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VOL. XL DOVER, M0KK1S BOUNTY, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1881. NO37 THE1R0NERA) PASSAGE TICKETS The Dover Printing Company, J't/JJMsHEIW A«:» I'llOlUiiTOJIS. Office oil MwriB Straet uunr Black well. rtOUHil «F BVflSCHlFTitOH - - 1.00 - - BO ADVEBTISINO BATES. 1 » i 2 il 4 s 10 K. 16 !iB fill fifl fiO 0d 2 w $ I a 4 fi ii «D 7r. 60 2T) 60 OH (ID a WKB. 4 i w » no 4 CO 5 fid 7 (HI 8 00 to a.i HI 00 B 1)1) 10 Oil 1KW ir> uu IB <-,(> ite mi 16 B!> IS !,•! 21 <M) 25 to) •>i> mi 117 tt> tifi tin i 410 t j 17 (i >\ it ;, 27 (II ESTABLISHED IN 1851. UIIB DltUas and MKDIOINEH, PAINTH, Oilg, tilaHB, ilniHlicH, I^Mfiw [ by J^MEW k. GOODAI.E, tb lit® Hnlo ami fr<> . J OIIW P. STlCKkB, Counsellor at Law AND BIASTBH IN CHASCEBV, ROCKAWAY, N . ,7. R f-AJiSION HOUSE, CoTiicr ot Jttv\xftA\ nnfl Hum* Bis. DOVER, N. J. 1. B. JOLLEY, Proprietor. flureua mill UnrrlngcE to Let. L. C. BIERWIRTH, 1NALYTIOAL CHEMIST DOVER, N. J. 4X4175ES o/ till DESCRIPTIONS OF ORES AND MINERALS. (~* KO. 0. CUMMINS, M. D., GENEHAIJ PRACTITIONER AND SFECIAUHT IN THE TREATMENT OF MALAIUAI, DJ3EASEI!. OFJ'IOK AT 1'HE STICKLE I1OUHE, D0VK11, N. J. JOHN URUMMEH'S SHAVING AND HAIR CUTTING SALOON, SUSSEX STREET, (between the MANSION HODdE mil Dopot,) EOVEH, K. J. * Thoplace has boeii entirely reflttoa in * in*I mimmor. LADIisB'andOfilLDllEN'S HAlIt UUTTIHO A 8PE0IAL1V. NS3EE01TE & BKITH, ITTOBNEJB 4 CODNSELLOES AT IJAW, Cor. Blackwell and suisex Sts. DOVER. N- J. I. n. KKIOHBOUS. x. a. SUITS. L. W. THURBER, 8CrEIUNTENDE*JT OPPUBUO SCHOOLS OF M0R1UB COCNTf. OCBCB ever QEO. KICHABDa & CO.'B STORE, DOVER, K. J. BLANOHARP,' ATTOHKES LI kvr> MASTER IN CHANCEIl?, rOVEK, K. J. Oflloe orer A. Wicbtoa'a ftave w4 tin l?-lf Dlftckwell Btroot. Agents for rairlanks' Scales andTer- VOORHEES BROTHERS, MOKRISTOWN, \m mtum, '^ CABBIAaK MAKERS 1 , BLACK- SMITHS' CONTRACTORS AND MIN- ING s u p p u s a , ' ' Aurlcnltnr* Implomcnti, Sued*, Fertilisers, &a raicti, Oili, GIASK, cto. WALTER A. WOOD'S Colebrated M0W8B8 and BBATESS. OXOSOI X. TOOKBXXS. JUEQ k, TDOBSZZS, borrlatoiTD. Deo- lfith. 1818. Morris Oounty Surrogate's Office. JOLV Qtli. 1881. Ic the matter of Jamea H. NciiRhbuur, EIPCD- tor ur Willtom II. UFerie, deoomeA. Hnrrngntn'i order tn limit creditorii. O ft anpliCBtlon lit ths sbovi" n«ntt'j Eicca- tor. it in onlertil by tlm .Snrrngiie tht !d Executor ftiva public notice to f iis!d ntct-rtenl to moutha from tliU date, br lettinp up * cop; of tliJo order, within Iwfoty dayi liercnfli-r, in flit of tlie nut at mjliite places la the Counly of " '• for twit months, *nd »!io within the I ntT tt»s EIU, o h !i it BtW titenT t»s» y •.driR tho IRON EIU, one (if lit* n enRpap ere HUtc, ror the nine apace or time (ttio Hurro gito jadslne »•» rnrthcr notice to lie nun 10 cBiarj); and ll »nj r red I tor B>iaU ni>gIecU< eiliibit liis (ir her dabt, tlonimJ »ncf claim witbin tlio Mid porioil nrniao mmitb". iiobtic notice IKJIBS giTcn •• *ff>rpsaiJ, (inch crtfilitot ah ill ho tar*fer icbarroA nl bm or h-» »ctioB thprefcif agtinit the imid Eioculor. A trne taipj from tlie roinntts. S3-J0w OHAHI^BA.GlTiLEN, BurroRato. SHERIFF'S SALE! lorrit- In'OlitneflryrtfNew Jenej—Fi. fi. for P»le _ -- mottRifted premliei, wherein Biitnfy II. •nd Elimbfllh Pelme»rbU ,— -. Wbiilwk, Mary Wbillru* tnii J*m<!i £. Lawii ITS dchuiUnti. Relatnsblo toOcto- ber torn, A. D.lflai. B? wltint of tbo above tttitnl writ or flcn hclw In ID? bands, I iball expose fo town, N. J,, on' MONDAY, UJC 6tli Azy ot September naxt, A. D. 1881, between tho hour* orIII M. ind I o'clock P M.. that if to it? at 2 o'clock lo thi »florn«tt» of n i d flv.iil 'ih»l Ittclct pwwl or land «Itnitfl. lyinc nod belDR ID Ho Town Of D o w , In Ibft Caaaij nf Murri« andSUto of No» JerioJ, bqnnded wd described tn followi Being tb« Rime tot of land and prtmlw* In* m i coavejed to iilil Thomas PIIIBIOM br deed frfm Taraci A. floodale suit wife, dated Aug. 23d, l«7li aDdjbaripi miHht north •"£ pr Hmibi utreel, atlfib northeast eortrtr or Cm tr»J anniw,rodruns (l)iD• nurlberij omni •.IOOR llie nf*t Hoe of Bnuei «tt««t,nuy (Ml •thenta (1) In &weilwlj aonrw pi Mil U -will Ceotral ar*DM. one hnndroJ fMl! thstiM (8) in a Hntharlr coarse parallel witb Sussex -jtlhaporUillQO L - MlMttottw ORAM, HANCE * Co.'s STORE, PUJIT GUAM, N. J. F UJI Rl| thfi prti.ripst lirrs t,f Htf-am«ltii>a fr.jiu Ntw ¥(nrk tu Livurji««l at UtWKtiT IUTEH. AIMII UKAI-THOriQIU-AT UI1ITAIM ANH IKEI,AN1>. ' I6-| McCAINSWLLE HUTKLl WE V0ETMAK, Prop'r. A Well kt>J)t lintnl With <!V,TJ-|U'<''JI1II TUB OI ,D STAND. UNION HALL 1UIL0ING Jils;'kivu]lHut;tt. Dover, Hot Mr Furnaces UOOK, PAliLOK, llJJATINO STOYES, RANG-ES, KEROSENE Oil., LA.NTEHNS AND 111UTTANIA WARE, TIN & JAPAN WARE, JIT UAN3, 4a, TIN HOOFING, EAVKa O l)];ilH, „,)(! BM klmb -in the h«»t manner ci. IliK|iri.lljrJw« i pper loaJ unJ pavio UUIU. Ka, THOU0H3, tJ'Miuir in mv li and si tilt; Hlt DAIRY BUTTEU, IIS 8 . wtioli'Bsle Irailc nnly. I *m alw.i.vfl prp[>iiri' to BITPLY STOUEfJ with tlic «EHT GOODH at t!io LOWEST MARKET PRICES. 3OOD DUTTKll MAKICIW, I lu FAHMUlt.H TtlODUCE. (Jnl,, it your Kij:nlt' fruutj mid(-noil ttt , Jr., BLAIHSTOWN, N. J. '• O. BOX, 23. 3-tf W. S. BABBITT. This iveolt wo propose to show 'ou an cxcoptionally olieap assort- nent ol LAWKS. TOU will find in nir collection tho principal Amer- ean bi-antls represented together vith a fow of tlio foreign manufac- turers. Tlio American goods look ust os well na those imported, and about one-third as expaumve. We will Bond yon eamples to try if yon send us word. We have juBt purchased a lot of DMswGooDacollod NUN'S YEIL- G. This is supposed, originally, bo an ALir-woDL FABIUO, and is •y rich in appearance. It is light in weight and made in tuary beau- tiful colors find shades. Tlio price >f this particular lot, to which wo low refer, is thirty-five cents for ;he black and forty for any color, idontical goods Bell for iiffcy lentsinthocity. Send for samples. A newnrticlo lias lately made its appearance in BLACK GOODS ; mac- turers are very entorjiriRing, continually inventing new fabrics. This, which we now refer to, is called TRICOTINE, an indescriba- ble material, worth $1.25 ft yard 'or tlifi best. Ask to fieo it when •ou are in or send to us for asaui- )le if you cannot get in. Of the ihcapcr grades of DRESS GOODS IVC havo an unusually large assort- ment, and we propose to sell them to you as cheap as the lowest. W. S. BABBITT, N?« S. Jensen, CARPET WEAVER Df TEE OLD l'RESIlYTEHIAN OHUltCIt, DOTEltN. J. Carpet Wwring, in nil widthi, dona in itat-clftiiB BtyJe at lowest mttjs. Tie bout iud of wkrp cu\y Tia^d. NPW carpnU or> Bale. ITIO liiglieiit prinn pnid ior l f i t DdfOI taken I^OTHES OVKI) and Ctenned in good Btyle. OTPF. Ma? 25lli. 1680. liftiT PAUL 0. BOTTICHER, 751 BROAD Si. NEWARK, N. i. PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS prepared tn3 tlio ODUtrpotiin Notice of Settlement Notice Uhereby ring that the looaqota nl Ihe , ub«tiW, ; , M o [ ^ i - - « t r U pmdffjgto >»• if ill be indited mi il«l«l by the SarrantAi and reporleil ror ullleinent lo thn Orptin* 1 , "—t (irthtCamty atMorrii, as UambftM DiteJ July Kth, 1881% BRS.. ;84r9w HAVE EVER KNOWN mhta ibew orjpna IN In food yott not flnd their nnosnar e* iHllhT Fuler'tCKDRn Tonic _. _ important oixmni, rMrtnt" ofdespi CMILLEUPLOW, BEST PLOW IN THE MARKET. Hiv4iv*,l (lr,(( i,i..