5
& Son/ Publishers. . _Independent Phono — Mo. 532 Terms, $1,25 per Tear; $1 in Atlantic-Count^ Best Ice Creaia ARCADE New England Bread Is-tho best Broad that you can get -njadebres FourthTof Julyr We publish below- the, official pro- graimne-for day and^evening. Careful Teading^wlll give : you all information desired. -. ; THE- PARADE Will form on Egg Harbor Road northwest of Bellevue Avenue, at 9.06 a. m., head .t-of-co:umn-on-Bellevue.-in-followmg - Bank Brothers' Store, COOL CLOTHING for HQT Weather! at a saving ! •'::-'> i 'H"S-"^••';••••'^^^^^ Are somewhat lower in price. Our assortment . . is quite complete. "^MJ*•«vi uj i/iyvooo buab yyO trieoTfor years to get before _we - • ' Nothing like It ever sold in . . •' , town before. Unclosed In dust and germ proof wrapper, and sold at same prloo --others charge for naked bread. Leonard's Bakery. _Chief .Murahal and Staff.jni G.'A: R.', in coach Bap^ np fnr»t Jr, O. U. A. M., if inarcliing VoIrThteer Fire Co., No. i Volunteer Fire Co, , No. 2 Italian Beneficial Society, and Float Society of St.'Panl, and'Float '" P. O. S. of A. - -Red-Mcn-and Pocahontas—- Gran^g Biicini-gQ T?lnnta , , . Dftde of ' 7 D ight fabncs, marked.at a saving of '$1 50 to suit -Are very flcarce thia year We have just received a car of real nice ~ Clipped Oats Green's Restaurant eietiea -are. ucmiupauitJ liy floats, the latter will be in the rear of the organization. "':"•••" : " Business,.flpats will form on Orchard Street, in the order named. It is suggested that each organization participating will provide' a member to act as Assistant Marshal, rRnnntfA •ia-llie leyiilla ot tneir order. Men's $5 Suits marked at $3.59 The parade mil- start at'ten 6'cloci, sharp, and proceed over the following nte-^n-^—- . —^—• ; ~~~ ." Egg Harbor Road cast-to Bellevue To Valley Avenue,. -|_9 Suits-marked .at $6 ~ - |io Suits marked at $7.50 $15 Suits marked at $10 ,^i8 Suits marked at $12.50 Cor. Main Road and,Bellevue Hammontou on yoaat this restaurant has strict orders to do overything possible for your - comfort. Yon can always rely on those little attentions that make a'meal _pleasant as well as palatable. ' Eat at this Eestaurant Orators of the day, President Adolph Roeder, ' ' P = ° a ^™ i '^T'-.'^"-~v ?m ?? r y J ^ •-**•'"' --"-^ •• --._~ ance m Park Hallitr the evening^ ' ^ everything to aid comfort and coolness. ^^aw^Skl^aTTf^l!^^ ir^r^samples^^awH-Suitsrat-fg.qo, $r ~ T r i r- j/ . *^ J-."OI values from $3.50 to '" MM JVM .f.n vujvj oyqlj IAI1UULO m JU' stay,—from the time you slFSown to the minute you pay tbe modest charge we make for our service. Yon depart more than satisfied in body nnd mind. ^ with appropriate music Lunch and Refreshments oh sale, ..:...'-'•_ day and evening At one o'clock,— - Raising National Flag _. Patriotic Airs, by the Band .Oroliftns; S. J. R, THREE MONTHS 25 OtS Hurrah for the ith OF JULY! . t . -Running high jump 220 j-arda dash Hammer throw Running broad jump Shot.put no yard hurdle, - Pole vault * Standing broad jump Half mile run Entrance lee, 50 cents Half mile single canoe Half mile double canoe Half mile relay canoe One hundred yds swimming Entrance, 50 c cncu contestant Entertainment iu Hall, during eyenjng_ A.game of Base-ball/"for'flie'Benefit of Fourth of July Fund, will be played at one o'clock, at Central Park, between Blnck'S'-Departmenr'Sibre' Team ntid a club made up of local Firemen. Plenty of fun promised. Music all dny nnd evening, , by the Hammonton Bond, and other Bands, if present PROGRAM OP FIREWORKS. Opening Salute—13 I.yddite Bombs Itnlian^Suilscr Hammonton,^. Monfort says There is no reason why the children should not each have a package of Fire-druckere. Line Fire, ja Catling butteries Bombshell Bursts—five 12-inch Silver Carnival and I'niry Land (on the Lake). Parisian Rockets Hexagon Wheels Hontbahclls—special effects ' Electric Illumination | Showers of I'carls / Set Pieces—a Jeweled Palm Trees Jloinbalicllti Solomon 'H Cnve Set Piece;—Mexican Fandango Glruiulhles Bombshells Set Piece—Kaleidoscope Hombaliclla—three sets of five Personal):' Conducted Excursions to NIAGARA FALLS July 1, 15/August5, 19,, September 2 and 16, 1908 0 * . ' > ' . " . ' Tickets good going on regular trains day before excursion to Philadelphia and Speoinl Train'of Pullman Parlor Oars and Day.Coaaufia leaving Phila- .delphia at 8.20 a.m. ou nbovo dates, runuicg via tbo Picturesque Susquehanna Valley Houte. ;' Tickets good returning on regular trains.within Sixteen days including date of excursion. Stop-off within limit allowed at Buffalo, returning Illustrated booklet and fnlt Information from Ticket Agontu. J. n. WOOD .... ' GEO.W.BOYD •Passenger Truffle- Manager General Passenger Agent Arsehate of Lead For Potato Rug8._jQii6-pouud-niftke8 16-gallon8T Sot Piece—Gyrating Stnr •••""itteoua Flii»ht of lioi Silver Waterfall A Pack of Fire Crackers will be ••given to every boy or girl paying cash for a pair of Shoes V duririg the Fourth fof July week. Siiiuiltniicoim Flight of Bombshells Sliver Waterfall Six Giruiidolea Five Special Bombsjiellu .BombsheU Battery Fusillade^ Five Special looH BoinbHliellA Six Glrnndoles—double Set Piece—Hammotiton, 1908 Boinbardiueiit dc Inferno. "Good Nifiht." HAND CONCKRT X I'UOGR'AM Afternoon. Fart I, 3.30 I''Norinnl Guards . . Losny a Overture . . White Rone .... Hoycr 5 Ailcliiirt WnlU . Cofint 4 National Mclodictt Rollinnou 5 Return of 47th Regiment . . . Bryant Part'II, 4.30 _ —— 0-: —I ~">. Aui.rv^o J.U {JUIIUHM, -In stock any quantity, one to one hundred pounds Pane Green, Slug Shot. ' \ Rose and Bed-bug Powder. Kat >"Roach nnd Mouse Exterminators ' . Crude Carbolic Aci.J, Kretol, Formaldohvde.- Horfle, Cattle and Dog Remedies. RED CROSS PHARMACY.. a 'Choral Overture . , 3 Merry Widow Waltz 4 Overture Clmmpioii J Our Director . Clement i . . I.ohnr Southwell . lllgclow PTJRE ICE! ———_. \ l Don't UHO, Lake or ^Pond Ice. Insist upon having our Ice, ' mndo fmm Hamniionton'fl pure artesian well water. \ , , Hammonton Ice Manufacturing Co, , QUANTITY. IOB BOLD IN UNDERTAKER . „. I'urt I, 0.15 r Tenth UrKliileiit , . . . . . . , Hull a Drcitin «>l Autumn, Kcretmdo , . I.floey 1 iSociiik' I'lirlu 1'olkit MoiiKcut 4 Hclectlona, "Martha" ..... Plaiow 5 Wnltzca, "Idle Hour*" . . ; Atidi\nea I'urt 11,110,00 I March, "I'retzcl Tote" .... Durnnd a ficreimde. ' . ] 11 Trovutoro ... .J, ..' .... 'VfixlC f Atlellim WulUen ........ Collnt j Nutloiul Alclodicu. EMBAiBfltER. P, JONES Oflico and ^t«Hidonce, SlOHi'llovue Avo. Looul I'llune No. 842 : Bell, 40-A. Wax Flowers, Figures, etc., for funerals and :, inomoriftl servioea, furniuhed on short notice. , \ f

Hurrah for the ith - Atlantic County Library · 2003. 10. 17. · that was' ever used in Hammonton. There are ecow» of buildings that you;eoe every, day, painted with the HammontOD

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  • Bov. J. C. Killian "j? •zpected tolpreach In the Baptist Church to-morrow [

    With"

    Civic Club, drove over the rente theyw i 11 ba vo th e Strce t epr i okler go. Ifthere is a family who has Dot been viei-' '

    Cpntral Avo., Hammonton, IT. J.

    -LarggjMggrttnenii of , ~~Palms; Ferns. House Plants,

    .Cot Flowers. FnncrafJDcsIcmf1 L. in Fresh Flo-were, Wax, or Metal.

    II:- IWATKlS ' . " . ' •

    Tickets good going on regular trains day before excursion to Philadelphiaand Speoinl Train'of Pullman Parlor Oars and Day.Coaaufia leaving Phila-

    .delphia at 8.20 a.m. ou nbovo dates, runuicg via tbo

    Picturesque Susquehanna Valley Houte. ;'Tickets good returning on regular trains.within Sixteen days including

    date of excursion. Stop-off within limit allowed at Buffalo, returningIllustrated booklet and fnlt Information from Ticket Agontu.

