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HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

Feb 23, 2023

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Page 1: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

W etther to-m orrow ; Probabljr partly cloudy, sfiow at night. wm%

.n ... —r/-i

♦ LAST EDITION.

NUMBER 7.208 NEWARK, N. J., SATURDAY. JA N U A R Y 5, 1907,-T W E N T Y PA G ES. TWO CENTS

HURLS BOMB INTO BANK;

TWOKILLEDrr^ ---------------

Anarchist Holds Up Head of Philadelphia Insti­

tution in Office*-

HE WANTED $5,000! Drops Infernal Hichine When

II Kefosd and Is Blown to Btts-Casbier Killed.

TWO OTHER CLERKS HAY DIE

S ilt P « n o B i In A ll A r* W o n n 4 c 4 h r E!K t»lA «loB^lD terJM o f t h e

V ^onrth N n tlo u fll B a n k In R n ln a .T h r o a s h o n t i t r o e t a m ^ N o t b ^

l a ^ b a t P r a s m e D ta L e f t o f W o u ld - b a A a o u flB i—P r c a ld e n t R a a b to s iH m o n A l n o i t B flra o u lo n a BaonBe*

t^H Il^C 'ELPH IA . Jan. B.—DoTnandlijK k loan of ^,000 and faillng^ lo gnt It, a BUQ Who has not yet been identified dropped a bomb In the Fourth Street Na­tional Bank to-day, which blew him to piecea, killed Caehler W. Z. McLear abd Injured alx othera. one or ■ two of whom may die. The only clue to the

I identity of the bomb thrower waa a : bonch of keya Tound In a portion of thtt

otothins attached to which was n plate tnecrlbed "R. Steele. Garner. Iowa. ’

The Fourth Street NuHomj* Bunk Is the largeat flnaneta! Institution in the city and oeciiplea the greater portion of the flrat floor of the Bumti building on V>oi]rth street bolween CbeHinut and n u t streets In the heart nf ihe rtuanrial dlotlict. The exploaSon was terrlUc and It caused tremendous exoSl'^ment In the carowded building and slreel,

The explosion occurred a few minutes before 12 o'clock, at a lime when tiie bonk Is usually well fUled with person.') TB a hurry to transaei business before ihe han 't closes. No one saw the unknown m an enter the bank except E. F. Shn'i- bachor, the vice-president, who waa pnss- ibC out of the building on his way lo luncheon. He nc Iced the man was poor­ly dressed, looked like a Russian and car­ried a sm» 1 parcel. The man wutknl ■trafght back lo the rear of the Imnk and asked a clerk to direct him to the ofllce of the president, Richard H. Ku^h- tOQ. W hat took place In hie ofllco la heat told by the president himself:

*'I wae very busy when the maji entered my ofllce and 1 asked him to be seated for a moment. He w-as very poorly dressed, bad patches on his shoes and his entire appearance made me a bit curious. While he w as Waiting for me to flnlsli the bual- neaa I had In hand a t the moment 1 iwp- pened to notice that he looked a t me very curloualy.

‘1 aaked him his business, and he gave b is nam e as O. E. Wtlllams, and said he w anted a loon of IG.OOB. He did not loo.<

I Tike a man who could make a loan of that am ount, and I asked him for oollaterul.

I H e aald aoniethlng . Mut an insuram e policy, and that it would mature In /ro n

I one to five yeara I waa then convinced i . the m an waa a r~ank, and decided lo dts ' n iaa him a t once, not ' a moment think­

ing there was any f f irm ln him, 1 ^..if him he would have to see ihc casliler, and

1 directed him out Into the banking de- ' partinent.

*'At the same moment I called my col*' ored messenger. William Crump, to see

th a t the man was quickly taken out of the bulld lr-. As 1 turned to continue my w ork a+^*,ie desk there was a teirlilc

aaploaioLi and I though the building whs coming down. The man had ro t time to

J reach the cashier the exploalon came so 1 Moru*'

D etails M to what actually happened When the man left the offlcf of Prealdent

I KoahCoJi differ, as nd one can ba found who saw the man drop tije bomb. The

J^bor to thd ofllce of Cashier McLear is : bBly » few feet from lliat of Prrsldent X tubton. and the man must have dropped tlM deadly mlealle between the two rooma. Caahler McLear waa aittlnst at hia dealt a t tb* lime and Ida body waa badly mangled. T he bom b' throw rr'a body waa torn to pfecea.

A t the time the eaploaton occurred all th e vauita were open, books were plied on deaka and papers of all aorte of value were lying on deake preparatory to beink p u t aw ay for the day. The exploalon de- VBatptad the Interior of the b i . banking room.

Qlaaa and wooden partitions were Wrecked atid leveled to the ground aa tnough a cyclone had swept through itio Idace. Desks were ruined and Iron bars W ^ twisted, In fact there waa hardly an W)5eoi left Intact the room. Of nil the peraons Jn the room a t least six. all of

, clerks, were hurt, two of (hemftklally. Three of tho Injured were sent to the kvapftal.

f t ta exploalon threw every opo in the WnltiiiB-rooin to the floor,' and to r a mu-

they wep^ dp»e(ls,M«»B>bbf them not ■f BtdWlng w ta t had happened and fearing 4 th » t.tb e building, which I t an eight-story ; structu re, was fttUIng, made a rush for !ith* door, Mr. Bu^\ton among them. The

ro a r of the axploekV brought the tenants .o n all floora tp ihL r feet, and a general I ru sh « a made to the elevators and the aUlrwaya.

A s the excited people came out there j w as a. fusn from the street to rescue tiiose [w to ,' thought, had been caught Intth s explosion. In the mean time an alarm o f Are .waa sent in and firemen were quickly oh the gropnd. There waa no tire

: ta the place, the Bremen and policemenI .• r ts r e d sverypyly out, and a strong guard [■ : . • m throwp^dfout the building.

ri'. -4.ft*r B ^ ld e n t Rushton had recovered m aei^ne told what hart happened .and. g sti^h for the bomb thrower was m,sde,

A t th® moment it wss auppoaect be hsd : been kmed. but In taking out the- ^ t liody of Caehler McLear and looking for

Ptlier dead, portions of a body were found th a t plainly Indicated thet the man had

r- bean blown to pieces..y- The escape of Prealdent Rushton was

.. f> .,« lw ast miraculous, for the damage fa ■■■■■ f « b m tt» t In his offlee. •

“"Th* celling oTcr-Mr. R ushten’s desk' -■3,. ig hMMtftcred with blood and under a ■M a U t t Vrsokage In one corner of the of-

^ i: WM W>. found the head and Shoulders off- th * booth thrower, as well o s hlk ovet^

/ ' oowt. J l r . Rnshton does not know how1ia,:AM«pdd, but recollects going up the

V y r - iRWH u( tha bnlWlrg to the Dokrti Tpwn » .dining orgaiiliafton. Srbers he

1-. later In a dated condllton.thfe excitement of the

p ‘ on Bth r»gei 4tF(!oIuinfLy7-'

"JUST YOU WAIT”

1 8 , 0 0 0 t o m s0 ) s p l m c e m £M t .

onartcM mcHT

ia 5 0 0 TONSDtSPLACtMENT.

P

fmojECTZP GE/fmN mfio/teo cfiWEEn2 0 , 0 0 0 T O N S m P L B C lJ ie N T

T h e F i r s t S h a l l B e L a s t t h e L a s t S h a l l B e F i r s t .

EASTON PLANT NOT A ^ IL U R E

Mimidpal Ownership of Street Lighting There Erroneously

Declared Not a Success.

THE 'NEWS' LOOKS INTO FACTS

C o n tln iin llo n o f W o rk o f R uD ntna DoVtu T rn tb i to r ie e o fF a l l a r e o f N uu id ik iil Ow uerehtp* L ax M etboda H ave P re v a ile d a l P e a u a y lv a n la C ify’a EnteepH ae* b a t I t F r la l i lc n e i l C o m p e lltu n .

Syeciai liitpatch to fftc KTESISG NFTlEfl.EASTON. Jan . 5.—Thl« place It one

of ibe cittea most recently adver­tised B0 bavins made a faildre of munici­pal .ownerahJp In street Ushtlng. The publications employed or aubsldlied by the private companies lo carry on Its c a m p a l^ of discourasli^R! municipal uwn- ernlilp, In ihe Intereats of the private cor­porations, have for »#everal weeks been telling with inucb gusto uf how Easton had tlPCldeO to abandon its municipal lighting enterprise and adveiTlee for bids from private companies for lighting the city’s streets.

According to the reports publlehcd In a monthly or occaslunal sheet called "Con­cerning Municipal Ownerehlp,'' which seems to be owned by, or a t least printed for, the public utility corporations, nearly sJl the cities In the country have a t some time or other failed in municipal owner­ship. The list of failures thla sheet prints, and which la taken very seriously by a good many people, as It is, of courae, Intended by the publishers that it should be, is a long one. Frederick W. Kelsey, of Orange. N. J.. has taken the Job ol running down some of these stories and has le tte rs from Mayors of a number of towns said to have made failures of municipal ownership, In which the Mayors ■ay they do not know of any such failures as reported. Easton seems to be In this class.

As the report of the Easton failure has been used vigorously In trying to create sentim ent against municipal ownership Ui Orange and Newark, I came up here the other day to And out Just how bad the failure had been. Instead of finding an adm itted failure, t found that among tho city ortlolals, from the Mayor down, there is R general Impression that municipal ownership here is a success. Instead of getting ready to abandon their municipal Plant and advertise for bids for private lighting, the councils are planning lo spend money In improving the city plant. Instead of agreeing th a t municipal owner- ship Cor s tree t lighting is a Eas­ton is one of the cities In the Pennsylva­nia league of third-class cities wliloh are trying to have the Legislature pass laws this w inter which wilt permit them to ex­tend their operations and plants so th a t they may furnish light and power for com­mercial purposes. The sentiment against continued municipal ownership In Easton is conflned to stockholders and officials of the private Ughtlng companies, and some hIgh-cTass, ultra-conservative citizens of*- filiated in business with the private com­panies or men tdentlAed with them.

flltiiM tldii a t B asto ii) P a .professor F rancis March, who Is at ths

head of the English department in Lafay­ette College, Is Mayor of Easton. He is a Republican, and was nominated and elected by the <Rcpub11csn machln*. Not­w ithstanding these facta. Mayor March Is an advocate of municipal ownership.

"Our mubl<^ipal street llght^fig plant is not a failure," said Mayor March. "On th s contrary, I believe we are lighting our streets economically* and that the city has saved money by municipal ownership. The private corporations seem to be very anklous to put our municipal plant out o t business* but 1 don't propose that they shall do so.”' ' 9ofhs of the "buslnesE” men of Easton, and some of its o t lw prominent and ul­tra^ respect able and conservative clttsens. don 't agree with-M ayor March. While they adm it th a t the municipal plant may have been economical In tha past, they pelQC out th a t ao w -th f private oompaii- lek, b ^ Q s * of their better facilltlee* can fum leh light fpr the etreeta on ae good t s m s UB th e city CAP make It for Itself.

fBoflW of them laugh a t Mayor March's

HILL ENTOMBS FORTY HEROES.Score of Rescuers Killed by Laudslide in Germany in Effort

to Save Comrades-Buried Alive in Deep Pit.BINGEN, Hesae, Jan . B. —Forty work- t Those who were not burled begun lo dl«

men were burlotl yesterday evening in the out their comrades* while meRsengcra 1-iittlng of a new railway line between | were sent to nearb.v villages tasking fur I^rnscheld and Ixelningen. The dead | help. Several phyaldans and a large hndlep nf thlrteeri Of the men and fifteen [ force of workmen were sent lo the Hi'c-neinjured workmen have been recovered. An embankment had collapsed, burying two men. To rescue them large parties of other In borers employed along the line were ImmedlatSy set lo work, and a wide pit was dug. In which ware about fifty mon, when the overhanging hillside fell, burying forty of the laborers under masses of earth.

of the dlsaaler from JBoppnrd uiid other towns. The rescue work, whioh w'kh con­tinued throughout the night, wae dnnjjer- ouB, owing to the poBslblJUy of freah maseea of earth falling on the lal)f>r»*ra. Most of the workmen killed wore ynung men. Among the Injured are lliren cliU- dren. It Is probable that there arc still fifteen bodies beneath fall or earth.

TOBACCO TRUST WINS VICTORY

Vice-Cbaacdlor Cooditiooa!ly Dismisses BiO Filed by Geo^e

Beling Against Merger.

OFFERS AN ALTERNATIVE

C oox t A nnom nee* R * n d ln * * . to H e a r A rtfn m o n t f r o n t C o n i i l n ln a n t o n q n * « tln n o f A o c e p t lo c a n U lc h t P e r C en t. D iv id e n d V n t i l B x p l r a - Uon o t C h a r te r— I f T h la U N ot T o k en B olt W il l Be D l im l i a e d A l to s e t h e r .

(Contlnuod on fd pafc, la t column J

titM A R D S MAY GET MORTH IN DRINK CURE OR NINETY DAYS IN WORKHOUSE

. W-f l f te t t l Oftpaleh lo Ike RVK.vn'O ySW g.,

8 0 bO K EN , Jan. t.—"Thirty day* In the,' d rink, ttnrn .or ninety in tlie ntorkhoute.'’ tn ty kn tlw leniencea Inipoaed by mncl*>

: ;jl-*i*t*a to iludion County after April 1, If t ^ W plan* of Richard Bteven* and Mt«. C..

■ » AtntmidlMr a*» rMtUied. Tlielr plena at# to, H*Y* aataMiihed in the now aim** a m * » mink cure, and Mr. Btevoni add to|4wr that ht .alfMdy bad fbt promlato •C A bumbir of the menibeti of the Board a t Fwkholdor* of Hndocin CSouaty to putte o llton into altoto -Th« of hAbit- y Unmkmdo l* poaoltJ*,' oaid K r. it* -

• ' ' I •Canada, Dr. Maekay ha*

t^ r ty 'f l te io n t t tn te d it by curing nlnety- t a r ppr f^nt. o f th* drunkard* th a t have

H lnU ter of the Domtolpn and JTJ w l l l w practlcaRy th e aatna w th o d *

b toan aentenoed to the V in k ^ouro, but we can have tho n ^ t u t M m ake their *tntanc*s * W for a abort tortn to tho drink cure or a ' teniror on* in the woricbobia Th* only retaoB tk* plan wa* not Into •Root ■ooner w aa t h a t ' tbare waa ae niitaMo pfaue InrSnako Bjill to aatabltah the cura. but wiMn tbo newjtitoahouM J* oompletw iboro mtu-ber u n t o u d i B u ta m u * tfao

It o t- it* S m 4 k ^ .in if ;4 m ito .tt it,

VIce-Chancelloi Pitney to-day Bled an opinion conditionally dlsmlaslng the bill Bled aaalnet the American Tobacco Com­pany by George August Beilng, of Bay­onne. to have set aalda the merger by which the defendant company was fmined out of the original American Tobacco Company, Consolidated Tobacco Company and Continental Tobacco Company. The vloe-ehancellor'a finding In the Beling suit foreshadowa the outcome of another suit to set aside the merger brought by Richard T. Dane, of New Tork, as ad- lutntetrator of the esta te of his father, the late Richard B, Dana, which suit was practically on all fours with the one brought by Beling, the two suits being tried together.

The opinion goes a t length Into a dis­cussion of the "extrem e difficulty. If not the Imposslbnity. of practically granting to the complainant the relief he eeks, and after restating the offer* made to com- jilaihant by the def'endant company, which was repr^ented to the suit by Richard "V, Lindabury. Charles L. Corbin, of Jersey city, and 'JnnIuB Parker, of New Tork, goes on to say:

The only decree other than that of­fered by the defendant which I have been able to conceive can be properly made In favor of the complainant In this cause Is a decree for the payment, quar­terly, ot the eight per cent, dividend on the amount of the stock from the date of the last payment up lo the termination of the charter o t the old company and the payment of the par value ot the stock a t that time. Bui h a decree was not sug­gested a t the irgum ent, and I am not ready, without argum ent, to say th a t I will advise It. I am witling. If complain­ant shall so wish It, to hear argum ent on the propriety of such a decree. If he does not Wish It I must advise th a t hi* bill be dismissed without prejudice to his right to his action at law, which, In my Judgment, Is ample to give him the full value of hi* stock a t the time of the merger.

t Wo fliS en to C o a p la ln a n l .If complainant choosea to accept either

of the offers wade by the defendant In Its answer, a proper decree will be advised without oosta."

The slock on which the oompialnant sued was originally Issued to Fanny Houle, and on her death. In February, 18#6, J. Forbes P o tter became the owmer, in his capacity as adm inistrator o t the Soule eeUte. The slock was held by Pot­ter until January, 1906. when he *old It to a men named SohiJk, who on FWbrtMT If of th a t year Bssigned It to Beling. The merger became effective In October. 1904, and the opinion set* aside a* unfounded In fact hta contentlona th a t Patter, who had actual poaseeslon of the slock a t the tim e of the merger, had no notice of it.

cm thi* point the vlce-cha*iceUor holdk th a t ''complainant's aaslgnor, Pottef, Is chargeable with negligence In not commg forward and asserting his right In time to have prevented the m erger from being so fa r carried blit as to render it pracn-, ” i ” toipOMible to g ran t the relief which 'ItB aBKa>’'

Contlrtulng, the opinion, pays; . Thia view ' reiideto I It perhaps i OimecesaarF to t ^ e notice end pass upon nnotber point wade bJ the defendant, and th a t I*, th a t while the a r t of 1996, ^ ^ l o g tor a merger. * a« not to eiristence a t the time the original company wa* t o * ^ neratod, the law th«n to to reed ld provide

fOonttaued Oft to page, dth oeiamii.)

K T h a olrouliribn A nte EVRNINO *hew* * net dhlUr . Artuat net dally gato Adweetiaen .tolM* t " ' to S le nn e f th ta uitdhi|iin*datiM M iri.-

alia aga:i

TRAIN’S VICTIM IS DECAPITATED

Frank B. Menam Meets InsUnt Death on Lackawanna

Tracb at Roseville.

DEMOCRATS GO IT ALONE AGAIN

New Council Loses No Time Repealing Ordinance Dealing

City Hal! Positions.

HAS VISIT FROM LABOR MEN

M om hrn of T ritde* C o a n c ll A d jo n ro Th^^lr Own .H fP ttnv to Do Hlkalozi- a r f Wf»rk .Amotiiz A ldftrm «ti to PrpTOiit C onflrm filioa of H elsler*« A pFolkitm ent—AUo Soe th « M ayor. N lnnott ABUtitinrva t l ie C o m tu llte ra .

NOT CLEAR HOW IT HAPPENED

Boy Sayfl Hfi S a w M nn W n lk ln s AloniC TrM ckii to Take* S lio ^ t C ut W lie n t h e T r a i n C nD ke'^O tliern 9«]- H e r l i i v W fti T r y ln v to G «t A b o a rd W hpD H e A llppieJ o n d P e l l |.:fider W k«els»W tito m. C itrp e n tr r nod B u ilder

Frank B. Merlam, flfty-two years old, \ builder, who lived a t 2JW North Fourth street, and who had an offler. a t 78 Br,-- row street, M anhattan, waa inutanily killed by a i^okaw anoa train n t the Roee- viUa AvoRtie Station, this morning. The body wae badly mangled aod the head nearly severed. It haa not been eatab- llehed definitely how Merlam met with the Bcicdent. '

It Is poMstble for pereonit to walk firing the tra rk s to the end of u fence whlclj divides the east and west bound tracks in front of the atatlon, and this apparently w'as what Merlam attem pted to do when he wa® kilted. It Is thought th a t when he reached RuaeviUe avenue, near the en­trance to the Morris and Essex tranks, he thought It wAfi the «hor,lr«t way for him to reach the Montclair branch.

There Is no way, except fam iliarity with the schedule of trains, by which aMcrlam or anybody else on the platform could know a ira ln was coming. A curve Ih the i^ad West of the station obstructs all view of approaching trains. That Merlam WAS seen on the tracks by the engineer of the train which mowed him down is evi­dent. As soon as Ihe locomotive turned tha^curve the engineer, according to sev­eral persons who were In the vkln lty a t the time, began looting hla whistle.

A few minutes before that, according to John Ahrens, eleven years old. of South Thirteenth street, Merlam Btrjppud off the platform and walked slowly to the spot where he was kllletl. The boy stood oh the Roseville avenue bridge over the tracks when he luiw the trmn. Ac­cording to the lad. Merlam baited a t the llrat toot of the whistle. Ha was then about fifteen feet east of ThV platform. Merlam, the boy said, appeared as if he tried to get out of the way of the train by keapSng close to the stone wall.

S to r ie s o f A ooldotk t D iffe r .I t was the train due a t the Rcsfivlllc

avenue station a t 8:12 o'clock which killed Merlam. There are different ver- slont a s to how be ife«t his death. Two men who, according to the police, stood on the platform a t the time, enld they thought they saw Merlam sttem pt to board the tra in as It was leaving the sta­tion. but the statem ent of the Ahrens lad did not co m b o ra ta thta -version. It was after the train had pulled out of the sta­tion th a t the two men. whose Identity was not learned* first saw Merlam's body and caUed to sooie aectton hands who were at work about WO feet east of the spot where Merlam waa killed. The railroad men hurried to th« spot and, finding tli^ matt was dead* ..noufied the F ifth P rednet poiioe.

Fatnoiman HoflTman and Schaeffer were aent to the ftation. They were unable to And. anybody who Jmtw Merlam, and the body waa ramovMl to MulUn's morgue as unldantlflfid, Busineaa cards found In tbo effects of the uoad man assisted the police. In locating M eriam 't home and rela­tives.

Mrs. Btnma Frciimitlh* a n ta rrW dsugh- ter. and Mrs. M ane I f^ a m * a daughter- in-law of the victim, want to the morgue. The U tte r looked a t the body and Identi­fied It, -almost fsiRttng a t the sight. The Iggateii were accompahied to the morgue by PoUoMDamHusk, of tb s F ifth Precinct.

Merlam and h it son, T ra sk B. Mer­lam Jr*, were sn^bfad In th e bullditig Ira f lm s , and.w ere acouftomed to travel- Inff bit tile I-^ckaw ansa eac^ day to New Twk^ TIte son always left on an esrller tralB than h li father. The la tter left <Us home thU nonuitff about foar minutes beC m he was kDled. Merlam leaves a w U n r, who Is an hm U d, two daughters and t h m sens. . -

/ ' iin .....sinUii I I

J n t T g r « • o t t l e « f rm m Jlooa 'M a m « d

By n vote of 16 on each stage of its pnssnge the Common Council last night punted a rp p ^ le r to the ordlrrajice pasfied December 10, 19M, providing for the crea-

tlon of poflUlons for tho care, custody nnd mninlr’iiance of the new citj-’ hall. The council had not flduplcd rules for 1(h giildani-'fi a t the Ume the repealing ordinnucc wrni ihi-ough, nnd President John F Slcnotl announced tlint the dHIb- eratkinH woiikl he governed by the usual ruloa of purllameniary procedure.

The sixteen vales were oust hy Demo- cfalic uldormen They hod the council chamber iitid the meeting id themselve?, as the Uepiihllcan memberp, fnllnUing up Ihelr action of last W ednesday night, re- Tralnt-d frMm taking port In the meeting. They RUiyed away. Only one of them vontured near the doors of the ohiimber. TiuU WHS Alderman Henry B. Snyder, whu waa not quite cure what to do, When lie look \K peep Into the cham ber and ra|il|zrd ihiit the political iittnnsphero of the Interior had a decided Democratic tinge he multpred .something ihu t sound­ed like "Sktdoo fur mine" nnd quickly dlwrippeared. That was the nr-ureat up- prouch to a Rcput)]lcaii occupancy of the chamber during the night*

The action of the council In passing the city bull repeuler was taken with full knowledge on the purl <if the Democrutfl that it would in nil probability be made Ihe basi.H of certiorari proceedings by Chandler W* Rlkcr. cniinsel for tho Re- pulillraji ofIVceholdprs, who are reluctant to tope their jobs, and who is also acting «s legal ndvjfler to the HppublJeaii mem­bers of the coiincIL Mr. Uikfr Was present ut the meeting, etileriug tiio cliamber In cumpriny with City Cnunscl Jam es R. Nugent. Ikilli lawyers were keen ob- eervers of the ,'ictlon Ifiken by Iho council and of the manner In which llie work was done.

Pi’euldent Slnnott huiiiJlija hla forof<s in good pjirllamenttiry rnanner, 4ind ns Ma­jority Leader Ryuii dernunsiroied Mint he, too, "kiiow.s his little book," ilie iirnceed- inga pansed off without any bilctu's Mr. Riker contented hitnielf wittj arranging to Mcuro from Gounotl Btenognipher Bnlmon a record of the proceedings, in so far as they related to the passage of the repralSr.

When asked If he Intended to certiorari the ordinance on the ground th a t it was passed without n legal quorum of the council being present. Mr. Hiker said at first that he wn.H doubtful Jf there waa anything to certiorari, as he w as not cer- tidh that the qrdliinnce th a t w as repealed was any good, and It wus possible the court might hold th n t there was really nothing to repeal. L ater .Mr. RIker said he would: probably give notice tn-day to Mr. Nugent of his Intention to apply for a. writ to review the action of tho cuundj on the repealer,

Mr. Riker said to-day th a t he will probably make his first legal move to liaye Inst night's action of the council re­viewed on Monday next.

in addition to the one-sided aspect of (he meeting from a political viewpoint the Interesting fratures of the meeting were the announcement by Prepident Sln­nott of tho standing and apeolal eom- mlUees for the year, the adoption of new rules which were framed to give (lie majority of the body powers th a t under former rules were vested only by a vote of two-thirds of the full member­ship, ithd the appearance on th e floor of the chambpr of a delegation from the Essex Trades Council, comprlalng th« full membcrahlp of th a t body, who bad adjo: rned their regular weekly m ealing to como down and protest against the confirmatloa of the nomination of JMSph Helflter as police commlsaloner.

The labor men performed a lot of m is­sionary work among ti e alderm en and also paid a formal visit to the Executive office, where they entered a protest* through their president, I. S tu a r t Smith, to the appointment of Mr* Rotsler. After they had completed their efforts the Trades Council men ca lm ed to have re­ceived assurances from teveni] o ther al* dermen lb addition to Messrs. Mullen, Reilly* Mann and McOowan, who had al* ready gob® on record as opposing the con­firmation of Mr. H elilsr, tM t they would defer votlijg on th is question until the appointee had sottled hls^ differences with the unions.

There were o ther members of the alder- manic body who declined to commit them ­selves to the labor men or flatly an­nounced Uutt they would vote fo r con­firmation whan the name of Mr. H aiiler came, up- Thate to«^ the ground th a t they felt obligated by th a lr oath of office to coiisIdKr 'ofily the tnterasts o f the city at large gad could not M rm lt % question of (Ui appointeeW relAtltma w ith unoffl- cUl crgAhliatlbni to a a tr r Ibto o r tn- fluenge their aettort

, AfiavtSaw « t U |« « *The e h e m ^ In the rules to fo v a n i the

aoOoM p y jh e oewnoH for w etsiOj^atUtu^ wt M ps#ib iMli o o t o

WAR DEaARED AGAINST SMITH

Democratic League Votes to Eliminate Ex-Senator and

NuReot as Bosses.

ONLY SEVEN STOOD BY THEM

gome L ive ly D I«niisslon M arks M eet- lu g of R e fo rm E le m e n t In P a r ly . Jo sep h M. B y rn e Im p n g n s M otive o f N ellson Al»oel<—C h n rlea J . B a r ­r e t t C a lls to r B e o rg a o ls a t lo n o f County C o m iu l l te e - ^ le a fo r N ogen t

%

It w is decreed by the Democratio League last night th a t the oontlnuaiiua of James Smith Jr. and Jam es R. Nugent as Isadora of the Democratic hosts waa InlmJcal to the success of the party, and that the league would make tt a special mlsblon during 1£KI7 to work to accom- pileh the Involuntary retirement of tho former tJnUed fltates Senator now that he had forgone his aiinounc.emsnt of last summer tha t lie had retired from the poUlleal arena, and tile right-hand man and Mayor H ausslln t's chief ndvleer, Mr. Nugent.

The vote on the formal resolution, which alio provided that (he league should labor for (ho reformsitlon of tbo county com­mittee, was 13 to 7. The membership of the league Is between 300 and 400. The meeting was orderly save for a slight disturbance when balloting began, while the debate was calm and dlapaaslonalo, m marked oontrast with a similar a t ­tempt last summer.

f-'rribflblv u doten Smith sympnthliers left the mcfiMng when it waa decided lo have the vote hy secret ballot. They quit after llalenlng to an unmerciful ar- ralgnmem of Mcmcr. Smith and Niigeni, swearing vengeance nnd flotinundng under their hif-jithe ihc hmiul of Democracy practised hy the “new Idi n“ men In the organlEuiion.

Tlifl meeting w:is held In Dr JU nns's hall, Cenlrnt Hvenii, Mr, Wush-Inptmi jiincn rcjsldcnre Ijiicks up against, llifl Dg Jiiiiino property.

Ths dlScuaaion mi Ihe reaoludoii lanted upward of two hours, ami the tUsqiialin- catlons and dlsnhllilks of flmllh mid Nu­gent as leaders, with their sins of coni- niifwton and omisalon. wero rcKeratcd time find again. Mayor HunsiaUng's natno was fhagged hi, und various romnumts nifuie am-m his salevllon of Nugent for city enupael and hia rrlnliona wlili Mr. Smith.

It was charged hy Joseph M. Hyms, who defended Mr. Hmllh, that the renntu- tJfljis were luirmltued h> Nellm>n Alipwl henause of the laU er’s Inahlltty tn land the city fiKornoyship, whereat he had become vindiriive. Mr. Abeel denied tho motive aartihed tn him by Mr. Hyrno, and dfHnred he was liisplrod hy the In- teroBlB of the party. SmMh iiml Nugent were fialtrira ami should ho deposed, be lierlarcd.

Charlfs J. Rarrolt. of Ponth Otnng*’, thoiiglit tt W'tis ^luestlonablc If the entire proceedings were not out nf mder. T?u- object of the l^agtio, ho ronlinued. wop to rejuvenalo iht? p*arty. not to (cur down nnd trample upon It. Mr. H nrirlt do- clearod he had not changed from ihe po­sition lip iissumod Inst summer, when ho nttempted tn hare (ho county cominlttos rforganlzfd, but condlilnns had ehangrd vastly, he said. Tho Icagiio, tiowcvor, could take tu> ccodtl fur tho victory a t the polls, for It remained Inactive, h« as­serted.

K in d W o rd s f o r ffngetit."You have elected » Mayor, ami last

night I read his rncBsagO'-a docunienc that hrenthes the prijiciptes of true De- moerary in every lino,” said Mr. Bar- lett. 'Tt Is the duty nf Ihls leiiguo (o support Mr. Haiisslliig. Ho has sflected for tils legal adviser Mr. Xugont. 1 bold no brief In his dofonso, but Mr. Nugent Mtinuld ho supported in his position until 111’ shows htiiisrlf not fit. Time nione will determine If he has not the legal crmlh lion ncooRsary. His predecessor la a mon wlio stands high In the profession, yet ho oxecutod the five pci rent, ordlnancp, of . wlilch no ofneiiil, no newspaper, nor the public will Hpealc well Mr, Nugent may do as badly as tlutt, but he can 't do worse.'*

Mr. Ilftrrett said he knew not the mo­tives of Mr Aheol, but the Sfiiilb Orange , man did know that when he tried to have the iRiigue work for n more efllHcnt coun­ty fHUnmlttee he was pot nrluiiled by per- POtiQl feellngB. Mr. Abed did noi see fit to support the reorganization resolution, bo Intimated.

'The party Is pruapertnifl lo eiiy, conn ty and State,*' candudod Mr. flarrelL ■'nnd It Is the time for Itemonruls to sup­port tho party, not to sepimite and ijiso- late II Let us have no rot ballfil* tmt let everything he open and aheve board "

Harry V. Osborne volunteered the stm*-- meril thnt from all he could luiir, Mr. Smith's only nuallflcnllon as le.ader w-aa his “pork hurrcl.’' Mr. Osborne also as­serted I hill the form er Senator tmd die* tffted Mr Housstlng's Mppcdr.lmcms.

Jidlnn A Gregory, of Last Orange, was surprised at Mr. R.arrett'fl “d iange.“ iintl could not iinderslanrl It. fte opined that Ihs greatest cause of DeniocnHlc fl\ic<css November G in ibe suburbs was llip k«- suranee given the olectorate that flmlth and Nugent had been relegntwl to tho rear. Mr HaiissUng knew how Nngcnf waa rfigard^'d. when he detcrmlncti to np pfjlnt him, and he had gone eoiinlor (o tha wishes of a vest rrmJoHty nf IVuiorratR.

Henry VV. (Joodrich, nf Nufb-y. rr-ferred to the speeches of Mr. Smith nnd Michael T. Barrett u\ the baiuiuel of Ktueger Assodatlon NPt'lng. in which It was stated that Mr. BmltU had ah.nidoned the pursuit of polities, and ihn nfflclal an ­nouncement TPHcle In Septrinber hy Mr. Smith of Ills “retirem ent.''

“James Smith Jr. is the appendix of the Democratic party." assericd Mr. Gofxi* rich.

• ru t him oiii.” chorused the crowd.After Mr. Aiiccl had voiced h1» surprise

Jit Mr. HarreU's “most wonderful" som­ersault. Mr. Byrne charncledxed some of the Tcmftrks as ridiculous.

“Talking about wonderful eom ersaults,' Mr. Tlyrne continued, "Mr. Rnrrett docs nf»( compare with Mr. Abed. A while before Ihe appolntmenta were made by May^r Haussllng, Mr. Abeel Importuned me tn Hpcak for him for the position <.>f city attorney,’'

Mr. Abeel, replying, said he was glad (n see that the humiliation he would be sub­jected to had been started already by one of Mr. Sm ith 's representatives. His ambition had been a manly one. he suld. and he tried for Just two daj^s to reallzo It, but resorted to no ’tgumahoe" methods.

W a l le r G ro w a P o e tic ,Lswellyn E. P ra tt, of NutTey, moved to

amend (ho resolution as It was submitted by Mr- Abed* by strik ing out n section reading that the league w-ould work for the election of a chairm an of the county commlttes who would be uD(>ofl8ed. Mr. Pratt said an Injustice had been done to Mr. Howell, as did Frederic L. Johnson. The amendment prevailed without dis­sent.

James A. Waller spoke for twenty mln- titee on various subjects, and quoted, among other Immortals^ Byron and David

UNION ASKS r DRYDEN TO

WITHDRAWIf He Does Its Law­

makers WiD Be Cau­cus - Bound* :‘“

STATEMENT ISSUEDConferfes Say Cotmty S o ^

ment is Aj aiost Fmdeih tial Man.

COLBY IMPRESSED BY PITNE?

B a s e s flen a to r^ W b o W i l l N ot V «t» f o r D rrd o » » g ay a B e u l « o l |a * d «». F a v o r th o B le e t lo a o f t h e C o u r t Jnatloe<--B eU «ve« H ia s ffo a n A b le a n d U ffrlfflit UmMt W IW W o a ld R e f le e t C te flU B fcS ta te an d C'ooaerve People** la te ta a tlk

At a conference held In EUtabeth th lsi morning the entire delegation In th^ Lag* istature from Union County agread ,Ui I.Hsue a public statement tn vbioH they duclare lhat If flenator John F. Dri'den withdraws his namo as a candidate"f<n* United States Senator they will gntai* the Ucpuhllcmi c:iucit« imd be bound by ICfl action. Although iho members of tlw dclcgatUin do not slatci In so many word# what Hmy will du If Mr. Drydcn doe« not wlthdi'HW. the statement U taken* by ilioao acquainted with the sentlmafit on the flenulorliil questton which a x titl In Union lluit they will all reftiae to Ihc caucus JH long as Mr. 0 ryden renuUng i\ candidate,

tn loB ^i F o ra ia l S ta tem en t*TIU^ 1h the forma) statem ent which the

delegation drew up and signed:''W e bfllevti that In order to coneeieifi '

(he beat tnieresla of the people the L t ^ h liitiirc of our Hlute at tlio coming leeidtm Nbmild Hcft a Ucpubtlcun to the Utllled' Stales Senate, As regular Republleftltt Wf iH'llcve In Dip party organlxatlon. Vn*<l«r Hie candltlons that confront the party at this time wu think all Republican members of tljn Leglslaturo should b* phu-ed In a posJilon so that they may ea­ter the vjiiicHs and thus Innuro the election of :i RepuliiJcan iJnitod S lates S e n a to r s ’> ■.

■■RcnrcsinUng the people o f Union Couit* '"*' ty. It In our duly to respect their wieheik As oNpreesed to u», (he senllnient uf.juur . iMiiuty Is su strong and overwhcimJngly ogHiuMt (lie election of Mr. Dryden tixar . ‘ wc IwUovo a ncpubih aii o ther tluiiv' ka should be elccd-'d to that oiJlce. Thtfffi la no doubt that thsro are mouy able ui6U 'In our iwriy who could mi the poalUfip J with sutlafnctlotj.

“ In order to clear the wny to uirftell pai'ly aciinn wo suggest tlie w ithdrawal of Mr. Dryden as a CBudldu.te, and tt h li - j name bti withdrawn we 'WIIV enter caucus and be bound by Its so tM /* T

The, document is signed by E rttea i R. m Ackenuan* Randolph FlfflW i, F a te t 1nmn and John R. Moxon.

Al the close of itio eonferenoo ffenator AckermsR, who has declared ho Will -A be r>ound by (he caucus It It nomlnul^T s s Mr. Dryden, was asked If the Union gallon would refuse to enter the c.au^b(If Mr. Dryden's name waa not wIthdrawTi*Al this time, he said, the doltrgallon did nul wlah to say anything fu rther Ufitkl ll\o subject than was contained In th tif signed Btslement. »

Practically the same btatoment Wlta made by Assemblyman Perklnn, who, when presH(;jfj for u reply lo delegation woijhl do if Mr. Drydrn ’dUT* rtot wlttidraw, said that ths delegation wnuld prahahJy hold another conferentiu.

I 'l tn e y ’s Cnadliliior*UcvelupmenLs during the Inst few dfiyi;

lins given rise lr> the inTfU'CHSlon tn I'alOff tliat ItiB delegation from th a t county to* Inclined lo support the candidacy Of flu? pt'Cine i'ourl Justice Mahlon Pitney fot (he Senatihralilp, although none of tbsnl has nuHlu any definite statem ent on tha Hubject-,

The positive slntemcnt of Oovom<W flltikr-n 111 Ihe Nl-lWa last night thSt tm wnuld uol be a candidate fur tlic flenator^ ship during the term for wiilch he won l•l^'cted (ifjvftrnur has tended to eleiir tho Rcnatorlal uiinofiphere perceptibly. It Han •Miablcd llioRc who oppose Mr. Drydeji't re-elC'Oihm and favored the Governor LO unite wiili iliose ripponents of Mr. Dryden who believed that they could not con- Hclitillnusly vote lor Ihc Governor tn vl«w of Ihe eohstJtulioual prohibition t« unit* upon another caiidldair. The olTect has bcoji lo give much ImpeUia to LUe boom of Justice BJlney.

Senatnr Kverett Golby. of Kssex. whf» hrtfl c1eo|(i]'cd lhal hc Will liol bp bound hy a cauv'us nominating Mr. UryflPii, snld UilH moralng that he wnuM be jhnllncd in favor tlie clerilon of ihc Juatlce. Ho b»*||evpil him to he »n ahU' and upright man. wdio In I ’nliH Hiales Henato would creiUt upon bis Stnn; ondconserve tlic bet i iTitcresiH of the people of New Jersey.

SCHOONER BELIEVED LOST.Itolnnit r i ( y . W h ic h I hciI (o t n i l a t

,>cvTArk, T hree W 'ceka O tn rd iie from fn va Krnlln.

The I m b n n n e r iMl.nnd City, until if'crnUy ft freuueui vinjtnr (0 New­ark, wliJh* enguKcd uj U f T»b‘^-t«'r*carry- ing trade fruut II llpi'nro. N R,, Is bg- IlCVPd in lm \'’ Im.'I! l-iHt at H9-a Wllh alt hands. incUiilinn f'niumti .foliuHon and hlg crew n1 (d {ht mir. while -m a VuyOgg-

I from Cfiiinn, N S in N’l w* Vork.‘ The veSf'l iH n«i«A tliie*' wt‘cks ovArfiUg ' and Ihe fvar that si.'- has foundcrefi ■ baaed on the fai-i lhat u't word has bfeen ' H-ceived (It tier f‘itirr- ■'he loft CafliO Nd- ! venibcT y . The NlJind Csty Hailed on lbl»

voyage oiiglnnlly frnm Ncwcnstlq* N, B-i and put Into Crmho through str«s» of,. wcHih'i. H 'l' enmmander w as wsll known in this diy,

<Contlnued on 2d pag$, 6th column,)

SCHOONER HIT LINER.rotM tolon In L o w e r M«w Y oH c B u r

^vHh f tiuitrder Resmlts In finlllnff < ro ft L osing H « r B o w s p r it .

Nii^w YORK, Jan. b.—Nows of a eoV- llyiun between the Cunard Lino staantff' intnnla. Inward bound from T rlsita , with ttic schooner Joel Cook, outw ard bound, in tho Lower Bay, last night, was brought here to-day by the Ultonin. The Cook struck tbo steam er on the port aids, dam­aging her forward rail and fore rigging.^,, The schooner's bowsprit was broken, and" she was obliged to put back for repairs.

THIRTEEN F^LSE ALARMS SOURCE OF UNEASINESS OVER UNLUCKY NUMBER

J i t

Another faite alarm ot Are caiine In la*t night from bo* «», At F e rry 'a n d BrlU •treeta mahlng a to ta l ol thirteen In tbo iBit two Box MS ta a new one andhad been In ooimnliwlon only about t-weo* ty 'four bour* .whan th e falie alarm wa* ■ant In. Though n o t very lupareHtlau*. tb* flremen note the colncidenae, o t tbe rgaatod unlucky num ber tblrteen and are wondering w hat will happen next, th * Incntie In the num ber « f thece alarm* b** be«n a aonre* o f anbayanoe to the g io departntrat. On * m r a J occariana the men bad Jn it returned from a blato wben U w wer* called out again, bn a u m I«m •nandi Chief X ien ted ha* reported tb* atattor to ttie .in ilbn oiBctoi*. but tlto r

9.1. . :■ ■ ■■■

have only aucceeded In apprehending OW ' alleged offender. Tbe chief had b tlllr running down aeveral rumor* Of petbuoa who Were thought to have pulled some of the boxra hut he had failed to gat afW direct evidenoe. Deputy Chlet ttotJey aafd' thl* morning, he ta u g h t the work denp' ’ by hoy* and lald it wa* a hard m atter to '. . catch them In the ac t o f palling A bCs."Vw

"Tb* beat way to atop tbto boatoeMr,?'., n ld tbe chief, " to to toold o t on*' low aad ilvg .'hi* a In State-jNtoan. f fh a b 'Y T o N ito :have a watontlr to' dSMl|<':«(Quii«___ ,■endtor to. iilanka T he t i /p M i to tbaagt''

-offeDdeta a n net mcKtohed e a o i i^ w ito i. eadgirt.'' ..' ■■

r t '

Page 2: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

t E lW A K ? ‘ E V E [ m ( 3 ' i r E W S . ' ^ M ^ B. 190T.------------ " ............... ........= = ^

u r ' ; w

r VESTIGATING ^U.$iSENATOR

S^SKtajT «f bterior Looking bto Aflegntioas Against " Warren, of Wyoming. ,

. LATTER DENOUNCES CHARGES

gpMial Vfiptidi to (ho BVSXnfO XEW8.WABHINdTOK, Jan. ( .-T h e Becretary

j t t tbe iDtarler 1* Inveatisatlng United •ta tae Senator Prancle K. W arren, of Wromlnf, chairman of the Senate Cotn- mltlee on Hllltnry Affaire. The Senator to charted with being a 'Tend grafter," t t ba laf a litted that he hae fenced In and appropriated to hie own uee public lande In hto S tata

Ttw oharfee are of form al character, and are accompanied by vurloue data, mape, etc. The name of the pereon who Bled the ahariee to not dlecloeed.

Tbe Senator denouncea the chargee ea ta lM and dectore* th a t they are pueb'ed

■ poialy for the purpoBe,of pcnjteutjhg.hlm. ! 8 a haa invited the tulleat Inveeltgiitlon.

Tbe lande In queatlon are located near Cheyenne, Wyo., end more thun Ui.Oin uuraa are aald to be Involved.

EASTON PLANT NOT A FAILURE

(Continued Cram F lr tt Page)

: > i l i t t natoam fee mnnielpal ownorehlp, talk I M pnatothfiy of the Uayor and hto "col- I H tb theorlee" when hto hope tor havinf , Hto pity dp prtoaita IlfhtUis to eusseatad.

and |lT a the In feranc that they regard j t t e libyor a« eomevhat of a demagpfue.

:: f r b a d la a rd Ulto ( m of tatk antons the . PhBv Olaat of “t<>dd oiuaeni" of the ultm-

tPtpaatabla and. uftra-conaervatlve type I I s «lhar towna, ^ I aet out 'td look for

^ tbe twaaon. I found it. While It doeen't 1 directly-opikcam natM dpat nwperahlp, eit' 1 oapt In part, it haa mach to Oo trith the , PMMat altuatlon and agitation.

The ;M ry tr Ilf ■ Ihd tpPhDo, S tillty oomr a ra Eiiaton ton't quite complete, but

h t o ip ln s that way. Thera are two eleo trio amhpaniea. The old one to the Cne-

S Power Company, oontroUed by the altad Chie JCmpyovcment Company of tUadelphIa, (ihlch to the big p a rtn e r of

the Prudential In iurance poojilo In the ownerahl{i.pf .thp-Pikllln Servica C.orporH-ti<A of Kow'jAriey. Th<* T HHfon tranRft

\ ConiMliijr, which holdi p^riHMu^l and im- . liJmitod- tro lly fraiA^hlHu for tnott of ihc

MrtftN 111 Iflkiitoa aikl in t*hIl]lpAT3iirR, the . twto town Apreme the Delaware River inI KfW '«;$nt.rp]led' by afflllAtedI 'SlWlfSlAt poweri with headquarters In m k lelphlA. There la an opcisitlos elec- '

trie ODSijtlanp,’.‘a(U cli'd id ‘bulilnc*e as tho Psoplafi Hleolrlc Company until a few anontba ggo, when It waa retirganized sa d baohma tha Peo^^o'e coneolldnted Public Service Cnrporatlon, under condb tloni which tuggeft a working agreement With the tntot. ,t( not yet an absolute

m urger. Aa In other clttee, the trust has le ft enough local men In Ihr oBldnl dlrec-

, torlM of the colnpanleti to give them local [sppnisrlty and InRuence.

- ..Pay to r r r s n e h te e .* When U arch wae elected Mayor he took j kto oflle* and dullea aerlouety, and etartrd ) pu t on s u rioua Campaign for Improving ' the otty*! condition, both phyaioally and- SlWnotally. I t waen't many muntlia after

he had been elected th a t the Piaeian Tran-! alt Company wanted a franchtoe for a

n w hhMkg on aome atreet they didn't have, but where. It leema, there was

i danger that another ooniM ny might aom* j time get in. The few hlochg of street- w anted dldn*t am ount to much In them^, Mlvee, bu t the Mnyor demanded compen- I aathm ten the franchise. He wne willing I th a t the grant Ihauid be perpetual, as all

th e otheri in town arg. b u t tSve company h id never pgld anything (or previous grania, egeept a petty lioense fee of (hi a ear, and the (layoTs demands ^ r e .de- tMunoed by the company as radical and tntreasoneble. He held out, Imwever, and

. Snally. compelled the company to pay (8,WO to cash ■ and to pave the public gquare with brlolt a s payment (or tho Iranohlaei

During this light March began to learn apmethtng of w hat party machines and th e ir influenoe ainoigit to in politics. Ho was lurprtoed when good cttlipu.s, men

'-I prominent In the party, the ultra-con- faarvntlvss and ultra-respectahlos, told him , 'h e wne going too far; was boenming loo

tadlcal and hlgh-handcd lu his treatment Of the company.

L ater tho Mayor become more radical. Ho guggeetod th a t It would Improve the appearanco of the streets if the wires were Put undsrgiiound, and wanted the city to ^ l l d subways and rent space In them to the oorporatlnns. The oorporatluns refused to even consider such a thing, and dolled the Itayer to compel them to do anything of tJili sort th a t they didn’t want to do. So for the wires are still abuve ground. Municipal subways are annuig the things o f the future yot In Hnaton.

Then tho Mayor forced other things. .On* thing he brought about, as p!*r( of his Iranchlse light, was In compelllii* the trol­ley company to stdl six tickets for twrnty- Bv* cents. He bad been learning things about politic* and about the view and at- tlludo of the prominent and uUrn- mspectable and conservative cltlarns all th is lime. He had learned, too, that tho

.p riv a te eteotrlo companies -nTre deter­mined, if possible, to secure the uhnniluti-

. m em of the municipal .strecit-Ilglnitis . p lant, a t almost any crist, to head off the i. possthlllty of the city going Into the pri­

vate lighting business a t some time.One J^iiy last summer the president of

th* Easton Power Cumiinny, the r , G. l.- fo rporallen, who l* also the rashler of lha

F irs t National Hunk, urged the Mayor th a t he should agree to lulvertlslog for bids for slreet lighting. Just to ftiid out If It wouldn’t be cheaper than keeping tho municipal pjatu gnhig. At that time, and Sines, the Mayor bus been ugUailng a Itcw bond Issue for a tmmlMT of l.irge Ini- provemants, such as Impnivlug Ihe lire AepatUnent, pavdng ' streets, hullding a .g,arbagc crematory and a sewaBe-illspoiiul plant.

T o ld o f th * T h re a l .“If you don't ngrea to julvertise for bids

fo r street lighting," w-as the tillhniUuin of the hank Cfisiilpr and eieelrlr romtiiiuy president. In elfect, "we will defeat your Iktndlng it'home.”

Before hIs election March might have g iksd who '*we" were nrd how "we" Could defeat public Imiitm etiictits for the benefit of the city, hut he hod learned it lot Of IhIngH iinco hful ln*rn Mnyor. H e at conlmry 1o iill rulen of thefam e, went tti Ihr and toiOthem of this thr<’iiL Tlion he den«Kl lht> CorpowMon Interests to brnt htni. untl

'■ » en t ahw d wllh his brmfRnf seheme. ^h tch l« now Wi ll on llie way tow«rtl he- Ing aubmlttM t(» a vote of the pooivic. March, by the way, bolievcs Jn the people liniviiig A voto ujwin tbclr own affitlrs, ns well n« upon the clnrtlon of ofRcj^re.

**Oh. yep!" paid March, when he hnd toM mo lome of th is and 1 had lenrned the rest in other ways, "1 nm still a Ue< l>uhllcAn and an onranlvutlon man, but I don't think I coutd got another nomina­tion from the organlsntton " ,

There wasn't a . smile ha he said this. The Mayor Ukea his politics ns Sf^rlcusiy aa he does hU oAcial duties.

All of W>iich throw s light thoroaaems why aome IntercstA might like to Nee munfolpal owpierihlp dt^clored a full- hr« In Kostoa, and why deppereto rffortA are being made to have u declared ti failure.

Easton has been running h municipal street lighting plant about twenty years. The city went Into municipal ownership bemuse It decided there would be b o a te r gcanomy than In buying light from the prlYSte compipiee. although even a t that t tms, U a k In the la te eighties, the prioii

EW'

mr*

RJ]'

Ti

m i b o r nFr«B Hia Owa ^ 2 S S ^ BaAmbiatioiu.

tjlnr 'emdd you do better titan com to me foe yonf eytKtosses?'I mlio boUl tiM «niBtaaUoR and

'V* (fiitM ^W ve .you exp itoe tM r^-duid 1 Biiarantee to give y o g ee ri^o o M . Notornyprim .

West P ark S treet««■ Msrpa fgMa JtosttA.;

fdr atreet lighting, on a moonlight sched­ule, o lf^ed by the private company and In preference to which a muniolpnl plant waji established, was lees than most cities In New Jersey are now pai^ng for street lighting. Easton has a population of alMut 80.000 people. Its fifty mtlee of streets were last year lighted by 240 arc Umpi. and the cost of lighting, with the munlclpiil plant, war ^I.ID per lamp. There was some trouble with the sirect lighting system In November last, due to the Introduction of new lamps which did not work well, overloaded the m a­chinery and caused a breakdown, When this breakdown occurred, the sup^rin* tendeni urged that the City Council make an appropriation for extensive repairs and Improvemanta Unless these improve­ments to the machinery were mndn nt once, he suggested that It would be neces­sary for the 'city to And some other mentis of getting light. In brief, his proposition was tha t the elty should either spend enough money to put the municipal plant In good condition, or advertise for bids for lighting by a pn-. vatfl company.

B ids fo r P H t s I* U v h tin K .Easton's city government Is divided

Into two bodies, a Commun Council nf tw entyfuur members and a Select Coun­cil of fwaive^iiasmber*. One of the select councllmon, soon after the superinten­dent’s report, presented to th a t body a petition bearing tbe names of about sixty people, all good cltlsens of the respeotable and oonservallva type, in favor of ad­vertising for bids for private lighting- At the same time he Introduced a resolu­tion to advertise for bids for stree t light­ing from private corporations. The man who Introduced the resolution, a lawyer and former promoter of trolley roads named Nevln, was the only one of the twelve select councllmen who voted for It

There U some apparent competition, whether real or assumed may he quee^- tlonedi betwesti the two oompanlee In Easton for bualDess. The old emmpany has a monopoly of tbe gas business and the ra te Is II. 2B a thousand feet. Bsfore the new oompany was started the ra te for private eteotrlo tight w m fourteen oents per kilowatt hour. This Is stlU the new company's rate, with rebates. The old oompany has out th a t ra te in half, and Its customers are now being supplied a t seven cents per kilowatt hour. The old oom­pany lights tbe a tre su of Phllllpsburi. acrose the* river, for 116 a y e a r To get rid of the municipal plant the private oompanles are willing to light both cities for ilCi a lamp, If necessary. This would be aa actual saving od what municipal lighting Is now costing Easton, but It isn 't arousing much enthusiasm.

“We know what we can do with a mu­nicipal plant," says Mayor March, "but we don't know what the prices might be If w« put ourselves entirely In tbe bunds of private corporations.''

A s to n 's municipal plant can hardly be said to be an economical proposition, eo far as Its actual operation la cotveerned. Under the Pennsylvania Constitution and laws, the oily cannot engage in oommer- claJI lighting; a t least, that (s the Imprea- siun. A private oompany eupnpHes the city 'w ith water, operating under one of the rotten uld charters granted years ago by ti more rotten Legislature, giving It en exclusive right to do buainesR In the town. Several years ago the people of the oily voted for a municipally owned water ^an t, but the courts decided tha t the only way the city could go Ipto the wiitur Imslnoss was by taking over ths plant of the private company. The water company, with imllmlted and exclusive rights in supplying water and making rates, put a prohibitive price on Its plant, and remains In business, charging high prices end paying enormous dividends

Once, long ago, the city had owned a SMi.ill rnte^ plant, In which It had about IGO.OQO Invest^. That was In the old bur- qugh days. Wlmti the IHaston Lehigh Company was formed, through some manipulation of local politics, the city plant was lurticd over to the private company. For this transfer the only thing the city got was an agreem ent that the company would supply w ater free for Are purposes. For Us ^ ,000 gift the city DOW gets free hydrant service, but pays the full price for w ater fo r Its pub­lic buildings and for the slectrlo plant. The water bills charged up against tho electric plant last year, although not . U 8hfi water so charged was usetl for m ak­ing electricity, amounted to IL3&0. o r a ilttls more than f5 per lamp,

W h x t t I s R x p « n s lT « .For the reason that It is conducted

alone, and without connection with any other utility, the Easton stree t lighting plant Is expensive. I t li located on one of tho hills, back from ths river, and all the coal bas to be carted through lha city. CkKid btickwheat or pea coal costs | the elty about 18.76 a ton, and the oLty | has to buy It In Philadelphia, a s the loea? dealers have refuRcd to make contracts since the last coal strike.

It Is only fair, too, to point out that the ISl.lD per lamp which municipal light­ing cost Easton last year does not include Interest charges on bonds, sinking fund provisions for paying bonds, o r any pro­vision for depreciation of the plant. The plant has breu run. so far as Its financial management Is concerned, on the happy- go-lucky, sytemlesB meihod of most small cities, and many larger ones.

My efforts to leurn something about the bonds and sinking fund charges, so aa to aseertuln what had been the true cost of the municipal street lighting. Illustrated Just how careless and Improvident this management has been. One cltlsen told me that ho had figured It all out, and found that, Including Interest, sinking fund and depreciation charges, street light­ing wae costing the city over |80 u lamp.I asked the city dork about It. Ho didn't know. Then I asked him about the bonds. Again he didn't know, and he had nothing In his ufflee to show what electric plum bonds were outatandlng. In fact, he had nothing to show anything concerning the city 's bonded Indebtedness. I went to the Mui'or and he dldn'l know. He ques­tioned the figures of llie cltUeu who had given me the ISO price.

"1 don’t Bee how he got it," said the Mayor. *'So far oh T know, there Is nn sinking fund provision and no deprecia­tion account for the plant."

Dillgem Hcarch in tho books of the cUy trsHSurnr by tho ircoaurer, Iho Mayor and myself revealed that since ISSB, when ttie plant wuB built, there had been no Issue Of bonds which were lioscrlbed iie being for any pitrtlcular purpose. When R.iston was a borough. homiigU bonds were iMisued at different limes, wlthnut any speelfica- Uon as to w ild they were for. Prnbably the eatabllslimenl of the electric plniU. wlilch wua, III 1R8&. valued a t 120,00ft. was Iriken care of by a part of some of these iKMid Ibbuch, hut there Is nnlhliig to atiuw huw much, w hat part, or whether or not tho bonda were paid. When Eftalrm be rumc a city a lot of the old LH)rough bonds were refunded. W hether those which helped to pay for the lighting plant wore nmong these, or had been paid off, nubiidy knows. To-day Efiston has p himded di'bl of I38G.OW, o r within a few iluuifiands of the two per cent, lim it on ItH ramUlcB. The electric p lan t Is now carried on the city 's books as a $48,000 asHct. Nobridy knoHVft w hether the plant

paid for or not. The Mayor and city olflolnls think it is paid for.

Ht^Mull L ax M eth o d s*At preaenl the plant Is partly worn ou t

The Mnvor thinks that an expenditure of about 88.000 will patch It up and keep It going aw well a» It hna been going for years. Others In the cliy. including the people Interested In the private corpora- tlona, ray that if the city Is going to .stay In the municipal owtierahlp business,It ehonld spend about i8ft.<XKi at e>nce In the e q u ip rn ^ of an up-iu-ilule plant.

However this mny be, tiio fact Is that lax methods, such ns would never bo lol- craled In any well-niunaged private cor- porfllhm, have'pul the city In the position nf being dependent upon an electric plant which needfl repairs, with no money on hand to make the repalm. Tt la the same old story which hua been responsible for failure of or trouble with many municipal cnterprlpps—ewere. strecla, wiilVr, elec­tricity and other utilities. Instead of making annual provision for a deprecla tlon account and charging It to the cost of llghtlrtg, BO that the plant would be kept always up to dote, Eaeton has iilmply Jog g ^ along, pocketing the benefits of a low prlof for stiTse* lighting and letting the machinery go until It wore out or broke down: th*in making a small appro­priation to patch It up and letting U go imtll the next bre.ikdown. Tills policy ta reflponHlble for wimtever trouble there Is with the Easton plant to-day, aa It Is re- sponBible for the trouble with the water supply nt Orange* N. J- It h the one trouble generally with municipal owiier ship of lUlUlles: too much politics, In keeping dawn the tax ra te a t the ex> pense of good tnunagemenl and good finanolsring.

As it now stands, Eaaton'a municipal Btreef lighting plant Isn't eavlfig the city much, if nny, money. U Is entirely possi­ble that the city could buy lights from the private coitipanlen as cheap a s It la now making them for Itaclf. Not improbably either of the old companiea would gladly underbid thd present coat of municipal •ervica for t|ie sake of having the m unid-

■RS*-

pal plant abandoned. They are bidding* though, to get rid of a possible oompetltor In privlate llghllng, the more profitable [iart of the business, and not for tho sake of the comparatively small profit there would b« in roeruly lighting the streets..

fn Eaaton, or anywhere eUe, a munici­pally owned electric plant, without big Issues of WAtored stock to absorb dlvl- detids and keep up rates, cun supply elec- (rlcJiy for house und store lighting, profit* ably, (it five cents per kilowatt or less. To meet this competition, the private com­panies would have to reduce prices, not nnly on electricity, but on gns- Electric lighting nt five cents per kilowatt Is about ei|ua), I am told, to gas at fifty cents a ihousftnd foct. It U to save the big profits In the guA business, now enormous, that the electric companies are fighting munici­pal ownership of electric plants, lo E as­ton, Orange, Newark and elaewhers throughout the world.

Tills fact seems to be pretty thoroughly understood in Easton, and the Mayor and rounciis are looking further ahead than the mere saving of a few dollars In strost lighting In t^e next few years. They have seen through the game of ths Oas Trust, and don't propose to play the trust's game. Mayor March Inn't ths first executive of the city who has seen and understood this. In a message to the councils two years ago, Mayor Horace l.>ehr cautioned the councllmen against the o t^ ^ ra tlo n tnfluenoea at work to de­stroy the municipal plant.

F o r m e r N x y o r* ! V iew s.'1 dsslrs to express my earnest convic­

tio n /’ said Mayor Lehr, In tlu» mvasage referred to, “of the desirability of main­taining our city light plant, and to bc g ooimcUmen to guard against all effort to turn our city lighting over to n. prlvuts corporation. llAcent events In our city imllcate that there is a more or less con- cenlcd effort to accomplish this very thing. However that may bo, the exist­ence of two private lighting companies In this city, each capable of exerting politi­cal an''! otbsr Influence through thos« financially interested, renders It necsssfiry that oouncils and ths publk should be on guard. Let us not give up this one pub­lic utility which ths city Is operating, but rather consider the question of extending the city service to private consumerR/ '

With everything against it. Eastun has made a success of municipal street light­ing, in getting service In the past for less than It could have bought eervloe from prlVAle companlee. Its success has so frightened the private companies th a t they are now willing to underbid the coal of municipal lighting to stave off or pre­vent the city competing with them la private lighting, but If the councils follow the Mayor's advice, they wlU not oven nibble a t the bait. It. 13. W.

A 7% Savings Bank Interestto unknown, but Wl hkk*

Never Failed to Pay 79bon our preferred stock*

An ok}-«AUbll«lMdatlon, that bus nevar before oiierea its »tock for «l«, wHl i»" of »IlmltKl umwut of It* enable It to meet LAfiClkLT IK- CRBMBD BtlSINBBB WHY LBT TOUR HONKY BABM

PER CENT., WHEN A SAFJAND BURE RBTUR#! o f 7 PER CENT. CAN HE HAD 7 . . ,

If you know how good Uil* bu*lno** I*, you would worn ih, rtwli “•toll yon. Addrou INVKIfnCBNT, Bm H, Now* oflkw.

It* «wn (y ttem *nA >»■ dtCarent man- * tln g offictol*.

’’B ut tbe flnanclat atatentont* ar« enn- ■oUdatedr' be u k e A "Y e a ,” be »al4Mr, C ornlih said he didn't know wb)

owned the atoek of the Ocddenla! and O riental Steatneblp Company, but proni- l**d to And out.

ling la id he n g re tto d th«* Vw m atter had oau**4 (rietlqn, bu t he aaBared the dele­gation that be could not h*H> It. He *ald the propoied appotntm ent of Mr, Hetoler had beoti announoed la tlto newapapet* three weeka before any proteit wa* made

Hood’s SarsaparillaBaa ntr|ia**ed all other medlelboa, in nundL Ndee and eurea

It* aaeoe**, great a* tt ha* been, haa ap.

DEMOCRATS GO IT ALONE AGAIN

imd thet When a p ro tea t.w aa made he i nnto'tiwth**unliort a lreadv nrnm l«.ui t.v I P*re“ t ly 0hl7 )ii*tliegUB.It ha* reoelved by actual count tnon that*

40,009 Ceatlmonlal* In twoyaan.

(Continued from F ln t Page,)

BOCK DEMANDS aE A N STREETS

Commissioner Rods Riot Act to Foremen in Departments

and Wants Results.

THREATENS HEAD LOPPING BEE

WOMAN'S HAIR SINGED TRYING’ TO SAVE CASH

M oney L o s t in F i r e W h ic h AU o D «- ■ lrciy«*it A, fj. Il<iri4'pp8‘8 lltm nv .

Dniuflg#Fire dentrnyed Ihe house of A, I*. I3ur-

geaa at Clinton plaoe and ProRpsrt ave- luia this morning. When llif' fire wax <1U- ciiverpfi It had g«ln».‘d much ht^adw'ny. It wuB nbout 9:30 o'clock that Mra. Qurgesg had occanlon to go to the ynrd In tha rear of the house, and saw the pmoko Insultig from one of the upper windows, flhe liiirrli-d hack Into the hoUBe again, ond. going upstairs, found the place In tlamcHi.

An alHrsi was turned In from box 25th WhIJe efforts were being made to save the furniture, Mrs. Buagess remembsrtel that she had left n large sum of money In the house. She went back, and In ?i»- leniptlng lo save the cjish narrowly raped flerInuB buriia. As It was, her hair WHS badly scorched. The money, which amounted to $400* w m consumed by the flameb.

When ihe firemen arrived, aflor a long run, the building, which wa« a iwn-and- one-half-awry frame dwelling, was all abliiBe. This section of the city at pres­ent lo without fire hydrants, and the aor- vlco* of the firemen and appamtua wfia of little use. Chemical exllnguishurs were used, but they mad* no Impression.

BurgewB. who oomiuclR a farm near hla home, hud no limurunoo on hia bouse or furnlturo. IIurgcsR places hla loss on the building a t $3,500. and oh his furniture about eleven hundred dollars.' These loBses, with the $400, which was burned up In the building, brings the total -loas np to about five Ihouisnnd dollars. ' No cause for the origin of the fire Is known

Chairm an Frank J, Bock, of the Street Committee of the Boerd of Worko, had a heart-to -heart talk with the foremen of the street cleaning gangs In the city hall th is morning. Mr. Bock toM them th a t he did not wont any more complataUi concerning dirty and Impassable itreete, and he w anted every man to oo-op«rate w ith him in putting the etreet cleaning and stree t repair department on a thor­oughly efficient footing. Otherwise the ax would swing and men seoured who were capable and willing to perform the tasks required of them, he declared.

As a result of the confab It Is likely th a t the city will be divided Into districts, w ith a foreman In charge of and respon­sible fdr a dlitriot. Several of the fore­men spoke of the dIfficulUca put in tfaetr way by people bereft of any scruples re­garding an unclean community. Mr. Bock sa id he Would furnish each with a copy of the ordlnancee, and would also request the Police Board to have policemen drlfied In the provisions of the street ordinances. If neceBsary, Mr. Bock declared, he would have the foremen made apeclal officers.

Tho commissioner got after Sidewalk Inspector D o u s e s , and suggested that he "get on the job In a hurry" or he might find Homebody else in hU place. The ('‘ ndltlons of the sidewalks throughout the city were disgraceful, Mr. Bock aa- Bcrted.

"This department has got to make goodi or I'll know the rcaaon why.” waa Mr. Bock's parting shot.

CHURCH ROOF FALLS AND INJURES WORKMAN

Ml. P le a sB iit B a p t is t B d lllc e N eene o f B erlo n s C o lla p s e —B n lld ln g D e­

p a r tm e n t liispeptoTH L a x fA portion of the roof of the Mt Pleasant

B(4ptlHt Church* LiyUevIlle nvvnue, oppo­site Oriental atreet. ccillapBcd this after noon, and un Italian workman, who was known nnly as ''F rank .'' was Injured.

The church is being enlarged, and labor ers were engagedln demoftsblng Bide walls and the roof In the rea r when the aocldetu occurred. The Italian was In the cellar and wna caught «mld the debris.

Four other laborers were working on the room, but escajwd unhurt, The Itul Ian was taken to H. Michael's Hospital.

Edward O'Connor, foreman of the work, Biiid that there had not been a building Inspector around for a month.

O'Connor and Ollle A. On*i>n, of tho Urceu Construction C'ompany, ihe con tractors, rloclnred that precautions had beon taken to prevent aocldcntB.

F.ATlIISn W H ELA N NAILS AWAY*

HARRIMAN AS A RAILROAD BOSS

His New "Endless Chain" Method of Buying Rail­

ways Indefinitely.

BONDING EACH ONE ACQUIRED

w il l , H o n a lg u o r gtipppnrd , N p irn rk r r t e * l G or* » u l<)uro,>*iin T fm r.

Rov. Isaac P. Whslan, pastor nf 8t. Pairlrk 's Cathcilral, Bailed tor Hamburg tills momipg III the HamHifg-American I.lne steamship Amerlka, In company with Miinsignnr John A. Sheppard, of Jersey (.’ity- A large mimher of priests and other friends were at the dock to see the clergy­men off. Father Whelan was presenlod with many How ers amt a large basket of fruit from ihe children of St. Patrick’* BeUoo!.

The clergymen will make a tour of the Old World mid expect to he gone at least three months. During Father Whelan'S nhaence Rev. William F. Grady will act

paalor of the'Wilhedral.

NEW CHdiTUHV HA1.1. S lIT ,

V le lim u ( C o ll» ii*e 4*l!s )’r i i , ) r t e to r t u r tgilDI) Dnim iKea.

etilt has bean started In the First Dis­trict Court by William Orecnlleld, counsel for Mosea Schwelrd, of 105 South Sixth atreet, agalnet Annie Solomon, owner of the New Century Hnll, which collapsed Nwemher 36. killing one person and In­juring oihera. charging tbe defendant with Improperly and negligently mnlntnlnlng a building tinsnfe to the public, nod praying for I3(» dntnagos for Injuries recolvnd.

Bcliwelrfl alleges that while In tho aet of purcliaaing a ticket a t the box offic* the floor of tho lobby caved In and aa a result he was painfully cut about the head and face.

W eek ’s D ea th a n d D isease R e co rd .According to ibo m ortuary table com­

piled by th* Board of Health there were 124 deaths in Newark during the week ending at noon, representing a death rate (rf 2149 per l.hW on an estimated populntlan of sai.000. Up to last week the jjty wa* credited the Iioard with s pbpnlaUon of 290,000. Contagious and Infectious d is­ease* caused twenty-five death*, general dleenses ninety and acddeala 7. There were two suicides. Of the peranns who died flfteen were under one year of age, nine between one and five, five between five and twenty years, tlfty-nlne between twenty and sixty, and thtrty-sl* over sixty years. There were fifty-nine new cases of contagious and Infectious dis­eases reported, an Increase of six over Inst week.

TO T H E P U B L IC I

4

P ile s c i s n l !■

T h is is to g ive notice that neither I nor the estate of the late J . A . Logan have any interest in th e undertaking hnsiness catrif^ on at 94^ Broad street, Newark, N , J ., by Sm ith & Sm ith, succesaors to

A . Logan,

i MRS. J. A. LOQAN.J u i Q u y 2 , 190 7 .

T

Special Ditpak^ tu the JSVBKITfa ySW 8.NEW YORK, Jan. 6*-Wlth the resump­

tion tO'day of the Interstate Commerce CommlNjtion's InvestlEation of the Harrt- mnn railroad and steamship combination, tho complete control of B. H. Harrlm an of th e g rea t systems involved was shown even more conclusively than yeecterday.

Every witness on the stand has helped to make this fact rnore patent. Directors end olficlats of the 'various companiles ha^’e taken his word as absolute com­mands. I t was shown that he Is abSK>lute m uster of over 2S.OOO miles of railroad lines, reprueeiitlng an outlay of over three billion dollars. With his power unhamper­ed. lie bought the stock of various roads until able to control thorn, and the sole concern of directors waa to confirm his acts.

"A new endless chain" deal has develop­ed In the testimony of his bonds and m ort­gages. Beginning with a bond Issue of $100,000,000 in IDOL It was used to enable him to buy In another road. Then this, In turn , was morigaged bo supply funds for buying another road. Again and again this operation was repeated until hl49 Con­trol of the systems he praotlcally owns had been built up.

IL a n d a . G* H a n T es tlfla s*E. T. Jeffery, president of the Denver

and Hlo Oronde Railroad, and affltlated lines, including the proposed W estern P a­cific Railroad, was the first witness be* fore the comitilsslon to-day. Mr. Jeffery's name had not appeared In any of the lists of witnesses heretofore given o u t

He said he was well acquainted with the railroad situation In the West. He described the Rio Grande system and Its connections. It exchanged business with the Oregon stiort line and Oregon Rail­road and Navigation Company. When the Union Fuciflc took control of the Southern

I Pacific there was a shrinkage in the am ount of business received by the Rio OramJe from the Oregon lines, "due, no doubt," added Mr. Jeffery, "to the con­trol the Union Pacific had of the Southern Pacific.''

Mr. Jeffery next desoribed the W edern Pacific Railroad., which, he said, has a line under canatruetion from Salt I^iko City to flan Francisco.

The attention of the witness Was called lo the Utters between E. H. Harrlman and 'George J. Gould read yesterday, In which Mr. Oould said he had determined lo support the building of the Western Pacific. Mr. Hkrriman t i l l e d that ht regretted the loss of Mr. Gould's advIcH Mr. Jeffery said Mr, Gould was largely Interested in Elo Grande.

The witness read from a recent annual report he had submitted to the Riu Grande stoikholdera. In which it'A^as stated thal Union Poolflc ofmtrol of Southern Pacific linen fihd resulted In "unexpected • dllFI- outtlea," and "unlocked for Impejjlinenta' In getting business through to the coast and theretoPB the building of a compatl- tlve line from Salt Lake to San Francisco had been undertaken to protect Rio Grande Interests.

"Prior lo the consolidation were the Union Pftclflo and Southern Pacific com­peting lines?” Mr. Severance asked.

"W ithin corialn territory, yes/' replleil tho witness,

"W ithin what territory?""A t Chicago, for Instance, the Union Pa­

cific would compote for business to th* coast as against the ftTInols Central, whloh sought business to he bandied K the W est by way of New Orleans and the flauthern Pacific. Not all the buslnpRS w as competitive, but there was compeli^ tlon nt a number of points,*'

D w rl4 WII40X on th e siMnd. David Wilcox, president of the Dela­

w are and Hudson Company and director of the Union Pacific, testified to-day that the <»titrol of the Southern Pacific was obtained by the Union Pacific on the recommendation of E. H. Harriman

’ B. T. Jeffrey, president of the Western Pacific^ th© new Oould line now under construction, said he was formerly asso­ciated w ith the lUlnols Central and the Denver and Rio Grande, Prior to the acquisition of the Bouthern Pacific by the Unton Pacific, Jeffrey said there wns active competition between those two roads to secure traffic to the Pacific coast. The llouthern Pacific received & s |ia re of th a t trade cyid sent som© of th© thiffld by way of New Orleans, m l J effrey said a t present the businets for tho W estern lines In the Bast was eon- irolied* by "commercial agents" of thoAe lines* W hen abked If the Union Pacific eontroHlng the Oregon ■ Short Line, the Oregon. Railroad and Navigation OonP pimy* ahd having secured oontroi of the Southern Pacific there .was thuch chance fo r competition, the witness eafd the chArtCes for competittoil were not very exoehebt for any road having Eastern oonpecMon*

W , % 'Oomleh, vIce-prssMent of the tTnlott Faclftc end several otiier Harriman UneA Wda the next witness* Mr. Cornish Is ftieo a director of the flan Pedro* Angeha and fiait U k e Ratlfood, of which Senator WllUam A. Olaric is president* l(r* would hot admit that the

VMllloB'* were « n d i r ^ asaie -1^1-1- opwateg

made on the recommondatlon of a special Dommtttee appointed at the opening meet­ing, of which Mr. Ryan was ohalrmaiL In tb© m ain tbe rules adopted were the sanfe as those of lust year, There were Im portant d ianges In sonie, however, and, one new on© wan added. This WM made Rule 19. I t provides for a course of pro­cedure when the house Is placed under calk and Is similar to the rule for that purpose th a t governs legislative bodies.I t enables lees than a quorum of the coun­cil to force th© attendance of absent meto- b«rs and Includes ail the stringent m eas­ures laid down In the usual parliam entary ru les designed fur that purpose. For tlli purpose of giving power to enforce th is rule the right of the preehlent to prevent members and others leaving tbe council Chamber while the house Is under call Is Q<Mif©rrvd, and during such emergencies ths powers of sergeant-at-arnis are vested In th© m essenger of (he oouncIL This rule was adopted with ths design of meet­ing such conditions as have arisea from ths refusal of the Republican members lo take their places In the oounctl.

Tb© most im portant changes In the old rules or© contained In Rule 94, which w as Rule 38 of lost year's council. I t relates to the procedure tn the postage of ordi­nances, and aa a t present constituted pro­vide© th a t no ordinance shall have a sec­ond reading a t the meeting a t which It was presented or reported to the council w ithout th© assent of s m ajority of th© members present. It 'fu rther provides th a t a m ajority vote of the whole council shall be necessary to have a third reading given a t the same meeting. The old rule required a two-thtrda vote In each of these olroUmstancss.

A sim ilar change is made in R u le '41, which now provides that any rule may be suspended temporarily with the concur­rence of a m ajority of the members of the council. A two-thlrda vote was for­merly required In this m atter also. These changes, of course, are designed to give

! the DemocnitB with less than a two- thlrda vote of the whole council power to pass and advance ordinances out of the usuiil course, and also to suspend rules without having to depend npon Re­publican votes.

A fter the standing committees were an ­nounced by the president, (he council took a recess of five minutes lo permit the com­m ittees lo organize. The Committee on F inance took advantage of the opp*)riun- Ity to recommend the passage of some routine resolutions. BOiiie of which were prepared to correcl botik-kccplng errors th a t had led to the passage of duplicate reBolutions authorizing minor approprla- tione.

On motion of Mr. Holzner the Commit­tee on Printing an d Stationery wh s au ­thorized to have printed MO copies of the smoke nnd noise ordlnunceB, and it was also decided to have GOO copies of the rules printed.

Mr. F rey 's motion that a diagram of the new city hall and a directory of Its of­fices be prepared for the benefit of visitors and persons having business In the build­ing, was passed, after a little by-play.

"I don 't know whether It will be neces­sa ry to provide a diagram or not," re ­m arked the president, "but from the ap- pearano© of things In thl© vicinity some people ax© evidently lost."

Mr. fllnnott glanced over the vacant chair© on the Republican s^de of the cham ber as he spoke and the crowd, catching the Import of the thrust, ap­plauded It.

"W hy not instruct the policemen on duty to learn the details of the building BO th a t they may properly direct visit­ors?" suggested Mr. Wright.

"There ar© a good many persons w lO would ra ther go up against a diagram than a policem an/' replied Mr. Slnnott, as he declared the motion carried.

•ThB privilege ©f the floor and the cour­tesy of the council were, on motion of Mr. Holsner. extended to former President John H, Ely and Praeldont James E. Howell, of the City Hall CornmisBlon, and both were eecorted to seals on the dais.

Mnkc*^wp o f Gommltte©©*The standing and special committees as

announced by the president were as fol­lows:

Finance—Messrs. Ryan, Corlsh, Mullen, Holzner, FrOBhUch, Martin, Burnett.

Police—Mullen, Wright, Laughlin. Construction and Alleratlon of Bnlld-

Ings—Reilly, riacher, McGowan. J. A. Meyer, Laughlin, Schreltmudler.

poor and Alms—Corlsh, Holsner, Lc- veon, Frey, Wohlfarth, Snyder, Bennett.

Public MarketH“ Mullen, J. A. Meyer, Reilly, Corlsh, Burnett, Moueley* Cairns.

Public Buildings—HolKner, Corlsh, J. A. Meyer, Leveeri, Frey. Kunee, E. C, Meyer,

PubllQ Health — McGowan, Froellch, ReiUy, Kunze. Lee,

Public Schools—Frey, W right, E. C Meyer.

Prin ting and Stationery—I’’l»cher, Mo Gowan, Mann. Frey. Leveen. Monaley, Estelle.

U cenaea—Leveen. J. A. Meyer, Bray. Sohreltmueller, BoecaJno.

Legislation — Ryan, Hoi*ner, Mullen, M artin L«e. ’'• ‘h Rresldont Slnnott, City Clerk 'Connelly, City Counsel Nugent. Auditor Form an, Comptroller Bacheller and City Treasurer Guenther ns auxiliary members, . . „ . .. .A ssessm ents-W rlght, Snyder, Boscalno.

Elections — Blertempfel. Mann, Bray, Lee, Boscalno. „ _

R ailroads and Franchises—Mann. Bray,usleyCity Home—Blertempfel, Fischer, Ben-

^MoBpltalfH-Froellch, Blertempfel, Reilly, Martin. W ohlfarth,

W elghii filUS Meaeures J, A. Meyer. Blertempfel, Mann, Mullen. Estolle, E. C. Meyer, Calms.

Bpeclal committees: *Memorial Day Observance—Ryan, Frey.

Bienefnpfsl, McQowun, Bray, B urnett BoBCoino.

Fourth of July Celebration—Bray, W right. Leveen, Reilly, Burkett, Wohl farth , Kunse.

Public OuUngs-Frey. Mann, Froellch Mullen, Fischer* Estelle. Laughlin.

Band Concerts — Wright, McGowan Mann, Leveen, Snyder, Schreltinueller. Calms.

E n t i r e D e le g a t io n Sees M ayor*W'hen the labor men learned tha t the

council would not take up the m atter of the nomination of the Mayor for police, tax and fire oommlBsIotiers they decided to plead their cause In connection with their opposition to tbe appointment of Mr. Hefsler, with Mayor HauBslIng and with the Individual members of the coun- cIL While waiting for the la tte r body to adjourn they made a call oti the Mayor. Mr. HaussUng first received a delegation of Bix Trades Council men, who. however, did not bring up the H dsler m atter l^ te r , the ©htiro council called a t th© ©<• ecutlve office, headed by President S tuart the metnberfl being Introduced by Henri' HllferB,

Mr. HausaUng expressed pleaaure a t meeting the representailveB of the tradee unions and broke the Ice of form ality by rem arking th a t he had performed ye4ter< day hlB first m arriage oereniofly and th a t tbe event had pasted off qulta pleasaatty. To a rem ark by Delegate Flcrs* of th© Heavy L eather W orkers' Union, th a t the chairs tn th© executive suit© should have been covered with real Isatner* Instead of Imitation leather, the Mayor I^U n g ty fe piled th a t he hs4 nothing lo do with tbe furnishing of the buildln#*

Mr. S tuart then brought up the fines. Uon of the HeW©r appointment, an** an flounced the oppoMtloh of tbe labor oiv ganiaatlorts to th s m o in tw . Mr, Hauas^

ilefsier. He felt he was then obliged to edhero to his obligation.

W ill Nfot In te r f e r e ,The Mayor added th a t the Bomtiwtlon

was now in the hands of the council or with Mr. Helsler and ho slated that lu would not make any effort to Interfere with the procedure of the council In thi matter of confirming or rejecting his ap­pointment. The U ayor said th |it his regret a t the presen t situation was due to the fact tha t h« had always been friendly to organised labor. To an ex* preaslon of concern th a t M r Kelsler, If confirmed, would be antagonistic to or­ganised labor In his official acts.tke Mayor hastened to aaaure the delegation that he Wiiuld not permit those fears to b© realized.BO far as U would be In his power to prevent It. He aald that Mr. Helaler bad a host of friends who had ioBlsted On hla appointment and that the In., flqences favorable to the appointment were so strong thnt he felt he could not ignore thorn. The Interview ended with mutual expreRslonfi of good feeling be­tween the labor men and the Mayor.

One of the aldermen afterward en­countered by the labor men while they were engaging In their ml&Blonary work against Helslcr wan Mr. Holzner, of the Seventh Ward, who haa been HelsIer'S champion In the caucus. Mr. HUfers asked the Seventh W ard man to with­draw hiB allegiance to the Mayor's noml- ae©, or to une bis endeavors to Induce KoJBkr to witlidinw. Mr. Holincr wo© reminded th a t he would Oc»me up for elec­tion, two years hence, and that he would probably depend somewhat upon the Ial>of vote. To this the alderman replied that h© was governed In his attitude In this nuktter b y 'a sense of public duty and he proposed to be guided by that principle. Mr. Hllfers confirmed the alderman’s declaration th a t when some years ago he was a cigar manufacturer* he was always friendly to union labor and that his sub­sequent relations with 0|-ganlzed labor had been as friendly.

The effect of the passage nf the repealer ordinance, If It Is held valid, will be to TkUllify the appolntiftents of James Arm- strong as c ity halt cuslodian, Daniel Men- zle aa Janitor, and several others who were named as englneere, firemen* ele­vator attendants and ass is tan t Janitors of the building. The Democrats will Ihcn be in a position to appoint men of their own BGlection to fill those positions.

purifies the blood* ear©s all blood dla> eoBes, all humori and all eruptions

It Btrengthens the Btoiuaeh* oi^eatea i s appetite BJid builds up the whole systeoL

It eurea that tired feeling and toaliss tllib weak Btrong*

Hi usual U<nUdfomortcelLoeolat©dtahl«t*knoF iiM fB rM tK to* . lOOdoae* $1.

TOBACCO TRUST WINS VICTORY

(Continued from First Page.)

Can’tConvince

wrait p m o n i tbai coffee caosM' tlMto th«;r *top tlriiil:.

iniff it m d OK

for the winding up of a oompany before the time provided for In Ita charier or certilicat© of Incorporation, and that this • agreement of m erger amounted to a wind­ing up of the old company." |

The complainants' contention, as stated > In the opinion, wag "the .simple on© su ' often advanced, viz., that his certificate of ! stock was a contract Into which must bn j read the provisions of the corporation act , of the State of New Jersey at the time (1890) that the original Amerlcaa Tobacco j Company was organized, and that no j more than those provisions can be read Into It. T hat a t th a t time It waa not competent to merge th a t particular cor- i porntlon with any other corporation. | Hence the act of 18WI was absolutely void as to him and hie contract, and the pro­ceedings taken under It to merge were ua to him absolutely void,"

W onld S et P ro c e e d in g Aside*On this basis Beling prayed that the

whole proceeding be eet aside and that the o rl^nal American Tobacco Company be compelled to tran sfe r to him on Its books the 100 shares of stock he owns* and which a t the time of the nxerger slllt stood In tbe name of Fanny Soule: that the merger agreement be declared null an^ void as to him, and as to the aaeieta of the original corporation; that the merger itself be declared void; that tho property of the original American Tobacco Company be declared free and discharged of a ll liens by mortgage or otherwise made thereon alnce tbe merger: that all Buch lleng, as to the complainant, be declared to be void; that there be an ascerlaintneiU under direction of the Court of Chancery of ^he personal and real estate and o ther assets of the original ATnerlcan Tobacco Company at the time of the m erger; th a t such aseets may be separated from the property of the other merged corporations and be redelivered to the officers and directors of the origi­nal American Tobacco Company; that there may be an ascertainment of the amount of loss and damage sualalned by the original company, and that a receiver be appointed lo lake charge of all the property and aasets of the original Ameri­can Tobacco Company, and that a man­datory injunction be Issued to compel the perfornnnnce of the decree.

The opinion dlapo'ses as follows of one phase of the foregoing prayer;

"W ith regard to any Hens put upon the property by the new corporation tho Inability of the court to grant the prayer in that behalf appears when we consider that no holder or trustee of any'BUch Hen is make party hereto."

The opinion goes on to «ay: "A con­sideration of the wide sweep of the r - \e r and the task it asks tbe court -tr- form iB flufflclently startling whoi we consider th a t the terms of the merger have been accepted by IISCB.EOO shares of a total Issue of 14,000,000 shares, leaving only M,600 outstanding, and that all theon . . . .other provisions of the merger for ex changing preferred stock of one or the other of the merged corporations for bonds of the new corporation and for tiie exchange of the stock Of the old com­panies has been carried out to an ex­tent equal In proportion to that of the preferred stock of the original Amerlt-nn Tobacco Company, and that the new bonds and new preferred stock of ihe merged company have been put upon tne general security m arket and dealt In to a large extent* all before any notice to the defendnnjjs o f public nf the claim now made on behnU of the complainant by hla bill."

The opinion adds: "The answer further altegea 'This defendant alleges, however, that both the Bald Rudolph Schatk and (he said com plainant had notice of the said merger before they acquired th© said stock,''knd the ©aid stock was ac­quired by them not as an Investment, but for the sole purpose of bringing such a suit as the present one."

"Now* this allegation^ dlaUnetly mad© En the answer.' Is admitted by the com­plainant.'' '

WAR DEGARED AGAINST SMITH

(Cantlnued from F trs t Page.)

B, Hill. Mr. W aUet'a p6«tlc outburat foil on unappr« latlvo oar*.

"Would It bo JuBt a* oonvonlent, Mr. Waller, to aend In your m nnuocrip tr queried Mr. N orth rup Innoeontly,

U r. W altar ignored, tho interruptioua and oonttnu;^ undtomaye*!. He (poke of Mr. S ugeat'a nctlvltleo:

“Hut you can’t queition hto MneerUy in trying to do w hat he wanted to," vouohaatod Mr. W allor, raforrlng to Nii- gent.

‘‘Keep on, W allor,” adylaed leveral, amid Uuffhter. H e did.

Former Aaaemblyman John U Armltage denouncad Mugent’a "atrung-arm" moth- od* a t conventlona, and aald that while hp vbted for Smith for Senator, he did not approve of m any acta ho had been guilty of Bine* th a t time.

By motion It w as decided to have a aeeret vote. Mr. Byrne proteated and left the room. The other Smith follawer* went w ith him.

'After the imte wa* announced, My, P ra tt moved a reaolatlou that the' actlofl

s.

For w inter irritations o f the s k in , rashes, frost bites, chap- pings, chafings, redness* and roughness, especia lly of faceand hands,for lameness and soreness incidental to w inter sports, for sanative, antiseptic cleansing, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery, Cu ticu ra Soap, assisted b y Cu ticu ra Ointment, is priceless.

thnughDUl ttM VdirM* li^eiotat LozOea. NT Clurterhouw Sq; Farli, & Riu de l» Palx; Auftn> Hb, R. Tovni © po , India, fl. K. FtuLCzicutu; CblBL n o u a o u 0 |ug Op.;Maruva* Ltd.. T«IIp : fouiUAlrl ' -- Cape TOWD. flU.i BuhIb. F f r r t t a , . w. s.. *. Pvitar DrGz A fawm. Covp.. Aata lOkMtOA,

Irl^ Lednop! IoboovlIL g. A-.

Keeping in Touch.

of the league be communicated to every m*MMr, and th a t every member be madeto flgu the reaoluttoD aa a condition of hto future mambetahlp In thq.league. crowd laughed at the prevleione of-the laaalutlon.. “Of all the Idiotic, allly, riillculoua, pre-

poateraua, abaurd, puerile and Iniene rMO- lution* I ever heard of," declared Mr, Barrett, “Ur. Pratt’* heruinly takm tlM

I cake. It paaaea my compfelwwileiL That’* all." The reiolutlon waa ov*i>

I whetmlhgty defeated.

Keeping in close touch w ith the doings of this helpful Furniture house has long been a source of m oney-saving to hundreds of h o m « . Brisk furniture selling goes on here daily— uninterruptedly. Bright folks are here early, each d ay , picking out handsome pieces of our "tried and true” furniture, at prices.they w ould be compelled to pay for trash at som e places. And the beauty of it all is that the splendid values are not limited to any particular line, but Furniture of every good charac­ter is here in this desirable stock.

GREENE’S3I*33'3S*37 Market Street*Oppcilta Conithoua*, Nawark, 11,. -

IT IS ISRAR AT H.A:«D t o H U Fm H B D h O F SK W A H K R B A P B H S .

rm n't neglect .tii aching buck.H.'ckache Is. the kidneys’ cry for

’ th e ’Neglect luitrylng to th e tr aid Means that urinary trouble! follow

quickly,Dirt! distress, diabetea. B right’s diseiiaa, Mrs. M. Knne, of 64* Wnltooe . atreet,

Newark. N. J., any*: "My hueband uaed Doan'* Kidney Pills w ith pronounced suc­cess eomc years ago and h i* had no re­turn of his complaint since then. B is back used lo pain him Sc t h i t he coplu hardly walk, and when a t work he often had to place the aiu ill v t hto buok against the bench to got a few moment* relief. He had b ird Bttack* like ^th(* often and they would g e a e r^ ly last from (our day* to d week a t a time. Th*re was also an annoying weaknesa of the kidneys and the secretlona were almoat

! /

1 "\

\\i■ •'5 ^

as dork n* blood. H* procured Doaa’a i t Manx's Pharm aoy aiidKidney Pills ---------- ^

tommehced Iholr u**-, foj* tKi* *aj* him reUefj aa.4 was cured, secretions und ho f**pDr” le by all deaJerr P r i^ W oanU. Foster-Mllbtirn ,5®!. Bijffslo. N. T., sot* uffentB fot United fllqtcA - . * Bomemlwr ths nitn*’“Hoan s-anff taka no other. - ...... ....

reUef. a i |4 nontlnulni ll»<!lr use, ha c u r ^ , tS s '« « •'Im. ths

etloni rsturned to thMr natural qdltur ho 1s to-day t m tm m any Mdltap

*

F.|I.S(HiMER, SM, •««, TM Bfoad gt,, Adv«r. tleer IRdg

Page 3: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

f - '

SEWARBf ®V‘5SirvT»4fBWlS. BATtIBDAY, JANtTART 5, 1901-__ i_ . . -■--»■ - ■ _____:•_ . ■ - ■ — - -

ArVV-'. : ’■

SEES DOWNFALLDF diRISTIANrrY LINER IS LOST TO CUT WAY OUT

/

CouDt Tolstoi Predicts Reduc- tioa of Etirope to Japioese

and Other Orientals.

BE ATTACKS CHURCH SYSTEM

PARIS, DfC. ilS.—('oim i L.po Tolstoi hjiR fV'rktn>]ii R letter to Pixul £t4L]AUi4*r apropos Of the latter'* rcr«‘n i book on thf dl^- fntabllehnnpnt ot the churrli In DVarii' '. In which the famous Kusslan mitlior pit- lictn the pOBsIbls redui'tloii of all rlic Christian coimtrlt?* qf the west ro a fHaU' of vasMlAfi^ to tho, Jup:inp.JH> ami other oriental peuples. Me bases ills pr<HllcMi<ni upon ifround it Is only in iln Oi km tiiat religion and patriotism a n ' t<yuun '- moim. In this le tter ro u m Tolaiui dis­plays alt hts old-time vigor or flyle umi cieamesB of Ideas, lie says in pan

^^RsUglon id tru th and gondnnss. the ebureh falsehood and evil. 1 ti*M yrni frankly 1 cannot agree with thnpH who beUave the chiircb In an <ir«aii[7.arloh In- dispensable for reUglon. The oJiureh has ever been a cniel and lying liiMiiniticni, which In ■eckiiig for lenitH^nil Hdviin- tages has perverted and dlstortml liie true ChHallan doctrine. All tin- con­cordats have been for it norhUiR hut emn- pacts with the S late whereby ilie I'liurcli supported the Btnto In retu rn for sperlflc m atsfial advantages. t ’)»r|siiRnUy !ish • ver been atmply a pretext for ihc rlmrch I may be told that llicrc ho\’e been and BtiU are In the Oalhotlr world men and women of holy life, hut I nnHwer tlmt these sainted lives arc tun due to ihe Ohurch but raiher In spitp nf ilie rhurcli

"In spite of all lUp efforts of church and state to mute tin* two principles, tn io Chris Hail Ity ilovc, humility ami kind­ness) and that of ihe S tate tphysicul force and vloleurei, ilm contradiction lian become In our time so flagrant lhai a solution Is bound to come.

"Several «yjn]Jioins prove rhis: First, the rellglouft movement la not rnnflneU to France, but exists In all countries; eecond. the revolution in Rua- sia; third, the extraordinary mllltiiry and Industrial progress which Is munireallng ttaeir In the Orient, In Pbinn and cv peclally In Jnpan. The preneTU rellKlous movement which Is gobig on not mily in (tathoHc oniinirleB, Ijuc in the w^hnle world is. r bellovo, nothing but the iinreei ac­companying the exit from the dllemiiiii.''

GOVERNOR'S PRAISE OF SUPERINTENDENT BAXTERBlr. S to k e s .Hwys K ta te M cliool iTeatl

la “ A H n rd fin d M oat F nM b- fu l W o rk e r /^

9tifrinl Dispatch to the KVEM^kG YL'H flTRliNTON, Jan. 5 —Go\'ernor Siak-''3

tpus aekfid to-day If l>e had anything b> guy concerning the recent puhllcaMnne In ►gard to Stwtc Surjorlntendenl Baxter. |Te said tha t Mr. ITaxter w»is ftrHt up- l^ in ted by Governor Grigge, again ap- |o lnted by Governor Vo<jirhcra and again appointed by Governor Murphy. The two last appointments, It w as pointed out. Wore entirely free from any personal or political Influence and W'cre made solely upon merit. Experience, ft was cxi- plAlned, hafl added to Mr, Raxter'e usefiil- Jiees since that time. Continuing, the Governor said:

"The State superintcmlent la a hard ntid moat faithful worker. I winh lluit evrry S tate official worked as m any hours. He hoe kept out of polUica. a* becomes the head of the educational system of the State. At no time, e ither before or since T became Governor* have T had Huy com­plaint from any of the achool men of the Slate against Superintendent Baxter either for neglect of duty or far liHiat- Ing Interferences in local school urfalr?. He has the faculty of settling difficulties by considerate adjustm ent rather than through violence o f authority . A brlUlani agitator as S tate Buperlntendent could keep the educational circles of our State In oonstint turmoil.

" I have always taken an Interest In eduesUonaJ matt^rg myself, and i want to see Jereejy lead In ^ u ca llp n a l re­forms. The school system pf our Btu^> baa made great progrees under Mr. Bax­te r’s administration. The school law has been revised; a system of supervising principals for country districts hi^ been developed; high schools have been brougiK wlthtn the reach of th e pupils Jtt rund sections by a departm ent decUImt;- rules hava bfeen made requiring aU new school buildings to conform to certain require­ments of light, a ir and Improyed sanlturv features. The S tate of New ^ r k Is so well satisfied with our educational d<‘-

^e lopm eiit th a t she has a t last conflenti^d accept our high school certificates aa

evidence of the academic qaallficaUon* of caiidlflates for her vnrlnu.** profesalcnH. The educational system of New Jersey to­day Is second to th a t of no other State.

"I am dally In receipt of k'Uvi'i' from the best educators In the State ui-giua Mr. Baxter’s reappointm ent. Tlipse men are sincere and have the intcif^ai of oiir school ayatem a t heart. Th*‘ rapid pro«- reae of our Stale In an edUL-utifiuil wa^' In the laftt few yeais waiTants iht* most care­ful consideration before nn.y cliLLiign ia made either In our piillc.v or nificpds. .i think It only fair th a t the peoulo shoiilj know my views upon thin m atter nmi lUo raaaona iherefoV.”

AWAITS ANOTHER VERDICT.H I. Tsibor C a tu p n ife t ln g ANsoclallon

to A pply to I ts e l f C ouveut Cns« D e-rlsion .

Sprciol Diftpairh 1o the MORRISTOWN. Jan . 5.-The ('ouijty

Board for the Eh^uftllzntlon of Taxes held a session yesterday to heur further evl-

THINK PAOnC

Wreckage from Overdue Steam­er Taken to Indicate Sink­

ing of Panama.

112 PERSONS ABOARD SHIP

SA .V F H A .V t ' iS t ’ O, Jan . 5.—T h e f a le o f lh»> P a c if ic M a l l l in e r C i t y o f P a n a m a , w h ich su ited f ro m hero M o n d a y l«»t fo r S o iiih e rn p a rts , c o n t in u e s u n k n o w n Ao- eo rr lln g lu d te lephone m easuge re ce ived fnvtn P aa cade ro la s t n ig h t tw o l i f e r a f ia cam e unhore ut W a r d e l l B e a c h , s ix te e n m iles !*K)Uth o f P a sca d p ro , F r id a y morr>- Ijig. T h e re w e ro o n the r a f t s o a rs , b o a l- hooks. u b a rre l o f w a te r a n d a b o x of cm ckcfB . l^ t e r In th e d a y tw o mor« r a f t s cam e a sho re tw o a n d a h a lf m ile s be low W a rd e n B ea ch , s im i la r ly equ ipped w h ile off sho re a la rg e q u a n t it y o f w recK - age w'as seen flo a tin g . B o th o f these r a f t f , It U so ld , w e re m a rked C it y o f P a n a m a .

It Is k n o w n th a t the a te tim p r upon le a v ­in g here on M on de ) '. In th e Teeth o f a h e a vy n o rth w e s t ga le , had som e ir o u ii le on the ba r, n s she w as ^ttopped the re fo r n t im e be fo re p ro ceed ing on h^r w ay Sm ith .

T h e C it y o f P an am a , one o f the ulde«;t vegsels in the P u c lf ic M h II fleet, waa c o m ­m anded by C k p it t in A . \V . N e ls on , w ho ha s the re p u ta t io n o f b e ing a n e xce lle n t seam an. H e fo rm e r ly w as In com m and o f th e c o m p e n y ’ s s te a m e r Sun Jose.

T h e vesse l ca rr ie d , hesldea the cap ta in , th e f irs t o ffice r, P l l ls b u r y . fo rm e r ly com ­m ande r o f the M a u c ln ir ie . w hen she w en t a sho re on R a b b it is la n d , n e a r H o t io lu lu ; tw o o th e r o ffice rs, a fre ig h t <’ le r k and Htorekeoper, w ith a c row o f tw e lv e ; f ifte e n men in the e n g in e p rs d e p f ir tm e n t and e igh t In the B iew a rd 'e i lc p u i im e n i , In a l l L)ie c rew num bered llf tv -H lv

A m o n g her pas.seiipf‘ i'>i wu« l ) i . H e n ry \\'x ildo I *oe, o f PoiM]:iii.|. w hn Ih booked t l in m g li to N ew Y 'o ilc, n u 'l w m IIo a t P u t i-

w ill in \ -e a ltg a le tie- h y g ie n ic sur- roundliiK f*. n« fa r jis in c y ;irf'*ot lab<ir. H e w il l m ake re po rt lo t l ic M e d ic a l E d i­to rs ' As HiM’ ln t lo n . o f w lilt li he )h p re s iden t, and to P re s id en t R^(lSl■^■ell M rg . Coe is w U h him , and a n u m b e r of ;n M m ln e iil (Jre- gonWui.H ulao.

T lie ie were f if t y - s ix la is se n g e rs un board , F if te e n ocoup ie il the firs t fa l i lr j stnd fifte en w ere In ib e steeruge. T h e o th e r tw e n ty - s ix W'ere CJiltiese . H ad th e C i t y o f P o m tima e o iit liu ie d u n tn te r rn p te d ly i>n l;e r w '.iy she w 'lnilri ha ve been due y e s te rd a y a t M a- Z i i i l i i i i , .Mex., her f irs t p o rt o f c a l l. T h e P a c t f i' M a i l boats ta ke the o u te r cou rse I'rom S.tji F ru t io lse o dow n . g**iieraUy keep ­ing ou ts id e the S a n ta B a rb a ra c h a n n e l Isl- uiuJi::. Lind S ta n d in g w e ll n ff s ln ire u n t il they real h the end q f th e P e n in s u la o f low r C a lifo rn io . T h e re th e y tu rn In in a n i’h o r o ff the B a ) ' o f M a z a t la n , w h ic h Ifl on ! lie m a ln H iid shore , a lm o s t oppo s ite Cvipn San L u ca s , Ihe e x trem e lo w e r end o f Bu ja , (,'al.

T h e bciicJi Is now b e in g p a tro lle d ft^r m llcH . w a b d im g fo r bodlt-a w h ic h m a y d r i f t ashore

STACK LOSES LEADERSHIP.I ln b o L e ii l lp s ld c n t la D ro p p e d f r o m HuiliMiti D e n io c r u t le K s e r n f l ^ e C otu-

i n t t t e e b y D a v is M an .J E R S E Y C IT Y , J a i r 5 .- -C iia 1 r iiia n .lam es

J. H en nessey , o f th e H u d s o n O o tin ty D e m o rra ilc com m ittee , ga\'e the m em bera ft laS'L n ig h t w hen he a nno un cedthe e xe cu t iv e c o m m itte e fo r 1907. The m em bers o f th is c o m n ilt le e a re looked upon ns the w a rd leaders. M r . I lem iea se y . w ho Is t lie p r iv a te a e r r e ia ry o f R o b e rt D a v is and one o f Ihe m u?t p o p u la r D em o cra ts In th e co u n ty , h a s been ch a irm a n o f tlte c o u n ty c o m m itte e t lir e e Shears, and d u r in g th a t p e r io d th e re has been no fa c t io n a l d is tu rb a n c e w it h in the p a rty n u ik s .

F o rm e r C o u n ty C lr i 'k M a u r ic e J. S ta c k 's nam e W’ aa n iistfling fro m M r. H en n e sse y 's Ust. S ta c k is th e re co g - nlssed le ad e r in H o b o ke n , and w as re ­g a rded a s C o u n ty L e n d e r D a v is 's r ig h t - h a n d m an in th a t e lty . Ih w a s k n o w n th e re w as a coolneflia be tw een D a v is and S ta c k , bu t no one had the le a s t su sp ic ln n th a t the d iffe ren ce w a s do g re a t n s to m ean S tack '.e depos it io n .

HER MARRIAGE ANNULLED.P a l e r i i i b W o u ib u , W h u W e d n Rfnr-

r l e d Man* .%llovve<l to T a k e H er M uiiten ^'iiine, <

T 'A T K R S O N . Jan . 6.— M rs . M a r y E lU a - b c t li M e ye r lia s p ro cu re d a n a um U m en t gf l ie r m a rr ia g e to H e n ry A . S le y c r , and A r ig h t to rcHume t ie r m a ld e ti nam e, on the g round l l i u i the m a n to w h o m she wa* m a rr ie d had a w ife a n d f a m ily l iv in g ttt th e ,t im e the ce re u u in y w a s p e rfo rm ed , u iid there e x is ted riu le ga l s e p a ra llo n .

M rs . Me^•er w h s M ip s M :irV R ii t i l l f f e . and t u i l i l h+'i' m a rr ia g e , w hU 'h o ccu rred on A iiR U fit :3. and fo r ii t im e th e re ­a fte r . leH ldcd w ith he r p a r c n ls on E a s t T h tr ty -U d rd s tree t. 'I'hc fn e t th a t M e ye r had p re \ 'louK ly hf*eii nuirrle^J und th a t ho had a f a m ily l iv in g w as d ia co vo re d by a c ­c iden t.

BocBUie Caugbl uii Hriili^e,iSpcrltff.DlspflfcA fo f?ic AVt.S'/M/

LONG BRANCH, Jan. B.-Tliroe horses got loose from llic Elkwood Purl? Stables and wandered to tha tracks of the New Y'ork and Long Branch Railroad a t Branchport Thursday night. A passing oxproM frightened the animals, and ttiey started up the tracks toward the river bridge. Two of the anlmkls got fast In the bridge, the other escaping. A fast freight would hkve crushed the animals hnd It not been for signals thrdw n nut

rescued.

denes Jn tho appeals taken by t he Newark Conterence CampnieeUns ABSociatlon on I te E |^efrlB d , a holnl proprietor,.!,» r . , . . . .n .. . ’ Tl>e animal* were axtrleuted from theIhe aesoeemants of property on lit . I’abot, bridge and fell Into the river, but were The prelhiilnary m eeting was held Decem­ber a , when Nelson B. Kilmer, secretary of the association, appeared for 2ftt> of the residents of the gi'Otinds. Exceptions ^psre token to his au tho rity to represent all the property owners, hbY^cver* and ^ jo u ^ m e n t woo mode to allow him aud ills counsel to procure affidavits showing bow rasiiy he was autlujrlaed to speak for.

At the hearing yesterday Edward C.Qultnby, assessor o t H anover Township, presented a list of about JOO of the cot­tager* who have already paid their tkxes, and these and eeveral others were with­drawn from Mr. K ilm er's list. Finally It was agreed to aw ait th e decision of the Supreme Court in the Bl. Elisabeth Con­vent ftssesament case, which has similar eondlllons and may decide the Ml. Tabor

" trriublcs. The convent case Is on an ap­peal from HBSossmontii of about 1190,000,1115,01)0 levied by the assessor of Florham park, and (<i5,€00 by Morris Township, the

> property lying In the two territories.

A i^on C ase to S n p re ib e C o u rt,THENTO^g Jan. 5,—A fter the limit sen­

tence of the law, seven years, a fine of 12,000 Aiid the costa of the tria l, which will run between }^400 and w as Imposedyesterday on David H. Brand for aiding and abetting In setting Are to the State and Montgomery streets store the night of July 2. 1905, B a c k ^ Sl K afea served a wi‘it of error on Judge ReUstab, carrying the case to the Supreme Court. Judge RBllKtub fixed the bail for David H. Brand a t 1^.000, which will be In full forou cmd virtue during the appeal; should ho secure the bondsman.

RAISULI TRYING

9. P , € . A . K o r m e d l a B U a a b e t l i .fitfitc M Dupoifi j(fl.iA B .irja? ivej« 'irs.

Jto). 6.—The Sheiety for ' PlfsveniKwOf C ruelty tg Aniinal* was

In this c it y . le*t alght, .several....... tntifreeted In this. work, tnaetlng

nejMjm* ot Mr*. ^ B arclay I'rioe, i l l Ml Qrimd street. Rev. Johta E. Atkm-

TMtor of the Trlirity . E piketu^ jiV pissldod over the ^ e e U n t. <.<nie y-will ooimnenco a t Pht^Cltf

rtCoHOn of s i v ^ l * iU'thie . # u th a t It wUl AH i t J

k* there has beas nb ,

« . I ^ r h e e s ; flr»t vjc*-;.—..-.-t™ . . . Ttew^rBitaut*; • «ecT«ang;:»ff!wi'& n r e r , Mrs. ClareitBi 'jttrector*. BlTIW

ir* . W illiamnen M b'jdlr*..

__T. JfoheaA. V. nim ock ahd!.:K #i

f l remeirtii’i

d e fy ^ 1 Md*hm. b y f

PBcer*t T rea1joora*to*/n; w

W ttjtt 811V

t« I.lw« in p!l||1iiliS ii|.'(Ike

w, 4«n . 5 .-A rthujc ,;-.»^:, I* msMntf hrtluaig,-

^ 9 . resldilrt ofiurhiK IWyhOOf; x " - '

s***h for'til* flWBsw

khtiMl ID Haveother

lAnUii-r ^ 'L H o liy r

moorish Native Chief Attacks Governmeat Forces, in Effort

to Reach Hoantaios.

IS SURROUNDED BY ENEMIES

f'ltl.ir Dit fXitPh to the VA'H'fi. TANGll')l(, Morocco, Jan . 6.—A fierce

flghi is In progress between the sohllere of R.'ilHiiiii the native chief who has pwav#*£i over this region for so long, and tlip Bovi-moieiU forces, according to re­ports nveived hers from Arsllla, Zlnat,

Ritlsuli haa been encamped ever sltue he lefi the suburbs of Tangier, Is the .^renc of the battle. ‘

Hulgtili was the aggressor in the battle. In H (leiermliied effort to cut his way through the loyal troops, which were fust closing in on him. and escape to his Hlt'onglmld In the mountains, he Is re- IKU'led to have attacked the forces of Siili Mohammed Qabas, Moroccan W ar Minister. Bcant details of the fighting ar^ nhiafnnble. but It Is said the bandit wen ^'icto^lou■. He has made his way tlmuigh the surrounding cordon with the majority of his army.

Since Ralsufi was» deposed as Governor of the Tangier d istric t and government forces began lo Bather here for his cap­ture, Ills followers have been deserting )ilm rapidly and going over to the govern­ment fiirccs. His position was fast be­coming desperate.

DENY THAT SALOON WAS USED ^ AJFOOLROOM

D rq l l i e r i K a le e r In P i^ llveH o a rd T r i a l i>f

C n iiim lttg e .JERSFV CITY. J eim, -Tlie p r in c ip a l

w lliie iiS at the c o m lm n i lin n Iuht n ig h t uf the t r ia l o f P o l ic e I ’a p ta i i i A!l>prt C u m ­m ings. o f th is e lty . accn.'^cd o f neg le c t o f d u ty in a llo w in g g jim h lln g to go on in h is

w as C h r ls i ia n K u ls p r , I jro lh e r o f .lohn K u lse r . w Iiorc fm luofi a t O m t id stree t Rnd C o m m u n lp a w aven ue w as lutded; lust 1)-*! em lie r 2 r \ ’c r d i i c f M u ip h y ’s and C iip ia in C u m m ln g a 's lie a ils . a s an a lleged poolroom .

John K'aiaer. priiprletui' uf the yftloqri. dmiipil rhiU there had ever been ganiblmg on horse rnecR in tiin pliiee. He aiilil thill lie pleaded non Xmlt when n*-- rc«ti*d liv Priisei'utur Erwin ti few yearfl

hei-iiiiflc he was told lhal If n pi^rson teiephnned for Information as lo what horse hnd won a race it Implicated him.

The Iwurd decided that the tria l nnist close on next Tuesday night.

FORMER PASTOR, INVENTOR.t 'u n ee riif l A t tn e l im e ti t f o r Irn in liire M

to r T r o l le y t ’o r s —W il l Be e n te d .\beua«J.

2<j r(:iar lo ihe EVKyiM iWASHINGTON. N. J . Jan. G. -Rev. J.

W. McMiuilmnn, who resigned the pas­torate of the Everittstow n ifethodlsl Church to become agent for a, trollev company, baa patented an Invention that liR thinks wlU make hJni wcaltliy. He luis just received word th a t he has hoen graiit'-d a patent on un utiuchment to armuturpR fiir Irulleys cura, im well us uilier armatures.

T lie ob jec t oi' the d e v ice Is p re ven t defjtTucticm o f u rm a tu r c s wditui t h e v A r - come Cross-elrculli'd, Lit the same imio p o rn d li lu g t lie u .hc o f th e o th f-r a rm a tu re s en iidoyed in c o n ju n c t io n Ih iT U w ith . T h is re sah is isItaJu i'd Ij3' l l j io u ln g the d a n i- aged a rm a tu re nu t o f c o m jt ils s iu n by a id o f a le ve r and c lu tc h . I t is .said th is d ev ice w ill save e v e ry tm lle y co iiip an s ' o f any con scque iu ’e t liu u s a n d s o f O o lla j's eve ry y en i. B y Ihe a id o f the Inven tion o f M r. M c M a n lm a n th is lose. It Is sa id . Is reduced to a v e ry s m a ll sum .

The officials of the Eaaloii and W ash' Ington Traction Company, w ith which Mr. McAImilmuu has been copneoled since giving up his pastorate, are well pleured with tlie Invention. The Inventor will apply for foreign patents.

DENOUNCES SECRET SESSIONSNioidli ]*lnlfitSe!d H n y o r T flkon F H n g

mi M stlio d a u f t b e P la in - d e ld C o n n e l l .

i^petiaf DiitjtiiUit to the WFF.VjfWVP L A JN F 1 L L L > , J a i l , 5 .- -M a y o r N e w ln i i

B . H m alley took a f l in g a i i l ie m e thods in vogue in the P la in f ie ld C o m m o n C o u n c il, w h ich have been th e cau se o f m u ch ad- V frs c com m ent in th in c it y , b i d en o u n c in g .secret sessions o f g o v e rn in g bod ie s In an inldreKT to liin o w n c n u n r l l In N o r th P la in f ie ld lu e i i i lg l i i . In o m ih ih ig qic, pluiiH fo r \lu- y e a r ’ s w u ik , he declareijf, w h ii Home em p lm alB ;* “ A i^ iih u i l l ie c o u n c il a lio u ld ha ve n m ind o f hl.H own a n d ha ve t l ie c o u ra g e o f Ids I’o j iv k ’ llcn is. iL l ia s hevej- been (he i'‘ i:stom o f th is I o ii i ic U 10 a d ju in n to a p r i- r u le room to d la cu ss p u b lic a ffa lrn , m id t h f iY come ou t a n d ^otc W h h o u i e n l ig h t ­en ing (lie lo b b y o f in te re s te d d i lz e n s . I f a n y im c o f you c o u n o lln irn h ave n n y t l i in g to Hiiy i IjIh Is the place to suy It; b r in g Jt m il r ig h t h r re . 1 te ll y o n ih sU 1 w i l l esteem it g re a t ly i f a n y rn a U e r you bc- JIqvc H liou ld be lo o ked Into, Is b ro u gh t up In open m ee tin g f o r a good c ion iin o ii sense dIecuKBlon w lt l io u t a n y f r i l l s o r red tape ."

THREW ACD FOR REVENGE.

BETTER LIGHTS IS MAYOR'S AIM

Morrktown's Chief Exccatirc, in His NessAge, Attacks

the Poor Service.

HIGHER PAY FOR POLICEMEN

.Mayor F a f a n ’* T r ip FoatpoDOil.Jl>':RaEY CITT. Jun. 6,.—M ayor Mark M.

Fusan, oC this city, hua- daclded to poai - POI10 111* trip to Cuba. Ho liopod to bo able to take bia doporturo to-day. As ho U intoreatod In the police tr ia ls th a t are la progreasi, he does not feel like Isavlne the city until they have been disposed oi, and he is also anilou* to nam e a comp, trailer in Thomas McKlvan^a place befoi'e he Biart* OB' bis cuntemnlated vacation. The Mavor flnda it n dlm cult m.atter u, SBcure tiie i l tb t man for this position.

1* i> it«a iee 9 1 tra I n e p r e t r d .JEHSliY OITY. Jan. 5.—John KnuK

Taylor, federal supervising architect, v la lt^ th is city jeKlerday and, eacorted by 'a committee of the Board of Trade, Inspeelsd the three sites fo r the new poat- oIBce recommended by the Boai'd uf Trade. Two immediately adjoin the city hall on the north and east, and the other Is In Newark avenue, between W ashing­ton and W afren streets, in the bnainefla section, Th* architect espretsed no opln- lOhLV-,'W, T -d r -—--------- ■

S .-T lih tlyd ' the of■■■■ ' le ltsr* . M l* ', |i te e a

. ItiflNl":: yw ster^y- a ^ e r “ S treep

— ..WllTiiimrt w * o * ^ .h f e r

CiTT. Jtla, t^ Je raB arrittf 'B an ’

vkltB L B tates „‘ ....................

P o l lo e Na }' M h o W h o D l» f lg a r ^ i l lu e l i i iM l I 'o q p l^ H a n M n d « ^

■ CO'nfe«ftloki.V I N E L A N D . J a n . 5.—.A s tra n g e r , w ho

sa id he w iia J . B ro a d s k y . u ta ilo r , o f lii N n r lh F if ty - s e c o n d s tree t, P h ila d e lp h ia , tvaK arrea fed ye s te rd u V on HUsp lc lon o f be ing Ihe m an w ho th re w carbo IW a d d In thft faces o f 8. T^evln, a ta i lo r , and h is l lU le ( la ugh te r T h u r s d a y n ig h t, H ro a d sk y , the po lice say . u n a b le lo e x p la in the a d d on blB handB* con fessed .

A cco rd in g to t!ie a u th o r it ie s , h e sa id th a t he h e d b o u g h t o u t L e v in 's sho p in P li l la d e ip h ia , and a lle g e d th a t he head been dece ived a s lo th e w o r th o f the trade, so re so lved to k i l l L e v in .

N o w ark e r to A<d R o a d B alld lttg*to the ICVEiflffO jV IFJS.

l o n g b r a n c h , Jan. 6.—Harvey E. FiBk» a Now York banker, and William Campbell Clark, of Newark, who own countrv sealfl In Ocean Township, near Oakiiurat. will build a mile of road In ihiit vkliiity, grade, gravel, and lay out aldewaika a t a ooai of t7*ou0. After the work la completed they will preaeint it to the Township Committer of Ocean. The Improved road or speedway will ex­tend from Mr. Clark'® place to Nor­wood avenue, and from the Durand prop­erty toward the Eatontown Township line.

R a e e K r a o k I n T e o a b le *JEPFKRPON CITY. Mo., Jun. 5,-Cblef

Jus tk^ Uuntt» of tlie Bui>r«me Court, tei^ny granted k w iit of erro r on wlih'h thif odftier suit of the Hiato against theDelmur Jockey Club will go to the preme Court of the Unlt»d sta te s. App: ouUon for a writ was made by the club ( n

teOdy bear.

W « t tuuUl fw r klim yt bMom. disniksd. • llg lit |r« iib lc, , .DOW cSiM* yes dlw«». .t rO K U iv O llf* tt by OMns Ur; B ttrar**' Ck»w. Ssndclloo ■■■■■■■ TsM ns sd4 pm*.-:- F»r ssls- b» " " " '( * - — “ — ■

ths groiitid th a t It was being deprived nt Its property w ithout du* process ot law. In viotatloii of th s fstlo ru l Constttutlnii. The MUsourt Suprsma C ourt a mtmth ago declared the club's charter revoKod be­cause it hud held only racing meetings ami had held no agricultural fair, a s re­quired by lha charter. ^

H it by P 'B lIlag B r ic k .' W h ile a t w o rk on a n e w b u i ld in g a t 4 7 i P r in c e s t r e e t y e s t e r d a y a f tw n n u n , ^lf)«1i'**l P a m llr o e . I w e b t y - b l f H t y e a rs

o f J f . Cu*i®y s lr e s t . w h s s t r u c k a

S g1a?

__ ne

.tMrfftg blow on the head by a brick■■ ,i,*5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .'ite St t i ig n t ti B a r ,

tfiatfhaVlnt the Injury drsased wiRg ;

OlrpoFA if) lAf ATA'^/^<; .VFllS..U O K R ie T O W N , J a n . ii. - . u ih** f ir s t

f i 'g u ia r m oa ting o f t im ui-w T lo iird o f A ld»-imon, he ld la » i n ig h i. M a y o r A le x ­ande r B en u e ll read a irn;»Rugo w h ich lie i(aid w ou ld m e re ly g iv e f ils im p rv ss lo n a o f iho m o re Im p o rtu iU m u tte rs to com e hi^fure th e l>oard In th e c o i i is p o f the year. T h e b o a rd w il l , he sa id , “ atm lo bii' c o n s c rv a t lre i b u t p rogreRe ive, a b u s l- tU'.xH adm ln letTg lJo i] w U h o u l im u e i'c s s a ry fr illt t ." A m o re In t im a te hn ow le tig o ot u ffa lre m a y m o d ify p re sen t Impn^NslonM. hf' added, and th en Npukc f irs t ,qf D ie < l ia r ie r u n de r w h lc li the to w n Is g o v e rn ­ed “ W e a re In a c la s s b y oureolv ieR." ho su ld. "a n d n n e e ap ec la l B ta io lo g ts la tton has been etopped, a l l fu r th e r pn>gt-i*ss tm dor o u r o b a r te r cease s ." H o re fe rrod li> th e fa c t th a t the to w n has no deb t atu) never h a i h ad one, o u ts id e o f a a n ia ll in - dobtertneae fOP the A re d e p a r lm o n t. and th a t t lie c t t l ia n a o f th e p ie ce huvo a lw a y s bopp s t ro n g ly opposed tn b o nd ing tim tow n, and " a t o u r w o r th y p red ccp sao rt have bean a b le to w o r r y a lo n g fu r soriio .v'chra w ith p re t t y good succees. o u r ehu r- Is r Im pe rfe c tio n s a re n o t g re a t ly no- th-eable.

"T h e Im n ied la te p re fts lng (niestSmm to com e be fo re ue a re sew e rs am i l ig lit s , T lie fo rm e r Is no w fi>r th e sponnd lim e 111 the hands o f conim lss1om <rs w hn w ill soon p resen t a p ln ii fo r n \ir fa nH U bT e ilo n . T h e sub je c t o f l ig h t in g 1.*! up In ii rn l lu T lU 'u to fo rm . H t r c f i l lg h l in g u T M o r r lw - tuw n h iis a lw ;ays been expensl^-H utuI h i- l\ilvqugli3 im d tieeil.s U» be !h iinu i# rh ly reviHed. T lie la m p s un - lew , h m iiy p U ifM l and I hi* coH l esccsH lve i f u l ly ih ejireHuril com paiilew w i l l tuake fu ic li i-edne- tloi>!< and l in p re v e n ie ii is a s w il l in- s m IIr - f ie ln ry lo us. I f the>- do i io i, I Imv** ns- H iiraureR (h f ll be fo re i l ie pi'ORi u i r m d t iu d s e xp ire the tow n w il l he Hi>le In i n n s id c r fm n ther lig h t in g p lan , a s .'fye L ilM ' and k lieap^ r ■'

Ttie s a la r ie s u f llu ' u iririhM i'H n f ih e pn llii* fori'-e w ere li> rre iis* ii JP«.' a \--a r. ;ila x iird ln a iic e pruvidh^K fnv iiii i* in g !p;j.bi'iO Was pa.Hsed, am i a o o in m li lfo , <'ompoHei] o f A ld e rm en iM ow ry, O w en am i I lu ta n , and M u j'o r Hepne ll. wtik a p pn ln le d In con s ide r the o p en ing and e q u ip p in g o f P a rkH and p la yg ro u n d s

K d lxabetti W tiiiiun 'B Iteo f^ p tio o .E l . l Z A l t E T l I . Jun . fi. M rs . R o h e n (P

tie, o l IH W e stf ie ld a ve iu ic , w ill g ive le c e p llo n la te r l i is a fte rn o o n fo r ht-i (h iugh le r, M Irr V iv in n R u h e n e G en tle . 'Ph r r re o p ilo n w ill he fu llo w e f l Ijy n .m ipp''i‘ lo r l i ie reoe lv ln g p a r ly und f ie o t i l i ln n l;j(er in l lu ' e ven ing , M rp. G e tit lo . Ml.ss ijriu!»> Tnd i l l ’s. \V, T l l f o r d Jo n e s w il l r(u'e|\i' T h ey w il l be rtwsisted b y Mls.s l iu l lu e r . o f L m ia v l l le . K y ; M Isr R<-hnlie. o f \ r w Y m k : M if ls H u d a S t liu H e , o f N e w Y o rk , M is s S J im o lt. o f M l V e r iiu n ; M is s Lo in ) D enton , u f E a s t O ran ge ; M Ihn Je s s ie Low

ISSUES DEH TO THEWHITECAPS

Fanwood Rrsidoit Gves Notice that He Will Not Leave

the Borough.

ARMED* HE AWAITS COMMITTEE

i^preirtf jb sp a frh tq fhr KVJ^.V/.VlT/ Y fiW M .P L A I N F I E L D . Ja n . u . -C , A . B e t lm a n .

o f F tm w o o d To w nsh ip , a g a in s t w hom Ilirea tM w ere m ade Iti p»ibl1c motleys s ig ned b y ” T h o V lg i lu i ic o Com m ittee o f N e w J e is e y / ' lia a had a- nu inhe i o f noUceu p r in te d , to be postiNl, d e fy iiiK th e co rn - n iU te e . B o llm n n w as ih ieH ten ed w ith ta r a n d fe a th e rs )f im lUd not l#*ave the b o r ­ough ,

B e K n iu n re fu se s to d iscu ss (he re ason r«d- the w id te ca p n o lle r . beyond d r r la r ln g th a t he k n o w s a l l tlioae coi*i\’r rn ed . th a t aon ic q f them he ll ir e w out o f h is hous« fo r m isco n d u ct. H e sa ys he h a rm ed n o w nmJ Ik p v r f f c d y w illin g to have the “ oum - m tH e e " u l lo n ip t to e iir ry un i Uh ih re a te .I Hr nolh'e foilowe :

"N o t ic e to the \ 'ig ilH tu e t 'u m n ilt t r e o f Ih e S ta le o f N ew .le rs i'y .

"I w i l l u o l absent m y se lf fro m lh a b o ro u g h o f F a n w o o d o rdered by j m i e xcep t fiM e»ri’ um fllan(‘e» m ay ro q iim . D m ib t lo s s pome o f you, UHnp tdose ly as- sn iu n ie d w i l t i the h o rou g li o f f ic ia ls m j g n v e rn in e n t. a re aw a re l l ia t lii»' M a y o r | w o u ld 1‘r fu a e n ie hiu 'Ii p« r n ilt tn c a r r y weapotiH . and a s Ids hono r Is n o i the H tip re ine a n th m lt y to do so. I h m e «io- U ln e d sut'h p e rth il am i am a m p ly pr^- po red und w ou ld g la d ly w e lcon ie von (O f e x e c ii le y u n r t l ir c y ia at the e a r lie s t |uu (-j s lb le rm une iit (If yon eanV und I r i is i sue | ■ E x ig en c ie s o f the caiu- w ill p i-n u lI ’ you | to a t le m p l u poon. J w ill Ih' In F a n w o o d ns f n el>' an il f iT 'ip te n liy ns I um y "

GET "ARSENAL" IN A RAID.M h i i 3 n r H i i u n n 1 'a k e i i l»3 Ih** J e r s e y

4 1i 3 P<»Uer In Kff<»rl lu t f lp d i re Mewed Mn bberN.

J i: i iS I - ; Y r r i ’ V. Jan . r= T ln r t m i s lP fU - lo s , f n i i r i> \ i h* 'rs m id u Ju i’k -k n ire w en fonn<l III) sf'\'cri m<-ii who W’cre ni'n*Hl<'d y i-^ lP id ay tn a i.n d tluvl w'as rmule cm tiu ' second fi"-u ' ol i\i< .“ 'a-oiul stree t, t h ia c i lv , liv D t> iri’ ( i\ i -.'‘i(* ifii'u iii r J ink F a p r lo and s iv prill.'( noui o f Ihe ]’'hHt I’ re c ln c t Feta­t io n T'he p ripo iie rp are Hii.speeled o f h a v -

l i n g i it la c k e d I ’n n p u ilc M o k z h I, w hn w h s j fo iiu d T h u i’Sihts w p li nb o iil s lx l) ' w ou rids I li. h is lioad und lanL*

M n a z c t i K ives h is address ns l.Ui M il l- h e n y s troM . New' Y o rk T h r Je rse y I ' l i y p.' lli •' Think he is mrineored with a Rh irkII in d " H o rle tj’ . a nd Unit 1ip was n l la c k e d b\ i Ih ' o th e rs because he refupi'd to g!v«* (hem ih e ir slu in* o f t lie .‘spoils (d itu ln c jl fro m ii T'li-nm.

IvAUTBX CO.

rb > f t le ln i i (o T a k e l u T lieo liiH y .M I I d . V I L L E , Jan , a —D r. IsCPlie I..

H a n d , w ho has p ra c tised m ed ic ine tneree, o f R u p cv llle : M rs . F re d K L a w r ie , \ iM s r i i y fo r :t num ber o f yeHrs. w illo f l id s c ity ; M Isth E le u im r M lln o r . o f 1 e n te r (he M e tluM lis t n d n ls lr y next M a r t ’ ll.M 'Ontrliiir, and M isn R<Urh G r in d n lP . o f I and w il l a.sk con fe rence fo r an a p po in t-New Voi k. I t iie n l

SPOONING COUPLES THE Q U SE OF DIM LIGHTS ON RUMSON ROAD. AT RED BANK

Bpet'ioi Itixpatih to the E V E M M i RED BANK. JiiJi. I'j,-The cause of tfie

biol U|$litiiig uf the Rumson road on sev- er.ii ulght.q last sutiimcr haa just Ijecn d is­covered The roud Is h much traveled thoruugijfare and frequent cuniphilms tvfre made lo Uic Slirewshury I'ownship Dommltlee, The llghllng Is done with gasoline lamps. Elmer F,. Cariile, a resi­dent of Litile Silver, lias charge of the lamps and It was Mr. Ch iIIIo who fimnd out wlmt was the m atter. A few nights

ago Atf. l^ it l i le phivc<l Sh e rlo ck l lu in ifH Lind nmrh- u to u r o f tlie rood. H e dlgL-in* e i’c il not le ss t iu in h a lf a do*en ep(M>nini; coup le s , w ho liftd turned (lie l ig h ts duw u In Harder th a t IrH ve lc rs cou ld no t see th em T lie tuw iiid d p com m lU fte Imrt held M r. f j i r U lc ]-fHp(*rifilble fo r The i^onditton o f th in g s , h il l he was exone ra ted w hen u*c tru e Jdatc o f th in gs w’a s unve iled be­fo re th a t bcd>', T lie to w nsh ip oom m iU pe m iiy em p lo y a d e ty r ilv n |o a id M r. EB rH te 111 supprcH sIng spoon ing a lo ng the R iim a on I'oad.

Letters From Africai iv

fiSMn th e th ird s to tr , h u t ** i l lk h t scalp wound. H «

g a r , -*--PourtHPreolirot

tgdwJI w ltb lk s llk h t scalp wpunu. « • % 8 t , B arofba* '* l lo sp lta l ik

itfu l w ocdn, o t|4

■r^h^-V A D llK iE S IN GliglTirttl «fter 12i|i

oily.

The Sunday CallT o -m o rro w th e re wNJ beg in , In N ew J e rs e y 's la rge st and m ost w ide ly

c ircu la te d Su nda y new spape r, a m ost In te re s tin g e e r le t o f a r t ic le s upon A f r ic a — N o rth . S o u th . E a s t and W e s t— a* |t Is a t ttie p resen t t im e . T h e D ark C o n t in e n t c an n o t be neg lec ted lo n g e r by a n y th in k in g and In ts fiigen t c it iz e n w ho read s and w h o w ou ld keep in to u ch w ith the trend o f h is t im e . A f r ic a teem s w ith g re a t p o s s ib il it ie s , and not a fe w 'o f w h ich a re a lread y on a fa ir w ay to re a liz a t io n . A f r ic a Is su re to p la y a trem endous p a rt In w orld a f fa irs , and If you do not p re p a re y o u rs e lf by re ad in g now, you w ill find It ha rd to un de rs tand th e re a l s ig n if ic a n c e o f events o l v it a l im po rt (ater w hen th e y com e c ro w d in g upon you In the d a lly p r in ts , if you read the f ir s t in s ta lm e n t of these A f r ic a n le tte rs to -m o rrow , w hen you w ill have le isu re to read , p ro b a b ly yo u w il l re a lize w hy you canno t a ffo rd to m i ls a n y o f th o se th a t w il l fo llo w .

To-Morrow’s L etter Tells About the Rascally

Bandit Ralsuil.A n d w h ila you m a y have read d u r in g la s t w eek th a t th is robber *nd

c u t- th ro a t w ho m ade th e S u lta n o f M o ro cco pay 170,000 a t a ransom fo r the A m e r ic a n , Ion P e rd ic a r le , la b e in g hu n te d b y a o id le rt , to -m o rro w you m ay learn m uch fro m th is l lr a t In a ta lm e n t o f the lo tte ra abou t RalauN h im ae lf and th * peop le a bou t h im . In t h is w a y fro m t im e to tim e the le tte rs w il l s u p p le m e n t th e a c tu a l new * o f th e d ay , g lv in a one e be tte r and c le a re r Idea o f even ts o f Im po rtance .

T h e le t t o r i a re w r it t e n b y M r. F r a n k Q. C a rp en te r , a n e w ip a pe r corraaponden t, w h o has been t r ie d a nd p ro ven , m any ttm ee over, aa a keen and c le a r-h e a d ed o b se rve r o f m en and a f fa ir s In a ll c llm e t and under a ll m ann e r o f co n d lt lo n e . H e fe a rs a i s r l o u i o u tb re a k In M orocco , and has heard w e ll- fo u n d e d ru m o rs t h a t th e M o h a m m e d a n i a re co n te m p la tin g a h o ly w a r a g a in s t C h r la t la n a . T o -m o r ro w hg w i l l t e l l you w hy he flnda the s itu a t io n g rave .

Many Other Bright Features Will Be Presented

To-morrow.Yo u w il l be m u ch ed ified b y an a r t lo ls upon the A m e r ic a n D ip lo m a tic

S e rv ic e w h ic h yo u w i l l find a v e r ita b le a to rehouee o f In te re sting In fo rm a ­tion . It w il l ehow yo u w he re w e a re a head o f o th e r ccun tr le a In th is se rv ice , and w h e re w e have m uch to le a rn fro m them .

" S le ig h t and S le ig h in g U p In Good O ld Susaea C o u n ty " m e k e t a no the r In te rea tin g th a m s ,-a n d th e p ic tu re s a re bo th a m u i ln g end In s tru c tive ,

The Newark Board of Public Work* seem* at Isat to have become . aroused to the need of a more tyttemstic, Intelligent and comprehensive

effort to clean the city according to methoda now In uea In other pre- gresilve munlclpafltlta, end to keep It cleen. The campelgn decided uptn will be briefly outlined to-morrow.

There are lota of Chrlatmaa presants st the Newerk Poetofflee etlll. They become separated from thoir wrappers. Perhepc then i r t one or two for you, if you'have any mesne of Identifying them to th* sstlifactlon o^ Uncle Sam’s people,

' . > There are about three hundred real estate agents In Newark. Some >1 of them are women. Some are butchora and one Is a milkman. Lawyers

and phyalotano, too, a n numbered in this Ittti* army.

, A eplendld work Is being don* In the eygning echoolt In leeching girU end working ’women to make their own olothsi.

Brick and stone maeoni now work ell through the winter, eiccept In most Ineltment weather. This Is * vast change over methods of

I i 0SEcety Ie4t than a decade ago. It will Intoreet you to knew how thle i:'~ ad^nce lfl|e been made poeilhla.

' Jersey City hfle * Judge w ho drone into rhyme as readily ee most :f:;’ r»lke«elk proas.

- These are a few of the things that will ottch and hold ths attentionthe r e s d e ra 'o t

fhe’ Newark SoBaiCall'' f e ' ' ■- - ■ - . ..J--,.. - -■ •• \

GP o - o R O . W

P I 0 3U J .

Waretoonis are open on Saturdays until 10 P, M.

T h e Lauter PianoiVrti •

j« i lt

-.u L ii I ', r iu fua s:I o W * 'r*ri. . .

I .A

Mnf t ?

■mast; Iff?

OIXJ BOi V

n, - (

ui/Bi'sfe:

The cumulative effect of our pro- ' ducing only pianos of the highest pos- sible quality becomes more pronounced ^ every week. We are daily hearing from ^ , dealers all over the cotftitry who pur- chased pianos at wholesale in . large

, numbers for the holiday trade. Not one it fails to speak in the highest terms of the t fine quality of our goods. Many de- ^ dare that in all their experience they, have never handled pianos that were so -ft uniformly excellent in tone, in con- struction and in artistic appearance.

Writing under date of December 28, Mr. C. M. Conger, dealer in pianos and organs at Jefferson, Iowa, sends us - ’4 a long letter, in the course of which he ' - ■ says: “ Your Playerpiano? came yes­terday. I have never seen as good a ',7 Playerpiano, or any piano, in respon- siveness and ease of operation. have seen very few pianos as good, and none better."

Such is a fair sample of comments that reach us from piano-men as far ; south as Texas, as far north as Minne-„^^^,5 i

■ a*sota, and as far west as California. It )is qualitv that is making the Lauter Piano a power among discriminating ‘ "t musical people, not purchased prestige/v'iS

r q t l .'

not advertising, except as each owner advertises it among his friends. ,

To those who have in mind the "h>

purchase of the finest possible piano, ’a whether a GI^AND, SMALL GRAND, PLAYERPIANO or UPRIGHT, we want ' to send “The Lauter Piano Book." This is well worth having for its own sake alone. It is a bound volume of 160 !pages that is beautifully printed and 11- . ’ lustrated. It tells the story of the Lauter Piano in a way that is readable and intensely interesting.' ” So great has the ; ' demand been for this book that a new edition was recently made necessary, . and this has just come from the press.

I •*/ .-T

We mail this book without charge to any one on request.

You can come here and see pianos !' in amazing variety. We have Grands and Small Grands and Playerpianos and Uprights in every possible style and finish and color of wood. We can even prepare a special case to match the wood work of your music room, and our fa­cilities are such that we can promise relatively prompt delivery.

We can take your present piano in part payment of a new iastrumentg and . can arrange to receive the difference in very reasonable sums, month by month..,

Send us your name and address (aVHiv

on a postal card to-dayg and we wilt mail you “The Lauter Piano Book.*',

V W

L A U T EW areroonw AS? and 659 B r ^ m W kf t t k t j i s t m , 'u d f i U d i i « i M « A«HHMb N g i ^

Page 4: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

K E W A B K B V E lf lN iS ) N p V S , S A T C R D A T . JA N T T A R T 5, 1907.

m $ - i \ r 2 5 k

ArHflj^! l^otigh Has ;peo<ied Only $rt) for Dcs-

Cases Since 1S98.

WATSESsiifG Ma t t er IS d ea d

I 'juint* a i. L im , V orm crir • ( D r o i# f Kllorr A L.nfr,' E xpired

Iidxt lyiEht. , . ',FrxiiciH M. lAW, tor tlii|(y-flve y«ir» x

realOont ot iu« Wataemln*. arclion m '(llooinflrld, dlpfl Ii! hla l)ofne, « , Afut'arx- atn« avffiiue, loat nlglit. from pnftiirabiil* after HU llinrsi of ono wee-K- llr l«im 111 Oranitr alxty-ilirro Vrura ago, hla father tirtnn iho lot* irriiiik Jjiw,

Mr..Iaiw leiirnMl tlin lialtei e Iraite In

ARITBER TER'SPOT set asid e

«nad known iaat ulgSt nt.'tlw organlia XJon If the ciiUBCll of t in t rtnoe.'Wheii the »p< t ofi« le ifl*yk ffeowM Hint aiirliig adtii yea re tha borougli had ex|ierdri1 hut |W J r the relief ot tha poor. This ri'oord waa Ihomrht iiiiuaual for a nuitih limUty, and In view of the fact tha t the tIO ap-

■pKIlIrlBted elglll years ago for relief of the tpnor hart hcen espeniied. ilia eouiicU p u i id a resolultoa setting aside a aim. IJxf LDiount for ttie poor ncoount. Moyor Way as aUiod that from present lifU 'o- tion It was a oueallon- in his mind who her lha money . vilotil l e 'e r be lout led, but. he said, II wae well to be prei ir«d for emergeheleo.

lo n I’afeudort was elected n menibei o t 1 la council to fill out the, uuexjilred tern of the late f.iOulK Koch. These oltl- cera^wera ro ap p o ln tcd C la rk , Augnsuis A. (Swwford; collector. Flunk Kckliardt tt ip ^ n te m la n t of highways, lieoiKe F lat Ing; pound-keeper, George lliiinli. m ar bal and health ome. r, F irihiiiK Kell I,

M B a y ^ l lunnod thesn . cominltlees. Boa I, PntndqK, Htantlcidmijt. yTi(ii;a, Ord' lanciL jraopA nbuJit tkilyFiifw olarf.The I appropruitlons were mnile: Iblinis, U.0II ; Board of ilealth, tiun. ronltng™i

dipt iMa. 12,000. j |r , Biiyllas, iu Ills "les- to the coujii,ira(orr<«l. ^ 4 k e fi"H.

rhiri whila tho Wrnugli wnk wining to in- ■tftl' wiv<rtty-f!vo l]n:uni|p*i:'"fit llKlitSp ine

poratlon liad refused to

puti tba liexi ; Ti. aom )H IMd di

thal^jMsIllllWt ililiWIlill III*:------- la a iu te g Of-lite jCfluncUi . aQMW~waa mada pmaldeiit niid Aiigustua i A .-^ w fo r d QlBibl *

VViTna uva-sMaaba

}D ip£D E M f iO F TRAIN

a e i M o d | |< » ^ | a .N o a lilla lB aa W a a ta red '■kali aa He-c -- Attbldetaf,

■off!, aif 100ValHIieBtraett Orajigo. wax aeVlonsiy In JuwJI -luat n^^lL .t y. JfcKlVig attiick by m taatboaod tealn at tlwrFonott alreet ernss Ing a t oio‘ i.^ltftwann(( ttetirond.- m tim

I bojf , 4 westlgniniltitUnOU the iH)>h)and Avenue Htntlon. ii.id •fteAtfMtnw two blocks ho ^hippod off at I'orjS|{aTOt-; J *Vfknj!d Ufttritlee the ap- proM Swip-^ttii tHt. ’tiia, aaiitbeiuad trnek and atopped directly in front of ilia en gine,'vv’-- ■.lio-'i- '

ThWWait)%M'?h»wing down,to make a O jf^ '^i« 'ttlfhlqtid AvenOe dlAtkifi, hutatOD

waxttoinE'ai a auiQplePf rate tn speed to erat taabs Wtien.plokcd nphurkiHVecta.aevi

he UaTiiAcpfttRfitus.' and tin Waa sent to the w in iO " MeitiorUil Hooplthl. whare it waa.Jaund,tti»t he waa s(tffcrlug with fractured akuTl.. Ua. haJi.Afigtifing ehama fOMdkOVeH'./' ■ ‘ r» ,

■,ii,-vi-iHi t . a -i.'. . ! , - -----

A? McCloske’y Jr.; ireaiurer. F rank X, Walah; aergeant-at-am ts, Georgs Krauaa; mcpiber of bOarrl of governors, John 'Keaatar.