|i>itnn el N. J. Ufa!" Fair, W*vfiiv, luai (all- Ovw lOfl tuliS bj «* tasv >iar. ^d,,] fufciu-uUr, VO(MtllEKS UU0THEU8, MORRIS TOWN, K. J. Agricultural Implements, Seeds, Furfcilizers, otc. JdcEm VAN InvKK. TrHVfi.iiij; Afi'.'Ht. Ut P u W 1 H 1 M BEEMER &PALMER 6YM/., WOOD, MASOiVS' MATERIAIS. BLUE STONE, FEnTiliZERS ESTABLISHED1847. LI1IE, CEMENT, CALCINED I'LABTEE, tllUtsT BIUCS, FlIiE LJIJIY, FIRE UjliCE, LAO STOISKS OUHBlMti, UI'.LLAIt srEPP.UOriNG, BILLS, LISTEIJ* LtiV) CIISTEIIN KECH.8, WHANN'S PHOSPHATE, itiic DiiHt^ (i'uinn. I'oiiiJrelt LAUD PLASTER, rfe. WOOD sawed in stove lengths. STOVE, EGO, CIIESTMJT. Orilf-r* jn»j liemldrfiiBfcl tbniugMlie Pont •fticc Lork Dm 2ft, . )r loft ol A. ikeiurrWnki I lil»ekwcl! Ht., n r i t flunsci, or «t (tic. yn.ul. HLACKHMITH'H COA.LoountmiM.voii liaii.l. JOS. YORK'S Till: OLD \_M) Kl'LIAHlj: BOOT AND SHOE DEALERS! Tile i(;pnlntiiou we h»ve eurnei] for our goodBia DUKAIUL1TY OF WE.WI, EXCElLKNt'E OF QUALITY, ELI:(JAN(;K OF FINISH, YAUIETY OF STYLES AND 11EAS0NABLE PRICES have extended to almost every house and hamlet in tlie county. For thirty-four years our trade has steadily increased until now few retail dealers in the State sell the same amount of goods, a suffi- cient guarantee in itself that our customers appreciate the care we exercise in selecting stylish and durable goods and the prices they have always been able to procure them at Call on us if you want a GOOD article at a LOW price. We •will give you by far the largest stock to select from and will certainly save you money. ft Ac IIEAGAN, OPP. D., L. &W. DEPOT, DOVER, N. J. iron THK Iftox ZBA.) TUB I^MNT B1DK, flf nhjX D1STOK. Tbon(h ou th« desert doomod to rett, Or oo the lufle sod roltlORdeup, •Tlilhftwio bear with patleDibreiBt- A bopefnl heart't la Uilno to k»|>. Lot not miifortaoe for thy gin, : POETIC, WAR ON HIGH PRICES1 IN 1\'ATC1U-HAM) IiOGtllK JillCJTIiniK'yjLYEIt-ri.ATED WAUK AN BOLDBi VW. IA HOAGLAKB, BOVKIt, MOltiUS COIIJ\TY,N. J. ^ for tho Ainprimi W.IMIL.M, or W.Utliain,fit.iaRiicljiwoHa; IDEP1 irlaalkH, Illiiinh, ami lMcklljnl W«tthiu «0W nl ».in« jotlliolio 0 TO JOS. YONK'H FOI1 PAHI.OIt AND I X DISINtl ROOM ANDOPFICIiMTOVEK. tt'OTYA OF ALT. K1NOH. OKKliy, r.LAHS-WAHF ANDCHINA. Joseph York, MOimiHTOWN. N. J The New Empire lot-Ai *.URN & Iliisc-burn- iiifi: C00M112 StOTo. 'HE BEST BAKING BTOVE IN THE W0EL1 OR SUMMER & WINTER USE. Alto, i ctiolca stock o/ Hardware, Cutlery, llaHfl, Woodeu, Copper, VMa and Japsmied TINWARE. T H E DOVER LUMBER CO. offors to buildurs tlio best opportunitieB in iho pureliUBB ol LUMBER of every grade anddescription including LOW PRICES and the great advantage of having Immber Worked to Order by machinery at thoplace whero it is purchased, greatly lessening tlie coBt of building by tha great Baviag in manual labor. Our stock always includes Sash, Blinds, Doors, Mouldings nnd LUMBER ol every description, and eBpeoial pftiua are to to give satisfaction in every particular. looting, Plumbing and Job WQrkiicoiupltjr»ttcn«lfnl to. iJi'* Scales at Mauufnc- turer's prices; Cu»i>cr, Drasi, Ltud, lUci »E(? g tkkeu in oicliinct-for Rf'oOi. lUtDEN A RONNELT,., uffloturors cf BUNNEIiL'S SELF- tt WIRE 8PBINO HED BOT- . Mwoh 1. IBIS. MORRIS COUNTY MACHINE &IRONCo. DOVER. N. J. if imoTtnsiia ot STEAM ENGINES, TIIKIIl CELEBOATED AIR COMPRESSORS, IRON and BKA89 CASTINGS, F089ING of aU DE8OHIPTION8. TtT T. LKIKHIT, 'Counsellor at Law, AND MASTER IN 0HAN0ERT, rr t* WiaoW ii* CUtftUOB WOOD !W< '• RICHARDS A OO.^B PTOHB.' ' rtt M 9008 SO 00 ' aiJM '- 31)00 ; •as: 1TC0 i w' bent Iriplo pkted lea kuivefl $1fiOper down ; Q\ovpmt& ibesi " ' * ' " " Hert forts. (lippeiJ) SO 00; fancy, 0; fancy, 0 ; triple G. 0, P., t s w«ch " l ^ ' V . JJtoth . . eplaled tL-B^HimiH. (tifijwti) $4 ; faucy, $ifiO;desHd ...„-.., 5 ; moiliiKi. forks *" HO ; tipped, $8 ; huudxonie jlve-bottle ouloni, •il o ke biwki'tN. 51 JO. Any jicrson whhhiR imy oi t\me UOOHBI will ___ pfirminhii'ii io cxniuiui) tlioin btfmo paving ; or any person wishing to t'nkb a w«ch, i de|ic!'iiiii(j the noouiit in I he NutiotiFil TFiiios Hunk, cttD carry tbB same fnr onp <li, «<- Wcan UP wnvlnend ho b^a wlj,,! ho WB,ln fur, anfl a goofl ottlulo. Bi'EOUX DISCOUNT tu lintels and retailrmitfi. Addroaa oil oonimuniuntioaB to CHAS. F. KOAOIASI). Stickle Honao, Dover, K. J. , Pre§ident. . 8oo'; and Tr«u. JUST RECEIVED A LARGE STOCK OF NEW CROP TEAS, COFFEES AND SPICES, AT TIIK BTiUlK OP N.Y.& CHINA C 0 M i m FINEST PERMKHA. 00LONG, FrNKsT OT.D QOV. .IAVA. K MMUCMUO COFFER e inviti) tin' spccisUttcntirninf P" to tlie Idltuwntf; list of price EET, DOVER, X. 3. 70 et«. por II). .13 " " 22, 55,2«, cU. per lb. roktoj:*rHh hotel locpcre and boarding COVFEES TBAH : HUOAI18 BOLD AT COST. We Kct out coodn ind lieuco our 1*0ff PRICKK. One (Hal in ill we l , > v us, at, so, as " " irect (rora tlio iinporter NEW MARBLE YARD nil ttl other «urk lu bit line. Com •ncloacd with graniio &ml nurble pn DDR «iper>enQ0 *ud rciaonablu iirl bdt bt 1 i S th dli AND FARM FOR SALE! A propwly ootnpriilng ihirty-fttB itorcB, mostly impmwd, «ndlocated pt OnDrtown, [mo mile* from Dover oq the roud iMdJng o'.Ohefltar, Op ths premleei Ua H N B BE81DKN0E, BABH u d ontboaBn, Almi teiuint bonn. Piantj nf g6oi bait, etfflj u d l t t o , »nd n rery flna p Cold Ilnniit EII<I Blrtnelh or Aroiilllon. 'Jdcio PIS* ^ul Kerrts, give £trcU£lti to thi Ecdj, Injoc titthltia Sleep, JTnricS MI.1 Imr'''»'» tli» qmlilj Ot th« Ulmit, iiut FniKT End lld-t.lcti Khu Cotn- piejion Tlior cnr« folpu»:inii ot llto H u r t _ _ that Iroa U i(llio«ni«li!ncntso( (holiltWHl.wid !• IU . :tonic Cnrtor'Blr<>nI>IIteBraiI»vtlt)- «b)a for mm who Bra tronbled with «MTO0» WHJUJCM, Nljlil HweoU. 4c In mcinl boxet. •tnOceniPi^Mbriat dlf«1»tt. Of MSt by CARTER MEDICINE CO., Mow York Oity* McKinnon Bros. JUNOTtCtUBXHB' CJ 1 Axes and Edge Tools, ROOKAWAY, N. J! ItHntitgheen rojiorted th»-t Uil* old-e liahed and woll-knowc firm tin gona out of bi a Uke thla mema orinrormlng ttie b ) t h We kre ntH kre ntH j otbn bnaiDCM, wa Uke thla mema orinror public that itncb )• not the caee. W to btiklnntB, *»TO no coBoection witb an j ot flroi irhatcTor, and iliill ccoliQtie to make om well-known cooda wllli ares tor care tLaa eta. iMoatB<io£**(o lianil-midn Ibrbiiibont and * are tho o a k Srm in Bo«li»w»yiijiilnK n u b Tbo rainbow will not a y Pron bin who seeks the anna? aids. Daem not the daj a locklft»« one',' ecawttio rnDTDiag-weanalrOTrn: . . cli>oda b«t.vee)i tb,ea and ibe sao fe*j drift avajr era le gcfc« down. ' The a»y wliose dawning i« ao dim, Hutds gladuca> •«»In store ror liln WUo works and vaiti till c*tntlde ' And luok'i toward the aunnjraidc. ' When wtldj tonndo-ilrfTen ilorm Hid brought tho migbty okit to prDOufl, The wee btrd for his llttls form A reruge in tbe foreit round. Lst fleaion calmly riew tlie t*y Wiiose thtiDden dimmed not lOBtlnol'l eye | Iu tlie Gud of tlie storms confide Ant) tarn tolbe oheety, sunny iid«. "> IK FAU«, ., ,'\ Wboo you are doifl kome day, my daar, QiiHo doad, sod andor (trouuet, WU-ire you wilt never s w o t lew A. summer sight or soEdd. What chall bf coma cf JOB to d«lb, WUen iJlooc mng» tojott ; •, Are allont B« LIIQ bird wboie br»th HUB RODS the inmtnar tbroneh f ; : I wonder will you ever WiW And with Ured erciUgaiti ' Llvo lor yuur old lira's little aik<( ,,, Auageo/Joybrjialb? Sball norao ilorn dcatloy control r That perfect tonn, utieieiu Ilmrdly sofieaoagli ofaoul ' •_ : To make yonr life iln f, .''[].'. "' Fur weluva l>csrdfor«][ things born .*-) Oao harv«at dayiprdparei -•- ••'-'' IU guidon ftinure for tba'cotfn^ t - ; And flre to burn, the tin* j ••_- ? .