    J. n. WOOD .... ' GEO.W.BOYD•Passenger Truffle- Manager General Passenger Agent

    Arsehate of LeadFor Potato Rug8._jQii6-pouud-niftke8 16-gallon8T

    Sot Piece—Gyrating Stnr•••""itteoua Flii»ht of lioi

    Silver Waterfall

    A Pack of Fire Crackerswill be ••given

    to every boy or girl paying cashfor a pair of Shoes V

    duririg the Fourth fof July week.

    Siiiuiltniicoim Flight of BombshellsSliver Waterfall

    Six GiruiidoleaFive Special Bombsjiellu

    .BombsheU Battery Fusillade^Five Special looH BoinbHliellA

    Six Glrnndoles—doubleSet Piece—Hammotiton, 1908

    Boinbardiueiit dc Inferno."Good Nifiht."

    HAND CONCKRTXI'UOGR'AMAfternoon. Fart I, 3.30

    I' 'Norinnl Guards . . Losnya Overture . . White Rone . . . . Hoycr5 Ailcliiirt WnlU . Cofint4 National Mclodictt Rollinnou5 Return of 47th Regiment . . . Bryant

    Part'II, 4.30

    _ •—— 0-: —I ~">. Aui.rv^o J.U {JUIIUHM,

    -In stock any quantity, one to one hundred poundsPane Green, Slug Shot. ' \

    Rose and Bed-bug Powder.• Kat>"Roach nnd Mouse Exterminators '

    . Crude Carbolic Aci.J, Kretol, Formaldohvde.-Horfle, Cattle and Dog Remedies.

    RED CROSS PHARMACY..

    a 'Choral Overture . ,3 Merry Widow Waltz4 Overture ClmmpioiiJ Our Director

    . Clementi . . I.ohnr

    Southwell. lllgclow

    PTJRE ICE!———_. • \ l

    Don't UHO, Lake or ^Pond Ice.

    Insist upon having our Ice, • '

    mndo fmm Hamniionton'fl pure artesian well water.\ , ,

    Hammonton Ice Manufacturing Co,, QUANTITY.IOB BOLD IN

    UNDERTAKER

    . „. I'urt I, 0.15r Tenth UrKliileiit , . . . . . . , Hulla Drcitin «>l Autumn, Kcretmdo , . I.floey1 iSociiik' I'lirlu 1'olkit MoiiKcut4 Hclectlona, "Martha" . . . . . Plaiow5 Wnltzca, "Idle Hour*" . . ; Atidi\nea

    I'urt 11,110,00I March, "I'retzcl Tote" . . . . Durnnda ficreimde. ' .] 11 Trovutoro ... .J, . . ' . . . . 'VfixlCf Atlellim WulUen . . . . . . . . Collntj Nutloiul Alclodicu.

    EMBAiBfltER.

    P, JONESOflico and ^t«Hidonce, SlOHi'llovue Avo. •

    Looul I'llune No. 842 : Bell, 40-A.

    Wax Flowers, Figures, etc., for funerals and : ,inomoriftl servioea, furniuhed on short notice. ,

    \ f

  • n e v e rH hea.rd of the

    rival pianists, didBy ERIC RAY

    remember is that, until last, year, theworld boasted two of the greatest?lanl8ta-who-had-eOTr .llyp.d at one.ulaulDvEi rr'tiw—aaw«"—%. . . . < - —time—Rocco- Linati, the black:halred

    •nUinna " master touch ot -tao-i_im|mn| ivn.ipn muni.... ^M^,.. _Ivory keys had set .the people of twohemispheres marvelling at his magic,and Carl Linden,' the stolid-German,•at whom'people said his only emotion•was in .his finger-tips.--

    You will remember, too, perhaps,, bow Llnati met his death, killed by amysterious explosion In a hall where

    - his rlval-'-for. the two men were rl-Vals—had been giving a recital theprevious evening: The true-story ofttat event has never been told, but I

    tious man on earth' dared•>hardlydream. As .usual, I had been sent'forto attend to the instrument, the tones

    able Paris, and I was going over mytools preparatory to starting for • the

    -golng-to-tell-lt-to-you-now,You may well look me up and down

    In. surprise, and - wonder what a rag-itniromp> fallow, with the lines of—tji-u, i i i i r x f r i i i i i i — , ... r

    dissipation heavy -on his face, knowsof the story of the world's greatestpianists. Well, let that pass. A heavy

    • pain. Is gnawing at my heart, and nottor the first time, either. Every ;tlme

    '• It (iomtm ir^'ows sharper and sharp-er.. I know its meaning, and I fear toface my Maker with the guilty knowl-

    - edge-that on earth my- lips 'were seal-10 the enJ.

    AUT-IUJ—01*3—L n nWho could-tune a piano like I could.This is no idle boast. Llnati, Linden,Poderowskl, Hombourg and all theothers have told me so; besides, whenany of the masters appeared On the

    LLQ_nlntfnrm It long T nnd nnlv T

    who was allowed to touch the Instru-ment on whlch;^-they-r_jwere--ta-,form.

    every capital In Europe, on the. eveof a great recital, almost at a mo-ment's notice, to tune the Instrument•which the master hand was to touch.

    they, said; no other ear was quite sono -~other-^sense— of—unison

    And I was "happy, too, for this famebrought money, and soon I was to

    cottage where the lilies,nodded in atthe window,-and where amid the scent

    • suckle, the roses listened as we whls-peVed the story that has always beenwhispered ̂ slnceJ;he_days_whenJHhetfbrld was young.

    Then the crash came.I; w»s In St. Petersburg wjhen 'her

    going to play before'the Czar, ano\heneeded my hand to prepare the In-strument for him. It was a brief lit-tle note, and cruel. My Marjorie ac-cused me of' neglecting her, and ofpreferring to run about tl?a world attbe beck and call of a lot of pianoplayers, as she called them, to bask-ing In the sunshine of her smiles. Shelittle knew that I was dolng.lt all forheu^-my girl—and In. a moment of-passion I tore the letter Into a'thou-

    What did it .matter? She could go.There were, other women In the worldas fair as she.

    That was what ' I thought at thetime, but I was wrong.,; No voicecould charm my ear like .hers, noother touch could send a thrillthrough my frame, and I gradually be-gan to sink lower, lower, lower.

    Soon I needed money—more moneythan "I could earn at my profession—and then It was that the event of

    . which..I^am. going._to.tell you took'"'place. •"" - . •- . ..-:...•-.

    I was sitting In my lodgings In Paris-ono evening brooding over the black..past and looking Into, the gray, future.On the morrow Herr Carl Linden wasto give a recital on an unparalleledscale at tho Conservatoire. King Edward, the German Emperor and thoPresident of tho French Republicwould bo present, and tho privilege1 6fplaying boforo tho rulers of three ofthe greatest countries In tho world atonce was ono which tho most ambl

    Conservatoire.'A short, sharp'rap came at the door

    of^my rbom, and before-I-could cryout "Come in!" the handle had turn-ed and a man entered. I knew him ina moment,-despite the fact .that hewas closely muffled and had. pulledhis hat do^n to hide his features asmuch as possible./ It was SignerRocco Llnati. • ;.. ' '

    He closed the door softly: and lock-ed It Then he came across and bentwer^mer-untll-we-^ooked-at-each oth-er, eye .to eye, scarcely a, few Inchesapart. - ' .

    jQ0 -—voti--— w^flnt--'twonty tbou88,nd

    the strings c;f the,notes .which areiri this chordhere?" — and1 heIndicated the onewhich he Ahadmarked on the 'sheet > of muskTEaiThere

    is all.Is twenty

    .pounds.

    pounds?" he hissed suddenly, speaking English, as I noticed, with hardlya trace of foreign accent.

    I looked at him stupidly.- Twentythousand pounds!. • Such a sum seem-ed to me beyond toe dreams of avarIce. As he asked the question I saw-lhis black eyes searching mine, as Ifhe would read-my very-soul—"What-do—you" mean ? -Who , are

    irbesrtofelIgnorance.,

    'Who am I? Pah! You fool!" heanswered, contemptuously. "You knowme—who but Rocco Linati, the great-est '-pianist— the-world-has-ever, seen.v,... T.nrrt ti'innrt fnr mo. To-mrrfrnwthey tell me you tune' for Linden, thatGerman^plgv-who—haa^robljed .-.me ofmy Madeline. Is It true? Tell me." „- "I don't know anythlng-about "your

    Madeline," t answered shortly, forsomehow: Madeline suggested Mar-jorle; "but I am certainly tuning the'piano at the Conservatoire for to-

    for you if youcare for this littleJob, - ohly~he wella d v i s e d , m yf r i e n d^-do notstrike that chordafter you haveput this"- littlepresent Into posi-tion—It Is notgood . for thehealth."

    t-^saw—Inmoment then themeaning of it all.

