflthrosbed by tramping It out undor tbohorutos' foot oo tho oaro door. Wotnon fol-lowed tbo oradlo In tbefleld as well asla thohouse. Two of them usually followed aman with a soytbo. each taking a sbosf Inturn. Men wero hired to wort on thefarm by tho day and wero paid fifty centsand board. Womeu wero engaffed duringnarvost at tho rato of twenty-five cooUaday. Girls working as: domestics tbenwero paid from tweoty-flvo to fifty centspor weetc.

"Land wus dirt cheap, tho beat farmsbringing only §25 or f30 an aero. Some ofthe land waa virtuallj given away. Therowore fow If any tenant farmers. When ayoung man got married It waa generallyandnratond tfaqr bis paronts had oooughmoney on hand to Btart him farming onbis OWD account. At tho prevailing pricesof farm land tbon this waa a comparativelyeasy matter.

"Taxes wero very, very low. When Ifarmed before tho war tho tax on tho bh?form amounted to only |20. Before I lefttho same farm thirty years lator tho yearlytax amounted to more than $100. Duringtno war, taxes wero excessively high. Oneyear my bounty amounted to ?30S which Iwas obliged to pny. , . : • . . , . • • -

"Our clothes wore all raado at home.Wo rnlscd our own ahcop and took tbowool to eome roan who hud a carding ma-chine, thero being one In overy neighbor-hood. The women of any household couldspin nnd weave and In most cases wereable to raako tho various necessary articlesof wear. A trcvollng tailor ueed to comoaround nt statod intervals and make clothesfor thoso fdmllit-B who wero unablo tomako their own. Wo made ourownstrawbats but other kinds we wero obliged tobuy at tbo stores. - ^.™-.•--— —

"Wuliurdly knew what a barber was.Every family had one member who couldcut hair. In his early days my son Chrisdid all the hair cutting in our family andhe knows moro about bair cutting to thisday than half tbo barbers.

"Boforo I became of age I went to Belvl*dore and learned tho cabinet maker'strade under Mr. Maxwell. Bolvlde/ti wasthen only a little village. Washington,Pblllipsburg and Hackettstown ivere littlehamlets no larger than Now Hampton orAnderson aro now. The only town of anyconsequence in Korthern New Jersoy wasNawton. When I wont to Belvldere, War-ren and SUBOOX counties were all one andknown AS Sussex county. About this timethey were set apart and the business of:ho new county was done at Johnsona-burg, then called the Log Jail. A shorttime later the court house buildingwas erected. I remember the old Wai'ran Journal and bow aniloui we all wereto Nee it on each publication day, I sub-scribed for it then and tuve taken It con-tinuously ever since. I remember whenthe first bank In Bolvldere wi>s established.

"I knew personally o -jry principal char-1

scter In the famous Castner murder. I•mw Carter and Parks hung. The hangingrook pi tco In thu public street in front oLthe c u r t house. Evorybody who desiredcould witness the proceedings and therewas a tremendous crowd present. Carterand Parka, the murderers, made no state-ment on tbo scaffold, but before belniIxunched Into eternity they shook handearnestly and kltsed each other upon theItpg. D.tnlel Winters wad nheriff then andhe did not have the necessary courage toexecute the mon himself- Instead, hedeputized some man from Pennsylvaniawho' had had experience in this lineof business. The great crowd of peoplev-ok away various forms of souvenirs ofhe hanging and many ebipped off pieces

from the gnllowH with tbelr penknives. . ."I"also knew Harden personallv. He

was the mlnfater who killed his wife atAnderson by giving her an aDpio contain-ing arsenic, tie was a fine looking youngfellow and cameto Anderfii>n from BO

•MR. JOHN' OliAKK BOWKltS.An Old KcsItloiiL ol AVustiinjftoii mid Vicfniij, Still Halo and Heurlj .

ing our school life. I remember one teach"er in particular. My, how he did flog Homeof the boys. There was no law againstflogging tben excopt the law ot humanity,and sometimes the teacher forgot thatA stout apple sprout waa-tho Inattumentof punishment which he used and, sakesalive, how he used to lay It on Tho boysaat by themselves upon a long bench andfrequently perpetrated many acts of mls-oliievousneea. Upon one occasion some-thing was done which exasperated "theteacher exceedingly. He endoavored tolearDjWho was the guilty boy but each oneupon being questioned denied any knowl-edge of the affair. This made him madderthan ever and he proceeded with his applesprout to go through tho class,"sturLiuff atthe head and wlDding up at the foot.Bach one got all that was coming to him,I can tell you."

'•When I was a little boy most of thefarming waa done on tho highlands. Thevalleys and lowlands, for the mont part, aeI renieoibur': hearing the old-timers tell,woto flwawpy aud-ISIltid^with-RrowthB"ofsprouts and thorns. There grew In greatabundance a certain form of thorn bush,the branches of.which wero very^lhlck.Farmers wero unable to rouiuvu tho growthbecause the thorns were BO sharp and thebranches extended BO many feet from thetrunk that they could not get at tne rootsto grub them up. A half-breed Indiandamn Alnng and ho took a contract to clearofl" a certain tract of land. His methodwas slow buL-by_cutUng off a brunch' nt atime ho was ablo to got at tho roots to grubthem up. Ho did a lot of this work.

"Of counts,-yon;know:;that I am ,nowand always have been a Democrat. JThefirst voio I ever cast wn« for VauBuren. Ican rocall when I was a small boy thatthere lived" in"'pur neighborhood an old.woman known.""far"nud near ns 'AuntLydia' Quick. Sho wfls for Andrew. Jack-son first, last and all the time. WhonJackson was nominated for President shecut a hickory polo and planted It with herown hands. I wnsprosont when she did

whore up about Knowlton. Before com-inpr he bad promised to marry the younglady who ovontually became his wife, andwhen he tried to repudiate hla contractbecause he aftorwards mot a young womanwhom he liked better, ho was foroed intotho marriage. I saw Harden a fow daysafter ho was married and held out inyhand to him. 'Wish you ;nueli joy,' I aaldto him in way of congratulation. He tookmy baud and without manifesting anyspirit, replied: 'There Isn't much joy.' Ithought Btrango of hU coolness and theremark came back to we afterwards whena few mont&a later he was arrested on thecharge of murderlne hffl wife.__*'I saw him executed, too, hnt--ths-affi!rwas not'public "this time. The hangingtook place In the jail yard and only a lim-ited number woro allowed admission. Iwitnessed tbo scene by looking over intothe jail yard from the top of a tree.

"I first came to Washington In 1839. ABTn«i«Vbefore™l'TwaB""at~that time only aemail bamlet. On what Is now the Oookecorner of the public pqunre stood the tav-ern, run by John P. Ribblo. Tbo last housedown West Washington avenue WRB whereI lived;-: Thlfl Is the house now occupiedby A. M. Brink. On Belvidera, avenuothflre wnpnota house between the'tavernand'tho canal. Tbo flrat house built bo-tween tbesa two points was the old Stradorhouse which WHS recently moved to makoa place for tho residences of Samuel Stout

— "As I remember thorn, the prominent"men of tho town wero Iuila Drake, JudgeVliot. Gorshom Rusllng, Jacob and JohnP. Davis, ttie latter" being "associated atono tline" in the mercantile business withAdam W. Groveling, r ..'-— ,, '••- "When I came to Waflhington tho townwas not known by1 Ita prosent name. It1

wfla cnllod nltoarether by tho namesof"Thpi Brick." You never hoard howoitgot its prcsont,.nnme, eh? Well, I'll toll1

you. In front of the old tavorn swung acrudely hand-painted boRrd sign contain-;Inc n-_ picture of General, WasLlncton. Justwho wns rnsponsiblo for tho name I oan-tho, work, "'Aunt Lydia,' I said, 'don't

you think somebody will-pull that pole notTQoall but'this'picture was "responsibledrawn.for,you?'. :Uf they do,' slio roplfcd, Tor the change, . - -.••••••• —-- -1 I'll shoot their blamed heads oQ.».-.. -^.'iVri'In 1S391 canioberal and'conducted.an

nnderUklngeaUbllahmont In thnt yearI tnado moro thin two hnndrod cherrycoinns. Tboro was An epldemlo of ocarlctfever and In thn fow mcnthn thnt It rnn Tburled 147 persons In this neighborhood.Dr. Johnson and -- Dr. Colo wero tho twodoctors of this cxtlon and thoy were keptvery htwy.'-Mwit of tho burials were mad©loojthor tbo old Mansfield cornotory, theMoth^K cemotery In town, or tho cerao-tery at Pluaaant Oiove. NotwHlmUndlngthat so many persons died from malignantscarlet fevor, ovory funeral was largelyattended, tho people evidently not realiz-ing that too disease was coDtagiom.•• "Tho andertaklng business was conduct*ed mucn dlflorently then than It Is now.When a person died tbo body waa Invari-ably buried tbo noxt day because we badnot tbo means to keep the corpse longer.I remember i large man who died In Bel-vldero on the* morning of a hot day Id JU),Tand was burled tho samo afternoon, nobeing unablo to beep the body any longer.We aid not use ice la those days and therewns no such tblag known as tho embalm-ing procefa. - . - . . .

"The cofflnfl wero all mttdo from oberry.There woro no handles. I got olgbtoondollars for burying a grown person; thatIs, furnishing tho coQln,caso nnd takingchargo of Uto burial. Graves woro neverWalled up In tboao days.1 Rfmroes weronot used, or at leaBt I did not use any. Thobody watt taken to the cemetery In a bols-ter wagon.

"The first hearso ever used In Washing-ton waa Introduced at tho funeral of dor-shorn ItusliDg't) wife, and was one which Iborrowed for tbo occasion at the urgentdemand of Mr. Rusllng. He also insistedupon having the coffin covered with blackvelvet, and this coitln was the first thatover wont Into tho ground in this neigh*borbood that was anything elou Lhuii plaino h e r r y . - • • • " • ' • • - :': ••.."'• :".". .' ''.

"Conrad Davis, long heforo ho died,jlected a lot of velvot and purchased

sufllclent mahogany for himself and wife.Hlawlfo was tho first person In Washing-ton to bo buried In a mahogany coffin.

"I remember when both tho originalMethodist and Presbyterian churches nerewero built. Tho Prcsbytorlans formerlyworshipped In tho old stone church In thelower end of the ManEQeld cemetery.The present church camo as tho result ofsome dlssentions which arose betweentwo factions. One faction built the churchwhich preceded the ono that now Btandson East Church street and the other mem*born built the present filusconetcong Val-ley church. The Jute Peter Cramer ofImlaydale, although residing close to theMusconetcongchnreb, allied himself withthe Washington church and, I believe,attended service here during the remainderof bis life.

"Fifty years ago wo never hoard oftomporance. Nearly ovory porsou drank.There was no beer consumed but therewas a lot of apple whiskey, pure and freshfrom toe various stills which aboundedthroughout the neighborhood. Therewas one distillery In Washington, locatedon Broad street, above the old tannerybuilding. We never heard of a remon-strance agalnBt a hotel license The courtrequired each applicant tor a license tofile a petition containing tho namea oftwelvo citizens, hut it was not requiredthat they should bo freeholders, as la nowthe case. However, nono hut freeholderswere permitted to serve on juries-

"When the railroad came through, twoof my boys took teams and went to workat four dollars a day. Prom this time onWashington began to grovv. There wasconsiderable opposition to the railroadwhen the project waa introduced and theInterest then was quite similar to thatwhich prevail1 just now relative to theintroduction of tfte trolley." ~ ~"'•Mr.' Bowerb' wife died flvo years ago.For the last few years he huB been occupyIng his mind in tho management oftsmall grocery which he conducts in oneof tho roomH of his home.

A Bambergor Shoe Store.A few years ago ono mlghthavo thought

the big Bamberger store, at the corner ofMarket *ud Halsey streets, Niwark, wouldbe plenty large enough for all the. businessthat wight be done tor many year». Timeand again since then, however, it has beenenlarged, Its front extended and ita depthincreased. It has grown downward intothe groond/'its gbl!"/.being deepened; Itbaagruvr.t 'upward toward the sky, addi-tional stories being built, and It has grownbackward into the block. And yet all thisdoes not suffice. Now It is to extend itsdominions acroBs the street. The groundfloor of the State Banking Company build-Ing, on the northwest corner of Marketand Halsey streets Is being fitted out as amen's shoe store for the Bambergers.

The outside of the buiding is to be alter-ed Lo conform In goneral architecturalstyle to that of the Bamberger buildingacross tbo street, so that, externally, aswell as within, It shall appear like a sim-ple continuation of the big store.

Mrs. Rose BeQerman and her eon Willtook a trnln from Clinton one day lastweek, and the mother did not miss herpooketbook containing more than $200 un-til the train was fairly under way. Sbo

feA to thfl bny phn>_$ it and^the rs"Ladout tho door and made a flying leap, landIng in a sand- heap. Hurrying back to thestation he found the valuable purse lyingon a seat. He telegraphed tho good newsat the next station.

Children's

That's a good name forScott's Emulsion. Children£^Jjke_yP_urng _^^will grow in -ordinary soil.Others need fertilizers."^-

The nature .bf'somejchildrenprevents them from- thrivingon ordinary fbod Such chil-dren grow right if treated right.

All they need is ii little fer-tilizer—a little extra richness.Scott's: Emulsion is -the right•treatments ( ~~

Fcrtilizersmake things grow.That's ijust what Scott's Emul-sion does...Jt_makes.childrengrow^in flesh, grow in strength,

row rich blood, grow in mind,grow happy. That's what we

•make--it-fuiIr"-i7:::=^—v"^:~':.7^ '_,,.Sencl for free sample. L ^

The

PrudentialInsurance Co. of America

Home Office:Newark, N. J.

Jon.V P. DBTDEK, Prenlrlent.LESLIE D. WARD,Vice rmrttlent.EDtJAU n.VAItn, 2(1 Vi'le PreHl-

ilftit mill CounHi'1.FOKKKHT F. OHVOt'N,Secretary,II.CDKDItlCK, ABHt.Kupt., llooinft. Honk irl'd'K, llruiiil St. amiWnulilnfjton Arernii', n ashm;;-ton, N. J .

may be larger next year, butit will cost you more to in-sure. It is unwise, therefore,not to insure T O D A Y .You risk much and gainnothing-.by delay. : : j

BUTTERWIGK &CLEARANCE ?orSALE OF ^ r

Wagons, Carriagesand Horse Toggery.

Notwithstanding the fact thatwe have already disposed of morethan ioo wagons of various kinds,besides, harness, whips,.lap dust-ers, etc., we still have on handabout 40 vehicles and a good as-sortment of horse toggery. Theseason is well advanced and we

are anxious to effect a complete clearing within the next few weeks.With this end in view, we propose to offer the entire line of goodsstill on hand at

PRICES NEVER BEFORENAMED IN THESE PARTS.

We are willing to forego profit at this time,for we have so many vehicles that two bigbuildings are necessary to house them, en-tailing extra expense for. rent and thesacri-fice of much interest owing to the large in-vestment, r- \

No line excels ours in variety or character

NOW IS YOUR TIME OF ALL TIMES TO BUY.

Butterw/ic 1c & Smith,ASBURY, NEW JERSEY.

ALPHA PORTLAND CEMENTAcknowledged by all builders,and contractors

* to be the best ever put on the market, is sold '

8

D.GULICK,Belvidere Avenues-Near Morris Cana!^

A little cheaper than it can be purchased else-where in Warren and Hunterdon counties. —-~

LUMBER, SHINGLES, SLATE AND "LIME •ALWAYS"'ON HAND : : : : : :

•••*•••«•««««««A

I CHARLES HOWARDr^rTO; T

BANKERS AND BROKERSI" Opera House Building, Washington, N.J.

STOCKS, .BONDS AM) GRAIN '',';•-" for investment, or will be carried ori'a moderate margin. ' ; ;

(•; We strive to give the most cpurtep'us treatmenti1''•' _ ,= i ; and best possible'service. ,,i»

t Private Wires to ffjw York, Tdephone Connection. J J

&='.

The STARlind Tri^WceklyjTribune^pS:

Page 4: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

THE WASHINGTON STAR, WASHINGTON, N. J., THURSDAY, SEITEMUER 18, 1902.

The"'Washington Star- CM*3, L. STRVKCR. EDITOR AND PnopmcTon

1 County W, 0, T, t*. Convention.I The an nun I convention of tho War*,r«n county \V. C. T. V. in thp Wn«h-I ington M. E. etiurob on Thursday of

.,. _ — •• lust wwk proved to bo a very eujoy1

[able affair, and ono that was largolj

It would indeed bo qnlto intercatinp to know Jui-t how much Mr.' attended. More than a hundred dole-Fowler paid tbo New York Tribune for the two-column write-up and picture gates from out of town were presentpubll.hed this week In that paper, a qopy of which l.»s been scot to every vot, r • • £ * * Ig&ta J*» S ^ ! T [ o toIa tho district. The writo-up must have been gotten up by a retired circus n-ndlnR of repwta of tho variona oom-

-'advertising agont, for its equal for fulfiome praise h'na rawly been Been in tbe mlttecB nnd officers, all of which werepages of any newspaper. • - : : |ot an encouraging natnro. Mrs. H.F B J r . t , Demareat, tho St.ito Secr*t*ry, and

" •'•-• , ' • • - ' , . : , , • . M r s . Anna Bourne, the State Presl-R jbort S. Wynne, the noting Postmaster General, has sent a not'ee to several t enti both mad* oxcellent HddreB8O3.

postmasters declaring that pernicious activity in politics, State or National, on ! Mrs. A. M. Bruen, who Is nearlythe part of Government employeos will not bopcrmtttoi by tho Roosevelt Ad- '.otghty-flve-years old, and who 1B thominietrntion. 'Tho reorganized Civil Sm*!ce.CommIi»!un, inspired uv thePresi.! ^ J r ° f

0 " en * c d ' t h e ^ n S S exc°r-

dent, has Etarted out with on a s after Pedt ral appointees who are accustomed ctata with prayer nnd this was follow.

Huntordon county pcich (rrowera »re'well ple»f<pd with tho pricca obtalnod for! tbls year'* crop. Some of tho tlaont bavo1 brcas'jt over n riolfnr it baskot but thoj average prlco DM be«n about sixty-eightccolii. Tuo fruit Is now coming into tbouxcbuugei) lu Urgo quantities.

to take part in political conventions IIB ilelt"£n*«:6 or chairmen.

TARIFF b'Oll KKVKNL'K v*. KUKR TRAl>K.

The Republican campaign managers realizing tho precar ions ness of tht-tr

position aud their helplesanees on the question of tariff and Trusts, are t-y

to gain strength by misrepresenting rhe attitude of tho Democratic party on

the qneatlou of a tariff for revenue and tbe abolutlon of the tariff on Tniat-

mado articles that afford no revenue to the Government in any form. A story

is going the rounds of the Republican press to tho effect that the Democratic

campaign book declares in unequivocal terms for free trade.

The Democratic campaign book declares for nothing of tho kind. What it

does demand is the placing on the free list of all Trust-made urtlcles that are

mnnufnetnred In this co1 ntry and soldat from forty to two hundred p?r oent.

cheaper in foreign <v?ur.-ries ' n a n t hey can be obtained at home. Every one of

the trusts operating under the provisions of the Dingley tariff law, afford not

one penny of revenue to tbo Government, but by virtue of that law they ranlct

the American consumer to tho extent of hundreds of millions annually. Tho

Democracy stands on tbe tariff and Trust questions where it has always stood,

namely, "Equal rights to all and special privileges to none."

In stentorian tones every. Republican orator of 1P00 shouted that "The Republican: party could be depended on to deal with the Trusts." In the light or more recent

events we are inclined to think they wero confused In their phraseology. They shouldhave Bftld "Deal to tho Trusts,"—Wbito County (IIU Democrat.

TUB hOCAL SITUATION.

The probability Is that tbe local political atmosphere will be cleared up

after the opening day of Court—next Tuesday—when the aspirants for the

various oillcea will doubtless put in their nppearance at the shire town.

At the present time there appears to be but one candidate in the field for

the Democratic nomination for Senator—former Senator Isaac Barber of

Phillipsburg—although Senator Cornish has been repeatedly urged to stand for

re-election, which he may yet consent to do. There ia no doubt tli.it our dis-

tinguished townsman cculd have the nomination, if he desired it, and there is

an equal probability thtt tho people of.the county would ratify Che nomination

at the polls. Senator Cornish's record for two terms is highly creditable tjotii

to himBelf and to the couuty, while bis experience and signal ability aa a legis.

lator makes bim peculiarly fitted for tbo post. However, if he declined to

Permit bis name to go before tbe voters again, Dr. Barber will doubtles3 be

the recipient of the honor. Although quiot and unostentatious in manner,

Dr. Barber possesses a keen intellect, an honest purpose and a force of charac-

ter that his plaiu exterior doss not suggest. Anioag tbe peopleof Phillipsburg

he isbeld in high esteem for hig honesty, integrity, professional and biisinee5

qualifications and kindness of heart. Tho3e who know him, beat are his warm-

. eat admirera.

For the Assembly nomination there are apparently but four In' the field-

Merchant Marshall Pittaoger of Kuowlton, Colonel John A. Wildrick of Blairs-

town, Morris S. Faust, clerfc of tbe Board of Freeholders, of Belvidere, and

Chauncey M/Ditzteuek oi .Pahaqnarry, All of these have lota of frioude, and

there can be but little doubt that; the people would give any one of them

hearty support aC the polla If ho were regularly nominated.

The greatest interest, however, seems to center in the Shrievalty contsat.

While a dozen or more names have been mentioned in connection with the

nomination, tbe Hat lately seoma to have; grown smaller. Those, who agsert

that they are in the contest till tbe finish arpl. Milton McCraoken oriinowlton,

Peter Cole of Belvidere, Wm. Jadson Birkor of Itidepsndence, and Thomas

-':-K6arccy..of.L9PfitcoDC.....While the.revenue of this ollics is not large, there ia

always a great strife for it. * It'canhardly be "doubted but thafrtbe mutest "will

be friendly and that the winner will receive tbe support of his present op-

ponents at the pollB in November. .

Prohibitionists Nominate.Tho Warren County Prohibition con-

vention was hold iu the Town Hal),Washington, on Tuesday at 3 p. m.The attendance was tho largest fn yoara.

Dr. F. P. Lcfferts of Belvidere waschosen chairman of tbe convention.State Chairman George H. Havenmade some remarks on the subject ofthe active canvass now being made bytbe ProhibitionistB In other parts of theState.

The following nominations were thenmade : State Senator. Wm. G. Duffordof Washington; Sheriff, George Boyerof Bolvidere; Member of Assembly,Ebeuezsr S. Apgar oi* Hackettstown ;Coroners, L^wU Brink nf Washingtontownship, and D.ivld B. Lnv of Kuowl-ton township,

A fund wan mined to prosecute thecampaign. Dr. P. F. Leflerts wan re-elected Chairman of the County Com-mittee. One of the firet gunn of theProhibition riiiupitign will he. flrcri r.t nmeeting to be held iu Temperance tln.llin Belvidere .on Wednesday evening,Sept. 24th. AddreeseB will be deliveredby the Congressional cindidntp, JOPIG. Van Cise, and R >v. C. H. Mead orNew York, bnth able Bpeakers.

The One Washington Lost.Thomas Brr-o. of E-ift Strondaburg

have leased the plant ot tlie Phillips-burg Gl;iPt> Co. acd will Iocato there.They took tho plent with the privilegeof buying It later on. Machinery formanufacturing bottles and demijohnswill bB put in at once. This ia thesame concern referred to last week asthe one which desired to locate inWashington and which was compelledto go elsewhere because the peoplewho would have been most benefit c&ddeclined to put up the money, neces-sary to construct a building.

Attorney-General Knoi wiii seriously suppress the trusta when cucumbers £row onJune apple trees and Littlefield amends the Con-ititutiou.—ilemphls News.

CAMPAIGNING AT GOVKKXMENT KXl'KSSE.

Every post-office in this district is today simply glutted with a vast quan-

:-j:..'..;tityqf literature sent out by Congressman Charles X. Fowler under big frank-

ing privilege. It is very doubtful whether any candidate for a re-election to

the National-Hou3e of Representatives ever before ao abuaed the r ight of free

mail service as the man from Elizabeth ia abusing it right now. Lying on the

floor in the. Washington post-office is a great Btack of thia political etnff ad-

dressed to the.voters in tbiB vicinity. Every t r ip the camera make from t he

office they are burdened with all they can carry, but now lots of it are coming

in almost daily. In Phillipeburg and perhaps in other towns of the district it

baa been necessary to pnt on an extra carrior to deliver Mr. Fowler's campaign

: doenmenta, and thus Uncle Sam is pres3edfiato service as Heeler for the great

financial poobbah. And the people pay the freight.

Many years ago CongreBa voted to its members the right to Bend free

„•; -.;;- throogh. the _man3_. letters ...and documents ...relating, tq^publicubusineas, bnt.it

\[ never co"nteHplatea¥uch'''ah1outra'ge6ua"miau8e""of th¥^riVilege^rttiis7~~Th'"e"

''•'. law names a three hundred dollar fine as the penalty for tbe misuBe of the gov-

L.. •; • ernment frank. But ^addition to showing his contempt for this Btatute, Mr.

r " " : : .: Fowler is actually compelling the government'to pay men two, and three dol-

p r ' : •"'; leraper day over and above the usual expense toi'deliver his long-winded

TfT-T:1—"•-•- •;-••-•'••--- speeches, that actuallywere never delivered. Mr. Fowler la .entitled to a. prize

:^' : forhia nerve unparalleled. '

;; 'J^*; Down in Elizabeth the currency Congressman has established a literary

']•.•-, .... ."" bureau the like of which was never seen before in this State. The roomB are

j ' ' crowded with great bales of literature printed at government expense and

[•'•• marked "Part of the Congressional Record." What a multitude of sine those

I; ,. words cover, ,but never since they were first coupled together have they cov*

j ^ ored such a multitude aB they do in this case. A small army of olerka is kept

i ' r •" '.'•' ' busy every working day addressing these pamphlets to the voter3of the district,

I: • and no Booner has the list been-gone over once thaii the addressers bogin at the

L ^ - ^ . ^ . . ^ --,-.tpu-..and..BO_tbr^nghM.iti..again, TJa^s_ each voter is .receiving not one copy

:J;.C ::';i • " " ' "~buVtw"o7 three and'half a dbVen of Lbb^bdbkleta," So1faVa¥kribw:rif Sir7'F1o:wler'

!. •. ' has not been able to work the government for this clerk hire, but there is little

Lv -„.„.-:•' doubt that he would if be could, -i1

v In his desperation Mr. Fowler has apparently thrown aharae and diBcretion

' " to the winds, and goes on bleeding a lenient government to tho utmost in an

ijn the halls of Congress. This isj the man who is bom

2c you think

If!.:

barding^you withjitcraturcand is urging-you to vote forbe'degervtiB your vote dr^hat of your neighbor?

" l ",._„.• ' Glhor^EditormT?Iaiier on Page S. "

Olcn.^ ^• - At a meeting ol tl\Q commission appolntrr—od.to select a sltff'-foT tho Tuberculoais™Ho^pltfil, held In"Nowurk- ou-Friday, the

location i'lienrGlotL. Gardner was unani-v uibuBly ohoBon. A picture of the property

": was publiBhed in the STAR of a few weeks•ago. It la half a m i l e ^ m Glen Garduuron the Musconetcong£niogG of hillB with

' {tan"elovati6rioE754foei. It ..has RBplondidBouthornexp08uroantl the view from thatpoint Is Biiporb. Thero: 18 plenty of good

"•"sprin's water at many ditfaront points on^ho4Q0>crcs under,option and It alEoin-

: eludes some of'the7 finest-timber liiud inl-:-- tho State. "Tho prlco placed on the prop*.

lerly by tho owners is not given out hut ItIs undcratood'^o be artery fUlr figure.;: ^

A. Wonderful Kscape.A peculiar accident happened near Car-

pentoravlilo on Friday afternoon In whicha.wngon was cut In twain aa cleanly, asthough the work^had been dbno'with aflaw. Honry Qrubo, who fe^cinployed byEdward Eieffer, a farmer of that vicinity,had been aent.-for a wagon load of .coaland was just "crossing tho P.'Ki H. trackswlth'Jt wjion a' iiorth-bound train csrostuunderlng'along. The wagon bad notcleared tlie track and. the engine struck itfair and square. The rear wbeola w.ont toone side of the Jtrack and the front onen toth other..^-Tho driver wae thrown 'in thoiiir butwaa not badTylujared.' Tbehorsss

aptid uuhurt,' but the <;wngoq~ WHH a,k • " '

p y nd this was folloeil by tho annual flection. , Mrs. 1). L.Snangonberg of Washington was ngafure-eletitrd President of i.hn county or.gatifzitlou. Tiio other ofllceM electedwere Mrs. J. P. Aniprmaii, Delaware,corresponding 'secretary: Mr*. 0. V,McOiiramou, Belvlden*. rouordiun sec-retary; Mrs. Grfurgo Riuehart, Wash-ington, treasurer. At four o'clockMrs. Atnerman gnve the children avery interesting chalk talk. The eve-ning B'-aston wad largely attended andwm adflreased bv Mrs. D^marest andMM Bourne. "Excellent music wasfurnishwl during the day by a maloqUartetts composed of the followinggentlemuu : Mttssra. George.W. Dilts,G, PreBton Smith, D. 13. Liubnch andPercy Ward.

Friday and Saturday Nlgbts Next, ;.The opeDif3g attraction at the Opera

Housa will be Ml>s Mame Fleming andher own fupcrb company in two fiigh.-clussmctropoUta:] prndoeilonB.™, Tnu localmnnagement la very fortunate In securingthis company, foe a Q:il-lieJ and artisticp^rformnnce fs {juurantefd. Mlw Flem-ing will be remembered by inosjt of ourtheatre goera for the bi r hit she inndeabout a year ago with the Wil'a Broi. Co.,and now at the head of her o»»n company,wiiich bits been selected with grtat care,she will undoubtedly be greeted by a largerhouse. Special Bceuerv and electricaleQecta will be used. The engHgement isfor two days—Friday and Saturday, Sept.lD:h and 20tb. The opening attractionwill be "Life, or Paoll, theCfrcua Girl," amelodrama in four- nets, repltto withfltrong comedy, sensational climaxes, andhigh clsgg specialties. On Saturday nigbta grandMorble bill, tho beautiful one-actcurtain rals'er, "In Honor Bound," and tbecomedy success In. three acts, "All In theFamily." Misw Fleming will feature herIllustrated SOD EH, bealdes appearing ia herBong and dance aptcialtiea.

Escaped Ja i l Birds Quickly Captured.Wm. ChnppUe of Trenton and Toomaa

VanZile of Newark escaped from theFlGmiDEton juil on Friday and for threequarters of an hour eDjoyed tho fullestliberty, Court was In session at the time

the jailyard for exerciaiug purposes. Thesetwu pkced buiicLea on top of- oae anotherand thus scaled the fence, mabin? a jumpof about fifteen feet on the other side.Their escape WRS soon diHcovored nnddeputies were at once sent in all directions.Sheriff Freeh came upon tho prisonersin a peaca orchard jaat outside,of townnod commanded them to stop before hoopened flre. He reached for his revolverbut found that he bad;forgotten it. Thebluff, however, proved successful and theprisonorn threw up their hands.