- > But who shall gMhPf iato ihnTei, ' ppy'i pnak«r l d4j6|plflesioarei, n beUa of starlet 4ane » . O bold Tlio p Blu No lute so li Toa y ^ j e ; You an too sweet for UelUo hold, And liuareb wootd tire jod BO. >• 1ittlo wbfiflj jpur Jijy u)i ill ho, 'A'pii ntiftc ^>V teftVeTw'(t»i ' l ark Board nf Trade it a[ipeaw that Uiere were In 1880 3,586 hands employed in the manafueture of jewelry, the value of the product boiag;$4682,837 ; 1,567 d i ki N bl Theuart ttyfpjift Again Into her Iresst. |* J And w* will find h qmrt pl«ie , ; Hot Jonr silltiBpolohn),"-,-,; ,: . Andl»jttieflovr8rtim«nyoQtIai», , ; i flffeetaijoarkUwi were, . .' . . •• And with luniied,Tfftoea raid of mirth Hptetd ih^ llgUt.Utl *1>OT6, Soft at tbB ttik you lofed no earth. - AamuuiiMfoaooaUloie. . , Pev tetn, bat once, poi-'eyeW ehall sbsd, Korwillwetlghat&ll,- But coma lad taok'upaa your U& Wben tbe ff*rm RtinllghU falj.' tJpnn'tbat grive no tree at trail Bbill gtnw, &oi MI; Ep-fcin; Only oneflowerof afa&lloW root, That will not «pring >snln. XDL'SlltlES OF NEWAHE, NEW JKIt- SET. Newark was settled ia 1066 bj people fruin Connoctioiit, of whom Robert Trent—afterward Governor of that State —v*ae ou«. An vi»u»l in oilier nan set- Hemonls the first taiII wnno grist mill, orocled in 1CG8, on it brook at iho uurtb r-f tbe tou-n. Tbe eecoml, if notJlio Rrat should liave been u m\\ mill, bat AOt recnrOa indicate that brewing was an surly industry io NewJerbey, burley aeing raised ia largo (iiiaatitics, the price a 1GS1 being ODIV tu-o ebillings aur- teucj. Nor ia Kciturk cider n product of recent jcarfl only, for in Ci>loninl timos tliat mailo " nt one town called Newnrk," ns-ieil tbo cider of Now Engkrid. Tlio oarlj settlers were, however, mi- illiug to coufiue Uicir muimfuuturea flour, beer and cider, for early reconia idicato that about tlio jeur 1075 the ropnrforR of E:ist. Jprsoy invileil tao* Unniea to sotllc iu Ncnnrk, Betting apart 3 the flint ot every Inulo v/ho wonltl re- ide tbere n lot of laud us p gift. Now ilint its boot and short (radii ia to oil en- it omy bu interesting to know thnt ta QiBt Bboemftiier was Samuel Waite- id, wlio cumo from Elizubctbtown, about tbo year 1676. EB was "for- mally admitted ii member of tlie com- luaity on condition of bis supplying il rilh HIOCS." Leather, so impcirtont a iroduct now, wne also an eiirljiaclaatry. 'lit! first tnunery in ibo town was ea- ahliiiticd in 1098, Hml SOOD after leather rnsmaclcin conoid em bio qaanlitica for (iiuuslic «en and esputtatioa. Iron ore ita, et an early period, brought over tbe Onmga mouatains ID leather bugs, on pnek boraea, to Newark, but 'whether smelted there or clsenliete wa hive no data to determine. An earl j as 1683 Newark bad a population of 600, and ibctbtown, the Beat of govetBtneiit, 700, ' , "- '' •"' •• -,' ; :. It is not proposed, boweier; to show tlio iDtrodaoIioD or growth of industries daring the eighteenth oeatury'-tbe? WDT6 few in unmbfer and -Hmited in ex* tent.. . " ' , • In 1816 v, tnatmfaeloter of coacU lace in Nuwurk employed abont 20 hands, obtained MB flora allk from <3oama- licut, which,WflB.foaoa to be, both in itreDgtb and lastre, much aaperior to beat JBDportefl," , • :>•''• p laced ubont lBSOby a,mo»t iagenioas artisan, Held Boyden, whose iDTflPUdbs ind aiscoveriea fffi fball prweotlj men* lion. " ••'••••.•'••- •"-'••-.•- '-I,,.'".' In 1838 tbe town of Newark upBtained .6 eilctiKive fnoLorici of aiddiery and arnuas einplbyiog '273 b&iic|«; a capital $348,260 per Bnonoj {independent)/ of of (bo ooaob mikeii,- who; nmae: their own Buddlery and b tn^, "WH carringr factorieB, bdTing' l 770^wQriirien 'aijd, a capital ot 0202,600; produced oarriaffe* to.tbu valoo of •608,000, iDoindiaff*p>°t' ig, lamp making, eto, fberencrei8il>« factories, with 1,075 binds anil a capital of 5300,000, ^Leproduct beiaft M07.46D. Thej! efmamadT,' (MAp,'000 Wor|U", of leather Rnno»I|j.sKiDe bat manufaolorles employed 4S7Hands; capital, 81(16,000; p , ; Tiiirtoen tflnnerien, Uh 103 liandu and t78,QQ0 In enpltat, rtiturnod an annasl'^DddA' of $608,000, Tbere were also'DpnBiderabb^niaiiot nrea of mnllwble iron, h aptgs, iron and bnudaiilofR, stores and tlieet 4rcn w*rt^ «*p" inil can ait*, etc, also one n^innfftatoTy of hnrdware sad two of liatent I^atber, \ l^wae'slated that about two bUDdred thoaaam] dollars'wortll of ri B, were during ^ppally ew Vorli io two in 1870, bad 1,198 mLonfactDriog esUb- lifibmenta 'of ill kinds, wt,icli em ploy wi 17.8U ojnln ovor aixtccn, 8,833 fcmalei o t u fiflMii ye*r» of sge, and 1 yootba—«n aggregate of 22,168—who re- onived in vagm 613.037,270. Tbe BraoOnt paict for materials WHS S29.355,. 083, and tho total value of tho. product to3,008,»58—aa inoieaaeo! %2L,Zttl,t\i, ot peart; 88 par c°»t., over Uiat of X880. 189 The oity of Newark jiooe, in tbe jrwir ended June 1*1860. pto- I 2 WUl d l d j 6il In 126 eatttWUljQ)e» p fi valued a( 854,290,101, not including (lie textile iuditattiea, brewatiea, dialilletiea, ship butldiog, and Home others that obtain in tLit city. Tbeoapltal invested wa $ 846,190, sveraget pumlx>x of liands em- l 27,005, to whom were paid ii ting tliflyearfill,S97,60B. vaJa of materials used, 832,814,21^, It will he observed tbat tltese mnnufaatnrea lapported dUectly an everage of 27,006, penona—of whom 20,688 were males over atxlecn yBnra of age—and indirectly, probably more than si Not having at band tbe statistics o! each WniJuBtrj, we are able only to pre; t the following official figures: Leoib er was carHed ID 82 eatablishmentii, em* ploying 1,209 bands and ptoduoiog to the vuluo ol »8.8U0,7i2 ; wuile 27 dBtab- lepts produced tuuned leather valued at $6^845,856. empbyiBg OQ an 1,211 buiida-tbe leather prod not tunoant- to tbe large Bam of 414,646,678. Hut* nnd ct ps were made In 83 eatab- Ji furnisbiag eaiploTment to 3,107 pefsoiiB, (the average h l f b L, Btarr & Co., T. B. Katnliold k Co. Wiener & Co., and a naitber of others, . GutRUOB HABDWABB.—O. A. Look- irooi) A Co., Strioby k Ward, Orlando OreaDon, fito. LOOKS.—PhcBoix Lock Co., Qilben Look Oo., and Boroor & Oo. EDOB TOOK AJTD SAODLCHS' TOOM.— 0. S. Osbora & Co,, H. f. Oaborn, Wf Oborn & Co,, H V. Oaborn, Wf Jobuaoo, John Oliarlton (e<3g< p , ( g bring 2,8I8)tand tha value of tbi|produot 93,596.678, : EordwBre wa« manuf Fured in 29 eatnblisbmeata and files in 6; .he total product valued at 1796,881; average Dutaber of bands'employed, 501. Irod oaBhngB mi flniihings employed overage ot 854 banda in Q eetablt en'Bj tha value of whose output was $488,600. Sixteen carriage faotDries, nd two tnaripg materials for oarrieges, mjitoyed op anaverace t)i3 persons, the yeurly product vuliiod ot 8625,823. Fliifoi oblained ttom the New- to making trunks, naicbels, etc., valus D! produoi *2f138,923; in find baraeuB 888, vilno of prod act *!.