    Linden's money is as good as yours,~~

    .the Italian answered, rubbing hishands together. "Now, look here — do

    T?pflTn 'fint fit rtTio nfthe pockets of his massive fur-lined'overcoat he drew a piece 51 music. I

    Ht-»w«lt'-enougb.-«,-Jt«ewaR-,tW;einslaski's finest Intermezzo, "The Com.Ing of Spring," one of the choice mor-

    * m . il.-, *•*____ A svonnlnrv'n n. M.JT. I.M

    and-one certain of a, rapturous recep-tion, not only on account of Its dlf-

    Lflculty_.of. execution, but—becajjjse jother^llvln^elng-could-lnjterpfet—Itas Linden could. - - -blbuso pafforh B971"rBjcunmlz08~foi7-a 32,. 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 Inch bust**mousuro; the skirt patttorn 6816 Is-cut In sizes for a 22, 24, 26, 28 and 30Inch waist measure,

    The second gown IB illustrated inembroidered butlsto with trimming .of ValenclonncB lace, .and Is gracefuland attractive In tho oxtromo. Tho 'blouBO Includes opaulotto-llko trim- ,niliiKB that give a broad and droopingshoulder effect, and it IB made with ayoke portion that can bo made from •diiy contrasting material, Tho skirtIB made In narrow pointed gores,which aro Joined to tho tucked,tlounco, and IB graceful In the ox-""tromo. Tho embroidered muulln withVulonolonnoB trimming Is perhaps anappropriate for commoncon^ont dayus any material that' could bo sug- ..

    but tbo modol would bocharming developed in thin India or •moBflnllno Bilk quite OB woll aa in theluwn dr batlsto. .

    For tbo medium alzo will bo re-quired, for tho bloiiBu, 4% yardB ofmaterial 24, 2% ynrdii 32 or 1% ynrde44 Inchoa wldo with 8 yardB of In-soitlon, 0% yardu of laca; for the

    • they will have, a material effect In do-"Ing away with floods, clarifying the

    •-waters of the Missouri, and Its trlbu-• taries, maintaining a steady flow In

    -those rivers and developing a largeamount of power. Tho five object'lessons to which the President will be^able to point are the Irrigation pro-Jects known as the Milk and SunHlver In Montana, tho Shoshbne In

    "Wyoming, tbe Belle Fourcho In South• Dakota and the North Platte In~"inlng and Nebraska. . ""

    - The...effect. of ..those-projects - upon,T'floods and In regulating the Missouri

    Is not left to tho realm of speculation."Tho basis of success In Irrigation,^rhlch is the chief object of each.pro-ject,'depends upon catching and hold-,1'nis. flood waters, which formerly ran

    1 -61T unhindered, carrying destruction•. With them and augmenting the floods

    • "Of 'the dread Missouri. In connection' • yUh each project, a great dam IB bo-._.,1ng constructed. -With Its help will^,l)o formed a mammoth reservoir, In..T-whlch-the: flood-Watera of the spring. nnd fall will bo held, Tho smallest of

    ' • 'thoso rosorvblra will hold-enough—to.cover 203,770 acres of land with water

    • -ono foot In depth, and tho largest willhold enough to cdvor 1026.000 acresto tho depth of ono foot. Altogether

    'tlio reservoirs will havo a storage ca-. paclty of 2,586,770 aero feet.

    Platte River Floods.The Important point IB that ft (s

    Tutown, through figures gathered rtnr-Ing many yoara, that each roaorvolr IBlargo enough to hitld all of tbo flood

    TUI.V lnlnod to hla nudlenc*that It wna a typa of tbo moat prlmltlv*conroyniuM* known, and that It had at-Ut«I In prcolsoly tbtn same form ID ,Pnleatliu' from tbo enrlloat tlnien; In- •tliMid, that It wnn probably a cart otWAKOii of thin description that JoMphhad wnt down from Hgypt to bring hj*.fntlier nnil hla hoiiBeUold Roods fromOnimnn.

    Aftrrwanl an old farmer rnmo ur> andcx|ir»Mi»cil bin grent Intorunt In what h«hnd benrd, adding thnt there wan on«

    abova nil othcra whloli bail Intmr-hlm, nnd thnt WAI tbo nut, "For

    now," ho said, "I inulorHtnnd Vby Jo-aupli iuld to bla brethren, 'Hoc that /•fall not out by tbo wny.'" .

    with n'pnrty that numbered "150moil, ^bouillon coaohoB and horHOB, andnil thn parnphnranlln, of prospectingand camplnR. In tlielr wnko In counioof tlnui cnnio ijoM-iiooltoni in lnindrediinnd tlioiiHnniiii. From lluyloy amiFord'ii inlno thoro wan takon In tliollrnt lilno yonrH of ItB blntory 134;000ox. of gold, vuluoil at $2,500,OUO.

    Alrnont mi noniidtlonal HH .OoolKardloworn tho Londonderry nnd Wealth ofNatlomi "Iliuln," Tbo Londonderry, . •», iji/iiiiuniiorrywan dlHcovorod by u party ,ot unsufi-coBtiful pronpnctorn on tholr way bnokto Coolgnnllo. Two of tbum plckodtip nOlilO rich gold-l)onrlii(l[ iipofllinmiB,Af tor n brlot Hoavoli tho outcrop, of nroot WIIB oxpOBod, from whlAh, In tho

    'ooiiriio of n fow duyn, tboy took outfrom 4,000 or. to MOO OE of KOld, Fromtbo cap of tlifl Wonlth, of Natlona roof,gold to ((he value of

    In a fow dayn.

    An Innkovper unco bnil tlln KOOI!tuno to riitnrtaln bla

    , among otlinr ttilnga, B

  • /( * 1 • • « tThe Strength of a "̂"T7;T::if::v;i;".

    Life Insurance Company... •• is in its investments. The securities of this

    Company, are' of the highest, and art bothDTlEe"""""""-"1^

    WEDDING

    '.».-"•' Thirty-second Annual Statement, containing "~ ^

    , list of Bonds owned, will he' sent you upon *

    request.Address Home Office, Newark, N. J.

    THE

    Foftfce Best Meals" • - 00 TO

    Cramer's RestaurantHaromonton.

    FaU Meals S5 Cents

    Served in all Styles.

    Philaaelphia Pure Ice Creamg« funix a Quart.

    ">amlUes served wKn.OysWrenna icu unaon short notice.' Botli Pbon.es.

    _Jo:.b'ng Promptly—

    Pumps and WeU'

    Local Phone 877

    Gas, Steam, andWater Contractor.

    Central Ave. above Park Ave.

    HJAMMONTON- N. J.

    COA.LAKD

    HX to 60 per cent, of thecoat in n »t >ok company.

    For pan icularl Bee.

    Wayland DePuy, Agt.,Corner Heeoml and thorry fitrcoU,

    Uiiiuiiiojiton, N.

    jtttirThu Lndlos of tho Olvla Oluli ox-puot thulr Htrout nprlnklor to-day, itnclwill jbv|{in eprlnkllnu tho (jtrouls Mon-day,

    Innuro with tho A. H. I'hlllld. Go.,IJurtlott JlullilliiR, Atlnntlo City.

    .ttbo-Cnaidy Kitchen laJL selllncbetterHvery day. Tuorelaareaiion

    for lu 1U u pure fuiitl anI6le. made fnimvurofresh milk, and vpryrefreBhlug. Try U. 20 bt,tbequart. Candy Kltcben.

    tST Bane-ball this afternoon, atPleapantvillo. • Hammnnton's secondteam, the Field-Cluby wll|-pldy"May's~Landing, on the home crounds.

    WE Hear Slmonf will not bn at tho Parkon ibeUu wltb his loo cream; but be»ny» bin more wil l be open ALL IIAV andEVRNINQ for tbo bennni of bla friends andpublic wbo want a good, pure, Ice cream.

    ttiyRov. J. U.'Killlan received a cor-dial reception from his former parishion-ers, and filled tho Baptist pulpit veryacceptably, last Sunday evening.

    AH I Intend cloning my plnoo of buBlnonaduring ttu> mouths July.and Annum, 1wil l i nnkon ureul rcduotlon In all prlcen priorto July 1, but 'will promptly nltand to allnrdora given, either by mail or phono. BellJD.Y. M, liulolla Wi'Bcoat.

    ItjyOur Presbyterian Iriunds receivedJtwojrojy yaluublo RilU dnriuR-lhe-pastyear—a One oilvor cornroanlon set, andok'Ctrio lights through tho bulldiuu—all'from friends.

    H IUHKMT 1'IUOIO paid for nil klntlu of oldJ u n k In largo or emull quaiillllo*. HendpoatuVaim I will call. W. K, Lolbor,

    ItamuionUju, N. J.KJr Hapk Brotliors ore oocupylni;

    tholr now store' wbllo workmen arerouovatlnu tho old part. When this isdono, they will havu. by far tbo fineststore In town.

    PLANTO, (ireat roduotlonn In prlneu ofplanU,—cabbage, nwecl pnialo, «lo., J). Oolwull AHon.

    tSf Master Norwood Rodman wastendered a pleasant birthday party lasttfutnrdny, rjulto a nurubur of tils .youncfriends utlundlnu. tiovoral nlco pres-ents woro received.

    W ANTUl) lo Itnnt or liny. Mniull formWllb Kond blilldlnirH. Ulvo nlieo, oondl.tloii, prtoo, and (ha liillrnt dhlnlla, to nnva

    «7". Tims, ll,llnrnlirli!li, , .Ill H. 7lli rilVonl, i'hl)ml»f|i'hli>.

    To Fourth of July v|»liora: \Volinvo nuvoral ffood runturuuts In townand ralroshmont (tnndo at the Park,whoro you can got all you want lo cat.Coma nnd •i.toijd tho dny,

    BOAT for Bull),— fur oarn or tnll-10 footlung, In A-l oondltloii, Oopiiur luntrnedtliroiiubout. (Jan lin tnnn lit Trowbrld|i«'(iboo. Mini, Imii i l rpof (1. M.Hwoot, nrnddnunA. (Vlunllny, A7Ull(JoiiiriinrctfHt^ I'lilluiUilphlii

    neaday evenlug. Heavy clouds gatheredand there was" every indication of asluiui, but it proved tu be only a greatblow, and passed away in. clouds ofsand. Rain was "badly neetfeu"; Bence

    Winstow Lodge (Elects.-.. -The Odd Fellows; elected. officers fortWnextTiall-ycar, at tbeir~muetli5g-onWednesday evening, aTtollows.