X Thief Quickly Caught.In a letter to her mother,-Mrs,-J. P.

Edgerton, received yesterday. Mrs. C. E.Bimanton, of St. Johnsbiiry, Vt., but for-merly of Washington, encloses a clippingfrom a local paper there which tells quitean interesting etory.

... Mr. Simanton,.It seems, had gone to sup-por, leaving bis wile in cnafge of the'storurA. stranger came in and pure based a watchkey at the same time assing to be allowedto oxnmino some rings. He purebased tbekey and banded Mrs. Bimanton a dollarbill. While she turned to get tbe changeho gathered Up a handful of rings andwalked out. Mra. Simanton Immediatelynotified the police andwithin afsw min-atua the fellow wan undfipj arrest'.and tliorings wore recovered. •, The thief wnHsentto jail and is probably good for a term intho State PriBOn. . t - . -

:-",The bids for thoi!5T»°on work on the newMusconetcong bridRO in > Hackettstown,wereftB follows: a.TS7\ Qlbbs, stone ?3.60,'iioncreto f-1 50; '-Wilson . & Search, titonoJ3.9fl,~ concrete 5-1-10; J. H. Boatty, stone$-1.00, concrote £4.CO. GibbBigot-the con-tract. The'bids-for--rcmovfncrUha oldtho brldco were as follows: ;T,-,E;:-,WH!tiii-Bon,?300; John Actley, f219; Q.W. GIbbs,S12-1. Tho bids for the iron work were aafollows: Berlin Construction Cnmnany, 00'foot span, 20 foot roadway, $2,275,18-footroadway, $2,100; tDover Boiler WorkH, 90-foot Bpan, 20 foot roadway, 52,310, 18-footroadwny, $2,170; Canton Bridge; Companyhad BoveraLbids-OO-foot span, 18-foot, roftd-wftv, |2,05O; ¥2,110, 20-foot rpndway, $2,245,$2,265, $2,305, $3,600. TlibliCanton Com-pany was the successful bidder.

7 - - - - ; ^ c . ^ . . - ' r — - ; - - . , ' ^ . _ _ — • • : . „. . . . j .

"Beefsteak, auoh as is sold :horo for-22-centa' per pound, brings jug?.)twico..that.nmount In Qerman cities at preeent. "^

Notlco of Sale of Ivnuds for VnpiildTttXCB.

Public nut Ice U fieivu.v nlvt-a by tfn1 cudHi-rlbt-t, J . Van ltoxM, Cmlci'iur of A m a r u ofT H i i n uf the HuroilKli uf U'liHtiiiiKlon. In theComity uf " nrri'ii, t lmt ><y vlrtm- of u tiisvvftrraiit luciu'il i>n tlie luiirth tln.v of AuuUMt,A. D. iiliiftccii tmnilrttl nml tWD.iNHUril byttifO'iiiiiiDiil'iHinrll <if tli*- HitM flonnii;)! nfWawliln^tnii, t lmt lit- iv111 nell a t puttlle ven-ilin* nil lainlH, (fiioiiu'iitti, lifri'illtittiK'iitH nmlr>*nl 1'ntato lit'ivltmttfr nn'iitionei], lor tliur-luirititt term fur wtilcti ntiy JHTHOII or IUT-hiitiH will nj-Tif to tnkc ttu> K.-UH0 nml i>ny tlu>

nliifitfii lnim1r<-<i IA. b . Il>(Ki) with tho in->rc»t tlii'ivoiim'i'riilim.nnil nil coHtx.chnrKfMLtid fSt>fiii>t-K In ri-lntluii tn tlu> lovy, UHM-XM.[ii-nt (ui<I ctiWtitm of falil tJixi'H.Tin- wilv will take tilm-o tit tlu> Common

•uiiiu-U mom- in the Town Hall hi tlu> *n\<\

SATl-KDAY, (HrroltKIE 11, 19n2,nf2 o'clock In tlnMifti'tniion.

'1'hf until mmlH, tetieini'iit*. liort'tlltmm'ntfinml rent futiuc KD In l>t< HOM nml tin1 tmnii'nOf tl>(> (KTHOIIM «H!llllHt Wlllllll tllO KlUll tllXCi>

live Won liUil on nci'utmt i»f tlie mime, tuullie nmount Inlil oil account ot wicli imrcel,

Mri«. Aim Atfii—Anioinit of tux. ?11>,5^.tuitrit' ami lot. No- 5(1 Cnrlioti nvcnin1; IIOIIMCml lot. Hontyiml; »tu> vnciint lot, No. r.0

Oirltoit nvL'init1. •Smuuei Aililltt—Amount of tnx, ?14.62.

luiim* and lot. No. 'J74 Kft»t WitHhliiKtonwitui.; liuti«o juiil iot; Caiiitl Hui-t't. „John C. IIOWPM — Ainoiiiit of tnx, ?no.

Hnnu* rentilenci', No. 1OS Wmt Wiir*liInK'to»nvenue; lot. No. MM Wi-rt Wiu*hltiKtoti ftve-iUt>; l o t N o . t i U Went WiwliliiKtoiiftVeiuie.

Mr;*. A mm Hell —Amount of tux. ?»..tO.

Clirl»tlii»('roiHtf.v—Amoiuit of tax, f 18.18,

W'lillntn A. Kiirlcj-—AniDimt oi tux.f H.CiO.Hoiico nml lot, .No. G3 School ntnt ' t .

Mn.. Tuiibou KlniU'j- —AiiHMint Of tnx,?7.y:t. Vacant lot, lii'lvlilon- avoii'H'.

John ECcnrnVticlrH—Ainoiiiitnltax.?I!t S2.Two lioiiKi'iJ nml loto, Wvnt .tolniHtoti H|rt*(>t.

Prank It. Looker—Aiuount. of tux. $l-t.(li>.mm' ami lot, NOH. M-.-.:[•:..'. \\>-t churchroot: hoiino mid lot, No. lOti \Vt^t Wimli-

lngloa nvt'iun>..loltn II. .\H'Murtrli— Amount of 1nx.97.HO.uui-i- nml IHL 011 VoiiinnuH uvi'tim.'.MM. M. K. [tailli—Amniint ol tax. S'-'.'.Ol.

lou^imii lol, No. l.V.t llelvt.W.'iiv.-tii].'.Mrs. Attum Smith—Amount nf tax. jjii.mi.

hiurtf ami lot. So. t!7 Wwt Wnrn'ii htri't-t...!. VAN IIUJ*S

Colk-ct.»r of Arrourn ot TIIMH.Itini'il: Si'PtL'mlii'r t(f. UH>S.

of Sale of tjiincia for UnpuMTllXM.

• • . i n i l l l f . 1 . 0 1 1 . U l l l l III" W i l l Cl"ll HT. l l l l l l l l l - V l - l l -iltietill the lan>lH. tctiftiicntc. h.Ti'iIHiim.ntsnml reul fctiiti? hcn-liiaftiT ini'iitloiu-il. for tliu-hor twt wnii fi»r wt, -It ivny iirrxuii nr per-HoiiH will nirrpc to t u k f i \*' MIIIIU' ntitl i"iy t'n-cat CM a^^HKi-il nu-iilx'-t Mie *>um- li-.r Mi.' yearilneteeti liiitulriMl ami inn- (A. 1). l ' J " l i , withtio luu-ri'f L tliori'im ace nil m-' ami all I'liarKv-iinH'imMiH-n In n-liitloii to tin* levy, »^ t r«-niMit ami culUiittun of MIM t a i ^ .

The nalil n:ilt> will tivVe[>mfi'at.tli>'C(iminon^tiuiK'lt room^la iho r o w s Ilti!!.!:-. tin- »a!dIiorou>:h "t WiiMlilnjitoii on

SATUItDAY, OCTOHKU 11. l'Jt)-',it 2 oY'lotk In the afternoon. > • .Tlie fnU\ Imulrt, lent'iiieniH, lierclltiiincntrt

.ml renl t^tiu« HO to lie colil. and the mime*if tlii> titTrtoiiri iiKtiliiHt wliom the xald ln.\t>K

nave l)Lt-n lahl on aecoimt of t!ie enme. andihe nmount kilil on acoount of each parcel,

re n* follow.-:Mrs. Ann A ton—Amount of tax. ?1S.7.">.

HoiKe nnd lot. No. r.ii (Jarlton nveiiue: onevai-mitlot nn Curl ton aveime; liuuxeniitl lotIn HnnsYnnl.

" John 0. 5iiwer»--'Ai»"»int <if tnx. ?0$.">0.Home rwiilenei;. No. 1«S WV t •Wiwlitneint"iiTcnni': two Imu^us and lut^, No. ICG Wedt

Kxtate ol .loKi-ph U wflS.UO. tlnuw nml lotJlnm-h an'l Scluiol HtrwtH.

Mrs. Kllen Hradle.v—Amount of tnx. §+.."0.Vacant low on Taylor rttrwi.

Ctirlrttlatiii CrotHley—Amonnt of tnx, ?22..".0. Houi-e andlot.Xo. 142 IMvMereavenue.

Wnlu-r Cox—Amonnt of tnx, ?17.rj(j.IOHHO and lot, No. U+ (irand avi-nue,Wm A. Fiirlev—Amount of lax, ?ll."iO.

loiirif and lot. So. <J5 School Btreet.Saraii A. Ceorwe—Atnonnt of tax, ?+.5O.aciint lot on Taylor Htreot.Amanda Gardner—Amonnt "I tns, J22.no.

loiide nnd lot, No."-"5 Itallroiid nvcuue.Kiliv Ilctidiirnliot—Amount of tax, §:i:i.7fl.

IIUIIMU nnd lot, No. 10S lirond itree.1.Mm. Tniitnoil ;Klnney —Amount of tax,

$7.50. VncnHt lot.^ortli Uelvldore avenue.John KfariiH' IlelV-Amotint of tns, 9-12.

House and lot on^yeat Johnston strt-et.John S. Lan-'O—Am.itmt of tax, ? 17.50.

Inline anil lot,"lS'J Urund street.I'riiiirr..'-i"iooker—Anioniitof tax, $00.00.

Trlnle. house, NOB. !il. 5JL1 OS Wont Chiircl>•eet; houwe and lot, 10G Went Warthliiffton

ry—Amount.. Mi

-lOUHUlllld lOLt*1^'-"*1' i"1*11*!..**3** •'-•.*•*--MM jiiiiiL-H W. .\nnmin— Amount i)l tax

•T.r.ol House find lot on MurliU- jtvuiiuf.Alice l'lcklo-Ainonnt ol tnx, 53.00. Vu-

iLiit loton Ilrodil Mtruut. • : : .„.;„Ann IlloliL'v—Amountof tnx,$li.ii.".. Uolicu

mil lot, No." lSIl IJncoln nviiiiue.'MWM. K. Knuli—Amount ol tnx,?i l .00.

IOUHC luul lot, Xo. ir.!) Belvidere avenue.Geort;eSuott—Ainnuntoluix.?S.uO. IIouHO

and lot on Canal Htreet.Kllzalieth Smith—Amount ol tax, ?:!.00.

'.onue nail lot. No. G7 Cherry street. , :Mpn.A.lli.11—Amountoltns, fO.00. nou»«

ad lot on Broad Htreet.1 J . VAX DOSS,

Collector ol Arrears ol TnxeH.Dated: Swtemlier 10, 11102.

yAmount.ot ;tivi,^1.p, _.!. MeMiirtrl,'—Amn«nt:brta*:;~Jf)U7

I l t . No. 40 YounuuiH nveiiuc.

Do Youe China?

._.!(so, here's your chance.

-- Bought a job lot of samples in Cake

' ONLY 19 PIECES. :

- Regular prices were. Si^o to.f6,oo.

° Our prices; while they last, ,,

*

S.W. CHRISTINE1 " lV JEWEUER:OPT[C|AN

36 E. Washington Avenue.'

^ — O n l y .10 pleceslieft..;.,

Incorporated March 3rd, 1674. |

....THE....

MORRIS COUNTY

SAVINGS BANKMorris town, New Jersey,

pM*!DC»t-HENRY W. MILl.Cn.Vict-Pflt»iDiNT-AUfieLTUS 0. HULL,

SlCRCTAHr AN3 T*i*nj«t«-H T, HULL.

ASSETS, - - • - - $2,506,566 25

LIABILITIES, - - - 2,271,387 80

SURPLUS, - - - 235,173 45

•ftXTP.RHST U ilcclarcd and r-ni<l In Janu-ary n» l* Jul>' of ench year from the

profits nf Ihc Jircvioii* >ix moutlu' bu»l-nets. .

©BI'OSITS mailc on or before the ?rd^ tlav of Jamtary, Afiril. Julv nutl uc-tober (irnw inlctr^t from tlie t im day olsaid months reflectively.

Correspondence Solicited.

| The Young..Student..

ft nowadays is expected to ab- A

A sorb volumes of knowledge in A

' a.very short time, and it is A

often the case that proud par- \

ents often allow their chil-'.j

dren's eyes'to be overtaxed. A

If there's the slightest neces- AI

sity of wearing glasses, the

owner of the eyes should

know it. £

"We do not charge you any- J)

1 thing to apply our new meth- 6

2 od of eye examination which 3

i is the most scientific and ac- £

S curate known. .)

A. DAVIDSON, aEYESIGHT SCECIAUST. j>

4 .)3 East Wasblnxton Avuiue, »

• WASHINGTON. N. J. *

This Business

this week and it is bigger and more useful to the public thanever. It has never experiencedany commercial ills, but hasgone on year after year wax-ing stronger and stronger un-der the warm rays of heartypublic approval until today itis unquestionably the fore-most store of its kind in War- :reh county. The territory con-sidered, it •: has enjoyed a re-markablegrowth.: It must havemerited the public favor or itwould not have been so sin-gularly favored.

It shall be our aim to con-duct this business in the fdture as to w in popular favor to astill greater degree, by continuing to sell the best products ofthe garden, field, factory and loom at prices that defy thesharpest competition. ,

We quotea few of our many specials in Groceries this week:

BEST ELGIN CREAMERY BUTTER 24c lb

Baker's Cocoa. 10c

Hu'ylcr's Cocoa.. 10c

Best Vlnecnr, per pillon. 20c

Hetnz's White Wine Vinegiir.per Kat..25c

Force, per package 12c

New Pancake Flour, per package ,10c

Can New Syrup.;,',.,„ ;...,;........10c

Ammonia, full quart buttle ...10c

5 Gallons. Best Water White "Kerosene Oil . . . V 40c

Arbuckle's Cviicc, per ib 10c

l.ion Coi'tee, per lb ICc

New Seeded Unisins, pet package 10c

Good Family Flour, per cwt $l .80

Fancy New Rice, per lb, 5c

Our Best Conibtarch, per Ib .5c

BEST FINE GRANULATED SUGAR".. . . . 5c Ib

Fancy Alaska Salmon, per can 10c

Ginger Snaps and Lemon Cakes, lb 5c

Rulstuti's Health Flour i i and 2; lb bag*.

Bust quality Pearl Tapioca, per Ib ..5c

GolJ Medal Flour, 2; Ib bag ..G5c

Fancy Baking Molasses, per gallon....40c

.-:r= Best Quality Butterine, in 1 lb. Prints - 20c lbIn iho Ulstrict Court of tlm t ' ilu-i:;

t»'s for'tin'i>uirict. orNt-w j We pay 2^1; per dozen for Eg#> and 22c per pound for Butter

Jersey In Unnkrutitcy. : j •' , . . ' '- - ,, ' ,.

district 11I Nt-wJerwy: ' ;

ol"\u«»wt In tli.'"vt'iir I'.to-j. tin* sulil .liill;i'>B. Tliutciter wns -ifil.v inl]ii<i^.--i u ininKrii|it,ml thut u nu'Ctlni; o[ tils crnlltor^ will tn>fid u t mv ollleo in HelvliJrre, iu fit!-! omi t j - ,

,,n tin' ta t l i tlJiyol Sci'U-nit.LT next » t tiln.-o'clock In tin* fort'tio'tn, a t wlik-li time nml>IiLi*e tl".' Kiilil Cri'illtorw way lUh'Mil, provi',lR'lrfIii!iiin,iiI'l»oliit 11 triinteu, »'XiiiiiIii;' tin-itinliniiit, iijiil trmiHiU't Mich otli-r biit*liif.-r*if miiy propurlycomeln-'foretlit'onlilnn-'ctins.

','*/..,*: IVII-MAM H. MOHUOU*.•'"^<-"'; Ituferot1 In llnnkrut»u\v.

DiiU'iJ »c Belvl.K're, Auaiist 2S, l'Ji'-1.

All iiroofrt ol claims mii-t li» nccrirni'tiiil.'.]liy tlfl.v cents {t«t"HiL'f»tiini(if) ro(.'n-f'" (<•••

|lfwlil lutvo proof *nf cliilmn ]irei»ir.-«l. raul?• rtTillcntloii. ThlH will tmvt' uiinoyiuiwil doliiy In iniLkliiK proofs nf cljilm^.

WILLIAM II. MOKISOW,Ueferi'c. •

1

Trve Prize "Ad."CHRISTINE'S JEWELRY STORE

NUFF SED11V \V. C.'l-'AKTEII, WAHillNOTON, N. J. ({

Among others that were very good wert' • ' sent In by the following people:

SIlns Ethel Halin WoBliliiKton; . ; r P,,\v. lliifl!i.......^.......M.Cfltfn Guniiiur i^

A. C. VoKMller,.-. ....OxfonlWllllatn \V./A1Je" WdHhliiKtori

and several,/others^ who^failed to sign• ' • • " t h e i r ' n a m e s . • • ' • • • ; • • - • ; ; •

Winner can have prize by. calling.for.it.

Thanks to everybody who tried to helpme In this Christmas "ad." •

S. W, CHRISTINE,OPTICIAN and JEWELER K. .

26 East Washington Avenue.

NO SHORT CUT.Our savings department

will help you "to saveVeasiiy1

and,,.systematj,cally, but it

can'tniiikeyou rich over night

or give you impossible returns.

Those who seek short cuts in

•saving usually get into a

quagmire. ;-~, ,

5 W e pay three_per cent, in-

Jerest, com p_oumied annually.

TM^ EASTQN

. 5TEASTON, PA.:'

3ig Bargains in Shoes.l.urgest line of Men's, Women's and Children's Shoes

in town to select from.

See our Ladies'S^.00 Sliocs. Nothing like them in this borough. 10 styles

James Means Shoes, best Shoes for men, four styles, $2.50

Good Working Shoes for-men, light and heavy, $1.00, $1.25

Our Dry GooJs and Notion Departments are complete. See our new

stock of Winter Underwear for.V.tn, Women and Children.

Call and soe us; we want your trade.

•* J. B. HAMPTON,4, 6and 8 W. Washington Avenue,5 Belvidere.Avenue.

l-.N SATliUDAY NIGHTS. CLOSU OTIII3II DAYS U I'. M.

New Muslin JVear;•• •- i n a--New-..Rricbi-Saie..^...

New Prices? Yes; special ones. Annual September event

serves to introduce the new styles and,,does it in a highly inter-

esting manner by offering values that are remarkably .more liberal

than the prices. You can come here with only bargain-getting

thoughts. We've seen to it that the materials are what they

should be and that rthe^eT:f'ecPow6rl{n^ishirr'Trna'n'ates-frora'"

factories of faultlessrsanitation. ^ . . - - .;.: .-. •• - , .

NoBfinch L. S. Platlt §£ CO., " MailOrden.S t 0 " s - . 7 0 ^ 7 2 . BroadSL, Newark,N. J. • ^Deliveries.

an invoice of over 300 Winter =Blan-

keis,jnclu(ling< 15"stylesfor the stable'; l a

anil 25 f6r~dutdodr~use: Also a line?

oefohi equalleG'

The prices do their own talking^-,

RTHE WASHINGiFQN HARNESS STORE^ :. > ' • ' 40' E/IST WASHWGTONrAVEtlUE. > _ , .

Page 5: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

THE WASHINGTON STAR, WASHINGTON, N. J., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1902.

WOMAN'S BEAUTY.How it is Made or Marred.

There Is nothing more subtle thnnwoman's bcflaty. It eludes all attemptsto analyze i t A woman may have themeaauretneiiU ami lines of the McdldanVenus and yet lack beauty. Orahc maydefy artistic standards and be knowneverywhere as a beautiful woman. ThereIs, however, one kind of beauty which iarecognized by all and which is everywomin'e dower, a be&uty to which theFrench have given the name of "TheBeauty of Youth/ Many a time weturn to watch some cweet, young girl,impressed by her beauty. But if weanalyze the beautv we find It is made upof smooth akin, clear complexion, brightey«s, ruddy Hps and rounded contours.That beauty ought to hut always But

say they can hardly believe thai lam thesame person; after being sick so longI have changed to be robust and rosy(hitieJ. I have Lttlceii diirxa liuttlcfl of1 Prescription,' fifteen of tbe ' Discovery •and fifteen of the ' I'clteu.' I know tliatIf it liail not been for_your medicines Iwould not have been living to-day."

Dr. I'lerce's Knvorito Prescription Is awoman's medicine. It is not offered asn cure-nil but it is confidently recom-mended as a sure anil safe remedy forall those diseases of women which arccurnblo by the use of medicine.' Itestablishes regularity, dries the drainswhich destroy tlm strength and beautyof,women, heals inflammation mid uf-ccmtion and cures female weakness. Itis tlie tent' preparative for. motherhood,giving great strength and elasticity f.the organs of maternity, ond making thebaby's advent practicoHy painless.

« C K T W N O V O D N O A O A I N . » .•••

It is one of the triumphs of "FavoritePrescription* that Its results are sopalpablyand visibly real. Tlie cure ofwomauy diseases by this medicine Mproved by the gain in flesh and weight,by the restoration of youthful freshness,by the renewed strength and ambition,and by all the outward and visible sieiu

health • thanks to. _. , _ _ _avorite Prescription end

'Golden Medical Discovery," writes Mrs.\ J. Schnetyer, of Pontfnc, Livingston*- "" "Have taken six bottles ofeach

I was taken eick last Februaryand the doctors here coiled it • Grip.* ilay for four weeks in bed, and when I gotnp I found I had 'displacement' 1 Hadsuch aches and pains in my back andlimbs, could not stand any length of

w that our home doctorwould insist the first thingon an examination, andthat J would not submitto, unless I was danger-ously sick, and then itwould be too late. If any-one had told me yourmedicine* would do me somuch good I would havesnid, r 0h no, not thatmuch good.'. I enn saytruly f was surprised atthe benefit I received. Anold friend of mine said - tome, • <\Vhy, y-rf

t t * i t h

said oia tbe

how soon we eee It fade. The youngwife looks at her yellow skin, sunkencheeks and hollow eyd and marvels ather own falling off. And the youngergirls still retaining the beauty of youthwonder H what her huBbnnd could htiveBeen attractive iu her," not knowing thatIt will be their turn to fade very soon.

, < y , yrfot ia tbe• innttei*'with you, you are

r;tting so young again'?told ber I had taken six

bottle* of Dr. Piercu's medicine, andthnt if she would do likewise she wouldfeel ten years younger, too." ,t

There ja one clause in Mrs, Schnetyer'sletter, which voices the sentiments ofthousands of sensitive women. « / knewthat our home doctor would insist thefirst thing on an examination, and thatI would not submit to, unless I was (fan-HOW TO KEBP BEAUTY.

In order to preBerve this beauty of gerously sick, and. Uyouth, to retain the chnrm of sweetuesa '?** *° "° any good."and frenhnesa which belongs to maiden-hood, the prerequisite is to understandthat the chief foe of .woman's beauty iswomanly Ill-health. Young women areoften very carclc&A of themselves. Thetemptation of the duice, or of the slelgh-ride overrules their prudence, and theresult is suppression and perhaps irregu-larity. This Is only the beginning ofworse evils, and yet: this alone is suf-ficient to steal the freshness from the

. face, \..-The wouiuuly liuiltli should beprotected with the utnjoVt care and the

erousty sick, and then it would be too

Many a woman in just such a case,realizing the danger she runs yet neg-lects medical treatment because sheshrinks from the indelicate question-ings, the offensive examinations andobnoxious local treatments which thehome physician often thinks nocesaary.

A WAY OUTof this difficulty'!!* opened for women byDr. Pierce's invitation to consult him byletter, free. All correspondence is held

„ _ _e use o.f, Dr. Piercuj'sFavorite Prescription. •t-?'

" I will always recommend Dr. Pierce'sFavorite Prescription, 'Golden MedicalDiscovery' and ' Pleasant Pellets,' forthey cured me when doctors and other

as'strictly confidential, and tlie writtenconfidences of women tire guarded by

by Dr. Pierce in personal consultationswith women nt the Invalids' Hotel andSurgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. AddressDr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.

TUB FAMILY FRIEND.medicines failed," writes Mrs. Mary E. /. A. L. Amend, of Newfield, El PasoLewis, of Tanner, Gilmer Co., W. Vn;s Co., Colo., says: "We have studied the" I'or fifteen years I suffered untold Medical Adviser thoroughly, and wheni

I -..i.™ misery. When T commenced, taking Dr.I "'•" Pierce'si medicines, I had given up all

hope of ever getting well. I could notlie down to Bleep, nnd everything I ate

anything is the matter with any of ourlarge family the first thing we do is to;see what the book says."

- - . , , — - o Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medicalwould almost cramp me to death. Was Adviser, containing IOOS large pages and

B T E W A B T 8 V 1 L L B .Tho services In tbe Lutheran church,

Rov. J. O. Yodor pastor, on Sunday morn-imr, *vero in thankfulness for the harvestyields, and the altar and cfaancot Troro do-corated with ovldoncw of thrifty hus-bandry as woro amply ovlnced by tbeabundant display or tho product of tbefield, tho orchard and tho garden, Sundaylost being tho first anniversary of tho deathof President McKlnley, too evening at thischurch was devoted to appropriate mem-orial servlcos In commemoration of thomemory of a groat, Rood, loyal man, oarPresident, whoso sudden aad dastardlytaking ofl caused tbe entire civilized worldto stand shocked* amazed, and then toburn with rlghtooua Indignation. Theaorvlces, conducted by the pastor (Rev.William Thomson of the Presbyterianohurch being unable to participate) tbotwo congregations uniting la showingthoirBfld respect, wore of a simple naturobut beflttlng tho memory of tho man wlioalbeit tbo cbooon President of a proud andmighty poople, was at all times simply aplain American citlzon. Tho music underdirection of Mrs. Annlo Hanco-Kremorwas everything that could be doslrod.

Harris A. Godfrey Is certainly a success-ful peach grower, as tho quality of bisfruit offered for silo thorouj proves*Incidentally, Mr. Godfrey takes ploaeur*ablo pride In showing tho beautiful bronzemedal bo received from tho recent BuffaloExposition for his splendid exhibit ofchoice gradoa of peaches.

J. Nelson Tiger has, we understand, be*como landlord of tbo Rockaborg Hotel. HoIs a son-ln-Jaw of "Farmer Man" Cregar,and lived In this village during tbo tbrooyoars tbo lattor kept tho hotel and workediard to maintain his right to tbo title ofFarmer Man, But'no matter, Nel Tigerhas our good wishes in bis venture, andFarmer Man always.

Misa Agnes Hanco has returned to IrvingCollego, Moohnnlcsburg, PA.

n of faint heart*eriff, and an the

d l

they will try andempty barrels this

Potor Colo shows no P.,ednesainhiflcanvaaforo _ .__day of caucus is noaring and people aregiving expression to tholr convictions, Itlooks aa If Peter had been working to agoodadvantago.. .:.... ,. - , =,.-.,-•

It Is plainly evident that tho author orjponaorof tbo mischievous article In lostweek's Warren Tidings casting reflecttoason our towDuhip committee fur the poal-tion taken with regard to tho Eaaton andWashington Traction Co.'a proposals toGreenwich township, Is familiar and thor-oughly conversant with tho particularsportalnlng to the attempted boycott, notonly of members of the commltteo, butother tradespeople who defended thecourso .pursued In calling a halt to an ei-cluaivo monopoly.

There Id no question that tho automobileas allowed to proceed otor our publicthoroughfiireit la, as It ever has boon, anIntolerable nuisanco and a dangerous men-ace. Tbeao roads are built and maintainedat tho direct expenso of tho taxpayers whoshould bo, cortalnly, ontltled to someIghta for tbolr equivalent.Our old friend, Dr. Isoao Barber, Is surely

n tho field for the nomination (moaningtho oloctlonjof Democratic State Senator.Outside und Insldo tho natural pride hisold township might feel towards ono whogrow up among her people, his sorvlcowhile State Senator, not so long ago as tobo forgotten, will not, we believe, bo putaside. Good deeds live long, and an honestIntent, backed up by the sturdy manhoodto do, Is a characteristic of tho Doctor, andthat Greenwich township will do her beetto prove how much sho appreoiatea her Ihoys will be shown when the votes for Dr.Ike Barber are counted.

Somohow it luoka as If some of the voho-;wont advocated of the proposed trolley,'ind consequent ardent denouncers of thoownehlp commltteo, have already begun

to apprcclato tho wisdom of tho commltteoin the stand taken for tho protection of;ho interests of tbe townBhip.

" Let us no longer cheat our consciencesby talking of fllthy lucre. Money may al-ways bo a beautiful thing. It IB we whomake it grimy."—J. M. Barrio.

B K L V I D K K E .A telephono lino connecting Mannnka-

chunkophono IIvlth Bolvl'Idero Is talked of, and wi!

probably bo built boforo tbe snow., fallTiila will bou great convenience, cmpuulttly whon ono comes out from Mow Yorklatoatnlgbt and gets to tho mountain aabout midnight. . ...

Acouploof woll known HaekottatowLgentlomon, Moasra. Fondeo and Wlro, whoIt is alleged aro guilty of vtoJatlajr tbo &aandgamojawa, were cited to be in Belvi-doro and appear at Justice Mackoy'fl ofllcoearly In the day of Saturday last. As theydid not oomo Pish Warden Hill waa put togroat Inconvenience and could do nothingbut adjourn tbe caso. This wo learn hodid, laying the matter over for ono wook.Of course, too gentlomen will bo on bandat that tfmo prepared to defend themnelvegor accept of tbe Jnovi table Ono of thoparties, so newspaper roport says, trans-rroescd tho game law by allowing hln dogto run at largo In tho woods, theroby vio-lating that section of tho gamr .aw whichforbids dogs from chasing game, etc.( andtho other gentleman Iscbargod witn illogal fishing,

BIcMurtr]e& Co. havo put up sovora:housand apple barrels tnlo aeasoii andhavo orders now for a largo number which

id fill. Tho demand for—r.rf asoMonhaa been unpre-cedented. Of conrso this is occasioned bytho big apple crop, which Is already beingrathorod and ahlppod to tbo great contres.Thousands of barrels of apples aro pouringnto tbo great cities every day. Many ofhooo are put Into cold storogo and will bo

kopt thero for hfgber prices. A. groatnwnv farmum hHVO sold tholr ontlrocropto tbebuycro who uro going "about thocountry. Tho highest prico paid for ap-ples 1H * 1.25 a barrel and tho lowest 75c.

