4
G0NTAIN8 MORE ANY OTHEE PAPER. XXVI. HAS THE LflRGE8T •V ;»; Northern New Jersoy. }; DOVER, MORRIS COWTY, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1896. NO 35 i «™«T raul nr iiro FBOPBIETORa BlatkuxU Streetjiext door olkSolmaL VmmBtmk, .JOFfi ABl? IK ADV4M0B. WOO 100 so COI.UMM. COLUMN. 9 w k i H wkH 1 ma. I1WI175 500 660 BOO moo IB 00 18 50 84 00 lyr. 1- l'RERMAN, . DKSTAIT . BOVEB, K. J. _1)U. J, H. C. HUNTBU- iwta «f Hio italUmoruDoiilftl Collar, and £) milu »ll klnilB of work "• '- i.KITT R. UD1UIBB. g*al Kitateand.lnatiranoe Agent. mar TO. Qaa. Kfotard. On.la Btor», DOVUR. H.J. r\B. B.A. 11ENKETT Oft OUJJJ 1 N £ OBB8TSUT BTB. DOVW, H. 5. - |8to0A. «'. . Ornc* HOURS J1 to 8 p. M, . WAL attention Blvett to SIBEABSS N dOHILDBEN. UUOBliS J. COOPKE, iTTOHttRV AT LAWt»B ITSS iKD SOLICITOR IN OHAKCIBY 011» In the TOM DolMliig, n J.A. LTOJ'B Btom, DOVER, N. J. fi«E8 0. COOPER, DOVER. M. J.. . ' * BrokerarulOoiiinllialoMror Deede. i. Hloim Bolter, Employers' Lla- t'ai hit Btwk Iniirawo. Our Is- ce "loiures. R M I Katato» bought uvf wCommlMoa. . . : Henry IV. Miller, Henry O. Htnej, .urcllos B. Hull, Philip B. HolTiluui, ftae, T . B a n , H. D. Paul Bercre, (dinindU. HW»T, JolmT - Rngena 8. Bnrke A8SBT8. lanuarj l i t , ISM ; ,. I1,M,8II>.*> LliBlLtTIKH. Dua deraalto...,. .»1,M,M.17 C1BKEIUI, rRACTlTIONEB, nnuuusT n ni munumr 6v w»u- nRH AHD lUUBliliDUBAUB. ! _ . j o north •«• ot Blukwell itreri ud ibout GOO feet wert of Wtrrfn itrMt,.; D0VJB. « . * . ; • /.V;;. Bnrplna... QIKD HAIR CUTT1MO SALOOS MANSION HOUSE, . COB. BUOKWKI. AND B O M U B T U B T , DOVSR, N; j:';,: :'•;•; .M pUu bM bsen entiielr wfltttd In a nMt oaaiir. Lsdlea'uidCUUnn'iIblr Cutting > ^W^ : \tkWW LUIH«RCOX,,.,v .-•.•,., COUNTY SURKEURTKNDKHT OP POBUOSCHOOLS :•••'• p U7JB a IBESIIAN, •>•;;;.;; 04HPESIBR «» BUILDKB, oi ud a luIy»ttoncloJ Drug Store pi port iiHtoe wll l -risrc lelt at a ir.Wni II. (taxkleor at tka poat «l»o« la ranptlr attendedto;^. Cottier; (fatOQaal IhnSireeta, Dover, H . J . E NEW JBRBXY IRON MIKIKO CO. •DtiiaABMI PARMIKG AND TIMBER LANDS IN HOBRIB'COUMXY : : •<• of oaeria' aidopWarda asd aneral •ixjbulWm lo|a In Fort Omm, N. J. •:. AriilriUal t. 7l ttt_H<aTkaa>B-liaia>a. • .. olloiMlng lo|a It Fo AdJtenL.O. B i n VJ i ATTORSiTr-ATjLAW,;' '."'. MASTER IN OHAHOBBT BTAHBOPE, Dr. W-EmERRY, D0VEE,N,X " •: HOURS; lto2:H0 aDd0:30toBr.«. daily, «<*ptMonday.": Bundayalto3only. JOHN : 0 Practical PltMbfciv Till and Sheet Ircrti porter. Steam ana Hot Water Heat Builders, PnotM iipertaw It* ROCKAWAY, N. j . ACENTS FOR THE . DUPLEX AUTOMATIC STEAM i ffiaun and Hoi Wnt^r tloaim. Tlini tvra of wroiiglit bollsr iron, liava conwir flu.<«. tuidtilnlraKiinerTorityliil}]tiro mitunwllito JoinU; N'Olaue fusilfljadtlakwpalMii; I ltolift t UIB top of a lar THE MOEttIS COUNTY SAYIHQS BAHK, •OHBIBTOWH. •. I. MUUHFOltATKD nAHOII |d, iyT«. EWduit-BKNRY W. MILLER. Vlm-Frealdtnt-AURlELniS B. HUIL. Betretarf uul Treaiurer—H. T. HULL. aia,a8o>o H8,5S4.W Intereatbidoclarodandpald In January and Jnly of each year from tlie pralibj of tbe pnv vlonaitixmonthB'buHlneBa. '. Deposits made on or hefore tfae 8d days ol inuary, April, July and October, draw in- terest from the lat days of aold months rt- apwtlvely. BANKiriU HtfUBP. 9 «. «. to «' r. M. dally,.ex»pt Batnrday. Murdaji from 9 ». «. to 18 a. (uoool and row 7fei'* p. M. BETTER THAN BANKS You couldn't make a better Investment of money than by he purchase of diamonds, setorunset. Tbey don't rust, moths don't eat them, they don't fluctuate invalue toany appreciable extent and you can always realize on them very nearly tneir value. They make fine presents or heir- ooms and are always excel- ent collateral. •• When you want first water diamonds or any jewelry, first see j. W. KIRK, DOVER. N, J. W, n. CAWtKT, C. UVoonrm, O.V.VuDwram. tf.H.,Cawley& Co,, Prop's SOU AGENTS :'.'••. for and bolttemo! BALLENTINE'S Beers, Ales and Porters, ' ,Wm«a»IicHir»ofU»b<at Soda and Mineral Waters. TULIPS, HYACINTHS. NARCISSUS, CHINESE SACRED LILLIES, ETC. •"'•• INtABQEgDAKTlTIEa AT 8FANGIJ31V8 GHEENHODSEB IAMOSH.VANHORN," W«nt one of our hntoui Wey- lor a year—ol counie. €it4$ Sale Literally asale of Md pieces, broken sets, single patterns of n kind—our entire two and one- half acres of furniture stock now at fradically yokromi price, * BEDKOOM 8TJITS—15 of J them-$ii.85,$i6.oo, $^o.oo. if $35.00, $30.00. $45.00—and * so on. These prices are nil * from |io.ooto |3o,oa less thin * before, f * PARLOR S U I T S - a i odd : pat tern B $16.50, $33.50, 4 $28.00 $3R.oo, $45,00, I* $55aOO. Former prices were 1 nearly double, t 1 We're still Jn tlie lead*. Our h , is withou n rival—perfect mecli- 1 nnJsin • and wearing qualities--. i nt $ap 00. Cash or credit, price r tho fiarao. CARPETS—a wide variety— +T nil weaves, from Ingrains to As minsters—making and laying in *«• eluded, Ingrains, oil wool, 55c, .• ynrd; Brtiasels, 60c yard; Mo- *i ' quettc, $I,00yard. > ' REPRIGl^KArORS-ofcourse ^ ourBtockof rcfrlgcrato'ra h not *? BO large 03 at start of ecason— A, that's why balance on hand la *£• put at such tiny prices—if tliera'B jT tmytlilug to your liking in It, A, wisdom would heahowti in taking 1 *T it—next season will titver see !T U!ie figures I I Amos H. Van Horn, Ltd. * I r 73Mkt St I ^ Oml.D.||v,«dr ra,, 0. nrp. ll V,,j u| , i 73Market St. Tahphana i m . WE SET THE PACE! WE DON'T BELL A $100 TraEEL FOB $75. OH NO I Bnt will Bell yona wheel that is worth all yon p»y for it from $20 np OUR LEAUEll 18 THE— ORIENT $100.00 It i. not a combination of nmnlnilsn noTeltlea ana captlratlng a»lln| polnti, but a u.lujbfnatlon ot nraotfcal Inventlona feavlog Ita mechanical parU ao proportionately aajuitttl bi eaob olUer aa to make a parfect whHL WE ALSO BATE THE—• •••'•'.' ' DAYTON, SABAOEN, BENHtm, EAGLE, ROMAN, MAJES- TIC AND BIOTOIiE SDSDKIE8 RENT1NQ AND HEPHRINO OF WHEBIB ABPEOIAUTV A L L E N BICYCLE COM FA NY Blackwell Street, Dover, New Jersey. ACME STEAIAHD HOT WATER HEATER Tlie best all around boiler up to date A cast Iron boiler inone solid casting No Hippies, gaskets or joints to leak Will outlast any boiler made For durability, efficiency, economy of fuel unrivalled OOBRKSPONDENOB BOLIOITED FBOM PARTIES IN WANT OFHEATEBR ESTIMATES FURNISHED. WM. BARTLEY * SONS BARTLEY - - - - - • ' " NEW JERSEY IT'S NEWS TOMANY To learn how cheap we can sell the very best or goods. Come .n ami stc how reasonably you can buyfrom our fine assortment ol Men'i null Uojs 1 Clothing Good quality and honest merit are in all e oocl»wc show. Uniformly lo« prices ire made onall we have to sell. You can't go wrong when you huy from us, he- :ausc we have just one way or doing business, and'tlnl is logive a dollar In good lu'ality for a dollar of any man's monry. • . . . Men's All-Wool Suits $7.90, in blue or black cheviots. Men s Business Suits, lormer price $10 reduced to $9. Men's Culaway.Suit. $g, $11 anil J12.50. Boys' Suits good clay diagonal, $6, aBes from 16 to 19. Children's Suits, in Fnuntltray hd reefer suits, ages from 3 to 8, $1.50, $i-°°, S**S and 53.25- Gents Fuim.li- n,r Goods-Men's Oullng Flannel Shirts, 36inches in length, 35c. Dest 45c, nil wananted 36 inches^ong. Men's Laundered Negligee Shirts 39c, Joe. and Sec. Boys' Shirts 2Sc. and 39c. Children's Waists 19C and 35c. best Joe. Knee 'ants 2 pairs for 25c. and best 23c a pair. Bicycle Hose, wamnteert stainless .lack extra length, superior finish, 250. Golf Hose soc arid 7SCworth $r, iclts Fine Suspenders 19c, 25c. and 5°c. Men's Half Hose 4 pairsfopsc '-en's Laundered Whitt Shirts 49c REMEMBER THE.PLACE, ..... . ,'.' BROS. Blackwell St.. Dover. Opp. Baker Opera Houae,) Stoves, Ranges and Housefurnishing Goods Quick Heal GMtliae THE - CHICAGO - STEEL - TOWER - WIND - WILL UanpatoW. Tomra.dWh»l«alTOto<Ilopr..entoomKjo». " '• Piomtimg, Tinning, sieatn. Hot water ana Hot flir Heainig j. T. KERR, OPP. Pa« "Otei. Blacmell St., Dover, N.J. TfRiNK J. OIES, ,..'•. MJBON AND BUILDER, Dovin, N. J. Cotmt.tak.0 and natariah tmUM. EflTUIXTEB GIVEN ON BOTH worn. 15 tl CRUSHED STONE, An? ilia or qnutltj, dtllnrcd on tie ltaei the DeUwu«i I*ck»wma* w d WMtern B. B. nd afLorrtewJener. iddroaa OEOBai BHAW. Snpt,, H.J Women's Oxfords Will again be very fashionable this season. Our store is the headquarters, and our shelves will be filled with every con- ceivable grade- We will men- tion as particular specials our 8oc, $iipo and $1.25 grades^ being most deserving of the ladies' attention. THB IB8TJE8 DBFINBD. loagretamfn J8*hlon Pitney mi Comp- troller John S. aibaon Talk Tariff u Uurrcnoy at Aabair j*ark. At tbe BUte Consent.on of I^publ clutu held at Aahurr Tark last weekad- were made byCougreasman Mahli Pitnoj and Comptroller Jobn B. Ulbnon, for- mer editor of tbe EUA, In which tlie fa wen aot forth with a elearnaia tbat left nothing to hs doilred, and It alTorda the E i u plw»6ure to ba able topresent to Ita reedon following aiiRtracfa of Uiofr rwpootlve HEAGAN SHOE CO. Opp. D. L &W. R. R. Depot, DOVER, N.J. T U R N OV3S3FU. A ww lent and jmy rs*\i Tnr your MEATS autl riROCKIUEfl Jou will fsll t •r Ii nt |wj day your wnsuo are youn ItiulwU ot your grot-cfg or %f9 y, Saturday, Monday and Tuesday, July 35th, a;th and 38th. DEBT cmJCK 8TBAK eo BEST BIIUULUBU LASIU 7o JEltBElf TOMATOES Go WILD CEIEllUY. TWO RIIU XOo n.sict SSOo lOoCABTILl! BOAP- TOOTED HAM *!<D TONUUE Bo '• •• ' • JlESTPIiATEIlBBP;, . 411). PJCKAUE I O O . . . . ' ' FINK ROOAlt COKN O • FIBEST BUTTEIl IBo BEST SMOKED BACUH XOo RIKE CIUSAM CHEESE ' lQo BEST BBEAST LAMB 4O BE8T CAltOLINA RICE So OUU OWN BHAND HOOT 1 BEER 1 • • . : Bo a ro» iBc. ' TEA SfOON SOAI' ' TU arooti WITQ auiii lun Do HEW POTATOES OBo . BEST LA11D Qo ! L. LEHMAN * COMPANY BLACKWELL ST. Noxt to Post Office DOVER, N. J. ,. OimonIBnirro»rJi!NEWAIlK..IUEin'0N. EI,IZAnBTII »»D RinWAY, ; Esleliliskd 20 Yem B, F. Bircli, Prop Htiam Hollen, Simla Btackl, Oil Tanki.Cbtra- ' leal fan, Ore Bneketa, and all llndao) Bheet Iron Work. REPAIRING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO Old Bnllira taken In eichanfia. Coal anil | Wood Bar rtillod and T/>OMJ LlmeHalr, Flantar, Cement Want and Common Brick, IlaulnV, Htep, Corlilm' Pllli, Hlau MnnWs, Etc, Ete C«r. Morris and Diokenon Bti, \ D.OYB"R CO,, BLACKWELL STREET. DOVER, IN. J. BDILDING MATERIALS OP ALL KINDS ;"•• LUMBER, SASH, BLINDS, DOOKS, MOULD- ' ?'• INGS, ETC.; BUAOKET AND SOBOtli SAWING . '••': DONE TO OBDEU. BEST LEHIGH ANDSOBAN- •'•' TONCOAt.; fiPHT ANDBLOCK WOOD. BLUE: STONE, BBIQK, LIME, PLASTEB, CEMENT, TILE DBAIN PIPE, ETC., ETC. TEbEPHONE NO. 3O WHY SUFFER FROM LACK OF LIGHT, i Cot Vexed Every Day with Poor Lamps? BUY "THE MILLER" U M P 8 , 1* ir ^|aaar *• w »»—_». •••««•«• *pv«af •* •aav^'Haaat . •*« aa>*la^'Hal •3 AM> J X ' - KlyiDf-la'IlKAllTJPUi.athd MinpTeriMtfAitDlUtrbi fi * A ^K ll«hl7 IuQM ' Opb, Sxen, VM«n, ObuwV-o.. *•. II ^ V^J/MV r ?£' ti*i* U i 5 BI " ' e . BBlu8 " J fo'* ' ***>& ft *2/ U wV9 .•. Krt^llihedM* EDWARD MILLER A CO., ?^, l o i » l l d l « t r i e » , n [ j S rFDP Cnnl UVntknr litir a"DIII.MfH" «IIJ BIUTKH; GREAT REDUCTION SALE . ' . ; •;•;.•• ; ; ^ - A T T H E ' NEW YORK MILLINERY STORE Hnts fliat were sold at $5.00 to go at Ima than ha]!. Fine Hate atyliah trimmed oa low as $1.60. , The Bamo WRrodnotlon in Oapes, Skirts and Jackets. ' iofl' SaitR in 6lot.li and Linen aUgoing at the same low rates. . Bailor Hnts of all kinds from too cheapest to the boat. r . Mourning Goods always on hand. ; , STORE COB. BLAOKWELL AND W4BQEN STBEET9, -:- -:- -:- DOTEQ, N. J. wblcb all our curmncy ia now redoemtd in gold, and to radeoni iu ailver ao long a* altver chfaportban gold. Tbe Immediate renalt of an erection of s i'nwldsot tad Oaogrom pledged to carry out tbla jtollcy would be p y Uwt &ur *jx hundred and D Cougrewmnn Pltnei atld iu pa't: " X liave perer been BOproud H I am to- night to belong to tlie Kepuiillcun pftrty. I i»e never been ao sure tbat tho Republican party atand* for tbe proeporlty nt tbo whole people, and lor the Becurlty of cur loatltu- Uona. We miiet bera wltb conQdonce that tho American people will Bee to it that thi prosperity of tha couDtry ehall borealorad anil ninfDlA.ned, and (fala win only ba done hj tbo election ot tba caodiiitea whoetand J money and against any depreciation of the atandard ol the people's currency, Tho Issue, aa I take It, ia not, tu heretofore, be- «p KtpublfoiQlBQ) And D^moorncy, bnt between Uepuliltoanfiro and Unmoaracy on tfae OLSeiile and autlDeinocrscy on the nthor aide. B«ited for the consideration of the American iple. First, whetirar fa adjiutlng our revenue lawa, we atall liave a Urlir for revenue only, or rather for deficiency only, hetfaer the tariff ratea aball be BO ad- juited aa to not only furnish adequate revenue lor the UgtUmate expetwi of tbe tent, but BO ai to dIncriminate in favor of tbe products of American farmx, ictorlee and inlnea. Tbe second r|uutiOD wbitUer tlie .miutUlal Bifttsea of thia great country, after bavlDg given their time and labor (a tbo production, of tbe country 1 * •hall receive pay foreach dollar's worth of labor In dollar* *qual In value to cents, or to only SO cent* ; and whether tbe thousandso t mflllona inTeatad In aavlnga bank A' porita, end life iMurnnccs, and build- ing and loan charts, and In membershipa in various beneflnlal aaioolatiom of tbe ccuntry, all of which rep regent the sulogi and InveBtmeotfl of tbe mataes of our CIUSQDS and which bave been paid for with dollars wutth 100 cenU in goid.tbaUba repaid to tbe ptrsotB entltlfd thereto In silver dollars worth only 60 centB iu gold. And the third question ia, whether tbe people of tbl> ooun- TJ, In tbe futui>, aa in the past, aliali oon- work out the probleraa of their ottl- senablp unrer Ilia limitations and guiranteea ol the great constitution wblcb was framed by tbo wisdom ot tha founder* of Ihli Repub- lic, or whether we aball make a new and vio- lent departure from tbe ancient landmarks and cater upon tbo dangerous roai which leads to revolution and anarchy. Tbe only doubt tbat arises fespectlng tbs dwishn ot our ptople apin the mmey ques- tion, Is the general luck of real Information upon tbe subject. Some people are misled by tha ory of free silver, and think that tha government will isaun silver ooini to all ultl- HDiwbo apply for them, and tbla without icd without price. It should bo un- darataod tbat free allrer will be free only to tie m&a who owns tho silver mlae. All otbtra will nave to pay, fall value for It, and I have no healUUon ID prfdlotlpg that la UIB event of free silver victory, mob a monetary crash andauoh « loDg period of depression would emue, that our cliliena In general would find It much more dlUlcult to acquire Utty-cent dollan than they now Dnd to ao- quiraloaoeDtdctliraB.... Some an m'aled by the cry of sixteen to one, and I have aotnmlly haord of maaiy who thick slxtreo to otie maana that tor eacb dpi- btrof tbe present itradard, sixteen dollars wonld be given.ia exchange. It la worth to take the pains to eipltJo toiuoh per> n o i ibmt ilxtecu to one meaui tiite«n ouooea to one ounce, and tbe silver programme Is simply an atMitipt to lectslala value Into sil- ver bullion, 10 M to try to make) IDworth H mncb uooe-sixteenth of tbevalue of gold, Ounce for ounoe, when In point ot fact, It is worth In oil the market* of tbe world, only oiw-*blrtleUioftbev«)u« o f g o l l No single nation in the blitory of tbe world has aver tuoreeded lo bringing together two metals at « given ratio, even wbtii there waa only three four percent difference between tbe mar- ket valUM and mint values nt auoh ratio. T< u y tbat tlili nation can, by Uw, bring thetn togetber, when there Is nearly 50 \nr oent'. djfftrence between them at tfaepropotcd ratio, pniposterous (oily, and the proportion Is f raughb with the gravest daegsr to our proa' partly. - 'Again, tho advocates of allvtr coinage 017 out about tba alleged orimect 187)) In point of fact, there was no crime of 1673. Tfae Uw pwaafd In that year, wbioh left out tbe sliver dollar f mm the list of standard coins, simply recognised. In statute form a B'ataof things which bid «lated for nearly forty years In point ol faot from the passage of tbe coin- age law of KM until tbe act ot 1873, »i!v«r, In fut, did not seek the mint for the purpose of oolatfs into dollar*, and during thim SO yo*n only ilx millions of silver dollan bad been coined, and then almost entirety for etport, while during tba atmo period nearly a thou- sand millions of dollars In gold) coin had bren minted for the purpoeoof currency. 1 Bat, If there wu a crime In 1873,1 pro- it that the workinnmen and buslnesa men ot America ought not to be condemned now after the lapM of 23 years to pa y a heavy pen- alty for tbat crime. And If our people to benow penalised for any tblng doss in 1873, protest that the fines accruing ought to be paid Into tbe. public treasury, and not to mine owner* ot tfae Rocky fountain Btates, Th« silver advocates claim, In one breath, that f m illver coltugB will nttte tfae valno of the bullion In asilver dollar to a parity with our present gold coinage. This clxlm Is absurd, and contrary to the experience of thia nation and every other nation Blue the dawi of ctolliiation. But if tbe claim were true, -ho would be benefited by such an oatoome except the ownere ol silver mlnt» I If a sil- ver dollar la to be worth oa Ita own merits as much aa a gold dollar, yon may be sureIt will be Just u bard to get, and we may as well continue to expend our labor and efforts In getting gold dollars of the prestnt stand* ard, or their equivalent In paper money, maintained by the Government aa good as gold,instead of trying tbs unheard of exper- Imontof the free ailver men. "Bat, lo the next breath, tbo tllveritn make tbs directly opposite claim, that wltb free silver coinage tbe dollars would be cheeper, and that thereby tbe debtors of tbe country coala mare eerily pay their .debts. Laying aside tha question ot thehonesty of attempting to pay oft a 100-cent obligation a 60-ctnt dollar, I desire to warnthe. debtor that this plan files in tbe faoe of the irautable laws of bnman nature, and that It never can end never will succeed. The at- tempt torepudiate 1 omvbalf of all obligations wonld only rtcol) upon the debtor himself. Tba election comes Ia November; a rree silver President and Confereta, If then elected, could not take office until Uorob, the earliest poalbte rnomsnt at which a free coinage bill could be pused would be three or four months Utw ntllt. Intbe meantlmi the threat that all outstanding oontrnota and obligations would be liquidated on aSO per- cent buis would causs a gmt panic, fAllan el flaaoelil institution!, aod a nut- tequent downfall ot credits and stringency In the money market, which woold force fore- :ioaum and collection aulte generally, with tbe result tbat the poor debtor would see bis property go to bis creditor under the Bberlufs hammer, long btfare tbe theoretical brneflta of the ailver standard coutd be tried, "Tbe claim tbat a change from tbo gold standard to tbt silver standard would mean money Is absurd. We have now In this country about seventeen hundred and fifty million! of money altogether, of which about tOIB.OOO.OOaaraRold, about 1500,000,000 nre greenbacks and treasury notes, which are re- deemed by the Gavernmont In gold, and about $025,000,000 are ailver coin, which by Indirect retldmition is maintained at a parity with gold. Tbs free silver programme is. to U mliltons of gold coin would disappear from circulation, end our currjtioy would thus be contracted thirds of it* present amount, and since tbe present plan of gold reiiemptioaj wouldbt at tbe giniB time abandoued, tbe remalntog eleven millions o( cumnoy would fall a t o n u to a silver basla, and as^hat Is about fifty nt* on tbe dollar of tbe gold basis, the working power of tbe r*m*ltitng ciranhttoa would be reduced accordingly, If the panio did not substantially drstroy business (for with little buslneM In progress, little money is required), If any business of consequence remained to be transacted, eleven hundred millions of currency on a sliver basis, would do no more work In the channels of trade, tban six hundred millions of currency on a gold baala can do now. Tbe result of a free silver election therefore meani great financial rtticgeaof, aod so I repeat that for many nan at least, It would be harder for the ilain American clthan to get a fifty oent dollar tban it Unow to get a hundred oent dollar. "Ho nation on theface of this earth has iver attempted, or bu ever before seriously thought ot attempting the absurd and hai- irdous experiment of giving free coinage to ilsls at a ratio differing fifty per cent, from the ratio rstablished In tba markets ot tbe world. I bave confidence that tbe Amer- ican pfoplo will never, bv their free commit tl.enmlm to such an experiment, and oondomn their own Industries to tbo paralysis that would follow. "The only doubt tbatbai bexn suggested In my mind concerning thia election la the Df t>repeat«4 otatetnent that the people do not understand the silver question. Ia not this, 1 true, suulclent reason for their refusal tu indorse so radical a proposition I " Ia tbla crUla thefiepubUoanparty relies upon tha good sense, Integrity and jjttrioUsm of men of alt parties, and eepecUlly ot those Democrat* who know that free silver would be ruinous, andwho have always fought Its adoption as a party policy ; and with the aid ot such Uemoarsts we expect to an overwhelming victory InNew Jersey suid In tbe country fur MoElnley and Hobart, for sounil W n o y and prosperity, ' Mr. Gibson followed Mr. Pitney, speaking iflpartoa/ollowj- "'; . ' Ii bthB policy of tbe Republican party to meet Issues as tbey arise; hence we depart >m a dlscutslon of that grtat policy ot pro- tection to oorabat with the heresy of free and unlimited coiaogeof silver, which Is the worst that we have bod to confront since the Civil War. We cannot forget, bowevar, that when the llepubllcan party waa In power we were lying oft tha national debt at therate ot 1280,000,000 uvrry four years. Bince the Democratic party assumed power we hare gone Into debt at tbe probable rate of |300,- OOO.Oto-a net loss ot over 1500,000,000 in four abort years. The vast amount ot good wblou could bave been done with this great sum of money may beestimated. Its expenditure for public Improvements would ba»»provlded abundant employment for American labor, and Its appropriation to ntval oonitruotlon would have built for thia country a navy that would bave mode iu feared on every sea In toe worid." Then Mr. Gibson turned bla attention ei- oluBlvely to the money question, He faritfly reviewed tba history of silver ti show now Idle were tbe assertions and tbe argumenta of tbo FopuJlsU and the popnlirtlo Democrats, We hear much nowadays," Mr. Gibson continued, "of the''dollar of our daddies,' u wa heard It one* before, daring the green- back crate. Itfothe muttering of the same old storm, the storm of flat money, Inflation and' repudiation, and tbe same cries and IOW'B go up In the darkness and. noise ol the ailver agitation as smote the air In the days of tbe greenback lunacy. Tbe Democrats and Populists ksep up tbe cry tfaaC allrer it tfcs nwiuy of the CauUtu- tlon, when the Constitution does not mention silver as the money of the country, ua*pt to provide that no Bun aball. tame 1 money other than gold or sliver for the payment of debti. It w u decreed, In the wisdom ot the fathers of the republic, that silver aboald stand Bide by side in oar currency with gold. In' their ranting about mousy, the Fopnlishi never give thought to the difference In the conditions ot our days sod the days of.the fatum, Silrer, la toe oaitytteys ct tie Nation, wAa sound money The real 'dollar of our daddies' was an honest dollar, based upon the commercial value of the mefaU. In determining what oar ourreney shouldbe, they lint ascertained whatwai the relative. 'valut ot silver to gold, and when they dis- covered that, throughout toe commercial nations of tbe earth an ounce cf fold would purchase upon the average.fifteen OUQOM of silver tbey determined that the silver dollar should contain fifteen tlnxm the number or" grains of metal contained In tbe gold dollar. this way they nude tbe tUvar dollar Upon the basts of Its aatual oonunercUl vfclue. Borne jeers later, in 1800, under the ad- ministration of Thomas JaS>non, the coin- ige of silver was suspenoVd, and was not re- sumed until 1B30, when the ratio was Bx*S at lixteeo to one, wblcb at that t tbe commercial value ot tbe dollar, Tbe daddlea of the men of the present generattoQ n w but few stiver dollars coined within their time, became of tbefact that from 1834 to 1878 only eight millions ol silver doHart^were cointd altogether. Silver, whtoh baa fluota ated In value to a greater.exteat than any other metal, was, daring, tbls peiod, worth a little more for bullion to be used in the acts thanltwasforooinactpurposet. Hence.the silver produoew preferred, to sell their metal In a market that wonld bring them bettor price t b u In tbe market ol cotntgr. Prta tho stiver dollar, of which tfacn wer not a tbourand In existence, appears to have been dropped from tbe list as a perfectly use- less ootn. But In 1870 tbe value of sUvtr hod again fallen quite oonstdtrablr, and from that time en the chtap money repndtellooltU tnd grtenbaoken began to denounce 'the crime of IS73,' and began to clamor for a dollar that was worth only eighty-eight centi. The men who had dUooyered vast deposit* ot rilvtr, which tbey wen bringing to tbe face in hitherto unknown quantities with Uw aid of now devices and processes, begantobe deslroui for a uew market forthe metal, which was rapidly deorroslng in valne be- caoM of the enormous Increase In Its prodno- tlon. Binoe 'the crime of 1873' thn national government, which had ootnrd only about elgbt millions ot silver dollara for forty years prior to that date, bus oobud 14(14,000,000 ot sliver bullion nnd«r tbe ante of 1678 and 1800. Certainly the government, under these acts, a given to stiver a: greater ounskfcitt'icn than wu ever given to any other metal, and yet, d«p"te tfaensi amount .of It. that was coined into money, this product bu rapidly decreaiod In valne. The ailver dollar, which was worth folly one hundred cents In 1873, ander thia enormous oolusge has fallen In value to fifty-throe otnte In 1890. The cry tbat tbla depreciated dollar Uthe 'dollar pt ourdaddies' is worn than false; it iaeeductl and misleading. It lures tha Ignorant to the tbat leads tonaUonel dishonor and in- famy, financial.degradation and Industrial ruin. The Republicans did not demonetise silver; silver demonetlud Itself. Let us ask, In tbe event of nooses In the approaching election, how then illvor men are golog to get their silver Into circulation. Thty will bave to pass laws forcing the peo- ple to take silver In exchange for goods, though a dollar be worth only fifty-three cents. Tbey say tbey will force circulation bj mating silver a legal tender for tbe pay- ment ot all debts and obligations. Let in glvD them a problem to solve. Bnppossthat: as Comptroller of the city,' should go to trust oumpany. an insaraooa company, or any other large financial concern; to borrow a half million doDan for tbe current e t p ottbe city la anticipation ot the oaUeadoa of tax#s. The first Inquiry of tha oHloer In charge ot that Institution wonld l>e If I in- tended to give a gold bond for tho money 1 borrowed. My reply would be 'Wo/ and would quota the fact that under tbe laws < the United Btatot Ulvsx wuftlegal ttadw for tbe payment of every obligation. I would be Informed «• once tbst there wai no law which would compel that corporation to loan y to tbe cJty ot liewark under luch oir- cuttutanoes. If I would not agree that the tiondsuoulJ he |n!il In g[>M,nrit*equivalent, •be money would not be loaned. Hllver men target that there era two voluntary parties a contract, and tbat no law will compel a »rporatlon, or an individual, to make a con- tract if he does oat wish to do so. " We are doing busIutM with all tbe great commercial nations of tbo world, upon a gold basis. We are compelled tobuy annually hundred! of HJJJJJODJ ot doHan worth ot >W- elgo goods which we caur«; ^reduce tor nur- aelvea. Without the guarantee or tha govarn- meut that our silver will be redeemed In gold irebasea. This fact alone mt In a little time to drain meat for our would be tuQl from tbU county nil tbe gold that it contain!, and under the unlimited coinage of silver we wonld soon be doing buatnesa upon a illver monometallic baits wltb dollar* worth only fifty-three cent*. Every man who h u s dollar ot invested oer>(t>»i would have bis holdings reduced to tbat ext«nt Every life insurance policy, every savings bonk deposit, and every accumulation In the building and loan usooiatlons would be worth only about one-Eialf what it Ia worth now. The pension paidtotha veteran of our Civil War, and tlia wagei glren U> all the poop's engaRsd In ou- Indurtrlee would potfaa only oueball UM purchasing power of the money tbey now re- ceive, Tbe wage earner would be one of the greatest suHarers, and when he realizes that hi* only hope of getting even lathe hopeless Fact that his wages would bavetobe doqbled under this new system, he will not he de- ceived, u hewai deceived four yeara ago, and vote to Mil hfs labor in n o n a marfctt," In conclusion Mr. Glbapa portrayed tie dis- tress which exl-ta In countries that operate ttud attempt to do business npou n BUT«T baali*. Tha discredit that would fall npoa lie nation In tbe eyes of all clvllinitlou waa also alludedto,and the aaaertlon was made tbat •tinnal honor with repadlation could aot be anjulred. WEEN THE BUN BETS. lun aete to-night at v , irday night at , Sunday night at Honday night a t . . . , 1 lynightat Wednesday night at Thursday nigi, t a t re cannot force thutntolake silver 1 ipay- QI' INTEBEBT TO WHEBLXBIT. 7:22 7^1 7:30 7)10 7:18 7:17 imunlcatlona for tbla column, to lasura publication in current Issue, nnwt bo In hand not l&t«r than Thursday noon. Cyclists desiring to jDln tlie League of Americsa will bofurnished with application blanks at tho K u office or on application to Doug-. Ua Broadwnll, loaJ L. A. W. Consul. At the Bay Shore, Lona; Island, bicycle ton no Baturdsy afternoon, Ray Dawson, Boonton's oraok-a-jaok, won first prlxe In tbe on^mlle scratch race and drat place In tba half-mile scratch roes, his tlnn being 3 mlo- ' eK) 3Ji aeconda and 1 minute I) 1-S seooods respectively. A-WHKEL. country read and fields of clover, A vagrant bre»e on tbe daisies fed; Irown earth under and blue sky over. Care and commerce forsook and dead, Tostrtls wide and lips olaan-psrtins^ Bead tossed up to the shafts of sun; lyes a>watuh for tbs oitbtrd, dsrtlng Down by the rails where the chipmunks run. Card, white sand, with a, tide In-running, A fringe of pines and a rooky wall; Iray-dunsky, with a truoo to running, A brine-washed wind and tho pewit's call; Shoulders Drscsd to tbstsmpMt't radog, L*Ks struna; tense and elbows square ; Syes on the lines of froth-tips chastnc Up and up where toe strand lies ban. s.ib'or tephyr of land-locked clovw, Uarlortarf mty be nodar faesi ; . ' . Wbetber duUsd iky or innahlM over, . What care I when Vm ott a-wbeel f Lie at eua la your orbored gim«ses, Bask in the perfumed breath of them, But five me. tbe klsi of the wind that pauses 1 _ to fan the tenta of Sbem, P o « ,WiutKL*n, In New, York Prus. Cbarlse H, Roderer Is tbe latest ncrolt to the ranks, of tlie looat cyclers. Ha la to* prond possessor of a new " Richmond, 11 Msxsball T. Cos, ogtd 39, who woe lojufed lnaooIUtlon with another wheslman in Park . Place, Newark, on .Fulj 11, died In Bt Bansv- Hospital, Newark, cnlCondty night. Ts» autopsy revealed a Iractureat the base of the inll. Toe New Jersey Division of theLeague of Amaricio Wbselmsn has been right to Una . trtth ; tfae other btgdlvlstone Jo rawwiog their mvmbtnbJp for the year 1800, ovsn getttag ... along bttter than BMnn. Their numben now rsacfa nearly four thousand and before tba . season closes they expect to reach the five , thoimnd mark, which will be more.than... double their number lost year. For all the . goooitbey do, there Is aa reason why all the•, wheelmtm In ttoBlat* shauUl not join andhelp 1 along this great organisation. Applloa- , tion blanks ess be seenred at this office, or U l , W. Bararrn. . Host everybodr «H1 • « " • with Oollla P. HontlDtTtoo when tossys: " I Ilka t propo- . altlon tbat pays," such a proposltton Is the following t Fifty-two Ismes ot a weekly jonraal. Tea to thirty per oent. ndaottotai at any . Mgue hotel. Free legal protection. In case ot accident. Fadllty for obtaining important inTornisv Won oonoernlng rood*, boteb, dJttaooM, tto, (Tbe N. J. Road and Route book gives this, Intarnutton and tpeolal inquiries will be aa- swered by your local ooainl) A ticket which Insures fmtoraU oaurtestea whene'er pna*ntA). ' Tbe enjoyment of oldlnR in the support of , an Bsscclation that has been the foremost la the 1 advancement of cycling. (And ot tbe 1 of good roodB, the h. A. W, having It- Bell spent 1120,000 In the cause:)'-: Toe (sjoyment without oort of «J1 evfot* held at the annual State gathering of wbsel- men. tAod special entertatnimeobi and ax- irWons at the National meeta.) "' ' ' ' And In addition the |35reward for retorn . ot a stolen wheel and tbe arrest and confla- tion of the thief. 1! yon are convinced, tbtt the promises an good, obtain anapplication blank at this office and join now. PwniniMS- A high grade wbeil. the Orient, MaBpecfalpreiiiltim for tbeswaibftrobtalf)*^' lag;tbe greatest number of new members be- fore July 1st Fortwentj-flvenewmembsiriJ a sold L. A. W. pla. For five, a Road and Route Book. For two, a N. J, Division U p Pin, and for one, a Dlvlsta Button. ' The past week bos been a had one for the wheeling fraternity on ocooont ot the fre- quent rains. Town T'llk says: Dr. A. J. Wright, ot Montclair, is agreat friend of good roadi, and as a tsemtnr of tbe press committee of the New Jersey Division, LA. W., be doss valuable work for tbe cause. Tbe wheat harvest Is e beKtuntng to color. Thellev. C. W. Woo d di Sd FA&KBB. Tbe wheat harvest Is about over and oaUt - - - - otor. . . . Wood, preached to agood slwd audience on Sunday night. Hra. Richard Robinson spent Sunday with Mrs. H. Stevens. Ufsa Bertha Button, of Somarvllle, apeat a wmk with her gTamlfatbar, A. a Button. A. Ufa? has purchased a new baggy and , toam of colts. Un. Hannah Hilrierbrandt,.of Oetmut Valley, spent last weak with Hra, A. Bum. Hisses Josle and Anna Haaram, of Moan- talnvllle, are around renawiiig old acquaint noDs, ' " Un. Burnett lAttae has two boardsn at berplaoe. Work oa tha new bridge Is Hearing com- Tha clrcna at OBrmon Tallsy on Saturday n!gbtftttnwtefln5lt«anun.berofoui '' tlr. and Urs. Conrad Hoffman, o salavtlle, were tbe gents of ?ohn Carllleon" Mia Hs'ttle HolTmkn spent A few days la . Dover but week. We are sorry to note that Urs. Jane Flem- tnz Is not lraprovln«. Urs.'Alaxonder Andenon vudt«d bar sister,' Urs. John Hockenberrv, on Hond*y. < . Albert Bonn and B. 0. Blglar visited Hack- DttvtQwn Lodge on Monday night. Saturday rp«orlt. ' at Houn- Hi