    N. G. ^Harvey ErKingr *"•"""V. O. —Calvin Motbis. .

    . Tbe Lodge will use the new rituals attheir next meeting, introducing .-somenew features. Though euffuring fromthe—wide- spread—depresslon^—the—old-Lodge ie holdiuj; uji well, with pros-pects of new life in the near future.

    IH oopatantly BrowingIn litvor. Oololnol Hloliards Is pumplnu;wntor by motor powor, and Win. L.lllaak and Jnokeon & Hon willcoflbo by ilia BUIIIII powtir,

    tho rdsldonooa wo notloadutidorgdliiK ropalra, thin wcuk worn:Minn llurtlia Twotnov'n, rapnlntlii|jt;.Mr.OuoUirM (Wlldo hound), rcnliluulliiK;John llolror, rcBhlnnllim; Mro, ti«orgoF, Buxtou'n,

    OBITUARY.

    Lyford Beverage died on Saturdayovouini;, Juno 20,1003, aged 05, years,alter a prolonged Illness.

    A native ol Now England, bo BottledIn Elwood ullor tlio war, and came/toiTammontoo twenty or more years ago.

    A uood citizen, a sincere Curiatmo,be was uolvcrsally rcspocted.

    lluviug served ln_jboJ[J._S.;JN[avy,,.-duridg^K5^li)bb^llon, he earlj~unllodwiih the Grand Army of tbo Republic,ol which ho was a Past Commander.

    Funorul Hcrvlcba wore. held at hishomo, on Oak Road, Tuesday after-noon, largely attended, conducted byptiotor, Ruv. A. W. AudoreoD. Hispall-bottrers wore comrades of tt^a Post,and tho beautiful service of tho Orderwas conducted at tbo grave, in OakduluCemetery, , . -

    Wo shall miss Comrndo Bovorn^o,and with a host of fi lends, tender eym-pathy to I ho bereaved widow and son.

    you will \vuuL lui, _yuUi

    ^Qf July!"

    Every man appreciatesa good razor. .

    ~^> "~p.

    NEW SERIES. TI,O work.Incinen'B Loan nud Hullclli.g Ananolatlouwill oixin a now nodes of ntook at nextregular mooting, July 0. 8ubuorlptIonsfor shut-ox will lin rooolvod at tho offloo oftho Boorutnry, O'Domioll'u Iliilldlng, onM'lHilay nvontiiK and tho Saturday uftor-noon boforo tho inoatlni;. ^ ^''

    WM. POEnPBL, Boorotarf.

    Going at Cost,?! to 1.2U HoBors, fiO o to 1.25

    Cnko Knukot, wan 4(1, now iS:t.H8Ton-pot wan Iff).2(5 nt $n,fil)

    14 Inch Tray, wnii $7 now (nllroad Tray, wan ?U.IM>, now fJ,8H

    9 8yrui>a from $4.60 ann't

    nOTord to mini, •

    We have a line of the best.

    Step in and look at them.

    Everything in Hardware

    Painlg, Oils, • Bruehee,

    and everything for the builder-

    H. McD. LITTLE.

    < >

    Cluster Olivestlio lalBHt ideh in Packing Oliyea. It

    ia a I7.*) cent bottlo of Queen Olives, with emailStnfl'f (1 OliveB-put in tho epacea left by large Queena.

    ' Some familioB h.ivo to get both kindn whenthey Imvo Olivo», in order to auit all tastes.

    ft hotilo of Cluator OlivcB,and ^OH Huit everybody.

    Twenty-five Cents a bottle, at. i , •

    Jackson's Market

    w. o. JONES

    1*. 8. If you want tho very fincul; thing in the?Olivo lino, AeK for tho "Kinga,"

    in SO cent jura. ' "1

    ' ' / < /,,f c» i » - M*« ' i

    Lf ,, , 4 , 1 i Is ( • * at frl

  • :*̂ :.:;a ĵ̂ ;;c

    I

    In the Wright Aeroplane,.. whose. Guarded, ft is Claimed That the

    ' . ' . ' . . Equilibrium Has Been

    'ecret is Carefully'teat Problem oftoed • ; . .

    rider, and.simpler !to operate than"tEbicycler In fact,- the" aeroplane . teasier to learn. In all 'our experiments

    _ :fdlng-and—flyteg—maohlneiSjave not even spralnied a limb; -,w<

    iVeJ-3carcely~scTatched our fleshV—J^ut If these . two- experimenters

    hav£ had immunity from mishapthelf? predecessors have not. Amp.ngthe1-first-to-undertake—the—tasfc- "o:demonstrating that a mechanical fly-ing machine la possible was Ott6 Lll-H e n t h a l , * ~ ~, a German,^Ineer.--He?jiade ^ ^ ,OT birds" and eventually concluded" thatvery little was known of the laws

    mechanical, en-t.tnefllght

    -Orvllla WrlghtT

    T'HOSE reticent and Intensely ah-..lr . sorbed Westerners, -the -Wright

    rothers, of • Dayton, Ohio,' appear, tohave at last conquered the elementwhich had so long '.baffled the Inge-nuity of man, and aerial navigation,

    egaraed^as^jr: fascinating;: ah*-• ' *-- -imtefl-

    —of-arpractteal-reallty;-Aside from the triumph of the long

    and : apparently, easily controlled_flight,: the most Important item con'talne^" ~ln"Tie~news" dispatches fromMantepy^N. _C., --where__the,'—brothers

    '

    ed tribe. He began experimenting In1891, using wings constructed likethose of soaring birds. Equipped withthese, he sailed -down hillsides intovalleys; 'After a series or more than2,000 flights one. ot his wings gaveway one day and In his tumble toearth he dislocated his spine and died

    e following day." ~Experiments In Last Two Decades.That was In 1896. Three years later

    ID-Englishman, Percy B. Pilcher, be-an experimenting along the same

    line. He had— essayed- but a fewuignts-wften-one-of his wings brokeand he sustained injuries . which

    fl later.On this side of the; Atlantic, Prof.

    S. P. Langley conducted .some notableexperiments, fashioning^ ,.ln._._1896 a"small "steam-clrlven .aeroplane whichmade a flight of three-Quarters of amile.1 In the same year -Chanute, ofChicago, constructed a- gliding ma-chine which attracted some attention.

    ' - '

    plane not only carried .both men, but• carried them In a sitting, position. The

    earlier aeroplane of these .inventors, carried but-one aviator, and it was"pecesaary for him to pg^prgue. u-ptm

    .^....^.vlilsstbmaoh, •

    lies in the apparent fact that the In-• venters have at last succeeded In

    ' overcdmlng the "real, problem of me-"v chanloal flight—the problem of equi-

    librium. Aeroplanes that would sup-: port-thelr, opejatQrj_haYe previously.:^—b^n—fe^te^P=Erigln8B±::rOf—sufficientlightness to prppeL them jhrough theair at a sufficient speed and to carrytheir own weight and that of the ope-rators have also been successfullytried. There have been plenty of

    .„ . aeroplanes that-'would fly in still air..The one needful, essential, and undis-covered thing was an airship thatwould not capsize when the wind was

    ~ —Blowing:—: ~:JWriting in . a recent -issue of Mc-

    — Glare's Magazine.• George Klbbe Turn-er quotes.the Wright brothers as as-serting that no one who had not nav-igated the air can appreciate the realdifficulty of mechanical flight—thatthe great problem—the problem ofequilibrium—never'occurs to any onewho has not actually tried flying.Thus .the. real quoatlon of the flyingmachine is how to keep It from turn-

    '"....Jng'loyer, ".- ",' . "'" .' ".'Inequalities in Air Currents.

    "The chief trouble," the brothers

    I'f

    " The common . Impression Is that thentinosphore runs in comparatively reg-ular currents which wo call winds.No one who has not boon thrown,about on1 a gliding aeroplane—risingor, falling ton,, twenty or even thirtyfeet In a few seconds—can understandhow utterly wrong this idea Is. ' Theair ajong tho surface of the earth, asa matter of fact, Is continually churn-Ing. It is thrown upward from everyirregularity, lIUo sen breakers oa acoast lino; every hill and treo and

    I building Bonds up a'wavo or slanting: current. And It movon not directly

    hack and forth upon ltd coast lino,like tho sea, but In whirling rotary

    ' innflHoav Some of thane rlsn up hun-' drods of yards. " I n a fnlrly atrona

    wind tho nlr near tho earth In more,'disturbed than tho whirlpool!) of Ni-agara.

    "Tho problem of mochrmlcal IllKlitIH how to balance In thin moving fluidwhich tnipportu tho flying mnolilnu; or,technically nponkliiK, how to mako thocentre of gravity coincide with thocontra of air prosiiuro. Tlio wind of-ten voorn sovwal tlnum a micond,(liilckar than thmiKht, and tho contruof proamiro changon with It. It In mi(llfllcnlt to follow thin contro of prou-Hiiro mi to Icoop your flngor on thoIliclcyrlni; lilot. uf light from a..prtamHwltigjiiK In tlio nun.