Atdprnpin tJligrl*a.W,.,Rocplne will give a liasaenpteffer a tip iier'to the menibors o t the aaeoeldtlon 'ntxt Wednesday night.

Krederlok-' TJw?ma*. aUtcen years old, of '431 Edgerton terrace. East Ornnge; Clifford 'I,UfHs. fltleen'years old; John T'taeye, sixteen Veara old, and.Howofd .Wkfren, all o¥ Orange, and nil r'olfired, war* held In 1230 traU by Recorder t)ore- mui In the East Orange Polloe Court y«s‘ lerday afternoon on a charge of breaking and entering. The boys, It Is charged, abile a oiianllty of lead pipe from an old house In Harrison street.

An address on "Men and the Church'' will be delivered In the West Orange Preshyterlan Cliurch to-morrow night by James ,M. Wnitetnan, vice-president of the Men's f’lpb of Central PreahyttTlaii Churi'li. Orange.

MUCH NEED OF PRISON REFORM

Mrs. Maybfick Says Some Nice Things, However, About Cald­

well and Trenton Prisons.

l ia O R E S IN ORANGE THEATRE

F rn n rtH M. hmyr.

Pfttf'rxtiii am! worktHi for the lul^ An- f!r#jw Rllor, ieOlf r bt* b^rnm»» a partner in Iho- Uinii^esB, tha Itrm biMng known na

For the paat algfit yaars Mr. T^iw wn* (n the employ of Ferry. Wo^er Ad Co., of

^ ai4a...tUK-Jto -waa .a jnnnibi;r of lha o i l1™ |Frot«'ct]on Kngin« rompiiny and i>f tin

'Irrnjrn'a Asnodatlon jn I’afrr'ompany and i»f the

I In K A

<ldn, Atrd‘‘wn 'alBO a triinin» nf^lr

jflstrmpt iFl. - -------------------------- -UiB\^6wark H at Flnlslirral AaKooia-

Wal-Fftsaing Free Public lilluary imuiy ypur«.

'tM t'TAw Waa a iiiertih^r’of tho VViitfl ssIng Mothodlst Church and at oti' Tithe wna president of th? board of (ri;«ecn. Mr. Lf^w had alpo flprv -d In lln' did board of Rcbuul irtjsteci. IIEh wlfo died iw otnanths ngo. Two Hon-H and ‘wo daughLrrs Bur- v lto hbii. Thpy wrr Mis. Artliiir A. Bllor, Mri. Ilnnry Al\'tn*ton iimt .lontph nnd Krn-

l 4iw, .all of Bloomfield. The funeral will be hold at hla liU« realdunce a t 2:30 o'olork. MoniUiy aft^rnnon.

K k :A K N Y A N D A R L I N G T O NHt. Sippln-n> Branch. Ijndles' Cathohe:

B'-neudeiU ABaorhithm, of yXrllnglun, has lasialliMt Ihene ofUcpra: Prf*sldl<'nt, M.iryA. Burke; lirat lUre-pretfkU'tit, AunJ- Kelly; wrcoticl vif<>*iovild‘uit, Catnrilitf Kelly: rocorder, Th«*rffla K#>11y; finance.tl Hi.'cretnry AMch Wlialen; treaaulrer, Ma;- garet Uomifliy; imireiml, Bridget Muri>hy: guard. M&iTraret Crocker; lruite«B. Miry lierJihey, M argaret Bohllghftuimft, Mary Kagi* and M argaret l^yde.

airet»i f'omrmi»Hmr»*‘r liugh MrQuold. of Kenray, U coiitlrted to hla home with au attack of grip.

Two furriei'B of the Arllnglnn Poatolfloe aro on the glok llnf, and na a rt^euli the work of the offleo la badly crippled, llio entire forre of th’t otflce hue t>rrn working Yivertlme In order to prevent a congestl'm of nu ll III the offlefe. Ypflterday i htk George Smltti went homo Hlrk.

MIsH Mary G rant, of Ktm Franclico, Oil., who haa l>ee]i thn giieMt i>i «lt»- t(*r. Mf« H arry B. raltlnieuft, of 7. tiiew- nr: avctuie. left yearerdny for A tlanta, ■tW7, when- ahe wHl reolde.

The Oratorio Boi’iely will meet Thiire- dfiy nlgJit u l the homo of William Ash- nj,’*l! J1 Favanla avenue, Arlington.

iiniden Rule Circle, King's IUiiigtiters, < f Arlirirtioii. will meet Monday night wlfsi Ml8S Jennie N ew born', a t Kj8 Hl^waiT av-i- line.

ilr, Oiiil Ml'S. J. U'oBley Kdiiionds and Mrr. Elia Kilmomls, of ArllnglfJO. have funa ift.Piimohk, Ji!tiL4.ffir..th« winter.

A vaudeville t-ntertalnineiii and daiiro will be ^ v en in Qnlncy Hall, Arlington, Friday night by the lOntartatnJng Club, Carl F, ZHchftu will bc.Uonr mnnager and James J. Dunn and William atevens will be iilfl usftiatFints.

Triune Ix>dge. F. and A. M , of'Arlli.^- (on, In urranghig for Iim anmial bnuiiuet, io ne lielrl Monday night, Jiinnary sit the Arlington'House. a •

The drat of u Borles of events lu tho Columbian entertalnnient .cuurse will be held Tur-aday uight u.t the Kearny High flrhool mulltnrlnm. Tlie emehahnnent will be given by the Marquis Liidtes' Hiring (Juartel. assisted by Miss Alice Enattmm, soprano.

A spectal m eeting of the LaOlea' Aid Bo>

Mrs. Florence E. Maybrick made her Rr»t uppeaiasioe on the leetuK' platform In Oratige last night, when she spoke on ■'Brlson Reform" under the auspices of the New England Hoclety. A largo audl- rm-e woe present In the Orange Theatre, ainh in addition to the talk of Mrs. May-* liTlfk. addresses were muds by Mrs. Emily K. Wlllamson and Edwin G. Adama. Wilson Farraud, presidem of the soeUty, presented the speakers, and a t (lie cou-

TIFFANY DAUGHTER DEAD,

dety of the Arlington Methodist Ctiurch lied for Monday aftornooii. at

0 9 ARGE CASE 1S P0STP0NED.AifBRWwat W xK ,(o H exlan M«-

:iU<ripal IiIkM Iws .C w w k 't on »"'■ l o i ' '41'Wwelt,

' A flh in i« it on th a ' xetern of a i-iil* tn a h o y « a u a o " # I iy . ', iw i t .'ot CHilorarl altouM npt laau4. u> revlaw tile .acllnn nf tha Or»ni;r Common Council In nwuriiliiB a contract for fl|B edtabUahmont ot a BinntcIpal.UvIiitlnc Jitant,. w#» continued

W(K>k hy Cblel Juatice Gummei n 'erne Court Circuit title morn- li^ptwt^nntiit wiia made ot the

th*. oMel jOBtloe, who hod tn io - oihay’ dutlca ;«way frum the

tttsy G, fP^rker, opunsai tor Iler- tJlfbHilfWa a itfoperty owner, and

WtUlarrt A. Ijord. representing the elty, w«re present ppaprfred'So‘‘krg«« the mst- ter-'*‘tttkit d ioss * flatYirday next for tJm laeritoig. In place /Fuesday, as dffured by court.

Mrs. H arriet A. Trem bly. W hose F a lh er Kouiideri Nirw Verb Hoase.

U ap ires In C a ld n rli ^aultarlom .airs. H a rrie t‘A. Trembly, daughter of

the late Comfort Tiffuny, a foumler of the Tiffany hoiiSf, of New York, died of pneumonia a t Iho Oak Hill Sanitarium, Caldwell, yesterday.

Mps. Trembly was nearly nlnety-two years of age gnd had been in Caldwell- for the !>‘ist two y't'ars as ll companion to her daughter, wift> Is suffering from piifalysls. The funeral was hold this aftorrujou, at AH Souls* Church, New Yijrk City, The body ,w!!l be creniated ftt Frefeh Pond. Long lahiiid. la fulfllment of a request of tho dereapod.

lirnry Mr Homrr.Henry M. Romer, sIHy-elght years old,

died this luomliig, after u long IliaesH, a t Ills home, IH Forenl Btroet. Montclair. Mr. Uotivr li«d been a resident of the

for many years. He was il member of W utchung Lodge, 1. O. O. F., find of the l.’nltpd Brotherhood of Carpenters and Jolneis. He Is survived by a widow. Funeral services will be held from hie hits r^^sldence, Monday Afternoon, at o'clock.

baa been j i f t i . . . . . .the church, when arrangements for a fair win 1>€ made.

The board of trxistees of Knox Presby- lerian Chureh. Keartiy elected these* of­ficer* last n ight: Presldcm. Alfred Kutch. eon; secretary, John JainleHon; treasurer, Henry Gliapmun.

Annabello AdaniS, five ycar.s old daugh­ter of Mr. gild Mrs. Thomufi AdumH. of ^ r g e n avenue arid Devotj mreet. Kearny, died yesterday after a low duys’ illness ot memoranoTiH croup. The funeral wka Itfihl at the home or the parents this after­noon.

l i i »

th*t It was a big bluff, InUadad to frighten the women, and to prevent their vlaUIng the Jail.

'T h e rondltions were borrtble; refuse was piled pp In the comers: tha prlstniera were flUby, ami I be vermin was flying around. There were no Banltary arrange- mants, and fill Uin laws of health were helng violated. Cells were overcrowded, atid there was not the proper separation of aexea, The only prisoner who had n decent ceil was a man condemned to death. His room wua clean mid com­fortable. The iigUatloii was so great at that time that sanitary arrangomeiUs were added end windows ru t through to make better vcmllation and the Jail was Cleaned. As yet they have nnt built a hew Jail, but ih<*y have done many things which hove made the btjUdlng more habit able. It has Mover lapsed Into the aatne conditions of din.

Prgls# for Two W«r4«mB."Time fails mo to give it historical re­

view nf all Jnlls, but It would not be fair for me tt> forget thiit (here were two notable exceptions, one was the Union County Jail, which was under the direct care of the freeholders, uml was perfe^'tly clean and no uver-tTowdlng, and wlln proper eSJ# of the prlpoiiers. both as to bodily conditions and as to food. The other WHS the Passaic (*ouiiiy Jail, which, although very faulty lu construction and inadermate. was found m !>*■ clean and provision for work was excellent."

Mr. Adams talked cspecliilly of the need of n reformatory for women, following out the Hnea taken by Mrs. Wiillameon, who had described the Rahway Reformatory. Both speakers iold of Ihe wonderful re ­sults jiceumpllBhed by reformatories,

Mr. Adams said that Governor Stokes WfW opposed to any further futdltionn in this Hnc, and that the people who have studied the. question and know how vatu- able a woman's reformatory would be should write the Oovermir aiul urge him to approve any leglslHllou which may bo enacted this winter.

MISS D i^m A DEBUTANTE,KornK-r n iM R id s* Y o a a a W «w aa

F u rn ia lly in tru iln eod ■ to. flo. c la tr In K en V erb .

A. liirg>' recepllon la being given tblaafiernonn by Mr. und Mra, Roller, Beu- non Diivls, of 333 Riverside drive. New I'ork . fonneily uf Rldgewooil a''eiiue, Glen llldge, to Introduce thelronly daugh­ter. MlrB l.iicretia Uavli, to soelety.

The liRllrooin snd drawing-room a r t decorated with flowpm. The dining-room

Mrs, F loren ce B. Maybrlck*

I R V I N G T O N A N D H IL T O N

OFFICE FOR HR.BAIGRIE?

H A R R I S O N - E A S T N E W A R KMary A.'Hlheliliftft. (if iu BeeondJlari'laoBr died yesterday, after " IMS. She was the widow . nt

tlhchllffd iuid:a resident of BleHt fdr iriore tlufn twenty years. Bhe nemlwr oX WoXy Cross Htanch. l.,: -Which will tueel a t '3 .a'clock lo-

S arrow afternoon, tn the haaenienl of oiy Cross Church, to take notion <m

bar d te tli and arrangw to attend her x u ^ t : ftunuel H. Swltxer, uitslnr ot the M aiffcon-B apllst Talieroaele. wilt preach a t i t io morning iietvtee to-morrow oil ■‘CrhWilxtdiV.’' At night hla subject will be "The Will of God," The laird 's sup, will* bd admlDtsierod u tter Die niuroliig**BSwdral l.odge. DaughteiB ot Scotia. wllCAQkt ft public Instalpltlon of the olIV- a e r i i a f ICIberoP hall, Friday nigh;, a t 3 o'rhMk. «x whIcU ibe liienibers of all slater lodMa, elana and their friends have been teTlted to be present, , , , ,

T lie . newly! elected otBcers of Holy

R e p o rt la t h a t D e lea led E a s t O range C o a n o iln in n W ill Be M ade

d ir e c t C oniiu lsn laner.Itnlesa some ehanga is m sdein tbe plans,

II la undesatood Uint a t an early date the Bust Orange City Connell will have be­fore It an .ordinance creating the office of street comuilesinner. At the present tipie the duties of that otflco are iitteiidod to by the clly engineer. The separation of the positions will provide an opportunity to give Andrew \V. llalgrio an appoint­m ent os street ciiinmtssioner- Hr. Baigrie was retired fiuio the council this year, a lte r serving for eleven years.

If this plan la carried out It will be lit line with precedent In providing offlees for menibers ot the council when they re­tire from that body. A few years ago Wlllliun T. Bowman, the present health InepeetOT, was a member of the Township Committee. AVhen lie retired ho was made building and health Inspector, Two years ago Edward I. Condlt retired from the council. At th a t time tho posttionB or building and health Inspector were dl- vlded and Mr. Condlt becarne building Inapector. while Mr. Bowman remained heaUti InspectoT.

The ftmeral of John Wills who died Tuesday night after u short Illness, w'as held yesterday a t his late residence, 13(1 Orange avenue, Irvington. llev. August C. FleUlnor, rector of Trinity Church, read the ritual for the dead and also the com­mittal service a t the grave In Clinton Cemetery. ' The obsedules w-ero largely attended. The pallhearers were; Frank Stoutenburgh. George F. BrEinrienburg, Clifford Mooney, Hoberl J. Frake, Ira Meeker and Edgar HoJgeUs. Services over Mrs. EHsahelh Harper, slater of Nr. Wills, Who died tw enty-tour hours after her hrothar, were Jielrt this afternoon at her late home. , 330 Wall street. They were private.- Kev. William II, Halncr, ot the F irs t Christian Church, olliclaied.

The Second W ard improvemunt Asso- clsthtn of Irvington will meet next Wed­nesday night, When final arrangements will bs made for the dinner to he given Wednesday night, January 16 In honor of file seventh anniversary of the organlsa- tlon.

Conusunlon service, wilt be held In the Hilton Methodist Cliurch to-mOrrow morn- ,lng- The pastor. Rev. Asa ,1. Kestle, will preach on "Forw ard or Baekward.''

The body of William T. Newman, of Irvington, who died a t Uie City iloapltal

Crosa lBri7n<5 l*diee'’’CaWoil(; Beoet-oieu'l Axaoelattoii,. of Uarrison, will he luatalledMondlty night, a t , Record Hall, by bu- prMBWDoputy Mrs. ifa rla iJuJuii, of New- anc-stin* tier stntl. Tlia menibors of the 'braAhb a*« jmeklug an elTort to get the supMtne president of the aasorluilmi, iirs . M argaret McGowan, of Ikiffalu. who Is lu New York, To he prcjsiut a t ,tho maetlug. A fter the ihilallpnon A w il l

the 'rtlSla!lpfen’'ii' fyW 'tikg poriy 'l JOhli«'T;- .FItWtiloy,-'.-of Johnstown,

p a J ^ h ta 'd r is Meeit' siAniilhg til'd t'lirlst- niaSTtolldaVa Wtth her piimils. Nr. uad

five, iveea'refQ:or\'«d ‘to hla lata lu>m« In Draka'a lane last night. Private funeral .sorvicea were h^ ld there (hU afternooiL arid the Intarm ejit was in Clinton'Ceme­tery. liTs NewniAn a iiallve of LJv- eipool, Enifland, and he had lived m this courttry about twelve yeark.'

Hfinry F. Belcher, lay preachel- of ihe Hilton ChrlatTan Church, wnl preach to­morrow nlifht on "The ReaponalhilUy and Opportunity."' The mufllo wlQ conBlat of the antl'iehi, "Qi'egt 1» the Lord," by tVi© cliolL and (hslrdm ehtal HfilecllOii, ‘'Neai'- er; My GexL ,to Tiiee" \cDncerco), by Mlaa 'Dewere Smith, ' '

The Velox Hoflal Alhletlc-Olub'Of Irv* Ingtfin will oeiebrate ItH aecond. ajinlver- aai-y on night of Fobruars- 21.rpu- r.r r'rroh Xlnf'MrTha topic of Rev. Uriah McClIndilc In the F irst Reformed Thurch to-morrow night will be "The Impi'ovement of the Future."

Robert Dougherty, of Avon avenue, Irv ­ington, la visiting frlemifi In Alonlicello, N. Y.

Mr. and Mr*, Charle* Heyniger, of ArAilemy ftlreet, HUton, are stopping In Belmer.

Roll ckU aervices anJ a "love fcaat will be held In the li-vlngton Methodist Church to-morrow inmnlng hoglnwlng fit 10 o'clock. FK'angflilHtlc service* will take place a t night.

I Chat o f Womens S ^h e c l in t o n d is t r ic t Clubs in Suburbs |

Mr*- Thonift* llfiiiley, of i jcvclnndleft yoateidoy fur Falm

Bea«n' Plorldn, whenv*h« will f*pend theU#ury^'K.' HqTh is vontlurd to hla

home on {ibcGi filreet. Huii-Jaim, with a dangaruu* illnea*.Jaoab 'L, atumpf, of Clevolaiid-avemie, Harrlafiiii- *Ui 4»n rtsideni' i»f the town, ta^&floed to'htkhome 'With ai\ attack of the-frlp. ■ . . . . .

The aiiiniRl meiJting of uia BLockholdwH of the Wesi iMjdaen jVuhlipinE .qf Hgm^yu wui mv Ueid fit noon

't^efeiirrison E?tc4>ip*., Jfuri Hen s ,\sao- Slailnn will' meet Uiniorrow nviniliig ;u 4ts-IwgdquWlcrs uisclvviiuiro! uvaiuie,

MMs' Ahiioti*'-Hlar'it, daogrnsf of Jtr. antTMr*. Jam es H. Hmoit, or iutl Harrison avenue, Htims.m, im -...-(liiy fiii- .Snui- ford. Conn., tur thgtRftavRhvf hei' hi'nitii.

Akflhs ajuiuai .(HEViltig lUe UudsojiCoBcty t e ati I, t i I'Otomini heM -last nUthi. t.Tiulrnuin James II''"' nessev aiiiiOtmced me iiisiubets of Mv, executive coiiimtttee .tov ma ensuing yi or. West Mudsoa will ne rcpresi'nlad on tbs ('OBiinUtefl .hy councilman f.'dw.ii'd J, Hie., uf llovrlson, and Pldllp C. Coyne, of Kearny- , . „ .THie gasnlUie 4ank In an antoiiioblle be- longing to the Iniovnullonnl fsleani Putnp

\ Cotttpiiuy, of ffar.risau bujal, tu-aaj', while, \ l t was passing along HiUTlsun oveitua. Yiewr Fourth straot. ■. The aiachtna w-ga dlsh’bled uhtlt'a. luacliinist •from the cum- pntfjf'a plant ■ anis'ad -and ropalrgd tha damage.

Mr. and Mr*.- Rkhajd Ryuti, of Sixth ttrai't, Harrison, vvei-a atr.tlgued betore Juasice Braingon. lit the 4lnrrl.sun I’olke Conn; to-day. on foinplalnt of Buperln- taiJdent John tkillen. of the OaUiollc chil- draii's AUl Soolety, who eharge.1 the couple with neglecting their four children. Mrs. Ryan was sent to the Hudson Cauh- ty 'Penitentiary for ninety days, Ryan w«9! paTiicd on promlelng to provide lor the family, i

ii9 99*9*9**** **9*99****The OniiiKt! ritmicttl Study Club will

hold lla iK xl Monday ofterdooiiHt lKd rrBlii«nc<3 ol' Mrs. Maurtc^ Decker. )19i' ( ’IfiVidaurt atrMU, Orange. 'I'he Ject will hf* ‘Tllo l.rxiatiiUve Outlook" Aldeti FiTtiiian, rif Kdsl. OranK®. Bpt ak.

will

M*’s. John uf BKiOTiilleUi ave­nue. Caldwell, riitnlalned the Heii and Piiliil Circle of that place yDutrrday afternoon. The pruRrum uomprlued ii pa­per on "Art Svhoolti and American Slu- Uenl*" by Mi'H. Edmund R. Laiji*'; piano uelectlon*. by Mrn. Andrew Tl \'yLkofr, Sind a po«m by Mina Anna \\ hile. 'J'he

meet siifuin at (he resitlenre nf ill* , iiidmtmd R. laulne, of Hloomllcld aveinn*. Friday aflerMOuti, Juuuory IS.

MecUtif* of the ar( depailnient of the IVomaai'# Club of Glen Rldgu will be held next .iloudfiy morahsg and January 21. at

! fhx* reHiiieuce of Mi's. G. V\\ Reynohis, j Lincoln j^li-eet. The aubjecl* will be "Bcp- ' oKiti (lozioll," and ‘‘The gchoolH of Flnr- ‘ ence utid NijmIi Elalx'." The depai’iinciit j f.f Blhlc llteriuure will meet a l lb« real- ! deuce of Mrs. Charh^s T. Dodd, 26 Apple- 1 1(111 piiK-»j, Thur.sflay mominta, Jam mry 37

and :!!. 'T he bJoak.H of Job and Bccles- taste i " will be dlacispsed. A portion of Uuio will be devoted at each meeting to the cGusldoratlon uf cm'rent religious queetlon* of the day. Joniah T. New'comb, of New York, wilt address the civics 'de- purtm ont of the club 'I'luirsOay afternoon, .Tajiuary -d* at thA reahifince nf Mrs. Melville StroiiK, HUIcrcHi road, on "The Caae of Muiilolval <.)wtU'T.«h1i)."

Uev. G. M. Shott, pQptor oC the Tuyona Fiirns* Church, will preach to­morrow morning on "ReacH Like a Hlvei'." Hi* evening theme will be "Re- tui'Jiing iu Gad." At the done of the tivutilrig Bcrvloe four young men will be baptized.

Tercatf Quiuu. (*f 3SS Peshljis a \e- nuu Fstrk View, enteriulneil a. few friends Ht imigre*8lve wliiat lin t tilgUt lu honor of her I'MUalii, Ml** Kalherlne Cottrell, of New* York. PnBPji won b,v lll«aKmily t^iihm. Ml** .Haiile 'ruruidl, jMIhh .Nellie Quinn. Haliiwln Cmwrurd. William Quinn amt Hugo Ryrlck. OlUei'R present Were Miss M. xVlcGoveni. Mias A. wiiliei'B, Mia* Matilda Kyrlvk, Mi** sVdIlc Quinn, (ieorge Hnedeker AogusUiB Hixriamn. J. CaHatrty nnd A. riioh.

MIsa Ethel Tnuib ga%'e a reception to a faw uf her friends last night nt her home Oh rthepliord avenue, ills* Florence Welngartncr nnd Miss Traub gave piano selactlonH, Mis* Edna Kapp ami John Kiipp played piano and vialln duels, and MIsb Ethel Tnmb sang.

'fhe Park View Plriochle Club met last nigiu at the home nf Mr. and Mr* George .Ixdnmon, lu Jvr*cy CRy. lTygresHl\> pinochle wiiB played and prizes wnu’e won uy Mrs. Lco^iid Lebci\ Mr*. J. Oscar Young. VVIIlium H. Coroy uiul George Johiisiui. Other* who atti'mlM were Mr, HTiii Mr*. Frod Betz, of East OiaiiKe; Mrs.

I’orcy, M1«r M, L. Ifyimer, Miss OUiilv* Ctu'cy. Ml** (^harlotte Lelicr, J, Osuai* Vmiiig Sr.v Leopuld I,eber mid Wlll- iani Yiiie*.

MIm Kl*a Cook, of Scotch Plain*, 1* vlslilng Mia.* Elsie Sholt. of Lyons ave- nup.

Mr*. }|(niiy Goldner and daughter. EdtMi, of leister Kvenue, are visiting lii Detroit.

X O B E S T H I L L - W O O D B I D E ftzcfi coiTifid7> fintlGed *'Bh* Would

Bti ^ Widow,"' Wilt be presented by the Oodd CdjinBel Dramatic Club In the par- Uh : pAll o f tba Churoh bf Our Lady of <io(M CouqmL H4G Summer aveitue, on the iilfWJ of January 21. 2? and 23.

3^. and Hra. • Joan HohumaD. of so Wgitilngton avermes apendlng u w‘eekwii!h relaf.stives at Bmlthtovn« Lour TaUmd.

M in Rebecca Terrell, of Plain

The first In the uniinal course of eTiler- talnm ent* given by ihe Woman's Club of Orange w'lll bo a concert next Wednes­day night In tho Wonmn's Club building by the Knelsfil Quartet of New York. "An Afternoon of Song and Btory," by Mist K ate Cheatham, of New York, will be the a ttrac tion Wednesday afternoon, January 2S. The last entertainment in the course will he a recital Wednesday afternoon, February 27. given by Miss Irene Arm- atrong Funk, soprano, and Miss Ethel Clettae, harpist.

B L O O M F I E L DThe HlKli Scliool Glee Club will give an

Engllali m uslra l' contfedy entitled, "The College Girl," In Central Hall, on the nights o( Fttbruary 21 and 23. The oa*t will Inftude Franklin C, Welle Jr,. Will- lam E. Blggart, Joseph F, Mann, Edwin S, Heiily, E- Morrell Hinkle, William H. Marlin, Erl'vord B. Crane, Norm* A, Moore, May . Bartholomew,. Carolyn B.ijm eairo th . Alothca S. tfieecker, Elsie I, ConSll * 'Irma M. Hairtaon end Helen Hays. The club win be aaalsted by the Etu(le Club, oompoaed of members of the ecliool. and_Franklin H. Bishop, soloviolinist, of Nutley. „ ,

Chief Engineer'B arnard F. Higgins willtbmit the names of his assistants to the

Trfwn Council for conBrmallon at the next

fleUk is visiting her. uncle, WIillum Tee- pleMot 8(Hi Washington avenue.

nsba: M. A. Lawler, .01 Hummer avenue. haiT'rstuTliad' tnom a ahort stay at RedB(iuL N* *T' ’

n i l ' l l , JL XJtigdr, 6 t 413 Butiuner av*« - iifVl^arlrer. Of S87 Lincoln

The annual election of ofllcers of thfi Woman'* Literary Club of Arlington will bo held March 12. The next regular^ meeting will he Tuenday, when the depart­ment of education will he In charge. "Tho School df To-day" and "Experlracnts In Education" will be presented by Mr*. Kfiklup, and "Some Parental Obsprva- tlonE" will form the baaU of a talk by Mrs. Florence Y. TrapweU,

^eek pR^adena'. Cal.g 'whfir<i hifiy iriU ftmaln until

Xuoenl Mrylcw of Mr*. Tbereoa itr6 ’ dwd‘*Tburoilay. 'Will be

lo-mornow AftarnooQ £rotn her late tfiiice- u Korgen^ ftreet

JFI- • ............. >' ' V '

EVENTS IN THE ORANGES.

meetlngi ^A. F. Ij^hman, of 'Bloomfleld avenue. Is apendlng k few days In Atlantic City.

'tive Board of ASaessor* will meet for organlEatton Tuesday night.

District Deputy Daniel A. Dugan, of Oranga* Hijttalled the ufllccrs-elect of Bloomfield Council, Knight* of Culumbiin, last night. After the Inatallation a recep­tion 19 * held.

The Ml**e* Dalny and Loretta Nolan, of 38 ■ Washington street, have returned to St, Joneph'a Academy, nordenlown, havv Ing spent tho hoHdaya with their par entt.

trj O ls E N R I D G E .,6 sh«' K. Hawkins, & tssrher In

tha jfihdsrfiirteti 4',aspnrtm«nt of ths pnblls 4Khoo! tor nsarty ihrts vssrs. Iisis r s s te fd «n. Bocount of fwr hvolih. otid

<K>tiys Irving. A.ikvkdiiiits .11 tho Kssr flritHlu Rormsl Brh^I In Connecti-

obo*«n US' fi«r BUveossor. n * EoE tpiub 'srULiaMt'Jsnuat’r 1&V S , XigWroneU Fu|c«n Brsmo. rurnaeriy

of.iOhut l**uod eards for snty« Iti. Jtttuaurr St

w«tj|wfint.T-flwrt Jtraati Nfiw Tprk. r.^aoff~Mris ClariiNft'toMHi 9*hi Ftofidtg- •

The Bible Btudenla’ League of the North Orange Baptint Church has eleoled the fallowing .'oneers: Prceldent, Charles L. Parker; vice-president, Willlum 'H. Cow­ell; treninrer, William Brenner; seorelary, Chester 1 , Bonham.

Samuel T. Dodd, of Butler County, Pa., who lived in Orange thirty years ago. Is making hi* Aral visit to ihl* section in tliut time. He Is Ihe guest of his nephew, Samuel If. Dofld, Of S7 Waalilngton street, East orange.

Th* prhnero Aafiodatloti o£ Orange •lectad the fottovlng offleer* last .night: President* Q«orge J. Wfraar; tioa^prasL 4 m L Sgjriiuniid KiAa ; vfitMUrr#

B E L L E V I L L EMias Bihel Blnlhgrr, of Qraylock

Manor, enierialned a party of friend* at hep home last night In celebration of her twentieth birthday. Kuchie and whist were played and after iho garnea'dancing was Indulged In.

A meeting nf the Board of Education wUL be hein Monday nlglit.

Ml** 1j, B, Taylor, of Joraiemon street, left thl* mnrninR for Wllkc*-Barre, Pit,, where aho will virlt .friend*.

"What Is Christianity More Than Judalam?" will he tho topic of Rev. C. K,

Scuddor m the Wesley Methotllal Church \ in-morrow iiioriilug. Jii Uie eveitlng ho : will nreach on "Through ihe ycH." i j

L. W. .Algeltlnger will addrens tb'e meet- { Inf y. Ms C. A. to-mofrow ajternooTtiV

elusion nf Maybrlck'* address, Aldan | Freeman, «/mlrnian of the lecture com- ntlttefi, liiwted the audience to conHider the case «ff William MacQueem who. he believe*, Is Innocent Mr. Freeman said that If Uic audience had read of the case In the EVENING KWWS, paying a com- pllmeul to IhlB newspaper, (hoy could Judge for themselves a* to MacQueen's giilll or Innocence,

Mr. Fnrrnnd spoke of the lecture course of the society and pf the various phases taken up nl different tlmea. He diaegBsed prison reform, In which he ha^oeeu' In- teresled for many years, and especially reformatories.

Mr*. Maybrlck spoke briefly, of her ex­perience In English prisou*. alluded to the Bing HIng, Auburn, Eastern Pcnlteii' llary at Plilladelphta, Trenton and CuM- well liiBtItutlonSs commending Hie pi'laon Hi Treuton nnd the penitentiary at Ould- well, especially for cleanliness ami gen­eral managcmenl. flhe condemned the undergrouiui cells at Trenton, however, but pntl*ed the keeper for hi* efforts t« uplift the prisoners. She also praised Warden atone, of Caldwell.

Tho enforced Idieuess in many prl.sons W‘aft qondemnert 3iy the speaker, who de­clared, that It W' B one uf the grealeat. of evil* and roNiiUcd In awful dcmnrallza- Uon. Hhe condemned the pracrise of keeping young boy* In peiial institution*, where men are detained.

Good F are at T ren too ,At Trenton Mrs. Maybrlck said she

natJeed sBpedaily lUat apple dumpUngn were served the prlaoners and that ihelr food wa* ample, wholesome atid varied.In Eiiglami, she went on, iter food bad been beef and mutton find fnuttnn and beef, with hard bread and cheese, and she dficlurcd that lids menu wua not varied during her entire time In prison. She added that but far Che loyalty and friend­ship of her own countrymen she oould not havis borne those fifteen years of im- prJsonraeat nnd Injustice.

"I am here us the prlflonet’s friend." she (U'Clared, "to voice their suffering* and to' clrthn for one and alt hbman rights, the right to liave God's aunirhlne, the right to hroathe lita freeh air. for pro- ifL’flfiii aguSn t tile moral corruption or­dained by leglahiturcfi.

"No chain Is fttronger ihan its weakest link: the exten:?iv»' Holi»'iTieH of penal ad- nilnlstratlon In several States have their ■fatally weak part In the jails. Gemtlne effectfre orgnnizutlon* In* the- I'nlted Stale* for the sulvutiou of the crlmlnfil oi* the alh^ged crhnliml must inks heed of facts which are noiwrlon*.

"Pronilacubus association In Jails and penitentiaries is certalu to contomlnaie pernoiiH who, though they have com- mltled one act, are not familiar with methods and course* of habitual law­breakers. The ftcgufllntancea made In Jails seriously deprave a per*on on his release, He come.s In contact constantly with some of the worst of hla fellow ex-prisoners, some nf whom delight to pull him down. If they cannot do this they keep him in constant fear uf the revela­tion* of the past, which he 1* trying to live down.

"To tlie average prisonpr the day of freedom brings with It an overwhelming despair. JIo mu*t fftO< the world nloiic. C'ompfU'tttlvely friendless, without pro­vision for life's neceasarlea, conscious that he will receive no recognition and (•oiifldent that he can get no remunera­tive employment If his past'l* known. To him comes the awful truth of hi* help- lc*8nes* that mnkes him hopoleas. Hope- lessm*#* brings despair and despair leml* swtftlY to deaperathm- Desperation ends In n Hiili'Ide'e grave or u return to crime. The time Is coiulug when the preolousnesp of every Imman anul shall be no longer a doctrine of the thurches and echools, but shall become llie power of our soften­ed and humanized Inatltutlous.”

Tlio B ergen Connt}* Ja il. RefortmUory ami probation work were

dlsciotaed by Mr.s. 'Williamson. She told of the coiidStlous in several of the Jalla In this Stale, of tite long iluie It had taken the State Clmrlilea Aid Asstidatlon to ftficure IcKlfilHiiun fllotig the Hue of remedying conditions, oml of the effon* made to keep the probation system oul of politic*. She cbFiracterlzed Um condi­tions ul the Bergen Gounty Jail as the worst In the Slate, due to ih#» fee fiyatem. 91ie *ald (lie sheriff received lUty cent* a day for the keep nf prisoners, atul that the food consisted of a loaf <if bread, fiouio coffeie and a dinner that was uniU for a human being. Mr*. Williamson said U was a genuine pleasure to ijieet a large audience In Orange and tell the people how much the worker* In civic and philan­thropic efforts tbroughoul the State ap­preciate the co-operation ami support of the people of the Oranges.

Oo the jail system, sh« said:"Thera W’S* a great deal of agitation,

which lesuUed In bettering the conditions of almost every jail In the State, A new Jail was built In Cunilierland County. In Warren County the jail was qf such a charfiifiter ihat the priaouers were nllowed to st>^nd their time In the warden * offlee. It was a veritable black hole, and had l)«en In use for nearly one hundred years. In fact, the *herlft of that county had been known to place a prisoner wKli rela­tives awom to keep htm securely, rather than look him up In this black bole. A new ia il was built a* , the result of this agitation.

‘The condition* In Burlington County were very bad. and the visit made by the secretary and Mrs. Alexander to ihe jail at that time will nlways be- remembered as an Interesting eptsoAe. The sheriff was not in his (>*« at the time of iho visit, and the deputy was uncertain wlieiber or not to .allow the women to enter, allhough they had ud order from tho court. He aeht a small boy hastily to the county so-

.llcUor, who sent back word (hat the wom­en -were lo be admitted. After that he walked to liU desk nnd unlocked a secret drawer and produced a large platol. When asked why he look the putul. he s«id that under no clrcumstaace* would he enter the jail without It. The women bothlaughed and (old him tffat ibey would entfir.wUltout It, and without him, having no fear of the Inmatet. With u great flourish o f ' the pistol, he proceeded to open the Jail door*, i t 1* needle** tn mv

M O N T C L A I R .' Ml** Hnchel Strongmeyer, of Bluom- flekl H ■e lue, i* visiting friends sit Horhes- tcr.

Professoi' Fosdlck. of Huffalo, 1* visit­ing hlfi *on,' Rev. Jliirry Knierscm Foa- dick, pfislor of the First Bapllst Church.

Th© Ku Klnx Club gave a reception to members mid guests at the home of Mi­chael Corcoran, of Bay street, last nlgbt.

Edward Avis will give a lecture on ' An Evening In Birdland" at the chapel of the I*Tr*t ITesbyterlun Church next Fri­day evening for the benefit of the Chris­tian Endeavor Society.

John Kimberly Mumford will give a lec­ture before the Commonwealth Club next Thursdny night on "Oriental Rugs,

Kev. Fidgar 8. VVlers will lecture to the High School pupils in the aB*ernbly-rn<m next Friday night on "What Books Do for Chfiracter and Education."

DennlB H. Runyon, Of I'pper Montclair waa bitten on the leg by a dog while walking along a country road near Great Notch yesterday. He had the wound cau­terized a* Boon us he reached home, morning lie went to work aa uJuaL

A lantern slide exhibition of vJewa taken by jnembefH of the Montclair Camera Club v/lll be given lo-nlght at Ihe club- room. In tlic Craiie buSUInS-

The Third Ward nepubllcan (-lufe of Monlclalr held U« annual n e e t ln . ul Time, Hall last iileht and eleclfJ the following oflleers; Presldam, WUliam B Dickson; vice-president, Arthur Horton, trcBaurer, H. H. AblKiti; secretary, ;VV IB- Ism 11. Swllicrton; enrolling ofllcer, I-. R.^Professor aiaJ Mrs. Comstock, of the University of Wisconsin, have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Louts K. Com stork, of Kernwood avenue, (or the past'^The Altruist Society recently slartnd building fund with which to purchase and improve the building at present occu­pied on Glenrldge avenue. Two thousand dollars has already been secured fur the purpose. . , . i.uThe Board of Henlih has organised with the following officers; President, Moaea M, Baker: vice-president. Dr. Richard P. Pranclu; treowiirpr. Dr. Lusl W. Halsey; secrtlurv’t John N. Holton; health omcer and regiBtrar of vital slatlfttlcs, Chester H Wells: aaiikary Inspcclors. J. G. Loo*© and Jay E. Kilpatrick. Menting* will be held til© ©ecojui find fourth Tuesday* of ©i,c:h month.

Thft lallor* of Montclair propoz© form

FIREMEN HAVE NARROW ESCAPEOrange Truck Just Gets Over

Railroad Track When Train Whizzes By.

DRIVER FOUND THE GATES UP I

Nllia Ltirroiln Onvl*.festooned with white lilies, and Ihe

ahlr Is covered wllh whitu tirchiils auii while violets. Mr*. UuvIh ,uiid her diiugh- ter lire receiving in fhe• bullrooni.

Mi>. Dtivl* U gownvd lr> white aatln, trimnird with motlim' of penrl sphtiglcd net. Her ornnments are diamonds, iin<l she enme* lilies of the vnlley and laven­der orchids. Miss Davia'a coatume Is W’idli* inorqulseltul, nnd her houquel i* a shower nt while *weel ■peas. Assisting fit the reception are Mrs. Frank Onkes and Mips Mary Oakes, nf nUKunfipUl; Mrs. C!ur;i V White, Ghuly* Burkhaller, Mrs, Robert TI\ionofiH and Mrs. Charles Searing, of Glen Ridge. Ml.ss Havrleue Colviu, nf Glen* Falls. N. Y.: Mr*. Rlch- ai'd Nott Dyer, of Last Orabgc: Mr*. Harry Mingle, of New York, ami Mrs. J. Henry MKlev. of Hruoklvn.

Mrn. Davis will give a dance for lirr daughter next Friday ijiglil. Mr. and Mrs. l>avi* and Mips Davis left Glen Ridge about a year and a half ago.

"J'en menibvrB of (he Orange Fir© 1)©- pmTmem, who wer© riding uti the hook- and-laddcr truck, had a narrow eacap© from being run down by a fast easibound liuln at the Oakwood avenue cTOwtiig of the Lackawanna RallroBd, ln*l night. An accident was avoided by Jeremiah 8av- flge. driver of the truck, who u*ged ht* hOJ»©s over the track and got the appa­ratus lo (he other *lde jtlat ae ih© engine dQRhed b}’.

t>-ivuga waa drl\-ing the truck back to headquarter* in Canlleld *lraet, after anawcriiig an ulrtrm for u. amnll flr* lu Hill siri'et, nllowed Ids hor*©* tomake the rsturu trip-im a slow trot, Ju*t US the horaca stepped upon the tracks 8avngn discovered Iho glare from the luMidllghl of iui engine a short dietauc© away. AlmuHt KimultaneoUBly tho clang of the dcBoendlng gRie wasihMard. It was too hile to back tho appanitua,'and Slav- age mihzed that bis only chance was to go forward, and he Urged ih© animal* Hhcad. 4

Savage 9to^ed''to avoid ihc tleaciendlng gul« un the north side of the trucks, but George Cuddy, who was at the tiller, fall' ed lo noth'© tho obatnicHon lu the dnrknesH. The,gat© struck him In th© back and almost knocked him from <h© tiuck, Jnst then tho ladder paHsed over the tracks only a few feet from th© en­gine,

The escape was reporred to Chief Will- lain H. MaUliewfl, unci ho is making an ImvesLlgatlonv

q'ho liivmeu were r©t.irrnlng from a ftr© in a charcoal alorohmjflp at $G Hill strefit, belonging lo Frank Sklnntsr. About fifty ton.*!! oC tho lucl hiid been Blor©d in th© building, and In order lo roach the blaze ji large part of the structure hurt to b© torn down, The cause is unknown*

l^rlucf'ton Almniil Dlnnpr,Arrnugcrricnls for the nmiufil dinner of

the Prliicelon Alunml ASfiOClallou of th© Oranges wcut made last night at a meet­ing of the executive cominittee. din­ner will be nerved In English’s hall, at Main and Walnut flireels. East Orange, ThuvHday nlghi. February 7. find among those who have accepted Invitation* to

i HTJeak arc President Fruiicls L. Patton, of Princeton Theological 8emln»ry; Profes­sor Blocktou Axsoii, Judge Mahlon Pit­ney. Mayor George Ji. Mct'lellan and Job K. tledgos. 'I'hc music will Im led by a qviurtet of uTidei'gradiialeH and there will be H number of "atinUs" to add to th© ncraslon.

Ing an aszoclutlun for mutual uroicclioti. A preliminary meeting for ihls_ pt^posewai hi'ld at ihe store of Pssquale Palla- dlno Thuredav night. Another meeting will be held In a few days and a P.’f i l ’"'' u©nt organization formed. U i* *a.ld that ft blfickllHt win be made out, on which W'lli be placed Urn name* of tlioae who do

A Crusade Against

Secret Medicines.

noi pay tUclr bills promptly.^Th© United Association of Plumbers ami

th© Protheiiiood of PnlnterB held elertlon* of officer* at Oranley's hall la*l night. Th© plumbers chgae the following: Presi­dent, Frank Cudworth; vlce-preBldPTit-. Hiram Littlefield: corresponding a©cTe- tar>', ArehJ© Hall; financial secretary, John Graham: treasurer, JovepU Daren; warden. Uharle* Hortsch. Tl e painter* election resulted In the cholc© of the fol­lowing: President,Wnilam Schlelser; vlc«- presioent, Joseph Engll*: recording *ecre- (ary, Henry Larsen; financial Bccretary. Peter Herlng; treasurer. Andrew Hnnson; eonducinr. DfivUl McNamara: warden.Georg© Tompkln*. George Watt* was ap­pointed buslneaa agent of both organlxu- tions.Ludwig Mulily, of Maple avenue, will leave next week for hi* old ham© In Oer- tminv. ,A delegailiui of Montclair letter-carrier* atlenrted a banquet given by the Newark letter'CHri'lera last night.

S O U T H O R A ^ IG EsUaUng carnival 1* icheduledA sUfiUng carnival 1* icheduiea to be

held oil th© Field Dub Jake sometltne Ihla month. The date haa not been itet, owing lo th© uncertainty of the weather condi­tion, but the committee In charge of tho arrangemenl* proposes to send put postalH to ail members twenty-four hours before the time *et for the affair.

The ParnasBlau Society has appointed Ihe following committee to arrange for "ParnuBslQu Evening." which will be Hold in the Hlgli School A**emb!y Hall: Roland H. .Kilbovn. Chrlatine Benbrook. Lane Spencer, Anna Sormltier and wlirrea

Howelis. of Third slreet ha* been appointed soprano soloist at SI. John » Church, Newark.

Twenty of the forty-six persona who

T h e n h a i heen an indiecrim inate on u a d e a g a in it American cem m eieia l enterprisM . T h ii moat extraordinary ATTACK VTON B U SIN ESS corpom - tiona haa in v o k ed m a n u fa c tn n n ot n early a ll kindi, haa apared few pro*

___________________________________ ducets o f any aort.Each and every one o f theae enterpriaea perhapa deaerved aome oriticianL

W hether the ir opponenta have dealt w ith them jnatly or not, they a n prom pt­ly a^jnatin^ them selvea to th e new oonditiona, and dem onatrating to tha bnaineaa w orld th a t in the larger th in g s th e y have been governed b y sound dnanoial In tegrity , even i f in aome few particulars the timea w ere r ip e for reform. ____ _

Like other g rea t indnBt^ie^ TH E P A T E N T M EDICINE IH D U ST X T !• com ing in for its share o f cenaure. Secrecy o f composition haa been th e m ain war-cry again st these m edicines.

I t waa adm itted on th e part o f p a ten t m edicine manufacturers, th a t their forfuulm w ere k ep t se c r e t T hey fe lt ob liged to do this, in order tn prevent imitatora firpm im posing on th e publio. A fte r a proprietor had spent hundreds o f thousands o f doUara in ad vertiiin g a rem edy, th e aeem iy o f hia form ula "wt$. hla Only profeotion a ga in st othtra step p in g in and reaping th e rew ard o f U a tremendoaa outlay in advertising. ’

T h^ U nw U lingnew o f p a tent m edicine manufocturera to revea l th e in -- gredienta o f th e ir compound waa perfectly n a tu ra l T hey fe lt th a t th e y d e­served protection from the governm ent th e sam e aa any Other citizen w ho procures a p atent on an invention or a proceea. BUT TH IS CONBLDERA* TION DID NOT K E E P BACK T H E CRITICS.

T he a g ita tio n w a s k ep t up u ntil Cnngreea enacted a law m aking It ohliga* tory oh tb e p a r t ofpuoh m u u u factu ren to expose certain ingredients on th e label o f each package.

I t waa th ou gh t beat to include a lcoh ol in th e l i l t o f o^ ec tio n a b le Ingred­ients. T b lf'b ein g th e on ly objectionable in gred ien t contained in Peruna, th e m anufeoturer o f th is very excellen t rem edy prom ptly obeyed th e law .

Indeed, h e voluntarily w en t forth er th a n this. Dr. Hartman, a fter aerioni consideration o f th e m atter, haa oonclnded to put PLA IN LY ON T H E L A BEL OP EACH BOTTLE th e principal a ctiv e con ititu en ti o f w h ich F en m a is com ­posed, W h ile w e do n o t agree th a t th e c la im against aeoreoy h as -been a just one, yet from th ie tim e on w e have concluded to take Peruna out o f th e lis t o f lecret patent m edicines.

Iw

dl©d In tho village during the i« * t year, cording to th© record? of th e Biureau of

Vltarstntiatk'g, were ovei- fifty years of age. Tlie t-auaeg of deatht were an fol­lows: Cerebral hemorrhage. 4: other dls- eagee of the brain. 6; heart- disease, 3; tynlioW ferer, 3; illplitherla, 1; cancer, 3; tubercultialg, T; inarasmiie. 1; eiilelde, 1; Bright's disease, C; pnennionla. 3; acute Indigestion, 3, and rlokeln. 1. , , ,

Right pi'opo.naln for membership have b,-en I'ecelved by Division No, 8, A. O. II.. and 'ft'lll be noted upon February ,.

flehenraula for "Golden aiilch” are be­ing held twice a week by a eaat comimneil of young people in the parish of Our I.ady nf Horrowa. The play will be given Ingf. .Vlnry'g Hall iiejt month, ...........

Memberg of the Boutb Orange Field (,!uo «-lll ohgei've cluh night next Thursday

Pe-ru-na Continues to Have the Confidence

of the People.

John A. Taft, of'Second atreet. galled yegte.rday for China, on a gear's trip.

The village poundmaster. David McCul- Iwigii, In his annual report shows that three rows and three horses were im- pmmded during the year.

A team billiard end pool toninatnent is being arranged at the Flelil Club.

StudentB at SelOh Hall resumed their atiirtleg this morning after the Ohrlalmas vaeattong,

N U T L E TThe gtockUolders of the Bank of Nutley

will hold an annual meeting next Tuesday afternoon.

Mrs, J. J. Deldy, of Hlghfleld lane, will sail for London. Kngland, on Jammry IS. Bhe will Join her daughter, who Is visiting friends in that city.

Mies Louise Hurd, of Fmnkltn avenue, is visiting frfends at Boston.

Mr. and Mrs, Edward Wright, of Hlgli- fleld lane, ai'o home from a stay at At- laiillc City.

Mr. and Mrs. William 8. KoUer, of West Nutley, are home from a stay with relatives In Conneotlcut.

ORANGE BRANCH OFFICE*

IkiNUrk CM lH lg ntIM tORANOE NATIONAL BANK BUILDING.

TsIophoriM 471 and 7 n , Oruno*. Advartla«tn«nti rtnivtd until 11i1> A.

M. for InMrtlen on th« u n it day. DELIVERY BOOM, 10 CONE BT.

W e now offer Peruna to the public u a reipilBr .pbannaceu- t ic o l product, ( t in juet u e th i­c a l 01 any compound p u t up by th e m edical p r o f e i t i o n . N^ atraining o f m edical -eth io i can

find ony fault w ith it. TH EP R IN C tPA L A U ttY B IN O B E B IE N T S o re prom inently incorporated iu fh ( label on th e bottle, t h a t the people m ay know th a t the claim s made for Peruna have a true justiflettiotL

T he only departure w e ih a ll m oke from m edical ethics in the condnet o l Peruna a fik iis in th e foture, is the fact th a t w e shall continue to advertise a n i se ll our product TO ® PEOPLE.

I f w e w ould o g r e e lo se ll to doctors only, to advertise for doctors on ly .O tet th e m edical f r a te m i^ would be ob liged to recognize Peruna as b e in g entirely w ith in th e ir approval.

BUT W E SH A LL NOT D O TH IS.W e sh a ll continue to offer P eruna to th e people. W e sh a ll oontinne te

convey to th e people onr claim s for Perima'O* a household remedy. W e s i ^ continue to eupply th e people w ith free literatu re, teaching theih hbw to u e our m edicine, teach in g them h ow to avoid disease, teaching them m any th in gs o fb e n e fit to th e home. W e sh all con tinu e to do this, w heth er th e m edical profession lik e i t or n o t

W e are proposing from th is tim e on to ta k e the public into our confidence. N otirithstand ing th a t some im itators and substitutors w ill he a ttem p tin g to put up som eth ing w h ich they consider ju st as good as Parana, w e ore g o in g to draw otido th e v e il o f secrecy end a llo w a n y one w ho chooses to know exactly OP W H A T P E K U N A IS COMPOSED.

This ou gh t to disarm a ll honest criticism . W e expect, how ever, th a tc r it - sr iu continue. On som e p retex t or other those who are envious o f th e

success o f P eruna oontinne to find fou lt. But w e are determ ined to g iv «such people n o jo s to o m id a in t * <i

m W IS A H B D tC H iE -I t h u b ecoste a h on n h o ld w ord in m illions o i homes. Onr fr ith in Jhe,<<.

rem edy is stooJigtr th a n ever. Ijyery y ea r w e expect to eitahU ih n ew p lo n ti '' in foreign laade'nnW th e people o f a l l th e world are supplied w ith ^ v o l' nable housriiold rem edy. • ____ ^

y w aWw flMWflr TO DO E V E E Y T H IN Q IN THE O P S I . W e o re go iiig to to il omr c n a to m m ex h o tly w h a t t ^ o re tak ing , and le t th em Jpdge f« t th e m ie lv M h o w m a o h fo iin d a tiQ n o u rcr itio sh a T efo rth e irc la iiM .

All wA g J t n f th e puhlio i l to h e IS fr ir 'with n i as s » are w ith them . i

t

AavHilMineiiu *1M rt»I»*4 ta Hit Onngn hy t!» (ullowlag •gtntSi |EAST ORANOX-

lUrtta BTO.. SSW. H. Vluiolty, 844 M*ln Atw«t. T«l. SISS. H. 14. WllSintn. m tn itiMt. ^ ^!u' n ' TMg*V( a » ^fla •tTMt IBilolc

Fourth'eyroue Md 'Bli- . l«oth *tn*t. TtL sasa.

J. 3.'Sponmon, HllhWn'l Avon-J*MontroH Phtnnuer. J. K. K«l«r, SOT S<iOt-.

lu S •(not, Onitg*. Ttl. KMSLSOVtH OHANO*-

llohtft InlK.' T(4. U.

SOTith Orongt aTcno*.

W il l ia m W . C o n n e r w.111 ha ve M r g topic - at Uie' RtfurtnCd

. , lorroir "PeAca t ik e a TMVeit.'' one Sack" iriD beyth* jCgtc of,Ms

SteraoDD 'mihmii, - .:;y- ' I ; "

S I 0 0 . 0 0 R E W A R D ITo flit fiiit person who will give the

I p f t ^ r information Uiat' will iaenre or I lead to the arrest and coavtctiou of the I pafhf who trespawed on my ptcniiies at

Hhciifn, N. J., and cat down and stole abMliiSO£«d«f ! lW i on Mtmdiy, IW

DIMGE ID m U IS .TJHBATm* tlcketa Ijought rtS- alt Newark

ajiJ New York •howe: go«4 tervlca; popular i.rlM. LOTlTOcrg pFture peat eard ator*. SWMam'at: opaa avenhiBL•TBAMSMrPJJehata 0* aH llnu.

. erfeesi"

» s|t liaui

W B OLAJX P E H U X A TO BE A G ATAXBH B X H S D T .'’ B oy a b o tiU o w l t ty i t I f i t h elp s you, honest and acknow ledge that It haa helped you .

I f yon w o n t n to wh w ill puhlioh your ■tatement exactly os you fo m lih it to u W e w ill o d fn o w o r d i, ta k e a w a y n o words, I fy o u 'w io h n a to w e 'w lU p u b liih your portrait in connection w ith i t W e <wiU not do th is w ith o u t your w r it tw request,'W ithout your en tire co n sen t

Psaruna h as cured thousands o f people o f o h n o io ca to irA in m any p h ttee a^dlocothuta. A t iM st, th a t io-what th e p eop le ia ir |o u i, through o u e lie ite d tee- tim oaiifli. PeruB n w ill cure m any thon iond more, in opite o f frbrioatod slandeiB to th e contrary. « ^ .

W X G U A H A ST X B E T E B Y B O T T U t OP PH B V X A TO OOVTAIM T H E T O O B X D te H to T O t n r r t o ON T H E l A I K L

’ ' W e gu aran tee th a t ev c iy tettim on ia l w e use i i a U c lu te ly t tu e —in the exa ct lan gu age o f th e testifier.

W e g D a iin te e th a t ev m y p h o teg ra p h p u b liih ed ie th e photograph o f th e peceoa wim ee nam e i t h e m , th a t ev ery w eed o f every teetiiaeB ial em s autiiorr ix ed h y the hand th a t ligned i t , -

W e are detem flned to bea,t our «ppo««uto by boing fr iter tim n th e y ar*,.^ by dea ling s fu a rer than th ey ^ to . W e are d e t o r ^ ^ to m eet frJashBod>iir ith t r e ^ duplioiW w ii^ i ^ d c r , iia iiuw riW ^ ^ th * n e w ty .

- W e k B o w lh a t th e n s e t g t r f |N ! E ^ w iH appfeM atM ur si th a t th e deolere iuPO funa

w in b e obi

r stand. W e b i l i i t t f ■

Page 5: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

f-rx:\ ---- NBWABK E T O iraa NEW«

v'iv 1 '■■. ^e,«;>■■■'.

^TUIiDAT, JANUART 5. 1907.'’«»* •«« ‘ ' ' ''-» V?**-**■ • *• •' 1 ■Hi

HOPE TO BREAK THE DEADLOCK

Both Sides in School Board Will Caucus Before Monday

Ni|;ht Meeting:.

PLAN OF AGREEHERT PROPOSED

Both sides in the Board of Education ^UUCiil n^lit fop control of th a t body have aiTang^Gd to hold cuucuees before the meeting that Is scheduled for next Mon* day night. The Democrats will be the guests of Dr, Henry A. Qlntanmyer a t his home to-morrow afternoon, and the Re­publicans whl get together a t the cUy hall immediately prior to tho calling of the meeting of the board Monday iilghi.

The la te s t form the discussion has ks- m m ed aa to the situation indicates that the deadlock developed Thursday night will be broken and th a t the presidency of the board will go to a Republican. This clrdumstance is said to depend, however, upon the compliance by the Republican members with certain conditions the Democrats are said to contemplate mak­ing.

I t Is Intimated th a t one of these con­ditions will be In the nature of a read-

* lusCment of the cominlllee apportionments th a t will show some changes in the plan as originally agreed upon by the* steering committees of the two parties. Another condition, It Is whispered, will be In the retirement of President D.avld A. Mc- Imtyre and the nomination of either Frank F. Crissey or some other Republican who Will be agreeable to the Democrats.

In the proposed readjustm ent of com­m ittees It has been suggested th a t an CQUltable apportionment would be to give Hw Republicans control o f theTollowtifg: Teachers, Evening Schools, Textbooka and Repairs, Heating and Sanitation. This would give the D em ocrats control o f SchoQlhouses, Furnllure and Supplies. Legislation and Finance. The plan of turn ing the Committee on Schoolhouses over to Democratic control Is based on w hat la clamed to be logical ground- Th work th a t will be accomplished by thf committee in the m atter of school coi ■tructlon will have to depend upon the stxe of the appropriation for th a t purpose

i^hat will be recommended to the Common I Council by the Board of School Estim ate. The latter body, with Mayor Haussting a s the fifth member, will have a Demo­cratic majority.

I t Is held logical th a t a Democratic schoolhouae committee could be expected to secure a better allotm ent In the way o( a construction fund than a Republican oommlttee could expect from a Demo- eratlo board of estimate. I t Is also a r ­gued th a t undrr these circum stances U would be fitting th a t the reipohslblliiy of the spending of this money should be upon the Democrats.

In the m atter of the presidency f tl^e board It Is understood th a t the Demo- r ra ttc leaders have concluded that It would not help the party cause to keep up a fight for a slight political advantage to the detriment of the Interests of the pub] schools, and th a t steps will he taken, It the Republicans prove to be Wintnf, to name C rikey or some One Other than McIntyre, to have William E. T u lte 'i name withdrawn and the Demo­cratic members to vote for a Republican (or presiding olHcer. In th a t event Mr. Tulle would be chosen vice-president.

Members of both sides said to-day that they had not heard of any movement for a Gompromlse beyond general rum ors that such a plan was afoot. Mr. Tulte de­clared th a t he 1b still a candidate for th e presidency and ta certain th a t his party men will stand with him as tong as he remains In the fight.

POSED AS GOVERNMENT DOCTOR AND DINED AT STEAMSHIP LINE'S EXPENSE

Spcri»l iltofwic), ,0 the BTB\'lKO KlflTS. .HOBOKEN, Jan. Q.^Qoo^ eatlntf, flrSnk-

Ing and amoklng on boar^ the ehipe ut tho North Gorman Lloyd.'and. Hamburg American lines Is a pleasure th a t August

Rico, 60S JefTerson avenue, Brook­lyn, will forego In the future. Indeed, he ran a good chance this m ornlns of eating prleon fare in this city IneteBd of tho rich foods pro'ddod on board the etcatn- ahjpa. For some time past the ofTlelala of the two steamship lines have been en­tertaining "Doctor*' Rice, a s the man de­scribed himself, whenever a *hlp entered port. He was supposed to be a govern­ment pliyslclan und carried out the part well. Me was egtremely affable to all of the steamship officials whenever he had dined and wined well on board one of tho vessels, but Assistant Superintendent Keunick.of the North Oerman Lloyd Line,

O D a i CERTIORARI CASE TESTIMONY IS TAKEN

a u e M lo n o f A d v e r tU I n g O rd ln u n c eP r e » B l e d to 8 n p r« n ie C o u r t Com-^

m lflB lo aa r—B rie fa M o n d ar«Taking of tcBtlmbny before Supreme

Court Commlmloner Ferdinand S. Adams on the writ of cerllorarl issued by the Supreme Court a t the luetlgatlon of the Democratic freeholtjera and otherB, re­viewing the legality of the electloi^ by tha Common Council of Reuben Odell as freeholder from tj»e new Sixteenth Ward, was conducted to-day In the city uttor- ney'M office in the city hall. Only two wltneBseSj were examined. City Clerk James Connelly and Jules L. QuJd-

iUculatlon manager of the Newark A dv^rtiur and Morning Star.

te question a t issue waa whether the loanoe creating the new ward waa Iclently advertlaed In the offlcl.'\l news- TS of the city before th© election of Odell, the contention of Frederick T.

m»on, counsel for th© Democratic con- belng th a t the "five publlcutlona”

the official organa prescribed by the law meant consecutive times. The other Bide want to establish th a t “five times." ns the law reads, means five times in 0£ many papers a t. tbe one time, If need

(^handler W. Hiker waa on hand to Interject questions for the Republican side.

In answer to a queatlon by Mr. John­son, Mr. Connelly said th a t the ordinance WHS published five times, as U la claimed, but that It was not published that many consecutive times. In reciting the Hat of ofllclol papers Mr. Connelly Included th© Morning Star.

Mr. Goldberg said th a t The Advertiser and The Star are published by the enme corporation, the Newark Advertiser Publishing Company.

Air. Goldberg added,* In answer to a question by Mr. Johnson, that The Star 1b the morning edition of The Advertiser.

Mr. Adams wlU eubmlt the testimony taken to Chief Justice Oummere on Mon­day, when counBel will hand In hrIefH, Joseph L. Munn was a t to-day'S meeting, but took unly a passive part In the pro­ceedings.

noticed th a t the “doctor" a«ldom mingled 1 with the other government officials, and (determined to Investigate the cauBO of [ this aloofnesB. Ho learned th a t the guv- : ernmcui know of no such doctor as "EK>c- j tor" RIc6 and when th e ’ "doctor" ap- [ peared on board the Kaiser Wilhelm Sec- i ond. for breakfast. Keunlck had Special

Detective Gerden take him Into custody. Rice protested Against "the outrage." but

1 when taken bofoi’© Recorder Stanton, ad- : milted that h<> had no right on bo^rd the

ships, but simply vlaUed them to pay social calls upon the officers. Keunlck itiited that (he steamship company did not want the man sent to Jail, but simply wanted his vIaUb stopped. Recorder Stan­ton warned Hlee th a t If he wns found en­joying the high life he had been used to In the past it would go hard with him and then ad ju d g ed Mm guilty of being a dis­orderly person and suspended sentence.

MOST BUILDING WAS IN THIRTEENTH WARD

Totii C o st T h e r e tfa iit Y e a r W an gl AuMtln C om plies

F t s a r e a f o r City*Figures showing the cost of the building

work done here last year have been com­plied by John Austin, superintendent of the Building Department. The aggregate cost of the structures erected was 110,- 411,328. The busiest section of the city so far as new buildings arc concerned, was

I the Thirteenth W ard, where structures totalling In cost |!,97l,fil8 were put up. This compulation and the other figures prepared by the Buperintendent are made on the busts of the ward lines as they existed previous to the ealablishment of the Sixteenth Ward.

The cuet of the building-work last year exceeded th a t for 1906 by tl96,7l3.

In the Fourteenth Ward the coBl of the new buildings erected was 11,115,242. and In lofc Eighth Ward the expense nf the new building work was *1,018.738. In the other wards the cosr of the building work was as follows: First Ward, ?2S4.i23; Second Ward, *576,684; ThlrdW ard, *396,572; Fourth Ward. *486.706; Fifth Ward. *213,074? RIxth Ward. *850,472; SR^venlh Ward. *307.320; Ninth Ward, *74l.faO; Tcrdli Ward, *66«.- 225; Eleventh Ward. *720,820; Twelfth Wanl. *758.587; FKieenih Ward, *300.487,

The iiniount of fees received by the de- parlineni last year was *20,345.60. In 1005 the fecji amounted to I2S.079.

/ LETTER TOLD OF MARRIAGE.

w ■ arff««iit Comk1«r*B Son A r th u r bu r- p r ls a s P a re n t b y T e l l in g of

H U W e d d ln s -W hen Sergeant Caleb Coakley, of tho

H arrison police, went on duty last night lu found a letter on his desk from his son A rthur, which stated th a t he and Mies A nna WlntarB, of Polk street. Newark, w ere married September 17, a t St. Jam es's Catholic Church, this city. The sergeant hpeard rumors a few days ago th a t hia ■on was married and asked him about It.

7fae young man, It la declared, replied that •there was no truth, in the rumor.

WlUlaiD Fallon, of H arrison, was the heat man at the esremony, while a young friend of the bride from P o rt Chester, N. Y.i was the bridesmaid.

Mr. and Mrs. Coakley had no objections to the marriage except th a t they thought th a t it would be better for the son to w ait until he waa twenty-one years oW, H e lacks a few months of reaching his majority.

PRIZES FOR FLOWER DISPLAY

ODD FELLOWS' ODD FEAST.

TQ V IIG »TER LO SBg A F IN G E R .

HeP la y s w ith R e T o lv c r W h ic h D id n ’t K n o w W n s Loaded*

Alfrado Corbi. eight years old, son of Oluseppe Corbl, of 66 Hoyt street, acci­dentally shot himself yesterday after­noon while playing with his father's re­volver In the yard of his home. The

> h o y pulled the trigger, not knowing that one of the chambers whs loaded. The bul­le t went through the first finger of lits le ft hand.

The boy's mother took him to St. Mi­chael's H ospital/w here It waa found nec­essary to am putatu the finger.

S ilv e r Cups fo r F iv e G a rd e n e rsA w ard ed n t M eetin g o f New J e r ­

se y F lo r lc a l tn r a l S ociety .The award of priies, consisting of silver

cups, WHS made last night a t the meeting of the New Jersey FlorlcuUural Society In the Llndsley building. Orange. These were for exhibits during the year, and the reolplentB were P eter Duff, gardener for John Crosby Brown; William Reid, gardener for Sidney M. and Austen Col­gate; Max Schneider, gardener for Charles Hathaway; William Phillips, gardener for Henry A. Potter, and A rthur T. Caparn gardener for Stewart Hartshorn. Prises for orchids were awarded to Ar­thur W. Bodwctl, gardener for William Barr, and to Lager & Hurrlll, of 8tfihmlt.

As the new competition has not begun there was but a small display of flowers last night. Orchids and lilies of the. valley were shown by Charles Hathaway, Julius Roehrs of Rutherford, and Thomas Jones, of Short HIUb. The new officers wfepa In-' stalled and the annual report of Secretary Joseph B, Davis was read. Reference wds mode to the small attendance on the part of the public a t the monthly meetings and to the deaths of Henry Graves, a patron of the society, and Robert Mac- Innesi,

SPRiHGFIELD BOARD ORGANIZESH e a l th 'O A e la la E l e e t R o b e r t H. M or­

r i s o n P r e s id e n t n o d L e w is T , T e r r y a s f ie e re ta ry *

The Springfield Board of Health organ­ised for the year last night by electing Robert H. Morrtoon president and Lewis T. Terry secretary. The regular meetings win be held every three months. The next will lake place on Friday night, January 18,

The 'Township Committee also met last night, when J. Edgar Meeker, tho col­lector. waa requested to give bonds to the amount of *7,000. His salary was fixed a t *260. Mr. Meeker was also, appointed township treasurer a t a salary of *100 per year. Dr. William M. Barnes was named as health Inspector,

a n NEWS NOTES.A meetitie of tho Newark Phyafcal CuL

tu re Club wiU be held for tha purpose of electing olilcere a t the home of Bdward P , Rogen, Ell Bergen etreet, January 9, g t 8 o’clodk.

Babne A Co ’a Mutual Benefit Aaeoda- tloQ will hold Its annual m eeting a t De JIanne'a, on Central avenue, next 'Wednea. day night o t 8 o’clock. Officera for the year will be elected.

A meeting of the Clinton Hill Improve­m ent Aeaoclatlon will be held In 3t. An­drew's H a ll,’Clinton avenue and South. Beventeetith street Tuesday night, when school m atters will be discussed,

A monthly business tnsellng of the Anna Gordon T, W. C. T. U, was held a t the home of the president, H ies Grace Orlfflths, ffi Miller street, last night, and

Signs were made for an entertainm ent to e fiven shortly for th e benefit of the

’ goclety, ,Benrlces will be held a t th e Toung

Mfoman’s Christian Assoolatlon, i t Bast P ark street, to-morrow afternoon. ' The leader will be Mrs, John McDowell, who win speak on "The New T ear's Mes­sage.” Vocal solos 111 be given by Miss Blanche Hedden. /

The Mutual German aiok Benefit 8o- *<rtety No. E has elected these o0cerCt

Jra s id en tr Henry Lang; vice-president, Jo sep h Vetter; recording se c re ta ^ , Kuno B eA er; flnanolat secietary, John Brieo; treasurer, Albert Qebbardt. The society

, , to s 11,000 In Its treasury.The Twelfth Ward Republican executive

, «nmlttee organised Ikst night by the steetion/ of Chartea Schm idt as presi- daht and Vlotor Carsfin aa secretary. Form er Alderman Anton H elts waa named M d ^egate .o f the new Sixth district in the county comtnltee. w

Iiwderlok Byke, four years old. o t $| ■svsnth avenue, took a swallow of Am- monia from a bottle on a shelf in the kltoban yesterday. He was removed to St, tCtchaal’s Hospital In th e 'Second Prsolnct patrol wagon, where he was- V s ^ e d and then taken home again.

Tbs regular monthly m M ting of the Visiting Nurse Association w as held a t Ote Free Public Library yesterday after­noon. The 'prMtdeat. BCv. Louis Shrevs Osborn, .Was In the chair, and reports w ersxnsd, Halasy T. Tichenor, th e sepro- tsry , reported a Imlanee of more than pO,

A regular monthly meeting of the board, af.m anagera of th e Homeopathic Hospital

Hsr x County Was held un th* Pros Public Library this thornlng. Tile treas­urer's report showed a balance of HOt.

opcretla, "The C ourt-of, H earts." 't i lc r ls to bs given a t the Orange Thea-

^^Fs P ebm ary £ , for tM beneflt of the roepltal, will ,b# : produced lit Blccmneld' F e b ru a ^ 1

Admiral Bampson Lodge No. Ill, Tndlr- p iaden t O lder’ HiMi A braham , held ita

. anm ial banquet and InsUlllaUen of offlesn »A jn Omms’s hall, 1» Springfield kveuua, Ia n MilHWtL The following s d ^ r s : yrere ht-

g t n l l ^ President. Bamosl N sdsl; tfca- . jBBsliMit Louis HariMihi Snan ttal sacra-

X r .iiMcRnT!

B «ll«T llle P u p lU .Tho following pupils of St. Peter’s Pa-

rcehlal School^ BeUevfile, were awarded testlmonlaU for proficiency in studies dur­ing December by Rev. Jam es P. Smith yesterday; F irs t class, Mary A. Sheehan,

H e n a g e r le S u p p e r G iv e n b y H e n ryL. D R ttnliiK , o f M o n le ln lrs to F e l ­

lo w T b r e e - l l n k e r s .Henry L. Duntiing, of Montclair, who

waa preBented with a small me­nagerie by the members of W atchung Lodge, I. O. O. F.. of that tow n, about two m onths ago on the occasion of his m arriage, gave a banquet to his fellow lodge memberB last night. The feast con­sisted of fa tted calf, roasted , slewed and potple; roast pig: frlcasaeed rabbit, roos­ter and pigeon, and rooBt duck. These birds and animals were a part of those given to Dunning. Since they had been in hts poHseasion he had kept them in the barn and fatted them up until ^ finer RS- BOrtraent of live atock it would have been difficult to find anywhere.

The part of the menagerie which Dun­ning thought not even an Odd Fellow would eni. consisting of a parrot, canary bird, snake, turtle, white rat, gray squir­rel, groundhog and dug, were placed In cages or lied In corners of the room where the banquet was held.

The parrot's cage hung over the table, and that wiac bird greeted the gueatB by culling them "ofinnlhals."

FISTIC SCRAP ■ OVER SCANDALJohn Davidson Sr. and William

Bardsley Reported to Have Engaged in Fight.

ECHO OF THE BRIBERY CHARGE

The one topic of converaatlon In Kearny la the probable outcome of the grand jury 's Investigation of the charges of bribery made against Councilman William Greenfield Jr., of th a t town, by Mayor Eugene H. Goldborg* Oreetifleld'a friends r alleged tha t thO whole affair la on© of potUlenl spite in order thut those who brought the charges m ight not lose con­trol uf the govsAtment of the town. Frlend.H of many years have partod friend- ] ship over a diecussion of the nierlls of the case,

A wen-founded rum or to the effect th a t | John Davidson Br.» father of Couhcllmun [ Davldflon. and W lllUm Bardsley, a form­er councilman-at-iargcu hotlr of whom arc | wel known In th e tqWil in business circles, engaged in a fistic.eacounter Wednesday I niglit over a dfilcUasioO' of the affiklrs of I the past weohy olroulated Inst night, f The m atter wut hot br«ught to the a t­tention of the police. TYte partlciptintn In the r.ffalr could not be located to-day. Members of theli; families stated that th© rumor wan untrue and that the story had been set afioat by some person of a vlndltilve nature, with the Idea of biding : the other quontlons now being dlpcusscd In regard to the charges against Green­field. *

Fn>m a reliable source It was Irarned to-day tlmi Mr. Bardstey ond the elder Mr. Davidson were Ih a dispute and eX' changed body blows oeriy Wednesday night, and that thb uffnir was witnessed by aevcrni paflKengors who had alighted from an Erie tra in a t the Grant avenue crossing. Ivearny, about 6 o'clock.

h u r lT SINTO BANK!

TWO KILLED(Continued from First Page.)

O U R ^

1907 ANNUAL SALEOPENS

Monday, January 7th.«

Biggest Reductions throughout the entire store. Spe­cials in every department. P rices cut to

remarkably low figures.

For Full Particulars and Prices See Our Ad. i.a the Newark Pajiers, Monday, Jan. 7th.

;h Jl " ^ " 3 iti . Mnull . i,ity ” ■

SSiS 1W. V. SNYDER & CO. BROAD STREET CEDAR STREET

...................... . ----------- ------------------------------t u --------- — L--------------------------J ......;t. A 'B ELIG IO V N W O TICES.

[Rallglou* Notloaa ar* chargtd for at th* rat* of 29 c«nt* for fifty word* *r lai*. Additional wordo will b* charatd for at th* rat* of on* cant *aoh.]

TWO VEHICLES CRASH.M rs. *la C. CoTkover* o f R o s e lx n d ,

T h r o w n O a t o n S h a f ts a n d C o n s id e r a b ly B ro tsed *

Mra. J. C. Conover, of Rose»land, was thrown from her carriage In a collision with another vehicle on Roseland avenue, , Caldwell, about 7 o'clock last night, sub- i talnlng bruiaes and a severe shock.

Mrs. Conover was on her way to meet her husband, Dr. J. C. Conover, a dentist of this city, who takes the trolley to Caldwe]]-on his way home, and when she approached Bloomfield avenue a carriage, which was coming a t confliderable apeed. turned in Roseland avenue and crashed Into her buggy, wrecking both rigs bo badly that they had to , be abandoned.

Mrs. Conover was ihrowp out upon the shafts, which probably saved her from more serious injury, She was taken to the home of Mrs. J, B. McChesnoy. where she awaited the arrival of her husband, Th© occupants of the colliding carriage were not recognised, and escaped obaei-va-1 tlon by unhitching their horse and moving Oh as soon as possible. Their carriage Is being watched, however, and whoever comes for It will be held for examlnuilon.

plosion had subsided, policemen and un­injured clerks were set to work search­ing the wreckage for till papers. Jt prob­ably will take days before the bank otti- clals are able to tell how much of the viiluahle documents In the bank's custody were cleBtroyed, as the W'hole place was Htri?wn with torn bits of paper.

The detective bureau la at work in an effort to Identify the man who was the cause of the tragedy. The only thing found th a t probably belonged to him waa R bunch of twenty-five keys on the ring of which was the name **R. Steele, Gar­ner. Iow a/' President Rushton described him SB a tall, dark man. apparently a foreigner.

\V. Z. McTjenr, the dead cashier, waa about forty-five years of age. He had been with the Institution about ten years, acting as assistant cashier. Six months ago he was made cashier. He was regard' ed in financial circles as one oC^the ablest bunk officials in the State.

William frum p , the mesaenger, was terribly Injured. Both hlfl eyee were blown out. hlB acaip torn off and his face BO mangled th a t he was unrecognizable. He was taken to th© Pennsylvania H ob- plta!. There the physicians learned from him that he Raw the man raise hie arm to throw something. Crump Jumped at him, but he was too late.

EXPECT STOKES 10 ATTEND

Anna B. McCoy* M argaret I a W ard, Mary A, Reilly* Mary A. Gavan, Thomaa P. Ward,jLrene A. Plnan, Mary Q, Conroy*

F i r e D e la y s R a i l r o a d T r a v e l .The Orange and the East Orange fire

departments were called out «t & o’clock last night to a fire which destroyed an oid barn on the Palm er ©slate, in H ar­rison stroel. East Oran^;©. The blaze was dlBCovered, by Policeman Robert Shannon, of East Orange, and he turned In an alarm for the department of that city. A citizen living In Orange turned in an­other alnrm. The loss was about A h the E ast Orange firemen had to lay hoH© acroBB tb© tracks of the Ixuckawanna Railroad, tra ins In both dlrectiona war© delayed for nearly nn hour,

F i r e D c p a r t i n e n t R eB p o n d s ^ .i t lc k ly .A blaze, supposed to have been caused

by spontaneous combustion. brok« out in a storage shed in the roar of Peter J.

S ta le G b a r l t l e s S ocfe tlsB P l a a fo e A n n u a l M e e t in g IVext M o n th

In P a t e r s o n .PATERSON, Jan . 5.-wadV^rnor Stohea Is

expected to be present a t the opening of the annual meeting of the Slate Charities and Corrections soeletlea which will take place her© on Sunday afternoon, February 10, and will continue on February 11 and 12.

Tb© plan of meetings is as follows;Monday morning. February 11—''On De­

fectives/' Rev. George B. Wight, cholr- nlan.

Monday afternoon, February It—“On Immigration.*’ ProfeBsor H. A. Garfield, chairman,

Monday evening. February 11—“On Chil­dren and Their Care." Mrs. E. B. WlU- larnBon. rhelrm an,

Tueaday morning, February 12—“On the Treatment of Criminals, Old and Toung. ' Rev. F. A. Foy, chairman.

Tuesday afternoon, February 12—“On Public H ealth.'' Dr. William H. Murray, chairman.

Anna G. Fitzpatrick and Patrick J. Noo nan; second claas, Ann W ard, Margaret Byron, Sarah Sheehan, Alice Mahady* i Heitcr'a luirdwar© store in Montclair, Agnes Ward* Ellon Plynn, Susan La ! yesterday afternoon. The place was filled Faucherie* William Daly, Lawrence Fin- | with palnU. oilp and varntshea. An alarm*_ .... . . . ^ -----, ------------- - , . , "Yuck and Hose companies No. 1,

are stationed only half a block

FOR A JERSEY CITY SITE.WASHINGTON, Jan. £. SuporviBlng

Architect Taylor Is in Jt.'sey City to-day for the purpose of helping the people of that city to select a suitable site for the proposed federal building.

F o r L a r g e r P a n s l o n .WASHINGTON. Jan, 5.—Congreasman

Wiley has Introduced a bill to Increaxe the pension of Clayton E. Blackwell, of Newark. Jute of Company C, flecond N. J. Infantry, to *72 n month.

Faucherie* William Daly, Lawrence Fin- with paints nn, Joseph Reilly, Marie Gormley, Jam es ' brought Tr Gormley, Mary Kinnoaly, Agnes Mona-1 which or©ghan* William Austin and Alexander Sia- ven; third class, Florenca W ard. Jose­phine Tedesoo, H arry W ard; fourth class, Agnes Donlln* Agnes McCarthy, Zltu Byrnes, Elisabeth Austin, Bllen Smith, Mary Vertan. Alice. W estlake and Andrew; Thaller; fifth class, SMward W irU . Joseph Byrnes, Caroline alaven, Catherine Hig­gins, Edward McGuire, Mary Muerny und Mary Byron, sixth class, L oretta Klrwln. Mabel ^U er. John Westlake. Joseph Del- aport> Helen Siireeiiy, George Ward* Helen Black* Edward James, Mary Senior, Henry Sheehan, Edward Faith* Bessie Gormley, Jam es Oassldy* George Verlan, Martin H lg^ns, Lillian TjUrlvlre. E lisabeth Thall­er. Thomas Baney, M ildred 'I^ rlv lre and Winiftm Walter*.

-------------- • ---------------Her* Oflicer* o f L. C. H. A. In i ta l le d .

th e newly elected ofBcer* of Our L ,dy Help of Chriettan* Brandh, L. C. B. A., of East Orance, were Installed last night by the lupreme deputy, Ur*. H. L. Youngblood, and Mrs. Roae Crowley, both Of thla city, the tatter acUnc a* marshal. The ratirlnd president, ICrs. A nns Walsh, waa given a gold emblem of the order ana also a Imuaoet. A bououet waa also presented to Hrs. Youngblood. An ad< dreas waa made by the supreme deputy, who presented to Miss Joseph’ Tne . w sohter, th# newly Installed president, a gold emblem. Tha follotring were appointed on the finance committee: Hr*. Catharine HcKlnley,Hies Conners and Mrs, U .. Holey. Fol­lowing the meeting, the members had a supper In Snglish'a hall.

"" ' ' « G sa d a a te s ’ IhMinI S esaan ,

Plana to r sevdral Tunctlons were eon- aldered last ntiiht a t a meeting o f the Hast Orange Migtl B O l^ l Aldilml Asso­ciation. The congiltution Wae presented by Oscar . H. Condlt an d adopted. Ken­neth condit, oham nan of th e committee In charge of the ctdicert to be given by the Steven* Institu te Glee Clubs, an- nounoed th a t alihough the eommltiee had had hut a srsak to make the arrange­ments, evetrtiting m g in regdtnesa. The concert w n ib* given In the new Ashland Echoul newtHmtatdny night. . I t w as sug­gested th a t th* a ggpcIatlMi give a play after Essier, and coromUtees to take up

wlTi M M ------ ■ "

away, to the scene In leas than n minute and the Are waa eoon under control. Mr. Heller Said this morning that he cuald not estim ate his lose a t present, but thpugtit it would not exceed■■'V“ ~ *■' ■

l a e r e n s e I n P o s to H Ic e R e c e i p t s .The^ecolpla of the local poetofllce for

the month of December aggregated (8*,- 286.65, ae against gfl.M.SO for the corre­sponding month of the year before, being an Increase of or twenty ondone-hulf per cent. The gross receipts for the calendar year 1»06 amounted to 1811,- Jfl.72, a s against receipts of 1742,271.61 for the year IWO. In November of m sl year th e . a g g r^ a ta recelpte of the postofflee were (7UOKSI, and In October 177,277.86,

Y a u tn a n s - T a l t .I Miss M argaret Tnlt, of 2J Willow street,; was married Thursday afternoon to Uen- I Jumln Franklin Vouinans, of IS Willow I street. Both parlies live In Orange. 'The ' ceremony was performed by Hev. Ocorgo I P. Eastman, of the Orange Valley Con­

gregational Church. Miss Agnes Tall, a sister of the bride, acted as bridesmaid. The best man was W illiam Youmane, brother of the groom. Mr.' Youmans Is first vice-president’ of the Trlmbie-Clcss Ilnl ManutacCui'ing Coitipariy of Orange Valley.

th fir qu«sttim dtii*r entertdtUttanta

>4ha r e a r . /n. .hted. Beveral

b< given dnrtng

C.MM W ife YFawta IHvav**,Carm^ Ouarine ar igariano. fifteen

yeaik old. who claim* t* bw e been mar­ried at tn« city ball to AhUitiio Mariano lapt Augujt, had filed a . petition In the~ ■ of Ch* ------ --------- • -■Court Cm hcery ^ set aside the m ar­riage a* lU efU .. The . applfcMIiih was mad*_. tp itn ifh ..w ch a rd ..Booriliiian, 'of

n e a t____ , . Richard _ __FtaliiHeiA. <9l her gu*rdlaii“ and iwai friend. The girl say* she wtia thresd to marry Mariano agfltwg faer'’i^ .

M ar* B a r t a r p riia g w V jtraaiamKlreiaait at well aa.Ysil^meiv fg Oyange

are to g « « Incraiae-Rr talorr At a chucua vf tha lupkllilcgA ;membeni 1b* G ram tagt tught

R e c o r d A m b u la n c e B e n e llta ,The prospectus of the annual series of

theatrical performances for the m ainte­nance of the Record ambulance will b« Issued In a few days. Three of the four attractions have been scheduled, H enri­e tta Crosman In "All of a Sudden Peggy," on Saturday. January 26; Lawranoe D'Ursay in "The Em tiasty Ball," on Mon­day, February U. and Francis Wilson In "The M ountain Climber," during Easter week. " S'. '■ r

- , ------ ■B m ployea o n fi'n ll T im e A gain ,

Notices were poatbd In. all 'th e depart­ments of the Pennsylvania Railroad Meadow Shop, th Kearny, yesterday to the effect th a t nlj employee would go on full time beginning Monday. This In­cludes those who were laid off six.wefeke ago. Many of the laVer have pro­cured positions elsewhere.

THR0DGfl5lT*THE NATION.MONTGOMERY, AlB.r- Win Scott, a

hegro. waa taken from the county author­ities early l*-day und lynched a t Midway,

E L j PASO, T ex,-K jne buildings were wracked and much mining machtn*nr de­stroyed in Lowell, Arid., n«»r Blsde®. Inst night, by the acridenttit e ^ e s lb n of dynamite In a m ihs atijfehoul*. No lives were !o*t.'?

D B I'B O IT-The largest side w h « l gtearoor In the world, hullt tor the De­tro it and Cleveland Navigation Company, of th li city, waa launched here to-day, and Ohriatened th* City of Cleveland. The City Of Cleveland I* 4 « feet long, and wl,l have * cgpaetty o f 6.ift) dap twasengers.

from OIHER COONlklES.B rO C K K oiW -K lng O*0*r ooatinuee to

gain streoglh. H e t* able to *H up for longer M rlodf and « tap * well n t MghL

PA R IS—T he -m ysnery surraffisdlng tha duel fO M S t.aeg r V enalU e* Thurw U y was

ifg g ia l 'to m f w h m K bddgme

FOLKS YOU KNOW.—Mrs. 8. L. Drew,, . of Sugar Loaf,

Orang© Couniy, N, Y., l9 vlslllng her nan, Wllliatn S, Drew, of Summer uvcniie.

—Mr. and Mm. Edward Gray, of 065 Clinton avenue, irvingtun, will give a Baltnagundl party a t their hotfie to>nlghl.

—A reception waa given In honor of the eightieth birthday of John C. Woodruff, ut hia home* 16 E ast P ark street* iasi night.

CALDWELL TOW NSHIP PROPOSALS.CALDWEZaL TOWNfiHIF BOARD OF EDTJ-

CaTIOK—Notice to oootrsciori.Seeied prep&sale wilt be received by the

bulhllog commiltM of ilie Caldwell Townehlii Central Bobool* a t the Fairfield ^hcolhouM, Fairfield, N. J.. s i 7 o'clock t . M., or> Mt^day, January 14, IWf, for the labor and inaterlaf neceaesiT for the complete bulMlcg and ere©- tlon of « achoolhoane at Fairfield. N, J.. in accordance wlUi tbs plana, drawings and epei:l- flcatloni prepared by the building committee, at which time and place e«ld building commit­tee will proceed v> njeHt proposals and jiubhc- ly annoiinoe tbetr: patents. Kaifh bidder muet accompany his. fiftpooal with a certified check for five per oabL. of tke amount of his bki, \ on a bank aoaeptabla to lb* commltieti. and ; property indoms^ «• ■ gusnintee that Mi) • coniracter wlU eater into a contract for the work and u> ewDlileto esme It his propon,)i | be. acoepted.1 fWark to begin Immediately or j nt such tfm M buUdfng ctuamittee may«l direct. Coplea of plane and spseiiwstiona may b« had at th t iMtiM 4>f J. 8M1m Van Neu, Au-dr«M CaldWtU* N. J. TfiS right is roserved to reject any or «i] bid*. If In the judninmt of commitiss It |B wise to do so, No < sn l>« recatved bsfors or after hoqr d^gnated in ihii nolioOb

3. STILSS^VAH wasS.I CiMlIrmsn of ItuUdfeltB Oosnaittee,

Caldwell, N. J.

i m . t o i « * i g m r i n c u .D w fi ywsrwHwimi*

B E U J m L B A IT tN U a c o No r b o a t io n -AL CRU RCH-tllS-lST B rikvlll* svtnu*. Th*o4m M*ri*ll Bhlriterd. ahnlsiw. Warmip at lOrii A. IL *bd T;*6 P H, Th* norntag *ibl»ra. "She Call of 0*4 to HI* p» b1*." DIbia g t a ^ »*b»!t at ' 'FonnU “ — — - S P. M, 'foungg t a M Mb<............... ..... . ....... „ - --

. 1 i t 1 F , M. E reolng w onhtp thorn*. ‘'T h t O u t *C th e Pw pio te 'Ih o lF thn l.'’ W « h Of hn y w -eerv iM a a n a n i ja m tathw * hato h r th* w r* a :« h a M w t'o t th* itp rth fiM .

‘rK B F D U T c o n o r b o a t i o n a l C H tm cH —O U ltaa a r t n u t aiul W righ t s tn « t. R tv. T. AIrd Moffat, m talalar, n w l a l .N«« T a r *«r- riewL g m d a y . Th* 1 :4a 8i|towy m a m g hour of w onhth ra»Bw will b* " ^ o g ," aae th« *lgnUira«ot nt Uh uM 0f tb i* MW* wood In th* fliht obgptBr p f th* S lb lt will gagag* our

i ; , I h ia a y be of lm*f*et te stat* that I «a*li wa*k win bav* fpr tm ta

tha gungay-amoerf Meeth- for w ill m ah* for giom thbrbuih

1 fo r ooh nf w m fietr an4 ta lly

............

^ Freabytarlaw *calvary I'llESBYTERlAN CHURCH-

tVnnflylvaola avenue and Gillette place. Pas­tor. Rev. 1. 13. Ilopwood. D. D. Bervicea 11 and 7;4S. Sabbaih^school, 3 o'clock. Y. P. d.C. K., 7, Frayer-meeling Tuesday, 8 o'clock.Wolconie.

CLIWTON AVENUE PRESBYTERIAN CHLIRCH-Cornar South Bixtoenih atreet. 8er- vices, 10:4ft end 7;4ft. Pastor, Rev. Joseiih V.Folwim. Hunday-achool at 2:30. Toung i*eo- pic's enestlng at fl:4B. Midweek «rvtce, Toes- •lay evening at 8 o'clock.

BETHANY PRESBYTERIAN CHT’RCH- Hpruce street, near Belntonl avenue. Rev, A.\V. Stubbleblne, pastor. Preachltig and Com- munlnn. 10-30 A. U. Bunday-achuol 2:3d F.M. Christian Endeavor meeting, 7 P- M.Preaching, 7:4ft P- M-

MEMORIAL PRKHBYTBRIAN CHT’R m - Corner of South Orange avenue and flouth Seventh atrest. Jusoph Hamilton, pastor. St*r'> vices at 10:30 A. M. and 7:30 P- M. Sunday- school at 2:30. T. P. S. C. B.. 6:80. Prayer- meeting Tuesday at B P, M. A cordial Invita­tion Is extended to all.

ROBEVIUaE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH—Comer Hussait and Roseville avenues. Rev.W Y. Chapman, D. D., naator. Bunday s«r- vtcfli, 10:30 A, M. and 7:46 P. M. Hunday- Bchool 2:80 P, M. Chflstlan Endeavor, 6:4ft P. M. Tuesday night meeting, 8 o'clock, flpec- ial week of prayer tervlce, Friday evening, a o'clock.

THIRD PRESBYTERIAN CHUBCll-Broad street, opposUo oily hall. Rev. Robert 8 :011 IngllB, minister. Morning service al 10:30.Babbath-scbool, 2:30 P. M. Christian Endeavor Boclely, 7 P- M. Evening service. 7:4ft Com­munion service and reception of niembera in the morning. Subject of evening Th®Glory and iho Shame of the Records of 1900.

SECOND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH- TVHffhliiHion and James sireel, Preaenmg,WAO A H a S 7;45 1'. M , by H.v Pi.aaaul Hunter, D. D, Babbath-school, 12 o clock, f-hrlrtlan Enieavot, « *5 P- “ „Ina Tuewlay evening. 7:46 P. M., will pe m charge of Dr. Hunter. A cordial invitation is extended to all these services,

FIFTH a v en u e PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH —Main and IiuermMlaie departments of Bun- dsy-school, 9:4ft A. M. Morning service, 11.Primary and kindergarten departments of Bun day-aehool at 2:30. Junior Christian EmUavor nt 3i30s Yeung People’s Leagua. 7 P- M.'Evening sstvIos, 7 I'm. Prayor-meatlng. Tues­day evening-

h ig h s t r e e t PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH —High and Court atroeta. Rev, John H. Kerr,D. D., mlnlater In charge, llomlng 10:60. ''A Ringing Command from Ood." 3 P M., Sabbath-school. 6:40 P. U., ChrltUon Endeavor Society. Evening aervlc©, 7:30, "The Deaplaed Bltlhrlghl." Prayer-meellngi on Tuesday and Friday evenings at 7

SIXTH PRBfflBTTEHIAN CHURCH-lAf«- tite and Union «tr*«ti. Rev. Dr. Daria TJ.L.j*e. miniatBr.. Prayar-maatlns. 10 A. » . Dt- vina worahlp. lo™ A, M, and 7:48 P. M.Froachlng by Ih* pallor. Bund«y-iKh«l,F M. Arlallan Endaavor. S:-«S P. M. its - naraiory wrvlo*, Friday ov»nlng. with iormon by Itsv. itoland a. Oawton, of Kearny,

FEWBMITH memorial, pb e s h t t b r ia nCHURCH—Hudson Itreel, near 0™n*r. Rev.WlUlam Alfred Gay. D. D., wGl preach at 10;30 A. M. and 7 rib P M. Evenlns aub- lect "Tbe New Tear." Sunday-achnol at 3:80. C. E. prayer-meeting at Orib. Ur. Ga^^!urdaT''dur1ng‘’tb J « " k a lT o 'c “ oH!‘'Eve‘‘ry- i "r-nlng during tbe week,body welcome.

W E ^ PRESBYTERIAN CKURCH-Drute, street, between Warren and Cabinel streets Rev H. C. Harnvon, minister, IftU avenue, flervlces at ld;46 A. M- and 1:4o P, M.Topic*, morning. "Beginning with God; even- Jiig. "Qod's Call to Ills People. Week of prayer services next week every night eacepi- Itig Monday and Saturday, at « O'clock.

FORICST k il l PBESHYTEBIAN f7HURCH —Highland avenue and Heller Parkway. The Rov Henry C. Vanderheek. rnmlster Servlctu S^d s iJS .* . 10:fW A. M,Vendetbeek w|U preach at both services. In the morning the fecrameni of the lK)rd e Sup­per will h« Bdmlnlsimd. The week of prayer will he obfsrved by een’lce* January 7, ft. W, to and 11 at 8 P. M. On. January ! Mr. Van- derbeek will lecture on tile theme. Tbs araos of Saving Men."

CENTRAL PRESBYTEmAN iTHE TOO*PliE'S) CHURCK—Clinlun. Uelmoni and Madi­son avenue tirhariea Everest Granser. pas­tor. Public worship. 10:46 A. M.; preaching by the Rev. I. V, "W. Bchruck. IX D, Sabbath- school. 2:30 P. M. t^rlstlan Endeavor. 6:46 P M Evening service, 7:46 o'clock; preach­ing by the Rev. 8. K. Braun. Church prayer- meeting, Tuesday evening at H o'clock. Wel­come to all services B«tti free.

WICKUFFE PRESBYTERIAN rHlIRt.’IT ■Corner Thlrieenth avenue and BMilon string Pastor. Hev. George 9. Hall. Services,A M and 7:4ft P. M. 8abbath-actuaj|. 2:3ii ^M V F. S. C. B., 7 P, M. Communion if Lord's SufKter at morning service, whvn f 's pastor. Rev. George ft. Ha|l. wm preach -or- mon appropriate to the occasion. Hev. Qvnri.rE. Ijoinbord will preach In the ©venlng, Mid- ftxelt prayed-meetlng. Tuesday, 8 P. M. a 1

“seati f ^ . Cdrdlal invUatlon and weluorae to all.

FIRST PRESnYTEHlAN CHURCH-The Rev. D. R. Praier, D, D.. pantor. Divine Worship at 1O;0O A. M. and 7:46 P. M. Bun- dsy-sehool at 2:fi0. Christian Rkidoavor, 6:45.Prayer-meallnf. Tuesday evening at 8. Meet­ing for girls. Thuioday at d;ftO. Meeting for boys, Friday at 3:50. Mesllng for the study of next Sunday's lesson, Friday at 3. Sunday- school workers of the olty are Invited to this" '‘f IhI t PRF.8PTTEIHAN TABEBNACLK- Tyler and t4tfay©tte streets. Horning worship at I0-30, Bunday-eebool at Zrlfl. Christian Endeavor at 7 o'olCKk. at 7:4ft.Midweek praytr-meattng Wednesday at S o'clock. *

SOUTH PARK PBi)8BTTBRIAN CHURCH —nlBlon *v«nue anj Draed itreei. R,v. Ly­man Whttn»T Alloo, D. D., uaator. IO:,ia A.M moriung a*rvle*. Haw FaaPa mrmon by the paMor * P. M.. Sabbath-*cho<jI. P. M,, aflarnoon aarvloe of Jual one hour, abort Now Toar a aennon by tho paitor, *p«lal louolo by (bo ebureb fluartot. All cordially Invltod.

so u th '* P A H ^ MEMORIAL CHAPEL- Boulh and Dawaon alreota. S!*o P. M.. Bab- balb-oobool. 7 P. M.. yjuBg pooplo'a and (blldron'B naotlng, 8 P. M.. guapol torvlo* aormon by tho ftov. J. H. Schaeffer. All cordially Invited. Junior Brotherhood oti Tues* day evening at 7:30 P- M.

PARK PRESBYTERIAN CHtTRCH-B«lle- vlile avenvs and Kearny strset. Rev. John McDowell, minister Murnlng, 11 o'clock ser* vice, "God's Call to His Church." Evening,7:46 o'cioeh, the pallor begins a series of six "Straight Sermons." January 0, "To the Man Who Wants to Maks tHe Host nf the Now Tear:" January 18, "Tb tha Man Who Hsp a Contifiuai' Struggle WUh Himself/'January 27, "To tbs Han Who Has Lost Hope:’ February 8, “To the M an W'ho Has to Fight Doubt r Fshruttry JOf ‘*To tbe Man Who Haa BufTered:" Pcilruarv 17. "To the Man Who Hog Now Found Christa* Special imialc by Paul Retry- Btata free,

PARK CHURCH ClfAPEl>-mghlani! &v«- nue, near Bloomfield avlmap. RoVa B. B. Oeor- hart, Ph. D„ minister^ meotlng, Sun>day at i:80 A. M. Motnfag oerviee, o’clock. B^'enlng aerrio« gt Tisfi o'clock. Sun- day-nchonl at 8 P> H' C^IgtlAh AideAvor. 7 p. tf. Pniyer-meetttig; Thttniday evcalng at 7:45 o’cloclL

|IitU«4i Pr«Mi%FtortsiBeFitIBT UNITED PRBSBTTERUN CHURCH

—Belleville aventM, pppoifUj aouverneor otreet.Rev. Rnberi R, w e l l , minister. Um'i LeofM. 10 'A, M. fm iohiag at 10:46 A, M. and T:4fi P> M** tha tMUior, Snndayntchool,3:4B P. M. I ^ lo r ^ E . . 4 P. Ur, and Senior C. B*. T - P. IC Prayer^eeUng,Tuesday lU | o’clock. All cordiallymvftod.

CMrlotliinf ir s t CKITRCH OF dCRfST. «Cli£NTUT->

Hannony Man* Mi> BsMd mrett. Iwtvaen West t^rk o&d Kev au>se4ia ionday lo^ioea, 10:43 A. H‘l gub ect* ’Xlfs/’ limday-aciKMi at ifi IL Wwluesday evomafr tomimoiilal mmtJitfi s n*ci6ck. Readiitg-room <mmi» dally, nceid fiuAday. from 12 U. to 4 P. ijr. 4; .

SECOND GMURCH OF CHHtat, fiClEK* t in t —U Worn Parkr i t r o t t , too rth door, Sun: day U A, H* SoBday-aohMkl at etoooof ssrvlMa WodModay om lflc laoHmonis) gM ette a t 8. o'clocK Babloet lOHWrow.

Mi^diictg-foom optfi 4olly\. apoopi - A. jL to 8 p. Kra m t i f f m

m TiBOi t o i

R B L IG ID U S N O T IC B 9*

H e lh o A la t E p ta a o p a l*BT. ANDREW’S METHODIST EPISCOPA L

c h u r c h — L. Peck, pastor. !*reat'hlng. 10:46 and 7:4ft. by pastoi-. Bunday‘Sch«Mjl, 2;3o. Ooitiel tempetHni-e, 4 P. M.. led by liro ihar Dcylan. Kpw^irth Iseague, 7 P. M. Class meeting Friday evening.

8T. PAUr.'fi METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH—Cornfr Uroad nru! M arshall streets. Lincoln A. Porrls, paaior. A0::k> A. M.. Holy oommunli’m. P, M.. i?utiday-»ohool. 7 P.M., Epworth laeagus veejior sHr\'le«. 7 46 P. M., n^orstilu; preaching by tho imstor. TueS' day. ft P. M., pruyer^nieellng.

MONTGOMERY STREET M ETHODI3T CHURCH— J Huyl, pastor. subject,"W tiai Shall Our Church Do Now?" Com- munlon. 7:4ft, suIiJhci, "T wo W o>s." men'i meeting. lu, Jglilors. 2:Hi0, achooi.7, both leagues. Special meeting!, Tuesday. 'iVeilnifiBtlay. Thuroday and Friday at ft o'clock-

CENTENARY HKTHODirtT EPIftCOPAL C ltl’HCH-C. L. .I^ead. i-aator A, M..romnuinliin aen'lcc and roceptiun nf inemheri-

1’. M., Sunday-Bohool and adult lUblaclniui. <1 ko P M.. K i'wcrih League servb-ri. 7:3© P. M., iireaching by the uaaLor; sub­ject, "The Message of the New Y ear," Union ser^-loes ilurlny the week. All are Invlted-

KlOHTiJ AVENUE METHODIST EPISCO­PAL CTUJRCH-Rrv. W. IL Ruth, pastor. Li>ve feast a t 11:30 A. M. The Lcird'a Supper and rv'ceptinn of m^'mbers a t 10:60. Sunday- ichi^ol a t 2:fh> P, M. Epworth Ijeague service at 6:4(1 P. M, Preaching by the pastor at 7:30. The pres iilng service will be preceded by a song service; the "Hongs of P ra ise" book will be used.

UNION STHEBT METHODIST EPICO PA L f'llU llC H —Corner Green atreel. Iledilin? Rlsho|i Leech, pastor. M umlng worohlp. BaiT.unent of the Lord’s ftupiier and rcfi’epli of members. Runday-achonJ 6:46. Bo*worth Ijcaguft iiriiyer-meellng 7:Xl. ev**nlnr worship, aennon by pastor. Subject, "|.rix»klng K orw ajj." Prayer-m eeting, Tuesiluy. H l'. U. All are welconiH.

CENTRAL METHODU4T EPISCOPAL C H U R C K -'^arket and Mulberry streets. Rev- WlUlam 11. Morgan, l ‘. D.. pester. lu-.Hu A M,. communion siTvice: reoeplnin of mr*tnbnra. 2:30 p. M.. Sabbath School, 6:30 P. M.. Kn- worth l^eague ^espe^ aervlee. 7:4ft 1’ M..proachlng by the traitor. I4| M organ's sub­ject ^ lll be 'T h in g ! tha t Count." AM aro Invited to these aervlcea.

FRANKLIN STREET M. E. C H U R C H - Henry J. Johnalon. pastor. Sunday. 0:30. Fellowship mef'tlng. 16:30. communion aerviee; reception of membera. 2:30, Sunday-nchooL 6:46, Epworth League vesper service. 7:46. evening wcwahlp: sermon by pBBtor. Tuesday, 8:00, prayer and praise aervloe. W ednesday. 8:00, Epworth I^eague annual election of ofrl- cera: social. Thuraday and F riday, 8:00, c laia meslings.

D AfllllELL MBTHODIBT EPISCOPA L CHURCH—The Rev. Herbert C. Iriytle, paator. Preaching at l6:4ft and 7:46. H om ing sub­ject, "The ‘Win One' Society, followed by the Communion service. The evening service will b« the Drat of a series of special evangolisilo aervicei to continue for two weeks. Mr. Ver Soy will conduct the oong and praise aervloe, btifinnlng a t 7:16, followed by n sermon hy Dr.J. H, Meeker, presiding elder of the N ew ark district.

ROBKVILLE METHODIST CHURCH—Cor­ner Orange street and B athgate plane. The Rev, Thomas I. Cnuitiia, tJ. t>.. m inister. At |0:30 A. M.. Communion and rsceptlurv of members. At 7:46 P. M. Dr, ( 'oultna will preach on "A Great and Calainltnup Neglect-" Men'B meeting. iUfib A. M. Sundny-fK^mil, 2:36 F. M Epworth Longue vesper mern'ice, fi:4B P. M. Boys' Vesper Club. 0:46 P. M

every evening du fiacfipt Fnturdny, at H o'clock.

ST. LUKE’S—riln v in avenue, opposite Bireet, Jam es M<»nroe Tnbor, D. D.. povit >'•. l>r. Taber will preach at night on "Y’our Life in UK17; A I’erau le." George H. Downing, the great brirltoiie, wU| sing qI Ihe close at the forv'lce. At the morning service, the Holy Communion will be celebrated, litol sever-'l new members will he re<-elvsd. Huridnv-Ofh. o'. f.?yi'us G. ftlippard, suiwrlMlenilrrn, np-worlh Ije-ngUP. young Men'e UnionCspofUl), A. M. g e n ia l meetlnKA, Tu"S- day. Wednesday und 'Thurarlaj’ nlglUft, .ii ft o't'iork. A I orillal welcome for all ifcopls.

M e lh n f t ln t F r o 4 « a t f t n t .FIRST METHODIST PROTESTANT

CHURCH—Hill ftlrepl, betwenn Broad and ilslsoy. Rev. J. W, B aldariton. mlnlater. Communion and reireptlon nf memhers at I6;3l>. Sunday school at 2:30. <'’hrleUan E n­deavor, 7 P. M. Servloo of song, with ser­mon by the nilnlster, a t 7:43; siib jsft, "FlaMh- llghta on Life." Hong ami prayer «rvlt?e. 8 o'clock Tueaday evening. Welcome.

CLINTON HILL MJTTIIODlST PRO TEST­ANT CHUKCH--Clinlon and Trsacy avenues. J. M. Dickey, pastor; residence. 1V> Farley ave. nu*. 10:30 A. M , Communion and reception "f mambBr*. 2:3() U M., Sibbath-school li:4!’» P. M., C. E. Kcr'lee. 7:4.6 P M , iircachlJig by the pastor; eubjerl. "C arrying the Hottip." Prnye*r nervine, Tiipnday eveninc, o'clock. Public pordlslly Invited to h| i thesn services.

I ii< 1 « p n n d e n f 8fe1hn<Tlat.INDEPEND EN T METHODIST f ’m ’Rf'H —

Ouuld svenue and H^iutb pmtrii.Pnth sireet. Preaching. 16:46 A. M., by ihf I>v. It. New­ton Halter, followed tiy Ho|>- Ciimtijunion. I>orifs day school. 2:36 P M, I'rnlflp Kcrvice,7 IV M. Thfi regulnr Pv*inge||H!l« wervlcr-. 7:46 F. M.. ih charge of ihe Tl-v <"hatle!* F, Nct- ilesliip. Gospel meciInR. H r M . Tuesday.

I Mlllburn gnsjK'l class, i ' M,, Weiineartay. nf Mr. Howard J. .Fi>hnHl"n'H Mnfn etreet. New­ark gnspcl claises. ft P. ftf., Thursday; Knee- villa, In (he ehJirch: South End, at 2 ^ Bel-

I mom avenue,R e to r m « r t

' FTFflT r e f o r m e d Clinton and, Johnson avenues, fituari Nya H utchison, m in­

ister. rTertchlng bv th© pastor, 16:47 a M.■ and Ti-lft P M. Morning aubjecl, "The Sab- h a th " Evening subject. Tin* Question of r a in .” first nf sorlei to young nv>n. Runday- achvnU at 6:36 A. M. aiM 2:36. P. M Y. P. S. C. R, at 7 P. M.

NEW YORK AVENUE REFORM ED rilU R C H —New York avenue aiwl P arltlr srrcrtl. Preaching in this place a t 10;r«) and 7;46 by Rev, T. W alker Jones, of Rrooklyn. Sacram ent of Lord's Slipper w ill be celebrated a t !0:3n, with reoepilr)Ti\of new members, ftunday-ach.nni a t 2:30, Christian Endenvnr nt 6:4ft. Tuesday evening prayer service a t 8 o 'tinck.

C H R iar r e f o r m e d C H U R C H -C nm erWashington und D elavan ovenues, Woorfslde, The Rev. Henry Merle Mellen, m inister. W or­ship and sermon, 10:46 a . M. and 7:3u P. M. M r Mellen win preach a t ‘both sfrylces. ftun- day-*chool. 2:B0 P. M. Christian Ertdeavor meeting. 6:46 p. M. Prnyer-m ecting. TuesdnY evening. 6 o'clock, A cordial welcome to uM

•am ice*.NORTH REFORMED C H lrR C H -R road and

Bridge street*. Dr. Jam es I. Vance, m inister Sunday-school* a t 6:30 A. M. and 2:30 P. M. Christian Endeavor a t 6:4ft P. M. Dr. Vance will preach a t 16:30 A. H. on "The Value An ECddy in <he Stream r>f L ife," and a t 7:4ft P. If., on “ A Revelry the Nlglit Rrfore Death." E ast Newark fiunday'ochool at 2:30 P. M,

CLINTON AVENUE FF o r MED CHURCH —iiincoln Pturk. D r D. H. M arlin. Ritnleter. Frayors, 111 A. M- Dlvlno worship, with preach­ing. by Dr. Martin, a t 16:80 and T:4S. Morn* j Ing, Turn Northwon! tD eut, ill.. 2), "A Frosh ' S tart ftJT tha New T e a r " Evoning louto. "H e Dencehdad Into H ell," fifth sermon in oertea on nur craod, O ther oervloea a t usual. W eL come.

fiT. ANDREW 'S CMUBCH*-Clll»on av«nna, coriMT of South Seveitteyfith otrest. Rev. K r * thur G rant HuaOon. vicar. Hours of servle* on Btndsys. 7:80 anfi 16:00 A. M.; Tiifi F . M,. A cordial Invitation to all lo*attend.

CHRIST CHURCH-Oetwoen 76 P » ^ t and gg OongreM sliwet. Rt. Bev. Edwin g, L ^ ss . m lo r . Rav. Chftrtea E' J a d u w * vicar. day «rvloa*i 9. 10:80, 8 a i ^ 7:J», neat at fi o'clock. conflrmaUoti bjr B l o ^ lioe*.

t r i n i t y G B U R rH -B road and R octoratrests. L. , Holy Cotfi-muntoa ©very Sunday a t i A . J f , aisd flratSunday In tha wonili a t H A. H . Hornlni^praysr aad nsrinon a t 11. o olock* SoadiLr- school* 3 P . M. HvoiUUf jpFo^or and agitgSQ at T :^ a'cKMfc. All eo rd lattr tavltod.

- IftgtfaFWwd■UMANXib L C H vnC K -D rofid o tro a t . i^ a ^

Fovrtb a*nnfi* aerriaari. to i l s a * m T

R H L IG IO U t XOTtCBB*

vujtu'* cuu] w arrno siresi, rTtaoillBg iwLslor, Rev. Albert ^ t e r . D. D*. gl

M. and Runday-aoboolM. Prsyer-meetlng, Tuesday evoiltllii

ttaE llM *ROBKVItUK lU P T IS T OHURCn - ODrM|) '

Gould avenu" and Warren street, “ by th f imslor. Rev. rVftO A. M, • -2:30 P, M. ....................... .7:4ft. Everybody waloorae.

CLINTON AVENUE D A P T ^ CHURCH—(. urner uf MMimmith sircel. Rev. Bamtttl J . Bkevlngtoti. pastor. Men's upp.r-mom Drayor-,., meteilng, lo A, M. Morning worship at T lir pastor w ill preach hia first analvoruillfif ■c rnl n, Evening worship « i 7:45. A n iw ‘ year sermon. "Thank God and Take Cnuraga.^' • Sujiduy-iKihooJ n t 2:8»>. Everybody weleoma.

FAIRMOUNT BAPTIST CHURCH fwonhiBri lug with the wickllff# Presbyterian ChuroW— > ,* '. Corner Hoeton stree t and Thirteenth avonu*.16:30, preaohlflg by Rev. Q 8. H all. TS45 PsUT"

Krv. G. E. Lombard! lubJacL.iirt '. Thought." Thursday h fg h t ,T 3 | I f

a dock. Rev. T. K. IVloh. u£ Oklahoma 'lecture on "Home Mlsilnn WoHi In Ok1aho«aeL% -

to *11. - . . o s .aot^T ir B A PT IST C H tT R C H -K lnney atroot,. - .

near Broad. Hev. w . 0 . Pennell, Ihe pallor* ' ,preaches at 1Q;80 on "The Ca ll o f God to H U Popple." Communion service at H:S0. A t 7:4b ; Mesers. 0. w . Perln and C. I . Btrtho|f,<'->i« who are trave ling salenmen, w ill speak. school at 2:TO. Week of prayer, oarvlota a v fry . *• evening except Saturday at 7:45, l^ a irbo d v " • invited.

MT. p l e a s a n t BATOST <;HURCH-BalU-■'■*'''^ viilc avenue, up^KisIte nrlenlM street. W. T. S* j‘1V Lum bar mlntmer. Morning worship a t I0*.4fi4 ti-i theme, ‘"The niHoouragement of fiuccast," Ha- cepllon of new members and communton a t cloH© rtf Mrmon. Evening worship a t 7 i4 l i -* theme, "The gmall Man Who Holds a B lvt* G rudge," The F i s h e r m e n 10 A. U. BtbU echrtrtl nt 2:.'k> P. M. ^ ^

f’ A P T lf lT (P E D D IE ^H E H Q R U L M '^ CHI. IlC !I~t urnar Brosd and Fulton stroata.Hrtv, Ihom as J V lllerg. D. D,, pastor. fi»r* v ire j Hjiprnpriale to the New Tear morning anil pve‘nJng. Paster's topic at '*AI'rtiyer fo r the New Tear;" at Ti.TO, "ThU T oar » A lw i." CcmmunloTi and reception of now meml>CTs « i n :8t> a , M. Pastor's Blbla clasft ut IJ. Humjay-scnocrl at 2:30. fiirangera weO* rome.

I f n l r o p M l I a t i uu iKKV. IIK N R Y R. ROSE, PASTOR. -

Church (it the Bedecmer—Broad and H ill tut fd lugonuiiy nppusti© elty hall). Morning oois Vtcr at 11. It win l>, uSroittnnlon Bunds?H. sermon an "OpportunUy." Man's dlaoa ^10:16 In the chtjpoh. Sunday-school a i w * - ■:. Hlno<7 garten g t I t. UarLlrt TdUth«4' Cox, noor-B Iriendent. Unique musical aervlc* at 1:4fi, M I>bwlB Armstrong, of New York, who will aing "The songs of A ustria 'H ungary and Bohemia*' HKHlsted by a large rhorua. Church opan a t 7:lft.

J E a g l la h L n f l iw r a n .G R A C K R N G L IS H L irT H E R A N CHURCH—,Hi

MerC'cr street, n t High stn*et tbelween W illiam ,, am] Court Htreels). Rev. M. P. Waters, pastor. '"^ Hervlres, 10:4ft A. M. and 7:45 P. U. Sundays "• schcMil. 2:B0 P. U. (*oinnnmtrtn ut bc-lb aar* vices. A cordial welcome for all,

C M v I i t i id a lp l i lg a .CH RISTADELPHtAN ECCIjKS| A-Dioeouroa

PUnday gvchllig &t fl o'clock fn the hasemnly-. r K>m nf thH Imriuols hulldtng, W aihlng- ton atreat, Just sontli of M arket street. M?.'R c iic l A. BrlttJo w ill epoak on "The Rnsurws*^*'**

'/-J

r 44

tlun of tho Body—It* Place In tho Plan

attend,Bnlvnllon/ All are moet cordially Invltod

W o m a n 'M d s H a l l g n l 'e tn p « rg i ia # >n ^SKVILMO WOMAN'S CUmUTIAN TEM**’.

IM'.IlANr’i; T NTUN—Cnrtter Gould avenuo eofi' FouTteemh ftrept. Regular meeting SundAr* fti 4:1ft. Mrs. K. ,T. S«llnr will uddresi the ineotlhft. Lv.rybrtdy invll.vi, Strangers wOL (’•.■nic.

WOMAN'S t’HRlSTIAN TEMPBRANCBI NI<>N- 12ft Mulberry :Ureol. On Sunday a(* tcriHMUi at 4 P. M_. the mpelhig will be Ifi., clirirge nf MrK. riimiiC"'. In the evening Mi’ll. Mary K. McDnwfll will preside. KverytMfiy“ welcnnip On Miiriday. at p. m.. the T. I.. will mreL SH'unlay. at ft:.'io, th® boys' IjOfigu© will meei. Wednesday, at 2:W> 'p. M.. hUMlrMeft Tncrtlng.

WOMAN’S CHRISTIAN TKMPERANCflUNION NO, a 'Coiner Smith Orangs and Lltll'e t6ji avenues. Sabhath. 4 P. M., Fluwvr Mlaaton ('•hrlatnwiB service. H. I. Klmer, suiterintan'^ dont. Miss IfHZP] Shtw , Adete Ladd. Mrxi‘>- Voiberg. Mrs. Drake. Mlseee Heathcote will as* ' slat. Free and everybody cordially welcome, ^\>dneaday, 3 P. M.. meeting at the reeldenc# at Mr. Albert Lyle, 3*13 South Sixth itreot.

C h r l a t l a n A ianc tle itlo m a.YOUNG WoMKN'8 CHRISTIAN AftSOCiA*

TlON-14 Rail Park street. Speaker, Mro* ' Jnhn McDowell: subjoct, "A New Year's MM*’'' leago;" must©, v|u|ln and vocal oolof. AJI'*' yrtufig Women Invited.

YfU'NO MEN'S CHRISTIAN ABBOCIA- ' TlON-167 Halsey street. Henry A. Coiiena,

: Nocretary. Rlbie ©laewe*. niorning anfiJ iiftcrnnon, don't fall tr, hear Rov. Frank Mac- ] onf nf the leading young preachers of1 the Mci!in,1lwl t'hiirrh of IhH country, in It’s j wond*'>‘f il address on '‘Huer-ptiB, nr Fallufe in I t^ 'h ic h S tro n g , vIi’kiuoiu. ron'dnoltigf

Hinging hy the retnarkable Lotus Male Quar ’I tel. Kvciy.uno a solnisl. potcxMlons by th a ' ,

Wnllaoo Hall OrchcstMi undeT illrection of L, , Carroll BBOkal. All mm n-clcome.

iitlon Army« • ' ’gAI.VATION /,UMY-28 npSUvIllB .v*?!;*. '

Meninf.s every evening si ft o’clock. Sundny, all day. Major Amilc ^Vethher. with twenty women cadets from the Nch' York troinln* Bohool, will laud all meetings. Good•peaking uml plBglTtg. Kvrn-bcdv Itivirnd. Captain I.irrie Flttslmmons nnd Lleutenanl-,t.- Hesalc Brown In ©harge.

f iR l r i t t iu lU r .PUBLIC fePlltlTfAL jTi“©ftng will Ik cohA

ductod In Frstf'Mial Hall, iKrt Hmad street. t»y '''‘ Mr. Ge -rge r‘lark (.ithers ,\t 7:4#''(>U, M. atlvor

THE FIRST CJli:iirU OF SPJFlTtJAL FBOOriESHtON will hold Us rncctliig In tha hajl corner West Park and Broiid s tr^ ^ at fi P. M. Mr. Poni will on.-upy Ihe fcslrtim. . Sliver poUecilon On every Wednesday an4‘ Frldny evening ctrrl« ar<' held nt 72 C<ylutnhlft' et. If. C Dorn paster. . ,

The Clirieilan and Mlselonary Alliance wHJ hold their regular meeting at W. C. T. 33. .1 Hnll. 12H Mulberry s1r-"ei. on Tuesday, Jantift.*'n iii-y S. a t ft P. M. Rsv. Henry Wllaon, -silaiA .ftiew York. wRl address Ihe roeeting. Mf©t- Ingp evnry Tuesday All nre welcome,

There will he n •jdrliual meeting In O. A. It, Hnll, 24ft Market street. Sunday, Mrs. J. ■ O'Crtnnor. Mr. H. iVliUney, workm. can k©' ’ pe-n nt Ifth Plane stiwl. the home of Mrit. EldrWge. all day Monday for roadftiv. Thaj • will slen hold a developing cla«a then In ttjs’ evening. ,,

n' •/Meeting Sunday a t 4 P. M, a t th© hall, 48 *

nellevllle avenue, conducted by th# North End r ’raying Hanti. C. T. 8o.nderson, pr«Ald«nt. Brnthers Cadmua and Lyons, of the Franlillji Street Methodist Episcopal .Church, will bf w tth us The regu lar bushtefs meeting of W. <7. T. r „ which w as postponed, will b4 held on Tuesday, Jan u ary 8, a t 8 p. M.

CMILDREN'e TEM PUS (fo'rmerty Ch*iGiii!''!^ B<r«el Dnpot)—R sllro e j avenue sad C h i ^ u r :Bf. Speetol m uriesi servlee 9anday eveni**;"-* 7:1B o'elacfc. M t. J . B. Them wlU efn*; s tn im e n u t mast* In ch*Mi> of Mix. R a n O f ^ ' '* Cosxer A lbr*/. Ttiaradsy evealnr iBMtlaff/Tri8 o'clock, (ae sverrbad r. The Temple e e a r i, '"In ehitrsB of ChsrlM W. B dw ud i e n i JoHidi W ilde. Welcome.

BESCUK SO M El-#I Cley elreet. Service*,*'! AriS. w ill he In cbsrxe of A djuteet J.^ U oi.r Conenty, Mr.. Cmiwar 1e s nowetful ■peskeifr come end hear hlni. The TriS eervlcee wl£..r: be In ChsTge of the Bev. H. H. M erritt. Mr*-'* M eirltt ts v * up hie churcl, to *o Into (H ' m1e*len*nf work end h*e been very n e e i to f t r ,In eeciii* souls, short testlraonle*. M ri '! " Robert Cs Rue. oittanlit: J. G. Ham*tot;.* muilcsl fBreoiM. . '’S t'”

THE OPEK-DOOR lf lS 8 lO N ~ n W lllh u t. e treeb I! : _ s n q IhindsT evealnx

m

.**»» . to '.tf A. K. S»a Trin F . M, lut w Mfrceji will ofictste. Sundar* JilD P. M. Ho --------

juniorRav. Jnfut. ... ............................•riHdl.. 3t(D P. M. Hg Toeedcr evwnlnc rie*.. Barrio* T h u n ta y •vtnuNR.. wiafe e t

- '.s: j

Itaattngf Monday. Thimdojr* 1|a tw ^ '< . _ iday evaalngi at Tldfl p otfielc* iday Jkittarnoon at iirdIK Tb-a “ v ln of ooBC, cond—

, also■Atefite ipM)tat^...

T h is. B tS K r . *« B;4B¥1 eeTvli^SS&JSefiWera At trill. l.»»d*r Me. WUh

Sm W, ToWDMnd. *{ tlw Clinton HW P^^jL Chnreh. All weteoin*. » « " {weM fra iM C o n o ^ t Mtto.Petolf Bn-elt. ptantst. RffTltriT rla,, esp«ltrte*4eB». ' . '

iH p u O T R i^ y o M j ^ pyw* ettrat a ^ ' vieea ©rronr flvaatng af Tififit

voTl Mo »Kr*2Lf?** *

SJ*.

Page 6: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

NEWARK EVENING NEWS, SATURBAY. JANUARY 5. 1907.

rvbIMi** 4*1^. n e tv t Im dar, kr tk*

fYsiiitfi tICWS fGBUSmfi COMPANY.t l 8 « » 7 M ARKET STR EET,

iIb w a r x , jt.

■I «M N m uk. » . I-. hirtofflo* M

t^ M ^ o n e II*4-PdV!it* Brftoeli R*chaii*t , . eonawtln* all departmanti.

IMrii^rad by aawadfnier* and earriara lb ajil' part of Newark and Kaiai County; In all towtia In Nortliern Now .Teraey and 11 sjonf tba Jaraey Cuant at tan oanta a

MAIlt iCBSCRIFTIONB- TMf^Nswark Brenlng Newi. one month,

M r «enta‘ fix montha, two dollara and «ft|”%nta; on* yenr. five doH&rt.

Na^'York Office, » ' World Building. SlaL'||fr< John.

Chloago Office. Tribune Building. Wwblnff^op Bureflti, Ryom £18, Colorado

VuikUnrOr^jflfO Branch OfAce. Tel. 478 OrangCe

LOCAL BRANCH OfTICBfl.Bburt place- \ SAO B juthaitthrtreat.ardcQ at real. I 9p WaUace place.

, _otptJ avraua I BO Boaerllle avenpe,I Brace etTMt. I t04 Dal3«vui« avanu*.

.fATUHDAT, JANUARY 6, IWJ.

•TOIKEJI. PITSIEY AND THB tBSA- ^ TORSIIII’.

Thhx |lK)|dtive au iem ent by Govornor ‘ Btoluw th a t bn will no| bn a- candidate / fo r tSe United Staten Senatorehlp no long

he reaiaJna Chief Gxecuiivn of the ~ B u lii; and that he will. If he liven, eerve

term of office for which h« wan M eeW , ■ remove* bln name from cnnnld- Staribn In eonnecttoft with chuonlng a W<irA|IW* td Tnlm P. Dr>-den, T’i> to wlth- Itt a-4lre*l| or two, Ur. Stokea h a i bean ane a f th* atfongeet tactora In the 3enk- tarlAjjjiitrugtlo, in aplte of the (act th a t fee liMkaoiMlatenUy held that be wae not

. » ieaMEdkte for the honor a t tbi* time. ITbe^lldvernor ha* bad many triende ■Slnin y the lagialatora. who have Inetatcd th a t their conatlttieAta .wanted him to

..liMpHpaht them In the Senate. Thera have ' bean bthere among the lawmaker*, etrong , pnrtlB tni of Ur. Stohea, who have aald

ere. There ere a t leant a eoore of gainful ! to become American eltliene," hut cer- aiid oeetut indurtrtea which cripple labor tnlnly the overwhelming percentage of wIMIy adjurted and orgnniaed could eaelly fcrelgn-bam oltlaenn In our Incane aay- puraue with good wages to the workmen luma demands th a t Hits practise cimll be end with profit to the community. A tao- esublisbed.as soon as ponnlble. Our owntcry or group of foctorlee In theee linen of production esnploylng cfipplee alone, with enough capital behind to meet the

Insane can readily bo cared for. The foretgn-bom Insane are eo numerous th a t their burden on the S tate and the counties

earlier rteflelt ns well na to eetabllnh ■ is well nigh Intolernhle. Cltlaens men- bulldlngs, moolilnery and otbbr accee- | tally und morally healthy are welaomc iorlea, would not tiU the quarter of what ! here, no m atter where they come from, some one of the philanthropic Mldosi n |,i,t (hs innnns and the orlmlnaln of other poelng as such heslow In ahnual prnclls,'. coitntrics should not be permitted to eelOnce made experimentally a success, who doubts that like enterprises would grow freely without need of exploitation. Tho profits ns they might accrue could prop, erly be devoted to the solace end pleasure of the lives of the cripple laborers In ways demonslrated by mure than one g reat in­dustrial enterprle* at home and abroad. It would be this kind of giving which would perform the almost Impoaslbiilty of squaring economic methods with the highest Impulses of love and kindness for the imfortunalea. It Is the only way In which a largo class of human sufferers could be helped on lines which would propagate and sualatii the licneflt.

This la the aeason of stork taking even In phlinntliropy. The mlllloniijre giver In estimating Ida assets and expenditures for the coming year may wisely m easure something more prolific In values than the humdrum conventions o f habit. I t la much to give, something of oneaelf. his Ihought, his deeper and more penetrating syniputhles to the obligations of bettering life as well as Ida gold. Anybody who has enough of It can do the lutter, which Is

foot on American soil.

the body and not the sou) of the thing.

Ih M ^ ^ u W , lIk«,j(^ .jpot* fop him, but.1 .fStUhriiiit do so conaolenttoualy because

Q)MI? hfllet to dp so. would be In vlolatloB of .^hely o a ^ ,\p support the Btste ConsBiution. W han It first became

) wndeot that Mr, Oryden could not secure : \e .l#i(il*«loti. there srh* a belief that the : .O o v ^ ^ r wofiid h* the moat available

h ag itit to.W asIdngion. anf( |i wu*, bis fHenda that, altkougb not' Ah IMIye amflldate. h e wuuld accept the

konot whan ft waa ollared to him ‘by the r BglM^lleah majority tn the Lsglalnture.

B fi^ tba ita tem an t given oiil by laitbrop V An<u|aon, a t tha aulhorieellon of tbe

flkHtiaBor, hasides eliminating Mr. fitokos Iroip tha raoa. hns apparently ebneen- t r a t ^ tba force* opposed to Mr. Dryden ABh jjtad them ap in favor of the elec- tfau) of Bdptems Court Justine Mshlon ntfisqr. Tbe Iforrl* County Jurist, Judg- Ihg h f Taeent (lavaioptnstits. can a ttrac t to lik |aalf not.amty the lawmakars wiio had, M dhhtarlly pftgigsd . thamseives to ■tokf% but he can cOont on ihs/.aiipport o f th8*a ,fltfinds ^ tfie Oovernor who fe lt nulkalt on .Ipgst j l fo tH # . from yot- ta g for the Chief .JSsaout^vB, In addition,

, .jf.JHier» are .* nutitbar o f Senators und As- ■^iRW Uphao-elect who have been Jn the

doubtful eolutnii ao long a* there was but MM avowed aamUilata for .tha Benator-

' ghlp, now Iq Tosftlon to shot* th e ir Inde- v^lldBanoa o t^Jtsshi*^ ru ts , sum op-

Jioaiuon to M tfcnatlon caaAfVt. jk may i Im gfld. thstafbre, th a t the avowal of

fatjlfco QiVarnor has bean, in affect, a die , . . ^ C t disappointment to Senator Dryden ,f # n d th a t e t tw i friends, all the more

In con trast to the enihuslaain It !;d to® T hav* created In th* |r ranks had

I,;. I t hoan forthcoming three o r four montha

y 'X j^vfH tney la a atalw art Republican, ., * b q ||t Tsgularlty haa never been qiiea-

'- 'tto q m itb a r* can be no objection to him V$H of Korth Jersey HepobHcons,

V b o '^ a v e «o ooncUmiVfly ehown their / ’ BAaUorttbJe oppqeittun to the return o(

; StojBtor Dryden. Ha should, beeidee, he ^ • T t in f lo r e dceeptiible to Boulh Jereeymen . - th a n the jprement fltnnlor. eeperlully when sv I t h e i been mede no evident th a t the . Xorclnv of Dryden upon the party liy South ^ '#erB eytnen would be certain to result in a

: detection tn Ahla acction .of such serinue ’ proportloDB lie to mtltO cert^ih IHb de-

oC thp Republloan tiaiTMlidate for dtnu)r |l iM .fi8U» T ^ r e are fovontf^en days

T H f m iilN E SlI W E E K .T h e now y e a r w ae UBhered in w ith con

t ra d lo to r y expreeB lon* o f o p tit lo n n-epoct (nff tta_ p ro m iae In th e b u r in eae w o r ld . On th e w h o lf t how eve r, th e re w e re ra th e r m o re w h o cou n ted on u <xm tlnuance o1 I n d u i lr lA l u n d co m m cro la l p ro sp e r ity , w U h th e u n d c r A a n d ln t th u t the eVops u re fa v o ra b le and th a t th e re a re no com - pUcQtJons In the m oney m u rk u l, M u c h o f the fo u n d a t io n fo r t h U o p t ln ils in re a ts on ih f l enorm ouH o rd e rs w ld ch h a v e been p la c ^ w ith m n n u fu cU fre ra f o r d e liv e ry d t iy in r 1907, dem ond fo r ir o n a n d eteni A lone m onopo ll£ lr ig p ro d u c t iv e cap a c ity * In thoee J lnca fo r s ix m o n th s a t least. T h o se w ho a re In c lin e d to be p eH s im isd r, however^ a re n o t s lo w to p o in t o u t th a t shou ld o lo u d i ap pea r the re w ou ld be n o th ' I n i to p re ven t con su m e rs f r o m c a n c e lin g o rders, Just, ms has been d o ne In t l ie past tn seasons of sudden reverenJ, R n t a t th is tim e, It sho u ld be added , n o th in g o f th a t n a l i ir e Is in e igh t.

Speculation has not expanded unduly In any direction, nolubly in Wall sireet, jilthougli the strain of Annual dividend and Interest diBbureeinenla caused less trouble than Pxt>ertetL The stueh m arket, which liegan the week with a very un­settled outlook, has tended toward re- covery since, except In the Instances of some of the high-priced rnilrood shares. Prices of staples continue to show excep­tional strength, particularly those for Iron, steel, leaiher, wool, cotton and cot­ton fabrics. The comitiodlty distributive movement has milen off some, a s la usiml At this season, but the output in Indus­trial lines was never so active before. In retail Irndes the greater activ ity la re­ported among dealers Jn w inter clothing Wholesale m erchants generally are send- ng out aalcsmen for orders for spring or

later delivery. Railway freight car short­age is still having a#erious effect on busi­ness and other conditions W est and Northwest, but the recent mild weather Is said to have greatly favored the build­ing Industry'

In labor circles nil la not es smooth sailing as many wish It could be. If rolN wey employes throughout the country In- rllne to Insist on fu rther wage and other concessionB. bb reported, from nearly oil the larger railway systems, with the alter­native of a general Btrlke. the opening of llie new buelness year will hardly be re- gaided as auspicious, gm uller counter­currents at times have betm known to dcfiGCt the whole movement of the Indus- Iflal ami commercial strenm, with the nsiiftt consequences of a wldospreau over­flow.

A VAf.LADIsE TKE FOR M?fCOLN*S GKTTYkBLUU M PE Efll.

Tender the auuplcei of the Grand Armyof the Hepubitc, Messrs. W arren Lee Goss and Charles Burrows, prominently con­nected with th a t association, are pre- pnrliig to Issua bandporndy decorated iji'diizu tablets, on which are Inscribed f.lncoln's Immortal OeltyBburg speech. Thiin this none greater In th a t supn^mc tent of fltnesB Of the word, with fUnuSB bf the ‘occasion, and iltness of the man, adorns the annals of human speech. Thin pinnacle point of glory has been freely conceded by the homage of the world.

It Js prnpi,iBed to ubc the propaganda of the O. A. R., to havu such a brunze tnblel placed In every large public bulldliig us It now exists In the new city hall of New­ark and In every BChool building throuKh- oul the United States bo fur as p()ssll>lo. Ub weight)' and sulemn truihn ron.si'cratud by an ocean of blood find BiiffiTlng deserve to be not only known by heart—Its brevity makes that eEiisy—but to be etched In the heart of every American, as a prlci-lefla toalammt of love, of human brothoThood. of citUen obligation* of that vitality of hero wornblp which Is not blinded by lh«‘ bhuon of great names. Every school pu­pil should be required to memorixe It as the alptiubet of patriotism and miiiocml ethics. It should familiarly greet his eyes In the schoolhouiie Itaelf, challenging a t­tention by Its eloquent monlllon.

At the end of Pre-nldent Lliu'oln'd brief niusterpiecG, U Is nJild lliut Edward Everett, then rt-oagnized aa the grontesl rhetorician of the country,’ who bad de­livered the formal oration of the day, some ten thousand words In iehgtii, (uoji him by ibo hand and said hi broken words; “You have spoken, Mr. PrcFldciit, the spsech of the ages. T hat will live and burn in human memory when nil my words shall have been forgotten." That has Indeed proved true. It throbs to-day with the same power to clutch the heart, to uplift thought nnd Inaplro suggestion uh Rt the time It was uttered. As a feature entering into the ethical schooling of the young generations, who will carry on tbe destiny of tbe nation In the Huccewglve tramp of the endless caravan, it Is some­thing which appeals a t uiice to every smmd American heart. Our Souihern brethren may not nt present, or all at once, accept tbe prot>08ltlon. but the time will come when lingering acerbities wlP have been swept away, und they, too, will confess In the Gettysburg Apeech some- thing that should be nt the corner-stone of the national fabric.

May tha Grand Army of ibe Republic succeed In rapidly carrying out Kb wholly pntlrtworihy project!

public utility, says the Mayor, was. ever ituktallod In th a t city wbU-h w^a the oause of more Rcrlmonious criticism, but since then It has proved Us woitli aii4 successful have been the reBults' th a t % new furnace baa been added and d fourth la contemplated. The actual consunjjj- tlon of garbage has Increast'd from about f ix thousand to twelve thousand tons a yonr. There Is rpally no olbcr s^tfafac- lory way of disponing qf bo much waste. Dumping U In open lots and allow lni it to rot i t unclean and mmanluiry. When It is burned It become aHhes, which may be used to nil m low placts and to reclaim uselcfts JatidB. Newark has Ub crematory, located at Kearny, and New York City has several. In one of lliesH'. located on the East Hlver, near the nt:w Brooklyn bridge, the cremating plain is used to generate u supply of eleclrlylty. while the one at Barren Island diBpo.*«eH of the gar- bHge that would otherwise be liikcn out to Bca find dumped so near the Jersey shore that It would fluat iuj»o and ruin tho beacheB. Tho cremation of garbage Is the one iuccesaful way of dl«poHlng uf It with entire satiBfaction.

WILL LECTURE'■ ON NOVELISTS

Interesting and Instructive Codfse Announced by Uni­

versity Club of This Gty.

'ATKINSON TOm COONAtD .

PUBLIC SUPPORT IS WANTED

Between 75.000 and SOOW ImmlgrantB located In New Jersey In ihe ‘ j'ear 1906; that la, If the proporilon of the prevloua year wuh continued. lu n tarly u million immigrants came to (he United States, and about 60.')CO of *hem found their way into this State and eatabliBhed ihnmselvea here. During Ihv Must year no h'Hs than U9B.4?s4 foreigncTS entered this country, or neurly 400,000 mure than during the previous twelve mnnlha. Of theao 041,- 917 were Bleerage paB&**ngerw. (f. then, tbe same percerttuge of these aliens locnted !n N«.'W Jersey the figures Jirni given will stand correct. Yet ihia sini'M army dues not aeem to have greatly umt-Uorated con- dltlona. The farmers are Just as sadly In need of hflp aa heretofore. They cannot get good liandH; the demand Is far In ex- cpfB of the supply, Laat year the State Board of AgrlouHiire entered Into re la­tions with an liulian employment bureau In New York, but it remnliiH to be seen what the rcBultB have been. Poaalbly this rnuy be made known at the coming m eet­ing ot the State Board of Agriculture, The greater part of the Immigrants locat­ing in the East crowd into clllea. Agri­culture and rural life appuara to have lit­tle charm for them.

It'B JuMt this way tn Atlanta*. The Mayor has called an alderman a liar and the alderman has called the Mayor a liar. You con see for yourself th a t If both of them aren t telling the truth, there’a likely to be some gun play.

The Kenosha (WIs.) girl who met, was wooed by and married a millionaire In three hnurn und forty-lwo minutes shows iiB how to nab the opportunity when It knocks at the door.

The announcein^tii yodorless llmburg- or cliceHc" Is important chiefly Sn that It lends UB to hopo th a t Inventive genius

liiy now concoct an odurleas whisky,

The wealth of the country has In­creased tremendously during the pneit year. We make this statem ent solely upon newppagpr authority, however.

sto iq HA 'lKrora th« (ftirt.abtillpt (nr fi<|t*t«a Benator is io br taken, and

Italians n6w sfe- (Jntf the Sftntl- (tvor of Mr, Pliney wilt b« o*er-

kfhelmlnr before ibe urrlvnl uf the houra,i.j fo r (ffiUng.4 . -

.JnntoresttnsAY»

A W ntetesttns rSniM of the work done l y the Guild for Crlpph'd Children hi New T o ^ ^ h o w s a gCMKl deal or active efTurl

> by of establlshltig mdioolH for these.l^nfQftunates. Three large have been.

. successfully endowed In parts ofthe city, and a foui-ih is w> II im Ms way

liclp ^h ee of thope'wli'* *uiiei' uihTifi' jiltaliy act'idqpt' havlf hctil ghom 'j'f

physical capac'iil^B wblvli urv the svin-Mug boon of ills great human nuisn shnnM peal closnly to ouv M.vmijatliloH. U l« Miife to say that a g<"Ml d<*nl less ha.'* bci'ii doiW'than could and ouglil »n have hcf-ii ^one in this way. That li» u pruposiu.m Which covers both . ciilhb'-ii and uilulls• 1R.w liS fhave to lira s lUrfr way w.-tirily th rough llio worhl. lorrlhl.v horHlu-apiii'd s ilk IT til Iheir puWer tu com a r i• p•■<‘(llb!c

.gUbfllBteiice and to enjoy ,'iiiv rncallcnm nf lIie^ lraH ures of llvm g li Is \Try wHi to thijiK of pi'ih’itlliiy child ci lriilos. l-iU tim i should oiil)' bo the lx.*ginuint. of jUillcliniH charity . After a clilUl Iw ^'duc ilTiJ hi the

sChrml fa..shlon, vvb;jt In to be fj.. done with him :lb he grnwe up? 'I'he

World's pclicm*’ of l:ibnr a« run hy the erd inary medieniMm Ikih bur few vactin- c le r fo r the rrhiplc, an hn is to

■V - th e or (In* pity of oUicrs uud to such - diHahllitles In sti'f-ngMi and activ ity .

phllantlirnpy flying Uim flag of multl- HsJltlpbairlsm healcgea mir a llenuon in th*':tiewa prints .with Its gnUatu show of

V baueftcence along hackneyed lines of glv- Public Ithrarics, univcrsltlea. tecUnl-

«iT ii^iooU. hosj^taU, eic,. ure the con" dtanllJVccIpIeiilH o l eiidowments or olhev /u u d J . from those,w ho could easily iflve ten ' limsB A« much without knowing any lQB»..M.Jn UicBB well channeled ru ts Came-»ti?’Rockefeller el al pour a' little of lUeli

wealth with a complacent aenw' of atevardblilp. This Ib fine and nubiT

It Koes. B ut w hat philanthropycurrent praetiwiacks is aaeiirdilng

iftWia qt the things which He bfinoath thesnfi the superficial. tti« thinsf

^^^%j3*l*lplTK)h with strstHslIng pow..r lii and auburbp o( life. It ro-

streak o f tniajlnatlnti nnJ crlBln- «tW T«rbap* to s « these things. Yet the

‘greater, latfk (a the infilspoeltlon to Itoubte nni thought In *lvltiB-aftcr

f ■' pwcloti* ftietor In H-oontentgllttortns show o( many olpher»

I . Ah'sit lUMraUait of Srtuit pbUanttaropk. ' «eaUb sibuld easily do, )et us apply ,ft tc

tlig ''eriJniX jjrobtenr. Th* most vaiua t«g<(lRt W-AWit wUMk.^epal'lss, «h* .help-

h«w4 4 .ghtoteat .Um -isfirig'!

s a o n c U s tsUoir

T H E FOREItiH-HORNIAccording to the last annuaJ repi.irt of

the manugsrH and officers of the Morrin Plains nosp ilal for the Insane, an aver­age of one person each -week day la now sent to that InHtltutlon for care ami trea t­ment. Insanity Sb manifestly on the In­crease; perhaps not more ho tlian it has been for several years past, but It seeniR (o bn fncreaslng, not only rapidly as the population, bu t somewhat more fl‘» The vast Institution a t Morris Plalnn, which was opened for patients ne.H'l)' th irty years ago, and was built upon plans which wera thought to be coinmcnBuniu* for the care nf the piitlenta of a century, has-bad its rapacity Increased from 80U to 1,400. and Is now. Dr. Evana sayR, ap­proaching (he time when It will be "an insiitTernbly rn>wdvd as It was before ih*- erection of the new bMlMIng” In l.icft».