- 1S7;3O4 j Inboots Hfid shoea, 1,586, pro- tlaDl9i.B80.C0i; and la' olathibg 1,488,' iroduct, «2,.0BB,lp8, Ia the fiscal jaar 1879 our total ,im- portfttiona of iron find ita manufactures i&ted to over $5,E0t.781, end ex- Iu 89,4W,49?. J Of outtery and »)I ifaciaieB of steel, our Jiqpprls were 8081,127, and our exports 84,641.019. Tbe excess of exports over imports of iron, ateel, andmanufactures thereof, ID 1879, amounted to $8,020,030. Tu show Low limited were our impor- tations in certain mauafuolurtis in tbe indicated, we preseut the fol- lowing: Gist butts and bingea, €280; bammors, aledgns. nxles, etc, 82^89; iQlltra wRre tinuntl, $1,113 ; horse shoe nflB, ftfi ; malleable irun caaLioea, $12 ; oicwe, S6,932; equarei, $16; wrougUt iron railroad chairs, fish plates, nuts titd wiishera, nil. ; wronght binges, bod tivetn, bolts, etc., $2,208 ; man- 's of iron not upecified, *l,091,- 140; c«tlc?, *1,189 88S; filea, «le iltates, *15.G2(). ENAUELED L3ATUEI1 AND MilLEABLE IlinH. To oue UIIUI, n ninKt ingCQiniis siriisno —Selli hoydea—is Hewark indebted not nly for Itia inveulioiis, bnt for dlacov- rica that led to tlie introduction of in- iistrios that now rank witli tbo most iipottaut »r that oity, m., malleable :on, cad patent or enameled or Japanu- il leatlier. Moro tlan tw«ntj years ORO, in an ia- erviow with this remarkable man, ve )litniuGil the faata ia regard to the die- by liim, after loag investigation nd experiment, of the mode of maou- atnring these two prodncts; bat, SB mr note! ifcle to it at hand, we are only A piece of jupannetJ leather, probablj bridle blind, and a bridle bit, or some irtiole of saddlery hardware, made of mneulcd oast iroo, oaine into hla pos- lesaiou and he determined, tofindoat ;be secret of tbe prodaotion. Sapposing .hat the peooUar yroperitea of malleatle iron were das to tbe kind of ore nsetl, Mr. Eojrden ywspebled unoag the mia- Dg regions of the State bringing back samples of ore.:' Being poor' and depep- deot opoa bla daily wages far eapport, he nwi&lly made those explorttlang on SaadajFS) ttnd tested' tba' ores in his kitchen,.Us wife blowing tbe betfowa. Failing ID (bis direction lie eventual); diBCovered that tbe secretfoyjo thejaa- Dealing process, and'thin discovery re- ailUed in tho weotion of a> foundry lot irodDplag : iniil{eabfe iron'cast lags, to be succeeded/by a lirge number of eetob- lisbmsnlB deroted to .saJdlery, OArris^e and UiBaellaneobi bard ware, eniployiDg thonganda of workpeople ana seryiog to largely 1 inefease:thB prosporlty of Neiittrk. Dr. Bisliop in lig exbansUve 'ark on the " History of American Mab- ifnotnree,"'makes the following refer- mces to this discovery : At tbe exhibition ot tbe Franklin In- fltitdta it.i ppilaaalpbia; October, 1828, n ^awarded to SetbBeyden, oi Newark, for an satortment of btfckleB, bits, tad other oastitgi'ot annealed oast iron,, remarkable forflmoothaesaand malleability.. . It was tbe flrat attempt in thia coonlry to anneal bast'iron for gen- e«n^porposaa.* ' "' ' •" 18JH,-Elegnnt fruit dUbei, «Hh' open lower work, cast and then rendered ma]- aablo/so as not to break", as'well as irea$t»pIoB of Napoleon «ai other iron brnamentb, were naclfi at the foanilry of Setb Suyden, in Newark, N. X, vfac isld letters'patent for the prooeia of ran dering casting! malleable. Mr. Boyden obtained lattan patent for Japanned leitbur in 1829—a atscav- efy Ibat leanUeo in a liwge md proflt- hble amnufsotnre—tho prodnot. inI860, Bmoonling to tl,797,000. ,Foittndning nntlt another isiue farther maaiian of other frrott industries of Newark, we now present the names of a fow of tbe principal firms engaged in th6 ' . . i BBAKOtfSS OF IHB 1B0H HAKC- As Malleable Iron was discovered and first produced inNewark its roannfo turd is continued by ilio following und other flrma; J# H. Biirlow &Cnndie,I>, 1 1 Lleeker k Son, anil (fecar Barnetl Ktso by tbe DaI turd * Minoben Hana ictttriag Compatiy, \*b,o aho m»kc track ifefdware. * SASDLIBT HABDVAHI.—B Hayden (the oldest), Sargeant Mtuofactoring CompaDy, a O. SLargia, Son t Co., W, tools. PICKS un> feotoriog Oo, Cciixar.—B. Heiulsob's BODS, Fur- nias, Bannisier & Sous, J. WisV Sons. SEWIMO MACOXKU.—Domeatic S. M. Oompany, STBUE EKODHW AMD H««iea &Philips, WatU, OaiapbeU k Oo., and others. yrus Currier k Sons, A. J. Dims k Bro., Seymour .fe Wliit- look, E. Gould iEberbart, and a large aniober ol others. HAT MACHTW«BT.—-George ulti. STOVES—Qreene Stove Company, OABBUOB BPBIHOS ADD AXLSB'—To Qn Spring Co,, and two other*. Tbere are also mannfadorers of iron mi br&ea biotsea, of bnse bedsteaas and many other prtiales of hardware in New- ark, lurked, when one observes On great variety of metal prodaoU, be is nvidoad of tbe truth of tbe itatemeal that the first settlers were from Oonueo- tiout, and that the munufactnrorfl of to- Jay bava loberited tua ingeuaity u s a y oribod to tho inhabitant!! of Ibut Slate, As might bo expected in a oity devoted moBt^exo'naiyely totnannfactuers, sap- porting directly or indireatly more tban one-half ot her poputalioD of 128,000 Ike principle of proteotfoa for Ainarionn it dustry 1B strongly enlertained. To rep- resent her industries in Congress a lead' ing manutnotorei 1 is usually selected, tlie present representative being H«u. Fliiu flQB JoD68t senior partner of tbe carriage bnliding firm of Phineas Jones k Oo.— B. Y., In The American Protectionist THE THREE FREE TRADERS-MR. WELLS. Tbey are tarae—two professors and one statesman—and tbey write letters to the Iowa Leader, They know all about protection; it is robbery and was in- ted by pick Tarjiin. Zt Is time our farmers should know that. They should know also that Bob Iogersoll is a pro- tectionist tbetetoie protection is tat sbominalfon in the eyes of the Lord. But what tbey should know above all thiugs is, list protection is uncomti- tntional. Dtok Tnrpln and Eobin Hood are classical characters aod belong of right to the profefiBors. Bub Iogerson and be nnooDStitutionality of protection are todern snbjectn, that a statesman alone Is qaatifled to invesilgate. Hence tbe latest oontiibullon of lbe Hon. David A. Wells to the Western organ of Hritifch itetests. To speak tbe trntb, Dick Tnrpin bod become mouotonoDH, The beat story, like the mast taeorj disli, IOWA taost of its spioe by repetition. Mr. Wells bas louts tUp waning cause of free trade an immense service by shifting his lino of argumaut from historic to legal grounds, army of quibblers will follow him ihere. The idea ol entrenching tlio principle if n "Tariff for Revenue Only"behind a certain decision rendered by tlioTJuitcd States Supreme Court, iu tbe case cf this ity of Topoka against ita bondholders, ia new, "bold and origianl. It dwarfa tlie mous effort of ita no tltor to cast odium oar protective ejetem ift tlie mintla >f religious people by stating that Bob Ingorsoll is not a free trailer. As it is not likely that many of our renders onUide of Iowa keep a file of the Dca Moinea Leader, we follow our nsaa] course of fair and courteous treat- ment:, and print in another column Mr. We!la' communication to our Western contemporary, We nek of thtini that Iboy will read it carefully, as it tony murk a new epook in tha tactics of oar opponents. It should first be obnervod that Mr. Wells does not for ft moment stop ID consider the relative merits of free trade and protection. He aaaomes, like the two professors who are associated with him in the extraordinary endeavor to break down American industry for the benefit of England, that protection is robber; } that tho revenue derived by government from duties on imports Is only a small part of what the people are made topay ; that onall goods of do- mes'Jc produotion whioli happen to be thas protected the American conHumer pay> tho Amerioan prodnaer a bounty } tbe avsty ; and that money is tbos nrbifrai ily tranflfcrred by legislation from the bunds of those who earu it,into tbe pookeU «f those wbo either do not earn it or would be better employed in other pursnits, requiring no protection. The great factor, domestic competition, (a as thoroughly Ignored by the etatcs- man as by tbe two professore. He tells tbe rarmers, for instance, that "twenty million bnsbeia of wheat hive to be specially planted, harvested nnd'. pnt " i to be 1 given to eleven Bessemer steel rail eB|al/]tsbinentB enoli and every year, in order toencble them, (o make and sell steel raits to .the people p* this oonatry fit from (20 to 93B