It was a groat pleasure to nee our oldMend, Alonzo Wright, of Wilmington,Del., a few days ago. Mr. Wright Hvod InBolvldere yoars ago, and when ho saidho hsd not vinltod the old town in35 yearn It hardly Boomed possible, fie laa son of John Wright, tho old blacksmith,who was for many yoars tho vlllngeborseahoer and could always bo rolledupon for a good job.

Wm. McUIll and family havo taken upheir residence In Banger, Pa., where tho

bead of tho family has steady oinploy-mont. His place lu tlie Furniture Workshore Is flllod by Qeo. Rohland, a Qrtit-classmechanic from Bangor, whoso family boamoved here, . • . / . .

Wm. Cooke haa moved his family fromHazon to Belvidoro. Mr. 0. Is employedby tho Warron Wood Working Co.

Cheater O'NIol, eon of Wm. O'NIol, Esq.,expects to enter the Normal School atStroubsburg tho present week.

Tbo appointment of tbo Hon. Fontor M,Voorhees receiver of tbo d oft net Rapnb-llc Building & Loan Association of New-ark Boems to give aattf>factlon to tbo Wnr-ron county stockholders, who aro ijiiltonumorous. A strong flgbt was put up byMr. Gadd, president of the Association,tokooptho mstllDtion out of the hands ofa receiver, but tho Chancellor decidedagainst him and now tno affair will boloeed out and if any loss is occasioned

M A K K S B O K O .Mrs. Milton H, Spverel of Orango Is vis-

iting at tbo homes of her slBtor, Mrs. JohnO, May berry, and brothor, Gcorgj E. Arm-strong. . . , , ; :

Hugh Farsman of Chicago, wboei f»thdrwas a formor pastor of tho Yollo 7)f Framocburob, wua In town lost week o...'gavobis old frlondK, tho family of MarshallSmltb.adollEbtfulcall.

Wo aro sorry to noto tbe affliction thaLhas como to Hra Francis Burum. SbebRsbeen Buffering lntenso pain caused by bom-orrbagoof tbo eyes. Wo hope aho mayfnlly rocover her eyesight. -

Blair Armstrong of Nowton spent a fowdays last tveok with Mr. and Mrs. G. E.G a r r l a . • • .• . •• • - • •. • • ••• ..,•

T. Van Horn Hart or Enoxvlllo, Iowa.vlsltod bis aunt, Mrs. Rosa Van Horn, onWednesday or last weok. Mr. Ilart caraooast to on tor the Columbia Law School,

Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Paddock anddaughter, Floronco, wero with friends InMcAfco last week.

Owing to serious Illness In tbo family oftbo groom, tho festivities at tbo woddlngpfMlsaNinaO. WUdrick and Wilfred 3.Hibler on Wodnoaday, tho I3th, woro of aquiet naturo. Only tho immediate rela-tives oftho two families and a fow inti-mate frlonds woro in attendance. .

Mr. and Mrs. Elbort Albortaon anddaaghtor, Gortrado, of Columbia, and Mrs.Albortaon's mother, Mrs. Emma Ward ofHalnc&burg, wero in attendance at thomorning survlce on Sunday, and afterward,hoy wore the guosta of Mrs. Ward's aunt,rtr«, Alfred .w. cooko.Mr.r.ud airs. Alfred Vf. Uooko and Mrs.

Aaron 0. Brugjer entertained at ton onSaturday a number of frlonda. Tho suestaworo Mr. and Mrs. Edward Price, Mr. andMrs. Win. A. Kerr, Mr. and Mrs. RufnsJennings, Mrs. Rotta Cooko and Mr. andMrs. Samuel Korr. -

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Robblns of John-Honbnrg wero cucato of Mr. and Mrs. Kher-son Trauger over Snnday. "

Mr. and Mrs, Wm. V. Walters of Hard-wick have beon ontortolnlng during thopn*t woofc Mrs. Tabitha Clarke of Tuuk-ahannock, Pa., a daughter of Mr. Walter'soldest sister. Mrs. Oiarko has not visitedher relatives In this vicinity for over fortyyears. Sho onjoys visiting places whichwero familiar to her In her childhood, andher friends enjoy listening to ber as sherotates storioBcoancoted with her earlieryoars, and. also thoeo pertaining to herpresont homo.

Miss Lydla Luce of Hope Is Spendingjuio timo at tbo homo of her brother,

Aaron Luco, below town.MIsa May Van Camp accompanied Mrs.

Harry Donham, who, with her two ohll-ren bavo boarded tbls summer at Mr.Jrtiith's, to her homo in Mt. Vornon, N. Y.>Iay will attend school and aeslst in caring

for tho littlo folks.

pvery nervous and could hardly walk^across the room, /only weighed ninetypounds when I commenced taking thesemedicines; 1 now weigh one hundred

, containing ioo8 large pages andover 700 illustrations, is sent free onreceipt of gtamps to pay espense of mail-Ing only. Send xi one-cent stamps forth c l o t h b d l lmedicines; J now weigh one hundred the cloth-bounrt volume, or only ar

and forty pounds atid( am having better stamps for the book In paper-covers.health than ever before. My friends all Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N Y

SHOES AND OXFORD TIES.GREAT SEPTEMBER CLEARING SALE to make room for Fall Goods.

There is only one way to beat our low prices and that is to GO BAREFOOTED. ',Men's Shoes

• In patent colt skin, box calf, veiourL ' calf; wax "calf and vici kid; all styles;and'al| wldths;"-~="—•;•-•" •"--- •--:-:-.---1- --

$1.98, $2.50, $3.00. $3.50, $4.00.

Boys' Shoes?:in patent colt skin, box calf,'"yelour:

r" rcalf, wax calf and viclkidfall styles 'and all widths. —'--.

' "*5'r$Y.25;-"$UB0; $1.98, $2.B0, $3.00. '•'

• Youths* and Little Gents' ShoesIn patent leather, box calf or vicikid; all styles and all widths.

*• 75c, 98c, $l\25, $1,50, $1.75.//

: ^Hr .y Men's Working Shoes.Twentv-five styles to select from.

98c, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75, $2.00.

Ladies' Fine Shoes.Button or lace; in any leather '

^-:"!."• : :""". :;,.;;dc5ire.v:;..;.;\-r.i,r,:::J25r$i;B01$i;7

$2.50, $3.00.

, "Misses' Fine Shoes. . '... ..Button'or.lace; In any leather you •;""•".:"" " • • . " "" -."" d e s i r e . . : •

98c, $1.25, $1.B0, $1.75. •

. Ladies' Easy Slippers.for housejvear. ' \ ^_ ;

*" 35c, 50c, 75cT85c, $K0d.'1<^v.

-." Oxford Tics \

A Parson's Noble Act.'I want all tbo world to know," writes

Kov. O. J. Budlonif of Asbaway, R.- I.,"what a thorouffhly Rood and reliablemedicine. I found in Electric Bitters.They.:cured mo of-jaundioo" and""liverroubles that had caused me treat Buffer-

ing for many years. For a genuine, all-round cure they excel anything I eversaw." Electiic Bitters aro tbo surprise ofall' for their wonderful work In Liver.Kidney and Stomach troubles. Don't fallto try them. Only 60 cts. Satisfaction isguaranteed by F. N. Jenkins, WarrenCounty Drug Store.

HAKMLONY.Miss Pboebo Stout and Janson Howell

of this placo were quietly married lastWednesday morning at the home of thebride's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Jacob Stout,in Lower Harmony, by Rev. W. H. Carson.

Miss Magglu Bennett entertained com-pany from Phillfpsburg on Sunday.

William Miller of Brooklyn vlsltod rela-tives In this place last week. /

Mr. and Mrs. Matt Amoy spent SundayinBelvIdere.

Mr. and Mrs. John Howeiy entertainedMrs. Lfnaberry and her son and daughterfrom Hope over Sunday. ••..• Misa,: Sarahs Baker; of-Enstmi-nnd ;Mr.Wlllover were Sunday guests of the MissesYoung, • ,.'Dr. Edward Dewltt of OamdeU'visited

his brother, Thomas Dewltt, laat week.Frank Gardner and family of Sandts

Eddy, Fa., spent Sunday at George Lom-lason's. . ,. ..Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lipplncott of Phil-

llpaburg woro Sunday guests of Miss AnnaMiller. •:A Certain Cure for Dysentery and

Diarrhoea."Some yonrs ago l waa one of a party

that Intended making a long bioyole trip,1'says F. h. Taylor of New Albany, Brad-ford county, Pa. "I waa taken Buddeuly

'with diarrhoea, and, was about to 'for men, boys,.youths, ladies, misses)-- Vtho trio, when editor Ward, of the Laand children: patent colt skin, pa' _t | vlllo JUiww«j;er, sugRnntert- that I.tal

Children's Fine Shoes. i : ^ jButton or lace. •;

26c, 35c, 50c, 75c, 85c, $1.00, $1.25

- Infants' Soft Sole Shocs^! Button or : lace; white, plnk^",tan|

...,u .chocolate, red, blue.; '25cV 50c.

Remember you can save from 10c, 25c, 50c^ 75c_tP/$I.OO on every purchase.

^ :"/'ii:"u'" REMEMBER THE PLACE" ; ;

WASHINGTON SHOE STORE^^ HERMAN PETTY, Proprietor.

ent leather, vici kid and box <50c. 65c, J5c 1 85cu$|.0g f $1.25, ^

Canvas Shoesfor men and boys for hot weather.

75c, 98cW$1.25, $1.50, $1'.75.

..--.... _.:.:-v. -u.:Tcnnis Shoes—'••'••'?•z-- •for men, boys..and,youths.

DIBHOIVCB n?iil Bwirtly(red nndwtiilo) from tho Kidneys antUtlaililer, J l i i L V C h S Ithnarc!loviii«[ho])iiInorKidneyColloniid'flvoId- * * * ! , ™ " T T 1 * B

inKttiBiiHQorthoeur^eOTi'rt knife. Calcurn Solvent proven la tlio formnllon of uricuciil in tho lllocxl ftiufcorrocla those COIHIIUOHB of tlio Stntiincli which i>roilnco Gout

inatlBrnVCaloiiraS^,,.. - „ „ , . _ . _ „ _ .iliotiH colic and cnnatlpaUour'JJr. J)AVWmtcomo of my long oxiiL>rionco na n I'hy.

__^_. _ „.,, ___ _..nt^titrJiiflvvniciitorinyilfo." Crnitlr--|:vri>Dr:David Kcltnadr'. ~ Only ono Mr^KonnoilyoPor lived In Itonaout, Klnsuton, N ^

eta tins, (JIVCB hcnilh to tliollvfir, nnu tnrvulmKennedy Bnlil of it, "Calciira Holvont ts tlio oi

J||£[^un.iyHf«.»

Awk tlio d

bf l y-

dosfl of Chamberialn'B""Colic, OUolora andDiarrhoea Komedy. Ipurobasoda bottlennVi- toe*- t-¥?oj,dos©a, one- before Htartlnffand one on tbe route. I made tho tripsuccessfully, and never felt any 111 effect.Again last summer I won almost complete-ly run down with nn attack of dysantery.run down with nn at

bought a bottle of thisy t y

remedy, andthis limo one,doso oured me," For sate byall druggists.'

L O P A T C O N G . .,.••BUss Lizzie Abor returned last week

from a fortnight's visit .with friends onLore Island. „'... •'-", . .-....-. !

Chafl. Dome has resigned his position atT. K. Bounott's and Clarence Hamlin ofUniontown has taken hlBplaoe,, -

N«xtweok John Stoat, the Firthtownpork butohor, will open bis business fortho coming wlntor season.

Poter Colo of Bolvldere, candidate forahoriff, Bpent Saturday calling on thevoters in this doct!on>"mr. Cole Is popu-lar in thia vicinity.

Tho Ingorsoll 067 last wook began thework of excavating'for their mammoth

"now plant on the gronnda latoty;purohasQdby them in tbia township. An effort IBbeing made to have all tho foundationsflalshod boforo freezing wontber begins.Some 400 men are at work.;, -

Mr; JanBon Sowell, and , Miss PhoebeStout;both of Harmony,~ware married attho bride's home on, Wednesday morninghist by tbo Rev* Mr. Carson, of, theHar-

M E ohurohAftortbe wedding

agiclosed out and If any loi_the stockholders will havo to pockot It.

Our football team haa organized for thoseason, as follows: Captain, Andrew K.WIdenor; manager, Cornelius Stewart;secretary, Harry B. Cortrlght. A littlolater on, when the boys get In trim, theywill Invite tbe neighboring teams to afriendly contest. :

The Blblo Society of the connty met ntHooo, Tuesday, and traneitctod the usualroutlue buflliieiw. Of Jatcytmru It is ealdbat these meetings are not largely at-

tended. Just why, thers doe3 not scow tobo any satisfactory explanation. Thocauso Is just as commendable today as«ver, tbd old Cook is held in hff;boreeteem today than evor before, and therollgloafl sentiment of tho people in on ahigher plane. With all those favorableconditions these annail gatherings oughtto grow In Interest and increase In attend-ance. If they do not, then tbo manage-ment must be at fault.

We are looking for a big turnout at theannuaF Sunday school convention to bobold In the First Presbyterian chorebtoday (Thursday) and shall expect an in-teresting time. Tho speoches, the music,and the special features, all give promiseof making tho occasion one of more thanordinary interest. ' :

John ZInk, ouo of onr bright young man,has accepted of a position in tbe cementworks at Stockertown, Fa. ,

A. Laubacbi who recently opened afruit market on Mill stroot, has concludedto close out tbe business and spend theearly fall month at Atlantic City, with hissister, who has a boarding house there.

Miss Mary Barry, a daughter of JohnBarry, and one, of tbe public schoolgraduates last Juno, is taking a course atthe Eastern Business College. ;\v

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Wilson have-gono to Salt Lake City, Utah, on businessand pleasure combined. They will boabsent several weeks.

Miss Annie Anderson, a domestic in theemploy of the family of E. E. Oarhnrt,cut her hand quite seriously on ajar, afew days ago, and was obliged to roturnhome for a few days. ... - -

The town authorities are very careless luthe matter of repairing the sidewalk onMill street, near Keener'e mill. The pavo-

fi-eqnently and injureVhernselvea. SeveralohildroD.bave fallen and sustained Injury,and opa child had to be taken to aphy-Biclau for troatment. If the trouble is notremedied very soon someone will receiveserious injury and tbe town will havo bigdamagGB to pay. It Is criminal, it soemsto us, for the authorities to leavo a trap oftbls kind open to cause Injury to peoplepassing along tbe Btreeta. I t should; horepaired at puco.

George Lutz, the engineer kilted ntHarrison, N. J., Sunday, by tho explosionofa locomotive, wasCa brother of Mrs. J.S. Southwiok of Bolvidoro.

A Boy's Wild Kldo Kor Mfo.With family around eypictlng him to

die, and a son riding forllfo, 18 miles, togot Dr. King's Now Discovery for Con-sumption, Coughs and Colds, W. H. Brownof Loosvllle, Ind., endured death's agoniesfrom asthma, but this wonderful medicinegavo Instant relief and soon cured him.He writes: "I now sleep soundly everynight." Like marvelous oures of Con-sumption, Pneumonia, Bronohitia,Oongha,Colds and Grip, prove Its matchless meritfor all Throat and Lung troubles. Guar-inteed bottles 50c and $1.00, Trial bottlesfree at F. N. Jenkins' Warron CountyDrugstore.

| SKIRTS •KHS

-AT-

j I Special Lot at

.Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Christian ond littlo

daughter of Mt. Herman passed Sundaywith hor parents, Mr. and Mrs. JosephWolfe.

A Mr. Shipman of Bridgevillepaeaedanday with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Keyser.Mrs. F, E. Bond has beon spending theweek with her daughter, Mrs.

Dunfleld.Stewart Tillman is suffering severely'lth rheumatism.Mr. and Mrs. Blalf Busling of Columbia

and Mrs. Annie I>inaberry of Polkvlllepassed part of Sunday at tho home of Mal-'In J. Dunfleld.

The public eobool building haa been re-mired by Logan and his carpenters fromBlairatown and tho Hill brothers of Wal-lut Valley havo been giving it a coat of

paint. This Is a great improvement as ItWHS so much In need of both. Tho schoolwill open with Miss Susie Hlcfcson ofBrldgeville as teaoher.

Prank A. Diiaiield of below town hadbo misfortune to lose a Sao young horse

last week. The animal was turned out tojaature and she got her foot fast in theinlter and choked to death. Ho purchasedbe colt of his father last spring.J. DuDflcld attended the Bethlehem Fair

ast Thursday and saw Prince Alert andinaoonda pace. The former won in 2.05•nd 3.Q5J. -.-:

Mr! W. J. Presnell, Mlchfield, N. 0.,Bays: "My daughter had rheumatism andcould not sleep. After using Ramon'stferve and Bone Oil she was entirelyiurod." This has been tho experience of

my, and Ramon's Nerve and Bone Oilillcvlates pain from burns, is a Bploudidmtiseptio for cuts, and relieves pain inir.niMfl. ;;:-Fc,N.;Jenkins,iWarrca Couaty

KKAh KSTATK TRAN8FKB8.List of fdfll estate transfers lodged for

record at tho. County Clerk's office.since3ept. 0,1902: . ,

EiiKabotlrA. Swayzoand husband to K.laraball Van Horn ot al. of Hqpo, datedfuno 25, lf)0O, conveys land In Hopojcon-Ideration fl50.Heirs of Jos. Howell to. Ellen Howell of

'hUMpsburg, dated March 22, 1902, con-'8js property in Pbillipsburg; coaaidera-Ion $1,500. '".:

Geo. B-rColo^Bhoriff, to The Stewartlartshorn Co., dated Sept. 9,1902, conveys

property,in Hackettstown; considerationu Onacoonntof recent rains up the river ^""* '•'-thut stream hns raised considerably and Isaac 3. Laubach to Edward M. Freer ofthe fishing Is bettor in conscquonco. Pennsylvania, dated March' '31,1902, con>

Smith'fiHoyt's mill closed on Friday voys lot iu Wbitaker; consideration $150.and Saturday to g.TO- thelr-aandSra 'short .Susan Anianuau-eit efc al.- to the-Inger-vaoation. r ^611-Sorgeant Drill Co.,"datedSopt. 12,1902,

Farmers aro very busilyIng their potatoes which .... Dand of a good quality throughout thlflocality,,\ Ltirge quantities of apples are beingshipped from the station here at tbe pres-ent tlmo by buyer3 from now:York andPhiladelphia. One dollar per barrol Isabout tho average price paid.

John H. Hoyt, Qoorgo Beam and EdwinJunauergtjrTiWent" fishing on Friday atBushkill, Pa,,i and roturnod:bn Saturdaywith a nut) string. .

The carriers on tho Dslaware at Manun-raohunit broke . - ^ J —lummer's stay.

ers on tho Dslaware at Manunke camp on lKlipt.&y after a

jummers stay. Tfiore st'li"' remains aoamp on, Thomas' Island whioh will re-main some time longor.

A ninn who has tried U-sa'ys: "Iwnsobligod to quit work on account of blHous-nosa. After uslnjr ono bor^.of Bamon'aLIvor^PlllH and Toulo-Pelltiltri- waa ru-atorod to perfect health." Thoy,.are forevoryonu. Even tho most delicate personmay use them with henofiolal result, F.N. Jenkins, Warren County Drug Storo.

Maurico O. Fitzgerald of Nowton, whoa fow yonrs ago was a plumber's AssistantIn that town, in now doing stunts in Lon-

a 0 bvolopeit Into a juggler of

611Sorgeant Drill Co.,dated Sopt. 12,1902,conveys land In Lopatcong; conslderatlcn5S0C35O

Jos. Stool and wife to Ingersoll- SergeantDrill Co., dated Sept. 12,1902, conveys landIn Lopatcongj consideration $300.

Margaret Cablll aud-huuband- to SunnnB." Wallace of Phillipsburg, dated Sept. 9,1902, conveys land In Lopatcong; consider-ation $175. '\ :.J\

Henry O. Rlohto Margaret Steal of Lo-ntong dated O t SlQO^' l dHenry O. Rlohto Marga

pntoong, dated Oct. SrlQO^in Lopatcong; conalderatfon"$

l of Looya lend

" Wm.L'O. Van Doren and wife' to FrankSkalta of Washington, dated Aug. 5,1902,convoys land In Washington; consideration

A N T H O N Y . "..' '•-.Alvln Vannatta and bride are spending

part of tholr honeymoon on tho mountainwith flomo of their many friondB hero. -

Lawrence Frltta lost ono of his mostvuluublu cows last week causod by foundor-ing in tbo cornfield. "

Mrs. Cressruan of Q'lakartown, Pa.,visited her daughter, tbo school teacher,at Lemuel Castner's, over Sunday.

Stewart Frltta lost a valuable hog bybeing drowned in tho Musoonetcoiig onoday last week. r : ;—•--—; .:v. Arthur Seymour of Bayonno la spendingh]i^c^ionjwjt^Law/ene9Sfr!tta

'M-t-V .K 3 : •"'"• , . ^ \ ' '

Tlie Star and JheTKrics-a-WeeSpy

Jonnle Maybe'ry at Port Mnrray;^^-v.^_-

Three weeks earlier than usual they are here and "m

in large variety. Z

The Walking Skirts are particularly pretty this -

season. The side pleats and slot seams are new. ;

The flounces are differently cut, and, the materials; 1"

are of the right weight to be worn without lining. ^

Special lot a t 84.98. • .?. . .

\\ These are better values than - we ever offere'd : -

bi;fore in up-to-date Skirts. Better Skirts at S6.50, »

..$.7.50 and gio.oo. Be sure and look them over, A l - - : -

wnys pleased to show/goods whether'you buy'or not. • ' "

E WN LAUBAGH & SON 1

? STATENORMAL SCHOOL,

East Stroudsburg, Pa.

^LOCATION.his noular Stnto Institution IB located la

....midst of the Delaware Water Gap-Mt.Pocono Summer Resort UPRIOH, thu mosthealthful and iilctureaaue In the state, iiudone that IB vlaited by taounands o( touriewannunlly.

COVRSES OF STUDY.In addition to the department* ol tliereffu-

lar Normal Course, vre have «neclal Depart-ment a of Music, Elocution, Art, Drawing andWater Color, a full College Preparatory De-partment. You can Have un entire jeurlnyourcollege preparatory work by coming here.'

FREE TUITION.

y to t - -- . . -noulil be taken advantage of

a t once, an thin law may be repealed by tlieloxt l,ef{lBlature.

COST OF BOARDING.Boarding expenses it re ?!l,50 per week,•• 'ilneludeH fully furnished i * ' '

heat, electricoom. heat, elitldltfoiiiil ex]

t and laundry. Thewltli UH thnn nt

most any other schools. ,

Among thoHu are a new Oymiiiialum, ft linoElectric Lltfhti'lftiit, and u new IlccltatinnHall now uetiif- erected, which will containfifteen large anil fully equipped reeltiitlonrooms. In addition, al! lied roomH ivlll be re-plaatered and titled u|>- and varloiiB otherchiiiiguti made In thudormlturlvH for the fur-tlicr comfort and convenience ol the pupllB ofthe school. • \-.-.- -

NEW CATALOGUECatalOKiie for 1002, HITCH lull' Information

an to free tuition, expenBen, cournt-'H of Htudynnd other facts of Intercut, and will bu nialli'dwithout charge to tho He dexlriiig It. PullTerm opens Seiitoinlier, 8, 1002.

H.Z.KEMP, AiM.t Prin.

COL. DANIEL F. BCATTY linl lrond'f t i ro n'nrtPhoto WM t«isinj»iTrfiniloii.(<xpeiiBes pn . 1(1 b v

will "Stattj'ii lliiiotrAled ToirdealerH well for 5J22R.fifth* Worldj" MnyQrWa«ninB.CoilluHi Our OXpOilHUS5f &= J f i^f i I .VW l >na "»tor you^elf.££tn£.ffflJEffl%^«i%Vritu at oneeOforr . X s S X - i m r ' 1 1 ^ It. K; Time Table.

AddroBB or Call Upon :COLONEL DANIEL F/BEAUTY,

" WASHINGTON, NEW JERSEY.

Only Shop in Town with Two Provisional Barben,

' KINNEY'SBARBER SHOP

or do any repairing, be particular about• • i• - • • the'quality of ths ^..,

LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALyou use. ,V?otii to last must be done withgood.material.. We sell.the good kind,the cost ofiwhich l5"dowii" io~chS"-lowest;•-•We defy competition. ,Be, sure^and^getour prices before maklngi-your purchases.Estlmatesfurnlshed on any quantity.,*

150 Thousand Shingles Just Arrived,,.

Alleger's Lumber Yard,WASHINGTON, N. J; SV v

The PEOPLE'SNATIONAL FAMILY

PubllBliod .Mondor.•WedneudayandFrtdoyi .IB lu reality a flneJreHQ,every-other-day Dally,Rtvlnff tlio latest newson days of ISaue,.andcovering news of thoothcrthrco.^Jt contain s:-all Important foreign'nnliln niiii.u TTVI.IA .'1 nr\-

NEWYORSCTRI-WEEKLY

TRIBUNE• • J ' - - . . . ' ' . , - h ' VUVIU UOnQ { n i i i i iM. Ik f—

'--" ' • ' " peara In1 tho Pally' Tn-bnno of name date, nlHO Domestic anil For-eign Correwnondi'tice, Short Storied, ElegantHftlf-tonn llhi«tmt!oiifi,H«moroiiii Items,-In-duHtrlr.ltInformation, Faslilon Noten, Agri-cultural Mutters and Comprehensive and Ile-UauuyFinancial and HaretTleporiH."—-, Regular aubHcrlption price, fjl.50 peryeor."

We Furnish' It with THE STAR for 12.25

Send aii,6rdcni tbfTHE|TAR.

ARCHITECTS; PLANSand specifications farnlehod upon short;notice nvd moderate terms l>y; ir'CiT''JAMES P . DE REffiCBR &? SONS^

, OFFICEi-Ho. 6 BK0AD STE^T., : U-JAMES E, DERBUKR m' cnABnE. ^

Page 6: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

•6THE WASHINGTON STAR, WASHINGTON, N. J-, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1902.

EASTON, PA.

Zibeline SuitingsCAMEL'S HAIR

Blade, Blue, Brown and Gray,

75c to $2.00 per yard.

Knickerbocker and Queen's Mourning Suitingsfor Dress Suits, Walking Suits and Separate Skirts,

3J1.OO to $2.5O per yard.

Novelty Flannel Waistings,ALL THE POPULAR SHADES,

• 29c, 50c and 75c.

Golf Jackets or Vests,Plain colors and combinations. \ Our own importation,

$2.5O, $3.00, $3.50.

THE CARPET DEPARTMENTIS READY WITH ITS NEW

Garpetings, Oilcloths, Rugs and Linoleums.

A S B U i t X .Randolph's Hotel was erowdod with

TvltneB«M,jurymon and spoctatoraon Frl*da; whon the caao of Wm. Frltts of Wash-ington against Georgo Kanlmau, chief on-KluuuruTUie EdUon coincnt works, wanmoved for trial bofbro Justlco Pox.

Countable Bmpmua bad drawn a rcpro-Bontatlvojury eorapo«ed of T. J. Bin It h,Iaaao Wolvorton, it. K. Rlchoy, FrankCawloy, Abrah«m DoHart, John l'roctor,E. G. Mo'Bon, Frank 8tmw, Petor MHIHS,Thomas Ptnkertoo, P. H. Slglor. and F. B.Bnttorwlck. Frltts routed a houflo andtract of land at BroBdwRy to Kaufman, andtho proporty having boon sold to PoterFrltts ho nought to obtain possession un*dur the landlord aud tenant act. Ex-Sonator WyckoQ apponrt-d as counBOl TorFrltts and ox-Prosecutor Strykor of Wahb-inton for Kaufman. Tho question at UsuowahwUeLUocKnufm.inroatcd tho proportyuntil it was sold or to tho 11 rat of Aprilnozt.

Frltts, David 0. Rlrtdlo, Mra. Wm. Lora-erson nnd Mrs. Emma Hainlln, woro nwornas witnesses for Frltts, and Knufman,Jacob C. Iiowora And O^car Ilcndcmhot fortho tenant. Counsel took n half hour eachto present the case to tho jury, and ttiolrarguments wero Interesting and at timesamusing.* The whole field of landlord andtenant law was covered. At thocloso ofthe arguments tha jury retired to dollbor-ate, and in less tbnn a half hour roturnodwith a vordiot In favor of Kaufman, thotenant, holding that he was ontltled to tboproperty until the first day of April next,

MISH Lizzie Groveling of Eastern was thoguost at tho American House during a panof last week.

Mrs. Elizabeth Stuilb of your borongh isspending eomo tirao with friends In ourvillage.

Milton Aten and family rcturnod to theirhomo In Norwood last Ttmradny Afterpassing a month In this placo, Mr, Aten,who bad boon ill With tynhold fever thissummer, was greatly bonctUtcd by his triphoro.

Misa Kato Carllng Ion on Monday forTrenton wnerosbo will resume her Blurilcsi,

Mrs. Rebecca Stltea and daughter; MISBAnna, of Washington were guosts of Mrs.F.J.LiKiew, from Friday until Monday.

Mrs. Petty of your borough, was theguuutof Mrs. Mary Cawley over Sunday,

Mrs. John Dean and littlo dauuliturNewark aro being entertained at tho homeofS.M. Riddle. .

Thero wag no preaching service In tlioPresbyterian church last Bund ly owing totho absonco of tho pastor.

H. 0. Butclior ami f tnilly have returnedto their homo In Brooklyn Afr.ur a pendingthe summer In our village.

Miss Bertha Watson, who haa beoa en-I joying her vacation at tior hoino in thi;place, left Saturday for her school work alEast Orango. " r-

Mrs. H. H. Bhrope and children OLBrooklyn, who have been enjoying a visitwith friends here, rulurned homo la.tSunday.

Krom Mrs. Norrla' Letter."I can now oat anything and enjoy It

My stomach and liver work all rigut, andwhenover I honr my neighbors cumplain-Ing of being sick I toll ttiem to tike Dr.Kennedy's new medicine. Ualcura Solvent,dtacoverod by Dr. David Kennedy of Ken-nedy Row, Rondout, Kingston, N. Y.All druggists, f 1.00.

; O A K D N E K .Lomuel Apgar offcra hla mill property

at Jerlco at private sale.

Thor'>waa another hoavy froet In thissection oo Monday morning.