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G0NTAIN8 MORE

ANY OTHEE PAPER.

XXVI.

HAS THE LflRGE8T•V

;»; Northern New Jersoy. } ;

DOVER, MORRIS COWTY, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1896. NO 35

i «™«T raul nr

iiro FBOPBIETORa

, » BlatkuxU Street jiext doorolkSolmaL VmmBtmk,

.JOFfiABl? IK ADV4M0B.

WOO100

so

COI.UMM.

COLUMN.

9 w k i H wkH 1 ma.

I1WI175

500660BOO

mooIB 0018 5084 00

l y r .

1- l'RERMAN, .DKSTAIT .BOVEB, K. J.

_1)U. J, H. C. HUNTBU-iwta «f Hio italUmoru Doiilftl Collar, and£) m ilu »ll klnilB of work "• '-

i.KITT R. UD1UIBB.

g*al Kitate and.lnatiranoe Agent.

„ mar TO. Qaa. Kfotard. On.la Btor»,

DOVUR. H . J .

r\B. B.A. 11ENKETTOft OUJJJ 1 N £ OBB8TSUT BTB.

DOVW, H. 5. -| 8 to0A. «'. .

Ornc* HOURS J1 to 8 p. M, .

WAL attention Blvett to SIBEABSSN dOHILDBEN.

UUOBliS J. COOPKE,

iTTOHttRV AT LAW t»B

ITSS iKD SOLICITOR IN OHAKCIBY

011» In the TOM DolMliig,

n J .A. LTOJ'B Btom, DOVER, N. J.

fi«E8 0. COOPER,

DOVER. M. J.. . '* BrokerarulOoiiinllialoMror Deede.

i. Hloim Bolter, Employers' Lla-t'ai hit Btwk Iniirawo. Our Is-ce "loiures. RMI Katato» bought uvf

wCommlMoa. . .• : • •

Henry IV. Miller, Henry O. Htnej,.urcllos B. Hull, Philip B. HolTiluui,ftae, T. B a n , H. D. Paul Bercre,

(dinindU. HW»T, JolmT

- Rngena 8. Bnrke

A8SBT8.

lanuarj lit , ISM ; , . I1,M,8II>.*>

LliBlLtTIKH.Dua deraalto...,. .»1,M,M.17

C1BKEIUI, rRACTlTIONEB,nnuuusT n n i munumr 6v w»u-

nRH AHD lUUBliliDUBAUB. !_ . j o north • « • ot Blukwell itreri u d

ibout GOO feet wert of Wtrrfn itrMt,.;D0VJB. « . * . ; • / .V;; .

Bnrplna...

Q IKD HAIR CUTT1MO SALOOS

MANSION HOUSE, .

COB. BUOKWKI. AND B O M U BTUBT,

D O V S R , N; j : ' ; , : :'•;•;.M pUu bM bsen entiielr wfltttd In a nMt

oaaiir. Lsdlea'uidCUUnn'iIblrCutting > ^ W ^ :

\tkWW LUIH«RCOX,, . ,v .-•.•,.,

COUNTY SURKEURTKNDKHTOP POBUOSCHOOLS :•••'•p

U7JB a I B E S I I A N , • > • ; ; ; . ; ;

04HPESIBR « » BUILDKB,oi ud a

luIy»ttoncloJDrug Store piport iiHtoe wll

l

-risrc lelt at air.Wni II. (taxkleor at tka poat «l»o«la ranptlr attended to; . Cottier; (fatOQaalIhnSireeta, Dover, H.J.

E NEW JBRBXY IRON MIKIKO CO.

•DtiiaABMI PARMIKG AND TIMBER• LANDS IN HOBRIB'COUMXY : :• < • b» of oaeria' aidopWarda asd aneral• ixjbulWm lo|a In Fort Omm, N. J. •:.• AriilriUal t . 7 l ttt_H<aTkaa>B-liaia>a. • ..

olloiMlng lo|a It FoAdJtenL.O. B i n

VJ iATTORSiTr-ATjLAW,;' '."'.

MASTER IN OHAHOBBT

BTAHBOPE,

Dr. W-EmERRY,D0VEE,N,X " •:

HOURS; l to2:H0 a D d0:30toBr .« . daily,«<*ptMonday.": Bundayalto3only.

JOHN : 0Practical PltMbfciv Till and

Sheet Ircrti porter.

Steam ana Hot Water Heat

Builders,

PnotM iipertaw

It*

ROCKAWAY, N. j .ACENTS FOR THE .

DUPLEX

AUTOMATICSTEAM

i ffiaun and Hoi Wnt^r tloaim. Tlini tvraof wroiiglit bollsr iron, liava conwir flu.<«.

tuidtilnlraKiinerTorityliil}]tiro

mitunwllito JoinU; N'O lauef u s i l f l j a d t l a k w p a l M i i ; I

l to lift t UIB top of a lar

THE MOEttIS COUNTY

SAYIHQS BAHK,•OHBIBTOWH. • . I.

MUUHFOltATKD nAHOII | d , iyT«.

EWduit-BKNRY W. MILLER.Vlm-Frealdtnt-AURlELniS B. HUIL.Betretarf uul Treaiurer—H. T. HULL.

aia,a8o >oH8,5S4.W

Intereatbidoclarodandpald In January andJnly of each year from tlie pralibj of tbe pnvvlonaitixmonthB'buHlneBa. '.

Deposits made on or hefore tfae 8d days olinuary, April, July and October, draw in-

terest from the lat days of aold months rt-apwtlvely.

BANKiriU HtfUBP.

9 «. «. to «' r. M. dally,.ex»pt Batnrday.Murdaji from 9 ». «. to 18 a. (uoool androw 7 fei '* p. M.

BETTER THAN BANKSYou couldn't make a better

Investment of money than byhe purchase of diamonds,

setorunset. Tbey don't rust,moths don't eat them, theydon't fluctuate in value to anyappreciable extent and youcan always realize on themvery nearly tneir value. Theymake fine presents or heir-ooms and are always excel-ent collateral. •• When you

want first water diamonds orany jewelry, first see

j . W. KIRK,DOVER. N, J .

W, n. CAWtKT, C. UVoonrm, O.V.VuDwram.

tf.H.,Cawley& Co,, Prop's

SOU AGENTS:'.'••. for and bolttem o!

BALLENTINE'S

Beers, Ales and Porters,' ,Wm«a»IicHir»ofU»b<at

Soda and Mineral Waters.

TULIPS, HYACINTHS. NARCISSUS,

CHINESE SACRED LILLIES, ETC.

•"'•• IN tABQEgDAKTlTIEa AT

8FANGIJ31V8 GHEENHODSEB

IAMOSH.VANHORN,"W«nt one of our hntoui Wey-lor a year—ol counie.

€it4$ SaleLiterally a sale of Md pieces, broken sets, single

patterns of n kind—our entire two and one-

half acres of furniture stock now at fradically

yokromi price,

* BEDKOOM 8TJITS—15 of

J them-$ii.85,$i6.oo, $^o.oo.

if $35.00, $30.00. $45.00—and

* so on. These prices are nil

* from | io.ooto |3o,oa less thin* before,f

* PARLOR S U I T S - a i o d d

: pat tern B $16.50, $33.50,

4 $28.00 $3R.oo, $45,00,

I* $55aOO. Former prices were1 nearly double,t

1 We're still Jn tlie lead*. Ourh

, is withou n rival—perfect mecli-

1 nnJsin • and wearing qualities--.

i nt $ap 00. Cash or credit, price

r tho fiarao.

CARPETS—a wide variety— +T

nil weaves, from Ingrains to As

minsters—making and laying in *«•

eluded, Ingrains, oil wool, 55c, . •

ynrd; Brtiasels, 60c yard; Mo- *i '

quettc, $I,00yard. > '

REPRIGl^KArORS-ofcourse ^

ourBtockof rcfrlgcrato'ra h not * ?

BO large 03 at start of ecason— A ,

that's why balance on hand la *£•

put at such tiny prices—if tliera'B jT

tmytlilug to your liking in It, A,

wisdom would heahowti in taking1 *T

it—next season will titver see !T

U!ie figures I

I Amos H. Van Horn, Ltd. *I r 73Mkt St I^ Oml.D.| |v,«drr a , ,0 .n r p . l lV,,ju | , i

73Market St.Tahphana im.

WE SET THE PACE!WE DON'T BELL A $100 T r a E E L FOB $75. OH NO I

Bnt will Bell yon a wheel that is worth all yon p»y for it from $20 np

OUR LEAUEll 18 T H E —

O R I E N T $ 1 0 0 . 0 0It i. not a combination of nmnlnilsn noTeltlea ana captlratlng a»lln| polnti, but a

u.lujbfnatlon ot nraotfcal Inventlona feavlog Ita mechanical parU ao proportionately aajuitttlbi eaob olUer aa to make a parfect whHL

WE ALSO BATE THE—• • • • ' • ' . ' '

DAYTON, SABAOEN, BEN Htm, EAGLE, ROMAN, MAJES-TIC AND BIOTOIiE SDSDKIE8

RENT1NQ AND HEPHRINO OF WHEBIB A BPEOIAUTV

A L L E N BICYCLE COM FA NYBlackwell Street, Dover, New Jersey.

ACME STEAIAHD HOT WATER HEATERTlie best all around boiler up to dateA cast Iron boiler in one solid castingNo Hippies, gaskets or joints to leakWill outlast any boiler madeFor durability, efficiency, economy of fuel unrivalled

OOBRKSPONDENOB BOLIOITED FBOM PARTIES IN WANTOFHEATEBR ESTIMATES FURNISHED.

WM. BARTLEY * SONSBARTLEY - - - - - • ' " NEW JERSEY

IT'S NEWS TO MANYTo learn how cheap we can sell the very best or goods. Come .n ami stc how

reasonably you can buy from our fine assortment ol Men'i null Uojs1 ClothingGood quality and honest merit are in all eoocl»wc show. Uniformly lo« pricesire made on all we have to sell. You can't go wrong when you huy from us, he-:ausc we have just one way or doing business, and'tlnl is lo give a dollar In goodlu'ality for a dollar of any man's monry. • . . .

Men's All-Wool Suits $7.90, in blue or black cheviots. Men s Business Suits,lormer price $10 reduced to $9. Men's Culaway.Suit. $g, $11 anil J12.50. Boys'Suits good clay diagonal, $6, aBes from 16 to 19. Children's Suits, in Fnuntltray

hd reefer suits, ages from 3 to 8, $1.50, $i-°°, S**S and 53.25- Gents Fuim.li-n,r Goods-Men's Oullng Flannel Shirts, 36 inches in length, 35c. Dest 4 5 c , nil

wananted 36 inches^ong. Men's Laundered Negligee Shirts 39c, Joe. and Sec.Boys' Shirts 2Sc. and 39c. Children's Waists 19C and 3 5 c . best Joe. Knee'ants 2 pairs for 25c. and best 23c a pair. Bicycle Hose, wamnteert stainless.lack extra length, superior finish, 250. Golf Hose s o c arid 7SC worth $r,iclts i « Fine Suspenders 19c, 25c. and 5°c. Men's Half Hose 4 p a i r s f o p s c'-en's Laundered Whitt Shirts 49c REMEMBER THE.PLACE, . . . . . . , ' . '

BROS.Blackwell St.. Dover.Opp. Baker Opera Houae,)

Stoves, Ranges and Housefurnishing GoodsQuick Heal GMtliae

THE - CHICAGO - STEEL - TOWER - WIND - WILLU a n p a t o W . Tomra.dWh»l«alTOto<Ilopr..entoomKjo». " '•

Piomtimg, Tinning, sieatn. Hot water ana Hot flir Heainig

j . T. KERR, OPP. Pa« "Otei. Blacmell St., Dover, N . J .

TfRiNK J. OIES, , . . ' • .

MJBON AND BUILDER,

Dovin, N. J.

Cotmt . tak .0 and natariah tmUM.

EflTUIXTEB GIVEN ON

BOTH o» worn. 15 tl

CRUSHED STONE,An? ilia or qnutltj, dtllnrcd on tie ltaei

the DeUwu«i I*ck»wma* wd WMtern B. B. nd

afLorrtewJener. iddroaa

OEOBai BHAW. Snpt,,

H.J

Women's OxfordsWill again be very fashionable

this season. Our store is the

headquarters, and our shelves

will be filled with every con-

ceivable grade- We will men-

tion as particular specials our

8oc, $iipo and $1.25grades^ being most deserving

of the ladies' attention.

THB IB8TJE8 DBFINBD.

loagretamfn J8*hlon Pitney mi Comp-troller John S. aibaon Talk Tariff u

Uurrcnoy at Aabair j*ark.At tbe BUte Consent.on of I^publ

clutu held at Aahurr Tark last week ad-were made by Cougreasman Mahli

Pitnoj and Comptroller Jobn B. Ulbnon, for-mer editor of tbe EUA, In which tlie fawen aot forth with a elearnaia tbat leftnothing to hs doilred, and It alTorda the Eiuplw»6ure to ba able to present to Ita reedon

following aiiRtracfa of Uiofr rwpootlve

HEAGAN SHOE CO.Opp. D. L & W. R. R. Depot, DOVER, N.J.

T U R N OV3S3FU.A ww lent and jmy rs*\i Tnr your MEATS autl riROCKIUEfl Jou will fsll t

•r Ii nt |wj day your wnsuo are youn ItiulwU ot your grot-cfg or

%f9

y ,Saturday, Monday and Tuesday, July 35th, a;th and 38th.

DEBT cmJCK 8TBAK

eoBEST BIIUULUBU LASIU

7o

JEltBElf TOMATOESGo

WILD CEIEllUY.TWO RIIU

XOo n.sict SSOolOoCABTILl! BOAP-

TOOTED HAM *!<D TONUUEB o '• •• ' •

JlESTPIiATEIlBBP;, ..

411). PJCKAUE

I O O . . . . ' • '

FINK ROOAlt COKNO

• FIBEST BUTTEIlIBo

BEST SMOKED BACUHXOo

RIKE CIUSAM CHEESE' lQo

BEST BBEAST LAMB4O

BE8T CAltOLINA RICESo

OUU OWN BHAND HOOT1 BEER1 • • . : Bo

a ro» iBc. '

TEA SfOON SOAI'' TU arooti WITQ auiii lun

DoHEW POTATOES

OBo. BEST LA11D

Qo

! L. LEHMAN * COMPANYBLACKWELL ST. Noxt to Post Office DOVER, N. J.

, . OimonIBnirro»rJi!NEWAIlK..IUEin'0N. EI,IZAnBTII »»D RinWAY,

; Esleliliskd 20 Yem

B, F. Bircli, Prop

Htiam Hollen, Simla Btackl, Oil Tanki.Cbtra-' leal f a n , Ore Bneketa, and all llnda o)

Bheet Iron Work.

REPAIRING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TOOld Bnllira taken In eichanfia. Coal anil |

Wood Bar rtillod and T/>OMJ LlmeHalr,Flantar, Cement Want and Common

Brick, IlaulnV, Htep, Corlilm'Pllli, Hlau MnnWs, Etc, Ete

C«r. Morris and Diokenon Bti, \

D.OYB"R CO,,BLACKWELL STREET. DOVER, IN. J .

BDILDING MATERIALS OP ALL KINDS;"•• LUMBER, SASH, BLINDS, DOOKS, MOULD- '?'• INGS, ETC.; BUAOKET AND SOBOtli SAWING .'••': DONE TO OBDEU. BEST LEHIGH AND SOBAN-

•'•' TONCOAt.; fiPHT AND BLOCK WOOD. BLUE:STONE, BBIQK, LIME, PLASTEB, CEMENT,TILE DBAIN PIPE, ETC., ETC.

TEbEPHONE NO. 3O

WHY SUFFER FROM LACK OF LIGHT,i Cot Vexed Every Day with Poor Lamps?

BUY "THE MILLER" UMP8,

1* i r ^|aaar *• w »»—_». •••««•«• *pv«af •* •aav^'Haaat . •*« aa>*la ' Hal

•3 AM > J X ' - KlyiDf-la'IlKAllTJPUi.athd MinpTeriMtfAitDlUtrbifi * A K ll«hl7IuQM' Opb, Sxen, VM«n, ObuwV-o.. *•. II^ V^J /MV r ? £ ' t i * i* U i 5 B I " ' •e.BBlu8 " J f o ' * ' ***>&

ft *2 / U wV9 . • . Krt llihedM*

EDWARD MILLER A CO., ?^,l o i » l l d ™ l « t r i e » , n [ j SrFDP Cnnl UVntknr litir a " DIII.MfH" « I I J BIUTKH;

GREAT REDUCTION SALE• • . • ' • .

; • ; • ; . • • ; ; ^ - A T T H E '

NEW YORK MILLINERY STOREHnts fliat were sold at $5.00 to go at Ima than ha]!.

Fine Hate atyliah trimmed oa low as $1.60. ,The Bamo WR rodnotlon in Oapes, Skirts and Jackets. '

iofl' SaitR in 6lot.li and Linen aUgoing at the same low rates.. Bailor Hnts of all kinds from too cheapest to the boat.

r . Mourning Goods always on hand. ;,

STORECOB. BLAOKWELL AND W4BQEN STBEET9, -:- -:- -:- DOTEQ, N. J.

wblcb all our curmncy ia now redoemtd ingold, and to radeoni iu ailver ao long a* altver

chfaportban gold. Tbe Immediate renaltof an erection of s i'nwldsot tad Oaogrompledged to carry out tbla jtollcy would bep yUwt &ur *jx hundred and D

Cougrewmnn Pltnei atld iu pa't:" X liave perer been BO proud H I am to-

night to belong to tlie Kepuiillcun pftrty. Ii»e never been ao sure tbat tho Republican

party atand* for tbe proeporlty nt tbo wholepeople, and lor the Becurlty of cur loatltu-Uona. We miiet bera wltb conQdonce thattho American people will Bee to it that thiprosperity of tha couDtry ehall borealoradanil ninfDlA.ned, and (fala win only ba donehj tbo election ot tba caodiiitea whoetand

J money and against any depreciationof the atandard ol the people's currency, ThoIssue, aa I take It, ia not, tu heretofore, be-

« p KtpublfoiQlBQ) And D^moorncy, bntbetween Uepuliltoanfiro and Unmoaracy ontfae OLS eiile and autlDeinocrscy on the nthoraide.

B«ited for the consideration of the Americaniple. First, whetirar fa adjiutlng our

revenue lawa, we atall liave a Urlir forrevenue only, or rather for deficiency only,

hetfaer the tariff ratea aball be BO ad-juited aa to not only furnish adequaterevenue lor the UgtUmate expetwi of tbe

tent, but BO ai to dIncriminate infavor of tbe products of American farmx,

ictorlee and inlnea. Tbe second r|uutiODwbitUer tlie .miutUlal Bifttsea of thia great

country, after bavlDg given their time andlabor (a tbo production, of tbe country1*

•hall receive pay for each dollar'sworth of labor In dollar* *qual In value to

cents, or to only SO cent* ; and whethertbe thousands ot mflllona inTeatad In aavlngabank A' porita, end life iMurnnccs, and build-ing and loan charts, and In membershipa in

various beneflnlal aaioolatiom of tbeccuntry, all of which rep regent the su log iand InveBtmeotfl of tbe mataes of our CIUSQDSand which bave been paid for with dollarswutth 100 cenU in goid.tbaUba repaid to tbeptrsotB entltlfd thereto In silver dollarsworth only 60 centB iu gold. And the thirdquestion ia, whether tbe people of tbl> ooun-TJ, In tbe futui>, aa in the past, aliali oon-

work out the probleraa of their ottl-senablp unrer Ilia limitations and guiranteeaol the great constitution wblcb was framedby tbo wisdom ot tha founder* of Ihli Repub-lic, or whether we aball make a new and vio-lent departure from tbe ancient landmarksand cater upon tbo dangerous roai whichleads to revolution and anarchy.

Tbe only doubt tbat arises fespectlng tbsdwishn ot our ptople apin the mmey ques-tion, Is the general luck of real Informationupon tbe subject. Some people are misledby tha ory of free silver, and think that thagovernment will isaun silver ooini to all ultl-HDiwbo apply for them, and tbla without

icd without price. It should bo un-darataod tbat free allrer will be free only totie m&a who owns tho silver mlae. Allotbtra will nave to pay, fall value for It, andI have no healUUon ID prfdlotlpg that la UIBevent of free silver victory, mob a monetarycrash andauoh « loDg period of depressionwould emue, that our cliliena In generalwould find It much more dlUlcult to acquireUtty-cent dollan than they now Dnd to ao-quiraloaoeDtdctliraB....

Some a n m'aled by the cry of sixteen toone, and I have aotnmlly haord of maaiy whothick slxtreo to otie maana that tor eacb dpi-btrof tbe present itradard, sixteen dollarswonld be given.ia exchange. It la worth

to take the pains to eipltJo toiuoh per>n o i ibmt ilxtecu to one meaui tiite«n ouooeato one ounce, and tbe silver programme Issimply an atMitipt to lectslala value Into sil-ver bullion, 10 M to try to make) ID worth Hmncb uooe-sixteenth of tbe value of gold,Ounce for ounoe, when In point ot fact, It isworth In oil the market* of tbe world, onlyoiw-*blrtleUioftbev«)u« o f g o l l No singlenation in the blitory of tbe world has avertuoreeded lo bringing together two metals at« given ratio, even wbtii there waa only three

four percent difference between tbe mar-ket valUM and mint values nt auoh ratio. T<u y tbat tlili nation can, by Uw, bring thetntogetber, when there Is nearly 50 \nr oent'.djfftrence between them at tfaepropotcd ratio,

pniposterous (oily, and the proportion Isf raughb with the gravest daegsr to our proa'partly. - •

'Again, tho advocates of allvtr coinage 017out about tba alleged orimect 187)) In pointof fact, there was no crime of 1673. Tfae Uwpwaafd In that year, wbioh left out tbe sliverdollar f mm the list of standard coins, simplyrecognised. In statute form a B'ataof thingswhich bid «lated for nearly forty years Inpoint ol faot from the passage of tbe coin-age law of KM until tbe act ot 1873, »i!v«r, Infut , did not seek the mint for the purpose ofoolatfs into dollar*, and during thim SO yo*nonly i lx millions of silver dollan bad beencoined, and then almost entirety for etport,while during tba atmo period nearly a thou-sand millions of dollars In gold) coin had brenminted for the purpoeoof currency.

1 Bat, If there w u a crime In 1873,1 pro-it that the workinnmen and buslnesa men

ot America ought not to be condemned nowafter the lapM of 23 years to pa y a heavy pen-alty for tbat crime. And If our peopleto benow penalised for any tblng doss in 1873,

protest that the fines accruing ought to bepaid Into tbe. public treasury, and not tomine owner* ot tfae Rocky fountain Btates,

Th« silver advocates claim, In one breath,that f m illver coltugB will nttte tfae valnoof the bullion In a silver dollar to a paritywith our present gold coinage. This clxlm Isabsurd, and contrary to the experience of thianation and every other nation Blue the dawiof ctolliiation. But if tbe claim were true,

-ho would be benefited by such an oatoomeexcept the ownere ol silver mlnt» I If a sil-ver dollar la to be worth oa Ita own meritsas much aa a gold dollar, yon may be sure Itwill be Just u bard to get, and we may aswell continue to expend our labor and effortsIn getting gold dollars of the prestnt stand*ard, or their equivalent In paper money,maintained by the Government aa good asgold,instead of trying tbs unheard of exper-Imontof the free ailver men.

"Bat, lo the next breath, tbo tllveritnmake tbs directly opposite claim, that wltbfree silver coinage tbe dollars would becheeper, and that thereby tbe debtors of tbecountry coala mare eerily pay their .debts.Laying aside tha question ot the honesty ofattempting to pay oft a 100-cent obligation

a 60-ctnt dollar, I desire to warn the.debtor that this plan files in tbe faoe of the

irautable laws of bnman nature, and that Itnever can end never will succeed. The at-tempt to repudiate1 omvbalf of allobligations wonld only rtcol) upon the debtorhimself. Tba election comes Ia November; arree silver President and Confereta, If thenelected, could not take office until Uorob, theearliest poalbte rnomsnt at which a freecoinage bill could be pused would be threeor four months Utw ntllt. In tbe meantlmithe threat that all outstanding oontrnota andobligations would be liquidated on a SO per-cent buis would causs a g m t panic,fAllan el flaaoelil institution!, aod a nut-tequent downfall ot credits and stringency Inthe money market, which woold force fore-:ioaum and collection aulte generally, with

tbe result tbat the poor debtor would see bisproperty go to bis creditor under the Bberlufshammer, long btfare tbe theoretical brnefltaof the ailver standard coutd be tried,

"Tbe claim tbat a change from tbo goldstandard to tbt silver standard would mean

money Is absurd. We have now In thiscountry about seventeen hundred and fiftymillion! of money altogether, of which abouttOIB.OOO.OOaaraRold, about 1500,000,000 nregreenbacks and treasury notes, which are re-deemed by the Gavernmont In gold, andabout $025,000,000 are ailver coin, which byIndirect retldmition is maintained at a paritywith gold. Tbs free silver programme is. to

U mliltons ofgold coin would disappear from circulation,end our currjtioy would thus be contracted

thirds of it* present amount, and sincetbe present plan of gold reiiemptioaj would btat tbe giniB time abandoued, tbe remalntogeleven millions o( cumnoy would fall a tonuto a silver basla, and as^hat Is about fifty

nt* on tbe dollar of tbe gold basis, theworking power of tbe r*m*ltitng ciranhttoawould be reduced accordingly, If the paniodid not substantially drstroy business (forwith little buslneM In progress, little moneyis required), If any business of consequenceremained to be transacted, eleven hundredmillions of currency on a sliver basis, woulddo no more work In the channels of trade,tban six hundred millions of currency on agold baala can do now. Tbe result of a freesilver election therefore meani great financialrtticgeaof, aod so I repeat that for manynan at least, It would be harder for theilain American clthan to get a fifty oent

dollar tban it U now to get a hundred oentdollar.