    "It hail boon .(.ho coinnion aim ofoxporlmontoni with tho uoroplnno totiolva tho prohlom of niinlllbrlum l>yfiomo automatic nyittom ot balancing.Wo bollovo that tho control ahould holoft to tho operator. Tho -minno ofeQulllhrluin In vory dollcnto and cor-tain. If you llo Upon u liod throo.quartern of an Inch out. of truo, you

    • ;hnow It at onco. And thin IIOIIHO of'equilibrium In juut an, rolluhlu a mlloiibovo tlio'uavth IIH it In on It.

    "Tho management of our aoroplnno,Illco that of tlio lilcyclo, |H lniHod upontho noiiHO of nqulllhrtiim of tho opora-tor. Tho aitpnratun (or pronorvliiKtho hnlmica of tho miinhlno confilntuof lovers-oporiiUid hy nlmplo utilformmovement!) which rondjiiat tho (lying(jurfacna of tho miich|iio to tho .air,Tho movement of thooo lovoro vorynoon hoconion aiitotniitln with tho avia-tor, an dooa tho ImtuiicInK of u blcyolo

    two^xgjjng-blcycjeTna:"began experimenting.

    It was not lone before their effortsbegan to atti-act attention.' But theysedulously.., avoided' notorJety,_iepL(thelr_Qwn: counsel, and devoted them-selves-to the' task .of solving the prob-

    thua - describes them:quiet men In a dingy.

    "Two lean,-commonplace?

    little brick, bicycle shop; pleasant, un-.QsJ^apprQaribflble,JiiitLflhy_

    the actual tests "of flying we establish-ed many poinfs definitely, and mademany changes in the'tables of caleula-

    '

    Significant Facto Learned,gweer".We found that a. rate of eighteen

    miles an hour through the air wouldsustain our aeroplane and its opera-tor In-flight A-ratejpf sixteen milesWoutdTsustalh Tit,}'but at-"too ~great~an'a'ngle'to'allow pTrogresB through the

    is a, good, strong breeze, but it is notjjxtraordlnary^Halfjpnr-gliaer-ln-lSO^were made-ln—winds 'of-twenty-mlles-an. hour, and at one time we were

    -gliding~;-ln—*iL^vIttd—which—measurethirty-seven miles an .hour. ' You un-derstand, of course, that these glidingexperiments do not mean the' meresliding down an Inclined plane in the'air. In heavy winds the aviator issometimes lifted • above the point hestarts .from and often, held soaring inone—place. If ho^-faad^toff^balamskill of a soaring bird, he could re-main there as long as there was windenough to support him. Indeed, inour experiments we have remainedmotionless in one position for overhalf a-mlnute. :~- 7—^—

    "In theuu thruu yuara uf gllaliig-wu^stablfshed enough practical knowlg3ge, we thought, tonext experiment of placing a gas en-

    ine upon our aeroplane and starting

    advocate the employment of thosehinoa point out tho obvloub faet-

    that/rtyIng-machines sailing over a.fleef-'nre1 Immune from any •uittack

    Mimr that "of small arm flre, antFthat - ' . ' . .^hey could attain a height-so great aa •

    to be out of range from these smaller •weapon's. There Is no type of larger —-gun now carried on, ahinboard that lacapable.. ot.such-extreme_filevatIon"^Of '-course, It would be easily possible toconstruct~a"~gun".mi3unt~ that would •', •permit of -high angle, or even -vertical '

    "Drey but the 'question is'asked howWould you be able to .hit'-one', ot "these 'small targets milliner BO high In air :

    ' THE PULPIT.AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON %

    THE REV.;'JASON'NOBLE RIERC&

    when firing at a floating" target any -"- . .^ - ^ "

    the splash -at the shell? But how Isa gun-pointer to tell where his shellsare going when he Is firing upwardInto the air?

    _ • . • I u;

    I .JL, sustain strength_ and ' providenourishment Is well known. .Cakes of!It are included in the emergency'ration prepared by the United States .Government. The cakes may" be' eaten -at once or dissolved in water and -.alten as a beverage. The chocolate—

    not been a success as a substitute-coffee. After a /number'of tests

    the men in the army asked for coffee.The chocolate seemed to supply thenourishment^requlred, but the mencomplained~6f -headaches -when : the :coffee was denied them, so it la nowIncluded in. tie emergency ration. TheCOffee extract wna. fthnnrtnrmrt for_

    . . _ . . _ _ . ^ . _search—Sechanlcaf flight. In. thenext year we experimented In ourworkshop with models and machinery'or-this. On December .17, 1803, ourfirst mechanical filer, • in a trial at

    :he air fifty-nine seconds, anoT moved52 feet against a twenty-mile wind—

    :hat is, It actually moved half a mile'

    erlment we felt assured that mechan:cal.flight was feasIble~rT-: : , :: ::.

    "This first flylng-.machlne, with itsiperator, wolghod about 7i5 pounds.

    power. ;At_6.0_milea_.21.1iorse-power"wiJuranSe. needeH, and at" 120 miles 60or 75 horse power. It Is clear thattherfi-Js a, certain point of speed be-yond which the -air- resistance -makesIt impossible to go. Just what that Is

    flnt lnjvegr ,gjia engines are lining madftJ'J***—L&&a vilibiMvo ms uniiife lurtiirrlighted—a-fact whicbrwilHncrease-thesurplus, carrying power of the. ma-chine available for fuel and operatorand heavier construcUon, but at pres-

    -ed.on for the flying machine. This, of P°ĥ

    nt tL^l*1*?™*PA«>aA-mABnn-,npga fhrnimh-:th-iQ.ir '

    Three portions of each

    Thome: Christ's Example.: . . . •- - ' t"

    Broptiyn, N. Y.—At the Puritan,-eotfgregatlonal Church, the new pas-

    tor," the Rev. Jason Noble Pierce,preached Sunday, nTornTng on-."'.Examples o"f Christ." He said:. My

    _0uMflciihls_morning -Itt-found-iiulbh n18:_15: "For I have elvon.'you an ex-

    . ample that ye phould do as I have•done to you.1' If^-you put that rightIn lla setting it would J?.e_uatutal-to

    -wonaeTT^Tielner the exam rile .Tesfisi involyes the-.?lrdInK-.pf-the-towol;the tftklnsrof ' thabasin-and per-

    forming the servlcn of love that He-performed for-HIa'diBnlnles: wbp'-.'ieT:-Hla-Dxamnlo-Is-lltcml-in-aUi-BeUingi

    It IB not strange tha* cerfMn branches'of the^chur/>h have in different tlnies]h'eld tKatTHfifftxamnle was toT>^akcmliterally; that He instituted an ordi-nance as-truly as. the ordinance ofbaptism or~ the r/orrt's supper. Andso, even down to the

    believe In the washing of the feflt «Ba religious act. From 13'30 to 1630the sovereigns of .Knglahd were sc-customed to liferaHy carry out thisexample of the Lord, and indeed down

    ~to the present day it Is notrunusunlfor the impprlal^-uler of Russia to

    coffee-beans-reduced to a fine powder.The tabloid rations of the army •

    probably_r«prgsejitjood-concentratloa~("fintg Elghestf-practlcal form. A meal,consists of a cake of sweet chocolateweighing] one and one-third ouncesand a bread'and meat component Thelatter Is a coarse' powder made of 16parts Of' yrn""1nAoH±iAU ha frnpw" thathis life-'

    The first time I preached In- thisPBlpIt-BeveralTwq'eW'Ti so" I^wentrout-the next day frotq thin rlt.v to a neigh-boring place and vls'ted the homes otpeople who traveled pxtfinalvely, anrt_

    ! -Let. us accept Him i a the.wky, andthe truth, and the life,- amTjHe willenter the,-room In wnlca we are nowlying sick of the fe'ver;of lite, arid Hewin take TIB by the nand and l i f tup. and nil us with new lifo forserylce to His glory and salvation of-our fellow "men.—^Hev. Percy T Or-ton..|n Plttsburg Christian Advocate

    Christian Endeavor.

    Th>I^stThoneht.Practice to make God thy lost

    thought at night-when thou sleepestand thy first thought. whon thou wak-

    ,-est;-Bo-iihaiL-thy fancy rbe-sancttfleain the night and thy understandingbe-rectiaed-tnHhe^aj-- so Bhall thyrest be peaceful and thy labors proa*parous.—Fraricls Quarles.

    mansion who hod sp>nt :sonie time In.

    took parts:- in t^n - Pnssion PlayOberammergau. She A \d_n ot. go to thenlay, hut she wpritiaTfeTward:lii.Shfllt,ioWeisTnfn-rt -7 •shajr"ii"eve«":forg8t;tli^.'ncidents shCf*~~£r^-f-*±*^-*:'^?±'"

    eggs- Into _.a_per cent, of w^ater from , the mix-

    ture by evaporation. The concentratedeggs are used chiefly for cakes, breadsand "made" dishes. Their value has.not been established, the grocers say,aa:a dish by themselves.. The Govern-.ment allows, the Bale_pf jth'e cannpdeggs .In !tbe armyVand. '. .quantities, and then only In the Philip-plnes'or'at 'points wEere eggs are veryscarce or cannot be obtained. ThereIs not much likelihood, therefore, thatthe present generation will see theconcentrated egg take the Place ofthe familiar soft-boiled, fried or scram-bled varieties or. the omelets on 1000breakfast tables.

    of those present could ever torget Hisexample, and I venture to savr"thathough John lived as lone as :ho didIn his last day he still -felt), th* Influ-ence of the Muster's tepchine asstrongly au-he dld-on-tbP' day whenthe Waster washed his feet.