Clark Brandu of Suflqaohanna county,Pa.,Bpontlaat wookwitb bla parents, Mr.and Mra. Wnr. O. Brands, -Mr. Brands IsintoreBtcd, In. tho cattlo bunlncea In thatpart of Pennsylvania. . :,

Dr. Ctirhart haa purchased of Mra. Mil-ion ttoy tho vacant lot belonging to tboTool proporty which sbo now owns, andwill erect n houso tboreon for bis own use.This will make a great fmprovomont tohat part of town,.. -."-•.;•Mr. ttnd Mrs. Robert Aablo will movo

,'rom Uardwlcfc, whoro they bavo livedilnoolnBtsprlnir, and occupy Mr. Aublo'sswn house on Douglas btreett the first of Inext mouth. -• . . ,; '....;,:;,

Tho heavy winds which accompanlod;ho storm of Tuosdiiy, Sept. Ocu, did oon-ildorablu damage about here. . Hundreds)f buuhola of applet* wore blown off tho.reeu, iho corn WHS ilottenod to the groundand some broken off altogether. Thiswill uiatce tedious work for tho farmerswhon cutting tlmo boglns. A.number offarmers commoncod . cutting , corn lulu

nk. • •• . - . - . - . . . _

Jralc & Ervlno, wbo aro buying up thoapples iu tills vicinity, have routed a build1pples iu tills vicitigof Mrs. Johnnd lust week r

ave rented a bon Douglas street

d a large conBlgnand last week rccolved a large consign-ment of apple barrel material aud nowhave several men otnployod in tbo manu-lacturu of barrols to pack applet la formlp-jii>nt. :. -

Grac« Andreas, who graduated fromBlair Hall last Juno, left Monday morningfor Wulieflley COIIOKO wboro she will taken four yoarfl' course. . . .

B. JiiRno IjRntennan, who baa ft goodposition travollng for a largo drug llrrn

' " lo, spent last week and part ofthi'ou;this

UKU Olil<visiting tils parcrttc, Mr. nnd'Mrn.

Aaron Luntcrman, near Kalarama.Printer J. F. Hili of Blairstown Is at

EroEont doing painting and papering foroster Brands near Poikvlllo.Whllo picking pcarB on tho farm occu-

pied by Bamuel Harris, noar Walnut Val-ioy on Friday, Abram KlrfehufT fell to theground, a distance of about 15 fett, sus-taining Injuries which have compelledhim to keep bis bed since- At this writingho Is slightly Improved.

Marshall Plttongor, Knowlton's mer-chant, lias announced ! himself as ncandidate for Member of Assembly. Mr<Pittetigur is a honest, upright, businessman, mid undoubtedly would do what'srlgtit if fleeted to that office.

Miss Roso Wlldrick or Hacbcttstown laspending a few days with Miss Swain altbo ltittur's pleasnut home, Proa poet Hall.

Mrs. A. N. Hazon of Washington, D. C,and Mr. Stron Hurdle of Manassafi, Va.,

ovor Sunday of Mr. and Mra,~ BOH ut their home In South

ire uueuts o1

_bn W. FieriBlairtitown.

H. Uilbort Woodruff of Now Brighton,H. Gilbert Woodruff of NowS. I., U a gueat at Prospect Hall.

SOMETHING DIFFERENT

Joseph Frltts Is havinfNew Hampton repairs

bis mill dam at

When you want a wagon different from thoseusually sold hereabouts, and'not found on sale in ourrepositor.y^tell. us about it. We are familiar withpractically every style on the market and with almostevery reliable maker. Here you may see countlessillustrations and get prices as low as are obtainableanywhere in the country.

BUGGIES. v . ;.•; •-..*. .from $35 up

RUBBER-TIRED RUNABOUTS......... .$60 up

PNEUMATICTIRED RUNABOUTS $100 up

IT COSTS NO MOREto buy from the catalogue than in the regular way.We guarantee satisfaction. You need not take the

- -vehicle unless it proves exactly as represented. It isquite differenfb'uying;yourself from a distance ofpeople who cannot sell'you at lower prices. Any-thing not proving satisfactory in that case, you havea very hard time getting it made right, if you are suc-cessfulat all. Here anythinfjWiA be made right atanytime. « - = / / t < / p - ^ - ••

R. Q. BOWERS, JR.

Mrs. Malvln Dunfleld of Oentrevillo;lslted her daughtdr, Mrs. Blair Iluallug,last Wednesday.

Miss Gertrude Angle left on Monday toenter tho State Normal School at Trenton.

Mrs. John Nowhart spont Wednesday ather homo iu town, . . . . . . . . . . .

Mrs. John C. Kitoben and granddaugh*>r, Margaret Dlotriob, went to Pbtlllj.a-

burg on Thursday, returning Saturday.Mrs, Belinda Orlsamao of Blalrstown bas

boon Btaylng In town the past weok withheralator, who has boeu fllok and la nowImproving. "

M. W. Kitchen of Phllllpaburg, who is abosa carpenter at that place, fell from abuilding last Mouday and Injured bis footquite badly. Ho oame to tho homo of hislather, J. O. Eiloben, on Thursday. Honow walks about town wltb tbo. aid of acano. Young Mrs. Kitchen la visiting attbo home of her parents at Hazon andwill como to Columbia this week.

John Phillips came from Still waterThursday - t.o attend, wltb bin mother,Mm. Martha Phillips, a relative's funeralatSlatoford.

_ lei Horabeck haa the stono readyto begin tbo cellar of his realdenco.

Rev. and Mrs. H. P. King.returnedhomo Thnrsday after taking their vaoatlon.

Prayer mooting was again held Wednes-day ovonlng.

Mr. and Mrs. Bortoo Snydor and Mrs.Hannah Snydor of Hainotiburg wont totho nltnsbouBe Sunday to visit Mm. T*ldn.

Mrs. James Michaels and Miss MaryMichaels visited Mrs. Jonoa at Browningon Monday. , ;, .:Mr.. ond Mra. A. A". Tallman and Mlsg

Jonnlo Tallinan aro visiting relatives inNow York and Arlington.

Mrs. Harry Phillips returned to herhomo In Newark after visiting her parents,Mr. and Mrs. B. F. East, for boveral weeks.

Mrs. Stewart Winters Is sick and underDr. Beck's care. . • • : . . . .

Miss Mamlo East was In town Sunday.This weok Mra. Irvln Hartzol is visiting

her fathor, Jacob Vroomo, and Bluter, Mrs.David Myers, at Portland.

Zlgman Lowery of Walnut Corner and ayoung lady of Stroudsburg wore united Inmarriage by the Portland Presbyterianminister at the home of John Moore. -

Miss Amanda Gardner, who has boontaking care of her brothers, David Gard-ner, children at his homo In Hobokon,came to Columbia on Saturday, bringingher two Httlo'nieces wltb her. Miss Gard-ner will pack up her honaehold goods andreturn to tho home of her brother.

Mrs. Carry Jennings returned to herborne near Scran ton lost Wednesday.

It la reported with aomo authority thaisoven Acres of land of tho Giotto propertyadjoining the farm of Jacob Vroomo willbe bongiit by a gcntlomnn for tno purpose

online Tellingdoes not take Into coDBlderaUon the oneessential to woman's happlacss—•wotn-

' inly..health,.', There is many a womanvhose future seems absolutely, unclouded•lio is marked by her own condition foriturc disappointment and 'distress.The woman who *

icglectshcrhcalthneglecting the

jry foundation of11 good fortune.for without henlth3ve loses Its lustrend go ld Is butross.Womanly health

Jay be retained oregalned by t h eise of Dr. Pierce'snvorite Prescrip-on. It establishes:gulnrity,"dric3ic drains whichrenken women,ea l s inflamma-ion and ulcero-ion and cures fe-iale weakness. It

Jakes weak wom-m ' s t rong , sick'omen well.Sick women arc invited to consult Dr.

Pierce by lelter/>«. All correspondencejfId as strictly private nnd sacredlyonfiilential. Address Dr. R. V. Fierce,luffalo, N. Y.«I hnvc (nken ilx bottles of Dr. plercc'i I-'avor*

tc ITefcrlvllon," writes Mis* M. Vyfe, of Orllla,inicoc Co., untnrio, "untl Iwu Oolllti uf thei'lcnxntit Pollcta' iiu you ml vised for congestionT utcrtiH, ovurius, aim weak new, aud can mfcly

thnt your mctllcliic hns t>e«n the menus of(Morlng me to good licnllli a^a\a, wliich I hadlot had for over three years, until taking your

eiliclna. I thnnk you very much for your kindid prompt ntteutlou to my'Uttcr n»kius advice."tt Favorite Prescription " has tfie testU

jony of thousands of women to its com-ilvte cure of womanly diseases. Do notxcept an unknown and unproved substi-;ute in its place.; Dr. Piorce's Pleasant Pellets clear thaloniplexiou and sweeten, the breuUi.

of boughtulldini

Pont-oillce Inspector Buck was in townon Wednesday of hwt weak and glocal eiilco a thorough inspection.porlud ull accuuntu mid otner matters O.K., which speaks very biguly for Poat-mautor Hovvuii Mini his trusty assistants.

Wm. K. Torrlberry of Somorville visitedhis cousin, Cashtor 1'heo. B. D.iwua, overSunday. Mr, Torrlborry la a Btudsnt atYale.'

Robert Kuallng la at present employedputting steam heating fixtures in for M.L. Tinsniau ut Columbia.

g "a factory thereon. It Is bo'id that iron roofing will bo made there.

tTbogontleman Isalno looking for a BuiVHo^ro-'aolo lot upon which to build arosidoaeo.

Edward Oaks and Andrew Lewis at-tendod the Bethlehem Fair.

Miss Lulu Fritta returned bero Saturdayafter an extended visit among friends andrelatives In diBorent parts of tho country.

The Board of Education met horc Satur-day afternoon. The usual routine of busi-ness was dune.

John Forco, tho township collector, isnow the custodian of the school funds.

Some think Constable Bell, though witha quarter of a century experience in thebusiness, goes a Iktle too tar nometimea,in executing bla legal iiupuia. Saturdayafternoon there came & liorse and carriage,from Junction, which Win tied In front of ithe hotel. Wticii tnu driver returned tountie and return home lie was politelyInformed that he could not take the horseand carriage back with him and that Itwould be well taken caro of for a few days.The claim was settled shortly afterwardand the horse and carriage with driverwent rejoicing homeward, with one moredebt paid.:

Jobn Crater's house.Is progressing to-ward completion.

1 David Siegfried is doing some repairs tobis residence.

Jobn Frltts, who lives near Spruce Runchurch, has a very sick bora of cows.They broke Into bis cornfield one nlehtlast week and gourged themselves. Oneof tho number has died.

Henry Phllhour, who lived with his son-in-law in the Rocky Run district, died onWednesday of last week while sitting atthe supper table. His ago was 73 years.Ho had been quite feeble, for aomo time.The funeral was hold at tbo house at 10 a.m. -on... Saturday; _.intormcnt;: In ..Clintoncemetery. ~7;" • """ ~"~" .-•

Harvey Davis has for sale cleanly washedbuilding sand, it bos a sharp grit, needyno screening and ia ready for immediateuso. ... . . . ••

Fortune Favors a Texiui,"Having distressing pains In head, back

and stomach, and being without appetito,I began tbo nso of Dr. Klng'a New LifePtlla," wrltoB W. P Whitohcad of Konne-dale, Tor,, "and BOOU felt like a new'ronn."Infallible ic: stomach and liver troubles.Only 25c. at F. N. Jenkina' Warren CountyDrug Storo.

ASV CHURCH or parsonage or insti-tution supported by voluntary contribu-tion will be given a liberal quantity of tbeLongman & Martinez. Paints wheneverthey paint.NOTE;—Tbla bas boon our custom for

building note repainted at

, , ^..ilon of LinseedOil to bo added to every gallon of the

Josh Westhafor of Loogootoe, Ind., Is .poor man, but ho sayB ho would nut bewithout Chamborlain'B Pain Bulm If it costQve dollars a bottle, for it saved him frombeing a cripple. No external applicationis equal to this liniment for Btift • nndswollen joints, contracted njuecles, at I ITneck, sprains aud rheumatic and muscularpains, It has also cured numerous case*of partial paralysis. It U for sale by al]druggists.

Mrs. John Wheeler entertained, a larei-nuraber of lady friends at a qulltlcg partylast Wednesday.

It is rnmored that wedding bells wllsoon ring in Vienna.

Mr. and Mrs. - A. B. Leigh tnok in tbipainuo^make'roady forMae TH'^Wxed* In | Bights at Beth'ehem Fair lost Wednesday.tv70 minutes, and cost of tbe paint thereby | R9V. Wm. James preached an exception'made loss iu price than any other. v—'" *••• • - - J — *- - - - -• ->-

Eroduct over one million gallons,ongtuan & Martinez,lole Agents:

F. N. Jenkins, Washington.H. H. Stone, site warts vlllo.G. M. McClellan, Haokottalown.U. Johnson «fcSon, Boatyostown.

Asa OBmun and.family of Hackettfitownwere enterlained Saturday and Sundayiy his mother. ^Xlov. H. Ivy of New YorkVwho preachedero last Sunday, will occupy tho pulpit;ain next Sunday.Mrs. Joseph Huselton was eurpriBed on

Saturday to receive a call from a number)f friends who had come to enjoy them-lelves, and they were not disappointed.Phoso present were: Mrs. Adam Battz,Mrs. Ervin Butlz, Mra. C.A. Bnttz, MissFlorence Buttz, Miss Edith Buttz, MissMary Buttz, Miss Pearl Buttz, all of Dela-wrre Valley, PH.: Mrs. John Miller andMiss Lillie Miller, of Mt. Pleasant, Pa.;Misa Sallle Moll, Lehleh county, i*i.; Mr.md fklrs. Henry S. Hueolton, of Rockport.'V substantial repast was served after whichine mualc was rendered by Mlsa FlorenceButtz and Miss Lillie Miller.

Elmer Clayton of Newark visited FredDcllicker from Friday until Sunday.

Mary Cougle roturned home_laat,vetktri;ei:"B"pcti'ulng:55Tcral~wccks~T;ithxionds Iu Newark.

Martin WUever of Bethlehem sphnt Sun-wltb his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Weller

J U N C T I O N . 'Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fulper of Brooklyn

are spending a short time with hltj mother,Mrs. L. Fulper.

Missoa Harriet Transuo' and : NolllePhompBou"7retui'Q6fi":on-Ta6sday to their

~~^Y6u cen count on-your finger endsthe~tsw' grocers who, make .Quality theirby-word. Do you suppose~we woulddo the amount of business we, enjoywere it noUor Quality?,., -

"" Cheap Groceries are Costly. Do not;prlsk your-hisaUh for a penny or two;:..'be faithful to .truo ecqnomy.:;.Buy the." best; 'tis the cheapesu '.""",.

We make a specialty of the best, "

I I Blue Tront Groicry,I ^ S = ^ : L M. DAVIS, Prop'r.

The Star and Tfl-WneMy New York Tribune, $2.25 a Year,

ipuuu - . . .school duties at the Kormnl school.

A pleasant surprise was given Mr. andMrs, H. M. Bigelow. on Saturday eveningby a number of their friends. Ti*e.featurcsof the evening wero music and**gameB.There, were about 25 guests present, ,™-Mia'a-Etliel Hughes entertainod Miss EttaBerry of Phillipaburg on Saturday and Sun-day... ' , -!%~' " ,. - .-r

Harold Conch, who has beon spondlngseveral months i In-Now York, returneehomo Saturday evening..,".--.-.-...:. •:•._..

: Harry Davidson bVu-the misfortunotihurt bis foot on Saturday while carrying;t l 0 . _ ^ • , . - ; , , - - . -

Kiss Kato Rowland of Elizabeth la ylalt-ing friends in towrL.™^.... -'

The stewards of the M. 13, cburch-wil.hold ah oyster supper in the ohanel on Baturday evuulng, Beptombor 20. Ico creamand other refreshments will bo for sale;: ,

Mrs."Charles Adams fipontn partof Josweekjit ProemanBuSrg.--. .=>. __ _...Z,....._ .. ". "

Mra. Doagle entertained Mrs. and MilBalberg of Oxford a few days last week*

MiBsErna Walflman^B' spending a fewweeks at Oallfon. ]/ -•-• }/ -.^ Jl

Mr. and Mrs.*M. English'of ?;SanitariLSprings have returned to their be-no afteta visit with, theirjnieoo^.Mrs.'^'ank I,smi th . ;; "••-•---",;;— ""•'•'%• -

Mra. psagle and dnnghtor Rperit Sundti'vjith firiends ?X P.ort.CoIden.-rr-'n-^",™-^.1- Mrs. H. Underwood, who has boon'apending acme time here; returned to her homeSunday. - - -~-

early ally good sermon to an apDrecfativo audionce Sunday morning. His- theme wabased oa the thought, "God hath spokoiunto man.1*

rs. 0. H. Albertson lost her famllhorsolast week. It suffered from diseasefor several dayB aud on Wednesday it waidecided to put it out of its misery by death,

U. H.and A. U. Howell havu been entertalnlng Frank Howell of Corning, N. Y

Miss Jessie Wheeler of Allamuchy is vis-

layW Hover.

Mr. and Mrs. Ji dob Thomas entertained

itlng relatives In town, /yTbe friends of Mr. and Mrs. Eugom

Walters of Oxford are sorry to learn otbo accident that befell him last week anhope soon to hoar of bis recovery.

Anson Ayers is a little better at th;writing but hin condition Is etiil critical.

Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Biblor spent Sunda-at Wlretown tbe guests of Maihlaa Hlblei

John Whltesoll and.'ffife of Allamuch.spent Sunday with the family of JohiGlbbs.

Miss Sarah Bird of this place will giverecital In the Port Colden church on Salurday evening of this wtok.

Mr. and Mra. Wm. Merrill and Mr. ObaeStiff and wife of Hackettstowu spent Sunday with, their mother, Mrs. A. J. Bunts-nan, .• O \ • - .Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pool are ontei

talning their cousin from Mt. Freedom.- The Ladies' Aid Society of the Methodlaluiiurub/ure piecing a name quilt todlopociof In the near future. They will endeavoto Becure one thousand names with whicit^decorate it,

. Harris and_ Mrs. Wm. Tee

•iondfi from Jackson Valley ou Sunday.F. E. Anderson was with friends hero a

part of labt week.Mr. and Mrs. Miller Curl nnd family vis-

ited nor parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Beat-;y, on Sunday. .: .. — . -

Mrs. John Zollara Is confined to her homoby Illness. ' " • "" .'" ••/ •' vS11

Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Cyphers attendedtho Bothlehsm Fair on Thursday. '

Jacob Beatty and eon, Charles, visitedMt. Arlington and Newark last week.

Jacob TbomuB had two valuable cowskilled by a train Sunday night. He baalost four coWHthi^year.^:. •.;.., •,•.-.-, .-.^ ./."Jncbb Beatty IB now"working -at"Whar-'

ion, .( ~ '-!" : . K. '. • • \Several of our citizens went to Delaware

--' - - • - - ' - - tne

made a'shopping trip to Boston Monday.

Ramon's Tonic Liver Fills have noas a liver xnedlcino. Try tbom for an-chronio case of disordered liver and yowill be entirely satisfied with tbo resultJust one before retiring. F. N.Jenkim

I Warren (Jaunty Drug Storo.

lodtweek and"they aro now singingcoon song, "Ohy dat wetermelon.". /

Oharlos Boatty has taken a position inNewark.'

B. F.Blrd and son, William, were atHuntaville Saturday and Sunday wltli ano-ther son, Frod Bird, and family. : " --^;-

Mr. and Mrs. John Pool spent Sunday atVienna, guests of their ;aon, Edward Pool,and family. , ;v,y u "~-6

Grant Honry of Newark was here lastweek at tbo home "of his father, JacobHonry.- .-•;..-;" ' '•- '- • •

Miss Sara Bird will glvo a recital In thoPort >Coldon~M. E. church on Saturdayovonlng, Sept. 20th.•„ ); " ; - '•"-"-"

Mr, and MrsrWarrdiorH. Wlldrlck oryoar town and Mr. and :MrsV;: Joseph Kln-noy ofDanvllio wero Sunday gnesta of J,W. Flumerfolt and family. • •• \-r- ; ; ,y -

H. S.'McValn of Drakestown was enter-tained on Friday evoniag by J. W. Flum-erfelt and family.

Arthur HopkinsBpent Sunday 'wlth'^lsparents at FresUKloaj^^'-^^'ir "'""" "" T '

.Miss GeorgUna Flumorfelt was tbo RoeatSaturday evening and Sunday of Mlsacg

Mra. Caroline Aupleman returned froiher visit In High Bridge last Wodnesda;Her granddaughter, Mlsu Kosalle Tom'son, accompanied her borne. •-"•"••

John Hoffman rjid daughter, Metha, _Bethlehem, wero the gueats of Misa JanReese on Monday anfiJTaosday^ . _^

"Evorybbdyv"is Invited " to " the" chickeiBupper In the baaement of the M. "church on Sept 25th. ;

Mr. and- Mrs, George Shrnmpf movifrom Mr. Shruopf's larm at Danville.Mrs. Shrumpf's house near thla town oMonday. " , Vi-Hre. SainaclLippcrjcottaodson,Oharhof PhillipBburg, wero guosts of Mrs. BamuiBrokaw on Sunday. - i ; ,

Ollle Anderson will lead theworth League services Sunday-night.

Mrs. Marshall Dean" and Mrs. DanLMooro of Townabury visired-;Mi£9;EatiEolsey on Monday.: •-'

Miss Loon& Lippencott spont Sunda;with ber brother, Charles Lloponcott,Washington — L ~

Mrs. Mallnda G ingles Is visiting higranddaughter, Mrs. tiwayfto Oralg^^;;•- MiBsos Helen nnd Cora Craig spont froFriday-;to Monday with ttielr aunt

EdwinBurdgo'ls^how employed' as.varnlsher'^ln the NeeSbam piano aiorgan factory at Washington. a...Isaao Pittengor loft here for Woodlau-

Park, N.Y., With the lntonllon of bringIng back a^horse and wagon for Cooper "Hovjettto be Tised fit-tbe Pequeat furuac

Mrs. George Jones, Mrs^John A. Jont-Mrs. Ueorgu Bharps and Miss Carrie >,Timiatteadnd>.tho..W..C.\,T..U. oouventlonliiWashington Iaat Thursdayr™"™""""

The eriaaadN-Y. World $ZM\ y

WM. A. STRYKER,20 E. Waihlngtort Avanu^. Wiihlngton, N. J . '

COUHSAUOft-AT-UW,SUPREME COURT COMMISSIONER AHD

SPEGIAL MASTER !M GHANOERY.PrncmiotiiT In Ail'.Unltad Statca, Stafio acfi

County Courts.

CHAS. B. SMITH, M. D.,131W. Wublnglgn Avinut, Wathl-jKin, N, J.

(H to » ». m.OHlcc Htii)rs{ 1 to 8 p. m.

Iu:30to8. p. = . , -".":Buniliiyn: H to 0 a. m,, 1 to 2 p. m.

'olepbono ObmiMtlona.

HUMPHREYSWitch Hazel Oil

TU15 I>IIJI3 OINTMKNT.

One Application Gives Relief,

It cures Piles or Hemorrhoids—Kxtcrnalor Internal, Mind or UleciHinj, Itcliinn orBurning, I-'issurcs ami fistulas. Relief ' -intdiatc—cure curtain.

It cures Ilurns and Scalds. The reliefinstant. . '

It cures Inflamed or Caked Breasts aBore Kipples. Invaluable.

It cures Salt Rheum, Tetters, ScurfyEruptions, Chapped Hands, I'cvcr BlistersSore Lips or Nostrils. Corns, Hunions,Bore and Chafed Feet, Stings of insects,Mosquito Kites ami Sunburns.

Thi'co Sizes, 25c . , 50c. and $1.00bold by Druggists, or sent pro-paid on recciptof ptlco.

H U M P H R E Y S ' M E D . CO. ,. Wtlllnm A Julin Stn., SEW YORK.

BIG REDUCTION

WailPapers3c papers reduced t o . : . . . . . • .21/!

\.......y£C c " • ' • • '7 C " 1 4 . «

Sc " 'OC . " : '2 C ' • ' " • - " " '

! 5 C • • " •

2OC " '25C "3OC.- " '

8 yards of border at the same pricas paper.

Corresponding reduction on Mould-ings at

A. A. AICHER'S,: v IO2SrThird SL, Easlcri, Pa.

F. P. M'KINSTRY, M. D.,:a W.WtfhlnjIOB AYMIBO, WMhIngtea, N. J .

{ 8 to 0 n. m.1 to H t). m.0 to 7:110 p. m.

nyB 1 to 11 li. m.

HENRY M. COX, M. D.,102 W. Washington Avenui, Wuhlnoion, H, J.

{7 to 0 a. m.1 to 8 p. ni. : ;

7 too p.m.jlephone Connections.

CHAS. M. WILLIAMS, M. DMI IW. Wiihlnoton Avi., Wiihlngton, H, J,

!8 to 10 a.m.1 lu 3 p. in.0:UU to 8 p. m.

liennOHOt Kye, None, Kar, Throat, n Specialty

P. N. JACOBUS, M. P.,37 Railroad Avinue, Waihlngton, N. J .

KuocliiliHt In Chronic Casci.WdHhliiKton, Wcdin'mluyH nnd HnturdayiAt Newton, MomlftyH nnd Tucadayi. '

DR. P. JUDSON ECKEL,!4 W. Wiihlngun Avinut, Wllhlnjton, N. J.

DENTIST.

Opposite St. Cloud Hotel.

DR. F. PIERCE FARROW,37 E. Washington Avonui, Wuhlngton, N. J .

DENTIST.

«ond Flour. Ford A Flaming Building.

DR. SEIP,EYE SPECIALIST,

th nml Northampton

SocolHl Floor,EASTON, PA.Cur Fare Allowed on J3.00 O

DR. G. T; FOX,Oillce nn<l Ht'nMi>nce, 171! Main Kt., ;- :

BATH, PENHA.Oillce HourR— From 9 n. ni, to 4 p.m. Prac-

tice ilmlU'il to ilimiHCH ot thoEYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT.

K , ,Conxtnntly on IIIIIKI the inrRCHt aRHortment

n! SpectiidL'H nud I'.yu QUime* In the Uhl«bVnlLey.

At KASTON, Prnnk'lln Houne, TUESDAYS.Adilri'HH: Itiuli. I'll.

Careful Examination

of Eyesand the fitting of

Spectacles and Eyeglasses.TlioiiHiuuiH ot fjiitlrifled X'litrotiB.

., OTTO JARCK,^ Optician, ,411 Nurtlintiit'itoii Kti' KASTON,"PAT

D. V. WYCKOFF,72:carllon AvinuB, Wuhlngton, N. J,

INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE,

Loenl Tuk-uhoiiR CAII NO. SI .

J.lfi. LINDABERRY,II Broid:strnt, Wiihlngton, N. J .

JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. .INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE.

CommiHtrioiier o! DOCUB And FonRlon Agent. |

THE NEW YORK WORLDThrlcc-a-Wcek Rdltlon.

The Most Widely^Read News-paper in America.

Time has demonstrated that the Thrice-a-Wcek World stands alone In Its class. Otherpapers have Imitated its form but not Itssuccess. That is because it tells all the newsall the time and tells It impartially, whetherthat news be political or, otherwise, it is infact almost a daily at the'price of a weeklyand you cannot afford to be without it. ~jv-"Republican ana~Democrat-Vnke can ieuuthe Thrlce-a-Week World with absolute con-fidence in its truth.^..In.addltion to news, It publishes first-classserial stories and other features suited to thehome and fireside. .

The Ttirice-a-Week World's regular.sub-scription price is only Stop per year and thispays tor 156papers.-"" •- .~-^r

We offer this unequalled newspaper andThe Starjogether one year for-32.00, ^

The regular subscription', price for the twopapers is'ia.so.^1 — ' .I

Address all orders to • the STAK"Wushlng-tcn.^N. J. ' • :- rr • •••

This is the Time foPWorms.Have Your Worms Got Horses? "

Aro your liorieH KcttlnR tliln iind weak? AretIiey"olftlielrrcedV" ])othqyHW«fttorworry7

DR. Sr.URSON'S "DBAD SHOT" ,,will remove worms, (Joad or atlve, tromhorien •ur.cittle. It will purify tho blood, corroc: and toeup tbo Btomacb and stiDQgttioii tbo norvea, •• = -'—i

Dlruotlonu vlth. each box. Sold VJ dragglfitfl 'or sent by mull apoa receipt ol Fifty Cents.,-- ..

C. B. Smith & Company,WDoleeale Agents, N*w«rk, N. J.

> S T f CLOUD HOTEL,C. F. STAATES, PropY. 1

UnfturpftHflod In location, accommodationQfl mftnna;ciiieiit. Permanent and trau»teniaeats well nnUrtnthei. Prlc«B reasonable.:_~ETery room lioated by Bteam and lighted I

by electricity. ;,

HOTEL NEW WINDSOR^J. E. THATCHER,' Prtp'r.

Finely (vrmnged, BpadonB Rronnfls, eleetrle Jllghta, stoam beat, free 'bus to add from -

all trninn.StableB Attached.

A plonaant Bummer retreat. ., '

WASHINGTON HOUSE,Hiny Knowles, Proprlator.

Onlr tfcj(evHtcp*H from tho DllIi.&_W.Bt tton, |

BeBt (iccommoddtlonB for tranelenti.Old stand with modern convaalencfii.

Fine table; comfortable rooms) .:Well atockod b a r . \--iry: '•'••'•

AMERICAN: ' HOPE, SEff JERSEY.

Bemodclea nnd cdiitnintnR All thp Moflera |OonvonlonceH. A Hplcndld place tnatop vfieo ftaking a pleasure arlvo. . ;, , :^'J B

Boardhiff anfl • IJvery Stablei attaehefl. 1Stage meets tralni on D., L. & W. IU B, • * •

Don't You Want >!a Spring Chicken

for Tomorrow's D inne r? I

If so, place your order withthe leading butchers,

HANCE BROS.rj

Tho 8TAH =sa Trl-Woctly Ksw YorS |Tn*lbnT>o, $3,25 par jour, In Ad

:t -

Page 7: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

THE WASHINGTON STAR, WASHINGTON, N. J., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1902.

._„.:.. CHA>, L. STHYKIR, EDITOR AND PHOMICTON

^:; The Celebrated ^cranton CGA' • ' . • • • A T H K T A I L . ...

Washington,N. J.. January 16,1002,At tbe D,, L, A W. It. K. Elevated Chutes, at

bead^of flrsi rlgbt hand utroet above New Wiad-t 4.S5 por ton.

zzz 4.M» per ton.' . . BtoVfl • 4.Tr» per ton,> Uboatnut... 4.75 per too.

Fen (termed by some compnalesNo. liCh(wtuut) S.Wperton,

BaclcwIiLvtt S'-'.iSBlocfceratthlDBorlilturalnouBCoal, js.OOperton.IVBse t qualities always on hand, dry (under

cover.)Coal loaded direct from chutes (over screens) In

wagons. . •JAMES L SHIELDS.

Ex-Mnyor Allogor is building a coriBor-»• • • VBtory and roomy porch on thofiouthflldo; of bis Broad stroot tiouso.

Tbo Interior of Sbnfer & Bourn's butahor: flhop Is being much Improved by now

, paper and a frwh coat of paint.••.-,; ...—,' The oxterlor Iron and woodwork on tiio~, ,••„ Washington National Bank building U

: being repainted by J. M. Person's force.. The Columbia M. E. church hiw socurod

< subscriptions amounting to $3,700 for theirnow church which lu now In coarso of cor»-

: structloa.Rev. J. J. Harris, tho African Methodist

minister hum, will lecture in his churchtbta evening on "Travels Through tbo

,7 : :;luUndorTriiiIdu(I.pl v •:--.:. Tho Woman's Missionary Society of the•'-•"'* Prosbytory of Nowton will hold Ha autumn

meeting in the Presbyterian oharch atHarmony on Thursday, October 2., Toe Choral Union has been printed thouse of the W. A. A. bolt for weekly reboar-eala, which will begin on Taesdty oveninp,Sept. 30th, with Prof. Knauss as director.