per too more than equally good nils could be boagbt for elsewhere" if tbe dnty were removed, BoV be does not telVthexa tbut Wben those eleven steel rail establishments, born of tbo tariff, did not exist, the people of this country had to plant, barvest, and put aside an additional one " u million baiticls of whoit order to procure the same quantity ot otesl t&Us i i Eoglaoil.. Brom man, wbo negleols snch a foot, it'wera idle lo expect that be would consider for s moment* whether the abolition of the duty might not cause tbo stoppage, rain g ^ and Qua) disappearance of tbl h e eleven pp establishments, and what the effect of aaob an event taigUt baOQ the' fntare price of stee! nils. ' Like tho two Professors, Mr. Wells may bBdeaf when he does not want to hear, but be is consistent. Httviag snmed that prolection is a preminm to robbery or paaperlam—Is* othee i that OUT Bmnuf&ctari&g pppaktioa are robbers or paupers," Hviu^at the expense of the' Western farmer—be a s fur- tbermore thst theonlj argument brongbl f r d t JQitlfy its oaqtianaijce in th a oertain "inairBct ft p prospect of a oertain. di or futare pp . i jodividaal or soeietary benefit, ai a (K»mp€tMiatioQ for pteaeat penanal n- Btriotion or injury j " whorcaa this arga neat. Uowerer good it may have >MD In the jmtt, is now scarcely med. at all, for tbe simple reason that tbe benefit is no longer prospective, but real, direct and general throughout the nation, easy to compute in dollars and deals, sud so evident that those only wbo, being deaf are also blin<J> cannot reatiEe its m&gtii- tnde. Bnt Mr. Wells, ve aay, is con- slfltont; ba does not want to nee what be does not want to hoar. Therefore, without eves telling ug what he meanB byfcbatcelebrated sent* ence, "A Tariff for Kevauae Only," itbout, for instance, telling us if a daty, originally intended for Protection, aboald be repealed as soon as the commodity thus taxed begins to bepmlnoed in tin's country, «ud oonseqneotly tbreat«na to become cheaper or to give BOTQBof our people profitable employment, thereby mailing them, in Mr. Wells' opinion, robbers and paupers—ha proceeds to how that tlie brioolpte of a government instituted to sucare to its olUzeas life, liberty and tbe pursuit of bappinov, is radically opposed to the adoption of any policy tnat may in any waypwjUot them i their iadoBtrittl occupations. Uafortnnately for tbe moqmot bit argament, Mr, Wells bus himself token •good eare to demolish )fc: PirsUj, by showing (hat tbe very men wbo coo* ceived aud eatablisUd tbU republic *tra ardent protectfonisu, or, la bis own words, "that in tbe first tariff enDotmenta of the Federal Congress, which embodied fha priocfpla of protectlpo, tbopream- b\m o( the abt& openly »tat«d tm& reoog- H the nbj™t aimed at, vie., 'tbe Bnpportof the (fovernwent and the en- couragement of manufactures;"' Sao* by-ooEreaaiup, in the following terms of hitter diasppofntmant, that if mob ft oonatitntiooal question should aver be raised bysome: learned qnibbler iri the service of a foreign power no iuaicial authority could fiDd iq the preuent tariff laws a reference to their protective purpose: " Io later years Ilia :loiiee relative tp mannfBcturcs has been ibrewdly omitUid from the tariff act reambles, poBtiblj from a Buspicioa that there was a constitutional question covered up ia this matter of protective atiea, which some day wonld not be •nnd able to stand* judicial eiamina- on." It is claimed for Mr. Wells, fincc ha ande bis entrance in tbe Oobden Olob a bug of ealt, that he is most com- petent to speak ot. tho. iniquity of pro- :eclion, for be was the very parson who, 'rom 1885 to 1869, prepared areviaiou of the tariff and virtually made it tbe iniquitous piece of legislation that he nrooloims it to be. Nobody else proba- bly could rell us so well who was shrewd lough to flnggset the suppoeed omis- JD. Bat even he cannot tell, Tor the imple reason that there was no ebrewd- iess whatever abont it. A large reveane id to be provided for, aud the pooplo liversaUy demanded that it aboold be •aiaed, not only Jc the leant bnrdoneome anner, but, if possible, in accordauco ith the patriotic purpose of t i e found- of tbis republic—-Ibat iaf ia sneu a y as to afford tbem, by proieelion, meano of no developing tho natural •oaourcos of the country, that in tbe :onrae of time tho burden would bft liglit md (he nation indODflndont. The work u dono, nud done well in spite of tlio T mibtakcfl tben committed from want sufficient Pipprieiice—niifltHkcfl that o ono ia more defliroiis to see corrected are. It staudo to-day en its ranj results, not ou any preamble; aad r-e congratulate tlio ex-CommiBsicncr of t'veoiic on the part lie took in it.—Tha [merieon Protectionist. Kisses Id all Agt*. When WiHicm, ibo stout Dako ol Bar- Qfly saw his fair and haughty cousin, e Princess Matilda, riding by, Ue waa iBtontlyflmitton witb tbe pangs of love. lut Matilda, like a true woman, refused accept tho homage of the eye. When e bold -wooer rushed forvard and iussd her before the wbols tmin-rtie as won. Hutory J'Bfull of instaneea of e conquering prowess of thokins. When Walter Raleigh received back his oiled jacket from the capricions Queen, the kias implanted on tbo spat where ber foot rested caiued him the favor that reara of sighing cod demotion had niit von tbe proud and handsome Leicester. r hen tbo poor stndentin Nuremberg ell on bis knees and avowed tothe royal Princess that he had wagered witb hi* lomponiooB that she would kiss hiia in pablio place, the guerdon of bis imeritj was the presentation o[ tlm >ya] arelcheQ'B rosy lips nndtbe «maeli sounded ia tbo oars ot the whole corps alnpcflcd young reprobates. Itisde- iriving womanhood ot half its jay and ill ita. nmatery lo lemit the kiss. It )bould bo taught to boja with their first fdstol. It abatild be mode the subject * at prizes at schools. Mothers should inconrage it, daagbters should practice t—on their brothers—and no man should be considered eligible who caa- ot kin In &11 UJB moaeB lemea. The poetic sido of the qaestion has been msrely tonobed here. The practical pens up a field to 3 exhaustive for pres- bnt treatment, bnt it need only be ang- gesled that Vlsstng properly encouraged wonia be ^ means of, enforcing temper- ince, siuca neither coffw, beann ndrpep- pe.raont could diBgoiBO from a' well- grounded maiden the flavor of Bach tipple u (night have dofloed the masca- iji Tbe Offloe of Sheriff. Tho office of Sheriff will not be n a oh of a prin binafter to ihe incumbents, and in bat few of the ootmHes will the bfflceba worth the tronble and expense or gciniDg, owing to tbo reduction of I«M which will be made Vhen the j»tes- ent jnenmbents retire. ' Tbe Sheriffs thoaa t«tauia,re8oaa i to ClptnsreoeWed Ueoty-five pe/cenC leui thin their pro-" deceasors, "uid ihfi' ia-oomiag Sberifb* fees: will botnirtf'tbree and one one- tliird lesa than the tarn the present offl- oialsteoeived; TbeWoodbarr Otmttitu- tion inya : " The danger is that the effi. olency of tbe public service U eaflan- gered by ibo refusal ot oomoetent wen to nooept tbo office and the odOBeqaenk seleation of tnen who are not fitted for it. It will teaij oonipetent mob to >ay ftt they cannot afJord ti» run, wnub would leave too oftakopea for a »t of ecnniMteDU and inefficient^ Id aeraubts The lawredDdne* the fee* ought to be QDealed'to the extent Outmea Abo dk. public work shill bo properly paid, and poblio intensU not ioopardind. Be- DAQM two or tfartM u«n m*y be omrptid is nojoshfloBtian for tho pusage of « law that starves eighteen Othan,