    .._'. 'Jeans', wholp life la nn n yourwife-sarthat?~Ttrflbows.-dear fflands.''the noFSlblllty of living sn npar Christ

    1 Peter 1:3-6. John. 10:28, 29.

    Jo; lioavon forbid I "Horo, waiter,bring

    wator unto mo, •My «on will tako \yhat father tnkoa; .

    My drink nhall water lie,"

    _ he was an PTamnle of patience, or tothe life of Abraham, and nay that hela a perfect exnninle of faith. ..I turnto JmnntuoiiB Peter, and I BSV the.rpla a man, of fervor: or to John, and

    _«ee the Tip.rfect example of John, the"loving disciple.' and wonder If weBhall,over grow Into the love of John.

    •These men are examplea In part. In' Dome things. In one or a few charac-

    teriBtlca, but Jesus was-a perfect ex-ample—roraplete. If you are anoak-Inic of faith. He Is perfect: If of pa-tience. He la perfect; If. you gn»ak of

    fervor, or. of love, or of humility, ofdignity, or of cower, or of nnv qual-ity of thn heart, you find that .TennH laperfect, the one B.unreme, nnrfect ex-ample. You and I know it in one-olour human falllnsra to look at neonl«»nd" imitate "themr Fow quick thechild IB to dlscrrn. Did you never BP«

    lldllliig oggn without tho use ofivator Is tho IntoBt novolty exploited"t 0110'of London's loadlnk hotolii, andn tho foat In nccompllHhort dlrnctlyKiforo tho ciiHtomoc tho now wny ofookliiR generally dttrncln nttontlonml comment. Tim vraltor placoa-nlox-llko apponituii on tho tablo and

    tuniH on a llttlo elootrlelty, and placntitho doHlrod numhor of OKKU lit thohuater. In al)out a inlnutn nnd n half,or half tho time oomnimod by tho hot-wator procoiin, tho OKKD nro cooked tou turn.

    Mm. M'Oiirlhy—Yor wagon In tin'clntn itliort thin wako, Mllco.

    M'Ourthy—Via, Mary Ann. Wo hadnn oxploalnn on Tooiulay, an' th' foor-inan dookod mo fur tlio tlmo I wan In.th' nlr.

    o words that her mother did. but•With juiit the naniP Intonation? TfIho mother sayn a thine with a littleJharpneen. no doos thn daughter.' Ithink nothing In. nil this world Is soquick to dldrcrn thn things they "eo aaa llttlo child, and not only to dlnccrn

    ' t h e m , but to Imitate them. If .Toaua. had banded down Mln Sermon on th«

    ,Mount just as a document clven by4n. unseen hand. U nover would havtt

    "had the renoimnro, tho clearness andtha power that It ban when wo see Itcoming from tho Itptt of tho Manwhom we almost can noe because Hlafollowora really did BOO Him, You donot tako any reasoning of .Ic.ius apartfrom Himself. You and I need to un-derstand .IOBIIS, and need to followHis example, because othor people ar«following our nxample. Hero In a lit-

    , tie boy In tho Bunday-uchool, nnd theteacher sayi, "John, you, ought to(row up Into a true, noblo manhood,and be an example for others," Johncannot help belne an example. I can;hot «Und hero this tnornlnc and1 sayyou ought to be examples; you aro,•nd you cannot get away from It.You may not want people to look atyou, but you cannot shut tholr eyea,There Is not a person hero this morn-ing; who Is not, unconsciously UK wellan consciously, loafllnji thn tUoiiBhts•nd ImpnInoH of AVhar people. • Youaro 'examplcH. What kind of o»ura-plon aro yoliT

    What k ind of 1111 oxampla aro weChristian poopla'.' In t h i n k onu of thentopt woiidoful men .was i'aul, Hewroto to tho Oalatlnnu, and hn fluid:"Brethren, 1 bduoocli you bo nu I am."Now u Kood many of you ara looklnit•t mo mid aaylnt;: "Horn Is our nowpastor, i wonder w hM kind at a manfix IH roully goliiK to proro to bo."Whnt Kind of a man would you t h i n kI am If I should say In u t to r uoi'li'uu-jiouHi' "Mnmborn of Pi ir l tnn Ohiii'oh,1 hcnocch you bo ua i mil. Look itmo, bohold in (i. Do nn 1 uin.'" Why,tlmt In Whut tho npont ln Wio l i ) to hidconjjrcRlitloii, Ho mint unollmr letter

    .to tho rhlll|iplaiiu, In whloh ho nnld:"Tluiso thlngu • whluli yo havo bothlearned and rooulvmi and hoard andnoon in mo, do; and'tho (lod of puacoahrill bo with you." IB thoro a nchooltM-|nohi HI-IKKK ban u ninllo u i i i l ' i i Roodword for them nil.

    --Hlnin ban un nr«u of 9000inllfB.

    , —^1,Vvi«

    . . . . ,-^

    ,". 'I r\,

    Vifefa,

  • LakeviewGREEN-CHOUSE

    Central Avo., Hammonton, N. J.

    Large assortment of

    Cat Flowers. Funeral Designsin Fresh Flowers, Wax, or Metal.

    "WATKIS & NICHOLSON/^^Florists und Landaoapo Gardeners. _— :Phone 1-W . • • • <

    -1O08 - 1009HAMMONTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS.

    ta»< twcfc.)

    OradoV.Sr. • ; • ' : 'lM Jonot Cunningham, Teacher.

    John Prasoh* Jr.jFurnishing ,

    Undertakerid Embabaer

    Twolltn St., between railroads.Local Phone SOI. Bell47-D

    Hammonton, N. J.All arrangements for bnrials madeand carof ally executed.

    VernllallnnottMiriam BUk«

    —A'orrfll Brvprago >T~. Anna Oumponolla .

    Annlo CunninghamHelen Cunilngbom

    " Goorffo Colllni—•CccllboddKatie DomlnlcoArtgollna KcmlnoITloronoo Foster , •

    f^tniniiiGont&l "~• Margaret'Hanson

    NclMm I nhoffGertrude Kuhl'Oharlca Glbba .--Lillian IJitnriuQvMary LtndlayMay Me;trs

    Grade V, Jr.::-- Mln Qortrndo F. Thomu, Teaobor.

    Mary AlolloMarguerlta Amato c_RnyJJankHarry Batcholor _Pomlnlc BeronatoAnna Candla ^_

    —Mary"Capella

    Jonlol/ucaCarmclln Maori1 Tony Macrl "O" r

    - Mllllo Noto 'Nemo Noto •William 0'N«H '/,.

    —Mary Paminrr"KebaPblllipa ;, •

    Gustiiw PnllroKobejt ProiohOllv0 Behman c

    —Thr«« Rnbto-o—Joe Slllpino , :YaloStockwoUEdna TrafforJMlldwdWood -OllTO ZiotJPearl llndlay

    CONTAINS HONEY AND TAR. CONFORMS TO NATIONAL PURE FOOb AND DRUGS LAW. TAn Improvement ovir mnftir Coutfh, Lunflnnd Bronchial Remedies, because It rids the3y»tem-6f-arcold bji--Bctlntf as a-cathartlc on the bowels. No opiates. Guaranteed to divesatisfaction or money refunded. Prepared by i?tNEULE MEDICINE CO.. CHICAGO. U. S. A;

    Mary JaroloAngelina JlacriJohn MangoldAlfred MtMloyVirginia Mondlllo8«dloMorMrKatie OrttilTe o

    ' Hammonton ">

    _StarJfetjBing:1'5p... B. FOQIiIETTA, Prop.

    Ginger Ale, Sar^pariilsSoda, Etc.

    OrdersrProinptly Attended To;' Local Phono 542

    Pol D less Extracting'. Local Phono 533

    Ice Cream

    All Flavors

    Mamie Capo ml i>Bon CarusoJoRle'CIomecto <Lelra OonorerMillie OoroMOSlariOH Crowf-IlCh»rl«i DeNuccI

    "Lawrence DowaltMorion DunningMiriam ElrinlNcllio FoglettoM&rgaret Illggina.Angcle-JacoblKlectraConovorAnnie ErrerftJPtncUa Blebol300 D'AgMtino

    Grado IV, Sr.".' Mtaa S. Kttthryn Murphcr.Tcaclifer.

    .JohnOrdlllo IItfony OrdllleHturr PhillipsA>ma Qulclcs«ll ' •Katie BhodaFranc™ Romeo

    -Earl .Soxton -'1'rodScamofli'lucy BclutoJUnldn StewartTony Tomasello cEOBlo VoleotlnoMabel WernerEdwin WcKoatTony LWJohanna, BUdobrondt

    r>ft. B. BOJTNTONDEWTIST

    rS Building, Hammonton.Office Hours: 7.30 lo O.co n.m.'--__ „ _ . lnnd,rrora.6, BrrcnatoHarry BiitleIto»e DrocallcoClaud Brown '

    -Edward BnrtGeorgo Canipanellalludolph Ciippiicclo

    DorettA LaoghamStefhen MarzooEiwln McGorirn.KelllB MorlinoJooOrdllle

    "Tonj T»ganoBerenice Prasch

    •?l.n^§£ Sewing' Machine CompanyJos. J>. Itubcrtone, Act,

    . - Needles, Belts, Oil, RepairingHammonton, - New Jersey

    Write.^or Bhone

    Josla CostaKjtlo-CreBciTizo\yillloCastprJennie D'Agofitino.