The Morris Guards of Now Joraay willonuampon tho grounds between the Water

V Gap and Klttatlnny House, Delaware Wa-ter Gap, for tlio wook boglmilug Sept. '£L

Tho collar Is bolng oxcavated for FrankW. ChamborllD'a now''doable bouse on

----- West Stewart stroot upon a lot he purchas-ed of Lovl Bowlby. Axchlo Lanoo la thecontracting builder. :

Tho P. O. S, of A. camps of Warrencounty will hold a district convention In

v tho rooms of Camp N. 20 at Port Murrayon Saturday evening, Sept. 20ih. DistrictPrealdent Tumor Blaino will preside. 3

Lots of smoko but DO flamos In tbobollor room of tho Cornish -factory lastFriday nt tbo noon hour, caused proat ox-

, cltcmont hut no damnj;o. Procaiitfon hnHboon taken that tbore be no recurrence.

'" Thin wook'fl edition conslala of ton pajtos,every ono of which brims with froah local

Mrs. J. W. Looser la In Now York select-ing her stock of fall millinery, and will ro*turn In about ten days.

Hftyward'aOroboatra will continue tritivo Haturday night concerts at tho HotelNew Windsor undor Mr. Hoover's man-tgoment.This Is tbo day of the forty-first annaal

convention of tbo Warren County SundaySchool Association In tbo First Presbyter-ian cnuroh at BoMdero.

Ll K. Alpaugh ofCallfon has Qnlshodhis buckloborry soason In tbo Poconoosafter shipping over •14,000 quarts of thoseberries to tbe city markets.

Tho heirs of Wm, R. Smith, lato of As-bury, will soil a lot of household goods antother personal property at public salonhis late residence on Haturday next, at 1p. m.

. Wm. Barroo Is about to still further addto tho attractiveness of his big and well-ccmlppcd cafo by converting a rear Factionformerly used by Mr, Amorman as a Btovowareroom into a club room with a Hpacoallotted for quoit pitching and othor games

Bliss Minnie Enimona of Hucfeettstownwas lined sovon dollars by Justlco Lnbnr

'rubberneck1'Whether

was (Inod sovon dollars y Juon Thursday for shouting "rat Mm. Yaweor, a neighbor. Whetherthia is to establish a precedent for tho usoof such language Is not known, but It willcertainly put an end to tbo custom of using• I . I f • l._ l^^ t t _ l I _ l » . _ t A.A...A. . -IT

Inly piord I tn

Hiiyward'a Orchestraof friends on Mondayof Mr II 8 S i t h

Tho moniborfl of Hiontcrtafiicd a party of ,evening at the homo of Mr. II, 8. Smith onW. Warron a'.root. Thoro was plenty ofmusic, an abundance of fee croain nnd cuktand a iron oral pood time.

biles Julia UorRon, as roprcHontatlro ofthe FtttB Boo IIlvo, will ho In Now Yorkfor Bovoral dtiya familiarizing herself withtho atylea In mllllnory for fall, und copyingtho Paris stylos,,whon Air. Pitts will joinhor and together they will select Iho now

,'-stock..:. Last Su/id«y was tho nnnlvoranrv of tho

death of President McKIriley and In thoWashington oh arch OH RO well m In o thornthroughout the land servlcon appropriateto the occasion woro hold. Tho lato Presi-dent's fnvorlto hymns wero aung In all tholocal cburchea.

- The Ladles''Aid Society of the Presby-terian church will hold « pig rowt hi tho

; chapel next Thursday night, Sopt. 25th.Sappor, Including roast pig stuffed withoyatora and all the accessories, will boserved from 5 to 8 p. m., at 35 conta norplato. Evorybody is Invited.

Dr. Cox's nure Lnolllo captured thirdmoney, $ 150, in A *l)00O stflke race at Both-lobomlast woolc. Tho Doctor had fivehorses at tho fair, all of which will bobrought to Washington this week. Arran-gements have boon mado for stabling theanlmnls In J. W. Fitta' burn. .--:-

William Lurliion * few days ngo Installedat his mill below town a Monarch Attrlc-

• tion feed mill «>!(] lu bo tbelirst put Inoporation in thin section. It Is compara-tively a small machine, but oh my 1 It hasa speed of 3,600 revolntlona a minute andcan turn out a ton of feed por hour.r John E. Outlet of-Port Murray appear-ed before Justice Llndaborry on Sstnrdajto answer the chorgo of nssnult preferrec.

-against him by Soring B. Young. Thecomplainant did not appear and uponmotion of ex-Prosecutor Stryker, the de-fendant's counsol, the Justice dismissedthe case,

Jacob P. Marlatt, who for several month),has boon working In Newark will move hlafamily there " "

:Ing in rthis w<—. .'eek. Victor Dalley

will move into tho hoaao vacated by Mr.Marlatt. Harry Sliker, who occupied part

• • of the same building, will movo to Eaaton,and Harry Lance has rented tho roomsnow occupied by Mr. Sliker.

Among the features of the Grand Bazaarto bo hold by'the Lsdlea' Social Circle oftho M. E. church on Thursday nnd Fridayevenings, Oct. 23rd aud 21th, will bo a hot

. chicken supper the first ovonlng and n pig"roust tho second at 35 conta^each., Thoro

•':•-• • will also bo a sale of fancy articles and sea-isonablo delicacies, and music will enlivenboth occasions,

Tho busy soason Is again upon ua, andthe printers,.W.P!I-;BS fchfl-manufacturer

:.. and morehant is being tnxed^o turn out.;•••; his product on time. As thoV«l:iflon ad-

.. yancea the taak becomoa preate^fand wo••""-'"iQust again urge our advertisers to aond In

their ohangos of copy on Monday. Copy.., . recelvod later than Tuesday noon - will

many times fall of Insertion by force ofcircumstances. .

An exchange says that the prospeotejof••:. the Marksboro Cement Co, doing anything

in tho lino of cement manufacturing thinyear aro rather romoto. The same author-ity intimates that tho concern'may runitsolf Into an loo company for all prepara-tions aro being made for handling a vastquantity of Ice this winter. A: switch is

,._'.. boingputin and aoveral largo icehouses~ ' " a i ( i being erected. • ,<','

i ^ r — : The Hotel N«w .Windsor Is now In chargoof Ellphalet Hoover, ho having been ap-

. pointed manager - by Imla Stewart,"who .was selected, as tho trustee In

bankruptcy by the creditors In Bolvldore on• j ; Friday, An appraisement was mado byC—'-.-- Messrs. Charles Amennan,-Davld Bflrtron

and S. M. Young on Saturday and a sottlo-^ . _ roent will be made with-the creditors in a

short tlmo. It Is possible that Mr. Hoovermay lease or buy' tbo hotol property with-in a fow d&yfl and conduct it himself, .jr,

;;;.. ^Goldsmith- Bros,;~ tho popular - Eastern•""'olothleFS', this woflk announce their-fall

-..:; opoaing. .They carry an immense stock,which.Is dlsplaycu-advantageously lu u

- flno big store. Bv carrying only thorough-ly reliable goods and doing business on thohighostrjplane of honest endeavor, they

': have formally years hold tlie public oonfl-donco mid patronage to an onvlablo do-donco Hud patronagBto, an onviablo dogroo. Tho small business: established bytbolr fathor a half cetitury ago la now one

• of tho very best and foremost In E is ton." liZ\/ Tho.report of tlie Farmors1 Picnic Aoao-1—• elation,1 the first," by the .way. in severalyears," appeared last week,-';; It showed the

i. i gross receipts for the last picnic to have^-. boon $307. The Ingersoll Band cost $105 50

, and tho Bpoakors cost $25 more, Tho Parkootnmitteo fooeivod for the use of tho park§15 and tho Plonlo committee received $10oacli. Other'oiponaeaateup tho balcaco.Tho conoral impression had boon that tho

„ recolpts were much larger, but as thero-.portiflaigncdby tho Socrotary It cannot; 6 e d o u b t e d . .-.„•.„...',.• ; . •• . . . .„ ' ; J::-

tbo word itidiscrimiuatoly in HackottstownDuring tbe post wook tho D., L. & W.

1.-R. Co granted pennlons as follows:Conductor Charles O, Smith, (31; EngineerO. W. Adnmfl, 5-12 02, and-Engineer FrankA. Adams, $37.U5. All those men are citi-zens of Junction and havo been long In tboemploy of tbo road. Tho amounts men-tioned will horoaftor be paid thorn eachmonth.

Tho Gazette saya that desplto the factthat tbo Cartoret furnace Is idle there Is aconsiderable force of men at work and pre-parations are- being mado for beginningactive work just as soon as a coal supplcan bo had. The steel making oxperlments are to bo continuod through thowinter and tho spring may.brlng Interest-ing developments.

ThoNowHampton Snnday eohool willlojd Its 19th annual oyster supper and fes-

tival under a tont near the store, in NewHampton, on Saturday, Sept. 27th, provid-ed tho weather is favorable. Oysters will^o served In every stylo, and. Ico cream,jonfootlonory, fruit, etc., will boon sale.Mosor'a orchestra, noted for its singing aswoll as Its playing, will enliven tho occa-sion. • . °

According to tho TTncttcttgtown papers,tho Port Ovam olopomont ended rnthordisastrously for tho woman, Tho pnra-mour lingered with tho wayward wifo un-til tho New York papers got hold of tbostory, then, after taking from hor all thomoney sho had, loft her to shift for herself.Sho raised money enough to roach hormother's homo and there, In disgrace, nhoromains. ^

Loo Dolllckcr, agod 17, of Hackottstown,disappeared from his homo nnd schoollast weok. A fow days tator letters wuroreceived, from him stating that ho wasnI)out to Hail for South Africa. Four daysafterward tie showed up nt homo. Ho hadheaved coal on a steamer from Now Yorkto lioHton und had secured all tho sea ex-purience ho cared for. Tho trip to Africaims been hidoflnitoly postponed,

Mrs. Ithoda Fagaurwill soon have com-pleted a two-story and basoment additionto her double taouFo on Brond street,which will add greatly to tin convonienuosand valuo. Now tho kitchens arc In thobasement. When tho now soctlon shallhave been completed, they will be locatedOD the first floor, with additional bedroomsand bathrooms abovo. Wm. It. Bryant'sforce aro doing the carpontor work.

The Scran ton Correspondence School re-cently Introduced a unique method ofteaching languages. Hunt/rods of phono-graphs aro being employed. Tbe lessonsare forwarded to distant pupils on records,"together with blanks upon which are recorded the pupil's progress. Those arothen returned to the school for criticism,when corrections la speech and grammararo mado and returned to the pupil.

A Hungarian on Friday wont Into theNow Windsor bur room and ordered drinksfor a pnrty of three, after which ;ho ten-dered a Lackawanna pay check in lieu oftho; cosh. Gus Geagor, tbo ball player,wa»temporarily behind tho bar and hestood for no argumont on the subject but

fTomptly stopped around and knockedhe "man down. The blow brought the

blood and by many who were witnesseswas regarded afl an outrage. No arrestwas made.

Tho first carload of coal to arrive in townsince the strike began came to James L.Shields' yard on Monday In the form ofstove coal, which was quickly taken bythose who were entirely without fuel andhad placed their orders early. A rarlondof pea was received Tuesday and anotheryesterday, and this Is being apportionedout in small quantities to those who haveboon on the waiting list. There aro scores?of families In town who aro entirely out ofcoal and aro burning wood, corn cobs andoil heaters. -^"

Thoro.was a sequel to" the Smith deaor-tlon cose' In Justlco Lindaberry's court onTuesday. It will bo remembered thatSmith married ono of tho Omlck girls riotlong ago and that she left him after onoweek of married _blis3,iLSmith.finally;: con-oludod t'uat Ucum Kounaavell, an"employoof tho Hopaicong Woolen Mills at Change-water, was reaponoiblo for tho cooling ofhis wife's affections. He bad tho man ar-rested but tho evidence failed to proveanything and the "Justice :was compelledt o diamla3 t b o c o m p l a i n t . ,;•••-'•'-.'-•.-•\t£i-~ -'"•

Earl O. Lukena, who, about a'yearslnco,was the district agent of tho Scranton Cor-respondonco Schools and who was a fre-<iuont. visitor in this neighborhood, wasdrowned in the Mississippi River a fewdays ago at New Orleans. He married anEaaton woman shortly before going South.For a-. time it was believed he had oom-mltted sulcido, but subsequently a womancamo forward and admitted that she hadpushed him off tbo dock. She said shebad. warned him to desist In his attontlonsto her and whon ho persisted BOO gave hima .push. He,:apparently, nevor came totbe surface again.

Juliua Sayser & Oo. of Now :York, ainilllouairo'concern making Bilk gloves,"Isseeking a location for a factory to employ100 girls. Washington can't compete forthis C1P.FR of Industries, fo? the demand forfactory girls already exceeds tho supply.The Bilk, millja nfinrly,,always huntinghelp, the niidorwoar'factory ia now adver-tising In tho STAii's-Cont-a-Word column

apple crop, tho trees In nuny coses havingseen swopt clear of fruit. Thousands oibarrels have boon taken to tho cld«r millsduring tho poet few days.

Justice Boon on Monday of last weekmarried William James PACO of Hobokonand Miss Gortrudo E. Stanton of Durytiu,Pa. The ceremony was performed at thoWashington Hotel, The brldogrooin la awell known Lackawanna fireman,

Tho demands of a greatly Increased stockand 5 growing business are so pressing;hat Charles 8. Gardner has Induced hisandlord, C. S. Amerman, to onUrge tbolullding ocouplod by the Washingtoniarnosa Store, work upon which will Bhort-Iy be begun.

A picnic for tho bonofit of St. Roao'aoburcb will take place In the grove abovetho now church ID Oxford on Saturdayevening, Sept, 27th, when a Pblllipsburgorchestra wtli bo present to enliven theoccasion and furnish muslo for dancing.Refreshraonta will be on sale.

What la designed to bo a delightfullyploasant social event is the "Bachelorilrls" festival to bo held at tho Oxford M.

E, church on Saturday evening next,Sept. 20th, whon tho "Bachelor Girls"will dispense lunchus, candles, fruit, nutsand fcecreum. You aroiuvltod.

J. S. Warno of thia place, who breedsBuff Orpington fowls exclusively, took ttiofirst and second prizes on this breed at thoBethlehem Fair lust week, in strong com-pany. Ho got first and second on cock,hon, cockerel, pullet and pen. Tho judgepronounced his oxbfblt of eighteen headtho ilnCHt ho had ovor handled,

gfor twentyt Ohange

Word coumntbo Uopatcong Millsroom for y mat Ohangewater have room for many more.

Tbo backbone of tbo New Englnnd townsaro tho factories employing girls und boysbut horc Jn thocountry wbat wo nood issomething that will glvo employment totho heads of families.- • ' •_ ;i•-On Taaaday "evening the members ofCamp No. 28, P. O. S. of A., of Asbury, en-tartained a large delegation of visitors fromCamp No. -10, Glen.'iardnor. Lunch and aemokor followed the session. During theevening the Arabian' Degree Elan, thofau ftnrf o-opd fellowship degroe of tho P.U.S. of "A.,-woe instituted by tbo visitingbrothers. Twenty-one charter niembornworednltlated into tbe mysteries. Thofollowing officers wero chosen: J, P., F, J.LaRlow; G. M., F-'Uary: G. :W., HarryHinorj P. S3, Win. RinoharirO.G., Tboo.Case; G.I,, Wm. Dalrymplo; G. B.,Thoo.Hazlett^G.L., John Polte; O. L., WalterShrope; R, R,, Peter Martenls; L. R., DavidTransuo,1^ a _ ,..i J;-i-^.. ' -:.,u'> , _.;; -. r-" Bear In1 mind that aSra/'X'-'W. Lub?|Mllllnory Parlors are now locatedjust ,_poaitetbo poat-offloe, on V7eat' washlng-— avenue. Npstalrato ollmb; .pleaflant

You may bfivo your liable appear undo;tho"Trospasa Notloo'Mn tbo STAR atooBt of only 25 oonta for the Beacon.

Blair Hall oponed a fow days Ago with169 stud onto, tho largest number enrolledat the opening ofanyyoar in Its history.: Tn rheOol>n*Word column tho less'bf &lady's pi n and a gentleman's pocket-book.Liberal r ewards will bo paid for their ro-t u r n . . : . . . • . . ' . : . . • • '• • ' . • . •

Tho Washington Athiotlc Asaoolatlonhas added rubber quoits to Its equipmentfor social amuflomont, and tbo gamo hasmany devotoes.

Tbo late Major Samuel Klotz, of Now*ark, who died In Hackottstown a fowweeks ago, carried life insurance amount*Ing to $11,000. . - : • . .

Because of tho want of water for power,a correspondent says tho HopatcongWoolen Mills at Changowator aro runningon throe-quarters tlmu.

A Somervlllo paper says that a InrgoEaaton silk manufacturing company la ne-gotiating to locato In Itaritan. Tho plantproposed will employ COO poople, and theonly question is the matter of sufficientl i u l p , . . : r - ' j t — . . : : . . : . . - " . " " " : " ' - •• •" • ' < - ' •

The Monhoultos baptizod two convertsIn tbo Morris Canal on Sunday afternoon,Ono was an adult and tho othor a girl ofnine. A largo crowd stood on the banksof tho canal while tho rite waB being ad-ministered.

Reports from tho country say that therecent storma havo greatly damaged tho

a pair. J.

typewriter;will sell for

IJuseball Notes.Ualn caused a postponement of tho Clin-

ton game last Saturday.Washington plays the last gamo of the

season at Whnrton on Saturday of thopresent week, In the gamo hero severalweokB ago the locals shut out tbo Whar-tonltes, which '<"» the second game theircrack sonthpaw, Rodgers, has lost thisseason. They have never recovered fromtho shock, and, rumor says, aro now load*ing up with tho laudable purposo of put-ting it all ovor tho organ makors on Sep-tember 20. Washington will have a strongteam on tbo field. Pfrom of Allentown

ill pitch and Lance will also be ou hand.The Porth Amboy Chronicle of Sept.

5th devotes a column and a half of Itsfirst page to an oxpressfon and explosionof their opinion In rogard to the NorthEnds generally and Manager Reeso par-ticularly. Tbo Marions were at Phillips-burg last Saturday and claim that on ac-count of threatening'weather the NorthEnd management refused to play thogamo and also declined to pay tho guaran-tee Of course, this Is only one Bide of tbostory, but If the Chronicle's vorsion con-tains very much truth the- North EndAssociation is certainly to be congratulatedupon the novel and: economic course pur-sued by Its manager.

Probably tho fiercest contest seen on thelocal grounds this season will take placeScptomber 27, whon Cornish's factory menplnys tbo town. Tho receipts of the gamewill go to the homo players of the regularteam who have civen their services duringthe season. We append herewith a couploof opinions which go to show that If con-fidence Is anything both teams will win.Captain Christine of tbo Round-townors:"Those follows down the street havo got alot of swelled heads. Just tell them thatmy team will be on hand September 27,with a twii'ler who will make thorn alllook llko: tho obverse sido of. a pluggednickel." Captain Cox of the CorniscianB:Did Windy say that? Ho must have a

soup bubble in his head! I eupposo, as beIs Captain of the team, he will placo him-self at Bhort. If he docs wo will show himup the first Inning and win, hands down,Thoy'ro going to have Gus Qeager? Well,let 'om havo him. We'll show him up,too."

There was a hot game on Thursdayafternoon between: the First Floor em-loyees and tho Third Floor employees of

;hor.CorslshtJactory™-A"-liifg«' audienceathered to witness the contest which

proved to be_vory exciting. When thofinal notches were counted it was foundhat the Third Floor boys had 12 runs to

the First Floor nine's 10 runs,.William Rogers," the Port Oram ball.wirier who made suoh a good Impressionleronfew weeks ago, has signed a con-

tract' with" the"' Philadelphia^-American'Leaguo at a salary of §150 per month.The Washington club will buck upgainst Rogers, on ' Saturday and" it lu

probable that he will go to the Quaker)lty sometime during tho following week.

Tho local olub might havo hed Rogers'services a part of this season, but for someoason tho manacemont doefded other-

FOUND—On Bolvldere avenue, a pooket->ook containing receipts and other papers.

Owner can bavo by proving property andnaylug for this notice.

FOR SALE OIIEAP—A flno lot of oarlyhatched pullets; will mako good wintorlayers. O. V. Moore, Junction. UlS-tf,

FOR RENT—A good grain farm. Applyto Mrs. Elizabeth Flumerfolt, Bridgovlllo,N.J . 9 - W .

FOR SALE—NO. 2 Romlngton t:will cost about 10 for repairs; Win?12 cash. Address H, STAR office. •

Tho Washington township commlttoowill meet at the township house on Satur-day, tieptombor 20:h, to receive sheep billaind transact any othor necessary businessihat may come beforo the board.

E. C. SNTDER, Township Clerk.LOST—A cluster garnot pin, on Sunday,

lept. l l tb, between Stewart street and St.?ctera'church. A suitable reward for Useturn to 127 Bolvldero Avo. 9-lS-2t.

UPHOLSTEHER — First-class nil 'roundjphoMcror wanted at onco. C. F. John-iOJi, 57 West Blackwoll street, Dovor,N. J. O-lS-ltp.

LOST—Pocket-book in Washington orvicinity, on Monday, A liberal rewardwill bo paid for Its lotnra to 02 WestStewart stroot. . &-lS-lt.

FOR SALE—Houses at No. 18 Bethovenavenue, 23 E. Church street and 105 Broadstreet. Address B. R. Woolvorton, 235Garsldo street, Newark,

Tho Bryant Opening.With characteristic enterprise, J. R.

Bryant-tftkea moro than-a-htilf page iathis edition, to : announce ttio opening .ofbis fall, and winter stock of clothing,furnishings, etc. He has filled his en-larged store with a collection oC goodssecond to none In all this section'of New

orseyj both in character and quantity,Tho splendid success that has crownedMr. Bryant's offorta la tho outgrowth of anearly.detfirinihfttion to.buikUhls bunlnessaoloJy on merit—merit of stock, merit oflow prlcea, meritbf honest representation,Merit-of a jjthernl, policy toward:; hispatrons. This wns supported by n previousseventeen years' experience In catering tothe public of this section. Ho started Insbflinesflon his ow;n acuount-nearly ninofoam ago nnd there has boon every yeardnceu growth of stock and a correspond-ing growth of trade to a volume that fowappreciate, '•"'"

CENT A WORDCOLUp..i... under this head ore published

iX tbe uniform rate ot one cent a word, but noadvertisement will be renolvod for lees than is:Bnta for tbs flrat laasrtlou. • . , -

A toothbrush that will pleaso or moneyiack 25c. Opora Houso Pnarmaoyi -:•-• .•„It.Mr. Alfred Laaco of'Anthony also re-

lommenda Hibbard Boatty's Cough Syrup.Fou SALE—Several desirable bouses in

Washington on onsy terma, S. M. Young.ZI WANTED AT ONOB—Several thousandbarrels of fall and wintor ap]

pioked. Addross or call ontor, Stewartsyille, N. J.

toples, airfaan.Qhas. S. Car

' FOR RENT—Home one block fromSquare; suitable for small family. S. M,Yoang. : •

WANTED—50 cheap, fat horses for cash,W.O. Smith A Son, ABbary, N. J. 9-18-tf.Tho largost, best. > and - cheapest - ovstor

la tho city aLJ. S . KiuWn Flaii i Oyato:Markot. 0-18-tf.

API'LKSl APPLESl APPLESi-WANTED--Ton thousand barrels. High-oi,t cash prJco paid for good wintervarlotles: 26 barrols or more.::Write orcallon W. 8. Smith at St. Cloud Ho to),Washington, or W. H. Conblln, Broad-way, N, J. O-I8-2tpd.

LOST—Purso with a small amount otsilver and other articles of.no valuo toIlndor, who will be-rewarded-at STARoUlco. ;: 9-18-ltpd.

HOOSK FOR SALE—Park brown mare, 8years old, Ml hands, perfectly sound andtentle: good roadster. Call on or addresBE, 0, Honderaon, nigb Bridge, N. J. Itp.

HOUSE FOR RENT at01 Youmaus avenue.Squire of Mrs. Alonzo Hummer, Fort

Ooldcn, N. J,Fortitp.

WANTED—A girl about 14 years old tohelp with tbo housework:; ono who likeschildren proforred. Apply at 22 Hornbacor street. 9-18-21.

FOR SALE—10,000 heads cabbage; readynow for fall and wintor. Joseph Crew-man, Washington, N. J. 9-18-tf.

SEWING—Anyone dcclrlng plain sewingor chlldren'adrcsBes mado, aro Invited tocall at 59 Stewart St. Children's clothes aspecialty. 018-lt.

J10 REWARD will bo paid for tbe returnof a diamond stud lost lost Thursday onO. R. R. train, in Junction or Washington,or along tho road connecting the two bor-oughs. Apply at STAH offlco. 9-18-2t.

Fon SALE—Flno buggy, harhosB, goodhorse, 5100; 2-seated carriage eltlgh, efld'dlo, bridle; Incubator, fo; Pen of WhiteWyandotte chickens; lot spring Wyandottochickens: my loft of homing pigeona 50c,my lof

r. w . Mi[ooro, Hackottstown, N. J.

9-U-5tp.FOR SALE—A very nlco line of walking

skirts at very low pricos; a large stock toBelect from. H. Brenner, 61 E. Washing-

mAve. - - fl-n-tfThe old Battzvillo elder mill Is making a

ipoclalty of elder making this year. Bringjout apples and take your n]dnr home with-ou—no waiting. The price for making Ismo cent per gallon. Your patronego Islollclted; satisfaction guaranteed. GeorgeJharps. , 9-11500 thousand brick for sale at Bailey's

irickyard, known as the Benwerd brick->ard, at Brass Castle. Frank B. Bailey.

. , 9-ll-2tp.WASTED—20 more girls at the LTnder

wear Factory. C. J. Reese & Co., Wash-ington. 2tp.

Pianos tuned and repaired; over 50 yearflixperience In piano making. A. Gleitz,Mlts street, Washington, N. J , : : r ; 9-Htp

WANTED—A millinery assistant at theFitts Bee Hive, Washington, N. J. 9-11-tf

SATURDAY, SEPT. 20th—Public Bale oflorsonal property, Including householdroods, by>tho heirs of Vvm. R. Smith attils lato residence in Asbury. P. B. But-;erwH.'k, auc-tioneor, 2t

FOR SALE—The brown horse Goby. Hesix years old, Bound, pontlo and kind.

ny lady can drive him. Inquire of H. W.Xundlo, Hope, N. J. 8-ll-4t.

When you have a dead horse or cow,iond word to us at once. We will take itiway and pay you for it, as well. J. P.?rome & Sons, P. O. address: Oxford, N. J.'.. F. D. .•.".: : •..: 9-ll-4tpWANTED—A good mlikor, Bingle man

ireferrod. Apply to James L. Shields.••...-•.-. 9-4-tf.Many people who havo used MAPES'

PHOSPHATES think thero are none likehem. Their judgment is doubtless busedipon a very satisfactory experience. Forhat reason I have sold them for yearsmd with the utmost satisfaction, and stillave tho exclusive agency. W. D. QULIOK,a s h i n g t o n " " : 9 4 ^

-.--. w AKTifiii—UOOH. «~ HxneriHnoflo " 'weaverswanted at the" WashlnEton Silk Mill. 2b

Bentty pipe top organ $17.50, squaro»Ian"6 $70.25. Call at 16 Bolvldere avenue.

GOOD S E E D R Y E for sale at 70 cents perlushel by John Wlndfeldt, Danville, N/ J.

F O R SALE—Tandem, high grade, excel-lent jooadjtioni $10. ..Apply, STAR otHce.

„. . . — _.....- . - .. . 7-31-tf.F O R T H E LAND'S SAKE use Bowker's

lelobrated ^'Phosphates, Thero may be)tber makes just as good, but it la doubt-ul. No'rock in thia phosphate. For sale

' ;at W. D. Gullck's lumber yard. '_ . R SALE—Three building lots at-Vul-

lanlto, N. J. Apply at STAR office, 8-23-tfF O R SALE—Because of falling'health, I

iD'er my farm of 109 acres. It Is situatedjne mile north of Anthony and is In a gooditato'of cultivation. Jacob Ribbons.. P.D. addrefl3, Anthony, N ^ S-2S-tf;™_;

- : . F O U : R E : : T -HouseofoigStrooms at 183West Washington Ave. Apply to J . C.Bowers at No. lflt. : " S-28tf.

F O R SALE—House and, lot. Inquire at22 FiBhor Avenue, Washington, N. J.

S-2S-4t.WANTED—To buy for cash early BprlngiilokpnR-nnd yoarllngFi^- Adciresa H.-H,,

iaro of tbo STAR, with particulars.F O R IIENT—Doairablo socond-Qoor flat

(f.soven rooms and -bath, adjolnluir myesidonce. Mrs. 8. A. Ribhlo. S;23-tf

SJJED W H E A T of high quality for sato byloo. B. Smith, Clinton, N. J . - S-2S-4tT B A I N B D NDEflfl.—MiflS-Annio Pufford,'lodical, surgicjil and obstetrical nursing..ddress:—Washlnfrton, N. J . , 1-29-tfFoRRENT-Adeslrablo house centrally>cated. Inqufre.of-W.G. Crovollng."Health by Good Living." Look for this

nottoon tho bag your cofToo Lcomos in,irition all grocery packagoa,: I t : lusureaiorfoctloQ in quality. Save it . . -\ : ^ s = = = ™ « : 1: \..-. ".,H.20-tf. :•-.

HBVO yodr furnitaro^upholstarfld andjarrlago trimmed at Stt A. SohuoriuanurH,-)2 Woat Stewart strool.L o

DWRLLINOS and other properties forront.- Apply,to Wm. A. Stryker, Att'y.

. ANTED -Plgs, weighing V6ver 40 Iba.,at highest cosbjprlco. If yon have any forsole write me. wm. Tlnsman, Port Murray.

To RENT — Four.roomflr. at .49 Broadreet, each 13 feet square. Inquire there.

6-26-tf,

TIA/ONIGHTS

Friday and Saturday,•SEPT; 19 and 2(3

Tho Great Favorite

Life, or Paola the Circus GirlS a t u r d a y Night Double Billin Honor Bound. All in the Family,

ni?rj- (or Every I'lny. „Sii|ier)i C'DHtiiiiH'H. IJrninl Kk-ctrlcul l:ff«ta.

Populnr Prices, 25c, :JOc, fiOe.SoiitH on wale nt the UHiml \ihirf,

Fashionis chains! chains! chains!The best and handsomestgold, filled chains are

SimmonsWatch ChainsThe practical difference be-tween them and all-goldones is the difference inprice. We offer a large assortment to select frorj.

A WATCHmt will kwp iiccurnto tlmt' fo:

many yenr* yon tiin net heru foiltlte tiionvy. A now l<u ]u«t ret'lvi'd; a\*t> IL now lot of Wodilliiflilnirrt In 11 mill IS kt. lu nil flzL'iunl wlii Lhf. .