"Ho nation on the face of this earth hasiver attempted, or b u ever before seriouslythought ot attempting the absurd and hai-irdous experiment of giving free coinage to

ilsls at a ratio differing fifty per cent,from the ratio rstablished In tba markets ottbe world. I bave confidence that tbe Amer-ican pfoplo will never, bv their freecommit tl .enmlm to such an experiment,and oondomn their own Industries to tboparalysis that would follow.

"The only doubt tbatbai bexn suggestedIn my mind concerning thia election la theDf t>repeat«4 otatetnent that the people do notunderstand the silver question. Ia not this,1 true, suulclent reason for their refusal tuindorse so radical a proposition I

" Ia tbla crUla the fiepubUoan party reliesupon tha good sense, Integrity and jjttrioUsmof men of alt parties, and eepecUlly ot thoseDemocrat* who know that free silver wouldbe ruinous, and who have always fought

Its adoption as a party policy ; andwith the aid ot such Uemoarsts we expect to

an overwhelming victory In New Jerseysuid In tbe country fur MoElnley and Hobart,for sounil Wnoy and prosperity, '

Mr. Gibson followed Mr. Pitney, speakingiflpartoa/ollowj- "'; .

' Ii bthB policy of tbe Republican partyto meet Issues as tbey arise; hence we depart

>m a dlscutslon of that grtat policy ot pro-tection to oorabat with the heresy of free andunlimited coiaogeof silver, which Is the worstthat we have bod to confront since the CivilWar. We cannot forget, bowevar, that whenthe llepubllcan party waa In power we were

lying oft tha national debt at the rate ot1280,000,000 uvrry four years. Bince theDemocratic party assumed power we haregone Into debt at tbe probable rate of |300,-OOO.Oto-a net loss ot over 1500,000,000 in fourabort years. The vast amount ot good wbloucould bave been done with this great sum ofmoney may be estimated. Its expenditurefor public Improvements would ba»»provldedabundant employment for American labor,and Its appropriation to ntval oonitruotlonwould have built for thia country a navy thatwould bave mode iu feared on every sea Intoe worid."

Then Mr. Gibson turned bla attention ei-oluBlvely to the money question, He faritflyreviewed tba history of silver t i show nowIdle were tbe assertions and tbe argumenta oftbo FopuJlsU and the popnlirtlo Democrats,

We hear much nowadays," Mr. Gibsoncontinued, "of the''dollar of our daddies,'u wa heard It one* before, daring the green-back crate. It fo the muttering of the sameold storm, the storm of flat money, Inflationand' repudiation, and tbe same cries andIOW'B go up In the darkness and. noise ol the

ailver agitation as smote the air In the days oftbe greenback lunacy.

Tbe Democrats and Populists ksep up tbecry tfaaC allrer it tfcs nwiuy of the CauUtu-tlon, when the Constitution does not mentionsilver as the money of the country, ua*pt toprovide that no B u n aball. tame1 moneyother than gold or sliver for the payment ofdebti. It w u decreed, In the wisdom ot thefathers of the republic, that silver aboaldstand Bide by side in oar currency with gold.In' their ranting about mousy, the Fopnlishinever give thought to the difference In theconditions ot our days sod the days of.thefatum, Silrer, la toe oaitytteys ct tieNation, wAa sound money The real 'dollarof our daddies' was an honest dollar, basedupon the commercial value of the mefaU. Indetermining what oar ourreney should be,they lint ascertained whatwai the relative.'valut ot silver to gold, and when they dis-covered that, throughout toe commercialnations of tbe earth an ounce cf fold wouldpurchase upon the average.fifteen OUQOM ofsilver tbey determined that the silver dollarshould contain fifteen tlnxm the number or"grains of metal contained In tbe gold dollar.

this way they nude tbe tUvar dollar Uponthe basts of Its aatual oonunercUl vfclue.

Borne jeers later, in 1800, under the ad-ministration of Thomas JaS>non, the coin-ige of silver was suspenoVd, and was not re-

sumed until 1B30, when the ratio was Bx*S atlixteeo to one, wblcb at that ttbe commercial value ot tbe dollar, Tbedaddlea of the men of the present generattoQn w but few stiver dollars coined within theirtime, became of tbe fact that from 1834 to1878 only eight millions ol silver doHart^werecointd altogether. Silver, whtoh baa fluotaated In value to a greater.exteat than anyother metal, was, daring, tbls peiod, worth alittle more for bullion to be used in the actsthanltwasforooinactpurposet. Hence.thesilver produoew preferred, to sell their metalIn a market that wonld bring them • bettorprice t b u In tbe market ol cotntgr. Prta

tho stiver dollar, of which tfacn wernot a tbourand In existence, appears to havebeen dropped from tbe list as a perfectly use-less ootn. But In 1870 tbe value of sUvtr hodagain fallen quite oonstdtrablr, and fromthat time en the chtap money repndtellooltUtnd grtenbaoken began to denounce 'the

crime of IS73,' and began to clamor for adollar that was worth only eighty-eight centi.The men who had dUooyered vast deposit* otrilvtr, which tbey wen bringing to tbeface in hitherto unknown quantities with Uwaid of now devices and processes, began to bedeslroui for a uew market for the metal,which was rapidly deorroslng in valne be-caoM of the enormous Increase In Its prodno-tlon. Binoe 'the crime of 1873' thn nationalgovernment, which had ootnrd only aboutelgbt millions ot silver dollara for forty yearsprior to that date, bus oobud 14(14,000,000 otsliver bullion nnd«r tbe ante of 1678 and 1800.Certainly the government, under these acts,

a given to stiver a: greater ounskfcitt'icnthan w u ever given to any other metal, andyet, d«p"te tfaensi amount .of It. that wascoined into money, this product b u rapidlydecreaiod In valne. The ailver dollar, whichwas worth folly one hundred cents In 1873,ander thia enormous oolusge has fallen Invalue to fifty-throe otnte In 1890. The crytbat tbla depreciated dollar U the 'dollar ptourdaddies' is worn than false; it iaeeductland misleading. It lures tha Ignorant to the

tbat leads tonaUonel dishonor and in-famy, financial.degradation and Industrialruin. The Republicans did not demonetisesilver; silver demonetlud Itself.

Let us ask, In tbe event of nooses In theapproaching election, how then illvor menare golog to get their silver Into circulation.Thty will bave to pass laws forcing the peo-ple to take silver In exchange for goods,though a dollar be worth only fifty-threecents. Tbey say tbey will force circulationbj mating silver a legal tender for tbe pay-ment ot all debts and obligations. Let inglvD them a problem to solve. Bnppossthat:as Comptroller of the city,' should go totrust oumpany. an insaraooa company, orany other large financial concern; to borrowa half million doDan for tbe current e t pottbe city la anticipation ot the oaUeadoa oftax#s. The first Inquiry of tha oHloer Incharge ot that Institution wonld l>e If I in-tended to give a gold bond for tho money 1borrowed. My reply would be 'Wo/ andwould quota the fact that under tbe laws <the United Btatot Ulvsx w u ft legal ttadw

for tbe payment of every obligation. I wouldbe Informed «• once tbst there wai no lawwhich would compel that corporation to loan

y to tbe cJty ot liewark under luch oir-cuttutanoes. If I would not agree that thetiondsuoulJ he |n!il In g[>M,nrit*equivalent,•be money would not be loaned. Hllver mentarget that there era two voluntary parties

a contract, and tbat no law will compel a»rporatlon, or an individual, to make a con-tract if he does oat wish to do so.

" We are doing busIutM with all tbe greatcommercial nations of tbo world, upon a goldbasis. We are compelled to buy annuallyhundred! of HJJJJJODJ ot doHan worth ot >W-elgo goods which we caur«; reduce tor nur-aelvea. Without the guarantee or tha govarn-meut that our silver will be redeemed In gold

irebasea. This fact alonemt In a little time to drain

meat for ourwould be tuQlfrom tbU county nil tbe gold that it contain!,and under the unlimited coinage of silver wewonld soon be doing buatnesa upon a illvermonometallic baits wltb dollar* worth onlyfifty-three cent*. Every man who h u sdollar ot invested oer>(t>»i would have bisholdings reduced to tbat ext«nt Every lifeinsurance policy, every savings bonk deposit,and every accumulation In the building andloan usooiatlons would be worth only aboutone-Eialf what it Ia worth now. The pensionpaid to tha veteran of our Civil War, and tliawagei glren U> all the poop's engaRsd In ou-Indurtrlee would potfaa only oueball UMpurchasing power of the money tbey now re-ceive, Tbe wage earner would be one of thegreatest suHarers, and when he realizes thathi* only hope of getting even la the hopelessFact that his wages would bave to be doqbledunder this new system, he will not he de-ceived, u he wai deceived four yeara ago,and vote to Mil hfs labor in nona marfctt,"

In conclusion Mr. Glbapa portrayed tie dis-tress which exl-ta In countries that operatettud attempt to do business npou n BUT«Tbaali*. Tha discredit that would fall npoa l ienation In tbe eyes of all clvllinitlou waa alsoalluded to, and the aaaertlon was made tbat

•tinnal honor with repadlation could aot beanjulred.

WEEN THE BUN BETS.lun aete to-night at v ,

irday night at ,Sunday night atHonday night at . . . , 1

lynightatWednesday night atThursday nigi, tat

re cannot force thutn to lake silver 1 ipay-

QI' INTEBEBT TO WHEBLXBIT.

7:227^17:307)107:187:17

imunlcatlona for tbla column, to lasurapublication in current Issue, nnwt bo In hand notl&t«r than Thursday noon.

Cyclists desiring to jDln tlie League of Americsawill bo furnished with application

blanks at tho Ku office or on application to Doug-.Ua Broadwnll, loaJ L. A. W. Consul.

At the Bay Shore, Lona; Island, bicycleton no Baturdsy afternoon, Ray Dawson,

Boonton's oraok-a-jaok, won first prlxe In tbeon^mlle scratch race and drat place In tbahalf-mile scratch roes, his tlnn being 3 mlo-

' e K) 3 Ji aeconda and 1 minute I) 1-S seooodsrespectively.

A-WHKEL.country read and fields of clover,A vagrant bre»e on tbe daisies fed;

Irown earth under and blue sky over.Care and commerce forsook and dead,

Tostrtls wide and lips olaan-psrtins^Bead tossed up to the shafts of sun ;

lyes a>watuh for tbs oitbtrd, dsrtlngDown by the rails where the chipmunks run.

Card, white sand, with a, tide In-running,A fringe of pines and a rooky wall;

Iray-dunsky, with a truoo to running,A brine-washed wind and tho pewit's call;

Shoulders Drscsd to tbstsmpMt't radog,L*Ks struna; tense and elbows square ;

Syes on the lines of froth-tips chastncUp and up where toe strand lies ban.

s.ib'or tephyr of land-locked clovw,Uarlortarf mty be nodar faesi ; . ' .

Wbetber duUsd iky or innahlM over, .What care I when Vm ott a-wbeel f

Lie at eua la your orbored gim«ses,Bask in the perfumed breath of them,

But five me. tbe klsi of the wind that pauses 1_ to fan the tenta of Sbem,

P o « ,WiutKL*n, In New, York Prus.Cbarlse H, Roderer Is tbe latest ncrolt to

the ranks, of tlie looat cyclers. Ha la to*prond possessor of a new " Richmond,11

Msxsball T. Cos, ogtd 39, who woe lojufedlnaooIUtlon with another wheslman in Park .Place, Newark, on .Fulj 11, died In Bt Bansv-

Hospital, Newark, cnlCondty night. Ts»autopsy revealed a Iractureat the base of the

inll.Toe New Jersey Division of the League of

Amaricio Wbselmsn has been right to Una .trtth; tfae other btgdlvlstone Jo rawwiog theirmvmbtnbJp for the year 1800, ovsn getttag ...along bttter than BMnn. Their numben nowrsacfa nearly four thousand and before tba .season closes they expect to reach the five ,thoimnd mark, which will be more.than...double their number lost year. For all the .goooitbey do, there Is aa reason why all the •,wheelmtm In tto Blat* shauUl not join and •help1 along this great organisation. Applloa- ,tion blanks ess be seenred at this office, or

U l , W. Bararrn. .Host everybodr «H1 • « " • with Oollla P.

HontlDtTtoo when to ssys: " I Ilka t propo- .altlon tbat pays," such a proposltton Is thefollowing t

Fifty-two Ismes ot a weekly jonraal.Tea to thirty per oent. ndaottotai at any .

Mgue hotel.Free legal protection. In case ot accident.Fadllty for obtaining important inTornisv

Won oonoernlng rood*, boteb, dJttaooM, tto,(Tbe N. J. Road and Route book gives this,Intarnutton and tpeolal inquiries will be aa-swered by your local ooainl)

A ticket which Insures fmtoraU oaurtesteawhene'er pna*ntA). '

Tbe enjoyment of oldlnR in the support of ,an Bsscclation that has been the foremost lathe1 advancement of cycling. (And ot tbe

1 of good roodB, the h. A. W, having It-Bell spent 1120,000 In the cause:)'-:

Toe (sjoyment without oort of «J1 evfot*held at the annual State gathering of wbsel-men. tAod special entertatnimeobi and ax-

irWons at the National meeta.) "' ' ' 'And In addition the |35 reward for retorn .

ot a stolen wheel and tbe arrest and confla-tion of the thief.

1! yon are convinced, tbtt the promises a ngood, obtain an application blank at thisoffice and join now.

PwniniMS- A high grade wbeil. the Orient,MaBpecfalpreiiiltim for tbeswaibftrobtalf)*^'lag;tbe greatest number of new members be-fore July 1st Fortwentj-flvenewmembsiriJa sold L. A. W. pla. For five, a t » Roadand Route Book. For two, a N. J, DivisionU p Pin, and for one, a Dlvlsta Button. '

The past week bos been a had one for thewheeling fraternity on ocooont ot the fre-quent rains.

Town T'llk says: Dr. A. J. Wright, otMontclair, is a great friend of good roadi,and as a tsemtnr of tbe press committee ofthe New Jersey Division, L A. W., be dossvaluable work for tbe cause.

Tbe wheat harvest Ise beKtuntng to color.Thellev. C. W. Woo

d di Sd

FA&KBB.Tbe wheat harvest Is about over and oaUt

- - - - otor.. . . Wood, preached to a good

slwd audience on Sunday night.Hra. Richard Robinson spent Sunday with

Mrs. H. Stevens.Ufsa Bertha Button, of Somarvllle, apeat a

wmk with her gTamlfatbar, A. a Button.A. Ufa? has purchased a new baggy and ,

toam of colts.U n . Hannah Hilrierbrandt,.of Oetmut

Valley, spent last weak with Hra, A. Bum.Hisses Josle and Anna Haaram, of Moan-

talnvllle, are around renawiiig old acquaintnoDs, • ' "

Un. Burnett lAttae has two boardsn atberplaoe.

Work oa tha new bridge Is Hearing com-

Tha clrcna at OBrmon Tallsy on Saturday •n!gbtftttnwtefln5lt«anun.berofoui ''

tlr. and Urs. Conrad Hoffman, osalavtlle, were tbe gents of ?ohn Carllleon"

Mia Hs'ttle HolTmkn spent A few days la .Dover but week.

We are sorry to note that Urs. Jane Flem-tnz Is not lraprovln«.

Urs.'Alaxonder Andenon vudt«d bar sister,'Urs. John Hockenberrv, on Hond*y. < .

Albert Bonn and B. 0. Blglar visited Hack-DttvtQwn Lodge on Monday night.

Saturdayrp«orlt. '

at Houn-Hi

Friday, July 24,1896.

THE UOVEK PRINTING COMPANY

NATIONAL

Republican Nominations.

FOR I'liraiDKNT,

WIIXIAM:

1 - G H V I C E l'KEMDfcNT,

GARRET A, HOBART,OF KElVJEItSBV,

THE Evfiiinu £si>rrt», R DoraucraUc newt-I»l*r()ubllabedin Morrtatown, baeu'tfouudout yd where It Is »L

EiiiTuii KiLU.ima, of the HunterdonCounty [b'ltoriai, accepts theChicago pUIform and ticket with a wry (ace.

Tin KEWBPAI'KK bolt U tusuiuiognUrailDgjiroiNirtiuiu. Tn« Philadelphia /YenMonday puhlhbeil ft Hit ot lfiS Democratliajwre ttiat have refused to «up[Wrt die "oernlic ticket.

THE BOUNH KOSET DemocraU of Minne-Kotn have determined to rf«e above party anduulU> with tte lU']<uoilcan* in their flgbtHgalfwt the otuliugfit of the treeeoliortn. Thli !H true ratrtolUm.

THE DIHKCTOK of tbe mint euliraaiea thatthe *orliV(t production of gold ttil*. yea:be f?.2,O0U,UKJ, o! wUeb amount IW.OUO.Olin tliu ertlinatiii yield of tlie United BTbo total is about tea per cent, above lastyt^r's yield.

Tho Atnerloan Protective Tariff League birc-is«ueil "lilafne's lUply to Gladstone" fiUHC in tlili campaign, l»y special arraDgementWltli the Sorth American lleviete. Thbjfamous e«uay »a» lneonx>raUd ia the re-marks of Con gran nan Chatter I- tang,Kansas, dulivered In Congrem.

The dluartrcuB elTect of a low or Tree taditariff uron tbo flocks and burda of the UnitHtateali etrectively «)t forth by a ipeecb(Senator Francia E. Warren, of Wyoming,before tbe HenoU. Ttil> epeech baa been ia-autti aa Mender Pocnmont No. 25 by tbaAmerican Protective TarliT League.

Till BOHKIISET Democrat winds up a lugt>rlous arUcleon tbe ntuatloa with tbefollowing:

Already we bear the rumblings of difftitai-fast approaching us, and we fear that "Uhlrago convention bu BOWD the wind _Uiat the people will reap tbe whirlwind. Wishall stand by Uie platform ot the State Convontlon.

R£ii)iiTEHK for the Loutsfllle CountJournal have Interviewed Democratic bual-nfxs nun to llpd out how tbey feal In regardto trie platform and ticket of the Chicagconvention, with tba result tLst out of 135<|UMilcued, .!» declared ilatly that tbeynot lupport the ticket. Of therernajDlDa meagre :» mid that tbey would iu[I>ort Bryan and Bewail while 40 werecomialttal. A bad outlook, truly.

|Tha Grand Array of Creditor*.Th» gentlemen who think that they ka

made an attractive bid for votn by proposinga fltty-cent dollar for debton to pay theidebts wltb are reckoning without their hostEvery State of the Union Is Mil of creditors,and tbey will never consent to defraud ucheat tbemaelvef.

Among these creditors are:—All persons who wcrlt for wages, Mlary

Iiy tbe piece;All members of building and loan •isoola-

tlotis iAll depositor* In MTlngi, national, State

private banks;All holders of life, fire and accident lusur

once policies';Ail members of benevolent and fraternal

orders;All holders of Industrial iosuranco;All widows, orphans or wards depend)

wholly or partially upon the Income from investments;

All educational and charitable Institutionsdependent wholly or In part upon tho Incomof their 'endowment*.

In fact, tbe Ofty-cent silter dollar wouldof advantage to few peraocs In ttw long* ran,nvo tbe speculators who would gambletbo Inevitable fluctuations In IU purchasingpower and In the pries of commodltlof.—NYork Win.

Oso S ear of ths Wijwn BID.Tbe first fiscal year during whloh the Wi

son tariff bill has been in continuous opera-tion closed wltb the month of Jans. Tbe imilt of; tbo enforcement of that measure,shown by figures produced at the TreamiDepartment, gites little comfort to the friendof the " tariff for revenue only " polloj,^o everyono it Is plain that the bill has badtie most dlsaatrous effect* upon the nation*]finances. The Injury to the bnslnesi inUnatacannot ba computed ; tbedecltn* In raa) «tate valnes, tbe withholding of money frocirculation, the refraining from entering mon new enterprises mod all other Incidentalfeatures ot stringent times cannot be |lreovaluation In dollars and cwta. But thecords of the department show that the yearb u not been one of progreea and advance-ment, the Increase by 1100,000,000 of thetlon'a debt through the issuance of bonds toBecure money to pay tbe ordinary running tat-ppnsas of tba goremtaent betas Ihs moatprominent feature of tbe policy which DMnot produced money suuiclaat to keep thewheels of tbo government In motion.

Tbe first full year of tbe Wilson bill showsthat the receipts brought Into the Trauuryunder Ita operations amounted to bat $326,000O00 whloh Is far below the rvodpU for aujfiscal year prior to tbe enactment of the meaa<on. The receipt* for tbe month ot Jons wilnot be In excess of 125,000,000, wfalab bratstho record lor twenty je*n with tbeexurptlon of the same month one year ago,when tbe revenue* amounted to but $25,015,4T0. Prior to that period the reoelpta In Junehad never fallen below »30,000,«Xf, tlthardsr the operation of the llcKlnle/ tariff aei

lor the tariff act at 1883.—AmeHtan ilanufc

WHERE SHALL T H B T OO F

Union With Bapubhcans thsOnlrOonraeto T Honeat Pemocrata l a Tola Orfaii,TLB appended letter, which « u publlihnl

in the New York Tribune several days ago,Is worth reproducing. Ita author, J. HerveyCook, Is a leading Democratic Uwytr, who,while pronounced la h!» poJJtJoaJ ritww, pat*patriotism above party. Mr. Cook wasraised iu Morris county and has many friendbertaboots. An interesting letter on the po-litical situation, from bis pen was published ina recent Issue of tbe EHA.

Blr: Where T was tbe question aiked by. Webster when be felt he eouid not act withthose who had broken up ths grand old Whigparty, and many a Democrat has baenio mr-loui thinking sine* the recent Chicago Coo-TBationa>to*batheshaUdolDtlia prndlnaj

. Prtsidentlal campaign. NSTW did tbe seniorSenator from Hew York appear to grMteradrantage than when, In thatCooTentlon.becommanded \ht> unflagging attention of eteothose who would not heed his words cf soberwisdom. Be stood sublimely there and delivtred his masUrl/ argument Ht knewwell U be could not divide the onCnumbtrlngforce* of bli unreatoumg opponents for apresent victory, be was ipeaUog to tbe largerUMinblagA ootoldB d his own countrymanand mort eloquently voicing their aenttmaota.

Tbe Senator—only think of I t -was follow-ed by tie fervid Bryan, who captivated withhis charming utteranosa, and drew tohlnuelfthoMwhowereofblswayofthinking, Bomwere so delighted as to compart him withSemoathenH and Cicero I Is eloquencely impajBioned eptecb, however earnestly andfretly delivered! Truly, such declamation lanot the oratory of iMmoatbtnai agalaatAeschlBsa, Clean against CaUUne, and Web-ater agauut Hajne; It is not that of OOs andHenry burling thunderbolts against the Brit-ish crown. To some of us tma eloquence Istbe power to advocate the bJtbert troth inreligion and patriotism, Webster haadeflnedIt in his eulogy of Join Adams and BnarWanIn h l i" Perfect Orator."

The large nomber of dlttlBgalshed dsle-gatei who *o heroically would not inbtcribatothe revolutionary doctrinej of that pUt-lora, and would haw no part io tba namloa-tioni to come, can tfasy with asU-respaofe andhonor now follow that standard' C*n wetalk of that daolaratloo of party principle* aabeing In Rgrwment with Democracy and &e-ablieADbmr tor w$ antoIdUieyaMthepo-

ideal vlewi of many In botii gnat parties.If ao, ft U Democracy and fUputiicaaisin runmid, aa in the French Revolution.

Where o n we act, those of ua wbo will no[olnintucb BUI unholy crukadu) Patriot innia infinitely »bo»« party linM, and we ahotilluutes to tal low bonent DemocraU and hon-eat llepublicoQi to crush out that raomtrounberaay which would array capital agalnit la-bor, and corruptly change tlie Justlcei of theUnited BUto Supreme Court. The tariff isloit sight of now, whloh a wiwe Congress cainpilte. Tiw public credit must t* rca.otflinedatallhwardr. Tbitbolng paramounw* should i*biotic*JJy rapport McKinley, siaanottodividsourforwi Jn a critical time togive revoIuUocUU a triumph. Tbat Iaprenie above sit. While we should act withgreat T.eor in our StaU organisations for theelection of our nominee* for HLate oiltces andfor CoogMM, we should unit* as our fathidid after tbe Kavolution on Washington, and

re fallowing Washington's precedentwltta aucfa an «lMtfon tor McKialey to ttieetfrom both parties tbe ablest to make np hUCablntt.

J . BEKVEV COOK.Klebilll-on-Ue-HudaOQ, July 17, HOC.

*OBT M0EEI8.Engine Ho. 2 is back from Kiogsland abop

wheresneieeimtobave renewed her youth.Bhe wss tba Dover; aha is now only a big,big S. Railroad companies are doing awaywith tbe atom on Uieir locomotive* aifa«taa thsy go to the ibop for paint or repairs.Tbe edict Hems to bava gone forth that

encelortb they aball bs known onlyby num-

Engineer Auguat Anerbach fell from tbetank of hit engine to the ground a couple orwwkaatco tout hurt himself so tint be hainot been able to work sinoe.

Builnati Of- importance demands the at-tendance of all tbe members of Olive LodgeNo. 41, I. 0. O, F., or ai many of thorn an cairoako it convenient to be present, next Man

Bom« one broke Into Manning Drake's cel-lar on Sunday night and stole some beefsteakand other good things which bli wife did not

ilss nntll nb6 got ready to get Monday'.Inner. When abe went where she left It It

was- not (here. Maybe Hoanlng W«B not mad.Sundnj Uat was a great day at tbe Pre

Methodist camp meeting. •JbeMethodlitaniPresbyterian churches of Btanbope closedtheir doors on account of It and people camefrom Dover, Tranquillty, Newton, Andoverand aJJ tbe oounuy round. There werewagons of all deeoriptloiu there nod it iaetUmatofl that iiefotm tbrMsndfour tbnu-sand people were there. " What oame theyout for to*81 A reed shaken by tbe wind f"Whatever the motive, the people were Uiero.Aim W, T, Leport and ber daughter are

viaitlDg Mra. Uport's raotber in Btanbopo.I'oasibly some or your Dover people may re-member Dr. Lepoit- He balls fiom Washing'ton, D. C, whichcltjTomMooreuwdlocaltbe city of magnificent distances. I rockoiIt baa been built up aome since Tom Mooro1

time end tbe distances a n not no magnificentBy tbe way. Miss Anna, Case reports thai

the CbristUu Endeavor people had a splendidtime out then,

John O. BltssU*a boy, who brokebis jaw bo_iuse be dived on Joseph Johnson's head, Iigetting along nicely. Tbe boys say fie cantalk almost as well as e?er now.

The IU utual Benefit Association bad ai olcta day for their eicunion as though forecas-ter Don n bad made it to order for tfcem. Thesail up lbs river wu delightful and ever} bad;seemed to enjoy It, exept one lady wbo gosick when the boat wai retarning homo fronOlen Island. Tbe boas wu good enough

;1TB me a dayotf and 1 went along with theii see Brooklyn Bridge stands where it dliland the Btatue of Liberty, and Governor'UUai and BlsckweU's Islsad aod Olen Iilaniand Boboksn. Tbe World building U nosuite to shiny as it wai wb*n I *a wji lut .

IbavenothBardyethQW mucb the excur-sion panned oat. I did nnt see anybody wliomode s. fool of himself by getting full. U wtba qatettmt eictinton I was ever on. Thewen some Sunday Bchool ptople from Wash-ington In tbe crowd, and, well, there wasa time when Sunday School people and rail-road people would not mil very well, bunow I know a good many railroad people wlarc Sunday School people also—" Old time* have rhonged, old manners gone.

H n . A. B. Cope, of SUnhopB, wss In tfaltown on Wednesday.

I notice tbftt Editor Kecch, o( theBtauhoiEayit, which is published In Helcong, baj puta pipe across the rood ID (rout of bis printingoffice and s. fellow doss not have to swim thaiportion of the ddewolk In front of bis oftor walk In tbe middle of the road whenrolos. I take off my bat nod make my beatbow for the Improvement, and I am not th«only fellow who h u reason to be thankful.

Thomas KoQfnnsst, who bos been sectionboss ban for 28 yea's, w u gathered ta bitfatten on Wednesday afternoon of this weekaboat one o'clock. He oam* here Immediatelyafter ths war and during the exciting perioiof UM war wu with Sherman when Shermanmarched down to tlie sea. Tom, as his lrlenAtfamiliarly colltd blm.worked rorCoLBertboudon tbe MoTTia CanaL H« was one of the menwho had faith in John Brbbln and hla asso-olatM when the D., L. and W. railroad wayoung and tbe Jnst were not the only peoplimho Ursd by faith. I bare beard him to)bow the paymaster came along on what Inow tbe main line and paid him a month'iwages with a promise to pay. There wentbouands of dollars worth of these promiseout at one time but tbey were all takon upand D.,L.and W. stock lsone of the bealstocks on the market. Ur.UcUInniswanoncot many Irishmen, utelllgsnt and energetic,who did hu fair sban toward making thlithe grand country It b to-day. He was on<of the pioneers of our AJlsotown which Iinow a part of tbe boroacb of Netcong, Hibuilt him a home and adorned aod beautifiedIt. Heustdtodeligfattotallhowhlswldowodmother struggtod to koep her children togetherand educate then, and bow the Episcopalcurate used to help them along, and howwhen be got big enough he (tot a Job helpingtfagardner of an English gentleman wberehe acquired a taste (or flowers and gardeningwhich stuck to him until be died; but whenbe saved money enongb to pay bis passage become to this country and from here be sentmousy anongh to his motfatr to keep her In•ifluMios until abe died. He brougbt his * I*tar over here some j e a n ago but she did notlike tbe country, got homesick and be sen Iber back. Tbe only nlailra he basin tboounsry Is a nephew wbo boarded In bbouse, which was kept by Michael Kearnswith wboQi he am) to boon) Jn Washington,N. J, When he got his hones built In Allen-town he sent to Washington for Mr. Kearnsto come Bod keep boose for htm and he came.Mr. McGtnnla was In bis 64tb year. Adi.mood In the rough, a kind hearted, generoukind friend and faithful servant•* Thou boat gone to the g n r e but|we will ncl

deploretbesThough darkness and sorrow encompass the

tombThe Savior bat passed through Its portals bs-

f o n OweHis rod and His staff be liy guide through

the gloom.'1

"Rcqutatcatlnpacp,"A funeral service will be held at tbe bonsa

on Saturday morning at 10:25 o'clock and atthe Stanhope Episcopal Church at 11 o'clock.Interment wffl be mods In BUohope unioncemetery, when tbe rude forefathers of thebamlet almp. "He rests from his labors andhis works do follow him." D. J.

OBKMAN VALLBT.Mrs. 0. B. FrltU, of Chicago, spent Thurs-

day and Friday t t the borne of Mr. and Mrs.Floyd Woodhull, of Morrtstown.

Mrs. Lewis Dafford spent Thursday with•iends at Hiddls Volley.A nnmbar from this place went on the exirston last Friday to Glsn Island.Mr. and sirs. Choc HoCoan, of No-ark,

th* guests of Mrs. David Apgor on Fri

Tbofe Is joy In tha hotusboU of WilliamDttfford owing to the arrival of a youngson.

Monday was pay day at O'Reiltj's quarries.The show on Sotarday brooght out a large

aasemblagA of people.The German Valley orchestra will furnishB masJo for tbs coming fair on tbe Lutherantorch ground* oo Thansday next, and tbeuut lon jabitee singers wiU also be In at-odanoe. The ladles hare seenred a numberplge, sothatUiwe will be plenty of roait

1 for supper. All a n welcome. . 'Miss Charlotte Knight, of Newark, Is visit-

In* frlsods In town,Mr. and O. B. Hendsnhot bare been spend-_ ssrsnl days In Busex county,William Starker, or., of Newark, U renew-

ing old acquaintances In this vicinity.Junes DalTord, of New York, Is visiting his

mot, Mrs. H. B. Cool, In this place.Mr. and Mra. Lloyd Gamble, of Bomerville,

rlsJUnt at tbs borne of Mrs. Phoebe Wise.list Kafgte Noun, of Lake Ilopatcong, Is

rutingintoirn.