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  • VOL. XL DOVER, M0KK1S BOUNTY, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1881. NO 37

    T H E 1 R 0 N E R A ) PASSAGE TICKETS

    The Dover Printing Company,J't/JJMsHEIW A«:» I'llOlUiiTOJIS.

    Office oil MwriB Straet uunr Black well.

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    ESTABLISHED IN 1851.UIIB DltUas and MKDIOINEH, PAINTH,

    Oilg, tilaHB, ilniHlicH, Î Mfiw[ by J^MEW k. GOODAI.E, tb

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    . J OIIW P . S T l C K k B ,

    Counsellor at LawAND

    BIASTBH IN CHASCEBV,R O C K A W A Y , N . ,7.

    R f-AJiSION HOUSE,

    CoTiicr ot Jttv\xftA\ nnfl Hum* Bis.

    DOVER, N. J.

    1. B. JOLLEY, Proprietor.flureua mill UnrrlngcE to Let.

    L. C. BIERWIRTH,1NALYTIOAL CHEMIST

    DOVER, N. J.

    4X4175ES o/ till DESCRIPTIONS

    OF ORES AND MINERALS.

    (~* KO. 0. CUMMINS, M. D.,

    G E N E H A I J PRACTITIONER

    AND SFECIAUHT IN THE TREATMENT

    OF MALAIUAI, DJ3EASEI!.

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    SHAVING AND HAIR CUTTING

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    Cor. Blackwell and suisex Sts.DOVER. N- J.

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    Agents for rairlanks' Scales andTer-

    VOORHEES BROTHERS,MOKRISTOWN,

    \m mtum,'̂ CABBIAaK MAKERS1, BLACK-

    SMITHS' CONTRACTORS AND MIN-ING s u p p u s a , ' '

    Aurlcnltnr* Implomcnti, Sued*, Fertilisers,&a raicti, Oili, GIASK, cto.

    WALTER A. WOOD'S Colebrated

    M0W8B8 and BBATESS.OXOSOI X. TOOKBXXS. J U E Q k , TDOBSZZS,

    borrlatoiTD. Deo- lfith. 1818.

    Morris Oounty Surrogate's Office.JOLV Qtli. 1881.

    I c the matter of Jamea H. NciiRhbuur, EIPCD-tor ur Willtom II. UFerie, deoomeA.Hnrrngntn'i order tn limit creditorii.

    O ft anpliCBtlon lit ths sbovi" n«ntt'j Eicca-tor. it in onlertil by tlm .Snrrngiiet h t !d Executor ftiva public notice to

    f iis!d ntct-rtenl to

    moutha from tliU date, br lettinp up * cop;of tliJo order, within Iwfoty dayi liercnfli-r, inflit of tlie nut at mjliite places la the Counly of" '• for twit months, *nd »!io within the

    IntT tt»s

    EIU, oh

    !i itBtW titenT t»s» y • . d r i Rtho IRON E I U , one (if lit* n en R pap ereHUtc, ror the nine apace or time (ttio Hurrogito jadslne »•» rnrthcr notice to lie nun 10cBiarj); and ll »nj r red I tor B>iaU ni>gIecU<eiliibit liis (ir her dabt, tlonimJ »ncf claimwitbin tlio Mid porioil nrniao mmitb". iiobticnotice IKJIBS giTcn • • *ff>rpsaiJ, (inch crtfilitotah ill ho tar*fer icbarroA nl bm or h-» »ctioBthprefcif agtinit the imid Eioculor.

    A trne taipj from tlie roinntts.S3-J0w OHAHI^BA.GlTiLEN, BurroRato.

    SHERIFF'S SALE!

    lorrit-

    In'OlitneflryrtfNew Jenej—Fi. fi. for P»le _-- mottRifted premliei, wherein Biitnfy II.

    •nd Elimbfllh Pelme»rbU , — -.Wbiilwk, Mary Wbillru* tnii J*m

    B? wltint of tbo above tttitnl writ or flcnhclw In ID? bands, I iball expose fo

    town, N. J,, on'MONDAY, UJC 6tli Azy ot September naxt,

    A. D. 1881, between tho hour* orIII M. ind Io'clock P M.. that if to it? at 2 o'clock lo thi»florn«tt» of nid flv.iil 'ih»l Ittclct pwwlor land «Itnitfl. lyinc nod belDR ID Ho TownOf Dow, In Ibft Caaaij nf Murri« and SUto ofNo» JerioJ, bqnnded wd described tn followi

    Being tb« Rime tot of land and prtmlw* In*m i coavejed to iilil Thomas PIIIBIOM br deedfrfm Taraci A. floodale suit wife, dated Aug.23d, l«7li aDdjbaripi miHht north • "£ prHmibi utreel, atlfib northeast eortrtr or Cmtr»J anniw, rod runs (l)iD• nurlberij omni•.IOOR llie nf*t Hoe of Bnuei «tt««t,nuy (Ml•thenta (1) In & weilwlj aonrw pi Mil U -willCeotral ar*DM. one hnndroJ fMl! thstiM (8)in a Hntharlr coarse parallel witb Sussex

    • -jtlhaporUillQO L-MlMttottw

    ORAM, HANCE * Co.'s STORE,PUJIT GUAM, N. J.

    FUJI Rl| thfi prti.ripst lirrs t,f Htf-am«ltii>afr.jiu Ntw ¥(nrk tu Livurji««l at UtWKtiTIUTEH. AIMII UKAI-THOriQIU-AT UI1ITAIMANH IKEI,AN1>. ' I6-|

    McCAINSWLLE HUTKLl

    W E V0ETMAK, Prop'r.A Well kt>J)t lintnl With

    Hot Mr Furnaces

    UOOK, PAliLOK, llJJATINO

    STOYES, RANG-ES,

    KEROSENE Oil.,LA.NTEHNS AND

    111UTTANIA WARE,

    TIN & JAPAN WARE,JIT UAN3, 4 a ,

    TIN HOOFING,EAVKa O

    l)];ilH, „,)(! BM k l m b-in the h«»t mannerci. IliK|iri.lljrJw« i

    pper loaJ unJ pavioUUIU.

    Ka, THOU0H3,

    tJ'Miuir in mv liand s i tilt; H l t

    DAIRY BUTTEU,

    IIS 8. wtioli'Bsle Irailc nnly. I *m alw.i.vfl prp[>iiri'

    to BITPLY STOUEfJ with tlic «EHTGOODH at t!io

    LOWEST MARKET PRICES.

    3OOD DUTTKll MAKICIW, I luFAHMUlt.H TtlODUCE. (Jnl,,

    it your Kij:nlt' fruutj mid (-noil ttt

    , Jr.,BLAIHSTOWN, N. J .

    '• O. BOX, 23. 3-tf

    W. S. BABBITT.This iveolt wo propose to show

    'ou an cxcoptionally olieap assort-nent ol LAWKS. TOU will find in

    nir collection tho principal Amer-ean bi-antls represented togethervith a fow of tlio foreign manufac-turers. Tlio American goods lookust os well na those imported, and

    about one-third as expaumve.We will Bond yon eamples to tryif yon send us word.

    We have juBt purchased a lot ofDMswGooDacollod NUN'S YEIL-

    G. This is supposed, originally,bo an ALir-woDL FABIUO, and is

    •y rich in appearance. It is lightin weight and made in tuary beau-tiful colors find shades. Tlio price>f this particular lot, to which wolow refer, is thirty-five cents for;he black and forty for any color,

    idontical goods Bell for iiffcylentsinthocity. Send for samples.

    A new nrticlo lias lately made itsappearance in BLACK GOODS ; mac-

    turers are very entorjiriRing,continually inventing new fabrics.This, which we now refer to, iscalled TRICOTINE, an indescriba-ble material, worth $1.25 ft yard'or tlifi best. Ask to fieo it when•ou are in or send to us for a saui-)le if you cannot get in. Of theihcapcr grades of DRESS GOODS IVC

    havo an unusually large assort-ment, and we propose to sell themto you as cheap as the lowest.

    W. S. BABBITT,

    N?« S . Jensen,CARPET WEAVER

    Df TEE OLD l'RESIlYTEHIAN OHUltCIt,

    DOTEltN. J.

    Carpet Wwring, in nil widthi, dona initat-clftiiB BtyJe at lowest mttjs. T ie boutiud of wkrp cu\y Tia^d. NPW carpnU or>

    Bale. ITIO liiglieiit prinn pnid iorl f i t

    DdfOItaken

    I^OTHES OVKI) and Ctennedin good Btyle.

    OTPF. Ma? 25lli. 1680. liftiT

    PAUL 0 . BOTTICHER,

    751 BROAD Si. NEWARK, N. i.

    PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS prepared

    tn3 tlio ODUtrpotiin

    Notice of Settlement

    Notice U hereby r ing that the looaqota nlIhe ,ub«tiW,

    ; ,Mo[^i--«trU pmdffjgto >»•

    if ill be indited mi il«l«l by the SarrantAiand reporleil ror ullleinent lo thn Orptin*1," — t (irthtCamty atMorrii, as UambftM

    DiteJ July Kth, 1881%BRS..;84r9w

    HAVE

    EVER KNOWN

    mhta ibew orjpna I N In foodyott not flnd their nnosnar e*iHllhT Fuler'tCKDRn Tonic_. _ — important oixmni,

    rMr tnt"ofdespi

    CMILLEUPLOW,BEST PLOW IN THE MARKET.Hiv4iv*,l (lr,(( i,i..|i>itnn el N. J. Ufa!" Fair,

    W*vfiiv, luai (all- Ovw lOfl tuliS bj «* tasv>iar. ^d,,] fufciu-uUr,

    VO(MtllEKS UU0THEU8,MORRIS TOWN, K. J.

    Agricultural Implements, Seeds,

    Furfcilizers, otc.JdcEm VAN InvKK. TrHVfi.iiij; Afi'.'Ht.

    U t P u W 1 H 1 M

    BEEMER & PALMER

    6YM/., WOOD,MASOiVS' MATERIAIS.

    BLUE STONE, FEnTiliZERS

    ESTABLISHED 1847.

    LI1IE, CEMENT,

    CALCINED I'LABTEE,tllUtsT BIUCS,

    FlIiE LJIJIY, FIRE UjliCE,

    L A O STOISKS O U H B l M t i ,

    UI'.LLAIt srEPP.UOriNG, BILLS, LISTEIJ*LtiV) CIISTEIIN KECH.8,

    WHANN'S PHOSPHATE,

    itiic DiiHt̂ (i 'uinn. I'oiiiJrelt

    LAUD PLASTER, rfe.

    WOOD sawed in stove lengths.

    STOVE, EGO, CIIESTMJT.Orilf-r* jn»j lie mldrfiiBfcl tbniugMlie Pont

    •fticc Lork Dm 2ft, . ) r loft ol A. ike iur rWnki

    I lil»ekwcl! Ht., n r i t flunsci, or «t (tic. yn.ul.

    HLACKHMITH'H COA.LoountmiM.voii liaii.l.