A. DAVIDSON,IIYHHUiHT fl'lJCrAlilHT

IVASniNGTON, XKW JKKSRV

A NICE DINNERFOR 25 GENTSAT "THE BON TON"

Saturday, Sept. 20On this date we will serve a limited

mmber of full dinners at the nominal priceif 2; cents each, from 11:30 a. tn, to i:^o1. m. - 1 - . . „;,.-- " " • . • • . • • • •

As the number we shall be prepared toserve will be limited, we advise you toengage your dinner on or before Friday

ight, September 19th.

The following Is the menu :SOUP

Tonmto UleiquuMEATS

:onHt Beef. _ . Boiled Lamb (Capor Sftuce)Mnwlied Potatoes ... . I'l'iis . .

Sliced Tomntoes (Mayonnaise Dressing)DESSERT

Cocoatiut CtiHturd l'leCoriiHtt^ruli (Wine Sauce)

Tea or Coffee

"The Bon Ton"41. E. WASHINGTON AVENUE.

NOTICE TO VOTERS.TlieUoitntj-Koiinrof Election of IVn

„ i'reclnct In fiiitl County of Wan...Ill meet nt tlic pliiue In thulr respective

Sleetlon Dlntrlet or Votlnc Product .whereL-xt jfeimrnl election will lie held, ouTUESDAY, O0TOM5R 14, 1902,

nt 10 o'clock In the forenoon, and contlnnuIn HLwfonViintll 1> o'clock In the crcntiiK, forthe purpOHo o( makliiK a roKlHtnvtloi'. of thocotern in and for miiil HiiveriU Kloctlon 1)!H-trlctH or Voting I'recInetHfiimild county, andfurther notice \« lieroli; " ' "cInetfmild c o m y , and

rther notice In hereliy jjlven that'.the wildoivrds of KexiHtry nnd Election In and forull and every Election District or Votingednct In mild comity will meet tit the plneetheir KHpectfvb Election District or VotiiiR

l t f l ! :TUESDAY, OCTODEK 2S, 1002,

it 1 p. m., and contltuie In HUBS! on until!)I'doek p.-m., for thy purjiuwe ot revlnliiK"nnd•orrectliiK the orlRlmil registers made for•aiih of Hiild Electlou Districts or-^otlng^Prii-

"C t B - J. WiTsKjlM. mhlAinjjf:. Clininiiau Oonrif.y Ttfjnrii d| Kl«/tion.

™"~.. A.'.HLAliy\B,tSEY,Secretary County Uoafd'of Election,

Datu.liHept.Jfi, ]1>UL'..' ' ••>• -Q ' ' Gt

ANNOUNCE THEIR

OPENING-OF-

Glothes,Hats and

FurnishingsFOR FALL OF 1902.

The best collection of. Suits and Overcoats adapted for dress,business or working purposes ever shown in this section.

Latest Designs,

Various Combinations,

Confined Patterns and

Exclusive Styles.

Prices ranging from $ 3 0 . 0 0 to $ 5 . 0 0 .

WE ARE FULLY PREPARED TO,SHOW

ARE YOU AWARE that the fashions for little gentlemenand youths change each season and. are as well defined asthe styles for their elders?

We are now showing the latest modes for the autumnand winter at attractive prices.

The new fall shapes in good Hats and a choice stock ofFurnishings, etc'also await your inspection.

We will send you a booklet telling you air about ourarge and varied stock if you write us.

222 and 224 Northampton St., East on, Pa.

THE BIGCORNER

- « STORE

VelvetThis will unquestionably be a Velvet

—SjJaspjru^.^h^and waists of Velyet, as well as Trim-mings .and Hats..r ..We.,are; showings

/an exceptionally .fine.line of Silk-faced -iVelvets in black and colors; also, allSilk Velvets in black. ;=

Corduroys-••••-=• All the stylish1 dress shades/including-S^the^differeht Qualities "in narrow conls'

and hollow cut cords. ; ~. "

An EntirelyNewLine of ',

nus/fand Horse Blankets.

°-A full line, in black and colors.1

.for, long-Goats45andjjackets.-^.

GAEL AND SEEWHAT WE SHOW

Trunks, Harness, Etc,Prices extremely ;low.

Page 8: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

8 •

lifeTEE WASHINGTON STAR, WASHINGTON, N. J., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1902.

'•1:1 •." : ANNIHILATING FOWLER.•- '•<••• : - '--.-— ....--- - [From the Jersey City News.] '...I"... .'•'.".•'". .'""""•' "

"The "Star" of Washington, (N. J.) Is waging a vigorous war upon theHon." Chaxlea N. Toiler of Elizabeth,1 who Is running for Congress on the Bo-pnblloan ticket In the new Fifth District, which embraces Warren county in

*'• *:hieb. the "Stsr".h'R8;it9 home, : The hard, mattor of, fact way in which that"~ emerprimug"newspaper la"poking*, fall: of. holes the. inflated repntatlon of Mr.

Fowler as a statesman and public benefactor Is sending the cold shivers downthat gentleman's opine and giving his devoted satellites palpitation of thehear t Recently the "Star," by facts taken direct from the "CongressionalEecord," showed that Mr. Fowler's aervlces to the dear people daring theefgbV years which lie has been In Congress amounts to practically nothing, andthat his reputation as a great and good statesman rests on something only alittle more substantial than wind.

"This caused that eminently proper old lady, the Elizabeth "Journal," tohold up her respectably mlttened hands In holy horror and proclaim that atruly good man had been scandalously maligned by a wicked and unscrupulousadversary. The perfectly circumspect "Journal" pointed out that Mr. Fowlorwas able to expend more than his salary In Ihe dissemination of his particularviews on the mouey, banking and currency question, and, in emphasizing hiszeal for all corporate wealth, it makes this claim :—

.: "Nothing la alower or moru difficult Ibiiu financial and curronoy 10-form. Yot this meaauro (referring to hla financial and currency bill) haaalready produced two concroto results. An attompt was mado to catab-liah the gold standard by atatuto and the debt haa been funded ID two parcont. gold, coin bonds, Mr. Fowler's luiluonco In this legislation beingclearly shown by the fact that tho act: funding tho debt followed his planin precise terms."This the "Star" demolishes In sledge hammer fashion by remaking:—

"Ifthteworo true let Mr. Fowlor explain why his bill In'preciseterms' was not preferable In the ayes of tta Republican leaders to tho onethat was passed? It Is tho opinion of tho "Star" that the bill referred toand tho ones suggested by Mr. Fowlor aro more In tho naturo of legislative

-•••;••• I n f a m y t h a n r e f o r m . . .-..• .• ,., •_,..-.. - .' ;

"The "Star" finally provides a nice trap for Mr. Fowler when he takesthe stump by making the following recommendations to the voters :—

'•When the gentleman (Mr. Fowler) takes tho stump this fall to givean account of his Stewardship to tho 'poor dear poople,' for whose In-terests and welfare be professes such deep solicitude, havo him answer the

. foUowlDj* questions directly, not evade :—"Are you willing to vote for a reduction of the tariff that will pre-

vent the Steel Trust from charging forty per cent, more for its products :sold at homo than It charges abroad? ,

"Are you willing to take the tariff off of buuf, lu ordor that the con-sumer may not be plundered out of his hard earned wages, that tbo BeefTrust may rovel in its millions?

"In short, are you willing to vote for any legislation that will curtailtho power of tho gigantio trusts to Impoverish and plunder your country-men?

"The gentleman from Elizabeth should reply to these questions."The "Star" Is to be congratulated on the excellent work it is doing in the

task of exposing Republican cant and hypocrisy, and when, next November,Warren gives an increased plurality for DeWit OHnton Flanagan, the Demo-cratic nominee, and he is elected in the district, it can take much credit for

, that result to itself."

SEPTEMBER COURT.

t Opens Next Tuesday With an. un-usuallyIJODK List Of Cases OU

the Calendar.The next session of the county courts,

which convone at Bolvldore next Tuesday,promteoa to bo unusually long In tho civil)ranoh, judging from tho numerona casessited for trial. Justice Pitney will presideind the Brand Jury will be the last to boIrawn by Sheriff Colo. Tho aspirants to)fllco will doubtless be on hand la fullforce, adding a zest to the othorwlso qulotgathering. Tbo list of oaaaea follow: :

SUPREME COURT ISSUES.

1. Evan G. Hughes and David D.IIughCB,pnrtners, trading as Hughes Bros., vs.Madison Morgan, Joanna Morgan andJosoph 0. Searlos, la tort...'.'fosoph M, Rosuberry. Goo. M, Shlpman,2. Roaa B. Kontz vs. Shpridan Council,to, 193, Jr. O.U.A. M. On contract.

•1. Wm. X. Wilson vs. John L. Adams.3n contract, ' - .- , .Wm. H. Morrow.' J . M. Rosoborry.

5, Benj. B. Barwoll vs. the Central R. R.if Now Jorsoy. In tort.Vayno Dumont. : John L. Conovor.6, Selah Kries vs. Edgar S. Mlllbam,

admr., &c., of Amelia L. Millham, do-cooacd. On contract.Nicholas Harris. Henry Huston.

CIRCUIT counT.1. Jacob A. Cummins vs. Wm. K. Angle,

[n attachment on contract.3oo. A. Anglo. Charles J. Roo.

2. Josephine P.Dllta vs. Goo. W. Diltaand Henry Johnston, admrs., &c.

3. Elizabeth H. Searfora vs. Wm. Ooha.:ntort.

F. H. and Clarence Walters. I. W. Schultz.4. Charles 0. V. Vandoreriftvs. WyckoflVandorgrift and Arminda Depue.

Imlth & Brady. W. H, Morrow and[Nicholas Harris.

5. Henry H. Williams vs. Pennsylvania&.R.C0. In tort.Charles E. Harris. Alvln H. Strong.

G, Wm. F. Chamborlin.otal. vs. GeorgeM. Couoh, et al. In tort. ,I. W. Schultz. J. I. B. Roiloy.

7, Wm. V. Bowers vs. Charles Nixon. Inirt.

THE PAPER MILL.Congressman Fowler has opened a literary cold-storage depot in Elizabeth. Ono

hundred and twenty-five sacks nf printed matter, each weighing 150 pounds,—al-together nearly ten tons of circulars—were received In ono consignment and aro to bedistributed through the mails.

Among them are 25,000 copies of a 66-page pamphlet entitled "Editorial Commenton the Fowler Financial Bill." Also several hundred thousand circulars upon"Fallacies Exposed." These aro to be distributed not alone among the voters of hisdistrict— there are not 40,000 of them, poor chaps—but they "will be sent to every

. state In the union" says an authority.Such a copious, broadcast and wholesale exposure Is almost indecent. What on

earth does the congressman think he is running for? Can't he bound himself? Hehas more campaign literature than he would need If he wore a candidate for Inter-national Potentate of the world's supreme lodgo of Concatenated Damphools.

What need will the cityof Elixabsth have for a library, for generations to come?The people will lose all appetite for lighter reading after this surfeit of Fowlerlams.

S. Wm, F. Ohamberlln, et al. vs. GeorgeM. Couch. ID tort.

W. Schnltz. W. H. Waltors.9. Catharine Riddle vs. Tho U. S. Trust

!o. On contract.

"The Washington (N. J.) Star In this weok's Issue replies to the ElizabethJournal's rather prefunctory bolstcring-up of tho shallow record made in congress byRepresentative Fowler. The Star, it will be remembered, was flrstto expose thatrecord of shortcomings and lack of deflclency, and The Guardian reprinted it In ourissnoof August 25 (page 9) since which time It has been republished widely throughthe State to the candidate's discomfiture. ; • ••••••

"Possibly on this account he has thought It necessary to open a literary depotand to flood the State with pamphlets and circulars to foster the Impression that ha Isan able statesman."—Paterson Guardian. : : .--.-

A FOUR PER CENT. TRUST.Having been enjoined by a Federal Coart from continuing a policy of segregated

monopoly, the meat packing houses which practically control all domestic marketshave agreed to pool their properties in a single vast consolidation, capitalizad at twen-ty-five times the earnings of the individual companies last year, when extravagance inpublic and private expenditure was at Its topmost round,

Aa a single corporation this new and enlarged Beef Trust may monopolize and re-strain trade, fix prices at will and dominate the people's diot with none to molest or.make It afraid. Competition on an adequate scale would be Impossible, while Isolatedattempts at revival of Eastern grazing industries could be easily, frustrated by well-known Trust methods. ,, • ' . . . : •

Hnw'atrong Is the confidence of its promoters in the success and perpetuity of thiscombination is apparent from its ratio of capitalization, which provides for only fourper cont. earning capacity, without regard to chances of lean years.—PhiladelphiaRecord. •

FOWLKR'S CAMPAIGN OFFERS.For tho sake of the eternal verities which it is not our purpose terrestrially to twist

let it be said that Congressman Fowler has not withdrawn his offer to build a public:^;library.forEll/ab6th,:except for the, purROso,of,modifr!nE:-his proposal, to.make.it a

$150,0001 library instead of a $30,000 one. As tho costof maintaining such an institutionwould be about $12,000 per annum, the city of Elizabeth is much in doubt whether ican.afford to accept aucb a magnificent gift or not. If tho city decides that It cannot

.. accept it, the gift will bo off, and the Congressman will be relieved. Meanwhile theadvertisement will have answered all the purposes desired In his political campaign;It would seem to an outside obBervor, that If the Congressman really was "on the levelInI this "donation baalnes1?, ho .might Rive a .=50,000. building and set aside tbo i£100,000 asan intorest bearing fund which, at 5 per cont., would .parni)babn(ih to maintain thelibrary, or rendor it easy for tho city to mako up tho balance. The Guardian's firstInformation was that tho Congressman had withdrawn his gift entirely, upon whichwo commented that be perhaps valued Mr. Flanagan so much moro cheaply than hodid Frank Bergen that ho thought ho did not need this advertisement now as he did Inthe previous campaign. Trebling the amount of his offer would indicate that if wewere in error as to tho premises, BO also were we in orror as to the inferential conclu-Blon.—Paterson Guard'an. ;,:

.Public nentimont in favor of that simple and effectual form of anti-trnat legislatioi-Trh'oh TTIU remove the,duties on;alI..art!ckB contro!ifi^-_hy_thftjTinrejBvilTruata gainstrength and volume d«y by day. There ia a feeling tbat thla Is the only practicaf wain vrhich the Trusts can be successfully fought. The truth is known that the monopolTruBte could not exist but for the high protective tariff which createa their monopo-lics.^The'fcrLUQ^posed by reason of high taiitf which thus fostera and enriches the Trusts. This makesplain the manner in-which-the TruBte aro Jo_be overcome. Tho tariQ duties on aarticles controlled by the monopolistic corporation muat bo removed.—Now YorWorld.—r^.. . .- ; ':;..•,-. ~ - - . . — , ' " ° ,_.. " '•

.^-^I'heRepnblieana say the Democratic party baTno issue. The Democratic partyropliestbat 40 percent, increase in the cost of living, without a corresponding incroasoIn the Income of the masses, is an Isauo, While a Republican Congress wasin session;while tho Republican party^ was In power and able to remedy this condition of afIt was asked again and again to do itT Did it do ao? Not a thing; the Republican part;has not'"done oho solitary thing; has not passed ono act that would tend to lower theprice of commodities^ not ono thing has been done in' tho way of restricting immigra-tion, so that thulubor of the Amorlcanjvorkmen" would be bettor paid.: i;With anjinormons increaselu. his cost pf living;, with vlittle_or^no.,lDcr,eaHoJn thtamount of what he receives; with nottiingdonb Bytho Republicans to force the Trustito oompete with theoutMde world; with hbthingiibntj' U>"fiii'tli6r restrict tho paupoilabor of Europe, is the American workman BatisQod withtho statement that tho Domcratlo party haa no issue?—Burlington County Democrat,

• Lastycar, whencpotatoes were 51.00 per bushel, it was the Dingloy tariff, alias thRepublican party, that dl( it. This; year,.-witt>_potatoes at 16 to 17 centa per b'uahtwith thQB&me tariff In vogno, It is the abundant crSp ttutdobsitl Here jsRopabl

leanlogic.for.you.-^Anoka (Minn.) Fie6_ProBB.''yC;J'^7T^''~~"'~^---' * ' " "

M. Rose berry. Cliflord E.Read.3, Emma C. Horn vs. Emery A. Miller.

Da contract.3oo. A. Angle. Henry W. Egner, Jr.

leo. A. Angle. Wm. A. Strykor.

W. Scbultz. J. I. B. Reiley.

Tobu H. Dablke. Charles E. Harris.10. Philip Riddle, et al., ex'rs, etc., vs.

?he U. S. Trust Co. On contract.obn H. Dahlke. Charles E. Harris.11. Lamos Gobon vs. Wm. Freer, In

o r t . . . ' . • '•Jlarence Walters.. I. W. Schultz.

QCARTER SESSIONS, ; . :_1. Overseer of the Poor of Bethlehem

township vs. Overseer of the Poor of'rankllnTownship. OuappnA'y^f - ~W. O. Gebhardt, attorney for\ i>pelant.

Evory workman who thinks ho hashad his sharo of tho "univbreQl pros-perity" will probably vote for Repub-lican Congressmen this fall. Theothers may fail to see It In that light—Knights of Labor Journal. .

The Atlanta Constitution pate thequestion in a nutshell as follows: "Thepolitical puzzle that millions of votersIn this county would like to understandis why Congress can legislate to raisethe prlcee of commodities and themcannot flnd any way to legislate tbemdown again wben they have reachedrobbery figures?"

The American people do wanttbatevery man in the United States shallhave an equal right with every otherman to produce and distribute, to buyand to soil. Every man has not thatright now. It is Congress which de-prives him of his right. It Is the un-restrained power and the abuse of thatpower by monopolistic combinations.And the thing has got to stop. ThePresident sees that it must be Btopped.Heasks Congroes to stop it. Andeither...Congress will. stop it or theAmerican people will got another Con-gress that will see the important, thevital concern of this great Issue.—NewYork Press (Rep.).

While Mr. Fowler la moving heavsnand earth to gain hie re-election to Con-greaa, Congressman Flanngan is puttingn a large share of his time attending to

his varied; business intercato." Ho lanot begging for votes, neither Is he BOanxious to again be elected that hewill neglect his business to get out andharange the public. If elected bestands ready to give hia time to hispeople Mr. Fowler, on the otherland, being a recognized trust agent,

has his employers' permission to goand come when he pleases, and Becar-Ing his re-election is part of the game.Mr. Fowler will put up twice the fightfor the office that Mr. Flanagan will,but that very fact should prove hisundoing.

If there was ever any doubb of theIntent and purpose of the Republicansin Congress to create and safeguardthe trusts, it would be removed by themost casual reference to the record ofthe proceedings of the Republican ma-jority during the entire time it hasdominated the Senate and House. Thepowerful majority haa been contendingagainst the efforts of the opponente ofthe predatory Sugar Trust to repealthe duties on refined sugars, which arethe only varieties used by the 80,000,-000 American consumers. If thoseduties imposed by the DIngley tariffwere removed, the Sugar Trust wouldhave been beaten in its monopolisticrestriction of- trade, in its fixing ofwages and its pernicious activity in In-creasing prices.

A

THE BOARDS OF ELECTION.

'he List of Those Chosen to Conductthe Elections-in This County

the Coming Year.The County Election Board at a recent

lession appointedHhe following.motnbors;o compose the election boards in the;owns and townships of our county. Therst two named in each town, township

and ward aro Republican and tho twofollowing are Democrats.

Allamuchy—John L. Till, William S.iarber; Ueorga E. Pool, James Wheeler.Belvidere—George WIdenor, Jr., Wil.

1am Siuierson; George Auble, Joan BRoaenkrans.

Blalrstown—Lawia L. Drake, James D.Ull; Lawia D. Babbitt, Jabezl. Llnaberry.Franklin—Goo. P. Dalrymple, John E.

^nacho; H. B. Bowers, C. H. Hoagland.Frelinghuyson—JameB Toomoth, Joseph, VacHorn; G. L. Armstrong, Amzl

3avercool.Greenwich—John H, Hulsblzer, Andrew

B. Frltte; Edward B. Relnhart, EdgarStone.

Hackettstown—1st district—J. Wildrlck,"ohn P. Everitt; John Kinaey, Frank Mc-31ellan, 2nd district—William Klupple-urg, William H.: Rice; B. F, Fox, Frank

White. " " """" ~~Hard wick—David E. Fretz, George C.

Bescherror; David Newman, Amzl B.Llnaberry.

Harmony—MUton Sbuler, Alvah Beers;Silos VanNatta, Howard L. Frey.

Hope—George Albartaon, Wm. Merrlcle;Alvln A. YanHorn, Dauiel M.; Pittenger.

Independence—Charles U. Riialing, UzalH. Howoll; E. P. GuUck, Wm. K. Teel.

Knowlton—Theodore McOollum, JamesSnyder; ChaB. P . ' Harris,"" StephenHarris. ' v ^

Lopatoong—Samaol A. Jacoby, DavidLaugland; Thomaa Wallace, Wm. Klssel-bocte. ' ' . " • ••"

Mansfleld—Miller Thomas, Newton B.Mftrlattj -Ezra M. Johnson, Jamea Tawgor.-•Oxford—1st district^Johu-D.-Ketuiiaiii,:

John 8. Smith; Isaac H. Snyder, John S.Banghart. 2nd district—Newman A. JonesPhilip J. Repp; Michael Flnnepan,'HenryMountain.-;1- •-" • : ; ' . ' '."..

Pahaquarry—George C. Garrls, John WStaples;: Joiui Mlyhutjl, Peter M. Dimmick

Phillipsbvtrg—1st ward—David P. Corral3. Frank Pulper; Jamoa Cullau, S&nuoM 2nd ward—Jacob N. Thatcher,Wm. A. Kollo; Aaher A. Painter, ElmerB, Oarbalrfc. 3d ward—Abram M. Ferguson,Benj, DoWItt; B. B. Burwell,": John^MTato, 4th ward—O. J. Wambold, Guorg(Warner;John Kaufman,Bernard Haghos.'5th ward—Wllils'Slroiiae, Jamoa Dick;John Fisher, Thomas.HIneg..,

Pohatcong—John MrCrbuaeV Harry' LRepp; -Walter Jacoby,AVilllHm S. Freer,.. .Waahington borouKhr-.EEL3t; diatrlct£Jacob"H;'Habn," A.;"Dr Minton;,,8|lr-Shields, Henry Snyder. Weat district-Grant Hood, John'Vanoyer; Daniol^UPetty, Bartley Bowlby. •;, ' ,\

Waahington townBliIp—Frank Snyder,G. H. SWnner; Daniel M. Wyckoff, HenryC. Bryan

MKNDMHNTS TO TniS CONSTITU-TION OP. N'UWJEltSKY. l'HOPOSKDBY THE LKGISLATL'llE 0IM90J.

IU: IT KKHOI.VKII h.v Hn> Sonate (the Iloune[ AdHfinlily poiicurrlup) that tlto followinmt'iHlmt'iitu to thucoiiHiltiitloti of tliln Stai-i\ anil the Kiuiiu are" hereby propoHud, uiulrhen the HIUIIU ntiaU lie m-reed to by-a

malortty of memliero elected to tlit* Senatennd Houat.' oi AsHymuIy,"LlietmlilniuvudmcutBelmli be entered on their Journalri, with thei-t'iiHiind nay« taken thereon, anil referred tothe legislature next to be eliOHcn, anil ebnillie pulillrttiud for three inontliH prevlouB tothe flrut Tueoday nfitir the IlrHt Mondnj of

fit (belnc Hie fourth day of MH! "

The tip top of enormous value giving is finally reached in the '

most remarkable retailing achievement of recent times. Each year

the September Trade sale has become a more important factor in a

' trernendously growing business, and there is probably no movement

during the entire twelve months that involves anything like the num-

ber of colossal bargains in_ almost every line. The finest and best

,-. •. productions of leading makers of Women's, Misses', Children's, Men's

and Boys'Outerwear and Furnishings are here, together with im-

mense assortment of Gown Fabrics, Upholsteries, Floor Coverings

and staple articles for all practical uses, at from •'.: ..•'•••:... •...

One-quarter to One-third Off and Half Regular MarkingsThis is the season of the year when manufacturers and importers

dispose of stocks made up in excess of orders, and close out entire

sample lines at a sacrifice. Taking advantage of their losses, oppor-

tunities are afforded thousands of Newark buyers to secure the latest

and most desirable goods for less than actual factory cost. Some of

•the lots are not large, arid we cannot be held responsible for the

disappointment of late comers.

Mail orders filled for everything. Goods deliverod free.

L. BAflBERGER & CO.,NEWARK, NEW JERSEY.

^5^S8g^a8gB^3B«iaja^SgJgJ@ftBg^^<^^

month)) in ut leftwt one newspnner of tncliity, If any be published tlierelu, tl- *

of tlie Senate, the npeaker'1 ol . . - ..Aeuembly and the secretary of state.

ARTICLE V.EXECUTIVE.

1. Insert In lien ol pnrnyraph 10, a newmrngrnnh, as (OIIOWH:

10. The Kovernor, or person administer-na thu government, tin1 chancellor and theittorney-penernl, or two of them of whom;he governor,1 or person ndtninisterltiK the[overnnient, ahnll be one, may remit finesanil forfeitures ami frrunt pnrdons, alter con-viction, In all caites except Impeachment.

ARTICLE VI.JUDICIARY.

1. Insert in Hen of Ejection.II, ft new nee-tlon, us follows: v . >J^

1. The court of errors nnil appeals shallnHifit ol a elite! Judge anil four associateillfofl, or «ny lour of them.'2, In ense any Judge of snlil qourt shall lie

(Usqunlllieil to wit lu any cnuse, or shall heunable for the time being tn dlsphari,'e..tlieduties ol his olllce, whereby the whole num-her ol JmlpeH capable of sitting shall liereduced below four, the governor-shall de-signate/a Justice ol the supreme court, thechancellor or a vice-chancellor, to dischargeIUCII duties until the dlsqunilHcatlon ornabllltv shall cense.

3. The secretary of State shall be theclerk

•I, When n writ ol error shall he brought,any Judicial opinion In the cauBe. In lavor olor against any error complnlncd of, shall beaHHlgncil to the court In writing; when an hp-peal shall be taken Irom an order or decreeof the court nf chancery, the chancellor orice-chancellor making such decree or.orde:

n ° ! f t h i t l t l n i r o r h ljasoThe

hetofore e erclHeil byit f r hall'bthe Hiinrcme court by writ of error nhall;bu

csclualvcly vewted In the court ol errors amiaiipeiils; but any writ of error pending In"lit' minmne court at the time of the adop-lon of this amendment nhall be proceededipon ns If no change hail taken place.

Section IV. c ;;;1. Insert In lieu of parn^rnph 1, a new.

parairraiili, aw (OIIOWH: • . : - • : - ' • :."". •'1"-'1. The court of chancery Hhnll conslHt of a

chancellor and HUCII number of vice-chancel-lors as fllmll lie jirovlrted by law, each ofwhom may exerclne the jurisdiction ol thecourt; the court Hhall mako-rulea covernliiBthe hearing of CUUHCH and the practice of thecourt, wherii the HIIUIH In not regulated byitiitute. " -•..-.

• -. Section V. .'_.1. At the end.of paragraph 1, add the

following: „.The cQiirt may nit In dlvlKlontj at tno BI

jr different times and plncea. - ,.strike out paragraph 3.-~ - "—•• '

, . InHert In lieu ol paragraphs 1 and 2,the following: "

The court of common, uk-aa Hhnll be coiitltutol and held In each county lu aucmanner &B may be provided by law. ;

AUT1CLK VJI. •CIVIL Ol'IWKItS.

rt In lieuaragraph, f l l1. Judgif

e i JtiHll

of parngraplr 1,ws; .

urt of-erro

Plug Tobaccoat Miller's

Jolly Tar—light.Jolly Tar—dark.Sweet Sixteen.Newsboy.Peach and Honey,Piper Heidsieck.Kismet.Cant Hook.Nickel Twist.Nobby Twist.Black Standard.Sweet Chunk.Old Congress Navy.5c Jim.

Standard Navy.Happy Thought.,Old Honesty.Red Cross.Battle-Axe. Palo.Old English Curve Cut.Sensation Cut Plug._...-,.Seal of North Carolina.Mastiff. Forge. .....Lucky Strike Plug—tins.Lucky Strike Plug—bags.Bull Dog 5c Plug.Drummond'Natural Leaf.Lucky Dream.

=and -27= EastsWashingtoniAyenue i

SCHOOL DAYS AREGOME AGAIN

penlH, JUHtlci'H or tlm HimreTno- court.,chancellor, the vlco-cliaucellnrBiunI tlicjuiof the circuit court and ot tho court of cmon I>lca* Hhnll lie nominated by the Kn ..nor and appointed by him with,the adviceand coiiMuntotthc Senate; all PUIB IIK nowlioldtnuany otllccln tlilH paragraph niiuieu,except the JudtfcH ot the court o! errGirtflmappeals m heretofore exlHtlnK, Hl'all coiit'uuoin the exerclHe ot the dntlert ol th»ir rcupectlve otllt'CH aceiinllnu to their respective com-mthnloiiHorappoIntmcntH; tlie Judaea ot thecourt or-orrom and appeals, except tliOHOllrHtappolnlJ"!: tlle»Jn»t.lcea of the Huprcmecourt, the cliiuTeellor and tln> vIce-chaiicellorHKliiill hohl t!i»!r ofllc« tor the.term:.of Htivcn-yeai-H, and Hhnll, at Htated .times; recelvctortllelr wrvlceH a compennaV.on which shallnot lie diminished liurlnK tho ternrot theirappolntinentH; and they shall hohl.no otherolllce under thp novernmeut of this HtaU) ortlie United StaleH; the Judges ol tho court olerrorH and nppealH flrHt appointed Shall weappointed one for three years, two for fiveyears and two for Hevcn years; iudKCH ot thecourt of common plons.HUall hold.their olllcestor tlie term of five yenrs.

"•..." Ol course the chifdreii "m=ast?b:e~out'fiftecl forth 'e-coming year and, as usual, the Warren County DrugStore will be the headquarters for

Pen and Pencil Tablets, Pencil Boxes, ..S " " '-'"' Pens,' Pencils, Rules,••if/" :"..:;. :7^—: j "

Erasers, White and Colored Crayons, c "i ; S l , . _._Slates in a dozen varieties, • •• .

School Bags and Book Straps, Compasses, -..-.: ,Ink and Mucilage, Composition_Books. ,, $

THE BIGGEST AND BEST 5-CENT TABLETS ON EARTH.

The Star and(N. Y. Worldi f2.00 por year | "strike tint parasraph 2.

~mQney in-School Supplies.'

F. Nr JENKINS, Proprietor^

NextSaturday

and every Saturday untilfurther notice, we will sellthe '

Celebrated u

Weed Ice Creamat 25 CentsPer Quart.

This noted delicacy is con-stantly on sale at our res-

... :;_taurant.in various flavors.^It's the best ice cream soldin town.

Peter Grannon

PhiladelphiaDentalRooms

Teeth extracted absolutely without pain.The best set "of teeth that cah'ba1 made;

.. _.yw(or only S8.00. '::...•''I

A CHAS. FORCE,s101 Broad Street,'' ;=-.