TAe rvgular monthly meeting of the Mend-ats Village and Road Improvement Society

will be held at toe town Hall en Baturday(to-morrow) availing at 8 o'clock. Matters ofprime importance to tho Society, and of greatImportaaoslotaarvahlentsof tse neighbor-hood will badlsciused and the attendance ofvery member of the Bodsry la urgently n -

asted:

On tba evening of Tuesday, Juno £3, tbeflat d u b of Botgers CoIIsge will give a con-n t a t the town Hall tor tae bnwflt ot t ie[endhara Public Library. AH members of

t e Bocdety are not only expected to attendtbemselvw, b'ut to ptrsnade their friends todo likewise in order tbat tbo public librarymay batuejmwl to taeftOiMt extent. i

TJPPEB E I B E E N I i .Mn Ahram McMwtr'a Uby died on Wed

limsly Brw. are stilppinK Ire a«airi from-ol;o Dc-niiiark, but tlio bnjn of tbis pltvc* dtot hare very nrnnifuck jn tliuir venture.1'bo Iron Ore boyn ut tbit ()I»CPcrotwl tiat

with tbe Bow-wiunna boyo ( n Batcrlay lastud ili'ftat.M, them by tlie score of U to 10

They liavo am-pt&l a ubolleuge from thort Oram l»>)ii fur Haturduv.Tfaellev. Dr. Hoaglaud, of Pa'sain, dell<

ored a Bcniiou at l .wer Hiliernin on Huniluyoigbt, taking tlio place of tbo Prwidii'Aitr n-bu was nick. U AND I.

MAHK1ED,niJlItlCK-KBTCHAM.-I/fwia CocbranWildrick, of thin city, and MluJonnleBurtKctclium, daughter of Ur. and Mrs. tleorgeF. Kotebuiu, ot Warwick, K. Y., wtre

Warwtoli,

Letters Bemainltm UnolaimBd in the PostOffice at ?over, U. J.

DOVEB, M, J. JULY 21, 1890.Mra. J Anderson Mrs W. IIluck ford

mien Cramer Magnle UonnawayW. J. Itavli Mn. C. A. UrsdcjtAlfred HosLtu Ttios. KellayDaniel Maxwell Mriu I'owell

ihn B. IVuJeii I). II. llouBbmis Baudemin Wra. C. tinundgi-s

_« Hiltnrateln O, (I. Stancllff•\ M. Slmter MIFH Julia Kmltlllim Julia TniMoll U. O. VouU.-n-chatenl\M Mattte Wood l.Woudamci Wright Wrn.K P. WoodTo obtain any of the alwve lolt;r* say " adertleod "atttl give date ct piiniist.

OEOHUli MuCllACKHN. P. M.

To Whom it May Concern.Notice IK licn-hy Rfvon tlmt t . W. I.. Walden, ofto TOUIMIIIU ot Iloxbury, ilntrl* (.'ouniy, N, J..Ill itmkn aiiiitlcotion to ttn, Inferiur Cuurt of

»iiiii.uu I'lt-on on tlm UiiM il»r <>r AiiKHKl OL'xt,UJ Imvt) IIIH llomws gm\U< lo J, M. Van Nurtwickat tuts Mny ttr in of mill rnmrt, to koep an (un ortavitni Iu lh,iTuw(is1il|j of |tuxt>nry,io nalit countya t Mt. ArliiiBtmi, Irntufurrtil to mi) for Uie UUIJ.-plnsl tt 'mi UiwrMif.

L', 8*-* U > J < t ' ' W1U.IAH I - WALDES.

The Dover Water Company herebygtres notice flint all moneys owing io thesame must l)c jiaid nt Uie ofTice of thcompany on or before

Friday, Ju lys . , 1896All water. liable to tie turned off if (hebills are nut then paid.

I'. J. II. I3ASSETT, Supt,

Office Hours : (j to 12 A. M.; 3 lo 5 l\ M,

The New Jersey State Nor-mal and Model Schools.

Fall Term Will Oommenca September BB,

THE NORMAL 8CIIOOI. ia o i>rori«iloD(UHVIKMII IIUVOIIH! UI tlie prciiaratlon or tvocliun retlm ."iiblic KCIIOOIH of S'titr Jt-n«|y. ItH cnurne Ii

iilvim a tlK.roiitfli knowlwlge uf slibjocL tnntter,nil boiv to 'ire«ont Uiat mibjwjt inalti^r Intntilnit to llie lawn uf nxmtal doTeininnuiit.THE MUDKL BC'HOOI, 1H n llioroui/ti AeoAoii'u TnUiidij- HiJinni, (iretmratorf to college, huslma or tlm J raw ing room.The whools ore wt-ll jirorldinl with apparatus U

all kinds of wor t , IntwmiorifH, manual trnlnlp

Tin* cost nt-r year for boanlcre, includltig boardFaHiiitiK. tuition boohs, ek-., la from %VA t c "or thoHe lti^n<llnK la tench, nml t^n tar oUic.».Tlie cvst torilay implla i s ( f a J"<HWtortlioat) Ii

i>ni]lnj( to t .wl i , ond from Jill to f,SH insr ye— -

*Tli«ll>oari!iiiR><I1i.il* ami t t ioruuiciV 1IK"K*1 >>J

with Imths fttid Mm umtoru coiiveniemW. Th•«'PIIIK rooms an! nla-iy furnWiiNi unil wry CM,For furtlu^r [torlluulara apjily to

J . M. QUEEN, PrinclpfllJH-Iin. , TKEHTOM, N- 3.

THEV

EXCURSIONOf tbo svason will tto made by Uie

First HI. E. S I M ScHool

JULY 28Glring 7 tioum at tlio sea shorn.

TIME TABLEU w o ]*ort Oram C:60; I torw 7:00 ; Itockaway

7:UH; I»nT(llo7:l«; Ht .TaborT: 14: Itforriii fiaina7:KI ; Morriftown ~Sl. ArrfviiiK a t Aeiiurr 1'arkatOJW U t i l a v A b 1 ' k 6SS L n

HOUND TBIP PAHB^DULTBOHILDBBN (over 0, under IS)

BRIDGE SALE.Notices |g hereby Riven tba t tlie fwbncrttent w

^•tf.Wo'SKsvwsKajiK'rWEDNESDAY, July 29th.

IBM, Rt ioo 'c loct A. M., tlio contract ta build miIron Ihick IlriilKR, to tlieTownsl.ip of Wuhlngtoti ,a t the ttvlitcttcu at lir. [iteckmlK near Stepiions-burp, ii, J . , and also tlio masonry ot Uie irldRa.

Also at the miinu time nnd |ilan> Uie u i a u o r / ortwo Lriil^-M at I'leajiant (irovfh situ it ed ooe neartliD resilience of I'hlllp Bilker and ono n m r lfeterllaldwln*ft. AIM reralrs on atone bridge nnar"libor'a, r ie tuunt (Jrovp, The Biibacribera w l ' *~

t l l in juace* ftliovo mantlbned on itajr of u i e .The Committee JIMOTVB [lie right 10 reject a n

anil All bids. Siwcltkmlions can ba found wiUi U

DatadJn lySl , 1W0.

A. W. A3L. , .It-COAItULE,

t ifSSg."1"-OommlttM.

REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE NATluNAL US ION HANK, nt Lover, In Ui<

BUte or Row Jum-y, at the clow " -

July Htli, \m.

Loans and UlHcoiinlM 1^8,001.00

fitwicH, RctnirltiLW, vie .*"."",*.*" 40,l<fi.tItiukltiK-binwc, l^rnltutv anil Flittinw, HU.UIO.IDUD from National UonkH (uat lteaerve

AKCDU) io.nra.DiDim fmin aiiprovLs] rwwrru afrcnlft, M.Ota.TUDim fmtn aiiprovis] rcwirro O R C H . M.O.TUCliwkH ami oUicr cmtb I ten is VMMUoU* of miirr Nntlonnl liankB 1.7M.IFractional in]* .* enrn-nuy, ulckt-Js and

wnlfl 6B7.8BLawful money Iletwrvu In Hank, \lx:

S3,orr.oonder nol«i S3,12100

_ _ _ _ _ 40 9)0 DOIU-dampuon fitrnl with U. &. Treasurer

(livelier cent, of clrvutntion) 1,400.:

Total |ttZ>,?13.1(lUADIUTin.

Capital utoclt palil In |l£s,0Q0.MSiirnlinfutitt.. SQO.000.00Uuilivldod prnllts, less uipenws. and

i t» po!J 80,019.03lonnl iJank nalas outetaoiJJiijf B8,l_00

— to other National limit* tt.OST.ia>uo ta fiuite banRB ami bankers. 40S.40

Dividends unpdld 4IM.O0Individual doootdU Biiiilect to cliock...,. 6t8,G~MDemand ct'rtUlcntMof ilepoiUt ISO. S3CcrUflwIcheckii 1,180.00CaAliier'i cbecka outatandlng W.06

Tola! tHD,71S.l

tate of New Jersey, I „County of Unrria \M

I, Elbcrt II. Itnldwln, Cashier oIUifuboTO-tuunedADk, do solemnly itwcor that Uie above statement

is true tQ tlie best of my knowledge and belief. 'E. JL JiiLDWiH, Cosbier,

I*. C. BlKRVIRTlt, 1M. Iloiouxn, Jn, J-Director.1\ O. Hue-:, f

Sherin's Sale.IN OHANOEBY OF NEW JEMET.

«t*nen Byron K. RUckle aod door™ W. Stickle,complainants, and JSIUM Heynol.Is and Aliiti wire, Frank Iteynolds and Ellen hisAcnia Callahan and wllllsm Callaban tw fans-band, Mary rjaToeyaiidTlioiMsaafiifly ber bus-iiaiid, Peter Itcrnolctj, Linie Reynolds, JolinTtpynol.ls, Allco Bff noldn and Thomas Rwnoldsare tkrecUanUt Fl. fa. for sals of moriswed

Itetumable to OctoberTenn, A- D.

HONDAY, the Wh day of AUGUST next,.. D. 1WXL between the hounof 18 M. and 5 o'clock

II, that Is to say at B o'clock In lbs aftcmooawild riny, nit Uiat tract or parcel or land, situatetha Tonstilp of itockawfty, in the County of

[onto And Stat* cf Hew Jurse/, and being tbeHOT Inn,! that wan cfinrnnd to the said ralr1-1-

Hcynotds by Jabei L. Allen and wife, by diUt«l Jl*n;liEj,18GI, and recorded In Uui M o . —Count> Ittoonl o t Umdc, la Book T 6, paoM 477,

' and tutted, bounded and described as follows,

B w Q l n at a rtono I m p In thn second Une oft t o W of (and conveyed to the said J a b e i _ Al-en by H a i r y HcFnrUn, by deed dated Augaal SI,

1MI7, and reoordDd In Book O 4, of DONIX, on pages143, 4c . , and an cnalni from U » second cornerof tlie tald t r a c t ; and runs —snoe a lonr Uwsreond Uno of tbo Mirrnm |hn brarlnK Is la sold

ned( l ) eouUi, twenty dejrreo* east, ten cha ins :Uienit) CS) parallul wiui Uw first line o t add deedaouth, flrty'uirm defcma wett, six chain* • t b r a e sparaJltl TriUi f j M aecontt line thereof; (a) nor to ,:trcntr ilfRTue* west, tea cha ins ; thence parallel

" ' - U10 iold Une in sold deed) W nortfi, fifty-i i\fgrea east, Ux clialns to Uie iietftrmlnic.

OontainlnK six acres of land, be Uw same more<r leva. Being par t of Uie —me lot «>d Allenlurd—iedasalwre stated. Tbec -e rdeec r ipUonn u taken from Uie aforesaid dtvd gtrea by—IdMen and wifo to said KflMwldJ tor uld promt**.tut of the abuT.* Is to bodeducled K> mucb thereof

ray for Uieir Bald road.KIHIU.VJ A. 11A0KEB, BhtaUI.

Doted June 0d, 16V3.Jenpymoo nod Era, p, f, jo,«

BLUFFAND

-BLUBBERDon't do business on our street, we've no use lor them. We want

people of GOOD HABD COMMON 8EJNSE. THEBE IS NO T A U JEND WOOL IN OVB. CLOTHING. It is all nioe clean selectedstock, and we chargo no moro than our oompetitora do for inferiorgoods, BEKEMBEB we guarantee price and quality of onr

CLOTHINGflrmmmmm

We have a few Specialsfor you to inspect now.Call and see them.

TAYLOR BEOSW l Popular Clol ire 're'

I LEAD and OTHERS FOLLOWWith the largest Use ot

CARPETSFURNITURE!

Ever offered to the people of Morris County

-'sW-sSii-SBBKA**

All tbe newest creations lo CARPETS aod through 001entire building you will find a display of FURNI-

TURE not equaled in regard to price aidstyles lo tie State

F. H. DICKERSONDOVBR. P*. r.

ALL GOODS DELIVERED FREE

Roberts' Cash GroceryBLACKWELL ST. DOVER

Finest UinnesoU Floor, pw bbl M 26Beet Elgin Creamery Butter 30

Good Elgin Creamery Batter. .18Htriotly Fresh Eggs . . . . .17

CANNED QOODSII Lloa B«uu Mo

4 oam Good Early JwuFaM SSo1 OBD Good Boaobaa lOo1 can Good Aprioota lOo

1 n o Boaton fiaktd Haana 10o ^Iba.ScwiilIiiitudSardInn 20oOoodBaidlnaa SoIS Orangtt 3(toWLNnou 3SoUoodBodaCnokara So u .

OROCERIES1 linm VimmAtn0 Ita. Good RlnUlliKlll l G o l d O u t

O M l

TEASOoodntawtaiUU • p r lo .

» o I

-HI1.TI'

Fork loin PLaTE Bl i r . \o

i.....iuo \jm HattoH tihMo Banana 13ollo FotRoaK go,10o

BaatSugar Cond Baooa llo Rib Boast... . . . 1C

Porter Houae BlaakBlrloln Btaak

IN AN—

Roberts' Cash Grocery. §

HERE'S A FEWDOLLARS FOR

; The endless chain of seasons ever coming and going force us very oftento .make'mores that the public profit by. ]u»t now we want room, andlots of it Tor our Fall Goods and we are willing to pay for It.'

WILL YOU TAKE THEM?The balance of this month will be given up to a general clearing saleof Men's, Boy's and Children's Clothing. Straw Hats, Etc., that we haveleft. We reali ic that nothing but price and quality will rush Springand Summer Goods at this jag end olihe season, BO here goes,

NOW OR NEVER!Our $6.so Special Men's Suits will go at $5.00 "' 'A .Our $8.00 Casslmere Suits will go at $6.50 . 'Our $10.00 and $12.00 Cassimcre and Day Mixtures'(good value at

•15.00) will be handed out for $8.00 -;, AH of our remaining $14.00 to $18,00 suits ia Casaiinere, Fancy C'hev-

lots, Etc., will go at $12.00

The Boy's Odd Stock GoesToo. This Way.

Big lot of Boy's Two Piece Sail* redoo«3 t o . . . . ; . . .11.30

Broken lots of two pieoe and long panta nita, Irom $1.00

to $8.00 clipped off the prica. ' :

W. P. TURNER & GO.CLOTHING. HATS AND FURNISHINGS

;or. Blackwell aad Sussex Sts., •!• DOVER, N. J.

SUMMER GOOD:Cooas needed for the hot weather season ia all departments. Canned Meats and Delicacies for campingand picnic parties at specially low prices. Housefurnishing Goods of all kinds, Fruit Jars, PreservingKettles and all requsites for tne canning season. Ice Cream Freezers, Refrigerators, Lawn Mowersand Garden Hose. Reduced prices on Parasols, Shirt Waists, Etc.; Etc.

Ladies' Muslin Underwear

-39

SPECIAL SALE

Skirts made of strong fine muslin with ruffleof fine cambric, headed wilh tucks $

Skirls wilh 6-inch ruffle of cambric embroid-ery, headed with --tucks .(xj

Skirts made of very fine muslin, 3-inch ruftleof cambric embroidery 98

Skirts with 10-inch ruftle of line cambric em-broider/ and two rows of tucks, 1.19

Skirts trimmed with 13-inch umbrella ruffleof fine lawn embroidery , 1.19

Gowns, fine muslin, square yoke tucks andinsertion, cambricr :'ii.'.es 49

Gowns with square yoke tucks and insertion,trimmed with embroidery and ruffles 69

Gowns with Mother Hultbart! yoke of fine in-sertions, trimmed with embroidery anil ruffles, .98

Gowns of fine muslin, square yoke of inser-tion, trimmed with embroidery, plaited back.. 1.19

Gowns with square yoke, tucks and fine em-broidery, trimmed willi embroidery and ruflles,double box pleated in back 1.39

Corset Covers, cambric, high neck, well made .09

Corset Covers, cambric, circular front, lowneck 15

Corset Covers, made of fine cambric, lowneck, V shaped back and front with tucks andembroidery, finished with beading,, , .29

Corset Covers, square front of embroidery,high back and trimmed with fine embroidery., ,49

Sheets and Pillow GasesMade of fine heavy bleached muslin at about what

the material would cost you.Sheets, 81x90, each 49cPillow Cases, 45x36, each 13c

Shirt WaistsTo close out the balance or our Shirt Waists we

have reduced the price as follows :•Allot r J .75 Waists to $ .jo

•79 " " 59.8! " " 6S

••°° " " 751.25 " " 1.00

Ladies' White Silk GlovesSome with self-color, and some with black '

mbroideryon backs, fine quality, per pair 39c

ParasolsPersian and Dresden Silk Parasols

Reduced from $2.50 to $'=5•• " 2 . 0 0 " 1.00

GroceriesPotted Ham, large tins S c

" small '• 4c

" Tongue, large tins -. 8c

" •' small " -. 4c

Boned Chicken, large tins 39C

" small " 3oc

Lunch Tongue, 1 Hi tins, two small tongues in

each tin, very fine 25c

Dotted Pig Hams, 2 Ib tins 5°c

Sliced Smoked Beef, finest quality, I Ib tins... 18c

" " •• " " *4 " " • • • l oc

Columbia River S.ilmon Steaks, 1 Ib Hat cans..17c

Schcpps' Shredded Cocoanut, Ib .23c

Huylers' Breakfast Cocoa, a tin 22c

" Plain Chocolate, Ib 30c

Walter Baker's Plain Chocolate, Iu . . .30c

Barker's Masty Lunch Chocolate, yt Ib tins.... 13c

Scliunukcr's Rolled Avena, 3c lb, 6 lbs . , . . . . . 15c

Blue Label Tomato Catsup, pint bottles 19cSoups, 2 lb cans, Oxtail, Mock Turtle, Chicken

and Tomaloe, a can 17c

Feed and GrainBest While Oats, per bag of 75 Ihs net $ .70

Best Yellow Corn, per bag of 112 lbs net 90

Best Mixed Feed, contains no cob or Hom-iny chop 90

While Flour Middlings, 140 Ib sack 1.35

Brown Middlings, i co lb sack 90

H. W. Johns M'f g Co.'sReady Mixed Paints

These paints are made of strictly first-class ma-terial, and in addition to the usual grinding and mix-ing, they arc also ground while in a liquid state,thus insuring a thorough combination of tlie ingre-dients. We sell this paint at the price at which or-dinary ready mixed paints are usually sold.

Ice Cream Freezers

Lightning

iJhere is ons \» Freezer—?

LIGHTNING^in whicri it is?real fun to make |jIce Cream; itruns so easy.

Gem2 c|t 3 (jl 4 qt 6 qt 8 qt 10 qt

$1.45 $1.85 $2.10 $2.60 $3.25 $4.40

The Blizzard FreezerFirst-class in every respect but not quite as quick

as the Lightning or Gem. " • ',.

Fails made o! best Virginia While Cedar, electricwcliied wire hoops, twice as strong as ordinary fiathoops and will not fall oil*. ;

2qt 3qi 4qt . . ' q ' . 8q ' io qt

$1.10 $J.25 $1.50 $2,0O $2.J0 Sj.IO

Toilet SetsAT SPECIAL PRICES

12 piece Toilet Sets (includes slop ja r ) finequality \Yarei Azalia decoration in blue, brownand pink, per set i . 1 $3.75

Furniture >Large comfortable piazza chairs, antique

finish . ; , . . ; .<.$ 1.98

3 piece Oak Bedroom Suits, bevel plateglass mirror, well made and finished.,.,.,,., 12.00. Oak Side Boards, 40 inches wide, bevelplate glass mirror, nicely finished, one largeand two small drawers, with double cupboardat the bottom... . , , , . , , 9.98

THE GEO. RICHARDS CO.

••• TELEPHONE CALL NO. 25 GOODS DELIVERED FREE

DOVER BUSINESSAre yon going to attend a Business College this Fait and Winter?

Tin Dover Business College • '

Teaches Actual Business from Start to FinishBefore going ebewhere atop and see us. Ask onr old stndents what

the College has done for them I

SHORTHAND AND TYPEWRITINGWe olaim to have the best system published. We claim and can

prove to yon, that we hare the beet and latest up-to-date Collegein Northern New Jersey.

A U J WOBTIII STUDENTS ASSISTED TO POSITIONS

mitHiuwmwiiBw. ptniiti ms nptr.

I7tk,wkea all can ratttr In peraoa or by

. Fred. H. Wildrick,Proprietor Dour BIISIUMI Colbge

Dover, New Jersey

•"••Docs Slavery Stillmbnees tie mortiul-•—lerdemwdfl.

srorthhUm

.rhotia nils

It woro tlmn anollicr Abraham Ltncolnid Ana trood Amorlca's men from thosenCTTB-ruinlnc tyrnntB.

DR. MTCHETTE IS THE HAN ,HaotiraMatonMuyHarautUtolatootiibttlaronoiTllsT

w on. MATCHrrrrs MB*INDIAN TOBACCO ANTIDOTE 1

SOLD BY ROBERT KILLGORE.

Waited.

T FOH GOBI!• OKX&r rouB ACT BPIOTAODLAB DEAM-

• ATIO BKHU.TI0N KRT1TLXD

FOR FREE CUBA.L FLAT TODlfDK) 0FON TDK CUBAJT WAR FOR

' T - - W i T S THI AID Or.

= LOCAL T A L E N T =

vtaam t r a DittMCnoit or THE AVTBOH.

•tntiral Guliftes t Speeisi Seeqerg t

General Admission, 20 cts.Reserved Seats - - 30 cts.

rnoouUBLR AT THI USUAL FLAOES.

To Wfcom it May Concern.HOPATCONQ HOTEL OOSIPANV.

p L E A S R u k e noUw that a t B mec W nieBUim ol* too Board ot Dlrectorw nt Uie llonTlrtino

not m e tf{oy*MQnt Injumnoo Coraw

sSiSd New York, litfa d»ofjolr 1BSC

QBORQE

TlUcm'l bo llipuM Uait 1 Km ItaaM nn«t «oek ofwlrai M d Llquon lcount,. MjrUockU.Kteilto.otWcddta,, OM Oow, H ^ u n a raBteknn», Mmont. Mono.jd^uanb.p 1 ta .nn«l» l , tc t .n i«( i o .n , t o l M .

Full line or Importod and Domostlo Rlni, Port*.Bhmta, C»u»l»a, winter Drink* J«2l™ rtumKlmniJ, Bock and Bjr^ BruJ , ^ i a » nJ^from Mto. aq t upward.

L.D. SOHWARZDpp. O. B. K. ol R. }..Depot, DOVKB, B. I .

SHEWe call attention to our

i SUIT DEPARTMENT jjThe lollowinf articles are all new, this season's very .latest styles, s

and at prices less than cost ol" manufacture, as we propose to close out 3entirely all spring and summer goods previous to stock taking, -0) • V- 3

JjulleiryvUlie r*]in» BklrtB, full fiiveep1

no»«it Hliai», radutfld Irom |1.40 to '

98c.Udl tH ' White Duck fikUts, full s*m>-

ntcel/ u u d a , former pr ice 13.00 now

$1.26

$1.98Ladies' Crash B.Ulo, l lnwr. nnd aklri.

thaer lumdHomely trimmeil wfUi nuollpearl butloiis, former prioe JS.00 now

$3.98

^"ii/jrs"'"7^BlfiS'J?''.-"™' f " ! . ™ 4 Q M " <**•Diiirt AvAiflts. regubir KUiO flu&ll&

95c

„.,.....__.......,?....

HEATH & DRAKE JI 77? and 779 Broad St., Newark, N . j i i

MOKRIS -COUNTY ^MOKTGAGE AND REALTY CO.. (INU08F0HATED HNDEIt THE LiWa OF TOE STATE Or NIW JBBSEr)

CAPITAL - - fe5.ooo.ob p

. J.Loans negotiated on Mortgages on Real EstateTitles examined ..\/:r.}f/p;:;r.:Valuations appraised by Committees of t ie Soard of Di-

rectors • " ' . . ' : .J'---:':-.MM-'-:::

Acts as agent in the purchase and sale of Real Estate

Isn't itWaicnes. CIOGRS. Jewelry. Diamoniis, Silverware

SU.VER.PLATED WAHE1 FOB w i D b i i i S -HwEOTS

practical i n the businca

ewelry.t

Jpecial Attention given to ren:Standard XI s M , , I n\ ""(1 *" * """ **II '^'(^!>(^^WCK» win jcwcirj.

'»naara u.!,. Naval OWrnUory Time furnmhed to me dally at noir..

WATCHES SOLD ON THE INSTALMENT PLAN

J.Blaokwell Street, • -; ;-: :DOVER, N. j .

" ' ™^°u/i?i*lSu,i/»2;,"|Hj' 1BHO0OO qA8PmiIBBB WABUD «H. a, MANBraLD, " '•' ; OrayiLpEIOH HOUSES

ths Fort Office at Dorer, H. J,i matter.

LOOAX JOTTINGS.

Kiting i* p™«y good a t Lake Hoimtcong.

Frank Ulbboci to erecting t dwlliug o:

A number of Dover people visited the cammeeting nt Stanhope on Saturday evening.

Edward Williams was severely out abouttie feet b / ftlau whiles wlmmlna; In tuo cane]en Monday.

A controlling Interest In the New Yorkj V n w y l i " been bought b y a syndicate ofiti«r men. .

CcarfcrOak Lodge, 0. U. A, M,, of feter-

H D irout on anJexoursiOD to NoUu's Point ouWednesday.' .. . .

Tbe Ber. W. B, Gallaway, D. D., willpreach in the Cbryatal street grovo on Ban-ifey afternoon at 4 o'clock. . , '.;

I,r.rk Oversew Rlley U oonttantly receiv-ing ramnUInte about the boys win bathe InUerMialbaokofthupJUk. '

A neat gilt lettered sign announcing thihminnt devotion has been placed near thoentrant ot Ht John* Cnoreb,

Tbe Republicans of .Pompton Tinlns have0rKaiify;ed a McKlnley and Hobart Club withfl roenibonhlp of seventy-three.

Ths (icapiB ot Centre Grove are curious to,00* lue reason for the delay. In theeompie-[Ion ot tb»bridge at Dilrymplo'a.

TLero will be preaching a t t he Free Metlioditt CliurcU on Sunday momlDB and evenfnj by the pastor, the Ber. 0 , M, Snndtord.

Tin moonlight excursion of Vfgitant EngineCo,, No, '2 h u been postponed on account oftbaitanii. Ths date wlUbeannounced latt]

Tuejirojpjctaare brl jbtfor thosuocenotIhe ua« lle^olnte Hand. Every msmber will|w Uiur ougbly Instructed by Professor FrankKouatle'r.

Herman Moller narrowly escaped BerlousInjury on Saturday. Whiiegrootnlng 4 horsothe animal ticked, striking Holler's now aglancing blow. •

The llev. Charles Billiard, pastor ot tlioPresbyterian Obnroh at Parslppany, has re-slgnod bis paitorate, bit .ralgntUon to takeefffct on October li v :

Work on tbe several puddling furnaces oftbe rolling mill frill be completed about thelatter port of this month and operations wiltbegin early in August.' .'.;

BUte Secretary Arthur Lucas, of theYoung Men's Christian Astqtiatfon, was IDDover several dsys this wsek la the interestsot tin local branch of that Association.

Owing to the snort circuiting ol oleotriclight wires during Wednesday night's storm,i number of pUoas, Mtnaug theat t ic itanilonHouse, bad to return- to t i e use of lamps audrandies, • , " ; ' • • • • "" "

TbsBtanhopti camp meeting' broke up odTbnmlay morning, I t wai one of tbe largestmd ui<wt euwwsful luestlng* ever held onthe Hlanhope grounds! Tbere were eleventeote occupied by Dover people; *

' 0. H. Baulfpaugb, a farmer near Rome, N.y., Is authority for tbe statement that saltwill cause the army worm to turn up his toes(ml die... His plan Is to plaice a barrier of saltin s farrow around a grain field.

John Cllft, for tha past several yearn con-cocted wilb the Harruttown Chronicle, hasbought tbe Bntmnlt Herald from Edward W.Uny, who only reoently bought the papermd plant from, tba Dr. David Smyth*estate.

Mary & McLangblln, aged' S3, died at theUonla Plains Hospital last Thursday. She) -moug frlBoda In Monraouth county.

l New, of Trenton, U vWU,n

Mrs.friondj la town.

/ . W. Kirk and Jobn McConnoti wl1M|«dto Newara on bunday,

Thomas Bray, of Wwbfcgtm, apent Buidsy with friends In town.

John E. Howell fa at Atlantic City ,-pondingatwowooka'vflcntinii.

MIBB Ltwle Mogul™ spent Bunday with theMlasos Lowe a t Ut. Arlington.

Mrs. Moyer, of Newark, h vlaltlng MJM

Mabol Waer, of Orchard Btrwt.

, boa b M n v

rpoi

log his parents iu Sassex stre«t.

There was a largo delegation ot Donpla at LsVe Hopatcong on Bundiiy.

Ulna Margtiirlto Buchanan, ct Mvlaltlng M!M Mlnnlo VanJorhooI.

UIM Mary Cbandlar, of Pateraoa, wn* theguest of Mra, Jonn Bliokle this week.

Mrs. William Pollard spent Bandfty withher daughter, Mra. Cheshire, in Brooklyn.

Danfol Voorhraand Clark Oliver, ot Mor-Mown, were vlltore In town Wednesday.

Frank Bjlitho hsn aewpted a position IDthe Mine Hill store of Jeuklna, Duck & Co,

Miss Mar, Hunt, of New York, U ttie Kuo.k

of Hlat l tot t i Chnirbre, of Dlclierson streetMI«B Edith liunntill, of Ke«too, Is vlsitlL

at the home of thra Missn Uny at Mtna Hm.MIM Katie King, Df Netcong,

ipenilijig a part ot ber vacatfnn a

s.y,Misa Moo Ouriliig, ot Tronton, li vlsltlug

ler old clasa mate, Miss May Coo, of Borgeiitrect.

Miss Carrie hKltwocd, ot Mount Veraon,K. Y , Is Wilting at the b0rooof Ilaymond A.''lark.

Mra. Joliu Hahn, of South |Ea»ton, la vlalt-Ing Mm, XrenuB ftlcharda, of Monmotth

Tfnuc, -

MIJB Sarali Allen, of froBpct street, iaijwndiDg a month at Deckertuwn, "lunty.

Mlas Lljzle Dean, of Newark, Is tho guestof bir mot, Mra. James B, MeJlck, of i l e"arlaii gtrwt.

a i l w g a a and daughter, of Yonkere,K.Y., aro gutsts of Mrs Georgo Heddpn, Mr,Tleagan'a daughter. '

City Treasurer Cbarles 11. Besnett ntartedon Mouday for a week'a vaeatioo Irlp tonorthern Vermont.

Edward Clark, of HoboUfn, spent Bundayilh lili ptrrnU, Mr. (ind Mrs. Charios E.

Clark, of Gold street,

Mrs. W. B. GlUea and her daughter, Bessie,ipeot to start for Aebury Park for a couple

of weeks' itay next week.

Alexander Shanks, of Nolan's Point, L»keHopatwoB, (pent Sunday with b!a parentil

liartho MoKInna, ot Newark, and I.M, Holly, of Brooklyn, are. visiting a t taehome of Mrs. W. H. McD»it.

John ?, and Henry Wagner, ot New Yorkityt are vot ing at tbe borne af the lie?, C.

M. Bandtard, on Sustex stroet.

Mrs. Johnttoa, of Ilackettstown, Is belni.inlerlalned at tbe boma ot Dr. Bamuel B.

bnaton on Pa(rview avenue.