Anollior new' bnJldlng Is now recom­mended, to be located In Houth Jerpey. ao iliat the northern, middle and Houthem seriiouk of the Siam muj’ r?nch have its

- )iijf*tafnVftJi the Insane, lir. Ih iifthe opinion ttm l no more adJidons sfiould he Imllt to the Trentqn and Morris i‘hilns insiMullojis, becuuse "th<'> have already become loo unwieldy and cumbersome '* He would also have »t spedal liistUurion lor riiiuiet and criminal Insane, a recom- mvndailoii that sHema to be founded In wisdom und in (he moral welfare of suclv uf rhe Insane iiH have no crim inal ten- (IpiH'lt-M Eleven StaiPti and the D istrict of Hulumbla now ecgrekMie flielr criminal In- Sgne und find |1 a>|\amsgoiiua.

One of the mciRf fnjgy*''th'e features of the report is Its Hlaii'mrnl wUti reference to insanity omong Imndgi fitua It is sup- IvjBPd that the gi)veniTn«-nt nuiborilies ex­ercise great euro In examlTiIng the moral, phyak'til Hhd tiienlul emidillrin of aliens. »o thut none of th«*m tiiii\’ hoooine public ebarges or dependents. Vi i ii Is strik­ing fact." says the rvpon. that less timn twenty-four per cHit of all thoee ad­mitted to the hntipUnl during the year were born In the Stale, and foriy-two per cent, of ili6 whole number adm itted were born In foreign lands.

From this It would appear tha t nearly thrce-fourihs of the S tate’s enormous ex­penditures for the care of llie Ineane 1b PHiast d by ihe Influx of foreignera who have brought the aevds of Insanity with ilu'Tn from the old countries. It Is dls- qutrtlng enough to know th a t the ratio of Insanity Is on the increiiBC, but It la murh more so to learn th a t tho squalid.

povorly-BlrloUen, Immoral regions of Eum pf are sending three of

I ihelr Insane to every one of our own, to he cared for by Hilft State, In 1885 some

Immigrants aoulcd here: lu«i year Iho number probably increased tonoarty 75,000. XI la little wonder that three large and very expensive hoppltrfls arc tiseded to take care o f our own Jndane and the montally defective uf foreign birth.

fhsrtalnly these conditions call for in- veitlgatlon, sind if more rigorous In spec- ticin and exunolnatio^ of Imitiigrants can be enforced it should b« do^e. “If notthe practiM/' Bt. &v*n« *a.y% cioiely

A PEOPLE*fl IN 5TITIT K FOR IVBWARK,

There are great posalblUtles In Newark for the eBtablishment of such ci popular educational work along scJcntlllo, literary, eathetic, Inatltuilonal nnd rclfgloue lliies R9 that proposed by tJie Unlveralty Club, which has arranged to test the sentiment of the people of the city toward the plon of Inaugurating, on Friday night next, a series of lecturcH by Professor Frederick Henry Sykes, of Columbia University. Ti Is the intention of the club to supplenient this course with otiidr lecluros by noted educators, with the experiatlon thnt the movement thus alarted will de\‘elop Into the formation of an Inwiltution fiimllar In character to Ixiwell Tnallluta in Boston, the Institute of ArtH and Scleucca In Brooklyn, the People’s InslltutB In New York und university extension work In many other cities. Co-oppruthig with the I’nlverHlty Club in Mils Uiuduble enter­prise ure the Princeton, Coluni(1)1n, Cornell, t^tevena, Harvard, Pennaylvnnia and Ru(- gcrs cluba, aa well ua a score ur m<>re civic orgnnlBntlons, ritid If 'their eupport Ih given liearllly ihero can bo no doubt of Wie suoceset o? tlie unjeriaklng.

Newark Is moFt favorably sliuiued (o aecure the host talent available far carry­ing on a work of this character, Wilh the faculties of Princeton, Rutgers, Hievens und Columbia to draw on for lecturers, it may be said that this cUy Ih fully aa advuiitiigeously located ns Is New York ItFi'lf. No one who Iwis evi-r visited Cooper Ciiton when the Peopled IriRiltute has been In HSsslon will doubt for a nio- uieiit (lie grout work ll/at is being acconi- pllsliecl there. It was ti-n yeura ago that n wua orgiiulZGd by rrofesHor Ubarlca Wpragijo Bfiilth, who has ever since been Us managing director. ’riiousancia of young men owo ti» tliis woik a nmrvelouH inhancemeul. both inentally. spiritually iiriil materliilly. Tile lectures given therp are nttouded by niKlIeiici'a nutubei'lng up to ?,uii0 and S.Chiu ymillis and men, earnest in their Boarcli for hnprt'VcnuuU siml enger tn tbplr cfTort.H to gel Ihe best out ol all ihat is priseoU-ul to (litni. I t has been Fiihl by proiTiimuit edneutoraT have iiuisle a Pi ltd) of I he iiuivenient inuler the Meoplc's luiiiitute. thnt It means more to (he metroi'idiH than Huy other single Sn- tliieTifH for Mie elevation of the standard of lit lug and the uplift of civk: Ufe gen­erally. ’Hie same praitt^ lm« been given to Hlmilar work in the other cities noted, ami I here Is every n-ason why Newark hIii'IiIiJ follow In these footstepH. Ti Ih the ambiilon of Hie Ibilverslly Club and Its ro'laborere to bco «n^h n work pimped upon a lirm fountintlon here, and the people should show their appreciation of tills effort by responding to the support of the first Bvrles of lectures. Once under way. with u guarantee of proper dlrec- iltin, there need be no ahllctpatlon of failure.

That Utah telegraph operator who CAUBcd a riillroad wreck “JuBt to see the havoc," Hhnuld now enable the public to Bee a first-clahe hanging.

A St. Louts man killed a masher the other day with a single blow of his fiat. This Hhowfl among other things why man Jr endowed with a fist.

The acleutlat who pronounces Jphn D. Rockefeller a type of the American of .the future has done hlB hewt to boom our wig Industry, anyway. r

Another of George W ashington’s old acquaintances line just paased away, after using tobacco for something like a century or so.

Theee graft accusatlona which they are bringing against him ought to looeeti up Vardamon’s vocabulary as never before.

\\> must remember, too, thai Stuyve- sant Fiah has already fell a little corner of the himl times v-hlch he predicts.

A Kenosha (W’ls ) couple have eloped litid yiui cun’t deny that Kenosha !b a mighly good place in run away from.

The pavement to a certain region of torrid temperature is being rapidly ex­tended In these early January days.

liOglclan Kid Hfrinati, of Chicago, hns al leasll been Inntrunienlnl In putting the town of Tonopnh on the map.

The country has \ et ninety days In which tn prepare Itself for the advent of Jeff DuvUs Into the H-mate.

rtradstreot find Dun aepm to Infer that everyliody was about aft busy aa Bantu Claus during the holidays.

Over In (he Philippines they are hoglii- nlng to Bustpect thnt flush times don’t fob low tho flag, either.

Bpeaklng of the w hite, man’s burden, there Ia"^’rafl>aflor Jnr Gans.

In these days the real crush la the Btciro Is at the exchange counter.

It now roinalna for Oovernor JlugliPS to simply make good.

Had the hill Introduced In the Leglbla- ture by A»scmblymsn Fordyce early In the Hcsslmi of 10Ofi been enfictcdi the life- of the man who went to the boit,um of. th ; TludHon River on the ferryboat Palcr- «on would In all probability have bean saved. I t will probably bo recalled that thl:s bill provided th a t dll steam veas*?^ engaged In transporting puBflengertj or ex- cirrsionletB fn>ni 'tny dock or wharf wlthla this Slate, nvisi have their stanchlona, deck benniH ;uul frames consiructed of Iron, RiPf'l or other strong metal, nnd that each must iiave ui least three water- light cross bulkheads, also oonutnictei of Iron, and any master or captain taking out a steam vesKcl not so coustrueted w' ia made llablo to n tine sjf $2.no6 and Im­prisonment for ft year, Had the PatcrsUii been coUKtructed with lUfikiieuda such ns ilio Fordyce bill requlrt'd, ihc colhHlon might have filled one of the apartm ents with water, but would hardly have sunk the boat. Al all evrm s the unfortiUtaie gller would have had pleni.y of lime to make bln escape, and It Is even powib'e that the sixteen or eighteen horses might have been «iavcd. The Fordyce bill wax a fo'nd one. but the fei^y companies did no^ want it and it waa killed.'

as to whether vetswuL;«ra r. tontsmlnstto . *ritb menaa^ tU«n. tuvIilAr* tiiisiiii riic - i1l ffi*iai tsi *M"Aar«t4n«r ' i i ^ uJW W lli^ -9r '

MTATE KTrlllNGM.Senator Dryden la not feeling so hilar-

loujs over the announcement that Gov ernnr Stokes Ih out of the Senutorliil race na he would have dono a couple of tnutUhs ugo. Clrcumstnnces n jlrr cases.

The Indopseinent of the boom of JuBllce Mahlon Pitney for the SenutorKhlp by Commlaaitmer of the r>vpartment of Motor Vehicles J. B. R, Smllh is un Sndh'Otlon that the S'upremy Court judge Ip consid­ered to hold a license to rui) Ihui will be recogoixed by Beorctary of RtuUr DlckJn eon as well as a few others.

The HepubllcunB of Millville have been gh*tn a 8€VerR shock because their repre- aenlatlvoB In the Board of Education have seen fit to elect A Demoorui to office. And, strange to say, tho only excuse these recaleUrflUt members in Governor Stokes’s home town give for their ccurpe la that the Democrat they hnve rlmsen Is en­tirely fitted fo r 'w e position tn which he bos been elevated^ and that they propose to keep politics out of the scboolKi

7'o Ihv HiiUor of ihf \KIVN;BJr-Tlje unnomiccim-m by th* Unlvcr-

ftlty Hluh of a cotirwe cix lectures on six of the great 4'h.iructi.*fls>ttc. Engll.Hh riovellRte tif the nhu-iecTilh ''century by ProfcBHor Frederick Ibuir) Sykes, of Co­lumbia Fnlversily. beghuimg Friday evening. January lii. with ‘Sir W hiter Bcutt and the Hoinnnllc Nuvt-l,’’ to be followed on hUCceM <i\‘e Friday evenings (except WflsHnglfu'!* Btrilulay) wUh '^CharicB Dickens: ’Hu' IdeiiHstlc and Hu- munltiiiian Novel;" ■'Wllliiim Makepeace Thackeray: Rpalif^m In the Novel:" Georg*Eliot: ' ‘RtaUftman-l theAnolytlcal Novel;” "Geurgo Meredith: lieullein aurt the Phil­osophical Novel." find LouisStevenson: The Rvlurn to Rumhitrc,’’ all the lectures to bo llUistruteU wlib lantern Blldes, showing ihe envlronmi lU <3f the author und bis nuvcl. might not mean more than Just an cxvcllint rmirse of lecLurcij and ndght not Justif.v uh In w rit­ing you About It.

But the l ’’iilverslly ('lub, Ihc I'rlnce- ton Club, the Columbia Flub, the t ’ornell Club, the Sievftis Club, the Harvard Club, the Pennsylvania CTnh, iho liutgers Alunuil and oihers. all piit<*rtnln high hopes f()r the Hiiccest* of lh!s joint un- derlnUlrtg and alneercly bpIU-ve that It. will loud on nnd grow nsturtilly into icnuitlc cducatlonni work fur Newark that will rank wMh JjawHI InsHtutc In Boston, the Brooklyn Institute of ArlH and Brlenccd In Rrocklyrt. the Pvoplc'ft Inetltute of New York Clb!*’, the I’njver- alty Extcnslaii Work of I'hlhidelphia and Hlmilar work In nearly all the griMU d tlss of America.

The University Club believe* that the new courthouse, now city hall, new 11- brary, new Howard Savings Institution, now Mutual Benefit Life Insurance build­ing, now Technical School building and the flplondid huildlnga of tho Prndemlal moan s great deol more than compusUlons of Hlone and marble; th a t they typify the Greater Newark thnt Is, not that Is going (o be, and that we already have come to a real coiiscloimneaa of what we are—one of the great communltlefl of the greatest sovereignly on earth.

May Irm niiire O th e r L *ctar«e ,The I'nlvcrfllty Club haa no o thet pur*

pose than to undertake the Inauguration of thl.H popular ednciitlonal movement, which, if U meets wllh approval, wilt naturally lead to the formation of f council representing the vurlou. i ro-oper- ating clubs that by another year will a r­range for enurspj^ of lectures in the five fold field of our flclentlflc Inheritance, our literary Inheritance, our PHthetlc Inherl- anoe. our insMlutJonal Inlicrilance andour rellKlous Inheritance, comprising our whole aplrltiml Inheritance ub defined by Preal- tkmt Nicholas Murray Butler in hla "Tltp Meaning of E ducation" The old Idea of educaiirm tielng confined to closa- rooms Is happily exploded and ought to be buried forever.

The only iinlijue part of this Joint UP- derlftklag la UuH H Is the first time that the university clubs of the city have un ­dertaken to serure any direct contact or commerce In Ideas l>ctween tbelr collegea and the town, but nil the celloge cluba of Efliii'X Fonnty, with one excepllon, have entered very heartily Into this joint un­dertaking, At a very largely attended and representativeconferenceof 4he University Club truHtecB and the cxerotlve commit­tees of the college clubs, the president of the Princeton Club pledged that organlxa- tlon tn (ine-hnlf Ihf Initial co&t of the first course of lectures by Professor SyUee find all of the clubs cheerfully agreed to the heartiest co-operation.

At the HuggeBtlon of Rev. Henry R. Rohc, who isi Intensely Interested In this kind of work, the irusteea of the dhurcb of the Redeemer have graclouetly and gra­ciously given the church auditorium for dlls first 'series Of lectures wrllhoul ex­pense, Rti.ve that involved In the actual conaumpllon of electricity and coal, in urdvr lhai the cost of the cottrae (IckeiB coiiJd be Kept a l a mlninium. •

Of course, the Ruccesa of this course nnd others. If the first Ib succesaful, will wholly depend upon the spirit of the city, jvist HS the fluccesa of Mr. Hammorstein's new opera hotipe depended upon the peo­ple of New york City.

Great f'ncourag^meTi{, however, haa been given iiN by the Indorsement of nearly every kindred organlzalion in the city whoae eo-op<*rittlon haa been counted un from, ihi! beginning. None of ihese clubs lias been asked to assume any obliga- ilon, but 1 believe tin idea and purpope has been cordially approved by the PhllttRcipomu, Salmagundi. ^Phllomn- theSn, Woman’s. Travelers’. CollGge Wom­an's. Saturday. Irvine. Sesame, Civic, Ray Palmer, fJunshlno, Medical Woman's, New .leisey Press, and H alf Hour* Reading clubs, the Tcaebers' Guild, the German- Ann rloan fOnglncerfng Society, the La H;ille Society, tbe Prlncipnla’ ond Rchool- iiii'tVB cluba, (he Wednesday Club and the High School Alumni.

The Unlveraiiy Club would grcnfly wel­come yonr co-nperfltlon In the Inaugurn- KUn of this work. Th^re la much of In­terest In tlic* development of the other Institutes mentSoueil. If you could see yuur- wny clear to giving their Interesting his­tory to yonr readers.

.lust a f"\v weekP before the death of Oliver Wendell Hclmos ho was naked:

Mow do you cpllniute the Influence which tbe Lowoil Tnftlltutc 1ms had ufKin the In- tfllectual life of (he country?” Ami ho replied: "W hen you bnvc pnld every on- ihiiHliieMc thing you may, you will not havf- Imlf ffllfd the measure of Itn Im­portance to Boston, New HlnKlaiul and the country a t large.”

ro lli-g e P rcsH len fs f«>Newark Is almost literally within the

Fhaduwa and ffmlly wKhIn working dls- tmice of five great unlverBltics. President ituHcr. of CoJumbla. and PreBldent AVIlsnn hare promised their heartiest .adAlAtance. nnd co-upc‘rntlf>n In (he project, and the other eollfges will undoubU-dly be Just ii.’ eager to fu rth -r this brorider work und wider outlook for th b city.

Professor Henry van Dyke, of Prince ton. bfi« already pfomiasd to come here next season. If rcnncHtcd. to deliver a course of If’CtnreS on the “Service of Pnetrv." which he is now giving a t the Brooklyn Institute of A rts and Sekneea. and which were prepared originally for Johns Hopkins TTjilversUy. and PtofoBsor Glildinga. the dlRtlngulahed professor of xoclnlogy. has gis'cn a like promise aa to hla course of locturea on ^American De­mocracy; Itfl Principles and I^adcrR. '* given fit Cooper TTnton before tjic Pegple^s Institute in co-operation with Columbia University.

As to the advantage of anch lectures by Mich men there can be no debate, and sfiine of us who have an unshakable faith 5n (he worthlnesa of this city, and who sometimes think wc have a little vlelon, bclleva that ifhere will be no question as to (he tlmellneRs of now bcgrinnJng th* work, and tTmt the people will show their nhsolnt* npprcotatlon by supporting heartily the best In the whole field o f educntlnn that can be offered. Touts truly, ALGERNON T. SWBBNET*

Prealdenl lTnlv*tilty Club* -' ■ — • ■ ^

F o r m e r R e p l ie s t o L «itter*s C r l t le la m o f I ll« L e t te r <m P a b b e l l i

ObaervAnee*To the hUntrtr of the NEWS.

8lr—I wish to reply to my friend, Mr,E. M. Macdonald, who queBtions lu the NEW 0 of recent date the accuracy of *ny flguratlve rcfcj-cnce to ClirUtlan natloiia. observing a Bitbbaih since the aasasSlna- tlon of JeauH Christ. 1 would be pieaacd to have him rcmliid[ himself th a t God worked nix djiya in creation of the world and rested the Bt^wnlh. i know of no Ulcrature, exerpt that of Infidels and ulheluts. that fiilta to malntnln* the neces­sity and reaK>nabicneB6 of a day of rest. Chrlstlmi people favor the first day of the week, and civil und ^^llglous orgam- sutlops of society have made Che Sab- balh a day for real and worship,

1 believe in an unileaccrated Babbath.T am not a puritan, saint or angel; I be­lieve in the sacred Inatltutlons of our country, the church and all that U should maintain. The church is the keeper of the. nation’s moralB. i t will be a sorry day for tho women and children of aur land when the church ceasea to light for tem ­perance and right.

“ Who is Mr. Atklnaon and the bishops," Hsks Mr Macdonald,” (Imt they should domineer over the people?”

The blshopH? Why. they are the raeu who set apart (heir hw n Jor moral ujid

plrllual leaderaliip; i jey arc the men who ropreBciU (’hriat uul hiifure whom you stand (o w'cd your wife: they are the men to whom you nnd ihi* wife enfry the first born for baptism nnU blcsilng: they urs (ho men w*ho conn* lulu your home to elevate and sanctify your Uvea; tho.v are the men who speak the words of consolation nt tho side of the blcr. and seal the grave with the star of hope beyond. These men arc entitled to exer­cise ttuthoKty o% r the moral and spiritual life, and because, in my opinion, it Is immoral to open the saloons on flumlay and have crime and debauchery InsU-ad of rvBt and worship, I am persuaded that no political party, no Individual or political organization can nr drservos to win on Immorality.

Ar to Senator Colhy, it h f h ta regretted voting for the “bishops" bill,’' he Ifl ft weakling. The election last fall was won. not for an open Sunday, but to close out Lentz and other boBses. When you get the lafltie direct, nn open Sunday or a closed one, I believe (he open Sunday candldnte for Governor would go down to <lefcftt hy about 75,000 votes. But whether ho would or not. I am op­posed to an open Sunday, and 1 would love to seo ft Democratic Governor of the character and Intellect of Richard V. Llndftbury. .

As (Q "who Is Mr. Atkinsonr* Why, blesff you, Mr. Macdonald. I was fighting for Democracy and decency nnd mobbed by the gang that nold out (he Democratic o r^n lra tlo n of New Jerp'^y to the race­track combine when you were reading about Ccnatantlne. I walked In the Demo­cratic convention In Tre-nton and routed the old gang when you were convincing yourself ihiil the Sabbath is not a sacred day. I was campaigning In the Eastern and W estern States with William J- Bryen when a onc-hundred-acre farm full of your open-Sund.ay Democrats were shouting and voting for any old party, except Democracy. l wop leamlng from BlackstouR th a t nil government la founded on tho principle of protecting the weak when you were imbibing dis­respect for (he hishopH.

Sincerely yourn,CLARENCE T. ATKINSON.

Newark, January 3. IW.

“ SQUATTER" IN -PANAMA ZONE

U. S. Government Is Kept Busy Fighting False Claims to

Lands Along Canal.

10 RUSH WORK THIS HONTfl

MONMOUTH OFFICIALS WILL FIGHT FOR JOBS

Spccffll DI»pafck to the EYESJtJt} "SEWB.FREEHOLD, Jftn, B.—Contrary to re­

pent reports, the Retiring Board of Free­holders does not leave a depleted treasury for the five Republlcftn members who, on Monday, will succeed tho present Demo­cratic board of twenty-four members. The old board yesterday held Its last offl ciaJ meeting. The report of the Surplus Fund Committee showed that J61,E .62 w'oa out on Inveatment, with a balance of 16^.06 In Ihe treasury, making a total of |B2,196.68. Tho report of the county col lector showed a balance in hia hands of »135,812.E1, Taxes yet due total tS**lA8. nuiklug ft total of »144,664.29. Of this he must pay out for State school tax RM,- 918.46, leaving a net balance, when the re- mnloing taxes are collected, of t39,7&)-S3.

When the new fresholdera meet a t the courthouse here fdr organization,, next Monday, It Is und-^rstood they will be served with notice that the present pounty collector, auditor and rnnd super­visor will refuse to surrender their offices (o the appolntceB of the new board, for the renaon that they have no power, un der the law, to oust the oflldala named, they having been appointed last May by the old board'for terms of two and three years. It is reported that both sides have employed ooimael and arc fully prepared to conteat the m atter In the courts. The difflculty seems to be as to the proper Interpretation of (he law.

In the case of the county road super­visor, the office now hold by Wyckoff Buck, appointed by the old ftoard of Free­holders last May for a term of three

HfKciot Correspondence of the VEWS,LA DOCA. Canal Zone, Panamai Dec.

24.—Aa thfl work on the Panam a Cana) progrosaes the "squatter” is coming to the front w llh his claims, There ar# m»ny pieces of land along the line of the canal that are claimed by men who buve boon occupying the same for years and a series «f suits will be necessary before the United S lates Governiiient wlU be able to oust Ihd prutnnders. In some Instances Ihe men who claim the land are real own- * ers and In such cases U ndo Sam promptly pays the price and takes poasesslon, but In other coses where the land In dispute Is large Irt area and the claim ants’ dc- manris arc not backed by the uocessftry ^ evidence to prove ownership tho case ts promptly fought out In tho courts. Nine mil of tiv'ory ten of these contested cases have been decided in favor of the United "tylllLfB.

According to the predlctiotis of those In chaiKc, the removal of rock from Culebra s' Cut will surpass all previous records dur­ing the month of January. The dry wea- thcf will be taken advantage ef to the limit of the capacity of every ava.|lable piece of machinery. ^All traces of the recent flood have disappeared.

The maukllllng contlnuea on the P ana­ma Railroad. During the week ending Dorember 22 (wo mon * were Instantly killed m-ar loi Booa, within a hnlf mile of each o th e r lu each case the victim waa decapitated.

During (he month of November the ^ twenty steam shovels a t work In the Culebra Cut removed 321,642 cubic yards : of ei^rth himI rock. Tho grcjitest Individ­ual record for a shovel was 18,266 cubic * yards, the next best was 1B,B95. On * December 18, 14,210 cubic yards of earth and rock were removed from the ' “cut.” This is the record for one day since tho Americana have been on (he Isthmus.

The first woman to be sent to tne Cule­bra Penitenllary was received a t th a t In- 6(lt\jtion Saturday, December IB. Two women, Orslr Johnson and Slvina Cleadl- ' on, were tried a t Empire, Canal Zone, on a , charge of grand larceny and convicted and sentenced to serve one year. Both ' women are black.

Baseball has once Again become the thing on the Isthm us and the lovers of ] the game will be treated (o a scries of games between the American and Pnna- i munlftti teams. The native sons have mastered the game, (md occasionally de-« feat the Americana. Ju s t across the road from the baseball field there Is a bull- ring, which constltulee a very powerful rival *of the boll game. Both ftltraetlous hold forth a t the same time nnd the re­sult Is a very large crowd. The Yankee game seems to hold its own against the ancient pastim e of the Dons and prom­ises to become the greater attraction, if tho Panatnanian team s cuutlnue to swat the American pitchem they have In the past. The bullfights tame in com­parison w ith some of the games of base­ball between the Americans and the n a ­tives. The gam bling Instinct which Im- pells these people to bet their last 'cenia-, » vn on ft eock-flght Is. very much in evi­dence at the ball gameB. and many are the hombres th a t leave the enclosure minus their “Wftd” when the Atnericatif win. They alw ays bet on their countrymen— scorning with fierce scorn such a thing as betting against tb ^ r Palsanos (country­men). JOHN HALL.

P:

f

1PUPILS RIDE FOR THREE CENTS

/cars, the claim of the Democrats Ib that this office was created and the term pro­vided for by ft county rwid law of jyoi. and not by the rUosen freeholder law of 1902, known bs tho five-freeholder net, un­der which tho new board was elected last fall.

In the C41SA uf the county collector nnd auditor, it is rlaluied that the provision of the five-freeholder act, th a t the term of all appointive officers shall expire on January 1,. succeeding the election of the new board, Ih dearly unconstitudonnl, because the provision hAa" no relation to the title of the act, which In terms re­lates merely to the reduction of the num­ber of members of the board and not to its government, the old law still remain­ing In force and regulating the govern­ment of the newly elected board. Whether the point Is well taken the courts will be asked to decide.

Pabllo Service CoTporatloa Pat* Into Effect New Trolley Etgte la

Jer*ey City.JEKSET CITT, Jan . G—Three-cent trol-

ley tickets for school chll(lren were » l d , here yesterday by the public fiervics Cor* ; poratlon, which operates the stree t car lines In this cUy. Transfers were given to High Bchool students, but not to the ■*, puplla of the lower grade schools. Tho ward improvement associations have beea< urging tbe trolley company to give to *' the school children a three-cent rate. Previous to the new arrangem ent the , children gut twenty-eight trolley car (Ickets for |1. They now gel th irty for . &0 cents. ^

The High School pupils receive blue carde siguvcl by the principal and counter- signed by Thomas N. MclJarter, president of the Public Service Corporation. Upon exhibiting those cards to the conductors th^‘ holders receive transfers. Colonel Edwin \V. H int, superintendent of the , Public Service Corporation trolley lines, toqk up iho m atte r uf a new fare sebed- . ule UB soon a s the committees of the dif­ferent iiRSu^latlons brought It to his a t- < tentlon.

W a r re n C o u n ty C ourt Cases.Epcrial Diepotch (o the EYEKIHO -VitliVg.

BELVTDERE, Jcn. 5.“ Tho tria l of the case of Cliarlea E. Slmonton, of Vermont, und Oscar L. Brambach. of Washington, N. J.. for dam ages for false arre st and Impi’iiCiinrnetit, tried In the W arren Coun­ty Court this week, came to a conclusion >csierdtty afiem oon, whi'n the jury re­turned ti verdict of no cause for action. The case of Charles Wuttors against Wolff lirotliers, of Halneaburg, which tn- volvea title to two islands situated In tho Paulin’s Kill, was ohlled for yesterday afternoon, but owing 1o the sudden Illness of one of the jurors. Jam es Frome. tho rase went over and Judge Prank T. Lloyd adjourned court until Monday morning. Tho grand Jury came Into court yesterday and reported six bills of Indlot- ttietU.

SpeaKtng of the members of the l-i^^ls- ^reiltonlatftre who are to nsflemble In Tr^iiton

on Tuesday next, the organ of ihe New Jersey saloon-keeptM's' assnrlatlan de- chtree' that "In nil counties (hero have been pledgee U> rnnsi'icntiously ropresenl the liquor Intorcflis.”’ s till there wre some folks under the Irniircaslon th a t u constd- erablf number of lawmakora will prove th a t they arc free to r«present the people who form their (lOUKiliuftncy.

The Newmnrkef timn 'Who has named hia pFllft LflOu-poufid porker Caruso must be expecting the big hog to mi^ke a monkW out of everything else In the hoflse.*

T hat wfiv avcguliir garden bouquet that the president of the S tate .Uordnuntni] ^ c ie ty U>rew to the trollsy oompnnleK In Enouncing the Umlied franchise law. Hm the Public Sljrvlce and A faw other irm.-- tioo ocmcema are looking for someUilng

flowsrv Ibeaa days.

• ff-f;

.Five years ago the city of Trenton bniU. and jeqiilpped a crematory at 'o oost ni IC0;OD0. for the burning of waMe

Tha n ew trolley Jtno frsip Red. Bank toDeeghic has been nompl*t«d and opened

a* lAr as Fair Hayan;.. Even (he

niA M C E l^OH C A PIT A M fT f.

M ight i>w irtufih Good b y lu ff a n Ic e P l a « t .

To the m to r of theSlr-1 am only a womajt. 'aofl not In a

p<‘s«)tion to command M** moneyed men arid wdPsen. but I hays ih(.ught and wonderad why some-one An such a posltjofi did not Inlcrpst just such uHople in organlcliiff a company to make ice BPd soil It Rt tkff imaUoBt poBBiblj profit. Why* one owmot even dream of the immense fluooufit of good |t Would (W. I have ithttughl of tWs tWnB for mmth* ana have tfUa tp *W * to help ft alouK but It seemoa Impoaslhle, stia thon It came to me that thought -waves may reacfi some oo* ,vrho-would kpow how tu lumaie Just such a matter, bo ! have oon- linucd to titink' and to wish this to be. I don't believe->«b ehall bav* to waft lor the mlllenntum « , * « lf* n aolosi fact, tjlif cti-eJy ypurBi"' ' C. K. M.

Newarfc (fapfiary 8 ,1»I. . ? *.y

$165,600 I

fo r $24,890. f i

r-'"

H. p. f., a New York Manuflcturer, took out two glides in The Pros

about five yoars

'■''S

.‘■ m

■mm. . --------

a i^ being then 31 y ^ rsof age. Recently t the policyholder died and T p llP r u d e n t i a E ^ i d his .widow $l65;^.^,#t .premiums sreceiVM^h^l

'ii-'- •••''■n'l'

the Compainy amounted

Page 7: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

NEWARK EVENING NEWfit SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 1907.

ASK DISMISSAL OF TRUE BILLS

Cotmsd Attack L^alitjr of Procedure ia Fiodiog Disor-

deriy House bdictmeots.

ICOUKT RESERVES DECISION

/

*Judge Eyck beard argument In the

C ourt of Qtiarter Beflaloms to-4gy (»n a VAotton to quash the tndfctroentB agalnui E dgar H, Sprague. George H. Melrose, iWllltara H. Van and Edwuid M. Kelly, charged with keeiring disorderly bouses. E rank E. Bradner and Mlctiael T. Bar- V«tt, counsel for the defendanlH, ootuend- •d th a t the manner in whinh the gremd |u ry was draw n rendered the Inquisitors • a iUegally constituted body. On this ground. It was asaerted. the tncHctmenta ghould be quashed. The court announced th a t deolalpn would be given Tuesduy, the

glay set for the trial of the defendantri.Mr. B radner attarkcd ttie syaiora in

fvogue Id the sheriff’s omc-e of se l^ting a n d summoning the gruud inquisitors. H e declared that custom did not conatl- tu te the law. The form of making re­tu rn s to the court of the numcfl of tile g rand ju ry selected, Mr. Bradner declared. Was not in accordance wltli tlx,* law. The ■herlff, he declared, is directed to formal- ^ name the grand Jurora ami certify to f te t r setectlon. Bo far ua the Sept»*mber Igrand Jury was concernedv Mr, Bradher isontended th a t the uuly record of the Summoning of the jurors la a pn|»er in The oounty efork'^ cHIcp wliich U un- '■IgTted and not In dir huiidwrtting of l^herlff Sommer. Tlu* Inwj’cr produced the l^ p a r , pointed out lliat l( was marked

and said tht- liandwrUlng was pthat of the umler-sherlff, Subsequently Pvos*cutor Young pro- plucsd ^ list of the September Jurors^ the handwriting of Mr. Sommer.

Bradner arild there was nothing to Igrtiow when this list was made.' ‘T h e facts are (he pame In ench case.” 0tfr, Bradner declared, “so far as this ma- ..Hon Is concerned. 1 ■wauld like In have it ^O derstood that the defendants jife to jkave the same rights its though nil tlie peases had been called to trial, r.siially m otions like this are made when the trial Hi moved, and before the jury Is sworn.“

The court declat-ed the deferidants coultl irmaJiy renew their motion if dcslrud hen the tria ls arc called.

B a s is o f M o lia n to (A nash.“The general grounds for moving to

U cash," M r Bradner continued, “la that |lie grand Jury wlilcli found the Irdtct- loent waa not a legally constituted, body. Jn the first place, the recintl does not ghow th a t the sheriff tmd selected tind •vmmoned the grand Jurv and made law- lu l re tu rn . There Is nothing on the record to show th a t the sheriff ever aummoned the grand jury. Th^'^e i.s a paper on flic In the county clerk’s oiTlce. purporting to g o n t^n a list of grand jurors for the Sep­tem ber term. Jt la not signed by an y ­body and is not in the hmidwritlng of E rsn k H. Summer.

“ The slierJfT acta in a judiciary capacity tThe r-cor(3a bHow Uiat I'nder-Shpnff X ason made the complaints and ennse- IQuently as a county offlcinl wan not In­different. Under the act of 191J3 It 1m pro- Yldod th a t the sheriff shall cause to come t>e(ore the Cou£\t of OytT and T enim i'r

the beginning of the term twenty-four grand jurors and in every city of more th an 2^,000, the proceedings filial! bp re­peated In s i i weskp. If it fs found t in t

jiUie Indictments were made more liian su ;Weoks a f te r th e opening of the Scpierubcr iterm they would be Invalid unles.*? the ^Aourt had directed that rtie inq\its1tors be (gstftlned. The construction of the Hluluie ^ll, of course, an Important factor In the ftestter.

Mr. Bradner referred to the act of j9or, fpegarding the quallflctUlrms of grand

orors, and said he took It that a grand Itiror m ust have no official connection 1th justice. It has been held, Mr. Brad-

^ e r declnred. that there can he no pre­sum ption , Ir.lentton or surmise considered t n the m atter, and that only w'hat appearn jin black and white can figure.

‘'W ould a judgment without the signa- ifrire of the court be valid?" .Mr. Bradner jgaked, “and would a motion un.slgned In- ponsldered legal? Certainly a return of prand Jurors to show who are summoned fo r the Inquest, which Is unsigned, is de- fic tlv e ,“

The lawyer added that the under-sheriff jpoutd perform the ministerial hut not Judi-

function of the sheriff.• Mr. Young said that specifically the p h arg e Is the maintaining a disorderly jkiouse. Thn Indictments were brought In ith* Interests of decency and morality, and jkhould be tried unless some essemlnS jllghta of the defendants would be affecled jstherwlse.

“ I t la the right of the people of this ^ a t e , " said Mr. Young, “that ih« chargcti [ggalnst these people should be tHed. hikI ‘If they are found guilty should be fol­lowed by punishment. The indictments

[have been draw n ns they have been drawn ^ o r years, but It luus been said that the .WCords fa!} to show the jurors w'lm found !the Indictments were selected and sworn fry the ■herlff, and that no proper return o f the flummonlng of the grand jury has Ibeen filed with the court."

Mr. Young argued that even if the in- iltctinentfl were Informal it did not &i.lIUc tfie defendants to have the indictments Quashod. He declared that, the court iiAcif could no t exercise its discretion and quash them, because the applIoaLiou was ■nade too late. If there was any question, ,lie held, th e defendants were w.irned long 'iMfore the grand lury was sworn that th e ir CAsea would be considered, and It M a s th e ir duty to take action before tlie |}ury was sworn,^ The court remarked th a t he thouglit the

lelectlon of a grand Jury was a mlniste- dal yather than a Judicial funrtion. On his ground the Indictment would not he

Muasbed. Judge Ten Eyck said, bur he esirsd to consider other features of the

Ju rWK

C I R C U l v A T I O NO F ' x h f ;

t m n

F or th« Y ear l O O O .J V K ' W A R K , I M B W J E p R S t l S ' i r .

N et D aily A verage, C opiea

DATg JAN. FES.1______ —

MARCH. APRIL. MAY. JUNE. JULY. AUQ.

1 .................................. t t 1 Ii (DOtq 63337 63001 1 fi7^Rn 615552 ......................................... 61084 63001 63052 63244 62772 60263 61580 1 60545

1 3 ................................. 60992 61280 614S0 6S094 62410 61709 j 6075Bi 4 .................. ...................... 61065 63144 62580 60286 1 1 J SSB72

5 . .................................. 61084 M l 74 6348 0 630S9 1 61058 fll91S0 ............................... 69970 61304 628S9 66866 6ni 777 ......................................... 6.340A 63314 61691 1 62944 S91M

.eeee.e.61X46

8 ......................................... 62013 64178 63MS 1 61695 59808 S9S7S ;0 ......................................... 62036 63685 63217 64817 63517 57816 68503 i 61292 ,

1 0 ......................................... 62052 61969 62198 63606 63734 ......... 60470 1 59892 .1 1 ..... ................................... 62081 63415 62596 61861 68466 57692 ■1 2 .. . ..................................... 62241 61887 64106 63483 61129 62529 68510 ....... 11 3 ......................................... 60980 64219 63909 63446 1 62380 59972 , 60481 ,1 4 ......................................... ......... 1 63547 64178 62065 i 63039 61428 57935 60706 '1 6 ......................................... 62748 64906 63316 63139 i 61633 60511 i1 « ......................................... 628S6 63925 64071 63719 62952 61S2S 61635 60761 ,1 7 ......................................... 63317 62840 62661 63474 ; 64149 61425 601861 8 ......................................... 62324 ! 71726 [ 63168 62355 61510 58B36 '1 9 ..................................... 6409Q 67802 ; 6U302 0 ......................................... 61455 i 64065 ^ I S 3 67708 61 fltnne 12 1 ..................................... A^703 64570 62871 62693 591002 2 .................................. 60259 j 64687 1 627242 3 ......................................... 63562 : 63822 64888 62565 62670 60270 61403 61385 12 4 ....................................... 64293 ' 63580 63075 j 63199 62528 61323 610312 6 ......................................... 63601 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . j 63064 63485 62663 61783 588592 0 ......................................... 63649 ^ 6S2S8 65011 ' 63333 60514 6^4 IR 617922 7 ....................................... 64064 63156 64798 ! 62870 ' 63^26 ..... ejOliM 1 A1AA7 '2 8 ....................................... 62733 64835 ! 61510 62033 61976 58720 61438 '2 9 ................................. 63529 64754 62573 61862 1 614Q43 0 ......................................... 62903 ' 64278 62763 58631 59761 68893 ! 612943 1 ......................................... 62740 63255 , 62437 62740 6224S

] T O TA L COPIES SOLD.. 1622524 1520144 1721243 ^ 1594557 1685516 1597040 1522032 I 1638074

1 N et Daily Averog«p 1906 62405 63339 63750 63782 62427 61425 00881 60669

j Net Daily A rerage, 1905 57948 59099 61404 61544 60903 60317 58434 SB51S

! NET DAILY GAIN......... 44571i

4240t

2346 11

2238 1524 1108^ 2447 1 2154

SEPT. OCT.

sa7se

js is s '!60129 i en o s I s m s60170 I 57930 '

I60661 I 60969 ' 60904 ' 60421 ' 60864 I 60S9S i

63408612636075939881eoecoS946B

630796280087208641M6223760508

636046301664738649746484763281

6 3 M6346463935634126350062333

642226489964772650026414562644

6471969828 '64465656976488664068

654056519364347

NOV.

65268 65184 . 63414

6449562604

100141648576440863094

651816508765131644236481664017

667326583766190658886586064016

664146643666087i 1 166412

DEC.

64368

672736495265879652456453463152

646846498064531645536479763218

U87I6658165732650996598364337

65654 i 1 1 6528$ 65894 65816 64060

II 65062

1543183 1738985 „ 1662892 l| 1627392

61748

59974

64407

60694

66515

62742

65103

61948

"W )Y don't yoif tell the tru th t '

COURT SCORED WITNESS*|) in d g e R & yteond S ays Lad O av« Un- \ r v l t e b i * T e M t m o a y I n T i o I I e rI A oe ld en t S a il.

Thomas L. Kaymond ordered a ent of 8116 entered agalnat the Pub­

ic Henrico Corporation th is morning, b«- dwnages ctalmed by Moi ey & LaRu*,

Bm C Grand and Jereey alreefs, E iiia- th, fo r Itilurie* to their laundry wagnii. ileh waa atruok by n timliey ear. May last. In doing ao, Iho judge took occa-

lon to score John Ryan, driver of the 'agon, who waa a wltnesa for the de- ndant company. Hia testimony, the

^d lg e aaid, w at recklea*, u j ,j ^ad re­la te d improbable stottei of the accident

tfyan told the court, when tha car wne ew feet away ho started to croea Hie •w ok , but th a t the wagon was struck Jbi*»re he knew It. The motormeji put on jtiM 'brakes, ha said, and was thrown out

ear.'tStow do you know the mototman put

j . i U . t l i e brakes?" the court asked, "when 7 jjRiih were looking ahead and not at the ( |«M am lng car?"' ciK. '7 eaw btm,” answered the Wltnesa.

. *Vun>bBS 1 tell you that he put on the IVEienency brakes?” said the judge.

,®5i; '"W ell, judge, yob got me thera," ri it:r .Mw boy.

- I -(

|*Kf

"Oertainly I have you,

replied

retorted the

1^''V ,',r ifW o rla W ondm in the lYash"

1 0Cents

l o r T m l

OJNew Year's, Fourth of July, Thank.sglving, Christmas.

S tate o f New Jersey, \County of Esses, J

CHA RLES F. DODD, being duly sw orn, on h is oath says that he is Hiisineas Manager of the Newark Evening News, am i th a t the foregoing state­m ent of the net daily average circulation ol th e N ew ark Evening News lor the year Nineteen H undred and Six is in all th in g s correct and true.

C H A R L E S F, DODD.Sworn and subscribed to ]

be fore m e th is third day ol \ JO H N R, H A R D IN ,January , A. D. 1907, J Af. C, C. or N. / .

The above is a statem ent of the actual (jlrculation of the N E W A R K E V E N IN G N E W S for tbe year 1906. Sam ple, w aste and unsold copies are deducted. T he net daily average num ber of copies so ld for the year 63,022.

C H A R E E S F . DO DD ,B u s i n e s s M a n a g e r

SHOP REVIVAL CAMPAIGN NOW

Plan of Dafly Rdiiioas Meet­ings in Factories to Be Dis­

cussed Wednesday.

INSCRIPTION ON TOMBSTONE EVIDENCE IN JERSEY QTY W IL CASE HEARING

W ORD CONIim S TE8 DAYS

At a special meeting of the Inlerdenoml- natlonal committee in the Young Men's C hristi^ i Assoolation, late yesterday afternoon, it was unanimously voted to call a meeting of all the pastors of local evangelical churches for next Wednes­day afternoon at i p’clpck fft the lecture^ room of the FHrst Presbyterian Church, for the purpoi^e-of coiiRldering the under­taking of a shop revival campaign nexl month.

The Idea of the committee Is to conduct such a campaign for ten successive days, one half-hour a fn o o n , in from fifteen to twenty-five shopa and factories each day a t exactly the same time, under the tead- erf^hlp of Rev. ('harles Stelale. of East Orange, siiperlntendsnt of the department of church and labor of the Presbyterian Church, who has offered to give his time lo the work.

At a special Invitation of the committee. Its members listened to addresses yester- dfiy by Mr, StolRle, and by Rev. Dr. James B. Ely, superintendent of the sum­mer’ tent revival work In New York City.

Air. Stelsle estim ated that the oxpenM of the campaign would be about |5 a meet­ing. or about 11,000 altogether. This would go to pay the musicians, printing, stenographer and Incidentals. A factory would have meetings on three succeaalve days, w ith the privilege of having them continued If the men so desired. They will also be held In a hftU of the neigh­borhood.

Mr. Stelxle said that the success of the whole undertaking would depend largely on whether o r not all the ministers of the city co-operated to (he extent of giving their time and energy. He himself of­fered to spend several bouts of each of the ten days In Newark managing the un­dertaking.

Dr. Ely suggested tO the committee that while shop meetlDgs were advisable^ and met with his approval, he felt th a t some­thing more perm anent was required, as he did not believe In placing so much de­pendence on apaamodlc effort. He recom­mended the employment of a permanent evangeliat, not necessarily a minister, who would give all hts time to shop religious meetings, revival meeting In balls In neighborhoods whpje . there,, were, no

>churcbs0, and who i^uld follow up ail persons who showed an Interest In relig­ious things, keeping In touch wHh them.

Sparial Dispatch io the BVEWISO ?iEW8.JERSEY CITY, Jan . 6-—An Insciiptlon

from a tombstone w as used as evidiuico In the Hudson County Orphans* Court yesterday afternoon a t the hearing on the exceptions to the accounting filed by Mrs. Catherine O’Brien oa executrix of the estate of her husband, James J. O’Brien. Among the Items In her tlnal accounting was one of |5&0 for a tomb­stone for her husband 's grave. James J.

O'Brien, n son, excepted to this charge being made against his father’s estate on the grounds that his mother hftd the atone erect4?d at her own expense, and to sub­stantiate Ills assertion produced a copy of the wording on -It, which was as fol­lows; "Erected by Catherine O’Brien In loving memory of her beloved husbuiid, James J. O'Brien. Who died June 38, 1904, aged forty-five years.” Judge Blair, a fter hearing argument of counsel, reserved de­cision in the case.

CAPTAIN SCRIBA NEAR AS ROBBERY OCCURRED

VERDICT AFTER NINE HOURSJ n iT DellbeTBtM lio n v B efore A llow -

lOK Mr*. K e n a o B r $9,600 (o r H n a lio n d 'r D eotk .

I t required nine houra' deliberation by a jury lo Circuit Court B, last nl8bt. be­fore the members could .dedde upon a verdiot of 12.500 damages In favor of the widow of John A. Kennedy and against the Central Railroad Company.

The plaintiff asked tor |10,0(10, because of her husband meeting a violent death through the snapping of a tru is chain, April 28, 1906. Kennedy was a mechanical engineer and wae a t work on the Schalk street branch of the road whan the fa ta l­ity happened.

VAILSBURGH AFFAIRS.1 The special committee appointed to pro­test against the sewer sosessment will hold a m eeting In Eswell Kemp's store, Scuth O range avenue, opposite the en­trance to the Speedway, Monday night.

A bowling tmlrnament opened on W a lih 't alleya la s t night with tw enty en- trfee.

Reports for the year sdll be received from the varloiit committees a t a meeting of the Sacred H eart. Club on Tuesday night, and plans for the remainder of the eoclel eeaeoii will bn announced.,‘.The 8t. George Boys' Club will mset a t Its headquarters In JUexaudcr street ^ext W ednesdey n tg b t,:

The YIpe and tToiSna Club will give e rooeptlom at tbe bosne of Mrs. l ^ u l Freld- helm, 86 Howelt piece, Thursday night.. The. (edbraclon of Improvement societies In t-Ms .eectipn O t'th e Btate will be dll- ougeed a t a meeting <d th* Vellsblrfgh asBocIetioh In Union Hall B ^ a y night. -B ecause o f.th n 'n u m b er o l m bbertes In the w e s t ^ eaation nf the dteti'Ict feil- denle have employed • n ^ h t wAtebman.

-■ ChlM ff* G jm klara O h lity .' 'Thicn Of five Chinamen a m s te d . in ' i

lA layetfe stree t bv the eh an fre men fieptambsr Yo last r e ­tracted th e ir pleas of not gulU y' and pleadad guilty befbrs Judge % Kyck In the C ourt of Quarter gesalone yeeter- toy^aftertWOTi They were Hock Gee. Ah ytUag smd Eng Moon. At the rectnest of AeelMent Prosecutor glutt fhe court itoUe prueged Use ehefwg. ggainet Itag Moon b ^ u e e f t .faeit .^ jw lM e a t

B u t H « And K n h n K n « wffo th lu K o f I t U n t i l A f le r A r­

r e s t M ade.On a charge of highway robbery. In

that, ii Ifl alleged, they held up and robbed Edwin F. Nace, llilrty -four years old, of Point PleaBant, Pa., ou M ulbeny s tiw l last night. John Doyle and John Reilly. longflhorf»men, lodglng-houso habttneB, were arraigned in the First Precinct Court this m om lug and held In S1,D00 ball each for the grand Jury. In the formal complaint they are accu&ed of relieving Nuce of $S5. By the testim ony It was dls- cloaed, Incidentally, th a t Captain Bcriba and Detective Kuhn, tif the F irst Precbicl Station, were less than a block away while the alleged highwaymen were strip­ping Nace. but did not learn of the facts until Pairolm.Tn Provost had the two men under arreei.

Although Nace gives his home town as Point Fleasant. It m ight be explained th a t It was once his home only, for of late he has been roam ing about the East working where he could find employment as a lineman.

Provost started to tak e hie prisnnofS to the Wlllhim Street Station, via I^afa- yetle street, and a t the Mulberry street corner of that thoroughfare found Boriba and Kuhn, who bad been patrolling “Chinatown” nnd who were at the corner When Nace was being robbed. They ex­pressed surprise that they had heard no BlgTi of the occurrance.

The officers told Judge Howell this morning that while they were walking to the station Reilly dropped a pocket- book and that F rederick Melwinger, eigh­teen years old. of Ham ilton sirest, who saw the urreats, picked It up. Kace after­ward said It v,'aB hia and the 136 was found In It.

WOWAH ATTEMPTS SUICIDE.attev BnsiiAsr, Q x lev lsv Dewtb of

H asbav il, G aali«» H e r T h ro a t.W il l R e c o v e r .

While te^^)o^a^lly fneane, presumably through worry and grief over the death of her husband, which occurred July 15 last, Mrs. Louise Brunner, forly-elglit years old. of 54 H ayes s t r ^ t , attempted suicide a t her home yesterday by cutting her throat with a shoem akers’ knife. She Inflicted a wound th a t It la said will not prove serious. She Is now at the City Hospital, where she was taken In the am­bulance from th a t Institution.

Mrs. Brimner has been In poor health for £>otne time.

•AY« THISRBLIEVE8 BACKACHE.

A wtlt-kDown B tithoiity n y i ttmt Bftckkelw t$ often N ttu re '8 dancer « ^ n « l m hlch notlfiea the ■offerer that the kidney■ ''■re (Icli.

Th e following sim ple home­made m ixture Is said to rellevs backache and elesnse and build up the Kidneys, I f taken before the stage of B rig h t’s dieeaee: Kluld Extract Dandelion, one- half ounce; Compound Kargon, one ounce; com pound Sym p Sanapartlla, three ouncei. H lx by a u k ln g w ell In a bottle and take In teiwpoonful doaee after meals and at bedtime.

wetl-ksown local dnigglgt Is autborttr that t h ^ ingredt-

^ents.are ntaln iT n f vegetable ex- traettoD ^ harm leM ' to nee, ta d can > be obtained at small cost from aay^gooff jp iw rlp tlo n pkannacy, Those wbo think they havo kidney trouble or suf­fer w ith lame book or weak bladder, should g iro this pro* K rlp tlo n a trla ). as a n barm eann!

poeatbly follow Its use, apd It in' laUl t^ .d R WPiSiere.fof

CHANDLER W. RIKER APPROVES SEWER BILL

T h in k a T ^ o - y e a r E x te n s io n P ro -v la lub la F n lr a u d Sera \ o ^^Joker’*

in I t—C onfp rence IMondny.Chondlor W- Riker. who. with Joaoph

Coult and Frartcls Child, has jeprsserited Newark in the negotiations with P ate r­son concerning the Passolr Valley newer bill a« finally agreed upon by tba P ater son represenlatJvas, eaid to-day th a t the bill in Its amended form was. in so far as he had examined It, fair and aatlsfac tory In every particular. The ram atk was prompted by reference to one of the clos Ing sections of the bill, whirh BceiriH lo negative the flrat Bectlon, where the man datory pr4>vlslon of a fixed date for ceaa Ing the emptying of sewage Into the PfUiSaic River, us referred to In the title, Ig designated as December 1«, 1912.

Sccllonp subsequent to the first and pre­ceding the one referred to as containing a "joker.'' provide for the completion of the work on "Deceinbor \2, IDJQ," or two years prior to the date on which- fu rther pollu tlon of tlie river Is made unlawful. That section provides that tn case the contem plated trunk sewer Ii nut completed on December 12, IDIO, and ready for opora- tlon on th a t date, municipalities lying In whole or in part within the district, and which have not joined In the construction of the sewer, "shall have two years after the trunk sewor if In operation to ceaKc pollution of the river," or that portion of It rneiittonofl In the act.

That, it Is srgued, might be construed to abrogate the provialoiis of section one. which requires “aff pollution to cease on December 12, 19E, and extends thft time to two years after the Indefinite period, at w'hlch lime the sewer might be complete and In operation.

Mr. Riker does not share that view and conslderB the cxtcnalon a reasonable one, as engineering difficulties nr legal rompll- cations might retard the opening of the sewer for actunl operiUloii beyond the contenTDiftbi[d:date. 'Stffilr on extension, he aayg, would be equitable under the cir­cumstances, but, lie added, th a t fealure of the act would receive careful consider ation by the local I'epresenlatives a t i conference on Monday.

LONG DpSIRED FUGITIVE FOUND

------- -T—

Italiaa Sotight AQerd Ac- compEce iii Paisalt County

KiOing ^ b e d Herr.

ADMITS, IlSING AXE ON HAN

MRS. ANNA STAGER DIES AT 92; HADE OWN PALL

.4ueil N n t l r y W o m a n C am e o f Old R F v o ln t f o n a r r S to o k —F a m ily

P r o m l n r n t •n H ln to r r .Mr». Anna. Stager, who had bfren living

al the home of Mr. and Mrs. ThomRa J. Faith, her grandchliaren, a l S3 Wehater Rtreet, died yeaterday after a few daya' mnesa of pneumonia, at the o«e of nine­ty-two yeara, Mra. Btager waa taken aick on New Taar'e Day. She waa the daugh­ter of Daniel and Ann Van Winkle, and waa born a t Centre itreef' and Franklin avenue, Fraifiilln, which now forma part of Nutley. 8he lived there a srea ter part of her life. She waa the eldeat ehlld u f a family ol thirteen.

The SInser family were atnons the fleet of the ortglna) Dutch aettlera to colonin akinf the Hudson KIver, and their names were prominent -aa oflicera during the Revolutionary War,

Mr*. B taser waa the Aral person to run a handloom In Nutley, when ahe made nine aquare yards of homeapun. She pjanted the seeds herself and pulled the flax wUK which she made the linen. ,t t her own retiueat. made just before she died, her body repoaea In the parlor of the F aith home overspread with the Unen she made.

I l ls funeral will take plane to-morrow afternoon thorn the Webater atreel home to the Reformed church of Nutley, with Bov. Dt. Jam es l. Vance, of the North RefonnBd Church, olhelatlnf. Interm ent wlU hetti Nutley.

D a w s hy M e C a rte r C a r r ia g e .K rs, C atherine Luts, th irty -fo u r .veai'S

old,, qf .11 W arwick street, w as knocked daw n by a team on B ro ad 's tre e t, neat Hhirket. stree t, late yesterday afternoon and bruised. The horaei belonsed to Usat ICcCaner, and ware tn chargq of A lb a rt W elfare, h ts coachman. Mrs. L u ts wwa f olBjs tow ard a - tro lley car wb*n..ii3H^ rah her down. Policeman O S araJsB d a olftaen ta n to h e r e sa lit- anoo and: dredged her from .underneathtbe c a tr la t* . They expected to find her x x rttM lP Injured, b u t nho jum ped up

die and said she only felt t h e r le ft srm.ifUid blpt poUae'wsiUUn'es, ,Bnt sc -

■ s« h r .la .'.fftiv s .h t f

W anted In Passato County, on a charge of having been Instrum ental In causing the death of George A. Bwick, of John street, Belleville, who died in the Moun­tainside Hospital, Montclair, December 3 last, after his head had been cut open with an axe, near Richfield, ten days be­fore, Francesco Rogarallla, flfly-llve years old. of It Culler street, waa arTested at hla home last night by Datectlve-Hergeant Carson and Detective CoaJdey. In a leUer Chief of Police Adams recently received from Prosecutor Eugene Emlcy, of Pnler- aon, the latter said Rwlck'n death "would seem like a murder," and further on In the communtcarioii, In referring lo the prisoner now In costody here, sta tes "he Is directly rcspimslble. '

When searched a t headquarters Rosa- mllla had a large number or prinietl cir­culars In hla punseaslon. They contained a plea for funds to provide defeimc for his eon Salvatore, who la Implicated, when he Is placed on trial In Paterson. Ques­tioned about tills, the father said such a move was afoot. He also admitted his trouble with Swick.

"My boy he rntrlta trouble," the elder Hosninilia is quoted as saying, "and ihata fellow pull a gun, an 1 hlta Idni a little bit on da arm and dn head with da a je Only a little bit, lliuugh." He will be sent to Paterson to-day.

rOHM MES’S c i,i:b .M em bers o f F n frn io n iit BspMsf C hitroh O rg a n ise fo r kucln l W e ltn r r ,

Members of the I'-nlrOKiuiit Buptlnl Church Inal night organized a men's club, for the purpose of aiding In church work, and to promote the social relations or the members. The meeting was held In the lecture-nmm of the Vt-|cklllYp I’reaby- lerlan Church, which is behig tempoiarll.v used py Hie Fiilrmount temgregailou until their new house of worship In Fnlrmounl avenue, near Bank atreel, is bulli.

The organIzuHon of the club was allied by Secretary Henry A, Cozzene, of itic Young Men s Chrlstlnn AssoctaHon, isk;; m ed«-an- address orr the value of such, movaraenfs to the moral life of the city.

The following offleore were ohOBeii; 1 U'cs- Ident, J. Henry Bacheller; vice-president, Arthur Honeychurch; secretary, Edgar LeRoy; treasurer, George Hiker.

THE TUOE Of CHUHCOU-F ew P e o p le K n o w How t 's e fn l I t Is

lo F re s e rv ln g H e a lth a n d D eonty .

C osts N o th fn a to T ry .Nearly everybody knows that charcoal

Is tho safest and most efllclent disinfect­ant and purifier In nattire, but few real­ize Its value when taken Into the human system for the same clenneing purpose.

Charcoal Is a remedy that the more you lake of It,the better; It Is not.A drug a t all. but simply absorbs tiie gases and Impurities always present tn the stomach and Intcsllnes and carries them out of the system.

Charcoal sweetens the breath -after smoking, drinking or afier Baling oulons and other odorous vegetables.

Charcoal efYectually clekis and Improves the complexion, it whitens the teeth and further acts as a natural and eminently safe cathartic.

I t absorbs the Injurious gases which collect In the stom ach and tkiwels; It d is­infects the mouth and th roat from the poison of ca tan h .

Ail druggists sell charcoal to one form or another, but probably the beat char­coal and the most for tho money Is In 8 iaa rt‘s Charcoal Ixisenges: they are com­posed of the finest powdered Willow char­coal. and other harm l«w antiseptics to tablet form or ra th er la the form of large, pleasant taatlng loxenges. tbe char­coal being mixed with honey.

'Hie dally use o f these losenges will soon tell In A much Improved condition of tho gsneral health; be tter compleiion, sweeter breath and purer blood, and the beauty of It Is, th a t no poselble harm can reeult from their oontinutd use. but. on the con­trary, g rea t tueneat.

A Buffalo pbyslctan, to speaking of the benellte of chartxMl, says: “l advise 8tii- a r l 's Cbareoai faiaensee lo all patients suffering tram gas tn stom ach and bowels and to clear th e conapHuikui ^ id purify the breaiti, mouth and th roat; T also be­lieve the liver te g n a tly benefited 6y tb* dally liee of them ; they cost b u t twenty- five eente a box a t d rug storee, a l­though. Id some sense, a im ten t prepaia- tlon, yet I believe I get u o re a M betterc h n i f ^ In E tuart'n lioisM fistbnn In any of the tab-

fiend yoar nvn * b>fl addrins 4am ey a ti ' a free trts l yaelmge and See get.Fndrsnffi'

fib*

BOSTON 'BLUE' LAWS SHUT OFF SUNDAY ICE CREAM. ORCHESTRAS AND CASKETSnj

BOSTON, Jftii. 6.-~-Alrea(]y ov<*r LUOD cItlietiB havfl bo<«n aumnronfd to court for violatfoiu of the “blue iawa,” a t tho re- fluU of tho contraveray between D lttrlct Aiiom oy Joim Moran uml Police Comml#- gloner Stephen 0'M e,ira over the alleged vinlatlons of the Sunday atatiUe, and the “blue law” crlile 1e beam ing acute.

The Poderal Government yesterday «tep- ped Into the controversy, when William Heaslaii. an employe a t the federal buUd< Ing, wan called in the Munlelpol Court for cleaning the sldewalkn In fi'onc of tha budding. Assleturit rn ited StateH DIa- triot Attorney Lewli announced his Inten­tion lo defend Hesnlan In behalf of the United S tatei Oovernment, on tho groutul th a t the police of Boetpn have no JurtiN- dtetioh over fedei-al property or fedei'al employee.

The declilone of Special JUMllce Duff, who in trying the l.laxi cn»eB. have bft<-n rem arkable and vnrlri!. The ^ u n found,

for Inetajice, that the transfer of acenerr ■ i f from theatreay after midnight of Sattir* day. Is not a work of necemity. The lection of offal from hotels on Sunday wai declared unlawful. The pinying of <ft* oheairae In the hotels <m Sutiday fa un tev- . - ful.

Boston roust do wtihout loe cream th a t Is delivered by caterers on Sundays, aa this wna held hy the court to bo outs(d%a. the law. Juflltce Duff left for tho con« -.a., slderflUou of the enUre imrololpa! bench the far-reachhm queitfon o f Whether the transfer of baggage by express companies on Sundays in Ipg.il, but ruled th a t transfer of a casket on the Habbath WSW*W' unlawful, unless li was Intended to r thJi'r limnedUiis uee uf the dead. t

The eiwdal cojnmltiee on Sunday laws of the legislature, which Ima been ail jiuimnur. will. U la expected, r s o o t t? ; - , inentl Hiime iliastlo change In tha preteht*''^^ statuic.

THE FLONZALEY QUARTET.A d m ira b le P r r f u r u i a n m a t O h a m -

b e r M usift G iv en lit I k e W o m n n 'n C'lab» E a s t O ra n g e .

AccldsTilii that undoubtedly would have greatly emhamiSMed less rapubK' musi­cians tlmn are the members of the Flon- Kiilcy Quartet, whli'U gave u concert Ih tho sm aller audllDrlum hi the home of the Wumiin’s Club In Eaal. Orange last nlghi. did not disturb the eqiiiinlinlly of that or- ganlsuilon. and were not allowed to inter­rup t Us performances. Twice during the evening tlie hall was plunged luto dark­ness by the failure of the electric lights to buni properly, but the musicians bf'Ing letter perfect In tlie scores they were in­terpreting continued to play umll the st- rallc Hghtltig apparatus reHiututd business. There was no halting of wavering lii thr work of the enlerlalners, whoso familiar- Ity with Beethoven and Dvorak eiiablua them lo complute the performfinces wllli- out tb« aid of lllumlimted pages.

The concert servctl to Introduce the Flonf.'iley Quartet to many music lovers In the Oranges and because of the abllUy discloHttd by this orKunlsatlon rui'iilshed such enjoyment as la to be derived from artfu l Interprctajlon of some of the liner things in rliamber muidc. Tiho qhartst Comprises Adolfo Betti, first violin; Alfred) Porhoji. Rceond violin', l.^go Ara, viola, and Iwau d'An'hambeau. 'cellist, and was hiduceit lo cf)me to thla counti'y several years ago by F. J. de Coppol. a wealthy resident of New York, who maintained it for hiB own enjoyment as ho many art- lovlng millionaires In the old world have supported orcheatraa and other niuslcnl organlxallona In the Interest of a r t or the furtherEince of their own pleasures. L4ant season It made Us first public appearance In New York, and although having lu aland the test of compartaon with tho Kiirlscls, the Boaton Symphony Quartetr the Maruro Quartet, the Olln Mead Q uar* ' ti‘t and other bunds devoted to the ex- ploiiailon of chamber music, Immediately won tlie recognlllon merited by Ita arllstlc accompUshmeiits.

The program preaented last night In- ciud««d Heclhoven'e quartet In F minor, pp. Ji&: Dvorak's quartet In R flat, op, 61; Glazouiinw's “CourunU*" and “ Polka," and a “Berceuse,V by Ostfn-Baokeu. In the Beethoven number, which waa w rit­ten In lltlO and Is the eleventh In the sertea of sixteen <iUHrtets for which the world Is indebted to that great and versatile creative inueictan, the players showed their quality fn no uncertain manner. The composition Is one of the moat Beethov- enlsh of all that' composer's works, and (he virile spirit in It was finely reallxed by the FlonxaJoys. In fact, the work of these musiplans la more notable for vigor rather than refinement or delicacy In ex­pression. They do not allow their energy, however, to Interfere, with the production of a smooth and agreeable tone or to Im­pair the contour of the musical phruae. ThHr blood evidently Is not lacking an abundance of red corpuscles, and they vltullse rniher than sentfinentnllan all they essay In the proclamation of melody and style in compusltloTis In the chamber music form.

One result of their long assoclntlon to­gether is a precision In attack and a unanimity and a Hympathnilc accord in performance that secures clean-cut and finely-balanced work. Such technical dllH- culilcs AS the Beethoven and Dvorak erm- poettlons offer are overcome with tho <"awi' born of absolute confidence tn their abil­ity to cope with the most exacting Bt-oroH. and owing lo this facility their pSayinR had a icuhnlcu) fiiilnii Ibal, cuijplvij VklUi the lemperamentBl energy witlj whicli ii was Imbued, mndn it very ingratlaUng. Tholr Wrongest appeal wrh exerted In the Dvorak quartet, whose proiioimced melo­dies, piquant rhythms, bold coloring, effer- vesceut splrll and striking coninists were revealed In a performanre that w'aa cx- lillarallng by reason of Its rt‘ash and gentral brllllanny.

The appearance of the Flonzalays last night WHS particularly Inti reHllng to many In the aodlence owing to the fact that the Knelaels will give a coricert In IjU' Womiin H f’liih Ijall next Wednesday even­ing and the Buseiun Quartet wHI be heard Ibore Tuesday night, January 16.

.1 --- ........—

KANE LODGE INSTALLATION.

a l l o w s w r it a g a in s t e n rC o o rt t t ra u U A p p llc t lo B ti> R»t |m s „

A Rlerm en*. A ctloo to F o r - P hoto F lrehoD ze SIto. '"'ll

Upon applleatloii of Elwood 0. coime.l fo,' Flmrle* Harry, a property owiu'r. Chief Jiietlre Gunmiere granted 1 will of eerllomrl In Ilie Supreme Court; elreiilt thie ninrnlns to ro'vlewr the of ilio Cnmnion Council In paselos a > rewilutlon aulhorlzlng tho puruhaK 6 8 ^ property at Mt. Proapeet iinu BlwoofiivJa Hveime*. upon wliloh to erect a fire art* gine-hoiiee. '..T-

The property namoj ektenls fop fifty feet on Mt. Prospect avenu,, ana U5 te f l ■ ‘ ' on Elwood avenue, and by a resolution adopted by Common Council In June, purchuse was atilhurlzed from H o r tp |l , j^ Gr'Keen for $4,800. Mr, I,.eary arsued -th lf^^e- couiiell hod no authority to buy property " ■ for the liouip, but th a t such power w as -=5, vi aRal In the Board of Pirn Commission, era. l ie maintained th a t If such pow ijt,. . exinta II must be used by ordinance not hy pnentns a resolution, and fu rtts t! Sd clalrai'd that no money was avolla^likji p ' either for the purchase of the sroiind,pr.ko* the bullilInK of the englne-lioiise. ■

Mr. l-earj' remarked th a t notloe of tfifi'™* appllcniion had been given to city ooim- aei, but there would Ire no ofurosilloii to jthe granllna of a h e writ, wl)lch Is to bO argued ki two-weeks.

■ e»lti(;"T ■

OBJEqORS SCBEPIpC o a r t A llo w s ^ n b s t l t n t i o a o f A a

e d n e s s u u s In V a l ls b s r s r l i .'■ ■i,Sew er C ase . ' ■-I'ek;:,':

Andrew B. FItzsImons, representing tb s . epeelal committee of the Vallabqrgh Iltu' provemenl AsHoclatlon, and Colonel >Livingston Price, repreaesllns o ther p r6 ti" “ 'T; erty dSmei'S, appedfed before Juflgfff*" Adame to Circuit Court A, to-dAy, n f i .Ol' fllcd the achcdiile of IK objectori’ natnsi'w £ agBlnal the auessm enta for eewer* re-' -F ' cently itood. An order was also ssryM '- upon City Attorney Child, and revIsM a itj amended reiianne were Substltulied authorlty of the court, no lw lthatandlssr v>. the olijecihms of tho city attorney. «-?fl

The naaeeamenta so far aa conflrmaij, have been entered against the reapectire ■ ',properllee on the hooka of the city aotOfi-‘" '“ troller and are a lien thereon.

i n

Tie JiMt BstNaklsg Brisk !■ tbs(if

|S* rA3 '- ■

jw M m a rrY -'s i# ;I Bsn, CsfH sad iM tssnaIr '’oolt

I .................. — 11 itiiiff'dj: J...... ' ' ■'■■’MttojS.-'?;

Hoarseness or loss of voics ' u.fr immediately relieved. Noth- ing excels this simple remedy

D ir f iy 't Pure M alt Whiskey

catescotighi, colds, grip, asthma, broti- cbitis and consump' t io n .' I t stimulates tbe blood. The great- t s t known heart tosla.

''Vf 0 'IP'rtl t f

WINTER RESORTS.

P roK ram FwUotva € rre « i»onli*B a t F o r t r - s l i t l i A nnnal

B atherlng^ of L o ra l MoMono.Kam? l.ndgf- No. G6, F. nn<l A. M..

Us fofty-nlxih unnuEil Inutiillallon niglit ol l[H roomn on Broail Hirwt. Tlit» altemljjiu’f’ wiik large, and those bcHldeH wlrnoBslng the ueramonl^p anjuyrij ii musical program.

The entfTlaInmeiit op^^ned witli n irlfi on thr organ, piano liHt] 'cpIIo, hy Milton A. 8mlU>. Arthur E. Whdu iind Ibfb^rt Jackson. An Invocation Ity llin .•hapJuIn of tho lodgt*. Rev. William T. Llptori, fol­lowed. Uftirge W. Harman, mas^er of Kane Lodge, gave ilie siilutail'ia. “Jn Absencf''' Was rendercil hy a qu/mei, com­posed {if ('harles Morse, Rj< hanl Neuli? amj Mssars. Jaekson and Smlih.

The inatailatloa ifieri ln'*k phice Wiil- iarn n. Rul&n wufl Insiadiiig rjfiieer ft.nd wan m p IbIcU by FnaltTir’k w FViul. Kol- lowltig (he coremorileH niiJMlca! fin«l vocal numberfl were contrlbured by Oiiiirlea H, Stewart, llftnry VV, Fgiiei .!>■.. Mr, WHde and Mr, Morse. Ile\ Louis Shreve Oa- hurne. chaplain iif Ht. John's Lodge, spoke on llip Masonic order.

Tbe ctiinmlHec in rlmrge of tha fervlcea was ennuamed of t!fiftrlea E. Coffin, LouisJ. Rurgessor. Mllion A. SmRh and Carl L. JftCM>bsen. Tlie uffieeis Innialled were;

Rximoii E. O^Ihs, master; Charles H. Htewart, senior warden: H^^nry WV Bgner Jr.. Junior warden; Louis J. Bur- gsBser. Ireasurar; P rank Tanner, .sec­retary; Rev. WilUam T. Llpton, chaplain: Carl L, Jacobsen, Senior deacon: CharleaK, Coffin, junior deacon; Evan, L. Tarn- ]yn, fletiloi' master of c«remontesi: William H. Allen, Junior m atter of ceremunies; A rthur A. Styvers, senior steward; Henry A. Slrobell, junior steward; Frederick Schafer, marnhal; Milton A. Smith, o r­ganist; EteWltt C. Nichols, tyler; tfueteea, Theodore C, Hammond. IflOT; Wllllanf H. Barnet, 1908; W alter H. Van Winkle. ]m-. finance committee, David D. Rutan, Honry N. Woodward and M erritt G. Perkins.

COSMOS LODGE ANNIVERSARY

ATLANTIC CITY, Jf. J .

HOTEL DENNISATLANTir C tT l , %, J .

OPEiN THnOtJCJKOUT THE YEAR.Ovfr t;iOO,<XK> fXp{*nd<y1 In Impfovcntentji

■'l lUlonn ]a«i MuBon. On* hunir<Kl pii'’ 'vjuf buthfi, with finn and fronh

W.^f.TKR J, BVZliY, Owner and PwprlSter.

Atlantic City, N. J.A L W A Y S O P E N .

O n t h e B e a c h . F i r e p r o o f , a

S e n d f o r L i t e r a t u r e . •

The Leeds Company*i- ir '# '-;:;,,-,, “ Afir, :

H addon H a llA tla n t ic C ity , N . J . ■;ALwayii open. On ocean front.

Courtnnus attnnt(on. Homel1k« •anrotmdlH#^ ' KJvery tiomfort.

Booklet and calendar on ■ppllcatlon.

Leeds & Lipptneott.

UlY

r.*a

VlaaDnIn O rg a a la « tlt> n t a C « l a b n ,eT h lr4 y -scT « n th B ir th d a y In F eb ­

r u a ry w ith H a tr r ta tn m e n l .In orlebratlon of ila thlrty-sevflnth an ­

niversary aa a Masonic body. Cosmos Lodge No. IM, P. and A. M.. will give an antertelnm ent and reception In the New Auditorium, Saturday night, Feb­ruary 8: Plans so far arranged provide for two hours of vaudeville and a formal reception and dance to the Grand Lodge of Hew Jersey and iMsIttog Masonic dig­nitaries.

The vaudeville feature 1* to be a llrat- claae entertainment. The eommittee In charge of the anniversary la composed of H arry B. Tolen, H. J. Yatman and George Holden Crane.

K rery mamber of the grand lodge of the ittete, every m u te r dud the offieere of all lo ^ e * In this jurledlollDn will be Invited to be presenL (Bnoers of the grand I<k have slr«*dy slgntiled' their Intention to assist Ooemoe to make the affair a grea t eucoeas; .

Coart Calls f«e m ndlar.The call d l fiuprem* Coiirt Clrcutt easea

to he U M betoie Judge Adams Is Otretot Z MtSfari 1 ^ be the toihnii^: Noa. m.

O A I v K I V H A . r , X ellUTIilL AND SA N A TO H ILH , '

ATLANTIC CITT.One uf ih* brlok and atael build-inx^, with avery oumfort, Alwaya open. A lways r«Bdy. Alwaya busy.

{ffiarlboronsb-SlenlKiniDlSSOLCTtO ff NOTIOS.

BTATB o f NEW JKRSWT-EWpartmattt^l^e^ S tata—Cartlflcata of disiolutlon. '

To a ll to whom thew preaetitt aa*y eoftes.-w greollny.

Wbereoa. It appeam tg my ■atirfaotloq,^ by . duly authantioBtod pword of tha jpiuoa«aTna'^» for th t voluntary dUwoluHoa th«reof by unanlm ouf colMwnt of all the Biockhowerv, ^fiMit;#} in my oBce. toa t Ihs TJohenM -OriM Company, a oorpoiation of this Btaw._ w*NTJ.i,i^ pclnclpe] oclce lo oltuoted a t Ne, S S e l u i a otreot. In the city ol E sat ^ n g e , « u n to i r t . .v goHez 8te t4 of New J e n e r (New Jersey B ests-,, tm tion and TniK cvnipm y being toe s ; •ihereln and In charge ‘h w ^ . procew may be servedK has complied, w itn reeolrem enu of "An »ctt,o a i (revision of 10Wn, pisU m lnary t o . . t a ^ ^ , j . .Issuing of tats certl^am of dloiolnwe. ., .,-12. -

Now” Itrtrttfoi^ OkAiasoa. Mkof tWste of the ^ s te i t New n n o y , ^ , certify that the, siW.tCTporitlw oo,.-,

MdieMrtle

vSsreet .2 haesJsaate set my hnak dad .sfiMed U v efflelai sasu'A

Page 8: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

%:NEWARK EVENING NEWS. SATURPAY, JANEAK^ -5. iwriy

v i,*.':?' '■ <-l'"V al ‘

| w of Work Done and Owtiook for Future in the Religious E « Wbrld-taymen's Greater Interest.

l if e E 1906 AND-1907.

th . h u in n ln v tif tb» NOW Towr I In the Rnnuin Caihollo church orange- mjeak on 4 ‘ *'>* bOBlnnln* Ot too ,.^„rch ...... . al- >

„ __ I Banred Heart. Now -Wounded," L in t;B a p tist j organ poallude, .March Romaiiio, Cliarlo*

Rev, Chnrlea F. Stanley, pnntor o( the j*Qounod, ^i Kirih iinptlat Church, to-morrnw morning

chmon o t nl) rell«k)u» hottiea ar* _ forward In the conalderatlon of plan* which arc to InHucncs the

duriiis’ this twelvemonlh, and __,j aiudyfoff the r«llfto»" movcinenU of thi'yM T JiBrt clo»ed, to-find wherein In* lueeea* are to continue and what new mdW^ent* arc calling for auppurt. The

"The Patha of the New------------------------- - . ..........Year '' The cxiJOHltion of the Hllile-

S K X ^e*C uL -C ,?iho"R ^^ 'and t’h.*e .ro j cv.-nlr,K Hu- pu-t'.r will being aent out, aupporlwl In iart;'- IW'■ | HeM lce of (h< U ee.i of I r u t i r " h k h by the t'.itlioUc Mlsaionof,'- I ’nlce, . , ■ "O- j ,.n.|«ir>vl for hy tlio Kvum,' lo-al .V.1II-

........................................................................ I I , , , . , . Tin- wi-i-k will hu ubnerved by aerv-

piAt yanr waa an eventful on* fur the ewfobc* ahnig Mveral lino*. Noiah|y

! were the awakonWg of the laynivn efitftS churohe* to r*aJl*ed rcepoMibllliy $ 4 l endeavor, th* Impetua whleh' clmreh . t i 3 ^ and federation novem ente received, th* arim iln t of a new th tereat in-mlaaioii*. fagme and foreign, and the Increaec ■ In doBnlte ' evangelUtlc eltort. All theae pniniae to he keynate* of rellgloug ad-

In Araadca duMng -IMR,Xaader* lay th a t there ha* never before

t i m In tWa country ao Wtdnapread and dwktl# A movement apfong th e laymen ofluVTVdfiVdMt OfAp/taifr'View »<«;•■*«*• -e-t l* atenrehe* >* a t th* preuont time. A feJl ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ' ■■dWea of tbia,BU>v*iB*«t la raferred to a* a BWtAttltOda W M B y m * uoty toward thgAlwaT, Tba.lay>tMn. look to the n>ln* M arafM ip lrttualleadersh ip , hut they are taWag-Up, W , thetnaeivca t^e direction o 6 it« n la r and taalerlal phiutea of Chtla-

■ i .work, tooluding church aupport aiid *' MatMuuuie « f imaalonary egort. Thl*

* o f praotl Ally all th* men'* organl- , WWlr fomyad. ae dltMngtM«he(l ja*e oygagladffod*dlke tlio..nrdtlnr*

Mrt ‘ th tI, .til* B rotbtrhood Andrt^w ung

a* d»*c’‘ *on«j«ttittentid orgunipi* i w t t l* :W«rt*y: tuld »h .Paul- hioUier.

in the Method!*! jUtfdsWit^and other*,Icb are doing InercnBlnglyiuccepaful I*, along ip lrltoa t line*, ■ • “

HlilJJitttharttood.Bnaibltea IMh ihn *ptr* t tw l and the mnwrliil in ll« ouUitiea w aiJa-Th* Mery* Ijcague of th e I 'n U ^ p jeM ytefttn tJtRrfeh'i h(*f tf'-»tmtlnF'ofo gjigaMfoA Joule hMeauAJUttU -UAdlttoUio talk: of locreoilng th e amount of contrl- kMHtii-’fo r e h u i^ 'a h f f m iM lon suigictht., Tlili<ialV*T*kll*t SCBthertinDtl Is not unw HteitilA TraibyterlAn At itg .ptutuo., dtho nel*.Bpf«i»I)al ,*rt*i>i*M(*P",tlty.MtAk,uryBopitfo. nan **t Itatdf vhe JeHnltp ,tu*k* of tradSlM JAymeit' -(or . fkindny-aeliciul.

r fd tl aSThy'tjfadefi ’ra tlfjsaihn*a f r tm te to hlilipdrt * **>*•’

■ a*» iiW 6j(i»*n4 l« t ' r t a ‘ i i H f '- a - i u t m r f c y oM ininfA 'hrM irch '^fH rU uiw r"'

UnMAaitta nMOnaiCdlfrrrentrtHMawAolUa*: wMati M w # been sBrihui chiggly oirolaa.fof « w m U ^ e * ja jtce lt*^

duet the mlBKlouB In th"' v.-nioo* o*o- ce*e*.

During last year missionary .vimtu-i* received nuch Impetua that Iscdcr. look for n BtlH wider Intefeitl, espi-oiolly In foreign nilinion*, during tliu twelvemonth. .The celebration of til* lljiyitai-k centennial hail inucli to do with the nrtiuiied In tc irs t‘Inst ■ year, hut other came# were the jubilee calebrirtlon of rolMlon* In Indln, which occ-.ur;d In the cloalng day* of 1906, the centennial colcbratton of mlMlon* In Chinn, to be held In a few montti* In Shanghai; the ac­tivity of the Toung People's ■mlealonary. and the Student Volunteer movement*, and th* iiimtner conference* of thoae and other organisation*.

Among young people'* *ocletles there have been few movonient* of .note.daring the pu*t year, nor are mapy ohaiMtea In prospect. The Raptlgt Yiiung People's Union lift* been put upon a better basis and now gives promise of stability and growlb. Th* Epworth l,«agu# of Ihe Hfcthodlet*. the Luther League of the t.ulhpran young people, and other denom­inational organisation* of similar nu- U!fe are continuing eacellent work. 'The United Bootety of Christian Kndeaver (tart* the new year with sew ral new lander*, although thoy. are neWf m'ty m Uirlr nfhfle*,. not 1^ 'h e ir Identlfloiitlon with Cmrliijinn Ktiflrnvor.

m . ' i i f . M m S E R V I C E S

i WUX JO T B ^ N E R A L

, w a ik . ;furth«r j. rocvi wwww wWf'itia -*■

r l ^ iW* year. The. ihfbirtt yeut,

irtan__ '^ ^ ^ ^ ib y te i^ it i i nhs-irla<rS‘"'W raab/terlaB ■ bodle*;

-'■idatmoidtah'aif. hsit -May, g tittl May 'of-ithl* ttwn- both- bodies imbip.uf. Hi# Pr*»-

____ lorlty fo lhajCufo-.

S t tO d bfocip.ttw .th»WBi.-.\>ut,Ahvil.W tm yTitii* auddiiaa. t t I'g -Wbirtuhll^ely thnf tS f^ M o n tl^ l P reab^terlS ) CbtWh will n lW 'jein tn» largw pWpAhyierian tttdy,aggigotlon W 'lh K e«a**''may 1» sgken in

Ctfo.'ggoimBatt TinHiD-Of . th* bungiega- tlonal, United i to th rp n .a n d M.lhudl»t p ro teatant d*»g|lblhalkf#f advtnced aati* '» '?*bA ^«io3S5£p5aiit>* S

rattMT th an 'dfgaitfc- ttafoii. ; iT.i ill igwisIlkrelUigIL QJr-U>ei^eUitrj|lpt

l^ ia S aUhintn UWi, w fc^liitW 'dctitl^; imay 1» -a tor. Bagttirtg and Etec UapiMl,!

are gattihg oloeay.' tagoliher and are e i- p * ^ t t and rotvunlon.Saptlst l e a ^ a p f d l j f ; ^ . ^ > r Dlsclplea

nliolplal J r t l » fonnSellhat U(® **.e ham- - nfi*uc» mat-

icijv* jfo .,«#S ral meei-oolili^idia in tmib fgafitiSiitt* toward

__ _________of gatifnil ionvention*before Whica' ttaWn anC'W h'dr H'eueral

tlOO. aw B lpf'A t* , t« cXiWlmontend h a v * -d p llo ^ a d intft’W "J• .*______ _ A.h.,'_Ia.Ab* ****I«»mMii riM gif

M an y € 'iiu»*li** to A b a n d o n (In a to o i ' l o r V n rlo o * H e jia o aa —F U o iitte

t o D a te S o g g e s le d .For the second time In half a-ceiittny

filer* will h« up observance of the Wcok Of I ’rayer bj6 holding (ifternooti lialon iiervlcee In '.the -.First: Preabyterlanrhu rch , n e i t feck . ThI* season will be tibserved In iimeieyn different cpuntrles of the world n» a.ispeclul week of-prnyer. nnd’the topic* need wUl be those arranged and sent out by th* International Evan­gelical Alliance, -

Bev. Dr. David .R. Fraaer. pastor of the- Flr*t ohuEch. upon whom th* pe*pon»tbll- lly ha* long laid, euptelned, when a*Ued about • the Kferviee*. tha t he wa* tired odt having' to malt* all the arrungemente, and. added tbAt n* thought it was time .n^oe gf the. younger clwgyfncn took hold. IJe declared Wn.ltLthe service* were becom­ing Itwye poorly attended each year, and Tiora thle be 'giuheted the Protestant* of KawfU'lt UJd tlq't want, the afternoon *pe- cjal'SeethlW '- H e "»'<* he thought It wa* r tu c h " tift? |^ /th stop them oft suddenly

h’cB In the h.nnes of imnnhcr* on the evimlng* >'f Monrtiiy, Tuesday, W ednes­day. Thui-oduy and Friday evenings tlie Brnice* will be In the church. .Announce- mrnt of the hume* rttslgmiled will he

‘jnade a t the service* to-morrow.T he l/jom of Thought" w|ll he the sub-

j,.ef of the sermon lu-morrow evening by Itev. peorge E- Lombhrd. a t the Fulr- nmuiit Baptist Church, Thursday nlglit R«v. T. K, T yaonjn home mission w ork­er from the West, will spoiik on "Okla- h'.irna.A The young people's Bible class will be resumed Tuesday nlgfit and the subject of the study will be "Self-CoD- quest." ,,

Hey. Pr. Thomas J. Vlller* will speak a t ' th* PAldle- Memorial Baptist Church to-tnoiTOw on "A Prayer for the New yaar." and will receive new members at the morning aervlce. In the evening he Will Speak on 'T h is Year Also."

Several .traveling salesmen who are Christian workers, will spi'uk at the eer- vlce In the Bouth Baptltt ChuMh to-m or­row evening Q. W. Perm, of Sprlngflcld, Mss*., anil C. E. Bertholf. of Boston, arc among those, on the prograin. TosJ' "f*' memhetm of the ''Gideons." a Christian order or Ha.lf'smen.

In rhi* Clinton Avenue Baptist < liurHi i lo-morrostf niornlnif the pn-nmv, Hoy. i Samuel J. SUevlnifton, will pP'ach hlfc

(tret mmlverenry «<ermon and rhe mnnihiv comrmmion servtee vii]\ be iuP'[yih#yrF"r** ‘<*lvefj; The -comjnunUfti uiDjr" liiir wll- bi* for Gld Mlnlnter.V Home 8(urUt>. In ibe evening a Mow Yenr ,a*-r- rtioii "'111 1*0 prcarlu‘d',t>n “Thunk <4od »nd Tjike Courage." The flubjeet of tin* puiiyer-rDfietlng Tuesday evening will be ■■'BuptlBtJt and Ihe TfkilnlnK of the iMln- In lry '■ WedneBduy ovvnlnef ihere will 1h‘ a Tneeilng for apecinl prayer for the w«)rk gf the Bible School and Thursday evening a , meeting of .tho M#m'B Loatfue will be held. Ill which Senutor E verett Colby will epealc.

ClonsrcsAtt^nal

i tb w fo.Vr'l'.fKfW Kfa)iually ‘‘n»*te out . W ITmer^bMlcves wlfb many proml-nemt, c'terKyrpfn of eyshgelloal ■'ill'over the coup.try, he says, th a t the

The week of prayer services will begin to-morrow morning in the Belleville Ave­nue Congregational Church, with a ser- plon by the pastor on "God's Call to HI* f to p le ." At the evening service th* sub­ject will be "The People’s Call to Their God."

Beginning -to-morrow the sermon them es In the F lra t Congregational OhuTcb; will have relation to the Sunday-school lesson of the week. Rev. T. AIrd Moffat, the minister, has adopted this method of church Instnictlon bccauBe he believes that the thoughts expressed in each aer- moii will l>f moi'e readily retained and iippreolaled It they tire not disturbed by other themes a t the Sunday-school. The sermons for to-morrow are from the first chapter of Genesis,

A|SIKA|*»-BPvInga -T tioate* I the esti

WetiS of pl-aj'cr' siiailld be changed from the £li<l of the year to the week between Palm ' HtihOay and ISaster-commonly "alttsl "hcly week," At the present lime of th e year, he aas's. the weather l.t usually bad: .buslnc-'* men are extremely busy and eyeryliidy Is tired out after the holiday*. He think* th a t much more good coukl l*e accompllahed by observing ho'y week.. bfCan.se then- the whole cun*- Msn world, Irreepectlve of denomination, woiiltl be on It* knw s a t once.

At the North Refoimed Church, where th# week of prayer i* usually observed by .II service every night, foete will he no ineellrig*. Rev. I» . Ja m e s 'I . Vance and hi* omclal boards- feeling tluU because of th e many extra meelliig* lu c e ie b ra lto fjf rptfent golden Jubilee it will be w laee.tfot'da bmd anb inore.. There will be 's p ^ t iT service* every night during holy week insfoad,

The -WdodsWe gifoup “f Proteslant cHucch** will hold no special union prayer

Uttivtrsallit

ibelf mifgMnairy fgKdeW a#i>tv«f*arie* of next M ar to t A.geiuiral.mMUnft,

In CxnudA there l* A, wMl-advancert

n**» •'•V —a------ , tservice* ettho*. ,a* ha« been th ^ ^ cuMoro for ; j e a r i f ' Christ Reformed Church je

"Opportunity" will be Rev. Henry R. Rose’s subject to-morrow morning In the Church u( Ihe Redeemer. At night Lewis Armstrong, of New. Yoi'K, will sing the songs of Austria-Hungary and Bohemia, assisted by a large ehorus.

The music at the Church of the Re­deemer to-morrow will be ns follows; Morning—Organ prelude, Communion, Scotson C lark; processional, "Jeruaalam . the Geldon;” anthem by chorus. "How IftivelV Are the Messengers" (St. Paul), Meadelssolin; prayer response. "Row Down Thine Ear," Edward A Clark; of­fertory, quartet, "Lead. Kindly !.l- Dudley Duck; organ postliide, Procei al, Eduard Batiste. Evening—< n prelude, Variations on Theme i"Jer,.aa- fem, the Golden"), Dr. Sparks; prooe*- slonal, "Jerusalem , the Golden;" anthem by oteirUA “I Will Mention Thy Loving Kindness," A rthur Bulllvan; olTer|pry, phorus, "Btlll; BUR with Thee.'^ A i^ w

:inovemsnr to w a rt 0>* uBlbn of the Coii- gngatlonallBta, fh* 'M ethodist* and thew m giytertans,' Action baa been taken ikTwverBl of Ihe cenetnb Vodles. all of:

SXM.1AM frtliS+ j'fimmlUPAPI f i t a ^ W e to utdoti. . j p l i t comrrltteefa n (Oindylng the problem* . Involved In

bu»y arrasging for lie dedication of the new buHdfog. whloh will take place a week from M onduynlght. There will also ba n a pulon- aprvlces in the P rotestant churches south of Lincoln Park, common­ly known ns the Clinton avenue group.

One of the few groups of churclum to observe the week of prayer will be ihoao

' In ih« Noi'th End, on or nanr Hellevlllc

Footej soprano boIoi "The W ithered Proch; alto solo, "aoiigs MyRose," Dr. . . u , . . . , ------------- ---- »-

MotlMs'dTaught Me," Anton Dvorak; tenor solo, "My Native Land" (from "F atl- -jiitxa"), Fran* Von Buppe; m iartet. "O

Pres^vterianTTh* anthem at the First Presbyterian

Chuyeh Tabernacle lo-morrow morning will t«> "These Aw They that Came," 1‘a tty Stair, and In the evening the an­them, ^"Crossing the Bar,' Cleaver, will he sung.

Rev. John McDowell, pastor of the P ark Presbyterian Church, to-mo*roW evening will begin a scries of six sermons, cntlthid "a tm igh t Sermons." The Intro- iluctory topic will be 'To Die Alan Who W ants to Make the Most of the New y ea r.” The other subjects «U1 be: Janu­ary 13, "To the Man Who Hus a Contin­ual Struggle with Himself. ' Januare 30, •"To the Man Who Ha* Lo*l Hope,” F?b- n » iy 3, "To the Man Who Has 1“ Fight D osbl;" i ’ebruary 10, "To the Man Who H as • S u ffu re d F e b ru a ry IJ. "To the Man

-Who H as Never Found Christ." During tho morning service to-morrow, Paul Pe- try , the precentor, ,wlll sing -'Glory to God," bv Bussl-PBcqla, and "God's Prom-

)lB<.," by Fran* AjJt. At the evenu^ ser-, vice he wilt sing "Lead, Kindly Light,‘by Pughe-Evans, dnd "By and By, ' by Ashton. .

The following prograin of music will .tie rendered nt the South E'lirk Presbyte­rian Church to-morrow: Morning—Organ p rH u^T 'M cd ltfillo n ," Duhols. anthem."0 UofS My God," Klein; response, "O Fulhoi*, Let Tliy Will Be Dim,-," achll- Ihig; oVfertory. quartet. "The King of ijiv e ." Shelley; organ po.silude, "Post- fodtiim,"^ Merisel. Atlernoon - Organ

''Tnmnn?rer.'‘ Hi*ljurn:uiti; an- Hnhu,"Oil High, the Slurs,'- Rhelnhcrger;

■imtlK'tn. "Hrciist the Wove, ' Cliristlun SchiiM-kcr; nfsponse, "lU'ur My 1’fayer," rtced; olfertolv, chuir hymn. "Lead Wa Home, F athert" Thompson; .irgim poxt- lurtc, "Magxhkxit." Cl»u».-.iu.in.

The imisical ,ogtigram ut Mie First Pres- hvtei-lan Church' tor to-m.irrow will he: Mornliig-Prirtudei "Ofrertory rte 3t. t-c- . lll.'i " Gdsun; ^ntliem. "Pniyer of Thunksglvlng;" bas.s solo. "A New Heaven and a New Earth. - Gaul; offer­tory. Aniiantlno, C ham et; pontlude. Allegro (Sonata V.), Gullnuint, “ veil- Sng—Pi-Bludo. "Benedlcllnn .Nuptlale, Du­bois; anltumi, Sanutiis. Gounod: quor-t f t "W hat A re ■ These,” Sbepord; offer. fory,-A ndante, Kroeger; postlude, I-aiisl)co, Dutiols. ,

Rev. Robert R. LUtcU, Pn*t«r of the United Presbyterian t hurch. who has been on a Visit during the holidays to his old home in Pennsylvania, has rcturiwd and will haye. charge of the service to­morrow, preaching on a theme appro­priate to the new year in the morning. In the evening his topic will be Maall- nata" and wlll .be directed especially to the Men's Ixjague of the church and tb»lr friends. The AdeJphJan Mole Quartet will have charge of the praise service.

"The Discipline of Obedience will bo the morning subject of Rev. Joseph F. Folsom at the Clinton Avenue Presby­terian Church to-morrow- In the evening hlB theme will be "W hat Is that In Thine

*^Tbe" music ip the Second Presbyterian Church lo-morrow morning will be; Prel­ude, Dela Tombeile; anthem, "We Praise Thee O God," Mlelzkl; offertory, How Lovely Are the Messengers." uuartet, Mendelssohn; poellode, Fantasia. Pal- lerl. In the evening this will he heard Preldde. due, "Adoration." Biirow*!, violin and organ; nnlliem. "O Be Joyful In the Lord," Foote; ollertory, I-iirgo, Han­del. violin and organ; duet. My Foitn laioks Up to Thee." Schnecker. tenor and bliss; duo, Nocturne, Chopln-Siiraa9ite. pustlude. Tours.

Rev Dr. Pleasant Hunter, who left the pastorate of the Fourth Presbyterian Church, New York City, to return to the pastorate of the Second Pc“ byterten Church this city, which he left fifteen years ago, will begin his work- here to­morrow, preaching a t both the morning and evening services In the local church.■ Following will he the music a t the High Street Prcabi'terlim CllXirch to-morrow: M om lng-O rgan prelude in P, An^vus; anthem. "Send Out .Thy Light, Gounod, "Qlge..Altns of .Thy .Goods.'■ arranged from Weber by- Dr. ;.:F, H. Elekhhrn; jpdhtlude In C minor, Duncan. Ev*nlng-t OtFan, "Pastor*!," Leybach; anthem, "Loveiy Apfiear/' Gounod; organ, "Bong -Without Words," Berrldge, postlude in F, 'Werrtr’ann.

CutbtraiAt Grace English Lutheran Church to ­

morrow the service will be of a New Tear character. Rev. M. S. W aters will speak In the morning on "The Manifestation of Our Lord to the Magi." In the evening Ihe sermon will be the tenth In a eerie* on "The Beginning* of tpe Church," dealing with the contact of Christianity with cul­tured heathenism of the day. Thursday evening the Lutheran League of the church win hold an Illustrated lecture ,ln the church by Rev. M. S. W aters on "H is­toric Jersey."

There will be two services to-morrow at Bt. M atthew 's Evang^U^'al U iithtrapChurch, Gcrmair In the mprninff und KngllHh hv tho evening. At the lormef the pastor v/tll preach on the bleMlngs of sthc New Testam ent church and m the evening will give nn txpoftlilon of ttA lessons of the new year. Tueedhy even­ing the church bourU W'lll ineet and•Thursduy evening the church will holdits meeting. . « x

R<fv. H. 8. Hhoadei, paBtor of Trinity Lutheran Church, will have as the theme of hlH sermon to-morrow morning "The V lilt ocf the Wise Men." At the evenlj^ eervkce the Senior Luther League will re­peat the cantaui* “The Wondorfvil Slory^''

RESPONSES 10 V A T iaN ’SUOTE.Protest by Pope Against Actions in France Brooebt Sympetiiy,

but No Aid-Anxiety Concerning Germany.

metboaistThe musical program at the C ei^rjl

Metbodlst Church to-morrow will be as follows: M ornlng-Ofgan prelude, Rheln-liergcr; anthem , “Brightly Hhines Another Sabbath D ay,” Eyer; response, Schilling; duet, soprano and alto. "0 Morning Ijim l." Phelps: organ postlude, Handel. Evening—Organ preluda Shelley; anthem, 'Lighten Our Darkness." Cuiitance; an-

tlinn , "The Radiant Mom," .Voodward; offertory Iij'mn, selecLed: organ postlude, ach'.iinann,

A two week*’ series of special evangclls- tie services will be begun a t the Dashlfell M. E. ChurcTl to-moiTO-w evening. The meetings will be In charge of the pastor, Rev. H erbert C, Lytle, who will be as- slated by A. J. Ver Boy, who will have charge o'f Hie large union choir. Rev. Dr, J. M. Meeker, prc.sldlng elder of the New­ark district, will preach lo-raoirow even­ing. Wednesday next, Rev. Dr, J. B. Faulks, of Madison, Is to be the speaker, and Friday Rev. J. D. McCormick. The meetings will begin at 7:16 P. M.

mctbodt$t ProUftAtitAt the Hill Street Methodist Proteutant

Church, to-morrow evening, the mlhlster, Hev. J. Wilbur Brkldeiraton, will deliver the flrat of two sermoiTfl on “ FUUkhUghtB on Life." A twenty-mtnute song aervloe will precede the sermon. At the momlitg service the Baorament of th< Ixird^g sup­per will be administered and new mem-

^bers received.

ROME. Jan . 5.—The offlclai note Issued from the Vatican, to th« members of the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See, for tranam l^lon to their govern- mente, and sent ulso to every apostolic delegate and repreBontatlvo abroad, has produced no practical effect except tluil It has brought to the hnad oi the church m any expressions of Sympathy for the situation lu Franco, and assuranccB that no Blmllar condltlona will arise. In other countries. Every messiige received from foreign governm ents has at the sttme-Ume tnformod the Vatlcnn authorities thut il 1» abftolutely ImpoBSihlc to interfere In France 's in ternal HfCulfs. even though the Injustice of the treatm ent received by the church 'Was pat^-ni to everyone. But the Vatican did not Issue the note protesting against the action of the French govern- melm In expelling the Popes personal reprenontative and seising the archives of the P apal NunduLure with any hope that a foreign government would talte up the cudgels in behalf of the church, but the docum ent waa laeued simply to lot the world know th a t the Vatican could not countenance the actions of the Frenph ofllolals, and to Imprena'public opinion abroad with the fact that the government w as ac ting wrongfully, .all conditions con­sidered. ,

The V atican authorities will not public the answore received to ihelr *'iTl- olal note through diplomatic channels, be­cause some of them criticise severely the actions of F rench ofRdals In relaJlon to the Holy Bee, and their ftuswers might cause International dlfilcuitlofi If given publicity. C hurch leaders here ure now convinced th a t the only wuy to she me the French ofllctats Into a line of conduct fair io the church Is to have exprowlona of opinion ellrlted from every corner uf the world regarding the French crisis and the acts of French offlciftls. Instructions have ju a r tiT^- forwai’Jed every bishop in the. WO)’ ’ '.i promolp sn ogltationamong th- in each of the dio­ceses and i 4' . .ive them adopt resolutions condemning ih t cctliini!i of the French Government against the Jihurc-h.

Of coiirac church und State will he sep- nrated in France, and the Vatican ao- Ihorillea arc not only resigned to this, but are now even anxious that It shall take place, to avoid future .Interference of the S late In church ufCalre. Church hulld- jnga m ay In the mean time he appropri­ated by the S tate and used for other than religious purposes, but the Vatican [luthoritles a re prepared to Institute pri­vate worship in France, and already have m inions a t their disposal to support the French bishops and clergy In their fight against the government,

Even in P rance several Catholic flnan- eJers have Joined together and have of­

fered to finance the French church oa « business basis and to con tribu te tow ard the support of the bishops and prlcatc and for the malntenBnce of new ohurebes,Just as much, If not more, than the 8,000,cop francs of which the French Qbv-*. fm m ent is now depriving the churoh*

By ordereof the Pope a general meeting of French bishops Is to tak e place lo Paris before the middle o f January . The meeting will pass upon every important tnatter now affeotlng the French church and Is to make plana fo r th e education of the clerical students expelled f ro ti the scmlnarieH. Other m atte rs to be could* ered are the holding of private worship In places where churchee shall have b e ^ selxed by the government: the roUgloai Instruction of the children of France, and plans for the recovery of churches and church property a t some fu tu re time.

It is not feared th a t Ita ly will follow the example of France and adopt laws Ob­noxious to the churoh. T h e relatione be* tween the Vatloan and the Ita lian Opv* ernment are more than eordlal and the recent demonstrations of sym pathy with the French antl-clertcat proceedings were the work of a few e n th iu la sts and do not represent the sentim ents o f th e m atsm of the Italian people.

In Spain m atters are somewhpt wone« because of the determ ination of the gov­ernment to obtain some oontrol over tba religious orders and their property* I t le ^ still hoped to arrange mp.ttors, because M . the historic fidelity of the BpaiUsh royal family to the Holy See and the personal attachm ent of the presen t King to the church.

/

W hat Is causing some anxlpty a t tbs Vatican Just now are the Impehdtog else* tlone of the Reichstag in Germany. Prsl- ates In a position to know claim th a t the Centre party and the Socialists united will be able to hold a t least 220 M ate for the opposition party In a to ta l of tK ntemben, and th a t because of th is th e m e a tm cently adopted by the governm ent die- eolving the German Parliam ent will hh^i no effect whatever in the looal situation, Information has been already received a t the Valirnn to the effect th a t In every district the Catholics are working as earn­estly as ever to send representattve mMi* hers of the Centre party to the Reichstag, and It is generally believed here th a t ho m atter how adverM th e elections shotild be to tho government Interests the new Reich Ktag will not be dissolved end the government will have to submit to the opposition and make some conoeestons to the Catholics In Fn isslati Poland regard*. Ing the language used In th e pubdc schools and In the Im parting of religloos tnetruo- tion. This Iff w hat the Centre party has beOn working to obtain,

oaaBRVATOU*

Kdomtd"The Value ot an Eddy tn the Stream

oI U fe '' -will be tho subject ot Rev. Dr. Jam es I. Vance's raorntn* sermon to­morrow at the North Reformed Church, He will preach at n lfh t oh "A Revelry the Nilfht Before Death "

"W hat Does the Expression 'He De­scended Into Heir Mean In the Apostle*' Creed?" will be the topic which Rev. Dr. Dainlet H. Marlin will discus* a t the Clinioo Avenue Reforiaed Churoh to-mor­row evening In the series on "Our Creed." At the morning service Dr. M artin will speak on "A F resh S tart for the New

At the F irs t Reformed Church to-mor­row the pastor. Rev. S tuart Nye Hutchi­son. will preach a t the morning service on “The Sabbath," and a t the evening service he will, deliver the firat of a series ot discourses to young men, the sub ject to be, "The Question of Cain—Am I My B rother's Keeper?"

€Hlicop«lAt the morning aervloe In 6t. Georgs's

Episcopal Church to-morrow the subject of tlie aennon of Rev, Dr. Henry U artyn Klofter will be "The -Visit of the Wise Aten," The evening sermon topic will be k T h e CsJl of the New T ear." - |

K«lorMcd EpiicopalRev. John W . Morgan will officiate In

Emm anuel Baformed Episcopal Churoh ,01 the services to-morrow.

: theeeilbTeWent. tlw la i t . meeting having F BBIf to ■Towmto laM BimiMfo Btstemems

e f f e t t h orW' now under discussion, but theiw are dlflereqce* arid difficult le* which ^Ljriay be, troposelbU' to rscontlle.

: dlsilngulshod from movemeuls 'ook-S rt to denom inational unions, the fortera- Ifoi Idea IS everywhere folding favor. A

federation of' bodies holding ih« byterlan aystem o t governmem was led la s t year, Hi which practically

BII nave Joined eateept .Southern P resby terlans, who see In. lit* .movement, *helr leadSN clalrn, a scheme on the p an of

t^MaKArfamtBHr.r'hUrf'll U>van-thpJJortheiia’frcrt(H erlan..Church lo.ahsoHr Ml W ealiifteeiaii b<son# #11 n e e u y ie rm n bodies, the SOitth- ^ btoluded. A fter long dtleussion of tbw* m atte r In tb a Geaernl Assembly o> MM Sodthirtt Cbtirett. It-w as referred to

Presbyteries for action, and will

HVt'iuie, where the pastors of the *1* unlling elvurohes w'll liiltc turns in lend- lp;j. The places of nu’etlng Will hi-' as fol­lows: -Monday, Lentenury Methortlal Bpls- coral; Tuesdav, T'nlted Ihreabyleriftti; Wi'dueeday, Belleville Avenue Cungrega- tlon.'ii; Thursday, Emmanuel Relormed Eplsoopal, and Frld.ay. Park Preahyterlnn.

8 retore come up again m^t May. The ger federation, Inaugurated ! over a

ago a t th* frferatim i conference In Mbw fo rk and notw helng voted upon hy Qfe dllferent evangelical drtjOmh'atlons. has thus fa r met no sptbaojfc:, aqd, every-S. . . .

' "'Ailrehsa 1909.

onthe m atter during mis yM t..* ,,,.

iS. « K S S r " - " ' # S K ¥ :MWeaVAmrinf ITTtVUrr # OTtllOtiO'

Cl)rt$t1«in €«atawr.The toplo for dlseuaslou lu the Christian

Endeavor meetliqrs (o-mori'ow night is, "Bcghinlng with God and Cnutlnuiiig with Him," Text*, Gen. 1., 1, John 1., 1-H.

1'he dally Olirlslliin Endeavor Dthtfl readings for next week are as follows; Monday, "C reattd Anew," Eph. Iv., 23-32; Tuesday, "U ke Our Falher," Ileb. 1.. 1-9. Wednesday, "Manlfasllug God," John xvlh, 1-9; 'Thursday, "A Marred Image," Gen. 111., 8-19; Friday, "A RestoredImogB," Luke lx.. 2S-!«: Saturday, "We May BeaT- II." 1. Cor. xv-, la-IS; Simduy, January 19, topic, "How GOd’a Image Is P rS lT ved In Us—Or l-xist," Gcri. I.. 26, Col.' 111.. 1*10. (A temperance meeting.)

Tlie rcadlug* on the Junior Eudenvor tapKs for noxt week are as follows; "'J'lu Royal Feii»t," Kath. 1., 1-ffi: "E sther (he Rertullful." Hath. 11., 1-10; "E sther the Qttxr.n," Hath. 11., l?-20; "The King's D

ITo

in m OrangtsThirty-five men and boys will comprlre

;the (holr a t the special services In All iBulnir' Church, Orange, to-morrow. Tho musical program will ho as follows: Jliirning—Venite, Gregorian; To Deum and Benedtotus In F, Dykes; offertory, "N axa. retli," Gounod; kyrle, Gloria Tlbl In G, King Hall; Sauctus and Benedietus, Gnu. nod; Agnus Do! and Gloria In Excetals, King Hall; Nunc Dlmlttl*. Gregortnn. Evening-Proper Psalms. Gregorian; Mag

Movement towai-d greiifrr, orlhonoxi-................. lllfiam miido

'"ftiiinr'i' ■ -ltd , r a th e r

s-fe.

cnvvcim'iii gtjwicxivi |i|.- -I f h a l I* a llied the higher cjlllc'em Mule or no advance dm lry -Wt:i, - jS has lost some wjround. A rano amt S altK y f*«T lfrW°fl»flAal»4'Htal«i of IBO t t r l a t l B n EeUgiem htHHI trofurO lu* id , Utder*, taken the pinee of the ultro- ile iittn o lnterpretat1rtu'-‘'0f'lib ' ISbk*. "Od We oM*T UrthDdox teaeWngs/O'hFh mads

creo," tifslh. 111., 12-16: ■■Mordee;)! and Siiither.'' Esih. Iv., 1-11; '"The S.j'u-ee of Courage," Deul. xxxt., «i; .■innday, Jan- onrv 13. topic, "Esther, the Brave yueen, ' Estii. lv„ iU,

John 't'. Spri'Ull. president of tlic St.vtf EBibt“"o r Uiiton, this week Issued his New Jluar Krsetinit' Whlcti will b'' reai! in lire Eiidoavor (n™tbigs to-moriow nlgiil. Mr. tipi'ouil apys:

•At tha beginning of another year the call ivimea clear and loud lo you for ser

alio and bass, "I Soiigln the Lord," Costa; poslliiile. Festival March, Foote.

"A Good New Year's Motto" will be the subjeci of Rev. Howard H. Brown, pas- rnr uf the Washington Street BafiUst Church; Orange, to-ifiorrow ulght.

Holy commiyilon will be celebrated In the Hyde Park lletormed Church, E ast Orange. to-morrfflV morning and In the evening the pastor. Rev. Orville E. Fisher, Will preach on "Trlumpha of Grace."

Rev. John M. Thomas pastor of the Arlington Avenue Presbyterian Church, pjaal Orange, will preach to-morrow night

E v e n in g -P ro p e r Psalms. Gregorian; Mag. , Relieve the F irst Chapterntfleat in D, Clare; Nunc Dlniittls In A, I j,, QenegisT" Following is the rouBlcalStainer; ollertory, "N aiareth ." ----— fee *so SeV! Morning-Prelude,

Communion ■services will be held In

We ol#*T rtrtissdox (eacWngs/S'hFti maus | call comes ciear aiiu louo lu j.,u more- of the letter, of the Book 'hlic bf | vice (or Hbo, and He wait* for your rii- lU spirit The bull'nbk for the Immediate ( s^toiise. Wilt you Join me In a cons,‘eranyil lA. AMC vryik*"— ......... •future,' ttitWHriiy- fofi*.ho yo<#i',.m>w .oprp «a. Is an orthodox. .WWB that W.IH and |4 some ex ten t now does ektend to all kM!6ll ^ A I '••I fn stmoxt all rellglqiis bodies ov)t(iKf'^ U movements were prominent dm Ing l ,y tSd are to be Equally It dot more -pronfl- Mnt thle year. Prwby.ufrmjto,. GqiiEr"S»* ifornllBta, B aptists. McihoJlHt?, Waclplos;

IjlruijLXSS. *1 ex* j-vx* -- - --- -----lion U> und for Him th a t shall mean hands full of service as well us hearts full of love? Lei the controlling motive In life and work bo found in tlie words, 'For

«!!S-Be iutenaely loyal and Increasinglyfaithful to your pledge. Make tune dully

X „ , n -----know by

Fen-y Mefhodlst Church, East Orange, to morrow morning. In the evonlng, the pas­tor, Rev. M. Wayne Womer, will preuen on "The Church of Christ."

At tha morning service in the F irs t Unitarian Church, Orange, to-morrow, the pnstof'. Rev. W alter Held Hunt, will preach on "The Ktiuc,s of the New Year." Cummunlmi will bo udminisiered a l the olusb i>f tlie sei'\'lcfi.

Rev. Adolph liofiler, paetor ot the New t ’luiri'li. Orange, will preucli to-morrow on "Tlu' Hook uf ficiu'Sls—the Story uf the Descfnt uf iBruel Into Egypt, th a t Is of the Spiritual .Mind Into N atural Life." The KOcramein. of the Holy Bupper will

program for the day; Morning-Prelude, Oftcrtolre In O, Bm-ldge; offertory. "Pas­torale Symphony," Handel: postlude. Cor­onation March. Meyerbeer. E vening- Prelude, Ollertolre In A, Wely; offertory, “Hymn nt Nuns." Wely; postlude. Ho- manee In A flul, Wely.

Hev, Charles B. Bullard, pastor ot Elm­wood Presbytcrlnn Church. I'Jiat Orange, will have for his subject to-morrow morn­ing "Getting Right w ith God." and In the evening be will pleach on "Beginning Over," .

"Lite" will be tiiv subject In the First Church of Christ, aelentlst, of Orange, lo- murrow morning.

The subjects of Rev. Dr. James F. Riggs, pastor of Hrlck Presbyterian Church. East Orange, to-morrow, will be

. . . . ......... ......... - -i 'v f as follows: Morning. “The Splrltuul Outbo a d m in is te re d ;it the close of the service. ; even ing , "The Perpetual Fire- on'DnnIfI the Prophet" will he the subjeet I . i

in d many o ta s r bocllcs Have iH>eu,t^du^'( tqg carefully plahlJeS hfuitpatgiia la varir

1 part* of the riOvitiiry. Somr of thebe

i ■‘U.- -

H ll pttrtS U1 m e tJVUUU,*.. va -.■•"■-Vh a v e b ee r^ ln to n lp n n m in a tio n a L0 lltxvx- ucvii Jijw-J ............... - — I

ill denojSiWafl^Jtiat .1" ,tbelr loadef-Notably has Ihni* been true 6T Ihe

w o ti of the R ev^Jir. J , Wllb.ir Chapman i J l the Preshyterlaa evangelistic eommit-iif.-’ iV fh e oHlcs sWAre ha. has ,^tvprked,

' s im u lta n e o u s SampdlglBi•L* JlPiR -F-,----I ilrg^n-chiirche'9, and ad\n th€ Protest*ni chnrcl..... — -

Chapman ’hiTnBl lf fxpri'PHf* it, tho .X haa bM'Tft Id miki* ClirJttlane rath«*f

imn PreBbyt^iians,Tha Mfithodlst coriimisalnh on pvnngt’l*

ism is working amuAg (bo coiifiH'eTi0e?, fir«cttnK, In large purt. tht* work of thofafltora along defln'itfr, avsir.i^llptlr Ihiea,

-*• tho name* thP Eaptlj^t >’om-

for the ‘Qufel Hour.' Come to — ,. . pracUcal wterlencc the value and blessed neiKs of rnamerits spent alone w ith Him, 3 e constantly on the lookout for oppor- tunlUes for aervlci? In any way to your paator and church. Muke your meetings hrfgbti ftenh* orlgtmil and, above all, fuU Of the Holy Spirit,

"How hfiiiny will yon endeavor to win to this year. Is It asking too muchof yoU to elop .long imougjt m HIb pien- ebCff-to . look into Hlf) face as He looks Into the depths of our heurts und prom*I be HtYn tlm t we will give tUla year as never before, our our work, our-aeKes lO work for Him?

'T iay rn g th a t you nmy be willing to pinkc tUls full conttecruilon for thle year 1 BO you may bo ni)(*U with HIh pren-

‘ rrict? iuid povi^er, 1 am. with bffit wishoa for the New. Veer uf l9!J7i w ty cordially‘ jlfsHHJ'n viit* isnfiU' " fv *-ik' 1 J -

iiR lee, with Rov. Dr,'GorEclliis Wceitklh | yours,” .. uItf-secretsry . works in .co.ijneratton with | tUepliPn R, Ridd'ill, of VI esl Or.mge, hrs f tfe T a e w c lilio n s . Trilt meifod furrh-s ba-n aplhdtu.'.l su^'rliitcm li'm of the I||g,„ysn|CoUsDc moveroeht into the sm.fil- | Essex Endeavor I nloH f.esh .ilr depart. E w m u n f t l e # and the policy it to be m tllt for the eiisufoB y«ur to *uoe«e,t

'"{oSlPued Ihroughoiit this year.- VVi ilium Pope.

■ *

CO N V A U S ( ^ C E k * ( r y i i > e p e r i D < L

' W eakenad and w a ste d u ^Bke a a e d i^ e fdant—dr^da i^cry

" t e u e l i .

St the liieetliig of the Bible class The first of tl aeries of speelal sermons

on "Pictures from Christian History, from 3(W to son A. D.,-' will bo dellverwl a t the evening service In Christ Church, B ast Or- unge, to-mOrrow. by the rector, Rov. Chailes E. Hutchinson, The musical pro­gram for the day will be a* follows: Morn­ing-Prelude F lat Lux, Dubois; Kyrm Kxoelsls In C. Gounod; oftartory, •■Blese..d Is He," West, Master Cook and oholr, Bunctuii In E flat, Gounod; Gloria In Ex- celsls Chant; postlude, "M arch of the Magi,'" Dubol*. Evening—Prelude. Melo- dia. Max Reger: Magnificat in B flat, Nuno Dlmlttls In B flat, Lemaro; offer­tory, "Glory Bo to God," Gounod; post­lude! Toceota In D, Max Reger.

The subjects of Rev. Dr. Charles Town­send, pastor of the F irs t preabyterlon Church, Orange, to-morrow, will be as follow*; Morning, "O th a t a Man Might Plead with God ns a Man Pleadeth for Hi* Nolglibor;" evening. "Knowing and Not Doing," The musical program will Include the following: Morning—Prelude, Andante. Jumel; anthem. "Turn Thee." Davis; nn- Iheiu, "O Jesu.t. We Adore Thee,” Brewer; puBtIude, Improvisation, DlnelH.

In Calvary Methodist Church. Bast Or- 1 nngc, to-morrow, the following musical

proa ram will be given: M om lng-O rganprelude. Andante,■ Gullmant; anthem, "God Is Love," Shelley; offertory, so­prano solo, "My Soul Doth Magnify the laud ," Sullivan. Evonlag-Ovgun proluile, *'Ave Mnrlu," .Schubert; anllicm, "Like Silver L.nup.t." Barnby; anthr.m, "Alpha nnd Omeg:i.-' .Sliilncr; anthem. "Savior, Source of Every Blessing," Scaly; ao- pruno solo, "Rock of Agee," Blsohoff-; poetlude, Allegro Aeaal (first sonata), Gulhimnt. /

The morning eervtce In Gmee Churoh, Orange, to-morrow, will be conducted by the rector. Rev. Charles T. Walkley, and In tho evening ths vumie. Rev, H enry C. Stone, wilt preach. The following mualc

the Great Altar.Communion services will be held In the

First Reformed Church. East Orange, to­morrow morning. ^ ,

In the West Orange Baptist Church to­morrow tha pastor, Bev. John R. Hum­phreys Will preach on tho following sub- Jeots; Morning, "The Charter of Common prayer;" evening, "The Old and the

Rev L. N. D. Wells, pastor of the Church of the Disciples of Christ, Bast Orange, will preach to-morrow morning.i on "Christ’s First Temptation." At night his subject will be "A Small Stone, a Dry Stick and a Jawbone."

Rev E. J. Holden, of Woodalde, Long Island, will preach to-morrow in the Pros­pect Street Baptist Churoh, East Orange.

At the Park Avenue Methodist Churoh, E ast Orange, to-morrow, the communion ot the Lord's Supper will be celebrated In the rooming and there will be recep­tion of new tnembera. In the evening the pextor Rev. Ur. W arren L. Hoagland, will preach on "Wealth and Poverty In Amer­ica as Viewed by the New British Am­bassador, Mr. Bryce." Tho rnuslo at both services will be a* follows: Morning, "^■rom Every Earthly Pleasure," Llsst- Shellcy. Evening, anthem, "The Shadows of the Evening Hours," G. B. Kevin; of­fertory anthem. "Peace 1 Leave with You." At the Euworth League service Mr. DIeffenderfer, of Maill.siin, secretary of the 'Young People'* MlBahmary Motje- mont, tvlll make an address.

The music a l the Grove Street Congre­gational Church, Bust Orange, to-morrow win be: Morning, prelude. Communion, Battatc; anthem, Jnbllnt* Deo, Schubert; tenon solo, “King Ever Glorious," Stainer; postlude, Lemmons Evening, prelude, Serenafle, Matthews; anthem, "o. Praise the Lord!" Demarest; anlhom, "My God, My Father, While I S tra y ." Ailing; post- hide. March Solennelle, Gounod.

RlotitclairRev, Horace Porter ha* chosen for his

subject u t W atchung Avenue Congrega­tional Church to-morrow morning, "How to Be a Chrtatlan,"

"The PoBltlve Note" will be the subject of Rov. Edgar I, W ler’a sermon to-roor- row morning a t Unity Church. "Aris­to tle 's V irtues and Friendship" will be the topic of dlaouBslon by the conversation class.

Rev. John Love will preach to-morrow morning a t Union B aptist .Church on "A Rainbow."

Rev. Dr. John M. Fulton, of Philadel­phia, will preach to-morrow morning a t T rinity Presbyterian Churoh on "Temper­ance.”

"God's Call lo His People" will bo the topic of Rev. Thomas Morgan's sermon to-morrow morning a t Cedar Avenue Presbyterian Churoh. The theme a t night will be. "The Story of the Hymns."

The theme chosen by Hev, H arry Emer­son Fosdlck for his sermon a t tho First B aptist Church to-morrow morning Is "The Indestruotlblllty of Goodness." Ho will preach a t night on “The Dangers of a M ajority."

Rev. Dr. Abner H. Lucas, pastor of the F irs t Methodist Church, will preach his fourth sernion on "The Ten Command­m ents" to-morru-w..ntght. The special sub­ject will be "W ork and Rest."

"A Bountiful Offer and a Kingly Choice" will be the theme of Rev. Dr. Llewellyn S. Fulmer tn tihe F irs t Presby­terian Church to-morrow morning. The topic a t night will bo "A Good Beginning But a Bad Ending."

jtev F. H. Butler wlU preach In St. M ark 's Methodist Churoh to-morroiv morning on “A New T«ar'a BenedlCilP^ and a t night on "Alrookt Persuaded to Be a Christian," ,

“ T h e Vine and the Branches wUI be the subject of Rev. Robert Seneca Smith In the F irs t Congregational Churoh to-mor­row morning. Dr. Samuel MeCune Lind­say secretary of the national committee on child labor, will speak a t tha vesper aervloe on "Child Labor; a National Byll.

Design bgr Hi f MnntWI.5651 Child’s Coat.

THE f a s h io n a b l e PLAID.Plaid cloakings are greatly in vogue for the small folk thl# eeaeon gnd nph-gle

ways BO eharm lngV youthful in effect th a t the fact Is sure to be a weloonw nn*. , H ere Is an attrac tive little model th a t I* trimmed with velvet bandinc. Uin notofi of whloh are th* dull greens and blues th a t are always so rich and handsome. Themodel Is one of the new ones th a t gives a box plaited effect a t th e fron t and bff,mftde e ither w ith or without th* cap*. I t will be found available for an swimmdWe cloakings and Is exceedingly handsome In the fur plushes and cloths IIM p* much in vogue this season, also to velvet, velveteen and broadcloth. Fop A four will be required yards of m aterial 27, 2 yard* 41 or 1% yards i f bmitoV R^dpii

m a t MANTON PATTERNS—'The May Manton pattern Illustrated <m thin can be had In all sIess for ISo, each. Mall order* promptly filled,PATTBBN CO, (N. N,). 132-112 W est Twenty-seventh Street. New Turk, A plete Una of May Manton Pattern# 1* carried by THE GOBRICHI CO,, Broad. M arket Street*.

i

BlooineM l i

Wtll veiHl<ne6: Morulng—Anthowi. --iip.

r:

S c o f f B m u t j f c n of p u re cod B m r o fl «ud kjrpopliodphthsd, co n te in i

fo o d th e c c a m le ic e n t need* in j o k lh e proiK irtioiw m ost read ily aaiiau*

folc ScoffM L e e v o t i iT S s ■ • a . j u a n j n ,

- - ■

--------- ----------„ ____ Jin. "x,y.How a Bose ■ E'er Blooming," Mlchabl Praetortous, Evening Magnificat and Nuftc Dlmlttl* In A, Stainer; anthem , "Now la Come Salvation and S trength ," | Hrirrl*. t

At the meeting of the Circle of Divine ; M nlstry , In East Orange, to-morrow, Mias > Anita Truman will speak oa "The Benroh for Happiness."

Th* music in the Munn Avenue Presby­terian Church, East Orange, . to-morrow, will be as follows: Morning—Anthem,. "O Eton th a t Brought Good Tidings," S tainer (Jhrsefold responsive service); organ solo, |

Rev. Elliott W. Brow# wlB.-preach to­morrow morning In the Glen Ridge Con- gregaUonal Church on "Soma Slgns.of the Times." In- the evening there will be a eervtoe of all the churches of th* Bloom­field Evangelical Union In the Glen Ridge church. Rev. Df. Jess* L. Hurlbut, of llic P ark Methodist Church, will preachthe sermon. „ ^

Kev Dr, Lewis Francis, of New l^ri*, will preach In W estmlnsfer P r e s b y t ^ ^ Church to-roorrow morning. There wHl »e no evening sarvlcA d«*-

R,:v. George E. T. Btevenson. h\fTg, will octuijy the pulpit ot th t «ivni BaptU t Church to-morroir*

There will be a f e M t ^ d of new merobers In the odist Churohthe evening the p a ^ . T i^ e n njackflon. Will prea<j|t^on *Now fftia Then*

i s r u o ^ta lk nlghlkr totday. "God;""SMltb;" ThttWdWA E rld « ,"Btived,"

To nuke boalUm or beef tiex,~| to sntlcli sosptor tnvl**, yoa I need 'Liebig Compaioy'B

Extract of 9eefIf real beef «xtrK!t,p«f*cUr pr»-1

Ipliwf— weiiwtied' bjh tduUentiotn |■orforflfn nbfUincffSr *

\hUIWWA'V*'LS * »n,. - 1 ---Aiifiante In D, Harwood: tenor and quar- jJ ■tet, "'Whoiio Hath This WorM's Ooofl.C.H

iN in itT j ■ HAVI I

tllUEVx* “1 (JxrxMj ixkauM a smswi .# wr •• w»s .‘ VgCnlhln: postlude, cfimm# In B itoL Hma- ii del. Bv6nlDg-.Prelude, Abdanto, MowtrtLTl anthem, "ift' Soul Lpogeth."' Mrifofoni.fJ anthem, “Js«)>. Qenttsgt B^fftouf," Wsrd^ rngntt. Offertotr# In D flaL^fnhiim;

* ■ ..'Tfii'i.---

Work li soon Stlon of a new f rH S ;

a v e n g e ‘ l i '• iS f

^ fsly form of food tn $ ^ from wheat that is all nutria mont Is Ihe soda cracker^ and yefe^-the o n ^ soda cradewp ol whiih this is reaJfy tn ie Is.

Uneeda BiscuitTbo

n«ial e iM fora

«on|! 1 '« Swwaem. ot.N«rt»

ThsAwAk W FhH*W T#|pl#itqwtn for dlictiaaioa In Uw fikoth^

t s s i S v ' « K ' w i 6 « ^ t'. Teat: q«H,

H u

The

Ibe

only

only

only

only

Boda cracker sckntlflcallybaked* . "

eoda crMkw ?proteeted* ’ ,,

soda cracker oyer fraihi . criq> Slid clean.

soda cracker giood a t •& tlmei.

! n tN A T IO M M - ■ !

Page 9: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

/

S tate Freelddot^U re. BHce Collard, 66 Clinton avenue, Je n a y City.

Flr»t Vice-Prosiaent—Mre. Auriietus CteveUnt, 31 Glenwood avenue, Jersey City,

Second Vlce'PreBldent‘-M ra A. T. Beck­ett, Potttofllcc Box 68. Salem.

Ilecordinff Secretary—Mrs. John Hyatt, SSiMt. Prospect avenue, Newark.

Treasurer—M fa Anna Conover. 23i Broad street! Newark.

Corresponding Secretary and Chairman of the Prtsa D epartm ent for the Suite of New Jersey—Mre. fallen M. staples, Hudson street, Hoboken, to whom nil oommunleationa Intended for publlcniion should be addressed.

KeadOiiarter* — 66 F tfth avenue. New Tork City.

This departm ent will appear In (he NEWS every Saturday.

New Jertey Sunshine workers hnve, ne usual. lived up to their iiurlnj theholiday season, and Juilfflnijt from thi* re- porte received by the chairman of tho press committee much good wort wns .done In fho wajf of Christm as f*hcn- siven or received.

The State president was nmnn'r rhose who sent in reports. I t was a el ittmcnt of the “good time” provUlvd for the eixty-aeven men who are inmates of the New'tnart Industrial Home and STt^aiun, Jersey City. 8i, Andrew's S:;nslifne Branch furnished lh*» ChrlrtrnriB tree. Each man received two pnlrs of eacka, a box of oendy, a handkerchief, a pipe find tobacco.

A fine program for their enlerUInment was In charge of the '‘Star of Bethlehem' Branch, of Jersey City. Christmas carols, recitations and choruses that were given were greatly appreciated by the Inmatoi of the mission.

At the regular meeting of St. Andrew's Bfsnoh, Miss Hopper, general pectetarV of the Y. M. C. A., gave an Interesting talk, and tea and enke were served during the social hour. On December f2 _the branch held a cake sale, which netted H0.B6, which was added to Its Chrlitmas eheer fund.

« « •Among the New Jersey contrlbuttons

ien t' to headquarters for Olirlattrna dis- trlbutton were tfhe following: fromMiss Madeleine LnwTt^nce, of Harbourlon.

j **to rtll somebody’s stocKlngj" $2 end two • packages of gifts “ for some of th« dear

children," from Miss E. O. Henry, Morris­town; tl. for “the denr little blind babies, from Mre. G. W. n iankm sn, 13 Wluthrop terrace, Enat Orange: $S0, for blind babies and emergency fund, from “n friend In New JerRey;’’ five packages, each con­taining note paper and a calendar, from Mias Helen Bertha Crane. 320 South Broad Street. Ellxabeth: (2, from Miss Edna A. Cowell, 138 South Grove street. East Or­ange; a large package of picture scrap­books, made by forty little hoys and girls, pupils of Mias U a n h n d.- LaHue, In sne of tho public schools of Summit: f1. from Mias Lizzie Brancher, Haddonfleid; tw^n- ty-tive cents and several packages of pa­per. from Miss Hnttl-3 Wlllet, liulston; fc-W, five picture acrapbooks and g num­ber of dolls, “for little girls who never had a doll," from Mrs. Alld« M. Thomas and her little daughter, of De Forest* avenue, Summit; IS, fo r the Blind Babies’ New Home, from D elaw al^ <N. J.>-branch through itfl secretary. Miss Ejlsobeth Trnnsue; $2, “to make 8Cbrlst!nhs bright for some lonely or sick old man,” from an East Orange correspondent In memory of father; box of sundries and a .lumber o f scrapbooks, from Miss Emily Corlell. Plalftfleld; II. “ for C hristm as cheer for some one worthy and poor,” from E. W, ei'Slon. Blofunfleld; (fi, to be divided be- tweeo tho empty stocking fund und the cost of a free bed In the Sunshine Sani­tarium, Bensonhurst, from Mrs. Edward ^ r g a n Jr., of N utley; 12, from Miss F orence M. Chaffee, and H. from Miss

Morton, for good cheer for the children; 12, from Mrs. Emily Stoll, of Blairstown, for the am pty stocking fund knd free bed In Bunshine Sanitarium, Ben- ■onnurat.

S E W A l t K JT B S IN llT a 5ATCJBDAT, JANtTARY 5 1907. 9m m m m m m A m

Ok M t u r PDotogrsplKr taiKrn

CONFERENCE PLANS MEETING

C hB rtty W o rk e r s w i l l D lscnss Schoals a n d W o rk a t

A id in g Ifoo r.A meeting of the executive and program

committee of the N ew ark Coaference of^"'■'*<^‘*“08 was held a t the

Public L ibrary yesterday afternoon. I t was decided to hold a meeting In the iM t of January, when the subject will be

Public Echools and T h e Other H a lf ' " Mrs. Mary Simkositch, ft head worker of the Oreenwleh House In New York City will Bpe:^. Other topics on the program are; “Moral D angers of the Neesssufy Congregation of Children In Schools"

Progressive Trend of the Newark Fub- lio Schools" and an account of the work Of one school.

In Feb^ruary there will be a meeting to Qecloe the question of the revifflon of the poor laws, a t which members of the cora- mlsalcn on that subject will ppcalt, and the topic of free dental clinics will be brought up.

A later meeting will take up adequate .relief-giving and tlie. up-tn-dnte methods M caring for deatilute famillCB.

NB of the m ost delightful branches of photography 1b the making of lantern alidea.. .In the following suggestions, Jt Is the Intention not to propound

any new or startling theories, but simply to bring together some of the old points which are often forgotten; but which are none the lesH Important in the making of good! slides.

I t must, first of all, be remembered that a lantern slide Is, in fact, nothing more or less than ft photograph, only th a t Instead Of being printed on paper and mounted on a card. It Is printed on a glass plate espe­cially prepared for It, on which It la de­veloped as a poaltl\’e and left w ithout fur­ther mounting. The only difference be­tween ihe two la th a t one Is viewed by the light thrown upon its surface, while the other 1b viewed by transm itted tight through Its structure. Sliver sa lts are In both cases the bails of the picture, and a process of development, to produce and fix the image, ts necessary in both.

Bearing this In mind, It Is a foregone Conclusion that a good negative Is as nec­essary for a good lantern slide as It s for an ordinary print, and It, therefore, fol­lows th a t the peculiar chemical and pic­torial qualities that may be present In the negative may be held and reproduced In the lantern plate as well a s on the paper. Care should b'j exerclaed. then, In select­ing negatives from which plates are re­quired to pick out only the most perfect, or, If a portion only of the plate la to be reproduced, to pick out th a t portion of the plate which 1$ as free from blemish oa possible.

I t will be seen from this th a t a portion of a negative may be reproduced In the lantern slide. To do this, one of two methods must be followed. If the por­tion of the negative to be reproduced la not larger In area than 2^x3^ Inches, tho slldD may be made of th a t proportion directly In the priming fram e without having recourse to copying In the cam­era. In this event the negative Is placed ,

os If for printing with paper. In lU reg­ular printing frame, and a lantern slide plate is very carefully placed In contact—. In the darkroom, of course—with th a t portion of the negative to be copied. The film of the dry plate must be In close contact with the Aim of the negative, and extreme core should be exercised so that the lantern slide plate not only covers that portion of the negative which is desired, but th a t It Is also “ trued up" In such a way th a t when the pLate is viewed longitudinally the horlson line of the picture will be In Its proper position across the plate In its long dimensions, If there Is no horizon line visible, obJectA that should be upright must be carefully Studied BO timt they are absolutely per­pendicular in their position on the lantern slide plate. This may be determined by Icoktng through the plate and negative toward the light of the darkroom lamp.

The position of the negative having been obtained without allowing the com ers of the slide plate to sc ra tJ j the Qlm, the pad and back of the printing frame should bo locked In position and an exposure made by any source of llg h t-e llher dif­fused light, gaslight or that of an ordi­nary koroBcne lamp. The length of ex­posure will vary, of course, with the density of the negative and Its general chemical qualities, and may best be ascer­tained by a trial exposure of a single plate at the beginning of the operation. This trial exposure may be made by placing a plate in contact with a negative of ordi­nary denHlty and exposing* It to the light that Is to be u^ed for further operations.

Hold the printing frame a t a distance of fifty, three feet from the source of light and cover the whole negative tvith a shield drawn from the dry plate holder. Then expose sections of it, one after the other, in rapid snccesalon, until the whole plate has been exposed in a series of parallp] strips. This may be done by first exposing a half-inch .of the plate fbr one wccond, then quickly moving the slide to the right or left over another hftlf Inch and giving another exposure, continuing this operation until the entire plate has been exposed.

It will be readily seen that the last half Inch of the plate will have received

an exposure of one second, the half Inch next preceding It an exposure of two sec­onds. the next an expo.sure of throe sec­onds and so on throughout the plate. The development will give a very accurate gage of the time required for exposing negatives of stinfiar density and a t the sam e distance from the same light. It must be remembered also that as the

distance from the light Incrcanes tiie length of exposure also Increases very materially, and the Image will lose kn brllllftney. It la very Important that the distance of the printing frame from tho source of light be uniform. If the worker la to-know just what effect he 1r likely to obtain with varying denaltles of nega­tive and lengths of exposure.

An exposure m ust be mads In accord­ance with th e abov^ general directions, suited as nearly, as can bo gaged to tho rulailvo density of the negative In quei* lion. Immediately upon expoauro the frame should bo qdlokly covered with a focusing ok>th and returned to the dark­room. There the platd muet be removed from the printing frame and either devel­oped a t once o f stored In a dry plate box for Bubsequent development.

As a general gsge to expoiures It may be said th a t with a negative of good printing quality an exposure of from five to seven seconds on an ordinary lantern plate, and a t a distance of two. feet from the dame of a gtis burner, will give a fair­ly well-timed slide. The plates used for slIdeH aro purposely made of a m uch slower working npeed than the ordinary dry plates th a t are 'used in the making of negative*. Owing to tbe foot that slides may b« made without the necessity of very rapid exposures, the maker Is en­abled to prepare the plates In such a way as to give to the poeltlve a richness, depth and brilliancy that is Impossible with the quicker-working, or so-oalled, In­stantaneous plates.

TINTENSINEA POWhRFUL, QUICK’ACtINQ INTONSIFIER, IN A SlNOlJf SOLUnON, MAKES GOOD NEGATIVES OUT OF POOR ONES.

20c. Per Tube.

ACID-ilVPOFOR VELOX PLATES FILMS. Prices,

AND

lOc,, 15c> Nod 2t)c. Parity

S c h a e f f e r C o .26 A ca d e m y S tre e t,

Near Broad.

ARTISTIC PICTURE FRAMINtf’ ..

Free $1.29 CouponWhsn mnllsd to !llQ£tn root DntA Oo«"

J s r k .o n , SHoh., th is will o n t ia * ™ ( anyone w ith

R H E U M A T l S l V tto r-celTO propotd. PBBB TO TRT, w n a n la r D ollar pair of Nspla Foot D rafts aiul ra laob ls Now ^ o k (Iw oolorst on Kheoatatlsiu.

Name -

Addresi-

O nlf ono tr ia l pair Ip sno oMross. KRt...................................... ...... - ............. .n you have rheumatism cut oat GOdt.'

free dollar canpon and send it to a* wiGi > your name and address plainly writtaS'* on the blank lines, fteturu moil will bring you—(ree to try—a Dollar pair of the famous Magic Foot Drafts, l ie groat Michigan remedv for rheaniatiain, Tlwyt ■ are curing very bad cases of evtry of rheumatism, both chronic w d ecatR,it no matter how severe. They arc cnri&g,. coses of 30 and 40 years’ sneering, iftot doctors and baths and medidnet had * failed. Send ui the coupon to-dliy. When the Drafts come, try them. If you (u-e satitfied with the benefit re- ccived—then you can send ns One DoK. lar. If not, we whum take your sim­ple say io, and( the Drafts cost you abso lu te ly nothing. A r eUiey not worth trying on that basia f Our faith is strong that they will cure so cut out and send the coupon to-day Magic Foot Draft Co.. BEl, OilsBldg., Jackson, Mich. Send no inoaap* —just tho coupon, Write to-day,

Points on farming and GardoninsHl B Y

Joftil T. Sfp|>} Ww9w 99WWWWW9WWw¥9WW

felS

COBNTir 8FHOOL.n.ft<)TERa MEET,

k a t a r e S tody n n d S cliao l (tariteK sD iscu ssed a* G n th rrln w .

SuperlntenaeiU R andall Spauliiilig, of the MonKlaIr public ecbools, spoke at the regular meeting of the Essex County Behoolmnstcra' Asscclndcn In the Free Public Ltbrary last night on what experi­ence h u t a u ^ t conccrnlfts nature study. The speaker ..told of his own experience and th a t of .seme of hisAeachere and the pupils of the Montcinfr echools.

Mr. Spaulding' also said tha t teachers noStadays know very little about what they see of nature every day . but this should be no reason for them to neglect school attendants in this branch of study. S ta ts Superintendent C h a rl^ J. BaiiCer gave a few of his experlencee with na­ture.

Frank S. Coe, principal of the Colum­bian School, Bast Orange, Bpouf-oh school gardens. Mr, Coe gave tlfvee reasons for the eetabllshment of gnrdens, the prue- tlcal value, the educatf5nLtJ purpose and its ■ use !n connection with ■ nature and geography *'Pr)t... Comity Superintendent A. B, MercdtlK, of N utley, postponed his ta lk on ‘'Elemcntiii'y Agriculture In. E ura l Bchoota" . until the next meeting.

A report bn the p a rtn ia l school bill, passed by* the Lbglslfiture Inst ‘winter, eras made by Mr, Meredith. He stated th a t an effort to have several amend- astotS added. would be made this year,

— ---------- * — — ----------rSa*i . ! ' SfB ad Bey, S en t ( • J n in e s b n rg .

Raymond Jacobus, fifteen years old, Who had repeatedly failed to keep his word, after I n g placed on probation as k Juvenile delinquent, was committed to the Stnie Home for Boys by Judge Ten Eyck y e s te r^ y a t the request of Proba­tion Olltcer John J . Oascoyne- Jacobus failed to, return to file home nigbts and w»a inoorrlglbte and. a tru an t from ■obool. It WM declared.

’ “ Falraacaaes 6< Beaeflt,J b r the benefit perform ance a t the New-

grfc-'Theatre Monday night. Jahoary gt, o r the Young Ladles' Quljd of ths New­a r k grphan Asylum, tbe patkonsssea are

I. fYederlck H l Dongloa,. f i r T Nb

Weeds.Thofts who maintain a garden for pleas­

ure o r profit must, of necesfllly, contend with weedB. Those who dll small areas, however, will find It j>f but Utile use to Study -the various kinds of Wi?eds and how to eradicate them, because the lim­ited amount of ground will not admit rotation of crops, fallowing, or any other weed-destroying practise. The only way J to hold weeds In check Is a mechanical one. I t consists principally In cultivation. In all cultivation the aim la to give the crop th a t we wish to grow sole posses­sion of the soil, and all cultivators, tiorae- hoea, hand-hoes,' etc., are used to destroy every plant except a particular one. The gkrdener who attowa the weeds to get thft bciier of him deserves very little sympathy, unless he Is cultivating too lafge an area, for the tools of culture are many and their effectlvoneas, with little exertion. Is great..fiivery year thousands of weed seeds

are In tro d u ce into ' the garden soil through the application of stable manure. The greatest care Is necessary, therefore, to prevent the further addition of these seeds to the manure through any other source than the unavoidable one—that of feeding farm animals with weed Infested foods. The practise so commonly fol­lowed of throwing all weeds gathered from the garden on the m anure pile is a poor one. If there Is a single flower or seed pod on the weeds do not transfer to the compost heap, but spread them Where they will dry* and then, with the accumulated combustible garden rubbish, burn them. In this way, w ith a little carOh ashes, so»valuable as a fertiliser, may be made In considerable quantity from properly dried refuse of the garden.