^WASHINGTON, N, J.LoweHt t'rIceB.

LnrKework a specialty..

The Star and the; Thrice-a-WeekN.'Y. World, $2. per year.

> $ ; •

Page 9: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

THE WASHINGTON STAR, "WASHINGTON, N. J., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1902.

Torturing Pain in My Back."DR. DRUID KEHHEDY'S

^RELIEVED ME !N THREE DAYS"-, Says Mrs. Charles G. McKay of Amsterdam, N.Y#Mrs. Charlos G. McKny of 153 Division street, Amsterdam, N. Y., and whose

husband oceui>iud tho important position of Treasurer of the City Board of Excisesays: " for tho past 20:years I lmvo been a sufferer from fltorturing pain In my b c*#. Thero wns no doubt in mymind Imt that I waa Buffering trow kidney complaint*I tried various medicines'And liniments but they fjavo mo

.; only temporary relief. My husband flaw Dr. Oavid Hen*nedy's Favorite Remedy advertised, and purchased a bot-tle, which I bewail talcing and In throe days I was relieved

„of those torrihlo pataa, and continuing uslnfj It, wancured. Previous to my taking * Favorite Remedy' I would•lmvu to lio on tho couch nearly hnlf of tbo timo itnnblo to domy work. I now do nil my household work nnd feel first-class in every wiy." ' • ' :

•. . • , Kidney diseaso ia ono of tho most fatal maladies known,moro so hecauso it cornea often without warning. Tho dailydeaths from Britflit's disenso testify to tho sudden and fatalresults.of .indiiferencu to nature's warnings, which, if ob-served and proper precautions taken, no ono need fear this

\ dreadful trouble. ;.,: . v _ •• ; ; ; . - , . . , . . : . - : . .

3 Z?J0.fMQ KIDNEY TEST,Futsomobfyonr nrino in a glass tumbler; if in 2-1 hours it 1ms a sediment,

.oramilky, cloudy condition; if it is palo or discolored, ropy or stringy,-yourkidneys are diseased and you need tigood medicine, and 'Favorite Remedy' ia thobest ono yon can tako. I t speedily cures such dangerous symptoms as pain in thoback, frequent desire to urinate, especially at night, scalding burning pain inpassing water, staining your linen by tho urino and inability to hold it, and thounpleasant and dangorous effects produced on the system by tho uso of whiskey,\riue or beor. E . •

: If you Buffer from kidney, liver or bladder trouble in any fonn, diabetes.Brlght's diseaso, rhenmatisiu. dyapupaia. oczumii, or any form of blood disease, or,if a woman, from tho sicknesses peculiar to your sex, and aro not already con-vinced that Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite- Remedy is tho medicine you need, youmay havo a trial hottlo, absolutely free, with a valuable medical .pamphlet, by

; sending your imuio, with Tidal office address to tlio Dr. David Konuudy Corporation,Eondout, N.; Y : i mentioning this paper.

"••": Thboktit n«'£tliiaed a Car."la a neighboring city lives a young

| tnnn whose name Is Cnrr. Carr Is deep*ly smitten with tho charms of a youngwoman .who resides'with' hc-r uiulUui- iua pretty villa near Sandlake, on theHue of tho Troy ond New England mil-,rond. IIu asked permission of liIs In-amorata to call upon her at her home,and the young woman accorded lilmthe privilege. Mr. Carr reached thovilla whore Ills Juliet resided andpressed the electric button a t the door.Tho ring was unsworcu by tlio motherof the young woman. Tho latter hadnever seon the young man. "I'm Mr.CV.rr." he sftlri, bowing profoundly.

"I'm—cr— well," was tho reply whichaggered him, "you may sit on the

stoop until one comes along.",Flvo minutes later the daughter told

her mother sho expected a caller andnsked who had rung the bell. She wasInformed that there w/(9 a young mansitting on tho stoop who had' missed acnr. Tho daughter looked through theblinds ami saw her lover perched dis-consolately on the steps. lie was quick-ly within tho portnla and mutual ex-planations followed.—Albany Press andKnickerbocker.

YOU MENwho want clothing of exclusive

; patterns nnl made up ns cloth-ing should be made—by anexpert tailor—come here. Youwill find it costs but little moreto gut tailor-made suits, madeto fit in every'respect and ofsuperior styles, than it doesfor the ready-made goods.

•, The workmanship is better,the trimmings are better. Suchclothes will wear longer, keeptheir shape better and looknicer, ; :

We have a large and elegantline of Suitings and Trouser-ings here for your inspectionanJ selection.

Trousers to order, $3,50 up.

Suits " " I 3 . 0 J M V -

We remodel and repair cloth-thing. We clean and press

; c l o t h i n g . ' .' ,_:. . . . .:/,. ..,,,_•....•

H; B R E N N E R:. / UEHLEIN BLOCK, "

<SI EAST WASHINGION AVENUE.

GEO. W. BEERS'J Big bargains in Black Taf-

S feta Silks. Never anything

e like it before for the price

• whenyoucomparethequality.

• 36-inch, very heavy $1.25

£ 27-in, very heavy, warranted 1.00

• 27-inch, very heavy .85

• 19-inch, medium ..50, .75

| SPECIAL:J Ladies' Gloria Silk Umbrella!, as-J sorted handles, 26-inch. . . .98c

a Golf Skirling, 54-in. wide 75c

j GEO. W. BEERS.

BESXRUIIERINE20 CENTS PER POUND

Totted Hum, per can . 10cSitlmnii, JILT enn 10cItlfr CmrltnkCfl ISOJIIIH ; fieMunironl, per box ........ f>eIllir »ox OoriixUircli .V. fie2 HIK HiirH Soup ;..5cJlnckoroi.... per 11), 12e; per kit, 00c

IMimiikiiififorTiimiVkln I'li'H. ' rll'euclies li.v tho QunrLer HiiHket.

Fu t (JlitckeiiH for mile. .^ - - ^ e w U C i i t Uii.v,.WlieiitSliortH. __._^ ' ' ' W c piiy -4c iierilbziiiTtoflfoNii i'KBH.J

The EastonSchool of Business

Increase of 50 Per Cent. Attendance.

A Thorough Training School.Prepares for Immediate Service .in the Counting Room •• :: n

INDIVIDUAL (notvclass) PROGRESSthe principal aim.

NEW APARTMENTS, espelally adapttdtor COMMERCIAL and SHORT-HAND WORK.

THOROUGH INSTRUCTION GUAR-i.ANTEED In Bookkeeping, Arithmetic,

IJ^enmanshlp.^Gommercial Law,- Busi-^-••ntss Correspondence, SpellinK, Bank-

ins, Computation, Invoicing, Shorthandand Typewriting.

Students"admitted at any time. • .-. . ^..Visit the Institution and examin^our fa-

cilities for imparting instruction.

:>r S / L JONES,;Principal;;:;;,

School Rooms, Centre SqM Easton, Pa,-t Write for Catalogue. .

- . N O TRKSPASSING. y .All IHTBOIIH nro ivarnod anal nut tre«pnfin-

ln(j upon the lamlfi or th«flul)Mcrll)trH In any'.maiintT, uKiifclnlh'.fnr tliu iiiiniOHo of liuiit-

hijr, trnpiiltiK, tlHliliiK'.or picking fruit, lior-rli>ri, or iiutH, under [tenalt)' of tlio law.Jopob Dunn ncnrlmlaytlnlo.Jan. L. SliI('lilH...ri....;..Wat*lilnKton township"•George Kwrley ..Xlontann

_._-Chrtn. X. Smith otfllaylor fnrm, Junction— Owt-'ii Oliurly "WaehlnRton towintltlp

JiiiiieH Sidltli^iV...... ...fJll'ii Giirilntir'• .TOB'KO Smith K»tiite ;;-..T;r.UlL'n Uardnur

Huulicu M.'Itrvau nenr New HamiltonThpndore A. lloiltnc....v,..;,;..;T;T.Stew(irtav!lloifflrH of Win ShloltlH U'aHh1ii){ton Twp.

^•J.'liiVaiuiurliult.; WtiHiiIiiKtnn Twp.;^-ticorscJi-.i:i!!-An:i«illaylor.7;;;v..r.",I>i-iiiuiwiiy

Itotiert M. Itoillnc Franklin Twp•Goo. Mackuy, Franklin and WuRiilDKton TwpsJohn Howern i:;...."\ViiHhln(i;toii Twp

•'.rolin -It, Mtirlatt...";."..;;Washington townslilj)•Uolm It. Dalryinplo. ,..........!acltHOn Vnlloy

The Star and the Thrice-a-Week

N. Y. World, $2 per year.

CUCKOG-

am not only soori clocks tnitaromore than tlmt; they arc UIIIIIUDclockH,,i;ver Heen that llttlehlnlcome out and cull the lumra?-:

.w\\ehRvntIimit;.sindI!j:ouAroum-look ttiem ovt-r. •

OTTO J ARC KJE\VKI,RU, ,

'• 441: Norlhampton St., Ea»ton.Tn.,

NasalCATARRH

I n al l its'Blftgui.™'•-'••

Ely's | r e a m Balm.cicnnscB, BQQtbea and heals

i b i i l i f r 'Itcutefl"cntarrh anil drivesmvay.a ooM^Iii-tlio bead'quickly. '" " '<i"~

Cream Ralnt 1B placed Into tho noBtrl1s,sprend3over tlio membrnno niul la nbsotbcd.i Itollcf Is Im-Tncdlntonnd^curefollowsT It la not drying—doesnot produto sneezing. LnrgcSizo, COccotaittSnig^Elats ot by mall; Trial Size, 10 cents. ''' :.•rELY_BKOTnERS, joWuxonSbtnit, NewYoit

• The Tcrdlct'Of n Jnry-""Nothing Is'more uncertain than the

action of a jury," aald a lawyer prom-inent in Xow, York. "I roiacmber astory my father.told me -when I ivas ab6y In Alnbnmn. The'story waa ot hlaSatanic majesty and a plain citizenTvlio met one day on a narrow pathwaycut in the edge of n cliff. On one sidethere yawned a precipice; on the otherside was tho solid rock. There waaonly room for ono to pass, nnd of thesotwo one must lie down and let the oth-er walk over him.

'"If ynn'll propound throe questionsI can't answer/ suggested Satan, 'I'llHe down and lot you pnsa over mybody.' , The. citizen asked:

" 'What is whiter than show?'V 'Cotton,' was tho answer." 'What is sweeter than sugar?''"That's onsy again—molassos.'' "What will be tho next verdict ren-

dered In this county by a petit jury?'" 'Pass on your way.' tuiid the devil

as ho made a carpet of himself."

Catgut From SUkivorniH.Probnbly but a small percentage of

the fishermen who use Hies strung withflno translucent catgut are aware thatthe almost 'unbreakable substance thatholds tho hooks against tho fierceststruggles of tlio struck ilsh comes fromsilkworms. The principal center ofthe manufacture of this kind of cat-gut is the Island of Trociila, in the bayof Xaples, but most,of the silkwormsemployed are raised near Torre An-nunzlntn, nt tho foot of Vesuvius. Thecaterpillars are killed just as they areabout to begin tho spinning of cocoons,the Bilk glands are removed and sub-jected to u process of pickling, whichIs a secret of tlm trndo, mul nftonvnrdtho threads ure carefully drawn outuy skilled workers, mostly women. Thelength of the thread varies from afoot to nearly tventj* inches.

,,'•-. Turcoman. Brlilen.When a Turcoman belle Is to be set-

tled in life, the whole tribe turns out,and tho young lady, being allowed thechoice of horses, gallops away fromher suitors. She uvoids those she dis-likes and seeks to throw herself in theway of the object of her affections. Themoment sho is caught she becomes thewife of 'lit-r captor, who, dispensingwitli, further ceremony, takes her tohla'tent. r: '.' " " . ' •

Tho bride race is also an establishedcustom among the Kalmucks, and thopirls are such excellent horsewomenthat, we are told, It would be impos-sible to catch ono against her will.—London Standard.

Hofift Yonr BOND.Boss your boss just as soon as you

can. Try It on early. There la noth-ing ho will like.so-well if he is theright kind of boss. If ho Is not, be isnot tho man for you to remain with.Leave him whenever you can, even ata present sacrifice, and Ilnd one capa-ble of discerning genius. Our youngpartners, in Carnegie Bros, won theirspurs _ by showing that we did uotknow half as well what was wanted asthey did.—Carnegie's "Empire of Busi-ness." '-•

"'Iliid to Swallow ManjvThtnR*.•'•'""".An nmuslng anecdote is related of

tho late Hungarian statesman Tisza,who when ono day dining at the Ilof-burg with the Austrian emperor placeda large pear upon, his plate at dessert

Tho emperor remarked, to his minis-ter that cold fruit utter a hoL dinnerwas Injurious to the digestion.

Tisza replied, "The stomach of aHungarian premier, your majesty, laobliged to be a strong ono." •"• ., -.

N o t l i i n p R e u m r U a b l c . ; ..„,=—Mrs."*- Gruiiipps-CiookiiiK-uii -fi-om :tiju ;

paper)—A brother.r.and.sister who hudnot soon each other for sixteen yearsmet uocidontaUy tho other day.7~"Mr^uruiiipps—iiuii! - A brother"andBister seldom meet any other .way.

The i'rofpNiior. (, (

"The easiest title in (ho world to hon-.estly acquire," said.the tobacconist tothe woodun Indian, "is that.of ^profess-or, for isn't any man wh6"prot!esses tobo a professor, necessarily a professor?"•—Syracuse Herald. o • •

He Did It.Teacher—No-one can arrest the Sight

o f . t i m e . .•;..-:;cvrr";r"~;-1 ."•-:.- -......-•i.-.r- .:•••:--;;.Pupil—Well, ns I was coming to schoolisrmci'ulug; Fstopped1 two iiiinutes.—"

Detroit Free Press. v~ ';

Aa Good afi Any One Tlierc.Brown—Were' you tho best man at

Hobsoii's wedding?Green—No, I guess not, but I wao

Just as good as any, man tberev-Chica-EoNcws..,: :..;,_ ....'- ;• .;. .. r.','""

GIVEN WARM GREETINGOther Denominations Join the Baptists la

Giving Rev. Eldridge Welcome.

Clever Speeches and a Fine Program MskiIhe Gathering One ol Much Pleasure.

• Rev. Burroughs Eld ridge, the newpastor of the Washington Baptistchurch, can never complain that hisreception to his new charge was not a.most cordial one, for when the forma,"glad hand" waa extended to him onThursday evening In the basement oithe church every denomination In townwas represented and the pastors of theleading churches gladly expressed pub-licly their pleasure in welcoming thinow minister.

The room, although not a large one,was filled to Its full capacity on thisoccasion. As each new comer appear-ed be or she was presented to the newminister and his estimable wife andthen joined a merry throng that movedhither and tblther about the room. At8.30 o'clock Mr. Monford Hutchlnge,treasurer of the church, stepped uponthe platform and in a; unfit Bpeeoh, oibehalf of the church,'welcomed Rev,and Mrs. Eldridge,

Rev. E. B. England followed in atwenty-minute address in which he de-clared that his people joined withthBaptists in welcoming the new minis-ter and in which he apoke of the greatdifference between this gathering andany effort that might have been madealongthat line fifty years ago. That ware Retting nearer the state of churchunity every day waa his sentiment.

Rev. D. B. F. Randolph representedthe Methodist church and he assuredRev. and Mrs. Eldridge that hla peoplewere glad to welcome them to Washing-ton. He said that fire and water werea great combination, for it created thsteam that made the power that moveithe machinery of tho world. He believed the fire of Methodism and thewater of Baptistism wore a combina-tion that could accomplish just asmuch in the world of religion. In theend he begged the Baptist .people togive their new pastor the three "upa.'J

Praise him up, pray him up and payh i m up . • • • . . . .

In.his reply to the greeting Rev.Eldridge said that he would labor tothe beeb of his ability toward: the up-building of tho church and the uplift-ing of the people. He thanked theaudience and the ministers for theirkind words and Bald the. latter, morethan anyono else, probably appreciatedhis position at this time. He askedthe help of all (n his work.and hopodthat all those wbo had met him andhis wife, as well as those who couldnot be present that night, would lenda hand in making their lives as stran-gers in town, pleasant and happy.

After the speeches came a song by avocal trio composed of Miss QraceWarner, Miss Gertrude Russell andMrs.J. H/Jobaaon. Miss Bertha Floreythen rendered a:;cradle Bong accom-panied by Mr. James H. Johnston onthe piano, and Mise Mabel Jenkins fol-lowed with a piano solo. A solo byMr. James Doolittle concluded theprogram. Afterward ice cream andcake were passed around by the ladiesof the church and in due time thepleasant evening came to an end.

Tried to Wreck a Train,Chas. O. Thompson, a railroad work-

man, on Wednesday of last week ob-served a party of strange men placingsome large stones on the Central tracknear Annandale and gave the alarm intime to prevent a bad wreck. Some'of the stones that rolled down the hillweighed several hundred pounds andaa one of the west bound fast passengertrains was almost due a serious wreckwould undoubtedly have resulted hadnotthedastardly work been discovered.It Is" believed the gang intended towreck the express and rob the victims.Detective.:: J.:B. Gray of Phillipsburgwent to work on the case at once andon Saturday arrested a tramp at Junc-tion whom he Buspects. knows some-thing about the kanQactiou."-7"^"'^:

Tbe man gives his name, as .ThomasHeller, nineteen years oldfarid 'livingin Elizabeth. He{ disclaims all know-ledge of;: the job, but Thompson haspositively identified him as one of'thocrowd which he saw placing the rockson the track. The "officers have loattrack of the other two, but it is proba-

-that^Hollcr :iwillr bo:-taken-to theHunterdon county jail some day thisweek and held to await the action ofGrand Jury.„., .„??„„.- -

WiU Stai't Sausage factory. ,,,.:.Alex. B. VanDoren, who for the past

:'wo years has been, connected with theWashington Meat, Market ou.:.-.- EaBtWashington avenueUnd who resignedthere a fe^Tr^sks.rigb, haa leaned" theframe building in the rear,.bf the A,W. Groveling building and'^'wiil'-sdongo into business t h e r e f o r himself.He proposes to put in considerablemachinery and will.manufacture pre-pared ham, bologna, sausage and othercommodities exclusively for the whole-sale trade of this region. HeVanticI-pates that he will have:no difficulty .indisposing of all that the plant*/ heproposes to put up will produce andthat in time be can work up a largeirade. Much of this class of goods soldIn this portlon^of the State at : thepresent time comes from Chicago. -

HACKETTSTOWN.Mrs. Philip Zulaaf entertained bar sis-

tor, Mrs. Wm. Gutsier of Hobokeo, part ofl a s t w e e k . . , .„„._„.•.,; \,,,..... „ • • . , , - „ . . , . .

Mr. and Mrs. William Park visited hit,aiflter, Alro. John Coloman, la Change-water, on Sunday. --. : - . - „ : •—--

Mrs. Arthur Pa rk of Newark' ia herovisiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. OacnrButton.

Mlsa Sadie Gray of Pbllllpsbars waa theRuoat of her elstor, Mrs. Alfred Clawson,in north Haokottstown, a few dnyp since,

Mrs. Henry Stryker went to CJfnton lastThursday with her daughter, Mrs. StewartTorriborry, who had boon her guest i j r aweek. Prom there they went to Nowark,Jersey City and Bridgeport.

Mnrvln Shields has mado marked Iraprovement In tbo clothing store buildingopposite tho American Houso, so long oo-euplod by bis father, T. Shlolds, Jr . , tboclothier, whom the son succeeded a t hisdeath, by placing a tmndaomo plate glassfront tberaln, thus milking It one of thofinest display windows on Main street.By tho way, gossip Is busy with matri-monial projects oa tho part of tho youngclothing merchant uud it is current rumorthat tho first custom-made wedding suit tobo displayed in tbo now front, not fordisplay alone but for actual use, will bethat of tho proprietor.

Samuel Stewart, an ox-fro&holder ofMansfield township, was suddenly strickenwhile sitting la his carriage on Mainstreet on Tuesday, and but for tho aesls-tance of friends wbo saw his condition,would have fallen to tho ground. Ho wasremoved to tho hardware Btore ofW. A.Hoffman and medical attendants called.After a Mme he was revived sufficiently topermit bis removal h o n e . His conditionby reason ofeluiilar attacks a short timoago i s t h o u g h t t o b e s e r i o u s . -•;:-/,

Tho Centenary Collegiate Instituteopened on Wednesday with a reportedfull attendance, and tho most favorablecondltlonu under tno management of Dr.Noble are assurances that the standardof scholarship will be elevated and. theconsequent results beneficial io all. Theusual complement of day scholars fromtown and surrounding villages will attend,and many of those are the boya that areunable to hold their own with tne advancededucation of our public schools, and Booferefuse In an abridged course of ono or twostudies at the Seminary, a damnation totho scholar and an Injary to the reputationof what should bo a high-grade institution.The average Haokettatown youth andmaid from twelve to fourteen years of agewho know moro than the modern schooltext books of tho day, to say nothing oftholr superiority in the knowledge linoover their public school teachers, seems tohave an aversion to the • study of thoclassics In the public school. One youthlias just returned,from Cape Town, SouthAfrica, after a live days'sojourn from thedomestic fireside because bo didn't like tostudy latin, uud others of like calfbro butwithout the grit to even depart for BO longa time as five days, arc striving to shelterthemselves in tbe harbor ofO. 0.1. Ad-mlEslon to the Seminary should be uponexamination. All schools of standing ro-quire it and it would bo our pride to bobe able to class 0. C. I. In the high gradoof other well known in&Utulioiia. Itshould be Dr. Noble'd uuibltiou Lo rank itt h e r e . -. • • ••.

The summer resident Is becoming aboutas acarco aa tho commercial yradoa ofanthracite coal—in other words, the binsthnt housed both are empty. At the lossof the one tho baker, the butcher and thecandlebtick maker bewail for the want ofthe other. Tho usual pood-natured house-wife has become a scolding mistress.

Roacoe Hart, the popular Center streetflorist and tbe town's most recent bene-dict, has set up housekeeping in the Mannhouse oa Madison street. • "••""-

Mrs. Darnell, wife of tbo Rev. S. B.Darnell, Is reported seriously sick at herhome oa Mountain avenue.

Our local horsemen are much InterestedIn the doings of The Doctor and DorothyS,, Mr. Horace Stokes' Interesting pair oftrotters, both of whom are entered in theraces In the Circuit of Eastern Pennsyl-vania this month. Many went to Bethle-hem to see them. Tbe little mare at oncebecomes a favorlto on every track she Isshown. Their success and Mr. Stokes'geniality and companionship with horse-men of note augurs well for tbe success oftbe October meeting of the HackattstownDriving Park Association, whlob will beannounced In a few days. No need to goabroad to flee this wonderful p^'-^nd thefast mates their epeed will entice here.Come here in October, when all races arerun on the square and the best horse wins—not the best jockey.

S T E W A H T S VILLB.No. 2.

-Mrs. Cooper is quite sick at the home ofMrs. Elizabeth Tinsman.

Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Lowis and daughterjf New Village spent Sunday with hisparents.

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. "Wolfe spent Sundaywith her slulur in Belvfdere.

Mrs. Bert Weller .Is entertaining herjouBln from Phillipsburg.-Theodore Butler attended the Bethlehem

Fair. ,Mrs. McFerran Is visiting ber sister in

Newark. -.=Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Brvin had com-

| pany over Sunday.Mrs. Burke of the medicine show is

tgain well enough to take her place In theaerformancGB. h;

Mr.-and Mrs. Harry Taylor entertainedMr. Fox of Philadelphia over Sunday.

MIBS Ella Mullen of Amboy-ts the guestif her niece, Mrs. Charles Raddatz. 7

MIBB Grace Shoeley Ia spending somo,lme with Miss Helen Stono. •••a^t:,

Mr, and Mrs.' Joseph. Martin spent lastChurodayand Friday at"Bethlehem, takingn the Fair.

Mr. and Mrs. Goorgo Soyder spent Sun-lay with their daughter.

Aaa Stlrea and brother Walter were Sun-day guests of Mies Edna Butler.

Mrs. Harry Morrow has returned homo:om Ocoan Grove.. vThere was a surprise par ty at Edward

Colo's near New Villoga Saturday. Mr.and Mrs. Ira,Cole and daughter attended.

Herbert Wolfo spent Saturday and Sun-sy-trlth his brother iu"FMUipHburs;,™-•--"-Mrs! John Frlttaliis seriously UVaVthis

fritluff.,, • C<^ . ^ *.,. •

Mr. and Mrs. Josoph L'Homadleu enter-tained on Sundav Mr. and Mrs. CharlesL'Homadiou of Washington and Mr. andMrs. Wm. Pool of Oxford. ~-

Mrs. Samuel Coon a n d . M M , MargaretGulfck spent Sunday with Mr. and Mre.'ftcob Thowaa a t Rookport.

Mr. and. Mrz. Carl Jensen are entertain-iE Rev. ."and Mrs. N.i'iV. Holm of New;_ork. • ' , j f •;:•E. 0. Sollday spent one day last week a t

,iio Bethlehem F?. Ir.-i^.Mr. and Mrs. Jafsesn Jensen of New

tillage epont Sunday a t the homo of Carlreaaen. ...••- _ _ .>, .-^.-^

!?oO To California. .'W--The Laekawanna-Kailroad offars r«duc6drates to western points as follows:^"----—-

One way colonist ticket to California onsale every day during September and Oct-tober $50,' with proportionately, low. rates)o nearly all western cities. i<, •'• o

Monterey, California, and return JI0I.30.Tlckots on sale September 23th, 29th and30th. Chicago, Illinois, and roturn ?19.Tickets on sale October 5th. GLh and 7th.For information as to the above rates ap-ply to local ticket ngont, or address GuyAdams, Division Passengor agent, Newark.

is offering some bargains in pianos-«_, and organs.

2 Upright Pianos, slightly used,each . , . . . . $175

I Estey Organ with three full setsof reeds . . . . . $40

Organ, value $40, for . $25

I Organ, value $45, for . $30

Square Piano % . . . ' $ 3 5

Square Piano_...;..;.... :.. $40

I Square Piano . , . . $30

The above for cash only or note

with security.

See them at the Hackettstown

store.

F. IlllKlBl'iHACKETTSTOWN, N . J .

CLAMS andOYSTERS

We are now receiving

every week consignments

of the finest Clams and

O y s t e r s o b t a i n a b l e ,

which are not only for

table use in our restau-

rant but for family trade.

We should like to have

the pleasure of serving

STAR readers.. .;.

F.C. SHURTS52 E. Washington Ave.

':^REABM:toshow you the most up-to-date lino' o(:Sportsmen's Supplies this side of New.York clty.and at prices that;wlH"please,'-N o t e t h e s e g u n p r i c e s : : -.••"••. : •'-•<•-. ;

Our Pride, the Beljlum.........$13.00Parkhurat;..;i:.;.' .....;. 15.00 ,Marhattari.....:...,. 16.00Pelper Patent:. : . . . . . . . . .„.; . 19.00 ':.Ithaca...;;.........;.;..;;^.......... 24.00L. C. Smith.....;.................;.. 29.00

I would ask you particularly :

TOcall and see our: famous Twins—The"L. C. Smith" and the "Syracuse," They, :

are the finest In the market for tho money'and are sold all over at $35. but our specialprice this fall is $29.00. w

Any small dealer trying to sell thesefamous guns at this price will simply

DIEIn the attempt us It Is Impossible to buythem In small quantities and sell them atthis price. • . .' • ,

We Invite you to call and look themover; costs you nothing. " r r ™"' .: v *

W. W. GHRiSTiNE'SSPORTING GOODS HOUSE.

ICECREAM

Unequalled for delicacy of flavorand purity of contents.

Visit the cool, mosquito proof pavil-ion and enjoy a plate of frozendeliciousness. :

Just now we particularly invite

your kind attention to what we be-

lieve to be the most worthy line of

Wrappers andShirt Waists

n town. The sale this season hasbeen very large, and the stock nowon display is a new invoice.

See OurSun Umbrellasand FineLine of Hosiery.

Specialties with us for manyyears which have won high publicregard are

Our Glassware^and Crockery.

No lines to compare with themare to be found in Washington.

J. K. COOKEOn the Square.

AND CAKES %have no equal in this county.;! Afteran unfortunate experience with bak-ers, we have struck a gait enviedby all competitors,

M.F.GULICK.

...The First NationalBank of Easton allowsinterest on time depos-ts, computed,by calen-dar months, at 3 percent, per annum.

L. BOiNNOT, FLORIST: - Removed from Enston to '"-•-;

936 Washington Street,.HOBOKENf"N. J . ^ ^ i

NOTICE.Notice la hereby'jrtven ol'tho'; annual meet-

IttK'ot tlt(! HtOl'KllOldlTB Of tilt1 NtiL'flhlUH. niulOrirfth Co.. a t tlielr ollloe In thojgln of WhsliliiKton, on Tlmreilay, the

Sth any of SoptenibL'r, next, l>etweeu theiourH of L'lovcn anil twelve, iv. m., for tlioLlip puriMJHO of elt'ctliiR llvodlroctorH find toe

' other ciuiHjR a s shn l j conie before tbrEBA"aTUSA."c6l,E,

Everythinga Farmer Want*

In the way of Farm Machinery,Plows, Wagons and Castingsis supplied upon the most fav-orable terms at the old estab-lished

WashingtonFoundry.

R. Q. Bowers, Jr., Proprietor.

! ! ! -zM U s :^=^_s=i.-JSis!

Ethe Leading^•£_.;22

Contracting Builders;

i anf Carpenters. V °Leading,' because they possess the know-:

how-1-tlve-ness; becaii3?uicy~do~the"bestvwork and manifest "exceptionally goodjudgment and taste,:and their methods-stand the cosest scrutiny. Whether thework Is done by tbe day or by contract, Itwill be of the same high order. Just tellthem what is wanted and you will get itand pay no more than you should pay.

will recognize Da Renter work bv'^"(5-C2t! -'W its goodness..-.'0\v.*< ••- .• ••

Page 10: 35TH YEAR-NUMBER 38. ELOPED WITH FELL TO DEATH · Roeey -was boy-struck. There is no doubt of that and It Is the universal opinion in the neighborhood of Hope that this one fact Is

10 THE WASHINGTON STAR, WASHINGTON, N . J . , THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1902.

-TAKES PLACE-

EPTat which time our complete stock will be open for your inspection. We have always worked hard to bring together all the new and correct styles made in the most honest manner, but this year we have outdoneourselves. It seemed last season that it was impossible to introduce anything newer or more perfect than the goods and styles were then, but'just the same as every year finds advancement throughout our entire-country, so it is in the clothing business. This building up a clothing business commenced nine years ago in the same quarters we now'Vcupy, arid every year •has^fo'und us marching forward to the highestmark of honest and upright storekeeping. There is a great change in the store today from the first year. Seventeen years' previous dealing with the people of this section rnadp.Jots of good, warm friends, but thehew methods adopted by this house soon started footsteps toward our store and they have been.coming ever since. Other friends and neighbors have been.addedevery season until today there is not a town or -village within a radius of twenty miles which has not some people who are wearing the Bryant clothes, and the crowd of comers increases all the time. For all of this \vc, feel very grateful to our friends andpatrons and shall never cease workinn to make our store the store for the people. Lots of new things we shall tell you about from week to'week, and we ask you to come in, look over the goods, spend asmuch.time'as you like,ask all the questions you want to and feel under no obligations to buy unless you cannot resist the temptation. .-....-:•'•• . . ;. • : •.•_-. ••..-.-:.-. . : :

Men's Suitsare in almost countless numbers. Everystyle that fashion says is correct youwill find here. .Honest Suits for business $5.00Black Cheviots 5.00Several styles of Fancies 5.00Black Worsted, has no equal at

the price 6.50Neat patterns in fancy colorings.: 6.50All Wool Black Diagonal 7.50Fancy Cheviots.; 8,50

AT TEN DOLLARS A SUIT.Blue Serges, heavy weight, all wool and

fast colors.Black Thibet in very fine quality; worth

much more.Fancy Cassimeres in a score of new

patterns and colors.Gray Clays in heavyweight, of pure

worsted, elegantly made and trimmed.