*Jfc> Mabel Vfter spent several days InNewark uarly tbls week at tbe gueat of Mrs.fettle Hover, ot Farker street

Mrs. Emtnott J . Tutblll a t dbe r »m Ralph,•om Mlddletown, N. Y., are vlsltlog Mrs.K H. King, of Mt Hops Avenue.Principal J. Howard Hulsart and family

•etarned on Wednesday from a tendajB1 visit

nothing ahould goout of the hotel that night.Stone l o t t e d that as there was no claimsgnlnst him he liad a rit;ht to take his trunk.

" Cooper, wto had been retained', wai of tho u n e opluloii, and at-

tempted to carry tha trunh out & sou fileensued In the oourse of which a glass panelIn the dfcorwaa broken. Tbec a parley en-

ilcli lasted nearly an hour, Dahlorproving proof against Mr. Cooper's words ofadmonition, and tbe result was that the trunkstayed behind when Mr. Cooper andBtoneInally took their departure. The sceno waswitnessed by a creat many parsons and theexcHmeot ran high tor s time,lay morning Stone got hla trunk and lefttown. Mrs Muohling has resomed the man.sgoment of tlio hotel and Divls Ii still Ian<guishlngln jail. A communication wblohChief of Police Usgan recei*(d this morningfrom J. \V, nwbe^y, President of tbe Mer-cantile Co-operative Back In New York City,gives Mr, Davis a very unsavory reputation.

BASE BALL.

THB ORAKOB ATHLETIC OLUB,Next Saturday tbe Cuban Olon ts will play

the Orango Atliletlo Club nine the secondie of Uisserlea Tba last game was a very

close one, ba*lng been won by tho Cubansafter a struggle of eleven Innings by the score"BtoO. This game will attord the. Orange

'alhwera another chance tc see tbeif team«avor to defeat the Cubans. Tbe game

wll!bec&lk-dat4i> ii.

BOSFITALLKEtS-rUltlTAKB.Of all tbe gsmesplaytd thfa wason upon the

loapKal diamond tbe contest last Saturdaybetween the Puritans, of Newark, and thehomo team was the sharpest, dwelt andmoat spirited. Those who participated en-joyed ic in spite of soma little drawbacks Inihape of errora and knockdowns wbiofa, how-

er,dld not stop tlie game though itchanK-dlie result at a critical moment, after a tie bad

ued in tho eighth and ninth innloga, Scoreto 7 In favor of the Purltani.

Tha wlnnlog run wasmideKthe third Inningthrougli a fluke, the Puritan running to third

llldlngwlththeBospitallen'third baieman:auiing him to drop tbe ball which had came'

> him from short itop, Thii run waa scored<)tb two already cut.Tbe score by Innlnga follows:

0 3 0 D-T0 S 0 1-8

wat a sister of.Eata HcUugblln, wbo recent']I; tommitudwlc ldeatamd houw at Wa-vrrly upon reoetptof • bogus Utter antouoo-I n g M a r y ' B d a t t b . - ; . • • • ' " ' • ; • ' ' • ' • • • - . . V

ttend-abualucBsy ycollege thla fall and .winter, Col. Fied. H.Witiriok, proprieWr of the Divee ButloouCollege, ti the man you want to get into ooiu-muoicaUimirllb,- Tha collage office wlU becptD0DandaflMrAQgurt.1T. • , .

Been made It hot for a Horrlitown linemanwfaofin Monday triad 'to drive a wwvrm fromarehyboxoo ia l fhpo l t . He shinned downtbatpolelas Hyely njaoaerand ft crowd ofB,*ct»toWw*i"'iliBiped6da3 weH. iLellue-man knows m o n tAont beaa now than he didl»fore. ; ,,:; vX'.1«l'.Vi-"-"'"": -.'./,•'<.• •

The infant child of the Her. and Mrs'. W.J. HamptoB died • tuoooyer te rd iy . f romcholara lnfinfcam. A tunenri serrlci will bsbald at the pa»miaj[e to-morrow, oantfuotedby the Bar. :WUllan1:H.'MoOormlck, afterwlifcb tba boiy.wUl fa* taken to Warwick,N. Y., t o r b u r i a l , $£' •'•.

:'.' •"-'.' •/•;-"-y . '•;

Peter Waiter, • carpenter eimplaysd onthe bouse of Samuel Pierscn, In .Waihington.itreet, Horrlatows,ion Tuesday fell froai •Ks fTo ldadb ta tma t o l r ty i l i fe«t, ttriklngon a heap • ! atonai,' One arm was f factored,his faoaaad body severely out and bruised.

l h l f f l i U l I j r ijTbe Rapnbllean' State Conviction for the

•election of PmkfcmU*l Eleoton will be heldIn the Taylor Optra Houie, Tnoton, on Tnurs-day, Ao§0*,S7:' The ewcutivo commilteeot the BtaiD Republican CommlttM will meetIn the Nawark bMdquarten on July 21. tomake a m a g s m n U for the con ventlon.'

County8op*riot«Bd«it Martin lutber Oothubs tna ikMlViac tuooaot t t ieex i in in iM itttbeootnpetitfre eumlneiiop for a naval'ca4etshlpwblohIstolM:bkld'ffit the liorrie-townCoortHoawonTueedaynMt, Thsaub-]<ctioortf«d will ta reading, wTliIng, epell-

The Mltses Nellie Florson, Liizle Conlonand Jcwephlne Ctnavan enjoyed a bicycletrip to Mt-Tabor on Thursday afternoon.

Mr. and Un, Robert Killgoreand daughter,Mis Mary, started on Tuesday for AsburyPark, where they will upend several weeks.

Mrs. J . i. Vrwlatd IB at BaUer, N, J.,where she will vlilt friends for two weeks.Mr, Vreeland spent tho AttK part of the weektbere.

Mlaa Emtna .Gould and Mfsa L'lis. P»tt*r-Boti, of Brooklyn, and C. A, Knes,. of New.York, ore guests at the home ot 0 ,8 Jensen,of German Btteet. . '1 Mrs. Qeorge Roderer anct Miss BarbtraRoderor are visiting In Fossalo andNswark.Miss Koderar will a?ao moke a brief vlaltt*friends In Olen Hldge.

Hiss Helen V. Hoplor starts to-day fo rasix weeks'vacation and V n visit frlendn IDNew Yorkj Brooklyn, Jersey City, AsboryPark and UoirUiowa. • , • .

Trlnolpal Erastus E, Potter, of tha PortOraoi pubilo school, started for St. Louis onMonday to attend the Popnlljt Convention as

reprmntative New Jeraey Popnliat,-Bliss Uers Brundage, htving returned to

Itosevllle atter spending the winter In Fan-daoa, California, bimaking'* abort stay withbtr cousin, lilas Etta Hunt, oC tbtt city..,

Mra. Edward t . Petty and her'daughterEthel, and Urs. Dr. E. W. Dot*, of Patoraon,Bitter of Mrs. Petty, started for Asbnry Parkyesterday fcr a brief s tayat theifaalde, •

Cbarks Hurd, of Roseville, Edward Congeru d Urs. Nettie Moyer, of Newark, in ) HltaMabel Waer took a trip awheel to Kenvll theitber night, returnfug by the i/ght. of the

TbAHIsaea Tlllle and Flossie Van Orden,of Au»tln, Texas, have retunirf home after

k h i l Ui

Ing, teography, Engilih graml b SV '' :

g, , tgm»r,hlrtory«adalgebra-.

John Doww, who lives near 'fit. Mary1!Churoh waii" not, the John Downs who waslast weak u n i t e d and fined for being drunk•ml disorderly:; To r t t o » who kornr Kr,Downs tWs deolaiiner will not be neceisary,Mr. DOWM being ao old and highly reapeotedcillttn who la: ta no danger oi having a " run

' in"witi i teipoUetorofbeingnmtnbythem..Tbec««n««UonatKl9nn1ay pclio.lof fit.

John's Chore* wijl goon ' an;,eioura!ad toNolan's Point, Lake Hopatoon j , on Thurtday,JnlySO. TUezoaralofl train:wlU leavetbeCentral ftaibwid station,»t 8:53 A. u., andrtturn to Doirtrat 8 r. V - •"•.Tiofcota for odiilu«(ilba45o^uul>tiffdron'«tloksUwUI be'-Sloenta. ;Aeorditjuirltatton licxtended toa l l t o c o m i « l O B f , - ' ; " : ^ " : - . : ;; .•-•.- ;•.". =•'. '•

Tie Edlaon Athletle Gob will gtre a plorjioaiWIwooot ienlgbt of'Toeiday.July 'H.Tbogrurtwlllb* JUnmlnatftl by electricityandBeaichVttjriDJIbabd'will furnUh'node.'The comnUUti of arnngemeDta consist* ofKmll Herter, John H. PWley, Jaraot Melvlc,WalterBaUandDanklMcOoutie]]. O, J.Conley Is preijdtnt ot the' olub'. In caio , ofrtln the plonfc will brnt ld oo the next clearnight, - r x v - " - : - ^ : - . : - ; ^ ^ - •' "';"•."• '

TbecongtegaUonof jGtraoa. M." :E. Churfib,Utt night, atWprayicmeeUng.rcrtlec toll.D. rillysr and Alfred Ooodale, and elected.Coraelioj X l r a t t u trnsten for three yeartoras each. M. K. Btajrt Is the ;outgoing-truitee. A tQMttag "tH the' offidal board w u

BIBO held a t wbleh arrangraients for the Ban-day »r7ic«aj dotior tbe absenceneit Bundayof theHultart

n s V n d t a i . Howard

In lsst week's " rtd] pthoijor " of the Metro-,polltan life Iotoraw* CotDpaoy, Ute namo ofWirrenSurnbttTisr appsar* tweiityfltth,I n \the list ol ajatttantRipisrnitentaikad tfie n MDBof Fred H. Crcli is ntnrty-flnt ca t b *Ibt. A f l t h l t o t h

f p .tbouand assistant •npsrintenieate and loi theulgborhood of Qfteeo thousand agent* la theaimpany's amploy,' Bnrnbnrger, and CrollboUibava resaolt | o b * prowl of th^diitloo

i U t o ; ; ^tednBtmtto;.;; ; .There la an'cppoftanlty for. BOOB bright

>»y In tha Puurth OongmjloiiaiDi«^lct of'««ir Joney, of whriiMorriiodutityisa pait,

K&thetutitt:b6 oftood pny«)q«e,;iirobiut health sad havalotiofpluDk.. Aoom-PetlUre exanlDatiari.wiU bs held tn'the CourtHQU I M Vn M o n i ( t o w V t m y , y ,w«'nnlng at u 1 o'dookI'^M.- Candldateooust beactusJreiUtnbrcii thVPsorth Coa-BrealowU D U l r l ^ i p w M t o ^ a t t d under}«nty years of age,- OongrtStrnftO MaUloal ^ e j l . a . t h t a i i t ; ' ^ ; : ' ' :

Joseph Kelly, a'd.jment«dman, Uon ly<"e jears old, was ott 'Kwday,taken Intonutau> by Gbtef of police tfrgu'sncl OBteerJJjram and locked, np for; safe. torplng.Kelly, who waa formerly a resident^ot payer,came into town'on Monday and,VlslUd thebomeof Btnsrt FarV, bt Bsa't Eoyer.lwflombafynmirlyiuMw, Kelly noted in ipeoal larmwner and Mr. Forr becoming b a n n e d - - *tor the oillcsrs. KeUyV faraUyvwhrfllf'Utooklyn, w«ra wbeequeatly Oommnnioated*llh and on Wednesday ' .brother of, tba wiwtuuate mna took.blm Uck to Broolilyn, •

A Few s with their oouiln,ld DEttaM. Hunt, or Gold »trwt, Dsver,

Hunt baa also been ontartalnlng MIBS EllaGarrison, of Dover, this week. \ . . . '

City Clerk Josoph V. Baker, Charlsa Me-Fall and IV bert F. Jenkins started oh Wed-nosd'»ynlgtttfortVarwJck1N, Y., wbaro theyatteuded the wedding yesterday of. L . 'W.Wildriok, manager of the grocery depart-ment of the W. H. Baker Store Company, to.Utta JaonleBartRetchatn, of Wirwlok.

Henry Z«(rd, who Itss been a t Meadharair tbe past two yn r s , it spending paTt of his

TaoitiQD tbaklng hnnda with old friends InDover, end Incidentally pushing the interestsof the Mutual Lifo Insurance Company. Mr.LalM will tfala fall a*uuio tbe position ol su-pervising prlBclpal of the Hockaway Town-B h t p B o h o o l s . •'••'.'. . : • • " . ; '-'•.-

Ford D. Smith an i family returned onTuesday from a three weeks' vacation tripto the White Mountains, N. U. Onthelrwayback ihejtpMit several days in Boston and ItaenVlrona and Mr. Smith was In Cambridge onMonday when the funeral of "William E, RUB*sell took place. Oa that day seven thou-sand people were turn*d away from the CityHall where tbo body lay in state. •

An Octogenartan Injured.Rosrrell A. Bsmpson, age 81, fatber-In-Iaw

ot Garrison M. Bowlby, a farmer on Clinton•treof, outside tbo city limits, was on Wednes-day afternoon buried to the ahouMen by thefall ot a.bank of earth in tho rear ot theprernlBes o( Mr. Bowlby, where a nambsr'oflaborers were at work cutting away the sideof a hill. I t took half an hour to release himwhtn it was found that his right leg wasfractured below the knes and that he hadsustained internal fcjurlea besides. Dr. I.W.Condict attended Mr. Sampson. I t willtake a long'time for the fractured bone toknit en account of Ur. Bwnpsan'a advanceda'geV Ur, Sampson was alwaya."daspltohlauge, a vary spry man and was digging awayat the bank of earth with \ number of labor-ers In Mr, Bowlby's employ'joat because he|bated to baidle, • ' ' • : ' • •

The Furnaoe Works. ' .-• '• ,VAD eleotrlo w»t«b block hn» been placed In

the office. The tour of the watebmm, whenou duly nbaut the pnmtKtt" Is reoorded on apaper dial. - ••-•• ' . '.'

A. Marvin eafs also odoioa tbo (ifflce.:.', 'I'welye nro lights have b«en pnt In Bulld-b g Ho. 1 and nine oxteiiBlon ladders ara onhand, ; - •

i : Oned;namo has been pltced In BuildingNo. 2 and fotir In Bo. 3. . Tbey were made bytbo Kditon OanBrsI Electric Light Oompaoy.Each la provided wi th .a Rheostat. The

! that ting ts all up tn No, 3 . . * '- By, 7 Is all wired for the electric Hnbts and

! (he men are coir employed wiring No. 4, Araised platform connect* Ncs. i and No. 7.

A picket railing has been placed at the of-fice entrance. -' , ... •

There'are two hundred and thirty sevenflrebuckata bung throughout tho buildingsjpr tuplncaaaot flre only.

; ;••"•• Big Beaaationala all snmmw Roods, Tbla wsy for barRalnit t tbe Dover B t n r of 3. H. Orlmin,

1 JamM A. Uavlu, *bo on July 0 took chargeof the Park Hotel under , written agrwuKutwith Mrs. LyJIa MuehliDg, onTuprfay morn-ing undertook to hurtle Harry Muahlinz outof tbe Jutel barroom and when be saw anumber of young UuchllBE'a friends ap-proaching from tho yard fc tho rear hepointed a revolver ot tlmn. CUlet of PoliceHngan cwua along just about tbls Urne andUking D»vjB by the scraff ot th« n M k howaivlieJ him to the olllce of Justice ol thfPeace Gage, wbere Huebllog mode a eb&rgyagainst him for aisiult »nd battery, Van C.Dull, a veterinary surgeon, who w u amongthe number at whom the revoher w u pointed*lsn made a chares of tumult and carryingconcealed weapons. Aheoring took place onTuesday afternoon and Davis was put underWOU and 1100 ball, oa the resp»cU?B chargesin default of which he woe tuat turns night{

'Men to tbe county Jail by Constable DobJor.There was more troublo, at the hotel at

night when W. L. Bta&s, who w M lookedupon as Uavls's partner, attempted to leavethe hotel and tcko hit tmalt with him Con-liable r-sbbr on hU return from Uor-rlstown had token charge of the hotel«nd gave It out as his dlolum that

id, of Mcirlstowu ; formerit John C. Eiule, of Kewai-k; the Her., Bgan,, and tUe Hev. Mr. Fryllng.

of Morris Plains; the Rev. 8, Z. Batwo,Warden Mosei K. Everett and members oftbe medical atsJT and Board of Utoagera,

A musical solution by tbn ho«plta! or-cbMtn waa followed bj an Invocntlanof thoDivine bleniog by tbo Rev, a. Z. Batten.Dr. Evans followed with a nporton the workof the tr&lnfni school. Ha said | u part:

Thin, thB first OIBJS of nurses cor*nect»awith tho Btate Hwplfnl. bessn tbe Tear withfifty four members. Of those, twelve rwianwior were discontinued, and forty-two carriedon the work to tha end of tbe Mini on. Ninewomen ond four men failed to receive the re-quired percentage, and. thir^fnre, mu*t re-main: for another t*rtn(n tbe junior das* Ifthey ciDtinue In tbo work.

TUIrtyplno- juntos presents themselveefor rx irntaailon. Of tbb number twelve menand fourteen woman pused creditable exam-inallons, receiving 10 per cent, or more of-enBral j.ver«ge, and will be a^vauocd to tboinlor olastu Three women and five men.'bo failed to receive a genera! averago of hO

per oei:t. have born discontinued from »tn the hospital. Two moo and three * _

CK<1 examination! above GO per eant, hut»d to receive 70 per cent., and Eire, there-

fore, oootinutd In the tervlce, bnt were notpromoted to the senior clou. Tneas are tbageneral results so far as It relates to percrnt-»«« Bed tbe Dumber of pdplls.

Tba work bos beeu one of Intense latermtto the madlcsl oflloers of tbe In>tltutlon. Thehearty support given It b j tbe Bctard of Man-agere has stinjomted us to work diligently tomate tee courae of ioatructfon a pranucat iand thorough one, and In appearing beforepart of tbe public and tbie aweroblaice. nf enplojet and attaches of tbla hospital I tm e.couraged to « y that this evening mark* oneor the mo*t Important eventa in the bistorrof tbe work of caring for tha sick nt tforrhPlslrifl, W« ^s^fl «tfl(ip*d opoo ft bfgberplane ot action.

Probably rlnco tbe organlutlon of this in-stitution there have generally been employedIn the wards atUndants who lave po*«s»wlkind aud willing boarta; mraand women whohave wanted to da ibelr full duty; personswbose tytapatblfs weat out to the sick undertheir care. But whUa sympathy, klnd-beart-(dnesaaDdadetlreto perform tba full tufas-ure ot one's duty are qualities much M hedcalrad la on attendant or num—In fao^, are?Wf!iti*lB In ths nuktupof a true nurw—yet,'or all tbls, tbeydo not mean ability; the? do

cot iwia tflicicncy. Tbe n-irw wl ,b a kindmd wlilioK heart may lack tbat training<tblcb enables one to not« tbe deviations ofJie pulse rate, thepeoullarUlesor variatlanB

respiration, meutal and phyaloal aboor-

malities, and

Considerable interest was manifested In tbegame last Saturday between the Fort Orarnmd Institute nines, on the Institute grounds.

The Fort Oram cine was cemposod of taeme players who played In (he b^glntlng ofIO season, with the exception of tbo second

and third bastmen, who wen from Patenoa.The Institute* bad a battery, Bowenatd Mur-iby, from New York, and Waer, from Rock-

The game was well played from startte flulsb, tbe score standing 3 to 2 a t the bs-

' log of the fifth inning. Tha Institutestould not touch Eettrick until tbe fifth whenhome run hit by Murphy netted them three

rnus. ID the sixth good sate bib by Bush-camp, Kara and O'Connell gave them (ourruns and the game. Toeee wen theonly twoinnings in wbloh they tfale to bat Kattrick!reely. Port Drams batted steadily fromstart toOntsti but wers unlucky la placingtheir hlU. Ullcfaell filed over tho fence twice.Bynm » n t a heavy sat* onepast centre fieldludAndtran a skyscraper for three bsgs to

left. Kettrlct also bit every time he batted.[it the field Fart Oram played a better gomethan their opponents, tut a fly being dropped

j D the out or inQeld. Byram made a splendidone-band catch. Hill covered third In good

iape and Hffchell ocmifeJ a nun her of dif-lault balls thrown to first. Anderson canght

one of the prettiest games ever caught andnt great credit for holding Kettxlok'a

speed In the manner he did. Huber, at secondsjed Wo ova.ncw, owloj: tosllpplng, havingspikes In hh shoes. For the Institutes

'Council played a n i « game a t third andDoDaU at fint. UcOarty and WaerA dropped a fly. Uurphy oaught a goodme. There waa not a large crowd prestnt

iwlng Co tha late tdvertiilng ot tba gnme.following is the score:>ort Oram 1 1 0 0 1 2 D O 1 - 0

Institutes 0 0 3 0 5 4 0 1 x—13TJuplrte, M*ssrE.Hunl and Richards. Timegame, two hours,

Tho defenders, of PortOram, were defeated '•HackQttetowabyaiooreoI2ato7. iAn intereaUng game between the Rlohard

nine and the Eclipse nine of Port Oramw u played at Fort Oram oa Batardty, tho)rmer winning bya m r a of 13 to 11, .'Tbe Dover BIghSchool team went to 'Ht.

itbor on Wedneiday and defeated the Mt.'»bor boys to the turn of 15 t o l l ,

Tbe Initltutrs wDl crota bats with the Ho-ikeo field club on tbt InttituttB1 grounds

D-morrow afternoon..

Tbe Tigers will go t i H t Tabor to-morrow.'bey expect to bring back the scatpj of the

Taborltes. ' • ' ' • '

>.<ah Story.Charles Mailer and Ethellwrt Byram

•aught one hundred and eighteen calfljh onelight last week In tbe nmrd pond. Their ex-

ploit recalls a atory told about "Steve" Fier-SOD, temtrlr ot tbla plst*, butnow a naident,

the wild end wo lywest, which runs as

worker when be worked andfollows;

Sieve, w u aS i e , u a_ Idler when be especially dnlred recreation:In one occasion he went fishing with a friend

. j this d t y when the flslt bit pretty much uthey did for Byram and Holler the other

Igbt, Bteve's companion enjoyed the ttshlng,ut noticed that with every fish Bteve hauledi the latter's brow wrinkled more darkly.B w-a* curious to know the reason of this and

JIIcuilositywusatisfiedafterawblle, whenBteve Impatiently, threw bis rod and line inthB bottom ot the boat, sajlng; "Ding it all.

f I wanted work I cooldbtve stayed inJover and worked. Pmgoing toqul t ' 1 Suit-ing Ihe action to tho word, he composed h!m->lf for sleep, while bis companion fished on.

A BoU Thief.'A bold thief late on Saturday night at-

tempted to snatch a purse out ot the hands ofrs. Charles Mohler u she was standing

liking to Urs. Bryant Beddon on B u t Black-jell slreet. The fellow reached over Hre.Mohlet's eboulder and grabbed bold of tbeparse and Mrs. sioliler, thinking It was herhusband, slapped Ms baodr. Tbe fellow gay»

more vlolont tug M this and Mrs. Mohlerurncd her bead and *sw th»tltwasastnu)ffer

,.'ho wanted hor purge. Then klie set up aicreatn ami the thief did not stand upon the

order of .aligning, but went

. .' LawnBoclable.A' weU-flttended lawn socfsble wsa held

under t the e a « i , *• » were, of the MorrisPlains Presbyterian Cburcii ou Thursdayevening. Cblaae lauloros and tho moontnrnishe4 the UlumlnftUon. Thore was anabundance of lemonade, ice cream and othercreature comforts, und.tbo net proceeds of

)BocIablewerfl870(B.

To da tn iu t i e Imtae,A lUpablbJU maw meeting will bs held>-niorrow night at 8 o'clock In frout of

urowns Hotel, at New- Fouudland. Tboprincipal apeakers wUl be Flatel McOee andis Hon. J- Herbert FotU.

Sea Bhors Baths a t Home.For 23 els. you can buy a bag of Be* Bait

at Kjllgor* Corner Drug Store that williik* 85 BIU water Uths.

A L a w OlUM Oradoate* at tho ntorrt*PUlne Traialnir School.

The fir*t commenoement of the TrainingSchool (or Nurae*, oonneclel with the H»wJereeyBtateHoeiiitaUt Morris Plalu, tookpluoe oa Tuesday night, wnsn a dim oftwenty-nine young ,graduated.

i and wumrn was

B held In tbe am momentboll of tba iDBUtutioa before a largeblage of friends of tae graduate nod otherIi)ler«t*d in or connected wJU tfaa StateHospital. On tbe platform, which bod beantransformed Iflto a leafy bower, itere seatedDr. Brlttoo D. Efoua, medical director oftiie Stats Hospitnl; the Bav. Dr. J. M. Buck-ley, of Morrlitown; State Benatir Jobn B.

rout other data whlah areu e c t r y to the physician In order that hasball havo an lnl*Ulgent uuderstaridiog ofhispailent. Anurmnisybsevorsodnl rousto carry out tbe dlreotiona of the "phyiiolanand do bUfuil duty.butif ha has noc beentrained In regulating the temperature of abath, in disinfecting the discharges from bispatient, io preparing and giving a cold piolr.Jo ifoplDg a' temperature chart, all this willnot quality hint and make him a man for theitnergency. Itr<qulmtrain!ng (andtbetraln-ng of nurws to posaeta all these attributes Is

tbe scope of tbls school. ._ 'M aiy R. Keigan, who stood a t tlie

ncod of the daie, next rend an <sa&y entitledTraining Banools—ara they Kecxsaary to

the Succeet of Hospital* for the Inaue.'*Hiss Keegon began with a brief allusion tothe oriel and Inhuman manner In whlob per-sons Buffering from mental diseases weretreated many years ago. Ttie throwing offor shackles, fetters and chains hy Pino!, ofFrance, and Tuke, of England, and tbe en-dorsement ot klndmni anil studious oara bykeepflTS and attendants WBB a murked stepIn advance, but It was far from the estab-lishment ot training schools and a oonrss ofBTitematlc and Instructive training. To

ike our hospital worka success; to give tothe sick in mind and body the intelligent at-tention they are entitled t o ; to be a b b to

execute the directions glrea byhjsclaEB; In order to guarantee tbe safety,

*;he comfort, thetenderest care of ourpatlmtevie mntt have trained nurtos,' and tn order tohive tbe service of trained nurses we musthave training schools faithfully and energet-ically conducted . \ .

The next number on the programme was. Iad tabreattng'aJdreft by the Her. Dr." Bliok-ley, wbo took for bts subject: " ThB valueof a diploma." A diploma, ho said, was acertificate that wametbiog had beeii dooe—an expreseiou of the valtie of the sum total ofone's acquirements. I t showed that it*possessor bad almsd a t a target »nti keptsteadily in view, day after dty, a . fixed por-

OBeUatoommaudedand.dfrected effort. : .Dr. Bockley'e address, while profonod, wes

Ictenpersed with a good deal of flue humorwhich visibly delighted his hewrsrs. . .

President George Richards, of the Board ofGovernor*, being unavoidably abeemt, the dl-plomu were preientcd by tha Hoo, John O:Elsele to the following member* of tile e l m :HaryR. Kefgan, Phebe J.Norlhwood, Elita-belb McBrWe, Catherine T. Farrell, t lary T.Logan, Mary T. Alexander, Jessie Agnes Z-r-bone, AnDle Ptrklnt, Jnlla V. Oatef, Catber-Ino'M. Fleming, Sarah Jo&DS9D,Sllcn O.I4D-gan, Lllllau E. Alley, Luoy B. EeUy, Cather-ine lUdd!n«, Caule D, Bmitb, Uattle Coiuls-»y, JemesQray, WilliamPoyner, Qeorga J .Hi'er, William Mai-bdi, J ihn Vf. Waltehsad,

ibn Colttnan, if/cfi«t>J J, Uraeo, FredlUevei, Harry L. Freeman, Henry Cook,Richard O.BMi and Louts R. Herrlck. •

Tho presentation ot prltus followed. MfssKeegao received the first price, a twelvepointed gold cross, bearing the Inscription,

First Honor, Training Bohool for Mursaa,Hew Janey State Hospital at Morris Plains "fames Qiay received the second pflzs," a gold

medal In ths form of a Maltese cross, and theihlrd priw, a Webetei'B Uoabrldgod Diction-

ary, was awardfd to Faeb« J, Hortbwood.Taesereorlred bonorable mention i WilliamPoyner, George Hileti John A. Manwn, JohnW. Whltehead, Phebe J.Horthwood.EllM-^(th HcBrlde, Catherine Tf Farrell andllary T . Logon- Music and benediction bythe Her. Dr. BucUej closed tbe *x ercitrs..

T . H, 0. A.Tht gotjwl scr vice In tlie ?&rk on Baturday

wvuttig w<u lik-kr veil attended. Mr. Xorrltspoke very earnestly to tbe uoiaved about thiImportance of preparation lor the futurelife. The ilngtaK wts good, nod on tbe wholeIt was a profitable tarries. It f.< proposed to

a those sartlcen, and next Saturdayevening tba Rev. <]. M. Saoford will apeak.Tlie list. W. H. Hhawger will alio bepnwatnil lead the singing. Evrrybody lu Invited.Iho rnecUng on Sunday was the largest of

tlilu season, Mr. Mdrria wai again tie speakerand nIntod many ot hit ponooul aiperleocetto prove t ie power of God to change men'slives. :,

Next Sunday afternoon W. H. Tanking, ofTort Orem, wlU address the meeting. These

Sunday ifteruotni no more comfort-sbla place can be found than at these meet-ings. Come and bring your friends.

The Y . U. O. Association believes in givingyoung men advantages which their grand-fathers did uot have, Tha world b u grownirsfsr and made progress shoe then,Theonly twtof mamt^rahip In the Asso-

ciation ia character. Anr young man ofgood moral character, irmpecttva of churchconnections, rellgioju bellafs or opinions, can

ijoy the privllcfiva and participate In all tbobonefltn of tlie organisation.

Tbe Yonog Maa's Chrirtian Aesociatlon hasunited more men of different OIMMU, occupa-tions, nationalities and creeds on a commonhuels and for a defhtte end than, any otbiilmllar vfg&nhttion*

Tbere ore 5,485 amoclatlona In tba world, otwhich 1,431 are in America, with 214,077member*. "Tills thing *os not done iicomer."—Kansas City iYosjiMfus.

Tbe following plana for gottinir new melien oro lugBented by the Sydney (!f. 8 . W.)Association, They are aa good in Dover as

Australia.1. Every member of the Auociatlon Inter-

est blniarlf lu tome joung row—uotadoifn,but one. , _ ,

2 Dob't bore bln),'lipt hlndly, politely andanlstently lavlto him tpMt building.S, Introduce bun to the Secretary and

Comtuftteo. ... t l . V f , ' i4. Sbowlilm through theV*rtoui depart'

leuUand explain the work, telling bfm oftbo beneflt* you have derived."

5. Call on him again in a day or two andwk him |f ht. baa co^ldercd the matter of

jibing. • ' '' " "0, 01 VB blra a membersblp aupllcatlon

blank. When he has decided to b;cime aleiuber acoompiDy birn to tbe building and.

ipend tbe evening.7. Aa soon as yon have secund one member

try the same plan with another 'joungan*! keep It op tba year round. : BImpIa, hn'tit! Let'adoit.

Tbe Wella Fargo Express Company of HanFrancisco, for the tenth consecutive year, has

lade, the Hurts of Its blty office members oftlie BftD FracoiecoY. M. C, A , taking outIS7 memberships at f 10 eaab and giving Itsibeck for (1,370 ID payment,

Tbe American railway corporations con-tribute flM.OOO annually to tte'work of thelocal Ballrood Young Men's Christian Aaw-'fatfous along toe Imea of their roads. Forty-

sis buitdiogs valued a t t5GO,C00 are owned byir held for the use of the railroad associa-

tion*. '-

. »3huroh Hotea.FirstM. E. Church-PreachlDg by toe Rev.

pr.Qallattay morning,and evening. Classmeeting at DiM A.H.; preaching a t 10:30 A. V.Sunday ednol a t 2 ; 3 0 P . M.; union sen?Ic*s ofEpworth League and oongivgalion, a t 7 F . K,coonistlng of prayer, praise, testimony andshort'gospel sermon. • ." ' •

Graar U. E. Cburch—F/eacblng la DracoCbnn:h on Sunday by tbe putor at 10;30 A.u. and 7:80 P. M.; Sunday School at 3:30 P.M.; Epworth League devotional service a t0 : S O P . M . ,

;

Tbe servk»a lu Bt. John's Cburcb, Dover,naxt Sunday wUl be: Holy communion at7:30 i .H , ; morning prayerat 10:30 A. M. ; Bun-day school a t UfiO r. u.\ evening prayer at7:30 P. M. The usual daily servlow will beheld duriog the weak. . . . •. .