Some gardeners suppose th a t when weeds are placed on the m anure pile the fermenting manure destroys<i their vitality* but this Is not the case. G ardeners must fight weeds this coming summer and the best way to hold them in check is through clean cultivation. Prepare for the battle early by studying the various toc^ls and their manipulation.

ten feet apart to give them the requisite strength a t the base. I t Is a good policy to keep the ground cultivated for a fe,w years after the plaijllnij and tu pracllse enough pruning to direct the branches In the right direction. All the evergreens mentioned bear the shears well and may be kept, if desired, In hedge form.

U n ,Bisjlbhard, M bs,'Intis'

rs. EuceaS MfA WiaMaiand ifrB. W ljlttr ICwRistitL - 'fits

« lOfllce will be opun. fgi- the .e lo h an n q<-:*eatB Tuesiittv, ------- - *'

I M S SignMun,

;r sV o tlG iB lte in tA ld rtbD M x m i f t r u i o .

Miq; ApsilM tnaf DMIiHs. Ragfiefi,

D w sliias*,' Bofi Tssti la U r Voatb. Oiiisfi Tttntas* M b lu (toMdkT D B na 14mirn W T ftM iiiAmini tmiiiii, aawtt

Screens and,Windbreaks.There Is a s re a t need In th is section of

the country (or screens of >ver»reen* or deciduous trees to shelter bufidlnAs, or- eltarda and gardens from the wind. By a well planted and properly maintained Windbreak one can change tbe tem per­a tu re of a certain location by M verat de- gfees. The violence of tb e prevaliln t winds may also be broken, and the Snow, instead of. drifting In jioaps and leaving other places bare, will spread Us covering evenly over arid about the p lants and af­ford them a b excellent jwotectlon against the ooW. Many of the dltOcultieS with which |h e orchardlst and gardener must conUnd mSy be obviated by a shelter of trees. One reason why grapes and small fruits often do better In th e cities and villagesAhan In the country la th a t they hav* the shelter o f buildings'.

I t has been .proven in m any nortbem retkions th a t whefe wlridbreaks. ape plant­ed to ' protect orchards m any of the more taifder frUilS, ndt otherwlae triaturlng in th a t .seetton, ooutd ha grown to pet-re,^ tidh. A sereen. unlike a hadKe.'-dbea not requ ire‘otoiw. planting, nor m uth shearing ;by attentlori o t any kind, buce It has be^n well'eatabllshed. As. to the p lants tb a t will serve tills purpoee, deciduous trees arq better oian optbing, b u f .tney a r t not

eb' affective' ae everKretns. There are ntafiy; ■yariaUes of evergreen th a t Stoke a p e r te ^ s f it^ tr . Norwky spruiie l■'ehe b t the besit,.and good etooK Ckh he seoured a t gi moderal* prim. T.ht.-hemlock la an­other admirable tree, , and If weil-giown nprsfry: plants can be obtained i t . Is In some placM . preferable to The Norway spruce-, THS hemlook is also a beautiful tree and se rre t a s a beaunfisr and wlad- break a t the same time, Atnertean arbor- vltae ano ther excellent errergrenu that SbqoM n e t be atrtrtookdd. ' : . . ' . :

ft ts always best ih making tliese w M - brsaka.to.looaen the notl to a eohsMerabIs, depth and prepare ^ tb em ust -Ppmaln In the ta tne pealUon 'fo r m any years. -ITta-.dlstiuaw 'sdkarc. lo r iet-^- Itng the Idants wJU d iS ii^ V I^ d n ,»h

.......

Management of Colts.Usually colts are left to fthlft for them-

pelvcB after weaning, and yet fully a year's gain in the usefulness of a horse may be made by giving It care and a tten ­tion during the first few months of Its life. The coil’s education should be beifun when It is only a few weeks old. The old- fashioned method, and the one still prac­tised by many farmers. Is not to teach the cults nnythlng until they have ar- tlved at an nge when their Bervlces can be made ImmedJfttely useful after break­ing.

Under thts method the first three or four -years of the colt’s life are spent In the pasture or In the stable, and the most tlmt it learns Is to bear the re­straints of the halter, and occAslrmnlly the currycomb and brush. When the time of Its usefulncas arrives It Is taught Its trade In a few days or weeks. The bit, the bridle, the girth, the saddle, the col­lar are all perfectly new to the colt and are forced on him In the most remorse­less manner. Too often the anlm ars aur- prlae and fear excltis Ite ma3ter*a tem ­per, and ft contest enauefl from the ef­fect of which the young animal may never recover, The time to begin the education of the young nnimal is while It la still running with the mare. From birth It should be carefully handled and caressed, and a t the age of six weeks or so It ought to be gradually harnessed and made accustomed to the various paraphernalia to which It must be suh- JectfMi in after Jlfe, The marc while nurs­ing her fool should not be overworked. Good posture or green food in the stable, to'gether with a light grain ration, v.dll keep her In good condition and furnish nourishment for the foal.

When the colt has been weaned and the usefulness of the pastures has passed, much Care Is required to give the colt the proper food and exercise. During the ♦Inter some of the earliest cut hay may be fed to It and a box etaJl near the other iiopses ought to be provided, so th a t the young animal can hoc nnd become ac­customed to th e discipline of the stable. Everything around It should be well se­cured, so th a t In rubbing itself nothing will become loose. < A habit' of breaking th ln ^ and getting loose. Is easily formed by colts nt th is time and it ‘ m ust be guardeil ag a in s t I>udng the winter feed ths colta 'as you would the horses. Give them a shaiw of w hat in served out, but in proportion to their slie. They eannot l ^ w or fare well on scant rations. Colts are better kept in conflnement than when allowed to run wild. They will become more docile and learn fewer bed tricks. Take them out only for exercise or tra in ­ing, except when a t pasture, and the^ be sure to have a w curs fence! T rain the colt lb become a fast walker, ra th er than a fast trotter.

N e v e r f l i n dthe ad vance in the price of Coal. We fire still offerttiK the b^t

Large tEH iait No. 2 Nut

Per Ton.y

Eg g , S to ve , N u t,e.£»«s. .

S , T r J o u D e r & C o . ,

SeasoDible Renunders.bee th a t the dw arf fruit trees are not

Injured by the anow,« • •

If the winter Is open, forest and brush pastures may be cleared.

This Is a good time in which to build or to make alterations In old buildings.

• • •By mixing plenty of Utter with manure

when €torlng It decomposition Is hastened. * • •

Rustic work, exposed during the win­ter, will be benolUod by one or more coats of oil.

* • •Use sawdust on the Icy walks. It ts

Just as good for the purpose as coal ashes or sand and much cleaner.• • • •D rifts of snow about low-branching

evergreens are apt to break off the lower branches. The snow ought to be shoveled away.

• * *See that the roof over the stock 1b

w ater-tight. Many good animals have died because the cold wnlcr dripped upon them.

■ * ■Bean poles may be cut a t any time

when the weather will permit one to work In the woods. Red cedar makes the most desirable poles.

• • «Thq great tnleiake In farming Is th*

neglect of tho manure heap. Keep the m anure under cover, If possible, and If not, compost It In heaps.

• * *Trellises, stakes, and nil the other little

garden appliances th a t will be needed In the spring should be made and repaired while there Is a little spare time.

A co'airhon mlstako ts to so surround tho house with trees th a t d istant views are completely shut out. A little Judicious cuttinif away will often open to view a beautiful d istant landscape.

4 t *T t Is a poor eordener who does not do

better this year than he did last, whether his operations extend over acres or are confined to tho narrow limits of city lots. While all vegetatloq ts in repose It Is a good plan to study What to do when tho awakening comes.’ * • • *

Cover the pits In which the vegetables are stored with a foot of long manure ns an ex tra protection against ihe cold. The manure not only helpe to exelude tho frost, b u t prevents the ground from frees- Itig hard, thereby enabling one to enter the pits with ease,

• * sTboee who have loehouses should not

neglect to fill them whenever a suflident thickness of Ice forma. When thick Ice can be obtained clip oft all the porous snow Ice and pack only the clearest pnrts. PHI the erdvioes with fine Ice chipped from th s top of each layer. '

4 . 4If branches of treee break under the

heavy weight of ice oy snow the wound shouid be cu t smooth and. painted with­out delay. If. a branch Is only partly broken off, bu t still haiigs, out It away immediately, for should a high wind come the Inlured limb ts likely to do more damage.

* 4 sS. aping the dead bark from the trunk*

and larger.lim bs of the fru it trees Is best done lurliig a damp, thawing spell. First give the trunk a wash of whale oil. or soft soap, or o ther alkaline liquid, applied with a brash, and then with a scraper cirefu lly remove ihe detfi portione. Thla will give the bark a amooth, healthy ap­pearance and destroy m any taibernatt^ Joaeota.

mer is usually fully occupied with other more presaing duties tbe work nf collect­ing fencing raalerlul must, of iieceBBiiy, whII until the fleaitan of more leisure. It IB beet to do the cutting early in winter tcither than Inte and to pplit the logs Im- mf’dlately. After splitting the logs pile them where the sun and wind will have free acceea to them, so that the jreaBonlng mny take place as rapidly as poBSlble. Pi'leH. trio Mmiill fnr splitting, shuiild have the bark removed at once.

Cutting: Fodder.No one doubts the great advantage In

feeding cut fodder to the Block, but an objection to It Is to be found In the fact th a t even with the best hand-power cut­ting machine the work Is very laborious. Those who have allumpted to adopt this system with tho aid of hand-power de­vices have found It jitipuBslblc to carry It out owing to the Immense amount of time and labor required. By the aid of a steam engine or with horsepower at- Inched to a larger muchlne, the cutting of fodder can be done so rapidly and easily that tho chief objection passes away.

On all farms on which the number of anim als to be fed Is considerable, and where the proprietor is satisfied of the decided advantugea of cutting, It will pay to purchase a small stationary engine and A power cutting machine. Rut those who dcBlrc to try tho ex^rlm en t In a some* w hat extensive way without the outlay of $200 or >300 that the engine and ma­chine will cost, may attach any good cut­te r to the Itcirsepowcr belongkig to parties who during the summer and autumn th rash grain for others.

I t In an easy m atter to take one of these movable horsepower devices, set It up In the barn and connect Its belt with the flywheel on the cutting ’ box. One good horse will furnish the neecseary power

Any one v-ho will give this sysleni of providing cut fodder for slock a thorough

during a single season will find

Barayards.

trial

Fencme RakrialTiiere u a t r e a t d i f f ^ B « ifi this fitira-

bllity o f rail* and poita th a t ans used as fenqtaff m atetisi. Tlmbisr left with the

■bark on decays much quicker than th a t w t ^ Is split and seastmed. Boise rails and posts will last b u t three or four yeara, while others are good for fifteen or tweujty ytora. There la a difference, ot oourae, |n the woods tiaed for this puf- poqe, bu t their manafenteirt a fte r euttbia Is. taort-Im portant.

B tm t'Ia ,otteh .worthleaa a fte r an a year's “ Ificust and ehastnut a « vary

' ^.WSd . .cut and aifilt soQt) after ‘ ;^U lost muflh'. iMiliM thaa 1 dnrinff wi8tib.:Sw aa sua-

'. ■... ■ -

th a t the value of the food saved in feed- I ? twenty animals will he

HUfflclcnt to w arrant an Investment In an engine and a large cutter.

Potatoes for Pigs,Farm era frequently feed their small po­

tatoes to fattening pigs In tho fall, U would be much better, however, to keep those potatoes until the spring, nnd then after cooking them, to mix them with a illtle meal and feed the mixture to the young pigs o r other young stock. In the spring, before the grass Is ready for the stock, there is a general shortage of suc­culent food, whereas in the autumn there are apples, pumpkins, cabbage refuse and ft variety of vegetables that will not keep until spring,

The value of potatoes as food for stock does not He so much In the mere nutri­ment they contain as in the fact ttmt they give tone to the system. For this rrason they will prove much more u se ^ l when fed to young pigs and breeding

. *** spring than when given tofattening pigs a t thla season.

eiir xiDiii tiiRiM l l l l l l T I i r FIIEl

nW y frm sBinple t i t l e s of that justly

1 ‘h'tady's FavOTite Rem- valuftWo medl-

nedy s Bang, Ronftout. N. T,Thousands, have kidney disease and

never Buepeot tt, ^ r , Kennedy's Favorite B em ^r speedily - stops Mch dangerous

*>«*n<!he. JnnblHty to boM Urinto b u ^ g and scalding psln In pass­ing It, frequency'Of urlmtloB,'paie »r dls- cojortf or cloudy urine sad "Mck dust“ depoftta; cures oonstlpatloic drspvpsta. rheumatfinn and lllhessss 'pwaUar to women. If .you hade any o r ths above ; ^ b l « take Dr. .Kennedy's .fbvorite Remedy a t once. It bat oqwd tboueands and. wtll. cute-yoiL Over thirty ycera of wtwffstAlt suooess; Write to-day for free

■ ’ ' i J „

All farm anlmala are benefited by n - erclBC In the open air and fllao by baaking In the w arm aun on pleasant winter dayn. Therefore, every bam ahould have con­nected with H dry. plea«anl ond well- abelterod yarde, and the uee of tbeee ought to b« confined exclusively to this purptfle. When the barnyard 1b made to serve as a feeding apot and a atorage place for manure, 11* uaefulneae Is ubused. On many farms the cattle aro turned Into the yards early in the morn­ing OlTThe milder daya of winter and fed their rations from the ground or In racks. Bundle* of a ta lk s are thrown to them and they are allowed to eat the leavea and softer tope. The main body of the stalk, which, when properly prepfirni before feeding, is a valuable fodder, ia trampled under foot and mixed with the manure. Stalks thus treated require a good part • f tbe ensuing HUmmer to bring them to a pr«jper condition for application to the land. Of the hay fed In the yard only the bent part Is picked out and tbe rest IB wasted.

Borne of the more recklesB farmers feed their stock in this way during the cold­est weather, and the cattle are obliged to stand exposed out-of-doore while con­suming their fodder. In this way not only ts a large proportion of the food wasted upon the ground, but that which is con­sumed la expended largely Jn n-takin* u^ the loss of heat which the animal ueces* sarlly p a rts with under such exposure. In such barnyards the depoHlts hy spring is several feet deep. Over It the animal* are constantly trampling, snd in It In many cases Is half of liie fodder th a t ha* been waatefully thrown out to cattle, The owners of *uch depositi boast of the immcnBe Quantities of manure that they make and apply every year, and cer­tainly the results of (he application* are excellent. At the same time the manure la generaJiy too coarse (or effective use In the spring, and consldeHog i;he expen­sive m aterial with which It lii made, It forms a very expenulve plant f)od.

W ithout a doubt farm s where this practise prevail* could eupirjort duirlng the winter fifty per cent, more stook If everything th a t i t railed were out and carefully fed In mangers Iq the barn. , The m anure from animal* thus treated would be m uch tb o rte r aod ready for use by the p lant* alm oit Immediately after U 1* applied to the jand. Further­more, the condition of the «tock* the thrift and offspring Of Uwir progeny and the quality and qu an tity of the mlllc w o i^ be greater w ith a *maU*r outlay of (eea and capitals T here nre m any farmer* through­out the country irho t ^ n o t , for the lack o f building*, house' tfleir stock or feed them under cover. The prevaient notion th a t *tock Is made harder and more healthy by exposure^by having to “rough lt“ —It *urely a nonkenstcal one. This can be readily seen by comparing the animal* of th* colder region* of the West, whose principal shelter is a soft bed under the snow, with th e well housed and carefully groomed stock In Eastern dairies. The la tter stay In better condition, are lea* liable to d im * * , make better beef, pro­duce richer milk and are In every way nearer tbe perfect type of profitable stock.

............ a ' '

Failiag Ererfreens.Everqreea# ar* fraquanUJ aean fi> a

lanculslwd condition. If ajivs, they maks no'wfiod and tti* txittoln linbs irradttaUv dis. Ths trouUs Is finriralty dtl* to tbs chsractsr of the soil, which I* too dry or ekbftustsd. Almoot all svsrtrasns prefer a moist. loamy soil, contalntns a lood- erats amoant of fwtlltty.

Dry soila can he made to retain M olstnn by spattlfiA in soda o r muck. Siveti though the aoU in Tjhich evorgraeita are growing la very gravely. tbl« tteatm ent wilt moke It to their liking. Ibhaqated aolM wilt fOoil regain their fertility, tt miod ashaa and. rotted uantirB ara apad-'* ed Into theto.

Mothing la agefa hideoui than atiaggly, half-dead avatgraena, and gn a precauUon ir arlU be well to gin* the ggaMmana and

a top jjreaatag « t ugiitoiiB.aL

* « | f a l r i

H e a i m

ittunifSHn

Ortff

Sfl*« F eaa leM eW geeeeg ‘ 7RESTQgES your HAlRIo

It* NATURAL COLOR.H lsa F a a a t a H o'toaBiee, L ak e f lC M fla

, W la., w rites of H A Ill HBALTHi . ,. ' My hair had bten gray ever sinoa t

was tix tssn years old. I t started ‘o gsV gray right on the crown of my hea^ waa dry and t'lll of dandruff, and my a tin. Itched dreadfully. I used HAIR HBAUFEI according to directions, and my hair le now soft and glossy, and very few grey hairs left. I do not think I could gat along without HAIR HEALTH now, tor II la such a fine hair dressing.

Guaranteed perfectly pure, Phllo-Hay Boec. Co, Newark, N, iv '50c. AT DRllGGI^TS.::

N o M ore Cold R oom s

Astral Gas

Stove $1.75

EXPREffi PREPAElSend for tfie biggest little G u

Stove nude. Hright 16 tnebes. weigbt 8 pound*.

Quickly beat* tbe coldest room. Beit for borne end betllh. Ideal for tbe batbrocun. A soUd com­fort in every hooiehold.

Top temovable (or b o tllog Viter. Send for sample, and la* turn if not as repreranled.

Order early.

G ilb e r t & B firk e r M fg;. C o .<2 JOHN STREBT. NEW YORK

1 towttid Ito apatMAffi^:

COAL IS G0LD"ISAVE IT I It'* Itko fiod-

tug. m o o e jr ths way tOi'

Ash^ te r Saves Cm L

Tamtnx tlw crank tut amlimte lifts thf daps. ■Abes, Ko (host, no Hut.kMy too*«rnhi: » t-tiM'

I «aii do I , snd no wnMOStStOU. fItBWtIOdGT. , . 1 bttml; rsTci m*ar

tittMw tts nM In 0 |«iwb > I omlttip tilndEiaarstPXtai-

for laiiktnir {Ito oi- ntohi. ■' oid (ir Iwh** dealers, if TW de*ltf

sa^pijr iroq W* WUL Writs for CiiniwiU' H

i i a a B*wib7.ffeVi

wrh* for Ctmio^HIIL DkVER CO. ■J

MANDO.' Kf'mwe« ttupv'rduiuiM'

triA(*i»tly and from port of th*

r j body, g j fsrr hotll«, by J mall. Banplra. lOe.

MXUM08EPH1KB LB VfiVItB I t i O * O lig g tn u l: S t. P rin a d e lD h la

For sale s* lagibw gef * < ^ 'a tftoiis ♦ Oo.’a

f a r iMOBte wUl OiIIAmL .m i u r H i i n t i n i i i i i i .

B to tn tb *

Page 10: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

10 NEWARK EVENING NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 5. 1907.

NIGHT SCHOOl COURSE READY.WiO Soon Recdve Schedules of Studies Pre-

ftf Them-News of Educiitional World.Th» now cour« o( illidy for th« local

•M K lnt hl*h ochoolf, which haa bean In W4me of preparation for a Ion* time, haa H W completed, la In the prlnier'a handa,

will vary abortly b* «»van I0 the (Musbera. I t *Ivei detailed augceetlona for

■ m luyt* snd im ount of lubject m tt t f r to t»e covered for eftrh year In overy toptu

■ A rthur <3. Balcom. aaalatnnt lupervlaor Qf tvenln* achooli. waa chairman p t the •MUnIttee that prepured the enurae, Rial the othaf ntwnhera were the four nl*ht MAh ichool principala—Fred W. Fort, uf Menbuiti piBOe; A rthur V, Taylor, of R n lltlln i 3- w ilm er Kennedy, of ihe cen* M l Xvenlng Hlfh. and Martin U Cux, of the Thirteenth Avenue Bchool. In Rddl- tloa to thcee, the ipeclal couraea were nraBarad br the epectat teachera. Bill PidrelcJc Jr., head Of the manual tralnlu* Aatwrtment, made out a courae of Chreo jrtaM In ahop work, architectural draw- MA mechanical a rt^m etlc and dealgn- lH|r. Hlaa Cant* V. Stephena, aewln* Mapervlaor, prepared a two yeara' vuurae h reaw ln f. nnd Mlaa Mary L. Caufleia, h« l4 eeokiM Maohw. ouOlwed two years efieadt-wdhkly'fQddihil kaaon».

) |o a t • ( the o thar topica Call for three yeara o( four nights a week the flva IM Btbi the ndcht schools are in aemion, andl ere aa followa: Rngllah, German.(Atln, French, commerolat arithmetic and ItMik'keaptn*. panmanahip. atenogruphy

typewriting, ohemletry. phyalc*. M »heninllra leoludlng algebra and teoin-

M plonaa will, ba given for three work In t h r u of the regular aub-

, and oertIRcatea for two yeara' work la these, and also for the indoetrlal ^pHtefaes.Jv » * •'T t i i new books tor adult foreign ctaanei tn th e night ichooli arrived this week, a t u L ^ eUneea are delighted with them, AMMWht to the pflnelpiilar'll'w iui voted to %uy them at the November meeting of

Board oi Education, becauee there long beim euoh a need.'' Up to tha t thoM growh men and wohwa from

■ le toAs F b sJ te f 'a W*nt*d .toJonrJV,, and read «he nagllah lailg llhg^i 1

• “ - - “-—.■pre!.,hatr, i two

x)ki

been obhgj^ ftp ,.«»e .textb I for chlliisin la the lowdi K 'e s i t s i K .

MA the oUiar b* on* .m A ing book. A t the 'TbanliHn Boftoob the hooka arrived n a r g O a r n t iM .

M ill Natalie Antx and Ulsa Elisabeth O arrahranl to aaalet him.

m• ' -Sr

^ G . S o y e r w R u r a w t r o i C ¥ C *

ISeram bled Eggs with ToroatopB-Stew

halt a can of tomatoes until ail ttio There la a general decreeae In atU rd- " " te ry portlele. are evupomled^ Break

anoe In the a'hoola, due to aickneaa of Inl" a suitable bowl sis ekga and seaBOii th* pupU« th«maelv6ji and In iht-. hoinai. > wUh whU# p«ppvr and buU. w hen rt^ady_ _ r . . . . ____ ■ . U . . ,______ _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . s b . . . H bsaMany tenc'heri, too, are nbient, and the demand (or HubiiUtuleB le Kreal. Sonifl of the inslrurtora. who live at tt'dlHtflnco have not yet returned fit^m their Chrlfii* ma« vacation.

to serve, have a taiioepun on the lira wUh a tableBpoonful of huiter melted, Eeiil tip the HKIta ahd pour thm> Into the eaucepan on the fire and stir with a fork until thick and creamy. Now add

The acpond bl-monthl’y Illernry nfheiing the atewud tomatoes nnd mingle cnreful- of the EsflP* ('run ty Tpachers Oulld will |y uriiJ hnvlng prppnri'ct sis sllceit of bnl- be held at Wallace Hall. Wednesday | tpred t«a§1, and trimmed off the crueta night, William Iscwl* Armslrtmi. of New | them on a hot platter; divide 4h**York, will give a lecture on o toroatoee equally on eech ilifoIreland,” and will elng »ome of the me j toast and Bend to table with a dl.**!!

;a«l

,v .1

of baked potatoea nnd corn mutflns.

Com Muffins—lilft together twice

odles. « « •About f36 wns oloAred by of the

High School calendar, and wm «*ed to . . , , ^ . . . , , ibuv raw vana-forma tor tlve art dapnrl- I < "Pful ut flour, one cuptul of gm nulni.nl | menl There haa been a amnll surplus 1 nieal, a t*bleap,wntm of sugur, a uunruu from the sale of the cnlondnr for several ot u leve^ tenspoontui of suit unO a heap- : years, luul with this It is Inte.ulod to buy ing teoapoonful of baking powUfr. Huh

In half a tahleiipounfuL of cold lard, udd to It one egg wtill beaten with u large cupful of mllHi and miK ul] logeiln'r rail- Idly and thoroughly, Two-thirdii iill well- greaned muffin pans and boko in a lioi oven fur fifteen ntlnuteH.

PINNER,Cream of Orec-n Peas-F^ut on Wu‘ ilro

In a porcelain iaucepnn a tubh-simonfnl of butler, a medium Hla(»d oiilim ininn-d' very fire, a celery stalk, h rooi of pars^ley, two cloven, six pepper come and half a. level teaspoobfiil of milt. Htir until the butter has melted and then j<tli‘ in a tubleHpuonful each of flour and corn­s ta rc h : add two canB of green pens with their liquor, and three cupfuls of water,

a new picture for the school « • •

It Is likely thflt the Parents’ Aasocia- lion of Ihe Franklin Bchool will have no met'ilng* until spring, ii* the new assem­bly Imtl, which wue iohedulfd to bo cx>m- pletod next month, la still far from ready.It will seal from MO to 1,000 persons.

Fmir men and ons woman—ft local vlce- princJpal—took the examination for pMn- capital's license Tit the Normal and Train­ing Bchool laat week. Bight women took the teats for pioinotiw , nnd eleven fnr certlrtcatea to teach In the grade schools.

• * *The round-table of gupsftntcndcnl Po­

land with the BupervlBors and prlncIpalB for January will be omitted, and the next conferepce will take place in ihe Hoard of Education heaCquarierg Wedneeday ] boiling. Stir until it rebolls uiid then i afternoon, February (;• I draw the saucepan back where its con

^ j * AW- ten ts will simmer gcnjlv for forty min"'A ltinfim eB tB are being msde for I utee. ■fte: ' formation of an alumni ss?niclfttlon iit

ATHLETIC NOTES OF SQIOOLS.Gossip of What the Boys kse Doing: in the Fidd of Sport.

No More Soccer at Newark High.

F a M k a r * t *■ t •

A llVO W da

^ DpR tb«lr way ctoar tu be umong.

0 , R H m — t .—■ flf tha public '» Y t i i s w " ' ' . i i# '-u o * t i; iI t t lp w i f t i a # th» Rch'oul »>■•'

t i t t a tit B IM pg ,'ana tkn tour will iwob- to ttt jm a d 'tlb n g th< «uine UAea

-Bg-ghat 'FMafc-AMga* Maaaljb JOt Laodon, M guparietendlng a t pyeefnl in th!» coun- t r r U I* punned W troniall laciKina.Qf the United BUtee. and it

. la lo p tA 'th a t bnihbalt of their cgpcnaeg ka kielr bv tM a , reipectlve ecbSol

. Ingird* f ^ l B lL ^ o h e r , now5 t b M floUMlIf «ffl f lM l^ n r> a r .t^ o r uU

'^ A E j^ i r a(ila^ A'hiiat w t AUSlani

‘■mm Dim hu aaam ■Oheatloa d u a rte ta jp ^o jn ew i t n , h* will keep regular w ip e t t u r e every aftam oon from 4 to d o'clock, hod h* wjii ^ ■ 'th d re more than heretofore, aa .h«.

1 *0 much olerloal work on hand.

the Oliver Street Bchool. Till* le one of the oldeet schonle In the city, und up to Ihe present there bee never been inch an organization. • • >

n iba^ r M a t(« T ii.Mies Oeorglannn Perry, of Summer ave-

mie, who hue been at home for h tr Chrletsnna vacation, will return to the Woman's College of Baltimore this week, where she Is a sophomore. Miss Perry holds one ot the High School eoholar- shlps in Ihe Baltimore Institution.

* • •Three teachers from the Ashland

Bchool, E ast Orange, were visitor* a t (he Franklin School yealerdsy. The Ornnge Institution was not In session, ns (euchers ahd pupils were waiting to enter their new building Monday morning.

' iil»*‘'M ario Bultner, head of (he Qer- nfaii department of the High School, and Ur, Grace Cooley, teonhiy of biology, htiva hott''beefl out of Ofhoo! all this week on account of slckneea.

• * •The Acropolis, the High Bchool publi­

cation, has presented a targe picture to the school. It I* n brown print of "Down" ahd hat B wide oak frame.

« s •The annual bonnuet of the Schoolmen's

Club will be held nt Davis's parlors, MU Broad street, Baturday night, January 'J6.

s s •Tha n e tt meeting of the P rinelp tlt' As­

sociation win take place at the Free Pub- He Library Wednesday afternoon, Ja n ­uary K.

• ■ «Prlpclpal Arnold Voget, of the South

Tepth Street School, who has been de­tained at home lor nlmost a month on|M |'W «ek ha h a t bfaivhuey making out

■ E iM e re « r the M iflear egamlnatlona iS S T w l l I to iA .^ iW tth o laat we(dt In JtnW ry i a t4 (Oh *n extra eiaffltnaiioh

- la .griihipetlo januhry »■ f**'* '• innovation, and will b* given to teat the tBUlSranlp teyhnl,i^ if2J‘iT*oy“ ''d prompi-

p’" -■'.tnnHorm enrolsjint dUrd (bf wch pUjsllf tn,.i»M'y wMwl ■ih*'i htt«ai(td M a

h o ttn ltteo df prlhctpah appoiftlea »y BtupaMriUndeM Fblaflff. ghfH It 'Will bo wNdantaH tor the oommlltee on nuppliea M the Board o i Bduoatton a t Urn next 1 The Newark Kindergarten Union will

' taaetlng. U adopiad, about thWG will he I hold, a meeting a t tha Free Public Library ordered. Thate are about W,b00 puplla Ih t Wedneeday nfternooh.

account of ll|i]esi, returned to his deak this week.

* * *Ulsa Grace lla'mlltDii, n graduate of the

High Bchool, and ulso u graduate of Ml. Holyoke College, hae been eubslllutlng a t the High Bchool th is week.

* • «The evening schools resumed work for

1h« new year Thtiridsy night, end the drawing >i,chool opened ita doora Wedne«- day night.

move from the lire and rub It | wUh pressure through the flue strainer. ; Return ll to the llry, and if ready to : serve add iwo cupfuls of boiling milk and a lablespoonful of butler, In smull bite. Aacertalh |f tlto seasoning Ih cor- i

pour Into the hoi and b*mu|to table.

Rolled Fowl. Sauce Allemande—Singe, draw and wipe Inside and uut with a towel wrung QUt of hot water, a fowl weighing about five pounds. Tie H Into shape with a itring and put ft on the Fire In a saucepan that will just hold It. Put in two quarts of water, n medium-slscd onloti in which has been stuck two Hovea. a dosen pepper corns, two bey leaves, two stalks of celery and three branches of parsley. Bring it to the boil­ing degree and then draw the pi>t back where It will maintain a oonstunr even tem perature of IM degrees Fahrenheit for two and a half hours- If ready lo serve transfer the fowl to Its hut plet*

and pour a little of the sauce over It, Send It to the table wjih the remainder of the sauce tn a sauce bowl. ^

Allemande Sauce—Put on the fire In a sm all saucepan a tablespoonful each of b u tte r nnd flour. Stir and cook a tittle and add two cupfuls of the strained chick­en broth. Hilr until smooth nnd lH>lllng and remove from tlie fire. Add onn egg well beaten In lablespoonfql each of water and lemon juice, a tablespoonfnl of butter in im all bit* and a few grain* of gratfU nutmeg, U will then be ready to use ua diroeted.

Spinach—Pick out any Imperfeotlon* and trim the stalks of half a peck of spinach. W ash It in meny waters until It l* en­tire ly free from Rand. Have on Ilia Are a gallon of water boiling rnpidly. tu which

been added a tabiesponnful of salt and a piece of common WHHlilng soda, tho size of a bean. Shake the wiiter from the spinach leaves and drop them Into the boiling water. Five minute*' rapid boHinig with the saucepan lid off will usimlly cook the SThnonh tender enough to remove It from the fire, Pour U Into the oolnndvr and prcBM all the water out with n Iviwl nr a plate. Chop it a little nnd return It tu the fire; add a few grnlns each of pepper and grated nutmeg, and a tnblespoonful of bittler, Make It very hot: pile It high on a hot platter and send to table with the fowl.

DAY'S FOOD FOR SIX P E R ­SONS AT A TOTAL

COST OF 13.47.B R E A K F A S T .

C s r e i l w ith Cream S c ra rn b ie d S Q g i w ith T e m a to ts

B a k e d Po ta toes C o rn M uffin s

Co ffee

D I N N E R .C re a m o f G reen Peas

B o ile d F e w L Sauce A lle m an de S p in a ch

B o ile d O n ions A p p le C u s ta rd O 'A u v e rg n e

S U P P E RL e ttu o e , F re n c h D re ss in g

S tew ed Cheese T e a B is c u it s Sponge Cake

I T E M I Z E D C O S T .C e rea l .................................... .10 ♦■v'ji p in t o f c r e a m .................. .10e eggs a t 42c. p e r d o z ...................211 q u a r t o f p o ta to e s .......................09V t c an o f to m a to e s ..................... 071 c u p fu l c o rn m e a l......................011 cu p fu l o f f lo u f ...................... .031 egg a t 42e. p e r d o x .................. OS'/^1 te a tp o o n fu l o f b a k in g p o w ­

der . .................................................021 c u p fu l o f m i l k ..........................03Fe ta b le sp o o n fu l o f la r d .............. 011 ta b le sp o o n fu l o f b u t te r ..........02V ege ta b le s and a ro m a te s ..........D32 ' can s o f ipreen p e a s .................252 c u p fu ls o f m J Ik ...........................041 ta b le sp o o n fu l o f b u t t e r ............ 028 Jbs. o f fo w l a t 1So. pe r lb .. .90 V f p e ck o f s p in a c h .....................261 egg a t 42c. p e r d o i .................03>/aj ta b le sp o o f ifu l o f b u t t e r ............ 021 q u a r t o f o n ig n s ..........................061 ta b le sp o b K fu l o f b u t te r ............. 021 q u a r t o f a p p le * ..........................101 c u p fu l o f s u g a r . ..................... 031 le m o n ................................. 023 eggs a t 42c. p t r d o a .................10*/3 c u p fu ls « f m i l k ..................... M1.cu p fu l o f s u g a r . . . .......................03

p in t o f c r e a m .................... .10Vx cup o f s u g a r ................... . .Ol'/j1 le t tu c e . I , ....................................... 154 ta b L tsp o o n fu ls of o liv e o i l . . .04V in e g a r and c o n d im e n t* ............. 02

4b. o f A m e r ic a n ch e s s# ... . ,092 eggs a t 42c, pe r d o s ...................071 lo a f o f b re a d ...............................OS3 c u p fu ls o f f lo u r ........................... 05a te a v p o o n fu ls b a k in g pow der .031 ta b le sp o o n fu l o f la r d . . . . . . .01V/g c u p fu ls o f m i l k . . . . , . . , . . .032 eggs a t 42c. p e r d o z ................... 072-3 c u p fu l s u g a r .............................021 c u p fu l o f f lo u r ................... .021 te a spo o n fu l o f b a k in g pow ­

de r ...................................................01

from the lea keitir. This Is a grave error,Of the high percentage of nutritive suit which the onions cuntuin Is dlpsolvrd and thii)wti away In ih* tlrat water. A mode more rational in to cover th e oqJons at first with boiling wuter, slightly salted, and acidulated with n few drop* of vine­gar, ami skim U o fu n and thoroughly. When the cmtunH are Hufflciontly cooked pul a teblripoonful qf bu tter on the fire In a smqtl saucepan; when it has melted s41r in and cuok a llule a tablespoonful of flour. Dilute !i with the onion broth until It I* or the proper consistence of sauce and add a few grains of pepper nnd more sail If needed. Add the onions carefully to the auucc. so tha t they are not disfigured; give them a boiling and then at once tran-nfer them to a dlep hot vegetable dlHh, and send td table with In# fowl.

Apple CuBlurd, I>’Auvergne—Peel, cor? and slice thin a quart of cooking apyls.^. Put them ou the lire with half n cupful of w ater; cover closely wllli the miucepan

’ lid and stetim them rapidly until they a r t tender. Remove them from the fire ^nq s tir In a cupful of sugar and the gratthl rJnd and Juice of a lemon. Pour th^ apple* thus prepared Into the dish selov't- ed for the custard. Bmooth the surface,

I and having well buHten Uirve vggn wllh il cupful of sugur. and three cupfuls of milk, luy It very gently on the apple with a small saucer or cup or ete.i a targe spoon. Stand It In a buke pun esjn- tninlng hot water nnd bake It until o9 liquid oufltard show* un putting a eponn carefully Jntu the centre of the custard. When about to serve stand It on a su it­able dish and sand to table with half t pint of sweet thick cream whipped to a stiff froth, slightly sweetened and flavor­ed with four drops o f essence of almond.

StJPPEB.liettuoe with French DreMing—Par#

the outside leaves from a large Jiead of Boston lettnoH. Break the other leaves In two or iliree pieces each and wash In plenty uf cold w ater. E x trac t the water from the leaves hy sw inging them vigor- ousiy In a towel; lay them irt the aalad bowl, and If ready to serve, pour over them four tahlespooiifuls of olive oil, a

. level tablespoonful uf salt, a teaspoonful of sugar, a few grains of pepper and two

I labiespoonfuls of sharp vinegar. At tho j moment of service mix all together I thoroughly und send to table.

The Newark High Bebool loocer elaaa tournament, which w ai atartad early In the achool year, haa died a na tu ra l death.A* It aland* now the Jualora and aoph- moree are leading with two w tn i apiece, but It la likely th a t the bard work of tue boya will go for naught, aa In all probability no more gamea will be played.For two yeara a loving cup donated by the teachers of Ihe achool baa been on exhtbtdon aa the emblem Ot Ihe chsm. , ptoDshlp to be won and now It | i likely to be held over for aOlI ano ther aeaaon.

• « •Fred Moy. the N ew ark High Bchool

boy, haa been doing some ta ll Indoor Jumping during the paat few months.Five feel five and a halt )n c h « la fala 1>eal mark and If he contlnuea to show such form he has an eiee llen t show of breaking the High Bchool record a t the next annual Held day. The present record la flve feet four Inches, held by Wesley Vreeland. * • •

William Wat!*, who two year* ago, while reprcMnWng the Newark Academy, was the champion weight throw er among the Now Jersey school boyi. 1* doing «ome hard training this w inter In prepara­tion for going out for th# Pennsylvaflii,Unlvewlty track team in the spring.W atts has all the neceflxary qualiflcatton* for a successful weight m an and a little coaching should make hint a valuable addition to the varsity squad.

• • *Arthur Vanderbilt, a g raduate o f New­

ark High Bchool In the class of June,1906j ha* been cholen m anager of IheWesleyan University freshm an track 1 ,^18 year, one of Its perforroanoeateam, Vanderbilt is preparing for tiie . Montclair High Bchool byministry and Is one of, the most pop'ilur [ ,,,p of j , ,,,,,0 Acadomv will

ccrliilnl)'-'have Its hand full In taking care of the visitors.

• * IAlfred Baum haa been ebusen to cap-

iHln the Newark High School cross-coun­try team for next sfaHon, AUhongh th is " was the local school's first year a t thh. game, the team made a splendid record; getting a place In every meet In whlcK it participated and capturing the cham­pionship of the New Jersey Interscho- lastlc I^engue. Baum was one of tha team 's beat and most consistent ruimpra.

school#. Noyes won many places l« it year on the board track and tho ezeeUeiit r#cord which h# mad# will In all Ukell^ hood be eclipsed by his performancM^.thia \ Bftason. ^• • •

Last year there was some talk of tak ing up awlmnilng as an tnlerscholsatlo aport.. Although Montclair Military Academy i» the only local school to boast of a tank, still there are many pools available In which an Interesting series of races oould be held. Tpe sport, too, would likely be keen, with Creed, of Esst Orange, who JIa a lifeguard a t Asbury Park lii the suitiS- mer. pitted against Alverson and Bmlth.\ the two Newark Y. M. C, A, cracka, n o t | to mention the host of unknowns which such an aquatic carnival would bring to light.

• * •Th# withdrawal from school of WUliani

Brooks Is the passing of another land* mark in school athletics. Brook# enterod BQbDo] In 1901 and sine# hi* freshman year has always taken a prominent parf In the management of High Bchool a th ­letics, Brooks was an officer of the olJ New Jersey Intersehokasllc Athletic As­sociation and laat year was secretary of the newly organised league, Brooka h«1d managerial offices galore and always acquitted himself well In hi* position. Th* school losea In Brooks one uf the hardest workers and moat popular fellow** th a t ever attended the Institution.• * »

Newark Academy's basketball gan)^ with Jersey City High Bchool on January 30 will likely tax the capability of tha team severely. Jersey City has a strong

' Slewed Cheese—Qrut# o r cut small half I a pound uf American cream cheese. Put It I on the fire au bain-m arie, with half a 1 cupful of iiillk, a few grulns each of dry

niustard, white pepper, paprika and salt, and an much bicarbonate of potash as I will fltand on u nickel Stir it occaalonal- I ly until ll is quite dlasolvt^d: then add to

It two beaten eggs and stir again until It Js smooth and thickened. Meanwhile pre­pare six thick sUosi o f bread by having th# cruHt trimmed off and being toasted and buttered. Range them on a hot plat­ter; pour the stewed cheese over them and send to table. '

T o i* l co s t. .33.47

: th* •chOfil*. The (orms .wlU eontaln a Jitapk tor the ehiUI'*,. . . . . . . - nahiei p aren ti' namo, | The High Bchoni battiiilon will sta rt Ita

hiliikim , hawe ,ad- 1 weekly dfllls a t the armory on Buesex_ I, age o ( ehlld. date of birth, place * ( birth, date ot promotion and preacnl

. . .Hew M a lf- ila r R a le .

The new State \aw vrliiiiih PBEfBlte pfln- ttpa la to dtsmlae ichool a t IV b'akirk. In-

of a t 1 o'«)o«k, when 1h*r (htnk Mi' ", waatjier domend* only a haif'.dfty session,

hM already been put Into effect, ami In Hewark has been made an addltlohal rule Rbloh those in authority think win do away wtth<)ioldmB half-d«y seealons, «x- Mwt (or eonte very good excuse.^ T lte principal toust notify the euper- tatendept a t onee of (uch actipn, nnd l>r. fialand muet make a report to the Cora- tolttee on Teachers a t Its monthly m “e(-

. lag of each ichool tha t hue held a half- dgy eMilon, on hOw many occnelons and Ihe reaeon why.

.'sC'i There were mnneroua reasons why the Rthte law wus chiiiigrd. Pour bnur* wllli- « u t loterrupdon wue rather a loiig Mme

averiie shortly afte r February i.. . .

TJie midyear examinations a t the High Bchool will begin Jiimmry 21.

HIGH SCHOOL NOTESTil# next numbui' of the AcriJimlls will

bo out Januftry 18. It will be th# Inst itnue uudiir th# direction of the present board of editor*. Th# fnatures will b« iWO short storbB, "The Grissly Bear.” by Edwin Poland, and "The Voice," by Ethel Ru«e and « vrrae, "Amo Te," the Itleiuily nf the writer imktnjwri. Bcalilra IhcB'' there will be tho usual dvpnrtments Of Pcliool how*, pcrftumils, uthlotlci and coiigrt^^Blonul nuicp.

Th# roRUlnr monll^'y. meeting of tho jinilur B class wa* held on Wednenday. Owing to the absence of ihe president. Ward Dlabruw. Jaiit-t Llnnelt, th# vie#

Boiled Onluiis—U Ifl lutually the practise to put autfleient onion* on the fire IQ plenty of cold water, nnd as soon as It roachca tht» boiling degree to throw th# water away arul ^ubetitute boiling w'ater

Ten Biscuits—Sift together three cupful* of flour, half a teaspoonful of Bait* and two teawpoonful* of baking powder. Rub In with the f ln ^ r tips u large tablespoon- ful of lord; add a cupful and a half of cold eweet milk and mix Into a smooth, rather soft dough. Turn It out on tiie floured paatry-board; roll ll out to the thlcknesft of half nn Inch; cut out with a biscuit cutter pieces ah Inch and a half In diameter; lay them on n greased baking tin, brush the surfaces with milk and bake In a hot oven fifteen minute*.

Sponge Cake—Pvjt two egg# and twrf- thirds of a cupful of sugar into the mix­ing bowl and b«at them together for about three rnlnole* until light. Add flve tablespoonfuis of rapidly boiling water and beat to tnix. Sift a cupful of flour, & teaspoonful of baking powder and a cjuar- ter of a level teaspoonful of sa lt Add It to the eggs with a teaspoonful of lemon extract; mix rapidly and turn It out at once Into a paper-lined cake pan. Bake In a fairly hot oven for twenty-five min­utes.

members of the freshipan class.• « «

The Newark Academy *'gytn" team, althqugh It has not appeared this sea­son In public. Is by no means Idle. Al­though basketball Is tak ing much of thi; boys' time th# gymnast# And spur# mo­ments In which to practise their turning and tumbling. The three-hlgh atunt will again And a place in the performance of the academy team and th# boys^ are justly proud of ihelr neat execution uf this rather difficult feat.

* • •Paul Hungs, a Newark boy, is making

quite a reputation for h1ms#lf as a baskot- ball player a t the PtseksklU (N. Y.) Mill* tary Academy. Rung# boWs down a guard position on the fly# end Is one of Us strongest players and best goal shoot­ers. Peeksklll will likely play Newark High School Ihl* season If The negotia­tions which are now going on a re succead- fut. « « •

Tlin bask 'lball gamp hptw e.n Nvivark High Hohool and Ihn Bi’ya' High School of Brooklyn, wtilcb wcj Hcbednled for to­day, has bpcn onncclcd by tho Brooklyn boya. Tha team |ias ba»n ofllclally sus­pend'd by the A. A. r . fo rplaying pro- fesHlunal fives nnd Its disbandm ent la the roBult, Boys' High School recently wllh- dre* from the Long Island Interscholastlc League because the football championship which It won was given to Ernsm us Hall High School on a protest,

« * •Newark High Schcol'* Initial bowling

appearanc# wa* #o snrre#sfu! that a big Impetus w'ftfl given the popular pastime a t the local school Manager W alter Edsall, of the flve, is now busily engaged in ar- ninglng a sehedul# of auflflclent length to warrant giving the boys plenty lo do until !he spring weather cause# the Itching .for' the national game to displace the tenpin craze. Th# next series the- team will roll will be against the Sherman A. C. next Thursday, « • #

Montclair Military, Academy seems to (like hardly nay tnlcreat In w inter sports. Although the s ^ n o l supporta a hasket- ball team, the five plays few gamea, and I ns for track athlellca. the "cadets" are absolutely dormant In this' respect.

. . .Fred Noyes, the speedy Montclair High

School flier. Is training hard tor the near approaching Indoor ath letic m eets of the .V , _ W.T__ XT_1. rsr^nflFAtfirV ■

Genealogy

big New York and Brooklyn preparatory ‘ wick collegluns.

Judflon Bloren, a former n|,hlcie of New- j ark High School, j* playing fin ihe basket- ball team of the New York t!lefilal Colleff#- The gam# between that .*ichool and New­ark High, which was *ohedul#d for ye#- tr^rdoy, was postponed until iKune la ter date. * « *

The recen t warm weather has played havoc with the hockey team# of Mont- claip High and Newark Hlglt. I f Ih# ' temperature does nut taken a iuddeh 'fa ll the boys will be given their dally prgd- Uses Indoors. The wood floor of the gym- • nasium makes • an excellent place o a which to practise, although the boys ar# somewhat hampered a* a rule by th# small area (ft space available.

• • *P. B^ed. a graduate of the K earny

High School, Is doing good work on th# Rutgers "gym" team as a performer on

'the flying rings. Reed accompanied th# team on its recent trip to Troy* N. T,, where Rutger* met the Y. M. C. A, gym- UKsta of th a t city In an exHroltlon dual meet. ♦ , ,

The regular monthly meeting of th* New Jersey Interscholastlc League will be held Monday, January at the Mont­clair High School, The fate „of lacroae* as a league aport will (>e decided a t th * meeting. * , •

Newark High School's hockey m atch with Poly Prep., which was scheduled for to-day, will be played next Thursday, a t the Saratoga Rink, in ^Brooklyn.

Howard Glee, who was one of the beat pole vaulters ever turned, out a t Newark High Bchool, Is captain of the Rutgera College "gym" team, Gles Is the best all- around gymnast In college, and his work Is eontrlbuting not i, lIHls (o the succesa that la being attained by the New Bruns-

prlnCees and point lace. Mr*. Hopwood will lie assisted Ih receiving By Mies Flor­ence Glldersleeve, of New York, a school frlPiid of long standing, and Miss H«Kn Nichols. With Mias Hnpwood In the re­ceiving line are Mias Florence Nugent, of New York, who, herself, will be IntfO- duced next Wednesrlay. Mias Emily Leidy,

this country numbered over 3,000,000 In tha year 1890, there Being ftn average of one German to every four persona. The first distinct German Immigration to this coun­try was In loss, the speaker said, adding that there was mnch less now.

Mrs. M, E. Leslie gave a paper on "O ur- Mexican Border." Bhe also added to her

■; Miss Madeline H ardham anJ paper a personal Id ler from a friend In

in'csldcni, look chiu'ge of (he meeling. tg r the youiiscr children to hit edtl; often t The treasurer reported i< hHlaiioe ot tl2. Ihe peronla worried It the youngsters did | It was voted to t.ikc op u collection for

i.b't

Bbt <jome horn# a t tk#lr acmi*tnm#U ilm*. p.nff many chllUnm bail lo be excuiefi lu tajc# luncheon* to ihelr father*. Tlum. fpo, an hour's dlfforerir# in th# time u #hiM EFQlf hU me:il, wit# deemed• f mor# ootiBi’quunce than wltl^ an aOuit.

• * «Lecture* in the school* will be

given thl# w#rk u* rollow*: Monday. Inthe Fourteenth Avenu# Kenti!?thfiruc# will ittlk «ti "'fli^ Ktiiforlc Hiul-

li. TueWay, Avon Avenu# .ftob‘iolgJteV. William J. Tilley, "The French titvfliuflon and the First Nbpoleou;" T^Tefincafifiy—three i(-rturt^«- in ilie Alcx- S n ier fllran flehoci). ilepry 15. Nurihrup, <in "Four Year* In Hlwltzi-rlnni. ' In the jBruoe Btjeei RehOtj], Mr, Bruo# Wllf.?#- poiU hla lecture oh **Th»* Hlsuiftc 1-Ifid*

" In th# Third Gsermiu I'reshyie- n»ii .('hurch, Tulonel >'dwflini W. Hill, '*IJn- #fM Cut of a R dh pth# rir# t ProBbytorfriii Mr. Nor­throp, on ‘WeauvuiP nnd th# Buy nf Na-H e f - " ' ■ „ ,

The Jjmuary meeilng of <h<' Purent*' A*«nelatlnn of th# ElRol Siret-i Brhonl will b# held nt the nohool bul]<11iix next WedtjcHday hlRlitg instikiid of last Wednes­day, which wrt* th# reguUu- ilin# for IheSathedfiff, th e pg»ijppu#nicm waa im t\r^

aflht of th#-!)nlllhiy^.‘ Penutur Rv«'iTtt ,Colby wll! make hi* lons»prnmin#c1 speeeln, a-nd a choir of 130 mill# will BiuH,about thirty of the boyn cnmirijc from PI Steplicn’s Eplscoj^l .C‘h\rri’h. vxlier# the prlnclpnl, Rhaffer, Is cliulr-nm&ter.

* * ■The Mondfiv mornlUH of ih#

Vx\i #rvl*i»r!j with Supen Ilium lent Pulaml lULv# been dlaeontlhued. iiud th# hour will probably tie rhniKreU to Monday nfler- jBOOn. The niHetlns pine# will W the board's aasemhiy hall In It* now quar- Ur*. The r#a»>n for the change Ib that -th# Mundnv inoriiln^ seNNlons muk# the iuperviKorR lut# in Into the

' ighoolfl, #B])#mally ihon# who hav# to ftpy great distance.*-p--- « » *. .Th#*' roKulur mantUly meeting of the •Xecwtlv? comniiUp# uf th# Rwsex Cohtuy

rlulld will b# held n1 the Frc# public Llbrarj^ VVednesdRy uftornoon, Jnnuary.9. U wu* postiKmeil one week from Th# f#itula.f Um# on accunnt of the VsMUen. At the mealing the date will be fW ' for th# iong-talked'of reception of (fe« SUlW to th# new Boanl of Educationig.-pe given In th# rlty hail.

« • *k l i A ‘ T o . P l c ln r c a ,

picture* In the auditorium nt the School will toon h# rearranged,

tpfl] Stearn* ha* invited UbraHiiti fehn Cotton Pan*, MIk* Margaret CouU,

the Iwnpflt of th# ih-orge C. Bonn M#' runrla l aohohirnhlp Fund.

At Iho n ex i r(.-gu1ur m ee tin g n f th e aedn^o! congrefiB M onday offlciers w lti in* H ftclud fo r th e rum lnB te rm . Caucufi#:* th e re p u b lican nm l IndependiM il p a r t ie s w e re held y es te rd a y fu r tho ee lec llun uf^ Ih e lr vnTiuus cundldiileg, T h # -follow ing ' Oftndldnte« w'#ru rhnseti a« th# r#pf#*K nta- tlvPB o f th# rep u lilira n p a r ty : P re s ld e n l o f congreK#, Ohitvlep l i r d d e n ; B peaker of Ih e houMo. W 'urrcii H re tt : d o r k . VVllllam JoftC hlin ; uBidatiuit c le rk , A lfred R nun i; A oropoll* re jjo r tc r . A lfred C ooper; p u rtv Icadur. F n in k llii I 'e n y . T h e Im lependen i p :ir ly ae le rle d tin- fo llow ing : P res id en tof co n g ress , V P u e n t C a*a!e; sp e a k e r nf the huuae. W illiam R eek er: e le rk , (V eil .itfftte: . *fl*l«tnnt ( lerk, K n e ll;A crojio ll* rv po i'te r, H e rb e r t H arm ock

A t th # r e g u la r rneertviB o f th e H#nlor A liiBa on W udhpsduy a P in tem eru w,ir

>iiiide o f th e experiee# uf (l:inn d, v. n f inibllHhhig th# c la^ s p a p e r nnd nf g n u h i- u tiun . It w.^s fuum J th a t th*' rr*Kular I liiHR rnndB, lo g td b e r w llli fhi- liUHertSiment w hich l* b# lng lev ied on each i n n n h t r o f Th# ehiNS, w ill co v e r a ll expenacs. -V v-riae of tl hiJH been o ffe red fu r th# hewi chih*yell deviBcd.

C U d llJn Thirlemun, H e le n R u n yo n and i.> c il C. A g a te w ore uppu in ted lo a c t a-n V idge* in th is c o n le s l.

N e x t w eek t iie r lf is s In geo logy w iU ta ke fl t r ip tn t lio M nsputn o f N a U itM l l!i^dn^y In C<*ntnil l*ark.

Thi n lalH for Uie <-nndldal#* fur Ih# de- hiillnj^ itiilll which In In meet that of the Muntrtlalr High School in r dehnto on (ho ipjeMihin of lah'-'T 'mmup. March 1, will Ijo held n ex t T lnirN ilav Thi’ two CTltiO# nf th r ai'-hnol curigrcww. I'rufewflor Morris L, Uflrr and PrnfeHNui F’hnhk G. (3dman, together with a third sni'nihcr <if Lh* fii'-nllV not yet decided upon, will flet an Uio Judge*

T h y J u n io r A c la ss In Id n u ie c tln g W e d ­nesday. A ch is* y e ll WiiH dcelrled upon, and It w as fm m d t lm l the e las* fund* now am oun t to Ikl.

A m e a lin g o f the Ramt)k}r*’ C lu b w i l l be he ld th is e veph ig n i th# hom e of W a l ­te r V a n W in k le ,

A p ic tu re o f the B y ra c i iw U n lv e r a l ly n a v y , bhow ing th# vHrJoua crew*, haa

i>r#8etiled tn th# schcml b y th a t in- s-tllu tton. A p ic tu re o f B tevens In s t itu te (1* It w il l lo o k w hen th<* new bu lld lnH * have been oou ip le ted , haa been g iv e n the

^A^^mcetlr^ff o f the A r t* nnd C ra ft* C lu b w** he ld T h u red iiy . P la n s fo r n e x t y e a r w ere dt*tMiMod

R u le 1—In a ll ca.s#* g ive the fu l l nam# a n d adder**, and w rite on one eld# of the

. p ty ie r g if ly .‘ R u le If—E v e r y le tte r th a t 1* to b# fu r-

w a rd e d muat* have su ff ic ie n t J ir im p s lu c o v e r expense*. C on ten ts o f a l l le U f i* sh o u ld be fo r th# hejicflt o f the puh llc ,

: R u le 3—C a re shou ld b# ta ken to rnnk#a l l In q u ir ie s and an-swer# as f\ i l l as P'>*-

I Hibl#, with ip e c la i re fere rc# tn datcp n:.p ' plaf^Ofl o f b ir th . d#ath im d m flTrlRgra. h i

a u B w e r in g alwa)-ti g ive num ber o f in q u lrv ,I iila o , w hen noBHlhl#, au tho r lt ie* .

A iid r# *8 ftli com nu in lca tlon s i to M . D. W hc# l# r T h u rs to n , care o f the E V E .N IN U N E W S .

fCnrr#otlon of rrd*i*fnt#monts n.inlnhioil in N n , 17’n> iin il anaw#r<‘fl In No. ITHfi.)

N o . 1 « I 8 - G L A R K - ^ K I N N K R -C m u ln - tied fro m No. 179S—J rtiv ( 'lu rk Hk1nn('r :irul huRimm l, R ich a rd , bccinn# m m iberH u f th# H iiptlw t (Church nt R a h w a y (Ui J u ly 17. 1X36, m u l N ovem ber 20, re- B p ee llve ly (B Ih le l. T h ey were v^ruhiihly o r tg ln a lls ' P ruAbyte rlnn* . Tb*» rm ir c ld l- ,lri>n o f Ju n e C U irk and H lc h a rd Hkhu ie r

WUH no Kenond nmrrl.ige. The yetir of her birth IS Kl-iu pr>^v#il; tiled uged elgbty-nne, In Ihe clrtlity-secmul year of h#r age. H im e I x u ii In iTcVi, In H ie yatue w a y we liv-t l ie year of his bh'Hi He died, aged rlii'.-rtix lit the hrfy-HCVfnth year of hla ngi-. w:\rt born in l/fiO, Inscrlpllons:

■ III Ml. n in ry n f .Ji-hn !Vt. C la r k . Who d ied In (he f if iy -H e v e m h y e a r o f

Ills j'i:. ; iH s ij I^ i-Ik -1, hi# w idow , w ho d ied l^ ccfn iiM 'i' is, islii.. In Ihe H g iu y -s e c o m l yeai -f her age. "P E R U ."

No lS l 7 - I I A r t K lS O N —I f the w r it e r o f No. w i l l .' end h is nam# and iidd rea* lu m«'. T iip i'th e r w i i l i d a te s o f b ir th , etc., o f su ch m em lierja uf h is la m lly a s he i c iin v e ra u ii l wdth, 1 th in k 1 can find tho In fo rn u iH u n fo r l i lm th a t he Inqu ire s for.

W. 15. H.K<>. ( ’ R A X i- : Bom# tim e ago I saw

Hayden’* VlrglnlH Genealogies, page 177: Power's Sangamon, III,, page T2U; Wnrd * Hisuiry, Hhr#wabury, Mas*., page Temple'* North Hrookflcld, page 764'.’

(J. T.No. 1823-PRrDDEN~VVALKER-Has It

ever b##n d#finliely seilled whom John Prudden. baptized IftFi, married, nnd where can I And an uccoum of his Ja­maica amt Newark pastorates?

It I* stated th a t hla slater Mary mar­ried tt Walker, who died before Novem­ber Si, 16S1, wiiftt was the name of thS* Walker? Were his Blacera Joanna, born It O. and Eil*ah#ih, born March 4, KUd. married? >1. R.

No. 1W4-BOTSFORD AND ALLTEO FAMILIKS—Continued from No. IWa. Ell’ Herbert Uotsfurd m arried Angie K. Sand- ford, January, 1SH4. They had on# child.

in 'Jersuy Ournuilugy." No. 1451). aigned | a daugliler, ElixaUeth Sundford.1. 1. who wniiTi'd Information u.h to Niithaii or Natbaidal Crane. I would sta le N athan Cnuu' IhI w:ih Ki)n of Ax»i-

inll iMjrn In New J^rsMyi wure- i Plillip \ rlali Cvam'. rnv gp'-at graiu]fn1h#r: lived In Bklnncr, born March 2H, 17I>T. mnrrletl No- \’#mb#r 16, 1820. HarrlPl Kelley; ih#j' had • ■liildren (J) Jane Clarlt, born Oftrilier JT.1H21; <2) Hannah ^fa^sh, Itorn AugUHi 1';?.J.X26; (31 Aiigiifltus Colton, born Nov'crn- i>#r 1. 1S29; (4» Calvin [either, burn Oein

aSlaffiird Tnwuftbli!, Monmouth y'oimly, N. J.. and h<* wa.'< a lieutenant lu tho rtevohitlonary War Hia wife's name waa Maiy Hiul he had a son Nathan Jr., born in the yuiir ITWl, un>l did marry In ToVn- l#y family. Naihuii Rr, had two wives.

the nanit-H of :ill uf hla children by 1 I^U WlM'N ^ W. A'. ( '.

No. 1X13- DKN.MS — The following

____ . w i d b « a u t l f i f » tb ®1 i n u l f l e s t w b r M ith .

E B 0 d »” ------------r o r a r a t t ^ ' j x t x a a o e a t u r y .

C o a T e i i i e u t fior t o o x i s t a .M l|PM (0|IY

SfiC_ .

C o n c ert By V lc toc H cfB ec l’a B an * .At the concert (n Be Ktveh by Victor

llerhert ami hl» orrhestra, with the aa- slstanre Of Klrkby-Lunn, lliegreat Enpllali contriillo. In |he Krueger Auditorium, Friday night. January i l , .th e following prugcam will Be preseiitaa! Overture, "C arnival". . . . . . . . . . . . . .DvorakAria, from "Bamann and Delllati,

"My H ear, a t Thy Saraei Voice,

(a) '•Plorl^'c?;''Carnival'' ................. .Burgmeln

(b) "Jinltation of a MuaJe Box (or- cheBirallon bV Victor

(e) "Bpanith Dance," from en auU*."The Naticma"................ - • Moalkowekt

■ - - -oa"................. ..Vardl.. .................hy-Lupn. '

IntroiucUon to Ih* third act and th* dance of the apprctiHcoa and tha procesalon of the maeteralngera, from "Die M elBi.'iratn»er"....iTwafnei'

l a ) "Love I* a D w* ib" i .Percy Pit*

« m > a AtoTrto^ii V i i S ^ ^

her 2K all trnae uf Philip flklniiennid | He emigrated lu Nurth Carolina. T have his femlly is lost.

Joseph SkiJiner. born OrtobfT 24, 17W, died Replemlau* .'I. iWHI; Is burled on Skin­ner fjtnilly plul hi Railway Cemetery.

Cursen Clurk rtklnuer. born July 25,\m . died December 16, ISM. In fVm. Ind.. when' he Is burled. *Ttle left home In New .Jersey when ubiml sevenleon years old i.iboul (be year going to Ohio; llv .1II 11 number of different towns In Dint

Hdiip ami In llllnoU;' wus ft *trl<‘i ITesby- ll•riaIl sill Ills life. He- married In Decrin- ber. lKi'7, Lftvlna Beuddor. born ui Harnll- lun. died May 9. 1S«. In Plqun. O,.\v)ier.' sb# 1* burled, immes uf lu'r parenta iLtU knuw'Fi. Tbelr three ohtMi'un, nil bornIII ur near Cincinnati. 0.. w#re; (1) Clark Skinner, born AiigUPl 30. IRiS. died June I i!v\3, m South Bend. Ind.; nuirrlf-d March 31. 1867., Nannie C. 8ew»dl. born .\iurnst 20. 1H38; died January 2, lk7b; their I'hddren Were H) Fnink 8«'Wolb <21 Clark,(111 William Q., (41 Rrlwin M, (51 Carrie.

2 Corolln# Skinnor, born Seiiiftnber 8,JS32. married In Peru. Tnd,. Nuveniher 1,IS.'iS, Coleman Hen ton. born March 7. 1822; died Ju ly 6. 1896. Their ehlklr#n were (1)Col#. <2) Benjamin. (B) HnrriM. (4) KM#,

Hal. ^3. Mnry Jane Hkinner. born April 29.

1«14, dl#d ISfll: married in I860 a t Selma,Ind.. U*vld fllnst.

1. Rachel Skinner, born November 12,1803. died AuguBt 16,115M. In Clnclnnftlb'O.; married January 21. 1824. Qeorge A. Col­ton. laft no children.

vVftnted**(I) Name of father uml maiden name of motber of Mia* Memeroau, who m arried Joseph Clark, father of John Mor- centau Clark, with all poRfllble date* uf birth*, deatha nnd mardagei^ of p#r*ons jYienllonad- ^ .

(2> NBino of father and maiden imititS'm m other of Rachel CorHon, wif# of John Mercereftu Clark, with all dut^a as ft!iov«

e*pf :lally date of lliicliora h in t and h#r mni rlago.

(3> A doiiiilt# statement of John M#r- cei«uu Clark's Hevulutlomify services, with pftrllrtilArs; also the prusrnt Invalloji of any axlsiing military rolls, nommlsalnns or m«MSftln belonging to him.

(I) Th® p rrsrnf liHiilltdi uf Julm Mi-lce-- roau Clark's Bible.

(5) Marriages, with th«?lT d#sceiid«uts, of John Marcercau Clark's inn children, ox* uepi the oldeBi. J hih*, who I* 'accounted for. ‘

(5) Marriage of Rov. Joseph Ckirkj brother of John Mercereuu Clark, with hi* deace fidanl*-

(7) l l ie identity of th# son of John Mer- ceraau Clark, who went tu Piqua, O.. and wholw daughter married a Howland, ,

The iom ^ton# of John Muroeroau (jiark and hi* wife Raohnl (Cursen). In the Rah­way Cemetery, ha* been olrared within tho pftst two weak* frum the earth which partly etnbfHlcled It. Tho broken pl#o#B» pu t together, give tli# following Insc/rlp-

ChftfU-H Hull Botafurd married Plorenea Tapping and hove (1) Flurencs, (2) William W arren BotsfnrU.

John end Kphrnim were brother*. Hla wife wftfl bynthlii. II# came from Sharon, Litchfield Cmn>ty. Conn-, to Burke, N. Y., and died there. They had five chlldrpn, (H Luther, (3) Eliza, (3) Elvira, <4) WJ1I- )um. (8) Loren, John, brother to Warren, went W est; no record of him, Ephraim, ft brother of W orren, remoined In Con­necticut, who t* said lo have com# from Litchfield County, Tunn,, In 1766 ami died there in 1795, leaving two sons, Elnatlmn

"flcrups" I copied from Imlex oarda of ] and Kphralni J r . Luren K, married, hl« Christ Church, New Hrun.Hwlclc, N. J.PopffIMy ih#y mny help some on#:

liUzabcth Head Dennis, baptized 1S(W,Hook B, page 3; Suphla Matilda Dennis, b!\j)tizod 1S17, Book H. juiga 4; John Den­nis. bai)tlz#d 1817, Hook H. page 11;TlU'fcsu l>oanlH, baptized UiH, Bonk B. page 9: HenrieUa W'ure Dennis, baptized IStiW. tJuiik H, prtgi- 3; Henrietta Ware Dt’unlh., cummiinlcnni 182ri; Henrietta War#DcnnlH, m arried J827, .Innu-p A. Atlums,Book U, page 14<d J^outsa Dennis, baptized 1819, Back H, piige i:i, died 1M2U. ug#d fo u r­teen moiilbs; Mrs. Putty Dennis, coir- rnutiiciinl isus, aged ^w eul.v-four; Suann Dennl*. murrlcO 180j, Israel Hlok#y, Book B. pago 184; Corncllii DemdK, inarrli-d 181],Jacob K. VniiditfvRr#. Hook K. pag#: 136,Elisabeth ]ft-imJs married ISIU, Peter A.Mttduirn. Hnnk B, png# 147. John Dcnnlfl Warden, lujri*'d Ual4, aged slxly-two,Book B, page 203: John Dennis. Jr. m ar­ried Irttt.rift ------- children John 3d, BookTJ, page’ ll. Marbi Dennl*. comnumlcaht 1813, ligc twenty-seven:. John Dehnls Sr., commiintPiinr iHtll, children John, church warden, S)iirlal ISOH, aged eighty to eighty- four. Book B. png# 198; Mrs. Dennl*. wife of John Dennis Hr, communicant 1S61; children. John. M H D

No. 182i)-HMTTH-Add1tlon«t and cor- roctbms to No. 15JH—flusHrnah Trembly should be Elizabeth, daujcluer of PcioV Trembly (2> fJohn (1) ami MaryJ and Busatmah Hacker, who married a Holland Dutchman by name of Smith—probably Henry. Susannah Trembly, siHior of Eliza­beth, m arried Amos Morsf. horn 1712, b to lher of Joseph, th# aurvc.vor, and *oti* of .JoBfiiph MOrae (fd [Peter (4>, Peter (3)Anthony (2). Robert a>) nnd Susannah — — e possibly f t daughter of Mutthlfts Hctfield. J. c . C.

No.. 1H2J—COX—OR A VBfl—'t'orrfM’don* to No. I6ii4—Phehe WInan*, wife of p#u*r Cnx <4> [Philip (8L Philip (2). Isaac iD), was n daughter of Wniwm (8). htu-n l7flo [John Cf)i John 'Dll. Rliiebfth. Ptiaalhlr a daughter of Philip Dodiige. not RarHh’ as In No. 1624. Th#y had two sons and three daughters, all married and settled in Bomerset County—WlilUim <41. Philip (4),

•Elizabeth (4) (had three huabnndB), Hun! nah (4). married Job Cosart; Plub# (4), m arried Peter Cox. J C C

NOi lS2i»-TOM lJN-I desire to know of OB* Barauel Tomlin, who by a survey of April £7, I'ra?* eeems to have had nropertv a t P erth Amboy, N. J.

OC whom wa« said property rurch«H#d.?Pleaee give h11 informaUhn about him ItU t IB pozalble, Jkime Tomllti Is bald to have purchased eight iiqunro mil## of land a t H per iicrs a t whnt 1* now jtuL lice Kill. CHouceeter Couhty. N ~p u t n * * '- — . . . . . - V . . , . - -------^ - J., but

tSon, which aeitU's, beirond thf. isisslbHliy cahubt And hi* muno, I ^udge ti was be­n t a 4floBbt. several point* In hu^stlon. It j tw ren IW-ITW. Can atiy of the readers

- ■ ‘ o f ^JorjU T w nealogy’* etiBghten upontlU»T

g te iiw ‘that Rachel, wlu» wa* ibe mother o M a o e , the eldest ohlid. born March 26, 1774, gtid inoiUer ot all of the other ohU-

jo x v f o t Jt>im ^ r k , h k i.enty ^ tut whUiir. Thiirt

ilto o a n 7 one t t l l one w h a t ta u i a

children (1) Ellen, (2) Henry and (3> Will lain. Ellen murrled Perlgo, Burke, N. Y., nnd had two chlldr#n. (1) Elmer Friinds,

Addis KEngftley. Elmer Francis mur- rled Katherine Lyon and hnd on# sun, Addis Kingsley; m arried Ellxuheth Bmlih, Chateawgo, N, Y .; live* a t Saranac LoUe. N. Y,; Is an atto^ney•at■lftw^

Luyallwt Botsford line, who went lu Ctnado. In lTfi.3, from Connecticut,

In Dumesduy Buck “ Htiltsford Is re­corded. In A. D. 1086, In Wllllanv the 0 ^ - queror's time, a* being posHesHora iiml tenements In LeloeBlerfthlre nnd de- Rcendiint.^ of the Briton. Early tn the .^eveutt^enth century they emigrated to America, for Henry Boteford cam# over In 1638 and In 1638 settled In Milford, Cunn# In A stone In arch of Memorial Bridge at Milford, Conn., dedicated August 28. 1S88, "Henry BotaCord, obltl 1686, and wife KliXHbeth" Is chiseled,

6 AmoB, 6 Gideon, 4 John, 3 John, 2 Elnolhan and JBIlxabeth —Fletcher. 1 Henry and KHsabeth, Milford, Conn., born In 1744, graduiited from Yale Collage In 1763 and professor there In 1768. Ha took the King's side In the RavoluUorf; trent to CanadB. He wiv* commisHloned by Sir Ouy Carleton, commander of British forcea in New York, a* agent for that band. who. at the close of the Revolution, removed to county of gunbury, Nova Beotia, now of province of New Bruns­wick. and landed a t P a rr Town, now 8L John, May 18. 1733.

Amo* Botaford oacured i r a n t of botos lot* In Patrtow n. but eeitlgd at SacH- villa, W estmcj^land CQUfity. BUte papers In public archives of HalifaXi. N. S„ snow Amos Boisford's duties as agent to baw been to superintend th e apportioning of lots, to overeee and arrange all public transactions of the m lgm ttug population and pecuniary allo'Waiww of the ero i^ , which accepted bis oertlfloates as suffi­cient evidence of ^yffients*

(To be edntimjed,)

Happenings in Society Circles

of Niitley, ....Mien Mny McCracken, of this clD'- Mrs. Antliiiny Post and Mm. Ambrose Tomi'- klns preside at the urns, and frappe will be served hy Mrs, A rthur Lebkuecher, et F a s t O ru iixo .

* • •Mrs. Edward N. Crane gave a luncheon

a t hrr home, 30 Central avenue, yesterdny afternoon. In honor nf her youngmt daiiKtiter, Miss Cora Crane, one of the delmtanten of the aenson. The table waa decorated In pink, nml each yonn* woman wits presented with a bunch of pink rose.. Covers were laid for thirteen. Aahle from Mrs. Crane and her daughters, the Misses Amy ami Cura, the guests were: MHSAntulnctte Qulnby IScnddcr, Miss Florence E. Murphy, Miss l^ u ise K. Polhemus, MSss Lucy IJndabury, Mlsa Kathtrlne Young. Mlsa Kale Rosa Wallace. Mis* Helen Osborne, Mias Marie D. Campbell, Miss Marie RIker and Miss Adeline UodiL

« * *Mias Ijcailse W ashington gave a luncheon

and bux ptirly nt the Sbubert Theatre this nflernuoii. The luncheon took place at her hnnu' B Washington place, and rovers w.re laid for seven. The table derorallona were lilies of the valley and rosea, anJ emit young woman received a houtiuel, Mrs. W alter a. W ashington, mother ol the hiisiess, chaperoned the young women to ' thr theatre, The giiesta were Miss ("ora Crime. Mias H ester Van ArsduM. Miss AntolneUe Qulnby Scudder, Miss Florence E. Murphy and Mlsa Helen Us- boriie * * •

Miss Adele Doremiia gave a card party a t her home, m Brond street, this atter- nfion. In honor ot Miss Theodora Coe, o' this city, and Mias Beth Holcombe, of Iianibertvllle. Bridge waa played, aril there were about fifty young women pres­ent, Miss Florence Doremus, a sister of tin- hostess, assisted in Receiving. The parlors were decorated with Christmas greens,

* * •Six of the eight boxes for the concert lo

he given by Vietor H erbert and his or- ehestra a t the K rueger Auditorium next Friday night, tinder the auaplces of the Oulld of the Hoapltal of St. Bem abas. for that Institution, h a re been purchased by Mr. Bad Mrs. Gottfried K rueger, Mr. and Mrs. w . Campbell Clark, Mr. and Mrs, Usal H. McCarter, Mr. and Mrs, James l,awrenee Ogden. Mr, and Mrs. Zacherkih Belcher and Mr and Mrs. Joseph M. RIker. The young (men who have ac­cepted Invitations to serve as ushers are Murray Sandersnn. chairm an! Harold Dennis, C. OsJjorne W heeler, Hamilton Ursine. T-eonntd Lnmpman, Edward. H. Wright Jr., Edward W. Soudder, Fred- erlnk Vandyke. Gayle Youhg( Zachartah Belcher J r , H. Toler Booraem, Stuart Young, Andrew J. Hedges. Dumont Mer­cer and w illlatn H unt.

Mrs. Bverard B. Hopwood la giving a tea a t her home, 7* Third avenue, this, afternoon, a t which she Inmiduces to sooiety her only daughter,(.M ist Kllsobetli Hifpwood. The hotne has been decorated with a profusion of pint: roses, palms ai>d ferns, And the tiiblo elaboratety trimmed, iirs , HbywoMTi’ gosvn Is of blaek spangled igee, over silk and chlAlon, with black velvet triin(Dlnga. The debutanU wears s prW ie»r«iiplni pssifl g ra y gUJt ,t« p a tj* ohiMi nguTsd 'w R b piRk ra te l. Bad irtoi-m et

ngUTSd 'w R b piRsdth rfMtHwtotnA veltn t Mbh

c4cthttks of tie ^ Women's Gabs

Tift linlmagundl Club m et a t the home of Mrs! Blohard B. Liiinti, l l Taylor etreet, yesterday afternoon, th e assistan t bo«- ess being Mrs. H erbert Rnwson. Mrs. Emily Vandervoort waa selected as the club's representative on the legislative committee of th e B u te Federation of W oman's Clubs, and Mrs, WlUtam H. Warner, Mrs, F rank B o lt and Mrs. Lunn were ohosen to attend the m eeting called by A l^ m o n T, Sweeney a t the tJnlverelty Club Monday afternoon. The subject to be d istiuss^ then Is th a t of the Uaivsn sity Club course of lectures to be given th is wlntef <"> ‘ke English novelists, and dslegates from atf Women’s clubs are Im vlted.

A oommKtee was appointed to- m^M arrangem ents for a d u b breakfast, whleli le to bb given In February , to celdwiite the tenth! birthday of the eocletF, TUS committee copslsts o f Mrs. WUHani B. Burnett, chairman: Idles Etln Sayre, H fi. Buwson, Mrs. George H orisy, Mrs. H. JL Btaekford and Mrs. I. R. ManaOeUt' m A W arner, the preetdenf. Introduced a no# member.-Mrs. Ella Fmnolaoo.

The program was a oombtnaUoh Of the Otis scheduled (or December 'H dnd that for Jsnnsry I. and Ineludod German life and MexlDin. Hiss Jennie HWMeit gave a paper on "The Germnn

Mexico, giving an account of the life there. Mrs. Leslie told something of tho railroads and mines there which have developed In the last flve years, She also told of the origin of the City of Mexico In 1S26, and an account of the old trad i­tions. Mrs. Leslie read from "The F a ir God," by Lew Wallace, for Mrs. Burnett, and Mrs. Blackford gave Miss Ella F lor­ence's paper, in the latter's absence. The subject was "Ranch Life." She described the life of the ranchman, the round-ups, and characterised the men aa loyal, hard­working, hospitable and daring. She said the cowboy first wishes to be a good roper, then a good rider, and lastly skil­ful with a revolver.

The roll call waa answered by name* of progilnpiu Germans or Mexicans and by anecdotes of both nattonalllles.

• * •Th# ex#cutlv# and buflnesa meeting of

the Ray Palm er Club wa* held In R uth- prfofd Hall, 17 We*t Park street, yester­day afternoon. Routine buelnese w u transacted, and Mr*. William H. Brown wft* appointed a deleg'ate to the meetlhff at the University Club.

Th# next meeting will Include a talli by F rank D. Loomis, of the Jotnt com­mittee of children's institutions, on "Chll^ Saving W ork." The seRsIon will be held a t Rutherford Hall Friday afternoon, Ja n ­uary 18.

• k *The W oman’s Club held & social a t tha

ctubroom*^ Broad street, last night. The affair was in d ia r i* of Ml** Auffusta ‘ Brldiem, Mrs. J. H, Bechtold and Mias Laura Brom^l. Dancing was a feature. To-nJgbt will be held the monthly m eet­ing of th# council, and Monday night the regular discussion cIusb will m ake plans for A e coming year,

• • ♦The CuTtomls Ijle ra ry Club will m eet a t

the residence of Mrs. J. D, Llpplncott. 304 Summer avenue, Monday, afternoon, Tha chairm an wilt he Mrs. Thomas J. BlsseiU and papers will be given by Mr*, 8. A, Hurd and Mr*. W alter Brueu,

« t *A lite ra ry m eeting of the CoUegt

W om an's Club will be held a t th® F rea Public L ib ra ry next Friday afternoon . The chairm an will be Miss Grace .There w ill be a dlscuwslon of the Clean City L eague 's W'ork by MIbb' Isabella Howell, The discussion of “Racial F ac ­to rs of New Jersey" will be oonttsuedr

B • «The subject uf freland wai Again token

up by the Travelers' Club of .RoaevUle g t the meeting held In the hoihe o t H ra. Robert Madleon and Dr. Augutto HttdlaOB Kelm, > Ruaevitle avenue, yesterday af­ternoon. Tile papers by Mr». A. B, JOhn- Bon on "Irish Women of Note," and U ra. CharleB C. Thompson on "T h e Chaaink o i. an Irish Holiday," were omitted on ac­count of the absence of tboto membern, They will be given a t the next meeting.

Mrs. F rank S. MaRipton apoke o» "Quaint Villages In the Xalley of tha ■ Biftckwater.” eomparlBg th a t'r iv e r to the . Rhine of Germany, ih e described tha odd little towns aoattefod along Its bankn, and told some of their legends. Hrg. Charles K. W est gave a paper on “J Week a t K |llarR«fj" speaking of tha- beautiful aeenery, and comparing SIg W alter Boott's account of the Irish lahM with W ordsworth Bnglish word-ploturbl;

Mrs. George F . King read "The .Lamaht of the Irish peasant,” by Lady Duf(e|siiib ' and a plaiw so|o, "Tba Kvenlng EtM .” Was played by Mrs, Louis Marvhh of Bloomtlstd. Miss BophroWs Andorton and Mrs. H aiR pfm store appMnted dslaggta# to the msaUfig a t the Dnlveralty Gltib, Monday afternoon. The n u t meeting F i t he h(ld a t the residence «( H iss A da t . Totten, M H prth BSnysnth street, F r td a r atfarminB.. J k n ^ f f M- ,.* ■.'. ,....

Consf/iIf rm *111^0

rf/O nI k o n

Nditouai' Ufe; ' aay iiif was very hwat at *T3S3LS:.

t.Oot

.gboT tM ior

iM f w k » wili^igoirog of A k Mfka In V

lt,«t.«apot*’ ho about

tM tii.ftiriteM lllk:

W &

Page 11: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

I '

ITEWARg evening iW ^SATtJRDAY, JANTARY 5. 1907.

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life

oilffht. and

T h e re t to

the so in-

■ r i g h t Ijorlmer will brinff his M fa^em em In "The Shejjherd King'," a t the Newark The­atre, to a cloae with the per­formance of th a t dram a to- >

will be followed there next ' Monday evening by Forbea Robertson umi •Miss Oertrude EHioU i„ one of tlic rdram atic noveltlea of the year, George Bernard Bhawa delightful comedy, "Cae- *ar and Cleopatra," which nrwised ao much Intereat during its long run, Juat ■eloaed, a t the New Amsterdam Theatre New York.

Mr. Bhaw ortgtnally wrote (he play for Mr. Bobertaon. and Ua llrat pnhUc version bears the date of 1S99, when, wUh other plays. It appeared under the book (itie of 'T h ree playg for Purl tun a." has been considerable comment a? why Mr. Bobertaon did not produce piece abroad. As a m atter of fact, adequate are the stages In lojudon the-

. alrea th a t there are possibly only two u rg e enough to accommodate such a pr«- UntlouB production. la ist len r Marc ICIq>w, of iha ftrni of Kiaw a Erlangi^r arranged with Mr. RobertB{jn for an American tour, with the rcanlt that 'C aesa r and Cleopatra" w;ia first pro- duoed on any stage at the New Amster­dam Theatre. It met with almost In- •tantaneous siieeess, and Is eFtslly one nl

, th e most amusing comedies from the pen Wf Mr. Bhaw, whoae brilliant wit and dur­ing ^treatment of (heme has already placed him In the front of contemporary dram atic writers.

He has taken for the period of t,ia piny the tlipe of the Invasion of Egypt by Caesar, after he had defeated Pompey a! F h a m lla , whom he wua pursuing In the hope of encompaastng bis u tter annlhlta- tlon, Cleopatra was then sixteen years o f age and Caesar was In his tvirly rifiies. The queen had been driven tu Syria by her brother Ptolemy and his aiipporters and he had seized the throne In Alexan­dria. The first act opCne In the iialuce uf the queen when the news of the ap­proaching Romans Is first brought to her household and It la developed that she hna ftsd In terror less she be devoured by the conqueror and his vletorinvjs leglon.s. The second scene of the aet shows t he desert St night, with one of the smaller .■iphlnies In the foreground. Cleopatra, who has gone to this, her favorite sphinx, for pro-

T ^ e w c o ir tV ? .] ftkV"' V v ^A ld trv .a .iT .'n - 's

- . ^ 1■m

^ T p o m 'T K e J la tp L A tv d HEve Gii*L" a V- h K e S b . u . ‘k?et*b*,

teo tlnn arul consoL ition , Ip o u rle d up In i ts i.jj’iws, fa s t a s le e p , w hen C u e s a r ht- xlvfeH. 'J'hn I tn m u n w a rr io r , w hoae llf« h a s been dfdicatf*d to th e g |orlflru .tb»n o f h is em p ire , is w orn a n d w ea ry , lUled w ith a •sense o f tu tiU ty IJjo t uftei- a life tim e of h u ltlea h e o a n n o t b r in g a b o u t a c o n d i­tion of p ea ce a n d a h ig h e r d v lllg o tio n . H e e n te rs upon h is e lo rjuen t u p n a tro p h e to th e nplilnx. In wLiloh he u n lo a d s all nf h is I r ib u la lio n s . C le o p a tra Is a w a k e n e d upd in a m o m en t you g e l th e RUbsb'ince of lie r ingen iious, g lrlla li, n a iv e e h a ra c te r Hs the HUllior h a s co n ce iv ed h e r, a n d as MIrs E llio tt em b o d ie s S h e b eckonsto (.-aesar a n d saya^;

"Cnm e up, o ld g e n tle m a n . O ld gentle-i m an , com e q u ic k ly up h e re u r th e H o ­m ans will c a t you. A re y o u a f ra id , an d

ll if m usica l tvm cdj^ in w hich K ddle F uy Is KtiitTlng.

■ Tlie Kurl an d ih e G ir l." Jn fiib rlcu tln j^ w hich S eym our H loks, Iv an C Jiryll itnd H 'T cy G reen b a tik collabnrutrM l, th eRtory of ft p en n iless y o u n g nob ienm n wdiORe c re d ito rs com e abo iil hip o a ra tU (he C ritical m o m en t w hen he Is on th e pultil of w elcom ing a WM'althy A m erican g i r l—ub je rr. m a trim o n y . In d rs p e ru lio n le st ihLs young w om an ehou ld h a d i>ut llie s ta te of llie dniiTu'Cs, he engagCM J im Cliee.«;e. an an i ma l Iru ltie r, io lmp<TR«»nii Ir him ThriUigli a n iie la k e llie crcilitorH g« t

( on th e tra c k o f the re a l enrJ. w h ile Ihe ' A m erican g irl, K iph in H aye. by unm e,

m ee ts 1hc‘d o g -tra lr ie r m id in h o riille il w ith hlH vulgarltJe.'t.

I

*-■' Ind'i

Ido you want to run u'wuy? C'onie up j In the course of events these oompUca- here. It la very coxy and I am very lone- [ H"np are siralghlened out to tin* hmUh- ly. and I will let you sit on Its other 1 faction of every one roncHrned. bin nnt

[ liffo re th e au d ien ce lia s en jo y ed m<iriy T h is u a fo n lsh e s C aeflar, b u t ho com - | h ap p y la u g h s a n d h a s h e a rd a v a r ie ty of

p lies wUh h e r r e q u e s t a n d th e sc e n e w h ich I p le a s in g m olodles. A m ong th e se a re - ibo th a J tl ln g on th e pawsi of h an d la te r wdien th e y go to h e r l8 a p o e lllv e d e lig h t In I ts ..com ic

fEvlluV.'rt,Sphinx palace, effoc’t.

T he finsl dJscnvi*ry n f h e r f r ie n d ’s Iden- ll ty an d th e g e n t le m a n n s r In w h ich th e grefit g en e ra l s low ly b r in g s th e g ir l o u t of he r cloud of s u p e rp tJ iio n In to th e d ra t glompBC of w o m an h o o d is d one w ith ex - QUlilie a r t .

T h e p lay in su p e rb ly B taged a n d th e co m pany s u p p o r tin g M r. R o b e rtso n an d M Irr E llio tt la w o r th y of a s s o c ia tio n w ith them .

T h e Ktanberl T h^m tre.T h e fina l o p p o r tu n i ty fo r e n jo y in g a p e r ­

fo rm a n ce of " T h e M an on th e B o x ." by H e n ry E . D ixey a n d h is a s s o c ln le s In th e c a s t a t th e S iiu b e r t T h e a t r e th is seoson o cc u rs lo -n ig h t, da t h a t p ro d u c tio n m utii Jnake w a y fo r ' 'T h e E a r l a n d th e G ir l,"

HOLIDAY PRODUCTIONSThe making of plays from popular fle-

tlon continues, in spite uf the disasters Attending the recent productions of adaptations of such notably ' sellers'' as Edith 'W hartsn's "The lioUBv of Mlitli" and Mrs. Humphry W ard 's ''The Mar­riage of William A she" The latest com­pression of a novel to the lim itations of the etege le ''B rew ster's MlNions," found­ed upon George B arr MpCutcheon'.s book of th a t title and produced in the New Amsterdam Theatre, New York, last

' Monday' nighL The collahorators' In the work Of condensation are Wlnctiell Buillb and Byron Ongley, and ftiey hove sliown *0 much expertness In their theatric trea tm ent of the orMflnat m aterial th a t th e result of their labors, combined with e a admirable Interpretation of the comedy by a talented eompsny ond one of the m ost spectacular and ' realistic scenic effects recently disclosed In a metropol­itan playhouse, fum ishes very pleosant entertainm ent.

The central Idea in the piece Is a fan- taatlo one and It is developed lit a way th a t piques the curiosity o f those who have not read McCutcbson'ti novel and results In amusing complications th a t fix attention and sUmutate m irth. By the provisions of the wilt of an eccentric rela- tfva, yonng B rem ter hi obliged tc spend n,amfi00 within a year In order to inherit |7,0».IIM. In three days of extravagant IM ng. philanthropic la r tah tte n and ex- penilve sports, ths obligation Imposed on th s hslr In this csss would not aeapi' tu ^ a bar to hiB Inheritance o f wealth beyond the dreams of avarice. Brewster •onddently undertakee his tnak and. be­ing generously disposed tow ard his old friends, determlnee that they shall prsilt by hta compulsory extravagance. TheSa n s he takes to sqqandar Ika mllHtm

citnes Dbo o f his benenclariae to regard him as Insane ami brings about quite a tragic development In the humorOiM vol- «me, th a t serves admirably, however, to throw Into relief the comic effects of the •peadthrlft'e conduct.

The pleyemlths In this Inetanos have not 'depended on comedy only to Interest audl.

' ences. In ttitsodvclng a yanht a s the toeata s r aeena qf th f action, they in-,Yltefl the stage eerpenter fo ^ e re ts e bts - « • m asrroi&tded by an n ee ileh i' otnn. titiDost ingenuity In creating an llhielftB, J W . George Nash, O nuit S tew art. W al- BC well has the mechanic perfoniaid hfs ) « J» Sddmger, th incan K arris, N an- work th a t nothing so renlletlo and de-1 eite_ Oomstopk and I xiuItc Drew, in par- eepUvp a s th is vessel floetiTig among toss- cly|ng him such a«ptx>rt a* m abeiInc blllawa with the moving panoram a 1 th e general perferm anse ashltarM ing.

Olln Murray and Amy Summers ably sec­ond his snorts.

* * * 6."C a u g h t In th e H a tn .’’

Ao author and actor, WTIllara Collier has made a hit In the new farce, "Caught In the Bain," which he staged in the Garrick Theatre, New York, last Monday night, W riting the piece In collaboration with Grant Stewart, the comedian has supplied lilniself with a vehicle for his stellar ambitions that Is likely to be as serviceable to iitm as were Augustus Tliiimaa's “On the Quiet," o r Richard Harding Davis's "The D ictator."

The rather eccentric conduct of Dick Crawford, is the m e a n s 'o f the m erry, making that results from farcical mlsup. deratandinga and m istaken identities. A professed woman hater, but very good fellow a t heart, a s Is shown by his will- Ingityss to sacrifice his prospect of pe­cuniary profit In the Interest of a num­ber of hard working miners, with whom he sympnthlsee In tbelr struggle to earn a livelihood, the young m an m ^eii a yoimg woman while both are caught In the rain in a square In Denver. Prom ptly losing his heart to the unknown, he rebels against keeping an agreem ent, rashly made by him, to m arry an old friend's daughter in order to save th a t friend from financial ruin. I t speedily develops tlwit the daughter Is none o ther than the girl he had arranged to wed, with­out knowing her and th a t the girl, not havUig learned Ms identity during their chance Iptervlew in the rain, resents bis unchlvalrouB conduct in thcowlng over h li fianaee for a supposed stranger.

U vantually the mleunderstancUng Is righted end the prospect of domestic bliss looms before the lovers.

The flomedy commends itself to audl- onoes by Its m any humorous Incidents cleverly designed situations, in which old stags trick* a re handled In a fresh and effective manner, and striking contrasts In oharacter draw tag. The role of Oraw- torq. IlM Ifp, CoUlcr like the provertrial grove, end a* the comedian has Ute ik iu of the true tareeu r in creating laughter by an aeepmpflcin of aeriouenetii, hie itn- p ^ M U i m le a s droll tn l u appearance of 8i»rlet!r noder m irthful conditions as M y M rtrapeJ bo baa put to hie credit.

\

of a lighted city In the background has bean etajm l in the pfesentment «f oomedi', tragedy or btsfodrqma The dtacloture p f |It Is bound to whet popular interest In the production, a* a large ueotlon of the blarcolng public la he fond of ftovettlMIn speetacuUir echlevement* behind th e . _ _____fo o tllib ti a s a child, l* of a nstif .toy. . t ly to the comic egerthm a of Alfred Hick-

The aufHseai of tbs' production, t* .doe la j man In the role a f ait am ateur Actor, em- • large m sasuie to ^ e p lire ra engaged j ployed to ImpertHMiaia. the N ro in e-w h o b setting forth .the ednteata o f the pleoe. l seeks hla help In extriM U itt her froU tits

■ ‘ .Abcleei 'dfbo bun done muoh Sil- I dlfftouliy. lu whMi ih e 'lw rb e o n placed by -E I h tr B,nxl«t3r t9 Wf4L lh9_|kftii of b»r oholto'

.A. M«w H vofettl PlEiPg; -'MaUMa,” a new mnatcai play by thd

tale L N. N o ^ w m produced by Mao- agor .Walter H. Lsiwreiioa a t the Ifadlwm Square vTheatte, Hqw Turk, last Uonday ntgM. end scored A aueceae, owtug targe-

WiMiid Mke to M «rry Von,’’ " l W arn a Man Mfule to O rder," "W on ! You Ghiins^ 'i our NumeT" "M eflltetraneftn Blue " ;u»d ■•TIuw'd You J J k e to Spuon w iih Mt*?" Tills Inat num ber Is aoi'tuiiptttiiei] hy a novfl bu of husInesH wliirli provldi'K ten Kjris with tJuU pro ject over tlielu-ads (ff 1 he amllenre.

Aesoi'ialed will: Mr. Fo.v, whOM fun- PisT-klng ahIJIiy has conimpnilPd him (n aimiflcinetit lovers In this rHy. are such tiiler.ted entnrtalncra as Harry TI Lester, Clara Inge, Zelnm RawJfium, Teubi'iic D'Armond, William Armutrung txmi Kruitk liUVarnift iinil a large ohorua. The plecH is mounted by the Shubert BrolherH In tfifi lavish and pictorial mjuiner that distlnjulBheil tlielr luany siicoosHful pro- ductloraft of musical comedy, A prjpuiar- prlcwl raatlnec performance, will ho given Wedneaduy.

* « ■P ro rto r* ! T h e a tre -

Miss Auric Dagwel], the BarrowsG..4in- caatcr company, LK>vell and Luvt-11 and the other entertfllnera who are amusing pa­trons of PfQctnr’a Park Place Theatre this week will give the final performancefl In their present engogeraenl to-night. The progrum arranged fur next week will bring forward other specialty performers wlwa»* vorled offerlnge will provide divert­ing ejilorta lumen t.

Oonsplcuoui among the newcomers will be th« OlivelU Troubadours, expert vlolln- i^ s and gultarlRiH, whoae performanecH h ive delighted miialc lovers, and will a ircai for those hearing them here. Jane Oourthorpe, who is said to be ri clever flclresa, will present with the nid of n Illtle company a one-^act romedletta. en­titled "A Fiaherman’H Luck.” The KSla- mura troupe of eight JnpRnep» Jugglers, aorobata and equlHhrlmH. wHl exhibit iheir skill In various feats. l.*ew .Sully, the comfKjlan, who wrote 'T Quma T hat's Going Some," "Not Yel, But Soon," "After AH" and other popular ditiles, will be heard in a flinging and talking act. Cliff Bersac will exhibit his trained ponies on a revolving table and will offer a pubstandal prlxe to the advanturous youth who suocoedfl tn riding his un- rldable donkey. I-^eona Thurher and her "PlckanlftnlPfl" will present a medlpy of epitcby songs and dancea. McCrea and Toole, experts with the rSfio and appear­ing In military garb, will Invtte attention to thelf prowess as aharpRhooters. Daly end Devera will appear in u comic ekctch, and the blit will b e>completed with a new setiea of motion pictures.

T M C o lu m b ia T h e a tre .The offering next week a t the Columbia

Theatre where the melodramatic produc- tiop. "Hew HeartB Are Broken," ta tn- tereetJng audlenecs, will be "The Cow Punchers'* a new play bv Hal Reid, who la Bald to have derived Inspiration for hlfl work from the record of a yo\ing woman's actual experience, aa i*eported in a New York newspaper.

The locale of the drama Is AHaona and the heroine of the play la a young woman, who, after having graduated from an Eastern college, taeted the sweets of fush- ionable existence In New York and re­jected several suitors for her heart and hand^ migrates to the far Southwest to take up the work of her dead brother, who had bequeathed io her u largci ranch. I t being necessary for her to iflve her personal attention to the management o f her property, she comas into Contact with luany. o f pappia o f the region,,with one;of whom, a cow puncher, she fall* In l<jvts

A* told by U r. Reid a n ^ k a enacted by Ws Mann's company^ the rom ani^ la said tb tw trerr en terta tn lng ..

Durtiig the week beginning January l a the a t t r o ^ n a t ^ e Columbia will be "Lerxa R ivera" a comedy th a t Is isald to have met with much favor In the popular* pcieed hoasaa,; ..

• • * s »S l u a r 'n llkem tfv,

'^Fbo Foot. Comers o f the Barth" wjjj remamson view at Blgney'* TlMtelre, only

('oiili'lbutMiiib to th f singe a lw ays eont-iln ft l.irge iMuoun! of "luMiri liihup.'^i." fts Virll ;i.Q mt) ubumliim v of ('lean and am u s­ing conifily. Ill "A M«n‘K lirokt-n Proin- l“i’ " w lurh will bo thv offering next y ovk. sill' i« K.Jd t'l lifts ».* surpaHs+'il !'»*r Iirt'vuMitj rfforlMin I’lnywrlUng. and lu hav<» wi'itUjii a ttu jk tlml oojitrnorHi.n Itself !-liu?ivly to till publJr hilt* iHiilrt'Rsi'R.

Tlu* plot rlfipl}? 'wtih the wi-'li-worn, !>u( ftlwnys jnti'rf.KihiB. Htory nf ;i w oinan’M Ifus: bvlraypfl by ;i jnun. Hu\'fng <le-

Jrinv <bik1iuni liitu fi fa lsr n iar- riugf. Simon Hun itrfs of Imr nud ■Insorts luT iiiiil iht-li chilli wUh tht* iniiiniluh u f^ th e spent HKiliiig down 1 1 1 l-ls ri.iUvf pLu'p and'*Wfdillng Until R L 'iis , ihv ij; mg lit it of W’pftJthv ni'lglibor. in ncnl uf fum ls he j

to (•iiiui>uftN th^ dejHh uf Ills rrlppled fllvji-liroliier In ordi i tu gri fnifty-.'^slun uf thi' IjtlfU'N fortiiju-, lull is Irn s tn iled In

i hlH (b'Slgn by Turnifis, ;m odd iinb* rlior- acl-’i. find by Hr. Clifruni Htiiifonl, who

iifi Inlei-'Sl In iho crlp]th '’,M aHinvp!, bi'fricnils him find t \ru tual1 \- n-HluruM him lu ft nurm.'il vun<litlut>. J-ii-fiii'i ju s llro la m* tud uiu to till w ink 'd H un. bin wrmld- be Vlrllmw undergo nnniv ftd \rnT iires and inm h siilferijig uh n r- sidl uf cuinplloH- tluiis Ingfnloiisly arrungi-d by fliv s u ih u r to uhlatn stirring dr.un.illc effi els.

The oompatiy pre.mmtlng the plav Is fiald t'l be u ciipnlile oni'. Tlic :iMr:u'(lun buokf'd to mic<'uod It a i FHanty's is A. M,Wuud-s's pruductloii of 'Secrel Pij m."

hia Rpeedy circling of flip floor. Insim r- luifl filwftVR on h;iod to feat li be­ginners, «iuL owing to Hie mIxp of tlte Mtik and the care px'TPiHi*d, the iwohI limit! nnt’R havp no lie?*j!atlOfi in ventur­ing ijfrf>n thv ftoitr.

On VWdnpstlny night. Jnmifiry 1«, Ihe fli I'unfl carnival and prlxe riittaquernde will l»e held in thp rink, ntxl, a» a n-wuh uf the pi»'parfttlu]iB lining made for ll. wul T»ruvlde mui’li enjoym ent for ail who a t ­tend. Tlie rink is open Hunday Hfler- nuonR and pvenings nnd botli scpsioruH on th a t d ii\‘ HUrnci liundrHd& of lovers of

• « •

p n x li^k n i withdrawn fo m gkjftutrix tor "A M sii's' Rrpksn From lss,’*

ssr play by ]L41Jlsn Mostlat«r* n iibor uf nitladnau “Ma HtrtlMr .to. Otuj.'i ' a 4 1 ^ t t a t io v i r f lavor

H o lie r hI O Tytuple P a r k .Till* nlynif'lc P a rk rollf-r sk a tin g rink

on Sprliigfh.dil avenue tuiH Wim a M»'ccu to wliloli m any holklny-rnakers have di- R'ctecl their Rleps during Hie puNl two weeks At ihis ptipular r»'Hori the ple.ie- inp pfl.^tlme, which is In le rrstin g th o u ­sands, who fim! v.h(dr-Hom« exorcise aa well as agreeable rccrejitjlon In It. can be enjoyed with g rea te r com fort and s a tis ­faction by those tak in g p a rt In b and by spcctritiirs than n t any uthor rJnk In tlilH poction, owing te tlie Kpiiciane Hoot. Bio f'omniodloijs promenndo.s, the weh-beaXed [ind vi-ntikiti'd ]>all and (he hoepliable ai- t'^nilons slKiW'n Ihe p a tn m s by M anager Hcrinnn H. A. &'’hmld(

Since the rink Was opened n few m onth* ago many hiiiiUeur skaterfl have duvel- oped by practlp© there Into expert.n on the njilera. and ^ i e exhibitions of fsincy and rapid skftthig thn l a rc to be w itnessed dally have n grent deni of In terest for siiectatora. Guii Anthony, the form pr cham pion among roller sk a te rs in (hts country, la a regn lar filtondnnt a t the rink , ami frequently ainaxes pa trons by

W ald m an n ^ ii D p e rn H o a se .The Jersey Lilies extravagUTi*a roin-

pany th a t la ejjtcrlftlriliiK tliv imlnmK ufNVftldnianfl'ii Opvni Tlouse this week will f-n*l Its ojig.iRfmcnt to-niglit, am i will be fullowk'd (here nexi Monday by Ihe Roue HU! f'ldl.i U'lijijjrtin. an Miganlzutlun th,it Is well and favorably known to freq u en t­ers uf tills iwfpular resort. The I'.um that tliH coinpiiny Is iintler the rtirertSon uf M essra. Rlf»' and h .irton Is pretty con- rliiHlvt* pt'fKjf th a t ll Sr capable of fu r­n ishing cnlJvi-nlng cnieriu inm enl

The principal ofTi ring will be a three-flci b u r lf lta en titled "Tl:r- Ruyal Billy Gottts, ' In which George IV. Hire l» the rlilcf fun- rmilfcr, liMil Is ab ly asslstcrl liy T lium as F. Thom as and a large e.iei of cumedlans

Service I and Hlngem, The prudurllon eonliilna Tmuiy niufeb'ftl niimbcrw iiml pictnreRque dsnees. und Is staged hi an a ttra c tiv e tnnnjivr.

The uMu Ilf \ iiii(JevHle speclaltlfft will In- tm lu c e Oatn, I'jvans and <'ornpfjny. Hen- r b i t a \Vlif*'!ci'. HlanPhf! Newiuiiilj arid Fat|<jn and V.ni,

F n y 'IV iiip le tu ii Com lnK .The fttlractlon ut the N ew ark Tbefttre

during the week beghmitig Jam iHry 14 w in be Klftw fir Eiliingcr'p pnidiicllon of George M. (’ohari K rnerry miifllcuJ play, "F u rty -h v e MlnuleH frum Brnudw ay,’’’ tn which MIsb Fay Ternpleioti Is M arring and iu supported by H<jeh clever playerfl HR \ 'lc io r Moore. I>:itnild lirltm. rh*rlefl r*rliice. Jiimen II .Manning, I-sOuIh Grltisl. JiiUn Ralph, Marlon Singer, Enim a Llt- tletleld. Jennie Fninklyri and Madeline L. Hoof

* * *"T f te P r i n r e C liftp .”

Edward I’cplp> dfllghtful comedy. "The Prince t'hap," us orlginullv presented at the Madison Square Theatre. N«'W York. With Cyril arotl In the leadkig rule, will be the offeiirig at rhe Khabort Theatre during the week beginning January M.

UNDER THE LIMELIGHTAn operatic verFlon of Goldflmlth'a

novel.' "Thfl Vicar of Wakefiehl." ha« been produced by David BUpham In Lon­don. The score Is the work of Mm Leh­mann. who composed the song cycle. "In ft Persian Garden." The opera follnWH it» the main the lines of Goldsmith s theme, preacrvlng Its nnwi palhelir und tragic notes, thus affording Mr lllspbam an op­portunity to display his talents burh aa an actor and a singer. The conseiisvm of the critical opinion of the production Ik that it Ip sometbirig more l!mn the ordl- tiary light opera, owing to I to sirong <lra- mntSc aspect, Mr. BlsphanTs delineation of the Vicar was received with enthuaiftB- Uc applauae. It proralBea to be a lai»Uug creation. Isabel Jny ns Ollvln, the Vlear'a Wft-yward diiughter, also soorw! a marked Buccesfl. The audlencf showed it» enthu- Elaam after <?ac:h act, and there was a re­markable demonstration at the close of Ihfi piay, when Mr. Biaphnni and L lta Itebmamri received an ovailoii wliich lust* (!id minutes.

« • *Thftt the drawing power of u thcalrioal

attraction Is a TOrluble'quuntltf In illf- terent ptoers was proven to lAlbler and Co.impanY during the recent tour of tlielr oo-stae qomblnAGon—Albert, Chevalier and Yvette Guilbert. At Toronui. wliere the tour began, the receipt* for the single pertbmtance were At Sprlnglleld.Mass., three days later, only *2nfi was taken In. In New York, two days later, the receipts amounted to 13,11X1.' A few nights afterward, Indlaniipolla paid only ^ p) enjoy the performance hy the noted entennlnars. flimliar fluctuations w«r« noted flse*here. the receipts In Chi­cago on October IT being 14.3001 Galveston, October S2, taoOi Winnipeg, November 3,

Deo Molmw, November 1, MOO; Chi­cago froturn engagement), November #, W,M0; Pittsburg, November 14, I60«: To- rontp (return engagement), November ill, II.WO,' New York (return engagement), Nqpeinber ES. ^

Binging Ijctson” I* the title of a dna-act farce, which trill be presented

. . . soon in vaudevlUe by George C. Bonttac*one nbebt tonger. aa th a t msibrtrainatle j . until rcceUtlv a member of the 'B«- ^ . . .1— ' f p^ and After" Company, and B ertha

'Waltslnger, f o n d l y a prljna donna In "Ifbe iB ^em lans” ■ ansanlgatlon.

MwrMng la Coii«|k

appear In Hartley Manners's new play. "A M arriage of Keuson, " which will be produoed by Messrs. Kiaw & Erlai.ger late In January.

« « «Will Creasy, one of the best known

vaudeville anthors and performers, le to sta r next season under the direction of the Bhuberts In a ploy from his own pen. entitled "A Village Ijiw y er" This same title Is borne by one of Mr. Cressy's vaudeville sketche*. Although the role he

1 Impersonates In the sketch has been elab orated into tlie new play, the themes of the sketch amt the dram a are said to be dissimilar.

• « •May Do Souan, who came Into promi­

nence and popularity us a member of .Manager Henry W. Savage's musical comedy forces, hns become so well liked by I.ondou patrons of nuisloal plays and extravugiinxns that she Is likely to remain In the Driilsh capital for piune time to come. Her latest appearann- there was In the title role of "Bhibad, the Sailor,”

• • •Instead of appearing In "Kathleen." the

new play put Into rehearsid by Charles Prohm an a couple of weeks ago. Ethel Barrym ore will continue her starring tour in a revival of "Captain Jinks." In which She w as seen el* years'ago and In which she made a. eonsplcuobs success. The de- elsloa to qjbandon ."Kathlsen" was reached during the rehearsal of the piece, which. It is said, vnts found to bd lacking In those qualities that, would assure suemsss,

Irm a La Pierre, who began her stage career as a cbfld In tbs late Augusdn D aly's "T h e Ojjisha" company, ond who lately has been lending woman for Mosers. J . H. Btoddsrt, Maclyn Arbuckic o n i Or- rln Jobnson, has been engaged J>y Henry W, BiiTBge fo play the tills role In "The Collsf* Widow” ’ oonspgny, now touring th e b iitth .

v s *"Stop, Dook and Listen," ts the title of

s nelr ponitdleHa, written by Hgtthew W hits J i., editor of The Argosy and edi­to r Of th* dram atic dspartnient in Muiw sey 's Ma^asliw, I t was reesntly and aii«. csssfuliy produCSd hy May Tully a t Keith dk Prostor'e Twenty-third Idfreet Theatre, New Tork,

"Tba W riting on the* W a ir Is tba lltl* of a MW pU T .br t s e Dltrlchatsln, author IK "AiW T oM t i l i t f l i r ’ Ukd "Ib fo rs M d

f t : ' . . '

AHUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS

NEWARK THEATRE'TO-NIGHT, WRIGHT liORIHCH IN "THH gRBPHBRD KING."

K X 'T W 15 E KM A T IN E K 8 .A T U R D A V O N L Y , .

T H E N E W E S T S H A W PLA Y

W7 IW Ith S H A W iS Q U i l ^ I S P IR IT O P

t O E H T L E FUN

THE COMEDY DELIOHT OF THE YEARK L.gW AM) KItLANGDR PU ESBN'I'

MR. FORBES ROBERTSON;A N D

Miss RERTRUOE ElllOTTlg GeORGB BiCKA'.ARII SH4WS MOST DKlI.ltlATEI.V HtNOHOItg

“CAESARgCLEOPATRA”I Of a l l II..1 a iii.iK H iiFonaly , e s a h r r a n l l y c a i x iv a i l i i n S h a w r o s a a - ]

d ie s , In (hlH I... r e v e a l s !.!■ a r e a l c s l c l .a n . , i.r b p iu fr r , c h a re •F r lx a llo ii a p jl d r l l r l n o s s u d M e lly u f I re a tM ie n t. ”

Direct and Intact from a long, auaplcloua and Burcessful engagem ent a t th s j .Now Amsterdam T heatre, New York.

D D IPC ? OHtU ltSTRA , rnlUtO B Ai.tosvgL.’KIi (THt'LBl, gt.UOl

gl.lH), TOc. and fldr.i OAIXBRT, » e .

OKU WICUK B R G isaiK G I 4 h . H A T m ta S - .

w i ([d . * b a t .MONDAY. JAN._

PLAlMINUTES FROM BROADWAYI > A Y .

J A X ,S tU

PRICES

F IttK T T iftIB lY KJCWAHK K I .4W « KKLAKGKH W il l Pr«*fMir

< jiK O , >1. C O H A W 8 m m i v

iVItU Amfricn'fl iTit'mi: } Arxblp i:(MnfKltpiit)p

AND tinnAi%' rmv TmmpMtmM, M fU ' roM K . CAiT.

O R n iK S T R A , l.gU i CIHCI.H, I.SO a n d ’ I.IH)|flA L tO gV , I.IMt n m l Tg.>,| G A IiL P a V , 1

CHUBERTW THEATRE

WtOINNINa

Mown, JAN) 7MATINEKg WKtigfBWAT

. AKU HATCKUAVe

S A M ,S. & I ,K i ; S H V B K t t T I N C , , O F Y E U

T h e M erry E ngflish M U 5 IC A L W H IR L

W ITH

Beautiful Costumes. C A T C H Y N O N L N .

AND TS OTHKRS

Oorgeotic P R K T T V

Scenety.F A C B t t .

POPUUK PRICE MSTIIIK WEDMESBir, 2 6 c SMI 6 0 cM uiitliiy, iln iiiin ry 1 4 ih - M ntliipps W pdneHiluy a n d S A tu n lu - 1

W ALTKR N. I.A W H K bC E PHKHKMTS , Jf > ' V W T T ^ h i l d ' ' C k U r ^ ' X ' the.O riubm l S. V, P rn ilB sttasI

* - - K 4- -E. (it tlip l><MI}fiiLlul ntt<) Htoituin P l*f •

f * k i :n c k c m a f *

M atin ee s :N T A H T IN C

N K X T

M O N D A YM A T I N K E . COLUM BIA MONDAY

TUESDAYWEDNESDAYSATURDAY

T ilt* [ { f s t . t» f A l l M e l o d r a m a s ,

TH E COW PUNCHERA H tor.v o f f l ip G o ld e n W e s t ,A N o v e ll.) ill r i ti i tfe I te iillH in .

A Superior Cast Headed by tlye Talented Actor,J O I I I V A . £ * R K » T r O J V

■Mt'iily o l H |iec ia ltl« ;* .H e a r f lip C o w D i i i ic l ic r q i i o r t e t U ' .

This sdvertiM* meiit and tOe. Will Entltie Any Lady to a Rmoiv- ed Seat at Mon­day’s Matinee,roRuioiK N€xI. WM»k-"LBNA BlVKR!j."

B L A N E Y SM»ir»eei-Woi)., T tt« „ Tliuri., Sat

WEH Of JW . T.Jsj. L.Veronte Amusemeni Ca Inc.

O ffers ano ther of

L IL L IA N M O R T IM E R ’S

Great Heart Interest Ptaya.A i’lav that appeals to all sexes.

A Man’s

m s3 sm a ^ ^J am. 7—Hatp. Mon.f Tnap., T h u rt. an4 l n £

R I c T i BARTON’SROSE HILL ENGLISH FOLLY CO.

THE M ERRY MONARCHS OF TH E BURLESQUE FIELD,

I'rsfcntliig n Xtiiricsl l'(i.%i;Lu$y hi 3 Acts, k*

One Round of Pfeasurt----------------------- - ---- ;jk

.run. N - Lnb MfUH’hfptf'r’fl .VlglU (>0 1*.

COLOSSEUlVfj 8A( liKD CONCEHT t

T(KM0RK0W AFTERNOON AND eVENINO

Prom ise‘ t h e o l d , o l d s t o ; y .\ r e a l *lov) nf t r u e to life,

e v e ry d a y people- liili-nse,

KKHEGKK A t'D lT O llltM

VIOTOBHERBERT

FftlD A rEV K M inO , j a n c a b v u .

AND HIS ORCHESTRA 45 ARTISTS

si'.'s.isy/.s'Aan d 10«. w in fid- Jld t e a IlMfrTwd

Matlnea-

CLIFFE BERZACAid his PonlM and (Tnridable Donktty.

I.B W gb'LLYO LIV A T TI TR O I'BA D O R S

I,F,ONA T B I 'R B B R a CO.

KITflMURA TROUPEJapanese A crobats, Jngg ltrs , l^n tU h rM s.

i r c A P A A P O O L SDALY * D B V B R K

xO T iow P i c T t a n g

JiMConfliapdCSo)' P rW u tis 6 “A R * |^ ^ K A K ’SUHnC'.'*

Aifliflted bjr MMK.C on tra lto o f th«

M otrnnolKau O para Hoaxa €o-

Concart iabJmf tJt« aunplroji of tha OulU1 of th« Bt. DtruMbas Honpiuil.9eaU M lA totor's, 60? liroad *i,«ob

IHonilRy. TU»keta, $«sOO an d 1 1.60.

MBl lyOR

KruegerMlditorli GMID SIGHED railCERT

TiD-Morraw Aftarnoon ao4 GvfiiM.::it e i j i i i ' i i iti

HIPPODROME

.. . . . .F l O K B f i B D A X «

R " .... ..................................i . .i jn ii^ a ||E

Itt iY S ^ S tin ce '

Jssssey'i*.

r i f A t i b w , ’n% L oiik« ,

Page 12: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

12^,jf,

NEWARK EVENING NEWS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 190T.I lY y -

<KK)D DEMAND NOTICED HERE

i» __________

Some of the January First Dis- tmrsement Roney Was Rejn<

. vested in Newark,

H. Y, COTTON EXCHANGE ROW I GOOD STRENGTHIN HARRIMANS

SOME SECURITIES TRADED IN

Th«re hM b«an a battar Invaatmenl da- raiuid locully th li week, with aome of the

,# » U m d and In te m t dlaburaarnenta here placement.

i?{h n haa been moat noticeable In‘NMrark Conaolidated Traction bonda at )0f^, North Jeraeya a t Tb, 'White Lines at n and Public Service Certlflcatoa between • Snd « .

United Electric bonds sold a t Te, and were In demand, Newark Conaolidated T niatloni a t 106, and Hudson County (las

, booda a t lOOVb and the nock a t IH. .Newark Banklna and Besex County Na-

^ i t r l ebaree were each 6 points higher on th a Ud price, a t 310.

Nawaurk C lo s lan Prioee.' The toUowIna cloemc quotations of New

‘ iSK Si ***’'" * ^ * turnlabed by J, S.COUNTY AND CITY.

Bld.Aiked.County l-66e 1916............ 9tlli$ u n t y t-66e lirit............. Mli IWIe^ U n ty >-66c 1936............ K 98^ n t y 4e 1919................. 10!a S iS S : : : ; : : - : ; :QeunW le 19«................Cotintr la 1944................

■ ....................

MvinK«ton*ii P o« ltlon .T h^ A|»|fr1icalloik fo r Fr«n<1

O rd e r u n d C o rte lfo o .WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.-Reprp*enletIvc

Livingston, of Qiftorgift. ftiPd with the Poiiimaater-'Grnf'rnI yeiterduy utldlUoriHl docum rau ir> suatatn the chargpfi that have bPrh made ngninat the managpinent of the New Y'ork Cotton Exchange, upoa which he und thoa . uaaciciat^d with him qak that the ni>e of the malU he Uenlcd I he exchange. Spctiklng of the attitude of (he exchange offlcluli, Mr, Livingston eald;

"U le a loalng gaine If they think they can bliifr me out by threatening Mbel prO' ceedlngfl.”

The application for the iMuance of a fraud order agaln it Che exchange hag not been actrij upon by the poslmwster-Gen- fral. The m atter I0 In rh * hanJM of the aaelelant attorney-general ot the depart- ineiit. who will make A report to the Po»t* iTififiter-Oenpral early next week,

Henry W. Taft, of New York, counsel for the New York Colton Exchange, ie In Wrtahlngton to-day to confer with Poat- maaier-General Cortelyou regarding the requcdl made by Repre^wnlfttlve Llvlng- Hioii and Harvie Jordan, president of the .Southern Cotton AwtooiatiqH, that a fraud order be Isaued agalnat the exchange. He wa^ a t the W hite HotiAe and had a con­ference with P reildent Roosevelt

Stock Market Brightened Up Specfllativcly-Larger Busi­

ness Than in Weeb.

ANOTHER BLOW AT STANDARD

HEW YORK OUTSIDE SECURITIEST bt (ollowinc auotAtlona ars furnish ad

ck * Cb.:Cloalnt

by Van 'Schalc

y*|lterd*y.

“SI_____ IBS

OmuiC* 4l 1933. ‘ • th adj. 4s Ib :

J* rw y I Union 4

County 4V4H 1B3-4-3... 5®unty 4# 1964.

, 100. 4l Wffi.lunty 4s 194!...........

RAILROADS.U. H. J . R. R. 4k Canal s ta ck .. lU

JB S i*[Oiri* m j |is « s con. Ts Ifflj..... tn Lorris 4 B i t t t rst, W i fODb.,a 99

Dal. L a a t i n r e s t . R . ^ Ts UB 1014 179 96

137 m____ ^ ________* W. fa r . trap. «• U » 101

B - lL o tW.~

gPi W n m n H. E. 7 W nrrtB & .R -.

lOi

IK

IB

ywtiBI^.Asksd.

INDU0THIALH.AmsrIcsta C an......... 9Tk 6Aniertcati Can, p r.. Gt 9SAmtrioan Chicle.... 104 iiOAmstican Chicle, p r 98 lOOAmerican Nlokel.... H 1’American Tobucoo.. 360 366Amer. W rit. Paper. 2 4Amer. W. Paper, pr 21 26Bay State Oee......... 4 'Central Foundry...... 3Cent, Foundry, p r..Havana Tobacco....H avana Tob,, pr......Iloueton OH..............Houlion OH. p r ........Inter. Mertp Maj'....Int. Merc, Mar., pr.. Inlem atlonal Bolt... liackuy Companies.Maekay CoSm p r ......Manluittap T ransit. . . .Otis B levator........... ^ 99Otli Elevator, p r ,.. . Jf 99Standard O il.......... 9* 6»

RAILROADS.Am. L l(h t A T ra c ... Ill 114. . .e . . . . _ ™

4t 21 31 94

Clots, to-day.

Bid.Asked

T rac... Ill Am. L lfh t A T., pr,. 93

.M„. I ll 1 1940 e>.

A " t r u r t W 'j i C to • Dock Co. oon. sold K 0*9 W ind R. R. 1st «s MB4V a, A W , let m. rt. W u n u i , !B. A W. f t , R. a n . M IM 1MV9 . A atwenwood L r te W 19*6 112

TRAOnOM.

121

, W e v n r t |M 4jW ier,otkm Co. ’9s 1B9... 106 iBt a t H y .la IB l.. 106 ly » . R y l ta K

iWliwny.iv A Traotlon Co......... 7o

at. Ry. A 1946 71

10*4

g ‘76

fori fo rth

, . f o r t h ____ .i-^•aUs., Plain. A Cent.

U bilo---------------ubllo

-vm . ^ vwu t. T riple 1996 ^ »i

S» ' i

ly - J d Oen.atcrabn ItiUwaT Con. <s ItR . 11' la ln lM d at. R. R. 1st 9t 1922.. 101

CRy A Bereen 1st 44s 1941 96 esaTtirD pIlif Co. 1st m 1961 9S

eSw n S ^ . By. o t 6a 1931^ uoaru"n‘s‘S i ? W A ^ . ! f ‘S

' T ra o .6s I9E>i ... 99 A H. At. Ry. O. H. 9s 1694... 99

Camden A Bud. Ry. 9i U43..

lli"102

122

Chicago Bubway....Beabonrd Co.'........... mSeaboard, 1st p r ..... 30Seaboard. 2d p r ........ 90

, MINING.Bingham C entral...Boston Copper........Bril. col. Cop..i....Butte CoalitUm........Butte A ^ n d o n . . . .Butte A New York.Butte Cop. and Zinc Cumberland-Ely M, Domlntoii Cop. new SI Rayo Mining....Foster Cobalt.........Furnace Creek Cop Granby Conaotldated Greene Con. Copper Greene G o ld .........Greene Gold-Silver. Greenwnter A D. V. Qugrenhetm Ex. Co. 27

tOKlrley-Darragh.Ilcmnc Gold Mining

Mines Co. of Amer.Ullohell Mlntim........Nevada Con. Cop.... Nevada Sm elting.... Nevnda Utah M. A B. Newbouse Mining... Ntplsslrig Mins Co...Old Hundred MiningSilver Queen.............Tennessee Cop. Co.., Tonopeh Belmont.. TOnopeh Extension. Tonopah M. of Nev. Union Copper Co...

:

II-

' SMiddleMg A

Jl^am d en A BuV. R y 9s 1643...... 1065 b a n k a n d T R u a r c o io p a n ie s . ■llgUonal Newark Banking Co.. 330 330W O tlonal a t m ................... 200 2lll*qSuex Oottnty National.......... . 320 380-rjfcrchaxita' National .................m.•dU m ifaeinrera Hat)oaad.,........SBC-N o rth W ord N a tio n a l.................MO•f id e lity T ru st Co....................... 700 720^ fed e ra l T rust Co........................ 200 210aUitlon National .......................... 360 360sw ee t BIAS T rust Co...................... 170-C ity T ruet Co................................ iBo-W est Hudson Co. Trust Co...... 130iTTnlor GottHtv Trnet On.............

'..lleeex County T rust Co.......... 300-M utual T rust Co......................... IM

L IFE AlfD FIR E INSURANCE.den tltl .......... 390irlcan ....... soo 900

jmen’e ............. 300iwsrk F ire ......... !£0 Mo

OAS AND ELECTRIC LIGHT.[gwork Gas Co. A 1944............u s IS4

helh (Ha Llghc Co............276’town <k L. ^ 1 9 1 9 .. . . 100oral Electric Co. 9s 1940...... 96 jog'j r u n a . L mH.AP.Co.A 19» 76 ^Bninaw....................

itnln n rid iilu . H. A P. Co. gj

______ W L„H.A P.Co.Hs 1918 103•iR tll Hud. L..H.A P.Co.A 19» 102

' Conaolidated Gaa Co... 90 ' Con. Gaa Co. 9e 1S4S...

KIao'on A Paaaalo G. A'E. Co. 67

A P aaaalc O. A E. 6s 1049. loo Kao. u n h t Co. 1st 6a 190S lOO

iC Gaa X. Co. 1st to 1922 lOT

Gas Co. 9e 1643... 106Judeon Gas Co.......... I23lec.'Co. of N.J. 4a 1049 70

itrlc Co. g t N. J ...... ei

109105014iro

mif0470

ltd.

.ale LIgbtIra Co. tat 9a 1926 ]i», L. Co. 2d 9s 1906 to 3....... too

lud ion County Gas Co. to 1919 lii!l ]fii 'tuSaon County Gas Cn............ l u iioio . J . Gaa. E. A T. Co. 9< 1953 99 ito-

ftouth Jersey Q.. E. A T. Co.... U7 lai ^Edlaon E. til. (Pat,) lat 6a 1912105 .■•EdlBOn Elec. (Pat.) gen. Bs 1935 i®£Gaa A E. Co. ot B. Co. 6s 1919.. loi) 3O’' '

• A Elec Co, of Bergen Co. 69 an, A E. of Bergen Co. g:.6t 1*1 9;i n,

Snth. A Boll. Springs lat to 1911 IW S. Y.. Ruth. & Sol). 6a 19ll.... la'i

, Gas Co. of N, 3. 6s 1930... a; m " . Union & Mid. Light, Co. .Yi n.Unlon & It'd .L .ro , 4a 19U 74

flin. Q. A B Co. )si 5.a 191!., 100 na Elec. Co, lat 6a 1916.., 33

O. A E. L. Co. Q. M. to ■*'*unton Orb A Ki-rirlo 6a lua 100 1 "

Seraay CItv Eleo. LIplii lyw j(Vi •Somerset Light. Co, 1st 69 19,3<! 9; rELEPHONE, FERRY AND Wa TEIL

US irai I ill 10794

1074

Y, A N. J, Telephone to 1930 107T, A N. J. Telephone............ H5

Hoboken F oitj- CJ). 1st to 1940.. )ti7 N. Y; A Ilob, Perrj'gtm . 6* BM6 nr,H. Y, A N. J. Ferry 3d to 1919.. KH

r-HackonBiick M'nter Co. 4e 11*2; IIO ,:Hacken*»ek Water Co., ron i.,, 170 ' H arkensark W ater Co., p r ..,,.. nil

Fassali' Woter Co. k- in. sis IW 111,9 Finodee 'V p. f- T,. !•* 7e 193:;.. liR

■ fcN. T, A N. .7. Wnlnr to 1930...... inoV INDUSTmAT, AND MlBCEI,T,ANEoijRIf Celluloid Co. ^........................... 136 193

■ l'*J. J50. 41W,420

few Jaraey Zlnr Co. 1st 4s 1926 9f 'a t . Br. A M. Co. mt rp. 6a ]9!:j 95

Lorllinrd A Co., p r ......... p’l)Dixon Crurlblf.............. ino

,JW Mtg........................... 4Wandard Oil .............. ................ahokvn L. A Imp Co............ soobb. Jaind A Imp. Co to 19W... ii»)

: In terest

, ifBOSTON STOCK MARKET,

3 '430IlLl)0291(13'

if;

rn ltsd Copper Ulnh Copper. White Knob.White Knob C., ■ii:

BONDS. Allla-Chalmers 6s.. 94 Am. Btkei F ’dy to.. 94 Am. W rit. Paper 6t SI Ceil. F 'dry 6s flat.. 70 Con, R. T deb. 4s.. 544 Inter. Mer Mar 44* 79

CLOSE, ACTIVE AND STRONG

NEW YORK, Jnn. 6.—Th<? opining d^al- inge In stoekN were on a very large scale, and eQormoui blocks of the speculative favorltea changed hands. Hmall gains w<»r« ths rule, but in f^meUIng there waa a' rise of 1%, Union P.aciflc ond Si. F o u l, preferred a point, and Southern Pnclflc. N onhprn Paolflc, Reading, Colorado Fuel, Manhattan, Pacific Mali and Sugar lorge fractions. Virginia Iron boU at an ad- v^ncO'Of 2. Canadian Pacific declined %.

11 A. M.—speculation developed consid- fifable breadth and buoyancy and trannao- llone were on a larger scale than in wreks, the atrength displayed by the Har- rlrnnn atoeks. Hi. Paul, Amalgamalod Copper and a few other stocky. The ie.iture of the buying way the large as- sorimcnt of ueutilly obscure stock that was In demand. National Biscuit went up 2<14, St. Paul and Smelting 2%, T^nlon PaclHc 2Vi. A tlantic Coast Line 2, North­ern I^aclflc, Chicago end Alton, Pacific Mali. United Stales Pipe preferred, AtnnJ- gamated Copper and American Tobacco prprm ed l% '1o L%. and Gredt Northern preferred, Southern Pacific, United Slates Steel preferred, Hloss Sheffield Steel, Rail­way Steel Spring. Colorado Fuel and Brooklyn T ransit l lo

Noon—The m arket dosed active and strong a t a rally. An intSmallnn of the woak showing of the bank statement reached the Stock Exchange before Its appearance on the tape. Prices began to decline and the fall wrs aggravated af­ter the publication of the statement. Reading made a spurt to 1S&, but Im- mcdltitsly fell back with the rest of the list. The reaction was sharp and wiped uut some of the notable gains, Amalga- mated Copper receding to a fraction un­der last night. Bmeltlng, Bt. Paul, Great Northern j?referred, Amalgamated Copper reacted 1% to 2. Union tSiicific and Northern Pacific U There was a rail; In the late dealings. Reading rose ag^ greealvely to 13R%. American Expre^i sold a t an advance of 6.

H ill In tro iln e e d In VfsMBScliiiaettaIv e d n la tu r# H o d eln l A firr Ik e

Ohio A n lU l'n is t IjUiv.BOSTON, Jan. fi.-A fight agf^lnst the

Hlandard Oil Company hus be4'n sprung 111 the tloiiuc, tlie first that has over taken dcflnUe shape in Ihp llas'iachuseUa i/f^gislature. It Is a HwcRpJriK hlH. model- eil a f te r the Vatenilno Ohio law. filed by R9*prcaciUative L.yniun W. Griswold, of Orecnfleltl.

ThxU the bill would be presented lo the Lcglaliiture was rurci^jisltd so:nc months ago by Thomjis L. JllHgen, of tiie four brothers who ran nn lndcpvjid‘’iit *11 com­pany. The Hisgcn brotiierH are .. c tho Standard OH of delllucrfitely ruuing rales to drive them out of business Tlic whole­sale price of oil in Boston Is twelve cems, but In Springfield, where therr> In compe­tition, the price Is seven r<>nte.

ROOSEVELT A STANDPATTER

Yields to Them on No Extrs Session and No Tariff Revi­

sion at This Time.

'THUNDER' FORNEXT CAMPAIGN

FINANCIAL POINTERS.

NEW YORK STOCK MARKET.

979786743777

94847b9447c

PHIUDELPHIA STOCK MARKET----------- .1 *by Elaele A King;:

Bid. Asked.Amer. Rnllwny Co...................... 61 614Cambria Iron ................................ 414 49Storage .......................... .'............ 67 89E. A P. 4a...................................... 97% 674U hlgh Valley.............................. 7S% 79Lake Superior Corporation....... 164 __N. J. Con. T rac .......................... 74N. J. Con. Tract, to.................... 10S4 lOW.iNewark Pass. 6a........................... 109 111Philadelphia, p r ..........................484 _____Philadelphia Eleo. 4e.................. 69 76Reading 4s.................................... 9912 98%U, O. 1............................................ 9 ^ 96

NEW YORK PRODUCE MARKETNFiW YORK. Jan. 6,-FIO ur-Recflpts,

1S.717; salea, 760; flour dull and lower to sell; Mlhtieiotft patents, fOO^I.aO: winter ftralghU , 6.40^.60; Minnesota bakers, 3,40^.75; winter extras, 2.8ft81i.l0; winter pfUwits, winter low grades,2,S0®8,05.

W hat—Hecelpts. 31.000 bu.: sales, 700,000 bu,; the early wheat market was easy un- d‘ir lower cables, prospects of larger world's shipments Monday and liquida­tion. May, Rl 7-l6«|)81 1-16; July,

Rye—Nominal.Corn—Recelpis. 83,A5fl bu .: m arket wns

vdull and without tninsactions. IBeef—Firm : family, ^4.60^15.00; mess,

o,oo<b9..'io; pocket, n.oo®'ii.50.Pork—Steady: mesa. 17.608 18.60: family.

IR.'nSi.’lS.OO: short clear, 17.25<3i]D.OO. l.ujiJ—Quiet I prime Weatorn, 9.40.?T9.?50 Bugar—R a * Bteady: fair refining, SMS;

CMiirJruga], 90 te s t 3 9-10; molassei* sugar, rtiflned steady; crushed. G.50: pow-

dtinod. 4-00; granulated, 4.80.Puullry—Alive, QUlet; Western chirkena,

12: fowls. 13; turkeys, 15. Dressed, sieady; WoBtern rhirkenfi, 121 16; turkeys, 15{ 17; fowls. 8012.

Butler—Ciulet. unchanged; recelpls, 3,023. C heese-Firm . unchAnged; receipts, 4,80.3.

Weekly roports, 1.S89 boxes.Rgga—Ste.'uly. unchanged; receipts, Fctroifum —fUeudy: refined, all ports,

7.45i|T7.rfl.Cnffc©-Sl*ady; No. 7 Rio, 7H- Molasses—8tf*ady; Nrw Orleans. STS'SS,

LEADING GRAIN MARKETS.

Tb« range of to-day'a prices for the mora active stockia and bonds ot the New York m arketi, a s furnished Rir the NEWS by F o il & Flagg, Is given below:

Open-Hlgh-ljow-CloB- Ing.

Am. Cot. o n Go...... Sli4Am. Linseed Oil...... ISAmer. Smelting........ 163Am, Smelting, p r...Amer. Sugar............ 136^Am. Agr. Chem. Co. 26A(n> C. & F. Co...... 44%Am. C. A F. Co., pr. 101^Amal. Copper........... 120^Anaconda C. M. Co. 3 ^American Ice........... Sl%Atch.*......................... 1 0 ^Atth., p r .................... 100Baltimore & Ohio... l2l'H Brooklyn Rapid 7 "Canadian Pacific.... I9f?5 Chesapeake ^ Ohio. 60%Chicago Great W .,. 1718 Chicago Si A lton....Chi.. Mil. & St. Paul 151 c.. c .. C. A 91. L .... 91%Coi. Fuel & Iron Co. 56 Col., H, V. & T , pr. ft4 Col. South., 1st pr... ffTH Consolidated Q aa.... 138^Delaware & H ud... 234 Den. St Rio Qrande 42H

eet. est. iw

1 ^ 162% 1M%136% 136” i k ”

«% M%liiii liwiae% m 28S

a1M%LOG

im%b»%

162 121% 121%HIH 60

161%60%

166S617%

1160% iw "

»1

T hr Standard Oil Company advanced the price of Ragland five cents to-day, making the Quotation GO.

Y • aAbout 2.600 Now York City freight

handlers are preparing to make demands on the railroad companlcii for an Increase of wages from 31.85 lo $2 a day.

* * «The places of the 4U0 freight handlers

who struck against the Erie Railroad Company In Jersey C|ty and W'eehawktin have all been filled.

Because uf added duties as president of the Pem>sylviuila Railroad Jami • Mc- Crea will .resign from the boards.Of the Norfolk and Western and the Baltimore and Ohio. To be Jn direct touoh with the New York, New Haven and H artford he will be elected to the vdoancy on tha t board caused by the death of Mr. Cassatt.

F t pThe situation as regards the possibility

(jf an extended strike on the railroads Is adm itted to be aertous. About 176,000 em­ployes are negotiating at ttie present time with the road managers for wage icaUs mid It Is feared that the apreadlng of the firemen’s strike to the other Harrlm an rouds, as threatened by the firemen, may preclpllale an immense disturbance.

i « ■Only seven-thouHandthB of an Inch out

of grade and only three-hundredths of an inch out of line, the east and west bound ■'headings" of the Penr/-jylvanla Railroad tunnel, beneath Thirty-third street. New York City, came together at T o’clock yes- terduy morning. The meeting of the two lubes was directly beheath-the Third ave­nue 'T j” structure. The passageway is now continuous from Fifth avenue to the East River.

A new coasting steamship service be­tween Philadelphia and Wilmington ami New York will be started within a month by the New YorlHrad Wilmington T rans­portation Company. The pioneer craft will be the steamship Dorothy, which will be follow'ed by a new vessel to bs built to the order of the company. W ith these two boats It Is proposed to m aintain a regular service and add more vessels as business warrants.

• • ■Trinity Copper on the Boston Exchange

contributed a Bensatloiml feature to the stock m arket yesterday. Seventy-five llmusand shares changed hands, and quo­tations a t one time reached 391«, wUh an odd lot selling nt 40. a rise of about 28 points since December ! und of 33 points since last June.

«from the Wathihgton flareOM of lAe fiF£*V-.

1X0 NEWS.WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 .-In order to

have 'all the Rcpuhlicnn thunder possible for use In the n ■xl Presidential cam-* palgn, nothing Is to be done with tariff revision, Income or inheritance tax a t th is session of CongresK, or Mt the first session oif the Slxtleili Congress, which convenes next December. This 1b the plan under­stood to have been agreed upon by Presi­dent Rooscevlt and Speaker Cannon.

At the present sesslun Congress Is hot to do mure tlian pass the appropriation bills and a few other pending measures. Next year's is to bo also a Btandpfit ses­sion, with little in the way of radical leg­islation. In this way the Republicans plan to make a promise for tariff revision a part of the EepubUcan national p lat­form and an Issue In the campaign of next yea^. income and Inheritance tax are also to be saved for campaign Issue*.

It has been the understanding that the President wanted tariff revision taken up

the next seaaion of Oongress, Accord­ing lo the agreement, nothing will now be done on the subject until a fter the Inaug­uration of the next President, In 1909. In other words, Roosevelt has yielded to the standpatters, and will do nothing .with the tariff during his administration, leav­ing It to the country to select his suc­cessor on th a t Issue,,

Uhder this understanding there Is little probability of an extra session of Con­gress being called th is year. H. B. W.

NEW YORK COTTON MARKET.NEW YORK, Jan. 6.—The cotton m ar­

ket opened firm a t an advance of 4iS4 points, and during the early session ad ­vanced to a net gain of 101 12 points on buying by the Liverpool bulls, local sup­port and covering, which was promoted by the higher cables, big spinners' takings for the week and continued bullish re­ports concerning the spot situation. This was realizing a t the advance, and some selling for short account, encouraged by the outlook for oontinued heavy re­ceipts for the immediate future, and after selling a t 9.85 for March, the m arket sagged off a couple of points. The under­tone, however, remained steady, and trad ­ing was moderately active during the middle of the morning.

8843^

IS''

6DH

m

64%

224' 22542^44"m

Denver A R. Q,.Erie ...........................Erie. 1st p r ..............Erie, 2d p r ......... .General Elec. Co...Inter. Paper Co........Inter. Paper Co., pr.Illinois C entral........lowH Central........... 289t, 2894 28% 28%

160^ i$ou iGo^ ieo< m i v l ISJ

m 81 8dS 81170S .......................

SeCU R tTlB S, INVBSTHBNTS, ETC. SdCLRITIKSe IXVESTMBriTS, B l’C.

Iowa Central, p r .... 60Louie. & Nosh......... 144^M., K. & T ............... 41%M. . K. & T.. p r................ 73%Missouri Pacific...... 92%Mex. Cent. R. R .... 27%Nailunal Biscuit...... 79%National Ix*ad Co... 76%N. Y. Air B rake .... 13S%N. Y. C entral........... 13S%Norfolk & W est.... 92% North Amer. Co,, Northern PacificNorthwest ............... 2Ontario & W esternPennsylvania .........Pacific Men ...........People's Gas ...........Pressed B. Co....Beading ...................Reading, ist p r .......Hock Island............Kock Island, p r......Rep. Iron & fl. Co..Rep. 1. & B. Co., pr 8l. I jOuIs h. w ., pr. Southern Paclftt*.... Southern Rallw^iy.. South. Railway, pr,. at. L. A 01, F.. 2d pr Tenn. Coal A Iron..Texas & Pacnic......T., St. L. St W est...T . . Bt. L. & W,. pr. Union Pacific R. R.V. B.l Sipol...............V. S. Steel, p r .........U. 8. TiCflther...........r , S. IjCMihiT, p r..U. 8. Rubber...........T 8. Ritboer. n r__Wiibaah ......... ....... .Wahush, p r ----------

145%4t%72%

144%40%72Vi

92% 9£y

79%76% 7B

13»%- 138%

60%10818%m

NEW YORK BOND MARKET.

ingAm. Tobacco 4a .. 77‘ii Am. Tobacco fta.... lOUVd. Atch.. T- & S. F, 4a. 101'4 Central L a th e r 5b 1*8% Chee. & Ohio 4%s... 106 Chic. B. & Q. 4s.,.- fHI-'i C.. H. I. # P. old 4r ion C.. R. I, &- P- 4h.. . . 77 C.. K. 1- Si P ua.... DO Eric K. tnl. 1. 4e.... hTK Impf’rinl Jap. let 6h 97% Lnperlal J.'xn. 4%p ... fntcrboroiigfi 4'j(i9... 8J%Mexican 1st Inc....... J7M( , Nan. A T,. l.at 98 N. Y.. Out. & W. 4bNor. Paclrtr 8s ........ 74 .Nor, A West. 4a......Oregon B. L. new 4s 94 I'oniiiylvanla Conv, D8% Rcfifihiff Oon, 4».— 9SV. Si. L. ^ 1. M. 4S..,. S8 aiuithcin Railway ijS 113% V. 3 fllec-1 8 . F. r>s. 98 WabuBh P. T. m 4s. 32Vi Wubnah deb t............ 74%

Open-Hlah-Low-Clns- 'sl. est. Ir.g. 77% t: r

98% 0S%105% 105 l05Vj

92% 9 I4

HCNgV ■IKOCt rRANM I . VOOKl

H E W R Y S l I Q B L S C OR R I V A T I B A H K I R 8

m ain n o o n

T h e lMWVDM V

4 ^ P M O lM T . IM T IB U TpAld OD D e p o flU fro m $1 to $ 3 ,0 0 0

MONKV D K ^O SITC D O H OM a a P o n S J ANUARY SlBT, Wtli.1.. DRAW I N T e A B S r PROM JANUARY 1«r.