Boys' Suitsare here in all the correct styles for thenobby boys, as well as for the more quietones.A good honest Suit $4.50Black Cheviots,.very nicely made

and trimmed.. '.. 5.00

Fancy Cassimeres, nobby patterns 6.00Several new colors and,patterns

at ..$7.00 and $7.50Fine qualities in this season's nov-

elties, a t . . . . . . . . $ 8 , $10 , $1.2, $ 1 4Boys' Double Breasted Suits in

the new two-and-three buttonstyles, at.. . . $10 and$12Special styles of any kind you want,

and if you want suits different from theother boys, come here.

Trousers.;Our Trouser Department has received

the same careful attention as all theother departments, and the showing thisseason is exceptionally fine.At $2.00 we offer a very good quality

of Cassimere, cut-in "the new styleand made and trimmed same" as goodsof much higher price. ^ ""•::.

A t $3 .00 we offers pure Worsted ma-terial of a very nobby style. Theseare better than we ever offered before.

At $4.00—Some very choice goods inentirely new styles. These will sure-ly please the man who wants a pair

' of nice dress trousers. 'Dutchess Trousers need no introduc-

tion* they are-old friends.:" $1.00 to $5.00 a pair!

Qryant Clothier and furnisher

Our Hat Storeis growing wonderfully, and the onlyreason'for it is the always correct stylesat always under prices. Then we standby every hat we sell no matter what theprice; if it-is not satisfactory in everyway, bring it back and get a new hat oryour money. All the new fall stylesare now ready.Stiff Hats in over a dozen new styles,

98c, $1.40, $1,90, $2.40, $3.00Soft Hats in all those new shapes'and

new colors. They are$1.40, $1.90, $2.40, $3.00

The standard Alpines in black and grays;better than ever, 98c, $1,40, $1.90

Our Furnishing Dep'tgrows larger every season and if there isany thing new in this line you'll find it here.

Our early showing of Winter Under-wear is astonishing. The number ofstyles and colors in all the differentgrades is a wonderful assortment.Prominent among them is a Wool fleeced• of very good quality and extra heavyweight which we are selling a t . . .49c

Also a medium weight in natural andwhite; a garment more suitable forthis season of the year than any othertime. Shirts and Drawers,,in sizes32 to 48, a t — . . . . . 4 4 c a garment i

Bryant

Fall ^Overcoatsare very necessary at this' time of theyear. Don't takeany chances on theweather. Our showing this season isvery complete. The colors are justright and the fit is perfect.$8.00 buys a fine Covert, either in

light or dark colors, finely made andtrimmed; worth at least a couple ofdollars more.

At $10.00—Fine dark Oxford in splen-did quality; one of the most staplecoats made.

At $12.00—All the new fancy weavesin light, medium and dark colors;some very short, others long; equal toany $15.00 overcoat anywhere.

New Fall Neckwear—Correct in style and colors.

New Fall Suspenders—Silk, Lisle and Cotton.

New Fall Night Robes—Domet and Muslin.

New Fall Gloves—Kid, Mocha and Dogskin.

New Fall Shirts—Correct colors, perfect in fit.

New Fall Caps-:—Men's, Boys' and Children's.

New Fall Hosiery—Silk, Lisle and Cotton.

Overcoats.Overcoat times are around again and

the indications now point to a cold sea-son, but no matter what the season isall must have an overcoat. The onlytwo things are, what. kind to get andwhere to get it. If you ask anyonearound here they will tell you to go toBryant's and if you don't know justwhat you want you will soon find out,for the tables are groaning with thestacks of new overcoats and all of thisseason's make. You will find overcoatshere at S4.00; you will find others atS25.00. -

You will find someof them quite fancy;you will find others painfully quiet. ,

Some uf them you will think too long;some of them you will think too short;but what a lot of them you will thinkjust right.

We are going to tell you a whole lotabout these overcoats later on. You mayget confused with this long talk of oursand think it is like a good many others'whose "ads" don't agree wilh their

I stocks, but ask for any garment we ad-vertise and we will show it to you.

New, Fall Handkerchiefs—Silk, Linen and Cotton.

I New Fall Collars and Cuffs.

Clothier and furnisher QryantPERSONAL MENTION.

A Week's Record of the Movements ofthe People You Know.

locla'Events of the Six^Days Briefly Chron-icled for QuIckJPerusal.

"-• Miss Lillian Hance Ia spending t h e weekwith friends in Easton.. Misa Belle Scott is making a lengthy

~";'1""."•;"'.-• visit with"relatives a.t Dover. ~ •. -••• . Mr. Arthur Eadgley of Scheuectady, N.

Y., was in town over Sunday.• Mr. and Mrs. J. Warron Fitts are spend-

ing the week at Ocean Grovo.Mrs. Lorenzo Drake spent last week

with relatives in Phillipsburg.Mr. Arthur Badgley of Schenectndy,

N. Y., was in town on Friday."•' • Bites Gussle Hill was with friends in

Easton several days last week.Misses Agaes and Annie Byrne are In

:....: - r. "New York for n few.days'atay. •;-,...Mrs. Lucy Robinson of Stroudsburg te

the guest of Mrs. Jacob W. Davis. , xMisa Caroliue Rtttenhouso hag returned

to Wheaton Seminary, in Massachusetts.1

• : : Mrs. Miller-.WIdenor waa the guest of• ' : her sister in PhilllpsbHrg several days last

week. . /Mr. James Sexton of Scranton has beon

..... spending a week with hfs parents in this.. , . ' p i ^ g - - • - - . - • - • . • . , - . . . ; . ; :

Mr. George Weber of New York was thegneatof Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Rush overSunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Ayors of Petersburgare guests of her father, Mr, Wm. G. Hallon School s t r e e t ^ >- ••"

Mra. Byron"Babcbck of Hobokeu Is thoguest of Mr. and Mrs. Alpheua Babcock on

:r;,-^-;ryv.\-Belvidereavenue. .--•• %.. — • - ."D. •"•.. -.>•„Misa Emil E lkner , formerly of Imlay

dale, has recently entered Prat t 'a Business^..^....-i. Oollegojn Brooklyn. „. ..^•^.,,.^^

"Mr. S*. W.bhristin6"5RVo his" Sundayschool class a day's outing at Easton and

™-.:'-':.•:: •-•-. FttXinoea onTuesday..- -,. - - :• ,---••:.:i.^,-™;^._li.Mrs...E.--HalIand.of Newark waa 'tho.

.T-r, - Vueat'of Mr."and Mrsraamuel cowman a: •_. Brass Oastlo over Sunday. ,--. . : '".

• ••..'. Mr. .William Hill • Is ienjoyinp a two: weeks'vacation, part of which tirpe^wllbo apent attending tho dlfferentfiurb.-—

Mr. Joseph B. Cummins, who has boonw.' Boendinc' nart of" hia vacation in Now

-,.;,; -^-.. York ;:W ill >fit;»m fro -the C.O. I-thlB-week.

"''-'•- Mra. Wni.Dereamer haa returned homofrom a two wooks' visit at her' eons,Joseph and Alfrod Dereamor, at Garwood,

MIBS Blanoho Coffin returned to heihome In Stroudsburg on^Sunday aftor

i- M*£ " "Cornish street.week's'visit with - Mjrs. Wm. Young on

; : t?—n. • ,-^-- .- Mrs, Theoaore Mattison will accompany-liar sister, Mr.sV John Thomson, to her^-lioms-Iiii:1JorscyiCity2Ltpdfly-:.for-.a;:.week>C;

Mrs. George 8. Trimmer and daughterand grandchild havo gone to Whitohousoto visit one of Mra. Triromor'a other daugh-ters for two.weeka.1 Rev. B. A. Boom of Florence, N. J., wasIn town Tuesday and yesterday. Today heis in attendance at the Sunday school con-

;', yontlpn at Belvldere. •••,;, .•• '•• ' .•• .\" •"•r'':"-Mr Janies Speirs of Lansdale arid friend

Q of Philadelphia^ Bpent Saturdp-3

and Sunday here with the former's par-enta, Mr. and Mrs. William Spelra.

Mr. Harry 9. Bruch, who haa been spend-ing a two weeks' vacation with his par-ents, Mr. and Mra. Thomas Bruch, inBroadway, loaves today for New York.

Mrs. S. C. Larison of Hackettstown andMrs. Jacob Larison of Flanders wereguesta of Mr. and Mra. William Larisonbelow town from Friday morning till Sun-day evening.

Dr. and Mrs. E. 0. ,^'Jyphers and Bon ofBelleville drove hero on Saturday with.heir fine turnout and are spending

a week with the Doctor's parents on Bel-•'deroavenutt. : :...-,..-•-;•.: :.. „.._:_„:.

Mrs. Har ry 0. Alleger and daughter ,Ruth, of Philadelphia, spent last woekwith her sister, Mrs. W m . PlottB, on You-mans avenuo. Mr. Alleger joined themfor over Sunday.

Mr. G. B. Wert , who has been*in chargeof the Carter Pharmacy the past fortnight,will nes t week enter the railway mail ser-vice, having paesod the civil service o s a m lnation last June.

Rev. Fa ther McConnell of Oxford willhereafter celebrate mass a t tho WhiteHouHoon thoJerwey side of - th©Delawaroat tbo Water Gap, at 6:30 and a t 10 o'clockon Sunday mornings,

Blr. J o h n A. Fox of New York, but for-merly of Waahineton, was a visitor a t thohomo of Mr. L. W. Miller last week. Heformerly lived Lure but this w a s h is ' firstvisit to the borough in eighteen years.

Tho friends of Mr. Grant Heed were gladto see h im upon thost ree ts again last Satur-day after his confinement.of several woftkson account of an at tack of appendicitis.He is now looking quite his former self.

Mr. and Mrs. John Apgar of Now Vil-lage entertained at their pleasant home onSunday Mr. and Sirs. Frsiik Apgar, Mr.aud Mra. William Apgar, AlLNand Mra. G.H. Bowman and two sons of Broadway.

JRev. Joaeoa'Rlgnoy on Monday marriedMr. John White and Miss Itoso. FlnnOEiinof Delaware In tho Catholic' church at thisplaco.r Mr. and Mrs. Whi te will live InDelaware where the" bridegroom i3 em-ployed.- "-•;:-:.-.. -:r :.„•;.—-,;-:-- -v'..-,:•••—

"A large number of thc:!lttle^frlonds ofRussell HIgglns gathered at his homo onRailroad avenue Monday afternoon andsave,.him..a_birthday surprise. Refresh-ments were served and~anenjoyablo t imtwas had by the little folks. Russell receivedquite a number of prrisfintH;-•_ _ -.-

Mr. Bayard Sheldon of Summit, wguest of his college chum, Mr. Wosley 0 .Bowers, from Saturday to Monday, whentboy l e a for Pitncoton.. . Thoy-mado t h e.trip from Washington .to Eaaton ou thecanal andfro iuEi is ton to Troiity~ii:::Oii:-lhtjDelaware in their handsome canoe, aond-ing their baggage by rail . - ;

Mr. Winilold Smith was-grea t ly sur-prised lust Saturday evening, w h e n r . b o u ttwenty-flvo members of the I. O. 0 . -F. andRebecca's Lodges came in upon hini'^romJunction. Mr." Smith hRd been anC'lOuiFellow for ' a long , t ime , but in somu-waylot h imself ' run out, and to hia surpriaohis esteemed wife had him reinstated twev.Tee!:s?~ago.:;"^!rie'r: refreshments ,v~wer5served, j

Mr, an'3rMrs.^Gsorge Shur ts of nearAsbury gave an 'e labora te dinner on Sat-urday, to a-fow friends aud ro^t ivea in-cluding Mr. Johnson Shipman of LonrIsland, Mr. Ar thur Vliot of Now YorLcltyl-air. and Mrs. Harry Hoffman and sonof Bloomsbury, Mr. Robert Bowlby ofAabury, Mr. J o h n Shurta, Mr. and Mra.Jamca P._ S h u r t V Mr. Edward aud MlCaMay Bhurts ofWaahington,

Mr. J . Hoaa Lake of Somerville waa intown Friday.

Miss Grace M, Warne r spent Sunday a tLake Hopatcong.

Mr. C. S. Gardner is on a six weekB' t r ip;hrougb the West .

Mrs, Ricnel Hansler Is spending a monthwith relatives a t PUtstown, N . J.

Mra. John L . Biggins a n d Mra. A. J .Craft were in Now York on Friday.

Misa Julia R. Borgen has been spendingseveral daye in Newark aud Rahwuy.

Mrs. John Lanco of Hackct ts town BpentFriday and Saturday last with, friends hero.--Miss Mary-Larkin of.. Jersey. City, is .visit-,log Mrs, John Hagan on Bolvidoro avenuo.

Mrs. P . W. Wandl iag and son, Will iam,returned from Guelph, Canada, last woek.

Mrs. E t ta Kinnoy of Stewartsville is thoguost of her sister, Mrs. Georgo W. Rase .

Miss HelonS. Ease was wi th friends atratiberry Lake over Saturday and Sun-

day.Miss Rhino Hayas of Petersburg was tho

guest of Mrs. Joseph Burd several dayslast week.

Mr. Dowltt Ramsey and Misa Belle Scott.ifcnt Sunday w i s h t n e former's parenta"at

Morrlstown, .Mr3. George Campbell of Easton la the

guest of Blra. S, J . Tlnsman on upper"road street.

Air. and Mrs. Na than-Rad l lne and son,Lester, spent several uuya a t Allentown,I ' * , , l a s t w e e k . • ' : - •:• . • •• " i . -

Mr. and MM;'• Wm; Cowell sponfc.lastSuuday..in Haxeu as Lhe .E>te&t3, ot'Mr. andMrs. B. B. Prall. ' ,;" ' ~. - • •" " "

Former Governor Voorhees has been ap-pointed Receiver for the Republic Savingsanil Loan Association.

Messrs. Harry H. Hann and Fred Mar-4uurd of Dover were the guesta of Mlas

Ktta Gardner on Sunday. :; ,

;

Mrs. William Walsh of NewYorkandM;a, Vincent Klchline of Easton are theguests of Mr.-aud Mrs,: William Barruii. •

Miss H. Nina Crovllhg leaved today fori ox tended visit, with friends at Dover,

Mra. WflHnm Paullsri entertained a num-ber of ..friends at herjiomeon Youmansavenue lastTnursday uvobi'ugr^-^ .-r---™, ,1;:

Mr.-and -Mra. Chrisslo Smith of GlenGiirdjiur wore'wlth'hor parents, Mr, andMrs. BeujamU::,0r»yellng, ovor Sunday,j,;.;:i."Mra. CharloV Beers 'and'~B6nr;Harry; ofSeraiiton, are hero spending the woek^vithMra. James P. DoRumor on Broad street.

Mrs. Wilbur Nixon and daughter of Al-lentown aro visiting her parents, Mi1'; andMfa 'JjffiOb .WvDayis, on Railroad a'vonuc.

WilHam'Isnrron was at the Empirotrackon Tuesday and saw Dan Patch raciVagainsttlino. The eQort on the part ol' t'ife horsewas a failure.w iff!:- • •!

Mr. John Pittongor is horaofrca Washyingtop, D. 0."^ . jjl'fr ..... ji~"Miss iilizab&th H u n t of .Newrirk is t h eguost of'Mlas'Ethol Carl iue. jjjf •''

5 •,:•;

alatur, Mra.'Anna.Egty, of Eustdiyi. , .Mr. and Mra.' Frank B. M7/iholl and

children apont Sunday at CheB^r,^;^,. ';Mr. Joaoph I?, Johnston returned to'the

Now York Dental College on Monday.Miss Holon Smith waa the guest of Misa

Mary p . Ammorman at, Bnda|s L^ko overSunday..;'.""' -v--•' S~:rV,'i'-i*™rT•" ; • ".Miss. Susie Thompson •'of "'Gladstone is

here the RuestjTf^her^brother,"Mr. Charles

Mr. and Mrs. Otto Gleitz and daughter,Helen, spent Sunday in New Village guestaof Mr. and Mra. James K. Smith.

Mrs. Margaret r, Evans and daughter,Bessie, of Scranton, aro guests of Mr. andMrs. Harry Lewis on Vanuatta street.

Mr. John Parks of Binghamton spentSunday with his wlfe-who la a guest oftheir daughter, Mrs. Wm. Plotts, on, You-mans avenue. r.

Mr, Frank T. Nutze left homo TuesdayJ"or an extended Western trip in tho inter-est of tho Necdbam Piano and Organ Co.Ho will go ns far as Denver.

Mrs, Thomaa Doyle and little daughter,Florence; of Orsngo, arcspeadicg tv.'Oweeks at tho home of her.aunt, Mrs.^Geo.W. Slirope, on Broad street.

Mr. James Spelrs returned a few., daysago from the Philadelphia hospital wherohe went some time since for treatment forappendicitis. He Is- entirely cured andfeota much elated. .--~-r ,

Tho announcement fs made of the mar-riage of Mr. Harry Toepfer and Miss HazelBaker. The ceremony was performed inDover on Aug. 10th, but tho fact only bo-came known in tfackettstown last week.

. Capt. Jos. W. Johnston returned'-Satur-day after a two months' absonco In thoWeat. IIo visited California; Nevada,Indian Territory, MiBaourl and Arkansas,on business. In one instance be made atrip of 250 miles by stage.~'>X)r. S.'H. Johnson of Cfllifbnsnontpart>f Tuesday in town. .This was his iirst

visit hero since ho romoved t o h l s nowlocation from Asbury last fall, a fact'duoto'alargo-practice which-hfta-kepL himfully occupied all the while.

Mrs. Robert MIUH of Providence, R. I.,has been the guest of her intimate friend,Miss Holllugshead, alncc last Wednesdayand will remain yot some time. Sho hualost nono of her invariable good natu.roand jolllty.blnco loavlng Washington. '

Mi-,'!Artltur Vliot, a natlvje of the Asburyvicinity, now "ono of tho QiioBtJ' of GreaterNowjYor'tt, was in towu-'rhiiroday. Ho lawithhip;family in Phillifisbui-g tor a fewdays, where they have been upending amonth/with_Mr. and-iM?fi'...rWm. Garriuon.. $po%b'- afty^friends!"bf//Mi8a Lulu Garri :

sod'cplled in a bodyiit^iicr home on East•WashiBKUm Avjirt/ii 2'.iuViJi.VovtjnIng andtendered her a "bufpiis;^3 Tho visit wasUta'ly unexpected by the lady but. theeyeiUug was very happii/-spent novbr-h^R?, ::. ;.- s-..... . \ . ' " . ; ' • .

vUr. and Mra. Jacob' K . Thompson and icbUdron of Gladstone were here from Satur^ \dn'V until Monday the giieats of their uon,M!'r. Charles B . Thompson . Whon" l l n jyr'vturned, they were aceompaniod by Mr.Thompson's mother , Mrs. Joseph 0 . iThompson, who haa~ since been yialtlnc Iwith them." I;> Mr, E. H. Bennett and family of Eliza-beth aro guests a t t h e Lako House -a tBudd's Lako. Mr. Bennet t ia a. HOH nf.tlioPresident of thorSlngor Sowing MachineCo, Ho has two automobiles a t tho lako.Mr: Grovor and wife, also of Elizabeth, iaro thero as aro also Mrs . Van Zant of|.Pasfladona, Oal.,.and Mrs.-Brlttpn o tF lom-irigtoh."T"""' .';•'.'.'... • '."'*'"• '." ' \- "

Mr, James Vannat ta of Indianapolis, In-diana, has been In this section for tho pasttwo weeks visiting relatives. Ho Haa boonhore with his brothor , Mr . S. T . Vannat ta ,ofTand on. Last Sunday ho was drivenhero from Chester by ano the r brothor, Mr>N. 0 . Vannat ta , of t h a t place. Althoughhe hoa beon in the iWest but a few yoars,he Is enjoying prosperi ty in fine meanuro,being at the head of tho Central ChemicalCompany. . . ' - . "" . •" ;i_^i='^;™,;-1 •

Mr. and Mrs. Hi ram Wise of Eastonspent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. MarkCyphers.

Mr. and Mra. Edward Stewart of Strouds-burg aro guesta of Capt . Joseph W. Johns-ton's family this week.

Mr. Charles Cyphers of t h e Tidings forcehas beon oQ duty two weeks seeking recre-ation and pleasure. A couple of days werespent at the Bothlehcm Fair .

Former Judge Morrow and son J o h ndrove here Sunday from Bolvidere and at-tended services a t tbo Presbyterian church,as has frequently been his wont. • -

Mrs. L. E. Vannat ta of Philadelphia andMrs. O. W. Beers of_ this place nro Bnnn^:intr three weeks with their brothor, Mr. (*.Watson Hansler, at P i t t sburs , Pa. : - -

Mr. John Mlers, t he engineer at t h eCornish factory, is In a very serious condi-tion, t h e result of running a rusty nail intohis foot. Elood poisoning is feared.

Mr. H. M. Bull has loft t he HoneyHospital in Brooklyn and gono to Ocean,Grovo for a sojourn with lila oldest aori:His condition la such t h a t gives littlehope.

Mr. Theodore Shropo and sister Eva re-turned to their-hoine-In. Phi ladelphia to?day, aftor spending t h e summer wi ththeir"aunt; Mra. William Shropobu Churchstreot.

Invitations are out for the marriage ofMiss Margaret Burroll of High Bridge toMr. F rank ; \Vi lbnrTuckor ;a t : the house,oftho bride, on Wednesday next a t threoo'clock. .

NOT STRICTLY'LOCAL.Notes of the Week's Happenings in Other

A Counties and States.

Items of General Interest Picked Up Mere and

There, and Humorous SquiBa.^-;^r

The Lnckawanna compfinyJoarned clearabout .=2G0,GG0*iiiuro; Ihls' ry6^t""P i t ' l dlast,, e- • " " '

Every blind person In New York citywhodeslris It receives from the city^inannuity of *5p.':,Th«y-,woro, paid ofl' lastVieeb; and 65S applied for the monwy. - ' J

The New York subway has alrondy cost5-21,000,000 and is throe quarters finished,The contractors uay that cars will bo run'nlng through the big hole within anothoryear. ,.. • ~ • - .

Reuben F. Toel;itho Easton aldermanwho committed forgery, ploadod guilty Incourt at'Easton last woek:;!ind won Ben-teucod to ono year and ten'months in theNorthampton county prison.

Admiral Dewey still lingers In tho Poco--D6B. On Wedneaday of last week, in the

prnsonco of a larco midienco,-ho turnedthe flrsi/Buovol of dirt for tlio oroctlon of anpw.momprial church at Montaneseu Park'.

David L. Everltt, ono of tho oldest andmost"rHapuctou'cilizuiJti of Ilieh Bridgo;cliad.at hifi hoiuw ihuro on Monday of last wook.He'waa tho first postmaster tho town overhad and waa the founder of Eoat HighiBridgo. / -• ; • • •'• : ' • . =• . , , -^ A

ifiira. Carrlo Nation was ono of thov'at-tractions at tho Monroe County Fair Jn:

Stroudsburg a few days ago. Sho,eot ?50for a short temperance talk. The smallhoys took advantago of the occasion topolt her.wlth pnpor balls...Alexander C. Oliphant, adjutant (jonoral

-"'X"

of the National Guard of New Jersey, diedat his home in Trenton ^Tuesday morning.Ho had been ill for several months butdeath was caused by a paralytic strokewhich ho suffered a few daya beforo.

Tho largo barns belonging to Paulson &Humphrey in Flomington, and occupiedby tho W. H. Cawloy Bottling Co., wereburned on Monday. Several other barnsIn tho Immediate neighborhood narrowlyescaped destruction, due to tho good workof the Flomington ilro department.

Tho U. S. Exproea Co.'s contract withthe Lackawanna railroad oxpireB in twoweeks and thoro Is HOUIO question as towhat company will be its successor,[tumor"t'Oimc.lB tho "American aud-lliuWttl!srFf\rsra-&Kv..beliig in control, of theprivilege now-bold by the U. S. people.

A romarkable family reunion was holdnt the homo of George F.Evcland at Hack-ctUtown u few days ago when ho sat downto dinnor with tils six slaters, all of whomare widows. Tho combined ages of thoparty was M5 years. Two of tlio sntorsnro Mm. Julia Cornish and Mrs. ElsieSmith of Washington. ^

Mlas Elslo Mitchell and Mr. Edward Hil-debrant we~o quietly married at tho homocf ths bridti'a :;iOtlior, Mrs. Mary.E.:Mitch-_oll.on Railroud avenue,. Saturday.' Thoceremony was porformed by Rev. Pimm,tho Baptist mlnistor at Port Murray. Thehappy couple are spending their honey-moon at Ocean Grovo.

A "discharged Central "railroad dotoctivclast wook confessed in court that he andanother detective stole a lot ol'.braaa carjournals in an effort, to fix a caso on two jyoung men whom they suap.ectod. The Itwo suspects woro arrested, kept in jailflvo months and iinally acquitted. Tnoysued the railroad company for damagesand last week wore given a verdict for?2,500each. / . , ,

Tho Suaaox county grand jury on Mon-day presented four true bills against thoLackawanna railroad company on fourcharges of selling, and permitting to bosold, boor on. tho company's property atCranborry-Lako. A largo number of indi-vtdualrF-'WOi'?- also Indicted on slmilnrcharges. 'The/1-maximum' ponalty for thiscrime is a Qno-of"$1,000 or -three years inprison, or both. • • - ' •

Burglars made a deporate attempt torob tho Sussex post-ofiloe one night lastweel:. ,ThWj.blew- open tbo Bftfo and m--curcd about one dollar. Had they BUC-ceedod in opening the Inner door, theymight have got away with about:threohundred dollars in stampa and money. Awoman living next door to tho post-officeheard tho nolso in tiio middle of tho nightand began ringing hor ^Uiner boll. -Thisraised the nolghbornoocl^nd so frlghtonodthu uurglard that they made-off withoutsecuring anything of value.

W. Howard Lako has boon" olectedpresidout of tho Iiitemational Oo-oporati'ioDiatiliing Co. of Flemiugtou. The com-pany is capitalized at a quarter of a milliondollars and has rontod rooms in >Fleining-'.on'from which it proposes to soil theproducts of tho diatlliery,by mail direct tc:;ho coituumor. - Tbo aama-ficbomo was;Hed twioo In WashinEton by pobplo thor-oughly::flcciualntod with tho mail ordertrttdo and in each case it provod a totalfailuro, notwithstanding 1 bo: fact thatplouty of money was bohindcioh venture.

An ^tAnnandalo correspondent writesfrom that town as follows: " Representa-tives of Bordon'a Oondonsod Milk Oo. ofNewark have beon in town during tho pastweek-with a yiow of establishing ono- ofthoire'oreainerfps hero. - They.:H2lected.. asite for t h o ' p l a a t b u t it la not known

whether It can bo secured or not. Severalfarmers were consulted aud it Is said manyagreed to deliver milk to tho new creameryas Boon as it is established.

1B Glen Gardner to Boom?Tho Glen Gardner correspondent of the

the Newark News tells his, paper a veryrosy story about the recent visit to that •town of a Mr. Uicker of Philadelphia,Tho dispatch Is herewith prlutod for whatIt ia worth: .,

"Mr. Ricker of Philadelphia proposes toinstall a 300-tiorao-power stoam boilor andengine in the mill at tho upper end oftown. Ho would not disclose what sort ofa factory It is to be. but a large addition isto be biillt/whlch'willboused asaniHChlnoshop. Work is to be commenced ntoncu.It ia known thHt'Mr. Ricker Is interestedin a patent milk separator,* and that mayexplain tho mystery. The concern also .oilers to run stoam pipes through the townto heat the houses. An electric light plantwill also bo established, whereby this townand Junction Borough, only a mile awny,may be lighted, and with tbo trolley fromWashington to Clinton,- Glen Gardnorshouid not only rocovor from the groat oilfire of a year and a halt ago, when manyof our :pooplo woro-: compelled to-leave — ..town,'but will"boom tiu »be"-iliii-iii years -gone by,- when "hundreds: found•; cmployr.-., -;::::;.ment In her numoroua fiictoriea and every-body had 'raonoy to burn.1"

iro of Oliitrncni.9 for Cittarrh tlitit.,;—-,-,Contain Ulercury ; " " ,-:

rciiry will etirely- ilfMlroy -the1 HUIIHU ol ••"•vh-_'ii L'liUTitiK II lliruiiKii lli« mucous ' -CH. Knell nrtlck-f Hlioiilil nitviT In', UHfdI on |)rcnor1|HfoiiH l-rom r<>|ilitfll>U' pliy-*,/W the ilinnOKU they do Iri ten full! toj^!,you can jioKHllily ik-rlvr from tlicm. .

HiLll'rtCw>rr;tCurt'. luiintifiuiuirixl by I-'.J.

nitl IKIVIICVII lnluVniVlly, uctlnir directlyupon tliu.lilood mid imieouH Hiirfnct'H o( the fs •

'oii-'Ktit thu nu'iiulni:. I t 1« tnkim In-._ lyiui'l Hindu in Toledo. Ohio, I>y R . l . .Chcuuy ft Co. 'IVNtliiKMilftlH fruc. - ^ :

Sold by Dr«ijiirlHt^. J'rk'o Tflc. per.bottle. . ' ^ ' •-Hiitl'H Family 1'MIH lire tlio liont. -

ROBERT=P. Civil Engineer and Surveyor.

HtnklnK out Htrects dinl biillilliiKft.. Gnuk'H lor_Htri'ct« iimJ driilu/iKC. -Hull road luuatruu mill uoiiHtriiutlon.

BLAIRSTQiVN, . NEW JERSEY.

H: Pro). Williams' Botanical RomodyMii'i] oiilJt.notH, ITerliH,1 IKirku, Ilcrrlcu,,

.1 KWK1NS', WASlii.VOTON, N. .1.GiurFiCNS', i»inixii\smjitu, '-N: ' .r .- j

CANDIDATES' CARDS.1 , •:' roil HTATE HtlXATOIt.IiYcoiniilljuicoivftli tlio mica ot the Demo-

craV>tc imrty of Wurmi county. 1 licrolty mi-,."noiiuce inynel( a can d Idato for tho nom I nationfor SUito Scimtor, Hiibjcct to Ui<s_(l(>nlHlnn n(_.the pnrty I'niiciiH. - ; :v : 1 " ''" :''^

'*?•''-.