. Com p iny I t ' s Election. 'A t a niteting ol Company tt onMonday

nlftfat William A., Surnburger was-electedp i n t Sergeant to (111 the vacancy caused bythe promotion of Sergeant Bolt to a llonten-soy, Corporal A. P, HoDnvlt was electedBergeantaiid Private Arthur D. Kelley »«ielected corpora'. . . •

Fractice on tha tiOa range has been going_a every fair day for the p u t week or tendays aud tiie company is hopeful of bringingback twenty-Dve or more sharp-shooters fromBesGlrtnextwiok. . , . _

Company H will start for Sea . Girt onMonday. . ..

Drowned In the Oanal,Leonard Ford, ttie six-year-oM son ol Cbar.

lea Ford, of Rockaway, was drowned on Sat-irday afternoon while (Uhlog In the canal

near Brutn & Bannell'B coal chutes, Albert,aa cider broUer, wai fi'ihtng some dErtanceaway. Hedldnotsee Leonard fall Into thacanal and tlie first knowledge anyone hod ofth t drowning was. when Mr. and Urs . Ford <alarmed at tbelrlittlo son's long atny, wenttuthe canal bonk and saw the body resting onthe shallow bottom, The fuucmt was' heldon Tuesday morning, tbe !Ur. Mr. Iforrls of-ficiating, Clarence McKlnnon, Frant P«jer,I«wls Strait and James May acted nt pullbearfiB.

BUkWaleUand Beparate BkJrta. BJ. h. rickerson Is_cloflog outbolsnoe of itock at about half

A Municipal Water Plant-Bya. vote ofJTO to H the voters of Rocta-

ynj BorougbT a t a apeclal election held onTuesday, deoldod toIsiuebondstothBamouitof $25,CO0 for ft public water snpply. Itbaa not yot been decided whetbar to encawliving springs, of which there are plenty Iatbe Immediate vicinity of Rookaway, or getit Mppij from drtTon vfeUi,

Illoalon a t Baubenrer 1*An exhibition of a claver.and mystifying

optical Illusion called "The VanUhlngIs being B>»n at Iiamberger'a dry

goods stare tn Newark under the direction ofA. B. Carrlogton,of CbtcagQ.iToall appear-ances the subject, Cupid, emerges to a pianoacoompiolment from) tho post supporting abrosd but shallow urn In tha centre of acabinet illuminated by Incandescent light*,and for a brief spsca ol time her bust U seenibovBtbs level of the bowl.To disprove the, supposition that a wax or

Imaginary figure* Is used the director asksCu>fd to tell tbe spectators that such Is nottrue, which ahe does. * Although her voloa Isnot audible the movement of her lips anduoddfng of ber head b plainly perceptible.

When the figure disappears again her formapparently enter* the narrow pedestal. It lanoteworthy tbaVher- 'eiitls not behind theurn, for the space between an iuoandesMntlamp bthlnd and a length of unllax draped'rom tbe edge ot, the urn, Is entirely onob^touted. la like manner Cupid again appearsand coon after vanishes.

Tbo Uliiiion, It Ii aald, Is acooapUslied by«ana <{ an entirely pew d»*Ico, thai of

galifog 4 rtfl'Ctfon of a h|dde& fl|nre uponanotbar reflMtl^i, pr^what eouli be deelg<n a b d a double coaut&r' reflKttlon, * systrailuperoedlng the older use ot right angle re-

flection." TheexhlbliionwlllbeconilniHdallof-this week, and U being witnessed b y alarge nuraberpf. tbe patrons of the store.;' . '

h X. Jf. B . Av."**oumon. ' -•Tbe oxcunlontoOlefi Island laitFriday of

theE . M, B. A. Was an tinquntlfied aucoess.thetnhs wve ran in) threeiwtJon*; sectionone, starting from-railllpsburg, picked uppastengeis as far eatt as Waterloo { sectiontwo1 started from Stanhope aud picked np

'ngers »s far cast ai Dover, while sectionthree wai for tha accommodation of the DBO-pie along the line o( the Fassala ft Delawarerallroa-i, ; , ;''

All thsseotlona arrived a t Uoboken shortlyafter 10 o'clock and tiia steamor antl barge1

arrived at Glen Island about 1. ' At four thereturn trip i r u bsgua, thoeiciirsloatatf bains;safely ''landed'fit' Hoboken at seven o'clock,without a mUbap to mar the pleasurts oftho day, • The inanagemeut was perfectin every detail The music furnished by tlieBooatonBand under the leadership of Prof.Cullen, vru o&e of tee features of tlie day.

Among tlie prominent membera ot tlie OMO-ciation prasetit War* Qanaral Chairman C. A.Kcndig.BoursUry-Traanirer T. M. Condit,Mtonberiof Finance H. H. Hoffman arnlC.E. Garknd, P m i i r a t B. K. Chapin, ViceProldenla Oeorge B. MUlen, William CUns,D. J. BIcDede, Gtorg* U. Taylor, John NUon,B. F, Thaw, Andntw^ Pcam, Jos, Ifayborry,Jos. Mltehell, 0 . a ylover, Henry Shsrance(

Harry Cyphers, F .T . Peters, Thomas Barry,Frank Praed, 8, A. Broadwell, W.H, H*l-den, Sidney Cote,' and otliers, ' .. .'

The association/will not about *0O0 fromtkmezenndon. • / . : ' .

Ha 1 forMauch' Chunk on September S3. '

.; A Double Traf idr* <Sidney: and Quitave Teweles, the tblrtoen-

y«r-'old twin soni of Lewis Teweles, a weal*thy silk manuracriirer of Paterson, whilebathing in Greenwood l ake on Bundty, gotbejond thdr depth a t i wvre drowned wttbfs•Ightand hearing'of nearly a hundred per-

800J, among whom wasHlis Nora TeWflw,abtor of the twins. ;;Bo*h bodies were shortlyaft*r recovered by William Citric, a »uldaattb6_LakeLwhodo7e for chsm, but all et*Torts a t rWuiclUUo'n failed.

K T . ABLIMQTON." F.-E. Panrn and'his stater, Hiss Rosalie,

ot Oiford, N. J,, bars4»en vliltlng theltlUisesXiowe this week, Th»y camf on tbelrSvneals, mftkfrg the. trip.of tblrtyflve mites*" itwohoarjand tweoty oiinntet. . . •

Hiss Wleland.of PHJIadstphla, is visitingher brolber, W: H. Wloland, of this place.

Master Wlillkm Btopheni h u been very litnrlng tbe past week, but Is now Improving.

1 Dr. N. H.*Adift, of Snaaa'anna, bai beta at-t»ndlnghim. ' -•: ' - • . •

Judging from tbe number ot people on theGlen UOHBB ptazz* H'every evening, Q. P."Tottan mmt be Qlltrtg hla boufsqulte rapidly,

Urs. A. Ztek U visltiog friends at MountainT t e w . - - • • . • . - . . • • • - . • • . "

- MIM AWa Noraaiin, of Brooklyn, Is theguist ot ber uncle, Max Normaan, at theNormaudy cottage.: . .

VTB. Hone, of Ellcibttb, Is visiting i t M«.Fieli'r. ." , . i

VT. H. Wielani and family have movedinto tbe Sullivan oottaRO, lately vacated byJohn. Doonay,

MiM Battle Wanl Is oa the atek list tblit s o k . • • • ; - • • • • . . .

Un. Mtry Strait, of. Ithaca, K. Y., Is vis-iting ter Bonsherev n . .wim™

, K. Y., Is vRUBTIOATI.

When| wear begins to esoted repair In yourbody you are going to fall sick.' Ths signs,otlt are: loss of fletbl.psdeness, weakneas,nervousness, etc, The repair needed ts foul.You think yon wit enough; aad yet you feeltbat you wear out more tlstuf; energy, nerve-farra,than yonr Jood make* for you. Thedldlcnlty it that ion do not digest enough.And this is so eeriouiitisworth sitting dona«rioujly to tblnlc aboat It you can't digestwhat yoa eaC, tata 'a tew'dotes of ShakerDigestive Cordial. Tbs fITeot ot It will bsto increase jour ' ( ton and mike you feetstronger. You wua't' fall sick.. Proof tbatit Is in control of jonr repair apparatos. IVs

i easy mongh to teat thla for yourself. Take\ a few bottles ot Sliaker Digestive Cordial,

Bold by dragBiats nt ten oenta to $1.00 perottle. ' _ - _ ' _ ; • .

;• - -Blurtwaist* . •,""All going at oort, Sow Is your time to buytt fee Dane Kaur ofJ.^il. Qrlmm.',; The Bntlra Balance - ; ..

of all mmmer goods at cut prices iti Ed.. T .

A Orlsuj i n the Welsh Tin f l a t * Trade.As tbo ramltof the McKiuley UxiflT rates

on tin plate qufte au Industry in tin plate 'grown up In tbls country. Hot as Urge, b<ever, as it would have been had not tbn tariffbeen reduced by tba Wilson bill. As It ia,howsver, the production of tin plate In thiscountry b u bad a marked effect on the fro.duetion of Walw, so great on effect that nota-ble reductions in wages are being mode Inorder tfcat tbe Welia mill* may be able tecompete with our American tin plate ullut.How great bai boeu tbe t i led of our produc-tion of plate k&own la the latter ot an Bug-liih correrpondont who gives thU list of tin

works a t tbe present time in toe I.tanelly

"Idle mills, 164 ; mills walking on 1874 Hit,«B ; mills working at 10 or 12}£ per cent, re-duction, 170; mill! working at 15 per cent,reduction, 4? ; mills working at 20 per cent.reduction, VJ; ullla working At ?J){ per cent.reducllon, five. T ho men declare that thinever n u s. time whan the permanence otUse 1874 lltt ol wages or any otheritendard was more seriously Imperiled that)

now, Tbere Is scarcely a veatlge of unifor-mity left; the wage abatements range from10 per cent, ta 22}{. A month ago the opera-tives engaged at the Old Castle, Western andOld Lodge Workr, Lla&elly, employing closeupon 4,000 bmda and distributing In wages£2,400 per week, conceded a reduction of 10per cent, Tbe men are now asked for noth-ing short of SO. At Utnel 'y UJB employer*declare that they cannct keep tbsfr work*go-1Ingnnlejitho workmen agree to a redactionof 23K per cent on the wage list at 1871. Bothen is a potilblllty that the only works atLlantlly shortly will be tbe South WalesWorks, and that no lew than 2,000 frorkmsr.will b& out of employment la tlie tin platetown. Matters are no better In tbe Morris-ton district. Htre the catchers and behind

have revolted and refute to accept anyreduction of wages. Tbtbehluders are youngmen from 18 to fli yean of age, who sarowhen paidJoJuU " m e 'it Ul. per day. Thacatohsra a n boya of from 10 to W who eartifrom Ss. 6d. to 3s. per da]'. Tbe ocaroliy ofemployment at the Forest tod other works

brought about a division of work, Manyof these young people for th ' i reason earn nomore than IOJ. to ISa, por week.

Tbn biitory of the tin plate Industry in theUnited Btates U a atronx Illustration of tbebeneQts of a protective,tariff. Years agowhen the first attempt was mod* to planttha industry In this country, Americans were

it with the statement that It could not bsdone. The very few concerns wbloh hadbeen started by enterprising manufacturerswen making good progress when thuf wereclosed by an adverse decision of tbo Tieat-ury Department a t Washington. Thenwhtusomething like adequate protection his beensir irded, our friends on tha other side of thowater declared that we caul! not make tinplate. Pint, they held that it would takelong years before we could properly tin tbeplate, then they said we might loam to tinbut we would have to send abroad for theblack plate. Bat . experience proved." >|hdtthey were wrong and that ths iuduatry Cfutdbe established here. Wiwn'the 'tariff went into effect, American ;$turtrs wtire given six yean to sbowUn&wcould maliB tin p'ate. Yet within two yeir*the provliions of tlie lair bad been mot,- ttuit

tint the araouDt of tin and terns plstwmade in the UoltedBtatea plus the amount ofarticles made from sfaoet Iron and stael or tin'quilled one-tbird'of the amount of tin and

terns plttes Imported, less the amount re-exported In 1HM AmerlcaQ mills producedthe amount required bv law, and 44,630,850pounds in addition. And this w u only theFourth of tbe sir years.

And tn the manufacture ot black plate wehave b e u equally tucceasfiil. l a less thanfour yrsrs from the day tbat the tJo plateclause In the McKlaley bill went into effect,tba American production of black plate w umots than sufficient to meet the requlrermnteof tte home market, fly March, 1895, themW«re 100 mills computed and {n course ofoonstnictlon, the capacity of whloh was1,060,000 boxes annually. Tdas the require-

menu of the home market were met In letsthan four years.' Greater pro&reai In esttb-

a new industry was nsver seen. Nowthat we bare shown that ws can make ourown tin plate, tbe Welsh manufacturer •teksto weaver his lost ground. And to do so fasreduces wsget far below' the figure whichAmerican workmen would refuse to consider.This plate, nude at the lowest wages ever

, will soon be ca our short nulessproper means are taken to protect Air erlcanicWrtsU. Tbt only way that the Un plair

a t these redowd wages can hi kept outof tha United States is either to reduce ourwage* to correspond to this1 reduction or toput up the tariff. And American workmenman won answer tbli question a t the polls.—American ilanvfaclurer.

SOOHTOZT.The Iioontoa Use btll team on Baturday

defeated the Verona nln» on the BcouUinrounds by t Mtore of 1U to 7.A large gins; of men are a t work building

a dam for tbe Impounding of water for aaartificial lake wLIoh D. llcwdeo, proprietorof ths Mansion Howie, Boonton, lnte.idj tomake one of the attraction* of that place.

A horto belonging to H*nry Bill, a ftriliving near Boonton, last week becafrlghtensd «t a passing train of c an andbraking IOOM from tbo cultivator to wliloie was bitched attemiitcd to jump a lonci

and broke hit neck.A Brjau ai>d tfetvall campafga dub wti

last week organized in Boonton with CountyProsecutor Joshua B. Salmon as IVesldent,11. Levls Brown, Vice f rotildent, a d J hCullen, Secretary,

Fireman's day in Boonton occursWuJueulsy, AaROit Mb, aad the Ore laddie*ors endeavoring to make the day ala tbe morning there will he a parade andntpectlan of the company. Tun afternoon

and evening will be takun up with all kindsof out-door sporta on tbo grounds ot theBooatonButt Ball Club In West Boonton.The Boonton Cornet Band will furntub rauiic.hrougbout the d*j.

Ttie Ltdles' Improvement Bodety ot Boon-ton have mtds a csovais of tbe Soouton mer-cbants and tn nearly every Instance tbe mer-cbante have agreed to dose at an Bsrlier hourlu the evening with tbe exception of Baturday,

Irving B. Tompklni, ot this pltce, who banboen studying theology and philosophy atHalle Wlttenburg University, Germany, hasreturned home with bis wife, and they arenow stopping a t tbe home ot Mr. Tompkin'ajorents.

Tbe Her. Alexander McKelvey, putor of;be Boooton Rotormed Church, li conva-lotclng slowly from his reoeut illness, hat isUDnblo to resume his preaahlng. Mr. Uo-Kelvoy and hU family are a t BDlmar. Hispulpit last Sunday w u supplied by a clergy-man from Newark.

A lamp shade caught fire from a lightedlamp la a bouw OD the llaU UouJay eveningand an alarm was lent out la a few minutesall was excitement, tho entire departmentippsarliTB; an thetoeue, oaly to flad that theirisrvlcea were not needed.

PORT O B i M .BnilannakerB a n still a t work a t tbe fur

nace getting it in rsadlnou for oparatlon.Abram HosUn was on Wednesday Injured

ay a dwcendlng bucket tn the Klchord mine.A slight cave-In occurred In a section of tbe

Mount Fleuant mine on Monday. No onewas injured.

Clarence Mulligan is spending his vacationwith hi* father in town.

Hits Hay and William Veale took a trip onSaturday to Orange, whore tbey vhltedlowpfc Matthews, formerly ot this plica.

MlssIIu-fiet Flarteyls spendlog ber vaca-tion with ber parents hare.

The Van Bmburg elrcm wu la town an'uesdsy and drew a large crowd. They Ravegood performance and tbe spectators w«re

well pleased.a Mine filla Hendcroon is reported ai Improv-

Eita, the eldest child of Charles Kyle, dioda Bunday Dlght from ioflimmitwy rbeunu-

tlsm after an' lllnens of eevoral weeks, Tbo'uneral sirtice waa hold at the home of Mr.Kjls on W«dnes1ayt tho. Rev. Abraham M.Harris olllclattng. There was singing by amixed quartette. A large circle ot friendsand relatives were prwwot. Mr. and Mrs.Kylo bavo tbs ejmpalby o( the community IDtbelr bereavement.

The youngest child ot Councilman Mnlllgondied on Tbursdsy night from the msa-ijoj.The funeral service wan held on Friday after-noon at the bouse.

Miss Libbfo Weaver b again employed atthe silk mill here.

Ittuolpal Eraatut G. Potter lsfton Monday,'or, BE, Louis, going with tbe Hew Jertaydelegates to tbe Populist Conveuiion.

Hral: WtUi&m Champion, jr., and Urs.Beojsimln Vlartey o n on the sick list.

The Farmero' Alllanos ot Bunterdon countyhas engaged the "Big Biz Quartette11 to singat tbo three daj-«' county plcaio wbtou tbeAlliance wlii hold tn August. The drat twodayi the pkalc will ht held a t IVttrku- Islandand tbt third Oar a t Obimiey lUdge.

Tbe B«d Man's picnicon Ssturdsy wasaaucoBM, r.ettlng'Popcwon Tribe oeirly (10.

Henry Bmltht ¥ Patersm, spent Uit weekwith his pawnta l l town.-' Georga Fintbr&ok, of PatenoDf epentWednesday In Pjrt'Oram,' T h e Misaes Anna'end Ella Qrady visitedMiss Parks, of Bartley, lait Bunday.

Miss Jeanoette Bure t t , of Bummlt, spentlunday hen.The Mtsaes Hary Roderer and Annte Haalln

ave entered the employ oj the Koss& BakerIlk mill .William Kelly and Oeorge Ely have re-

signed their positions at ths dye houto.

•TABHOPB.Tte free Mtthall§t<mnp Butting has been

the esetrs of attractloa for U s p u t week andlarge numbers have been in atteudauoa rainor shine. Bandar latt wai thB great day oftbe meeting! Many wers present from re-mote places, far twyond tha county seata of

'SiattJCtlTorrtftuKl Warren couatlei. Therew u a spiritual atmosphere pervading on Sun-day e'euiug especially and the altar wasthronged with seekers atter the ' 'pearl of greatprice." -

On Monday a thief entered the tent ofsome IVevark people and stoh 925 from a,trunk. It was promptly made up to the lostrsby tbe other campers on the grouni . . Somemiscreant also broke and carried off ths pumpthe tame night. I t was found along tbe rail.road track some dtttancs away.

There are over a down preachers to aid ine services Bugler Cavanaugb is on hand

as uinst with his horn and wit and •aroatm.The boy preacher, Tamblyu Logan, arrivedthis week. . Ths chairman, the Rev. Mr.sillier, DM twen able to nave complete o n t oUu-oughout tb« entire meeting, wbloh brokeupon Wtdnetdayevedoftfaytheusualrnarchand hand abtkins;, Tbe mwtlnf hai bMa asuocesa temporally, flnanclally and spiritu-ally. • . . . . • • •.

A largs number went from this vicinity toGlen Island laet Friday on the E. M. B. A.eicarston tud eojoyed tht trip to a fafgh de-gree. . Tbe Island Is a beautiful one. We sawex-Governor Werti and family on the Island.

Htanbope bos a new vetarinariin whoseshingle with the ntms " Dr. B. W. R. York "hangs out a t tbe Btanhope Bouse. Dr. .York

ism* to be doing a good butafM.There ara many visitors hi this vicinity,

among them T, J. and Luther Illsseli.whoare a t th-lr m-Hberi hou*e; Mr. and U n .Edward VYIntaraute, at the borne ot HahtonWoodruff; Was K«to O'Brien and Miss KateYstter, a t IWRO Kionloutt's.

Tbe Rev, E K. Donalson and family a noocupjlng a cotfage at tbe sea shore.. Conductor James Duffy, of the Sosqae-h»hna railroad, visited bis brothsHn law,Georis Boothney, a t the Uaoslon House last

r e e k . . ' - • • • • • . - - . . • .

Tbe weather li not propitious for hay, bar-f it and camp msetlngs, but fine for pasture.James Dell contemplates moving to Dover

i lhecan.dt ipon of hi* handsome roidsnoeDO Ledge-vjood avenae, Ketoong. Hare Is abargain for some one. -

Oliver J . Rosa, of Newton, visited BUa-hope last Sunday, : . ;

Tha hotels were well patronised daring th edinner hour l u t Snoday by tbe people attend-ing the camp meeting from a distance.

W. Harrison ktoon, tba evangelist of Mor-ruitoWn, spoke at tbeoampinesBtliig lsrt Sun-day Tsry effectively.'

The Rav, William H. Bhawger, of Dover,Isattendlngtbecampmeetlpg. AM

. . « ! • •

XBDQBWQODA story'» being poised about fa tbla village

ot a Ledgewood man wbo greeted hist wife onher return from a vliil to a sick naighbar a tUt. Arllngto n with a pall of cold water whichhe soused over her. Despite this cold recep-tion she entered only to stumble over a bedwhich ber wrathful iponse bad overturned onthe floor. Whtn she got Into the dining-room her husband overturned a dish of pota-toes oa tha floor and begtn to dance a wardance In and abort tbe soggy mass.' Theneighbor*. It li reported, are ontarpoken Intbelr dl*libs of such earnings on. ;

Lyman Wilkinson U spending a few dayswith his parents, Mr. and Ura. V. B. Wilkin-

in, . . . . ' ' . . .Alvln Bagan has entered tfa's employ of the

Ai lactic Dynamite Pomlw Works.Boating on the canal has been resumed, tfai

break having been rtpaiftd. ^John Smith died a t abfpplng Port l u t

Tuesday night of. general debility, after anUlnou of over eavra montiis. Tha funeral

Ice, conducted by the Rev, Dr. Btoddard,was bold on Friday, Sir. Smith was a goodMend. • -. , .

BFABTA,There are about one hundred cud fifty

boarders In town a t present-Mr, and Ura. Hampton Andress spent Bnn-

day la Sparta.Alfred Bpangenberg bat the addition to the

Bparta Public House enclosed.. T. Person Isassisting him.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith, formerly ofthis place, wbo nava been living at Oak Itldge,moved to Oaklsnd, K. J. , last week. He willcontinue in the employ ot tbe H. Y., 8 . & W,R. R «a operator.

O. H. B*Uar b u twenty-eight boarders at

BIQ BARGAINSIK

BICYCLESS. H. Berry Hardware Co.'s

THE BUFF.BRICK BUILDINGDOVEH, IV, J.

Come and see what we can offeryou before stock is sold.

WE ARE TBE AGENCYbr Adriance Buckeye Mowers and

Reapers of Poughkeepsie, N. T.Everything in Hardware for Sum-

mer Time.You know our line. Prices always

Right.

MlsaLlnle Smith Isentortalnlog Hiss RuthEoiiaiid.otWathii igton.N.J. •

JobD Johnson, GltyOollBOtor of Flainfleld,Is spending a week with Nathan Etntnons,

Wise Anna Bevard entertained as ber gueit1 Sunday Kaox Taylor, of Bound Brook.Ernest Swayst; of Ploinfleld, was in town

on Saturday. -Bldney Wilson, of Uorrlstown, U spendingweek with his ooutln, MIBI Dilsy Htnitb.The Hetsrt. Haasini;, ot Mt. Tabor, made a

trip here oa their wheels last Thursday,spending the afternoon with thoir friend,Monzo Green, and returning the same day.

A party was given a t the home of WasEdith Tredvay l u t Tuesday evening Io honorDf ber guest, Hits Agues Freeman, of Ando-w , it, J . . . . - • .Fred Burd, of If orrlstown, It (topping with

RoaoMHowell.Mr. and Kra. Oeorge Multord, ot Hoboken,ave been visiting Urs al ilford'a mother,

Mrs. Wm.Tredvay.Daniel Brans and Utai Bvana, his sister,

•pent a few days with the Mltsea BHckle a tHockaway last week.

Miss Bterensm, of Newark, and Hissatryktr, ol Ironla, were ID town latt Thurs-l titt f r t day vtsittng frtsDdt.

Miss Mlnule Drake Is entertaining HissAnnie ChiM*. of Krd Bauk, JX. J .

Mr. and Mrs. Baltnon, of Boonton, wereguests last week of A. W. B ilmDn.- The youoBBst child of Lemuel L*sk; of

Uiditoa, formerly ot toll p lus , died fromdiphtheria and was brought here on Tuesdayrooming for borlaL

' Mra. Roberta and daughter, of Plalnfleld,are visiting Mm. Frank Uutr.b*on.

Mr. and U n . I.. 8. Young, of Bos ton , arespeeding a fortnight with Ura. WilliamYoung.

UIM Buih Godfrey, et Ltiowood, It the,RuestotMUaMtyBndd.

MlMKttoGullak.of Newark, Is athersls-tar's, Mrs, Joseph Zwks, ,

The funeral of ths little child oC RobertDuDcan took plsoe at the bourn on Mondaymorning, tbe Rev. S . B. Bray ofUclatlng~ itermt&t was mads a t Newark.

Henry Rtooo, who D M been attending tbeBohoolof Christian Workers at SpringQeld,Haas.. has returaed home for hla vacation.

Mr*. A. J . Bttrk and sou, Clyde, or Wash-ington, passed part of l u t week with Mrs.Btark's mother, Mrs. John Bragg.

Mr. and Mrs. Dr. SlmpBDa and family, ofBrooklyn, i r e boarding i t J . D/Budd1*.

John Burr, of Mornstown, and PhlneaaBurr, of Newark, visited friends In town onSunday. ' ENDEivonsn.

OHK8TEB.The Cherterltos wish to eztand a vote of

thanks to tbe resident* Hdcg along tba side-walk who have bad tha grass out It Is agreat Improvrraent aql wilt be appreciatedby all pedestrians,. Let tht good work con-tinue.

Marian, the joungeat child oE Mr.und U n .Unfow Leek, died at.Madlson on Monday.We extend our deepest sympathy to the be*navel parents.

The youo* ladles who attended tho Y. P .B. O. E. Convention a t Washington, D. C ,have returned and report a most enjoyableand profitable, trip. We are anxiously wait-lug to beat ft toll account from the delegates.

Usually we have car longest days la June,but one poor soul has had bis or bar (I) cal-endar twisted and thinks not only tha week,but the daya too long in a certain part of July.

Ths pastor of tbe Methodist Church beingabsent last'Banlay servloes wen uondQctodby ths Rev. E Clifton Bearles, who deliveredan eloquent address from tlie text "I* It wellwithtnysool."

Knox Taylor, of Bound Brook, was thegneatot Hiss Beward over Sunday.

The social Ufa In Chester has been muchenlivened during the past week. We are

' glad to Dole this fact. Oo Monday eveningMba Minnie Drake gave a party In honor olhex friend, Hiss Annie Cbilds. All presentreported a good time. UIM Edith Trad wayfollowed by Riving a card party cm Tuesdayevening in honor ot Sltaa Agues Freeman.

Miss Fancy Seward is spending a weekwith ber aant, Kirs, frank Graham, at An-bury Pork.

Miss Fanny Hall, of Foullpeburg, Is thegneat ot Hiss Bayre, . OTJKI

B e n n u n t a l Bennion Postponed,i t bnvlng; been found Impoesibta tq secure

Ihe attendance ot comrades who lire a t adistance, on the dato sat for tbe propoaed re-union o! the tartlTora of the Firteonth N. J.Vola., It has been decided by tbe committee'In charge of tbe arrangements to postponethe reunion to Thursday, Baptember 8, onwhich date It is expected to have GeneralWright and Oencral Sickles present.

Don't Hiss theBhlrt Waist talc at Ed. L. Dlnkenou's, cum-in enclng Saturday, July 11. Look at his advcrUsuneni la this paper.

SPECIAL OUT-IN-

CHILDREN'S SUITSFOR THE NEXT TEN DAYS

Odd lots of two or more sizes, some only one of a size left.

Vour opportunity for a school suit for your boy.

Price no object. We must have more room.

CHILDREN'S KNEE PANTS(SIZES 4 TO 13 TEARS)

2 pairs 25c. For 10 days only.

PIERSON&CO.Opp. the Bank, QOVtl'S Dover, N. J.

Telephone Call Ho. S B.

ED. L. DiCKERSON'S. DOVER, N. J.

Saturday, July 11iKDFOLumraa WEEK WE WILL m THB wixowna '

BIQ BARGAINS WHILE THEY LAST

Our regular 29c waists atOur reeular 39c waists at -Our regular 49c waists at -Our regular 75c and 85c waists atOur regular 98c waists at

15c2 3 c3 5 c4 9 c7 5 c

And entire balance of extra fine waists at about half-price

AT REDUCED PRICES

All sizes in white and black stripe• Former prico 98o.

75c

A l l s i z e s i n l i g h t c o l o r s • ' * , ' • * 5 0 cEarly valuo WDB 76a

All sizes from 32 to 38 in tans and drals 75cFormor valne $1.00.

All our $1,49 waists to be closed out at $1.00

A few white waists at half price to close out

Percale/waists unlaundered • * • 25c

Wm. H. Baker Store Co.

TRYING TO GET EVEN.

Clock »ml Wftlcti Maker* Oft Into thmHlcyele Trtwlf.

Clock au<1 watch ninlit>ni who fountUmir regular liuHiiU'ut fulling off ou sooutiiit of the bii'ycUi erazoare nowlug u p for i t iu thu mauufuoturo Midsain of cjclnnictcw. C«iiuimtiUoii is ux-eewliiigly liviOy among tlio rival luiik-fern, to tho grunt bs'iii'lit uf tho ridti

Three ur four years ugn thuro woreonly a iVw uiokes uf (lycloniutwflthey worn very hoary mid coatly. Novcyclometers ure umde us Hiuatl as a sVv u r q u a r k T , weigh iiluiout nothing undcan bo punliuwii a t a triflingMirny dealers add » cyclometer tequipment cf Uio bicyclts us IUI induce-mont to tho purchiwur, and an a rrmi1

bicycles without cycloiuuUsrs nro tho tsi

Cycling has brought ninny bleoHUigii n i ts train, mid one of tiio ga'atunttheso ia tho iioat l i t t lo roniriuu- wblireoorda arx-uratoly thu diHtiwee traversedby tho cjcliKt. It is jinit'tiiittlly a lO.OOtmilo tapcliiio in 11 ruittuuct mid rouvenieiit form, t t i i a grea t Hatlftfactiun foitho r ider to BCU thu miles roll up uu thedia l m Iu spins ulong. Tlio present cy-clometers aro very ninijilo iu coimtrun-t ion, mid UB u rulo jx-rfimu thoir dut)wi thou t error, but too much niuiit ua\bo oxiM«tL'd of whut in tiiurtly a iimchiuiiuiil contrivance. Ar idercunhurd l ;exjKct hia cydouit'U-r to liiuoimre thdiataiieo between two pointH uccurateljif bo wnttbleB f nun one nido <J( tho rou(to the othor. In tliin way u U'glniiPicyclometer might riwunl a milo wliibo hiw tiwiii pursuing bin BiimouH coursefor only half that diHtunca

Oycloniulera tiro made for wheels ofg,VL-u (iiumt'tcr, arid if u 20 iJicJ) crotur bo fitted to ft 28 inch wheel thiflgurpfl will not bo accurate enough Ubo vnluublo. For tho BHIUU rouson if ttifront tiro bo »oft un uppreoiuble e min tho nioiwuromt'nt will occur, IILTIIUIof tho lessened dianiet t r of tho hicycwheel. U tlio tiro Hinks in « quarteran inch under tho weight of the ridetliu error in a milo ride would amouto 14 yivrdR, Thus tlio nc-eurucy of a ociuumlttr uieiuummmit vnrles percept!'bly, accordiug to the liarditBifl of thetiro. Howovor, tho averngu bicyclo ridiis not 1111 euginwr or mirvuyor, and tinpopulari ty of thti ejcloinetor is in 111way riidan^erud bocuuso of this Bligvariation from tins (ruth, .a fullingwhich tho cyrlouietor is often driven hytlio nooaluT eager for n hugo mileageru:oid.