    -Kobert EJfroihSteplen FcminoHoward GlbbaJotmEskow :_...:.Katie EekowTherewColcaard

    Ilary BanaFr«ncl»Iloin'0Samnel Bu»oHarold SoxtonJ'lhrt-SillplnoTonySillplno :—Willie Sklnnor

    - - Oscar flury -..-•-Ursnliv.Tomasco . :

    Jos WntoBllna_^magw_

    Will Caruso' Hurry Cottrell c\Villlain CiuwforJJ Lu Piija—'

    i, Teacher. ' *Tony MollnoUorlo BlnrpneyHarold MfyirBJohn Ordlllo ITony rumen

    UnM>crl Eltln-Margaret Foster

    .. .' ......... IB the. very -host' paint ....... - - ......that' was ever used ID Uammonton.

    Tlioroajrq scores of _biit](JlnpB;that_yOUL•BOB every day, pitijued with the

    Ilammonton Paint c it; lit t:i twelvek •' • yeurs aco, apd loulhiig weir ..

    at too present time.Tbd Hammoiitou Faint id sold for loss

    tbau any otuor Qrst-claBn I'aint. It ban110 tqualj BB it vforkft well, oovora well,

    . and wears well. Bold byJOS. 1. .

    HOUBC, f-l^u and C'arriaRo Painter,Beoond and Pleasant 8ts.,

    Hammonton, N. J.

    The Peoples Bank

    Hammonton, N. J.

    Capital, »50,000{Surplus and Undivided

    Profits,. $28,000

    Three per cent intprcnt paidon time Deposits.

    Safo Deposit Boxes for Rent

    Jl. J. BYRNES. Promdont.M. !•. JACKSON. Vloo-Proa't

    W. H. TILTON, Oaohlor.

    '" "Dfiiiearona "it, J, Dyrnua ' M. L. JaokaonO. F. OH((rtod ' Onorgo Klvinn

    Htnokwell Wni. L. Itlnok. J. Btnltli J. (!i Andoriion

    W. 11. Tllton •

    . HfilinaaAnna JohnijuirLIllfuD LehmanKatip JImiguIJ'Sidney Mart cAnnie BJort ino

    -\Vhirtlo-McNftneyEarle Blegargel' Frank MvrllnqllAhnle-JUoliudzrzrr:Fred Bloli-o -

    ^Tooy Zpzuno"' J~^^~GradeIII;Sr.. Ml&d NortiMonfort,Harol Andrews cLlo>d AuBtlti>Mwiu CakrljAnna IMriizlHelen Blako cJacob Bonrlllion cKhtbarlne UrowolooMike CuppudoCliarlett Clt-monto

    Alex RodeySlary Byan aWillje Scofpgjlp c

    *" JlobfriBtewart "Amy Toui.iMlloCarlo Tomosella •Ollle Tumaaello .finsio^TuonoTdttt UtnoaelloChurlM-SawHaBulh Vnugbn cHalm Wnlte

    Mrs. TAMAE ANDERSONIloscdale, N. J.

    Leave rags at my homo, or send by

    CENTRAL OASH ST0REII' We are now'doinj? business, and I

    • .' Invite yoii fo call and . • 'inapoot oar Stock of

    "~~ Groceries, "Maccarbrii.; Pare'"Olive Oil, Imported Cheese,;

    - • • Fresh and Salt Moats./Wo 8oil-for-C(ish-only,-and on-the-lowesfcpossible margin," therefore we fool sureour prices are right and ourqnality will

    ,Buit.;_H6ping.tO:serveyou,-l»'earo -BAKEK BROS., 208 Bellevue Ave.,

    ' Hammonton. •

    CONCiyETE ?Buildiner Blocks!

    • r-jr---r^^3s.'.....-_, .

    SEopt & Son, Publishers, • IndependentPhono - No. OS Terms, $1.25 per Tear;. $1 in Atlantic Oountvl

    VOL. HAMMONTOK; ̂ j., , 1908 K0.2T. To hn nccn-at^tba-yardg-

    CHAJRUE£E. SMALJL'S,Street.; T7'_.'-=

    AND

    Dairy Rooms, . ^214 Railroad Avenue

    Kailroa Local Phone 023

    Mary Zuzono o

    Teacher-MlkeMetalno

    Lou!* MondllloVictor KondllloJoiep.h Nett oTany Notto

    , Katie OrdlllnClara OjitcrnianQcrtiiJo OyalirmanLtnlu Ortolf c

    -^uAiu-uiauitiu.Cliartoa Gnuter cAuuio U'Aeu»Uuo cLester Duytuti o

    . Clfura Domi-nico cIlliitiam Dunn

    . Peter Gruitno

    . Myrtle Grrim oJohn GurftlaIllram HanpumDominic Jacob! cIlaymoiiil I^illglllln 'Faliiiy MIIZK.O cJo>i>|ifli JtlcQilliran 0tlnrloMclioveru

    Janetl.-Tranlc 1'orooa , ~

    Emit Pfgurua cOicar Ittibnmnn .Clirton tiaxton

    FrunciM HoccaDratrlco Sooy oItoberta titeel oLonli SueyoaOrnci) TnorrioTrrena TomaaelloKmma Vernliir ctlargarella WeuerOalTln Wrfwat o

    no Alfredo Kara.t Continual next week ]

    Church Announcements.

    Single Comb White Leghorn EggsFor lliitclilnrr.otroln and vrratcat layersIn Unltmt Rtntfc. ,

    . Crcitnicr, Falrvlow Avo.,lUmmontoii , i M, J.

    _ _enu, I'uHtor. No jprcaohliig norvloca untl]August. Sunday 86bool in Flromen'aHall at 12m.! Primary at Miss Hoyt'e.OottuKo pravor meotlnpf Thursday ovo'p,at MiHH Emma Vornlor'a.

    M. B. Church.— Uev. J. H. Payran,Pantor. 10.1)0 a. m., pronolilng by thePaHtor, and nt 7. BO by Ituv. Andoraon.0.4ft, Kpwortli LonRiio. •

    Prosbytorion Ohuroh.— Roy. D. O.Stownrt, P^Htor, will |irtmoh. 10.00 a.m.,Itrothc.rl'ood prayer imictln^. 10.;i()n.in."Pownr." 7.JIO p. m . "Two modernmlrnoloK " TlitirBduy fcyonlnjj piayormooting, 7.11".

    (JnivoraaliBt Ohuroh. — Ilov. N. O.Dlokoy, Pastor. 11.00 a.m., pnbllo wor-elilp, "Patriotism, dannmlnutlonallHm,and rnlriBldiiary «i>lrlt" 7.!10 p. m.,"Qhrlbtlaii morality, and tho aurvival oftlio llttoMt." . •

    St. Mark'a Ohuroh,- Ilov. Wm. n.Btono. Hector, will ofllolnto at 7.00 and10.110 a.m., unit 7.30 p.m.

    — Italian Evangelical Ohtiroh.— Hov.A Oromoiionl, i>. D,, I'aator. 10.15 a.m.,Sunday Buhool. 11.00, proaoblUKiorvlao.7.00 p.m., proaoiijiiK aorrloo. Plrat nndthird Thnrnduy ovenlng, pra/or inootliifr.

    224 Federal^5treet. Camden, N. J."Capital, . - • . - . - $100,000.00Surplus, - - - $700,000;00Assets,' - .-: - . $6,779,000.00

    -— Pays interest -——•". 2per cent

    "subject to check without notice,

    over.

    3 percent; •on "Deposits subject tOx-i4 days'

    - Banking by mail can be done'safel/lindTsatisfactorlly. "Writefor book. l" • ' • _ '

    Trust Department^Executor, Admlnislfat6r7 Ttustee7~Quaflmn

    to .Financial Agent.

    Samples at J, B, SMALL'SCor. Second 8t..and Beilpvn^Ave.J.. ,'(lj

    SOLD IN ANY QUANTITY

    ConcreteCo.

    Harness. Blankets.Robes, Whips,

    :- Trunks, etc.

    At L. W^O

    BroomsAre somewhat lower in price.

    Our assortmentis quite complete. .

    Hotel HafamontpnOppoaite Penna. Depot

    LEADING

    COMMERCIAL

    Are very scarce this yearWe have-junt received a

    j of real-ear- -nicoClipped OatsTrythem.

    "ALL MODERN COHTBJSIEKCZ8.

    iS, Proprietor,Hamnjonton, -N. J, '

    _ Safe?deposit'boxesin fire-proof and burglar-proof vault!, for valuable and important papers, |2 andupwards a year. . - " ' . ' '

    ALEXANDER O. WOOD, Prealdent 'BENJAMIN O. BKEVF, Vice I'raldeiU .nil Tnut'Offlem.--

    JOSECJI UPPINCOTT, OecreUir ud Treuurcn UEOUUE J. UEBGEN, Solicitor*- , DIUECTOBS , • •

    William S. Scull Alexander C. Wood Io*ph II. Cuklll William J. DradlM •WUllam C. D«x«oa . Willllm S. Prlte . %VI1llan, I. Srt.,11, Jr. O«K« f . JlcrscaL— Bl—B«nJamtft~vrKeeT« "CcorBtr%tynold« ' ' Edmund E. Read. Jr. ' Jo>epb W. Cooper I

    Ephillra TomluiioD . _, ^ _ •^ *^v .

    LUMBERmm

    Cor. Main Road

    ~~Sjrd~Belleyue

    — Hammonton^---~~--^-~.