MONEY CAN BE O B R O B I T K o O R DRAWN AT ANYTI MB WITHOUT 4I VI NO NOTlCC.

AN ACCOUNT CAN BE OP E NE D AND B U B I N E B I r R A N E A C r S D VERY CONVENIBNTUV BY MAIL.

O o » M « r O ftD M O B S O tlC I T lf t

B ootbi 0 a . M. lo U O P*M« r , L, CHAH^lOn. cashier W. j . DOHCRTY, ASfT CASHirE

3 _ P E R C E N T .THE TRUSTEES OF

The German Savings Bank,No. 772 firoad Sfreat, Newark, N. J.,

have declared a dividend at the rate oi 3 } i per cent, per aminiu on accouuta o( $1,003 or leaa, entitled thereto January 1, 1907, and at the rate of 3 per cent, per annum on «uch part of any account that ex­ceeds $1,000, payable on and alter Jan. 22, 1907. •

GOTTFRIED KRUEGER, Pres. JOHN FISCHER, Sec’y.JOSEPH LSENBURG, Vice-Prea. WM. G. TRAUTWEIN, Treat.

W P M iT iM M . n ry a rM ie w T a . r w L j r a c u R m B a , i i m i iT H K i m , w ro .

T e a m s te r 5liea*s T r ia l D ra g s OsCHICAGO, Jun. 6,—Assistant S tate 's A t­

torney Miller declared ta-daiy a t ,the com­mencement of the Shea trial that he would advise a number of merchants, who were yesterday subpoenaed by the defense, to ignore the Bubpofina*. It was announced hy the attorneys for the defense that they Intended to compel the inerehuntfl to pro­duce their huoks in court, and show by them that they are members of the em ­ployers' dsBOclallon which conducted the fight against the loam sters In the great

. strike of last year.

94% M

9R32%

T he following quolatlona werf:; t e y r . b . amith & co .l■.'4Bhf«nturc ...............................■ M...... ..............................

..AJilBlgaTDated ............... ......‘ ham ...................... ............

sa Coal .................................1 C„ C. * G......................

oet * A rir..........................alwmst ft H e c l a . . . ......qpp«r .........................hlln ......................................

ae ..........................................Royale .....................acliuM tts ............................

xn .............. .......... ............Ahawk ...... ..............................Jortb BuU« ..... ....................PM Dominion.I

fnnii.ih- <1......

......... 611.;............ lUi. . . . . . 6'S 'l,......... 3J>ii

::::::: IfH.......... S'H

..........................^liiKd v.:.v.v;."'."v:::v;;:;::';:.-; r i ti 611

to e l t ln * - . ........................ 70. Swritlnk, p r . . ..... ....................... 47

;C tkh CnnaoUdktedii..... ....................... W14;-‘Wol¥ertn# .............................. —

MiaCEIJ.ANF.OUe EFOCKB. chuMUk E le c tr ic . . , , , . . . . , , . ; . , , . . ~ i i M ^ Kicctiic. *r>,

kmootti Gftk...,..,,v'.,vi„w.'....,. lljM tbi G«a,

■t>. 1. . . I. . . . . . . . . .r lbuih tnn...,;rix r,..ri;'.....

CHICAGO, Jan.5.—Wheat to-day opened fairly artive. but [irle 's w<>ro wpuk be­cause of cbusi<lera’'le Unu'daiion by local holders. Thlt^ fielling. combined wjlh r t- poris of sfifllor cables, fnrcrrt the price (jf^the Mhy option down u> 75%, which was (i new low record for the crriji, May wheal npcfied unchungctl tu lower a l Tiflg to TS'-i and iold at

May Porn opened nt 43 to ■lR 434i» and sold St 42'i..

May ontfl oj>cnRd a l ac*.* to sold up to

Mtty prON'tslons opened weak. porU -at l6.e.l^l6.67H. lord at and HhF ut3.02^^

The following ciuolatlunR were furnishedby B. Co.:

W heat- May July May July

O.-its—•Moy July

Pi,rh—Jan.May

L$'.rd- Jan.Mnv JulyAt the New York Produce nxchange;

W heat— Open. Close.Way ................................... 51%July .............................. 8 1 5 1 Va

C orn-

July ................................. fiOli

NEW YORK MONEY MARKET.NE6V YORK. Jfln S^Money on call

nomlr.nl. Time loujio easy; sixty days, ninety rtnya and six inonilts, six per c«U.

NEW YORK BANK STATEMENT

Op. 11. 75%(S7»% 7K%&m 4S 43%

Hteh.7^476%13%43%

1j>*.73%

13>4

nos<*.7543

a6v,®*5%83%

21!33%

36)433

16. M ie!i716,0218.62

K62S.ST

»!625,67 63

t.3!i9.4;.6,E0{bft.52

Hew 617,000,1)00 Mllllac Companr.sp trm ntiimlrH to IV gVEXISO 3!SVS.

TRENTON, Jan. 6.~The MfjSoan H ill­ing and TrnnapartaUon Company waa In- coruanitod li*rc to.«aY with ait nilthor- lavA wBfta! ftock of BmiBO, aw picj into fcooAOpOjpreten'iiJ.anttTBiS^ eomtnoa atoA , H i* coropany do a k tn u a l

NRW YORK, Jan. 5.—The statement of olenriug-bousb banks for (he week (five diO>i showa' th a t the btmks hpUl ill7,S25 rriun' than the legul reserv e i*euulrements. This s dotT^'fise of 8t,221,400. ns emn- p:irc-il with t o t week. The BUUement fol­lows: Ixtana Si.O48.i:(i7.Cfl0. tnorcaso SJ5,-5P4,ri00; dcpOsU»i il.OOO.f978,'li>}. inerense IIS',- i SfTT. 200; clrciiluiion 1h“’.D64.k . decruase ’ 16,600; legal londf-rs 177.341.000. 1n(>rea8a

spectr $172,851,400. decroftse JiClTh- bW; rt‘serve |250.l'B2,KiO, decreusn $402,100; reserve requlnxl $2r.0.144.575, Inr.reasf' $1,815.- SOO; Kurplu.'si $147,(25, decrease 15,221.400; e.<- L'nlted Stules deposits $4j4ft,225, decrease 15,263,250.

In January. lOQT, ihe Prauktln Bt clety for Home HulUlInff amj Raving' of N«w York psj*» Its ,30th Semi-annual Pividlend. As usual. It ia fti ihe nue of Five Per Cent, upon aums of Tea Dollars or more up to Five Thousand Doiian.

T h e F rB n k lln !a « unique, con- eervatlvely managed und moat euccessfu! example of co-op­erative financli'rIng-«Unrrengiedmid wltnoui Special Privilege I t solicits savings by mall or otherwise, but first to be liivftStlgnted. A descriptive leaf- let for the asking.

TheFr&.f\kiin Society.1 lUid 8 Ueekrnnn. btaiihritfan,

CHARLB0 O'CONNOR HENNKBBy V.-ProB. anti MBnager.

Accouvl» vpmH bt\fore Jamian/ jj-

A s tru n o iu lrn l R venln—TM-ulghl an il T o- uiui'I'6»%v .MernlikK.

Bun tvtB, 4:43; risn^. 7.21. Mouti rliKS, 10:34 P. M. Moon’s agn, 21 days. Moon $it grealest llbration ca&t.

IV ntpi^riitiaro 41 a t \oot$,The thermometer a t the weather bureau

In tho High Hchool iiinrkvd 4l degrees a t noon to-ony. having rlBun from 32 a t J o’clock ttiiP morning, and from 36 u t 7 o'clock. The humidity was 73 per cent, nt 7 b!.dock and ^ a t nuon, when the wind was. bk)wlng from the southwest a t 8 Tnlles (Ut hour. Tiie highest temperature ytaterday was 57 d ^ rees. the lowest 3T and. *hc average 44. 'Hie average humidUy w as 64 per cent., and thar© was a rainfall of thlrty-^foiir hundredths of an Inch The prevailing wind was fvomrihe weal, and the fii&^iimum vejlocliy was thirty miles an hotir, A yij&r ago to-day the hlgheat

GO.,d s ta b lls lie d 1857.

VAN SGHAICK7 W n ll B freel, Mew Y ork.

- - _ . __ J New York Stock EiMembers | Chicago Tioard Of

Bi n 1 &l.W iUUm r . M vth , MBUaxer,

T .I« ) ,h o o . aOM.l o c a l in v e st m e n t Se c u r it ie s .

S.xxnxk,16. J .

That Boyof yours xwho is n o w in college should have his life insured in the’ Mu t u a l Benefit Company,and this is a matter that should be attended to at once. Tele­phone 444, New­ark. Day & Cor­nish. ^

Merchants' National Oank.‘i ......;•«>

N o T im e L ik e th e P re s e n t

to op«ii ,m account with this Bank, ft pays 29bon daily balances o( $500.00 and over subject to check. This Bank Is strong and progre.ssive, yet conservative. One ot the greatest safeguards that can be thrown around a bank is the tact that Its officers, directors and clerks are l» .rge sha .re hoM sra of its stock.

A box In the Safe Deposit vaults costing tS.OO per year and upward according to needs. Is the maxinimn of safety In keeping valuable papers,stocks, bonds, certificates, jewels, etc., etc., from fire and thieves at a minimum cost. T ry It fo r bl your.

Household goods taken on Storage in our Large, Strong and Dry Vaults.

JOSEPH M. RIKER, Pres't.JAY S. TREAT, V.-Pres't' and Cashier.

ARTHUR L. PHILLIPS, Assistant Cashier.WM. C. MORTON, Supt. of Vaults.

770 Broad St., Newark

Federal Trust Com pany,

747 Broad street, Newark.V M TE GIVE particular attention to every detail

affecting the financial interests of our patrons, and pay TW O PER CENT, on daily bal­

ances of $ioo and over, subject to check.

OFFICERS:JAMES SMITH Jr, President.

BENJAMIN ATHA and JOSEPH M. BVRNE, Vice-Presidents. JOHN W . CROOKS, Secretary .FRANK L. LUFF, T reasurer.

J A M E S SM IT H JR., B E N J A M IN A T H A . J O S E P H M. B Y R N E ,W .C A M P B E L L C L A R K , P E T E R H A U C K JR.,

D IR EC T O R S .

LO U IS P L A U T ,J . W IL L IA M C L A R K , J A M E S S M ITH . H A M IL T O N F. K E A N ,

W IN TO N C. G AR R ISO N , S A M U E L S. D EN N IS , W IL L IA M H. K E L L N E R , C H E S T E R R. HOAQ.

G O T T F R IE D K R U E G E R . A U G U S T U S 8. K N IG H T .

3 5 ^ % 3 5 4 %

West Side Trust Co.,Springfield Ave., H igli St.

START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT,The proper wav is to open .on Account in OUR

INVESTMENT DEPARTMENT. You cannot afford to be without a bank account. Your money draw.s interest at the rate of 354 per cent.

In our Business Department we pay 2 per cent, interest on deposits offlOOorover, credited monthly.Investment Department Open Monday ------------------------------------ o f f i c e r s , —

FREDERICK W.MEYER KUIiY, Vict Pr«.AUGUir GOERTZ, 3d Vice Prti.

Evenings from 7 lo 9.

PAUL, President.R.0,P. DIEFFENBACH, ZdVictPrtj. CItAS. T. ch am pio n . Sec. S. Treat.

354% 354%

1 .S i P e r C e n t a S .Interest is paid on all sntns of $1,000 and under and 3 per cent,

on all sums in excess of $1,000 if deposited in theSAVINGS DEPARTMENT

“ “ O F THEi___

NOITH W U D NATIONm ItllK .443-446 BROAD STREET.

Resources Over $3,500,000Deposits made on or before January 5th, draw interest from January

1st. Deposits made the first three days of any other month draw interest from the first day of the month. This bank is the only bank in Newark under U. S. Government supervision having a Savings Department.

REW AID l|IOSERN SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS.

Members ot th* New York Stock Exchange.Post&FlaR[R[,

M WaU Street, New YoiK.Brttncb Office: 77fJPrfiH|St„

NBWAItK, M. J.A ilrM tLD iin it , SwtdMt Pftrhir

^ TBLBFBONB IftTB,

l e c e l l e w i t n H t S m ir i t le U

TAX EXEMPT BOND&i30 Pln« Street, New York.lOVIRO I, STOIES.

H A B R lfta PULLER■ / l h l « S d w n j , lUvw YSriie

NEWARK OFFICE, 738 BROAD STgEET,rMbaaifA M tbudiiooM B elisjtrB nf.

viuMtotEBtL* jk B ftJd f t i o o r m , . ■ .

EssexGountyNationalBanlc^ C ^ ' W A . R K , K . J .

Capital . . S u rp lu s .. Deposits e

# 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0

i , e c 5 0 , o o o

0,000,000INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS.

BENJAMIN ATHA, PtMident.F. B. ADAMS, VfcB-PrBBiiiML aBOROE P. kEBVB, Vtce-PrwUMt “ -‘-T ^ A .F .R . MARTIN. CMhter.

UNIQN NATIBNAL BANK,TAB and 780 BROAD STREET, NEWARK.

Oovernment, State, County and City Oepetltary.Capttil, $ 1,500,000. Sorpltts S l .900,000.Profit!^

BqoIppsdtobsndlSMaomitiioi IndlvMusU, Momhuifti,'ACftnvInDtnfiri, OorpOFihtlotiir Bsaks aao Bsaltsn.

I tf lU S ft O R A F T a AMO L E T T E R S O P O R C D tT AVAILABL3■IN ALL (»AHTS OP THE W 0 .2 L J ..,ijrOFFICER*.

USAlw Ht MeCARTiKRp Vlee-Prsi. E. D.."wTaNewSfl^.^Slrtw. cashier.

EISELE & mafembaiw •$ thb Xew l a r k an* **kilaa*lVlila Steek axekanaes.

7IM$B Broii StraitooairaR aainc.

Kew Iffie; Secirifiet i SpscialtyDirect Wllea to Afl Prtaclpal

" 'g BET'.

C.O. MILLERu u U i a .

794 BROAD STREET! ri.. an tA B U B B B b i m i .

■ , F w t i e e h l t iP tt ■ S p ed a lty . ■:/ ■ ■ W h w W to w 'd h a to '* '" ' ■

fP . CL STONE & CO.m SHOftt sT u aar.

. I r a lm D o t t i i ir Lata w Ukeelatir.

Page 13: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

5■ ■ ■ ■"’.I^J

' %'fiK'H E W A B K B V E N H T G f f l ^ , S A T U E D A T * J A N U A R Y 6 . 1907.

IMPROVEMENTS IN NEW ARK BAY

Plaos Approved f(« Deepeoing Channel Between Staten

Island and New Jersey.

i-OOKS n o w LIKE BEGINNING

f r tm <A« WMiM«i0 oii Buredii of the EVSN* ANF« i/SWB.

Wa s h in g t o n , Jan, s . - i t looka nowm thotrch ttafl viv«r and hartw r bui, which 1« iOM to b« r*port«d to the House, will w v r a bABdaoma a4>proprlatlon for the «r«ff1l o t Inprorem ent for Nowark Bay, an Miprovamant th a t i i no much needed and win pmwa of ao much ralue to the s ta te of Naw H rm r,

Maokatiila, chief of engineers, h m JUflt submitted two reports which SscFwtary Taft has transm itted to (?on- sress^ and which bear directly upon that IfiW itftot qwstloti. One is a report of JaniMry H, 1908. by Colonel W. R. Llvej> wor% and the other by Colonel D. W. LAchwood, of December 6, UK'r, and they Iwth Qpsat of the preliminary eaumlna-

sunrey, respectively, authorised by th i last river and harbor bill of a ch a s te l itt Newark Bay. from the K!U 'i?* aorth of Shooters* Island, to5i v*****^^ channel near Corner Stake U w , Including the reef a t Bergen Point *J with a view to obtaining a depth of jlx tssh feet and a width of 300 feet.

The i r s t report recommended the pre- Ibniaary survey, while the second sums up ths facts developed by such survey, and takes strong ground in favor of mak- lac the Improvement asked for by the NSW Jsrssyltea

A ltar rsferrlng to the two reports, (?eo- •P il NKackenxIe thus sums up the^ whole m atter in the following recommendation:

Th« cost of the improvement Is esti­mated a t I280.U8, with 16,000 annually for maintenance after completion. For the fw ts and reasons given, I concur In the opinioQ of the looal offloers and the board of englnc'^-i of rivers and harbors that the locality in question Is worthy of Irn- ^mrement by the United S tates as an sktsoaJon of the existing project for work on Arthur KIH or Btsten Island Sound, from Kill van KuH to Raritan Bay,"

L ao k s L ik e a n A p p ru p r ln ilo n .In view of this strong and unequivocal

recommeadatloa by the chief engineer officer of the army, the Insertion of the pfojsct lij the forthcoming river and h ar­bor bit) seems a certainty. The estimate o f 1188,1'tf oomprlses the following items:

For drodgiag the proposed channel north of Shooters’ Island from KJlUven Kull to the existing channel a t Corn«r 8 tok^ Light, the same to be 300 feet wide and sixteen feet deep a t mean low water, wljth the widening of the approach to tfewark Bay, 740,000 cubic yards, H«4.000: for dredging the middle ground in ihe IpeoUty of Ibe Corner Stake Light, 175.000 gHkig yards, |62,6iX>; dredging fur the »*e* mowit of a pert of the reef jii Bergen Point Light, aa,000 cubic yanle, S6.B00, for dvedglng for the removal of tli^ middle ground in the channel helw^^n Beigen Point and Shooters' Islatict. tl.Oftj cubic ygfde. 110,360: for engineering and turn- tlngcnclee,, t26.4€9.

General Mackentle nlan gives hi! un­qualified Indorflemenl to two t'epurts made b,v tha same offioULLa, with d<tiall.‘j of preliminary examlnntUm, wUh jhan nnd estimate of cost of the propoacd Ini- prnvement of Old Rmith River, nlsu In New Jersey, which waa likewise au­thorized In the liisft river and harbor act of Maroh 3, 1906.

The Improvement proposfKl conejgtF In pwvlding a channel in that river UX> fort wide and eight feet deep at mcsitj Inw water, for a distance of one mile from (ho jiinctlOQ of the river and ibe head of the Washington canal. The cHilmaicd cost of the proposed work is I’O.KiS.SO. and ihc chief of englnesrs repuils that be .^uucujs In the FScommendstlona of the local ofll- oers and the board of engineers, that the locality Is worthy of improvement to the extend proposed, the work to be done, in connection with the existing project for 0buth t ^ e r .

K can*s W a te r B ill.Senator Kean bos Introduced a bill to

provide for the lh.ve8tlgatlon of the water resourcea in the United BUteg. The hill was Introdueed a t the request of the direc­to r of the Unltod States Qealogical Hur- vey, vUloh rsquset came to the Senator through Ham hoi C. Leighton, of Moni- olaJir, N. J„ who Is one of the expert cngL peers oonneoted with the geological sur­vey. Mif. Lelghtoo hoe long been eii gng«4 in InveatlsatlQjf fpr Ihe govern­m ent-tha Sooda of New Jersey, .inil in other portions of the eountry. The bill auUvMlSM the ^IrortoF 19. eoiftlnua iliooe klveatlfi^tlonA ao aa to determine how best to prevent floods, how to rtdaln writer for iFricbtloh purpoaea, hot^ to lotnln 11 ytlffic^llt aupply of w ater for navigable Otreams, etc., and any other desired In- formation regarding water resnnrces In the United Statea, both on the surface and underground

The many friends of Congressman and Mrs. H. Wayne Parker ot the capital basra beard with sorrow of the death of l l r , Parker*! mother, and regret tha t they and tbelr_ two daughters will now jie obliged to'yofuise to extend or jvcoept any social invHntlons for the remainder of tjie prM eat seMioo. H. B. W.

AnACKS THE PDBUC SERVICEH w y o r o f fto D se v e lt A dT O oatoe tfco

B s la b l la i tn ie n f o f a H a a lo l - s a l U a b f P ta w l.

HOOBEVEUT. Jan, 6.—Mayor Joaapb Herman, In hie mesaage to tha Borough Council, has made a vigorous attack upon the Public Service Corporation for tha poor service given Rooaavett. Ha advo- catea the establishment of a municipal lighting plant, If there It not an Inune* diste Intpi'ovement,

HUDSON’S BUILDING WAR.r i t l m a t a C o lla |M a a f T r a d a a C aw B oll

T h e r a l a d t c a t a d b y A e llo a o t P laa ta re iw * L o a a l.

NEW YORK, Jan, A—Tha plaatercrt’ local of Hudson County has cut away from the Building Trades Council, the central organisation, and haa made an agreement with tha Maater Uaaons' Asso­ciation by which, It any differences arias and a Joint oommitteo cannot reach a settlemant, the committee will leloct an umpire. I t la expected th a t the lathem will ebler Into an agreement with the employers without the intervention of the Building Trades Council.

The employers for their own proteotlon were forced to organise several months ago because of the arbitrary action ot the Building Trades Council, and It led to a declaration for nn open shop, after the employer! had announced that they would trea t directly with the unlojis, but would not recognise the council, which ordered the strikes, The bricklayers and the plae- terera decided to end the unsatisfactory condtllona by Ignoring the middlemen and dealing directly with the employers. This means the ultimate collapse of the Building Trades Cminell.

DR. FLOW ER IS UNDER ARREST

Promoter of New Jersey Peat Fad Scheme Caught After

Three-year Chase.

WIFE RESIDES AT CRANFORD

PRESIDENT BURNHAM'S TRIALE lx p r r te if t h a t H a lu a l R e s e rv e l . i f e 's

E x e e u l lv e W IH Oo ,o C o n r t o n JunneiT v 14,

NEW YORK, Jan. B.~A motion will be made by ABHistam Dlsirlcr AtlornBy Nott on next Mun(}ay far a stu^clal panel of Jurors to iry Frederick A. Burnham, prealdent of the Mutual Reherva Llfa In* Burauce Camrany, for larceny. Predeiick A. Biinihani will be tried oti the same In­dictment on which ]tls brother Goyrge B'.irtiiuini Jr., who wae uounaei for the company, wue ctmvU'tt'tl, George Burn- hum was eenlenccd tu two years In Sing Bing.

U Is the Intentioti of the district a tto r­ney's office lo eel M»e trial of Frederick Burnham for Junuary 14, before Juzlice Fitzgerald In the Supreme Court, Criminal Branch.

UNION PACinC TO FIGHT.

PATENT OFFICE ?m i IS NOT IMPROBABLE

B a s t Ckmnga Haw a n a M alor W llcy T ry in g ta. B enaedy C o n g e stio n

o f R n a la ta s T h ero .P n m iht ITiMlUatrtoa Jfsrcdn a/ the

m o SEW8.WABttlHOTON, Oiin. E.-Fced W. Bar-

Raclu. of Eaat Orange, spent yeBterduy ut *hg CaufttpH bk affortg to ascure from Con- greaa some steps toward action to remedy thp congettion ot business in t h e ^ t e n t Olllca. U r. Barnaclo Is a patent aUorney god to r gf^nral months has been making a close Mudy of the ooiidltion of altairs In

.fa tsn t o n o aTho E ast Orange man brought with him

to Washington a big case full of tables gnd figures showing how the work In the p a ten t OCce has been accumulating for OOveral years. He bad a talk with Major WlUlam H. Wiley, p t New Jersey, and t^e two later bold a conference on the fgbject with RepresentaUve Currier, cbalrman o t the Kopse Committee on Ik ten te .

Mr. Currier agreed with the Jeraeyman th a t conditions la tb* office were had, and gald he had been ih receipt of letters from all parts of tho country complaliUng of them. In hie oplaloa g larger force of em- Moyei and better pa.y would be necessary {« create better conditions. While he was ii| favor of beth these, he said, it would b utterly Impossible to h,ave tbo pvoetpf w n g reas pay any attention to the matter. , ____________ M. B. w .

.^FIREMEN'S fUNP PVIYAL.Upyleeh O o n p a n y 's f I l,Oljo,ooft ^ « s

t* B* O v e ^ o m e (l,g !{{cav|' A ssesetueu t L ev ied .

BAN FBANCISCO, Jan . ?.~Tlio atock- y e ld en ot tfie Eiromen's Fun<^ Insurance Company will meet Thursday next, to fooelder the amount a t new sloph to ha tiauM for distribution among policy- hoMera who loat In the firs bt Aprti }g,' Ttia tb m losa ot the oqtnpany wag

Tha tarm s of aeltleiment th a t fiavg t|g«g aeoaptad by a majority of th e pollcY- Ifeldlin Inelpde the payment of fifty per g j^ t. a t tfig face of claims fit adjusted. 1 ^ Um remainder In stock of the eon,-

.Jh u ^ m the' b iA s o t a

^ iu t agaeeament o t gsoe per share levied BR (M kharabolders ho i been well paid up.

• Ikki gfl ...........

»■ 0 . O poip ialB ed Ot.PjntAJDBloPHlA, Jan. S.-Independent

WW operators, Npresenting tW.0Ml,CM. ]WIMM m lM i a n on the BaltlmoriSi and M w lU Iroad, n e t yMtsrday at the offlee orw iw am A, Slaagow Jr., M this olty, S M demded to begin proceeding! against waBUtfmora and Obto, on the grpupfl ot w p lW V k lli ta favolr of oittain favorad

“tata** are isnoM t bjr the ^glUmofe

’ M

E n l l n t l n s a n A rm y o l M en to M ee i a S t r ik e liT I t s F lreu « « n , S k o n ld

L a t t e r Q u it.

<^1AHA, Jhn,. UfJie Union Pacific Rallniiid in making all pfpiiratioDB for a filnki of it£ firemen In aymiwithy with th'- strikers cm the'Soulherrt Piicitlc. Yen- lejiliiy rucrulUng otUces wiire op^iioij at every UirK« town ll|tt line. Dealrn-lil(“ vnitii^' men, rcgiirilU'fi.s of former em­pire I'l 'ni, nl*i‘ Ik i-nliRtod lo fill vn- cMiiiliF fitly un iir.

Tlif 11 eriilli^ di'e hvM at the c’ompiin>'H or rs lirsd will rnCcivv J1 p*T tPiy for nx- jwnsiH mitl! pul lo or diHchurgoilFf pn: to w<irk they R"1 reifular salnrlew Tiii,- cull hip hull r«-piKmd**rl to by many yirtitiK :non iia^w-ell its b>' former employeg wlu> \s!uU 10 I'v ri'inRtjitofi.

K utlri»u tl-E ]c‘i n ( o r 4;unklilne>.WAWiTINtJTi >X, J:iii 5. —The Intorslatt

ConuiP.’i i H r iinmlsMlon M;im rcinclui4»id U5 slKiViiJig the resultH of the liivezti'

«iiU<m maifi- huy the oporaUoiis of %ht' ^ailu rlev’Liloi' <'Uinp;iiileb of Ihe RicUfi) iind ilielz' lelutionH with the rall- i-ojids. , he esIJonce tends lo Bhow. It lir utuit-rKiood. that compoUtUm in the grain Lrucle hatj Uvvn practically elipihiaied through comhlnutionti between the ele- vutoi'8 juid the railroade, iind thgt prions ere controlled by the eievulora ami a gys- teiii of arb itrary grading has been lin- posod upon tlie aollci: It fe" also shownthat many railroad offichiU Id the "VS'eBt are elookhotdiTe in elevutpr coitiuantes, which fm 'ihcr‘ lorida to the prejudice ol the mdler, Tlie report will soon be sent to the Senate, a i tTie Inquiry wua nuufi- in nccordance with a .Senate resolution,

The Security of Vbur Estate

after yonr death depends upon pre- viooa fo rethought and action.

y im rta jiilly w ill suffer from your failure to wisely select an llxecutor to safeguard th e ir interests.

F I D E L I T Y TRUST COMPANY

PH IL A D JH jP H IA . Jxn. e .-O h u rged w ith having xwl&dled hundreds of perflonB In &nd around New York out of upward of | 1.000.000 through the iala of bogus mJnliitt Btook and with aklpplng his ball of A2O.0Q0,Dr. Richard C. Flower. «HaB Q. C, Dalnt-y ullax ' ‘FrofCMOr" Oxford, was arrpHtMl yesterday afternoon In hla office. W7 8 to- I phen O irard building, aa a fugitive ftuiii i ju itloa, and la held a t tha cUy hall a w ak­ing roQuisItioxi paper* from New York.For nearly four years Flower luia bvuti trnoked by New York detectives throuA;h the United States, Mexico, Central Amerl- oa, BraxU and Canada, and twice before ,he had been located In Philadelphia, but i LigRit One, Flleven re rm ttS i

W ith $9 ,000,000 of C apita) an d Surplus

aod a U rge and varied experience in such m atters, can serve you.

VERY LITTLE BUILDING WORK GOING ON NOW

efioh tim e eluded the vlgUance of his pur­suers.

The doctor Is aald to huve come to Philadelphia nearly two months ago. ob­tain ing dfiskroom for hlinnelf and &oii, ' Alfred D. Flower, lii the offleeti of C!ifn l«« D. St Joseph P. Lance, and had been in­terested In promoting one of his palenta for the m anufacture of hrlcka in tweniy- four hours by a chomlcal process. In lUi* BCheme he Is said to have intcrowiod □ num ber of prominent Phlladelphlana, juij among others whom he numi-d last nJhln was Theodore C. BearHi, wim hos b»en , Identified with many manufucturlnir an- i terprlBos and wue for ypurs prestdeni of ! the National Manufacturers' Assuclatlun.

A g g re g a t in g lJe|ii|^G r a n t e d .

Fleven perm its were Ie.HMed by the building departm ent this Lihi w<i*k, the same number us granted the previous Brven days. The aggivgme onma of the building this week la fjj.isu U‘nn thiin lust wci'k, the to tal cBUnuitwil i-owt lidiig $!i4.270. Of this limount more toon half of Ji will be paid by the M. L'ufTi;ry ivtuilier Company for four new UulldlngB. Tfi# ioLuiUon of the buliiUugs, llieli' nwiicrs Hhd eatlmuted cost uie f'dluwa:

Second Wfcird^MitrKM sticu l, a ltem tlo iisto cafe; F rank Mih'on, owner; estimiUod

BIG APARTM ENT FOR PLA N E ST.

Modern Building to Cost |40,- 000 to Go Up in the

Centre of City.

NEWS OF THE CONTRACTORS

Hfi)i8ton 8t ^ ft ti-

MORTQAaES.The fnllnwInK nKirtgiiitre were rocorJed

In the county,register a.oIBce yesterday: NEWARK.

Hurry Goldsmith et iix to Anna S, .Fulm er, e s JUitgerB sf 791 Jl I r .n cor S..ufli Oratiec nv, |2,4MI,

KuUe O ertol-H elB i and husband lo Oscar Seifert, w a Falrmounl av 73 ft n fr Sprlnglield kv, 13,809.

jM.scpli J. Smilh a t ale tu Howard Sav- Iug.i fnatltutlun, cor e a W aaklititou at and a a Malden Lane, 130,000.

Sigmund Altmar et uls to Martin H. GolUBmltli, w a N. J. R. H. av e a cor lot No. 1, property Aaa Whitehead, *2,000.

Heliable Improvement Company lo Ger­man SavtnES Bank, a e cor Market et and Van Bureu at, MOOO.

Alexander Baptle et ux tu Nell Mackay. w s Peshlne av te It e W ti' Watson av.two. ' .

J. Otto Socmer to Seventh Warfl Bulid- 'Ing and Kodn, e a Rldhellen ■ terrene 75 ft n fr Noll pi, H « a

Michael Toro et ux to Antonio Cerreto. w a Sixth at W ft fc .Cabinet st. *3W.

Dondto H. Rizxolo et ux to Eighth Ward Building and Loan, a s North Fourth at fto ft n fr First av.

Minnie Levin and huahand to Preferred Building and Loan, b e s Broom at 187 ft 8 fr Mercer st, *l,M(ii

Robert Prederlcka et ux to Essex Coun­ty Building and Lioan Association, w s Morton at 120 ft s fr Belleville av, 13,000.

Jiilln Bllanowits and huahand to Kva (lockclcr, a a Wth av 175 ft e fr Hunterdon at, 13,300. ■

Frederick C, Toler et nx to Eva Gook- ele w B S lltH st 350 ft s fr Bank at, 12,000.

Joseph E. D« W yngaert et ux to Ernest E. Coe (ekr. etc), u a Bank st 18 ft W fr Henry at, *2,001).

Frencisco Cnvaliero et ux to Gitatav^a A. .RJobUtda, n a “131m at, *1,200.

Brooka n ealty Co. to Nellie Franeca HudilCn, a a lech av 137 f t a fr Littleton Bv. »io,m

W .' H,. Compton Shear Co. to Jeaatc Buclinnen e t als (exra, etc), w a Bergen at tW ft n fr 16th av, *2.1«0.

H enrietta V. W ort and huahand to F i­delity Trust Co., s a Clinton av W ft w n* Vun Neaa p*, * 3 ,^

Cnarlea A, Moral to Hilton Building aqd Loan Atsbclailon, cor n s Orange at attg e a Gold at fN lUh at), ( l* ,m

William Breuaan at ux to Purkvlaw lAnd and Improvnmant Co., a a Jelltff av IfiO ft a fr Hawthorne av, *230.

Henry Warach to.B lnabath B. Andrawa, t a Court at U8 f t fr W ait at. M.OOO.

OUTSIDE OF NEWARK.Roaaa Brodar and huahand to Arthur

D. Crane, Bast OCauca, a a Main at 1*2 ft a fr Munii aV, 11,0m,

Edwin S. Brady et ux to R Cattuuina Wlfgin. Oran«a. w a n ay at *18 f t a ft P arY av , *1,600. ^

Salvatore Stlaaa to S tuart LIndaley at al Orange, w a Conn at a cor land l O » rg o A. McCauley, 31,500.’^Alwtne M. Schmidt to Louli F. Schmidt, Irvington, e a Sanford at 810 f t n fr E lm ­wood av, *2,600. '

Fred E, Benjamin at ux to W right Iv Glllbert, Bldorofleld, e a Orchard st 216 f t fr * a ' Belleville av, *1.600. .

Joseph Fortlnsky to Robert J. 8tlllwe|l, IrvlnstoB, n W B Stuyveannt av s cor

'^foVT ? r i a ‘' » ^ ' ’ e rh e r , D . i rm i M S « ? t a V a v * *2 (JS' *"

E va PiiaolrenhoBh and husband to Klghth W prd Bulldtu* and Loan .^ o c l* - tlon, Nutlay. centra of Rutan pi, 7ST f t g ff Harctfinn si, *1,000. ■

Ruflis Cl. Hoggle at ux to Philemon Wpodrutt (fxr and trustee, fte j. ©fAuie. cor w B Hiltver St and a s W are .at, **,»)0.

Rooett CUHO « U*tO Alfred W- Llhtott. Bellevllla. n w cof Balmont av and New- artt av. twit . ' . ■ ■ ■ t ' V

B ertfaud B. Burger et ux to FraflJcUik BoBding and I/oan. Nutley. ■ g ^an k U p av g« f t n e fr Vreeiand av. *3.*H).

Bertrand B. Burger et ux to, Hnaeet Baechllh. Nutley, t a m nklin av Ml ft a • fr Vreeiand a V,'Mill. '

" W U lM n^!*»erb» 'Jn 'et ux to C e tharta t

Wllttagi J 2 B ad u fl et t*« to Annie If, •'aldlff- -----« ---------------

n^iil vfllN llie *T*rbfcimor,**F lo w er w«u) In PlilltuldphJii laat. Sep­

tem ber, com ing from PaiereorL N. J., to m eet h it aon luul slopping wbiie here tit (he CuntineiUfll HoiuJ. , \ l th a t lime the police bud, been Informed of hip w herf- aboutB, b u t In POtne m anner he leai'mid of th e Tnovementa of ihe tlet^ictJv»‘s and re ­tu rn e d to Patereon.

W hile tn P tttcraon and PasBuic he p*»aed G. 0 , Daliu-y, and waa the proprlei u

of th e Trl-C olor Brick M anufactu ring Com pany, a schem e for ihe niunufucturfl of b ricks (jf fuel frftm iipuIh nf ifit* ifutrshee about P a ierson and F^aasiilc.

W hen F low er wtua originally u rm alcd he wa* conducting an office a t !0 W all BtreK. N ew York, and called h ltn ad f presldem of th e E as te rn A rirona Mining Compuny, a d v ertis in g th a t he owned m ince and opera ted Bmeiters In Arlaona, w here rich goW v e in i had been discovered, w ith an o u tp u t o f abou t oiiG hundred do lla rs ti; th e toil. I t w as learned th a t the doctor had only on option on the A rizona prc»p- e r ty ; ih u t th e re were no sm elters In ope-- a llon and th a t tho echeme waa a bogus one. Several IndlclinentR of g rand la r ­ceny In the first degree were found apoInHt him and h ie a rre s t shorily followed In aVInrch, IJHtS.

W hen th e ce.se whs colled for tj'trfi Dr. F low er had d isappeared and the ticftnli w!*1ch w as cofK luded yeelerduy Wua be­gun.

Besides hla »on, Alfred H, Flnw er, h.e lm.« ano lh t-r son, lujine i.k inO rnnfo id . N. J .. and u wife. wlio. it 1h um lerelood. hoB been with him during

la rg e r portion of liis fhgtit ov-i- I 'm- two ooiilineiiTH. His poit, who o i 'f j i e d t)je sam e otfin- with him, mid his s.m-ln- law, Mr. ITenrd, of FaHs-jijr'. N. J., were

The c ity lu ll la.ll ivliiiii uml luul k ng ta lk with the prisoner N EW YOHK, ja ti. 5 . - The loeal au-

rhorltlffl expect to brljig |>r K, F Flowi r I ro n P h ilade lph ia In n d;iy nr iwi> It op- ppJirs the dlHlrlct fiiUuney's ulflec le a rn ­ed rhut F low er was living under an as- Humed nam e in a New Jeisey i-iw)i

f'A SSA lC , Jan , 5 IHfjecuili. - I i way Uij- der lire nam e of ProfoKSor G. C. Lalney th a t Dr. R lcliord C. Flower wub known here. He cam e here last J\n3e from Now York, and eiuleuvortwl to sell slock in the T ri-C olor Brick M anufacturing Com ­pany. If he succeeded In doing this, the fa c t iB no t generally known. TJuj com- pnny w as organised with a Ciuiital a lack nf 1250.000.

C R A N FO R D , Jan . 5 (Spodal) —The wife and d a u g h te r of Dr. R, C, Flow er aiuT h is son Jew ell and the la tte r 's wife uiid child a re realdejits ol th is place, i l r s . R. C. F low er and daugh ter bcuirii a t the Isnme of Mrs. A. O. Rash. n& Alden fitreet. Aside from saying th a t her hoard- ere w ere not home, Mra. Rosa refu.*od lo give any fu r th e r inform ation abou t them .

At 3 Bylveator s treet, here, Is the home of Ur. F lo w er's son Jewell. Mrs. Jew fil F low er told a reporter to-day .that her h u sband Is a lawi^er w ith an office In New Y ork i^nd th a t h« had no th ing a t a ll to do w ith hU father. She explained th a t th e ir lives w ere along d ifferent lines.

Jew el F low er and hla fam ily have lived here ab o u t a year and a half. They li^id been out o f town recently and ju s t re ­tu rned-

j -laGOrThird W ard—D7 Mi#ward street, brick

I store; Oscar CuP.sclinfimi, uwner; esll- n'Ml*'d cost, |1,000.

’ Fifth \Vard“ l77 FVrry Htrert. hImit.- ntu! i dwylilng; Charles p. Hoes, owner; *-stl- ! miilid cost, Jl.OoU.I Eighth W ard—276 Parker street, two- i Biary franie dwelling; Samuel G. iluyo, ! estim ated ctiat. Jo.riOO.

NIntt) Ward-'l'il'-Pj-i Frcllnehiiysoi ave- ntir. three m ifs lo ry cniues jiiul storiiKC Itullillngs; UhiTinan Hriok aiul Siipjjly t'umpnny, owuicr: cxiiiTintnij msi. ll.iKifl FrellnghuyBen four iwu-stuiybiick factories; M t ’uffcry Lcuther rori\- poiiy, owner; ofiUmiUed eoKt. IHtKenner uvenuc, twn-siary froim- dwcll- Jrigi H, Ackerman, nwjier. t-Htlmuicd cost, $4,000,

Tenth W ard—33-37 Miilvern street, twu- Blory frame stable; OuHlave Kuhn, ownei» esllnmled cost, $2,000.

Eleventh \ \ ’jird 12r> Niwih Slxlli street, three-story fram e riwi Ihng; H and E. Aiiflersf*n. owners; ewtiiiiiUei] cokI,

Fourteenth ‘Ward -KeKr <>t niuihw--Htl■"rne^ uf flouili firing,* uviimf amt Rriieu street, frame HlMragc-limMe, A. (iiLiUluK. owner; vsTlmstteil o e i $3"i0.

SJxteemli Ward A\nn uv'rnjr. niar C’hndw'ick avtiiue: iSt. MuMticw s 0> iinan Ctmrrli. nwnt-r. eHtlnulcd M.itsi.

HEAL INSTATE TH A NSPKJh^.

n' oltft Batnonii

w Dw k Ui

) M. (ML.>« XV tM

ftttai h R. Outlxr. ita XV

Bxht b r X X

Ini L.“Ufh«r,f t X f t

Hour• i.-,T-w7 cbrlBtlan F»fxea

. . V. < X Orxnt I t M f t f t .A j . Ixm^^ w oar Ixnfi Bxarjf 9 ,

f^arx t« Anitrkxn Intqrxiiix Ox,. Mawaw *v e cor ix ^

THAT B. AND 0. WRECK.G o v ^ m m c .n t In v e s t l f f a t lo i i o f th e

D ln a a t c r W an C o n llb n e d A g a in a t W a B h ln g to u T o -d a y .

WABTriNGTOiTJi Jaq- B.-^Tlsc In terstate Commence <5pmm(6aIon ccmtlnuedIts Investlgatton Into the block signal system employed on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, with particular reference to the wreck of last Sunday.

The s ta r witness of yesterday. H arry H, Hildebrand, the engineer of 2120, t.he "dead" train , was again put upon the staqd. He had practically finl.Hhed his atory qf 'th e wreck yesterday, but there Wore fu rther points which tho commis­sion was iinxloue (o have more cleuvly brought out. Nearly all of the employes and officials of thie Baltlpiore and Ohio who have any ltn,owledge of value to the commission will be asked to tell what they know.

AsfilaiuDt General Counsel Wilson, of the BaUlniore and Ohio, cross-examined Engineer Hildebrand. In reply to a ques­tion of Mr. Wilson, Hildebrand said lh a t It was ImpoaslUlc to see any lights a t T erra C otta when he struck the Fred­erick local.

“I would have slopped anywhere If 1 had seen a red light," he added,

Replying to a question of CommUsloner ClsnoentA he said that be had seen a white light a t Takoma, which was a platform light. He explained tim t some- tim es th a ie lights wars located in boxes behind glass.

In r«|it}>tng to a question of Mr. Walter, a tto rney (or the Interstate Commerce Coznmtsalon, Hildebrand sgld th a t he eotild sea Uttle or nothing over the boiler Qf A EDOnster engine. He might see a tree a hundred feet high. The only thing he (k>uM see through the small aperture m the oab w as the heed lamp on the cngln.a.

**I bad no reason to believe that No. OG had not reached Washington/' said Mr. Hildebrand looked at my watch at l^ver Springs and I knew that was then Mz mJDutes overdue end I supposed she was In 'Washington’.''

'*Do yon ever use coealne?*' asked Mr. W alter a t the vltnoas.

"'ICeven* indignantly replied Hildebrand.*^There was no liquor ,ln his cah," said

Mr. Hlldebrend» neither he nor his fire­man having it aboard.' I t developed that very frequastly train callers would Insist on men goltig on duly when they Insisted that they did not have enough rest, said Hildebrand, and th^ro w as considerable complaint against this.

It

Ir

to

Tin- follnwin*,; d'-j-il.-: vn P' n " nli it jri iliCouiiiv ilhi. r. > i \ ,

N i:u AltK.AniiH H I’lilinnr tu li itiy 'loUJ?;

iH vx. f* .s UniLii'rs v| ;fji ti Ti n 8''Uih (>r:niKc MV, ............

Hu 'Im : r HNini; ■"! ux ti> ^■|1 Trlfis .ir. m hi. <• Flflli hi iVn ir Firsi rtv. :)7xhM..................

^\^lliam Tib's J? i-f alrr In l.btt*<.’uirhiii. I- s I-'iUh si 4-K< fi I

av. iS iXKiii........................[]. Hn .iki-iLUtlfjc f-t ills til i

abMh M WiiKti'-r, w h Mmin ;t' ri II fr MLJUiuuiJi VU w uv. :;Al'

rh i ifiH- hoiualtt' i‘l al ii. xrs J'lLii J. Ainm- Jr ei ux.

av timJl y s LiiKtilii hv................ '

t ’hi-i^Uc HutJiuliu- f t ills Iti Jnlui J.J r. 61 UK, cqi n n Dvluvmi

uv ah'l e H Axijicqlti uv, ...........Ireorst I’. Kurl.jw et ux in furnelia

Al. Greenly, f b Nurih flixili mift II fr aixLli uv. 2i xlUJ......................

Haiiiie Ai Uu tu Edward M. Wiildrun at Ilia, s e nnr W.i.'jhhiijUJii Ml anu Wuldeu l.uii, ........................... &l),t>Ar

Oacar sJulTurt H ux Lu Kulio Ofi'lvi w a Kaii'uirjuiji av 73 ft n

tr yprlnuhvlij u\ . D '4xllc.................Chaues Hill to Marzjo Val-uiliiu,

w H bloomlicld av 25 ft h iT land H'dleim ijiaum IGD I’L x ii’ Aqueduvi.

tu Jiiliu176 ft V Jr

NEW INCORPORATIONS.TB0HTON, Jan. 6.—Conoerna charOrefl

here yeBterdar were:Warner -Brotbere Company. Paterson;

wpltal. *l»,(l(l). Inborporatora, Morris v. p y , Luther Q. Sinth^ Jr. I0)d (Totby M. Cheater.

Marlfle Beatty Company. Atlantic City; aapltal, *10^^- tnoorporatorx, Wilbur jHettpeitwan, iHerbert Cuthbert and Bd- vard (*. Baprta.

CMliSxn a«xl ^rmaoeuUcal Company, C a n ^ i piygtal. *!«.()». Incorporatore, W W W B. Wolcott, J, AHellwrl H lg ]^ «tw* OMuriai B. RIW

BallthM (feBrtrupt'on Company,Trtntt#; SiWltxl. *Wp«#. Inoprporatore, C, U WilaDa, I>. B. Kenitedy and E- L. Katit.

P. A. Mlintta* * IDdtewaler; captM laeMpwptori, nanlel A, Hiedlna,

Wj) jta*d 0- . and * Walter 4.TfSlWiHB'.

-»T -Va eretawWa, MaroBBe iftlxaBar.'

AJLBiAKFi Jon- l - M ^ x m o r H uf ha« yax. dfnpd bU fln ir Xktnulltion txarnuii, tSo V h ^ ir t! | J a r* ^ to

ui, 82x75Frtrtitricl. 11. Ktiorr et

liJiiiiiowiiz, ij a I7;ii ^Hunicnlnji si. JixlUUx.......................

,iL Suniiiitf (sheiilO t(i Oliiith pvtiuelacr. w 8 Lentz iiv ij'J ii s trl-e iry M. JixT l....... ..................................

f^riitst L- Coe iexr., etc.) to Joscpii L. De Wynguerl, n ti Liuik at is Itvv fi Heiiiy bt, IMxsn................

.• UBUjjl 'FULIU et ux lu Frnm-.eHtu .avuiicru ei ux, n .s lloiitiiun si

^ It fr Llm SI, J5xAo...................TliuiUKS H. iiiorthmiso u» j.

iiuttefw, w H Whllnci" HI 22ii ft « iiSouth Orange hv; 40.xt ............... ,

JitisJo UuchanHn et ulw lexr.s., eu' ) *1' W. H. Coinnion ?4l*tAU Cu, w 8 Bergen st 150 ft n fi Ittlti uv.frUxlUJ ...................................................

xMiiurlce D. Kaufticrr el hIh to Ai- bcri 11. Knutlierr, s a Gulden si lift ft w tr McW horter si, ifTxIliU.*md four otlior tru c is ............

Mai^rice D. K aufil^T ala to Kauf- herr & Co., a h Gardoii «l D5 u w fr MeWhurLer s7xKi2, and Idurother tra c ts .........................................

Parkview X..und and Improveineiit Co. to Wlhlum Brciiiiaii et ux, e a JellllT av ^ ft a fi Hawthorne av,25xlug ....................................................

Armu T. Nh’ltion tq Charlea A. Morel, cor n a. Urange bt and, e aNorth lllh at. BOxlUO.........................

OUTRIDE OF NEWARK, t'riink 11. Sommer (Hhevlffj lo Hiirry

C. IloJIi’nb'.ck, xM'niLclHir, w a Grove, at ft n fv Claiewlll av2iOx3im, and oecqiul tritol..................

Kuiidle U Carpenter ut ux to John W. McCanliy, Eaal Oiung'-, e # Gleuwuud av 405 ft n fr I'uJk av.50X200 ............... .................... ................

Frederick T. Davis et ux lo Edwin S. Bi'udy el ux, Orange, w u Day bt3111 ft a U i'avk -avi 27xltl.-...............

VVauon WhiulCBcy el aip to AnniQ L. Cox. East Orange, s k VVder xav rt tt fr Munn av, 6xl0u.......

S tuart Lhidtiley 61 ala lu Salvatore Stiaaa. Orange, w h Cone «t l* cor lands George A. McCauley, j£xloo..

EJdmund IVrrlU Rico et u» to Ce- cella O. PoUi>i, MonUdair, e a Li'ui- lerton kV Ct fr..u s Chei^tnut hi,

Robert J. S tiilw ^l to Joseph Pur* tinsky. Jrvlngton, n w s Stuyvesant ftv s c9or land formerly John N. Crawford or hla estate, 8 ch 9 1x5Ch SU I...... .............................................

WUUam Gr Jacobue et ux to town* ship of VeroiiiL Verona, w s Grove ^ ft n fv division line lands Thomas N eary and • lands estateMiltou McConnell, deceased..........

Charles Carroll Tillman to Frank B. Hqwi-s, E ast Orange, w s N Clin­ton s t ITS ft n fr Hamilton st,RDxlOO ......................... ........................

Helen L. S later und husband to Vannah L. Heggle, Orantre, corner w B HlUyer et and^s u W^ard st,26*107 ..................................................

John H, Hreakenridge et uls to Joseph Kraany, Irvington, e a Montgomety av S3S f t fi fr S 20tht t , m i 0 2 .................................................................

John, H. Breakenridge et als lo Tim­othy A, Lewhy et ux. Irvlngimi, n 5 Berkshire pi T26 ft w fr Mt. Vernon uv, 25x100................... .........

A^lffvd W. U n to tt ux to Uocco CUBiq et ux. RellcvlUe. n w cor' Bplmont av and Newark av, lifix'iSa

Samun! B. Tillnu (axr, and tnintee, etc.) to Michael J. Ryan cl ux. South Orange, e w e Ipvlnpmn uv 72 ft 1 e fr Tlchenor aV. iOxl'iS......

obrnfir It a Montsompry st and w'S' WUitamson ttv,^5i21)l,

lUl)

;:.5M

J,M0

7.000

400

6,7oON c'w ft^ Hnme flutfdoW 'Company to.

WitUSm T. StoFbe J t. et ii*, Irvlnff- lon, w a Llnfien' “V l.SM tt n (rCllnlcn nv west, .'0x109.................. 1

Auauiftuli A, Bfier to Prank M. Van wpretine.,.Liviwr»ton. «,* Beaufon

llohert' Banderwin et u*. to Cynis li! LpreK et ux. N orth Caldwell, cen­tre lino Grand View aw cor Imiils fb»Merly of w in tan i Ryle, 06x37}.. 1

Wlltwin lUeeka e t bJt to. Albert Dleoitp, MiinJiirn ■ ana livinKston, a t elm tree lo a ) t |p.nds Daniel Baldwin a a laflde P arker Reeves,I Ch *4 IxH ch « L and second tract, l

Htoaolaa Brower ip Robert Jen- nlnta. Vtrona. middle of lane ba- tWeen land formerly of John Brow­er Jr, (dec.) and land Itnown as ."MeiraDc Otty Home Farm" .(cor(Stove av). U chJtW cfi M Ir,.;........ 1

l4 t i ra B, BpAltkW Atid btuband to . fjhnla P. schenwr. B ast Oranee,17D ft a (r point In a a Main at mt t n w fr n a (^Inton at, STxiffl....... i

Chrlatlnp FelRen^n to Olusrppe Fedarlot, Moatcjalr, e a Grant st9) I* n t r Bay b n e , TTocIDO........... . 4,*9*

Ailerledh > Inahrance Company to ^ s W 'T t B r e . i l l b W c l d l t a r e t o n i . '

' *■ av B oar 1 ^ iWllltam .Jaeo-tfts«...... . *

.41 ft ft ft.-«pifth.Jat'..HgMClf f B as **•! aa leaat »aaptt ' g

Fltiria have jq«t completed for a Urge imxjvrn npurtmejit building which 'f it Union Building Cunipuny will erect at 17g and 17S Rlwuo etn 'c i a t a coat of about Turly ihouHauiJ dollare. The plans, whloli ware drawn by P eter Charlen. call for a four-gtory brick building, with a frontage of fojty-eigiu feet and elghty-fflx f*et In tlepib. It will be un ornate mruoture, the front uf which will be faced with pi‘ei»«ed brick und llmeetone. There will be front and rt-ar apartn ieiiu for four famUtt’8 on door. The former willcouhIhi of live rourug tuuJ balfircooPii, whilo Ihe U tter will contain an additional rootn. Tfia building will be equipped with one large aleum'iieatJhg plant, and will fiJfio contain a hoi w ater eiipply l» the ba»enient- The filruotuio wdll alou be provided with guB and electric lighting, and will contain four dumbwallerB. Pre- Iluilnary work will be eiurted eoon.

Williiim 11. Schwurte u lo expend ulmut ten Lhimsiind dollute in iliu ereclloii of 4 Urgu flume private realdence al KW und !*l tiouih Kiovttuh itreot, from plana

j drawn hy VVillmm Moll, of Irvington. The I liouMt:, which will he iwi» und onc-hulf I tilorlvB high, will have u frontage of thlr- j ty-84-vi'n and will he thltly feet Inj depth. A fta tu re of the building will bt u I Uajge pimau, which wdll run ucrosa the j entire front and extend about twelve feel

beyond on uu« aide. The exterior of the fiiai alm y wdl bo of clapbuarda, while

I tlie eecund Hiury and roofing will be of ‘ lifiluylfs. Thf iirat Iloor will contain n

parli/r, to be irhnmed in brick; rcceptlun Jl ill. library and *Unlng-room, lo hi* Jln- l&hed In ouk; « den, to be Irl mined In ilu-Mimii, While a kllciieii ami bulle!''a I«uili'y will iiUo he provided. The wecond door will he dlvfiliid Into »ix bt'drooniB. tirwlng-i'oom und two hathroonm. A ]duy- room will be fiiilBhed off In the attic, wJiile th . hiiindry and an addlilonal bulli- J'ooiii will be aiTungi-d In the cellar. Thfl houHc will be t-quljiped with Btoum heui and ciuiiliinallnn giis ami electric lighting. C o n t r a . f o r tlic rnuBun und carpenter wmk havpk j\i8i i>e4-n awarded to Qrulin A* B.hwiii'X ('ll, and John Waesmer, re- Bptclli-eJy. Work will be aiartpd next w'oek

TTrci-fanilly D w elU ng.Bonedlcl Ackernnmn will be the owner

of u twt)-fani[ly frame dwclllug to bu erected ui 1S4 Hcntier avenue, in the Wee- (juiiljia I'urk Hei'ilon, The pliUis. uti drawn hy A. H. Thornfioh, c,'UI for a building Ewr> jiMil H half stoi-fi*H high to meiiMurn J2X-J2 f' Nl. The first ftiiartntem will enn- aiet. ■>f flVM room* and hath, while the aparlrum i nn the flijor abov.e will ooiitalti III) ad.liiionjtl rriont, F4)ur ronma are kIbu to I".* pr('\Ulerl In th f alTlr. l*5i*parato Htcam hciitliis pltihiM ure Included In the liiirTovatm-hlH, Runoillci Grosch liaa Jiiat l"-fzi awarded ihe x**m>rril contrsict for the fiiilldijiK, w-lurii will rotii about lii.oOO.

('hailoM Knoff. a« archl{4*ci, la receiving eaiiinaU-s f-n- iln* erection of a iw«i-and- n-liair Htiity fiaiiU' ]jj-lvKtH realiience on Dabilhi uveniir, l-ir Henry Groel. The h niac will iiifii.mjre iluxSG feet, litid will ‘•'Ji.ialri ?iiiie rminja and hathromii. Thu Inletjoi' w ill Ije trtnimed In cypreaK, Tho -‘iP'rt-Hiciiijniis o.'dl fur steam lieiu and !oii,liluailn[j ifjis and electilc lighting. The iRilnialed c4-ai Is ahuut ifi.&OO.

Fiuindatinns have been sturted on a UjieR-siory frame, iJiree-fumlly fiat ou lie norihiiaa! corner of Avon avenue and sS ^. tileenili street fur John l^ablan. The fiuijduig will fie tw enly-four feet wida by fiu iy.i.lghi ftet deep, The apartinonia Will

of six I'lHjjna, lu bo provldisl with ranges, batha and wash-lraya. Edward sHi'ljindder drew the plans for tho building, w’lihh will cost ah4iut $5,500. Herman CV .Selincliler has the general contract.

Ground haa been broken at 128 North Slxili street for the erecllun of a Iwo-and- a-lni-lf Hiory frame two-fumlly dwelling for Bamupl E. Anderson at a cost uf $6>00Q. The building will meaHure 22x51 feet. The first und aecond fii)ora will contain apari- menia of five rooms und baihmoin, while four additional rouniH will be pro­vided In (he aitlc. All Improvemenla, in- chilling steam heat, are to be Installed, IL Li, Ho])klna hna the general contract.

The HuHS4*ll-rtobinaon (.'onipany, which luiH erected Bevcrul six-fam ily apaitmeut bulldlngH nn Earl Htroet, hjia JuBt Hlartud work on ihree more, at Nus. 20 lo 28. The tJirueturefl, which are dcUiched. measure

fcHii each Apurimenl.'^ for two fam- lllvH jtrn Arranged (jtj each floor, to con­tain raiigvH, baths, wnsh trays and duinb- wiiit4-rH TIk* cost will be about $3<i000. Willfiirn lj. B lnachanl Is fitting the muHOn work, and the owners are doing the ckr- l»*niei Ing.

Feu-f t.'hiirleH, as architect, has Juat utt'iirded conlracta for the erection of a two-fanilly frame dwelling al 13# Treaoy_ avenue foi F. Albert Erhard, at a cost ot abo\ii J5,2"0. ’The hi^uBe Will be two-and-a- halt' Hiui'li'S high. It wlU oontaJii five rdoma and biilhruom on jl ftour The In­terior will be trimmed In cypresa and white wood. The apartm ents will be provided with steam heat and other Im- provemenla. Fred Kllgus has the oon- tract for the maeon and carpenter work. The o ther contracts have not been awarded.

Samuel Q. Mayo, of Essex Fells, has filed plans a t the office of the suporlntend- ent of buildings for a two-and-a-hulf- atory fram e dwelling to contain apart- nientH for two famllloH. Tl will be ereettid ut 2?G Barker street a t u coat of 16,600. John Mutch, of Nutloy, has the general contru(jt.

TENEMENT WORK LIGHT. ,- - I <

M I d iB s a t* Coat ^ a ,(N > 0 A o lh > r- »ooA h r B o u A D a v ta c T ills

W « k .Thf ata ta Board of Tahamant-housa

Commltalonera authorliad parmlta for the oneatruotlon of aixtaan buildlnaa tor the waals eiidint ju ta rd a y . (ha aatimatad acrre iB ie cMt of which was IJ4!,(XI0, Thta l i 1 f..’oreaoa from tha am ount of work done during the preceding n v e n days. Atmut liatf of tho work will be done In this city. Tha permits are aa follows:

Newark- Sarah A. Holloway, 6CI South Fourteenth atrest. one threa-atofy frame, *6(01)0: RUHsal-Itoblnaon Company, ^ a i ^ r l atreet, three three-atory frames, ^.MO; Antonio Olullai)0,M>uthweat oorner Summit street and Summit place one three-atory brick, 110,000; Anton Planer, Avop avenue, thirty feel west of Bergen street, one three-story frame, llOiOOO; Mar­garet Thelnie, 784 )9erg«n atreet, one ^ree-a lo ry frame, *8,000; Frederick FUehet, Sussex avenue and Third street, one three-atory fram e, *l'i,0o0; Henry Oehler, northennt oorner Thir­teenth street and Ninth avenue, one three-atory frame, *16,000; H a i Blnun- feldt, southweat corner Tw elfth street nnd Fifteenth avenue, two three-atory frames, IMOOO; Jaoob Bkolhtck. S7S-J76 South Fourteenth street, two throe-story frame, *18,000; Mrs. Anna Felnberg. 368 Belmont avenue, one tbrse-story frame, *7.000. . ■

K llaabeth-Charles Schmloker, 198-140 r iftn one three-ntgry fm iif tt flO.OOOe

Jersey City—Anna Ewaid, no rth aide Dwight street, too feet eaat of Jaekaon ovenue, nine four-story bricks, *81,001): Herman Schichting. Stevens avenue. 116 M **'*'**'■*' '"'® three-atory fram e,JJ.IM); Leo Felnen, southwest corner Hague street and Boulevard, one three- story brick. 113,uoo. ;

West Hoboken-John O’Connor, nSrtp. west corner Spring and Union streets, one three-story brick, *13,000.

East Orange-Llncoln Koalty Cnmpany ' west a de West street, uc feet south 0* js'ooo' '* (hree-atory framea,

heftn r6-CONTHACT0.

Th* following coiitraota hqv rorded a l tlie cour(hou«e;

A. M. flh«rrelk owner, 154-16 NorUv Maple av. East Orange, with Joacnli Allen, for pninting, *680; Alfred W altera architect.

m™.-. owner, 77 Bruce et.will Charlea Conlurtl, for all work. tOoc, Mlrlwiol B, flltb^rslolii, ari'h lteci.

The tnialeoe of West preabytetiati Uiuroh, owners, LltUettm nnd Bievont’li aVK, with Joseph Alieij, fo r ' patfitliig,

w nii tlWstaining and deeoratlnm *4nfi;11*;?®''“ Euuippcrs. for jlghtlnj*148; with Peter Amend, for sin iln" «rJ Alfred W alters, architect.

Trustoee of HecOnd Presbylerian C hufcl owncra, IS Washington at, with H urry ft! J;wksnn. for clcclrlc and giia n n u rca . |6W; with E, H. Harrison Bro., for tiling, *280: Thomas Creessy, itrclU*(iaL ,

W E S T H l'U S O N R E A L lU g T A T B .

Spci'laJ Btipntck to Ihe OyjilAmo NJliys. ' JI'.li&EV CITY, Jam 5.—The fpDoWlng-

deed ;iml mortgage afteoilng pro |ierty-111 csl 1 .dson were recorded yeaterituy:

IvEAHNY CONVEYANCE.Charles A. Morel et u i to John .H . Ud-

tCiran, « * of Highland nv MO ,( t n-^m Flcrgen av, M4*100; w s of H lghlanS By I f i J ’.-'’ I ' ***' &1'* a n d .t r uiitf75ifS)'''|'l S'!.

KEARNY MORTOAGE.John H, McKcon et ux to A nna T

Nlvlson, e s of illghland av 190 f t n £r Bergen av, augino; w a „f H ighland «v n t l ?'*. 30OxHm. and w k

*7^0 «V 3T| ft fr Bergen av, 76xlWh

la o S a r e d t o r t h o u v re s t n a d u b t IbwI ( to a a* n a y p o o a a a a r f tB n a a a d o A to o te d t a a ta o U la t srlsw f to M t h s ^ l lp e a o f t h o Mow V b s k a a d Mow J o r - 1 ■oy T a le p h o ife ( l a a ip a a r l a th o I t a t g n ( Mow Jo stio y ..,

HielUIU.TelapbiinCL

JAEHNIG GAS FIX­TURE GO., Inc.

We Make a Complete Line ol

Dinicg Room Fixtum,- B O T H -

Gas anil ElectritrVisit Our New Show RqoirSs W lU Tbirteeiith Am

C n r. M o r r t l Avo. -JAtlnriaMa nod Bpoelol DHlgnt

I ■ ; . CheerluUy PurnlshsA

■ w... A.,.Y

fiiAiBN 1 rm T A iL n u * ^E L E C I R I C I - T rpractically taugltt frp fiv 'stv itrj.fln -i ish In 60 to (jujrs' in seven‘Story. . .bujfdingv .:tav>s(iiij i t s l

electric powjiir bfftjnt tn lF ftp --ow nresepenE a toti -el^rtcal ctjulpe ment of liS.OOOl ’’vir. si'-jj.a '

Doy and eve^'bjt' ftotinirt.- llid i- viJual matruotion... .Podtion* « • cured, .‘.'Write.af A l f air p o lr lu .

NEW Y O R K a e a K i c M , lTRADE* $ C # t J j

}9 W»*l; J7A,St.r Wsw,;YoA»"Ttievpnty PradtKai aictflo^ WMigSclMMll^

In tbd'workj/',, " --y.

!.n. ).fft a) , l-O:. nUT «•'. riI hr, i,;c erf;.

■t; -ir:; cJ 11

nl

Tfty .Ai|vgr\l|< tno'rt’ ft>> h 'hi* wftya bc'Ucved'ia Uie word ol.inotklil advertlaemeiiL Tt Is the oiw Ihi^ hhu mudg. H O tT . IltAl^fM ril* STOiiii] fanwust Test H ot

« AGAUICllY *T., OPP. P i Ov. a>

___ y .... ^

lii(l<‘pr*n<lt*nt tcie Dealer** Election*Thu indi'PLindeiU leu Dualetti' Aaaoota*

tloii of New J*ravy held Its annual rheeilnff at Hank and Kutuerti Bireetfi lafit nlehl and elecled the following officer*; Fietitd«*iil, Arthur B. Trembley; vlce- pi'Lfiiderit, John M. LantR; secretary, Charlq* A. Teri[lll; financial af^nratary, Herbert tu. Garry; treasurer, Hufua A. Pile: truHtee*. Jame* M- frnmp, IjOxiI* J. Oipperly, Horace Dunwoociy. Harry T. Robiri.<*on, E. Harry Phillip*; a<u'geant* at-arma, John W. Shriek; chairman Of flign cumnilUee, Benjamin T. Foatar.

: l * I i O J k I E » T D I ^ U l V E t J f V .

s m pyiias.•A IL,!. ijM fs - r o o K : . .* .

J. B. CONOVER COMJE?’■**5 a n d m ,'9

AUGUITIJS OVIBNBBlHRT, Pros. JOt. ML COMOVRlil, do*^..

BHRM

UEGAL HOTICft*.tJOXICB OF ADJOURNED BPECIAL MEET-

INQ OF BTOCKHOLDEns OF UNITED STATES TKANSPOBTATION

COUPANT.An ad jo iin itd ipacla l of tt]« ttock-

hol4i«n of Utkitad 8U t*a Tr*n*i>or(«lk)n Oom- pany w ill be held a t th« principal ofiUx* of the oofnpany. No. M l W w blng ton «trett, New­ark, New J*rie]^ cm th e tw enty-fourth day of JaauarVs IWT* a t eUven o'clock In ike forenoon, to (aka action the followloareaolutlon of the board of director! which waa uoankmoualy adopted a t a special meet- Inc held on the n ineteenth day of October, 19M.

Resolved, That in the judgm ent of the board of dlrecb*re it Is advlaalite and moat for the benefit of the U nited 8U tee Transpor* cation Company th a t the sam e should be forth­w ith dlaaolved, and to th a t end It is ordered tha t a meeting of tha stockholders be held the fourth day of December, 1006, a t IX o'clock A- H ., a t the office of the company. No. 161 W ashington stree t, Newark, N. J., to take action upon Ihla resolution; and further, th a t the secretary forthw ith give no- tlcn of said m eeting, and of the adoption of thla resolution w ithin ten days from tAl* date by pufillshlng said rrnoluttoD With a noUoe of lie adoption In t!xe N ew ark News, % news­paper published In N ew ark. N. J ,, for a t least four woflkn. next preceding, otic* a week, evcoceslvely. and by m ailing a w ritten or print* ed copy of the sam e each and every siock- holder of IhU oompanv 'in tbs UotTVd- SUtes.

'‘‘F a th e r Uesolved, T ha t the stock hooks of th is company be ijlcsefi on November 38, lfl06, and rem ain oloeed until December 5* 1900.''

D ated Jan u ary ft, 1907. _H- Is WlUKlNflON.

Secretary.IN CHANCERY O F N EW JE H B E Y -T o W ill­

iam 11. Bowne.By v irtue of th« o rder of the Court of Chan-

oery of New Jersey, m ade on tbe day of Uxe data hereof* in a caiiae w herein C lara I. Bowne la cempIalDant and you Are defendant, you u re required to appear; plead, answ er or de* m ur to the bill ox sa id comPlalAatKt, oil or b ^ o re the ekfeventh d ay of February next, or the said bill w ilt Be taken aa oonfewed sgaln it you.

The aatd bUl 1» filed agAtwt you for a dt- voroe from the boadi of matrimony, and you are made defendant beoAUee you are tbe hus­band of the oompUinant above named.

Dated Deoonber SO, 1909,A. KONKLB*

' CompUtlnant'e ilolieltor.SIO Bofaeuer Building,

(ld.00) NewArt. w. J.

PenosylvaniaRailroailToiirtOld Mexico California Mardi Gras

theDelights

of

FreeTravel

GRAND. CANYON’ AND COLOR.ADO

Febr ua r y 26

Pioehurst

NEW ORLEANS;rEDRUAHY ,6.

FEBRUARY i ; 11, MARCH S ;1.

February 1*

RICHMOND. WASHINGTON-F e b ru a ry 23, M a rch 9,'23, A p r i l 6 '

Washington Ja n u a ry 17, F e b t 'u a fy 7, 2 t, M a rch 14,2a, A p r i l 4,19, M a y f i

FOR DESCRIPTIVE ITINERtHIES GIVIRO FOll IRFORMITIOR IRD RITES* *

A p p ly to I ' ic k e t A g e n ts , o r a d d re s s J . R. W O O D ,

F a i f s n g e r Traffic M anager.GEO. W. BOVO,

RAILROAD TIMiiiTABLB:g.

NEW JERSEY CENTRALCorrootwd to November ^ lyoft

Jar Bbjjftop, Bethlehem. AJIsaiown and klAuch Chunk fTJif to Naatoo}, A. IL: a>2iJ: P**lf** * aL SundayA IkiM/ 4-W*i^ 4 ii ‘v“'S‘"s«s3;yr?!r*'u'T'Jr Berth S:3s 9:Si UJIO AH .; uaoj euMk t i f t S;M . a;ig g ; !? u ;5 o p,

*■'« '*■ 4'4o f . m,*• 4*),

l i ' a >1:»9 (M urfaife oaI») P. H. Uua. “ : l:!19 P . H.

a

ITBAMSIitFfi,n a p

B o e t o M r ,(enduit->]B aMselitBeBt—Notlss.NoUee 1% kercbT givm that a writ el attsoh-

ItnS tKeOfh, t b o d s u 4 e l im f t i , M u e s iBleats, o f Bs ----- ----------------uabseat atxt< tbs sum ot ureaMe "

o o y * r ? - ie ^

•aly). 6;66. 6:49' P. M.^ L ™ woo4 »:4S Jl R . i 11:60 (Saturae, only). t;». 3IU R M.. 4:ie 6:18 l&reatay.

• 1 ) . Buadays, 7:2*, 9:42 A. H.For Atlantic city , 9:42 A. H .: ll.'Ca (Sntur- i

6 » onrt), 8;B6 p. R. flundayg. 9:42 A. M. I tov Trenton and Philadelphia 6:12. 7;«1. i

9:42, 11:80 A. M .; 1:20. S AT.•4:18. "Siah. 11:M, 7:45, h:45, 11 :.V) P, U. Sun- daya 9:0&. 9:41. 10:8!l. 11:66 A. Id ; •I:B1 1:46, 6:66, •4:66. 6:80. 7:33. 8:49 P. M.

Foe Baltlmcre and W uhlnzton, 7:69. 9:41 ll-JO A. M.1 lIlU, 8;)6. 6:J8. ll:M 1 P. £ eupdays, 0:66, 11:66 A. H.; 1:91 3 .61 6:39. 6:66 P. M.

•Philadelphia (nily.For ticbela haggsge ched.., ileerdnB car.

reeer.ntlona call at Rioad Btreet Station. Tel-*‘f tT 'o .* ^ L B R . W. C. HOPH

V.-Jrea. A Oen. Man- d r

LEHIGH V A L L E YTW 0|RICT UMC MWJkRK fO BumU(L‘ . . . . . ...... .... 1.

Lr. Ttevwkl

Sen- Paes. A«t.

TICKETS TO M O FMW T K DID GOailTIIT

Bytha Twln-ecrew fixflrbn B tsgim rtattto

AMEBICAN U X iNew York, Plymouth, ChsrbouM •g,|

Southamptan fvsry tatiirdAy 8t. Lou ie . .11629 tO n iiN sw , yirk.lDWtSIM 81, P a u l. . .1 1 6 ft t o n t I P h l lg . . .....lOm toijBThe Qloantio TwHi-iCftw

W H lT ilrA ii U I E ^New York-Ouoenstown-Livsrpool, Wsskty.

Oceanis, 17176 tong - 'Majestic .. .10174 tont'Tsutonlo . tOMWilk Adrlatlo.blg 23000 tom'Battle . . 24m ta SC e d r ic .........21086 tans Celtic " l .m M le lM;.:6J ip a u c d A t ic o m m o ila t lo n t In e l lc la s M *

Passenger Oeportmeiit, 9 BtoadwRy New Yorlf, or,Agents to Newark

\ isnirviclnity.

ALL TMIN6 RUN VIA NEVIIANK, IjJDafly eaeeci BmiAay. Oihet Italm asUy

WU Chunk Loeel... . . .. . . . . . . . . .B«|iriarai>Rta *1 P f.llf frirTI LOWL aaeaa 1 -Id jffU&jSnj •xpreii^,,..,..............K H v

| | ? s

tb e .ea lt ^

. OlsmMiW. Attetstir far waietit..,2h'

M CKAW ANNA RAILROAD,FOR NORTH AMO WRRr-USAVRr f S -

tWti***

T h e R o y a l M a il S t e a m P a c k e t C a

W E S T I N D I E S ^ :^ I t t l i t n d , B arb n ittte , L e ew a rd an d W in d w ard le lan d e , D e m a n m , RIa.

J A M A I C A single, *40 Retuffl, *TSc m O M 170 zndCibtagflQw v rL .u i8i steerage, *J0 , ;Atnta........ Jm. 19 I Trent.... ..... E*6k. ItTb««ies.,., ,.Pei). 2 | La Ptata..... Mtr, j!

For deecflpUvt pamphlet, ratal, etc.. anA l f t 8AMDFR1ION A SON. AgenU. 12 NlaW 11,11:%rOBTER DBBaVOiaB.P.A..FH(lronj6MlLN.Ni.

O L D D O M I N I O NFor Old PoiDt Comforti Norfolk

P lnner'a Puhat and N«wp6rt, MTr ntciiDf lor l>«t«r«burg. Rkbi Boacta. Wft^BgtoB. D. C.e

S"‘rLnr«"-*"F, lL..Tiok<ts .162 Marhat at

^

Page 14: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

oS E W A R E . M E N I N O N B v r e , S A T P l t P A Y . J A S T r A R Y 6. l a O T .

iSSlP OF THE ROAD DRIVERS

George Steogd, Loder Among Newark Horsemen, a Reeder

of light Harness Animals.

lOCAL AHD GERERAL ROTES

AXUM, MR. STENGEL'S FAVORITE COLT.

■ »*w o t tha local hor«cm*n h*va entared UM .flald »a breedara ot the light liam eii

^horaa, and of thla few the leader le George ^^llaB tcl Mr. Stengel la one of the remaln- ' | b( veteran horaemen who jeora ag° 'nm da the raatineea at Waverly a mattur

i trf hiatory when he drove that good main I jU tliy Btrldeaway to many a victory. He ^Natldetn Itarth hie horiea for money, pre- | . te i in g to develop Ihelf apeed and eliow

!th « n a t the natlneei, aell and allow . u tben to race them, tie la an authority

upon the trotting hlood Bnd ihoae loiiibl- ^ftaAloilta which have, producad the grenicit

, and In hla etablee will be found the blood of chumplona He line been an ac-

'■ Uv* member ot all the local driving aeoo- v ln t i ^ , a t one time being preoldent of the

’ MItttial Driving Aeeoclatlon.' » . Bteitgel te a tralnei' and driver of

1 UMKtt, M d few niM of hie yearn can out- |!!*1ve him In a race. H r attributes hie r w u e g t ntbuet heuHh to the eierclae he

J.'thue obtains. Ontelde of hla buelneae, horsae are hla hobby, and he dellghte to

i eaatt with borennen and tallt boise. Ho ! .eohttlbuto* to the sport of the tnnilni PB

t VaoAunhIo Park by mterliig ond eiurl- r-fng hot***' Aa a Judge of speed In rtb a yoiuis horse, few men aw the ou-

^Mr. Btengel. This fact was vf*" 'tlluetratw l In the purohsse of the fast rpoeor Moitanga as a twpeyair-old. _' BUtwood Ygrra, the summer home of Mr.

n ig e e i . Is . located about one in ik irom ^''Long Branch, and here h« develop* the ^gaaad of b it colts. Elkvtood'ls bfauUfutlv Tioogted with Its imadows eloping toward i^tlw bcaan, running fresh Water, lino imlld- ' Ittga ’ and a handaome eummer, home,

W btn th * blood of AxteU, llh . began to J baoomo tgmaus, Mr.-Siengpl iwrpiuMM.Df

Allah Barm the weaplln* poli oy An- h tM t out of K&thay. by Kremlin,

wood, his nous are highly jrrlied, ami he I IS eallod Axum. it is tbp IntoiiMon of Mr

B te n ^ iu give this hw ie a-tro tting mhrkHm conidif Million.

Mon to Axum le the, hgnd|W i^ Jlitlo troi- tarjlointnlon, 1*1,"'by AITertop, '1 u l' b e n e 'Itas treaiiantly bean frfcfen' a t the matliwas a t Wee<iuuhie"Parlt'«ii# uvtr fh t Basex iCIounty' Speedwafi' and IU|> AXvim big oolU'are Baa IndlfftHtals hrtfl egiKcmed highly by Mr. Stehilel.

Asother ilr* a l Elkwopd is Mie young <bonn ^ n e ra t Trany. ^ * J.yiihp i:*i.. .ate about .twelve biMOd n io iei «t Mba taian and someior them- ure funioun «1th*.’ W their own performance* or the raeords obtained by thrlr ge t.. llerLha Jamse, by Isolator, Is the dsin of ihirri-

son 'trilkes, .Jllli, a great tro tter of IJOTi, Wld with her Mr, Btengel also owns n

' full ‘b ro th tr to Harrison tVllkCH, by Hrlf- : w dl Wilkes. Bush, tW li, by Alcyone, li ' Um ft latest trotter by record owned by

IKl(. fltepgel, and a wonderful piece of ^taMkailedh she IC Last summer iit public matlnc*. a t Weeouahlo Park, Bush

'rtro ttsd a mile to wagon In d.lSlA driven by jW iW sm H. lioekwood, a phenomenal p«r-

*Wea for a mnre twenty yeure oM t i ^ Itad rglied two colts. Bush still holds

’tHMU record of the Goshen track.WtKllU' Mr. Stengel Is the owner ot her B lM gM t colt by King Bdnnrd, sun ot 'CggWtus, 3,17, which Is highly prised. ‘Am Umt of the matrons a t Elkwood Is 'oilla Wilkes, 31S14. the dam ot Uriglit JB yst. g fast patting mare, with a tria l of

Is also the d p i of Elkvrcod " ‘ I t Mary 8., by Baldour, Womiosa,

ISCARRITT FOR AUTO REFORM

Recommends Best Features of Jersey Law Be Adopted by

Automobile Club.

FAVORS REVOKING LICENSES

DHRAY IN HIS RECORD-BREAKING CAR*

!<•

Sable Wilkes, and others make up A vary aMact band of matrons,

Among the youngstere a t the farm I* the foal ot Happy Venus, :.17^ by Axum. ‘Tilly resamhles her dam and is a

na tvn il tro tter. Among the horse* which Aeon raised and trained a t Elkwood

BOBghaa 1s ,pn>bahly the leader. This horsa was purobased by Mr. Stengel ns a tww paa rAld and rapidly developed great gpaad. H e was shown s t Weequahtc Park and over tbs New Tork Speedway and gold to Adolph Schteuer early In IINH. He waa nampatgned In the etable of Isaac Hully th a t aeason and established the pacing matinee record In Ihe fall a t Wee' guahic Bark, by pacing a fourth heat In a rgco. to wagon, In XW i. The horse was abaW'attar driven a mile to harness over tha game track In 11114 and sold to the

ar Brothers (or the reported price of Placed In the hands o t A. L.

-,..,vp„eS , ^ n s n i a won second money In » x h # Chamber of Comniefce Slake at De » ’.trolt In 1**' finishing second to W alter .?D iro c t In. each heat, the time of the first ' babig 3<IS14. The horse was not started : again that season, but In Ju ly last. In the

gsum stake, a l Cleveland, again won aec- end money to Ardelts.

About the most consistent matinee per 'ffb tlM r shown by Mr. Stengel has been

the blaclt horse Rubber, , winner ot IM wagon presented by John H. Cuthell.

. itgracht. by Kremlin, :.0714, wa^ another boras which Mr. Btengel drove to a matl- »aa *fcord of 3M. ThI* horse h « l wonder­ful tro tting speed, b u t. waa somewhat

i*m U c. Among other horses raised or f dgvakiped a t Elkwood arc Retriever, matl-

IMM record. Regret, hy Oro Wilkes,. N athan Hsle; Nathan Hale, Viola, hy

Siggter Prince, trial Jiu; Hesper, 3.30; Monnette. Dlreetorine. 3.33, and Elkwood

r U d y . About thf! flvpl horse of proml- ntncfi ovpned by Mr, Stongol w u s Dalny

' StVideavay. This maro irottcd n mile m W averly twenly-flvc' y^ars .igo In 2.30 and

I: wax BOW by Mr. Slrtigel \o Nfw YorR paftieii lor 13,BOO. Thf next horsp wafl' Dtkdley Wonder, n grny plaHlon of gj*eal Mftbtid and beauty, tliai was sold to the

GovemrtionL fov a louit price* itootber gray atatllon owned by Mr. Sten-

waa Rlrpsrrnvcs, 2.3tl. nnd he aeon Altar owned the handsonte chentnui staK ' ilon Baldour. .

Dart, by Silent Brook, dam by RRotjat, WM a magniflrent spcelmen of ibe young Slre^ and wee recently noUl b^’ Mr. Sten**

to the Japanese Government for $4,000. -^ a r t waa a jet hlnok In color and a AAtur&l hotter. Another stallion not to to''fATgotten among the horeep owned by

HkL Stengel was Bariing. by Nelson, with A .natlnee pacing record over Kmpiro ttock Of 2.14H* Darling Ig the elre of the fto f mare Bright Flyes* It In do\ibifnl If there la another man in thlp rounty -#ku> baa owned 4ie ,inany. feel liorpea a» Mr: Stengel. Elkwoiti is doBtliivd to bo-tofne famous hp a breeding natablishinCii.L

"jp William and Stongol Inherit ih^tirlove of the light hnrn*i#B Iforee from ihi*lr

- to ther, and all thfoo are proir»1npnt r.inm* Konrt Horsp AsaooiaU*m £md

‘ WolNNnown road rlrlverA': lilr. SLongol)uui' PMSepteil cuj>s to both lbs Rnad

and the Elkwood l>riv- and le hIswj « member nf Ihe

NeW^iltfirk Road Drtvrrs' Ai»woetallon. Mr. Stengel hue ihe repulnlion of being n

:t fa fr BTid eonare dr-iil' r In horaofleah. and ' tn tn y hofftcmen v \w have purchased ' fmm him h»v(‘ mon<*v by ttielr

l^lpurchnPee. w ith thp blood vhjrli hp hasACCHWiilnted nt Elkwood tjprpd if hound

. Go be prodnoed In ab\nv!«rtre, itnd snr- ’priaeB are hi etor? for th** IncaS htirpe-

ftt next Bfaeon'e matinees.

where (he membership 1* so large, In my opinion. Ims a tendency to dlsi:o\irage ambitions of olhefa. J aball alwaya take the deepest Intercat in ihia tha grealaat aesoclttilon of Uk kind In the country, and sincerely tn ia t th a t Ua growth and in­fluence will continue to increase as It has In the past." W hat action will lie taken by the 'nomlDating committee la not as yet known.

IjoeAl And dew erA l Botaa.sTay Bird la dead.Clyde McBride ta Jogging N athan

Straus, '£.<*3^Th* dean of Ih* R. H. A. la William L,

Tonipkltia.*'a«jieraV* John B, Turner le now

aavenly-flve year* of age.O«orge T. Jam es In a young but en-

ihuataatlc horseman,' The banriuet committee will hold Its Trjeetings a l the JeffernonlnT; C'luh.

Allerton, 2.09U, la the greatest non of the dead Jay Bird.

The right man in the right place" is J, Wesley Van OlflSon, chalrmHH of dinner committo*.

Tl In expected that Bright Byes will ihow very fast next season at ths pace,

Dan Bodine. a t ninety-two yearn of age, is sllJI tm lnlng horses a t Merchunlville.

Dr. A. Percy Eoberls, of Elisabeth, has sold to Henry Keenan the faet matinee Ifotter, Madge Cobb, 2.T8 .

Dr,, A Percy Roljerts ta th* first man frlom Etizabeth to he named a* a director of the Road Horse AsnodaHnn.

Th* 8pt'edway clubboune. although lonnJ temporarily, will soon be opened

by ,1 new steward and undnr different .'uisplren,

Pbiraes leads the sires in 1906 with thirteen new stanilurd performers, Bobby Rurne Is weond ami AHerton third. The derul Onward added Ion, makhg; 195 In all.

Wlial cities will ronstllute the Grand Clrrull In \W1 in in doubt. An all-Eaalern circuil is proposed, Sndudlng Poughkeep­sie, thiffulo, Albany, H artford, Syracune, Romivillo and Kinpire, N. Y.

The renrmilnailon of T reasurer Daniel T. Campbell Jr. and Sccrelaries James BI. fleldon and James Lovatt In a de- nervfd recognition of faithful serx'ice In the Interest of the Road Horse Assocla' tion

W ith the new stalls at Weequahic Park it will be necesHury to have a marshal who wilt be in auendnne* a t lh« park constantly during the whole s*a«7n. from May to Kovombei',

The nomination of Dr. DImond as a director In 'th e Rond Horse Association has been well received. H* has served actively upon the dlTmcr committees for two years.

Tseigh Harrison, of Baer Orange, a well- known member of tho Road Horse A*f.o- clatton. enterlnlnt^ Captain E. V, Gager, Edward M. Grover and Johri B. Dusen- berry a t dinner a t the Drug and Chemical Club in New York last auturdny.

iJ^uring the past four seasons, Sweet Mario, 3:03, has started In thlriy-four races, winning twenty-nine firsts and two seconds, a most romarkoblo showing and on* never equaled by any trotter.

Axtellay, by Axtell, dam Kntbay,by Kremlin, 2,o7H. aud a full sister to Axum, the fast stullion owned by GeorgeBtengel, of this city, will be sold at the | pnlgn In ID(T7.

m idw in ter sale. A xtellay s ta rted hi her first roco the past M ason, and, *ep* a ra ted , tim ed a mil* In a race in 2,09*h. A xtelluy, beside* Iwing u hnndsomc Indi­vidual, can tro t dose to 2.10, so it is re- port*d.

■‘Speck” la th* appropria te name of the "sinalleHt horse In ih* w orld." owiuid by E dw ard Wlgund. of D rlawnr*. f). The dim inutive anim at I* 6.2 hands high and weigh* six ty-tw o pounds. Is six years old.

Tl Is a singular yet significant fa rt that lb* s ta r iro lte rs of 1905 and 1(K)6 wvre bcuh owned by members of the feminine sex. Hadle Mac, 2,0(» 4, w a s ' owned hy MIhh Ka th a ry n W ilks, and Nutboy, 2.U7ti. hy M ils L o tta C rabtree. W h at lady wlH own the s la t tro tte r of 1907.

H ulda. 2.0S^ of O rrln Hlekock fame, on* of the s ta r tro tte rs of IS93, was struck off fo r lieo a l th e rooent cloaing-out salo of Adolph Spreckels'fi harness horsea In San F rnndsco . She Is eighteen years old. IHone, 2.07*4. ^ well-bred daughlcr of Kms, th a t tro lled to a record of S.OTV* In 1900, b rought only $<Tno.

T he R ussian breeder. G reglom Osihkoff. baa purchased the tro ttin g m are Buale ,J., 2.06t^ by Jayhaw ker, 2.1*^. and Blue Hill, 2.l5»i, by Bingen. 2.061,4. and will ahJp Ihein EiJoiig with BrUJlajU Girl, 2 .OHV4 . and T otara , 10944. 0usl* J., 2.06H. will he the fa s tes t record tro t te r owned in Ruswla.

B arney DMitmr*J?t has purchased the chestnu t paring m are Daring Maid, by D are Devil, 2.09, and will rni** her next sensoTi. This m are paced a i r i a l mil* a t Poughkeepsie ih ls yeai‘ It TT i^ and a tulle over the Dougan HIU* fHtaten Is l­and) tra c k In 2.T3Vt. Th* dnni of Daring Maid Is maid of honor by Mumbrlnu King a.ncl also tho dajii of Rod Easton. 2.9!*44, an d H eautlful Chimes, 2.22i>

Tlpko, an own bro ther to the rliftmplon tlirec-ysar-o ld pacing fllly, B renda Yoj ke. 2.0k%, died recently a l Ih* farm of ,1. K. N ewm an, Lexington, Ky. Tlpko won th ird money In the C ham ber of ( ’oninifrc* s tak e s a l Clevelnml. la in g cloao up, in 2.0Wi|. G race Tipton. 213. by Slmnjons. dam of lirenda York* and Tipko, uIho produced L uther Moko,

W illiam (3. M ark, of Buffalo. N. ¥., baa sold to \V. J . Andrew* for E. M. H arri- mum of New- York, the brown Kclriing Red Dale, hy R u i E lk , aon of Red Wilkes, dam L ily Dale, by Young Jim I'riie , for $500. Thla well-bred young hors* has cap­tured ti blue ribbon In Ibc show ring, unci W'hlle ho bus never been tm ined for speed, can go fust and high

Old Lightlying. 2.1L by A lcantara, has tv fa s t four-year-old tro ttin g filly' by Cres- ceus, 2.02^, which Is reported to he. a fa s t tro tte r . L ightning w as a fasi and con­s isten t race m are, and her coU. by Cres­cent, when sold a t the m idw inter bbIc. shoiiUl be In grent demand. The filly i* nam ed Mias Rochctitcr. Harnh Palcli, by Joe Palchen, i* also In tho sale.

The old G ultpnherg racetrack le com ­m only looked upon as the train ing ground of outclasNcd Becuuil'hand harneae horses, b u t \V. L. Rhodop, who Ih located there, won la st aeoBoii, w ith five tro tte ra and pacers, Ihe tidy sum of 113,795. H allock M., 2.09*4. the s ta r of his string , s ta r te d tw 'enly-four times between Decoration D ay nnd Thanksgiving, w inning nineteen races w ithout m aking a break and earning •7,300, all on half-m ile tracks. Rhodea for­m erly tra ined for Frederic P. Olcott. He Is now w intering tw enty-five tro tter* and pwcers, the best of which he will cam -

INSTITUTES' BIG VICTORY. CHANGE HIGH SCHOOL RULESLocal BoM kotbnll T oaaera P a l A w ay

th e C rack M lllv llle t b r u f fiel to ILT.

Plnylng a fast and clean game of baa- kttbalt at Institute Hall, New street, last night, the Inalltiiies of this city won from the MinvUle team nf Millville In oa*y lAShlon. the poor© bring M to 26. The Mltlvlhes are considered one of the best fives in New Jersey, but from the s ta rt to the finish In iaat night's game they l ttd Uttle chance. The viBitors gave a i ne exhibition of passing, and had many Shota for tlie baskets, but (heir efforts would either go wild or hit tho ring of the banket ami bound out. Johnny Mc- Nab. one of the local's forwards, put up hi* usual brilliant game. He caged the ball from (ho field thirteen times for a total of twenty-six points and (sillied one free throw, Dougherty, of th« home five, also played well, scoring six baskets, Frnunklo, of the visitors, played beet for his team, securing six Held goals, All from the centre of th* m iirt.

Although tbe score wna one-*ld*‘<l in tits flltst hair, the MillvUlea pljiy«*d good b*Bl and made Hip lucal* work hard for all the points they tnlllpii. For th* first ten min- ules It looked If th* visitors would cap­ture the gumc, iiin once Ihe home quin­tet ffnl going lh*y hitd little trouble In bcorlog points. Boltz and McNab lallled most of the winner's ptilnis in ibis perlud. The hflif ended with Ih* score 94 to 6, in the locsl's favor.

Knochel relieved. HoUb al guard .fo r the Inatitwtes In- tlio second Imlf, end. ul- though he did not do any scoring, lie blockid many of the South Jersey boys’ trtcb for baskelH. The visitors were a HUl* better jn Rscurliig point* in this pe­riod, getting ten field goals for a total 0/ twenty points. The locals also did h*t- ter goal shooting In this halt, aecuiing fourteen hsskeia and one free throw. Only one foul wn* called during the cnTUnai, ihAt bfling on Praankle, of the vlsIturB. sho kicked Ihe ball. The line-up:

InalHules. Millville.M ve...............Right forw ard......... FelmcyMcNab..........Left forw ard......... PratinkleDougherty .........Pentr*................. JolifisoiiH aring............. Hlglit guard................. Plantliiilt?................... l.*fL g u a rd ............. ..lObcrle

!Men C onstlta tlon i A dopted, W h ich IJeoU iv fth th e W e a r in g of F<m-

blem a—L ette r* A w arded-The adoption of a new conslltiillon was

ihc main buslnefl* accompllBhed ul a meeting of the Newark High School Ath­letic AHSoclation yesterday afternoon. Clmlrman Winn mad iho document through and U ws* adopted without b hitch In the proceedings. The moat Im­portant of th* new lulTngs is that ii per­son om-e {iirnlng the right lo wear c echool *mbb-ni may purchua* aa njimy dupllcales us dcfilrabie. Abuses of thla privilege will result In the offending per­sons forfeiting the right to purtlclpaie In High School athletics

The resignation of Arthur Rudd as vics- presideni of the asBociatlon wa* nccepted ami Joim Van Buskirk waa elected to the poaitlon. Tho departure from school of WMlinin Brook* hecessllntcd the election of a new manager for the basketball learn, and Leuimrd Terliune was chosen to Uike charge of th* five. Walter Edsall wnp elodtd to ilic pohillon uf manager of ih* howling learn,

r'uui t.’olyer, the acnior member of the advisory oommitiee, anuouurei) that the fidlowjTjg omblems had )»eon awarded:

Football—Alverflon, Rudd, Rich. Edsalt, D. Tuttle. C. Tuttle, .Shopfor, Gregory, IlPTilg. Hague. Agate,

Oosa-country Te.-ima—ICofin. Menagh, Baum. Sweetliind.

NEWARK TEAM IS IN IT.

W lntbrop E. Searrllt, of Orango, has rendered a repoii ili*' board of governor* of the Aulomoblle Flub of .Amailea, In which he fonaasts certain form* of legislation that would afford the general public better proicciknu thereby [ending to ttllevlflte Hie iiBhallLui againfii automobilislM. Mr. BcarriU has carefully studied 111* New Jerney Lav, w.uh the r«- HuU tluit BOTH* Of th* b*fsi feHiur** may be Hjoptet.l by ihe AutimmbUc t'lnb of America and a I’equest will probably be m«de for a Uiw revoking tli* Ucensei of carclesB chauffeuid and owin r* ** a Pen­alty foi' continued abua* of ih* speed regulations. Such aa act ie embodied in llj(^ New JerHCy ]rw, and iiithougb cer­tain ehangcM arc 10 be mud* Irj the much abused piece of m otor' It-glslaBon, it la now admiUed by molorlais that the rev­ocable IlcenHe law bn* been on* of Ita best featurcB, as it ha* contributed to grniiler rare in driving, and as a result tho accidents have been lefi» frequent tinm in former years.

Mr. Scarrltt'8 wamhig that unless auto- 1*1* l>*atlr themstelve* In u*k1ng for and then enforcing laws that wilt contribute to tho benefit of the* public other* would Huniy come forward and demand reatric tluiis th a t might be harmful to owners of motor vehicles. That a tendency of Die Latter sort i* imminent is made clear by the remarkably drastic bill Juat Intfd- Uiu'odi In th* Belgian Pnrilament, and which has amused the Ir* not only of ;iuioiBtH In that country, but In France, Germany and England, ua It will affect inurisiH of all nationalities Imvellng through Belgium

This bill Mipuiates that for *11 damages ciiuaed by a motor car lii* driver shall lie held responsible, and In eider to es­cape Ih* pemiHy h* will be forced lo prove condiislvely that the damaa* or accident waa ocraKloned solely by the Injured party. Nut only will the chauffeur be held responsible, but the owner of the car as well. For 111* first conviction th* driver will forfeit Ills license for a year, and for a second offenB* hU license will be taken away for thro* years, virtually putting him out of liiislnesB. Should he be so un­fortunate as to be convicted a third lime he will be restrained from ever driving ft motor car In Belgium. Should a driver b* caught driving a car during the interim Miat bis llc-puse Is forfeited he will be subject to a flu* of frntn •5.00O to $6,000, an<l Imprisonment nf from eight days to two years. For a second nffenae he wUJ l>r imprisoned, nnd for a third offense th* <”ir wMl he conflacated. To stop the practiB* of running away after an acci­dent it i.4 stipulated that all owners of motor cars in the country will be required to contrlb\itP toward a fund sufflclenl lo ]»ay the damages awarded lo the injured ])Hr(y, These are th* most drastic that have ever been drawn up against auto- imiblliata, and streiiuiHis efforts are be­ing made to defea'l.the bill. The very fact that fiitch a radical hill has been rendered posKlhle illiiHtratcg th* necessity for g rea t­er care by motorlsU Ihemselves In seeing that their own membera observe a proper regard for ih* law.

“The 'Automobile Club of Am erica,” says Mr. ScurrlU, ''haa always stood for good road*, good lows and go<x! behavior* and, if noceBsary. greater attention will be paid to the latter feature this coming year than ever before. The club has pub­licly proiialmed Ita objection to racing, on the ground tliiit, under conditions usually cxiallng in thla country. U Is not safe. Of course, with the completion of the Long Island motor apeedway theae obji^rlions will not exist* as It will be pos-‘ sIbJe to control such a course so as to in­sure the safety of those adralttod to view the contests. The club haa also gone to the extent of disciplining Us members when found guilty of reckless driving, and it has offered rewards for the apprehen­sion and conviction of those who have driven in a criminal and reckless way whereby serious accidents have resulted. This policy wilt be vigorously continued."

Mr. Scurritt. who haa been made chair­man of the comtnlUee oji public safety* will call a moetlng of his committee next week, and it is expected that some definite plane of proc*dure will be adopted tow ard dealing with certain automobile evils In a firmer and more satisfactory manner.

Next to the establishment of a federal law, which Jtidge Hotchkls*. of Buffalo, and tlje coming president of the Amer­ican Automobile Association, hopes to ob- lAlu In the near future, by which an auto- Iflt m/iy travel from State to S tate w ith ­out the necessity of taking out a license or registering I1I* machine in a num ber of different States, the most favorable In­dication toward making convenient tour­in g conditions for motorists Is shown In the new bill which the Pennsylvania autoifltB propose to Introduce into their S tate LoglsUiture thla month. This bill contains jtn act granting visiting m otor- Ista the privilege of touring for ten days in Pennsylvania without interference, provided, liowever. other States g ran t the same rights to Pennsylvania autolsta. In other words, it wlU be placed upon a re­ciprocal basis. Something of th is sort is needed, and this action,

[PREPARATIONS FOR AUTO SHOW

DecoTAtioas So Elaborate tiiat Considerable Work Has Al­ready BeenDone at Garden.

OPENING DAY IS jASUARY 12

Added interest will be taken In the an­nual meet on the Ormond-Daytoua Beach, s ta rtin g January 12, when 11 become* generally known that Arthur Duray, the g rea t French driver; will l>* present with hiB Immense 130-180-horsepower car which won the Ardennes circuit race and finished th ird in the Vanderbilt Cup race. This car is now en route on board the steamship Bretagne, having been driven over *he road from Lunevllle to Paris and th m to Havre* a distance of 600 mile*. The car will be seen a t Ihe New York show a t the De Dietrich exhibit and will be shipped to Florida by express. It will be remembered th a t a l the time of the

Vanderbilt Cup race Duray claimed lo have more speed than Ih* road would stand nnd In the race Itself could not let the car out on accouni of the crowd. On the Tide Rolled Beach the huge car wilt be sent to Its limit. At no time* since Us ronstrucUon has Its full speed been determined and w hat It may do in Florldii Is the merest gii*as work. Five miles In two m inutes may be rmide and the 100 fhlles tn tlie hour Is not so Im­probable. This car holds the world's record lo r a m ad race. 11* the Ardcnnea Circuit of 400 miles, in August last, was made a t an average of fifty-seven and one-half mllea an hour.

H. W. Bawyer, R. H, Curry. Frank Holmes. E. P. Solomon and A. P. Craw­ford are the other members. A large subscription to the regatta fund was made, the same being headed by bis ex­cellency the Governor, and the chief justice. It Is proposed to s ta rt the big race a t Miami on February 8, on the completion o t the Palm Beach Motor Boat Tournam ent, and It Is expected that the entries from owners of the high-powered boats a t Palm Beach will be available for the International race.

B d lsa n Bays a New C ar.Few automohlle tlcenses were taken out

during the past week and until the new IW cars are delivered the local agent of the departm ent of mokpr vehlclea will have an easy time of It. Among the num­ber taking out licenses was Thomas A. Hdlson. who registered a twenty-elght- horsep.>wer Mors touring car. The others were Hay 9. Cummings, H Highland ave­nue. Orange, seventy-horsepower Btearns touring car; William H. Maryote, 603 Bei- gen street, Newark, motorcycle: H arry W. Tlchenor, 637 Summer avenue, New­ark, ten-horsepower Maxwell runabout; Elwood Schenck, 130 Parkway, E ast Or- ange, twenty-tw'o-horsepower Rambler touring car; Central Motor Car Company, Bloomfield, dealers; Paul Hochart, 6! N orth Sixth street, Newark, nine-horse­power Cadillac touring ear; Sherrerd Depuo, IS Snybrook place, Newark, tw en­ty-horsepower Franklin touring car, George H. Hartford, 63 Ridge street. Or­ange, thlrty-flve-horsepower Oobron- Brllle, limousine; Hugo Goerke. irJi Fair- mount avenue, Newark, flfteen-horso- power Ford runabout: Sherman \V. Fora, 16 Norwood avenue, Summit, twelve- horsepower Maxwell runabout; A rthur B. Baker. 6S Ashland avenue. East Orange, six-horsepower Pope-Tribune runabout.

New O arag e In B loom «eld .The Central Motor Car Company has

been organlied In Bloomfield and will shortly begin the erection of one of the finest automohlle garages In the B tata The concern has a capital ot the Incorporators are Charles B. Under­wood. who will be the president of the concern; Charles W. Smith, who will be tb<5 vlce-presWfifit and secr*tar>-. and Br. -lat H. Cadmus, who has been elected tred x ^e r. A plot of ground has been pur- chaaOi. Washington and Farrandcnantjv vm »»etDiasi.^w... ----Streets W the building will be readyfor o ccuv^^y earlystructure >.NJ be built of cement block and will be L «< story high. The concern IB already dOs''ig business a t 25 Broad street, Bloomfla'l and Is Ihe regular agent for the MUtN^H car.

time for formal acceptance of the road by th* board expired three monlhe ago, and no action was taken in (he m ailer at the regular meeting of th* board. The county has virtually bf<-u occupylug the highway alnce 8ept*nih*r, at which time the membera were advised by Solicitor Hlghbe* to notify State Road Conimls fttoner llutehinson of all the detail#! and request him to examine the road,• « •

There whl b-e no erriiBC for the uiQuu faeturers not having their Vunderblll Cup racprs ready early this year, as ihey are generally more advanced In their work anti they wUI have Hbimdanl oppor­tunity to try out lh*lr new cars on the actual course. There Ih f’v .ry reason lo believe that th* new Long Island motor parkw'ay will b* ready curly In t)ie full, and on it there will I*** no resirlrtion of the care lo two hours of practise day. as was th* case tiver the Nassau County course.

« « *Y\'‘h a t s ex is a m o t o r S h ou ld ll he

Hpoken o f a s he. sh e o r liV F o r in s ta n ce , a m a n w a a o v e rh e a rd In a h o te l d in in g ro o m s a y in g lo hla co m p an io n , a w om an “ Y es, Bhc'a a fu r ty -b o rp ip o w e r WfiUe c a r ." T h e woniBii a t once p rn te a ted a g a in s t h is s p e a k in g o f th e W a lle r tis ■'she.’' T h e n h e in ld h e r t h a t It h a d a b o n n e t w o r th $60, a n d she q \d l a rg u in g .

A w a te rp ro o f hood to eox'pr (lie high te n sio n m a g n e to is a good In v es ltn en l f o r th o s e w ho h a v e th i s fo rm o f Ign itiou on th e ir c a rs . • • • *1

In many, If not In most, of the c^ars of comparatively new concerns, there is much talk about impmvrments which, upon investigation, prove lo he only th* txTrdy adoption of some good method that hi>8 been In us* for years on some load­ing make oC car. * • «

C y lin d e r c a s t in g s , in cooling, a r* a p t to d ra w o u t o f tru e , th e m o re a p t if tho q u a n t i ty o f m e ta l In tlie in la u n even ly d is tr ib u te d . I n s e e k in g to o b v ia te lid s a n d hrtvB w ell b a la n c e d cy lin d ers , m an y o f th e fo re ig n r a r e , Inc lud ing such a a th e D* D ie tr ic h . F ia t a n d TsoUa T*’'ras4-hinl, c a s t th e ir v a lv e s on th * op p o s ite s id tri o f th e cy lin d e r. M ore .o f th e A m erican m a k e rs a r e now d o in g th is th a n ever, th o u g h In so m e o f Ih e s ta n d a rd m akes* n o ta b ly th e G re a t A rro w , i t h a s been d o n e fro m Ih e b eg in n in g . T h* new m odels th a t have* b ee n sh o w n a p p e a r to be a b o u t e q u a lly d iv id ed in th is m aU te r , b u t It is e x p e c te d th a t a t th e M adl- Fon S q u a re show th e en g in es w ith v a lv es o a s t on o p p o s ite s id e s wlU be In th e m a ­jo r i ty .

Already the ail-aroiind record smashing foreshadowed for the seventh national automobile show in Madison Squara Gar­den, New York, has begun. Usually tha work of preparing the garden for ths show does not begin until a few days, or a t most* a week, before the opening day* This year, however* the decorattons for the show are ao elaborate, and ihs changes necessary are bo many, that soma of the work was done last week, al­though the show win not open until Jan­uary 12.

The platform th a t 1b to cov'bt the strtoa boxcB and extend a few feet over the itiiiin floor, which Is new in Ite width and design, and which adds thousands of square feet to the exhibiting space, is al­ready H place. The carpenters began on this job more th an three weeks before the stiow date, In order to get the work done tn time, as the coming iw uitry show trould shut them out, and afte r th a t there would not l>e time for the job, A now floor, bet­ter in every W'ay than any over laJll be­fore for Hie purpose. Is also In place In Ul* garden. This preparatory work wlU bo used by the poultry exhibitors, and Uion the main work of transform ation wJH begin.

Even a partial investigation of the pre­paratory work being don* In order lo dec­orate the garden Is astounding. I t fiOems almost as if S. R, Ball, the decorator- general. Is proceeding with the Idea of creating some perm anent hall of art. At the modeling works tW'O entire fioors are given over to getting ready the two doxtn or more heroic staluoa of different designs* the g r ta l fountain and o ther objects that will adorn th* Swiss garden. Into which the Interior of th* show building Is (d b* tniTiyfoi'ined. In a vacant store downtown in New York a gang of a rt carpenters are busy converting several carloads of white birch boughs and trunks into rustle arbors and bowers, while in a ppacloua loft ntroBs town a score of girls are busy Hewing 31.000 silver s ta rs Into the 16.01)0 ju rd s of stuff th a t will form lha amher-hiied sky.

T H E TOP NOTCH O F AUTOM OBILE CONST RCCTlOPix

&T he A cm e of A u to E legance

a n d R ellabU lty ,

40 H . P . . . . $ 3,000 50 H . P . 7 Passengers, $ 3,500 75 H . P . 7 Passengers, $ 5,000Order Early and Insure Delivery.

Demonstration by Appointment.

F.E. Boland Motor Co.239 H A L S E Y S T .

EASY FOR THE ACADEMY.O n ly T w o llew ulnrM O ut o n T e a tu .

M ini (h e L o ea lii I le fe n t B lo o m - f ie ld l i l g h :)4 (o

I'l,.-' JliXHia H o r x r 6 ll.4 ,i: ln lln n OfllrrrM,

■, 'T h e nominntlng; rommlttw nf tlin Rood U ere* AwBCK'latlon. in an'-ord^tinp with the

' provlelone of Its nonallLullnn, havn filed aAd ntn.lf» public, fiftncii di.>H print- ;n thn annual xribetlbg| which win i,n ii.-id on Tneaday evenlhs,- January 16, ihc foilnw-

■ f m llel of hames lor Ihr varlni;? ofllcco . to f the year IWT: PrpBldom. Adam II'f lroe l; xice-prexldentx. John B. .Duavn, M rry, John Hausmun. Dr. Wlothrop D

t'MttetUlI; troaBiirer, Daniel T. Cumpbell T«or(l|jig eecretary,. Jatnea M. Bel-

■Joni flnandal aeereUry, jam ex Ixjvati; BlniDiel, James B. Ho«4U; hoard uf dl- raoter*. willlain H. ’Wllllam F.gtofieU, Dr. Henry -Vander Hocal, Fred A. Oatmfin. Wllltam H; Armetrone, Dr. Snliart*, CharleaB . Barker. Samuel Deek-

lAOPOUl MeyW. Ilieedore B. MlIIw,: A odir!* 'ileC alih . t>r, WUllain Dliilond, ..JU w aid A, Knal. George T. Jaiuee and

E . Y. Gager. The Hat la the aame ■war, with the exception of seven

^ ngir names aa .directora,A m d e ill Groel, In a letter to the chair,

enan of th e nomlnatlDg eoinntUtee, de- eUnad tb* waomlnaGod.'.Mr. Oroel aaya, -W illie I dWDly ♦ppreclate the honor ffi^ tka donadeiwe Impeaed by th# com-

1 mwit d e ta w .e « « < # J>;lMtUoii, Aa you 'Aware, T have heed

■ - o t to r twe year* and actively with the isM ^tian and grovtth

MMfleent niaaciaUMi daring the w e ^ . 'o f itai'atfldtane*.'. ;W* bar*

Ml — 1—T - and 'tp* olSde o t I g w la U|M*A An hoqnr yiw thy « t the

)M a asy meaihhfJ-add I tM th a t i'AMuit Mtgte, l a .tMbiiuattoA

11.N otw lthstatiO inp the fuct lliol Nrvirftvk

jVca^lemy bii.Mkr-tbiUI ICMin luni only two reguUirp iii IUm Uuc up agulost BloumflHil -High School yertit-rilny aflrrnuon. the looctlrt outpliiyMi thd* sulJurhivuUeP ft( tfvery «(«*!:'■ of the gam e unU won enslly by ilic .score of 6A to II. Thf* gumo woa pliiyeil In Academy gym imd waawitnoasoil by a large crowd

Hcsliios Gsiffney urtd Rliinchard, the ACxolemy leum waa m inus the servleefl of C aptain l-:K«nlc. and this neocssarily broke up th e ordinai-ny fust pawsing of (he play- ei'H Ntivenheles-H. the mibstUutes Dcqult- \e*\ them»elve.s w ith c r^ llt , and basket a f te r baske t w as scored against th* iiloortifield iiggregMUori 'I’he v isitors were w uukcr th an expected nntl m ade k luiot' showiJis, althoutflj a t tim es C aptain MuxwrII p iaved b rillian tly lo r the sub urljiinltea. Belcln-i' n t cen tre for A cadeniv perfo rm ed well and moat o t 'l te polnt.5 The Itne-up:

Newark Academy. Bleimi field S,H o r n ..............R ight fo rw n rd ...........B elcher. ! ..........Be ft fo rw a rd ...........M axwellup.w .......... C en tre ............ . . .J o lin s tmB o y n to n . '. .........RlSlH ...........

SCO,a a t and of .first h .U f-N ew ark Acad-

A a e o e la tlo n F iv e o f T h is C ity W il l l^lfty In P r o te c t iv e B n a k e tb a l l

C h n ia p lo n a b lp T o o r n e y .Al a meeOng of the Protective Baaket-

hflll ABStKlBllon of New York a t the Emrinon t:iah, 337 W est FlfUeth Btreet, New Vork, la.Bt night, entries closed for Ihe chiimpionship tournament which 1r to lie lieid next month. Thr Association Five of this city wa* elected to ineinberslilp, and Hsrrv F. Welgntid, of Ilia local team, was seleriod to represent the association In ililh cliv.

it w.i.« decided to award medals to the teams IliilKhIng firm, seennd and third. I'laeh tram Ik to have seven pla.vers, and tliDse on the lenm flnlaliliig Ursl nrs to receive gold mcdspi set with diamonds. The plnvrrs On the tram finishing second will vereive silver medals set with rubles, and I hose on Ihe third tedln arc to receive htoiize medals.

DOHERH BROTHERS RETIRL

thescored

emy !». Bloomfield High School 7. Fina Bcore—Newark A^det^iy BloorufleW ffigh ^ h M l U, F l f i Aottdeuiv Hera 5. Beicber 4, t onion «»i B o ? n t r ' J ^ o n , 3: Bloomfield Hteh School, Gahs 3, Maxwell 1. J"} '"’" '’; throw—Gah», SuhsIltuleTBchtnidl for Horn. Time of halves—Fifteen minutes.

---------------• - - - - ■'A n o th e r O anie Next W e d n e sa n y .The Newark Academy basketlmll team

will have as tu upponeiils a t the sw ooi iymnaslutn next Wednesday the Iresliman five representing the College of the t i t y o f New York. AltliougU the Academy team Is a t present materially w ertenefl by the ahsenee of three of Its twet playere. the locale, neverlhelees, look Jbr a vic­tory over tho New Yorkers, will be called a t Itlfi.

e game

■ a y Vtw—B hbil B o rib :B « d * <0 C lbeh.“ View Hall,'

the B ay itbell liv*

„ _ _______ . tWi dtY'

oi|jht* |n w ia « t i . l h m r

RnKllMh T e tin ln E x p e r t* D e c id e N ot to P n r t l c tp i i t e In In te m iit lo K iP l

M a tc h e s X ext ^nnnnei'*NEtV YORK. Jan. 5 ,-According to the

LopiV'iti correspondent of the Herald, the Dohertv lirotbere, thfl craek English ten­nis players, have practically decided not to participate In ihe^lnternatlonal matches for tlip Davla Citp next summ*)^. and It Is possible th a t their only public appear- nhce next season will be in doubles at VVlmbledon, to •‘iirlex'ivor to rogiilii the English cbampl'‘'nbihlp from B. S. Smith am! y . L. RMlpy.

While nr. di-firiup reason la given for Ibeir retirement, jt \n iindersiood to be due partly to the recent coniroversy over pivfeHflUmalism, which haa led lo such drastic cliaugrs In the peraoiinel of the council and partly to a reeling (hat rheja is A period of loo »tremii>u$ ftrst-dasa maloh play. If the Dohertys carry out their present Jntenilon. the outlook for Etiglfuid ill the D^v\f Cup inalchea Is none Hk> prcunialuK* becauH* !hf> British players ranking next to (iiem, Gore, RHo* ley and Smith, arp not very young,

TWIN JACK BEATEN.0»iv o f (It* P am ona SqlllTOti tlro tli-

^ ra Lorob O eetelon (o J im K lyno In Tw*nty**roiinfl PiKfai,

1,09 ANQEI.ES. Jan. 6.- J im t-lynn. of Pueblo, fpon a doclsion from Jack (TwinV BiiUivan, of Boston, bafor* the Pacific Athletic Club laec nlg|it, after : twenty terrific roumis. Flynn won the decision on h it oggresslveneaa and terrible pun- lilUnS and on his abllUy to take punish- Thent< Sullivan’s olevernesa sbvm him many times throughout the fight.

Tlint and again Suillvan was seen to strikt Flynn with bis albow jind tmtt wlth>uTMad, and tbs m ^ t o n mas to

_ _ which em anatedfrom the Pennpylvanla Motor Federation, has m et with general Ltvor from ow ners of oars in adjacent Btatea, particularly in New York and New Jersey.

J o h n D. C o n ld H lan d I t .A story Is told by ri friend of Ralph

Owen, ft pioneer automobile agent In nieve.iand, about ft sale of an autom o­bile by Owen to John D. Rockefeller. Aa John D. does not need any adver­tising. the story is given as a fa c t

It BeeniH about fotir years ago Mr. Rookefenpria attention was draw n lo the possibilities of the ftutomobfle as a means of locomotion* not saying anything about Its being a big consumer of one of tho products of the Standard Oil Company. After thinking the m atter over. Mr. Rockefeller got Into communication w ith Mr. Owen, who bad been angling for an orrler irom the founder of the big oil company. Mr. Rockefelleris Instructions were th a t the smallest automobile then made, as well as the chcapost, he brought to hlB residence for Wb Inspection and tria I.

DellBlited with the m esia te , Mr. Owen was Bonn a t the Bockefeller resWenCe In Cleveland and, found John D, ready. The la tter, who has a earrlage, had his ja r - rlajte and coachman all ready In ease of a tjreakdown, which was much more likely to occur fnnr years ago than It la to-day Mr. Owen was cautioned to go Blow a t first, which inetruetlons he obey­ed, A fter a while (as Mr. Rockefeller was evidently Interested) Ihe speed was In­creased, so much so that the Rockefeller carriage was anon lost to sight. After a successful ride, and Just before the fin­ish of It, Mr. Rockefeller, who had been asking many tiuestlons, said to Mr.Owen: ..

"Young man, what does U cost a month to maintain this machine?'’

Mr Owen was equal to Ihe occasion, und replied Just aa quickly; ■'Mr, Rocke­feller, It largely depends on the m arket price of gasoline."

"Is that so," returned the great oil man as he smiled. "Well. I guess I can sta rt oft with this Utile one," Which he did but la ter ordered large machines. In which he takes a great Interest and 1.S very fond of autotnoblllng. as Is also his two partners, H. H. Rogers and H. M. Flagler,

' ‘F la g - to .F la g ” n a c e .Word has been received In New York

from elr William Gray-Wlieon, Governor of the Bahamas, that arrangem ents had been completed a t Nassau for the recep- tlon of the In teruatlonal' Motor Boat Race, known as the ‘Flag to Flag," M iam i,'F la.i to Nassau, N. P. A meet- Ing w as held riscently at the government- houee, Nassau, over whicli Btr WHllam Gray-W llw n presided, to arrange some of the details tor the recaption .of the blif race and the motor boat and sailing regn tla whloh will be given a t Nassku on the n th and 13th of February, -n*- oommllte* In charge . o t , the ga'tia reported tha^t cablegram

SlaUng'^lhat the IJnlled State* N avy De p artin d it h»(* agreed to fum lab j* war '.m fttl purpose of Mofirt to therace Navy Doportmeptwobifl n>*h.e a critical a tu d y p f ' tbo work nV th* taotor boats In ths MMttU* race . - . y u f o i M to Nassau. S lr.O , :D. Mai-

iBca of the M a b n M .tlio k * and dM towm ew r .

~ M avf, mod*

.A n lom ob l.X N otea-The twenly-four-hotiwpowar Frayer-

Mlller touring car belonging to Raymond 8. Joo & Co., of 79 Orange street, th is city, won the sixth place in the economy run between Philadelphia and Harrisburg. The cor was penallaed seventy-five m in­utes but it finished first. The trouble was caused by a hair being caught In the feed of Ihe gas tank, which necessitated the pulling out of the entire tank. The car was driven hy H arry Knepper, vice- president o t the Frayer-MUter Motor Car Company of New York. Mr. Jrxi, of this city, was prevented from going on ac­count of Illness. The car reached Newark on Thursday and wes taken to New York to be placed on exhibition a t the salea- rooms there. . . .

Percy H. Johnson sold two Grout tour­ing cars during the week. He expects to take a tour through the State soon. In order to arrange for a number of sub­agents. * • «

The Motor Car Company nf New Jersey will begin deliveries of Cadillacs and Au­tocars on or about January 16.

F. E. Boland has 'disposed of five Na­tional cars during the present week. Two of theae cars will go to Rahway, and the balance will go to local purchasers,

• * •Robert Perkins, who represents the Cor­

bin car a t Rockaway, drove to Newark In one of these machines on Thursday In company with hla sou, G W, Perkins Jr. Mr. Perkins said th a t the roads were fa ir­ly good, notwithstanding the bad weather. In some places they were little soft, he said.

A t a meeting of the house committee of the New Jersey Automobile and Motor Club, which was held a t the clubhouse on Thursday night, It was decided to hold the annual club dinner a t the New Audi­torium on either the Sfith or the 31st of thla month. ' The date depends entirely upon tho committee a ability to secure the hall, and tho exact night will be an­nounced tn a day or two. The dinner will be In charge of Carl Bchweltzer, the club steward. • • •

Commissioner J. B. R. Smith, of the de­partm ent of motor vehicles, is preparing his annual report, to be submitted to the coming tMCglslalure. It is known th a t the commissioner will make a number of rec­ommendations for new automobile legisla­tion, hut the nature of them 1ms not bec^i divulged. His ideas have all been ob­tained from the knowledge th a t the de­partm ent has gained since the present law went into effect last July, and It Is not thought tha t anything unreasonable will be asked. As a mailer of fact, Coimuls- Bloncr Smith made the automobile law a study and Is considering U number of clauses th a t may be Inserted io r the bet­term ent of the automoblllat and the lay­man. • • •

The Greene Motor Cur Company of this city has received a new Oldsmobtle Hying roadster demonstrating oar Which is attracting a great deal of attention. The machine has four cylinders gnd I* rogtl- tered a I S9-36 horsepower.

* • *Percy M. Johnston has received m book

ot testlm onlsli from purchasers of O tout cars. Some ot the letters are very flat­tering and are In response to Inquiries sent out by the Grout Company,

In the BlorcB of the dealers are now to be seen color prints of Ihe color scheme and Interior decorations, aa planned by the artist-decorator o t tho Madison Square 'Garden show. The rich­ness and elaborateness of the whole sug­gests th a t even more than the tW.OfiO ap­propriated may be spent on It and that It will be well worthy of a visit from the President and the foreign Ambassadors.

Recently a canvass of New York City alone showed that out of some 19,000 ad­dresses fully 1.000 were, wrong, which menne th a t they were only temporary residents of New York when they took out tholr license as automoblllsts. That means quite a loss In stam ps and litera­ture, as letters ore oftentimes used by automobile concerns and others In trying to reach automoblllsts direct by letter. Much money is lost In an advertising way tn trying lo reach the address of automoblllsts, as the regular registered lists of addresses supplied by States are fa r from correct.

T H E

e t E R e tF I . I . I S M O T O R C A R C O .

I ItJ.Tf'*” * 222 H a l s e y S t

F r a n k l i nPope-Toledo

Pope-HartfordAutotmbiles

OrangeAutomobile Garage

ORANGE, N .J. FfMBe487

,MWSI^

CAR CO.

The re-

it had received a from the New Y ork repre-

ot ihr> ' Flaip-tOwFIflr**. rac*.

IO«f

£ ^ O h e itertoi *»krfK

5AT- ■ • 'fi ’•

Ninety-four firms are maaufaiCturlag six-cylinder ca ra which 1* an aseuranc* th a t these machine* have come to itay . These Include* both European and A m ro- cati manufacturers. Of tW* numbst four dlffsrsnt type* »r* msde In Ovsat Britain, twenty-on* in France, tweltm *M American, white the balance ore scattered throughout Europe. They are made In Germany, Swltserland, Holland and Bel­gium. Among th a best foreign car* th a t are included In th* *lg-cy!lnder eatagoyy are the panh ird . Darracq. Hotchkls*, Fiat. Harcedes, ^ I l e a Chtment-Bayard, Martial, BoUs-Hoyce, 'Mors. Bolide, B«r. bet D a IMon, Oobrott-Brllle, H u n ttf , Itala, Mltisrva, Boss*!, Vlnot and N aplst. Of th* six-^ytlndler Afnerioan cam thare are th* Ford, ffrankltn, Frayer-HlHer, National: Btevena-puryq*, Btoddard-Day- ton and ofbtr*. .

t e eTh* nrw tUAiOW auto boulevard acroiM

tti* UMAnia At Atbwtie City may not bs oohioM % tb* BoMd. oC Eraabotdsra It is cMtni* tkot tba poad bag MdtM mone tUuk a 'fd o t l o ^ M pi*i' l o t to B

■ E stablished 1B34.

I. QUINBY B CO.N E W A R K , N. J .

Immediate Delivery. Riinby LimomlM Sinplex, “30” Qiinby Toiriig F. I. A. T., “36” Quinby Toaring Simplex, “30” Qeinby Toefhg SaiheeoB, “50”

Early CHASSIS Delivery.

Renault PanhardF. I. A. T. Simplex

Alnrainum Aatomob(le Borty Builders

REPUKUED XT TIE PMLMEIFIIX MOW

R o a d a .b ility -S ty le * ]O l d s n t o b i k R o a d a b t l i l y m e e m s :

T o ho ld the road vrith the beat', to dum b h ill* ahead oT th e rea^ to I ahow OTollty lb abaence of wear; to be as/Rood lot th e Wile* ab « m M ! th e m naa beh ind . ‘

Dldmobik Style means: ^ ' ' | v ' ' , '

A jo o d actor th a t lo o ts the part; no t • peenUar *tf)e-“ h a t the cor*I rec t gtyle trf a car to be proud ol. , v, .

t a u b ^ W IMIvtry—'Itinpte can at ill ig tK lsi.

1 Tie W t te ter Works ajESux.< ^ « en e M otor Cur Go.

"ISL SLratlon i^ I ige0tl,!(WU|, I' a tn n lb AJ|WA»r/• ■

nr j -a

U ^ to to o l^ l

Page 15: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

" I .

^WAKK EVENING NEWS;>MtUEDA\, JANUAEY 5, 1907. 15

NEWARK B TIED WITH

N E ^ V E NLoals Win Only One Inter­

state 6ame» Necessitatias: Roll-off for the Title.

fiURTOR/LANBS AVERAGE PRIZE

The unexpected happened in the Na­tional lutcTHtate Bowling Lougm- find Newark, which waa expected to carry oft t i c champloiiBhlp. fell hack to a Ue with New Huven for first place, in a aensa- tiUiAl wind up of the corapetUtut!i. Thla tliuatloii came about by the locala cirup- pmg two out of .three gun^ea ut Now Jo rk and New Haven wlnnlutf the odd from Trenton in u aeiieo n)llyd at New Haven. Both teama have won twenty-elx Ifaroes and lOHt sixteen, inukhjg a j .jII off iiecofisarj- lu decide tlie llUe. ’1 1.1k roll-off ■will conalst of a home-und-tiomc wulen of three gutitea and in eaoi' of another tie Yt\^\ wJii cmiul. Now Turn raniurol third honor, Uroukiyn unuslieU fourth, “®*‘*J*y ^Ity and New L^rjnswirk iied for nflh, 1 ronton got ei-veiuh pJuce anu EUi- aboth wound up last.

KEW YOHK, Jiui. Newark’s '"Big f iv e ” bowling cijmblnatiou. which hUR landed fieveral ctumu lohijlnpa IhrougJi Ufl ability to make a winning finish In Im* portant faeries, slippt*i:i u oog here lastS it on the wind-up of tiie Interstate

gue series wuli N-w yorfc. and lost two out of three gnnu » .,f ihc selica. The rfecseymen had bi'cn loading right uloitgSin the cumpeuilon, suul wltn a one-ganio

uvamuge wag louked upon to cUnck ike hamplonship. Tii^lr double defeat, how­

ever, only fenabiiil ih<-m to tie with New Haven lor liio lirst honors, ns the laUer won two out of thr«.ij games from Tren­ton.

The vlHltors were apprehensive of the result before the Fcnoa bogfin. apd their anxiety caustd them to get away poorly In the first two games, which tliey lost. BjaUis anu mlbfHiH caifie galore in these Iwii chntesla, and they fell by the weyalde In rather a weak m^uiner. However, the tallber of the Ncwiirktrs whs clcurly SiHJWn when, with their anllt,‘lpiktcd title BUiwiy slipping from their grasp, they Pulled together in the final game, and by 6& grand a rally aa seen on these alleys ftn- ihe season, pul up the big count of i.uflj for the victory that saved their bacon. In tlile contest the New'urkers shot probably as they never did before. FVjtir double-century figures were account- rd for, and New York never hud a chance. It was a great ending to a costly begln- ulng. The scores:

NEWARK. I NEW TOUK.■Afeyer ......ITS 100 22.T Ullsneff ....‘2'Mi 201 UWPlenon ...,S14 102 2tMb U Rand..,. 181 1T2 IftOIfoa^laud 1Jj3 lOO IT-ti J^nkt-n ..... Ih3 ..........J'lkna .......I6ft l(k) 2ti0: ('Itmlwldk ,483 213 2isV'clngarth lUO iTtl SSRlDougisss ...101 191 lU'

------------ Sifln ............... Ihi' Total* ...Wto 863 1025J ------------

1 Totnlfl .. out 04(1

Kew T lnven G ets tm t T ^ o .rixrttfl Diajifiuh to the J'.VfiMMi Sf^WS.

NEW HAVEN. Jnn. 5,-Two oui of three was the best New Haven cwjulcl do In Its final championship Interstate match wTth Trenton here last night, and the locals thpreby miuscd u chance to boat Newark out for the title. l\ was all New Haven In the firnl nnd third games, and all Trenton in the srrond. Jan.swirk. or tbe home team, slipped up badly in the cccond jrame, and hie ulump wua partially reuponslble for tlie teuin’s defeat,

High individual lionois for the e\'cnlngwent to Steel and Beecher. Reecher's high string of 208 In the hrsi gome and RlecT’H nigh three string total or 590 cnppljig thetvenlng*B woi k. Captain Charley johriBon, of the New flnveiiH, was atek abt*d. and Weber took his place. The scores:

NEW HAVEN, i TRLCNTON.Jau»wipk .IHI 141 m Curtts .... ]kls 1U5 101H«>ch<ir ..2i»8 no 18l] Ht-ue] ....17fl l*rt.Iluher lui |>i2, palne ........ 13B

..... 108 19.H lir9| lu7 isi IJSV/et»r ..,.]U2 ITU l&u: I!p<s,ia]nh ..15, . .. 159

_ -----------" i i?cheTiCk ........ 2<W .. .TMala.. 847 MU 898: Ulackford .IRo llH iwi

TntalH .,.84H ST2 H34

B ra n s w fe k T n lte s Thrtfle.ELIZABETH, Jan . 6-—Kllstabfth bowlers

Diade an IngJorloriB ending to their N«- tinna! Intcratate League season here last pi^lit, when they dropfKtd all three gatnea to New F.lj'unaw'lck. The visitors were In great TcUle and put up towering Tallies, rotrbdlng uui iht* seiles with a cuiuU of 1.04R, Every New BnmHwlck man regis­tered a double-century count.

lu the opening game Eiizalicth made a good stand, and wua only braf^'u out by four pins In a score of !60 to 9,'i4. The liiinne leuni was lending right up to the last frame, whou'New Brunswick finiBbed Mit ahead with a ru.sh. After that tbe locals were never formidable. The scores: NEW nnvN aw iqK . 1 El iz a b e t h . -Greenw’ld Am I4fi 200iNolle ........ 187 191 mJlawklna ..IHb 170 2101 O’Pennell ..178 l8l ia.HBurton ..... 172 243 223| BplHl^h’se ,'OKi 108 kV)Stevens .,..2aj 2(»5 aMiC’leuiom 110 170il'Cbnn’k .108 148 20f»iOlBiiaii .......th7 177 134■ Total* ..,934 940 IW2, Totals ....ttW 883 738

C ity R eitls I trn u k ly ii,JERSEY CITY. Jan. r,.-The Jersey City

team of the National Interstiiie League treated Brooklyn to a surprise in the wind up of the longue compctlilon here last Right, winning two nut of three games. Brooklyn got Us sole victory by rolling the big score of LUOti In the second game. T he acoresj

JERSEY CITY. I BROOKLYN.th l .........IkH 193 l97|HeHtac ......105 213 SSt

...213 liiti H4:TtBrHey ....174 174 175VtAa’tm'n .134 1ft* 17M>e Molt..... !flt IW8 ITUR’ktetik'k •irib 17b iTLMurgaa ....191 231 174 Steinb’ck ..216 184 SlOjt.3>rdea ..... 179 UM 151

Tolftli ...U16 U39 0491 Total* ....37S lino DU

B n rto n W taii A verufte P rise .The Honantloiml wind-up of the team

Tace, with Newark and New Haven tied fo r first place, making an extra serlos between the team s necessary to decide tiie title, excaed* only slightly In interest the battle among the individuals for average honor*. The Issue here came right down

the final serlee, in which Lee R. Johns, ©f Newark, who has been setting theJ^ce ao long, was beaten out a t the tape

or the honors bj’ Burton, of New Bruita- wlclc. Burton made a grandstand finish and wound up with a mark of 192.7. He

' rolled in all of the forty-two games and Uad* Johns by two point* and four i>ln», the la tte r having » percentage of IW.S for h i s , ftill complement of forty-twp games. YVeliigarth cannot qualify, so that third honors go to Ijamster, of Jersey Clty„ Who has a murk of 190.1.

Brooklyn win* high team average prise with the good percentage of 938.23, and Newark ts third, with m .U , while Jersoy C ltys l . lg is the high team score, Jjor- gan, of BrTOkfyn, reglatered 2H for the brat individual tally. 'T h e tram stand Ing and averages are as follows:

T e a m S ta n d in g .W. Tj. Ave. ILS,

I fe w a rk ..........• « . 4k2a 18 B2S.14 ' 1018NeW Haven.............. 26 16 wo.32 1020Now York........... 17 ojT.jff 1013

A Brooklyn. w ..,. R4 isNew B runsw ick,.... 33 SO 023 1047Jersey C i ty .* . . . . . - - ^ 30 015.23 U09Trenton ................. M g 904)9 hjjofilisabeth ................>*10 Vi 873,12

? .i* e d 5 c J n .W : iT in

W A N l W i fSHARPE BACK

Saaatoa Qub Owners Dicker­ing with Newark for Release

of First Baseman.

F O O T B A L L T E A M S [ g Q ^ L I f ^ Q

STARS TO ROLL HERE

L u c iu 3

Johnny Voorheis and Jimmy Smith to Qash in Series on

the Tuxedo Alleys,

NEW YORK AND BROOKLtN.TOO

VidroTT’ .ScTawa-T®!-?

LOCAL CLUB DRAFTED PLAYER

A dispatch from Scranton stnlM thiit llte owners of the Bcruliluh Basebnll Club m e negutLiUng wllb the Newark i;lub for Hie reluni uT Bayard Sharpe, first baao- mun umi captnln of iiiHi 8eaai.jii h team, whu wu« uraft^id by Newark, aiuirpe la popular hi Scranton, and If bin tflease

pur^h.ise can ixi ubtuined frurii tnr locui clutj at a re:i>>nn;Hik' figure lie will be uppohitvd m anager of next tseuaon d teu3ii in (hat city.

Sbiirpv wuN recognized as one of the alara of tin- New York .Stale League lust senBoii. hla playing and htindllUK of the playern being a big factor In brlnghig the chamijl*»ii8hlp to S<-rfjntoii. He led (he Aral basemen of the ioujflue fuid wad up among the top-nutchers In the halting depariment. Under thfst: condlikjnH It ih hardly po^aibit; th a t the wiahea uf the Hcninton club will be t-omplJed with, un IcKH tbe coni region magnale» are dJf- puaed tg hand over a anug sum of money.

That the Newark club roallzea that It baa secured a great player In Sbarpo la borne out by the fact of Manager Burn­ham’s refusal to take Arthur Hrowri off of Detroit's hands last month, when Hughey Jennings offered to let Brown re­turn to the local club. M was the orig­inal Intention of the Detroit club to give Brown a trial on ftrat base next season, but as Jennings corralled Kssainan, of Cleveland, to play the position, hoop after api^umlng the inanagemont of the Wolver- inea, he derided to dispose id' Brown, aihce then Brown w as purchased frorn the Detroit club by Montreal, where he will plgy next season.

B a se b a ll Bit*.tarry Herrm ann will undoubti^dly be re-

Hb'ctcd to the preaidency of the nationalitiimlsiaon Monday, a t Cincinnati, Man-

ugur Charley Murphy, of Chicago, rocoin- mends tb^ l hla sa lary be fixed at 110,000 per annum.

Manager Joe Bean, of the Jrr^jey Cltys, say.H th a t he han the m aterial for a strong tcnmi next season and w’lll need but a ft w more players to complete hta router.O

The Phlladelphin Athletics have been booked to play an exhibition game wllli the Newark team a t Wledenmayer'B Park, Sunday, April U.O

Manager Wolvorton, of the Williams­port T n-S tale tearn, has signed Manning to pitch again next seuBun. Manning ha* been sought after by several league team* of lute, one of the attractive offers which he received coming from Connie Mack, of the Philadelphia Athletics. Charles, the former Brown University second baseman, has also signed with W illiamsport for ano ther season.

Few colL 4' li. nore i-ire rated as being higher than tu occupy the position of c'optHtn of Iht* varsliy foolballl eleycn. Yet this Jh lie dIslUiclJoii wbirh has fuUen upon nurnorous Jersey l>oy« during the pnsi few y-ara. In fact, from lOCa, when Sanford Huni, of this cUy, cap­tained the Cornell eleven, this S tale has been, or will lla^•e Iwen. represented when next bchs' iii's campaign Ifl over, by no ItHfl than five ledilera of big college teaniB. One of tJieHe, Boh Torrey, of Monlehilr had Ihe liuiiur in held the di»- llngiilslipit poBltlnn of cuptijln (tT the Pennsy 1\Mi;iu eleven iwtv years In suc­cession, aiiil at the end of that period was engaged up, he.Td coach Of the Blue and Red. ■ The season of 19(15 aaw the election of Fred Schwinn, un«i(her Newark iwjy, .ind an old High School t'l^'ver, to the posIHhn nf captain nf the Brown 1 nlver- sHy f'loibiill team, and the last year saw Vtclnr Schwartz, aiao of thin city, step

Into Schwinn'* shoes and pilot the Brownlentil.

Throughout the past aetiann Scliw*irt* played brlfilunt game, lutd liia heady running of the team was mainly rcsponRl- hie tor (he great game which the Frovl- doncH* collegians pul up. The Brown team this year, was inn best that college has ever iiirnm! ou.t, and Itfl brlllhinl record piid)4ibly put* it at the head of the col­lege elcveiiH not classed under the big four. The great stand Brown made ugntnst Yale was remarkable, the Ells just muniiglng to win out by the margin of a single toiichdow-n. and that waa only secured during the last few mlnutna of play, Hrow’n also tnninced Its old rival, Tiartmouth. In their annual gridiron con­test.

At the close of the pres-.-nt football sen- sgh at Brown, Ponnhl iTyor, of South Or-

H’UB chosen to lead 1 he team next se.ition. Fryer Is on* of the hesi athletes 111 the poll>-g4-, and his fin* work during

tlio past teawon merited the reward ho received. Pryor will be rcmornbered by local schohintlc followers a* a g reat baec* ball, fontball and basketball player, who waa Identified with the ^tliletlc lemns of the South Orange High »clu>ol. Besides playing on the High School tenm, Pryor won honors while coiitiected with the South Orange Field UkiU. Pryor will graduate from Brown next year.J ja a t but hot least in the field of glory

<ff)mes H. Lb Blglow, of Glen Ridge, who next year will lead the football icum Yale University, Dlglow's elertton aid lioi come as a surprise, to his iiuiny ail- m lrers and rolIowerH. who rcrognlze in him a player uf unusual ahlllty and gen- eralFhip. The Jersej’ boy put up a great game for ihe ICII.h during ttw past Hcasiin, and In the Harvard game iu- dlstlngulstml himself by blorklhg a drop kirk whli h probJibly would have mmle a score for ttie t'rim son team.

EUREKA JUMPS INTO THE LEAD

Goes to Front in Masonic League with Qean Sweep

Over Cosmos Bowlers.

HEIIZMAN HOLDS HIGH MARK

FIRST WARD IS STILL HUSTLING

Sticks to First Place in New­ark League with Double Vic­

tory Over Belleville.

UNFRIED'S AVERAGE IS HIGH

FORESTERS' LEAGUE.C o u rt R o r a l B Itir D e fe a tr South Bn.1

A T m in In O dd G nutc of S rr lc ii.

Court Royal Blue bowlera took some of the plumage off of the South End A tenm of the Independent Order of Foresters’ Ijeaguo last ulghi, by winning two out of three giimes on the Central alleys. Ihe scores:

BOTAE. ShUBJ, I SOUTH END A. Cr<atnrr....lgil M» 14g|Debnert lUS ISOBraiUlgam 148 111 MilO. Tr'tweln.151 147 145 Van Doren.lSO 151 UBUClUMman ..1B5 liM 137Wood ....... 181 155 157tC. Tr'tweln.!8S 144 I3rSpain ....... 138 aw 215|Huakele .,..117 141 l!!u

Toula . . . f s o m i a l i Totalt ....TD7 728 738

F o re e le ra * A re ra s e e .The leading 'team s In the Foresters'

League were Idle this week and there was no chanige In th e tie for first place between the itunyon A and South End B teams. George s la ck e tt, of the Runyon A duintet, still re ta in s Bret place among the Individuals. The team standing and individual averagea follow;

Tenaa S tu n d liig .

Runyon A, South End

In d tv ld iin l Arerwgf^a,

Burton, New B ru n a w lo ti.. S ' W s U g a r th . N e w a F h .4 . .»

g a h a s , K e w a r k . . . .Lotnater, Jersey C ity ,.....; , bI to n p n . B rooklyn..;.......,,

. StelRbruok, Jersey C lljt,... M ■ i t a ^ New H a v e n . . . . «

" *MWW, N ew n rlt Ma . Hew York...................f l

__ M k Brooklyn.......•t e l f f l . ^ « u n , w i c k ; : g

H e r e r . H a w a rk' ’V asaennan, Jersey C ity .... n

jteOormlek.New Brunswick NE l i o t t , Brooklyn.................JaniWIek, Haw H aven...... «

: Oreanwnla, New Brunswick 41 fM tn r , ] l a w a T k . . . . . . , ' . U '{toiiglag. New York......... H■ a a g lM ig , B a a ra rk . . . . . aC nrtik T ren to n .,............ gW a ,lW ie y 'C ftt? .,. . . . . . . . . .is Jj,^ tu w ta ^ .N e w Haven,Oi.ff

Av, : I m.T ■ itas m.)i».i >mts w.« ,m .nm.fU7,4UTm uUI.U1«,I7.m.M

U8.KU0,H..

. . . . . . . . Haw Haven........ S4 ITS.®SidiWteh. T ren to n ..,......- ;! S l i i .*H e t s e l f ' T r e n t o n . . W lp-»RtaatM v^ K e n ra v k .. . . . . . B ] » .»SpUtfeKauA, Bllsabeth...... >S Ifl.n

-----^ 0-..------ ------ -------- - j,.

tW'

Bimia. T a l le y Vletorla«*<'Valley Lyceum, by wining two

tenM . troa the Orange A. A.,Thuritoy nltw;; held to.nest place In the Lacha- wanna .Beagna. Thegcores:

rttjfc LYtemW. f ORAKfOBA. At C l I M . . . . l i t IH wUlrtnstM ....153 Ui4M|r'..;.lSA Ml lufomliBHUin.. Ito

V BnWU in OerdM .o..l85 mHcCfUtk ..180 140 M3 Reilly .t.i.143 t » I> s lt% ,... .l» m .Mgf'&thts ..1....I4J I4T

EnglishK earn»\s,. . . . . . . . “South End A -,.................MProgressive A.................. 11Seth B oy d en .......:.........UFnesalc B ................. ..10Branch Brook.................... |Clinton ' ISouth End C ............... Jprogressive B ............. rJergey A ................ 8Runyoii B...........-.......... Ittoyai Blue...