So long KB tlio variation ia on tho cy>dint 'H Kido tho cyclometer's future ifwife. A t any rate, tlio demand for tlidevice ia lively, and tlio makers aro rotrenching thoir losses inourral hy thienenmeliiiieiit of tho bicycle upou thewatch txude. — Now Orleans Times-Democra t

Tba Appelt*t« Court*.Appelluto courts can know nothing

tlio real trial tis i t did occnr, yet tho:a w not deterred from granting "°vtrial* and practically co-opnrnthiR vrlnOBcrupulouH attoniuysfor tlio ©scapewen guil ty of tho most wicked inurdemAppcllato courts too frequently scorn tcth ink Hint miperior knowlodgo of thilaw ia flliown uot by ufllrtning tho it iou of tbo t r ia l court, but by tttiuidlIn antngiiulsm to U and bycr idoie iIts action.

I t is liko the ram of tlio bold, ope:cri t ic , who frequently gets credit for supcrior kuovrk-dgo hy Iho andncity rhifl oritioiaui, wheu, in foot, ho k n o wiiothing of thOBubjwjt. Appellate courharo very often made up of men wantingin Jniowledgn of tho mofit elemental-]principles of tho cr iminal law, for thejItave iwvor ei ther studied or pracHcecit. With this w a n t of knowledge of tlievery law tlioy arc soekfug to administer,tlmy try tlio caso uot on i t s meri ts , todetonuino the g u i l t or innocence of tbo•uan, but tliojr t ry it by uomo Uwhnicalru lo which him really no relation to thotrailt or inuoceiioo of tlio accuaod.Nor th American Review.

Thrifty Prtutoc" Is Franco,"nalil MozSohotteJt, whi

reprcHoiita a great American dry goodifirm in Paris, ' 'nearly every man satBomothiug. It doesn't matter how amibis Income may bo, bo manage* to patby- ft portion of hia earniuga. In this re-spect the thrift of Uio people atandB oatin marked contrast to tho prodigal wayiof thocitiwiiB of tho Unitml States.Hero it Boems csflout.al to spend a bifBain of mouoy to gut much pleasure; iafact, the amount of pleasure Boemsmeasured by tho mouoy expended. ButI think it undoubtedly trno tlmt thoKVcnob people get moro enjoymont oatof life than the Amoricona

" I see much to admire la this nation—ita wonderful progress, if* iurontirogenius, Its unrivaled rewnroea. • Thereia nothing In Enropo like your lumrionarailways or your Una hotels. Bnt wiall that I had rather livo in FrauocOur nation hua n bad namo, I find,this country, but tho reputation UuVtdeserved. There ia uanmoh real religionand pure homo lifo in Franco u existsin any land. Wo go to church earl]Sunday morning and Ln tbe af term

the woodfl. I thiak yon would be betteroff over hero if you enjoyed Sundaymore after tho liberal fashion that proTails across tho ooean."— Wuhlngtoi

i Wronc AnulM Rlffet."What is the proper Bpcllingr" asks

» correspondent "Should it be 'tire,',or 'tyrer' " I uuwer with fear andtranjbling, for I know b j expericoMwhat heated passions are sometimesuonsod by questions of Uiia gravity. , Ifind, howovor, that Dr, Jobnaou is ontho Bide of "tiro," though ho*notiooa thoipelllDB "tyro," whilo Webster gives"t i re" and ignores "tyre" altogether.

The interchange, of " i " and " y " in"worda of this shape soami to be purely,b matter of convention or cupriDo, andone can only bo gnirlcd by tho ruling o(tho recognized authorities. Webster anJoanaoa aro good enough torjne, andwould suggest to tho various pneumatic,"tyro" companies now advertisingthcmBelvofl that thoy should romodithoir spelling. Some timo back I bmdpassage at armB with a gentleman overtho Bjune question iu tho Bpolling of theword "t iro," and the question was do-aided, to my mind,' by tho uuthorlty ofProfessorBkoat, whojronouncea "tyro"a "gross misspelling." So far M I canaoe, rcry much thn mtno misht be saidof "tyro. "—London Trnth.

HarBllpptn. - v"JoBt Blip on your blno wonted slip*.

pen, darling, over your whito Mtinones Co wear to tlie carriage, and leavathem in tbo vestry room when you getto the church,"

So said the bride's mother, m prowoman, wbo did not wish to soe .viandBtainod shoo protruding beneath tn«bridal gown as her "darling" camedown tba aisle from tbe altar. And'thebride followed her advioo, at least tbofirst of It But in tbe excitement of thomoment she forgot, to romoTO, them intha vestry room, and tbe congregationW&a treated to tbo unuaoal tight of aMtin bedecked wife, shambling,alongiu bedroom slippers.—Now York Jour*naL

"There, mamma," said the littligill, exhibiting a cupful of raisin stonea,"liaven't I been a good £irl to stone all'them raiains without stopping till I badgot them all done?"

Mamma—Ton are momma's own lit-tlo'girL' Yonoan throw theitcuosinthe ash barroL But, by the way, whatdid yon do with the rnuunaf

Own Little Girl—Oh, I ate them)—

To Cureweak MOimth, lot! ot appetite, flituVac«, wmler*

.hnuh, tuint of food, heutbuni, njjililtnare.cMicdtoogut, olTtwive bre.th,

jaundice, l«J coinplcx-ioa, Ii»»r^pol», yellow

UlioD of tb< heart, »nJ•bort lfe«lh ifier n u l l ,t i l t Dr. DCWB'I Dp-

Dr.Dearie's

iRyspepslajrluB%*y. i!grnA hourili1in»fowl.

i7-A trill after cw:U meal.Wtite wiapperlf con«l[»1ml, yellow If bowtlt m

IMM >J « « » Bf dnt|ci«u'. Stud lo u. (« • In*

" " " ^ Dll. J, A. JJSANX COi Klaptm, N. Y.

A DREAM DREAMED OVER,

Th* mnalo w u throb bin g anJ pulnlus;Tits flowon. *nd lht> jiillua, and 1lt« light

In uuoutb, wuml flours wo to rufluoUidThat jlortoua nala nltfbt.

With tba IragrwiM) ot ttxtua aliout bor,In bur dainty, puro wLlto gown,

&be WM, a* U whUperud to bur,"The prettiest girl In town-"

&bt nulled and fluahul and dueled it,Aa » vrvtty girl mmit tlo.

Bat hj hur h ia r f i d«ip mmUmUncD*Stio know that JJO tliutwht It ttni;

And Uiojr dauowl to Uiu tLrllltiiu IUUHIO-Oh, 1KB WW raiituru ll«:ul-

Whon alto wu the pruttimt girl Iu ( am.And bo w u Uiu Qrvi uC IJII^II

Tb«T p«rt«d with »n«uliib«l sorrow;Time dowixl tlie ckiudud nky.

Hut At Itwt ct(ht 'i >wll nl>e I!V<MI Bfoii)In UiU clittruiMl dnya gotio by.

H b SOD and bur Jnughtor wtr.iTbo girl IQ • pure whlto K J W ,

And eLo huard him aajr as thvy PB"Vuu'ru Uiu prcttluat tfrl In tuuul"

—Oaklund Echoo»

I ber,"

HOW GUNPOWDER IS MADE.

Tha r « r t That Kath of th* ThrM IncrodlenU t n tbe Kaploalve 1'lajra,

Ganpowdcr tias steadily developed aimechutiical skill oonutruoted tx!tU;r amibutter weapciiiB iu wbiob to UBO it, uuuntil toduy It lius reached a i<crfeoti«nof muuufiicturo for various purposevbich allows its effects to be foretokin tuty weapon, even to tbo time it tuku

grain ta barn and to tho distoura iwill drive a fihot.

Roger Bucon's gnnpowder was madiof saltpeter, sulphur and charcoul. Halt-peter is chumicttlly culltd niter mid ia abuturul product found betidi'd iu tinearth in different purls of tbo world,chiefly in India and Uiiiua. Sulphur,too, is found in a natural ntnte iu manyvolcuuio couutries, like tiicily, while,as ia well linowiij charcoal is niude fromWood or woody substiuices by lieutiugthem ftlniost to a burning heat in auairtiglit vessel, thus driving off every-thing in thoia but carbon.

SaltueUr, Btilphur and charcoal amstill tho only ingredients ot tho gun-powder in oouiinon use, although n uewgunpowder mode of different matcrioliis undergoing successful uipcriimmt. Amixture of saltpeter and charcoul alonewould form on explosive, and milplis addwl chiefly to make it plastiu orcapublo of being prosm-d into cakes andshapes. All tlirco iiignxlieutii lmvoto bopurified by tho moat caruful chuuiicutskill before they ure combined. Thouon exact projjortiojj of euch has to bemeasured out accordiug to tho kind ofpowder to bo nnule.

for tho gunpowder gniifiriilly ami youwonld find Iu every 100 pounds, if youcould separate tlio ingredients, 7pounds of saltpeter, IS pounds of char-coal aud 10 pounds of Bulphur, but itwould bo almost impossible to BOjiarutotho ingrodieuti), for they ore not merelymixed together as you might mis pepper and salt, but tbty nro ground uu<rolled and stirred and pressed togethuby special machines until they ore ulmoat Buffioieutly uuitwl to form a ein<glouow tiubatiuice.

Thin mixing process 1B called tritu-ration, and tho powder is thus madointo tbo form of big Out enkw, call&p s cakes, and then broken up andscreened into grains of special sizes, orground to tho flue powder used forBhot-guuB and rovolvcra Tbo large grainedpowders aro still furtlior atirrod togetlnuntil tho grainB become highly glazed,and these aro called cannon powders. Alighted match may bo hold to n grain oloaunon powder and it will be found al-

t Itupaeailiio to set It on lira, baouoo ignited it flashes off vorysuddenlyand violently.—Lieutenant John ALEULoott in tit KioholuB.

Th* Bmim Awmj.Tho Swiss army is comploto in every

detail,'it is said, tho medical, votnr-luary and oouiniiBsariat departments bo-ing thoroaghly organised, and this i:ipito of tbo fact that tho average cost ofa soldier ia only £7 a year, Tha firstline foroos iinniber an effective total of187,040 men; in the landwohr theroare 80,000 more, and In tbo l&udstumiH70tO0O. Besides, owing to tho encour-agement given by the state to Buoli iu-ititutioiifl as Cue Socletoa de Tir, soorl.every man in tlie country knows how tchandle a rlflo and U moro or less ot•joldior. Switxerland oould at the short-est notloe put into tho field and main*tain an army of. 160,000 men at leant,properly found and equipped. Whan thoSwiss twldier crossefl the threahold ofbis bourn, ho way be B»id to bo in fallmarching order, for bo keeps bis entlikit, .riflo—kuapaaak and olook—in Mahom^ and every man takee au inpride In having each article in goolooisditiou.—Pull Mall Gazetto.

Ble T H O M Paid b j MBfaalim.Fabulous pricea aro umotiinos paid

fox tha •ettutionaJ feataros in tiio mag-slues. A writer who claims to Bpcak'Ith full knowledge of tbe facta clniins

tho Century company paid $50,000 foriU.MLiroofLincoluI"t)lB,000 for tbo•orial righU to Mrs. Humphry Word1

novel, "Sir Gcorgo Treaaaday;" fromI960 on up to $760 for Kipling's verses,according to flltc Charloa goribuer1

Sons paid J. M. Barrle $35,000 for tho•oiiol rlgbta to "Sentimental Tommie;'Robert Loola Stevenson received $7,00for ono of tho scriala be sold to the Me-Olure syndicate. Other and equally re-markable prices are not lacking, Sno-OOH In literature nowadays means mouoyjust as oertainljr as dooa BUOGCAB iu otherpnrsuitJL It's all in the u n i and thofame.—FamilytJalL >

; ' AU Abo«> Low, -"Say, I'm in love," confided tba fare

dealer to tho lookout during a lallthe play.

!'Why,.you .don't know wbut loviIs," laughod tho lookont.

VDon'tyon. believe i t , " retorted thedealer. "Love is a gumo that Cupiddeals.; Ho bas a orookod layout, mid tbobank wins cvory bot If yon copixx acase in hia game,lt's niro to win; if youplay a cue open it looses, and you're inbig look if you don't got wbfpsawcd inevery turn. If a man culls tbo tnrn it's

1 to 10 shot ho drops dead"—NowOrleans Times-Democrat

A B « o l BrKUl Gift,• A good utoryis told of tlio Into Baron

Hiraob.' A. charming young girl, wellknown in- London Bociety, married anequally well known guardsman. Neitherwas overrioh. The baron's weddhtggift—at tbe instigation of the Prince ofWules—was a ipecial train to Couatnn-tinopJo and bank ttor tho hoaoymoonand a three wocka* Btay at the best hotelin Constantinople,—London Tit-Bits.

'• Oandllni; eggi is tbo ono Infallibleway to test them. This is deno iu adark room with a candle, gaa or electriclight When thQ egg is beld close to tbelight, if fresh It will appear a pinkishyellow, aud if otherwise it will .bo dot-tod With opaque spots or bo entirely dark.

By doing good with his money aman, as it wore, stamps the image ofGod upon It and makes it pans currentfor tbe merchandise of heaven.—Rut*ledm.;, .

Hiss Antique—How sad tho thoughtthat In. a hundred yean all wo know

'ill be gonelHlsa Pert—Conaolo yourself] Yon

will havo a .obonoo to moko now tto-qoaintanoes,—Detroit Free Press.

;. Whenever tbo invention admits of amodel, tbo inventor is required to fur-nish it, of a convenient slzo, to showproperly end to tho best advantage tho—arkiug of tho device. ; -

Toe oldest sou of a marquis takesnreoodonce over tha youcgnt fo* of nduke-- ' . .

OOBda&Md Testimony,Chaa B, Hood, Broker sad UumTaeturn-'i

Ooltunljus, Ohio, certifies t U t Dr.

J . D. Brown, Prop. Bt. J<UHMBotaJ, Ft. Wayoff.IzuI., tesUBuliiMt ha wuOBrtdofaooafhoitwojeariatandliiK causedby La Orfppt,-by Dr. KloK'aNev Dltoovery.

P . Harrill, BaldHlosrllle, Mae*., n y thatDCS tlisd and HOtwnmatvtwi It and DSver

NW U to <ii(aml wrald rather hava It thanany •toototv bataoH it tJwayi ouna, Mrs.Emoitm, 2*3 E. 15th BL Chicago, alwayikwpa It a t band and hia DO fear of Croap, b»-ttavltlastaatlyrisUarea. F r w trial Bottleimitb* Druf ttfotmot Robert Klllgoro. Jtonrmiy.N.Jmkh»,Cbt9t*r,t1.y. j

DAWFUSKIE ISLAND.IT H*5 A HISTORY AS THE SCENE OF

MANV INDIAN STRUGGLES.

Tlie Extreme flouthentern J'olut of SontbC»rt)liD»—TUt« Tntgcilj uf Illootlj I'ulut,Tbwt Wljwd Out K Wliole Trlbci uf Io-illsiu.

A new caiuliiiiifo for pulilie favor ifDnwfnHkio inluiid, ono uf tlio inlandsnot fur dis tant from Suviiniiuh nnd oneif tlio inuttt intt-'niHtiiig liistorioully.

DanfuKkio in Hit.' Indiuti minio of theIiuiil. I t id Htniin nixiiniL'H In lengthnil four mi lea in wid th , noted fur. its

tbli, oysters uiid cruhs and fuinouB oflute years for )1H ilwr Imnting. Tho In-

IB WITO very part ial to i t—tlmt is,judging from Iho inmmt]r>, tonmkuwkB,nrro\vli(>adt) and otlivr rclirn of thatruco ivhicli are Htill to txi found on theialaiid. It is tho HOuthonHttii-iiimmt poiof fcsmtli (Jititsliun, and di rmt ly OJIJ

Tybee IHUUH\, uud in what wuaformerly Ictiowu as Bt. L u t e ' s parinli,llcnufort distr ict , hut now li-gully desig-

itcd iui VeuinHSi'o tmviiHliip, lit-aufortcounty.

The Island v n s nt t>no t imo tho prop-orty ot tho JMiuiKin fiiniil^-, who Hcttlecit. about 17C0, mill up to tho !jrgiuiii,iL

of tho lute wivr i t wus divided Into BOV-crul jiluiitutioiiH und Inul it popin uddit iou to tho pluntera' funiiliea, olabout 1,000 HIUVCH. Kuvcrul plnnon otlio .HIIUKI aro fitiil owned i>y tiio do

uliintHof tlio Monginn, Uloody Pniulhy Wr. Mniigin Btuldurd and " "hy Mr. Alfic<l H . titmliliird.

Tho following story cf DawfuHkie is-Imitl ujipciiriul i u Tho Kloruing Nows oJ a n e 24, IHl'i, nnd is all of i ts earlyhiatt.ry tlmt cim ho found:

Tho musmuTo of Bloody Point,ugh pnviouti t o tlio Revolutioimr,

wnr, is Htill in t o n s t ing us n-lating t'tiio uiH'ic'iit history of &'t Luke. Th

ntltt of I'nrt Iloynl uiid Ht Holunwero )in;tty thickly MiUletl with whitepopulation w\wn Hil ton Jlfiul, DowDnskj1, Hiirktii 'y and tlio other neigh-borhifr ifiliuulH wcru hold in poBHoesioi:by ii few irialntod Indiiiua or wore nltogothorniiiiihutijted, Thoy formed nkimof netitrul ground bt'lwwn tho whitand red men. Tho Indium* from Gcorgiwero in tlio lnibit of making frequent

mils ti[rOii tho ivJiito Bt-ttlkilling tlio inliabitiuita und cniTyiug nITwh«t«viT plunder tli«y could (,'i.tlior. tothcirreniotcr hoincuiu tlio further Honth.Tlioy furuied lurgo wur imrticu tinwould proceed as fur north as HiltonHead Hero they would Kknlk about tilla fair cliuuco olForcd, when -they wouldcross IJroiid rivur and i-avago thb neigh-boring (HtttlemoiitH; hcuco tlio uanio otSkulk crock (iuid not Bknll, as is nowwritten).

"Tho Indians wero in tho linbit of re-turning to Skulk creek niter tliefio iu-vaHiona and would eludo purfluitmnoiijits uuuiuroasiiookfiaiidwiiidiuga. Upoiono of thcHo oa-iusiouB, aftor bavinoounnittol a number of murders andhaving loiiilcd tliuir canoea vitti what-over plunder they wero ablo to collecthaving Beuurod n quantity of "tiro wa-ter," it Is presumed, from tlio sequel,tlioy piifjscd through Skulk creek outheir return south without stopping ithoir old haunts mid uover halted untithey reaohi'd Dow Dusky, where tbo:thought thoy would bo beyond tho roue!of tho whitcB.

• 'A vary strong aud determined partyof wliitcH went iu pursuit tif thcut. Oureaching Hilton Head ttiey learned froma fow IndiiuiB of u friendly tribo thatthoir eiiemica bud not halted, but hadproceeded on south. Having inducedthese friendly Indians to join them wguidon, tlu<y coutinuod their pnruuilfurther south. Wliou tlioy hail (jouoas fur UH Dow Dusky, thoy discoveredfrom tlio ainoko of their camp tlmt tlioIndiana Juid haltrd nt Iho BODtliooEtpoint of tho inland. ' ':o whites lnudcdon tbo northwest p<. i mid marchedtoward tlioir miuuiicH. Tim Indians hiput all thoir bouts u slioit distanooup whut IH now* known as Now river,to avoid tlio surf wiifcli unmka upoutbo point Tho Indium were ut tho ox-troiuo i>oiut, uujcying tlieiuxolvea iu nnumvauted round uf conviviality aiifeoHtiiig. Tho whites approncliL-d can-tionely ami stoaltliily, and, having gotbetween tlio Indiana aud tVMr boat*,offcotually cut ofF tlieir retreat. ,tdiowcr of bullet it was tho first intimition tlmy hud of tho presence of on en-emy. They wore shot rtowu, buyouotcd,Haborcd tmd wero finally driven into tlie

"Tho surprise waa complete; the inns-sacro WUB dreadful; Iho wliite-aandswore crimsoned with blood, and tho2iirtti was strewn with wounded,, dyinand dcud. A few, very fow, eacuped Lyswiianiiug, aomo to the opposite marsh,and ono Bvram entirely over to Tybee, adiattmoo of three miles. From tho dread-ful enrnngo ut this Bpot it received thooamo ot bloody Point, which it rvtnluato thiB time, it being Uio extreme south-eastern point of SoutJi Carolina. Afterthis decisive victory, tho settleuicuta totlio north of Drond river received nofurther molestation from tho southernIndiana., und noon after Hilton Head it-self began to bo settled by tho whites.The Indians who escaped, iinviug col-lected, utter n lopso of somo time, re-turned to Hilton Hcud, and, flsaingonly two of tho tribe who lind guidedtho whites in their pursuit, avenged thedownfall of their own tribo by destroy-ing both of tlicm. Thoy then returnedsouth aud tfurc lost eight of ever of tor.Baob is tho tradition iu St. LnkoV—Savannah News.

AN AMUSING DEBATE.

WEDDING IN NORWAYAN HONORED GUEST TELLS OF ITS

AMUSING FEATURES.

Tha Sutyect W M BOHOD» EnooBh, ba t (heSilufttloD W M Comical.

Whcii, iu (JJO old day a ot trouble be-twoeu tho English aud French, therewas talk of Bending Admiral Hnwko toma to koop watch over tho enemy's fleet,there occurred a notable interview. 1

November. Thowcatherwasslorm;and dangerous far vessels mid tho goveminent was not agreed an to sendingthorn out

Mr. Pitt, who was in bed with gout,was obliged to receivo thuso who hadbusiness with him in hischiuubcr. Thisroom hnd two beds uud no flro. TimDukn of KowonBtlo oaino to hiai to con-sider tliQ Fending out of the fleets andhad scarcely untered tho TOOIU whoa hocried ont, shivering ull over with cold

"How is this? No flro?""So," said Mr. Pitt. "When I havo

tho gout, I cannot bear ono."

Tho duk'o, wrapped iu his cloak, tooka seat by the invalid's bedxido and bo-gan talking, but ho found himself un-able to endure tho cold.

"Pray allow mo I" ho exolaimwl sud-denly, aud, without takingoDhiH cloak,he buried himself in the other bed andcontinued tho conversation. Ho wasstrongly opposed Nt tifklag tho fleet intho November gnloK. Mr. Pitt was abso-lutely resolved that it should put to sea,and both argued tho matter with muchwarmtli. It was tho only warmth, in-deed, in Uio room.

" I am positively determined that thofleet ahull nail," said Pitt, accompany-ing his words with tho most lively ges-Uculatious.

'-'It in impossible! It will pwisb!"snfrl tho dnhc, with equal emphasis.

At tho moment tho discussion waxedhottest another diguitury of the realmcnino in and found it difficult to keepbis COUIIUMIIUICO ut UIQ night of twoininifltera doli berating oil a matter of so

ivo iuiportunce from EQCJI a novol aft-antiou.

Tho licet did put to Bea, nnd Mr.Pitt's judgment proved to be right Thoenemy was crippled und n signal ad-

auUifje gained.—Yonth's Companion.

8100 Btwird, «100.The reftdcr of tbli papar will be pltMed tfl

jam that tbereliatlMstonedrMueddlMOMthai nl&tioe b u been atils to cure la all ittstagM, and that Ii CaUrrb. Hall1* CaUrrbCore »the only potltlfa euro known to U»medical fraternity. Catarrh belo[( a ntutl'tutltnul dlauw. r*qul« a coustlnitlaiialLrwtnient. Hall's CaUrrbUure U taken in-ternally, acting directly on tbe blood androcoooi mirfacea of tba ayitem, thsrehy de-strojlofr tbe foundaUcn of Urn duwuM, andgijtog the vaUiab tlnogVa by bolJiiog up

is oonBtltntloa uid emlitlaft nature hi dilogta work. Tbeproprfoton bava BO much f tltEa IU cantive powen, that they offar Ou»Itmdred Dollan fgr any cage that It fall* to!iire. Bend for tMtlmoolab. Addrvn

P. J. CHRNBY & CO., Toledo, 0.ld b j DniHliti 76c

Tbe Spirit of Reielr j B D U Hl*b,*iiiFntlvltlM L(wt Until ETCITIXMIT la TiredOut—Drinking tl>« Health of tfa* »WeddMl p»lr.

A conatry iredding fa Norway it aninteresting siffht to behold, tuid, beeidoabeing amuHiug, I flhould think, La quiteuniquo in lta way. It ia uot BO mnobtlio actual church ceremony, althoughthttt ia strango enough in its Hlmplicity,ta tho nftoiprocL^KliiigswUloh fiudfeuchchunns for the fitrouger.

When 1 wiifl (ruvelitig in tbo neigh'Lorhood of tho great Justedal glacier,M-tm invited to join in some weddingfestivities, and the jirivilego of beiugtho honored guest is oiio I tdiull not eoouforgot

I waa rather behind my time,when I reached tlio village the goodjit-oplo wero roturuing from tbo otorcii.The first thing I caugUt fflgnt of wan atroop of gayly dreiaed pion ttnA womencollected Iu tbo Btrcot and marchingalong ta tbo tnuefl of an tuitiquo fiddla.tiomo wore duncing, eouio wcro aiuglng,urn) the older lnlmbitauta, who had

i tlio figc when each frivolitioeno longer chnrui, wore puffing »wny &tthoir curious, long, wooden pipes, tbe oldwomen enjoying Uio fumes of smoke, ifuuyiiiing, mom tJian the men.

Tlie younger girlxwero most gorgeous-ly arruyud in snow white eajw and mass*ivo ornumcntB uf gold. Their drosseswero guy with every color of the rainbow. AU tlio musical aocoinp&nim&nwas supplied by ono old fiddler, bntthotio fliuiplo folk enjoyed tho erraticsqueaking every hit on much as If it hudbeen tlio flnoBt orchoetro Iu tlio worldunder tho charge of BQIUO oelebrutod con-ductor.

Tho now mado vlfe, covorod withblushci-, looked sweetly picturesque Inher bright rod Bkirt and finow wbitobpdicc, &u4 her jewelry tinkled likifairy pytjilmlH ps, shn walked or rnthorgoutly swayed along.

Her most conspicuous ornament WftB|io bridal crowu, which it is tbe aniH

tiou of every vlHugo girl to wear. It iitlio property of tho wliple parish And higDjjerullyppdor thocliiir^pof thoprloflt,who htmds it over just befoia tbo cor&-utoiiy. High abovo tho tunideu'R beadit utpod, looking uiopt lujpiiHini/, iu tliesnn glistened ou tho miwy jewels whichwcro iot urouud i t

I joiuod the merry throng, the mearafsiug Uiuir cups and tho women cour-teByliiB low wheu they cuuglit Bight ofmo. Tlion I followed tbo party tip somenarrow steps to tlio first floor of a bigthatched barn belonging to tbe fatherof the bride. An old oak oliair wasdragged forward to receive my portlypentou, and I sat mo thoro and wonder-ed grontlywbat on earth was comingnext.

Tba villagers ranged themselves roundtho long, low room, on one ildo tiiogirls, oppoflito them tho youug men, thematrons at tiio top and tlio elders atUio bottom. Then the bride rotircd. ofcourse- accompanied by her husband,and changed her ceremonious garmentifor lighter attire. I thought her wisowhen I BOW what followed.

Whoa tho pair returned—and daringthoir absonea thoro was alienee in thoborn—a Jingo bowl was offered . to moflllcd with tbo natioual beverage. . Ilooked at it aghast. Was I to drink itnil? Thoy Intimated I was to with tinhealth. I touched it with1 my lips. Thenthe bride bent her pretty head and tooka sip. Tlmt OJJO taate w u enough totmo. But thero was uoro to coma.

They signod that I was to go ondrinking. I shut my eyes and did sa,Between every two drafted tlie bridebowed bur head and oourtoaiod beforemo. At lost it seemed I might feavDoSaBut, no; I had to go through, it allagain with tho bridegroom until thebowl was empty.: Aud when that tlmacame I was heartily glad, for tbo drinkwas strong, and a liking for it is mostsurely one that eonld only be acquiredby long acquaiutAUoe. >

And now tbo husband lod his brideinto tho middlo of Uio room and trip-ped ono of those graceful pal uoux pecul-iar to tho country.

At lost, bob and fluahod, they stoppedand stood before mo. A tiny elWer cupwas bold out, and I « u asked to drinktheir health again, this time in oognaa'I did so without daring to think of themorrow.

This was tlio Blgnal for the dancingto commence in earliest. Only four peo-ple—two men and twowomoa—-were allowed to dauco at cue timo, but as BOOHas they stopped, exhausted, others slippediu .and took their places, and the oldfiddler aoraped away until I thought lili

•m must break.Presently thero waa a lull Two won*

on, dressed iu g*uxy, wavy dresses, stop-ped into tho middle. Thoywero tho vil-lage dancers. Then followed A marvel-ous exhibition of high kicking. It wua veritable triumph In the torpeioho-rean art; for every few stops, they tohob-cd tho oeiling with their shoes, and toelouder the oliok of their ihooa tbe Loud-er came the applause. And to the nighthours slippod away unheeded. Danoe fol-lowed dauco and song followed song,until at lost they oould koep awake nolonger, and, with a kiss to the brideand tho bridegroom, one Mid all depart-ed—Hartford Timflg,

FHEAK FACTORIES.

[•-/• Wo Trosbl* l a tarMla*Haw AttrtMtloM.

"How do you mouago to find newfreaks and curiosities?" w u the ques-tion asked of tho manager of a travelingBhow that had pitched ita tent in aLoudou suburb.

"Don't have to find .them,*' was thelacouia response. "Thoy find as. Thefreak business in OB regularly establishedtut any other and bas its wholesale andretail firms, traveling solcMmoa, brokers,price lints, factories"—

"Factories?" queried tho reporter,aghast

"Why, certainly, factorta, of oot_._The freak business is divided into about

varieties—foreign, domestic audfake.

"In tbo first class the colleotow travelall over the world iu Beareh of rarities,bnt the very best freaks ooiae from In?

mil Uio MnJay-penJuiraJa. In thesecountries there are people who breedfroaka. They bny young children andanimals and deform them while theirbones are soft br all manners of meani.Then they aru cnnntantlyou the outlookfor geunino uatural freaks, aud In thoselanda tbo birth of a freak occurs veryfrequently. Tho headquarters1 of tblibufliuesa.is at Singapore.

"Then thoro aro any uumboi of menwho devote themselves to the discover-ing and-placing of freaks of. all kindsand varieties, and there ie scarcely aday goes by that wo .do not-receive,packages of photographs and illustratedcirculars from some freak merchant orother. • ,

"Of course thoro are the faked freakmon—a perfect host ia themselves. Iftbo proprietor of some little show needsAH additional attraction and does nothave the money to hire something good—for, liko everything else, freaks baretheir price—ho can get something forlittlo money that will Berro bis purposo.

"Tho real, gnnuino live freaks alwayscommand high.prices.aud travel allcrcr tho world in order Ut exhibit thorn-selves. Most of them have regular routesmopped ont by their, advance. BRenti,,juBt liko theatrical companies, and uthey only appear at a place at long in*tervals^they never get stale, and some*' UCB moke bigger hits on. their ncoond

third appearance than on their first"—London MaiL

The Bevero itching and smarting pro*dnced by being polmmod with try oakor dogwood may bo relieved by washingtho parts' affected with a solution *offoloratuawatov-a teaspoonruLi tea pintof water—anA then applying olothi wotwith extract of witch hrtBoV *

Ail oaveata.ara drawn.up in «nbaia&<.tially tho samo form oa appllpaHbni forinventions, muit poataUj., d e a i ^ i fand models, and each most beto •linffli dlworcry or l

BABY INCUBATOBS.A PHVSICI/H TEUS OF THE CON-

BTHUCTION AND OPERATION.

Tha Appanttoa la Teiy fllmpla *o4 Jnez-poulve, bat AtUadmoa la Coat i r - InAddition to Bftvlu; m u r e , Eati, inonb*-tioo Ooatrlbul«a Cmtui Knowledso.

In Bliorp contrast to Ihe lavish reck-lcsHucsa with which noble, splendidlives are often sacrificed to some futile,ignubla cause, is iho infinite vigilanceand care, the ingenuity and skill thatare somotimesexpondedDponpreservingand fanning- into flame a Jittlo sparkthat htm hardly uttaiuod thv dignity ofbeing called a lifa

: Doubtless most are familiar with thometal receptacle * by 8, standing onfour lugs about waist high, with a emailwater pipe and iwating apparatus ouone side and a oold air pipe and addl-tioual apparatus on the other known asthe infant lucubator. Bnt perhaps fowrealise the patient skilled watching fuidtha consequent eipeaao oocossary to tbflbringing forward of the littlo imnite,until It shall bo able to take its plooe intha world as a real "live aud kicking"baby.