    WOOD

    OEO. A. BLAKECarpenter and Builder

    Work Flubbed an pnr Agrooniont.Platin, blno print*, aiulcinthuiitoi

    furnlfihed. Jobbing ftttanilod topromptly. Hox OM3, I,oou| 1'liono ()i 0.

    Corner Rug Harbor KonirnildOliorry Btroot, Ilnuuituutno.

    Do you enjoy

    la it wladom or a good Investment 'to pay $1,000 to $15,000 for a hotiao andthen b« cramped into onty-afow-roorhfl'orit^

    lock of proper homing? Why not got tho lull jl ii.riiv./ii.. I

    vnluo of nil the homo spnco day and night, AMERICANX IDEALall winter lonff, by tho gonlul, warmth of f\ RADIATORS ** IBOIICU3

    Tbeaa outflta noon aave enovigli at tho coal-bin to pay for thomtelves. A turnof the valvo aunpllca aa much or little Low-Prconuro Otcnm or Hot-Water heatus i needed to dellKhtfully licot the roonio. No aoh-iluBt, noot, or coul-guooaget Into llvlng-rooino—thus Having housework and furnlihlngt. > '

    JOHN A. HOYLE, Plumbing and Heating ContractorIliiinmonton, Now Joraoy

    It yon want coal that will not clinker,but w)ll give yon a soft white a?b,

    with lota of heat, .we C&D gnnj)ly_y.ou. _____ , _ ,_

    DINING ROOMS

    New England BreadIs the beat Bread.that yon can get,. —made by a process that wo

    tried for years to get before- we succeeded.

    Nothing like it ever sold in_T . town before.Enclosed In dust and germ proofwrapper, and sold at same priceothers charge for naked bread.

    wnard's Bakery.

    Green's RestaurantLocal Phone 1173.

    Where to Bine on the FourthCome right here and enjoy a meal that

    complains of Jack of appc tl to"T At,thifl Heataturant.The foods are so perfectly cooked, BOdaintily neryed, that, hongry or not, yoncannot belt) eating; them when set beforeyon. Celebrate the Fourth with a (jooddinner, by coming here. We guaranteeyon'll remember your visit with pleasureand satisfaction.

    S. J. ;

    GET-

    THEBESTROOPand that is

    Oortright's Metal Shingles]For which wo arc

    BoloAgent forjQttnjmonton,.__.

    They are Best and Cieapeflt -

    Win. BAKER, Agent25 N. Third St.. - Baronontoitl

    Hurrah for the 4thJULY!

    A. H. Phillips Co.•' • . 4 • • » 1

    Fire Insurance;MONEY-—

    Mortgage. Loans.Correspondent*) Bolloltod.

    [Jartlottf Atlantic City, N, J,

    Monfo^t saysThere is no reason why the children should not each

    / have rt package of'Fire-crackers.

    SANITARY MILK.Dairy Is ftirulo'u.

    jiutionn with milkproduced under tlio moat(military conditions. Kveryproonutlon In taliun to Inauro

    oloanllnona.A Pack of Fire Crackers

    A NEW BARNA NEWla'KBD OF OATTJ,ir'

    Dairy ojion for liiBpcotloii.

    Sanitnry Milk, nnd, Kno\yon are Getting tho Bent.

    WM^, II ROIUNHON, ManagerHoll Phono 7-r,

    to every boy or girl paying cashfor a pair of Shoes

    I ' : ' . " ' . . . . . . .

    during the . Fourth of July week.Jf your biiHlncHH In not worth

    you luuludvor(lH«) It lor HU!P. /

    Hurrah for the 4th!Everybody Will Celebrate

    To-day is the. Fourth of July, and'nearly all business houses will closeat twelve o'clock, noon.

    At 0.80, as per program, tne paraaeform at Egg Harbor KoacHand

    Orchard Street, and at ten o'clock will

    place, couoterroaroh to County Road,to the Park.:-The-line will consist oftheGL.'A. B.. the^Bandj CiylcXJlub,

    PlreGbmpnnlesritaliairSoeletlesranTrllodge and business floats. •

    At one o'clock, the Park programwill commence. Band concerts, 3.30

    rauuiu. AC aatli, ia splendid display of fireworks will begiven,—listed at nearly $1000, part ofwhich will Be-set off over the water."~In"casB7jrhard-raiDj=;fireworkB maybe postponed until Mondny. ,

    All ritanda io the Park have been"rentedV\>uf~by the Band, and enoughamuBemeptsa&^rafrraJh.mentsjrilLbefound to'satiefy everybody. —

    Special police will be sworn In, andprevent disorder and theft

    Both fire companies will keep theirpyes..jppen_fpr_]Qrea,_.It_lfl-lip'_lQ.thecitizens to make. them as little workas possible.

    Firemen vs. Counter Jumpers.

    At one o'clock Ibis afternoon, peoplewill be treated to a,'game at Base-BallPark. While it may not be a scientificgame, there will doubtless be manygood playe, and an equal amount of fan.

    The line-up will probably be some-thing as follows:Flro Co.

    T. CookL. Conloy

    U, F, LoutL.Speyoo ~.JrWtttt....r..r....P, A. Lohman.John I'rasch....Low. JJatlils....

    , Dlnok'ap —.....1*. Andoraon

    .........o....-™....W. A. Frenchlatb—.... F. Thornton •

    ,...„.. u -..I'rcalon Brown3nd b Chun. BurUon

    ..;«' 8rd b;,^r..7..'JQlVu~~younis"r/.........Alex Ilrownlooor. H. U. MoufurtIf .......'..„,John Mooro

    Orgyia Loucostigma.' fTula whlto-markod tuoaooU, or vapor-

    or moth, IB gotliug to bo a common peaton the nbado trees In Hammonton. Itla rarely found outalde of cities andtowns, and only on ehado trees. Thecaterpillar la easily recognized by Itabright rod bead and velvety black back,on which arc tour thick tults dl creamycolored hair. At either end la a pair ollong, black, plumo-llko pencils, andthere are abort itifU alone l'>u aldoa, lageneral, they give the Imprcealon of be-ing yellow.

    They llrst appear ID May, bccomlnufull grown toward ibo end of June, andgo Into the pupa utalo, from whlo|> themoth aiipuara in uboul two wuuku.Ifrom tbo CHUB laid by ibceo moths n

    eeoonil browl'Ot-cnterplllarB-will dutcho July, golnu thron«b the eamo evolu-

    tion, to tliu vtm alago lor the next eua-sou'a crop. Tbo ugg muMca arc anowwhite at Ural, but become covered withlust, and gradually change lo dirtygray or brown. Thoeo ahould bo don-troyod nhonevur 11 la pooolblu. Opray-ng with araonato of lend, 3or 4 pounds

    to 60 Kollona of water, will, kill the cat-erpillar. J, MniUlAT BAB81CTT.

    In tbo )lopnbllo»n1 f\JL\J

    o'clock, noon* onSaturday, July 4, J908/

    Tfie two hundred tropic'al weight two-piece. suits we placedLon sale last week are worth your personal examination.

    The prices are $3.50, $4, $5, $6,; and $7.50, and the suits ar&handsome, being two fifty to five dollars below the actual

    :' • -Vy:' value./e urge you to take advantage of this offering. Colors are

    . light and dark.; W;ell made,, of honest fabrics.

    ent45 so bg thai you cfind what you want

    Shirt WaJStarthat are made after imported Paris models^in silk, white, ecrue and lace. • ' ~~

    Prices are $1.95, $2.50, $3.50, #4.50 and $5.,_;:___ iJDressiug.Sact.iutis at 23 cents.

    ^sf.f ;

    . _^^,_ _ , ._,_$,! Dressing..Sacques, specialist 6o_cents

    Gollars, Belts, Sash Ribbons, of the best qualitiesat the'lowest prices. /

    Butterick Patterns for July,—10 and t^ cents.

    BANK BROTHER^_^—_-BEttTntn onton^N. J.

    Personally Gonduoted:Ezoursio

    NIAGARAto-—

    ^-and-ief

    •RpunjJ-trip Rate $llvfrpna Hammonton^Tickets good Koing on regnlar trains day before excursion to Philadelphiaand Special Train of Pullmau Parlor Oara and Day Coaches leaving Phila-delphia at 8.20 a. m. on above dates, running via the —•—'~£.—

    • Pioturesquo Susquehanna Valley Boute.Tickets good returning on regular trains within sixteen days mumuu

    date of oionrelon. Stop-oflf within limit allowed at Buffalo, returningIllustrated booklet and full information from Ticket'Agents. ::

    GEO. \Y...BOOTl_ -L"General Passenger Accent

    J. R:WOODPassenger Traffic Manager

    Use Arsenate of XeadFdr'Potato BugB, One pound makes 16 gallons.

    In stock any quantity, one to one hundred pounds. ~ —Paria Green, . Slug Shot,

    Rose and Bed-bup; Powder.Rat, Roach and Mouse Exterminators.

    DISINFECTANTS. Crude Carbolic Acid, Kretol, Formaldehyde... • Horse, Cattle and Dog Remedies.

    RED CROSS PHAKMACY.

    PTJRE I O E\31~Don't use Lake or Pond Ico.

    Insist upon having our Ice,

    made from Hammonton's pure artesian well water.« '

    Hammonton Ice Manufacturing Go.

    UNDERTAKEK

    ELWOOD P,Office and Kenidqnce, 216 B.'ll^evue AYO.

    Local Phune No. 842 : Bell, 46-Ai '

    Wax Flowers, Figures, etc., formemorial aerviceo, furniuhed on ehort notice.