Av, H.8, B38.12 M4 780.E774.7 767.J 7ti4.E 708.16 781:8741.7 812.U 140.11 7S8.14

g^side

772.S019mu090.7 028.1004.8601.4

atoeyJersey S . . , . .FiMMia. a :...

l a g tv ld n a l A veeagaa.Q. Av,

a , Sloekett, Runyon A .. . . . . BBrook...... . E

10 14

Tracojr, Branch Cam pta,-Jersey A .. Bahay, Bonyon A-Bloaii, Jtuny(m | llliig tare , Bm nch B rook ..t,. 16

Xtonay, S h i f l l e h . 18

By muRlng a cle*nn awet^p ovo-;r line Cos- mii.H tivfj Oh ih4‘ Mohtg'mit^ry alleys iaat

ilu* FurcUiiM uapumed Ibfi IcwibTHliip bi Ihc MciKfiiilr Isfioguc lu tliC’ sooundgame ib^ F^urotkas; p:fi)i-d up u (<.i(al of l.uti. W ackenhul putting up a tocore t>f 2JJ and SiookeU ’iaiL The scon-.'C

rOSMOS. I EUREKA.Howell ...p}o IM Klft RuihlO'i , .137 195 Ifil1‘lark ...... 13b IIH LA'ii Wickfnh’t .210 237 JU4 JWilliam* ,i2T IIH HJ3, iniicky . ,.lw< llk'i JTOEififl .......Rkt 14H it ii 8]uok4-u ...174 :;2a 15a IL'huioiiaji .123 145 HI.Wulu .10i> lh(j Hkl '

Tiilala ..713 twa TTd' TutalH .. .877 lo;i3 fj43 1

NfasoD*' A vcragea .Ivuroka’a Imld on first pkn-f 1* by a

tiiiirgin of emv ganw ea4:ib w'ay over Orl- f*nlaJ Lodge, wlilch was prY-vlously lead­ing. Kureka bus wou dgiueeti games and lost three. Ueltzman, of fichlljer Lodge, lias a viseliko grip on first place In the i IqdlvkluAj nv« ragt; column, with 201.1, six poIntB more ilmn Steiner, of Trilum lnar (jfjflge. who i.s second. The team eland- Ing and imllvldaul nvciugeB follow:

T eam iitHOflIng.W. L.

Eureka ............................ is iOflfiUul .......................... 17 4 S71.13 h;|)Nonhi-rn ........................ 16 5 ST:>.2 iWkiHope ............................... IK 6 N7S.22 103:»Schiller ........................... 11 4 WH.i lODIKune .............................. 12 fi bttii.6 tW7Trlliimlnar ..................... 14 7 i«7.4Hi, Jo h n 's ........................ ]] 7 973St. A lbans................... S 9 RU 9ftiFythUgnrua ................... 9 L! 9l2Roseville ........................ 7 11 TSo.lH 901Newark ......................... 3 IG 7 *1.13-Union .............................. R 18 765.1fl l-ti2Franklin ......................... 1 1*0 745.8 mCosmos ....................... 0 21 671.1 802

Av. H.S.1.39.T7 10.13

lu d lv id a u l Averaige*.

Shepard, Hope. Waiford, Conliell, Richter,

p«tijgM4a loiTth Slda A.*miIhfW U a

PBoydMI ^STWSy A>4T«a»*h****3 II

Saulth%tido.:..ucckaU, Runyon A .. . . . . M

- l ^ y f » . . . . I. .MtraiA Hay Jd HefwiHefWi&'BtrJ tfndi 'B

IftiT o g r^ lv a A ...

n ^ nF. M^lwli.W ‘ ' l ^ B .. . . IBHallly, Branch B TO ok...,.,., 12 W a l s h i B r a n o b B r o o k , 16 F ra n J o u th I M . . . . . . . . . . . l iF as. Branch B ro o k .. , . . . ; . . . I ByniRna'arlti, tioiith S n d B., tt-p(mlta«. le n g h n ............ URaswlok, BrogreM ivt A ; .. , . II AnachuUA C l i n t o n . 11B tu n i^ ^ K a s r ity ............Hflheniw iC B StbB pyden. . . . . . 1a 'm n tw a in . South Bnd A. H Whitmore, F ragraaalva A ... 18 'Wlttana, C lhiton ... . . . . . . . . . . . IS— roy. Paawtle ' B . i s

i l p t o i S s k K * ^ * - . I I

B . S .178.18 241 176.8 174,12172.18 170.11 170.U 168.1 188.10 187.28 1SJ.5 J86.12 !«.»I8I.3 iK i3 iS e 182.16 182.14 PU

168.1 168.2 158,4 1891U.8. Wi117 201M7 m Hl.lg- 1» W 1» 1S614 SOI JIAll B1 U6.U III 1S.1 IM 161.18 IH.U 1E8.7 1621 1127 M2.4 111.11 ‘61.1

H-'ltEUihn. Hchlller............... 13Stt'lmir, 'Trlluniiniir............. 21

.......... 21PyihiigoruB....... . 21St. Johns............... 15Oriental.................. 2!

W ackenhulh. E u rek a ........ 21Bnldwli), F ranklin ................. 15Styvprs, K anp....................... 18Birkcnnielcr, Sohlllcr........... EGluttintf. K ane..................... 12Cooke, N orthern ................... 21Blockctl, E ureka.................... isWeiss, E urekn ...................... 12Bueliler E ureka................... 21Relap, Nortlii-rn.................... 18Kemper. Sclitller..............■.... 12Lee, Hope.............................. 24Casuldy, Hope...................... 10a. Johnson, Oriental............ 21Wolfe, N orthern................... 21Elciilln, St. Johns................. 10Bennett, Hope...................... 1CHuUenhacIi, F rank lin ....... 16Abrahams, T rllundnar........ 10Mlllnr, K ane............................ 18Stuckey, E ureka................... 18Blsserson, K ane..................... 16Ornef. T rllum lnar............... 21Clark. N orthern ................... £1Erbacker, Ro-sevtlle.......... 15Helse, O riental..................... 21Tuticbulto, K ane................. 18Oeils, Hope............................ 24Stevena, Roaevltle..................18Delcher, N ew ark....................21Wetherltl, St. Johns...... . ISKuglvr. 8 t. Johns..................16Schaedcl. Schiller............... 16Baldwin, tfnibn...................... 21Hayes, St. Albans.................16Wood. 8 l AltanB . . . .............IIM, .lohnaon. O riental............17Mebkar, O riental....................ISHalsey, B«. Jobes............ .Haines. Bt. A lbans,.,......... 18Schmidt, N orthern......... aDehnert. Schiller....................ISLowy, 'Prilunmiar......... . 11Judson, K op^....... . . . . . 4 ... 18W. Meeker. BosovUla....... WRltchlng* ................................ 21Green, N ew ark ..............Morgan, U n i o n . - . aDauth, N ew ark................. aGrim, Pythagoras.................. IIBlllB, C o s m o s . . . . . . . aGreeley, F rank lin ................. a

Av. I 2UI.1 lir.,1 190.11m.G189..5UtS.tl187,1.719C.5185.2 181.1 18-1,18 183.H193.10193.6192.7180.8180.3179.13 179.15175.5177.10177.4177.3 17G.3176.11176.9178.14175.5 173172.12 172.8172.7172.3172.3m ,um170.U170.6 1W.16 1S9 108167.10165.8166.6166.4 166.20165.14166.4164.6164.6162.15 162 162 10.2 161.2 1«,10160.16

All lhi> teams in the Newark League U«uk alike to Firbt W ard This qi:lnl*-l which ha» tieen ahi'wlng tu the front since thci competition started and mowing down oppunentH uh fasik a* they came along, look a full uut of R<;llevlUe last night and won the odd gunic of a series rolled on EliHt Ward allej's

Tbe work of both team s wa* good and there WHS alHu some brllllam Individual work. First Ward got a scare In the opening giime. In which the team was bfuten after u poor sta rt. However, the pniiiicnuiN got tlKlr bearing In the secumi cc>nteai and putting up u. count of 936, which tiiey followed with fill in the last game, won out hendtly, The Bcores:

RKLLEMLLB. I FIRHT WARD.Karr .......175 ITl lfl2iSciienck ...14T 21X ltdf4hi’fhtin ..llTj 14H 15tt Clark .1»2 Ifid 177U'Oret^v-y Wb 212 lOb Keame>’ ..173 I5D 1D4W^ibhier .174 140 HUi 'T in .158 Hi.3Rulu .......ItiO 177 m . Baker .182 3iX» 173

ToiRls . .bid Mb! Totals

PIrMt W ord U a ld s to P a re .First Ward Is cv/tting out a great pace

In the Newark L«agm'. ItH record of hcvHiteen vlctorlus and but four defeats gives the team a conyfortable lead of three games each way over Ro’Se\ file, which Isi njiinlng Becond. Unfrled, of Weal End, holds to tbe first among the Indlvidtiais^ with hla mark of 1$7.S, but Tommy Shaw, another West End member, Is coming along fust. He holds aecond position, on un averrige uf 184.2. The teRn) stundlng und Individual nvoragea follow:

T eam g tau d ijiff .

916

PARKS COMING TO THE FRONT

Securr Firm Grip on Second Place by Scoring Triple Vic­

tory Over Rosevilles.

CLEAN SWEEP FOR NATIONALS

KRAMER WON’T STAND FOR CUT

Cyclist Says Nay, Nay, to French Promoters and May

Not Ride Abroad.

M’F ARLAND AFTER VAILSBURGH

22221G213233

21D2192062432115J2G21S20622421G221235m24ijlfi2TJ21021S20fi20S2463Cr?1S3m1922072242132S6514lift153

W. L. Av,First Ward................... . 17 i 8,)3.]6ilasi viUc ..................... * U 7 KKtU7Norlh<-rn ..................... . 13 8 84G.3Vt’fSt l^ml..................... . 13 8 m ATurk A. A.................... . 11 10 874.5Butt cry A..................... - ID El 824.18Nalloiml ................... . - y U StiU.lGBrllevlUe ..................... . B 13 85b.7Ct'UuIoid ..................... lo 815.12For^'Sl Dili.................. . 3 18 hK.W

In illv ld a a l A v ^raw ei.G. Av.

Unfried. '(V't*i K-nd,,.. . 31 1«7.3Shuw, W«'Ht Ktul......... . 31 lii4.3Puls. Bellevllie............ . 3i 1S3.18Mowtll. ...... ........ 4 21 183,16Wim.'itne, Park A A-- 4 21 IK. 10Mcl-iflughlin, Park A. A..*,. 2] iTP.ieMacKl lUir. HiUtcry A . 31 17K.i<iBrunduKO. Huwi'Sille.., . 21 178.11Luff, HoflGvlUe............ . 21 in GTi»dil, Northern....... . 21 iTG.ir,Kt*en, est Knd ....... . £l 176-lSM. Kleiber, Nathaiale. .... . 18 176.5tIuWHh, Northern...... . 31 ■ 176.2Oarnibrants. Firm W ard.. . 21 176.1Tretiutth, Nutioual*,.. . 18 17G.1Schenoky Flrtst Ward. e 21 175. ISClU«sdmter. Roatn'lllt*... - 21 175.yCran«, WtjBt Knd........ . 31 ir.1.30C. Kieib«*r, NultonuJa. , 31 173.'J

340

ISarlich, park A. A .... Kuobter, Foreat H ill... Sheehan, BelleviUo.... Lponurd, Northern.

...... IS 172. ir> 2M

...... IS 172.14 -A4

...... 21 172 23421 n U 2 -M4

f ir s t reg im en t l e a g u e ,ConPBwy I B Pin Knl*Btn OnirtwM

tlio Olid Gnm e t ro H Cwjh- ^ p a n y C M ve.

GoiHoanv B bowitrs won two ou t o f t h ^ g S m e . V u > Company C pin UnteMa

i n lasI i I g,ygt-l{6 tJW P. Gormao.148 80 M ,.1W 1*7 161 liol«aner ..IBJ 116 IM ..151 1611*4 .. ..J |6 1J6 184.,161 Ml 146jHenry ......MO MI 167

Toula ...711 614 688

Pujpey , Bykta .

Totala ,.«T4 760 Tab

lOhBtlinni L aoda T h re e .Ckatham roUea wall agalo it Hollywood

Thureday night th a I.acKaw6nna Ia» |w e ierie* fttw won thteo atralght game*. The aeoreai

CHATKAM.HomM* : .1 7 im l«6B- Lu» .■*» M U '"I- IS %

ToUte

HOlJiTWOoa o ro w ....146 167 m

T * l«

W1 IftlAd*4- ——r-e -r

B e a ten a tA!'ToMle ...TIM 718 74J

Baker, Plrat W ard..................18 171,7Schem>r. Park A. A.............. 21 170 S) 21.7Lante, Park A. A................ Si 170.18 224Werrell, 4>Hitlold.................. 18 I70,{ S8.'>Kearny Flrat W ard............ 8 bS.l M2Oaflli. Belleville......... '..........!g 169 2J4Clark, Flral W ard............... 21 PJi 1J 193Hoerl. National..................... is 166.6 211WiniamB, Weet End............ 15 167.4 207Webetcr, Sollevllle............... 21 166.18 206Negley, Bntlery A............... is lefi lo mRaWeon, N orthern................ 21 166,14 187Cronin, Celluloid................... 18 Ui4.2 1X9May, First W ard.................. 12 163.9 193Brier, Roseville..................... 18 163.6 2liN. J. Ilin, Battery A .__ . 21' 1M.6 196R. E. m u,H sattery a ........is isa.it 1S4Kull, Celluloid........................ 21 16216 269Davie. Celluloid..................... 12 1W.4 189MeGreewy, Belleville............ 18 I69.ll“ ft, Ba

A good grip on eerond place In the Su­burban league was aecurcci by tbe Park A. A. bowlers last night h.v taking three straigh t gomes (rom the Roaevllle quin­tet. on the Park alleys. The Parks rolled In splendid form and carried off all thre.. games with good margins, rolling u|, Bcores of 9U und Jer. In the tlrat and second games respectively. The scorea: I

PARK A. A. I HDSEV1L,1,E [Denny ... IIH IIH 181 Hetce .114 123 118 IHoward ...1S7 ITS IBOl Reles .188 IU2 1.52 IAOume ...215 211 :77 MmiEvoy .,16.3 Ukt 128 ;Holme, ...180 1111 168i Herrle ....... i l l 12.3 IS, IWalden ...175 list lllfij Willie .155 ]a2 1.52

Tolale ..611665 8671 Total, .,.761738 884 V 'attonala M ake (Tenn kw eep .

The National Tiimveretn quintet goored three straight vlclorlea over the Celluloid five In a Suburban League mutch on the Celluloid alleys last night. W ith the eicaptlon of the first game the Nationals had a cimparallvely easy time In dlapua- Ing of thi'ir opponi^ntB. Thi? ecort's:

t’RLLrLOID. I NATIONAL.E Kull....IDO 146 I7B ThHl* .161 224 ir.HRoatmnKle .141 167 13T'Banfluni |TU i:.7 ir.7

..... bW 144 1 04J]8ph*fla ..... 130 21* 170f annon ITH I4l liurr itiu ikjHagReny ,m m lWt| HaUHRlInt? iHfi 171 216

Totala ...810 814 T2!) Totals U£*'I KH2

Buy Y'lewa jitlll Lead.The Bay Viewa are holding the lead in

Ihp Wul iiTban Ir^agup iiy three jjampp ovor the Park A. A. bowlers, who have u Tight grip on Becond phicv.

ICddle Hausallng. of the National Turn- verein quiniet, bolds the high inillvldunl ret'ord wltli an iivtiragv of iHfi.H for twenty- one gnmea. The team standing and aver- flgea follow:

T ra m Ntnntliiijf.W.

Bay View...... ................P a rk A. A .. . . . . . . ........... ic.N ational ...... 13W est End...................... 10F irst W ard.............. 11N orthern ....................... uRoaevllle .......... rSouth O range.,.,...... . gBelleville .............. nCelluloKT ...................... 3

In d iv id u a l AveraKen.

Av. H.S 859.35 W14.& fi70.l5

«17.16 HIT 1 MTH K.14.16 Hiri.n 788 LU

964m926101 r. 91:1935>6

Toblh, atlerj' A .,.............. IR IMWeber, Cellalold....................15 15S.5Lever, F ore« Hill..............21Jonkins. Northern

!57.6 ........21 156.8

Webb, FoTMt HIU.,,......... IS 3B4.H 219Kratner, I^ren t Hill........... 21 154.H IMCrane, Foiym; H m „ , 11 149.18 IM

THE HIGH ROLLERS.T h e n bowlera put up ae»n« of 2U

aha belter In gardea last night: B e m n n . T axhB o C o H » ..,.£ S 2Burton, New B runsw ick......& . 243BlllPJlng. New Y ork........................236HflUtoi, Bronklyh : 213. 231MtotSta, Brooklyn .A...... 231Wackentauth, Eurslcit Lodge 216. 227CHoekott, Eurekia LA dge..,,....... 2i6aieyttis, New B nuuw lck ............226TjieUe. National ............. j . . . ........ 224K f l s S f e v m e .V.L'.V.V.T.Lr.lLL mW M teartb. Netyapk ...................... 223m M i^ c h . Jeroey CU y.,,,.. 215.'2l«Intjullng. N ational .............. . . 216

im», Park A. A ............ HI, 215' ■on, Monroe Council.......... 21*

t. Ward (^IU ioll......7..> .,. 2E. , Orange 7 .................. 214lenon, Newark ............................214

adiriGk, Now ’Y o rk ................ 213itatef) Jersey C ity.*............... 2E

Ohade, National ......... ..~Tln, Royal B lu e ...< t......

iflll, rfijellW ..................

Sew^Siiitowidi.iii.!. R*ann. F j t^ W a n l ; . . . . . tW

Bpelra, RusevlUo,...................12JlausBllng, National..........Jldw arlb. Park A. A.......... 2JTaylor, Ikiy V'lew........lijAdam*, Park A. A.............. 21K arr, Bellevlib*..................... 17Radel, Wv*i Kmi................. 15B arkhorn, We*t End.......... isTheiltv NatUinai..................... i»iCooper, W eal-End............... 13Deune, South Orange.......... 2TKline; West End.................. isWillis, Roaevllle..................... ziShaw, w est End.................. 3Sunder*, Nutlumtls...... . 2lOrltehelt, Bay View............2tWUda, Park A. A...................siAitken, Boy View,.................21Ri'dfem , South Orange......21KnlghU Belleville.................. 21S. CUriG4 Plrel W ard .,....... 21Moehrln^. Went End........... 18Reiaa. l4o*evll1n................... I6Schada, K atlonal............. . 3tTIeiach, Bay Vibw................21W. Kuebler, First W ard___ 21Niigelr Bay View................ 5Bvice, Roaa^dile..................... 21W. a a r k , P lral W ard....... 8Steiner, N ational.................. 3Brafnard, South Oraage:.,. 18Harrtn. RoBevIlle.................. 12^ tc h w e ll. Northern............ isR. Kull. Celluloid................ 21Soutar, Northern....................ISH. Champenola, 80. Orange 21 A. Kueblor, First W ard .... 15Fiirm r, Northern ................18Albert, Celluloid.............. isDr^nny, Park A. A,............... 2lHdlmea. Park A. A ., . , ..........21WooUey. N orthern .,.............. IkBurr, N ational..................... 38W arford, Roievllle...... ... UT ro w b m te , Firat W ard.... 2l R a g lg ^ y , ^ llu lo ld .,.............£1

Av H.S. 1K7.3 L*4fiIKfp H 2%IKUs >2l. W 161»1 fi L:uiIWl.H 21517D3 Sbi17T.U Li;]377.9 221177.4 2lt]176.3 ZM176 -diH174.9 24S174.1 202173.17 zriJ73.14 m172.12 Sbair j.ll 2U1I72.(j 23T117UB 2H17L9 221J71.4 3U4170.13 224176.5 2131M;7 mm . i 217m i9«167-0 £34166 mH56 mI60.G 243I65,e 20(]164.16 304]164.17 IK164.33 201164.10 18f164.6163.15 aoi363.10 2tn16.11 221163.12 ay162.10 2« Itil.lS161.4 201160.18 Iff

Tlit-if lb a ^HHlUlUty ^liui FrankL. K'ljiiii'r, .-XiiKilt^s prviiilor Kprliii bi- cji-li rjilfi, .iiul vvliM* winni-r i>f the Hriiml I'lTx lie race, will hut coni-pi'U' nil iJi4- |nn i|,^ trui'ks (hl^ .war, aa lit* luiN Ini iwu p:iHt, Keatiit<r huurv!iiM4'(i III atiinO fur ii rut In Ills vuntrad IT'Jin Vili.ii ill' i'i.'1'i'Jvt'U on lJu' pU'S'loub oc- ri,i>luiiN. mill ihu 8plll oiur tiKihvy uiatier» luiK CLiiytMl a hUcIi In Ibe'tiegullalloiiH bu- isvvfii ili>; i-luimiiiim and Hobet l Couquelie, till' t'lin i'li ptimiuiyi'. who Uiih horvlnfon- niuii.igi.^ till* a\im-iTujin'8 lorutgn tuurH.rmiilijj,‘ll(*, who wuH Ui ihiH i.oimiry during lilt' rflx-dny nil'*', sull^fd for liotne iubt Sat­urday witIhMU Kratiitii'K L'nnirui'i, and the laUi'i' sayi< iliat It now luukH uh if hi* piotujMril ii 1[! lb off.

Il hiiH- i'uslnmnty for ('tMiuuJle tu.Kranii-r up rur hltt lour uliQUl ihti

IlDU'' of Ilh' aiiilUiiK slX’diiy rnt-e, bill when lie |iiop4PH4'd u i hi l-iminpr driunr- fi'il Tlu I ii.iniplon ill'll,iiH'il iliai he waul* i-d thu iiiiMii- guaraniiM that he nTulved mi IiIh prt’vioub trlpp. iLluuad, and HuU If hi- didii'i gf'i prii’f Iju w<iuld slay hoinf'. TIiIh jlirmi' Is said to have been In the hi iulTboi htitid ot CoquettewuN obdurate in Ibe ^hihd, and. though Ihe nun hftd thruo lengUiy ronferenoe*, iheru wiw no .Meul'-nu'iit arrlvi'd at. Cou- i{Ui‘)li' de;iurtud with Mic undorstuiidlng Lluii If, iifter lil« arrival In Franco, he I’ouUl pit- IiIh way virar lo I'onu' to Kra- iro'r'ii ii-iTU.s, lie would l<T the hiiterknow' |jy cublf, uikI tlu-ri- is wln-re the mulli’r1M»W NlJIMlIrt.

Thf'ip le lo bt' ph-niy doing 3n the bl- v.u h* gaiili' ibito.ol Huh s*-iiHOU, and hiul krainui giniu lit' would Itav'p Htuyed for ihi' wi-rln’H 1 hamiilonshli*H. which are to III hold in Parin, Ih' had been offered lu Ufr tertiiri frotn ihu wlu'ul and lira t*on- ocin that umploj-ai film u year ago. and hu expt'L'.tfd n inui'h heUvi «i‘UPon tlnan- p|al!y. ThP knowl'‘dgi» of t1il>4 M thought lo have fiuiiiiiiad Coutinelle In bln Ktand. and Home of NiMnn’r'ij ft leiulrt wnnii’d lilm lu go 118 a' t'lui' larioe. the name an Hobby VValihour duis. and tjook hie uwtj races wlih the irm:k uwiaTH. but Krurnur does not likr!: thin Idea.

WnniK Mujor Tn^lor llarkA Comjuelle Tnifl nnollier scheme on foot

whirh. in uU likelihood, bus something to do wlih hiw Kiand In the Kramer ense. For some llin*- he hue tievii negotiating with Major Taylor, the eolored cyclifil, for a trip to Kurope, nnd he has eien gone to Taylor'H home at Worcesli r,

In an i-ffort tn get the colored miin lo ride fibroiid this season, Taylor Is said to he considering the queHtlnn. us the FrjMich promoter has promtseeJ to lift tli4' negro’s suapt nHioii loi- bri^aklng Ills contrael 4>f tw'o y^'ors ago and to also drop Ihe dnTTinge suit against him. If Tiiylor ennsents lo ride there would not be H big ileniand f<»r Krufner, and If he doesn't FoLajU'dle w-lli jimbalily come 10 Kramer's terms later.

Amyrlrun rideifl in g-' niUv numbers will 1)0 Hi un on fijri Igti tl'ackR Ibls penson. Flovd Mio FarUin'i Is already In Europe. He Piiih ii a week ago to-iluv with Fnii- c|iieM(, am! he has a contract for four paced raiM's, the first of widoh w-Ul takeKlncc In F’iirls. Sunday. Jamisiry 13, when

e will have Hnnrv May^'r uk an op­ponent. if 'Mue” wins two of the four rncPH he will be given another eontrart for more rares w'ith l^etfcr terms. John «n<l Menus I-tedvll will also try Ihelr for- tum-a nbroad- They sulled to-duy to rUlo ns free lances, while tv«r T.awson, who Ik reeuperatlnp In CailforniB, will go abroad in Fi-hriinry

Tnleri'sl among local follOa«rs of the sporl will cen(r>' In wh.jt will be done nt the V'allKimrgli F'-ai'-l 'ITurk next sf-aMon Thai r;o-*‘N wdll ne h'dd llv-n !l l.« n i- 'n \ -lO- 10 orediiT. M;ifFarlan«l 'has T dd mmiv <>f ids friends that he would Ilk* u< bn’. ihe lo<m> track, but as \*1 >i'- notriegollatlons with n -a rlrs H nioemeckc, the ow-ner. th-aiyb It Is expected tb«t h« will when he lonrnr whnt foreign riqe.r* he OHM lecuP' to «n-.me here. ’'Mac" 1« sidd to he worUlfiE In rorifuncilon with P. T. Powers, who will likely open Mfidl- 5on Sipnire Fiurd* n for HoriJ^rueea. and It Is 3nKt possible ihM w henM acParland ret'irn.s from Eompe he wH” )rlng EHe- gufird the new world’s ehfimplon; W alter Hull, who was his partner tn the slx-dny race und KmM Fimlatn. th^ Freitcbrnan. with' him. ThiH group, with KiAmer and l.iiwson. would furnlBh great aport. Jack rhapm iin. the promoter who mnnages the Salt T.oke Palace Crack. Is qIho nfter Vallsbnrgh for next aPaeon and bfi has written to lllDemecke In reference to tli' m.ilter.

Johnny V<M>rh#la, the "Ulttle Wliard,**■nd Jimmy Smith, the '^Peerldi* Ort*/' two ot the grextflit bowler* Jn thi* epun* try, h«ve been matched to roll * i*H«» of forty.five game* divided Into thf** pfr- lodi of fifteen game* each, and the one winning the odd number, or tw enty^ttirti of the game*, will be halted ■* the Ufi« dliputed champion of the la a t . ' a t ie e t t

Newark tana will hah with deHokt the announoament th a t Voo.rhela and Smith will reii one of the aerlee on the Tuxeite alley* In thl* cFty. One of the terU i wiM . be rolled In Brooklyn and the other In New York, but on what aiiey* thay wIK be ahot has not been definitely daoldetf^

Efiert* to bring Voorhel* and Smith to^ gather have been under way for aome time, but It waa not until laat night th a t ' the meit were aigned up. 'Whila the d a tif ’ oh which tha aerie* wlfl be rolled have \ not been ntm ad, the article* of agraement ^ call for tha man to olaah before they meat 74 In the Oreatar Naw York Individual eh«ni'>' plonahip,

Voorhela and Smith met laat year In a match i t r t t i on th e Superta alley a and Smith won. Voorhela contended after the match th a t It Viaa hot a fair teat, «« ha rolled a flftaar^-poMnd wooden ball, whit#Smith u*ad a ecmpoaltlon aphare,

The match will jiratabJy eraata more tereat than any bew llhf oentaat aver halft '1 In Ih* Ea*t, and local apoHa will be great* iy pleated b eo aJii Of Ihd fac t tb i t on t 'of th« aerie* Will be rdllid In thia cKy»

-------^ ^BAHK ClERJg^ l EAGtlE, .

O vonr* B ln K n lc h to D r» „ T h ro « .S t r a U h t Gam** tv tiM F IR cl- '

H r T ro a t F Iv * .eteady rolling by th* F ld tlity Triw t '

bowlar* ena.bt«d them to win thr«*. e lralght g ^ e i from the O rtage ftv* In 'Hio Ranlt ClOflts' I.<su«uo on the Tusedik ■ oUeye la it night. The ecoree;

PIDBUjITY, I ORANOB..'Blegina ....206 212 ISHIlilita ...........I4g 214 16gBh.nn ......144 18.1 liBi((.tOIti ....... 148 1*0 ISl 'Gowning ..IM m ITTIWIflie, .......1J4 IM IW 'Dyire .......llW 16« OmiWimalne ...166 IW ITT -IVlalierg ,..12« too totlHmlth ..........1B6 IW Ug

Totu!* ...voaikw 8f»| To(al3 . ..TOO 864'8<l']

F id e l i ty Coittlng; t p . ^Uy rolling two mirle* thin week gad. X ^gigterlng a clean sweep In each, th* - Idellty bowlere, of the Bank Clerk*'FI, , ____ _

Leagutt. have advancetl to third plan* I the li'iigue race. The learn etauding *nl Individual averagee follow:

T ra m g ta n d lu g .W. I* Av. H.B

Kcileral-Kseex .............. iBi 3Went Blde-Biute........... 31 6Fidollly ...........Union NnliunatOrungv .......................... 20 13 IM W»' ,German Saving............ IS 20 733.38 682Notional N ew ark.......... 3 27 (S5.29 TWMontclair ..................... 4 29 886.17 761 ‘

In d iv id u a l A verage* . '1*6G.

Shaw. Federal-Eseex.......... 37M.-ra. U ulun.,........................ U 1TS.36 212.K. llclnhurg. Fidelity......... 37 174.20 34* ,(lWllllamH, IN-deral-Ksee*__ 36 173.12 JK:--liyiee. Pidnllty.. ................... SO 173 5 "lilgglh, F Idillty .................... 33 172.20Snilth, Orange....................... 3.S 171.9Wllllume, Orange.................. 83 162.18Venneulu. N ational.............. IH

822.6 784.16

.. £1 16 828.13 lb3,j(

.. 20 40 724.17 WS.a......... fmi

Av. U.S. ).1S 34*

'22T ,n r

W7.W.'..^.. . . . . . . . . . 27 l«.iDowning, FTaellty........... . 21 IM.ITHIHz, OruriEfi:.Downing, ..............KaypH, iTnIon......................... 80 164.28OrPiiKOP, \Vp*( Hide............ 34 164l^uKr, \Vf*al fildp.....................1!7 I6fl.l7'ITiilhpr, L’n lu ii ., . . . .............. 3 3Wi

m199lGS-««

KlHi’hor, Ft*dPral-E!<KPX...... 30 IFiS.iifl II2S jpWT__ LS4.1.. ’V, Tr.kl -JM ‘JA. V........ 3J irii.26 324.- iwuo

IVpw, tv ext Hide...AdarnH. Gt'rrnan....................Pprubarlon, tVent Hhle....... 30 J58.i

- ... 12 l&tl.l... 83 i:i3,4VrtlL National.

rtM2kP. (.b'rinah.................Hhatin, f'iib'Uty.................(irlnune.. VVtat Hide.........Ilawnrlh, Eederal-Eaiiex. S. floviMul, Moritclair.

Ii37'^' 319 H

i^ .'a SM jt152.10 19» ^ .161H 234„ilulXS fflO 2O, nuvvini, ................................ * TTiadu*.

Davt*. N ational...................... 24 151.2 2W w27 160.11 m27 149.3 310'Ji

EOCESAN UNION LEAGUE,

SOUTH SIDE TOURHEY.F l r a t W a rd , R a lv e n a l a a d B ra n c h

B ro o k F la K o lg b f* S g llt w i th H oaor* B v e n .

An even break woe made by thn F irst •Ward*. Universale and B raneh Breoka In the Bouth Bide Five-man Bowling Tourney on Kletner'e eUey* last night. The eeores;

FIR ST WARD, I UNIVER8 AUE. KugMmaim.. 12! Bolton ........is?Bennett 148 Dreyfuee ....... 179GlMiehmaila IHHKennlng ................173B. Kugleimiin... I6| Crtqul ................. 144Clark ........ . I ll Btlen ......... 176

Total ................. 828UNIVBHHAI,.

Bolton ............. 161P rey fu ss ................ 147K enning.................173Criqui .............. 114Btlen .................ITT

T otal TitBRANCH BROOK.

Casey .......... 141B nglrhardt : , . m. 116

T o ta l .............. T«l|B R A N C H B R O O K .!C * « y .............. . "E n g le h a rd t ........:W ^gh . . . . . . . . . . .P a AH eO o lre .............

T o ta l . . . . . . . . . .F IR S T WARD.

Bem w tt ....... 168

IiiMlIIxitra W in T w o Oof o f T b ro e Onnirfi rvom at, ro lo ra b n

P in K n lg h lN .Thr InstlUite five took th<‘ ofirt gsimr

from S(. Columba bnwhTK In Ui** Dfoc^'ann Union Leftgue on the Tuxodo rtlloya last Bight. The fjcorea:

ST. nOLUMBA. i rNSTlTUTK.O'Hrlen ...190 172 ITO Bullly .......H'4 166 l.}».... ^...iSft I52!j, rtighJan.lW !PfJ 188 Murphy lOE ..162 !« SOflRyanTulteUnlhnn

1 too 'J16 Kem I 161 tTNjlCoffhlan

ITlt 181 ITO .Ills 107 206

TolBln ...676 ass WMlTWI* ...,097 HWi 618

LE GLISE TOURNEY.Tmxedo Cnlfa R o ll In F o rn i an d Ol*«

po*« rtf tli« Coinin«^relal find A rrow Plvo*

The TuxetJo Colts defented the Com-* mrrcml and Arrow team* in the L« Gllse five-man bowling tourney last night. fHe CommcretalB broke even by defeating the ArrowF. Th^ acorof’

COMM ERCIAG., J TTTXEB® -COLTg,^C Naler.......... 13SiOwens............ . 176I. M iller.............. 187IBank*............. ITSH. Miller............... 136 Bermann...w endel...................HSlGebauer...,.........Schlegei................ 178Downe.............. .

Total..................™ Total..................TUXEDO COLTK ARROW.

Owens,........Banks.........Bermann....Gebaper......Downs.......

168Kunkle.,, lUlVan D o rn .,,..... . 262 Cavanakk..........

l78Keppler........ ISBlOgbhaHL.......

Total.........COMMERCIAL.

2411 to t a l . . . . . .........ARROW.

'C. Nail r : . M 3 i K o n ) ^ , . '.L, M i l l e r . , M l V e n D w n.............H. U 2ICavanagh..,.„.„,weniteL.... . . . . isojKeppitf. . .S ch ieget.,.'..;.^ ,,. ]75iGebliard...<,....;:i

114

•itei TSK

BuohlBr. l-nh)n,.LIrinHton, tin io n .,.............. -(Jordan, Oninge..................... 3S 148-81Lu UulsHop. M ontclair....... 9) 148.1LHutcnnUigcr, G<‘rm an ........CTI^al. ijf^rmnn........................ 30 144-8McCloud, Orungo......K. ftos’crnt, MontclairIMi'klng, Ornngc..........Wlckaw. Orongc...................... 6 139.1Howv. M oniclult...................HhiIx', (Jennan. Gardner, Niitioiml.

MmiW .V-

146-24 187

14S.1.6 1ST' 141.32 ISl. 442. B IM

iTl .•»( 16312

•J7 131.18 m

JR. 0. U. A, H. LEAGUE.V alln b n rg h en d 'W ard T eam e Seoro

T rip le V lo to r lr* O ver th e Mun- vs ro r* a n d N ew ark* .

Vull»biirgli and W ard Cinincll bowlere carried olt Uie big share of honor* In the ^ Jr- O, r . A. M. League on the (Uford . ' iilleye laal night by seiiVlng triple vlc- tiirli-s over the Monroe and Newark Coun- J ells' five*. South Orange won the odd giiniH from llie Hobart qiitntPi.

T h r e e S t r a i g h t f o r V n l l a h a r g h . -nTho ViillHburgh roller* hit the pins In ''I

giKirt shape and experienced little trouble // In marking up a clean sweep over the r Monroe pinners. The Bcores: ^

VAlIJlUraOH. I MONROE. .1fliaek , ai6 t n ITthKanillc . . . 11*1122 IM.UiMtaim .190 164 184(Wihw-rUi .122 140125 '. n. hoh ... 142 177 1661 D-nthlgh .. 123 H« MlUweri .IWt 181) HIM I'riflisim . 216 ITT 167 AUi'hk - ..1.91 139 1771 Itl.'li'Uscn 120 127 1 ^ ^

T 'lsls , .K7(t *47. KWlt Tn(*i» .Till 714 64T -T r i p l e V l i - t o r , t o r W a r d * .

A Clean sweep wns tniido h.v Ihe Ward howling five over Newark I'omii’ll « com- - hmutlon. The Newark |dn knigius were * nimhtc to find ihe groove, wldl-- the VI iirde mimed lo loiiig the idns over -ii will. The .t | scores: '.is

WAHU. NhW.VHK.McElwaln .Mo 174 162 J. M'". 1 (Tom , lot tlo 19.11 f, Mnin.i 8. ItcKI'e. H7 I'll ItHM'lerei.n A. Orooi . 17.11 1711 |ili| IieinMeKt Taylor .....2ir. 1.".H l;1|H»e.i"' ■

-mr 147 107 .1111 164 108 M2 146 11*

.140 126 ITI . . 73 14t

Total* - .9211 4ti7 kill T ifils . .1**1 IM4 TTI tlild Gniiie fo r kniiih Ora'ogte.

South Orulige reptiiie.l two ganit-S oqt of three frotii th.' rinhori comWnattcin, ■Tile Boiilh Onirge rnilni.t had a wolk- over In tlK) first mflieb, when the Hobart* ‘ were shy iw-o ol ilicir rnUer.9, The econw: *HOIiTH OIlANdK. 1 HOBART.Kink -Ijl D'l 141 Ludslirr ...llT 116 9# EiV'lVlelnUII H" II’' I'h'well ....166 IW 149 IJ V'hl'Fprnl'llI N1 1211, MougIftfiS . . . . . 144 tar1 viil'Bfniati i‘2S 11*1 Conover ........ 147 IlKOardner . l.VO 192 H>2 Ev*n» ......139 182 172

T42 76* 7411; Totml* ...411 747 9t» 'TtHfilP

BUB TOURNEY.

N enninnlH an d n a r l tw o p B 4 ia ln tc ta lllsp o n r n f Ih e BnU 'W rtg h t a n d

L a fa y e lte T ean i* .In Ihe Bub Btiwilng Tourney last night le Newmanlna oaptured a close game

from the Bob W rlgtlt five, while theDsrkwood quintet w as victorious over the Lafayelt* live. The score*:

NBWMANIA. BOB WEIGHT#. 'fSchott ........ nU C arroii .............. 163 u\Hoch .............. . lid HA w .................... 21* .',vOsswald ........... . Critchfttt ............ 161 .'E rhard ............... P lereth .............. Iffl .Loick ..*.D*v*> 1ft Tlejsctj,. 157

Totals .............. 863 Total ........J.... m £.[DARltWOODS. LAFATETOT

135Hornicb *i4*...., 1«! Nobel ......... ........Naylor ............... 170'strum .............. . j a '1-K ora ........... 171 Diewer ........... .E oIbs ................... 167 Htget ........ 130U S ^ 'Young ..........7... ITS Gfleil ...................

Total ................ Total ............... 649' tS.;

1 0 PIT TN.I tWEO.O n ly g p e d a lio ts in t h e S t a t e w ith

p r a ^ a e lim ite d s tr ic t ly to t h e .(tta* , ^ s e s o f m e n , a n d all n e rv o u s a n d u r in a ry d is e a se s . . ..

1 1 0 0 r e w a rd fo r a m a a w a ftiil to cu re . ' * . * -

I t t M M O Il NST.V JO y*ar2 in oaa piaoa. -'r*-'

m QkANGE $T., NEWARKICM oHcli HisB alTHtlt'.

/; ,C ,V.: j A, . ;v

r l K

Page 16: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

r i i• NEWARK K m m ro new s, SATUBDAT. ja n e a b t 5. Iflor.

D B A T H f t .

_i ui4 IMrIte A4US1, ««»4 <V teM t *Hl bo priTii* from

n S i w u>-4av (teturtar). o°n>"' **3mmm3u1 owon.Mt t« rilrniooat Oowotonr. rrlondi

I aoonvt tbl* OBir Intlmotion.UWT, Winijm H,

____ a motltha runorU_____ ___ lata rMWanoa, Dimialt art-iRloavIlla. trpion Coonir. »■ J-- ™ F. Jaauarv 1 at *• P- Hala'lfai aWa ara iBYliad to atuAl. Intarmant

1 rrite r. January 4, !»{?■ 'imothr CMJimto 4nd mother Davm. ^

I UFora R r U u mJ4«no*. N«. I l l 5 ^ 2iUftiMiL ofi •L£:15iWh of tho Holy Ctowi. '(fhc.ro

i 0WN’*-O« ;«i«fcnr 1Ifft

aaT DanI

'of RMuiain'Vlli ba offaraF* (or E of bar aauU Tntarmatit In tba Cft r U t b a Strty Bapulohra.

UBIOPHER JU Tottanvllla. Slaton , on Friday, January 4, ISM, Mra. Sarah rtauphtr, tOMhor-ln-law o( Rav, J. *. in har Tttb yaar. Punaral cn Monday, rr T. at bar lata raaldanca, Broadwar and ' arantta. at l iO P, M.

Jannarir A, ISOT, at tha i-m-law, r -, Palrlcli,.----------- ■coanorao. NoOoa o( (onoral

if h b ^ - V la w r Mr. Oaoriiia Sollar. "(n K W avanua, Palrlcli,. huabami of Ino

Cams, widow of runaral Sunday,. OAMP-Mary *. Da

frnaaa, asad TO yaara.............anarr (L lOOT. at 1:S0 P. i(„ from Hothlaham

I at Bloodioodi, OB tha trolloy Una ba- Ilahway and WaalBaM. Inttrmont at

hSiiaEtMOKlrr-On Friday, January 4, WOT. at I IlEla raatdanoa, »o. esS Boraon atre«. Har- i Ja., Salorad kuaband of Chrlatlna Klbracht I TaNW). aid am of Harmon Sr. and tha

Mat? B l ^ l i t , ayad 40 yaara, Jtelailvaa fittdi, aiao.dsarraahara' Union No. 13«,

•Jy lafitad to atljnd hU funarai on „ faiiuarv at la o p. M. Intarmant iMdIand Camatary,

#ABDK»Il-*t_IrvlMton. N, J-,TT, Adallna X., niaow ■r, tn bar Tad yaar. nalatlvat and tricnda

saaUulty Invltad to aitaml Ina funarai I at WHddanoe of bar dauabtar, Mra, lia. i t Mapla av an ^ lrvlnti<,n. h.

O A R D I OP T B A N K A .Wt harawtlh dailra to e*sraai our moM

kaartfaU fiailiudt to all our ralatlvai for tha mu.ny kind (tKisrtMtonb of .lyrnpathy and tha ttftby beautiful ftoral irlbutea extended to u* In the recent bereavement of our dearly n«- Jov*d irtf* and mother fiedle Nowlon tne* UdLauabMn); iDMlal tbanke to the fenile- man pollbeirerj for their kSrtO ■ervteoa. Rev. Mr. O^erhart for the oomwrtlni worde oi condolence and funeral iJirector Joenua Brlerlev. for rromW and MR. ISAAC HBWTON AND BROTHUR AND

SISTER,peamlnr It Impoeeible to thank in Pfccn.

we take thla moane of eipraealng our hfart- (alt. thetike tu the many friend* for acta of klndftifee and sympathy ehoaii at tha d^eth of Qeorke Morpeth; to Hartaliora BenavolentAaaoclfttnm. Kartihorn Ho«u »..i.mi>eny andployo* and il.e DHJon A. 0. for UaauiJfivI floral offarlnaa; to the Rev. Mr. Knox for words of ootnfon and Jam** Brlerley for eailafactoryTutltA*'MORPETH AND PAMIDT. HARnD

SON, N. J ._______________________

H ELP WANTBD—MEN.

D M D BRTA K B n^A Ut-AHii,

UKDBRTAK&RS AND EMBALMERS,• MuJbariv a t

Rctwaan Walnul and franWln itr*#**-1?rmerlr with the late J. A. Lo<an.SMITH A SMITH.

BueceMor* to J. A.UNDERTAKERS AND BMnALWCIlSi

Fine LJvery.Tel. 158. W4 Droad *C.

(IIKRRAL (H7 Warren at.

A STALEY COLBj DIRECTOR "

BRAXTON'B funeral |«rlora. M ■phone <1132; embalming; coach**

chair* to hire ____________

AND “'fcMBALKKtl. T*l. 1118 Pranch ^ » o k-

Court at. and oamp

January • Hownril

January Ai - n Cemeteryt

TtW. «t i-p . M.i t bi'pltnton '

ui Bunt Orniyy. ™ ItiOT. W iird B. GIbhIni. Punrtnl (htn murulnc from Churrh of t^ r

l«in of Chri.tlitn», Bum Otnny*. wbert-,__ J of luHlutom WM Oflorod tor tho ropiioo

f hl*mul. Iniormtnt in gi. jFihn'i Comotory,

jC jit Onmio. Jonuury 4, IMT. Pottu. fVoiw O t b w t tuiiioB i-

niiaio of tho f»ml!y nr* rMSectfulIy to aatond bar iuoarai fir?m her latn

Ok. MoriM Mkin owmi. Ornnm. Mon-. Jm a u r J, »« * o *"** *• “ v “Julm'o Choroh, whoro u Hllb M»« of

MB' Wiu b* Oftorod tor tho rtpoi* ot b « totiirmoni tn tba., Comobary of lh< «o.y •«*. 1BjilMO-On Jintiory, 4. IWT, P»t(lel(

' Ftost Mm of TorWbo* »hd G .^ t ln *SThynn). Fm «4i twt»«iMbh *1-_.«m d im u ', rtildatioo K<t ■> Wortb

rtoHti otjoot- Tnnirmobt u,. th t oiinotiry bo Holr .Bosutobro. ■ ;

' lUlttl/K IK-On January n, 1M«, WInKrail ' tiulltOB IBoa CottaJtat, pbolOTad widow of

A Uuilltaill Butaidnoi uidr fijoado an. luoKM ta. attond THO fuiOWl ftom a ot bar «i-1o-ta>, Jabh Murity, .I otroat, m Monday, Jantityy T. at S:TB ta%.''Jamoa'o Clurab. wbora ai High KoauleiB «tu bo i^onb- for dba ropoM

IT owl. tolarmonl tn ikb Comatary of the lUpWobfa. ' ■ ■ ’ ' ■ '

JanuaJp i ; 1»T, Mary__________ __ ____^ SiHwIicUali. ■Itolati™.E S ad tr lB u ln i the itoeooaed syeAlBdly tnviwd ‘‘' l a altoM tho funm l from bar lato rtaldotur.

Mo. I ll Boooitd a tm t, Harrlan. on .'Monday, i tm u t r 1, at a A. M,, tO'Unty Cnoio Churrh, Hbopo a .TlMli itaao of Raiulata will b« oRt'iw,) ;foo tbo toioM ' oChya.aoul.' Inurmrm ift Fibo OoaototT o t tb« iWblX ' ytupldbro. ■

iT lW . Thot4«i” 6alovcn wjW orC T 't'e ; anon ocod 41.. yoara ItolailToa and

___ija ara nopMIfutly IbvttaS Jo attand thobnaial from her lato rtoldaftoa. (4 Nura-

'Flity 44roat «b Sunday. January t . a l.J I*- M.! XMonlnobt to Falymount Comolary,'.‘1 tiDn>iMO-f)i) mtitiMair. FnWbary ». .mot,

'AMMM h . Hnpplnt, afod «T ywin and 4 wmtiba. lUlatiToa and frinnda a n reapoct fully teytiad to attmd tha funarol mp.irei at hi.

p '.la ta yaoUMnaa, No, 12 PonnuylvanlB nvanno. on K SatiMBT •vtolny, Jahuary t , at 1 o’clMle, In-

'OOriDOBt at tho couvatiJinba of tba (anitlv.January », MOT. Mary, alrn

Huahn. Rsiallyra and

JolOI tVEBLSrjFORKlIin. ‘Phona M.1J BranchbX i. indStaVer A ambalmer, HOP Orunpa m.^ WILBUR B. WHWB.J3T Cllnl^avo., opp. BllMbalb. Xol, aM.*M. SKINNIBR, uodartakar andainbuiintt.

No. 2l4^('1li,tnn_a«. Talaphon* tra,T, _____D prirLBART, tiuiarul dtraotm, ambulnwr. I t

Ru.«ai an.. Ban nraoui, Tal. 2!t2t f _____Jo’h n H. BROEMEL. TOrNTOALmRetTPOR,

NO. N|0 yy.BPT UT L. P ' ' ...........'PHON10 tbia.T,

M O tlM N pjaO O IM .^HQUBNii«r^OCiDli.''"

tcouomlM on mournini apparal by allowlnf ua Is dya tarmanta, althar in load or uniform, (utton, wool or alifc. with or wltbFjul trimioin* i roads iBlo a bnuttfol teat blaohi no rlpplnii of aaunia; all work tuarantsad; olaanlnii dnast rotaptlnn and baH drarota a apsetally. Tha^Ar- ouda Dyalny, Olaanlni and Parlalnn Laundry. Broad, - Halny and NewMain olBea and taotory Oraiwa,

fti. 'Fhona 4145Jh pbona «4S2J, East

9TE1D IN 24 HOURS AND DEI.IVIEBED BY ,. BETpR’s o i.eanino and DTETNO XAPLI8HMBNT, Bl* PERRY W .l OPEN

CBMBTEIItBS*TMit BVERCIRCSN CEMETERY <orf*n1«e<I

IBW).' Nfjrth BfoBd it., between Newark and BllMbeth, upp«j' ro*J to Bllsabetb; beautiful irDundi; moderh equlptnent; lot* UA upo exih or partial payment!; trolley* marked '*Main llrte," evenr III mlaulea, pi\e* entrance, fare A •anu. HENRY M LOOKER, eupt.. BUaabatfa.

AffWBtBaAGENTS-Wl will niBk4 yo« ‘ .P T S S '- 'aM fr ■Ive you a aplendW aull of cloinaa ev«y ninety daya, *hlarge your picture free and p j/ you a aatary of <AC per month and ^ trtv»i jna expeiieoi. wHh our check for ^affaaed, 14J uke t-rdtrireliable portrait houee In .“■JJ.toiS**will be iruaranteed. Addrew R. D. MARnst*.dtparttneiii 6C2, Chicaao. 111 _____________XoENT-An unuaually favorable Proflt-

able arransemer\t will -bo mad* enerteilc man for and vicinity for the m I« of we furnlib adveriMlng and Inqulrlee

connect with a wide-awake. man. lU’HR BROTHERS, OOU Flatiron bulJd-Ina. Now York. ___________ ___ ____ _AOENtS^Gsi tump, with dftachnhlc b»*‘'[

nnd Pooksr; lamp uialtM It. own got; 'U“al» clm-tnclty; hs.ier licati any f®'’”' ■. “ ".f" cook, nnylhlng, all three os.t one cent dally, booklet free, olvlng wlioleaala prtooe, “ ““ "-J" Co 12J Uberiv et., Deparlinant 13. New York.

H E L P W A N TK D -M B IL ^

HBIaP- • HAPOOODB.__ *BT Broadwa;

CUBRICAL.-Eianiu Hoteli ll.SDO; Dana cior». tu*’ * ■VtmO' MhiTh WOO aad m*at*i stock clerk, dniga. fw . link clerk, crockery or deparimeru II.SOOI book-keeper, crockary. |l.»w. boon

>rokeraf«, twd-

a g en ts g e t busy .secure the exclusive *elUn| rlfhU In your

territory for Xclabyfar. a U'C*nt artlc e that aelle tn every homo and pays the aseol ITO P*r com. proflt. Addreaa The E. 0. Company, Box aB7. Rrovldenc*. R. I.. Department A.

uk cl .W)0:

New York Clly wante man for offle' P°altlon. lIKti fudd opening with another com*™ tof nuin with eome buaineae *iperleiici|»i»'

UESIQNEBS-Qao llitufee. |J.** a™ up, rolling mill inactainery. net Iron nun ataai,''DRAF^MEbf^AroWtmUU-'a'' etruciural, according lo abllliy,

MANAOBR-Largo lobbing concera. J*nd1'"« men't, women'o and chtSdren t unde^ear wantl elrlctly high-grade eiocull'i!, eaiair

**SALEBMBN-PluHlblng ait«il*l<,JSI'.It.MW; riwBng rontorUI, ceffee, Hudeon Rlrer Vnlloy. »l.3«l-»I.IkA*. eelee manager. Jewelry, (S.ot«»-»4,oiiii-

HUrERINTENDENTB-Publlc allon, |4,«00; Onarry, ll.fkkj, men j, he^y working glovaa, B,o60; eoft meiel n.fWU. Call, Wflto, HAPOtXJDB, SUT Broad­way, N. T. ____._______ _

AtiUNTS wanted; ceeh aalaty and all aa- poraew to men with rig. to liuroduea our

gueriiiitead poulfry and atock romeillea; leno for contract: we mean buelnam and furrti.h heiFI referenuta. O. B. BiOIJfIB CO-. Boa BTo. Hprtngfleia, I I I , __________

JEWELER wanted; young man with aoiM knowiijdge of owivela and Hiring rlnga. g w

lioelilon for right party; alro boy ‘f., iradr. Call WM, i T TATIXJH 4 Ct>. Liberty end Lafayette its.

Aal'lNTS—Make good Income eaally; n«r biirn^ turna common keroeeiie lamp Into brilliant,

portable, aluioiutely .afe light; big eellero; de. ^wrlptlon free, □aellgtll Mfg. Co., 261 Broad- ngether at. wny. Now Toric. _____ __AOENrS-Namc pletea, Blgna, numhera, rea.l-

able darkeal nighto; •»allJ,*f>l?L2L“.?'* eamplrs tree. WHIGHT SUPPLY CO., Engle- wooil, 111, _________________AGENTS—Wanted, two men of good »Plf»t-

ance to ecli aomethlng new for tha boll- daya C. F. ADAMS CO.. 8IS-S60 Broad at.ALSEMPLERS and bench handl on flire t^le-

tere; none but met. that underetand a«embl ^ amolL parla nted apply. STERLING MMARJ-R r.'OMPANY, 420 Ogdon et,, ___________AUTOMODILK—Ineitwrlenced men waflted to

learn Ih* automobile i huMneM; t>ul<i learning. Adrtresa Auto, Box H, New* omc*-ADIXRtTs INO IdAN; foofl commlaiJun. Ap­

ply The l*hor World, 8W Muntfomery *1.. Jersey r:ity. ■ ___

BtKCHCUrrSM)n \r^ , tfftoew or Cbtflf*

RIDGELAWN CEMETERY.Ths tarfWt and most fcsagtlful temutery !n

ihf PtHtu just opened. Valuable plots cab be bouiht at • Domlnal price. Visit the cemetery ai our uzpunse^troileys r» dlreoL Call, 'phons or writs tiO office, B4^Broad st.a NewaxiL' ' ARUNOTON "ciMKTKR f.

Offlcfl at pemetery. Arllhirton, N. J 'Phone ITR.[ieturceqile beauty of modem psrk plantWik.

wfth parpeiunl care without charpe; fteamy aura Ic Arllnfffon T>«nnt. then hv red trolley lo

i»2'* . ** i»4<Y4T<teR* ■yft<V ■■»»met:snf.

CEUKTRItT MBMORIAL9.GEORGE liKUWN C; CO. Ejiabllabed ISSft

Pesisner* and ManufMciurers of _ monum ents. WAl^SOLKUMP AND aBNERAId rEMETERY WORK Ilf QRANITE. MAIimaR AND FtTONR.

nTO-874 nellevlne av*.Opposite entran>^e^ PiaftSto-'* fvrnetery_.

BASS aiNOEU wanted for church choir In Plainfield, N- J„ M leading voice ^

chorus and understudy to the aotoUl; w ist ba sisht reader, wltb voice of low wnie nnd familiar with church mustn and furnish salta factory first-claw referonces; compenaatlon V per month and railroad exDeiiics.W MfClvrcHEN. 51 Rockview ave.. Plaln- flsirt. N J.nAivMAKEnS--Two compnlcnt

fiir men'a nnd toy* vulltpa, ona tor K'rji;'r i : “h rj,h '? ‘'rown'’" S i . p «s

ark. N. J.BOtlK-KEErKR to oiJ*n set of books and take

ffarni- of -fime for a manufseturtuf concern n th« wood' orkin* line; youna r.m d. AW„>' by IKtcr, In statinif salary, Elook-kfeeper, Box 52, Newsoffice. ___________ _________UIhVkTk^EPER-W anted, experienced mflu

book-keeper. Address S., Pox 1. News omceIJOY—liiiKlit hoy, long «tn.bha_hed ^whole*ul^e

l.t.use; American pniferreO BOijd a t figures: choi^oe cTialicf, Boa .N*wa offlee.

wrlw fair hanrl udvanc*. Addreaa

g( J lr f^ i^ r ia u p h tu - Hugh' - ‘Maniiii iBto romnbara tit twaufy (tockty, arn 'BgdHr taattfd to aitaiid tho funarai from h"<’ RtolWStoaM. .1*1 Kaarny

■ Oh fioMay. Jtmuaty T.c " - ^preh , wnsr< a .Solfl*nn llliht .M /.* m voddai’.will bo uffered tor the p'o-

___ f 0f iMT •otil. inlerroenl In the cemeterpfC tlH Roir StpiBlflhre.

K in o m jn ir^ January i, iWT. Fri^*DcM, IMtoitw* nf Frederick a^d Eitmw U Ku«bb-r,

jnnrs 2 inonth* IT day*. Reidtlvts jid* ays kindly Invited to attend i»\' Msrvldto Ht Hi» resl«st1es nf her P^r' B u t By>Y<g avetiu*. on SarWivr.

.5 ta jau u > -

IrtteruMnt In WuoJIbfiJ

PLOR18TB.H. C. BTHOBBLL A DRO..

FLCfRISTB.Fltiral daatgna and emblama taatctulty arrtngfid

at short nolle*.Mr TllFDAn PT,. NEAR MARKET 8T.

BOY--Brlaht yuunir boy wanted lo 4S*1*1furnlihlns nlort': go<sd reference. Call

flundtty. 10 A. M.. 112 Market rt._____ _lioY "^^tfd Iti a pawtihTOkrr'i buslnata.

(fcnerally usoful; hor.eit; must have rerer- enro. tv, pox 7<i. News office. ___ _IUj Y. ftboui UI-17. to learn

rhance tor aiivini^ement IIAHDT. M Tlrnome at.

cutting; good WILLIAM BTEIN

BOYS wanted, between the ye-&r%. hiqulre OTTO BERNZ, South 13th «t-

n^ar B<iuih Orange n v p , ___________

KlfCdOLUTIONH &NGaO»9CH.J. V. HARING.

Pummpr ave.pen artist lllundnator. 1T4

BNGRAVUIO AND PMINVIIIG,Bngllsh. «u, > plat*

7iTr, Broad *T,ENUIIAVED cudi. old rrlniltiK. ftreathead

PERaONAL.

I UailOO-OB Januiry 4, l«iT, JahW* E,, b*- ^HkSSSi InMaud of Mary Laird <n« Fennliui). AvC*hLtl*aa asd trlindi of llw droesard ara _ -ovllad to altimd lha fonm'al from

deno*. No. 661 FtgiT airaot, on 'January 7. at Idl# A. M. to flt.

, _gfSalan<rB Choroh. whit* a Mau n( litara will h* oBarOd tor vita rabod* of hta . mitrmeht In Mount Ollv« c«nelrry. Matar, H. T„ paptn plaaaa copy,

j LA TF^t |R»m(l*M. N. J., January 4, MOT. “ M. Law, huibtnd o( th* lalt Emma

r. In hU 66d yaar, Fuiwral forvlora I ^ lata raaldanca, No. 6fl Wataamlng

ga Ml Moihlat altornoon, January 7. “ rTtoOOk. Hatailvaa and frianda ara kindly ' ' “ to altahd. InMTffiant at Bloomflatd

illSWIKBWANDEH—Uuddanly.it Ora«n Bay, W S a r S i January 1 WOT. Edward J. S tn - j|l,uraDd*r, tormarly of Nawark.* ftORXDN-On January 4. 1607. EdWaiM S.,

■ hd of the latt Jan* Norton (nt« Reilly), tvf* and frlandi, atao tha mtroliera of tha Namt Bocitty and Brothtrhood of Loeo-

B » Erglnaera No. 6», aW invited to attaU'l funarai from U t lata reaWaoce, No. 1.65

louth atraal, oo Monday. January 7, at h A. S „ to M. columba'a ChUToh, whore a Botamn H igh M*m of R*i|Uiem wUI b* olfarad for tha Jtopoaa of hla aoul. Interment In the CMuatary

*,4g lha Roly Bapilchre.IRIBN—On January 4 tllOT. Thomaa, be- I huabaud of tha lata Boa* O'Brian, Notice

• funarai haraaUar.tXUBS-On January 4. tOOT. Bmll. t»lov«l and of Elliabath rreusa (nr* trrevL aura

m 5 montht 2 daya. at hie lato raildanca, uth Orang* avenue. Notice of funeral lar.

JtMCJtr-At Orange. N, J„ January 6. Anna Rodimar, aged 47 y4*ra. Fimeral

Kaat* oh Monday, January 7. at 6 F. M.,I her lata ratlJanoa. No.,61 Thomaa atnsat. nn*Dt Roaadala Camatery.

,I>MER—At Montclair. N. J., on January If, H*nry H. Romar. agtd tW yaara 0 uHUtho. 'kttva* awl frianda, alao ofllcera aad mam- J of Watchung Lodge No. 154, 1. O. O, F.. I United Brotherhood Carpenter* and Joiner*

-jal Union No. 42U7, Montclair, ara Invltad > altond htt funeral from hta lata reeldanoe.

IJ i Fonat atreai, on Monday, at 2:60 P. iMaMMAt la Roaadal* OtmaUry.

17. Wlll-.ajn ro-

____ _ _____ .. ____ __ ___ral from1 funeral parlor of Thomaa Cunningham. 147 ' i atriat. Orange, on Sunday, Januaty H, , at 8 o'oloek p. M., where aervfraa will be

' In Roeedala Camal

MUM. HAHAH AMEIJA LODEH (nee Re.-J), hiVlnit left my bod and board, 1 will not

be reoionalble for debU rontracted by„hcr.BEriESUB VON PTORUII LODER.

Newark, N. J,. January 8, lOM.__________

1 b a ^ Clark.

M L T W A N TH D -IO nLYOUNG HAN-W*Bled. to r«%l «itoto omes, «

young DIAO. U or to ?|f «*•; ,P*n*i*^*^i •mptoyiMiit to (mo who will Apply htnisslf and study tbs btuliwM. Apply to own hand­writing to V. W. VOORHEin* oppofltt Hrlck Church Depot, East OrongSa N. J.__________TOI;h O m en * about 16 to 20. to laahi to maks

spriTfgi lor in*FCbto«ry'* automobllas. etc; rapid advaoFSmsnt to ihoaa who Ison quickly. Addrsis CHy, Box tt . News ofBcs._________YOUNG MAN wanted. Id to 17 years of egs.

who wa,r)ts to le&m a bitslneos; this It ^good

^ H M j ^ j r j u r r s i b - w o i n D i i .HOUSKWORK—Wonttd at ’oliea. g gv«od girl or

woman u> auUt hi gtneral houiwiwoik* s 'll ' fim l^ of aduJto. (Ml MRS. Jj p.IM Greenwood ave., Esst Orange, N i.HOU5Eii^RK-Watitedr*f7r^ generil , r

work, with or without washing, girl, i-> r. borne nights; small family; anwii apariib*'nt-''>- aOO North Reventh ot*. second dour.

HMLP WANTHD-MBIf ANII W O W M .

handy m en wanled. used to working wUbtools. Apply at ioebou#*, I4lh near ur-

arige et., at once.

unity. Add v. Box 31.

YOUNG MEN. between 16 and 31 years, wont­ed; photograph businsM. UNDERWOOD A

UNDERWOOD, M5 Devon at.. Arlington, N. J.YOUNG HAN to assist In shipping dsp&rl-

ment; stale age and aolnry expeotod* Ad­dress Shipper. Box « , News offloe. ______YOUNG MAN, about IB or 20 years old, to

work In butohsr shop and drive a route. 044 Valley rd.. West Orange._______ _________YOUNG MAN for position as foetory clerk;

must be good at ftiures. Imperial Cutlary yWofka, Avondale, N. J-YOUNG man wanted to drive oab; must live

near by. 17 Greenwood ave.. East Oroage*

JLWELBBS—Experienced drop and pfeaa ban 1 wiinted (»n gold >owelry; no lath^ need

ply. SUHAPFEL, SCHANliAOHLlt & HB-,Jfji Bancher at. _______

wonted; Apply

TiRO.. 20

HBLP WANTED—WO UBN*APPRENTICE OIRLS; paid while leamlng;

alao waist trimmers. Apply 102 Market St

JiaWELBnft—Kxperlenced melter lUody poelllon the year rvundj

aCHAPPEl* SClLANBAOnBR 4 needier it. ___ _______________________ *JEWELER—■Wanted, a flrel-clae* lewclcf OT

14 carut emblem goods; men ticeil npoly. SCHULTi!. LEI«B 4 CO.. DlOliver i t ._ ______________________ ___JE;WELE3RS and atone aetiers wanted; atWdy

wr-rk. CHaS. K. DAMM, manufactuTing Jeweler, 620 Main eL. Uufffllo, N- Y-_______JBWBIjBRB: boy wahUd to learn trade. ARe-

THUR MAR90N. Inc., 23 Mttijiall et.ANlTOH wanted for apartinsnt-hous*- Apply Monday morning. S. LBSt’HZlM'eH A CO..

Tfi2 Broad sL______ ______ ______ __KNOiTCUTTER watiied: one with experlenco.

IJIFFANY A t'O.. 20 C«>ngresa st'

book-k e e p e r —la tnere a ytvung woman In Newark who understands double entry book­

keeping thoroughly and who wants * position. Address Book-keeper, Box P, N ^ s office.COoic-^^tedV a competent colored woman

as cook and taundTess- in a email family; referencoa required. 76 Lenox ave., comsr 8oulh Walnut at., East Orange.____ _______

I TOOKBi 126. 180; laundreose*. 126; waltreeses.tat) and 125; houseworkera, •*4»: cbombw-

I mold, 120: 3ft0 situations. Cali Monday. 76 Centre st.) Orange; con suit all.

HGUBBWORK—Tomnetant girl for. general housework; small family; good wages; wlllt r without Washing and Ironing. Call 113

South Grove at., East Oronga.______HOUBBVVORK'Ueneral bousswork; naat girl,

with good referenoes; must be good plain

DOOK-KEBa*ER—Competent book-kespsr want­ed: eltlier male or female: reference needed*

jtt;*irese tn clvkteper, Hex <D. NfWS olhgi*'.I.'.‘T'. (HflL— tn lored girl fr b< y, to

u Sa'Ui avLUMit kU>r- Cull ei..■•OLICITOHS wonicd, male or tomais, for

pure spring wbIct. In Newark and the Gr» anges; go^ coaimitkaicn and guaranteed salary- Addreoa K-. 3W Slate #t.. Brooklyn, N, Y.

cook* willing to help with Ironing, Fuller terrace. Orangs,

Apply T

MMFLOVUENT WANTED—UMN.BOOK-KEEPER and office satlstant;' wlda eg-

perlence; able lo aseume charge: wants po­sition. Address Wide, Box 50. News omce*

HOUBEWORK—Wanted, girl for general housework and cooking: ntuat have good

references. Apply at once. 62 Bouth Clinton St., East Orange. _____

BOOK-KEEPER: rtrGt-clais; eight years' «*• perience; wama posliion. Address W., Bog

New* office,

HOUSEWORK-GIrl for general family of three; no washing:

heme nights. loth at., city.

Call MRS.bouse work;

__.irefer her to goATERB, lift South

BOY-Germah-Amerlcan boy want* poaltlw In erchliecl'a office; furnish reference. Ad-

drsae Boy, Box 16,. News o f f i c e . _____ _BOY, 14. wlthoa employment. 22 1st st„ city.

HOUSEWORK—Warned. girl for Apply 48

generalWatsonhonotwork; family two. . . .

gvs., Hyde Pork, w ai Orange: taka Central ave. cars*

BAKER-Flrst-claae baker desire* position;Bwlas^lerman. Addrees Baker. Box 78. News

office. ______

HOU8EKBBPBR—Working housekeeper, to small family* to aasist with light bousswork.

sewing, etc* Call 85 Hawihoro* av«.. East Orange. _________________

CLERK—A thorough, practical double e m ^ book-keeper, honest and strictly sober, wants

olerical work: good roferenoes and moderate salary. Address Qompetent, Box 60, Newn of­fice.

girl for general bouM- famlTy; good reference

HOUSEWORK-Good work; two In fan*..,, ^

qulred. Call M Reynolds terrace. Orange, N. J. _____„

MA nag tJR-Wanted, larg^ lirsl-clHsa house of 28 yeora' standing, manufacturing a staple

line of goods in conatoni dally use, wanto a gitrtd B iiirw manage branch wholesal* b ^* ness; salary 11*800 per year, payable raonimy, together with all expenaea and extra commie- eloni; applicant must furnish goi>l reference and 11,000 cash, which Is satlifaclorlly secured. Addreas President, 612 South 6ih st.. St, Louis,Mo ______ ___________ ________________MAN—A leading manufacturer of hlgh-gi^e

penknives end pocket cutlery dealrea the ^ - floes of a thoroughly experienced ,7 *^ to tsk e charge of factory operation*: be strictly temperate and able to aucceisfully direct several hundred employ«- *pp^ to confidence, with references, to FENTON, 41 West a4ih at.. New York Clty ________ _

COOK—UPSTAIRS WORK—Wanted, two girls, one to cook, wash and Iron, the other for

lupaiolr* work; good wages: references r«:qulred. Call R63 Summer ave._______COOK—Competent, experienced cook; clean and

wllllnk; reference reoulred: liberal wages. Apply MRB. M. L. PATTON, 46 Unden pl.. Grange, between 7 and 8* ____SoOK-Ntat while firl a* eMk anil laundrMa;

one who ha* done general hootoworh pre- tarrad. Can S7 North IBtli at.. Beat Orange.COOK, waltrea*. ohambermaWe, nuratt. houK-

malda, 100 flrat-claaa altuaUonj; higheat wages. 86 Day at,, Oratige. _ ______

HOUBEWORK-Wantad. girl for general houiBWork, to conk, waab and Iron; njust

have referenoe; carfare paid. AM Market at.HOUHEWORK-Warlod. girl for gener^

houaework; no waablng; two In family. SO Harrison st., near Main, East Orange.HOUSEWORK — Girl wanted for

housework; sleep home. MRS. WRIGHT, 86 East Park at

eeneralA. W.

HOUBEWORK-Wented, girl or woman, who thoroughly undentubda general housework;

sleep home. 91 Jefferaon at.HOUfiEWORK-Compoteni girl for general

housework; small family; no children. Apply 92 Bouth toth It.* Roseville.

A io u irogeneral

MidlandORK—Wanted, a

Louiework ave., Montclair.

washing;irl for

124

-COOK and laundress; smoU famRyj good wofss; must come well rscommehosa. Coll

82 Clinton ave.COOK—Wanted, a cook. MRS. WILUAM SAYRE, 181 Ridgewood ave,, Glen Ridge,

N* J.COOK—Wanted, good cook and laundraas; Ger­

man preferred. Apply 1K> Avon avs.______ _COOK—Woman wanted a* plain cook In c»f«

kitchen, 4IMi Brood »t.___________COOK-Wenled, a corapelent cook. Apply 66

North Arlington ave. ________ ,

HOUSKWORK^Wnnted. a girl to osslat at general housework; German preferred; at

once* 10 Court at., city. _______HOUSEWORK—Girl for general housework;

no washing. Apply MRS. FRANK PERRY, 17 Crawford- itM-Clt^rnOUBElVORK-Wanted. girl for general

housework: small family: good srogoa. Apply Ml. l^Toapscl ave. ____

HQUSEWORK-Wanted, young girl for light housework; sleep home. Apply 216 South

lOih st., flrat floor.MorSEVYORK-Gin for general housework

ihree in family; good wage* lo right partv lU Shermun ave.

jl^^N-Wanied. a steady man for ""lall hotel.to tend furnace, clean up end gent^ral house­

work; must be obliging and sober; wages 118 per month; fare paid. Lock Box 2li HackeU*town, N. J* _______MAN ioi- roull aellveri;: Booil opportunity t >r |

one ajixloufl to obtain good ptwlilon; mu«l hiuve AI reference*. Address, with full por- | tlculare, Work, Box 58, News otilce.

'm a n ^ -ahted for hard and soft soldering; metal noveltlea. 284 Washington st.

M W watltod everywhare to iso* advsrtlalnj, card* Bjid dlalrlbute adverllatn* aemplea,

aalury m iwr wm*; B a duy vai*"'* aU“w- anev. unity Buppty Co-, daa* 2. Clllcaao.MEN KVKHYWHKBB. aotid pay, to dla-

tribal* clrrular*. udvertlaln* mnttar, too* | signs, etc,. no oanvaasing. 14UU National Aav Bureau, Chicago.__________________ _

CANVASSERB—Drug eorapany wants flrst- class nouse-to'house eonvatsers In Newark

and nekrby cilieo. P.iO. Box 177. _____COST WORK—Young girl familiar with cost

work and figuring pay rolls. Address Cost* Box 56, News office.CHAMBERUAID-Watiled. on experienced

chambeririald and waitress; smoU family. 84 James st. __________ch am berm aid and waltreas wanted. Apply

to 49 South. Munr, ave,. East Orange. N. J.I CHAMBERMAID and waltresa; white. 166

North Grove it*. East Orange.I CHAMBERMAID

Orchard si.and waitress at ISO

CHAMBERMAID and waitress combined. Sixth ave.

270

MEN—Good sjiay to men.• rib

BOY—Ouod boy wantpd at Bon Ton Tailoring Co.; gorxl ungps for the right boy. 9 Wath-

Ir.gton pi.. Euft OraHKC-_________lK>Y wanted. 10 to 18, lo assist

wngin; wBXes and hoard. Address r*oara, lUix H9. News ( . f f l e e . ________ ________BOY—Jewish hoy wanted In drug store

tunlly to learn the trade. AddressBox IW. News ofTlCP._____ _____________flOYH—strong boys wanted; itot under 44

iroTT Apjly HEADLEY & DAHMER CO.;Harrison. N. J. __ _____ ._BOY wanted In dry goods commission-house:

offire w«irk. Address J.. P. 0. Box IM. Now York a ty . _____ _____

, ^ p o rrug.

LEHMAN Brill and

THE gentleman employed by the Kleclrto Company who pun-hased a suit of clothes

at th« Guarantee Clothing Rtora Friday after-............. \VntHin klhdly call si _the stora.

BOY wanted for machine shop.MHOK. Uonykamper ave.. near

Kerry sts. ________ _ __ _BfiY wanted; good pay to good boy. SElF-

KERT’S Drug ?«tore, 141 Main *l . Orange.BOY wanted, to work a round hardware store.

Apply E. W. DECKER. Belleville ave.DOY-Strong bny; one with experience In ma­

chine shop preferred. 867 Bprlngiteld ave.

WILL party who wrfile letter April 2 to a Ur, Av., UrcHd sL Vigilance i.>immltlee, kindly

write Mit. W., who la In Ulatres*? Address P., Box 51. News otiloo._________ ___________O0NTT..EMAN who reiurtied card rasa found

In Sbubart's last night, please communicate E. G. di., Ji<fX Jit. NeiiaS office. _____BOARD*wsjiieiTlor a baby hy the day; must

be nearby. 157 Mulberry at,

Nowailt, JoButry 2, IW t ' iliin Hout. fTJehdt of fatolit .on ipgaffuRy InrttM t» atiend Ms funeral

B a tin rsa pcrotswal**FERCELL'S,

67T BROAD Rt.. COR. WEST PARK. ■ph o n e 2(»5J.

IMPORTED HUMAN HAIR GOODS: LARGE AHSORTMBNT and h a re SHADES; NOT fo u n d KVERVWHKHE.

ORDERS FOR gW'ITCHEH. POMPAIX5UHH, WAVEd, ETC., FILl-EI) WHILE YOU WAIT. ESTIMATB (,’HffiKUPULLY GIVEN. SATIS­FACTION ailARANTEED,

CHlLDllfCN’S HAIR CUTTING. PROMPT SUHVICE

SKILLED ATTENDANTS.Facial and Hcalp Treatments.

Hair Color! tig. iileaclilng.eharapooing. Singeing.

m an icu rin g .MAHCML WAVING

made a sperlalty by artlsis whose experlcmce and proflclehcy assure ati»olui« satisfaction. Luxuriously appointed individual lialrdreaslng bonths. lUied with every known scientific sj>- pi lance, give privacy, comfort and oonvonlent e.

uasg u era d e w igs o f a l l k in d s to HIRE.

PBRCKLL' 9.ffrr BROAD 5T.. COR. WEST TABK.

BOY17

-'VVanted, Hln.ng Boy to help In bake •hop; I week. Call at 82 Ast'>r st.. rear.

___ everywhere, to tacksigns, distribute circulars* saniplM, etc,;

canvassing. I'nlveisal Adv. Co.* Chicago.MACHlNTBTi"WaW^ ,.to Newark two

three tool-making machinists. Address, giv­ing ago. nailonaUty. experience and wage" expected. If satisfactory an Interview will be arfang^ , W.. Box S&. News office. __m a c h in is t s —Wanted, ffrit-olas* macblnlsta

on boring mill and lathe work; give refer­ence and experience. Addreas Employment Departmeni. Stanley Q- L Electric Mfg. Co. Pltlsiloid. M a a s . __________ __ _______MAJ’HINIBT'S h e l p e r - E xperienced young

man as machlnlM's helper. Apply Monday morning^ H. O. S. Engineering Co.. 2H1 High sc., city. _ ________MACHINISTS—Wanted, three firsUcla^s gen­

eral machlnlats; also mllBng machine handa. Address ROBERT AITKEN, Box P44, To-ledo, O, _______MACHINIST—Wanted, young man with alU

around experience on milling. ESERHARDT BRt>THER9, tW Union st ______ _ __Jl^CHINISTS—Several go<id men for lathe

work. y.LH A HAHNEMANN. Ave. A and Vonderpool ft. _____________MOi-DERB—Fitting jmoldtTS wanted on sntl I

plj'e lUlIngs. Address Fitting, Dox 9, News j office. ______ ______________ _MOLDBRB wanted on soil pipe flttlnga.

drex* Molders, Box 8, News office. __

CHILD'S NURBE—Wanted, a take charge of Infant ohild.

it.

young girl' to ^ South IGIh

HOUSEWORK-Experienced girt for general houBowork; must be a good cook; no washing.

236 Broad st. _______ _HOUSEWORK—Gin for general houaework

no washing. Call 69 North Walnut st., Bast O r a n g e . ______________________HOUSEWORK-Yeung girl or woman io do

light houaework; must be reliable. Call 295 High st. ______HOUSEKEEPER wanted, to care for man and

two children. Apply M Sherroan ave.. EastNewark. _______________HOUSB‘'^ R K -Y o u n g girl to aaatst with gen

ml houaework. Call 80 South lU h st. near 9th ave.HOUSEWORK-Nea’ girl for general house

work. Call at 3ft Verona terrace, East Or­ange. ______HOUSEWORK—Woman or fllrl wanted fir

housework. Call at 52 Bank el., hefor r . M.

DEMONSTRATORS wanted In Newark and Burroundlng towns for house-to-house work:

must be experienced, cspable and able to fur­nish high-class references; salary 19, with commUslun; permanent position; state experi­ence. Address Box 2ft4, New York.d em onstrators — Wanted, experienced

woman demonstrators to travel, Introducing I novelties and starting agents; straight sslary I and ijXpenaes: references required. Minton 1 Company, I&c., Rochester, N. Y.

d em onstrator—Girl to demonstrate new tobacco Hlrlpnln* machine; good opoortunlty

j for a huitlor and best waxes paid- F. O.I HICKS* 186 Commerce._________ ________

EXAMiNPm on tucking and lap* trimming;also hand sewers on shirtwaists. BEEHMAX

& FRANK, 18 Liwrence et.FACTORY WORK—Several girls wanted for

light factory work; steady employment. E. J. BRUOKB ft CO., North Uth st. and Park ave.t’llAAlE coveroiij warned, also girls for foi l

and power presses; steady work; also learn­ers taken. DIFF.ANY A C*0., 20 Cbngress si

HOUSEWORK—Wanted, girl for gerwral house­work; sleep home. First flat, 73 Sherman

,.B1A0E WASHER-Colorsd man wishes tuatlon as carriage waaher; experienced*

Call or address 2« Clayton at., top floor.ARlalti

CARPENTER—Young man, two years' experL snee, wishes position for carpenter work. H.

H, GRAHAM, Pnnipton Plains. N. J . _____CAFpKNTKR’V ouldTlkr»^rk Jobbing.

47 Market st.Apply

CHEF—Conk wants aliuatlon; clubhouse, res­taurant. hotel; beat reference. Apply J. R.

H.. 141 Acodamy st., Newark. N. J.CHEF—Bober, Industrlouo chef. undftretan-l‘-Oi{

his work thoroughly. Address Industrious, Dox S2, News office.CHEF-Flrsl-clssi

Brunswick st.chef wishes position. 65

COACHMAN, married man no family* wishes poflitlon, 25 ynars' reference. J- P. IIINEL,

898 lioldwlri ave . Jersey Oily.COACHMAN; marrlqd; highest references.

riresB 7ffa Parker fcl. ^DIBHWA3HER—Young jnan wants situation as

dishwasher. Highland and ntoomffeld ave.ENGINEER—Cortlsa engineer desires position;

experlenceil with compound and condenslnj engines; good rrferenoe. Addreas Enginesr, Box 03T, Junction, N. J*ENGINEER wishes sltuntion as engineer or

Arsmsn-i 16 years' axpertaace boiler* and. pumps: good reference. G. EDWARDEl, 122 Orchard aL______ ____________________h a n d y man seeks employment at any kind

of work. Apply J. PTENFER. gprlng- fialfl ave.. Irvington.JANITOR—Sober and Industrious man wmnts

situation as Janitor or watohman. or any work Inside: reference given as to character, J. L. PRUDEN. 68 Lafayette,JEWELER—An experienced all-around Jeweler,

able to do h|a own coloring, wants positloQ as foreman tn a small factory. Addreas Jew­eler, Box 40, News omce. __________MAN, well qualified to handle men In polish­

ing and bufflog line, 21 years experience, ]0 as foreman, also has fair knowledge of clipper and nlckvl plating, now employed as fore­man, wishes to make n change; best of refer- encea. Addiess C. L 1)., Box 4ft. News office.

HOUSEWORK—Girl for general small family; bring references.

housework in 42 James st.

MAN—Mldfile-ofied German man, sober and honest, wants work In store, factory or

»lwn. Address Work. Box IL News offlee.MAN wania work on n poultry and pigeon

farm: good, handy man on handling tools,Addi-OBS 0. B.. Pox 63. News ntflee. ________MAN-'BoDer, Hteady nun, mlddle-ageii. wants

aieaiiy position; reference. Addreea Rellabto, Hot 55, News office _____________MAN with team would like some hea-^ can­

ing. Addreas Team, Box !4, News offlce ___pLuMBpR; skilled mechanic: sober, honest,

reliable. Addrees S., Box 7, News office.ITHOl^TERER dealrea work at residences or

shop; references, Addresa 015 Orange st.

HOUSEWORK-Wanted, young white girl; small family; good wage*. U1 Delavan ave.

HOUSEWORK—Young while girl wanted for general housework. 00 Snyder st.. Orange.

HOUSEWORK—Girl reference required.

general housework; Ut. Froapeci ave.

HOUBEWORK—Neal girl for general house­work and plain cooking. 122 Clinton ave.

HOUSEWORK—wanted, girl for genera) houee- work, 130 North Centre *t.. Orange.

HOUaCW^ORK-Wanted. 1 housework. Apply at 67

plain

HAT BOX FINIBHERS. experiencM, wanted at once. The Orange Hat Box Co-. 6 and

11 MUchel) st., Orange.

YOl'NG MAN. lately landed, with tittle expe­rience, wishes poftition as book-keener or col­

lector. Address E. DILLON. 376 Morris ave*. Newark. N. J.YOUNG MAN desires clerical poelllon and as­

sist with nfflce work; gcod penman. .Addresa A B. auHl’YLER, New Canaan. Conn._______YOUNG MAN. ID. would like to work on ship

nr ranch. Address A. B.. 66 Maple st,. West OranKC,

E M P LO Y M EN T W A N T B H -W U .M K V ^

COOK-UPSTAIRS GIRLi-Two sisters (colored) want places In the same house; one os cook,

the other as upstairs girl. Addreas lOH War­ren at., clly.

IMPROVER or good hand sewer wanted, ply 150 Pomeroy ave., Kearny.

i'r ONER wanted, two days week; steady. Hawthorne ave.. city.

Ap‘

KITCHEN-WORK—Woman for general work in restaurant; good wages. FERKINB, 21&

Clinton ave.

COOK—Good cook, by day or wrek. Inquire 44 13th ave. ________ ___ ____

CHAM BERM AID-^'aniai a position at imce n# chambermaid; wages 122 per month. Call

107 McWhorter el.Experienced

want* work by the ^ yDRESSMAKER • dressmaker

11.75 per day: satis- Address J., Box tW, News

l a u n d r e s s wanted; st.

white. Coll 104 Court

BOY—Strong boy wanled st Travelers' Trunk Co*. 7th st. and Iflth a v e . _____ _____

POY wanted lo help In METER. 301 Hank *l.

butcher shop. O.

BOY wanted to attend plumbing shop. Wagenen st.

nOY wanled In drug store. 488 Clltttoii av*.HUTvHER wanted; man lo take charge of

meat market; sober, experienced man; good sages to right party. Address Butcher, careof Flainfleld. N. J.. Freos.__________ _b l a c k sm ith —OffOd wagon blockitnlth

hftiper wanted. WILLIAM WBIDNBR, Hot* rUon ftve. and Washington st-* Harrison.BUTLER and useful house man wanted; ref-

eTCticea. Apply 157 Harrioon st., East Or­ange, N. J- __________ ___________BLANK BOf>K finisher wanted. BAKER'

THINTING (T).. 251 Market st.

OFT’ICE AElSIST ANT—Wanted, bright* capable young man as office aasletfint In office of

la.ire rnsnufacturlng concjaro; stenographer ptL-ferred; excellent opportunity for the right party; address In own handwriting, staling egc, experience and salary, expected. Addresa | p. O. Box 3 5 8 . __________ _

^ OFFICE CLERK wanted by a manufacturer, |one of experience and ability and wcii recom­

mended; reply atatlng experience and salary 1 required. Addreas Ability, Box 78. News of­fice. ___________________ ____PLUMBERS and steamlUlePB wanted; steady I

work to the right men; also three strong boya j as steamlUtof's helpers, to learn Irade. JOHN : J. KAVENV, Montclair. N. J.

GIRLS WANTED-SETVENTEIEW TEARS OF AQK AND OVBHl GOOD w a ges : 11 PER DAT WHILE LEARNING; BRIGHT GIRLS WITH A f e w WEEKS’ EXPERIENCE GAN

NURSE—Wanled, at Home for Aged Women, ' nurse to take entire charge; one with ex­

perience and acquainted with the work pre­ferred. Call Monday, after 10 o’clock,Broad st- _________

faction guaranteed, offlco.DRESSMAKER* experienced cutter and filter,

wishes engageraentH out hy day. Address Dresstnager, Box S8, News o f f i c e . ______d ressm a k er wishes a few more engage*

ments; tl.50 a day. 14 Plum st._________258 DAY'S WORK—Woman (German) wlahes place

washing. Ironing or office cleaning. 4» atone

EARN

PEARL bu tto n driller and l»rer wanted;eiporience<J. National Pearl Works, Mul- !

berry and Murray sls-PATENT LEATHER varnish holler wanted.

Address P. O. Box 184.

Il.ao TO ll.ffO PER DAT*

GENERAL ELECTRIC CO., SUSSEX AKD 4TTB STS., HARHISON. M. J.

or iiforier wanted, ket at-

CHILDS'S, lt)4 Mar-PORTER wanted,

Bt\)ad st.one who can tap bser. 732

tnlanuaiil atary.g lELSON*-^ 'Jaium^ A lIKiT, Edward

d, beloved son of and Jane A,

son, aged 28 yaara. Relatives and also members of Artlngton Council No. O; V. A. M.. BQd'pride of AfUngton |7o. 173. Daughurs of Liberty, are m*

-VlWd to aUand the funeral iA hl* MU mldonee, t i t Laurel avenue, ArMi^oR, K. J-, on Sun* i^y„ January 6, at 2 P. M. Interment at ‘AntsfftoA Csfneierr-' SCHMALZ-'-Kntered Inta reft on Wednesday,. January 3, 1W7, at 10 P. M*, sRet lingering

,tU»et*. Marla fichmals (ae* Breldn, widow of GotUieh tjchmals, In her 79th yoor. Relatives and mends are rHpectfuliIy mvited to attend the funeral from the rsildeiic* of her daughter.

Jlrt. W. A. Cm , No, ITS South Eleventh---- ... «*..J... fA_.*ammw Jt 1U/W 4< S O ^

'Street, on Suudayj January ft, 11K)7, k\ 3 F .Intarmant In FaCrmount oemstery.* ITAGER—on jamuAry 4* iMTr Anna, wtfe of ihfl llUe RormonlB OMbSr, Ih her U2d veur. SdoilvM and itnfheakba frlfnda i f 4 ifiviled

ittstid the funernJ'M fl the rasidence uf grandson*ln*l*Wv Thooing J. FUJlh. SS

'aboUy street, np Bundi^ 'JtBUirr 0. at 1 F.- ..... ‘ ---- - ■ held In NuUevI. Ftlcmla ore

......... - __________ ..ulier; N. J.Fold reverently the wofrv honda

That tolled 30 long Md weiu And whtle our toAra pFopHnivr fnli

‘ It sweet (hankaatvlbp awsll. a ante within hiT FMhsrii house,

DOLLS' WlGfl. BOo. UP.DOLLS' WlGB, 30c, UP.

DOLLS' WIGS, ADo. UF> Mads of natural huuian bolr, to ail

sbadsoa ____A flner aAsortment caniuit be found

elatwhtra. _A pice Christmas pr«#enl fot mothsr

or sister Is one of our aU'ioni-baIr•witches; SOc. and upward,

ZlMMURMAN'SHair Store. 541 itroad st*. near Naw st.

During Christmas week we keep opea nights*

WK CAN SAVE YOU MONET.i'ure lead and line paint, Il.&d gallon; no

bcuer made ui any price; enamils, 15c*, Ubc.. 4rK'., 11)0., II.an, |2.5u: auins, Arme, lf»c.. Sue , due.. II. fl.75. for floors or furnhurv. try our varnish and paint remover, clcsna off ready for new coat.

A. C. GETCHIUS A CO*.niS m ar k et st .

Ct^TEH wanted; cxjkcrlenced cutter for fine iravellng t*agH and •"‘JH case*. Addreos. giv­ing exi>frlence* ene, etc., to Cutter, Box flo,

N^wb o f f i c e . ______________ ___CUTTER, experienced on ladles' waists; must

bn nrsl-clssa; good pay; references. KINO Wttlai Co., Sherman ave. and tUantoi^CLERK: muflt he quick and ftcourate: state

age* salary wanted; reference required* Ad­dress Accurals. Ucx 42. Na^ii office^CA lip^TK Il to lay flooring and flt saxh in

factory; state wages wanted- Address Car-iMtjtor. BOX 20, News office.______________ _

' CARi'FNTKHH—Wanted, two carpenters. Ap­ply at Icehouse. Uth st., near Oranfe st*. at

once. ____________CARUIAGE and wiuron painter;

wanted; also blacksmith's hetpsr The COPEC<VCOOK—Experienced cook (colored) wanted at

(il^gourt at.______________ ___________DItAFTSMAN—Wsnted, to this eUy (or a few

weeks» the Bpm'lces of a mechanical dtufie- nmn, competent to make technical working drawings of Biieclal shop tools and fixtures fr..ni original designs and pul Into practical shops the ideas and sketches of employer. Ad- dresa. giving iwe, experience and pay ex* pe«;led. W-, Box w.^^New* office. __DitAFTRMEN—Wanled, mechanical draftsmen

-I Hmall tool and Jig work; stale age, ex­perience, references and salary expected* Ad- dr\-*B Draftsmen, I^x 44, News office. ______DHA^^SMAN—Mechanical draftsman wanted;

young American preferred- Orange Iron Work*, corner High and Aldcn sts.. Orange.DRAFTSMAN-Archilecttiral draftsman want­

ed must be experienced in detail work. Ad­dress nraftsman. Box B, New* office._______

r e p r e s e n t a t iv e - Lnoal reprejentatlve wanted: experience unnecessary If honest,

ambitious and willing u> learn the business thoroughly hy mall; anlendld income assured; write at once for full particulars. Address either office National Co-<»rjerative Realty Co., 71® B. Athenaeum building, Chicago, or TftB B, MaD'Iund building, Washington, D. C.

OPERATORB—EXPERIENCED OPKRATOHB WANTED ON WILCOX 4 GIBBS STRAW

MACHINES: HIGHEST PRICES. LONG SEA­SON. KNOX HAT MFG. CO„ GRAND AND ST. MARKS AVENUES, BROOKLYN, N. Y.dPERATORS and barter*; also girla who have

worked on power machines, or good hand Mwers will be paid |5 per weak whlla lear^ ing' In a few weeks can earn from 97 to SO per week. KRAFT Pints Faotory. 38 Franklin sL, rear new eiiy hall.

OPERATORS.Twenty-flva aiperlenoad operator* on ladles'

tollnrsd want* *nd boy*’ blouaaa; good p*y; hour*. 6 to ft; half hoUdv on SaturOty oU tb* year. THE KING WAIOT CO,, flhennan *vs. and Stanton r t . _______ .

OPBRATORS, A lso <31BL8 WANTTO TO U5ARN ON CORSETS. THE rERftlS

BROS. COMPANY. 90 TO 100 SHIPMAN ST.

washing. Ironingit________DAY’S WORK—Washing and ironing wanted.

Apply Mr s . LBE, fll Fttirvlew gvo.DAY'S W'ORK wanted; cleaning or laundry,

^ Clayto n st.. third floor, left side.HOUSEKEEPER-A young woman, 17 years,

would like to have employment as a house- Indikeeper, at

Hungarian.reasonable inducements; speaks Address 163 Court at., city.

FORKWAN-A good poat- ■ irKlnSTEAM FITTERS’

tlon I* open for a llvo*. up-to-date working foreman; one who can Imndlo men to advan­tage and work to arivantage of employers; state ago, past conneuilons and salary expected to start. Address Engineer, Box 30, Nows office.bTiS sMBN—Large whulesale house, paying

Its aaleanten 11.500 per year and expenses W sell staple Hue to general trade, desires two more men for 1907. to commenas work at (>nce. If possible. Address flAWYER, LEBLIB & CO., Detroit, Mich.SALESMAN wanled for this State to sell pure

aluminum cooking utensils to the house-fur- nlshlng trad*; good ccunnylsalpn paid; we only want a Arst-class man of ability, Apply at once. IlUnoli Pure Aluminum Co., ^manitfid- lurera, Lemont, IB-SALESMAN WANTED- Side line traveling

saleeiiMin can make |:i0 to 960 per week handling our latest prt'iductLon of advertising fan*: liberal terms; api*ly at once. United BUlc* Calendar Company. Cincinnati, Ohio.

QIRLS WANTED—Young girls wanted, oyer 14 years, to sew tickets on pants; also girls

to leam operating: paid wall while learning; steady employment. KRAFT. 28 Franklin st., rear new city hall.gTr LB—Bright girls, 1C to 20, to leam a

trade paying jl5 a week: steady work all year. Apply between 7 and 6 P. M., THE LAIBLIN CO.. 8WJ Broad mL______ •

for213

G1UI.B wanted, with factory experience, examining and packing: must b* over^jff

years. Apply at the Duranold Mfg. Co., Chestnut rt. ________________GIRL—Wanted, mall order girl who can ad-

dreoB 1,000 envelopes per day. Apply to MRS. C ATSMA, ItO Washington st._____QIRLr-Wanted, experiBtiead while girl vrtio

Speaks English; no woehlng or ironing. In~ qufre MRS. ROTH. 210 LUtleton ave.

OPERATORS—Wanted, girl operators for press work; otean. light factory]

steady employment and advancement. DODGkr Uetalllc Cap Co.. 1ST Malvern at* cUy.OPERATORS on lawn waists; highest prloM

and steady work for firs^cljssa han^: none others need apply. McCUTCHEON MFO, CO.,78-M Mechanic at. ___________________o pe r a t o r s on bar coats, dusters and sport­

ing goods; steady work; good pay. RICH­ARD HILL Manufacturing Co., lu Boyden pi.,rear 227 High si. ____________OPERATORS—Experienced trltnmera and plain

sewer* on corset covers; steady work- *03 Bouth fllh st.. between 14th and 15th avea.

HOUBEWORK—Gin want* a place for light housework or upslnlrs work nnd waitress.

Call Sunday and Monday at IH Rutgers st., seciibd floor. ____________ _ _ _HOU8EKEEJPER—Young woman wisboo poal-

tlon at once; 18 years' experience at on* place; wage* ^ month. Call at U>7 McWhor­ter SL______ __________________ __________koUBEWORK—German girl wanta place tu

live out for general housework and plain cook 1 ng. VOGEL 72 Waverly ave. ________HOUSEWORK—Woman wants position general

housework; more for home than high wages.61 Union at. _____________ .

OPERATORS ON SHIRTS.SMITH * LINNETT SHIRT CO*.

4fi f r a n k l in BT.OPEBATORB, e x p e r ie n c e d ON J±Af lE ^

PINE DNDEHWEAR. C -K . DB BEVOIM CO., *2T HtOB BT ____________________W

3IRLB wroited on round nnd mumd tioiai: cteadv work nnd wood nny.

FENHAtrs BHOa.. JW AcnJrmr «t.. n»Mf SCHIP-

oniVER—Toun* m»rrlcd man, with •aprrl- In r»tnll dollvofr. good was« nnd

mnomor mraer. on tnmuiw ju u nI t Funml Will ^ h*KtfonSfd fSiurrh «t J;50 P, K Ktsdlk lavltra Intmntnt kt nut

^ • r « man/ manatnnn l»i C jw nr thnl ItiBf. iBoh-wert mnr mom

Dw hu rt to tbM nnd rm.WEICHHOLD—Bnleml rtrto rant on Thun.

4 t j , Jnnunrr 9, luot, Louiia Wnlohhold (n<« Bolmrlch), widow of Frodorlck Welolibold,

.A(«4 M r« r» ft month* 9 d«y», RoIntlvH nnd niond* nr* roraorttuHy InvUod to nttind

funtrnl on tundoft, Jontisir t At t P.: ~1l„ from hor lotc nddento. M W «t n tm t.

:lM»nt»m In Woodlnnd Comotory.Thuradny, Jiuiutry 4 IftOT.

.{Inry Mtlor (rut Tr«mn»«r>, briorod wife of ; ,|Unry ZoUlrr, n««d 16 yur*. HolntlvM nud

.Wnnda n n kindly Invittd to nttrnd tho funeral > iNTTloeo on Bundny, Jnnuitry 0, nt ft P. U..

if!?® EJ** .."“ j U* Hontorton itroot.y.aftldnnnnt In Woodlnnd Cemotory,

M o ir r i ra h in d .■ PUJNMTT—A U a» of R«iuitm will tM of-

.fond tor ih* rofioo* o( the «oul of tht Into ‘Jobii Plunkttt, of 38 Llhtny itn tt. nt Bt IrUCftt'i Churoh,, on Tucidny mornlnr, Jnn- w ry i IftOT, at 8;90 o'clotk. Riittuoo and Iftlinlli * n kindly fnrltad to nUrad.......P

4IlinV B H >A aY MAS*. HlQaiNS—First AnnivefMry Moss will be

<flaf*d for the repose of the soul of the iat«iMul HlfffRUt eit St, Josat^'* Church, on

londay nuniliig. at. T:8ft o'ckKfic. (ui«tiv*a m i th m m w tagsedinmy inviMd.

tn «m O R lA M *k toirliM vttMnhrMo* of our dear daughter flbfi iDOtker, Row I . Xellarr who poaoed

A m r u n m ry fi. iMS;Do not ft«t tt* It w* ml*a her,

TWr* t* aaeb « vaeobt place:W* coo MY«r fUrfet her gentl* voice

. ATid hsT depr. gweet lovtog face.. VHOIF .WM . p a r e n t s , h b .

S e h b io . and h e r. i DEAR CSBUHOai.. l ift tOTSiN numiry oi my tHfn, Ron Kollor,

n o dM MnuiitT 9, ttM: r p . A «rtdBU ono from nt lo non*,« , - A TstM-a* tovH In ntRl.-

/ A ftlAM If Taonnt la swr homo WWdkjwnr onn t» fltlod

;.,i*gj^aeRBAVleD“ B%UAlfB**AJlD OHII.-

’’^ 4 l l e l & i S jp ' l j & F * * '* **»*’• “ >. •«»** f_. J - f - . An^R -mo*R'je i$£ISS *A > m - o n n >

DR. UANDEVILLK. speciailii, ftlft Diuito si., over LhilUs'a. w years* experkoce as a specialist on all chronic diseiusae of mvn nrid wumen, catarrh, uervous dlMsses. dlteuiMB uf heart, kidneys* stomach* Uver or hisdflcr, rheiimnrism. urinary and all lung dlyssAft; hours, 2 tn 4 P. H., 6 to 8 P« M.; advice free. Notice— closed Frldayo Saturday srd Sunday. Do not forget name« place and numt>er._______________________

rRinopnMwT.M. E. HILBRT. 20 CEDAR ST.

Manicuring. i*oc aivU siiiilp luuiyiftuge, sham­pooing and hairdressing, done by expert attand- ohta*

HAIR GOODS.First Quality and perfect match guaranieeit

'PbuQS ftftlUJ. Dulls* wigs made of human hair.^ tlOO REWARD

for a man we fall to cure, and no 6ay till cured IJ our offer for nervous diseases and nil urinary trouble, end all diseases of met». ASA Medical Institute ypara In one pLaoe), 184 Orange rt. il block above High st.>. Newark. Heura. ft to ID A. M,. 1-3 artd ft-8 P* M.i Bun-day, I to a R. M._______ __COSGROVE'S DETECTIVE AOENCT-A sef-

vtoe for bankers, lawyers, oorporailons and individuals* invrstlgstvH all matters afTectiiig bariklng, legal, commercial and persnnal inter* •fte of either a civil or criminal character: ts|- e i^ n i 4®T7 Newark: nlghi lelephnnc 400L. Branch Brook. 757-759 Broad st., cor. Dank s tPROPERTY owner". >'oti have

a wet cellar, 1 will cfwitract to make \* «lry by the' laws of gravitsUon; nn charge unlesi suoceoiful. By this method you can increase the depth of your cMlor several feel and remove dampness from your house. Address Hydraulic Snginrer. nz Market at.

BUPERFLUOUa Ha ir ,Warts Moles and Bltthmarka removed forewer by electricity: 21 years* experience.

MME WESTERVELT SOMMER.Biff Wsshtoxfcn st __________

quiroS. 'Addreas Securliy. Box 02, Newa offlee.DTtfVKTia Wanted; two or three sober, reliable

marrlirf men, who can furnish referenca. CrowoU’s Uttiiber yard, foot Cress st.DRIVERS—Experienced tsam and tingle coal

wagon drivers wanled. Apply The PRICE praying Co.. HOW Rosevitie sve.DRIVER for coal wagoni married man.

MERKKIi CO., ak IVtnra at._______J. Q.

DRIVER—Expensneed driver wanted. 64 Academy eL. clty^_____________

DRIVER wanted. E 84 South Sixth st.

Apply

M. WALDRON A CO.

DRIVER wanted. H2 Bouth Iftth st., city.DOG MUZZLE OR FLOWER WIRE WORK­

ERS WANTED. __284 WAflHINOTON BT*

SALESMEN—Wanted, talesmen of ability and m at apT'caranee to call on all mcrchanta In

their lerritory; elegant side line, convenient to carry; good commlofiiuii! prompt remit­tance. BELMONT Mfg. Co., Clnctonatt* Q.SAL^MAnT capable of earning la.MX) per

yeur, with full line of soape, extracts, etc., furnishing dealer the |2 for II Belling plan meeting mall curder competition. F, T. COOK, Sales Depariment. Detroit, Mich._________SALESMAN—C^ar aalesman wanted In yoUf

lucality; city and country trade; salary and expenses or commlwior; experience unneces­sary Sfadlson Cigar Co., department 44, To­ledo, 0. _____________________SALESMEN—Wanted, salesmen to handle our

fine calendars, leather Roods and fans; lib­eral eomp^nsaltiiM, can be handled no a aide line* The WINTERS CO. flpringfleld. 0.SAIaESUAN wanted: tell'retail trade, your lo­

cality; 4 ^ per month and expenses to start or onmmlasLoni experience unnecessary. HEU- INOBEN CIGAR CQ., Toledo. 0.BALESMBN—Wanted, reliable salesmen to

aoilclt for nrst-claas nursery rtock; this I* the time to start; liberal puy. Write 0. D* GREEN, Syracuse, N. T.

GIRLF—Experienced girls on gold meeh: good pay and steady work. JOHN TICHENOR ft

CO., 268 New Jersey Rftllroad ave*_____OIRLB wanted W serge; also leanieTS *to

hente; steady work. WM. DIEFBKTHAB* LER, rear 44 Green st. _______OIRl^Small girl* about 16 year* old, wanted

for light work in factory, DB NOuRIB A CO.. Market at. ______________ _GTRIK wanted for riveting and soldering; also

light bench work on metal novelties. 284 W ash 1 ng t on st* . ^GIRLS on foot presaea fij" fanCT metal good*

factory. 32 Green at*. *econd floqr: call Mon-day morning._________________________ _GIRL fbr store work; German preferred; call

after 1 P. M, Saturday. 403 Main iL, Gr­ange^_________ _ __________________GIRL wanled* about W, llfht housewoTk;

eaoy hours. Addreas X., Box 24, New* of­fice* ____mwTJi wanted for bench and foot pres* work.

KARL OSWALD JR. ft CO., 832-K4 Perry •t. _______________________________

machine; good tSft Commerce*

HOUSEWORK—Young girl wishes geneiiil houaework. 47ft Mulberry i

poalltoa

OIRL to run tobacco strij wage*. Apply P. O *

DRUG CI-KRK (Junior) wanted: two w three years' nsperienue* Address Balol* Box

News ofltec.DRU^cLflRK; few years" expertenoe; college

pri vilpges. Apply 280 Orangs st., at once.EN A Mni-RR—Wanted, flral-claia enameler on

14-ca.raL emblems, to tske charge of our enameling department; steady work and good salarv- references required. Addresa ROTHB- CHILD ft HADENFELDT* INC., 8TU Ban Pablo ave., Oakland. CaL_________________EliEVATOR Ma n —A young man to nin eleva-

week: hour* from ft to J2;

BALEBMAN—To call on grocer; must be hustler; good pay to right man. !^7 Bel*

immt gve.______________________________STENOOBAPHSR—Employment departnaent,

T. M. C. A*. I ll Hataey et, require Ji young moii ■tenographeri 1 -20 years old: must havs had some pnmlcal experience; splendid opMr- tunlly for right man. Apply to L. w. AIGEL- TINQBR, Satordar evening, between 7 and 8 o'clock. ______________SPINNERB. SAND BUPTEBB, BURNI8HBRB*

E G. WKBSTEB ft SON, 022 Atlantic ave * Brooklyn. K. T.. require spinners, mnd buffers and burnishers: good pay and steady smpioy- ment. _____ _flOLIClTOlll—A flrst-^Iasa experienced nwn to

lollcU in Newark and norihern New Jersey; npiendid opportuhtty for iheVlght man. Call

GIRLS wanted; good pay; Gme work or piece work. MANSFIELD Gum Co.* 227 High at,

OTRLB wanted to card Ivonr buttona. New Jeraey Rotton Co., Morris gv*. and Naw at.

G1f[l8 wanted at the RENN Chewing Gum Co*. 113 Arlmgtob at., tiaar Court,

GIRL.B wanted. 12ft Halsey *t.

Columbian Steam Laundry.

DENTISTRY—l‘'11llngr, platea, gold crowiift, uuni brldxaworit, *1 one-half ihe regular price if

done beffvre January IS: work guaranteed; ga* administered: day or evenThg. Addeesa Heg- Isteeed Dentist, B«x 8ft* News office. -MIDWIFE—Ladles wishing private nursing and

board, mother's care LtlDW-IG, ffSl Iflth *ve.; take Bpringfield ave. or Plank road oar to Iftth at.* walk two blocks.CATARRH, hay fever and oold in bead cured

by uitol CAtsrrhIne; oent by mail, Stamps. kl^NHUU.>'R drug store* RUg Bouth lath rt.. PhlUdelphia, Pa. ___________ftWIfiDlBR tntsaage In Its bronchas; privuto

treatment at your home. THOR\1S3 Soulh Qr^ e «t., East Orange;

GERMAN MIDWIFE."Graduate: ladles boarded. t MRS. X, <todsriak. ayy.

flTrpKHFLUo'uB toir, wono, eto.i. remciwerf;

I f t , HM* yark c m .

tor four nights i tjrinit refersneoB. Apply LiaSNER'S.ELBJCTRICIAN wanted, familiar with foundi

werk. Apply...ATI!A Steel Coating Co., f( Chapsl rt , Newark, J.Ga r d e n e r —Wanted, a married man *a gar­

dener and useful man. ancuatomed to IR'lng on n privs.te plot'c: German preferred; refer­ence required. Addrere Place. Box 70, Newsoffice. ______________ __g rocery CT..ERK wanted; with or without

board: good wage*. Apply at once W A. H. WOIDT. Garwood, N. J.g rocery c l e r k wanted. Inquire F. NU6-

RaUM, aftft apnngfleld ave.OLABS beveler wanted; rougher or smoother

,n small work: good po>'; steady work, i t Rich - it.. Irvington.HUSTLERS wanted eversrwheTe; hurtlers to

lack signs* distribute clrcularH. aamplga* a te ,: no canvassing: good i>ay. tiun Advertising Rureau* Chicago*___________________HirfiTLERft wanted everywhere, good pay. for

ouldoof kdvrrtising; new plan; no canvass- livg; steady. M^rrharus* Outdoor Adv, co*,Ciacago._____ ___________________ ______HBLPKR Ifl wwhrfjom cf laundry; yewng tn*in

who mupt l« iironK tifiO willing lo work: wagui Ifl wdekiy. miller ijtundrr^ 127 Hai*sy st* sW^h^ fiiw, •

or addrest room 14, 740 Rrond at.8?^iriJ51IAN wanted; must bs sober and oonie

well recommended. OEOFFROY Coal do., 85ft Bellevllis ave*flHOM^utotde cutters on women's worii. t,

ft T* COUSINS, 873 DeKalb ave., Braokim,N. T* __________t o o l m a k er—F lrst-clas* toclnaaker; flr*i;*

eiaas wages tor flrst-clasa suMce. Addrasa Tool, Box K., Iwwa office. Orange.TOOLMAKER; young man esperienei'd on

cutting ftBd bending dire. tY. BAILEy, Aq CohiJtthi*t r u n k MAKEBB .wanted: ateady empi^,

imnt. Afimi; h e Ad lSt * f a h Jie u *co .H»fTl*MI. W. J.

HEAD o r STOCK.THOHOJJGHET CAPABLE CNKR'

OETIC WOMAN WITH LONO EX- PEHIENCE IN CLOAK AND BUIT DEPARTMENTS OF MOITSEH; MUST BK ABLE TO SHOW RE.TOLTS: PREFER ONE FAMIUAR WITH NEWARK TRADE, THWOB THIS IS NOT ESSENTjAtj TO WITH THE NBCMBAHX f l^ L IF L cations a PSaiMANENT TOBITIOMAND HIOH 8AWRY IS o m m r o REPUES TREK ED CONFroi^^ TIALLT, ADDRESS XX, BOX Tfc NEWS OFFICE.

OPSaiATOR on t«o-ne«Ilo *leevln* mnctilno. SMITH & UNNBTT Shirt Co., 4S Franklin

____________*_________ ^ _OPERATORS and learners on corset cover*.

C. HIEVERINQ. 47 Hamilton at. ___OPERATORS on shirts wanted, CLINTON H*

fiMlTH ft COm 7ft Orange st. _______ROPE CHAINS—Ei^rlenced chargers wanted.

ALBERT ABRECHT. 8fl Crawford rt.______BTENOORAPHER — Trting woman stenug-

rapher, having had experience in a com* irrclal offtoe. knowing how to make out • jvolce* on typewriter: must write a rood

hand; reference reoulred. Address Steno.* Box 17, Newe offlpe.STENOGRA’PHKR. ....typewriter* Sbok-keepe^

willlnt:^ Industrious; references raqulred; |fl. ASrIr*** ImmndUtaly. Be* 60. Naw* oIBce.STENOGRAPHEH~Wantea. a youni wemaa

na sMnographar and typewriter. UICHABL8 BROS., 804 Market *t.______ ____________ _

TWISTING-ROOM HELP; ALSO RBELERB, SPOOLERS. WINDERS; FRAME, COMBER

AND DRAWING TENDERS; GOODt PAT: STEADY WORK; LEARNERS TAKEN AND PAID, W PER WEEK WHILE LBAHKINa.THE CLARK HILE-END ‘ SPOOL COTTON

COMPANY.CEHTRAI* A m . EAST NEWARK. H. J.

THEATHICAD-Thre* or four wanted at once (or theatrical e ^ lb l t to « n

Sunday or Monday, "Midway," Mala *(., Pal-er*on. - ■ •- ____TUCKERS andA BOULTER CO.. W EIOTith aea._________WOMAK—Brlaht, antefaUo wo»An for oi^

order department oneenee a i salMladyi mult pPMOii ooolldenM and S aotlva ami raacmneftil mind: a wwlwr U d ^ Ja S AMtaw ConioUdatad Conaetins. Co..Albany; ». ,T. ________________WOMAN—A redned womaB weOTed, alWla

and ptaoUoal. (or naromaBl K^tlon fddiV- lo t eloae attaatlan frow T to ^

Bot pa neoemaiy aa adapiAWHty. AddreieC.i »<* TT. Mawa i>«oe. _____________

(actin ' reprm ni mannfaetunr;

M(.L'8BWORK—Two alii* wleli general hau*a. work. 40 Beacon st., busement. _________

housew ork—Girl wanU position, general houMwork* 141 West sL_____

LAUNDRY WORK. Iron or rough work; sall*- factlon guaranteed. CliSTlS 7ft Warren at*

LAUNDRRSfr-Flrst-olasa laundress; aerman; day's work; Montclair or Olen Ridge. 45

Washington at.. West Orange.____________ _LAUNDRBSB8—Good taundres* ha* Tueaday

and Wednesday tq sm-re: also cleaning. 175Academy at., city,___________ ____LAUNDRESS—Woman wanta work first two

days of wertc. 138 Chestnut ai.NURSEb-Gehnan' girPr wlAes place ■»* wrt

nufiw; baby two weeks olo. 8ft Magasine st.NURiS^Rxperienced contlnement nurse. Ad­

dress Nurse, Box 08, News office ________BFAHETHBSS—G<>odi seamrtresa wlahea work

on children's clothes; tL3S per day. SeMCi-Btrere, Box 29, Nows olflc*. _____ ________TTPBWRrTER,

ireas wnitbeginner, wlehes^altlon.

ilftce.Ad­

dreaa willing,_Box ftp. New ________UPdTAlRB WORK—Young Gorman girl wants

position tor upstair* work. 4TS South 18tbit. ___________WASHING—If the weilliar 1* bad or ih*

womos disappoints or the servant kicks a^nd for us to get your clothre; we will wash them* Iren all the bed and table linen and return the otMr garments, starched as needed, roux*i dry, ready for you to dampen and iron; cut charge Ts 6 ceints a pound for this service: a good else wash costs fom |1 to 11.25. The R ^ fh Dry Laundry. 127 Halsey st., ’Phoni 1068,_________________ ________ ________WASHING—Oermab wcman would like p1ae«

waging every Tuesday; fl.5ft per day. 26 yairvtaw ave*. MARY FREDERICK.WASHING at boms; thoroughly competent

Wbmen. Second floor. 57 Darcy ad.YOUNG WOMAN -(speaking Qennan oniS

wishes position as light upstairs work «nA seamstress; elegant niter. Call or addreHi MRB. F* B , 2T0 Parker at., city.

B B U % O Y H EN F~^N TEU .piifii]« f tN » WOMBIV.

c6^^fiL^^Bri|^r'S^'^*"cou]^?nSflptoh* fieolfW ■Ituatkrts In private- fati)Hy nr any plaoe of

Apply L., 99 Washington et., Hewarfe,

MAN and wife would like Janltrres: man undcrstal

heating* 440 18th eve*, roow‘ r0* Joftl t Her i w

[107 and

WARTIDIIa

WOHAN leaving Hentj au ts . Mfl lakMfdeSdt tnilSIns, I

par day to Mart; rarma- r r*llA>n- ENOWALL. Chloaso.

K0HBKWORK-'W*oiad, a aompaiaot do aanaral hou*awo»Kl w a ^ and *ood

homo; must ba a ProtaMaat and bava drat- Clara raferanea. CaW at « WlWwoOd taiTaoa, 0 !»b RM*e. Bear BlditMadfl ayi.

and imundroii: InBoat ndBod col'

good MSkfamily; refarenoo*.Uset Ofoagst omtoff pwm

otnoli aparimehtl two In YnUOHT, aa Sussex avs*>

JIB tftooirtfleld gvc. ladlraf Ullor n.„io«. H pu8B W 0M -Y a“. r i L a^!*i

HEUKR—Wanted. aWa-Iiodled man for milk- room; Krtranca t^ntrad. Addifta Jlataranpa,'

Boa ■!. Naly oXoa, ^g jpLJ^^^Wancad. ha l i^ fw botMr.

v a r n ish b o il e r want«d;iUtowa*a* wnnt- (4. Addraia P. O- Bok 8TT._________

WIRE w e a v e r s —EkiwrSaiwad, capabta nonr unioB broad loom wlra waavara wanted; ».S|

day • **II> tnerraaad paK.vU menb ^ ro a adapiod to the work; eoaraa and due maab; anantlty and nuaniy pt work coiuid-

Btrmanatit, aiaads work inataiiued; aooo opportaniw Addreaa orap^ . Fwaral Wire Cloth Ca., HaTrlaon, N. j.WANTED. W • “ atency of U yaai*' attod.

Inc. t*d aapaHanoed collaetlpa atanoy men lo ^ lo R AIKI »»»™d to tba elMliis ol oon- tm IS atf**dy am aetd far; afepaUan, tatnra; acau larfBOr aaperlaen. Addnaa. CMaolidataa OaUwiMSE to-. AIIWTO. N. T-

i WABtad- T« M^ki* ;a(.- ~ _ rW 'Uka'iniN;’ofl«iU''ajii( w m ' SdiMfia « WHtaipi a t

rrw*c^k*'s!raSSTMr‘ A 7 i { ? i £ ' 'M ’‘?t!K^flrtt door from Clinten aaa. ______________ _H0Usii5^M t*^O«™ ^ hoaaawoilt: nwat ba

.rood nook and latiAdraaa and coma wall nao. om m « i£ ^ motlwn •»>“ : *»»>'» »< “ » « l good home; t » par «MtB. Addreda K. O. R„Bo«**r. ofimre. n . j , ,

*"•

WOMEN to work plaoaworttt IS per doien;matailal* ftnnlahoS; no c u r ^ l i v ; Moady

aorSi; addreaaw) envelope. BEST Mfg. Co., Champlain banding, Chlaago. _______WflMEN to maka aanltary balti: material all

not raady to lawi l l . » » « doaen; pjrtlcu- lara addreaaad Covalnpe. Vaioa Co,, depart-ariaait g». Ohieago. ________ _WAfaift»W01*AK->A g«d German waaKar-

wamaa (or WMSlnrand Ironing; moat undtr- itaod her work partacUy. MRS. schmau- DEB. 1*1 Bergtn M.; c itrwrnawnUtwSMAK—Wantad. a woman for

w^AlB^and Monliig for Noitdaya Ap^y

W j S m S w O ^ I “ o"!*!*' Ap*:ply U Sw»im*l at., third Boor.girl'

> ... ^1!?™ - - Eaat O raa^

CAST-OFF CLOTaiNO-POSITITia.T HMJH- ett prloa* pald-mora tbag anr.otbar daalar is

the clty-for ladlei* and gtnaamen-a aaai-ofl clothing; hati, ahom ale.; aa«d poatala city « r country; I will call u y or avalSSg al pior ooo- vcDlanca.

CBARUtS CAHN,IM BalnwBt avaaiia.

OLD gold, ailvar, ptatlaum, dlamonda. paayliL broken or dliardcd JewaltT' T'"*?! S ' dafnead

U. 8. cotna, antlguaa o lW o d o ; U.B. nail tor- clgn money eaobaBgaj cIvml VBR.BIER, Oraaga and itlh Mai phone SSM B, B.AFrBEt YOU !*AVEC'ASH QUICK Alf® CiQNFIORNTIAL. 4}toDt R o » m i n y E . i -iT w ™ m -

W A W R B i» -F »n ‘o{. nrnit rellahlo girl u waltreat anffobarohermald; cclorad pratenw.

Call UB Nnrtli Arlington ava. ~ - *WAIYBBSS wangd, rafarance ratinlrad.

A^lngwn avA, Bait Orange.________^WA1TBE8S In reJUufant.

ClBMna raatntiranl.HE BaMy >1.,

- u

will call.heftter PRICKS I pay (or all kiada a( 1^ J ' * V ji!r e a 5 j to BEClicEH. W at

OOW^antadt * Jiff*tha vlAter: k goofl htrtae guontottsd, Jifl,* ? H . JIB V*1i*V Wert orangg^

saeoDd-baad oiotk- „ d poBot* 'Pliona «*B. »aRUS. (O ell'v llH avo., Newark.

TBADlw b'iTAitFB; an ktBda'"^bt fw higkpHaaa- l»c« or book. M«a

OMiPon Cw. tH

H()lf(nswOSE-®l*l f a a * ^ '^ gaaarai bonaa- V o t ^ T O t B N of aood addieat m^'.iaiiiSr::.....A- «A« TirmM IrlRnaW ai * y ------ailtwia BnAiMam E*n. —------------------ 'wolk. ids Want KlBiiay al.HOL'BEW0»*-<»lrl »w fasaral mnanRefc. »

North Tib iLl no waMdnr.,HODL.........

Call abWHOC

wetib,

_______ taklBg aubaorlptlonatjM moat baantlful itiagailaa of

tie aIgM; oommlaatoo anst. lih 55*i*Wea «ain be inroad,

-----“ .^aa cait'MiM.igopng tr i i t f '' wtrli* at-/ ■

for Dagga.'

ew auk pdaaa: loaaa or book. Meta gatwMt Plana!, near Maiket:

t l r g aB-wimtaa. a aaew^kand » - « . IsB- ■ ■geJSg*.gai 88 ftawa olllco.

locst — ^

Page 17: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

\ 1 n r f

AUt'H^AtTNCt ftirnacM, MW mWI — biiod, steam traUus imd radiators, casllfOB

•Uuisl baih tubs, sliabtlr tomacM la Ht1p> ^iif{ water closata. DoWlr, blfb a m UJikB, cuerbls aod sDamat luvstortea, kltclisn wiakM, ranfoa, bollvn and waah t w s jai Jow uicsa to reduce stock. B. B. LEONARPr H tombardr tel. u D. ftffiU ^phon* 1*7. Open evenlOff.ALIr kinds of second'bMd liulldliw material

tor sale: saah, doors, b«aik)q| and Jjws twards: 500 plicM SalS sprwe plfck. H to Id tett; buildmss boxifhl and feinoved. A. EOWB. n o Uala at., comer Hollywood ava.. Bast Or- anie, K, J,; ‘pkon* M5dJ>ALL kinds of talking machines on credit.

J a tu a n records. IMleon and Ucior. now ready. Manhattan Phonograph Co., Broad and Market s^ .; open ercnlnuH.ATLASl^S-Threa ollaee* f'jr sole: Newark.

OmnEa uml Kspi's i'ounly. hs good as now. Addjvae Atlas, linx 711. XewH office.a UT-DMaTIC oxlension ladders and poles. Port­

land L*\1der Co., ISO Orange sL; tel. 5ftd B._aBLANK RlX)KS hav« edvaticed In prlre. hut

we will sell them retell at the old price; buy autv and save money.

UUOU BKOH., Springfield are.opjHielte Helmimt.

BILLIARU AND I^OOL TABLES tKJughl. sold, rented, re-cov ’ced, repnlred; eup-E1I«b. LCPLOW, factory removed to 1*1 Mar-

el Bt., Z doora from Broad. L. D. •phoiu*BOYS' leather gloves, 2Sc. iMir; gnuntlel

leather' gloves, &>c. bair. AHCHBlNBACH'S Lather Goods Store, lU Uarkei St.J3AROAIN—Autn ccat; rnecoon skin. larte

stse. DRKWtlS, 17 Crpenwood a v e ___CLOTHING—rncallcsl f«ir ar;d sarnp^e aiSifl

and overroaii ih«t were made to nrtii'!- for tlH, tlAl and l.l!; )<iur choice, H».7"i BERQ BllOB., custom lallori', tw> etorce, Broad and Merket and fi2 Market wt.________

CuUNTltT*”PROd'tJcE ‘Hotie^ li the im>it nuirltloue heslth food; five

Munds very fine abeulutely pure Jersey honey for OOo., delivered free; s«nd tiostal. Orange Mountain Bee Perm, TS'mI Orange.CAlit^B-^Brownlf* No. 2. ilitff week. tl.iWi

t4 kodak boxes, mtik (12.2<);te kodake. g4, gesllKht pnix rx. Newat-k Photo Hupply Co., 101 WHehInsiuti ki.CAMERAS—Bpeclal Wxlt) etiluiglng. with lens,

shutter, lelf^AdJuNtliift ruck hpJ idnlun, gib. Newark Photo Supply Co.. UH Wasltlnglon.CAN.CHIER, rnlletii, Japanese robin, Hnnefs

goldJlnelieB, female cHiiarlea for hreedlng; foldfleh glnbte. F'lTTMAN'H Bird Par-for^BO? Orango si.CANAHTEB (dcin^Hilc), Si’etch, fancy and K<‘L

gitn. goldfinches htoI lluneta 407 l«th ave., top lloor.CARDS,'bills, cireuliira, lHt>ela, neatly printed.

LOOQ,.up; chvclCui:St note Jiaajls.-tLllA; vlsttlhg cftrda, 2Bc. liVr WYCKOFF’S. U«H Plane. ■POLLARS earned hy saving agente' profits;

alrHght lamps, gas fixtures, braekete, globes and Incandescecl gas Inmpa; g«l my eatlmatea on plplnge and fixtures; open ovenlnge. C. PAViDSON. ^Bnrlngllfld ^PRESS sultAsee, |1 lo (0; trunks, airaps,

' handlee. ASCIIQNDACE'S Leather Goods Store, 70 Market et. Look for the red horse.

FOR SALl,A HUNDRED THUU6AND SECOND-HAND BRICK; NEW AND SECOND-HAND BUIU>- ING m a t e r ia lBUILDINGS rURCHABKD AND REMOVSD.

VAN KRUREN A BONi <01 PASSAIC aVE., east NEWARK.

'PHONE 2044. HARRISOM.

PTiR .SALE, a mnnber of l»ent-wood rhalra anjl a (liiftnilty of lumber; will sell cheap- BS3

Broad.FtiFl Ha l e , white TjPghorn lockorel; WyctifT

Blittin. 7 Htittoh pi., Wfst Oiange.Fcrt S.'tLE—llMkn, r.ltalra and tables from old

city hall, at IIBB Rlltabeth ava.FUiEW'OnKB and colored flia always on hand:

full line of guns and ammunlUon. all slsea; everything In Bportlitg goods: bowling score books. H. H. BRANT. H7 Market ft.FOLDINO CH.MRS-WNl new OiU folding

chairs, 50 rents, auy number; ruitatil^* foi banquet,or porch; aamplea at glO Rrond. tonin 47.FUR QLOVE#i, fur r«>bea, leather leggl.iS,

leather jackets, lambe' wool ^‘‘sts, coats. AKl’HEN^CH'S. 70 Market Si., near Ptane.

1 BeattiR for hulUllng )>uTitoses,Canvas rovers for niasrms' trucks, etc.

'WALHH H auxa & «.’0 ,S0O W'aBhingtnn et. 20B PassaJo st.

Le a t h e r pocketb-Mka, wallels, card*‘aFies.ledlee' handbags and pocketbonka. ASCH EN-

BACH'H. to Market nt.. near Idane.i j LEQOIl[ ( HONS

LEQQINS, for wlnltr wear. 50o. WALfJU'S HONS A CO.. 200 W'ashtngtan, 28S Faaaalc et.

POULTRY HU^PLlER-neinedtes for ohlt'kwm.doge, hursee and rarisrles; try pur laying

food; suvveeB In short time; 10 pnunds. 20c.. 100 pounds, (1 75; singing canaries, breoditjg cages. Poultry Supply Houac, 2U1 Market at.PHONOGRAPHS. Victors, records; BtK;. week.

COLON. 112 West Park.POOL end billiard tables aold, bought and

rented; large Block of new uail icc>’ind-hand; repalrtag. CANFIELD. 1S>» Market et- Tel.2B80L.POTATOES, at car, II.7l; 1,000 bble. of apple*

St your awn price. KAISER Milling Co,, Jell Iff ave. and Pennsylvania Railroad.READY-MIXED PAINT H. IB GAL., REti. »1 BO;

EVERY CANGUaRANTEIKD: SMALL CANS Kk. I. KATZMAN, 45 BEU,EVILLE AVg.

SKATES! SICATEig 1 SKATe C I 600 [lalr United Btet'es Clulf and Peck it

Bnyder.All cUntb skates 50c- a pair tip.

At Fr a n k BLASS'S, 135 m uld er r t st .BPECIALS-CHINA CUPS AND SAU'CERB BC.,

DRINiaNG GLASSES 2 POR 5c. 1. KATZ- MAN. NEW STORE. 4B BEI^LEVILLE AVE.VIOLIN;’ very fine, old InetrUment: < irctim-

Btances compel me tn sacrifice K for (7. Ad- treee Invalid. Hog 2. NewS ofllce.

Hoi>s«liold Goodg ■nd P v ra ttn v fr .AXMINSTER 9x12 rugs, best quality, V2‘2\ 25

yards miHfit carpel, Hfi; Ingrain rug, IB; ■fiatra and hall carpeta. BUI Waahington, oor William.BARGAINS -1,900 stoves for sale, ilAX PLUS-

SER'S furniture house. 150 Surlngfleid ave-; eyltnder rtovta, I2.4H; Rnund Oak Blovea, Jfl.DS; pot «tovM kitchen elovM, $8,014: slidingcouchee. Iron beds, braes beds,117.08; draeeeff. t0.9S; will furnish your home |1 per w e^; axmlnster rage, 0x12, $17.98.BALANCE stock of a large PhlladtjlphlH furni­

ture houi f, consisting of parlor, bedroom and diftlng-wm furniture csTpetB, oUcloiha, rugs, rockeri, parlor tables and many other itteful household effects 50c. on the dollar; c>Wl and convince yourself. R. KANTOR, 2M Washington at.BIG reduction In fioor coverings, parlor end

ditfing-room furniture; Iarg6 eetK-llon of atoves and. rangca. from $L5P Up. B- KAN- TOR, 60 Market Rt.; open cveotnge.BRASS FENDERS—I’m- sale, two nice braxH

fender*. Apply B6 I2asl Park at., Eaai Or •nge.CARPET yvjur floor for Jfi; reverelble nige;

handsomfdesigns.ci.'ioi'fl; flnoXmas gift. Ken- glngton Rtfgg, IBO Irvington ftv»„ fioimi Orang*.C.M,tFKrTS—Fop aal -. live'mlaflt ttrussela car-

pdte, very cheap.' IW Market ■at.FOR SALE, J-fllh Feniur.v Steam ('ooker; the

hou*ek«|>er's favorite: the rmly perfect Cngk- er nrMthe-rfnrkat; Rgent.a< wanted; rlroulars on appUcaitomN. W. BARD. 2tM Hank «i.LARO-E aoennuneai of alt kinds ^^tand aiovee

•iiid raogew. a f ibe lowest prWe* in id.wn. A. EANOWll'pii ^ 00., 42-40 Belleville ave.PRIVATE flALB^-2l Hui^'irnT," East (.Grange.

handwme furniture: nearly new t^irhif uni easy chair*, twin beda..velvet carpels, cu.-* tatnir, doaka,- solid tiiahogany- dining phulrs.PARIxm SUIT, four piece*, cheap. 254 Xurtli

6th et. . ‘B angs;—Good kitchen range,; No. k. Addrewa

Rahgf: Boa.2lk New* offlue- ■SEWING MACHINK. hlrdseye maple, five

drawers, all attaclimente; bargain, -MRh. fiWAKTON,-430 Plan^ at., flrai floor, "bear Court at. ■STOVES AND RANGES, SECOND-HAND,

f Ol.X> IN EX-CHANGIL 670 .MULBERRY ST,STOVTO obA Btcive’yepaTra. MrelDDLEMA^ 261 BiiyhtjgSeld a|e.; Igl,SECOND-HAND etovet and parlor *tovea, as

gono »B n^ ,_for sale cheap; we also buy gtoveo. T. SHIFP, 43 Suasex ave. 'WE ELY ANDJJhLL AT LOWHST PRICES

NEW AND Sra.OND'.HAND FURNITURE B. RRESSMAN. 24 BELLEVILLE A VR6,4100 w o rth of etock; ifiuet' be acidt half

prlco;. account a ^ lv to g partnerahlp; 200 bra«» Anfi Iron bode, BOO rtova*, all kln5^ Mit^^aescirtmem oilcloths, Inlaid linoleum 85c. yard. *1;*5L‘ U nubt be.acild to Mdayo. A, SANOWITCH A CQ., U-4S BeTle- vll» ave. , .112-PIECa DINNER BBt | 0, RlCDUOHD

FOR THE HOLIDAYS »,9|^ W l f ^ 9 ^ ••0.^1. KATZMAN. 46 BEtLEYlLpS AVE-

H naaeboli! Gooda W n a te d ,'AUi kluda'bi iianacHoia (uMii and lueiotundln.

co.|tonis at • ta r» h#u»i atul litu* or noytfitoii you h«vo to •»». lwu«hi for oaik,'

ftglD. Auctlea Boona. gg AwulMny pt.

tKUtbtMHiddlmUal: mm. onUn- ooutoBtr oC atorte JhaS I . jMiM ^ A iTER. 220 WMt tc iao tr at,! ^uP lw w pM rtitl upJ J "dl a l l . _____ ■JlLWATB RfcUABLEl Q.BT AUL, TOUR

OOOUB ARE WORTH SBN» ITOB VAN rOZNAK, 43 SOOTH OFlANOli AVK.; OTTBKB v g a t w s - — ................

SOOTH OFIANO*'PHONE, am .

ikANOG-WanMd, a wwind-haqO TliaUlwr .«PrtMdrme' raAs,; oh.ap: mun b« Mod

teitefp: 'Addr«« Rtngra, Bo* lO, New* office.m ■ . T — — -

■ I s le s .UAVQ yoe' f tm OBf «s!ee *nd out price*! W*;

i*ll,.kur or Molund*. Some or .ow mcjM- J i u d p u U Mr* WACttceny ce«. A »vhiTp? W e U . ^ l w pilce*. #t*te;>l*e. W* bsv* »»«m I w : DO so«i>d» to S,0M> peuadsNBwLwiffecOND-HANOMACHtNlIRT OO,

M CBECTNUT ST.

- m o w h r R poR B W ifco.. m b r o a d st.-, fer how* or etSe*: f» raa« td iM M ra ; vary w»t i » » . ■i*#t r*i4 WalwnT MO.

, . ,.,. ,y i ' i ...... V y w iw it te * mm€ FnppIlM *

ItkllUilGTON, n . IL to'HOQd c ^ H o n ;/gen t HlIcKenederf^i'■ typewriters, 21 Acaa-

: dTT^LL.’phQne 413;

C lilek«itg.BUFF ORPJl<mTONS, froin 1900-6 Modlem

BARRED ROCK coekerela, Th'impenii ringlet strain: euperlor quality, CHAS, K. Me-

CJeURK, 207 Mnple ave.. Irvington,CHICKLN8—fUx Rhmle leland hena amV tw*-

ter, also brown l*eghitrn rooster*, fur eel*. 3&T Hanfurtl jr., IrvlngttMi, N. J.FINE while I'ljTnouth Rock chlokeito cocker­

els aud pullcte, Hlno fortv pair homers: e, ch any time, ja MEH Si\>wRltOFT. Park terrace, \i e*i (haiigr.PIT giune* for mtl*'. ftiJ Oxden et.. Orange: Sunday liisp cMim. _____^RHODE f.«l.AND REDS; mu« sell wy ertlr«

flock of 2fi bird*, including my winner* at Rutherfrird and Stamford; »ome eahlbltton birds, other* hreeders; galeo pea of Buff Plynaouih Hock*; vill sell cheap. C. KALF- MAN'N. xNutiev. N. J.TWFL\'1‘! iiedlgreed barred Plymouth Uo.’:ka,

la>lng laiJIet*; mtitt be Mid. Cali Bunduy iM-rnlng, MAVi 'fARD. W*7 High *1.TWO Huff Jio4*k ecirlierels for a*le; come early

and liHi't your pick. Oall Sunday. 164 EentKlfifiey at.wiriTE l.£airORN pwllet*. laying. 75 cents,

llhri^d Hock lu’illeis, $1 each; l«EMON GAME rwflter, H.25. 013 South Orange ave , etnre.

W atefew aB d Jw r* lr r«BENJAMIN J. MAYO, Newark Arcade, dla-

moind ItiiportPr. broker, appraiser, jewpier dlamerula rPiMtlred, meet; Js’welry and wafchcM repaired; old gold and alh'er purchased. Tele­phone 2 3 0 9 L . _____________Dlemonde. wttebea enj credit; to pay | i weekly;

conftdemtal. New Torlier, Box 70. News offloe.ON weekly paymente; fine watches, diamond*.

le'R'elry; lowest prices; buelneaa confidenMal; all good* guarenteed. IVatch Supply Co., Thrie Malden lanr. New York.

MV*BsARTlSTtCT BIGNB, SHOW CARD3. LETTER­

ING. BEN-A-TAR, 7fci RrnoiJ Ht,, cpr. Mar­ket. All trolley* pan* the door: 'phone 2&79J.

CHaRLKP K. Ma Ie H, \ S i ' ,Signs anil t'lbfiw Durde.

tMl Market at.. Newark, N JSIGNS and ehuw cards for e\ ery buelneeft; call

for eellmatei. E. UAR1TQ. 146 Market st.

D oes.BOBTGN TlvHUlEn ptippLa, good head; bob

Tail*;-feapfUiohlo. ^ X'urues »lFlNH oolltB ring wtTh-whtre breasr and head:

about eight months old; for *aie. MuilTLEY, 7.i <’i-ano M.THGHOUflllMfltilD colllo dcg* iiiid jnipples for

sale at Central Kennelp, 3 6 <>niral ave.

C oerl,COWH-twp I'ciw* fpr (tale vltfftp; and 150.

12 Hrlgluim i»ve>, Soho, Netipyilla.

FOR EXCHAN43G,STll<IARH given away In exchange for g<x>d

i-lean rugn. COMPTON SHEAR CO., 314 Comtlen mi.

BUSlN Eii OPPO RTrX ITlBF.ADVERTISE YOUR "WANTS" and your

builneaft In the ctesBlfied column* ef the "Frelo Zeliiirg," the German "News."One InnenjotJ.................................. le. per wordTwo or iliree day*..........-............. 2e* per wordFour or live day*........................... 8c. per wordSeven or eight day*...................... 5e per wordBy the month..,..................... ....BOc. per line

N. J. I'-HEIK ZEITUNG. 76 MARKET ST.ARMOUR B KENNY.

'Phone 8562J. 168 Market et.ALL LINES OF BOSINKSB HOLD.

Noihliig to pay Onill the ealo Is conipleted, Huyera Inveatlgale uur offlce list of

DE.SIRAIILK. DUSINEBB OPPORTUN1TIE9.ACTIVE. nJddle-ageil man of imegrltv. ex-

pnriem'ad manuf*oturer In Iron line, famlUer ofllfp detulL. will Invest I16.I.KI0. vllh eer- vices. In eslahUshed paying busln**^; slat* reatonable particulars, no schemeR or agente. Addre** Rpllalile, Box 67, Ne'W* offloe.ALL kindp of mprchafi( i,BB. houaehold gooda

content* of Flares, bousee and fiats bought for cash; consult ua before selling, Commercial Trading Company. 38 Academy *t. Tel. 8736J,BLArKHMiTHS and wheelwrlghl*. on aevount

of slchufcs nil] (>ell good ehnp for une-f«urtK of value, pk-niy of yard room, firm tooUii and pfiod fiianfl, -heap rent and plenty of work. AddrPM Bargain. Box 36. News office.BAKETRT-Fnr sale, desirable bakery; progrei-

*i\e BUbuTb; long eitabllsliafl. envlahl** repu- tallnn iind trad*. Address B 0- T., 704 Mroad it.BUTCHER HUOP; r*iiire of city; long tra*e;

law rent- prk-e reoasmahle; sfrlrtest InveiU- gaifon. HIEG. CRONllEIAL 170 Market it.BARBER SHOP for aale In Ullrabeih; old M-

tabllshmeni 564 East Jersey et-COMPLETR Jewelry faclf>Tj- for sale, well

eipilpped alih up-to-date mflchlnery. tool*, dies. ete.. ft>r the rnanufHi'tufv of litai-ekts, brooohes. locket*, buttons, scarf pins and rings; Hii excellent opporiutiuy for h new Arm. Fiir parilculars Address Manufacturer, Bofc 50, Neus ofllc-e.CONFEtTlGNEItY 'For sale, a gond. estab­

lished -whoiesale confectionery; not much money needed. Address Wholesale Box 80, News-office.DO ynu need capital, extend or start bunlrwsa?

if so. vvrlte before arranging eloewhere: ex­cept ionul facilities placing Blocks, bonds quick­ly. E\’ERETT DUFOUR. corporation attorney, ].e Droit building, WMhlngton. D. U.F A C rfi^A y ' pF zNAK '^rAYB^BETTEH

PRICES' FOR FURNITURE. C.MirKTfl .AND CONTENTS OF FLATS; 1‘AFII Qi:iCK AND CONFrDKNTlAL. 42 SOUTH ORANGE AYE., 'PHONE 2071.JiMHl SALE.- gcod will and businexH of the

oldMt eatabllebed eniployment office In cUy; cjiiahllahed twenty-three year*; retiring from busltiesB. Address Good Will, Box I'U, New*OffirC__________ , *_____ _FOTl b<A7»F—One of live Ueftt monltig'hou*«i tr

vlly; wauld tnake ft. firat'Clas* hoanling-houec; alemn heat; canti**!. Addre** R., llox 16, Newu ortlce.FTRNIRHED-ROt>M HOUSE for sale: twelve

rooms: good tenants: good locality: will sell cheap to quick buyer. Addreis F. M. \V., Pos 2f. News office.GENERATE office man and experienced sales-

man seekn a clerkship wUh resnonaible firm in Newark or New York; will also iryreat eome money If fuliy secured; highest uiimmerclal refori?ttce given; annwers treated confidentially. Atldres* Reliable, Box 18, New* ofilce.OIIOOERY and bulchar husineiw; doing a good

huahicHB |u a good location; for sale on av- coum of otlier business; price I1.2IX)- Addrohe R . Box 63, New* office*.GROCERY RTOnE (fima|l> for sale, with liv­

ing roonia In rear; price Wf». 201 N. J. K. R. ave.HAVE >2,006. to , liivcBt B* partner In '■ume

legRIlnate busineifs. Address K., Box 4i; Ne'fl's office.LUNCH WAGON-Nfriv, up-to-date lunch

wagon for sale; 25x10 feet V cash or easy pay­ments, E, J. Jo h n so n IM Washlngtyu at..city. •NEW TGhK theatrical manager, wlfh three

ihealreB.* desires party with capllal to buy fnlcTcsL and manage jAroiIuctlo'ne; splenilld in- veatmm. AUSTIN JfAVlS. 46 West Jfllth at., New York CRy.OYS'^R and chop house for ssle; gcrad lo­

cality. Enquire, 177 South Orange ave.PROVISION ROUTE-For sale, on* of the

oldest and he*t provision route* In this vi­cinity; established 3u year*; all information required will be given. fllNNOTT t: DEAN. 6i!i2 Broad eu 'REAL esta te BUaiNEBJ? for sale: two

detkit, typtiwriting machine, atlaeae and clittlri; O'hole buoineii In good running order;che^. Addr4M Heal Estate. . Box To, Nowi

RliJSrAl.'RANT;.. elearing |fU> a week; near eourthouee;- good cigar tredg; owner hoa

other liuemees.. Addrete Hare Chance, Hox 60. New* office. .SPr.ENDlD opportunity fw bright yemng man

with J.VjO i-a«h lo Invest in first-I’laBfl vHude- ‘lltc conipiny; all booked for the road; good

flalary and Interest given. .‘Address Liberal Offer. Box 76, New's office.8ALOONH: o1d-e*rabM*had. corners: Newark,

liolwken. Jersey 0lD‘, >J*r*ey City Height*: dlreci .through, the brewery,'from f7fi to llWl. PAUL PILFKE, 222.Market at.SAIAIONS. hotels, roadbauaee,. sold without

publlHly. GEORGE H1R8HFELD. 621 North Tenth, Philadelphia; eatEbllahed 1879.SATiOON—For sale: on 'accAunt of ilekneae, 'good saloon, with denoe hall; price S60;

c.hedp rent. «5 lAlUe at. ______ • ,STORE ami room* for win or rent. Call op

J. K, HAVIH. Mnihum, N. J. •WOULD like to Join pwty who has eatat;HLahe«.}

paylhg roomifnciuritig bueincae now ninplnj;* have HdffJb to |2,hQd to liireel with eervlcea; have .had ten yoors' experience In itieJiufactur- Ipir bUBlueie end can handle tiny part of aame; glVB^finr ptCfftfculaTS lUid state Mfcc.e of bu*U n«M* AddBen* Parfirtlp.' Box iW, New* office,■WOt/LD 1lko to oaeociate a«'employe to an es-

labUflhcd real etlate busInesH, which will eventlMLlly, lead to ftoftnclal totutet, Addreos f in ite . %tr% n , t OWB offlee..