    JOS. YORK'S

    Till: OLD \_M) Kl'LIAHlj:

    BOOT AND SHOE DEALERS!Tile i(;pnlntiiou we h»ve eurnei] for our goodB i a

    DUKAIUL1TY OF WE.WI,EXCElLKNt'E OF QUALITY,

    ELI:(JAN(;K OF FINISH,

    YAUIETY OF STYLES AND

    11EAS0NABLE PRICES

    have extended to almost every house andhamlet in tlie county.

    For thirty-four years our trade has steadilyincreased until now few retail dealers in theState sell the same amount of goods, a suffi-cient guarantee in itself t ha t our customersappreciate the care we exercise in selectingstylish and durable goods and the prices theyhave always been able to procure them a tCall on us if you want a GOOD article a t aLOW price. We •will give you by far thelargest stock to select from and will certainlysave you money.

    ft Ac IIEAGAN,OPP. D., L. & W. DEPOT, DOVER, N. J.

    iron THK Iftox ZBA.)TUB I^MNT B1DK,

    flf nhjX D1STOK.

    Tbon(h ou th« desert doomod to rett,Or oo the lufle sod roltlORdeup,

    •Tlilhftwio bear with patleDibreiBt-A bopefnl heart't la Uilno to k»|>.

    Lot not miifortaoe for thy gin, :

    POETIC,

    WAR ON HIGH PRICES1IN 1\'ATC1U-HAM) IiOGtllK JillCJTIiniK'yjLYEIt-ri.ATED WAUK AN BOLD Bi

    VW. IA HOAGLAKB,BOVKIt, MOltiUS COIIJ\TY,N. J.

    ^ for tho Ainprimi W.IMIL.M, or W.Utliain, fit.iaRiicljiwoHa ; I D E P 1irlaalkH, Illiiinh, ami lMcklljnl W«tthiu «0W nl ».in« jotlliolio

    0 TO JOS. YONK'H FOI1 PAHI.OIt ANDI X DISINtl ROOM ANDOPFICIiMTOVEK.tt'OTYA OF ALT. K1NOH.

    OKKliy, r.LAHS-WAHF AND CHINA.

    Joseph York,MOimiHTOWN. N. J

    The New Empire

    lo t -Ai *.URN & Iliisc-burn-

    iiifi: C00M112 StOTo.

    'HE BEST BAKING BTOVE IN THE W0EL1

    OR SUMMER & WINTER USE.Alto, i ctiolca stock o/

    Hardware, Cutlery,llaHfl, Woodeu, Copper, VMa and Japsmied

    TINWARE.

    THE DOVER LUMBER CO.offors to buildurs tlio best opportunitieB in iho pureliUBB ol LUMBER

    of every grade and description including LOW PRICES and the great

    advantage of having

    Immber Worked to Orderby machinery at tho place whero it is purchased, greatly lessening tlie

    coBt of building by tha great Baviag in manual labor. Our

    stock always includes

    Sash, Blinds, Doors, Mouldingsnnd LUMBER ol every description, and eBpeoial pftiua are to

    to give satisfaction in every particular.

    looting, Plumbing and JobWQrkiicoiupltjr»ttcn«lfnl to.

    iJi'* Scales at Mauufnc-turer's prices;

    Cu»i>cr, Drasi, Ltud, lUci »E(?g tkkeu in oicliinct-for Rf'oOi.

    lUtDEN A RONNELT,.,uffloturors cf BUNNEIiL'S SELF-

    tt WIRE 8PBINO HED BOT-

    . Mwoh 1. IBIS.

    MORRIS COUNTY

    MACHINE & IRON Co.

    DOVER. N. J.

    if imoTtnsiia ot

    STEAM ENGINES,

    TIIKIIl CELEBOATED

    AIR COMPRESSORS,

    IRON and BKA89 CASTINGS,

    F089ING of aU DE8OHIPTION8.

    TtT T. LKIKHIT,

    'Counsellor at Law,AND MASTER IN 0HAN0ERT,

    rr t* WiaoW i i * CUtftUOB WOOD !W<

    '• RICHARDS A OO.̂ B PTOHB.' '

    rtt

    M9008SO 00 'aiJM '-

    31)00 ;

    •as:1TC0 i

    w' bent Iriplo pkted lea kuivefl $1 fiO per down ; Q\ovpmt& ibesi" ' * ' " " Hert forts. (lippeiJ) SO 00; fancy,0; fancy,

    0; tripleG. 0, P.,

    t s w«ch

    " l ^ ' V . JJtoth . .eplaled tL-B^HimiH. (tifijwti) $4 ; faucy, $ i fiO; desHd . . . „ - . . ,5 ; moiliiKi. forks *" HO ; tipped, $8 ; huudxonie jlve-bottle ouloni,•il o ke biwki'tN. 51 JO. Any jicrson whhhiR imy oi t\me UOOHBI will ___pfirminhii'ii io cxniuiui) tlioin btfmo paving ; or any person wishing to t'nkb a w«ch,

    i de|ic!'iiiii(j the noouiit in I he NutiotiFil TFiiios Hunk, cttD carry tbB same fnr onpIIteBraiI»vtlt)-«b)a for mm who Bra tronbled with «MTO0»WHJUJCM, Nljlil HweoU. 4 c In mcinl boxet.• t nOcen iP i^Mbr i a t dlf«1»tt. Of MSt by

    CARTER MEDICINE CO. ,Mow York Oity*

    McKinnon Bros.JUNOTtCtUBXHB' CJ1

    Axes and Edge Tools,ROOKAWAY, N. J!

    ItHntitgheen rojiorted th»-t Uil* old-eliahed and woll-knowc firm t in gona out ofbi a Uke thla mema orinrormlng ttie

    b ) t h We kre ntHkre ntHj otbn

    bnaiDCM, wa Uke thla mema orinrorpublic that itncb )• not the caee. Wto btiklnntB, *»TO no coBoection witb an j otflroi irhatcTor, and iliill ccoliQtie to make omwell-known cooda wllli ares tor care tLaa eta.iMoatBoda b«t.vee)i tb,ea and ibe sao

    fe*j drift avajr era l e gcfc« down. 'The a»y wliose dawning i« ao dim,Hutds gladuca> •«»In store ror lilnWUo works and vaiti till c*tntlde 'And luok'i toward the aunnjraidc. '

    When wtldj tonndo-ilrfTen ilormHid brought tho migbty okit to prDOufl,

    The wee btrd for his llttls formA reruge in tbe foreit round.

    Lst fleaion calmly riew tlie t*yWiiose thtiDden dimmed not lOBtlnol'l eye |Iu tlie Gud of tlie storms confideAnt) tarn to lbe oheety, sunny iid«. ">

    IK FAU«, ., , ' \

    Wboo you are doifl kome day, my daar,QiiHo doad, sod andor (trouuet,

    WU-ire you wilt never s w o t l e w •A. summer sight or soEdd.

    What chall bf coma cf JOB to d « l b ,WUen iJlooc mng» tojot t ; •,

    Are allont B« LIIQ bird wboie b r» th

    HUB RODS the inmtnar tbroneh f; :

    I wonder will you ever W i WAnd with Ured erciUgaiti '

    Llvo lor yuur old lira's little aikloninl timostliat mailo " nt one town called Newnrk,"

    ns-ieil tbo cider of Now Engkrid.Tlio oarlj settlers were, however, mi-

    illiug to coufiue Uicir muimfuuturea t«flour, beer and cider, for early reconia

    idicato that about tlio jeur 1075 theropnrforR of E:ist. Jprsoy invileil tao*Unniea to sotllc iu Ncnnrk, Betting apart3 the flint ot every Inulo v/ho wonltl re-ide tbere n lot of laud us p gift. Now

    ilint its boot and short (radii ia to oil en-it omy bu interesting to know thnt

    ta QiBt Bboemftiier was Samuel Waite-id, wlio cumo from Elizubctbtown,

    about tbo year 1676. E B was "for-mally admitted ii member of tlie com-luaity on condition of bis supplying ilrilh HIOCS." Leather, so impcirtont airoduct now, wne also an eiirljiaclaatry.'lit! first tnunery in ibo town was ea-ahliiiticd in 1098, Hml SOOD after leatherrnsmaclcin conoid em bio qaanlitica for(iiuuslic «en and esputtatioa. Iron oreita, et an early period, brought over tbe

    Onmga mouatains ID leather bugs, onpnek boraea, to Newark, but 'whethersmelted there or clsenliete wa hive nodata to determine. An earl j as 1683Newark bad a population of 600, and

    ibctbtown, the Beat of govetBtneiit,700, ' , "- '' •"' •• -, ' ; : . •

    It is not proposed, boweier; to showtlio iDtrodaoIioD or growth of industriesdaring the eighteenth oeatury'-tbe?WDT6 few in unmbfer and -Hmited in ex*tent.. • . " ' , •

    In 1816 v, tnatmfaeloter of coacU lacein Nuwurk employed abont 20 hands,

    obtained MB flora allk from x of liands em-

    l 27,005, to whom were paid iit ing tliflyearfill,S97,60B. vaJa

    of materials used, 832,814,21^, It willhe observed tbat tltese mnnufaatnrealapported dUectly an everage of 27,006,

    penona—of whom 20,688 were malesover atxlecn yBnra of age—and indirectly,probably more than si

    Not having at band tbe statistics o!each WniJuBtrj, we are able only to pre;

    t the following official figures: Leoiber was carHed ID 82 eatablishmentii, em*ploying 1,209 bands and ptoduoiog tothe vuluo o l »8.8U0,7i2 ; wuile 27 dBtab-lepts produced tuuned leather valued

    at $6^845,856. empbyiBg OQ an1,211 buiida-tbe leather prod not tunoant-

    to tbe large Bam of 414,646,678.Hut* nnd ct ps were made In 83 eatab-Ji furnisbiag eaiploTment to

    3,107 pefsoiiB, (the averageh l f b

    L, Btarr & Co., T. B. Katnliold k Co.Wiener & Co., and a naitber of others,

    . GutRUOB HABDWABB.—O. A. Look-irooi) A Co., Strioby k Ward, OrlandoOreaDon, fito.