At tho first appearance upon life'sstage of this speak of humanity "soaroohalf made up," it 1B swathed in a bun-dle ol absorbent, cotton, aud laid Iu Hilittlo nest, witu nothing to distract itsattention but a perfectly ucenrata ther-mometer, to which It, however, seemswholly indifferent The glass lid is thenalmost closed. Experience has taughttho physicians that it Is bettor to leaveit open a littlo Bpaoe.. A trulued nurseat once takes bet place by tbe aide ofthis uuiquo object and keeps constantguard over temperature, conditions ofair, eta Absolute .quiot and a subduedlight ore among the reaaimuenta. Thotemperature may roji^a fotn 00 to S8degrees. In caaes of low vitality it' iskept at 08, and with tho most robust isnever allowed to go below 60 degrees.Tbeii every hour tho little obargo, mustbefed. This issometiuica'aoooniplisbed,by meaiis of a droppttr, b'pf nioro pttoua littlo mbbnr toba i« pawed throughfho mouth aqdctKiuhaguH }ptpt)ie ptonvacb, and. iuto Uiia tu,bo (ailpwly poureda flrawi nfcmrt & tcospoonful, of pro-iiorod food, Thus in tlie 94 noun aboutthree oupoea of food, aro absorbed. Thisfood itt luodo After a formula arrangedhyamuvt ex|x>rtclieniiat and change*from day to duy Rccoraipg to the dovlopmetit of tbe baby.

Every 80 hours the little gown of ab-sorbent cotton in exchanged fora per-fectly fresh ouo of tho same material.The food and clothing of this embryopcreouago are not, therefore, great hillsof oipense, but its lodgings, its physiolan and nurses taoke' up a pretty iratnfor its indulgeut parents.

It will easily he seen that tho onlyrequirements for raising a baby In aninontiator aro a perfectly : even, hightcmiwraturo, pure air aud a food thenearest approach poeaiblo to its naturalfood. Bat simple as this sounds it haitaxed every resource of the best engi-nooring and sanitary aatlioritlcs, thefinest bacteriologists and chemists inthe country to arrive at tbo presentstaty of advancement An. Incubator ui t i s now perfected costs about 9S00. Afew firuis have them to rent, and as thedemand for them is naturally small onemay be rented at any time. -

Dr. Kolch, who is responsible formany of the locetit improvements of theinoub&tor, has boon very niooessful initsnao. Ho inBiata upon having alwaystwo traiocd nurses, BO-that no momentmay there be tho risk of a ohaugo.bconditions which might torn h Jthe wrong way. This of iteehT means•fiP a week, and the time of IncubationIs usually, from two mouths to tenwopks. But tho haby.ao saved wanes,intime to be quite the equal ot his follow*who followed tho good, old fashionedwaya

. Hospitals cannot boast as great, •DO-OMS from thoir experience with tnca*baton, although, several iuoludo onoamong titoir..appliances*•.•In the firstplaodiit la cften a case where Jhe tinyMohammed j must gDto.tbe mowtain,and U Is alniost inpoasible to aooompUshthis without some UtUe exposure. Theninmost oaus the child has not. onlypremature- birth to struggle with, butthe wont factor of having oomefrom illconditioned, badly nourished and oftenintemperate 'parents. - Besides, no nonein a hospital, no aoore of nurseav can soarrange that ooe. afaall alwaya tavo aneye ou the thennonwter; and tha 60 ormore full blown babies will not upondemand refrain their voices from weep-ing out of consideration for the Bonsl-tlvcuoss of their delicate littlo comrada

Tiio hospital people ate sometime*asked.why theyiuke so great an effortto save the livai of these pooi littlecrearares who, at the ba^t, must eater,tfaetooeof lite •fearfully handicappedThoii MHunwnt, ot.oooreo, ia thot thotiuiwt life hi embryo has a right to itschanoo; but tbehvjUiterost Is doabtleMlargely: scienUQpt -! Physioians , fromMaine tp CiUiforrUa, from the St. Uw:renoe to the gait, ,»re oonfltantly, lookingto tbeso, lu»pit«^;/ur tho latest and bestreaalta.of: their»tesBprohss> and export-monU... aud^y-.st^djinjj.the ^roatmontand. patching .^.development .of oapeehere,.tho incubattiig proposs, included,,thoy may 1» able, to /save many a Ufo.nearer jboma. t Besides, who can foretellwhothor,UK tiay ajtom may nc | turn outaliioooln or aWsgnen^woll us a com*

WbataRitBtqunnlltyof work a "goodboustkecptr" fiudato do I There arcto many little linic-and-BtrenKth-tntiiiBchores that have no

, Bam us. And it must*nll be do«c whether.the housckct-iicrfetls like it or tioLThis is inie oi men'iiwork too, but uitn'iimanual Inlior inncversoconiiilknteu

housekeeping, lame way or olhcr:be world's work

.us t be done ."'This iron-clad rule isbd

menA

I t WGll E

border on wotliiin it in oifinc

man esa ' t be aa tick &..Afl B msji'i) orguuiiiliun is simpler and

•trotiKcr, it follows llmt l ib ailtiiuiilfl nrul e u complicated. He in not subject to thechances end changes, physiologically, thatcome to the average wuttian.

If a woman 1B ia gaud health there U nomore heaJlLfiil tmploymtnt than liouse-vork. Generally spi-uklng. tlitie is no hniv-

an In the world man the one who. . _ind busy all day Ions "makingborne" for denr ouea who depend ujxinlier. But how different when tvery brL-atUia pain, every step torture I This state (ifhealth, In nine cosci out of ten comes fromicrapgemetiu of the delicate, feminine or-gmiu of Reneralloti. Tbe family dociur in-quire* first concerning tbeM. Ik- moataawuly insists upon u t "examination."From thiB the modest woman naturallyBhrinkt. Sin ' " ' " " 'unusual cascu _. ._ -•ml&alionn are unncccstary. Dr. J'lerce'iFavorite Prescription is a simple, naturalremedy COT these ills. It cures gradually,ufely, permanently. Here is oiic testi-taoniu out of thousands:

She is right. Excepting in veryascs of '^female weakness " cx-

I,yrae Center, Or a ftBend i i ctnu (n onr-ccnt i(nmp« to World'

PUpeoBarv Helical Auorialluu, liuffhlo, N. Vana receive Dr. 1'icrcc'n rooH ringc COUJID

Co., K. II.

World"*

monplace Smith or'JonM?—M. D. inOhicagoBeooxd.,;/

At tho final rehoanal of Monrt'aopora, MDoa Qlovannl,"ithe oomposerWM'diMatiifled'lirith tho efforts of theyouug lady to whom the part of Zerlinawas assigned. Zerlioa' Is frightened atDon Giovanni'^ too .pronounced love-miking and cries lor uaistanoB,' behindthe scenes. Mbawtwas unable to Infujosuf&61«nt' force,'into' the poor girl'sscreams, until at lftBt,:loiing aJl pa-tienoe,,he' clambered from the oondnct.or'sdesk:.OB to the boards. At that peri-od «, few'UUow candles dimly glim-mered among.th«'daBsJ|, ot the muil-oiana, bat over tbe .stage and tbe'restof tho hotaie almost utter; darkooMrelghod. JCowrt^^saddeti appearance.on tha stage w u theroforo not suspectedby poor Zorliiul.wbol'at the momentwhen the ought to hivo uttered the cry,r e i d from the ootuposec.Jtshavp

tb itti Jlp ppinoh on tbe arm, emittinf Jlsoonse-qucooe a ibxiek whfchc«Bwd. him toeioUim:"Admirabler Mind you •creamliio that toolghtl'l ••', '•'•'•;:

: M8l Babiarq, told n»e that he got aheap of work out of you whon yon waiwotkiu for him, ? atJd ,lbe iVtmeV.*-:

" W K J , 1 aUow.ha •4id,« aald thebitedman. . ••; t

"Yaaa Pactii, IffOMbe Jirtabontgot it alL •'—-Indlanapolia JoaruaL

; A. pnater nnmbor'of men than ofwomtobeoomestoat Ute.in life. NoMtisfutoryezpliuuitioi.'of tbiilaotilQgercd. . -•• •- . .-,.• -.

IK, profusely Uliuiimletl.

K s k s u t « d Boll, Bo Cal led .

It Is a common wny of speaking oftlio soils of nhundmted tanm, and cfOthers thaty(eJrtonly uiipralUnulocropsthat th,oy are Vf tiri) out, eilumfited midalinoat Vftluo]p|fflfor thopnrpom'H of cul-tivation, TWfl canilition of biirrouiioHSis more, apparent than real and lins Ixrnproduced by ft treatment oa fluporflciulas tlie vi(t\y of thofloso ready to condemntlio noil Ju tlio curly days of milling InCuliforula tho imruiticut gold Rockers,with fade Rppuratus and primitivemethods, collected such q&nutitirs ofIho precious metal an came cosily totmml Hiicl<ornool( th"fr claims, lmivingbebind IK tho oarth fur moro gold thanthoy carried away. Iiinfterywira othersmoro skillful havo guthen-d nbnndautwealth from thoso forsaken flr.-Ids. Somo-tliing of tbo same nature will yet bu tic-complifthed upou thooBiiiids of acres ofNew England soil now lightly valued.

An aero of soil, going down a footdeep, oontAJna approximately 2,700 toiiaIn lta 40,000 ar moro ouhla foot, orabout 184 pounds to the cubio footChemical analysis domoimtrutes thatthis qoantity of Burface earth, iu an or-dinary average soil, coutains about4,000 pounds of piioflpliorio aciil, 6,000pounds of potash and 10,000 pounds cfnitrogen. These ingredients, if pur-chased at usual market prices, mightcost 4 cent* a pound for tho potash, 7oeata for tho phosphoric acid, IS centsfor, tho DltrogeiL At these rates, tboaggregate value bf tlleso tlirco substancesin a thin tmrfaoo aero, only a Bingle footin dapth, would be (2,000. As tho goldheld In quartz wufl beyond tho reach ofthe unskilled miner, the tabahw wealthof tbo soil is largely uuavallablo to thoontldllod farmer. But tho treasuro 1Bthere, to bo secured by tho fanner ofthe futoro, Tbo HUH of f 200,000 wouldbo thought a pretty liberal valuation ofan ordinary 100 aero farm. Thoro niomany such forms in Connecticut cheaplyvalued by Dwaera who littlo npprouiatotbo, wonderful oapabUitics af tho soilthoy call exhausted.—Hurtford Times.

' lrt.h H«aor.*;7on should get yotir oarsloppod,

Brian," Raid a,"mnart" tourist to an-Irbih peasant whom ho was quizzing."They're too largo for a man." "Au,bedad," replied the Hibernian, " I wasJnitjthiiikln yours would want to bomade larger) Snro they're too small foran aMt"

Buncy wai a noted car driver at awell known Irish watering place Boheld that the "salt watbor" was vastlyImproved by mixture with a "drop oftbe oraythur," but would not commitbitnielf to tbo opluion that Uio latterelement; gained anything by tha com-bination. Ho Bomctitnos drank moro ofit "neat" than was wise or woll for tbofather ot hia weak family. One hotday; after n long drivo and a liberalfare, Barney turned into tlio best bur iutown aid asked for a "sprinkle, just tokeep down tbe dus t" Tlio proprietor,who wonld rather have otbet customersthan poor Barney, camo in aa tbo latterwas,raising tho gloss. "Barney,11 bosaid, Vl'dratheryou wouldn't be drink-ing,' my boy. You know yon wore carryfor it before, and 1 suppose you'll bo•onyforthuitoo.1" " " "

AMBERGERI4T-I49 MARKET 5T

C0MINUATI0N OF OUR

Mid Summer Bargain SaleTrioo cnttinf! extraordinary in order to refince our stock to th

BmalleBt possible limits.

BARGAINS OF UNUSUAL GREATNESS

In every department from HonsofurmBliings und China Wsro itbe basemant tg UpliolstGry nnd Looe Onrtaina on the foarth floraA. perfect mine of savings awaits you here while this great »n!e is inprogress. Froa dolivarios everjwhere and mail orders promptly filled.

L. BAMBBRGER & CO.147-149 MARKET ST.. - - - NEWARK. N.

CrippleTho Iron #rasj» of pcrofiila has no

mercy upon its vidiniK, This ilenwiio | the blond 1B nf It'll not sutififlcri wllliFuuKhf dreadful wrt-H, bu t VMMH theuody with liii! \u\\m of ihwiiimunti l HUOII'H yitrwipndllu airtis.

•i Nearly four years ago I became af-flicted witU Bcrofula aud rheumatism.

MadeRunning sorea bro to out on my thlgbaPlocefl of bone came out and an operationWas contemplated. 1 hnd rheumatism IDmy legs, drawn up out ol»hui>o. 1 lost ap-petite, could not ulecp. I waa a perfectivrwjk, I continued to grow worse andfinally gave up tbe doctor's t r ta t intnt to

Welltake Hood's HaranparlllA. Boon appctltcame back; tho sores coinniGnccd to heal.My Hmis elraJgljtcned out and I threwawny my crutches. I nm now stout andhearty and am farming, whereat* louryears ago I WHB n cr fppk I cliidly ruo-omroend Hood'n Hariinimrllln.1' On HAMI U M M O M J , Table Orove, Illiuoii.

re pliod Barney,"Begorro.Imlghfc,"

'bat, Bcro, it's saferto be wtrrr for tftkbi 11 tban for not tak*tq It 1"—Westminster Gasotto.

^, The collection of religiotu roliostobe'floen in. tbe church of thoCoraicanVllhtga of Sioco U undoubtedly uulqao.Tita .tnhibiUDte ot thii ptvttr Jittlol Are exnoedlngly devout and vory

which probably aoootuits for thorf b kb l ll

p , pypow«loti (rf snob ft remarkable oolloo-tloa A writer iuL'IudoponrJeace Belgogives the following list of tho prinolpaliteim:. ' . .

bo horn used by Mows to call t^get ]er the children of laral while Inthe| depart; a tuft of tbat rod bnir whichwit the prido of Eeau. and tho despairof jJaoob; a piece cf the nail of the lit-tlo toe of tho left foot—the statementUierypreoiflc—of Enoch, tho patriarch;the bib worn by tbo infant Jeans; tliobod) and trapper of tho na that tooktbd holy family Into Egypt, and severalrelies of varfooj saint*.—Pitteburg Dia-path.

Hood'sSarsaparilla

Is tho One True Mood 1'urlDor, All druggists, f l,I'rejmn-ilonly l>y C. I.HoodS; i%., Jewell,Mass,Hoed's Pills IZ,,'

ART IN ST. PETER'S.

Thar* Are Few rictnrci ar FIMODCI Intlie OrtiBt OathrxlnL

Nothing jwilinpn isruoro Btrikiiig asono becoiiiefl le t ter nc(*naiu(<«J with Ht,Pnlcr'B tlimi Iho constant vnriuty of do-talL Tbe vast building p r o d u c e nt flrseight an inipresslon of hariuony, andtiicro nppours t o be a reaiarkablo tini-formity of stylo iu all tlio objects onesees.

Thoro arc no oil pnlntinga to speak ofin tho oliurch and b n t fow frescoes. Tbogrout al tnr pieces are almost piolosivclyfluo uiOBaic coplca of famous pictureswltieli KropreflervrdoJsowJtero. Otthesoreprodnctioiiri tbo beet is generally con*sidorcd to bo tha t of Qu.croino'B "S t .Fe t ro t i i l l a" at tlio end of tlio r ight aieloof tho tribniio.. Dosurossos praises t 'mosaio nltnr' piecrs extravugnutly, aiirlovon exprCFWH tho opinion tlmt tlioy oreprobably superior i n imlut of color tothe origluals, from which thoy nro copied. I n . execution they nro certainlywoiidorfu'l, uml niauy u etrniigor looksat them ion] immumon bolinviug themto bo oil puhitiiiHR.

They ]HWW'SH tlio qnnlity of boing v.poHsliublo and btyontl itll inllucueo ofclinmto ar Jumpni'ss, and they lira itorpiecea of iiicuiinnical wnrltnniimhip.B u t many will Hunk ifnun linnl :uiiHyinpnthctlc in [inllino nnd ilccliledlycmdo In color. Much wi t lias l<ecn tnmi-ufucturod by iho critics a t tlm cxpeiistof Galdo Jlcui'B " M i c h u t l . " for instance, nnd us iiiiuiy ahurn things couldbo said nuout n KUWI many other work)of the eimio kind iu Iho tlmixti. Yut;un tho wholo, they do not iK-Ntroy thogeneral Imraiunj. Win » s they are, wliei.tlicy nroKri'ii froniti littlo diritunci1, tlicylink into mere timgiiiUciint jinrfllics

color, nil but last i u ilmrfcrp vlcliiof1 tho whole.—Muticn Cruv-fordCentury. • • •.

The loM of hay in thb] country fromfkilnre on tho part of fanners to ro-ut to the iua of proper bnplomenta iatutoallf. very large, nay is a crop that iknit be .mowed, cored and stored underujny disadvantages *no\ of ten in a Tory I

•hdrt period of tlma Snoh work canuot |always be done onlees eyory applianceneoewary , f or haryciting tho crop ia 'available. •- Ou farms where birgo cropsare grown the mover, tedder and rale 'add to the value of tho hay by assistingto pore it Ui a manner to preserve thewhole of itBnutritionamattor. Properly'coxed hay 1B nut found on all farms.

i ' COM be a Goodpkeletods? , Thoy aro prepared for

tbe oao ot physicians and medical fitn*dehtv. and tho best come from Pariaand cost from $S5 to $50. The medicalprtfe«ioti prefers them totheAmerioan.mike, which can be bad for IB or «10,for the Frenchman bai mastered tbo ee-oret of trc&tiag tba bones so that, thoya n shorn?of all offensive odors. ThoAmerican has not yet discovered thosecret, and tho demand for his productt» devoted solely to the poorer olnasoa ofstudent* and doctors, secret organisa-tions and artiste.—Kansas City World. |

. ' •" . / ' : Ambltloiu. ' ' - . . 'i "Onr new oook-hna gone olroady. Vt"Wbatwaflthoiaattcrr'" - : -1 " Whoa sbo fonnd we bad a gas Btove

ihn wrnit,' Bhri bnd fanmod n ton cf conl nreek in each of. her former places, andfc' said nhe had to bo where sho oonld

op tohor rooord "-Philadelphia^Keoord - '

1 • Fnawllti .1 Briggs-^fDoes ytmr wiffl Inaghwhoa

yon tell her a fanny Btory? . 'fjtlniKgs—Oh,jm I always tell boribeforehand that ' i t is funny.—Indian-iwoHs Jonmat ;

* j ' • BuoUan'a Arnica Salve.JTta Bm* 8alv* In tfat world for Cnto,ftnlM, Barm, Uloen, Bait Bbmun, Fever,Boru, T«ttar, Ck*pr*d hatuU, ChOblalu,X f c d U B l d E t U d pvely

< p y q d . Ithgctran-Utd to gin pvfsot latlifvtJan or mmwr n -faijaiN^PrloiaScwitipBrbox, Voimltbylotwrt KlOm, DroccUt,, Sonr, B, F.Ml.-TakiM, OkMhv D J

ia the title of a story, writteifor the manufacturers of

HOKESBCM-1"™MEAT,by; one of the most humorouswriters of the day. It \vibe sent free to anyone senting address and naming thpaper. , . . .

•JMRELUSOULE CO.,SnieuH.N.V.

AmmtenrVlt wofl goneriilly tlioaght tpro or

three yenra ngo," mmarks tlio Syracusetost, "flint amateur pliotoprnphy wonld(tin oat, OB hasiuiuiy another OHIEC, Imttboroveraohas bpfiiitbocofla AiUionghthoro is uot tho fnstt miulo over it tlmtthoro formerly was, raoro people havoyielded to MB fasclAationa (luring tholnstyeur than over beforp.". Itisilonbt-IOM tmo that photograpby iaiiot tho fadtoday that it onco was. Tho kodak fiendIs not so commonly soon mi wns tho COROa fow years ngo, mid of coarso tbo hj.cyblo ranBt bonr tlio bunion of tlio cnin-era'a lews of popularity^ , Novertholcsatboro is Bomcthhig so ftweinnting ahontphotoRrapby that i t ia hardly probablethnt it will over die ont until BOILO nownnd better way of reprcdaoinfr tlio facoof natnro U discovered, Tliono porsouswho adopted tho ouiuora JUHL hecuusotlicir ncfghboTB did have given it up, asmight havo been expected. Tanso samopeoplo will eventually grow tired of. tbobicyolo or oC anytbinfr CIBO. Novelty iswhat they Book, and asisoon as Uio new-D0H8 wenrs off tho thbghna DD fnrthorattrootiona. Butforpersonflwhohnvontmtothnt lvay.photography i s ' ever anovelty. There ia alwnys Bomo nowPioccBB to try, somo now experiment tomuko, and tha real cuthoBiast novctrwearieaof his camera. Tlio amateursaro lnrgoly rcHponuiblo for Uio greatprogress made iu phulogrnpby, ani it isa fiwt that until the amateur enteredtho floia the pnifcasionalfl know only therudiments of thair art. The root camnrn"crank" is not eatinfled to nlwajn fol-low. Ho must oxpcrininnt and Beok toproduooiiow offecta, and i t Isthb^possi-bility of invention and discovery thatcotiBtitntea the greatost oharm of thoJ*wt ia»TrafTiqas

I wish to impress upon yoithat it is a mark of rare distinction to be catering frontone season to another withstock of shoes that are im-mediately recognized to be otfie same season's mT :A newly made shoeworth from $1.00 to $1.5more than an old stock shoeas it is attested over and overagain by the hardiest peoplcoping from the surroundingneighborhood.

J.O.KAMINSKI,Dover, N. J.

CURE VOUR COUQH

DR. EDWARD'STAR, WILD CHERRY

$ AND NAPHTHA

COUGH SYRUPIU pleaiant and agrenblo taato, lU> loothlag

and eipwtarant qualltlu, IU vegetable

, propertlei and its certain cutattTO

action render It one of tho most

dwdrable couth nmedtM of

tbBday.

Price 25o. t 50c. and $1.00 p*r twill

MINING MACHINERMORRIS COUNTY,

Machine & Iron Co,

AIR aOMPSEBBOBS,. . est efficiency.

ofhigl

ENGINES, duplexamd revena&U.

PUMPING ENOINEB, elrm,and economical,

OORSISB PUMPS, double

OEARWGavd PULLEYS, hrg,and smaU.

HMTT and Light Cuttaara in Iron, Brand Phosphor fironzo, Forging! of every i• s r l t l n : BOILERS Lorir/mial toEnl

0 1 " R O

omem AND WOBKB,

Branx Bnmwr DOVEH.H. J.

S.R(BUCOGSOB TO A, WlOHTOX)

HANTJPACTURER AND DBALttR IN

ST0Y1S,EAKUB,fURNiCIS,

Tin, Copper and Sheet IronBoofiBK, Zinc, Sheet lead.

Lead Pipes, Pumps, &o,

THEGOBTOHHouge-Heating Steam Gene-

rator a specialty.-

Notice.STATE OP JOaETH RIOUABDS, D E O B A O . . .Pumiant to tha order of tba ftirmnte of t ie

Jounljof Monia, nuuln an the flfUi ifiiy or MarA. D. ono thoiisanil etatit hiindred uaJ n|netr-nu'notlM ni litTBby ((ivon to nil ppreong having cl&lmiualoiittbeniAfaior Jownh lUcliardn, luta df t ioCounljr or Morrifl, iliw«i8Bd, io rK«ent the mam.uuilcrotU)ior niTirmnilon. to Ummibacrlter.onorbefon, tlio llttli iltr of Febnuu-v next, baltur nlnsmonths from Uio data of S i J order* u d «t?»crodllornofilucUnK •« W»B In atf M I M L V " -

Wm. WKftTwiUi or adirnialfon. wiUif

k lUOHAilDS.

Port'oSrd ^

dYotiSTer.Trj Electric Bittori ai n jxmoOy (or your

tronlloi! J t not, get « bottle now «nl getrelief, This medicine has been round to bepuculkrl; adapted to th» f ulief nnd euro otall Female Complaintt, eiertliig n winiltrfoldirect inflUBnco In giving strength and tocoto th! organs If Jon have Loo ol AppiHto,Coninpation, Hendjche, Poiiiting Bpelli, or

-i H»rvmu, Bl(epl»m,Kttitablo,l!el«ntholjtroubled i r ia Dlaf SpdH, EeoirioBiS-

• It Urt medicine you need. .Hetiongth are guarantiiod hy Ita u»: large

bottlei cnljr fifty conta at Bob«rt Killgoro1.DrnjBtore, Doter^B. P. Oram & Co.'«,PortOramandP. H.Jratln.', C h U '

IM0HB19 AITO XSBBX DrVMIOM.j

D*pot ID Kew York, foot of B*roUy Oi M i

foot of Ctr i r topUr Bt.

Co iaaaon io Snn* l i t . IBM

DOVER TIME TABLE,

TBAOTB i l E T T l AJQ OSPAXt r>OM • m u

BTATIOH AM FOLLOW!II•UBT BOUHD. A. K-WMTBOnjO), 4 . K .y«_t Freight _ I t f l j f l k n n i 5;12

Botton expTMB* &-£0 Dov«r aeoam. 8-11

Hack't'n "exp.« 7:13Haokettat'a mall 7:80WasbiugUiaipL'SKBButTalo ezpreas* 6^8

Dover Booom. U:40BcrantOD ezpl* 11:03DovBraooom. 11^0

P. I tDover loccm. 1S.4Sfiltulra expre** 1MKufaramtul 2:44

' 4;0tDover'•ccoiu. 4*5Haokettat'o spl,* 5-JBiUover kooom. 6:55Buffalo exprew* 6 ^Dover eooom. 6iB3Milk expren^ 8:17Burton looom. B^TMilk eiprt i t* " "

WaihtagtoD M* Uffi

D aooom. {*»

D v a r a o o t n a . WMIBarton ezpn* ioa•SorantoB exp.« i;<uHaek'l'nwp* 5«

luffaKaipra.. 8 4 1Bprtonaxnnaa. »-:uU, o. tip.* tj'55Bonr aooom. loam

s s r ' a•Via. BoontoD Branch.

Uava

)over.

3OVER *M0 MORftlsrCWNArriva

itorrliUiwi].4:!t0l. K. 5 :14A. H.

1X0 "

9:40 "

740 "9:18 "

IO:10 •'11:60 "

S:45 r. H. l;10 p. V.2:M "4:S» "

B-M «8:ff7 "

8:15 "

eaa "7.-01 "9KS "

La»n ArrtriKorrlMowtu D o n

Bsse-«10:10 "

'{JJ "835 '««:41 "Has «

liau.

«. >|»X.1I

9:10 "10:4S "Udlllr.a

i. »*» "

Oia ••. 7:18 "

am ••1098 «

LEAVE KBW YORK FOR DOVKR.At 31.1, 4:20, 6:00, 7:10, B:«r>, »J0, ««r>

10:10, A. u.\ 18.-00 • . 1AO«, HM, VM 400»4:20*, 4:S0,5:10., 5 :* , 6«0, ! « • , |1:30, »:80«, 12*0.

.Via. Boonton Bnnch.

CHESTER BRANCH, :a o m a IAST.

CbeBl«r,C:t5,7*3a.m.; 13flO, 4:10 D. m.Horton, 0:31,7:59 a. nl.t ViiOS, 4jlfl p, m.Iroola, 0:35,8:01 a. m i 13:18, OB p. m.Huecscunns, 0:80, Ii:O(fa. m.; i!):18,4:2Oa Q>Keuill, '];:O. B:M.. m.; 13:13,4:94 p. m.Jiinotlon, O^i, 8tl4 a. u . ; 18:37,4:40p. u ,i'ortOrwu,0:41, 8:17 a. m.: 13-A), ifillp.:.:.Ar. Dover, 0:40, 8.43a.m.; 13:35, G:DUp.m.

GOING WKST.DoFer, H:35a, m.; U;30,5^0L 6:40 p . In.^ort Orun , 0:40 a. m.j 2:85,5^5. 0:45 p. m.Juoctlon, <J:4:l a. m.j 2:38, B^tS, 0:4Hp. m.Kenvil, ll:Mia. m.J 3:48. B:8 0*1 p. m.HuccaiUQna, 1UKTJ a.m.; 3:47.5:47,0:57 |i.m.Ironia, 10:12 a. m.; 3:S3, 6:52,7:03 p, m.Horton, 1O&J a. m,; 2:G7, G:55,7ri)5 p. m.Ar. Cluster, 10:33», mj fcob, 6:00,7:10 p,m.

The Haakettatown Etpnaa atopf at Port0ram|colEgeartat7234. ».; going mat at

CENTRAL RAILROAD.OF NEW JKBBKY".

[AntiirAcltft coal TIHI^ *JTftlmiTiljfi lavMifiMnirlnUn— u d tootoii.

TIHB TABU tif t r m r jutm Tta, 1S06.

TUA1NB LKAVa UOVKE AS TOLLOjfS:

For New York, Newuk tnd Elli-abeth, %l 6:55, 1110 A. M.; 855,5 .-37, P.M. Snndsjis, 5:55 P. ».

For PhUadelpbit.at 6:65,11:19i . M.J 835,5:37 P.«.

For Long Branch, Ooean OTOTO,Aeborr Park and point* on K#wYork and Inns B r u o h EailxoaJ,at 11:1!) A, M.; 825 P . M .

For oil BtatioaB to High Bridgeat 6:D5,11:19 A. M.; Sasftm r\.Stmdajs, 6:55 P. U.

For Lake Homtoong >t «t&,8:62,11:19 A.».; 3 26,5OT, 6:49, p.M. SnndojB, 10:lt A, M.1 - V.y

For aU statioius io Ediion at 0£6,4.M.J 8fl6,p.M. . •, v; :

ForEockawajat8:19,9:16,ll:10,A.M.; 4:14, 6:17, 7:13 p. • . B a n -days, 10:48 A.«.; 6.22 p..«.,-;'•

For Hibemia at 9:16 A. M.; 4:11,P . M . • . •-..••• : * • : • ; : . - .

^ i t o w n a t i d l U o « bChunk at 6:66, (1119 to Eutos) A.

; 825,6:37 p. M. Sondaja, tSS

~ IE*. £] 1" TJ El I T I IT OK

Leave New Tork at 6 « ) , 9:10A. M,; 1:10, 1:30, 4*0, 430 p. « .Sundays, 7:16 A. M, ': :

Leave Bookaway at 6:17, 8:48,11:10 A. M.; 8:17, 639, 6:40 p. a .Sundays, 10*5A.M.:5:47P.M. ;

Leave Port Oran,:.«t 8iii,»ai,1136 A. M.i 4K)8, 6:18, 7: l?p. U.Sondajs, 10^8 A.M., 6 : 1 7 P . M .

Leave lake Hopatoong at 7JjO,11:07 A.M.; 8a6, l6fl9, l :47 ; f.M.Sundays, 5:50 p. if . ' / -

Leare High Bridge at 8:10,10J»A. M.; 8:10, «a5 P. a . 8nndayi,9:30

0 0 L U O I . M a n r w k . M . d T ..unu icon ooonopUUo, .B«(Ma. Oooniai.

* ri MwmapondiriUi tola eolktB la'nto-, | w l n y i a ( a a , > n U i a n

notezeelled hravlneUtntloiilalliaValMBaieB638 BmOAE 8 T « M T , MIWAlkX

O r « enhance to the Oaatral B. E. ol H. J. dapot

COLEMAN.HrLllSIIBSCOUFtE,

J,CARPENTER

•—OFPIO« 4 K B B H O F —

BlacltweUBt.DOVgB, W. J.No contract too large lormr equipmentNo contract tooAtnall Tor my personal

attention '.. ; . , ; . - . ;••: .I manage Repairs to Bondings 1°

iveiy branch • ,.• •:• ; ' '••. ' s , " - , ' .1 aim do all klndj^ii Turning, Scroll

B « d and II, Sawtaai^''; .rj*' ' '

Lumber, Coal, WoodanaMason's Muterlals

CBUOOE88OR9 TO JL'JUDBON'OOK)bare • full Ilne'orerecTltelf raqotreafor BuiUingTlilBKR, LATB, BRICK, : BHIKOLKB,

8LATB,' VBltACKITB,.. OOLDaWB,DOORS, BUSH, BUNDS, ETC.

'MaaiKa, aTTBBrso, BTBPS, tiirtsw,.-.;.-,.:,-:.,:,. : : s r o . v E T o ; i ; !.•••..-

LKIHOH, BOBAJITONuia) JITOM1NO0S: : • - J • • • : ; • • J J O A M ; ' • •

WOOD WBLL SKA8OHED BAWKD AKD

•STABIISHHD

GEORGE K.HOKHIBTOWN N. J.,

IRON MERCHANT,t6RICULTURAL IMPLEMENTI