AT AlTflTlON AT AUCTION.

276— HE.kD OF HORBES— 27B ALFONEO POX. PROPRIlCTOR OF THF5

GREAT EASTERN HORBB BAZAR.620 BROAD 8T.; ANl>: l»*21 ATLANTIC ST.,

NEWARK, .N. -J.M0NDA%L JANUARY 7, AT 10 *t. >1

We adli have hi auction on Mondaj-, .lau- uer}' 7, 1607. 276 head of All tha dlfferciH type* of horses that sre in the moil demand at iliis time of the year.

Among the abiKc will be some extra gncrl big draft liorse*. weight from 1,600 to l,TW>: .Icrsey chunks. huitnesH horses and s'ome excellent rx- press cnunkH ami severti very Cast trotters and pacers, which nlJt be nhown In harnoHs at 2 o'clock. Will aluo have 95 head extra good big Fennsylvanla work horses.

Thn nbovK ar>i all consigned to be sold on commission end do not know any price what­ever on them. thsy are all to be sold to highest hidderti on day-o.f ssle. *

Sole will cominmoe at if> A- M., commencing with A*! lies-1 of horse* that have been ue»-<j around the i-iiy.

Regular aiirtlon sales every Monday and Thursday, rommenclng a t 'U i A. M.

ALFMNEU.FOX. Proprietor.Fred R RlireVe. Auctioneer. Tel. Iffid.BULL'S h ea d COMMISSION STABLE,

4W-467 flROAD ST.. NEWARK. N. Jr LAROFST COMMISSION STABLES IN NEW

JGRBBTT.REGULAR auction SALES KYERT TUE3-

Day and FRIDAY, a t hi a. m . sh a r p .Years Lrf experience have proved Ijoyond all

que*iinn lo bily«r and seller alike Ihst oixrB Is the plai’» wher* *t| arc assured of a "square deal" «na receive the best returns for iheir miifiey. We can Mv* you money. A trial ha* convinced olhert, no! only that. TOd pro- Iftf-ted by niy gusrsntee, which you have two day* to try all warranted horaes. ami If th*'/ are not ns repretented will tjol ask you lo keep tile horse, and If you have not time to come up lo the atsbl*. send your order by telephone. We want yiiu for * ouslomer, because we can save you nvoney on horses. Mr- John B. Morchous ^nd Mr. J, F, Bebrlftg, our salesmen, will he pleased to wait on any one who la In need of a horse. Our regular auction sale* day* am evrry Tuesday and Friday. y5b ofhorses lo select from. *o I can atill both poor end rich* W* have private sale* and exchange every day.

JOS. 6. HOT. Proprietor.J. B. MQREHOTTB, Fatesman.

•J. P. SEBRING. Salesman.JACOB SIIl'TTS. Auctioneer.

BANET BROS.PSALES AND EXCHANGE STABLES,

17-41 BRIDGE BT*,

NEWARK, N J.500-UORBES a n d HULEB-SOO *

coniUntly on hand to select from. Due to two csrlbftds, bories «o4 mules,- iuUab]e for all purposes, socllmgted and ready for immediate city use. received weekly. SatiefaQllon guaran­teed and prloca to suit all buyers.

ffr-HORBEfl FOR HinE-79 suitable for ell kind* of work.

Both 'phouee, 424 Newark.LOOK FOR THE "RED IlORSB''

HLA.NKET yXLB.Bacrlflc* sale horec Idankets end robes.

Most of our large orders for hlanknU and rob^s Mere filled by I>ec. 1, leaving ue with many odd lota of stable, express and truck blankets; Mte are going to sacrifice every Llailkct and robe; none carried over. Liverymen and con­tractor* who axG wide-awake and looking for bargains should not fall to o&U. Gloves, larg- eal ajBortnieni ever shown In Newark. ASCII- ENBACH'S. 70 Market *t.. Newark, N. J.

UOHBE BLANKETS, LAP ROBES, StSblS blankets, 11.25 to (4.60.

Rosd blankets, $2 to |10. .Burleigh fawn blankets, |7 lo til.Fine fawn olankeU. |5 to fd.Fur robes, S8 to 120.Driving gloves, Stk\ to 78- Plush rnhea, {3 to |10, •Everything for your horse af

flEO. RniJBAUira. 202 MARKET ST.SAtTRJFK’E Having dlspoaed of private stable

nf horses and catrlngcp(, sell halanre for reaHcnabIs nffor: very liarnl.fome light running cutunder surrey (rubber tlrsHi, elegant light combination cutunder ii'ap (ruhbtr Urea), Ra1ley speeding sleigh fseat* two), nenrly new; also fine surrey harness am1 light track liqnie«s: everything In flrst-r.lSRB condition; seen any time. Inqulro at stable, 14 Newlawn ave , Arllngt nn.BUSINESS WAGONS. busluiss wflgons:

bu!ch#‘r, grocer, baker, milk, plumber and carp<^nter wagons; also wagons for express, delivery and trucking huslnefts; all wolghtj and size*; It will pay you to look th'^m over should you contemplate buying a wagon, either new or ie('gjul-hand; exceptional itargulns Jn light vehicle* at i»reaem time. The t’lentral AVagon Works. C*»ntral ave.. Third and Foorth sis.ON account of mo\lng, nmul .■»cll one i>cddler'*

top wagon, Mith liaskets, l.'IO; nno heasy single platform wagtvn, 125: ime surrey with lop, f‘JM; Jine heaiy rubber-ltr''d bugg>'. 120; one laundry or wagon, 512; one |»eddlpr's wagon. Jl(j; one brass-mounted sttvrrj' hnrn''S«. been ushi.I tn'o or three times, 71", ono ali\er- tnmjntert roupe harnesH. fl2: one heav>' expr«-Ka harness, $171)0; one second-hand buggy harness, Itl 14 Lfy st-. Newark.FOR ^ALE, at ft sacrifice, to ill.ssol r

partnerslilp, ten bend of gnori, nse* fill delivery and eipress horse*, Melgbi 1,0'jO to 1,400 pfrunds- front 125 to *2on; -’t sets of all kind* harneRS, trucks. caUecima' wagons I'heap; trial nllownl on horsefi, $55, <’ana<Jlan mare. M-itn fnal. nunrdliiK and Jjvery atables, In rear at 12 Kasi Park st., Newsrk-15 HEAD of good. ar-rUmaled work and busi­

ness iiorses; also LUlle Dick, chertnut c- b. tJ years old. 18> ban<l* high, thoroughly iirokpn n either ride or drive, and fearlcHs of nil i‘Hy Sights: M’ould nixke an ideal runabout cob. <TlRTWrX>I>'H buHrdIng and livery ataliles. hi Slate sL: L. D. 'pheme 1224 Branch HrooK.Ml-’LES—For sale, two pairs of mules, in good

condition for heavy work, at S.50ti per ivatr; one broncho, partly broken to me saddle and ha mess; seVen colts, well bred, from' 1 tT> ;! years old, two of nsmie broken to harneS'i; prices and particulars furnlshetl on nppUcalinn. Hn«iklsv,-n Farms, Morris Plains, N. .1,

?iAM HERHY, £8 DRIDGE f?T,HorwK and mulea for sale or exchange; sev­

eral extra goofl. driving horBca; one pair i»f dapf la gray carriage horses, HI lisjuls, perfect ly broken, slng1« and driublo; iwn paoers and one trotter that cati *ter» very fast, mules to suit all purposes. TelephoneFINE lino of sample carriages; $<ime from man­

ufacturer's exposition, New York City: st sac­rifice. J. LUDWIG, manufacturer of hlgh-c5ass wagon* and carriages, 2ti-22 Camfield *1.;. rub­ber tires, repairing and painting: all work guar­anteed; U D. 'phi>neyi52J;NeM«rk 'phone 24HB.WAGONS! TRUCKS'

THE SAM.TEAGl'E WAGON WORKS,7 aV i> I) -WEBFTKR FT.

WHEN WAGON BUYING SHE )'?- ANYTHING NEW DR SEGONU-HANp.

MORE VALUB! ‘ EASY THRMfl!■BARGAINS—Iftff buys chunky built business

horse, suit grocer, baker, milk or any biisl- n«ss. cost inn short lime ago; also one big horse, suit ,,.c*(ul1 or express huslneoe. $40; and one small horse, suit any light husinces. IJIb; alt Iskeii for debt. Inquire rear af 14 Grant st.BARGAIN—|2fi and $45 buy* choice nf nice 7-

ye«r-oid, fat, chunky-built Canadian mare and horse; suit grocer. mllkPian, balrer or any business; trial allov.'ed. Can be seen to-day and all day .Sundaj at carpenter shop, fear 27 Green s(., near Broad at.E. BODBNWEI8ER. Stable* and Repositories,

9'11-I3 Lombardy at., near Broad, Newark, N. J.; horses, ponies, Moyer and 'W’atertown carriages and buslnes* wagons; harness, blan­kets ajid robes. Teh 2464J,$4C Bt'YS nice blodky built eight-ycar-oi-1 bay

mare; guaramewl to be excelletil Murker;' wotghfl aboirt l.ion pounds: suitable for gny khin of i.uBlness: will give one week's trial, or money cheerUiUy refunded If not satisfactory 14 Dey St., city.HORBEil! HOKSEI !—Constantly cm hand extra

good Illinois htJT*ea. i^onslatlng business chunks heavy draft horses, drivers; sold at loweai market price#: trial given. Rear 20-!42 Bridge st.. .4LEX. UCHUALBACH. proprietor; *phon» SfiSIW. __________ _ _lIANDttQME. light, lined, nne-hofse Brewster

brougham: cost |l,>4ilXi: will sell for cash: one of tho finest to the Orange*. EVANS, 508 Main *t.. Orange^________________________COUPE, rubber-tired, Qnlnhy make. with

pole and nhafti": to perfect eondUlon: also set of dnubliS hameei. Stable. Mfl Main *1., East Orange_____________________________LADY wm sell gtvKl ctiunhy mare; weigh#

LltW pound*; suit farmer, butehpr or gror4r; also gd*>d rob pony, drive or c-addle. iKJSVj Otdnge at. _________________ _MARB-Well-brefl marc* for sale; very fast, for

burtncis or pleasure; will sell <-heHp If sold at once. Inquire fkl Kim st., after tJ P- M.h a n d so m e black horse, good saddler: braxs-

triranjod harness, rubbcr-tlred runabout; en­tire outfit a bargain. Clifton avo- __TWO truck homes gnd one business horse for

sale dhesp to cash buyer; will sell separate, Call Bunday or Monday, Cfl Central ave.$86 BUYfl newly painted top wagon:-also fi . rubber-^tlred. hinabouta for sale cheap. 713 South Ktii *t.. near gpringfield gvc.____WILL SELL yontle lioraer fat a* seal;. s«i^y

top ap4 luimeSB: will, s^ l ^U, together for |tt) the tot. ‘1 Atf hUy..$35 bUTB chunky bull!. good '‘wind;

suit froceh or butcher; fairtr'traveler; safe for lady, FOSTER, 00 Commerce at.Fun SALE—One coal truck, one stake truck

and on* dumping wagon, f-'qulre ROUBHT ZlMMgRMANN. HWi Avon

gtylllh'carriage hcs'te; euKaJLile for doctor or'wlli trade for heavier horse. MR,

MARSHALL, 81 Academy st.

WAHTlDD* somtUilng .aM u tsiy new In the way of a ftOYSlty that will appsgl to wom-

sni abotUd rltsll for about 25 c«nt*: will buy 0001* outGlgfit oLwiil handle on royally baaia. The Minton Co.^ Inc., Rbebeotar, N. Y.WANTED, honest nuui to buy half lnt*r«st In

food payihf buatoeoa; expensnee not nscea- sary; must pttt to .|M0: money Billy oecurod; big profits; no Tiambug. . Addreo* Intertsl, Bovat, Tfsira ofllee. :WANTED, a jfooft-payfiiif salooi In goed

^Uty.- A ddr^ fchxw. Box T.^Newe offioe.WILL Invest stvergL thoufAikd- doUalw Ih a

bustoMi BropoiUhini aehkmen «f g«MWIiy«l^^r»lti. , Advnm Parllqtitari,. Ben

WGoi) , BL:MNEiiB!| for. fia)«; ''engine.- bdUer,.togchhieiT. Addreos GEOHQE

N. BCTCHINQ. Btimiult, N.,J,aod^todi^adeDM; YB of our n s - uhloss for venittog ‘ akltsd Mitr an

Hlto utrno Co.. 40 SMith

' «ynvCTORB, OBALBMij;. n rrA T l.

nwclAi ' AtunUna tflvu.' ih . . om. . . . .

US AND mo, tW9 bta, he»vr worit boiwa;two faK, llveir nulM, ilitt)* viil double

hamee* cbeup. IT HotUiid et.tao BUTB founc «t™ food drivtn* muetwif;

»leo one food bueloeee borae, cheap. SO BUrltn* »t„ Eeet Omagie. _____ _______0 0 0 0 buelncee horse, rnbber-tlred top ran.

ubout, harneta, cheap at 270 South Clinton at.. Bast Oranac^_________ ______________UOR BAIjE. depot waacn; In flrat-claan order!

price U7»: colt, »5(!0. Addrela Wa*on. Bon SB, News office. ____0 0 0 0 drt)' horao. tra«on anil hanieaa fw.aale

Cheap; owner baa no uae for eame. Intiulra 3B iMnon it

(AIN-S'onalo.'Po'Kl- all-atnunid; cbunlr i; cheap li lold at onto. «S Oentra at.,

ro R SAUK-Cheap, aiiU.ii pair of mulea; no rawaonabla otTar refuaad. ,04 Oranaa at,, oall

Btiiiday. , ' ___tuiil. B0T8 U rie woefc hnraa. wllirht I.dOO;

at|0‘ pa*r mantel viTpa, IW Tlohenor el. ■MIAtJ, mad mare, pentle, hind ami foariaaa,

fhaap:, ho nte fOi Mr. »IT Berun" al,2M.BIV al qtrne«aa; flU.- *S6 t'eittnil ava.

FOR SA tih;, oMap. ana- *ray mare. - JOHN­SON, W Ualeted at.; Eaat Orahie.

AT'ATCTION:...lAraeat Cottimlaalon Slablee In New Jersey.

‘ ;Su_O I!A 0 OF ilORSKfc—■«*>

c'onimaiioina at 10 A. M„ with tiOTsee. wBc.is an.i harneM. AM *ant eman who la In iwcl of n riurae should not Call to ba on hand Tm.i-d* 't'

H'-suUr ouctloa aplM eccry Tueeilay andFi'lilav I'diFiimmcIltC lu A, M.riii,a>, iun»mrnvu*» ^ Tivp.J F, SHBRlNGi Salesman.J B MOREHOUtf. J<atotman.

JACOB C. SIlUTT^. Aucitonrrr.l ^ r n t l . p : or hire. 13 noraej. b™vy chunk,

I'lr. wind and work horao. !25 nihbir-ilr.d foupo, ton rubher-tlred * V(■re... wacona: biand-new clump wagon, illW. J Sc'Hl,'i'itMAN, 107 O mritl ave.iTThbK harneM a ^ rUlMon-tIr«l runabout;

Ic'iJf, 'isS black, with Iona mano and tat;-, «.'oi for lady to drive: not afraW of auto, or c nc« aood Canllir horie and reaaonuble prlca.■IclN kniahl^^O J?'!!''';'’)*DHicranAM-Frlvile party will sell an ele-

*am utenalon brouaham. nsndo by Flanilratt * C l.. latest itylo; need but n_ few times, hoocl an new; roet U.400; price !.6n, A.ldieaa r., itoi i«e. Olen RUae. N, JPf.RiciIlk. cutters; aomn with top cjn. hw

pIlvHlrlana: twti-aeal elelahe. llclit btiBlneai b"li ' nni} *ni IWu horsf bob Klrdu; also Isrgp ft'-'k Iif qll Styto «irrlRg^s. 'Plioii" 32J. U. \ l .K.Miaow. SummU. N- ______________Ml s r fiflU two bU8lnftrt!» «ml 'Irivlng lioi-inD*;

Mill any bustostw: <’np heavy *m .af hanimny gi -.cl ii* jiew; <ino tl<'w bugKy fel, n'‘v"r u.teil;

i»4*<iil|er’» rig. Aiiply, all ila.v Pumla>. Jiw llimir.it,n ilarriscm.__________________ _Ulii\' urr; famllv liHiul omp bay rob

Iinl our long-tall hOTH®: wjfp f. r imv onr to MiK**: nM reasnnablo off-’r rrMscrl. hmnIk ih^ room. Call *11 il*y Huntlay, UHiS'A Ur'i«;| Hr _____ __ _________ ______UnrHlVKl) one car InaiJ of )i»'Jivy <lrsfl

l.iiMiiDS* hows; I hlark iriitu,wagon Htid hanifw'. J. KI U‘'lUlHr’J'-

NUrt. 1177 Hnuth 12lh »t., afar Rpringfl*'!'!HALK. big work hurRen, two rnuU’s I'sll

1 KI 1 Rh g\e._______________ ___ _li<'USL for rial*. <'«ll Suiuluy, 20 Gar^ooiJ |>l,

F o r Sal« oi* E xchangesnLA'K GELDING, ataitrlftnl. rrglmorrd. i.y

I'llgrimim', (torn Amy \V.. hy l'»>li.nlUH. five trt'SflpH in Kysclyk's Hambld-iunlRn, 4Vj .wars, i:. humlH. nlih llmiu-d lumJIlng pIiuw con- el'IiThblfl HiK'od; tvIH I'xrliange for n g rnTHl friniii) horse; good iravplrr iinil »af<‘ f<»f a w<iciini\ in drive. A. W“. H., Uoi 117. Mllllng- U'li. N, J.GtMUi. largo roafi liorso for *jilo or eii’hatigo

f'lr giKxl work horse. Uolunmii llouav. West

H orarg, CArvIncas* EtCac Waii4«4aIMUMl:) WBJifed, suitable fvr iloclur; mUHl t>e

M one and priced worth the nn'tit'y. Ad-dn'SH, giving full partlculHiji, llor.' v, box KI, N**ws otilre.BOARD for horsoHi box stalls; best care; pad-

fiix'.)(S: line carriage hi>rae#. Lswtonia Farm, A12 S*ouili Orange ave.. Hn, Orange, trl. 318W.CROWN l*QEni Stock Form, Bloomflolil avr.,

Tmy Hill*, N. J.; horse* pastured; box stalls, paddovks. JUDD CONDlT, Prop.WANTED, twf good mustritjgH; olty lire kM

th«y Hinsr tn- g<*id wind ami work. GKollGE R.4IJi'H, West Orange,HfilLVE wanted huHhIiIp fur Irutklng; also

shed wagon and haniesB. A<pJri*«a Hors*. Box 2.1. News offii-e.WANTED—Old Ivarneaa bought. Sold or l&kcn

In exchange. ASCHfiNBACH'S. 7h Market st.^ ■.ANTK1> if> buy, bulf l an inf.n Ing wagon,

bliH'k nnd fall. 1*7 High Ht. HROWN.

ANNUAL MEETINGS.'iHE aniiuft] meeting of thr stockholddr* of the

Flr-nnen’p ln*uninve ('otnpany of Neewark. N. .1.. 7v|ii ii#i held /m the fuurteenih day «>f Jan­uary. A. D l!k>7. Ri IJ u rlOck In the Ior<‘noon, Ri (he urim'lpal dfflee of the ronjpany, No. 7S0 Broad Bireel, to the vlly <if Neuark. N. J.. fur the purpoHe of eleclhtg a board of director*, ai'opiiiig bylaws nntl rei-elving and acting ujKjn ihc reports of the oflleeTn and for iha trana- ai'uon of *ueh other business os may properly 11 one before ihe meeting.

Polls optin from 11 A. M. tn 12 U.Dated December 21i, ItMkI.

A. II. HAF5 1NGERSeiT -tary. .

EDGAR B. WARD. DANIEL II. DUKH AM. CHARLES t'OLYKR.

Blockholde r*..NATIONAL .NEWARK RANKING CUMI'ANY.

ELKCTIUN.Newark, N. J.. December 8. IIH>6

The anntiHl meeting of Ihe HfrirkholiW-ra of this bank, for the election of dlreciors lu spria fur the ensuing year, will U>- held «t the hunk- irg-hiiuae uu Tuesday, the eighth ilay uf Jantj- wry iipxt.

Pull* open from It A. M, to 12 M.H. W. TUNIS,

CnshJpr,

THE ASSOCIATION INlTlTUTBVOUKG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION.

107-tlt Halssy st.. Newark. WINTER TERM BEGINS JAMJART 7.

COURSER fo r MfclN:COMMON SCHOOL. 'COUMERCIALf

'SPECIALaXdverilsLi , Halesmanshlp, Publlo S[>Mkinf. I'biilne** Law. Care and Msnageiuent (tf HU- iloziary- Sieuni Holkr*. Growliit acid D«velop- itient of (he United Scatei, Modern LAaguaiss, btaiu>graphy, Kic.aVTGHT SCHOOL FOR IJMFIA>TED BOYS.

Send for prlntvU matter giving full Inform^' tioit.Expert ln*truri<ire, t»ut rnoilerat* co*(,

UiT-llt IlftlMy at , N’ownilt.

OIoDEST. LARi’.KST. BERT.ESTAlHJaHED lti62. FOUTV FIJ^H YEAR.

It puys to ailrnd Ihli «iKl rrllaMn Krhool. You rei-eltt ihr »wuc(|i!« nf a more ihoruugh training, and whvn ymi graduHW- you carO’ with yuu thr Inlho^nii' <if n PChiM.I ihai liu* theconfideiioo aibl r««pnM uf luifiluo** iiu*n i-\vry- where. Cvlrmoii graduHtos grt

GuoD Paying positjons and hoivi lli“ni. Ikecaun-- they urt* n-altu'd m do good Work- (.'all or wrlu- for caiHifgne and School Journal.COLEMAN n a tio n a l KUSJNKSSCuIAjKOE,

Academy and Halsey bis., Newark, N, J, __________ J. KUIJLKR.ni, Prtndpai.

DRAKE college:,Broad und Writ Park ala.

Newark.Bualness, Hhoriband. English.

New term begin* January 'J, 11*07.Y ay and evening sesslona.Ufiice upen bolblay week.

The Chrlsiniaapraseiit that will ba apprectotevl fnr a lifetime ami wliUh gruvv* better wa.’Ji >var le “A COUHHE AT DRAKE COLLEGE."

There I* no better IlUHlness or ahorihand School anywhere at any price.

Jf Intereaird you sro reipuctfulty Invited to call.

EDW.ARD G. BRANDT. Prlnclpll.

II WmEUII WEEK If you Juin club new for per­il WEEK eunnl evening ipitructlua In

, ' book-keeping, nbortl^gnd, iyitawrlttog, etc., to tS^butinesa-HMwa-- private aclionl. Merdliontj and Danker*' Ajisc>clatlun. i}&3 ilri.3ad ii. A. J- HARD­ING. Pre*.

i s s i - i mTHE NEWARK BUSINBBB COLLKOB.

PARK BUILDING, PARK PU,HEAD OF MlUtAHY PARK.

WILUjUI WlLHEKI'OllCE WINNER. PHJN. A miyfiern bu*ln«ss training schooli educate*

pei'iple to becunie Independent and self support' Ing; enjoy* the oonfldeiic* of the public; dis- llugulshod fnr fine dticlpHne,'thorough Instruo- tlon and excellent result*; over fiOO cilia for orfics help since January I bespeoki tbs stoad- ing of N. 11. C. graduates._________ _ _THE KOBEVTLLK COMMERCIAL 8UHOOL,

IfiT Second nt., near Orange *(,. Newark.L. BLAEI^ER, iTinrlpnl.

A hlgh-grade~prlv*is school of llmUsd niilD* bershlp, for the study of Btenugrapby, type- wrlttfig, bouk-keepings Engllib branches; uo claasea.

Catalogue on application. Vljltors welcom*.Teleptionc D(ML Branch Brook.

SKYMIUTI SUtlWL. fl \VHf?T U.\RK ST ENGIjIWH. PMORTILNNL, TV I’EWHI TIMi

EHtubil5h«-d 1-StltJ. Hctluivd rate to i.lay Htu dent* eni' lltog ImmedJiiiely. Muniioii h urk- escidled Mtiorthand aystvin; cxperlenuvd leerh- »*r*; HucceHuful graduates; puBiflithfi furnished w hen comp'‘Ti>n*, unexveptiomihie rfferenoes. UhII or wiH*' f<ir I'HTHlfjgue.

THE NEWABlv 6EMi^AH7,172 CUntun ave.. Newark, N- J-

ANNA FRANCTH WHITMORE, PRINCIPAI* Boarding and day echuol. Couree* In inuiie.

art, slncullon, pliyslcei culture. Pupils enter leading collegCH every year on certlficeta. Gymnaeluni. laboratory, athletic*. Catalogue*,

Ne w a r k academy.Pounded 1792.

a. A. FAHRAND.Wn.SON FARHAND. Head Msotere.

Thorough preparation for any vollege or *rl- eiiiific s.'hnoi. or for builneis life. Catalogue on Hppllrntlon.

UNION NATln.VAL BANK.ELECTION.

Newark. N. J., December 8, KK)Q, The Einn\!*l meeltoK tf the »;in< klmlderh uf

thlB hsnk. fi>r (ho elwilon of direoiur* and for vhfi transflcflun uf any I'llier hufiines.i that inay tome before the meeting, will bo held «t the banlting hpuBe on T'O'sday, .lanuary 8, InuT. between the hours of 11 o'clock A. M and L! M.

A. VV. CONKLIN.Cashiar,

ANNUAL MBETING, ELECTION.THE pr u d e n t ia l INSURANC’E UDMPANT

OP AMERICA.Newark, N. J.. December S, 1606.

Tlw annual m 'Ctlna of tho aiiickltoldera of this company will be held at (b* office of the company, PiudeiiTlHi building, Newark, N. J., on Uunduy, Januai-y 14, 1007, for the purpose of electing dlvectura to serve for tbs ensuing year.

PdUb open 11 A. M-. close 12 M.KDWARD GRAY. SscretarT.

NATIONAL HTATK BANK. e l f c t id n .

Newark, N J., December fl, HKHJThe annuhl itie<ding of the stocKholdcrs of

ilili bank, for the clectkm of J1 "ctl:J s to servs for (be cnBuIng year, will be h*’ld at the bank- ir.f-hou9e on 'Tueitdayi the eighth -day of Janu­ary. 11H*7.

Polls open from IJ A M. to 1? M,WHjUAM ROUKWratA

Cftahler.fid ltjITY tr u st CO,

Flpotlon NoticeA meeting of the st'^khMldfra of FldrUfy

Trust rumi'any. for the jHirpoRe nf rirnliiK dlreciora to aer •e fur the en-'Ulng year, will be held at the nfflec of the company. Broad Btreol, Newark, on Tuesday, January 8, lfl07.Hi m o'trkick ilOntt,

roll* oi>eh from 12 to 1 o’clock.FREDERICK W. EONFR.

Sc<-rctnr>'FIRST NATIONAL BANK OP BEuLEVILLE

el ec tio n .Belleville, N. J„ Dee. g, iBOft.The annuRl meellng <yf (be slovkhoJders of

thla bank for the election bf direelnra to serve for the ensuing year will be held at (h* bunk on '^esda.s', January' 8, ItWI, between the hours of 2 and 3 p. U.

JOHN 8, BOWNR. CnahSer.TllE NEWARK LiMR Alfp CEMENT MAN^

FArrllRlNO COMPANY.The annual meeting fnr Ibe elerllon nf direc­

tors nf this t'on)])ftny will be held at Ibo ihlfii-'e of the company, foot of Bridge street, Newark N. J.. on Tuesday. .1nnuar>- Ifi. lfiH7. The poU* will be open from 11 A. M. tn 12 M.

W'ALTICRTOMKINS. Secretary,BBfiEX COUNTY NATTONAL BANK.

Newark. N, J., Dectbiher 8, lUOfl.The annual meeting of the stockholder* of

this bank, for ihr Hi«‘t:t|nn of divertor* to serve for the ensuing year, 'Will be held at the bsnk- Ing-housf, Tnesda.v. Jsinuary 8. 1007, between the hours of 10 and 11 A. M.

_______ A. F. R. MARTIN. CgshlSf.^ O R T H WARD NATIONAL BANK, ^

NEWARK. K. J , DEC. 8, 1603- EIjECTION,

The annual eleotinn for dlrecioTs of thi* bank will bo held at the banking hoUHs on Taeeday Januarv 8. 1607< befween the hours of 10 and II A. M.

SPENCER g, MARI?H. Cashier.THE annual ineeilnir of the Annexarl THsirl-t

Pnliding and Lnan Aa»M;latli>n will hr hold al JkK) (.fiintoti ave . Newark. N- .1., on Mondav. evening, January 7. iffiWk ni k n'clock.

]•:. AJjLEN RMITH, Hecretary.

a u c t io n SALB^r

-AUCTION FAIjR-

M. J. O'CONNOR A SONS. AUCttoNERRS. AT THE SALESBOOMP. IH2 ANfj i»4 Ml’L BERRY ST., MONDAY. .lANUARV 7, AT n A, aU. A VERT LARGE SALE OF FUR MTURF. RUGS. CARPETS, IJKDDiNd, ETC., AND SOME OFFICE FURNITURE SOLD AT BALE IN THE OLD CITY MALL. ON MONDAY, DECEMBER fll. JpOd, TO PURCHASERS - WHO HAVE . NOT <?OM- PLIHD W ITH Tllie TERMS OF SA!l> SALE. In part, Parlor Suit* and odd pierva. t*ham-

ber Bului Folding Bede, lira aa and other Rod- aleadfl. Wardrobes, Chiffoniers, T)Te*ReiD, China Closet#'. Extenalon, Llbmiy and Parlor Tahlew; Sldeboanls, Leather and other Chalrx. iPvok- caoes, Deska, Couches. R<H‘k4re. Iffer and Mantel Mirror*, CurM Hair and oth'T Mat- IrejMS, Bedding, Portieres, ne«‘ and serond* hand Rugs aud Carpets In all grades and Nizei, LdnolflUtn, Ma(tlng„ a variety i>f gowl common furniture and housefumishtog gtwds of all kind*. N. B.--LOCKBD STORAGE-ROOMS ON THE PRHMIBF^; 'PHONE C91; 4A TEARS IN THB BUSINESS.

NOTICE Is liarebjr glvsa, that th« undersigned will e«ir at public auction on the twelfth day

of JaiiuaTY, I90T. oomrobnclng at 10 A. M . at the stoeage warehouse, 84-02 Bank at., New­ark, N.. J., one rolLtop desk, one flat-top desk, six chairs, cute Alfag cue. one banket aud' contoRti, otosed by J. P. Holland, upon wblob stoniiptf and other chorgM have not bean paid lor one^year.

AMOS H. \’AN HORN, Ltd.M. J ' O’CONNOB, AtiCtloneer.

Dated Dec. 'ai, WO*.NOTtete^ !• liven that tlifr underalaned «;n eell

a t fiffilbi aaetlan, S7d Waehinaton i i . Jan- ttary 22, 1907. at 2 A,-iL.. certain anode In ffinrat* b«]aB9ln( to J. Joliee, L. Htfrentmthen.HattH^Hriitt lU lw Dena Kreedattn. O. X*Morrteon,

-K«nd ............. ..............and _

WABIlIKfl^N SfORAOK CO.

— _»on, Hattie WUetm, Mary Wll- ««n BaldwBi and Rotiert Dfinenr,. to .atlefy BwMrstgntd’g bill fnr storuM and uther charge*.

THE NEWARK UtkH CO., of 82 Aesdsmy Springfield sve, and fomierly aifl

jpSnat a t, win sail a t jnikllc auetlon on January Sr 10 A. U., alt unredeemed,

plafiSM at-.We W. TlBnD’fl Auction Roorn*, ilfi. . . . / .

p w s u E i ^ f t f l U 't r T S 'f i S i ^ ^pat^lO ’ agfioS; fuJl retdiaf*, lOc. end Hi

flka rouii 12. sam*Ctoldgg raitattramt

' ft.. ttew-Tfyii. iteinaUatWaa e jir .

UlS.S TtiW.NBEND-S boHrilto* eml ffey achool for girls, fit Park pi.; acartemlL-, Inirfjnedliita

Siui primary dvpartnientii. >vell equipped wyni' tiaH.lum and laborstory; certlfli'ate admits lo l»>afUng <*ollegen. Rpopene Hrpt. 20. Miss TbwiJ- *entl will be at heme from to S afterSepl. 10.

for •tenography, lypewrUlua. book keeping. Knellah, weiilngs, ai.1 $2 \Kf»rkly In the day- tim*’; evi*ry one tought BPi>«ralely; viosltSou* Runranleed. Tel. 4424 J. ROWUEN'R Huatoea* t'ollpgp. ffS CemrA p? . n*»ar MiUtnry Park.THR KAPTRflN SCMOnL UK 8TENOGRArHY

874-6 Rrnad nt. Mias FmllJs H. Saumenljr, R L . prlnrlpal; i.T yesi« Im cciprtroom and fchoolroom: Individual Imiirut tlon day, evvn- fiiK; piiRliInrin seoiirort; eoSnied maid for girls.B0.4T0N t e c h n ic a l IN.gTlTUTE, 2T1 ~Brnad

at.; ♦*le{;1rlrftl studleu, merhanloal. srchlteo- Diral drawing. maiheinatJvs. backward stu- dente, law. metllral. high achnol oourse*; oer* tlficate admita lo miifge; ’phone 1D60L B. B.

MaatceVOCAL INRTRTrC'rMN-lmilfli; melhniJ r.i.

Ijlaviiig. cnrrpi't reading, hy SIME. I'KITl'i'l-:, pupil nf Han OliivRiito. of Milan, 11hI>, and prlmn donnii of leading ulMJrH .'joUsn.-a (J I'!iirop»* HFKD. DAWfinN <Y>. Bma.l at.. Tuns,Jay uiul l''VliiQV, vnlop irh'd fT»-e; New Yrirk atuillo. !;Sl \S>.si 14tb at . it\?r the DHinruerh Ciihm,

HYRdN S. DICKSON,VncAL AND pian o INSt RUCTTON

Cobauiratlon and olce rrlnl frer, SVedu sdei p ami Kttturilays unill, 8 I'. M.; nihtir daj's bj .ippotoiinenl. f'al! or ndiiress 7&.1 llroail st.

WBIDT SCHOOL OF MUSIC. BANJO, MANDOLIN. GUITAR, VIOLIN.

Private leoson*, RUc. laatruments for sal*. 297 Nigh at. (near Central ave l. L T>. 'Phone.J-'I/1RENCR AB rilUR. volcf pi'nilijrUdii. piano

amJ \lttlm toHi'lrer three years hi lyunlon Conservanjlre. Moiulay, Wedneailay. Friday, fjff Hank et.AUfj, WIN'IIARDT, graduate Conservatory at

Mannhetoi. Germany; flute InHlnirllona. Neiwm pi.; member Newark Tlnsatre Orcheatra.PROF. CKAK F. RH'HHOIIN, piSno. organ

and hafmunj-, ’rello, flute, mantlolln and suitor; eight reading for vtH*all»te. 14 ThomD* et

W, F. h a tt eb b l et . organist Si- Patrlrk’e <’Hthedral; piano, vole*; Tuesday and Friday. Studio, 506 Broad it.

MISS MAE R. PERBINE.Violin, piano; tnelhod praettoal, thorough and

yet simple; terms moderate. 22 Court it.WM. WALLACE canon .

VOCAt* CT'LTURF:. 5.W Profld It. (Teb 48R Branrh Brook.) 2IM) Clifton av*.VK)f,rN Instruction; iboraugii propapation for

orHiestrn ur lololfli. CEO. KRtUS, 144 Lit­tleton ave. —VIQJKN , nnilTlUND'S mualc elnre.

hRTi)a, guitar, inftudolln. ffOr.; private.' Kprlngfield ave.

UARRY FISCHER, teacher banjo, mandolin, violin, guitar; lessons private. 117 Oliver sL

MRF. Ml NETT A PftiUE TIC HEN OR. violin, mandolin, banjo lessons, libc 22 fi'alnut at,

VIOLIN Instnirtlon. Alexander Hlrjw‘li1>i?rg. at studio or your, residence. 276 Belmout sv*.

Riloetttlom*ELOCUTION, voles eultur* for opasoh. sxm« w

Sion. S. HARIS 80NN* 1» Pork iL,Tussdays sad Frldoya.

D m iriH p.THE DAVIS SCHOOL OF DANCING, BUNBET HAUj. 8 CENTRAL AVE.,

NEWARK. N. J.MRS. HELEN DAVIS. MANAGER.

CHARLES F. TRAVKRB. INSTRUCTOR. PRIVATE LESSONS OUB SPECIALTY. Every day and evening, bv appoloiment.

CLASSES—Advanced and ColTllloii. TUEfl- DATS, 9 (0 ll;30.LECllNNKRB. WEDNESDAYS. to 10:30.

Swelal rats to persons forming a class.fa n c y a nd sta ge dancing .

Write fnr circular of terms or apply to Mr s . IIKL.EN DAVIS, 8' Central avs.

Hunaet Hall can bs reiitecF fur social *1-1111#. 'Phone 2MTH.JOHN H. RJCHABDH'B SELECT SCHOOL

FOR DANCING AND PHYSICAL CUL­TURE, LENOX HALL. 681 AND 668 BROaD

ST. SFjCOND QUARTEn IN ALL Cl^BBKS V'ILL BEGIN FROM JANUARY L 1967.

Beginner* and advanced olasiHi Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday evening*; High School dasa. Friday evening; children's clsases, Sat­urday afternoon; bsglnnsra, 2 to 4 P. H.j ad­vanced, 4 to 6 P, M. Saturday morning*, Roie- vllle Athletic Club. Reductions mod* for two or mora from one family^ pupils Crotn out of town, or club* of fear, sit, eight or eixteen people; new begluners and new High Bcliubl viasa forming this week: private lessons by appolnttoont. Fur term* write for cirouiof.

"NEWARK D A N C t^“ a cadem y”" ‘ WalU and two-stsp guaram^td, tt; private

InitmcHon; recet^ilon every tifonday «v'g- K**t floor in. Newark; musla by Godley's full Sihestra; odm. ailc. Jacoby * hsU, ^ 3 Brood atBU BCKHARDT* B Doneing Acodstoy, 676 Brood

«t.: new beginners can Join any evening 5 16 iw^ ■one. M tim e n ip. laiHes | 4; half term* gentU- men M, ladles |2.60, Pkyabla half to odvanS; the latest styia and all dance* g***” "tttf*CHARLES BARNARD'S chUdyen'i «»****

Oraton HU), Broad et,» oom*r Bridge Sampl days, 2 iQ ^ beat, Urgsst and ebaapeat- soaiety; staga, fancy Anclng to olaw ' seieot

JOSEPH B. w u m r s wcioci 17 w m from Jm w rr. miawln««r aum i-, I^rtiea;« i

on *ppttfij.tlon, by or -fhop* 42011.H. A U ^N OaBOliHi'O ffil Bto,d

•t., w«n« ftiiii twoinop tu ith t in a fowT”Bia»; privato loraom,' Me. por Inioo. ‘

I " *■ »«•» .

THB BBRLITZ BCHOOI.O? lANOUAaaB.

^ (o ppo b it b t h e poBTOPricB),MO B R A Itm iH w A li , LKADINO CTtlBg

JJiraC H , QBMIAN.•W W IiH; ITALIAN.

D A TjH ip EVBNISO LESSOSS.psiV A Ta zjaaoH B a n d classes

AT SCHOOL OR nailOBKCB. TMobors i ^ t to noKliboriiif towna and auburbt.

TftlAL LE8SOKB FSEE.

C iv il S siT W s.C m L SEHVICB omplowa aro u id «•!! for! . e»n work;- giamlnatlom of alt klnrU aoou: hooklrt,» l*#.'0«iK;rlW8*,SMlU(tna anO. ttlllnr.satort MiO :outflwat was to Mevn ttom )i fTf*. 'Writ. BOW. WUhlttfton Civil Sarvioo )|otoa(. Mitfylaikl 1«iU0Ib«> Waaktastoii, K. c.

■ h o rllia itd aiad T y d e w rltln c .SHOHTHA\'I>. lypowrltlns, *-hool o( Younf

Women'* Christian Aosoelatlori. 14 Blast Parr •t. Apply at ecbml. froim U to tS A. M., or lo principal, I. C. KENNRUY, 35 Wright it,

A endatnto mud C4>U«glnte itaAI«a,PRIVATE Instruction In the ubove, 21 BCt.

Pleasant ave.. siudcnti' home, or 76 Ultclisli pL. EutO ringc. fi. D. mU.U.^N. Ph. D,

UlffS MARY S. HOOD. Art Cloisee-A class to water color will be opened January 5, ipoi.

26 Lunabardy st.

M laeelliiaeona.-FR EE -

A u lomoblle Lea«ona.All ln*irurUnns In automobile lesnous, both

in [-epalrlng end running on the road; goofl |h i- slilenM oaii b* piucuved by well lenrnwl cheufTeur*; come at once. *» the eiaflHes efe llmlteJ. call bciww’n 7 A. M. ami » P. M., Autuntoblle PolUH'l Of New .Ipjeey, 457 Wflali- Ingtruv i i . ___________DO YOU went to learn how lo run and reiiair

in automublleY Tim courses In our Auiomo

Hwo.aoo loak •bo nd AND iftjR’rOAa*. at b p e r

' t a l l ^ 'FAPBB8 c a r ;________________

. CHARWa*. A.-PEICK.' COOTWBLOR.AT tXW, .

TM BROAD ST.■ TO-LOAN -

ON BOND a n d WOtCTOAOE.NO BONDS'OR OOlUnSMON BXACTeiA

OEO. W, HAONBY, ■COUNBSLQB-AT-LAW. lB8,MABKgr ST

bile Si-hooi ere thorough and practical; un ha\H a Isrge garage, completely cquUU'ed and prev- tlral Tiistrucuirsi thi sohoul is run to help menB.v *haV« wiAnak' airVTV If'ilR I'AT*.•not lo make money. SENT) FOR CATA­LOGUE. *

WE8T t?tDE T, M. A.,.1«0 IVRRT CTTIl ? T.

SIX WEEKS' Insirurtlon In traveling aales- ninnshlp: ponitlon guaranteed ut«uii complv-

Uon. Hrsdstroet Pysteo^, BcH’i>f*tei, N. Y.

L O iT A irn FflUMD.LukT—Hrtweeii 150 North N'inlh at.. Newark,

ami O'.N’etU'* ator*, Sixth hvc., New York, via D , !j iind W and ll,1d at. OMUfthWit CSV*, xlrlng of gulil henito. I'lndpr will bn atllt- ftbly Ti’Warded In returning Nantp lu DtjKTON, lEto Norilv NinMi m.. N«*w&rK.lAif'lJv *tOld I'icket and chMlti, picluit! lliSidg.

on Thuud jind Merkel .'to, nr iVniml n\t*. rnr. coming from .Ne\Kark; valitt-d n* kitiionke from dead frlntut Revnrd If relumed lu *7

at , t U'Hngo.l.nST Fh»» yunlH of titorh moire silk, Frldsy,

liMwcen Ki nini either on UUnton nv?.uir nr in HamtM'rgi-r'e. Kinder kh»lly reiurn In lost and fuiniJ desk <.*f Itahno'M or H.un-bej'geT' *.I>tST. *irai.ei1 «ir *!f>|en, « spotted iinnrii d. j<

uttawerhig lo the imme of D nvey. und having fl Nfoiitelnii' llrenMe 149 fnr 1l)^. IteTT-ueii If returned in S. ot.K.^ON, 20 Valley road, MoiK- f Islr.IjOHT—AlM>ut II month and r half ngo, to

lUuney's baleony. ud)-'* unjbretlfl. ullvri* haii-die; toitlals K, W D.. tnurked L P. Fluul A Up. Ueturn Lu lllhiify'g.hQX. aUiiir re LHlil..__IjOST—Oii I>e<k 2U. from a.Utoi»K>blle. In Millf-ied

*U, near Main. East Orange; small hlack d»g cmksr nruinlel. Lihrrul reward If relumM at once to Hi South Twelfth ai,, n«Hrtv|]le,LOHT-Friday, about fi r. M.. near D.. Ja. and

W stadun. Japaneso pnoketbook, comalnltw gold chain, amnll nitin of money: rawolfi. lu. H F’F.r.!.. 5 R«llroad p i. Newark.

[“ St o l S H iVICE iCHOOi;-^d S K T m s ^ to l :

ggSmlMillsni^ •

ilHiikbook Nc. 1KIM)4H. iMUed by the Muward Having* InstluUlnii; payment 'has

1>ec-n atniiped. Finder 1* requeaUd. to leav* me At the tiank. 768 Broad »t.

r,AlST-.luuuni')’ L gold hrscelat, going from lii Suuih Arlington nvr., East Orange, in

trolley, to VYsKlilngton and Market- Rstunt tn aimifl HddruM*: reward.L/IRT - l*»'iNtm who fuiind silk Umbrella In

I'Uionitield car late Thutodav night, please re Him: reward. .1. H. MATUtl-n'. lirtmtofieM R\T. and North filh at.IjOHT -.Tatiuary 4. Ih»x marked lirs. ILlrvey

Htid t'arev. <Vtt1ura»lgue, N, V.. via Krl* R. It. Reward W'lM lo> paid fnr return of sant* lo 78 Tan'k at.1/iKT—Reward ofrere.| flip ihe return of pig’'

skin rasu ronlalnlng ph<>1ogra|>)v; lo*l on JantiHry 4. Adilrre* HewanJ, Hoi 41, Newff ‘■fflce,I/)HT Flankl>')uk No. 2(i4720. imuM by lioward

SavhiK* Rank; pnymunt on Name han hern 2t'ipl»(l. finder will leave aarpe at hitnn,l>^ST On TliurHilaj-. January fi. small hhvrk

'L>({. bare spot over right eye. Rewurd pnld If i''tuiTied to lift rrinimerre al.LOST Slh-er-handled umbrella. In poslofliitn,

TliiiPJidav afternoon. Ileward If returned tb 20 MllfcTfl a\'e.LOST Small hrhitile pvnipv, )‘etitertlfly morn­

ing. aritumi Mlghlantl uh*. ; rawanl. liiLI Uen- tre Ht,. Urangi',f>ST On J''rl'iHy night, atjulrrel aearf. on Mar­ket at , rewiini. Return to Of) Ihirk pi., Ir-

vljlKlnO.IJIKT--Wednesda:*'. a black 'l trlianimil. Reward

Sf returned b) 57 Washington , E-lunt nr-

Ful NU -ijrlndle hull pup; owner ran lia\e •8ine by pr' vjng prot>nrl>' nn;l imylng ex­

pense*, 0 T ark Irvington. N. .1.F01\N1>—Mtoeii I’olored cnlH# dog, ni; l>eoemiier

2.1. Parllculnrs. call Sunday, 15 Lladaley pi., Faat OrangeFfd'VD- U.n*H«h aett^ir, with Mack eiir*, bodv

t^Iilte. ti.hfii wim black. Tnxldvjmlsi. ID Wllham at.Ft'U.'qiK uloli! eyeglflaaea; low4*r scrllon of d ’y.

fall IJiT Sllllelde avr*., illy.F- OUND—Irlfth BcUf«r hinli, Derember 27. 44

MtlMngtcm rvn.

PIAflOS AKD OUC.AN8.

HPURaK'S,B5 flprlnRfleld ftva. Open evenings.

Bargain for Canli.New uprikhr piano. $125.

nig lluntalti.UprlKliti, $1 a Week up,

. spunaE 'fi.Ofi PpringfldJ H\e., corner IliKli si-

riANoa-Tha F, Connor. linied for li* desp, ridi toMQ ai'.d wearing qiialJiy; i|io cHabrated

IlMlIvy. IViKJ. Hold elaewhero IlllfiU; aleguni new □ [►rlghr. 7 1-3 ootuve, r«al inaliogany. Ivory key*. llT.'l, to mtinihly; ntl pinnoi warrsii1,eil f ir ton years; stool, ar'arf nr noer; one year's tuning free: slightly nstfd itprighls on hand; Suuare planus surrlflceil; open ove until 10.

HENRY IIOHN'S FSTATR.51 Smith Orange uve., corner Howard *t.

Vl’IlH lIir UlANtiH Kelt 11.THIS WKFK (^M.V

R wiil pa>' lo 1nvc.HtlKate iniw nm do. Jt; join aur J’bliuj t'lub at mul J1 will ddlvcr IQyour home a hamlHnme upright plHno; guaran­teed fnr JO years, hIooI, cmcr Hgri delivery tree, n 'WOTaI-’F a CO.. HI ku Markfll *!.■TFN dii\N niafiufacturrr'H fHCtory utoaulng

Rftle; eighteen Used upriglitB. indudlng su>-b v^oli-gimwu Tviakea as Stt-Uiwav, Krakuuer, ChlckrhfiR. Kranlcli & I3r< I i . H<-hmer. flulilrr. Wrrllng fjcclwrllng : frmii $«.'i ii'$«HI; 15 month­ly; squiirns, $15 to $ikL \VISBNl‘:it. dd.'i Broad^FOUR pia n o ” BAROAJNs'^THig WEeX ^ Feaas upright, pnahogSTjy cane, cost S30O..$2TGPeas* upright, bargain, cost J2HS............ 200Clilckeriiig uiirigin. fins ton*, cost $400.... 160 Bradford upright, mahogany cass, cost 125

FEAHE warerooaiB, 10 New at , NsBrurh.PEEK A dON opera pianos, with tliat deep,'

lympathcilc orgsn-llke tone; :>an b« pur- chftsed oil convament mfinUily paymentu; *in.ill planob for Nmull room*, at DAKLR'd, 27 Baulh Orange ave.Fi’JR Ha l e , fill*’ upright pinno: liinntl lu-w

elegant irmr-; );andsomv mahogany wuhtak^u for <l»'ht. will sell ai a great bargato for cash. I'all or uddrens owner, tifi N’grth Oros-t- Hi., East uraiiK^. ^I*!aAYER riAN 't, new: best nihke; preat-nt

piaii«> taken ue [>art piiymuiit, pualilM'ly a groat bargain. Addresa Cash. Rot 4>i, .News ulfice.

>>to4 «nd BiOTUBK la l-n JJ t i? . ® **'' “ B'-.' WHbOBf bSlMkl p u a r d By BLACK. eouiM4tor«BH PrBdBBtMD

10b t en' hond and mcvtcuti. » ' b*nu« r-qmn.4. KRBDERICK B.nl8D01L 1»W' tM BfoaJ W.. N«w«ri;. wTl ' .

AT5PKRC*WT.i

„ __;_______Selieuw lUUdtnK.' < •MdXKV lo Join ™ .inortou*..Bt' to W m l ■

of vain*, r r PN-OVF.lt.CTa iN N o ir l i682 Wrmd st. ______ • . t .

UORTQAOES, t-OANW-pKRIiOISjS^

fiS* ..O r U ^ N A J . .S0T3S,., _¥p » tto.noW - .-TO

Looiic.1 ,0 nnip

ESPLAlNiNirTUK ABOVl;' F tL iY ; Aoy Uonfit a)«ii, -hdlffint a mrnumM

I poiltmn. n-1.0 iriohei to iw loaoBfaJonUr <-Rti borrow. jbcMt Ttoi* tw,' ..-Itnout ttB’

humllHitlon (.( havtof till titipluj-of. !*»• th-B or FrlriHt know lila pojrviml barii.

( o«»; wlihovt. murtftmlBA hi* iMMBM] t protooriy and without Havln* atiy on* Itoi dora* or *uat-ant.,o ht* porfoml -not*. ■< .

■.. JL'BT W K15 A BANJK. . B uk* loan u rnu.ioy«r* Id Ik* aup*

t inanaor, that w* do u> .-inutore*.♦ DO NOT^i ainrt-. tile aem y**r. wroni for.-th*; tu ttt of nuiney.. ,,

BORROW h’OWI and all ilio>« little bill* atoiiBlnBI analiut' j-oil.' . • ' " ■ - ,* OHW'MJEa ABB.W)W T-' I O

■ ODR- P.\11l*tnW-«X81P; W MSpti 'i -.fr e>- ‘B. K " n'

CB cbi, '<13d floor),

;C« BT«.ICW;

) and allow Ht* kb riiplkl » <>Wii «U« jl-Afm n b w ^ B R n w rii/A iUll flutto 313.14 Rthatirr bldj

jm>ttytT4V

|HH>. v,r, HELP YOU PA t’ Wfctfl.DTD Y4K.P rim In d*bt fiBrtng .Chs hsririt, ■ * . DID YOU stA<i)ci<g iMti^mraa thsA^Yomriwv ..4

tT ad I.Ut ^gt»snllpullo .cm .V.iHPUUt afforrl* ..tlxn find ikt.ii* fniisi h«nt I* GfAch tifit

' .'1 it ■ • ■ .r> i r.'* I ‘'L • ■ IvM'tAKT TtlK N«W VflAR BIOHT -■ i . :

will, n "olean ■•latB.ll' Wa, will lo*n iii'Mify tm gour'•Fviralturixc.. PioJKi VrkVagrui, utc. A'ou can pay off all aimoylqg dobts and uwa It all tu us, ttrsA vnt vTll ndt bs holhftrud with cfiltocto** a w d r •- i.Rig Inftoni from *11 fhfiso filflsi'SDt c6»H5!»Bi*Wk maka g stralgttii'iiyrFard’ UltlhMS' pr0(K>* ^ f c i t S o n . ■ ■ Uf: -t

■- YGtf.ARW THEN INDKPENDBKT ■ timi ontlBr nWgniloh* to mj.uiK': tlHit oJfiM loskHi it well'YVrinih :th« smsM ghantt mM4*.Wc niak* no aimojltig iltMiulrlesfrlendi or nelghboiM,' .y^ni n«|*d ,wjm«nt8 flf any klrjd und suffer noYdu iAn.v*t icAii hfii'k h wfisWr^^Vmonthly Itinittlmsfito. tvhlrhsysr’ you IpMfIjr. .m\V«1 altiiw' vA~ ---- (.Wn allow v'fjfl a Isrgff Tchatd tf lofin Is ulivad uf tfmo; Ih ffirr. .. 'rf,

WT5 c a ter BTflrtm'lLT TO YOU,rats oBpa^.j a iT iy iw .I. wrr(rT*A.':

BTflrtm'lLT TO you :It ii«F# US to pleSils. That'S' fair. Isrt^'itl

F.iundP fair. W4 huvs itrFtly All infnrmsiloa. oNwIut*!/ fro*. P08ITIV*H*T .NO a d v a nce CilAJlGttB. Call. ''i boiiSd ' ’"g ■*oTijER.tOAtifl pAiP o r r . ■,5 'rB O rur*!, LO.VN AISD itnOKfiRAOH-OO., ■ Utoma toj,. 4US, 403, lM.Kl*i(«,ra buUdUii,___Market * t.,P h o ne tlWJ. B. 0. 'Bn*’ ■ - .J

DON'T W HBllV RIKNDfl , .whsu 111 n.«nd of R Uuift avgllsbls cash; 1t.S'^.. iMi-M In ccuiH it will, end tlnsatEsfScior)’, If n<A, T iirii'leusant, tu both. M^ybs YOU ulrsatbr t)o« true Ibis .staistoent iSi Titen oom* w we'll a<‘Cr>)iin><)rlgite' you quickly Rhd pr1viltSiT-w, at 4 minimum cost. ihS't wHi make j'bu |ji4** vt’ • i«‘ndcb( Of all "Dor' builneSi is'sgoiu** aelvriy in uoslst rnSiiy who Ijbirotv

aMDNEY ON lim ’HKHOLD FLIRKITUM '*V‘ WITHOUT DISTUBHrNO IT. - ,v

Now isiCi thin fair.' Vou hj*ve ufS pf .bO^a vr»nr seourHy and u)ir mousy at muu« ihijfl, \Vn Tukn uiiy amounV le'ibo, ftir iifw month ur one year. Rnif Tf s«(lltd, g brjurq Hgrftfd.vsfl uliu”.; y-i; s Icrsiicli '5;'munUi that llM mop-'i’ to no1 us*,d sitt- /

.^ T u r oT^LV0‘AV :for Ihe srtuai tirr(» Vmi keep the money. That i I* riie HiandariJ prlni-j|»le of our surcBmi, fJflP'y, >■ nd *<juare (rualment tu *vrry unr, Ne favisr- \ W llism ebown* Yuu woc|'t bg afraid to .Icust US 14 wlih yiiur buaiiteH^J>ei‘aui*e it Iswliti your buaItteHtv j>fi‘ikUi4e it is ,.1

ENTIRKLT WJTliOPT H:BLI<UT,Yw ■ '%Ve eitarwi 1‘du Uhe .uuurtfsy «iir, 'prUnlfi*'

prRelssly th*/,.. fttiiii rro w**’ knit Tf Sttlltd, a

HorSEKE^iPKRfl GET HUflY, ■ ;no Ton NUKD Mo/jiiirj , ’ J

IVI- M-'kKfl . ..r tU N ltL ’RB . IN, -H

Tlir weekly paymrni cu a loan nf|10 11.5 .12s..»;it)..... ...................... 1h140 liu>

.'7»’**‘la ....................... il.tO.iS,............1* ...................... 41.58, if,

.......... I* ...........................Il.flo k.T’Hyoicms made tnnnthiy; If (U sired,. a ra*

bate oTi every Itian’paid bsfure (Jua, •have hesrv'a big heip hr many and may A,

bo tit yiiu. It otiil* you noihlng lu Jearff of ' our lielpful plan-

aMUTUAti JiOAN CO,,24-25 Wood building, ,

118 Market st. 'I'lilicd t.'luijr PtoTS.

LOANi rO-l'-XlcMltoliT dn}f

FITINITIJHE. PlAN<ja,,JI0 H6Ba. WAIWNII, 'r;Ti'., KTi' S

Wa make ,It- an as i/poslble Tor -honsst-pc-iplB b> du bodlUcsB wUh ur. \V.e apprtelats..'^, the favi that vvf’rv ‘pcr flff of pride desires to. keep thbJr {jU'RUpgl aNkwiT private. h1)<1 r in 7g. pruhilsr and gunrurttM fo SUl'li absolute Cfffft- --4= denrv In all N'unMrthffi* rnnductnd with US-

OUK IXINFIDE.VTIAL CKEIJIT Sl'STEM ,■I* astonishingly llhosal;‘ sinipiu, sbfe and pii« ^ vote- We tako'sn'iffek.' 'fi'e'cseatr no pubflc* '’4 lly. '^'e make Tur'charge fipr appSLlcstiun,

WH-TIiUrr 'XOI.'.We win rgran a vciiifidsittlal credit acvouiit 4'Uk you. if--vou h4M: In'gGcii of ihoeer i-ali a l oiir ^ ■■rfiL'e. bO'< iV«li-i7fnc«l, a g d .om e npenrd cStrHgjarajBgAlNatolSeii Yu.u trlrSVS *

B"1 «0£. flmJWfe*. e(*e*[||ee^ «

HCNKSi

rOIaON, 12 WEST F.VHK. JST, NEWHY &L ETANH HTT'LTZ-L.M'Kia.

PIANOS# J'ASH OH I’.VVMELVrH.OUR $185 riANt) IS IN'cnMlMnAHLE.

MAJtOGANY upright p1n*ii.; beaiitll'ni case; firKt-rlarii coMdlhtjM. guHJanleed. $116. D.

UOl>'F * CVI.. -Hl-K'J Atork-:^aT _KLlCOANT upright plutio. utaiKluji-fl mal^e;

used but a fow niimrli.i. i-j4> rll)<.v |j)‘k«-$I2fi tyquick buyer. .34 ChnNiuul s!UPRIGHT piano. In Ai cor)«lltlon. with stool

atid couer. $75; term* If desired, D. WOLFFd CO.. Nl-83 Market st. ^PIANO-Htplnway yntfcert grand. IfiO; big bar­

gain. to niHk'- 3)tt..Jl.'.flsUto|ftofi m.,cor wmiarn._______________ J _______|l -PlHnu*. organs tuned, repslmi; expeH; ?HV

years' ex^rleiice. TIKNRT RWALD 4fi W ^..${MJ MARK-DOWN for January on our atock

Snhmer^s pltmr?*. AMON <:•>,. 146 Halsey.plANO TUNER, repairing* new strings, etc.

F- W'. CANN, leg Market st.; t«l. 24g3J.

r ia n o f l n n d O w n n a Wflntfid*flTEIfc’WAY Raby Qrsnd or upright piano

wanted; Tnentlon make, price. AddressnEIHERT, Box ftfi, Nftw* offic".

MON^'TWO rom

ui.HNs ON ^ouffiBiioi'D ' fnmNiTiSRic, f, VVH'H"rT REMOVAI, Tmi rHKAPBUT IN * TUB «m T, lOONlainUNTl.H. AND HKUA—• Hl.K A® flUWrNWUlK-l'KVKHT DOI.LAJ| ' I’MO RfflLVeM fffIS M>AN. .'jO'OJIf.VBC* f TfliN y. Wll ANXOi'Mlffi V1AS tVml’ANr, C I.OANB (5N., tUAVlONI^, -njATClIBB. JEW* iLl.RV ■ ANfj ' T’KRSoN rlKllaMAN. Iff cKDaR

' ' '~"r,o.vW<w'a-TiR.vrrirnK- ^TWfl NE'VAFtK

: I>KU\TI>ltNT. .IJIAM'A>im« lATirW. ■■ittfl.* Jitl floor. 'L

Fr^sltier ty « J „ ^ u t u l a y , f*a!h t ‘2 l.'kj^-l*ri'sJii«nto,. J. 'WJ|lla>n I'luik, treaRtirst-Jg

Clark Thres.1 T »u|s a t s t .L.. lUuill'vrK r .t i ,

twesurst- Mt rvifb pjrvshlejithlJI** hll4n-'sl.>i''waTk iWKlna ‘iVHijw'y:. • >• m;. 2

The .VAal ,l»t<tr«st '"u*464d-un $ J f t - ,fo ir ^ ^ rnoiRlm IstK And'Unr lUD. l

icnai ntupSft . .wKV'fi’t r'Tiiov sre tfiV Tb-vyeflU in th* rU$b.a ‘ and rellabre. C-jiCA aUfJ,gst, iconvlnrrd. .ia.k-.to.

Elf IjO.VNI^ flAlMRiJEp'Pl ers, w HbuUt ■JinyWIT 1

W A LLPA PER AHD PAPERI^AKOlTO.DO YOU KNOW we have moved to fi South

Orange ave.. and will Iceop up our repuiailou for drst-clso* work and low price* at our new store; we do papering and ffatotlng at prinse much below others; established 1 ^ . MAX KOTHCUSE* the well-known decorator.H WILL paper your room, InducUng good

'workmaponlp; also painting In utiQ outslds; pop«r from 3c. up; estimates {urnlshed.

BMPIRE WALLPAPER COMPANY.91 eprlDgfleld ave.

L. KATE, flfi BPRINGFIBLD AVB.* fs well known for doing the best and cheapest work to the city; sells paper at cost Pfice' orsllng and paper-hanging; open- until 7 f . 11.EOOHB papered. $3-60 up. Including piper and

labor: kareomtnlng. Il.ofi; palntitkg* tZSQ: out gnd Inside work: coil or write; work guaran­teed* B. ROBINSON, 2 » Mulberry; tul. 4 4 3 ^BOOMB papered, $3.00 up, Indudlng and

labor: kauromining, $L90; painting. $2.b0; out and slJisIde work; call or write; work guaran­teed. RABINOWITZ, SOAswrel, L D- tel liWRROOMS papered, 19 eaeh; pglntlng, $2; ready-

mixed paints* all colqra; outside work; also wallpaper fur sole. M. KARWITZKFY* 11 Boutb Orang* ave.; 'phoneROOM papered with nice paper, |fi up; pstol-i

Ing, kaleomlrtlng. ptasterlng and outalde work: reasonable; work guarantoed. J aFFB,. is ‘Vopnottth «L______________ » ’ ■1^16 Manhattan Deccraiing Co*; pajsti

ILTbf papering 12.50; best workjer— ^gir*eff*|4aedL jB jI1JEL^WAX, rogiTi

»^stlkg rwroomrotog

f a t im t ib .FRAKaNTZIflL 4s RIC,

*^LAW. Lon* Bltiahiw ‘Bkan* iGlAJJJB BUJLBINO,MW BHOAIi ;iT,. BOOMB 901 AND 80S.

J-ATitN-TS-DilAitR * C d. floilCllOTii, oora,p Broad and Marliat «1a ; » ynn .' anwrlaflca:’

vlli b i 'ttt office any evenin* ' ubob racelBt of noUoa. K. y. and N. J. Tel< *IttrSBBLL U. SVERETT. pMrad' iiwvar and

aotloKor. 7<M Broad at., oar. Harkat; 'oMii* W pM ar* ttti 8 'l^ ¥ .. *nd.<aa.ai avaa-WBS'by a^potoMiiiyit. ■ . . . , ,

*OOU'^4U VWON B U X K 'W N IO H St^

MONand dthprs. officee to-' 153 prJnolpalrtioii .v by petMng_'rr^^TOLiiAN. roonjMiritel. - . . t . •I’MON ,UMN r®7 : Bfl*U«t»ld

mon«v-4o fokn'''R-furmtUTS]'Ifiw" rakew; sogy .

WE have desIrablOtpeWy^.

Hcoaj ay* j-ii Uli

ties, Hoot Ohr niortgafn

"^.lawyersa MO

$,VOOO w a n t«D - cent./ ■ecfflred ta! ‘finrt |

New* ofilce, »

ADTOMOBILBE "kSuf MOTr^BCTCMIftWINTON antmMbUej '.ta ffirat-cioaa annditloa: ~

muat tM h M a l - , ^ a , any naeDoaiile offer ■; aili; be a n tD M Kaw rit Qaraitt Md Raiiatr t C;oowany.' Xtk U Btoa a**., Mowaric. ■ J 'BBCONP-^ASrei'llV.1 for, a le ,ch«p; aa vui:'«s [la. sale

1 Tire Repoli UL; -aid

ir Cooipuay*canixe tlrea. Auto Ilgisey st, Tfit',; UWlOLDBlfCttllLli i^aboiit, ih gdod cbodttionr

dhedp. having b d t^ t Hwgkr. cir.; >*': Cnlt'jb) ftsor. ■|i)4'l.’‘nttm'ave’.-, IrHnfthtt, . J[

dhedp. having _____ ___ftsor.'KHrl Tmngthtta

F o i l RIliliB, XAoomob^jet Hcrositowar; o il cow|A«U: pftee IBOO. K BH I li:

L E W J i t . 10 8 M sy s l^ s^ .^ d ty .BEFORa BVriNt^'e&D t h e

MOTCKI C T C L E ----------------co.-,‘ w s' BBtban ]TOR HALE, OjdaitiobltoAniaaJ^t; ] M t ;J N te

HBdltlan; WW tt iE ,- ‘iWffiua. ffiaa 4bMews offlesi-■ ■ / ■ j;';- ^ ■_ ■-

i4A w v«n«4.X h ElJ aS l^ LA

tisiauce* emMrrslNeiteroAlhfikpatsi xwnto4

K s s S e r p s w . . , ™

,^*eiaWT.r-yA^BOCUL i >a:n

■« i t

Page 18: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

■' J J i i i W A K K . , l l i V K M - N l i J S E W H , f e j A T U K U A Y . J A J > i U A E Y t , 1 9 0 7 . ^

Special Reala iT A T S rO B lA L * RBA.L KSTATH F O B tA L K -C IT T . H BAI, E S T A T E " ‘• 'P 'A T B F O B J A L B ^ ^

9X& ft SCHXOHNfQI “ TTATB BROKER 3.^ ^N IO N ^ B L ^ L D i^ O .

m » f 8T. 'NEAR BROAD.LOOK. OVER THIB UBT FlfiFORB

b u h n o .iBBCiltABE ar.-^OTivrt* tot SBjcIOO; 4^-otorjr i Bu m ; » i1 rw M ; »rtM l».W0; *»*r ''rm i.

JBOUTH 1«*H * r., noM gprlnfinw aw .— ThTM fitBlIfo#; H room*; oil ImproTsmont*

'WeoiK I tu t; **”•» HS8 pof yoof; !*,*"*•. near —

S-foom flail; w h a am) rangw: rm ti II, !W■ —1^1 ;yoar; prt<w CA«h II,NO,' HUNTftlllWN 9T,. n*«J* 16th avr-JrhT^^'fAin-

fhr bouM; 16 rik)nif; flac«R«nt prcv«rty. prlc^ ; fftWO; ouh ITOO.fCDKn'RAL AVK.. neap NftwarJi M.—Two fatri' • Uy; 0 room*; rent* t2d6 yearly; price |3.M>0;' «Ull 1600.

rUA Tvi. 70J.Broad «l.. 26-48; NOxJOO; two fUaat rro&ta.H at-. 801-301; iol M all^ . .

■1-. jno*JWli ta w. cor. 8ch ava.; 88x100- al.. Um-IUQ; 61x100 ,

at.. 642; 28al2U; hrlck bulldln«. at., 1242. lot 30x180: two rronta**«.

nia avt.a W-IT; 48*106- four atoraa in« ava.. Ta-N: IttxlW: 1»Cattira! ave.. |0; 28*w; 4>«tory bulJalnl-

Canlral ava.. 12; 23«,xi«; 4-aior)' buHrtiiif. Clinton ava., W, fran'c dwalhay, BOxUJ* -Sllmon ava., 01; frame dwelllna: JA*!210-

al»y at., ifl-M; loi 08x118.Mlnlv at,. 080-OV2; dmalUng; 106x308. _ High at.. 744-748; brick reaWance; U^*3»- High at. 761; brick r«al<Jeti<?4.Market at., 2bz: brick bulWIna: 21x100. Markai at.. 810-821; brick bulldlof; &3xl».MiilN-rry *1.. 102-104, mJ06. ..........(Sold) Stulbarry at., 401*411; iWxSSOO.Bpruca at.. M; brick raalfienca, TBxlTS-

Bprlng it . 85, t{«r. 8Ui ave.; 25x100. _ Waablngton at.. 29. cor. Bank ft.; 80X10A Webatar at.. 44-49; fraiDa dwelling; 4 )*i00. -■-

OMl’KU W JACKfiON. 200 Market »t.__

Divelllii|ra<Hi'RJNOKlKl.I'' A"*.';!,, betwten Brooma and

Howard ais. I32.00t».

-Three-atory bualiieaa property;

D w ^llingf*ba rg a in s—BoMvtlle, «nd IJ.5W. Ofw,

iwo-fanitly, all i™nrov,.meai-. «"•anrl h,.atfrs: *-'"*'* “"111

BPHiMilFIELD AVK.—FJhh -rtmt? pfopartj^ iFD per cent inveatmeni. bargalti.

Iraiine ........... ,room*, lnu>rofv<-meriti. near tf-u, tion. 0ns \ocViioa. FRITZ, ing.

Bia- nlbti build'

LITTIjETON AVE . beiwrerj l5Hi and I6th avcji,-8i*-famlly luniae: five mom* and bath;

only I10.2UI.

EXCBIrLKNT <'Jt.\NCE h-'H.-* m«:, HriKima; oiis-faiiiUy. all iinrin"''Oienta. JOi .«jx

100. OHphalt itreot. FHlTZ 1*01' Lnton build­ing

A^'E - -T«-fi-fanilly, bargain. 13.300.

PIXTKKNTH AVE.-isOi. (Ween lllh and 12th ntp.

2ft feet

CHEAP; eontral: 15,200; ihme'•tory brick; all Improvamente: five nilmtiee ^ n i ^ Mnricct and Broad eHJ- FKirz, 606 union

building.

SOr:TH ITTH «T.. near Wth avp.-Two alx fmtilly iKJuaea, Ave rooma and balhi; very

(heap; I8,&(J0 each.

AT 8ACR1PICEJ—l2.8tXJ; naj-J f‘ r two famlllea: aiphait »tr«t: narty muni s*cll: term# to

ault. Call FRITZ. OOU Union bjlldln*.

! VKWAnK BT.. near Warren-Three-family; 14 rooma; renla $40 monthlr; price I4.0U0.

‘ WABHINrtTON .ftT*- tftroe-famlly; 14 rooma

frioo 16.800, caah H.OOU.Kinney- 30xW»;

ttatha and rangea;

B. W. O EERT ft 0 0 .,REAi. EBTATS. FlKE AND UFB INB.

Logne on Aonda and UDrigagea (any araotiat). Uaaaaani ot Sautea.

WO BROAD ST., BOOM 2». CoimntaaloOir of Doed*. Notary Publla

OUANOlfl HT-—Corner pTuperiy. three-atory brick; aeparate atcam beaters, fln« inveat-

ment; |1S,T00.

LITTLETON AVE—14.460: houaa: 12rooma: al Improvemonta; for two tonl-

lia#; line location. Call KHlPZ. 606 Union building

tLATTON rMi« I3M ytarlv

ST. tloT» nroperty; three tanania; ptfee 63.300, cs 'cash |4(K>.

■tKWOOD AVU.. pear Sprlngfleld Irv- ingtnn: invaatiiwnt

‘ atoraa; reqt pidca. 6U.S0O; raab 11,000.

Wa n ted , a daacnptlftn of all kinds of prop­erty Offared for sale or reot; have special m-

clllile* for aalling and renting fagenoy loroe. •utouiobll* convayance, central location, etc.;. Bend po«at tnr daaerlptlnn blank, call or wrlio. OlFrOUD. 764 Prudinllal, Newark.

MORRIS AV E.-Four-itory denble, with e itn i lot and itablva; annual rent 61,32**' grcul

bargain; 6U,a.M»: amall amount of ca*b r*- qulreil,

DR. n. QLUrK,22 Clinton at.,

Rooma 10. 11. 12; 1>. D. 'Phone 21KHIL.

BARQAlN-~64,500: for fntir bouBea; plot 54 feet front; rent |45 tm-rni. flinaM amotini

cash Call FRITZ. 600 l’nl'«ii buHdlng. ■ ___BUMMER AVH.-Flne resirtrui-.-, large tround*,

with tUble, at a bargain. exchange for smaller property. WORT, W'ti Union building.

Ino-H aJlADE l^^ 'KtiTM^:NT.Paying over HU per cent.; h i hoica six-family

houaa, In one of the best sect1>nin <if RoaftVlDc, oloBO to Central avp.; has six apartments ut five rooms and bath earh; all iTniTovemema.

aavTH BELMONT AVU-Two-family frame;all Improvemema; iwelvn r «uns and tMUhs;

separate haatera, a bnrgalc WORT, 5U8 I.'nlon building.

BALLMARiCBT ST. eorner. near Pennsylvania RalJ-

rtwd fttailon: brick atoraa and dweiiingB; larma tn miii; price gi4,000.

REAL esta te and FIRE 1N6URANCB.RENTINO .Ct^LECTlffi^-.IlSNTfl ‘

Price Total ■niorigage.

..lUt.NO .. u,r.oo

BPEPIALTT. EBT. 1855. BHEROD C. BALL. 222 MARKET BT.

WILLIAM Wf., near Broad; bualneM properly; j^cA right.

jnUfLrNOHrYRBN AVE,-3-famlly: 17 pjoins;aU laprovsmenla wiospt beat; rent 6&w P'T

'fgMr; pried I5,300; Mxy tmna. "

TW'O lots. UIrtge St., only 61.N0; two lota, iUlnled Rt., East Orange, only 6600", Also two

Ima. ItoR* at., only 660U; 12x100. on lAttleton Hve. $800; also many other lots fr<;ifn 6100 up. CHaRLIIB B. OliDEK. 784 Broad at.

Cash InvfjBted,.. ..............Tearly rental.............

5 per cent, on }9,5Ul> mortgoae .Hhixea ........................................Water rente...............................Insurance ....................................

$1,oik>

NELSON F'L.—Two-atul-oni‘ hair aioTy frame dwelling; all ImpfovemeiilR and a hantletmie

ami oonvenienily situatpil rFSldf-nce; cheap. WORT, awi I'nloh bulldiriK

RBAL ESTATE F O E SALE C IT ^.DwelllBWA.

11.000—0 N5:-FAMJLV bouse, l$th ave.. 6 rooms; 62,900. onv-famUy hntia«, 1st at., 8

rooms, cash reQUlred, 65pO. WILL1.4M8, 142 Mailtai.t2000“ TWO-FAMIl.Y bouie. 11 roonnB, rent

*256 yearly; two^famlly house, Wrooma and baih. rent HW yearly, all tnodefn Inaprovemenie. WILLIAMS, 1+2 Market,| 4.(WO-THRP:E-rAMILY house, 18 roam*, rent

•525 yearly; 16,000. tiiglit'ramtly house, 6780, lot 47x106. WILLIAMB, 142 Mark<Market.68,200-THRNE fa m ily house, Munterdon at..

finest reeJrttutiPl sfrilon; alx rooms and balh; steam h<at; IIHn) yearly; bank mortgage, 14.500; wecoiid. 61,CRH* \^'lLI4Allfl, 143 Mar­ket-ilO.HOO-Bli-family house, brick, rent 61.100

yearly, cash rcnuircd. 61.200 ; 610,800, slx- top^tly house. r®6l 61.200. WILLlAMti, 143 liarket.I90.DO0 Bl'VB Irwo eight-family hpuaas; lot

50x100; five moms and baih; rent 63.600 yearly; first mortgage, bank, 120.000; aacundl, 110,(MJO; caah required, |6,<J00. WILLIAMIB* 148 Market. ____________________

REAL B fTA TB FO R lA L R -U lIT OF TOWK.

Sflflt OmiM«a.WANT offer on atveral bargains now offered:

liatsd at |B,OGO, |T,f“iiousex are liatsd at |B,0Gb, |T,800. 6U.000, 618.1 1 and 625,000. but ownara hava authoiiiecl us to auhmlt any reasonable offers, as tb ^ are anxious to wil; Jet ua know about wbat price you wish to pay and we will send you a list of bargain* arcordingly; dsolded opportunltiea to securp homee at prk^s leas than It would cost to <iup)1cata. J. a. TRU8DMLL MOORE. oppii«it« tirlTik {.?hurch Station, Blast Orange.

BKAtJTIFUL MITNN AVm,EABT ORANGE.

A NEW ft ROOMS, BATH AND BTBAll HEAT BIMPUY A OREaT CNR-FAUILY HOUSE: PniUR 44.80&; BEE IT, ITl MUNN AVK., THEN SF.a OWNER, OKA8. L. WILL*-

MARKET 6T., NlAMk. 124 : NEW'ARK.

IC aloiitow ii,6280; 7 acres, 150; near aesahorl,28 ACRB9.

Box 75, 4:aiontowrb N. J

SAROAIKBlBAST ORANGE AND ROBKVILUU

.14*5 «Ni

. 13lP <“> 44 :/.i

. Hi '"I

H o rrir IRTH aT -O ncrtm in- dwelling: rU Improvements, with h.ini nn-l ftAgon-hnusc;

v«i7 cheap. WORT, irnt'ii biiUillng.

:FA11»M0UNT AVB.-Two 6-/amny imusM. raWMl IL90O psr year; price HB.500.

• fRAiPMnttvT AVD.«-4’ompr; lot flOxlOd; two S^amlty hooseti exeelletit condllb^u: ail Im-

Ukafifsa sots; owner wants offer.

FLAND KT.. corner, tn close estate; aKcellent business lr>caKlon; two buildings; rented for

n.'OOU: good opptuiutiKy to aecure a valuable t:omer that will rapidly Inorrasc In \'alue. Ad- dreas Mstats, Box 48. News office.

■Two S-f#rally hnuisi^ s ^f io tm i u m t ............ „ Mrt6«l ftauble, with driveway*; reute U.SQO ysar: prloe 6li.0W>; easy t+mi».

WE BUILD, buy, sail, rent and Improve voiir property on very favorable terms, we have

loms central pivmrty at low figures; look- ui up. Open evenings. JOHNHTON BUILDISa AND REALTY UO.. 776 Broad at.

: BBLMOKT AVK-. near runlon avS-^

r Koitoft-Biffltln; two liou*«: Qt nuinthj i-rlce M.WOi

WB--' •w » m » 8 it-u sT T Q ('n i»noPKBTu» w it hBS; -RT! HATE n lr rK n s rO R ALL

■ - I KIN-DB OF PROPERTIES.

m :.BEROBR fl SCHITCturKR,

wtAL e s t a t e n n d K iw ftROOM «1, t-NlOM B I^D IN b , PUHTOS at.. WI?AB BROAp.

■J

la t h r o p andkbboh .. tlFPATC Afft> INSUBANCE.

^^^#TCRROAp ST,,;,W1*. ORAIfO* ST.

•A A ':..FLOOJt.'; ‘htt-FPHONB 1491..

, F A C lta ^ t ((rtc iA L iF T .

fSJ'-'-

. (A m t BCB^LRfUIiaER. S X U 'W A tE

IK ALL' ITB BRAHCKEA 'K a ih ILOMkv ; UNION BUILDING.

OLnUfOiT'W„ AT BROAD.--1-:

FOR ftALE~-Baaex ntablaa, 65 Summit at. and ttO-88 Culdan st.. running through the blr>ck;

Btiltabls for garage; poaaeeslon April JOHN D. TOPPIN, 4KS Orangg at.FAtYPORT—Hill ifictloii, wUh iwu-farnlly

hems*; stable, large yard, engine ami brjller; |6 ,5W; other factorlei, large aim small, all ssetiona; factory sites. VaN HORN A KIEHAN. liH Harksi at.BAROATN—Three'etory ikiubl© houM and

store, Including grocery nnd butcher fixtures and stock: altMi newly built stable; l+nuili Or- atiga ava. and 21st st.; act quick. JaEO STERN, 411 fkmlh klh st.FINE bukl'<flis corner In principal RosevlUu

section, price shnw* It s 10 per cenl. Invest- mant. which Is very unusual for auoh prt»p- Orty: lea us quickly. KaM B. BCHEL'EK & CO.. Seheuer buJiilIng.RUILDKRH We have a number of aviilishle

lota In stiUabl* location for Jramedlate Im- provemaiu; one T5-foot plot; Just the place for «-famlJy. BAM H acHEUER ft Ctl , ftcheuer buildingJAMM j . TEELING faucc«*asor to Arthur Pe-

vlnelT real estate and hisurHiioe broker. . . ---L »•'mIsslon*r of deeds for New York. N J-. Pei Conn., Mass, and Csl. 787 nrr»sd. enr. kfnrket

JOHN B. HALIaADAT,REAL e s t a t e and INSURANCE.

RENTIXCJ AND COLt.Ei'TlNn A ftFFCTAiyTT. M2 UNION BUITaDINO. 'PHONE 285J.

WE do a lenerat REAL ESTATE BimiNESHj we aollcU your

ittCALi C,DlAJlib ljUDmiuBr)(trade and QtJAB ANTED

Total expense., .puifi t>2 no:. r»2 _

FARTAN PJ,.. near Cllmon hvc Flogant. up.lo-(lnte lw<i'rfiTnlly; aviiarnt'- »l>'ain healors;

all Itoprovomcnts. IViiR'l', miH Tnlon building,

Net lAcom*...............................which Is uver 3ft i>er r*>nt. u[Hin inniiey invested PHIJ.II’ J. HOM KHM ft i“<i. Market st

BIO TiARrjAlN- 64ftk 4k fn,.V)0 buys lino it-fniuliv lllh st.. near

iVuirAl avp . (til liiinro^rrnpiiia but hesj. all ri.>onia light and aJrv. a^uihult strpH; cor^’en- lenl to trolley and staijnn. PloNNIE ft URIS8. i:at South lllh ek.

rmOADiT. A.NT) ('MNTOS AVKAKK BKCTIONi; A Nl MfUCR HI

f'LAHt4 UEHJPENTIAL PHUJ'RKTIRH. AT MOOEIIATK PRirK S a NL l'P«)N MOST If.A VOHABLJi TBRMa.

LOl'lS HCHLEPlNQRll.■ ■ ^— ~ T'yroN iint.DiNfT.—* —

CLINTON HT. AT [IROAD,

6fl.:i00 BUYS flrsft-c lusH iwo family house In Ll.\<‘OI,N Hosp^vlile. cfijivenleiu to h»-. -nil Hues of cars

and station: l-l ntoma and 2 bailis I'fONNIE ft REI8K. 130 HouHi lllh stONC-FAMILV houae on widr- lot. rUltlOO: all

Improvemerus: flrHt-r-lan‘< nNiKhborhowt. only I8.8U0- f44)NNIE ft HEiHS, LW fckmth«4Ul> *1,NORTH llTIl 14T.--HochI. now modern two.

faniUy house: all Imumv'niotua: seuarstot*ntnincps and heal: l.'l rinnrie and hath; only Pl-OOO. ITONNIN ft REIHK, Lkl Houth lUh bl,

R«' ogr East {>rangc ad. _____

t'l,INTON AVE n ’OK ), VICINITY OIMIIOH HT.; MANDHOMK PliAMK RK8IUENCE; Id

ROOMS AND HATH, l-lXi'El.LKS'T rONiU- TION; MI’HT HK .^EEN TO BK Al'I'UE- ClATKO: P R h 'L AND TERMH VERY RRA- ftONATILE.

LOfI? SrMljESlNUER.['MUN BLOa.. CLINTON BT . AT BROAD-

69.(100—Aslor st.. 0 rwnis, Inu'ls...... --M.OUiy-Wuverly av*.. 7 rumo . water

68.0WI—f'amp si., ll) n CHTi'. Impti' ...... 66.800-Hleecker st.. 11 rwins. central 67,800—Hr<md at., 12 nioniH, tmpts — 6k,0(K)-Rlierman ave . ftinilUee. Imids itl.tXMl-dJnuyejTieur st.. 12 rontna. Irripts. *10.000 Mllfonl ave., 0 n«omS, Impis, lll,0is>—«.'<»ur1 SI., two brick hnuai'S,,

in.ooij-t.lNiOh.Oo.ifi.r>ooT.fHiSi k.tlOli IJ.CNfi

. lO.OWi 11.000

Nine-room, detached, frame houss; alli Itfr pr<»v#mcnts: rear Rusevllle bISIiob: |4.»w ; tl ii worth 65.(MW-New three-family houaes; Jot SBilOO; SU rooma and bath on each floor, inoomt 1761.

New two-family housea, and ateam heaters; 13 rooms, loU 2BX1W, ws offer theae at *6,800; they a n UkS otli«ri ara offering for |T,0o0.■New iwo-fnmlly houses, with apace for driv^ way; the lota are M 1-3x100; sirest Is paved, the Income from one floor paya all little cash required: call and we will atow theni to you; conveyanuea for that purpois.

TOTTEN ft LURICB.6 North Ninth at.. Newark, N, J.

Taka RoaevlUe car. get off walk north tma block, oppoalie RoaevlUe At*-tlon-

HHAL USTATl: FOB flALK-OOT OF• T o w n .

fttlanC lc H lshlw iidgiATLANTIC HiaHlAANDB—MaMeau: Iota aell-

Ing like hot cakes, 650 and |7B each; highSround, overlooking Sandy Hook epot. bend for map. F. A. MOREHOUSE,

Atlnnilc llighlands, K- J.

]rw ln#toa«RESIDENTIAL BACRIPICE! FORCED SALE!

Best locallon; convenient to both trolleys; 46x200: thirteen rooms: porcelw^n bayj. stHun beat, open plumbing, large porch, acreiiis'. ew- lly altered for two fainlilei; forced prlco, *0,000. f e is t a FBtaT. 738 Broad.________NINE'ROOM houao on Union avenue^ all Im-

provatnenta: In flrHl- laas oondition: barn with )hrM lot 40,400: )u,t *h* piftt'ofor milkman or poullry bualneaa. STATES, Irvington. ________ ______1800 DOWN, balance moiTagage. buys a three-

family. 14-room houae: imuroycraentB: onMyrtle ave.: rents will nav for thla propertv. STATES. Irvington. __________ _BNAP-Two-famlly houee on Clinton ayenup.

centre of town; lot MxlOO: price la s bargain; terma to auU purenaeer. oTATBh. Irvington. .DEAUTIPUL lot: 40x120; Irvington ( entre;

one lot from CUnton ave.; decUled bargain; $000. ANDREiW f i s h . 316 Washington it.CUMMINGS BIT., near two trolley lines; house,

•lx roomi, new barn and chicken-house; coxy home. Address Owner, Box 45. News offlee.

F A U i TO t m V ^ E T O F TOWV.~^M'ACRE farm al Echo Iftlts, naar BuUot: new-

’ecM bulMingx: nominal, rent, AMrtM i WR— *' ------ “ -LAWRENCE, Box ao. News omeg.

FARITS W ftirrR D .WANTED, a deoertptlon of all kinds of

eiiy olYerod for sale or rent: have special cllUlss for selling and renting (agency fo t^ atiiomobllo conveysnee, centra* loratJoa, eto^ Send postal for description blank, oaU or w rtS QIFFOKD, 784 Frudential. Newark,_____ »p

FA R R S W ftR T B D -O irr OF TOWN4WANT a home within commuting dlstanoe of

New York, near good grammar school; g*<H| bouie and outbuildings; three or more acrea; plenty good water; some fmit; *M0 down, balance etralght mortgage; what can yow offer? Give comptete description. Addreta Box Mlllburn, N. J, ■FARM wanted to lease, with privilege uf b j^

ing; near Newark. Addreei E. L STEEi!, 806 West Side ave.. near Culver, Jersey t'lty.r^WANTED to buy or rent, five-acre fariu

Newark. Address Fan , Box M6, Newi-

FURNIRIftiD HOUSE FOB SALE—SKA* S B O M -

OCEAN O-ROVK—For sale, fumlsbed cotta#*, •lx rooiuif P’’«l attic; comer properly. .Ad-

drese Hale, I lox 25, News offlee.

F u r n i s h e d h o u s e s w a it t e d .WANTLD—Small furnished house or part of

furnished house for light huusekeeplog; city or out of town; want at least tour or Ave rooms. Address Nice People, Box Tl, News office,

f a c t o r y s i t e s f o r SAULfactory' site in oHy, near two freight

stations, Vanderpool at,, five minutes tn ih 5 2?** Market. ^Igltt full low. less tkoA

i*rm8 easy: title perfect. OwBer, JEROLAMAN, Hlltog.

COZT Blx-room houoe. near centre of water and gas; barn: lot 28x1611: price IS.fKwr;

terms easy. 8TATE8, Irvington.___________6800 DOWN, bsjanoe *10 monthly, buys a

cosy six-room house, hear centre of lawn; price JI2.700. STATES, Irvington.

A m n ff in « .MODKRN RfTSlDEiNCE of 10 rooms, hath and

huiler'H iiantry on Bel^ove drlvt-. the finest rpBldemial wtreet of Arllnelun: will sell a t S hnrwfiin JOHN H. HART, 127 Halsey at.. Newark,

8ta-A RAKK Ol'iniilTLiNtT’y.

Oinvenlent to lj<u'kawHJn?ia tHoiiavlIle) titin aifd Or»ve Street Station, cholco family fiat, a t ft saiTlfloe; llfte*-n rtKjms. separ- aiu etoam heater; open plurnlilng; handeome'y deoorfttc.d: large grt>uTid; i»aient sUlewaLk, fr^nt and rear: airt-et irtivcd; pays a honilauma In- eomo; worth 67,W.Ki, If «oM fiulek. 66.0WI buva It. PlLIlilP J. DiWEHH ft I'O. IWI Market

l l 2 .0WWirtii«rfl st., brick <lw#'H , stable. 12-'<KX’li.H.fkjf)—Mt. Prospect ave.. nvjiiem dwsll. 13,50 SMOOfuiclghlh avo.. two brick dwellings 14JIU0 *18.1X10- tiinton nvp.. iif^ar IJnroln Park. l:*.non 628,000—f’llnton ftvp.. near Lincoln park. 25,0110 *2R.l)00~r,lnonl]i Pnrk. re» . stable room. 28,000 J. WARD SMITH ft S«>N. Pnidentlal building.

Stoom SclA ,AT HUkf.MFlELD—P' lght mlnut»;v from New­

ark trolley, five mlnulcs from Erie; on 80 ft. lot. 21-ij-siury slaie-roof house, plassft front (tnd side. 11 rooms and hath, extra toilet; 10 years hutli: now furnace end range; houee recently painted; [iot>ftcaelon May 1: bargain at $5,000, *:i,ikKi i-an rorruln at 8 per cent. C?onis to Plll.-e'NATHAN RUFHELL.

K earm r*HOU8B and lot. Mo. 9 Lincoln ave.. Kesmy;

will oetl for 61.200 to close holdlns: this Is a bargain. JOHN H- HART* 127 H&lsey st.. Newark, N, J.

U ftplevroodtATTRACTIVE home; pries |3,TOO; all Uu-

provements: ateatn h<w(: csmeiUed cellarBiilsitcaily deqprated; la rg e s t; real bargain. •J.TflO- FJBH ft KOCH, 319 Washington st.ALSO beautiful lots, 80x128: $10 foot: one

minute to trolley and train; writ* or call. FISH ft KOCH. 310 Waahington st.. Sew- srK. N. J.

P a tr ra o ii .ITALIAN tenement; thrre-atory frame: atore

front: tweh'fi good roome; water and toilet on every floor: good condition. Inquire 56 Broad st.

f a c t o r i e s f o r s a l e . i-i'

BRICK FACTORY; corner property; 7r 06 feel; first floor; near Lackawanna 8tatfoh.

city. A. H. VRKB1.JLND. 46 Clinton st.

PACTOHlBft FOR SALE^OUTTQWJL,.................. ...

OF

FOR SALE.FOVNDHy AND MACHINE SHOP.

IN JEmSET CITY, WITH KL.TOM CTUPOLM HAVING RAIL CONNECTION. AND fiHORTCARTAGE DISTANCE FROM FERRY.

At^O VERY DlilSlRARLR PLANT AT PAfl- SAIO, N J.. WITH RAIL COMn ECTIOI^; DB- •SIRABLB OPPORTL’NinUS.

NICHOLSON & CO.. HOLE AGENTS,UK) BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

ei.

NEW ONE AND TWO-FAMILT HOUSEB IN ROSKVn.LE.

13,680 TO $5,400. twn-faml]y houses,

fiOlTTH 9TH BT, am) Ceiitritl ave-'rwo-fftns- lly, u)l lm]irov4jtnent». muiarHie witrptu** and

two steam heating plmiiH. rerUH 68Tb annunll" only *6..'160, If enld thle week, gmatert barga ever offer^, A.ddresa Quick. Box 71, Mewa office. ■ ___

New Ili'oad aad lines.

... . 17 minutes fromMarket, con enleni tu two truHey

LL'.k>mI'TEL1‘), Ray ave.—Large frame dwell­ing; 10 rooms and hath; steam heat; lot I80x

132; sruall barn; terms easy. Inquire of A. H. PEAL, SI J. Wias ft. Bans, 683 Broad st.

youreATIBFACTION.FRANKLIN F. MATO ft CO-. TM BROAD.

^V^'r

W S tHO. 'PHONE 749.JAM3C5 A, BRRRT,

' REAL SeTATB-lKStlllANCB-LOANS. VAIN FLOOR. S^BRT BDILDXHO.

... 4«CLmTOK8T-

ItiA L

lls 'Phons 8S$.R S. BOND ft CO..

BITATB AND FIRR JNflURANCR. OB Mortftfss, Maoaffrt at Sitatos.

tVl BROAD IT.r of DOfds. Notary Public.

OWO. W. BMUNaAK.MTATB, IMflUKAMCE. LOANB.

ilOB bMfl., fl-U Clmon *4. T.I. flVU.

eMTBAL DttiteH* .nd au)r« lU PlAi). M.

rsSldsncs propsrty.

S c a n tS B i s o - n c H s ., - -----------------n |o c ] oorpM filsaning is ihs beat

lor' ooifiota anff raft, hsoaim UtoTahgh and baVoftiL All fins* ati4 toraign roattsr rsmovod;

JULIUS E. beitz com pany .792 BROAD BT.

BWTATR- FIRE 1NBURANCB.R»AL _______ ____RENT CTHXECTINO A 8FB01ALTT.

FOR SALE^'Flne factory site, with railroad faclIltiNi: situated In manufacturing aectUm

Newark. Inquire RORT. MOEBBNER, hOO Broad 8l.. Newark.LIVINGSTON HT.-FJne building plot, 75x126;

get It atflck and alarl a slx-fumllt on It; easy -— ............ SCHEl'ER ft CO-, ScheuerlefTns. SAM.

buildingb.

H. C. BEACH. HOO BROAD BT„Real E.nst« Broker.

Appraisals m ils; properties bought itnd sold.EDWARD H. LUM,

$12 Prudential buildingReal Estate, Insurance. Loans and Appraisals.

FRED J. WORT,RBAt ESTATE AND INSURANCE.

308 UNION RUILDINQ. TBL lft2J.BAalUEL R. CAIRNS.

4MBROAD 8T.

Real Estats. Insuranre.

Renta collected.JOHN U. McKEON.

HEAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE UROKER, 185 MARKET ST.

no fttjHng of s«!lges aini rlpplag of seams.C u w li m A mgi toksn up. cleanssi* '

JgUi m twthty-fudf hotLTS if wanted.. CADMUS', ovsr thirty ^wsrs In ihs

IftglMgn. in ohorf*>AMOS H. VAN HORN. LTD-.

OfAos. T9 Market st.. Newark, N. J. 'Pboos 560.

A, BERNHARDT ft CO..IFpliolsterera Decorators, C'ablnei Makers.

ft-ll Franklin st.Antlflus V^rcKurt repaired and reflnlihed.

Kgtr Mattres«e«. Window Hhgdei, AwningsftjM SHp Cot^rt.

tftees.Carpets cleaned and laid.

Btnrsge,Driperles.

CftllPSTt AND RUGS CLEANED BY IM­PROVED PROCESS.

REFITTED AND RELAID. lt.'RNITURB upholstared and repaired. HAIR

MATTRBBSEh to order and RknovaTED. BANBON ft DICKERSON.

Proprietors ofglobe c a r p e t c lea n in g CO..

Both ‘phones iU j 64B BROAD SJ.tAV« l»h*f .W having ua^wfinish your sllver-

leafs, qftsndsUsrs aqA .hrlr-a-brio, makinglike new; nn^blng In the nieial line re-

ihed and repaired; a superior silver pollsU always on haad. Write or 'phone 3540J.

NEWARK NICKEL PLATING CO..Rear S8 and 40 WsJhht st.

ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE; t^pNTENrS OF HOUSES. FI*AT8 AND STURii.H

BOUGHT: CASH QUICK AND ()ONFIDEN- TIAL. 4Y south o ran g e AVK.; 'PHONU IrtlTl. ^ '____________ _______________ __

V a l e n t in e .8CHAUB ft - - Upholsters and oabtnst makers; flneurtients In mahogany an d , antig^ues; easy arm ahair* and Davenports* 24 and IOVSILALUI Cor all tradssi blue, srosm,

i n aedwUfcej' the lafgaak atsek and best lias

holiday . jy arm

Central ave.hiok'

c e n t r a l 1 oratloti; near Broad st. and old <lty hall; go'td Air any buslneet. AddrcM

Owner, Box 47. News afllfls.

i'ENTRAL—FouriRpn-ro'im hmiRe. lot 37x116.bargain, $6,Wiw: nl«ti Ul-nKsm ImuBe. ceniral.

steam tiRal, boarding or furnlsm'd rr)i>mx, prim fU.UOO; n-tamlly. walKr and gae. |4.(K)ii. annual rent $308. easy teritiB. ORIHUIN, 22 *^hnton <H.

*4.000.Two-fnn^lly houses for

V m DOWN. 120 MONTlir.T. JOHN 11. DUNN ft HON ,

7G7 Brosd st.. cor. Bank.

B r l le r l l l a tBELl»KVlLLE'-Ut-acr*i plot. B-room bou.'«

and two Ijarnft: prlcf *:i,00M. SAM. 9.SCHEl'DH & Cfi . Rc'iieuei building.

CENTRALLY LOCATED BARGAIN. ArliDKtoD SI.; two-fumlly liauw; lot 32x00;

bon-resldint owner fiffers this property at decided bargain iinii on very easy ti-rms. PHILIP J. BOWERS ft CO.. IW Market si

TOREST HII^L FNAP New house. No. 8SI> Ridge s( . lo rooms and

bath, bum for le^sonal usk?, but have derided >noCto occupy It; wlU aaerlflce to quick buyer; hfirrlwj}4>.l irirn, eteanu heat, tiled baihr<x>m, electric llahti", jjnrquet flcwim; upon for lnsp"c- tlrm; temin very easy. For parllruUrs uddresH W. T, CLARK, owner. No. IS North Iblh it., Kttst Orange.

ItEAlj KvSTATK values, Iruuronce, Insna. J, I. (XINNELL, 113 Washlagion ave., Belle­

ville.

WAKEMAN a v e ., 10 and 12, near Beeond ave.t\T &UTl*,

and laundry, steam heat; first-claas order; h 65 ft. by 113 ft.; lermt easy. Address JAMBS M. SEYMOUR jn .. 51-63 Lawrence st.ONfi-FAMILY. ft rooms, only *3.200; one 6um-

liy, 6 rooms, only ll.&flO; ciie-fiimlly, b rooms, 6l,lW0, and many other bargains; easy termi', Biuall payment, halanre r*-rii I'HARLEB H. ORBEN. 7ft4 Brcwl st., cui. Marked_______BARGAIN—Fine 2-ramlly House. 12 rooms.

separate steam heaters, beet lertUiti WLn;d aide, owner leaving rUy, price only |6,300; nn* nlher f<v |ft,300, with extra lot 6'.2l>0- VAN HORN ft KI KHAN, 104 Market st.

6H0U DOWN n rvnElegant new two-fflmlly house, near trolley; ITi ronnw. every modem Impnivement, ycu pay 126 seven yeiii s, than i>nymentfl caase. Address Subslantiol, Hox 57, News oHlcp.

BO&IE very daslrobl* Iota.OiVa.; want offer for cosh.

Box 47, News office. ion Sprlngflelci Addrt'M Offer,

MYRON W. MOR9K, iBft THIRD AVK.

Real Estata, Insurance, Renting and Collectlof.

IF you want to sell your property kindly let me know. M. HORWITZ, iSfl Bpringfield ave.

JOHN J. QUINN. 393 PKSlHNE AVE., Ineuronoe, real estate, loans. Tel. 2ftftBR.

OEO. W. CROSS A WM. T. HARItlB, REAL ESTATE. 767-769 BROAD 9T.

LOT—A cholva Ellsnbsih ave.

corner lot. Owner, 19

26xlU, No. 136 RruriHV'lck at.

F. J. BEYKR ft CO., real, estate dealers,hiHtees and lots. 1176 Broad sL

D w etllttM .PARKHI HHT HT., noar Broa-1 •Small house;

c\ery Inipruvetnont; uxcepiloimi vapie: euey t^ rme. Address South threet Btatlon, liux T'l, N«!wn ufllce.SOUTH Tt U i'T,, near Central avo.; ftn© two-

rDnillv; steam heuiern. etc., targe l<>t; bur- gain at |d,iHKi. ftlNMJTT ft DEAN. ,1H3 Uroad stRfiEEi'KER BT. ul>fH'o ■plan*-—I.aige two-

familv fram**; nil 1ni|.rOvam*‘rUH excwpl heat; baigaln at $5,100. H1NNOTT ft DEAN. .'32 Droud st.MT. PROi«PE(.T A^'E.. n«ar 0th ave -T mh-

fanilly, in flne condUlon, all hrsprM\aments except hoac; $4,200. SlNNiiTT ft DEAN. Tih'J Hniad st.CENTRAL: two-fanilly: all ImnrovcmcntM 12

rooms, tu'o hatliH: alate riHjf, b4'a.t;nftnr Irolley, HoniiltT MENZEL, 47 Mar­ket atEIGHT-ROOM iwo-fitmlly house, iin Hniith Hlli

st., nvai- Soiilh Orange ave.: must t>e MiM; no Rgenls; *3 ,2tkv, Addrcsif Sixth. Hux 43. S i'Wa olfice.

• t HARHTla tbf pUri ilfto Chlcagp ironworkarr t t W. fllglTH'S, 214 Martrat atNEWARK SliALB WORKS.

Hava your scales reflklrad art 3d2 Biiutb Sixth st - only flrsl-clats .w.ork, L. D 'phone

$7l7W.MA&OK WQRKx-Chln^sys repaired. rabuiK;

tu to r in g , alterations and jobbing a ap ^ ls i ' H. PgatMODY. 1«1 Halsey, tel. ^ IL

ROOFING and remenllng; new t>*tent slag •TOX'S) rnnf Is Q. K. It lakes Silver Roofing

Ck» Ih dd It. Tift Pmitli 14th s t.; both ’phones.l?TOVEH THAT

___ _ ARA^'TRED. B.Ifli) CHARLTON 5*T,

CHiMNEYft THAT SMOKE. ---- .->■ --DON'T BAKE; ^XINt|_nVA?lA^'TRED

TOUR noJnUng snd dscwHiIng work eonrlied: Bone hatter. VTN128. I t l Rosertlle

BOiSEVl l.l.E—Twtj-fmnlly bargains; Thlrtl el., 11 rooms. |4.NiO; Ijouth LIth si., 1.7 ructni!;.

$4,700: many others- GIP'PX^HD. 784 Proden- tlal,6fl,t)l1t>- Three fnniily brltk. on Wnrreu at , m-nr

High; 15 riHJins, with Impri'vemenlJ, reins *dl2; birgHln. KlNNOTT ft DEAN. M2 UtuaJ

|d.ucs>- ’I'lirf*- funsiiy hrtrli. nu Warren st., near High; 1.5 Twnim. wlrh Iniprovemems; rents

*612; bargain. HINN-iTT ft DEA.V, 682 Rrtjad at..1.4MES BT,, Mbnve E’Isih'—Modf I'lt lO-tonm

brick luitl stone, electxli-.llgtits, Hte.: bargjifn :it $7<S.H), BINNOTT ft l'E A ^ 5 S 2 Hroad st.

CLINTON HILlj--Reauilful hoiiin; eight vui,mis and l« th ; ol«n plumbing; uteam he-uf: large

rooeptlon hall; lot !l4xPa>; will .■’ell on voo' easy terms; Invesllgate tide bargain AdilrusH Owner, Box W>. N>w’s ottU'i-. __CORNER on Brnhd st , l3-ro<nn house: all Im-

pravements; steam heat; newly devoiiiieil: In jierfBcl order: 42 feet friuil; anklTig imwrented for |7B0: want ofT r. Addresa WTIJ.- Ia MS, Box 511. News oUlce. '8NAI*S--Two-familv, 11 rooms, ceniral, near

Summit 9t.. $l,80b, rent 6250; another lu- rnnm. near Mullierry, 62,&(Xl; Jefteraon . |2>.30U. H r<ionii*. oLliei- bargulnp, \'AN ilOllN ft KlEJl.ftN, 014 MiirUet st.

BARGAIN INSPECTION IW* i.'hnjwick »ve,; 5ix-tamlly Imuse: B

rooms anil bath per family: all up^to-dals Improvemi-ntn; *pfli!(cms Llosut room, ld»-al Uica- tl«h; otip block from Cllnt-m ave. and Bergen street IrolleyH; rent *1,20<1 year; 20 per cL-nt. InvLutmann: l2,tMKt cash: owner un prem­ises from !(► to 3 fcinnday. ’ "

M.;!2.v-oNC-PAvn.Y imii-K.?ouih Twelfth st.. off ilould ave.. sclscl aec-

tlon. r.ouvf*nlent. lu ii-oiieya and atatl^n; nine iv*om8 HtKl Imth; all miKlern Improvement ni‘wl> ilpcorated and |ialnt<*>l; Al cc«1ltlon.s, asphAltt'd Airci't; don’t miss !lnn, as It 1b wur'i *.'».6U0: easy tormM. PH lL li' .1. IKAV'EHB ft CO., I HU Markel H(.CLINTON H1LI-—Two-fainll.v. 15 rooma and

bathe, china and ponirv ctos> ia: Ci'al and ua,s stt>\‘ea; separate entrance ahfl aicam he.iti*rH; rcHlrlcted neighborhood: near st^hool; eif'sp- tJoiially line home nf 14 tier 'em . Investment; will sell >’ery reasonable. Al>P*y to owner, 28 Hoinestead Park. 2H blorka (rum Clinton ave., off Clinton pi.-

C h a th a m .attractiveFOR HALE, attractive country hnnje; elghl-

rfflni. up-io-ilat»‘ house; all Improvements; thirty minutes from Newark; two minutes from lAcRawanila Htntlnn; high and healthful; with up-to-date now aquab bouse and flying pens and 350 fuil-hred Homer pigeons; busl- nes.H well establlNh^tl. Address Home, Box 74, News offlee.

C a ld w e ll.Fl'Y In Cttltlwoll. boy now; Hi>nie nice places,

from $2,200 up; nil sizes; wllii and wtlhoiii Jniprovcmients: s*'niJ for list. CIlAFIN ft BRADY, Furcat aw . Caldwell,

ffonth O raatfe .SOUTH ORANGE—Ten-room house; ev^ry im-

provameni; steam heat, electrlr light, gas. sewer, centre hall; lot 76x160; cofivanlenl to train and trolley; mountain view; bargain, $0 .6(10: easy terms. ORIBBIN, 22 CUnlon st . Newark.IF YOU are desirlous of purchAOlng property

ihtmoes or lots! consult WADR’S Agency. Wl Riggs pi., or room ulft. Scheuer building. Newark. They have a large list of desirable property a i reasonable prleea_______________A groat bargain If taken promptly; the moat

desirable site for hlgh-claas reeldence In the Orangea. 871 Montrose ave.

VrrD Q ii.VERONA-Double house, fllx roonis and aLlD

FACTORI1C8 FOR flALB 4IR TO LUT. 1 OUT OF TOWN.

TO LEASE OR

FOUNDRY AND MACHINE SHOP.TKN-TON CUPOLA. JERSEY CITY. WITH RAIL CONNECTION. AND PEOMP*r POS- SBBfilON; EASY CARTAGE DWTANCD FROM FERRY; RARE OPPORTUNITY.

NICHOLSON ft CO.. BOLE AGENTS. laO BROADWAY. NEW YORK.

each; finely situated on trollay line, flve-cent fare to Newark: lots of light and afr; coot in ?=ummer; great opportunity for some one desir­ing country home, near city. J. WARD SMITH ft SON, Prudential building. FACTORIBS TO LET*

WF/BT ORANGE—Fine 2-famny house, with Improvements; Columbia s t . ; 62,AQO, If sold

at once, |60U only required; rare chance. DB FAIAJO Btudlo, Orange.

CENTRALLY LOCATED,FINE NEW BUILDING FOR RUflfNEBS Oft

MANUrACTUBiNQ PURPOfiBS,E itat Or«i*c«»

I’Tm THJ-: MAN with an auiu this Is your

in v eh tm I‘:nt ukopertythill Is Wurth liuylhK; w>;ll ljulu two-fanilly Ihvu"c in Nnrth End Hcclliin. close- to ave.; ]■> n>ams, tiath tnu'li. all Improveimnitit; irinbli* aiul cRn'lage hiif]»e; lot WlxllMixWI; In-iiigB ill 1)1 reVAnu -; firlco f'lr IkiIIi hnuBpjt |b,.VW PHILIP J. HiiWKItS ft' I 'u , l«y Mar-ki'i XI

CENTRALLY Ifx-at'.vl brU-K flpamminl-b..ii»«.*;Income sheuvs III in’r com. on nrlc« »ekb-i1 nf

$22,60". ««iulty of Ill.OOu; win U'ke part cash and halancf In tvaile. tD , Bcheuar building

.HAM 9. arllKIMIU ft

HILLSIDE AVE.. insar ClliRon avs. — l.ieaulirul i>ne-famlly house in n‘ mi>st tlvsfrahle locu­

tion. lu rtMims and bath: hargaln m Js.iHrt); lU.lHM) can remain <>n rnortgage HlNNOTil ft DKAN, 6142 HrOAil at.RC»SEV1TjLE>—T lu-ec-fHiiiily; rents annually

670.H; uU improvein> nls; pays twenij -nvo per coiit. nn InvMlmi-nt; dnii'i Ici ihls opimrtuiiilv slip hy; your only cbaiu'w, AildreHS Rurgalii, Box flW, News I'lfirw. ^ _____

KERRY 8T. CORNKR. NEAR DliA'OT. RmbI corner bdon i-ullrthad: l2 ft from:

storcH and dwelling: miiai be sold lo I'lusc estate; rare ba,rEaln: 62ii,»<Ki FEI«T ftFEBitT. 7118 Bro a d ____________________ _cITiNTON lIli.L New H-nxmi nn-il.-rn lioime;

gas and electric light llsitures, in:<iaiitaiie(HiH h<it wnter liciitcr. Htetnn lu-iti. u lnuguln at *7,lKKi; moiigiigrt $4.bob Adilit-iis Owner. Box fiT, News office,

WlhiDSIDK HARtlAlN'.A Prsi -. laBs, ihre(--^tor>. lU-rouni house; all

linpi’O’emcnis; oji SuinniHr ave.; In fine lorail- lt> : ti'dhhis like H In value for ihe money in the nmi k fi; «-un be u i il for one or iwo fani- I t) ’ u P'hhI miinev-muker; only lO.UiMt. easy teniiH. CHII.ir J. RijWERH ft CO.. IWI Mat- kei atliRl Li-titGAlN—RoHeville, two-fomlly, well

b^in. all Im ids. two atpam heatera, twe rotiinH. Jut IkJxlOO, slate roof, well

line iiM'iiilcii. price rnaMinahlc; anoihc-r Clinton Hill, (WM-ramlly, extra well built, lurge lot. tViu steam hrnters, something fin4. ROH- KliT MLNZEL, -IT Market st. Tel. 27B4W

buHi. al butfaH: Ui renlnJ, Iln

ONF I'‘-\M1LY-W.rusl.All en.oi.Hunally handsome- lliiie tiom#* In hi-e

sti’-4-t lii norlli '-11 1 sv-eili>n. cb w u> ill. Pi’-- prt-L aw' : has s'*''-:, r»>unis. bath; all Imimn ji;entr< in?u*e In tlist clah.s conilltlon; conven­ient U0IIHY&; .1 annp ii"* a quick buyer. J’HILIP .1. Di.»WKKS ft iX> . IKD Maik<*t «t.

WARREN 9T.. H’-T to <J2U,feet frt»ni. r>snlM tUO iH*r

corns Iniii huilnosB: nui.it67,000, nmka offer. Owner, ket si.

neiii I2th Bl - cO I'ooiii; win be sold; asking .Miri 0. m Mar-

1 5 .TiMt RUY9 modatu, ir.-ro.im. iwo-famlly hmi{«c: Jill Improv^meniH; nvo wteam heaterf^;

slate i'U>f: lot 28xlOH; near Htaunn; bargain JOHN UHlTTINGER, 102 North Hith st. 'Phono 572FI. •CHADWICK AVE. imar I'llylon avo —Heairtl-

fill one-fanill)' house, sleam heat; 'Mertrlc lights: pantry: cold buh’bx' , hush cli>s»*.. eir., price $6.UOO. KINNOTT ft LEAN. f>k;i Broad 9tWASHINGTON 9T!—A bargain for some one;

properly gri»wMtXB into buisiness; S-slory brick huune’, 1] riroina: large hit: iirlce $11,000. wiirll:

AddrcHB Rargufn. Hox W>. Nows olllce.HROAD ST. lO-rwm house. Imprnvemonls,

|t,500, part moitgag''. Rosovllle. H room house, ia.ikH). only ^l.ikkt needed, good rnntai. WADK'H Agettcy, vtKitn WIH ^k-heuer buiUllriK.

Kf/RVEN-RnOM rrsldctice; Rablwlii St.: $-l.r»00; can be used fiir two families; extra

'I 'i'fl lot. AtJi'RED LINDSAY, H''2 Market at'111RED-Family houso: RnaevUie. payment

at rent, other property all parta of city, sub- urhs ond Suio. FlTZHERBERT. 7M Broad it.

CHAIRS caned, 46r kttd Qrangs sb. near Cotton ^

BESSKR 21H

" n i a B n a t a ^

9 OOP Afl NJCW.WTHE8. BHAPBRB, MUXEWS. PliESStS.b«O I'8 , BOLLB. BIJIWEBS,p o u e r tE R s .^ A c l r sawsI, i -.irgeh. ANVILH. ENQI}JJt^..aplU;;«-<. UV.-vAMjli. RAMAT0118. FAWi. ^AfTS. . ftHAFTlND- S r U X I R HANSSSifl COUPLINGS, RfiLT- ING. ETC , ETC

Ihlning useful lii a fw^tnry always •totk. ftl half the prte* of new goods.

B\tryihli

NEWARK 61&COMD-1IAND MACH INERT c o ­bs Chestnut «t, 'Phone 8081,

IbSItGAlNS-'Nslion pi ; several flne brink o.ndframe houses Hnd flats from $0,000 to $12,000.

• ......

$600 CASH; Elliot st. near W'hshlngtnn sve ;tvvo-famtly; U roonis; rcni $11.'<4; all impi‘>va-

ments except heat, house 7 yoaiB ohl. linrgein; gn.rtOO. SIn NOTT * d e a n . &$2 Bmetl HIft AOO—I muel sell my twn*famlly hi-usc: rein­

ed $240’ eight minutes’ walk fmi-n Market and Broad sis; only 1600 cash required. Ad­dress Need Money. Box 77. Nch s oftlre

H-ea WaI.laCK MTERS. Prudential building.a N .\1 r\f-w twu'famlly: Clinton Hill Mctlon;

all mndern liniircn’einvnts, easy terms If sold at onre. Addresn flwner. hkix 4lf. Neivi office.Hl,KI->’RK.R r=T I'lne 2-fninlly brick, near

Mane, $0,rp00; Ibmiet nt . fi-riKim brick, gt.iMMi 1‘uny iHrtns HRIllHlN. 22 l.'llnton st.m u jiARr.AlN 1‘j.iTri for iiaTi-ro<,irn house; cen

iral. «'iiliubl«-'tv. 1 ramilLii: litm t mliiB thin. a NI)RK\S’ f is h , owrinr. .llH Washington st.i TjINTgN Hlijl. ijrowny

!im>*HORBE hurlKontal boiler, 16fi-liorae upright ' " oomptite wtUt alack, good Ipu Ibo.boUir.

auam; 30-hone__ locomotive boiler. UKl-lltfhl.direct connsi!t»i(l,'lighting plant, good for .raa-tory: 96-h<jr** N. 7. safety engine: g-nuiire eu- somatic engine, Mar^h receiver pump: guaran­teed; Prices low. T. A. WWRRtNi. 11 sVardst.LOTHH HARTCNG A CO . infrs. nf Steam

OollerB. tanks. Rm'ike«iacks, and heavy Mbeet Iron work a specialty; iHdlcr rcralrs nromptty attended to; new vertical boUefa oit hand for Immediate nhUinieni, 414 Fdftsalc ave.. East Kewark; 'phone 218(I'J. HArrlson.

w . u . k i n g ,MACIUNB DEPOT: NEW AND ffBCOMD-

HAND MACHINERY: aLBO BOILEM AND ENaiNEfi.

Comlleld at., near Brood and lla rM .D r o p h a m m e r for eal«: 175 poundt; 16

Igahea between guides, with hea\’>- iron-b^ama lo r foundation; |12S. 178 Centre st , New Witk, boosmont.MOTOR: almost new; JO-horsepower; Crnckeiv

niiaaler; 600 volt; direct current; .'ost |40(>-. ■Ml for 1280. CARL PAA§ 00.. Eeott iti. S w ark.DOB SALE cheap, iMlbrsapowel^ steam engine

gvA boiler; to flrot-isiBsa condition; '^un l>e ‘ g. 97 ‘ * ■

hiust be sold, Por- ibulnrs BCHFLUHK ft Sc’HELLER, real ei-

tale men, 14 At aileiny si , <ipp. pnftifjffice.CLIN'rON HILL Kf(U--n: nm-Tfamlly

houHS, 7 rfjoibs and bath , h-al; lineattic- AildrvSfl A. H. lh'!i li2, News uffle*-.SOVTH HllOAD ST. Bri’tlon- tTw -fiimllj', vt-ry

dislntbi*-, rwn Uvre.* ftimiUi-H, big iiarguinB fall at once fHI'*FOI<L. T:'-t PnjilBnttal.tVASI U.\<M‘ON .' T. :i2li inU ’SK t'OR flAl.ii;

DF.HllLVllLK iJ n ’ATIliN ru l l LADIES’ T.ULOl:. Fl'ItKllCIl tMt MTl.UNERCIIESTNT'T ST., Iia -Hrick hons«; 12 rnr>ms

Snd bath; stesni h f^ i: laundry In callar; In gnmj comiltlnn. Inquire on premlsns.C uSrO ^E R S . for one, two or

i.wtnLINf?DI.N AVE.. n rcKinia flOxUM) ....... ih.Llnmln ave.. 12 rooinn, iKUlilb ....... lljtKKJ

WuodBldc, 2-fa*nlly. 14 rrHiinn ....... 6,75(1A. WOOI>. 22 nimun si

RENTS |1 i'S4—PRIi'E 6t),ftHJ.A branil new sl^ f.imlly hoU»e In gi’O.l rent­

ing “Mr. [l-itj «.if Hi'UUi Orange ave.. has r * Mlj:ii‘tm"iiia; all nvi.lHm ImprovemeiHs, esc'i-t li,vt; li-i foiMj- fiv-- r#-et front; <-anT bs dupli «,-uiK<l, tHs seen to Iwk appretlateJ. PIllL.lil IMvtW'lH.v ft l'O . lSS Market bL

T WO- l••.V M IL Y-63,r»o,,V I'li.lcB iwo-Ltriilly housc. In exclusive

Nnrth End reHliletUlul section, doae ly WsbIi- ingtyn ave.; has 11 moms: lm)jrovpmentB: lot 2 1x10 0 , annual rf-ni f;.i4u: a fine piece of hi- vpHtiiiem properly at a big »Acrlfice PHII.IP .1. HUWEHH ft CO. IKfi Market st.

oppi'rtunity i<> Mture an exceedingly attrac- tivi' hnme, In a hlgh'vla»H neighborhood, with ample frontage for uUlo drive: lc«t flOxl.’H), and depth which permits slurltig your machine nearly lOo back of house, at a price that js right; house onnialns pgriur. dining-room, kitchen, large buller’a paiitty, which will please the irioBi exuding housewife, ah«1 very atlrnc- i1\'e rereytloii hall with staircase on flrHtfloor; four well arrangnl l>e(iraoms, which ail open tUrei't Into a nemral hall, with bathroom ,ii end uf hall on Kccond flooT; third floor I'unlaina one tlnluhod room and attic; laige buy wliidowa In phltIoi-. dlnlng-riMim an j two bed- roomb. open fireplace In dining-room; hall to he ClnlHhed In Flenllsh. parlor In white and dlii- Ing-riK.-m In mlaalon: broad veranda acrosa tn- Ihe fivni: large paneled gloss doors, veall- buli>; best plumbing ihrouehoul; Model Bteum heater. uurkmanKhlp Al; floors finished (or rugs; price for Iminedluic urceptance, *tl.2TjO: mortgage liboOtl; $l,0txj .luali will aeiure It; act uulick; If taken now docoratlousi irtay be had Id eiih: If yi>u know values joii will not hesltaie after oiicc SHPing this; carrlapeH at your dln- iKi. al. ('ONNOJ.LY ft NOSTllAND, lUth st. and 4ih ave.. East Orange, N. J.. uppoaiie Am- jn-re J'lfillon.

WEST ORANGE—Two-family house; lot 12l feel front; barn: chicken run; $4,600. E. C.

ROBERTSON. !tl6 Market st.. Newark.

S rB l’RBAN homeB. poultry, dairy. truck farms; grist mill, fKi-horse water-power. Sh­

ade pond, Ice houxei. H. J. HOLMES, Wsbi- fleJil. N. J.

Flve'itory building, of maitlva conrtnictlon, jow In course of erection, Nos. 9-11-lfi CatDi)-

iMll Bl-, A fe’w stepa from Wasblngton; five lsiY4 lofts, 60x60, for rent, with or without power; elevator service; light on throa ildoe.

FIEDLER'S. CENTURY RUIIJIING. . 'Phone 4060. 142 Market sL

W ataeaaInR .BARGAIN, on Dodd st., near the D.. L. and

W. Dejiol. plot. 60x2 0 0 ; on easy terms. In- qulra JAMES Dr JIANNE. 17 Central ave.

FOR RENT, for manufacturing purpooCi, largfl. -- -| |m ... .and small space; water facHTtles: well lights ed; power If required; aleo (lock to ram fffi river front. Address J- C. SMITH Mk WAL­LACE GO., 4U Ogden et., Newark.

HKAI. eST.ATB FOR N. T.

s a l r - n y a c k ,

HANDSOME rpsldem^ on the Hudson In bcaullfol city of Nyack at sacrifice; party

leaving city. Address Safrlftce. Box 46, News ufllCR.

HEAL ESTATE FO R RALli-*OOT OF TOWN-^MISCELLABEOVB.

WA'IV’li THIft REt-TION.I'ciilnil ave., betnven HaiTiaon st. anil Mtinti

iivi- ; gtind trolley service; cun\pnlelit lu uUi- tloii. plenty ol m th lty and a Kicul deal more to f'dtnw; Ibc surest and BuicHt ecctlun for h"iiie or hivcatmpnt; Bhow elegant reiuriia; I oivp out and con\lnce youraelf:' otlle*: I'irtui ijiiiiday ftflernoe«n. PIONNIIC ft REIHS, ('eji- triil a^•a.. corner Clinton st ; tel. 2b.'i6ll-

B. M', OEERT ft CO.—We have over one hun­dred flat houses for sale, all prices; one-

family haujwa In every ward of the city and Oranges; building plots, factories, stores, dwellings for sale and to le t; managers uf estates; appraisers of real estate, commlssJoner of deeds and notary public; call and see If we Ilave what you want, BAMTTEL TV, GEERY ft CO.. 800 Bifoad st., room 200.

TWO-STOIU' brick factory; 2flxM each floor.22 Flerson'B alley, opposlW new courthouse.

Imjulre^T Grove it.

f a c t t o r ie b w a b t b d .

Rl HNKrT ST. near t ’cntral a\e.- iloat iip-to- lialt! t\su-fuinlly h«niB*.'a: neparatfla entrances;

nil modern improvemeiilB: heain cellingB In . « lU rent hu- $.'12 and $ l'i pot

K.it; luts ;tlx\,-«0: bargains uf <7.MM); only61 'M(i ittsh r.qulred. PIONN'IE A ItElSS, i.tmiral ave. corner fUrHtm .nt.

BAHGAIN—W.30II-, fleven-roora hyuse: plot Mix :i30; new bam ; on trolley; five mliiutea fioni

sittilon: convenient to Newark.i j‘*’KlTZ. 60li t'Mlon building REAL ESTATE WARTBO,

acrp: aub fo r ba le .Newark. Vatlaburgh. »*mth Orange. Irvington, Bloomfield, Wsverly. OLIVER W, JACKSON. 20fl Market st.

FOB SALE OR EXCHANGE.lIOr^K; Betjaruie entmiu'es; all

nu^darn Iruprovunmntii; dproratad ibroiigh>iut; ku TIvlIK); only lU.inm. HlONNlE ft KEiSf*, I’l-nira.l aw,, coi-per (:ilTiton st.

HHJ KARO A IN.Bl\-Toom house; open aillr; heat; all Improve-

jiitinls; di'lvoway and bafii u'HU two ataHs. wiigun shed, gcjoil-sized oapp**nier shop; just ilifl ptaf*B i't*r Bohiel*'n1y starling In the bulhl- ing BusInesB. PIONN'IE ft RElbS,Central ave , ecirner Cllnttui sL

CHOlOK HUSJNESa PROPERTY,A flrat"(!la»8, nuSih end comer huuse. wtP)

sloie: Ktiltable for uny line of bufllneau; h\B msven ruomu, l>atJi: nil tmpr«Tvemenia; €!'■»«« l i indlay luifl Hloomfield ave.; good rvvtnu-: price 64.IXK1'; worth < r.ivsiderable more. PHILIP J. ItOWl-niB ft ITO.. ISO Market Hi.

a} PER CENT. INVESTMENT.*2.ono cash requirod (o buy tl-fomlly house,

fj roonjB and bath i-i-r family; all modem Ira- jnovempntB. except heat; lot feel front:onf block from trolley: flne location; reinnl $1,200; InvestlgCkle u>-doy. JOHN H, Me* KEoN. Jkfl 6!aikfH .it. ____

ST.. nnar Bloomftold ave.—Two- rmimB: all Improvements

except heal; *4,600. IA)GAN. 4 Academy at.NORTH 7TH

family hoiiee, 13

AVON AVE.--Several one-family hnuees; alx rootnii and batU: all improvements. LOQa N.

4 Acaih'my st.ATTRAtnTVC. coiy home: six toomi; latKe

pantry and bath: all improvementa; steam heat: open .plumbing; nicely decorated; twenty nMnulCB from' Broad and Market: arlsiocnitlo nelghborbood: dfcldni bargain; lUjOtt; large lot. FISH ft KCH’H, ownorB, 819 Washington st., city.

fVjREST HILL-ElBbt-rouin htiUHi': itlt lin-provementsi full Iti; lu ’.erfin order, will

rent for *300; prk<- t-’t.MK); neiP dresB Owner. Box NVwn ofllre.

•rrer Ad-

DON'T mins the oppHirlunliv t«‘ buy Hiln le gaiu mi.»dorn brick luu.i.s*', un Nelwuu p!., by our

beautiful L'ounhouso, fur $.-),b"0. Hoe DANIEL ALT, 60 Neiapn p!., about It.HLOOMFHOLD AVE —Hrtck comer stores and

fiats; a w ry line Investment. ]>aylug 10 ptr cent.; owner leaving city; mum sell. Adrtreos LYNN. Box 69. News office._____ ___________NINE iwo-foniily houaes, ail Ijiipruvenieftl*.

two years old, 66,OOd required, will on ln- T-e tiinent 33 per cent.; musl sell. Atldfesa QuloU. H<ix H7. NewH otfleeSIX-FAMILY. RnHeMlIo, near two irollftys.

M'ood renting secilon: *10.Win. mortgage 6»,fwti: r -llt 61,140; bai’Kuln for some one. AdrirPBe Hix. Box flu. News itfllce.

ihrsshouse bsiow Fenn^ylvanta llaiJroad. Writs ^

call. JOHN J DBHRT, hlU Brood st.

mt'LVD HT. huelnefw properly at ..........*1 .0110; mortgage $8fi.fiO0: wilt Uhe AtbI

bargain,nuutgage on other properly; don't mtsa this. UKIBHIN. JS ’ilmou it.

houss: stable:oxtra io(. n «iuu<. «wiMini, utg rent. VAN

HORN ft KIBRAN. 1« Market stHILL SBCT.lON“ Thr«;fajnlIv

sxtra lot;_H_snaD: big rsni

HOI79E for eale, four rooms, in lino order, on lot 26i1fffl; no reasonable offer refused. Ad-

dreos House, Box Id, News office.FINE rexldtnce, situated

NflwkriL for sale. For)Wcs.Rftfldsnne, Box 30. News

In Llneoln Park, .rilculars address

(iiU’-.tT rHANGR -New O-famlly frame; w- ceuiionally well bulU; guaranteed Iflc-ome

61.»m; win take $12,600. SAM S Sc'IlEHEFt ft 0 0 ,, ^ b eu o r building.$1,000 CABH: Delavan a '». near Washington

ava.; fine new tw'o-famlly, with steam heat­ers and all improvemente. lO.lkKi. SLNTNOTT ft DEAN, 6R2 Broad et.

MAKE YOUR MONET EARN MONEY!Buy tins maimlfloeiii six-family Investment

snap; desirable section off Clinton ave ; 97x106; five moms and bath each apartment; nil mod­ern iim^rovementn: rental $l,IUl: mortgage*7.WD; snap $10,600. FEIST ft FEIST. 736 Broad.p a r k a v e .--Exceptional bargain In s modem

single farwUy house; ti bright sunny roome und large a itlr; alt lmi>ri>vsmeni.fi; bIi'a.iti heat; Hlato roof; convenient to two statlona; choice nelghborhocid; ternw to suit buyer. JOHN RBTTINOEH. 162 North 10th at, Phone 672R.BELLEVILLE AVE., beiwecp Third and

Fourth aves.—Threr-story brick and stone residence; lot 60x101; houiiie In good oofidl- thm; no wallpaper; all walls palmed or water color; win be tu'en by permit only. BREAK- ENUIDOE ft TICHENOH, 751 Broad st.NEAT ONE-FAMILY DS^'KLLrNfJ-OHRAP.

In iTIllli'n pL, lust off Clinton ave.; In first- clnsB nelgh1>4>rhood: ha« eLglu ruoine ami Im h ; all moiTerA Imiirovenu-ntg; at terms to auU you; only 63.6 0 0 ; can't be duplbatt-d. PHILIP J. BOWEH8 ft CO-, IHU Market si.

FORBfiiT HILL--Two-famlly bargains: Bummer av*., U r^xima, I4.MKL Hldge at., 11 rooms,

brick. H,2(K>. ’rt^nthrup, brick. H rooms, *4,000; Bldge st., 7 rooms, mie-family, al) lin- provatnrtitf, heat, etc., I$,40U; speak. quick. alFFORD. 734 PnidentlaJ.

I limning. Moh st., Irvington.U n ta H T BOILER, to ^RIGHT BOILER, to working order, carries

....... and pipe, for 6 a ,ews office.

sk c ic n s I ir a**: >

H., C

, anctn*! fi-T^vompowar; Mrfect- 9 MOipItU. A. H. w., m HtMtn

: jtiO W W W M m ia AHD u l l i h b m .I DraaoentUng and MUIInerr Bohool-

only first-otooB school in the farm now open; thorough In

-

___ __ open......... - - - -___1 to droasmaking, .ladles** tsilCrr-ancli mrtMnenr, from foundation to

glTiftiMl Induction; opoti every day, and Thur, av«'B. MATHT E.

I Broad -at, cov. CMstrai ave.

DEY 8T., near central av«.-^Ix»t 3(1x116; iwo- famlly; 0 ItMtms and stable, $3.lU0. BIN-

I40TT ft DEAN. WS2 Bronfl at.THRBB-HTORT brick ten-room house; ail Im*

provemenis; In best, residential part of New­ark; borgato- 279 Plane st.TWO-TAikULT. 11 rooms, open attic, all Un-

provements; rent 6824; good condition; $3,l0o. F. MATX, 176 Dickerson at._______________FOR BALEX a two-family hnue#. with ten

rooms, In perfect condition; price $S,.B60. Ap' ply at 296 South fith «•no rth se v en th st .. Iflft'-SVj'atoiTr brick;

seven rooms and bath; all ImproveinsnU; bar- gatn- 279 plane st. ___ ___$A0h DOWN burs a 6-room cottage, balance

^UtiBBMftSlNG and mriUnery thoroughly igught; ow y' J64irsi«nts; start kow; oocure

igaeft. pftsltleiM tlMs vftrtog- Call or write. Mo* XKiWMLL Bahoel, $t0 Hh avs.« Hanliattaii.

r 5 i i i r a 5 t S r 5 " 5 T O o o i r

• t lio" Mr mWtS. HAM B. BCHEUHft »CO., fleheuer building.FOR SAI.«F-tlb: Rians st., iwo'famtly hMua« .

H rooms, all Intpi'ovemenut; two blocks [ran, Hahne*s»HOtTBE for sale; o]l improv’emems; two-story;

491 flotfth 1?th ft. Inqulrt sdcondtergaln;flosr.

frame itdir« «aff looms, 4i Wavtaiy ftYt.; ttftlto ns priotA ,^Tj(£PWr, n Organ at,

k’20—Elgin rooms and baih. newly •‘very Improyemeiji. immedlaie

Kl,40fi; worth *3,1)00; key at H?2. ■RANE. Mucket.

RIDOE HT. decoratt«i

E?'CPFAHKEK s t ., tif'fti Uloomflold a».e.'-'Tvvo-

fatoily: l~ r innii: nil Impjin’umcttts: tteam heal: rent* |U0: bargain; $5,730. SINN'O’TT ft DKAN, riS2 Rraafl st.THREE-FAMn.")' Iuni;!44’, h»v Imtjn^VHment;

gi od IfA-allty: n«ur Siniih nrnnge ave.; 1 must peH; prlraie, noi for ayirus, Addrefle Tliro*, Boa 96, News office.NORTH 5XH ST,. 1(\9 atiil 171-^well prop­

erty; Wg Investment at the pries; only $9,300; little cash. SAM B BOHEUER ft CO., fleheuar building-6MK1 CASH down seiiura* a splendid one-fam­

ily. steam-healed, ni'jdern defiling: write, ■phone or call. HAM S. SCiiEl'ER 4, (X)., Bcheuer buildingn e w two-famU) , R«9** ille leritoti; separate

Rntrance; wpiimip sroam hefit«*r*; this Js a bargain if «oid a; uncc. Address Owner, oiruT.

CHESTNVT RT.. near Broad—Threa-story brick dwelling, all |mpri>vememt. 66.500;

Washington ave., nine roomn, all improve­ments, full lot, #4,200: Bloomfleld ave., seven rooms, nil improvements, $3,000. ffi. C. ROB­ERTSON, Market st.p r o f it BOOSTER! INVESTIGATE TO-DATI

Don't dftlaj': rare nrmortunlly i., invest ymtr savtoirs; triple Ihrpp-family, eh'irstii flve-Toum uparttwanta: tiled buihs. eanitarv nickel^URlbing; desirable section; rfmai Ji,.«ctom ortgo^ I 1 1 J)00 lour chance. *lii,:,(Kt. PF.IH'T

7;W llronti.R09l3^^1.I.E--^'«■0 [U-O-fABlIiy: 1 ; r..™ ,; t,yo

baths; ell up-to-date irnprovementH; separate entronoa and two ntram ptotus; rents $5q ejid 6^ tnORthly: these ere tti4 b ^ t Investment or for IriRB* cvei' offerk>d, Address Bargato. Rot TO, Netra offc»._________

M4JDEUN COLONIAL IlOilBON iGCAL'-nFUL m i:nn a v en i:e .

ONE OF THB HANDSOMEST HOMBrf IN THE ORANOtW; PERFECT JN EVERY DETAIL: <’ONTA!N9 SiXTEfeN ROOMS, t h r e e b a th ROOMS; HOT WATBK; HEAT: FJLEtrTRlCITY: HASHAONIFICBNT GROl^NDS WITH STA­BLE. CONTAINING AMPLE FACILITIES FOR HORSES AND ACTOMOBILKS; THE AHRANOEMEINT o f t h e LNTERIUR MOST NOVEL AND ARTfrlTIC, POSBESS- ING INTERESTINCr FEATTLEKB THAT MAKE IT o n e o f THE FINEST HOMES IN THE ORANGEH.FOR PERMIT TO INSPECT APPLY TO F.rtiENE A. k e l l y . MAIN STREET AND ARLINGTON a VENUB, EAST OR- ANUH. N. J.

WANT full partlcularii of uny howees offered for sale at prices frupi $6,1)00 to |l6,iX)0. ami

loaited In any of the Orangea; If you are anxiouA to selt^finil will offer a genuine bar­gain, w« have applicants waiting and can Secure you a bargain, but It ift useless to sub­mit properties at Inflated prices. J, Q. TRUH- 1>I3JjL MOORE, opposite Brick Churoh Stallon, Kft.st Oi-angp, and 208 Broadway^ New York Cliy.

IVB have a flrsl-class dwelling, 13 rooms, every modern convenience. In the choicest iiart of

the rlty; rent *84Q per annum, to exchange for a good farm, value *8.000. Bend particulars of farm to 8, W. GEERY ft CO., 800 Broad st., city.WE havs a choice business property, central.

a good Investment, to exchange for a iirlvsis dwelling of, say. 0-10 rooma, modem conven­iences value about $8,000- Send full particu­lars to fl. W, GEERV ft CO.. 800 Broad st.HOl’BEB. lots, plots and seres; cltv and sub­

urbs; splendid farms In dllrerent seotlons of Stale: beautiful Iraets to cut up: factory slloa; bent of railroad advantages. C. C. MORROW. 800 Broad st,ATTRACTIVE Ifl-roora dwelling, bath, laun*

dr>% heater, every Improvement; convenient to BoiJth Bt. Station: would exchange for two or throe family flat. A. H. MARYOTT. owner, fiS Emmet st.WARREN ST., tt rooms, 37x107.........

Ariinglon, plot, 124x102...................Summer, ave., 60x130..........................

A. YVOOD, 22 (turnon si.

.$4,600

. 2,600

. 1.600

FOR SALB OR BXGBANGB-OLT OV TOWN-

AT EABT ORANGE—Modern (ind splendidly confltructed realdftnee, 11 rooms jincl bath; olj

Ittprovemenls; handsomely decorated; open sanitary plumbing: pew ^rquet floors: choice neiglitHsrhood; four blocks to Brick (’hurch Btstlon; price $8,600; a bargain In attractive home. V, W. VOORHEEB, opposite Brick CfliUrch Station.AT EAST ORANGE.-HplendId uuportunlly for

builders and ppevulktors, fine plot of building lots, over fK)0«feet frontngc. a<IJf>lnlng finest street In East Oratige; magnifleent and unsur­passed locallon: value t26,00U; can be puncha«e»I for ll.fl,00fl. oh easy terme; no exchange. VICTOR >A’. ’(JORIIKES. opp ialte BrickChurch titaUon.

ALL the Oranges—On select streei, near sta­tion, trolley: house. 12 rooms and bath; alt

Iruprovemonis; lot ffOxlUO; will wll for cash or exrhiLiige ‘fur stnaller house In Roeevllla or Mumclalr, WJTHRG\N' ft ANGIER, $72 Main st. I East Orange Stafioit near city JuH), Eogt Orange, N. J,tw o-FAMILT house, near weHurantod,

condition, newly doccratid,In fine condition, newly doccratid, steam heated; a flrst-clau investputit for a ttoi.21 amount pf cash. C^U and let u> "bow yoa thto propHjsmoiL HERRICK, BOOTH ft CRIST. oppoeUs drove St, DejtoL_______ „LENOX AVE.—l2-roorn house; all Impiwe-

mcnlB, reasonable; 0-11 "?*provements, near Grove IU» Station, a t ■**•right nrirs. .WADE’S Af*TO' -----near Grove, or room 918 Sc Newark.

m Main st.. ^better ttolldtog.

NEft- onu-tsaily; a WSB^ tath; .ttam hmt open siawbbqr: MT«a itrMt; nnly

S2.000,' or s»m« fconje. “SSi3!S‘plot. botp. for b.7M Bi-oaJ, cor.

SEMMrT—11-room liourt; both* two toU.ti.laundry, gaa, fumoc*. rtnbloi In ffood ro.1-

Jontlal Mciion; flro inlnuto.' wnllt f r o m ^ - tlon; tot T5 f « t wide: lentcd to May 1, ISpSj price M,00O; mortiMe. M.tMO. u G per eelit., c»n remnln; wHl e*cb*n*e for enrnil ««nn or outlylnt place, accewible to etatlpn,Mliburn and iernardivllle, AddreM wtW full particulate and contplete deecrtptfon, Farm, Bo* 6T, New» oflSce. ._______ _

BLASDERQ A ZIsai.ER. 800 Broad It.

m#T TOUR PROPERTIES WITH MR ■'Ing, yours may

ulf particuton.I B^ADaH. C. BEACH. 900 1

FACTORY space to suit; modem equipment;•IfOtrtc power and light WM. C. C. MEML-

GAC7H, S98 Mulberry st.

GtXlD light shop, suitable for one or two par-' ■ ‘ fortlee; suitable for any manufacturing purpose

Inquire on premise*. Ifl? Springfield ave. ^LOFTS—Ught lofts to let. with piJwer: steam

heat. Inquire Eaglnesr, 4-6 Cominsrclal a t, or 08 North Bth st., RosevJUs, ____

JJHICK facton'i about 3,000 feel, with yard;etato full particulars and terms- Address Fac»

lory, Box W. New« office. * ;

WE HAVID BBVERAL CUBTOMBRS FOB 3 AND 3 FAMILY BOLSE9 IN HILL SEC­

TION.Lilt with VO.

SALABLE PROPERTIES In all localltlesf pleBM give full particulars and lowest prices;

quick and eatlsfaewry deals aesured-SINNOTT ft DEAN. 6S2 BROAD BT.

Next Peddle Chtmb*REy^L esta tb- in bu ra n ce- lo a n s .

WANTED, a description of all kinds of prop: erty offered lot sale or rent; have special

facilities for selling and renting (agency forbSH automobile conveyance, central location, etc.). Send postal for description blank, call or write, GIFFORD. 734 Prudential, Newark. _ _ _ _'WANTED—To purchaae, moderate-sized and

m^srate*'pr1ced dwelllngB, In all good iocali- tles In Newark: prompt sales assured. $2 WARD SBOTH ft SON, Prudential building. 2

Hav$ several buyers waiting, yours iMT ba just what Is wonted; send fuU

MODERN two or three family house, with im- provsmsfits, w ant^ for cash; &^uth Broad.

Clinton Hill or Roseville aeotUm preferred. A. H. MABYOTT, 6ft Emmet at. ^IF you want to dispose of your property quloli

Ust It with TUP; I have oustomeri waltfngf.. JOHN J. BERRY, 910 Broad st. ' ^BBTS^-ROQld house; near station, 40 mtoutss

from New York; prloe $4,000. Addre« W. T .', M.» Bo* Ifl, News office. '* *WANT to buy tWo-tarolly house cheap, *'DewB ,

Neok^’ no agents. Address House, Bot News office.

NrTTiliTi'. Franklin ave., 11 rooms.all Impta. near depot. 100x160............. $7,WO

East Orange. Main at.. 11 tooras, Impts., ^.................. ....................... ISiVWMontclair, brick. 12 rooms, bam. chick-

en-houee, Ireea. fruit, etc., Iti acre*--- IftwO A. W»X)D, 23 Clinton at.

BEAL .ESTATE FO B BECHAICBB.EXCHANGW rte.lrable l<<™w ,S*

encumbrance, near Boaton, ®*.*5for farm or home near or In newata. drew, tail, lion 0, Wewe oflloe.

Ad-

FOB BALE M t TO ,, . . , -J-tftt bale or to let, olMATJ^WlLfe‘eS* V „ „ u M B r / a ' ^ 'lulldlns, 23b WMhlottiat « t

B-rooni home:* ^ rv e ? ^ lra S j^ » n t^ ' to T sS B W iir^ ^ d ln ts twenewtlon. aAMtJEL

FOB »JUM OR TO U W -O O -i: T'OWIt.

o r

nnaitfhE N. J.. opD. Erie Railroad Depot—®Two-wra hulMloS. -J'®” . 'i?*'*"’'.-* m^rn. otboe, stable and other

or autogotton iTeet of Boor; on»«- «Atoe ana

H008BS—Ihr Halo or to let, cheat.. I ts Harrl- aotf avA, Montclilr*

for Sew Torlt,

■tieNew

B,«» Mowmr-MAicfflo thretighcelt Wew E nsl*^ , —t

JW M ^nS the Booth: wrhe (or "Btxout'e Llet No. IT," aeicrlbltw huo4red» of h a rfo lu all elan and jrloea, with ^ lu re # of holldlnpe.pH:___ ----- ^*. ■ A. KHOtT, JFafm Oepartmeat N am o al„ New TorttCIty,

HAWTHORNB AVB., near Eabven rl—Pme pew rtsldtnre; 9 rooms; steam heat; harfl-

irood ^uble floors and CrUn; bulU by day's lobOr; erilor celled. scrsSQSd; awnings and ofiodes; lot fiOxlOO, 67.500. SBNBY RURSfibL 3$ CUnton st. ____

SOVTH la'l'H ST.- Miiitern .three-family;rents $fl;.!:4. rup- bRfuuIn at 6a»,HOO; about

, 1 1 . ■iLBh rrquirmi RlNNOTT ft DEAN. Rroed at- \

TVt'O-FAMlUY' house; 1$ rooms; neparatt steam heaters; nesr Roseville trolley and

Station: good Investment; |4,0U0. SMlTKp Ro$v>1lle aso.

$4.45<>-TWO-FAMtLY FTiAT.Peshto^ ave., bclnw tninSoQ; thirteeei rtorna-

all modem Impro.vrnwnts; good lot, smsli nmfoint CBJhh rrtjulred: you_jwst an qii|<-i- rn get thlM. PTfILir J. BOWERS ft co., iau Marker rt. ____BOOTIi ORANGE AVE.. rfos

OlOSa and two-fainlly jprd^rty; prrso-nl huri> to

jugs est^itohod over 20 years; flu'' ixiRineHs MMlcjin for tailor and olmmlog sstabliiihEii^nf

RAM a. SCHEDKR ft CO.. schrSer

XjMKK *t « m ? e rly ava i i rSRT, 78 Orsea su

I us price, pip.

HOUSE. 9 fooo»$, hWh. all ijnwpvpiiMihtt, to a eectlon reatrtetfTto bwelllnm. and ™» of

Che raoit dettrable InBw* Oraaae; price W,8M| tflrgui modarate® Address Modende. Bog 88, Now, office. _____ ________________ _EABT ORANdE-^o cloee eatate; b-rooQi

houw: all improremente; rood neifhborbood: coneenleBl to train And iroUey; lot (HhlOO: make oBer. QRIBRIN, 22 CUnton at.. New- arlt.%EABT ORAXaE—t’Bcant plot. .29xl4T, north-

weal corner Main and Jonee ««., near Park- war; excellent location f»rn«>»fe. fnoulro of A H. pBAIo at J. Vrtae ft 8oni. M» Bn*d |rt.PRiNOKTaN ST.. 21 and 36, noar Central icn;

—Two fra™, two-fanllty hot^ea <celoiWdl:> n n u HO; make oAer for ttulck tale. Oinief, Room a. 100 Mnritet oL, Newark. ______ _aWEU.lNa~ftov«i noflia' and halhrOom; U

luonvamenlt; d e u lot; aualtottt. looalitr; near Uou£^ ALTRSd U N P lU t, fM M«dnf ■t.'jm rarft. ■■

3.0M EOWKt-MAKmO farina for wie ihrougbsttt Now SnglaDd, New York. New

jsTMT and the flnottri write for "atrout's List No. l7.'* dm rltonf buttdtsds of bargslB*, all slssi knd p r t ^ . With pictures of buildtngte Fa A. BTBOVTi form dopartmeni 28, 150 N il '

‘ ^ k City.■ah s t, :

WANTstore.

to bOT O-fafUlly house; also hoots j Adtlroas Houtee, Box 8$, Nsws OWOa-

RBAI. ESTATE WARTEIB—OUT!T o w n ,

WAn4t!D ,T d eec rip U aro riT k ^ Jartp offered tor tale or rant; havo apeclu Bi'

cUltles for selling and renting togeacy iQKs. Automobile conveyance, centiuil location. eto>^i,: asud posUti for description blank. &ll-4vwrits> il QIFFOHD, 734 Prudential Nswork.WE hare a cash purchaser xor up to ADD i

within two miles of station, on Lsi0li~~ rood; give full desariptloo a'na prfcs. BROmORU flununlt or UoplswoodaLOT—Wanted, deslrabte hdlldttig lot Ilk fOgd

location In Bloomflelde Address Mllft BOX’. WARDS, in care of OarleclE ft Ulihsila Bloom- field. N. J. • .

BOVSESHOUSE wanted to MW near Bread. hftwaM ’

South and Mnritet homt_ near ,Clln|i»tf! home or Hat tn Foreat Hill: flat^nmr

Th'rd PriSnS Satlm , HABOl® W. tATf, room 808, IM Market ,RtBIGHT or lea

Eioreat Hill or or Baptember t. Newi office.

, henaa; all imDrovemaDta: ■eferredj Mar J .

It, B «

WANTBD. hjMfctomlr 1, 8 :1-fainiir; good looatton: or lao,' Addroka •

Home, Bor W. n * m pffina ■

TO Ii«T -O B T o r T tA m .ir tih g t o n , C!twcB;»;'*o « • .

Two blMlfa f t t* imiler oarai ^ h *

..........W M iatfor SprittoffiaM a rc

all latMTe' InqiUre SBMlV,

• ■'et,, or BETKIt.

TAKH. 10 a«raa; roomr houK, bani, oot- ffiillduiBa; frott treea, w c^ lot; halt bow

froni 'jfawaik. Pihiwlvaaia Bailnuid; __Pnidential butldlnt, ™ b WARD-OEHUf QO.FABMB frott W twr a<» Up. wichta JO Ib ll^

of.tffillidMhla; barffaine In all claaait Jb llalel^ la auburban propertT. DAOlM 4. KHIOlfT, E a Witheripnon, PMIadelpbla, ,SUCCABrNNA-THteeu acrei; lari

Imprevetnenta; Ane outbolldlnfa; and lUtlon; M.ooO: eaer lerna. — pricee. FITZHERBBKT, T84 Broad at.

ardc Im iia; filar tllidlW

; w w i a t n

TOR aAt-E-rarm, W a«ree. ffopd BDlldinta; a. - . ^ ■------ . .. . .. norea;Boa 9t, Itah'

taiih of 2T arree; a ci»d tb tat of 14 ncrca: alia a cheap farm, S lA acrea.war, M. 3.rARMB. .WO up: 3

it., w a w a ^

lU 'Waahliittab aiire

m w BtM M

» » a rA alfay

, farad iwnna; all Impri a« l n e t oCBvmlantR. K. BCHUTtBl, 1; incomond; ’phnae Klon..

toOMata,Cariwpd;I Blacoi.

■ ‘A,'robeU N D , BiBlf » « * art.^Ji»oha(4i

hot and cold water; rent |iv,; J. R , HTSB. Boaal*^-

B O V fW w a r t d d - o b t o r t o jo k ., ulwilcan hpuae, hlM roRWL'i

nipaacy about m ru a rf I ; ■‘-“ ^ A d t o i A s f g a s ^

Page 19: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

OTWAEK EVENING NEWS: SATURDAY. JANUARY 5. 1907. 1»

Real Estate Days^SaturdaysUOVBIES TO IiBT. •T qnifcs. o m c E i , e t c ,, t o t * r . » o o * is a s o PiiAT» t o w r .

FOREST HILL, P«rltB »t., •I»hlroom* and bath; st**m b**t; ill ImiifOVi*

meat*: la r« lot; Immediate po*8««»*oni l*J- HENRY RUBBEm g CUntOB i t .________TOIVATE HOUflB to leti Jive iwm*; iJl tm-

lircirirenieBU; aieo iswilnit mJI to l*U lultible r receDtIona or meetlnir*. or can “S.J***?^*

and M Uarciay iMdlre R> sn^BER'liJL. 9U8 finrlmcQeid av*.TBN’ROOM hDU*e, all Improvimente; Are !©-

catloa; Ms ratnutM lo Roaevllle Station; f.W;Klh tt rooip*, 1^. BIRD8ALL. flU North

th It.. Eaet Oranfa_____________}«BNTZ AVE., S5~Houw for two famlltee; a

alible, chicken coop, yai d and farden: euH- able for mllkiQin or contractor; for rent tn ■eparate p a r t e .______ _____ _ _ _ _ _ _CX>ZT ft'room houae. all Improvement*, good

locality, handy to car line*. lUti; three room*.She location V)T denUit, llA UTTER, lo

aiHibeth a v e , ______________________H ie s ona'fimlly hou*e, with all Improve-

mentii all mlnuUa' walk from trolley and X>., li. a ^ w. Station. S67 North 6th at,;adult* o n l y . ________________________NELSON PL.. fld’-W-room hou*e, all Improve­

ment*. poaaee*lofv February 1. Apply onSremlcea or room 401, NUtfara hulldhig. i.s5

iarket at.WOODBlDB^Flve-room cottnee; water,

large idt; place fur chicken*: 114 ni'>nih. water rant. JOHN LEVER, 18S washinKton •ve.

TO A*iST, fat automobile*, ih* whole or part ^ a bam; Central ave., near Burnett at. In

quire FlONNiE « HEiss, Central aViu South Clinton it,TO LET, rare chance, itor* and photocraph

gallery; 132 Belleville av*. WEETFALL. t t Jame*.TO LET-Flr*t floor ot faelory, 114 N** J#T»

•ay Railroad ave Itiqulra at 101 QrMB at.

WANTKiv-'fVmr light Vooma, aecond floor; vi­cinity of \rrlklli CHnlon ave. Ad-

dre#* R<!fereno4, Ru* W> New*WANTEID four roonwriB good neighborhood.

by mocher and daughter; itate term*. Ad* dree* Flooma, liog M. Newt offlee.

WASHINGTON ST., lOft—Three^tOty huHdlbg for bnti|n«M purpon; 7,000 aquari f**l floor*-

Ing. Inquire of owner, J. IH JlANNE,. 17 Central ave.

W'ALLACE PL.. ll-8tor*; «9.

IN South nh at.. cloM to 18th ave.; second llaor of 2-ramlly huUBv; T roomw and t)athi

all Improvement*: only fliS- PHILIP J.BOWEKh * CO., im Harkei * t - _______IN Bergen at.; a brund-aew *eootid-floor lliii;

iMith; all improvement*; only ild: ready now.^ U P J. BOWERS * CO., IW» Market *t.I HAVE^aeveraf fine apartment*; live to *even ROOMS TO LBt^-OUT 01*'“ TOWN.

r«x»mi: all ltnproveni*iit*i from IIU up; *J*o ------■tx-room house m <18. KNIGHT. 7H4 Ijroad *LJOHNSON AVE, 6, near W«t*on av*.—

8ft;and rtOOT. InquIn iV Bh.rman *v*.

WABIIIKOTON. BT., <0«—BM«n*m to lot; ■ttltobjo for horbor or ooioo llBPt builMW.

STORES, OFFICBS, BTC., WANTBIS. -CLI'BHIKJM wantoil In control or oouthom

port of city; atato rent and full portloujoro Addr-as H. H. EHMAN, Boo T*. Nowi oMca,BlviRR M^'roomo; In food locuaiou for fro-

cory, Addrsfo E. FUCKER, 18 Hlllildr pi.,city. ____________WANTED, by a small manufacturer, ground

iluor 2&xlft0, or equivalent: centrally located; plenty of light; will Curnlah nwn power (go*); rent muat be reaeonafale. Manufacturer, P. 0. EJox U51, Orange._______________________

ROSEVILLE—7ft eijuth l2tb Rt-; all Improve­ment*; alx rooin* and bath; rent Inquire

a t ITOUTEKBUROH A CO.'S. 7W-S0ft Broa--]^ _________________________ ___________iJORT^fiEVENTH B T , . r o u m j and

bath; all Improvementa; |Kfl. 27b Flan^ «t.HONMOUTH BT.. ne7r Clinton ~ave.-Teh > rqum*; imurovementii: 187.50 munthly. J. iWARB SMltr.................... ■ ■ ■

WANTED, lo Icaae * *malL well built liable, with *oitie open space, in olty. Addreai

l.d*aiti, Dux i, New* office.______________WANTED, part of alore. with show window

■ind storage-room In rear. Addreu K„ 3M Btnte at.r Brooklyn, N. T . ____________ _W'ANTHD, to rent, a small atore or part of a

store for retail atationory bualneii. Box 646, Plainfield. N- J ______________

SMITH A BON. PrudenilBl building

JAY ST., le. hour Dranga #1. and Lackawanna atutltm—New Hat. 0 room* and bath: Janitor

aorrlce. Inquire Sbi Qra^B it-___________JE L JJF^~A^^?., 20 ^Jtrit flat: five light

room* and baih. Inquire ITl Psinlne ave., n>p belL ______________________lE L U FF AVE , 4J8HFotir light roonii. with

bath; rent tU, ______________________Ltf-ruFrON AVt,., Tfl-Veir fl»« flwl; COTOer;all light room*; Improvement*; aleam heat: fltie nerghborhood; unexpectedly idle: rent |2A.LITTLETON AVB.. 841-FtaU to let. five

room*, pnniry; all Improvement*.MARKI3T ST., 8P1. "hear P. R- R. Statlon-

I'lui; six terge rootne; store end basement; with all Improvement*; or the whole building. Call at 9 McWhorter it.______ __________WT. PROSPECT AVE., *-Nlc* *ix-lfoom Bate;

all Improvement*; iteam heat: rent reason­able. Inquire LOWT A BERGER, room &(tt.MetropolUan building.__________________MT pROpPECT AVE.. Hft-'Aparttnente to let:

new house; separate haattn; near High •Schooi. 'Phone 921W, Brahnh Brook.MADISON AVE,. flSt~onr. JelJIIT ave.—Near

thr#e trolley lines; beautiful, ^hi'lght. airy rooms, all Improvements; mnnll ramille*; |l|). *10. 1 1 7 . ______________________

BEUeEVil l s —High ground. fl'’e room* and bathroom, «J1 Jlthtl aeptirate eniraoeea and

heaters; newly dMOT^^d; all Improvement*, tn , Inquire a t n IX Witt ave., BellBVllle.ELE<jaN'T eteam-heated flats; 4 rooms and

bath; North P n * *(-, corner T)4>0il. East Orange, inquire J- Wi^NGERO'S tailor store, sLk'Vi' Address, ____BrABT DRANOli Hollywood ave.—Te let. in

private house, a aalte of three or four room*, with bath. Addreas Room*. Box 4fl. News oOlce, ______»ART fiRANOSlL >1® a -. 6. corner Oraen-

wond ttve.-Two large room*. 119 jw mnnth. Om-rit. 2tx> North ^ *<•• oUy.POUR rooms. Oh Amherst st., near Cintral

ftve.. Esst Orange; city water; nice yard. Applj' by telephontt, Orange._______PoT,rR rtvoma lo rftnti water and gas. Inquira_^'4 High at., Orang®. ______ ____ _IRVINCrTOK—FlV* ®lce light room*, water,

flrat floor; rent 111. 10 Sljtimftu pi . Irving,t o n . ________________________irnTNcfoN, Elmwood Terrace. ftft-Fiv*

room* and balh-Ull.ANdE Now at.. BO—Now building; apart-

meiua to Let; |1D to lift per month. Apply WATEriMANH, ftlS Main *t. . _______

'klDOB 8T., ISO—Eight roems and bath; all Improvernenta; newly decorated; 4ft0; Im-

itnedlite poaaeisloB. CRANE. ISft Market *t.■^bUBSlS, T r^m*. |16; convenient and desira­

ble laoatioQ; near trolleys and station. In*

iTO RiSif O FriC E gf ETC.* TO LttT OUT OF TOWN.

. - .. ..leys ______gpUt* of 1. N. SMITH, too Kofevllle avs.ROtSVfLLK. North Sixth »i, l^ N ln *

room*; immediate posevselon; rent 183.8ft. fOMW D. TOPPIN. 483 Orange s t . ________

LEABEl—IVtb and 8pHn|rfl«ld sve., house, with seven lots; suitable for florist. PAUL

aiRT.A.VKER. ftW> DPfmd e tr--------------FIINNSYLVANIA AVE.. 56—Beautiful eight-

room house; bath and heat; rent reaBopaDle. FEIST A PRigT, Tftft Broad._______________OAJtSlDS ST., 113—Seven room* and bath­

room; lane attic; all improvemenU. A. H, TREELAND. 4ft Clinton at.iSdADSMT ST-. 124. near Plane at.—Tea-room

hous* to let lo respeotablu colored people. 0- EECRHAUSEN, 8on Broad _______________HROAD 8T.. 2fJl--Threa-«tpry. newly decorated I 9*roam brick houxe; all Improvements; rent JBM. Inquire next door.I NEW ST., 8ft—Ten rooms and bath: suitable

for furnished room*: rent reasonable. F'ElftT » FBIBT, 7Sft Broad. __ __ _ _ _IlILLER ST.—Seven room": Improvement*: tS'.)

monthly. J. WARD RSHTH & SON. Pm- 4antlal building.________________________ ^HDUBE to let; central location; 7 rooms; all

Jmpravementa; rent Inquire 403 Mt.Frospect ave.•OUTH TTH AT., lift—Beven rooms; storage;

furnace; rent |M. JOHN U. TOPPIN. 483 Orange at.TO LE*T, 1101 Broad st.; 1ft moms and bath.

Inquire Fidelity Trust Co., Prudential build-to r ____________________________________BOUTH 17TH ST. ftT7-House lo let, eight

room* and bath: rent 33S.ftO._____________Tt o r BS, o f f i c e s , e t c ., t o t,HT,

BEST looatsd atore In Summit ftM* first-class meat market; lormnrly occupied for thni pur-

ose for many year*. KICKS BHOTnERS,Bummlt.

Ma g n o lia s t .. lift—Flat to let: 4 rooms.with improvement*; rent reasonable. Inquire

M. STl'^lNEB. lift, next house._______MULBERRY BT.. aSIt-T rooms' all improva-

menta. Inquir* of CUABLE6 PRAENTEEL, 100 Permaylvania av®.

TO l.BT—To May >■ fully furnished apart- . moRt; 41 room* and bath; heated; two mln- uu h. fi-,m Brick C?hurch ftlatlon. Apply lo DU. K M. SANGER, S4 llnrrlson f t . Ka*t 4 Grantee. N. J , _____________WEi T ORANOiO—To let. elaht l4V»« room*

with dll irnprovaments: cor. Lonxvlew ave. and Uondit lerraoi. Apply Id Mt. View ave.. Wost Oranae. ____ ___

EAST ORANG&-6tor« and dwelling, corner Bterlltig and Main *t*.; thii la the best bust-

neo* comer in olty, TAGGART, 200 North 6th

PATERSON—For ^r*nt, Paterson, N J , 121 Main st., atore; flne location for shoes,

smim, dsnSy] puesesklbii at J .-O'NEILL, 21 Academy *l.. Newark.______STORE—To rent, the best located stors In East

Orange, N. J.; 22 feet front by over 125 feet deep: two fine show window*, situated et ftftft Main *1. (Brick Church Station), h u been oc­cupied for tnnre than 20 years a* a flrtt-claw dry goods store; will niter to suit tenant; mod­erate rental aro desirable lease to rellsht* party Apply RANDALL, real estate. 2ft7 Main »t., Orange, N. J. ____________

TO LET, a well-appointed, cpnimlly located lodgertjom; Monday evenings, lenns reaann-

Dble. Inquire of Janitor any evening except Monday, fourth floor, 104 Market at., oy*r Childs'* reBtaurani, or andreBs A. U.

m u l b e r r y PL., IB—Three large room*; gas and water.

NEW apnrtroenta; ft room* and bath; steam heat and hot water supplied; gas range; pri­

vate hall; rent $30; Third and Dickerson sts., one bloak north of. Central avs. Inquire on p r e m iK i.________^NEW BT., SS^Three rooms to lei; three

clothes closets; run n i n g ^ 88*; rent lift.NEW’ 9T., 8ft4—First floor flat lo let, four large

room*, gas _______________NEW'Te r r e Y railroad a v e ., is2—to let.

four room*. "4^ond floor; rent retiantiabl*.NORTH SIXTH ST., 477. near Blwinfletd

are, Second flat, 5 rooms; tubs, bath: newly decorated: ft2: to smatl family._____ __NORTH SEVENTH BT., 4104—Three fliits to let;

five, six and seven nxims; all improvement*.NORFOLK ST . K5 and HI—Flats, seven room*,

all Lmprovemr-nls, In ftft Norfolk s t.; four rooms, third fliHir, 91 Norfolk at.

tVEHT t'RANQH, Wklchung ave., 281—Flat to lot, «1x room* atid bath; steam heat. __

f u h n is h k d r o o m s t o l k t *ATLANTIC BT., 8ft—Desirable furnished room

for two gentlemen; also single rooms.BROAD H'r.--Two or three connecting rooms; “ iimsiy «r l ^ e t w r IS farntty;minutes from South Bt. Slatlon, P. R. R .: ref­erence. Addresa fi,. Box 18. News oflteg._____BROAD ST., 1131—Desirable rognis; mixlerti

oonveiilencefl: axc«ilcnt accommodation*;,railroad and car: reflned surroundings; suit­able for two: gantlsmen only.

. broad bt.. tOft—Newly furnished; bath; goa; good location; moderats,_________________

BANK ST-, 67, corner Washington—Nicely fur­nished single and connecting irooms; *11 Im­

provements. furnished complete for house- eeplng; $2.ftD up.

VIIIJUF* rcaLB HI H.4U, Ui <LAfeft. iSft Boutli I3th st., city.

ii., overDOUO-

nOOMft A!ID FLATS TO LET<

ACADEMY BT.. 10-28. NEAR BROAD BT.- WELL LIGHTED OFFICES, SUITADI^

FOR ph y sic ia n C>R DENTIST: STEaM HEAT, GAB AND ELfiOTHiCITY. LOU 19 BCHLB6INOER, MAIN FUXJR, UNION BUILDING, CLINTON BT., AT PR O A ____ACADEIMT BT., 21—Becond floor; auluible for

buikn*** tnd apartments; steam heat, ja n i­tor aerviee: six rooms and bath. Apply 13, G. PEMAREtfr. 7ftg Broad st. ___________BUILDING, with store and ft room*. Ml. Pros-

peot aves., comer Irving st.; suitable for butcher and grocer; rent reasonable. LOUIS 6CHLE61NGER, main floor, Union budding, <^laioa a t, at Broad._______BROAD BT., fiW—Largs, light etore, or entire

building, with rear entrance, to rent for & term of year* from May 1; will alter to suit. toQuirc of owner, MRS. G, C. WARD, lOUt Brood at.

AVON AVENUE, NOS. 289. 291 AND 2M. NEAR NEW PUBLIC SCHOOL

New Hvo-famlly apartment-house*; all Im* provemeni*. separate steam heaters; 7 room* and bath: Iminedlat* pos*e**lon. Apply on premlBei, 2 to 4 P. M., OV

LOUIS bch lesinqbr .UNION BUILDING, ,

CLINTON STREET, AT BROAD.___ _AVON AVE., 214 and 2IC, near Bergen at.—

r i \'0 rcKjm*; latest Imonjverooni*: tiled bath­rooms; lift and It II ____ _____

BROAD ST., 77ft“ 0<nce and desk roam; low rant; third floor.

BELMONT AVEl, IO—Store and two room*, WILLIAM H STRAUB. B04 High *t.

CaiNTHALLY LOCATED STORE; I/ICATBD ONE MINUTE FROM BROAD AND MAR-

iKBT 0T8.: SUITABLE FOR ANY BUSlNliRS; WILL ALTER TO SUIT TENANT. IA>UIS .fif^LSBlNOER, MAIN FLO<JR. UNION BUILDING, CLINTON BT., AT BROAD.

COK M S^B BTm aO-FOUR LARGE LOFTB; ; AIBOTWO STORES ON LAWRENCE RT , I BETWEEN COMMERCE AND CANAL ST3.

^ SCHMIDT, ftft CANAL 8T.__________CEIDAR BT., ai-STORB: IMUM^IATE POB-

.BEBSION, I/OUIS BCHLB0INGKR. MAIN iFLOOR, UNION BUILDING. CLINTON 8T.. ' AT broad . ____________ _______________I CHEAP atore at room*, lift; rent \vaa

idway* Iftft: at 48 waverly ave.; from Ifttn. PIPPERT, 7ft Green at.IFIPTICOK{c o r n e r Bloomfield ave. and Webeter st.;

large atore; four rooms and hath- Inquire ' WSfl/i Bloomfield ave.

ANftONlA ApARTMBNIti.Uft&llflft Broad *L, corner Murray st. be*u-

\ tlful new apartments; elk room* and tiled butliroott], butler's pantry, marble entrance hail, etc.; special renting iRducemoQti. Apply Janitor on premises, or JOSEPH OKIN. owner, Metropolitan building, Market and WaabingtoD.a pa r tm en ts—Three deelrable sunny room*

for light lnm»ekeep1ng; excel lent neighbor- lir.od end convenient lo South Btreet Station; 410; ready. A. H MA^OTT. 65 Dmmct st. ^APARTMENTS; new; central; newly deco­

rated; low rent; six light rooms; tile bath; storage; ianitor aervlcv, telephone; excellent location. PRITK. 606 Union building.APARTMENTS—Second floor, steam heater, all

itnprovemems. 91 Astor, near Brood. A|>- ply TT PenneylvanU ave.APARTMENT of *ix rooms In the oentr# of

the dly. Apply at No. 810 9cheusr build­ing, Newark. ___ACADEMY ST.. ftu-flE\'EN BOOMS AND

BATH; STEAM HEAT AND JANITOR SER­VICE; 182.50. LOUIS BCHIjESINOER, UNION BUILDING, CLINTON BT-. AT BROAD.

•■BBUioNT." _CLINTON AVE. AND RIDGEWOOD AVE

Newly completed apartment* of flv* and elx Ugbt ana airy room* and bath; atMfU heat and hot watsr and Jaultor •ervto*; decorate to suit; low rents to good M&ant*; Itnmadlste poweuloiL

LOUIS fiCHLESINGBR,Union Bulidlng, Clinton st,, at Broad.

D^a17d-NEW flr*l floor flat to let; tn Rose­ville sect Ion I clyes to trolley: fine nelghbor-

hoM; have h rooms and baih: all Improve­ments; only lift. PHILIP J. I30WERB & 00-, ISt Market at. __ ^RRAN'D-NEW second-floor flat to let In Rose­

ville'bectlofi; close to trolley, fine neighbor- hutid; ha* fi room* and bath; all Improvement*; fUtly $1B PHILIP J. BOWBRH & CO.. IB9 Market *t.

[CENTRAL AVg., 440-tflrce store; pent |16.|l>E8IRABLB top fioor; Market st. comer; [ elevator service and heal; suitable for office* I or light znanufacturlng; rent rea*onaM*.•FEIST “ ------- “ ■FEIST ft FEIST, TRft Broad.DESK ROOM—Use of de«k, typewriter, 'phtm*.

etc.; large, light ofllce; chance for real e«tatettan. HOPWOOD, S6 Clinton Ft.

I DIVISION BT.—Large stable, IS stall*, well situated; low rental. J. WARD SMITH &

. ^ N , Prudential bulletins.HUZABBTE ST.. S^ToH et’, store, with" 8

room*.FACTORY mace to- let. top flour, 93 Chestnut

■ti, city; QOicTft; light all sidse; elevator; Iteam heat; powtt* to suit. Newark Sectmd-

ftand Machinery On._____I FEW Choice rear ofBcs* to let tn the Splngarn

butldlug, IftS Market i t . ; rents reasonable;I >n*>s*iitm Immedlfttfly. Apply Janitor.Ha t store; oomer store; loth *t. and 14th

aaa ; prominent corner up on the '‘Hill;"|10 mcKith. Inquire in store.

llDPTS, with BUd steam heat. 48 Iaw-rmot * t WASHINGTON WTLSON.

liOFTS—Lawrence m.. near Market: steamhaat, alactrle light and power, at reduced

roe*. Apply to JAMES U. SEYMOUR JR , and Bft TAwrano* s t

V>rX—Ught. airy loR, shout 2,D00 feet floor Space; with power to suit. THE CARL

FAAft CO„ SoDtt it,, Newark.

Applyl^ARGE corner showrcN>m; second (loor; Uelro-

j fwllun building; for burlneMi Borpo*er- I l®rg* pJat* glass show window*,j ^ MARY, Metroiwllf*!! bulldh'tojARRET 8T., SflO—Loft ®nd ofltos, suUable ■ ^~tof__ljgnt ttianufaciuriiig; reut reanonabl*

4 SCHELL^. U Academy *t.,

toARKS^ ST., f98—Large store and basement;JOjdC feat; all Improvement*; rent reaaon-

MMj Janitor Mrvtce. Apply Janitor, on yrewi®**- ___________IfBW 8T., 2^Ftn« large atore. admirable lo­

cation tor business; reduced rent lo May 1. .| S. ftCHEUER A CO., Hoheuer building.J cBolc* oflBees lo rent; Metrn^\ polllan building; fight, heat, elevator and

^LSTIQ ft MARjC, Metropolitan building,0FFTCB8 TO LhT IN KATIOHAL STATESANK BUILDING, COR RROAD A W MB-

ANICBT9. ATRLY JN BANKClUtTM'Al'l HT-‘ BtablsL etsdle for 9horse*; all ImDrovement*; ehgd* for wagon*

carriaaei.____StOIuiBBON BtllLDINO-Th. mly atrti.ltjr

ftrflpTDof inftnufacturlrtR ^uliattur in th , ( tly N«w»rk; rooms lo rent rw an r light itMiitu-

i«olu»l« P»r[w»; el«r»tor » rv l» i riwiMlc Rlht. oamvmsrd «lr; •lectrlc tmirar: ntuni

•»« “ •'I, turrtl«h«l nculevaded lo rmt. Fiirther tnformotl&n «ui ba «f K,- C, TITCKI^. ehlrf eiiRltid,'. oo

-•— oor. Qreon and ColumbiaBTORS^-IjAHCB c o rn er STORa

-Odotrat: tunable tur vholuale or retail: MW ti)wk from Market and Brmid; m t tao. In- ‘EUlf® on preiDlss*. Bill Washington, cor. Will-

I A

_ J and outer floors to let; 48x70, rtoiStgUft* for any business or for offleok, f« ea ia heat; elevator ser^ee: exceli«Qt light, / B®*tth®i t btUldlhg. t>-U Frafiklln at,___

store; loeaied In thiokjy two living rooiM attaobed;LSf3!

.Mckermt . Inquire on premise*.

fuS 0 0 0 1 0 ^ AQ^'Ceivt i f t iiT«k r

PrORi

. ae®l'excellBDt

fiai rrffiSoBS to 1st. oor. South Oranfe ave

'^LUtletoo ave.I new brick building; e tor steam heat, inquire Rr«t

a hotut®.iRS to 1*1, ^ Bpvliiffield eve. toqulre at

I D. WOUf « CO., Waikat a tI CrORtm ta l i t W Cliotw at.,

p , g*IJ>TOI.to Itt: at W •Mtn(llr1d a “ HOFrKB BRW * CO..

ave.

; ■ffOMI to W at * » Broad m l i 5 b ta . tmiulra at AMOB B. V^N nORN'8. t t

...... ....... -n*ABUI OH BTOHAOH; CENTRAL.

B tar ( Brdad it.t SOaSO; aultable for ataWj. Moraaa. of Ilibt manunoturlDK: r u t !«>• jw n A » f H a t . IM Brodd.

ttabla (or root. Imolra IM

CITE of t , ______tmliabl* for manleurlof, baataeaa. IB', otbat I [iHdald av*.

ih tA l^ 'aw aa with ow noiBi vraid a a l t . l w ^

BALDWIN AVE., 48-To let. deelrable, mod­ern. 7-room flat. separate heaters; electric

light; must be seen to be appreciated. Call any time. ______________________________BERGEN ST., 677. near Avon ave.—Flat, tn

single brick fhoube; elegant six light roon" all Improvements; bath. Inquire tup fttfor.BERGEN 0T., 2l*ft-Flat to let. six pjoms, all

Improvements, all fight; rent |]G. Inquire LASKOWITZ, dS South Orange avo.DERGEN BT„ 411-Five room*; *»coiifl fioof; ItatHTovemeDtir

Apply Janitor. ___BERGEN ST., ftSft—Elegant lop floor; In three-

family house; all Improvements. Inquire 843 Belmont a v e . _____________ _BEkOEN ST.,-7ftT—Four room*; second floor;

$13; all ImprovomentaDEVERLY BT., 84-Flal to let. live light

ruumSr Improvements except heat; rent |IT.

NESBITT er.. 4ft, near Orapge it.—FW* nice rooms snd laundry, flnit floor; adult* pre­

ferred Inquire 45 NesbUt *t. ______NEWTON ST . 124^Flat. with all Improve-

menlH, Including steam heat; rent f22.NELSON PL.. ,^^-Slx room* *nd bath; modem

ImprnvcmentH. ____________ _OWNER (Amfrlean), having finished elegant

two-famtly huujie, with every poselble im­provement, fliji'st neighborheoj. . cl'iae South Orange ave. trolley, 1ft mlnulHS to Rroad, de­sires satisfactory tenant Hveond floor; sieam heat furnished free UilnJire of season. Ad­dress Referencft* ExchHoged, Box 22, News offlre.ORCHARD flT.f 40-For rent, second-story

apartment; six rootni' and bsih; heatDur.lehed: also small Bhup. HulUble for email cabinet work or stone aeltlng. Inquire at No. 36. opposUe.ORIENTAL TERRACE. SI—Seven room* and

bath; near Erie Depot.PEftHINE AVE., 12K-IJH1-New flats lo let;

second and third floors; all Improvemenia, pent lift' Inquire i>n premises or LOBWBN- BERG ft COHN, 6? Cj^merce st.PESHINE AVE., wiT'n-ar CillUon uVf.-To

lei, five room* and bath; all Improvemems. Inquire 29 Hillside p9.PENNINGT0N_BT.. Bl-Two-famlly house; |1x

beautiful, all-light rooms; wUh Jmprove- ments; $15. FEIBT & FEI8T, 78ft Broad.PARK VIEW, First ~st7 W2“ Four e l ^ ^ t

large room*, with Improvements; $12 per montn. Apply Janitor, on premise*.RIDGEWOOD AVB.. 10-Flat Is two-family

houae; 6 room*; all IrapivvemeaLi; steam heat; po*s«i*lon at once: rent $28. Inquir*

^ AUGUST BUBRMANN, 28 Stratford pi.RIDGEW^OOD AVE,, ll»-Flat to let, five

room* *nd bath, hot and cold water, %\C, near Clinton ave. Inquire J. BIMMONS.Rir»OEWOOD AVE.' 117—Blx rooms and bath,

new house; all Improvements.ROSEVILLE' Second st,, near Sussex ave.—De­

sirable flat; all Improvemem*; adults. In­quire 47 Second st.. near Central ave.ROBEVILLBr“tl^A N ^I187 N^W 0 AND^

ROOM FLATS; ALL IMPROVEMENTS. APPLY 4 NORTH UTH ST.

Rl’NYQN BT.' 24T—Flat tn lei.____________BHERMAN AVE.—Dealruble comer flat; five

room* and bath: every Improvement; separate *icam heater: ready; only tl8. A. H.MARYOTT, 06 Emmet *(.BUMMER AVE., TBO-Becond fioorV 8 rof^ms

and bath; third. 2; •uparats steam plant, heats both floor*; all light rooms; J25. HENRY RUSSELL. 23 ainton st.SOUTH KIGIITH BT.. (Ml. near Central avp.~

Five light rooms: bath; all Improvemenla; tSO. Inquire 30 Montgomery el. JOHNFRANZ.SOUTH iVt H st ., 484-N(‘wirBt. five rooms

and brith latest Improvements; |16; two block* New York c*r Inquire Oft Elm st.BOVTH IITH ST., 3Sl-n.1t, IB twoT«mliy

house; separate heater and all Improvement*, I JOHN J. MENTY, 8ft flnuth Orange ave. |aOTJ-nrO^RANGE^VE , 212. near Hunterdon |

at.—Second floor: 6 largw rooms; rent |I6. JULIU0 B. SEITZ CO.. 792 Broad St-

BANK BT.. IIO—Front room (or on* gentle­man, $1.60; al*4) large room for a couple or

two gentJemeti; rasHonable.RANK ST., 1T6—Pleasani, newly furnished

rooms; private family; ab Improvement*; reasonable.BANK ST.. P2, near Halsey *t.-Nlcely fur­

nished front room*, with steam beat and bath.BANK ST., flfi Mid 148—Furnished room* for

light housekeeping; all Improvements.BANK BT-. 243—Rooms lei to colorsd tMjopIs;

furnlabHd or unfurnished; 2d flivor.BLEECKER 8T., IM. between Plane and High

Hie.—Front room, nicely furnlahwl for light hiiusekeeping; all Improvements; tiaam heat; rent rnasonabla.LiLEECJKER BT., MK-Connecllnir room* for

light housekeeping; go* und bath _________BLLKCKEiR ST., 102—Two eelect front rooms;

ht^aled; light housekeepingDF:LM0NT a v e ., (10—Nice hall room; private

family; |1 ; second floor.r:orRT ST>, 76, opposite Plane at.—Nicely fue-

niRhftd single and oonnectlnip room*: all im- provemente; furnished complete for househeep« Ibg; $2 up.Col RT 8T-. fto—Two connecting furnlehad

frr»nt rooms; new wallpaper and carpets; titfih: gas; n<.> children; central location.rniiKT ST., 72—Furnished room; all Iropruve-

ments; family.CENTRAL AVE.. I»0-Aleove front room; fur

nlshed for housekeeping; also two connecting ronms; all Improvement*.CENTRAL AVE., !00—Plpiuanl sunny front

room; well heated; also smaller room; pri­vate; ail Improvement*.COLUMBIA HT.. (l2'-lArge, nicely furnished

front room for one or two gentlenieii; with bII Improvement*,COLb'MiSlA ST., fl!—Nicely furnished rooms to

lei; large and small.CLIXTCjN s t ,, 4ft—Nicely furnished room;

suitable for two gcnilfmen; gas and heal.

rVRKfISlfBD ROOM® TO LBT*ROBEVlLLB. Ruuth l4iH *1., lt«-Furnl»h*d

front room; alaci room* for fight houaekeep« ing; heat; *11 |niiproveii>enls: reaunableROaEVnXR AVE,. 88—Large *eiond fliKlf

room, suitable for two. near itatton and trot* lay*; light houaakeeping if prefen‘e>t.__ ^HPRING flT„ 3T. between Grant'*t. and Eighth

ave. near La^-kawanna Depot—Furnl*hc»druotnit' l l : light housekf^-plng, fl.ftO lo tZ-flO aPRINci 8T„ 62—Pleasant front fiirnlohed

rootii; reasunabi*.BOUTH TWELFTH 8T., ftS^—Nicely turnlih-

ed rooms for light houtekeeplng, also single room*; all Improvements; modomte rate*.HDUTIl 0 R.xs1i e ‘ b 7 27a^F^mlihiKl front

room; healed; reference.STIRLING 8T.. 4ft-Newly'’ funil*hs(J, •team-

heated, large front room, suitable for two, on floor with bath; private Uouss-_________BTERUNO BT , 61-FurnSihed room, In prb

vale family; all improvement*.STATS ST.. S3—Furfilnhed. lorgn and imkll

room*; heated; II up; near LOifkawaniia Sta­tion: referenos.__^ _____SOMERflKT BT . 111—Furnished rioma to let,

with all ImproveriiHiitB, bath, inquire bkIoouTHREE furnished or unfurnished rooms; with

private family; steam heat; tfitphonc. Ad- drsM Private. Uox 88, News office.TO LET, two nice ruoina with quiet family;

suitable fe»r a lone woman. Adqri‘»H Room*. Ikn 17, New* office.THIRTEENTH AVE., 84-lArge front room;

steam heated; suitable for two gentlemen.THIRD AVE.. 81—Rooms, singly or en *uit«;

steam heat.UNION ST', 131—Tivo fine room*; hleely fur­

nished for tight houaekeeplag; single or con* nectlng; bath and all convenlencf's-UNION fit., 144 and l«-runfl»hcd rtxsms for

fight housekeeping; front and buck roums; $2.50; all Imptovemsnit.VEBEY BT., 27—Furnished rooms to let-

BLUM ST., T—Six light rooms. Improvementii $14; also two attic room*, water, tft.ftb.

BALDWIN 6T., 28—To let,, second floor, four nmm* in two-family house; adult*.

CHADWICK AVE.. 203, near Clinton ave,- FWe Urge» light, airy rooms and baih; all

improvement*; |16; Immediate possssslca. JOHN H. McKEON, m Market it.CUNTON PL., 02-Four rooms, $l0.ftO, »ec-

onfl floor; five room*. tl2, third floor; Im- provementa.CENTRALLY located, four room*. *econa

floor. BAM e. BCHFUER ft CO., Bebeuer building.CENTRAL AVE.. WW-Three nice, elean

room* and cefiar for ^ quiet, small raaplly.

SOUTH SIXTH ST.. 32lKrive and elx large, light rcKims; bath and panfry; private hall.

Inquire JCDISKY, on preinlues.SOUTH BELMONT AVE., •filh—Fiat of

rooms; wll) alter to milt leuant. reni free to January IS; all Improvemenis.SOUTH ORa NGE av e .. ftl-Flve large light

rooms; bath; all latest Improvements; hall and bath steam heated; adults.SOUTH ORANGE AVE., comer Grove si., n**r

oaihouse — Four ro<BEYER, n7ft Brood st.__________________SOUTH IftTH ST., 768—Flat, now house; flv*

large, light rooms and bath; ail Improve* tnenle; rent |16.BOUTH 12TH BT.. 118—Five rooms, all Im-

provementet Immediate poesesslon. Owner, 39fl P n rk e r j t___________________________SOUTH U.TH 8T.. 40B-^hlrd floor, five

room*, hot and cold water, bath; rent |lfl.BOUTH 20TH BT., M«. cor. Avon ave.—6 rooms

and bath; in three-family house; rent low.BOUTH ITTH 8T., ftflC, near Clinton avir

flat to let; twn-fnmlly house; rent low.-NiceDBLAVAN AVB. and Oroton irfC; on* block

from Wsghington ave.-^ven rooms; ail Im­provement*; *team go* and electric Hghti ^ ______ -exoell nt neighborhood. Owner, 280 Parker *t SPRINGFIELD AVE. 84-Mve rooms MdDESIRABLE flat; second floor; 8 light rooms;

bath; Improvement*; sieatn heated; rsnt |27; adults. Inquire BATEMAN, 117 South 8th sL

bath: all ImprovemenU. Inquire M. BRBNN- FTiEICK* third floor, or A. FI8CH, 7U2 Broad•t.

DEBIRABLH flat of Elk rooms and bath on Sherman av*., corner Wright r t .: H8. J. M.

BATEE, 248 cunton av«.EARL BT, IS, adjoining Elicabelh aTo., tovf

blocks south of CllQtoa—Just coDiblatad; 8 rooms; tiled bathroom; butler** panur; ball* fumlsbed; jn - llB . Inquir* RUBBELLROSIN- SON CO-. Ear) it. tbd mfinghiirMfl av*.

SPRINOFIELD AVE., 888—Five nice, fight, airy twin*. ImproveroenU; rent >14._______

SIXTH ST., 778, three Wook* north of Bloom- Aeld ave., oppooHe Branch Urook P ark-

qTvre* room*; Itl. BEYER ll7ft Broad at.

em m et s t ., 118—Four large rooms; rent 112;Improvements. Ipqutr* on premiss*, or CHAB.

WEfGAND, Market it., paoood floor.ELM BT.. 862—Five room* and bath, Call at

48ft Walnut «t., H. 8ANN.FLAT—Six rooms and bath; all Improremeiiti;

steam heat fumislud; balls gnd stain car- t>ete<l. 32 North Tth *t.. d**lrabls nslghbor- hood.f l a t —088 Orange at.; 6 Light itwm*; all Im-

|gt)V*mcnt*; reflt |18. litqkln 10 Odor it.FLAT—Elegant Oat, all Improvemtht*, S or 10

room*, with shower bath, InquLr* 68 Hill* aide pi. ___________________FAtBMOUNT AVE.. 2ftS-Middl« flat; 6 rOOIM}

bath; modern ImprovstnenU; near .Boutb Or* ange ay*, oar*; fins neighborhood;PAIRUOUNT AVE., 356—Flat, flv* light lafg*

room»i 6fi improvements; rent $15.FAJRMOUNT AVE., ftS7—To lei, five rootti

and bath._____FERRY 8T.. 4l. lecond flooi^Fotir large

room®: improvements; po**e**lon at ones: roat H i 8W Broad ®i. room 401.FIVE latirii airy room*) on Holland si,. mid

fo«r m M on Bergen ft. Inquire F. nua* BAUM, S^apriOgAMd _______________rABlTAM RU. tiO-Gonier flat to t«ti ®lk

raonw ®iu| tMub; alt aio* and large; etabie if Baatad." ____F m ^G B U T B IW AVa.. T8“ Thr®e

llghi roBcn* to n t, wiUh atoore.tore®.

GRERM BT.« lUh-Fotnr rooms to let; baa®< msbt and f^ot fliaor; wotor, | ^ ; 1(1, tdqtilr®

Heir TOffe a?®.GRtwlT^iiT.' lot, four Rt(irnMm®r ott

aeoond floor.GOBLE §T. 4t**t*qqr nio® worn®; r ^ tMANPflOinc nww Data to let ip South Orange

L®*** *>*® nj^bortood; tmv* four l*r|I'kbd• 6 per 4,%rua , CVMif <IW«rft 00., iflfl Market st.

. _ -I »n iiapivvem«nt|j per floor; rwdy now, PH tl

HAMDBCWB y w 0 ^ to lei ta South Oranga . s . , dotirable ne^rhborb^t hare roar large, tia*,* *■ *0* lAd bath; all tear— — --*-• —

R8 t CO.. I t t UhHmI a tHUIfT»RDOW B'

s s m T u . h a ' », mSAR VABAEK 8 * .-

n i f im w w w i ^ m , w . jfWfin*l(B|»rovMa,ftU. WiT^HE.. W EA pi,

ifI f w « n . ' ____L . : , - -

SIX room® and pantry to let, with Improve- mnUA Inquire A. MEYER, 61ft South 13tb

•t.THE ORLEANB. THE WARREN.

42 AND 4ft ORLEANS ffT.Handecune new apartment*: every nuxlorj

conTonlence; six rooms and bath; stoam heat; hot water at all times: convenlamly locate J to trolley*, nLltroads snd builncs* section; rental* $884 lo W80 per annum. The Janitors will show vacant apartment* at any time and anawsr Ml Inqulrfcs. PHILIP J, BOWERS ft CX>., 188 Market st.

THE RIDGEWOOD.400 Clinton ave., cor. Rldgcvuji)d ave.; up-to-

date apartments; fl nHMn* and bath; with heat, hot water and Janitor senliTf ; i-ther oocuDantu of the moot oelact people. Diagram upon appll- cation to McCUR ^ . 600 Broad st.________TO LJflT-EilegaBt apartment*, centrally located

faoitare **v®d); rent 120 and upward; Im* HMdlate powsilott. FtSDLER'S, J42 Market itVAILBBUROH, Sanford ave., MO—Six room*

and bath. In new two*famlly hou**; nit im« provernkfi^l Hpaiiit* itaoia heaier; |26. A)*o Palm a t , 88i flv* rooms, In new two'tomfiy bouse: t14. OOOLBY, 22 Hinton *t.Va iLRSVROH 3ECrnoH~Hoet elegant fight.

attractive flat In the oitjr, 530 Norwood et„ just north South Orange ave., with or withoutSteam heat- .......... ...........’VAILBBVRQH, Bifilth at, 78—Flat to let, att

Improvemenii, firet floor.6 room*; excel lentVAWDERPOOL 8T., So. W-FlAti

■leave apd baih: ImproTemanta: enndUlon: |J1. Apply llrot Boca-.WAKStiAN AVE., 42—Haven Hiht rnoaii; all

lniD«vem«ota; bul looatloo In etteet; poewa- SoB ln;.nie<Slately: ilrp laVliSrv; newly papereA; eapHalt *treel. _________ ______________WABHIKOlfON 6T.. MS-FIve eJlJtfht

Efel Boor: Inrorevemente: rent lie. BEI8T A FEIST, IM Broed.________^XVEKL.T AVE~ «4-Flve nice, ll»M ■ iftwnu,

leeand ‘Ikwri rent reaeonahle. Inquire Brel_________________■

WAVEftt,T AVE., 91-Flat In let, lire roonUi all tnaprovemeate iicept bath: rent 11a.

lIUinN BT,—Flat; four rooraa. a S . reptii SI, 88 qlntnn it.

H. 8. im .-

IlTH AVE,. flJ-Ftne flat to let; line locaUtyi all tmpeovemetiti. tnanlre IH llin ei..

SAMSmaMEE. _______ 'w r a AVK ASP SOOTH t™ let,- with fi room* aud bath. Inquire 848 |lhk aye. ^in r it A ^ - . M fM lW topfflO all lmpra«-

ttlMitii AU.IBTH'ATS., 8 0 —Fo® roome aail bath; thlrfl

M e < * S - yPA TB. PT C - W ABTBD.

Ha lsey bt.. Larxe front rocin; suitable for one or two; also Rmall room; all Improve-

menta.

LlLfilE Bt., P—One large room on Qrst floor.MARKET ST., 878—For men only; steam beat;

electric lighU; shower baths; large roadln|- room; all papers and magazine*; terms tl.nl ^ tft per week; everything clesn. Home Hotel.MARKET 1ST., 18-Nice warm furnlBhed room*,

with Improvement*.Ma r sh a ll s t ., n —Large front room, suit­

able for one or two gentlemen; heat; baih; gas; all improvemsnte.MULBERRY BT., SO—Front housekeeping and

B|«ieplng room to let.

NEW ar.e a^Fw m t parlor; also other con* uectUtg rcKUtt*) for fight houeekeeplng.

NEW 9T.. 80—Xeatly furnished room; with bgth; private fatnlly; call Btinday.

NEW BT.e Iflfl—fMrutfehed or tiufurnlahed rooms; pnvato family-

I WEST KINNEY 8T., ftl, eecond door from Washlngloti it. end olongalde cars—Nicely

furnished single or oonneciing room*; all Im- provementi; tnoniughly heated; iMiih. laundry and gas; furnished complete for houiokeeplng: gas range* In every rtKjm; evfrything sup­plied free; I2.fl0 up; no children.WEST KINNEY RT,, 303. corner Howard-

Second floor halt room, fumlelied, tl; room .OEXt-in. kltchnn Xor tarty, 11: priVft.t®aWEMT KlNNKY HT.. gS^lJirgfl front room:

neatly furntwhed. _____WASHlaNflTON BT,. 4ft«, near Kinney e t.-

Large front roam: two connecting room* furnished for housekeeping: single room, $l.nu; hU Improvcriients.Wa shington st . two connecting

roems, parlor floor; light hoUiskeeplng: r*- ipoctable^ tmly.WAHlilNGTON fiT . 4Sl-!lall room; private

family.WAlinEN PL., lla -1'wn rn.m connecting and

also aJnglc ronnia furnished nimplete for housekoKpIng: Impi'OYement.H; centra]; quiet.WARUKN HT. .ft3-Kurnl»hBfl front room;

well healed; suitable Mxhl hourtekoeiitivg.WILlalAM RT.. Hu—Two connecting furnl»h*'d

ronma for light housekeeping, running water; two doors above High stWALNUT ST., ItiO—Two connecting mom*.

furnished for housekeeping; married couple, sleeping room, tl.29.WALNUT 8T.. T8—Large ronina, furnished for

gentlemen; slsu large hull room: dll Im- prcnemetilB.4TH AVE., H8—Nicely furnlBhed rooms, hnai'd

and bath; housekeeping or gentlemenSTM AVE.. 3V—Large front romn, prtvule

fum lly.____ _____ ________

FURNISHED ROOMfl WANTED^WANTED, frnnt bedroom: In * utrlrtly hlgh-

rlaen private family; as nmr tu Broad and Market au taiosIblH. but not Imr^erattve; by voung man who had close hie own hmjse for four munthfl. highest referenees given and ex- pected. Addr«M Bniad. fiux ,18. ^ w a office.WANTED. In Newark, furnished room, In pri­

vate family, by a young man: Would prefcir room near Quitman st. Address R(Hmi, Rox 4, News offloe.

FUHRTISHED ROOMB TO LET-OUT OF TOWN.

EAST ORANGE, North riinton st., U f-T o If-l, two furnished ronnis, ootinectlng or

separate; one alcove front room, suitable fur Couple or two gentlemen; firivate family; all Improvements.BAST ORANGE, Grove si, TS-Fumlshed

mom* lo lei; two minutes from Grove Street Station and trolley.

East pa r k st ., l l —L’ tmlshed hall room; all Improvements.

FRONT ST . 04, between Fulton and Rector— Tw'O sncund'St'jry connecting front rooms for

bouBekoepIng: reasonable.FULTON 0T., 4A ’Two rooms, connecting or

separate; soulhera exposure; all Improv*- ments; in private farnlly.f r a n k l in HT., 38—Neatly furnished froii?

rocmi; alt modern )m]>rovements: steam heal; also back parlor,FRANKLIN ST., 2&—Nicely fumishsd rooms;

Improvement*,GREEN RT.. fiO—Newly fumt*hed rooms to let

for one or two genttenjen; steam heat, all Impnivements; also hall room*,GHFRN ST.. 14J—Large from room for house­

keeping or two men, $2; small room*, |L60; hall rooms. JI.(3REEN 9T., lb—Four rnome to let, furnished

nr utifumlsheO, for rtapectable colored peo­ple,GREEN PT-, 7ft- Largo front and backroom for

light housekeeping; 12.50 and tft.GRANT ST., 13—Nicely furnished large and

smatl rnome; at) Improvements; one minute i«i D , L. and W Btatlon.GRANT ST,. Ift—Ls/ge front alcove room and

Rnmil mom,gray st ., 37. near Roseville Htailon—Fur-

nliihed room to let; aleo light housekeeping.HIGH HT , 422—Two nice rooms, on* eUtgle,

one double; nlcelv furnished, warm and light; tor gentleman and wife of elngle gantlemen; near Rroad and Market sU.HIGH RT,, 27ti. near GemtHl ave.-Pleasant

hull room; also largo, nicely furnished room; all Improvements; central; reasonable.HALSEY ST., 28ft—Two connecting rooms,

furnished for bouseiteepfijg; running water In room: price f2.ft0; respectable only; also oneKwm. ftl.ho.

EAST ORJ^IGE, Grove pi., 13—To lei, large, light, furnished ruom for two ladlr* or two

gentlemen.FirRNISHED rooms In Orange, two minutes

from station amd trolley; plraaant and de- elrabte location. M. M.. Box J, News ofllca, Orange.LODGER wanted; a comfortably furnished,

sunny room. In private huuue, hear railroad statinn. Addrcii* K. A Gs. 3ft Kail I'ark st.. East Orange.orange; Main st., 21Q-Ncatly furulsheil

rooms; all lmi>rovcmenl8: boat and balli, MRS HKNHAMORANGE. Oakwnod ave., I2A—f)ne fuinlhhed

room: all Improvemen ts,SOUTH ORANGE—Two nicely furnished con­

necting rooms to let; corner hous*-, Addresji Fumished, Box B7, New* oiflce.

FUEKI8HED HQOMfl WANTED—OUT OF TOWN.

GENTX-EMAN wants furnished rctom. heated.bath: in private family; near !>., L. and w

or Erie R. R... Orpnge; reference. Addresa Mck, 89 James at., filoomflold.

BOARDING.ARLINGTON FT., 02—Two young men can b©

occumniodated with board and a j)inasunt from riKdit.REnjLEVTIXB AVE.. 277-The Belleville, large

healed room*, aullabU? two; best of tatilr; convenient to all roads nnd surface chrs; rates reasonable.

til umiu, <4viri. lainiiy, Do n empioyM; wulx-Jng dlsteiiiT to Broad and Market preferred; lertii* r«wnabla. Add**** Board. Ho* 87, New* olfice.YOUNG MAN. American, wont* comfortably

fumlahed room, wUh board. In quiet re*l- dontlal nectlun, vicinity of courthouse or olty hall; state price. Addrea* Permanent, lk>x ft®, Nows olfioe.VOUNG WOMAN, employed. de*lre* room,

with breakfast, in uriyate family; oeatrel. Addrve* M-, Ilox 3ft, News office,YOlJNQ I*Ar>Y. employed, desire* board In

prftvate family; central. Addre** B., Box S4. New* office.

BOAHDING-OUT OF TOWN,BLOOMFIELD, N. J.. Fremont st. ft8-De*lra-

bte furnlihed rooms, with l*oard and home cqmfort*. ior eelect people.DELLEVILI£. N. J.. William at., 88-Want*d.

three gentlernsn to board In a private family.&A8T ORANGK. Washington terrace. 87—

Large s«cond*4tory, well furnished roam; 6 uilhute*' walk from Rrick Church Htstion; pri­vate family; pteem heat Telephone 88aOR.EAST g r a n g e . Routh iTth *t., IK-Large fur*

ni<ihed roum; suitable for two gentlemen; with or without board; steam heat; gae; nearCentral h v «,

EAST ORANGE. Chaatnut *t.. ll-N tcely fur- nished room snd board; near eutlon and

troljey.KKahNY. Devon nt., IB—F\tml*hed raom to

Jet. with or without board, for two gentle* men <y two ladles; private fathllv.OIlANtjE, Warq st.. ft2—Nicely furnished room

with board: stilrtrble for one or two: *11 coii- venivneea and heg^d.1 LhABANT furnlsbod or unfurnished footn*.

urul board; private family, desirable location, rteex trolley and trahii; referencei. Vddre** E. II. DOUULAFB, bust Orange, general de­livery.WKX?T OflANGBl, Crus* si., ft—Would board

business couple or two young women, in prl- vote family.

HOARD WANTED—OUT OF TOWN.IJUAHD wanted out of d iy . couple with chUd,

three yean old, want one ur two rooms ana board with private fumily; MoiuoJalr or v1-

Write, stallrig term*, tq t-VruntiV Ifomc; -Btwt fft. Mews ....

CITY A D V IIR T lifelU flllT «,u k ," . p i ^ K l Much

th rek MLor w fltaU.ti*4 tie openin « HewJoresy, to o r ^ «i^ oatieft tie t^ Q in liC'

FABTAN PI«flCfB ^«e a pubik vlreei or highway from Uie ooulfl* ejly litJ* of property of Arthur B- lA^wT a* shown on map on file In the oflke oTtht

In boo® of privat* maps of GHnton Township, on page XI. and exteMlnc th® Unet of H*me to the northerly Hot of Lyon* ®v®Due»

00 feet, togfttWwith all the ippurtonancee Diet* the aame,

Such person* a* may object thereto queated to pre«en| Rielr ohjHilow to the okrk of *k|4 boord» at the

reto a n n -

Board of Street am Water ^mmfwloaem, eltr hall. Newark, on or before the explratloo « Ilk days from dat® of thl® polloe.

By dlreotloa of th* --Water Commlsefoaert i

Wurork, w. J., Juokry «, fw r"OFFICE of oit,. olwk, N m m . N, J„ DMimi-bor ai, 1#0#.

Hfliori ui snttrmonti (or thf » « k onflhCST: ftrli at; toU!, HO.

Agee—C^e rear and under, 81: betwega 1 u f l i h J ""O 0 T; i lafl W f f F ^B; IS Wifl ao rwro (, m vM » jNwm. I l l and to y»w, IH; io (nd SO m n i. 10; K •_ so ytan. 19; on (mi TO yUB, l»i TO U d I y»tro. T; 80 and ovrr, T.

ni(MU>—AnHurltm aorta, 0; apopHjqr cpf cerebral hemorrhage, b; appendloil^ I j *!*> Ivctails puimon, 1; bronchitis. 8 ; tew hlU i, capilUry, 2, bums. J; cancer, 1; canoerr O M Phagu*. 1; cancer. *tiimach. 1; caaualtieg,"f toirrhoslB ilvev. 2; delirium tresneiu, betes melUui, l . diphtheria, ft; enflooorflHI®, enlerliU. L; erplpvlsi, l; fevorj foarkii^fever, typhoid,a i'itviU, tr , iiai:iur* M(MO, *; gMUV ■teritla. 4j hwari dlsesHe, 2; heart. vmvulH^a horntplegla, 1; hemoi-rhage. 1; henito. t;{rrlppe. 1; marasmus or mslnutrlthm, B| flia ngfili. tubercular. 1; meninglUo, < ~^

spinal, 1; tnyocardllls. 2, nephrllti, fi; '

i, VWflUfii: 1}fracture *kuU, 4; goiitro Me--- " " vdrutY* li

or seTimty, I; patoljili.' geheraVrj; ' p?!ftii| pulmonali*, fi; pleurisy. 1; pneumofliaa j vneumoBla, broncho, 8; promature h lltk rheutnatlam I, sepUoarmia, 1; lA q ^ ft: fl born, ft; suicide, 2; tuberculosis, 11; urOromtl 1; myelin*, 1: rtecUikn oasaphagua left potikti 1; itOA* bladder, 1

riaoes of Nativity-United BUle®. 88: iN* land, 10; England. 6; Scotland, f : Italy, li France, i; Germany. 17; Deniaarh, }; RthMUL ft; Auitrla, 8. Tnloi^, 4. Unknown, L

__JAHlSfl F. IXINNBLLT, Ctty Cl«|i.

ground! o^aoent 'li:of official* therefor,

oreto, and for •pprova

HALFEV ST.. 403—Nicely furnished room* for housekeeping; ail conveRleiicee.

HALSEY 8T., 96—Nicely furnished room; all Improvements.

6T.. SSfl-FWTshed roanT for l ^ t housekeeping- ' ^

LAFAYlirrTli HT., Irt3-N!ccly furnished front room and single room for gentlemen only.

LAFAYETTE ST.. 03—Connecting room* for housekeeping; water.

LiTTLjyrc7>r“avE T . 'i 3 f t - ^ r n la h M " r ^ ^ private family; on the top floor.

MECHANIC BTa, Il8-Llght housekeeping and fumlehed room*.

NETaSON P L . 27—One or two nicely furnished.wet) heated front room*: sultokk for two

gentlemen f?r couple: oa*. bath- telephone: pri­vate family.N E I^ N PL.. IftH-Well fumlehed, large

front room. In i^vata family; heat cu>d bath; will let raa*onable to permanent gentle­man. _____ ________KURRE8—Room* for nurfes; furnished or un-

Cumlehed; oteom heat; telephone. Addrea* Nbrae. Box 88, New* office.NORTH 5TH BT., Iflr-Two fumlahed room*

for bcooekeeplng; range and bath; near D,, U and W. fltatton, trolly ,NORTH SBVBNl'H ST., 96-A bice furnished

ftttiA room, suitable for two fentltmcn.

ORCHARD ST,» 145—f'nmkhed room* for light housekeeping t ako fuitiiahed room* for on* ;

or two weni eteam heated; private home.Or c h a r d fumtahed room;

light honwAweplng; ttoatt boat; improve- manta; naor flaw city hall.Or c h a r d rt ., as—two nloelr furnished pon-

nectlAg roomiK with ranhlng water, central; aleo other ®lnffle rooms.

LELLFJVlLLE AVfl. 842-RoardCrh wahtf-d; a qulci, (Mimforlflblp hnm'», wUh uH Iny^mve-

ments; lerms mcHlf-rale; Iscgc roi nis.HLMFXi'KHU ST., 4?- Iloartlera wanted; nicely

furnlBhed r<x)ms; heet and gas; all conv<’Tv lencaa; near trolley; fur either sex.BROAD BT., Blft- Two connecting rooms; par­

lor and beiiroozn; hot and cold running wat*r; other rooms; al*o table board.BROAD 8T., 1140Vir-I^g‘‘ rnnm, SUllaljla

for two gentlemen or couple; good board; reoeonable; private family.BROAD ST., 31l>—Furnished rooms ir> let, with

or without hoard.CENTRAL AVB., 107—Lnrge warm room, fln»»

table; private house; comforts hie home, |ft; also sunny front alcove: suit two, quiet; deRii'- able place.CH^TNUT BT . IS. Wond door from Rroud-

First-class table board.FILM ST., 24-H6lngU and double roams; steam

heat; all Improvement*.EAST PARK BT., 88—Connecting ‘cna, fur­

nished; board optional.FOURTH AVE., 98—Second-floor suite or bcj)-

orate room*; *tooin heat: open fireploctwi: Separate tables; near two statlonB; best *er- vie*._______________ _ _____f r a n k l in st .. 4fl-Pront furnished double

room; *l*o one double beck robm; heated; all iirprovemento.HALBKT 8T., 101—Goad hoard, warm room,

ftS a week; Improvements; a few minutes walk north of Broad and Market st*.HALSEY ST., 43—Nicely furnished room; sull-

ahl* for two, with board; Improvemenle,HOWARD FT., 76, two block* from oourthouie

—8ccond-itc»'y front room for two, tIO: ex- cellent table; bath and beat.HILL BT., Ifl—Lorge and small room*; private

boardlng-bouse.LITTLETON AVE., BTfl—Gentlemen wanted,

with or without board; private family.MORTON HT., 74—Large front room, heated,

suitable for married couple or two gentle­men; or two large connecting room* for light huUfeCkeeplng; Gorman cooking; ten tnlnuiea to Broad and Market.ORCHARD BT„ 120—Nicety fumlBhed front

room on seiooad fioce*, firat'Claeii boarding­house; aleo two smaller rooms; table board a specialty.ORCHARD 9T.—Good board with flne furnished

room, also table board; convenient to Bouth Bt, Btatlon. Address Orchard, Box 36, New* office.ORCHARD 8T.. 8—Two or three respectable

men can have good rooms and board; Im­provement*; moderate; referencesPl-ANB AT., 488-Large heated front room*,

neatly furnished; *uU man and wife or two gentlemen; with board; reaeonablfl rates.pIkANE i(T.. Iftl. The Franklin—Largv tad

small rooms: eteam begt; free baths; excel- lent table; |5PLANE STm ITS—Desirable single and double

rooms; select board; all improvements; tele­phone.BOflJOVIuJ." W arM h~*t/ floor [

rooms for one or two ladies; ^ v a te Tamllyi home conveniences; with,or vhuiout board.ROHBrVfLLB, North

room, with board.

; board.7tb et, 8i->Desirable

OALEANfl t r . , flS^Two connecting, well fur­nished, oiodora, llflht houaeteepiiig rooms;

well hsktedl Miect tenant* only.ORLfeANfl HT,, JJ£K-Nlc*!y furnished rooms;

all Improvement*; steaiu heated; central: genttowwi only.PLAKB Wk- 166—Two connecting healed

iKMing,. mnor floor: also other rooms; light hoqeekaspjng. Inquire besemefit or 433 Plan*rtt • • . I '■tnUAHlI HTr, fl64»-Reii«cUibk woman can have , t t n d iM rodoi in private family for light bflflgjS agSng; third flooTk ________PiiA55*5$7l&h-Nlcaly tumlified large front y rewfii glto tiall *11 Improvemems.

rwuB for

BTATB ST., 60—Re*l«d tarnished room*, with or wlthoyt board; att Uapfovementa

BOUTS'14TH BT„ flOrejvib)* boarderswMte^; good home cooking, _____

SOUTH BTH ST., S4-^Piiml*hefi rooms: board If desired. , _________________

STIRLING BT,, KHr^RleoHmt room*, with or without board.

THIRTEENTH AVE., 44-Two neatly furnish­ed front roenWp with o* without board, In-

qutre fT lltb jftvi,WABHIN^TON *T., flOCMTsinilSbed room* lo

let, with beard; steam be«t»ratM r«a»oa-able. Camarttyiat B a ft.__________________WABHDfiO'T^ "ITm

twey Rteety nawiliA«A ,______W iL m 8 ^ jrt.--«fiMly fitr-

flhiM y m ; hoot and bath; good Otnnanboatd. “

CITY ADViitlTlIfBMENTfl.NUTlCbi^Nutlue 1* biieby given to *1) ;>arUe*

imereslcd that Lbe uerliticate of asBeMmeiil Of the whole am<iunt uf the uCMts and expense* uf cnueii'Ucilng the ioim outlet «ewer ha* beuu delivered lo mr' uocurding to taw. Bald aasssi- ineni aJ] the lots, tract* and parcelsit laiiu and reui i-atate lying In that section of South Fourteenth street, Bouih Fifttionth street, South Blxiftitiih street. Bouih BavantveniH bcrttM, Bouth Lightaenth •treat, South Nine- tefruUi street. Bouih Twemlcih ■ircsl. Thlr- termh uvonuv, South Orungv avenue. 8'our- toeiUh uvonue, Ftflvatith avenue, Suteenth uvenui:, Bt;venlevmh aveuuo. Eighteenth ave­nue. Nini'itMiiGi MVL'nue, 4tpiingfivld avenue, Bouth ‘I'wemy-flrKt sirevt. Grove street, Whit­ney •ireet, Hl’ccilway avenue, Devine street. Linden slrevi. Munn avenue, Columbia avenue, Chel**a avenUf'. Cedar avenue. Grand avenue, Isabella av ’nu*'. \'i'rmnpl avenue, (.'urollna avenue, ^ >»l Fitd avenue, Alexander iireeti BuiiBvl avonui'. tiiylan alreet, broolulale ave­nue. Norwood Btuyvesant Street, Salemstreet. Meuil sireet, Wi<.JUle*ex alre»?t. Durllog' Ion Mreet. HiuUh "iri'l.i, Hmjford slrvel, Haiel- wood Kveuut. ItirhHIi'U urriice, Geneva, atreet. CuinUvrIanO Hirct'l, Ddklaml tsETaoe, Bt. Paul uvtnUt:*. Dover m >'*'{/ ,Mi-iitri)»e Hlreet, Vail iirrel. I'uiiii I'U'ti, ‘leifonl airepi, HalsteadHiTci't. rlvi-iwooii place. Miiunlainview place, Mt. Vernon i>lsoi', NethrrwLHid place, Ivy plort*, Lcmix Htievt, Cuinmuiiwf-altA avenue. Ut eiiii uvt'rtuo. (‘Illf nil] place, Florence place. Ucli'ti placi-, Noil plure, Clift Forlunflbiivt-t. MfUiim .itf^nur, Krninurv uv^nuu, Fin­ley. plaoe, l.,unatk uvonuv, Abbot sford avenu*, l>i-rl>y HUeoi, Ayr strfvi. Silver avenue, Abin- K*=-r plhii-. Rink niri‘01. Park place. Laurel ploi'o, Plymoulli etrevt. Hicurd slrc-nt, lluwell place, MounLulnvlca avenue, Treinont avenuu, lindwell avenUv. Ibtfislng avenue, I>ow aireei, Ruth sirvft, Fvrdliiaud atitet. Grain slraeL, Uflilai'd street and Valley street; aUn (Jllntun p)uc.e, Alcllne street, Willoughby aireei, Dema- rest street, Iiewvy sirect. H(il)»on street, Leslla street, Walnwrtght fllrrnt, Schley street, f’*b- yan place, Lyons avenue, Bhaw avenue. Fur- eel place, Selvage eireel, Bi. Janu'* place, Loretta streel. JiuiMngUin street, Uraguw ave­nue, Edmund* place and Nye avenue, wlUiln the follrwlng bounilarloa:

^tKlnnlng at a point In the northerly fine of Boutn Orange avenuo one hundred fpet west of the ventei'ly lino of tkmth Twelftii street, which point I* imposlte the weelvriy line of Aijhlaiid Mtretii, iheiice northerly and WHuterly alon^ thti raur line of tots fronting on ths northerly side of South Orange avenue in the n-ar line u( lots fronting on the easterly etUe of Bouth Eighteenth atrect; thence northerly aJung the Bame to a point about four ]umd e l fuel north of the northerly line of Thirteenth avenue: thoma wcistorly nlut acros* flmuh INgliteenlh street to the rear line of lots front' Jiig on the easterly aide of Bouth Nlnetaenth street; ihonce northerly along tha sAmn ahuut on* hundred feet; thence westerly and ocros* South Nlnetccnih wireet lo the rear line of lute frantlng on the westerly nUle of Bmith Nineteenth blruet; thence ecuthurly along the aam« to a polJil nhoul one hundred and fifty feet north of the northerly line of I'hirteeuU) avenue: thence wuuterly and aerna* Bduth 1'wenileth street to the old city line, whb:]i Imc wan farniuriy the dividing line beiwiipn tlie city of Newaik ami the iHunugh of Valls- l.ur^h: theniv northerly *long the oartie lo the illvlding Niu' bciw*-f*n the* rliy of East Orange end 1h« city of Ne wark /rnrmerly VslleburghJ. Gifnee wttsicjly, scmhcrly and northerly along its vurlMue cou «e « to the illvidlng hnc beiwecji the village nf Bouth Omnae am) the city of Newark: thence souiherly along the same and lie t nrioiis eourses ti» the dividing line )>e- Iween the township "f Bouth Orange and the city (:f Ncw'orlt; IhuiUT H«>iilh<Tly alung the »ami' lo the lilvliling lino between the town uf livlnglun ami the city of Newark; Ihonce easterly along thv eame and Its vorloue courses to the o>d dividing line between Newark nnd the bfjrmigh uf \ ’QllKlmrgli; theni-e tMJUlherly along the various i-uurt c* of the LllvldlnK Mna bitwrih Iho tfiwn of Irvington and thf city «r Nfamk In the rear lint* of IhIh fronilng uii the Htiuthffly Bble nf Bprlngtlcld avenur. thentf' ragterly nlcng Die Hnino tn B<iulh Nhie- toenth street; llipni'" northerly along the Hnnis to a point about iwu huiulreU and sixty feet north (jf tlje northerly iim* of Hpringtlekl ave­nue; thence easterly to the n'ur line of lot* fronlliiK on the ciiHlrrly hid** of Hrulh Nlne- teenlli Hti>*t: Ihencs northerl) Hl ing the same lu (he rear line of b't* fronilng tn the loulli

I I rly side of 'lnetefcnlh uM-nuv ihuncs canl- r nrly along the bame tn a point iwi-iiiy-flve feci : west of the westprly line of B< iilh Elghtoenlh (Street; thence norihfjrly ur;d :icio»-f. Nineteenth ! Bvenuc to ibe rear line nf lute ft'iiillng on llie ! hcirtherly wide of Nlneiecntli h'.f nue; thence

Kesterly 1-' ihp rear line nf Ini*- fr'-niliiH uii tJie *1ile of South Nlm’ieenib stioH;

' thence nor’iherly bIouk the hhiiM' in a point abnul une huTidred and sweniy ihp fi*et woijih of the southerly line of KIglUwontli avenue; thence easleily and acri!»ss ftouih Nlghtepnih eireet to the rear Bne of lots fToniliiK on ilio easterly Hhle of South Eiglilcenth street, thence northerly along the Biirne lo the rear line of lots frniiiljig on the soiilherly aide of Eighteenth avenue; thence easterly along tIih saine to a iiolhl Iweaty-ttva fent west nf the westerly liO«* of South Wevwleenlli slievt thence norlli^Tly and bitosb Eighteenth avenue to the rear linf* of lom fronllrig on the norlh?T- ly Bide of Elghieenih avenue, thence westerly dlpttg the *fiinr to the rear lino uf lots fronting on the wanicrly elde of iSouth Elghtoonth aireol; thence norlherly along the sume about one hundred and fifty feet; thenc* eaateTly lu flouth Beventfontlisireat; ihenco northerly along the oaniH lu u point one hundred feet nurtli of the northorly Tine of Sixteenth (tveAUe; thence easterly to the roar fine of lots fronting nn the pasterly side of Boull) Scvenlocnih Hlr“ct: thence northerly along the aume to the rear line of lots fronting on the southerly >tlde nf Fif, toenth avenue: thpnoc eftstvriy nlong thr sains in South Flflfenth atreol; (heiicp rjorlherly to the northerly line of Fifteenth avenue; thcrce westerly twenty-five feet; thence northerly one hundred feel; thence easterly along the rear line of lot* fronting on the northerly line ot Fifteenth avenue In the renr line nf Jots front­ing on the easterly side cf South ftixtsenth street, thence northerly along the same and aerns* Fourteenth—JvvoniM) to a rv>lm about TWO hundrcf) and twenty-five feet north of the northerly line of Fourieenlh avenue; thence easterly and across South Flfieenth street to the rear fine of lots fronilng on (he *aster1]r side of Bouth Fifteenth at reel; theno* north­erly alHiut twenty-five feirt; thence easlerly and aorOM* B^uth Fourteenth street to the rear line of itJte fronting on the easterly aide of Fourteenth street: thencs northerly along the aame to the rear line of lots fronting on the southerly «li1r "f *b>uth Orange avenue; thence easterly along the eame to Ashland street; thence uorlherly an«1 aerqu* South Orange avenue to the place of beginning.

Also that BPetlon of the city of Newark and more particularly described a* follows: Be­ginning at the Intersection of the centre line of Lyon* avenue, with the dividing fine be- iwef»n the city of Newark and the township of Clinton. Ihf'nce northerly along the same to Nye avenue; thence easterly along the same to a point one hundred feet west of the westerly fine of Hchley etreet; thence louTh- erly along the rear lino of lot* fronting «) the westerly side of Schley *treet about one hun­dred and- seventy-flve feel: thence eaaterly and acrdM Schley *tr*«t to the rear fine of lot* fronting on the eaaterly aide of Bnhioy street; thenca BOUltMrly along the Kama to (he rear line of lot* fronting on the northerly Bide of Bragaw avenue; thence easterly along the aame lo a point twenty-flve foot west of the westerly lino of Walawrlght street; thence southerly to the northerly fine of Dt-agaw avenue; thenco eaaterly and across WainwrTght Htraei to a point twenty-flve feel east of the eaatarly line of Walnwrtght Btreel; thence Boriherly about on* hundred feet to the rvar linn of tot* fronting on the northerly side of BrfMntw avenue; thence easterly along tb» same to the rear line of iota fronting on th* westerly side of Leslie street; thence northerly along (he Bainc tn a point sboiit two hundred and (WHnty-flvo feel north of the northerly line of Bragaw avenue; thence easterly and aeros* T..cslle street to the rear line of Jots fronting on the easterly eide of Leslie street; thence southerly along tho same to ih« roar line of lots fronting on the nprtherly aid* ! of Bragaw avenue; thence easterly along ths same and across Hobson street to the rear fine of tot* fronting on the westerly side of Dewey sirMt; thence northerly along the same to Hye avenue; thence easterly along the same to a point about one hundred feat west j of Clinton place; thpnce southerly about sev- ' enty-flve feet; thence eaaterly and acroa* | Canton place to the rear tine <if lots frontlngr ; on the ekffterly and northerly sldee ot Cllntoa place; thence southerly *hd easterly alo&g tt» same to the centre Rne of LycHciJ aveou*; thMice westerly along the name tu the pUMw od beginnlag.The owner* of land nnd heal estate assessed (n said cenifleate of assessment are hrnby required to pay the amount so aneised upon them, and each of them respectlveiy, to ma at <ny office. No. 6 city haJl, on or b®for® F | b » i f 4. 1W7. , ' _

Newark, N. J.> January 8, 1907.J. H, RACREWfllL

CocaiitnHflf.n o tic e o f {NTENTION-Boaxd of flir«*t M

Water Commlaolonex*.fhirnraiit to a retoiutkni adopted hy tiw

S ^ rd of and Water CoarnkMloMfi ofUm city of Newaik, at a lueeunt held third day of JanaafY. 190% aM aMurivad w

ment < lu, fiKM.

Be U ordained by Iht Commoa Om m II qf Ih*City of Newark:

Bectlon I. That the ardlnaho® of the Qty of Newarh. entitled "Art ordlna>no* to pHslia®.JBl-. Thr rare: arstody. ObuStp) flsd' uuUa'The new n ty Hall and th* iround tl'erotb, and for the ap)M>lntmen( of Ihf^rrfnr," approved Deosmber tenth. OA® i sand Mine hundred aikd gli. b* ahd the m i .. hereby rA;»euled. and all offloai oraatad tkegaky urc heroby declared vacant.

Ri’Vtlon 2. That tM* ordlnabo® stoU taka «% feci inimorUately.

Aclnptnd Januttry 4, lOOT,preNiiUfi lu the Mayor Januar]r % lOAT, fpf

I’pprovalAppriiv K) January 4, 1907.

JOHN r . amNOTT, President of Common O oum .

JA8. r . OONKELLTrcm ~ *JACOB HAUflsL

The foregoing ordinance wa®Ooiiimon Counoll on Friday evMl 4. IMT; read three times under i the rule*, was msMd and duly il;Mevor. and la Ihorefore a law>

JAB. F. CON!

englo—r of the Biflitt ommlBiloaer* rif Um dMp

OFFICE of ths chief _Btreet and Water Commlsiloaera

of Newark-NoHoa.The final estltnatef for the tolRnr!

tracts will be presented to the Board and Water Comtnlsalonerf of th* otty .. ark for acoeptance on Thuraday, Japqaifi 1007. vl*.:

Paving ofNORTH ELEVENTH •TRESt.

(Tom Sixth svsnue lo K«wtx>ld itr**t- Pavlng of I

j k l l if f a v en u e ,from Avon avenuo to Runyon *ire*t.

Paving nf __ »HOUTH flEVEKTEENTH flTRBETi

from Bprlngfirid avenue to Clinton avtflu®. Grading and rurblng of

MEEKER a v en u e ,from Bllxabelh avenue tn Frelinghuym fM*nue.

PaT’lng of __ADAMS STREET,from Market street to Chestnut •tr#*t.

All nhjectlnn* to tho payment of said m m nistvB niuai be filed with me. In wrltlM, fifl M Wore Thunrjay, January lO, fi>07, at ** ■ M. B. SHBRRItRD, Chl,t Bn«1n»«r.

January t, IIWT,____________OF TUB noAnD oir'B xcliiF 'B Sw .

MIS810NERS Oir THE CITTOF NPWABK. ■ . __

City Hall. January fl. IMT. Th. (ollnwlnit la (hr Hal nf naniM, raaldVflW*

am) iiinnaa nf bualnaai of parauna raalBnfl ap. ]>]ltuTlnn 10 this iMiard for the granting of llcfoif*-* tn M'll iplrlttiuu*. vinous, malt Of brouvil fiquor* nm1 mil heretofore publtiMOni'crirflliig tl- Irii'. U' wit;

RKTAll^- RENEWAL.Name. Plstv* of business. Reridenoe.

Pi-onk Hnr.fic, r.I4 H. Ilirh st........... gam* pike*■ --------'MarEmnip Dof-U, iftH Front *1.

Mflp’UM TriuirlK. ftST MnrkPl *l...B*a>*itui«*

Cb*4. BKTATL-fKWULW't HaTiorhm, «!l# M. J. B. n. av. .

Ji>hn Dilok. Sn Ijlvlngiton it..KuntsTUHtin. ftfts (i. iPth s i— flajM -------- - -^niRLfp tk j

9- Utk at-RKTAII.T-filNGLE TRANfiFEH.

FicrliUi flcljwelkPft- flbl H Orange rv,VHliflbuTgh.......497 H. Orange ev, VallsbUTfh

TURnnoRE OR.^T. Prosldonl.JAMEH F. OQNNP:r.fLY, qerk. .

LEGAL NOTICB9.IN i ’HANt'KBY OF NEW JERSEY-'-Tg

i'bnrlefl Edward Taylor.Uy virtue of an order of the Court of Chao*

eery of New Jersny. miiia oo the day of th®I dale hereof, In u cause wherein Osrtnid®I Eatelle Taylor )s pntltlmier and you as* dfl-1 fondant, you are redutred to ar>i>««r and answ**

’ - 3tltltin or ■" ---____ . , . iry —thereof lunh decree will be made against youthe petitioner’* petition on or before th* thlf* leenih day of February next, or In dcfiuftaM the chancellor Mhajl think oquItabU and lufl,

The said petltlun 1* filed against you for a divorce from the bond of matrimony, and yoq are mnde defendant because you are th* hu*- band tif tho Raid {irtlil ifier.

HORACE CODIftotlcltor for NGTON,

retlUoner,flecember U, IQOfl.

Homervlll*, N. J.

Do You Know. tli.it you can purchaie « choice B u ild in f i Plot In beentUul

; R O O S E V E L T P A R K ,

I M a p le w o o d . N . J .a t from

1 0 C e n tH to I S C «n tf l P e r S<|iiare F o o t ?

Didn't know It, did you?WoH, It'B a ffigt.

It is aelllng rapidly, beoatiae It l« ®n unuBiially a ttra c tiv e and high claig propoelUon and because of the low prices.

rrake I.flackawanna R. R. or S, Or- unge trolley.

Sftleannen and offlics In Park.

BOOKLET ON REQUEST.

T. B. ACKERSON COMPANY.UO Nwflflu S t . , N. V.

Developer* of high ela** propertj.

NOTICE TO UVENTISEIS.

CIlHlflfld advArtlMmtntt miMt b* l « i e*lv«fl before Uiifl o'etook f tr Iw or Uon In ■II edition! of the u m * dfly. AfhiMtWN menti received between that Im ir. a n . 1 O 'clock will appear In an ovarlldw'aoliunti of the Second end Third tditiwia.

Trenelent idvertlelng in lha N K W A R M EV EN iN Q NEW S must ba |H«t>ald. Nd account* will be opetMd far audi.

No edvertiumenta will ba paaaivnd bvar the telephone eneept thoaa e«nt by ail* therlied agente.

Aniwert to advertlMiMnta ara k .p t f ir two week! and than dniroyad. It any other diepealtlon la daalrad tha afllaa •houid be notified,

Sueinesfl offlee ogan aaeh watk day ' evening until g iU a'alook.

No advortitamlnt roooivad for lu e than » eenta, axoapt Rmptoymont Wantad.For tnie olau of advtrtlalng. 1 oent a work, minimum 10 oonta. Agato t ^ uaad axeluahraly on elauHlod poget. Nd diaplay or outa,

TramJaiit, 1 oant a wordf ana montli daily, t IJO a llnei avefy othar day. M a d line, minimum three llntt. The auarada'It eaven abort werde to the line.

One year dally, 11040 a iipai w m f othar day, ts.DO s linA mlaimum thfdd llnyd,

Oaphaia and blank apaaaa. Id gmrta to rHna for tranelant adiui 0 trorde ta d *pM,Ndt laafl than three lima Igkad.

paatn Notfoat, m um ima*. Id athllMr addltla«ai IIm a Id oente a Hna.

M a in a tt NaNfln , M eanta.AiMtion taiaa. to oMiti • i>M f t l ;Imploymant AgtMfat, to atntt f|, * W

tat.Htdgleiia tfatiOM- # aginu tgp *Ry

mgrda ar M*> Additi«M ( w w li , 1 «M ll

Page 20: HURLS BOMB INTO BANK; TWOKILLED UNION ASKS r DRYDEN ...

■-r -f. ‘-'. ■•< ■

T KEWAEK EVEOTNO' paTUBDAT JAOTABY S. i w l , ":

^ u n / c / / f O t ^ O w n s r s h t p

M trK IC IPA L owner«h1p In di**at B ritain , by Hugo R- Mnyar, la th r aecoiul book In a aerioa of four dealgnod to gtvo th r rr- tu lt ot llie aullior'a «»amlnatloiJ

*1crf th* ac tual worklluff in ijnporlHiit In- ptancoa, of iho public reKUlailoii and gnv- a n w e n t ow nonhip und operation ot ibc •a-oalled public lervloc Imlnairlea." Mr. Maper attaoliaa apecla! value to the eapei - Uaenta In Ihia direction carried on In Orcat Britain, and he l« convinced from hia Study of uonUlIlonn In that country th a t munlcliial ownemliip there Ima mil tMtD attended with aucccae. He aaye: “The doctrine th a t the puhllc eervlce hi- dostrlea which ua* the public eireota dl(- fcr esaentlally from ordinary irudlng und M M ufacturlng venturea, and that they gbould ba aubjeoted to special lUnltalUma paA apeclal taxatlone, designed to secure to the public a t large a eliere In their aroUta, haa pennariem ly paralysed every

upobllo aervioe Induatry ip which It has ■ MW applied. A number ot the leading

Matasmen of Great Bcltaln have come ftlOr to reallae th a t tact, hut they have laartiad a t the aame time that It Is cs- trotnaly dillloull to r governniems to re-

*M*e*fer**Kaerta that British cities 11)114 fa r ltav« shown thetni»flv#s inciipflni*s of nttllalnp fully the induslrlca given them agaody m ade'” by th e American captain ot Ipduatry, and ha also says that " 'n ' **' perlsDCe of Great Britain revenln the un- unablenesa of the argument that, ^ n n t- Ip f th a t public bodlea cannot biilUl up saw Industries or oonirlhnte to the lur- -V—v dsvslopm s'tt nl eitahllahstl ones, they

■ t■eniHiiifld'a'lth thccondiicl ofM t sasy d4 __SplootiiM th a t hnve r'sehed the sta- donary o tage.'' Me contliiuest

to the t i n t place, i^rni is no Indtiitry of wbloh one can say with llniully t h « I t rsached the slSllonury stage. 111 eaa loeond place, every Industry, no m at- W Sfhai Its Btaga of developnrtnt may be. Ip liable to he displaced wholly Ipr In p a r t by some new Industry, ThiH Is one of the ordinary risks of < rode. But t be torittgh oltlee, a# well i s the British na- S ml absolutely refuse to accept th a t rlsh. 55* BrlUsb oltles retuaod to esnose their

" p t a n t s to compsttlloli from the electric if: subsequently they, refused to oJt-

tbslr hjaal electric lighting plant to stttlon even In the gnpply df cur- to r power, from the wore niod«n dclty-ln-bulh generatlrff slalton. The

OOvemment, on the o ther hand, pandstently refused to allow the. tel-

S to n e to oompsta freely with the tele- ■raph. The argum ent th a t a business in which has been Inveslsd ‘the people s mpney'’ m ust not bs Impaired by eoiupe- titlon from a ' ‘dlvldeuil-scetdng ’ cpnipaiiy b a t thu* fa r always swept everything be- toM It. completely blinding the people to their own Intereat.

Mr. Meyer compares the development of publlo eorviee Induetrlel In the United Btefee and G reat Srltuln. much to the d letU vantagp. o f the latier. He insists th a t Industrial progress cdiues "not from th a people a t large, whether acting us In- Aivlduals o r ,In the cbnmrats capacity of fHgto or city. I t come* solely from u. com-

V M ratlvaly sm all body of men of unusual Imagination, daring, power ot persuuslon and sxecuttve ability." His summing up i t as .tollowe:

"UoekeUy-Packetly House." Is concluded, and other w riters uf fiction rcprcsentei! Include George Maddbo Marlin. Ralph Henry Barbour, Haptalii Harold Ham­mond and Alice Hegaji R ks. The verse Is by Anne Willis Mcl.’ullougli. Nancy Bvi-d Turner, Johnson Morion, (■'. V. UcBler. Edwin I-. aiiblii, Pauline Prances (,’amp. Stella Oeoigc Bieni, Mary Cntli- erlne Callui,. Aitiia Marlon Hniltli hnd Mary Hrndley.

Ill The New Flngland Magaslne for Jan ­uary. U I’’. Paul write* of "Hsinniule I’ortcB. the fe n tra l tlg u re In Mciican Illstory." Edward H. n'lement conlrllv- utes the llilrd article nn "N'lm-ii-rath Century Boston Journalism ," and other leuiurcH arc: “The .tlaaeucliussHs Navy of (he American Revolution," by Cluirles Oscar PhoIIIii; "The ilnrvHrd Immprvun; its Poundera and Fsmoue ConlrtbiUoie, by Mary atoyell Sllmpson. und "The Prloclplss of Money aud Banking." b> E, H. Crandall, Fiction and verse arc provided.

Putnam's Slonlhly fur January Is an Interesting Issue. Us features Include "RcnilnlBcences of the House of Com­mons," by Henry W. Nucy (the "Toby, Jl. P,." of Punch!; "The A rts and Oratis In America; Pottery as a Fine Art," by Charles de Kay. and "A Primitive Hii- maii Type In America." a symposium fonilsttng o t "T he Finding of the '.Vehraska H an,' " by Robot! F, Gilder, the dlecoverer: "PccuHarltlee of theNebraska Mao,' by Henry B. Ward, and "Prehistoric Man In Nebrasko, " by E r­win H. Barbour. Charles M. Harvey writes of "Cuba In Amerlcati Politics; ' Mrs. John U m a discusses "The Tyranny of Clothes," Slid Alberl H. Smyth con­tributes IhS fourth paper on "Franklin's Boelat Lifer In France, " J. Rsnkln 'fowse

o / iP r m c Q C h lo d w ig J I f o A e n / o A e

Compurtson of our exparienoe under the iley of the minimum of governmental

rantfon—thtt priceless heritage In-__-had to u« by our forefalhers-wRIiI* experience of Great Britain under the ■Hoy of the maximum of Intervenllon, lottre tu that we have no Ills that call

j r tho heroic remedy of treating the aibllo MCvtoe Industries as Industrius dif-

-orlng b» any way from ordlnar.v trading and autoutactorlng ventures, We have more itrect railway facilities, electrlo lighting tBolltttes and telephonic facilities then have oor British couslne; and we make more use of our public facilities B an our Brltiah coustos maKe of their re- lirloted topIlttlAe. l^ i* show* that the jlcca ohilrgtd to b« by pdr ooihpanles un- J S f the ituoulus of an enlightened geli- Sterest are better adapted to our nursfs SJain are the prices charged to our Bi'ltlsh lA.klns by their city father*.

The main teatbres of Mr. Heyer'a argu- yntnta may "he gathered from the fore­going axtract*. The details upon which ho bases his bellbt must attract the atten-

r tlon of all Intereated In the problems of mtthleipB) Ownership. It Is; perhaps, al- iDjDst too obvious to remark that those in favor of municipal ownership, whether on A largo dr small scale, are at liberty Ui point out that reforms are not nauulty In- ttltutsd without Initial disturbance, or. possibly- loss, and that unfortunate expe- itence may pavo the way to auccesses Incidentally, Mr. Meyer does not seem to he especially Impreseed with the pvopitsl-

Jlon that there may ho a working mean, lerhap* In the shape of carefully pleuucd . governmental regulation of natural inon-

-;v opotles. between unchecked liullvidunllsin on the one hand, and cullecUvItim—lo

has an article on the la te Adelaide Ris- tori, and there la printed a Iranslatlon by Dlrce 01. Oyr of a paper on "The Endowed National Theatre, " hidshed by Mme. Riston a few weeks before her death. Henry lajom is Nelson writes of Carl flchuri. and there Is a pneiu on Mr. Sohurx by Richard VVnlsoii Glider. Will­iam H. Llghton's serial. "The Hhadew of a Great Rock," la oontinucil.

Articles In The Broadway Magailne for January Include "Salome: d'he Most Ben- satlonsl Opera of the A ge," by Cart Van vechten; "The New York Hall of Rec­ords," by Roltert Adamson, end "Fads and Frills of E ducation ," by Mabel Pot­ter Daggett. There are aevsral atorles. The a rt feature of the miiga*|ne consists uf reprodnollons of five ot Cohn Camp­bell Cooper's paintings ot New York.

Josinh F lyn t continues his entuhlog- raphy In Success tor Jnntiary. Hemsen Crawford w rites of "New York's Hotel Palaces." and Samuel Merwhi has another article on "The Peuitle's Cobby." There are short stories by Marlin M. Foae, Henry Harrison Irfwls ujid others.

Much Information uf Inieteal tu house­wives la given In the January number of What lo Kal. ,(Fhe upeidng article Is "Food Adulteration In New York."

Articles In The Book of Itie Royal Blus (or December Include "The Great Dismal Swamp—Its History and Mystery;" "Tho l.ast Hours of W ashington," by Charles 1,. Hhlpley, and "The First Confederats MniiuBient, " by Ellhu 0. Htley.

Ills work and hat gained the confldcnce of till* Conservative parly. Betlimaiiit- Hollweg Is In opposition to the Inxlretiie Orthodox party without being a Nation- nllsl. Herr von Bonin has not the conn- lence of the army, which regards him na loo liberal. • * * The Indolence of the Minister 1e a great hindrance to tho neccs- s.ni v l■L■ol■gil l atlon of the army. Flott- weli 1,1 loo old, and must soon resign.

Certainly there Is no lack of detliilte- ness In ihese views. As the statesm iin's years Increase In; coniines himself mtu]c largely to the presentallon of what he holds to he the esaenllal elements of m at­ters of moment. Such Is the treatm ent of the Bismarck-retirement. Under date ofMureii JC, IWH at Berlin we find him wrlllns ttfi follows’

i f t r aS ie c a n t Spooks o t % §tS9

F e w roccriL writers of dramatio bhiiik verst have shown a com­pleter mastf^y of their a r t than

THford Dargan, whose, “ 'laordfl and laovers,’ pnd Other

Orarnaa,” Is marked iire-emln^ntly Toy an uuusuui poetU' imiiglnatlfm and fsHcitoua wielrlcal exprcHslmi. The first of th^i three d ram as Included in ,the voliime^ “ laords and Lovers," draWk plot and scene from Ih t England of me thirteenth century, umoriK the more lml»ortaiit char, ac-lers being King Henry III., the Earl of Pt mhroke, the Earl of Albemarle* theYertterdav 1 miide nn early fall upon the

a rx n d Duke of HnJeu, wlif> is oxcelleuUs arohhiftliap <»f Cniiierbnry, Rlchford. sttn Grand uuk ,, ........ p,.,„i,rokc; Margaret, n Scottish prln-i ; r d ,^ ‘a"‘,,u7kiloW cvcrsthhlg. 1

i^ ^ o V 'o V n r 'B U n it-k was n^^

and so forth were m'-n-ly icr*. The main poliii was I he '1“ **' the Cabinet order of the '7 , , ."Bism arck wished to Impose ‘I .,? i"latent without the Emperor s hnowluige, thus making H Imposethle for them report dlredly to hie majesty. he Ein peror wished this Cal.ilnet order to he r pealed, and to this Bismarck object.il.• • • Bismarck Is said to have got ““ angry In the course of his discussion wun the Emperor that the Plmpemr afie ran ia said; ''I t was all he conlrt dn to refrain from throwing the Ink-imt at my ne.irt.

Tha next day the Inlereated llotunhine went to nee Bismarck. He round him "Very well and vigorous. When 1 sold th a t this (the crisis) wns a verv uriexpect- ed event to me. he observed. 'To me, also, for three weeks ago he had m. ■ no Idea th a t the affair would e,ul In this wa>', 'Anyhow,' he added, "It was *uily to be expected, for the" Emperor now wishes tn reljiin alone,.' ..He then mentioned the lie ili^dual polnis of difference between TiTifT"

!:ess, and Eleanor, cminless of Albamarl*. No Idea of the poetical quality of the dram a cun be given In extracts, and >»t one Is tempted to quote. One selection, from n apeecb by i.enry, must aufflee;

It"

The flrst number has apiieared of W at­son's Jeffersonian Magaxlne, edited by Tom Watson, and published by him monthly a t Atlanta, Go. There I* a fore- wonl by the editor and proprietor, and the first par.t of Mr. W atson's “I.Ife and Times of Andrew Jackson" Is printed. Va- rloiw departm ents are Instituted,

^ i e i t o nOne's credulity Is ta ie d to the utmd*t

In the opening chapters of "The Avenging Hour," by H. F . Prevost Batteriby, It surpasses belief th a t a man and a woman, lirtch ns am herein pictured, meeting for the first time In an English railway train and sharing a compartment, should, In the course of a few brief honrs. full des­perately In love with each other am! cotu- mlt a sin which throws Its shadow over

P R I N C E C H L O D W IO f i O H E S L O H E F R O M T H E P O R T R A I T B Y F . L A S Z L O .

........ ...........................................................

coTmlUerution, I «m sure that un intiigue against my reniulnlng lonsrcT tins hatching fur u yvar muJ u ilay. A rnuin- lude of various thlnga conlrlbulvtl to it,

H E reader of the memolra of Prince Chlodwlg of Hohenlohr- SchllUngsfuerFt, now piibHshed unabridged In an RngHah iraiib- iatlon, supervleed by George ■

Chrystal, can have no doubt of the gen- uinenesa of tha aensallL'ii caused lu Eu­rope by their appearance. In certain high nuarters, oiotably the German court, the event. Indeed, wfas aceounted more t te n uenaationa!; to have ihe h»rif.’ fiict< o f Oerman diplomacy spread t>efore the ■#orld was rated as nothing short ot the balght of Indiscretion. The Kaiser, cliur- Acteristlcally quick in aetUm. fosi no time In Informing the Hohenlohe family of his imperial displeasure, and the first edi­tion, the original of the version at hand, was recalieiT But the fa c u had bei'ome public property^ the alory» whether for good or Jll, had beers told: a prominent

I HClor in many an historic pasmige had

which muiually perhaps hud no connec­tion and vet all almwl at tho Hiiine end. When any one has enjoyed a puat-llon as tluu of Ainhasstidor in fo ils foi eleven "N'earH he becrinice the iHiiiit oe mire" for much cuvctousni'Sfi and envj-. Tho youngvi- Kcnomllon, people wttb a careiT, whu eleven y a m ago were t «[£;';

Irn! diflfoverlea—the "Trientalis Euro-[m,.n" and the Brocken myrtle. His catia- tic humor Is evidenced In such an extract us the following, written in his Journal at Ibilln, June 10, ISGI;

Ye.sterduv there was a short sitting of the (.'uatoms Parliam ent. Goeler proposed to make a nationalist speed, on a Cianae of the treaty with Japan. 1 explained to IiIti the reasons against this course, and he swallowed his fine speech and was

tj'-Hve, are now nearing .their, fortieth silent. An Inatance of rare aelf-mntroLIn

" ! r .a BHii le u bBllavahle Is It , fhankly and fully his luideratniid-ull their future. Still let* believable s n mvolved. Moteuve., thethat the *'^"“ ""hou1d lm th e ^ | „m |nl«cences were stamped with the an-all the bveriureji. 1( the hero h , t^„rlty of Prince Hohenlohe's aoii, Prliu-ewere of a coarser moral fharacter h* , , 1,^ ^ accuracy had Ih.,ellnatlon m ight be thinkable. Oram g | ^|gt)„|[ujsh*d indorsement of Profepanr he premises, the conclusion la worked out p,.,j(jrlch Curtlos, who omcinteJ as edl-

logically. D. Appleton * Cu„ New York, pubilah the book a t H M.

An exceedingly clever and Ingenious story of bnilnekS life, In which the hero Is nn fiutwurflly sanctimonious but inwardly tmscrtipulDue promoter. Is George Carl- - . ioK'B "Richard KlHotl, Financier." The iiUventtires of Hie character who gives hison III® ono auno. unu uuiidjuviHin—i v ............... Mia »na asK^o me

which h® would rtoublleHA apply tJip itdjpc- uame to tli? novel a hnv In a undertaking. In*j... _____ sx........ *u«i. iitoA If- first an omcx* Doy in a ^ __tlve. b llffh tln ff^n tlia olhri-.''M unlelt^l Own#rt>hjp in Graat Brltuln.’

jaavinlUn )1.i>U ni't.

by Hufo'^R. Meyer. Yhe JuavinlUHn (."(im- N$w York. Prlv*»M y.

C u r r t n / T ^ a ^ a x i n ^ s tTh® International ijtudin the

ttew year with nn feaprdally auiav tlve Im uCi handHDuidy lllunirau^d. and rmi- tftlnlng many Inlerertlisg I*>a-tu res of tlte American iwcilim of the Juti- uary nuMber nr« "Tht* Art of Hhippo Yakl,” by Arthm Upwm. with Jliuslra- tlona made from thf- ('t>ll«oil«n of Dr. Al­fred Owre, of Mlnncapniln; "Tho Kxhlbl- tJou of the National Soclcly of Crafts- m en,” by Eva icovtiu; ‘‘I'he l^ouihern

•CaUfornUi Bungalow; Local Problem In ilouelJig." by Floroiic** AVTUiiiinH; niik- MUtn notCM und notc.- of i'Urrcnt nit®venlfl- Among tli^ io'tlclca prhiicd hi th« Europeati section arc "Tiie CullccUon cf Mr. Alexundfli’ Young lir. Some T>nv- Irigon Pictures." by K.- G llkitcni: ' Tlu' Art of the Lnle AlTrt-d Sihvouh, ncIgiHU P a in te r," by F^niaml Islinopff; "Recent Design® in Dom^Ntlc st-rchUecturr:" "Mr. F ran k Brmigwyn> New Pan#'l for the , Royal Exchange,'' by A, H. C'oYoyi ■^"Modern Stage Moumlngn hi Germany.I Mr F au to 's Work «t Ihvsden." by ProfcM or Han« V. aingcr.

CpnLrlhutlonH lo The AmrrlcAu Monthly Review of Reviews January Inclitih- •'H arrlm an: 'OoIoshus uf Roiida.' " by I'nil Btiydm’t "The C raae'fur Mining Stocks " hv Charles F. Speare: "The Revival In W estorn Lnnd Values," hv Cliarle« Mo­reau Bargor, and "A Year's AcIlvUy of Labor Untonl4m,“ V..hy .Vlvior 8. Yamub.

Tn The Theatre for January Kogiuif PreEhrey writea of "The Tec of ih*> vv..n1 *Almo*»pliere’ Applied to ilie-HUigu ’ O^lnr fcalurCK are a ohat with Clyde PIum; •‘Which Jft Ihe Right Way to I’lcsi-ni fihokcfipeai-e?" by Fdlth Wvunn Muiml TOO. and "Some Stagv frun.Europe." by Grace HowShorne.

Ume he first appinir . lurgc maiinraiHurSng converu, through nls v.uioos pheiM)memil auccvMe*. his final rtownfall. The story 1b. of courB®, over- (Iriiwii. but certain rondltlone and poKSi- bllUiee In the Anierlran buslucBa world ai'C pictured with no little skill and power. The hook 1« published by L. C. Page & Co-. KoMtnn. a t lYW. U was rei'elved through P. F. Mulligan.

Basil Edyvene. the hero of fit. John Lucas’s ■•Qukikailvpr ami Flame." falls lii love with Klctm Bardl. an actress. She Is a pure and radiant heltig, and Is on the threshold of a great career, which she la at tlrat unwilling to give up for his aako. !n the early days of hla wiming she prom- Isefl that If a Parl?< amllenoe ehall ever hUs her from tiie siege she wUl give up her eui’per ami iiccepl hts offer of m ar­riage Hut iifl Ihe yea™ go by the feelings of both iimlergn a change. Basil cornea \Ai love lier no well that he would be the ttrpt to urge her v»i mnr what appears to be hrr Gud-glvrn nilsiilon as an flctresa. wlille Elenn. n« nlie wins triumph after triumph, finds the applause of tiie world a hollow »no<-kerv. as she yearns ever mnre and more fur the proteuilng lovr of one dear rn«n always urounrl her. The iliam atk' climax Is reached when Eletin Ifikes the reins from the ImiidH of fate Hiiti forc<ii the world to give her to without Ihw breaking of tier pledge, laong- niiiriB, Qrcen * Co.. New York, publish the book a t ll-W.

to r of the maicHal.Ft luce Hohenlohe. Ihlftl Cliajiceltor ot

the German Empire, died In IWl. lei-is ihan a y ta r aftur his reslgiiallun uf iho most eminent position held by him In his long

A few moiiLha beTore his ilemlBt; he lolfl Frofeseor Curtins of his loienilon of preparing his mcmnirB for p'uhllcatlon. and asked the profess^T'.** aaststance hi

the event of hya

AinonK coniribuikms to The Mother*>i Ifcgezlne fur Jaiuiar>' l« the first of i'. • tr ie s of papers by Olive Hyde' PoHtor, on “th e School bs a 8oci.il Centre." There to fiction hv Anrle Hamilton Donnell nml Others, and the departm ents are wUI kept up.

The openlriB iinlfie In New Shako- •psreans for January Is "As !o Meteors and Meteoric 8li*’'Wrrs; Home Ov'erlooked Item s of Inier'esl in 'llan ite f and the •Julius Caernr.' " i>y Kt-nry Pemberton J r WlUlB Vi<-kery'e Beuerfil preface to the "Bankslde Uesiuratlmi" series Is printed.

Articles In Phyaiosl Culture for Jaiumry Include "The Flatiron as an Exerciser." k y B ertiarr MocFudAen: "The German-

i , AtnerlGHn Turner Movement." hy Ivan j^ lv in Wftterhury; ‘improper 1'se of the

' I fo u th ," by OohellH Btuart McMorries.>• «knd “Th® Shame and Ihr-eut of Chlld-

gUtvery**' by fielwyn C. Harper.

u. "M gry Baker. Q. Eddy; The fitorv of L " B " end tha Hlstvry ut (‘hilsUsii |

#clenra." by GearBlBe Mllmlns, beglim ]p Ilia January Mt'Clure'a. (’nrl rtfhiirz's “ lleiDlnlacanrc*" art" vimtlnu.sl, ami Btir-

" .top 'i . Hendrick ha" an artlde, pntlllut ' • "T he Graal JewJah Invasion J' Fiction Is

provWriJ by Fercavnl GIbben. ,\da M< lvln, S ly ra isellY ftn i n th m . amt tlic conirlb- Utora -ttf' i'fikie Include JfiUu G. NGlianlt, C o m t! fu i^llnx and Thendnsla Garilibii

'"My Operatic iiarolnee," by Adelina r k t t l , la ao IntdtfiStltUk article In Thf MttHid fo r January. Arthur Morrlton iWtltM of Fhll I w , rile article being OlbatMtUal with iietne *kelche* by Mr. I to y , BltotMo .tntpiibUehed. There are 5 5 5 a .w d ti# le »tfirlM. by w . IV. Jacob*, ’WlnlfnRI ‘ nd A. M. M'tll-

.other*.ir,''ltud*(m Hoofa tell* In 0t. ^ le h o lu

: “S«Mfto« ■OmHotuM for t te Wrt*." ~ i c . K M ^ SotoifW’* ed ir<

'Z>A« S^armtity jflm anac, J 9 0 7 ‘So dainty In appearance Is the whKs*

buuml "Farm ing Almaimc. IW ." com- plh‘0 by Claude H. Miller, that the farm er, or, for thut m atter, any man. will feel a gorid deal like h crlmliial In handling the huok physically, of course — wllhout gUiws. Bui. if thp publication does seem Ui giiivhato miiuiHlly to the parlor table.' tlUTi' uiii ho no qutHtlou that tha facts inchidftil In U will caller the work-liigB of N’cry drpftrtmefd of house and farm Th<* range of the matcrlnl livery wide and ihc daM.-^lfifatlon exccl- li-nt. IT !b curlimw tn ntne in the calendar (he things' whluh arv Hvuuiosrd to appeal jiortli ulurly I" Amf^rh-an farmora In the way of unnlvprfliiiipp The dnya of the rrowiimg nf En*;hT'h roynUlep are. for example, noted with much care and anioTiB other nnulverstii'v entries, we find gui'h cveiMH as. Oclulier 11. "Afghan W ar

April *. "I’etrarch honored. April 2o, Robhieon Crusoe died. May B. ' Madame Flavslsky died, Muy 23. "Captain Kidd executed.

February 11. "P. MeOiften suicides, end January 16. "LlHuokslanl de­

throned. 18»3-“ This is indeed a rem ark­able eollcfiion of events lo keep In mind.

Bo fsr as the dalf f»f death of "Roblnt*on (’rusoe" 1 euucertied, Mr. Miller apparently has confused that fletllious charai-ler with Cruaoe's creator. Daniel Defoe died lu 1T31

1841:’’17Jli"

1701:"m "

c i - -

‘The Farm ing Almtinan, tliOJ.’' I^per. Doublsdnv. Page & Co.. New York Price, twenly-rtve cents. ^

9 t o u n y ^ t i k s (ti ih » X t b r a r ^ .Toutig people who have (iiitgrown the

cliiUlTito'c rnoni a t the Newark Frep Fiibli,' L ibrary are comlag In Increashig mimb.'ta to tiia aiUilt rlppanmetu o( tbc lIliiHi-y (ur Infonnstlon. As the majority nf them desire to wmsiill reference bw.kH which do not clrciihiie, two extra tahlei for ibelr spevis! use have been pl.iced between Gw r.-Jerenca ropm and the filr- ciilntln* departm ent. The table* nr* In clots proximity to a cate which I* almoet exclusively devoted to ,tbe book* aultabla (or young men »od women. Here the young people also oonsfidl the tem porary oollecGon* at book* upon the special top­ic* recommended bjt thalr teacher*.

Book* (ram tha library ot J u n ta R. n teh o r. o t Rkert HHIt, M. j „ will be sold at the rooms ot tb« Anderoon Auo-

death, the prince sold that his son, Princ Alexander, would sec that the proposed plan was carrie!l out. As U liapppned, the oonlingency provided for occurred, ami wlihln a brief time. Professor Ciiitlus In the Introdlicllon writes: "Prince Alex­ander and mvsi-lf • • • remained midcr the obligation of (ulflllbig the hi-sl deahe of the prince ao far as possible. It must be said that a fte r the prince's deutli hla project ciiukl never be more than Imper- fectiy compinled. He had intended to re- fieab his meniory by a rc-cxamlnatlon of his papers, and thus to become his own biographer. .Afler bis death all that can be doni' Is to publish the papers which he has left beldml, (U accordanen with his dpstre. so far asl^tlh lh 'atlon seems de­sirable." As may he Interred. Prha.;e Alexander nr^d the editor have not bern censors of i#e rigid kind; yet that they have exercised their discretionary powers to a certain extent Is evident from the following statem ent prefacing Mint divi­sion of the work relating to "The Gn- perlal Chancellorship and the l.asi nays; '■ prince Hohenlohe left copious nolea ot the period of his Chaneellorshlp of I he German Empire, The value of these notps, apart from their disclosure of the cniirse of Gertnan foreign policy, conslata In their unreaerved preaenltuent of the dllflcullles and atruggles of domestic politle.s. ’edilcli were occasioned more by the persona than by the things themselves. PerempUiry considerations, therefore, prevent their complete publication a t the present time.

f r i n c t H t i t n l o A t ’i Career.Prince Hohenlohe—to give the hsrest

outline ot his life -w ns born m Uotlien- burg on the Fttldn, March 31, 1819, IDs fttth fr PrIiicG Franz Junepli of Hohen* lohc-Schimngsfiiprst, was a riavarlan country gentleman who had ubandorrd a m ilitary career. The prince was Imbued parly with it ileslie to enter puhllc life, lie first aimed to etiler the diplomatic service and lo this end enlered upon the obligatory course of legal training. In 19G he was appointed to an adtnlnlsti'a- th e post nnder the Potsdam government, bring retired from the legal servlre, and two years later he e iilem t the Uavarian upper house. Mean llm,'. In HG, he mar­ried the Princess Marie in Sayii-VVlttgen' steln-Rerlebmg, heiress of the Hariatln- skys, a pr,,milnent Rnsalan family. In Bavarian polUlcs he was very aoon a fac­tor; he became President nf the Ministry, and 1,1s Inflnence In allying Bavaria with Prussia a t th* time of and following the war with France made him an Important figure in the newly formed empire. He was a member of the Imperial Diet, Am­bassador to France from 1S74 to IMS. and held from IfflS to 1894 the extremely dllO- onlt poiltlon of Governor of Alsace-Lor­raine. In 1894, a t the age ot aoveiity-Hve, he w as elevated ro the Cbnncollorsbip: succeeding Caprlvl.

A n Im fe r s e n a l H ecerd tr .In classifying the linpiesslons caused by

the "Memoirs"—Inipreasiona ilisllncl frotT, their political Importance, which will be conslde,'ed later—one notes first the ex- traortllnary vloseiiess of Prince Hohen- iohe's observation, and eecond the Im­partiality with which facts are set down In hlH Journals aiitl his letters. Me was. so to speak, u model i-eportiu'. 1 Its fao-‘ uUles, imturallv keen, were trained to note ,-\'ervthliig ot significance, and the events that came to his knowledge were recorded, for tise tiioet part, as dl*pa*- slonaiely as clviivly. He did not pul pea to paper to rouse in hlrnaetf feeling* Ot ambition. Of pride, of hatred; he spoak* of himself. Indeed, almost as Impersonal­ly as of others Infretiuemly doe* he let hIs own einfillons have sway, and then only for an Instant. He can phllttao- phlae over the changes and chaiic** of h li life. and. when there 1* oocasloti to r regret, the mere statem ent Is ordlnartlr sufilctcnt. '"or example, the transfer fregn' Farls to Alsace-Toorralne was not pleas*-' Ing to him; but hi* aoalysla of thd situ- atknt Is that hi the man of tba world who take* either good or III w lth/ «

year, ttiid b.-gln lo get Impiitlcnt Mich a rosllbm ati mine one B illiot staiid well with every our and with all one s stibordlnutp*. and wticllmr one wills It o>- not, on<*. iuak*'H enemlra.

A(U1rG&«lufi himself elflvtn days later to h h rbosi'u roJifldiiTite. nlBler. tho P rlr-

^mall«. the perfroiifll note, so rare In Che prince'a wrlUugs. la Bounded. He Huys:

You insk me hoi; I feel. I am not dazzled by llu* sjilendor of the JU-miTU. and am sorry l« leave h«‘re where 1 mil aecuntom^'d tn be ana na.i.' mitnv friends. HeeldeF. the French have

.•ulwuvfi been congenial to me. X*uithei- mure 1 believe my laboi?i liere to liu\c

■ bl.cn'useful. I t Is it sim ngc fatuiny GtHl I durtiTK the course <if my life I have “''H

held posts long cnmigli iiiUlul dlfflcnllios andtn rh*' aiid i*'tl haj>p> • Th f n ihelhh ir^■ItbtP haml nf rroyldcm e umi tears me Mwuy, jitid It sw?me 'heiir H vulrc .Hiiyliig, ■'i'-verylhiiig is going on too rasily and p leasantly for you. Yuur Intjorii InzlnesH will got the upper I,Olid, si> off you BO in flom ethlng m-\v, Tluui oiu.'e rnon* I mu^t rHi’OuntRr th#- vin- auoiisiomed, tlie puliifol. Ihc and ghMpIrlUiu

U Is from »iirh frugmt'ntfl tha t om* is enabk-d to ('unslnuit a im-iital pU’lure nf Htdiinlolie. the umn. aa well ay iohf, the KtatesTu-iii. Pmof of lu. - mtunnai- ca! nature lii glv^n in the firxt of hlM let’ tm-H which have heen prescrVt>d-oue writ- ten tlurmg the i^ummer of iSbi:!. when Uf was aixtcvll years old, descriptive n( a walking liMir iln-iiugh the liar* c |“hn- talns. Here he speakB nf the "awful and romunllt: licauiy of the B.idoatal." but relates with equal satis fact inn Ids botan

■customed, the palnlul, inc inmnowu. Id pul my whole sln-ngth Into th e sinig- e T hat mav be very iisHul fui n y drltual weUuiP, lint It is nid a g rccah l'.

j fu ik e r and 3i»adar.Thf* recently pnhiisiied book, "A Wonmn

vVlone in Gu’ Heart of Japan." Ih of - ial lnt#*regt to Nfwarkt rs In th a t Us au ­thor. xMrs. Uerirude Adamft FIfilun-, for­merly i-OHlded In this city, graduating, ue Mlf’S Geitrude AiJamH. fi'oni the High Sfhool. Mrs. Flsb#‘r was burn In Beihu. lull hf-r ttirly yeai» were »pi-ut here and Hhr lias kept tip her Newark asaoclotiuns. After fUtlUif fOi' collefiP lu the h'oal F4-hools «lie went to Wellesley, prrparlng hf-raelf to- become a teacher. She was for a lime a mcnilHT of the faculty of the .Vdelptil In Brooklyn, and later luught In the New H«vcn fOonn.) High School. A Mnduess for travel has always been on* of her marked cluirarterlstlcs, uml u 'f trips abroad, wMch diversified her life as n Puhool teacher, have been Hucceeded of Ffeceni years by more extended Jnurney- Ings, luvioh of her Hmc being spent In Southern France. Floienee amt aVUienSi ua well MS In Japan. Mrs. F Ishu ' lms< written iminy interesting loiierH of travel and ktiown u« ft lecturer Atpresent she Is with her p u m its a t Lo* Angeles, Cat.

Mrs. Fisher’s story of her experiences In Jopan i** decidedly rendnble mid pus- sesseH a unltivje vaiue. gh ing, as It rtoea,

«HS* G E i r n U l l E ADAMS Kl!< ||Kll.

a w4dk'-awiike American w0»niin> liuprcs. gtpn* oI a country about which little ims

written front 1b* Wei^leni feminine VlcwfioinL lia r coinmeiu* on thi;! man­ners Ani8 cuBtouis of the Jupaneae aei-tn Ip. W singularly fair, and. certwinly. she

to ft noteworthy degree the pkjturtaaufi aspects of th e ir . ctviliEdt ion. & tl0t wpecta of JapanoM ttfa which rnn- not ds feeUag^B of admiration are''i l l b frankly In the pages of

An especlaHy Imporiant part of 'W ' observations dea4i with tltc prog-

'iwae V vroman in Japan* In this progress, • • awmPbiled partloutorly in the oxtepw

of- educational aAvatitag^is, Mig,

A ne prince haw no CalMe modesty In narrating his successes; If a speech by him Ih applftuded, he mentions the fact.On Ihe other hand, there Is fine reserve In the references to his courtship of and marriage io the Princess Marie zu Sayn- \Vittgenatelii-j->erIeburg. He enjoys SO- fiely. a large p a rt of hla pleasure con- Klstlng in (he rtM'ognUlon of his ability tn dissect It. For Instance, he writes to Ihe Princess Amalie from Parla, Decem­ber 15. ISDU:

Yeslerday evening we (Hohenlohe and hlH wife! were a t the Duchess of Mallle s, an amiable lady with a gray TnliBtSche.We hail a pleasant i-eceptlon in the small, exclusive milon, where we knew nobody: i>ul the guestfi only stay for about halt on hour a l these smull soirees- and we went on to ITinccPS Licveii'a. This was a nmsi tnieresLlug experience for me, as we m n po many remarkable and celebrated iMHipIf. Giiizot, as you can see at once, hits a .striking personality. He Is Uie nnlv mun 1 huve seen so far in this PariHluii society who does not appear to Ih thinking of something else all the time (Mil* tftlk-p to him. It .1? really a dimcull (hiiig, uud denotes great strength of im nd’io keep one's head in the chatter null bcwlldermenl of 0 Paris drawing- rutin Mole Ip a capable man, but very iiiisent-minded. Bcrreyer. who also was luesent. but whom I did not apeak to, liwiks tike M country clergyman. Amongst 11,1- ladiffi I Kaw. I sliould alnklv oat Mme, Kalvrgl for bar brmity, Princess Qrasaal- kiiwllch fur vigorous old aes, Mme. iLulIn for tier stout figure and Ingenuous uunversatlon

Kullowing are some notes on the Romanj-ucicly of Ihe 50’s;

Roman iirlstoMiidc society la one of the b#‘sl ill I lie world. The good breeding, which Ifi a peculiar and Inborn clmrac- iti'lallr Ilf tlie Honiah people, this fine r«'e]lng Fiir good form natural lo the liigher rhiases, Is specially developed In the arlsiocracy and gives lo society a i^ l- Isli of mannerH a*id behavior which makes a most agreeable impresHlon on all per- hOUS of Inste. There Is a certain Bllffness v-Mcii Hirlkos one ui first, but disappears on further ftoqiialntance, and there re ­mains In Intimate relfttloTifl an Imp^resalon of ex'juishe reserve and courtesy. There la not mitcii educiulon among the higher t-Tuases. The women are more cultivated, ihough ihelr education is very Imperfect. 'Hie men do not go lo public achoola or tr\ In nny way lo acquire know led». When « young man has got beyond the

mentary stagcH and knows a httle Fr# nch his education Is a t an end, and hr is turned mil Into the world very care, fnllv di'essed. A few go on to Study a t th e ’ unlvnrsitlea. • * • For the most unrt (hey are harmless creatures, the more accompUshed in all th^ ways of their world a« that world Is the end and aim of their existence, careful aa all Ro­mans are to nv^old the dlfllcuUle® and gi rs uf life, and much oatounded if they Ilf nr (hat there are people who have am ­ple means ami yet give themselves up "to drudge find slave and die in thetr travail " * ♦ Thelir morals are, on in* wh.de, good. At least o ‘ d o e * n t See much wrong In society, railed, to tabooed.] ♦ ‘ • Fam ily !tfs nQiujigst the RomaiJ Rrtotocracy to still quite patriarchal. i

Political Tart of the Record.Bo the observations go. life being mlr-

ro rf j In the memolra with the filatlnctneae of the photograjihtc pUte. The aame rb - snlute frankness eharacterlse* th a t p a rt of the rccurfl denllng with polltica, and U Is this feature, o t.fo u ree , th a t g lv ^ to llic book its paramount value. Prinee Htiheiiiohe first concerned himeelf with i.uiillc affairs about the time of the Revolution ot 1848, and for the half-cen­tury and more following th a t date wa ha.-a his version of the Inner history ot even IB, the rapid progress of which led lo the deveroinnent of the German Em ­pire. the exteiialon of Its Influence. th« initltnlng and prosecution o t lt**forrign policy and to Re Internal ditiebslona. T6# part which Prince Hohenlohe himself tM k In all th is la Indicated w ith adroiraWw (learneB*, ftnd lb* other ac to ri In th* great dram a a rc draw n with w hat Io m * to be uncompromising fidelity, A iDembor of a family called upon nant ro le In delertnlDlflg 11** ****” ,51 of Europe, he sclaed every o p iw fim ltt to illeoharge hla duties ^ a way to In hla being called , to higher orito. reference to hl*"l**!ne*»." fluoted is a totally uiTWRTrh,nUd rofioctlon, do we read hi* character from th a t youth­ful utterance to Uto effeet th a t • mind • * • ought to advance more and moro In dcUrminatlPli «!«»Such devetopm ght .ean ^extifioTdlnary cnetinr at«l » <*5*">*e ***• lent in life. OnTsard, therefore! ^

As llluatrhRofia o* Ptince Hojienlohe a polUleal comment, here are extract* from the memoirs, f**** '^ ,altuatton in Berlin In 1868. and the BUC- ceedlng one *d Bismarck’* retirem ent, which subject unnueatloBsbty la the n ^ t Interesting one treated by him. Th* "pniuleal Note* Made l a H|U" Indicate jiohenlob*'* firm judgment* on men and affair*.

Porination of a .Minletry—M o r e von H o S ^ l lo v n Is ^ *■?BUDPty Juat what th* Prints* of Pru**la faiHiln ''l a capaolty tor h iw es* and

of oharaXr, »•'***>a the tofraeno* of Hew von Auers-

!#<‘lf and till* Emperor, the woPknian'p com. p#ns*llon law, whUh (b<? Emperor want- eil. though l( wiiP r«--ally noHihig ttjuit than ft w'oritmaiito computolun law.This brought him (o the quoallon of llm Prvjsldi^acy of ibo Mlnlutr.v. ;iiul )i«Mail! th a t 51 wun \u\ ImpoftJilbto ofaffairP If any Mlatot^f w^m allow<»cl lo do bualimsa with the Emperor on his own rf’aponaJbility without funsviUlng ila; I'ub- limt Coundl or the ITesldeiit. He min- iruHtfl Verily and Ih vi'ry angry with ihP MlnisterH, and saya that ibey h-fl him in the lurch, becauat* ihry. feared llm Em­peror more thim hlmsflf. TnUer Ihrsc condition#! he could not niaJntalu ids an- thorlly. He also mentioned the Grand Duke of Baden aa one of hia' oppunenla. When ! told him that It was likely tbiu. the Emperor would ask him tn come hack Hooner or later, he rejected the idea, and Bald that he would not live through the past three week» again for anything. I shall not see him afiolu here,* he con­cluded, ‘hut If you care to come to Vurzln or Frledrlchsnih you will be welcome.'He also referred to thu length of our Joint polJtlccil careers mid advised me to be

refill that the Emperor did ni!t worry (ivermtu'h about Alflace-Ijovrulne, uiid th a t I hud bi'Uer kv.v\i out of his night, hut thto.'*- the chronicler adds, "1» easier Bs\l(l than dune. "

It remained for Prince Hohenlohe to get the Emperor's side. M'he opportunity Boon cunie during the course of a drive, April 24. w’ltb the Kaiser to the ahooting-box a t fiufflenhelnn- The conversation as re­ported by Hohenlohe to In part hs fol­low's:

T h e K asstr*s S ta tem en t,He (the Emperorl aald that relations

had become struhied as early a.*i Decern- • ber. The Emperor then desired that Homething should be done upon the qiiea- ilon of the workmen. The Chancellor objected. The Emperor's vlow w-aa that if the government did not take the in­itiative, the Reichstflg—In other words, the Sodflltots, the Centre Hiid the FTo- greflfllvcB—would lake the irmtler in hUJid and the government would be forcedi to follow them. Tlic Chancellor desired to bring the Socialist law, including the provlaion for expulsion, before the new Relchntftg once again, to dlB.solve the Reichstag If It rejected the law, and to take energetic nxeasures In event of a re­volt. The Emperor objected to thto pol­icy. saying that If his grandfather had been forced lo deal with -rebeto after a long and glorious reign, no one would have thought the worse of him. But ne was himself In a different poalMon. for he had as yet achieved nothing. He would . be reproached with beginning bis reign by the slaughter of hto.subJeclA ready enough to act, but he wished to oe able to act with a clear conscience and

Slop not my tears.■J hey shall pour »ea-llke till my boito' Itoi An laU* o'erwheimed. My eyea could tend

the skiesA nother flood, yet lack not m oisturt,

* ♦ * Olala!i t w'aa my klae tha t slew thee. But for n « Thou hadet been living still, 8o W lhter

aprlngaTo clasp his blushing Autumn love* then

apendaHIh weary season burying her dead toaveg.

The second of the plays Is a protfi dram a. "The Hhepherd." the scene o f ' which IB laid in Russia, the time belnf June of last year. It shows conslderablft Iiuwer, but laokB the beauty of the au- thtu'to verse. The volume concltidea with • Tiie 8iege," another blank-verse drama.

I which tells the story of the siege of I Syrarniae, 356 B. C, These three dramag

jiuiulfpnt such remarkable ability th a t dn# j-who- fctrite- t hem wUl- await Msfe—Daih—

gan’s future work with the keenest In­terval and happiest expectation. Th# book la publtohed by Charles Scribner's Sons, J'kOw York, the price being fl.W net.

first to make an attem pt to satisfy ilie legitimate grlevaneea of the workmen and a t least to do everything that was possihle to fulfil their Juallflahre dematula.In a oonterence with Ilia Minlatera, the Enipeior therefore dciimnded that Ue- creea aliould be drarteU, cuiiiointng these provisions, which the decrees ,after*'aya aeenred. Bismarck ilBClIncd to hear of It. ■The Emperor then bronghl tbe m atter before the Cabinet Council, and evenlually secured the proposal of the decrees nm- wlthstandliig BlKinarek's opposition. Bis­marck. however, waa secretly working acalnst him. ' • ■ This friction had considerably disturbed the relailona be­tween Bismarck and the Emperor, and these were further atrpliied by the ques­tion of the Cabinet order of 1H5i. BIB- marck had ofi™ advised *1’'’ Emperor to grant the Ministers acci'ss to himself, < nd this was dune, lim L”"between the Emperor atid Ills Ministers becuine more frcunenl. Bismarck took of- fensi;, beeame Jeiilous “o'* . ^ Cabinet ordei' of 18&! In Older to break cominuniaailons between the Empereir and llie Ministers. The rn h 'ed and demanded the rimeal hiel order; Blamurck m afe a ™ 'sent, but nothing was done In the m at­ter The Emperor therefore denyi tided tim l he Bhould either Issue an order of repeal or hand In bis ‘■ealgmillpn. This decision the Emperor the Prince through Hahnke. The Prince healtated, but gave , I * * * ” , March IS. It muat be added that as early as the beginning of murck had told the Emperw he. should retire He afterw ard explained thnl he had changed Ills mind and would stay, a f whleh the Emperorbut offered no remonatrance rmtlt t t ^ effalr of the Cabinet order arose.In anv case the laat three weeks were occupied will) unpleasant tween the Emperor and the Piln^^- was aa the Emperor expressed It. a Ttormy time," and the wftR III! the Emperor went on to a«y» whether the Hohensollern Aynhsty *he Bismarck dynasty should reign.

The mo.st attractive verses In John 1.. Shroy's "Be a Good Boy, Good-by; and O tlirr Back Hinne Poems." are th n is which deul with memarles of childhoods There to a guod deal of the quality In, them ilutt the ])oeL deBcribea in th# flrit ftiunza of the verses "Just a Boy;" \! ain 't nny better ‘r worse than the reet, \ F 'r BonH“t!ow us boys never hanker

■'best," \Hut iirt* sort a conicni to git licked n o *

aiV ilion, „ ^ ■To lonson our hide bo'b we'U grow to M

men.r m just pripsin' through them tnere det-

burous days.When 0 boy to a savage—my sliter alw

says,Ar.' m other she frowns an' heave# loa*.

heavy sighs,An’ scolds In the day an* a t evening

cries.The book to attractively Illustrated. I t

to published and sold by the author. Joha L. Shroy. 173Ji. Diamond street, Pblladel* pbia.

Richard Watson Gilder’s poems reiallTlf to music have been printed in a dainty Ut­ile volume rntltled "A Book of Muaic*'^ The collection to one Unit none of Mr* Glider's admlrerH will wish to be wUhout,. The pool has an unusually delicate under- . standing of music’s meaning, and bis In- lerpretattone are characterised by fArc felicity of expression. Included m Ih# betok tire a nnnibRr of poema which do fiot appear etoewherc In the author'# Work* find florne of the verRca are here pubitoholj for the first lime. Among the most beau­tiful of these later production# is "Th# Voices," which wts take tho liberty ot quoling:Rich to the music of sweet InsttumKhU. The separate iiarp, cornet, oboe and Out#, The deep-souled viola, the 'cello grave,.The xviany-moodcd. singing violin,1‘he Infinite, triumphing, Ivufleo cmvtor. And w'hen, with art myslerloufl, some gin Thrilja Into one the lone and viiriuut

tones. .. w wThen In no hiding passion of eh# heart.No algb i f evening winds, no breath Ox

dawn, . , . . . .No hope or hate of man that to not lolu. B ut when a human voice leaps from th a t'T Is aa ft flower that burst# from tii

trembling curth;I fiomethlng inoro wonderful assaito tna

soul,A« with exultant, cries, up-curvmg, swill, The slirlll Walkure clamor aga 'nst la#Or pnie Brunhllde moans her bjticr fat#.

Tlie book comes from the Century Com­pany, New York, and Its price I# t l net.

H arper Sr Bros., of New York, publisfi at Jl.iiO net the volume, "Selected Lyrlc*»l 1‘oemR of Algernon Charles Hwlnburne.'* 'fhe collection to made up of the poema appearing In Mr. Swinburne's early "Poruns and Ballad#," In addition to which there are a number of later 1yricg« Including the alirring "Clear th# W ay!" It to not stated whether Mr. Swlnbuin# himself made the selection for th© book a t hand. The volume waa received liirougu P. F. Mulligan,

' 1

Tlie llluatratlnin* Inclufle sfveral por- trait* of Prtnw Hokenlolie anfl simile of a letter from Emperor 'Wllhelin I. to (lie Prince.

"Memolra of Prince ^hniHw>il hv P rince A lexander of H onen

o S . 'company. New Yorin Price, H net.

S y u a r a ® * a /. *'Selections from vartoo* aadresses ila-

liverert ky Mr, Roosevelt fluring hi* oc­cupancy of the Presidential chair haveI Z made by Horace “ rapublished In a volume /■ *,1Deal." Mr. Moritley has dofta well In presenUng, in handy (orsn. .JJ*Prtaidem'a noteworthy book make* for vlgorou* high thinkitif *» " * ‘i. *"« <*“ , ■ pieaaed in turning the PWr* many npttteT* ot Im^rtanoe fn ^blchP reirtdeX R«*eveU 1* upon which b* h w expressed hi™ el(

no ir ■•treet, X**f

# W##l Tw#ftty""TBtli gnnng or m * -emnitoerwi « »rMk^''ew•.-,l(ollld|w. e tte r -

m y ,

Mumsd at Pari*, Auguit T,■WliMi 1 U k* a u UH ^ m v to a *

la writes In hie ,.gi*!ltf I—** «re*t pewtblBtles for giaid. i jg in 4 * t , . t a J a s ) ' • " * **•f r ^ t s w J ^ W e - t w i w».Uf and tov&*bl^ ^ axjr.i i* r r von i

« ! w i

i S b j t e ^ s 'd t e S U a 'b y ' '^t te addresses drawn npon^for the rain- Dltatlon «•* ‘’The Monroe Doctrine, The Worid's Peace," "The Man Who Counts. “The Nobility of Parenthood, Success In U fa.” "The workingman,*' "Dyiteh lj .w ” '*The Efignlty of Labor,” "Heal* of CltlwnshlP" and *'The Essence of Christian Charabter."

The booh Is hound In flexible covers, and a new photogravure portrait of Mr. Hoosevell serve* a* frontispiece.

“A Skware Deal,” by The^.ire Roose- y*lL The Allendale ^ess , Allendale.

T

f l f ia t ^om m rktrt j ( r t !7t»adinfTh# bo<^s mont In drtinatid at th# NfaWw

nrk Frae Public Library during the pagt . week have been, in th* order of their poft* nlarlty, M follows; Fiction. "Jane Cabta." hr George Barr McCutcheon; *'The Flghf- snr Chance," by Robert W. Chambar*:; “The Treasure ot HeaVeifr/' by Maria CoreUl; "The Opened Shutter*," by Clam laiulte Burnham; "The TbrowbaM." Wf AlfYad Henry Lewl*,_«nd "Th* ppdllers," h t Rex B. Beach. Non-flctIdii. "lt<MIPni lii41*,"‘by WiiUattt Bleroy CititM;: "Plapa PleasaRt and UnpleBianf," ' kT aewge Relitvd Shaw: “UldawAner KlghF*Hr*rin“ and "Rlchart n i , '’; W «ll**W* gpsMe;, ",p»«ama Caiarttw U . Ptptwr, and.

^ o o k s on Variout tjopiesThree of Richard Harding Davie's farce*

- " T h e Dictator," "The Galloper" and "Mias C lvlliiatlon"-are publiahcd logeth-

er In a single volume Illustrated with poo- tographa of the actori and scenes In the ploys HE given on the New York stage.Tin; hook Is handsomely gotten up. and will be particularly welcome to those who have seen the plays given by the people who figure In the illustrations. The fron t, ispleee I* a charming picture of E thel Barrym ore. The book comes from Chsrles Scribner's Bona, New York, The price I*JI.M net.

If It la Impossible to make a Hat of the "one hundred beat books" autlsfactory to all BCholai'B, It Is equally so to m ake a collection Of exlr.acts from great willing* whlcli will please all critics, John R ay­mond Howard has succeeded as well, per­haps, a s could be expected, In selecting and editing "Prose You Should Know" (Fleming H. Revell Company, New York* Price 11.50 net). Both President Roosevelt ■and William J. Bryan are represented, to no favoritism Is shown to either of ths g rea t political parties. Thor* are. extract* from the Apocrypha, but none from ths canonical books of tbe Bible. Rev. Dr. Bradford” of Montclair, and Dr. van Dyki^ of Prlnceioii, are honoreri by the Inclu­sion of sclectlona from their writings. F or the rest', Ihe list ranges from the earlleat prose writers of England to American* who have not yet reached the height of th e ir powers. The selections and ex trac ta are so short that It Is hard to ImaglBV w hat purpose the book can possibly serve, uflless It be to aniuae the critics. Bull, as the Immortal Lincoln one* remarked,.,If any one like* this sort of thing, Hu* seems to be about the sort of thing h* would like. The book was recelv*t through P, F. Mulligan. ■' . '

Under the title of " ‘Boy W antsd 'l jk *_ Book uf Cheerful Gouqssl," a number, tjf’ Nixon M'aiermiin's verse* best s u ite d -^ Hi engender a sense of self-help Ilf th* youthful mind, have been pubUabed In *, setting ot prose which weaves tb*in to­gether and amplifies th*lr mtstagC- Th* : chapter titles are "T’he Awakmjlng," ‘lAttt I n OenluR?" "Opporiunttf.” "‘Ovsr ami Underdoing." "Tho Value of Spare M tf ments." "Gbeerfulneas," "Dreamlnbi *n(l Doing " ami "Real Buoce**." The advlM In good, ,md the boqk 1* aUm ctlvely atVranged, with m arginil extract* from MM writings of great men who have .wise counsel to th* youth of all tlm**,;i The volume I* published by Poring * t3th,< e t Chicago, the price belnf M-2S. ^

"The object of thl* work," eay* » "Wake Cook, In the preface of h i* reoeot book "1* to f |y e It) convenient form th* la tes t discovert** -h lo h p i l o t s IM W I^ ual ■ Industrial *nd oOHsctlve *fflal»ttcy,*The title I* W0ri> * * “**■. ®*fu ll' "Betterment.' {ndtvtdital, 8ool*l and Industrial; or, Highest EIRelwioy * rb u g b th e Odlden Rule* of R ight NutritHMi tVetfgro Work and the Higher Ipdn ttria t'Development*." Some of the s ^ l w u t treated are food* and exenslae. model,fka« tnriM ua*(n**s method* and m oral* wel- far^vvorki the hooring problem, old ag* n e ^ e n s and land natlonBUaatlon. ]A tom e a*otlen« of the work t l» w u t ^ apx V « a r * ue Indubitably. * faddist, bu t ttia geners) tone of. th* bnok fs Ban* and m ahv df M* tbgtestlona ought to be lot* laived by a1I‘ rlttit-tblnklng men and w o t ^ , Tha W iderick A. S to k n Com*, pany, New Tofk, publish th* volume a t » *LM net. . __ , -j■ ‘T h e Bridd* Blue Bonk," "by .pgul I K ’ H ottelay, 1* a compilation of the oplntodii, ■of leading bridge authoriUe* on •— * - 1 (MeJarationa, Inference* and gnteri ! » , - ifAiMlair bag arranged hts .* - j MstM-nisllv. and the manual ~ admirably ■ « -

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