    LOOKS.—PhcBoix Lock Co., QilbenLook Oo., and Boroor & Oo.

    EDOB TOOK AJTD SAODLCHS' TOOM.—

    0. S. Osbora & Co,, H. f. Oaborn, WfOborn & Co,, H V. Oaborn, WfJobuaoo, John Oliarlton (e foundry lot

    irodDplag:iniil{eabfe iron'cast lags, to besucceeded/by a lirge number of eetob-lisbmsnlB deroted to .saJdlery, OArris^eand UiBaellaneobi bard ware, eniployiDgthonganda of workpeople ana seryiog

    to largely1 inefease:thB prosporlty ofNeiittrk. Dr. Bisliop in lig exbansUve

    'ark on the " History of American Mab-ifnotnree,"'makes the following refer-mces to this discovery :

    At tbe exhibition ot tbe Franklin In-fltitdta it.i ppilaaalpbia; October, 1828, n

    ^awarded to SetbBeyden,oi Newark, for an satortment of btfckleB,bits, tad other oastitgi'ot annealed oastiron,, remarkable for flmoothaesa andmalleability.. . It was tbe flrat attempt inthia coonlry to anneal bast'iron for gen-e«n^porposaa.* ' "' ' •"

    18JH,-Elegnnt fruit dUbei, «Hh' openlower work, cast and then rendered ma]-aablo/so as not to break", as'well asirea$t»pIoB of Napoleon «ai other iron

    brnamentb, were naclfi at the foanilry ofSetb Suyden, in Newark, N. X , vfac

    isld letters'patent for the prooeia of randering casting! malleable.

    Mr. Boyden obtained lattan patentfor Japanned leitbur in 1829—a atscav-efy Ibat leanUeo in a liwge md proflt-hble amnufsotnre—tho prodnot. in I860,Bmoonling to tl,797,000.

    ,Foittndning nntlt another isiue farthermaaiian of other frrott industries ofNewark, we now present the names of afow of tbe principal firms engaged inth6 ' . . i

    BBAKOtfSS OF IHB 1B0H HAKC-

    As Malleable Iron was discovered andfirst produced in Newark its roannfoturd is continued by ilio following undother flrma; J# H. Biirlow &Cnndie,I>,1 1 Lleeker k Son, anil (fecar BarnetlKtso by tbe Da I turd * Minoben Hana

    ictttriag Compatiy, \*b,o aho m»kc track

    ifefdware. *

    SASDLIBT HABDVAHI.—B Hayden

    (the oldest), Sargeant MtuofactoringCompaDy, a O. SLargia, Son t Co., W,

    tools.PICKS un>

    feotoriog Oo,Cciixar.—B. Heiulsob's BODS, Fur-

    nias, Bannisier & Sous, J. WisV Sons.SEWIMO MACOXKU.—Domeatic S. M.

    Oompany,STBUE EKODHW AMD

    H««iea & Phi l ips , WatU, OaiapbeU kOo., and others.

    yrus Currier k Sons,A. J. Dims k Bro., Seymour .fe Wliit-look, E . Gould iEberbart, and a largeaniober ol others.

    HAT MACHTW«BT.—-Georgeulti.STOVES—Qreene Stove Company,OABBUOB BPBIHOS ADD AXLSB'—ToQn Spring Co,, and two other*.Tbere are also mannfadorers of iron

    mi br&ea biotsea, of bnse bedsteaas andmany other prtiales of hardware in New-ark, lurked, when one observes Ongreat variety of metal prodaoU, be is

    nvidoad of tbe truth of tbe itatemealthat the first settlers were from Oonueo-tiout, and that the munufactnrorfl of to-Jay bava loberited tua ingeuaity u s a y

    oribod to tho inhabitant!! of Ibut Slate,As might bo expected in a oity devotedmoBt^exo'naiyely totnannfactuers, sap-

    porting directly or indireatly more tbanone-half ot her poputalioD of 128,000 Ikeprinciple of proteotfoa for Ainarionn itdustry 1B strongly enlertained. To rep-resent her industries in Congress a lead'ing manutnotorei1 is usually selected, tliepresent representative being H«u. FliiuflQB JoD68t senior partner of tbe carriagebnliding firm of Phineas Jones k Oo.—B. Y., In The American Protectionist

    THE THREE FREE TRADERS-MR.WELLS.

    Tbey are tarae—two professors andone statesman—and tbey write letters tothe Iowa Leader, They know all aboutprotection; i t is robbery and was in-

    ted by pick Tarjiin. Zt Is time ourfarmers should know that. They shouldknow also that Bob Iogersoll is a pro-tectionist • tbetetoie protection is tatsbominalfon in the eyes of the Lord.But what tbey should know above allthiugs is, l i s t protection is uncomti-tntional.

    Dtok Tnrpln and Eobin Hood areclassical characters aod belong of rightto the profefiBors. Bub Iogerson andbe nnooDStitutionality of protection aretodern snbjectn, that a statesman alone

    Is qaatifled to invesilgate. Hence tbelatest oontiibullon of lbe Hon. DavidA. Wells to the Western organ of Hritifch

    itetests.

    To speak tbe trntb, Dick Tnrpin bodbecome mouotonoDH, The beat story,like the mast taeorj disli, IOWA taost ofits spioe by repetition. Mr. Wells baslouts tUp waning cause of free trade animmense service by shifting his lino ofargumaut from historic to legal grounds,

    army of quibblers will follow himihere.

    The idea ol entrenching tlio principle

    if n "Tariff for Revenue Only"behinda certain decision rendered by tlioTJuitcdStates Supreme Court, iu tbe case cf this

    ity of Topoka against ita bondholders,ia new, "bold and origianl. I t dwarfa tlie

    mous effort of ita no tltor to cast odiumoar protective ejetem ift tlie mintla

    >f religious people by stating that BobIngorsoll is not a free trailer.

    As it is not likely that many of ourrenders onUide of Iowa keep a file ofthe Dca Moinea Leader, we follow ournsaa] course of fair and courteous treat-ment:, and print in another column Mr.We!la' communication to our Westerncontemporary, We nek of thtini thatIboy will read it carefully, as it tonymurk a new epook in tha tactics of oaropponents.

    I t should first be obnervod that Mr.Wells does not for ft moment stop IDconsider the relative merits of free tradeand protection. He aaaomes, like thetwo professors who are associated withhim in the extraordinary endeavor tobreak down American industry for thebenefit of England, that protection isrobber; } that tho revenue derived bygovernment from duties on imports Isonly a small part of what the people aremade to pay ; that on all goods of do-mes'Jc produotion whioli happen to bethas protected the American conHumerpay> tho Amerioan prodnaer a bounty

    } tbe avsty ; and that money istbos nrbifrai ily tranflfcrred by legislationfrom the bunds of those who earu it,intotbe pookeU «f those wbo either do notearn it or would be better employed inother pursnits, requiring no protection.The great factor, domestic competition,(a as thoroughly Ignored by the etatcs-man as by tbe two professore. He tellstbe rarmers, for instance, that " twen tymillion bnsbeia of wheat h ive to bespecially planted, harvested nnd'. pnt

    " i to be1 given to eleven Bessemersteel rail eB|al/]tsbinentB enoli and everyyear, in order to encble them, (o makeand sell steel raits to .the people p* thisoonatry fit from (20 to 93B per too morethan equally good n i l s could be boagbtfor elsewhere" if tbe dnty were removed,BoV be does not telVthexa tbut Wbenthose eleven steel rail establishments,born of tbo tariff, did not exist, thepeople of this country had to plant,barvest, and put aside an additional one

    " u million baiticls of whoitorder to procure the same quantity ototesl t&Us i i Eoglaoil. . Bromman, wbo negleols snch a foot, it'weraidle lo expect that be would consider fors moment* whether the abolition of theduty might not cause tbo stoppage, raing ^and Qua) disappearance of

    tbl h

    e elevenppestablishments, and what the effect ofaaob an event taigUt ba OQ the' fntareprice of stee! n i l s . '

    Like tho two Professors, Mr. Wellsmay bB deaf when he does not want tohear, but be is consistent. Httviagsnmed that prolection is a preminm torobbery or paaperlam—Is* othee ithat OUT Bmnuf&ctari&g pppaktioa arerobbers or paupers," Hviu^at the expense

    of the' Western farmer—be a s fur-tbermore thst theonlj argument brongblf r d t JQitlfy its oaqtianaijce in th

    a oertain "inairBct f tp

    prospect of a oertain.di

    or futarepp . ijodividaal or soeietary benefit, a i a(K»mp€tMiatioQ for pteaeat penanal n -Btriotion or injury j " whorcaa this arganeat . Uowerer good it may have > M D

    In the jmtt, is now scarcely med. at all,for tbe simple reason that tbe benefit isno longer prospective, but real, directand general throughout the nation, easyto compute in dollars and deals, sud soevident that those only wbo, being deafare also blin cannot reatiEe its m&gtii-tnde. Bnt Mr. Wells, ve aay, is con-slfltont; ba does not want to nee what bedoes not want to hoar.

    Therefore, without eves telling ugwhat he meanB by fcbat celebrated sent*ence, "A Tariff for Kevauae Only,"

    itbout, for instance, telling us if a daty,originally intended for Protection, aboaldbe repealed as soon as the commoditythus taxed begins to bepmlnoed in tin'scountry, «ud oonseqneotly tbreat«na tobecome cheaper or to give BOTQB of ourpeople profitable employment, therebymailing them, in Mr. Wells' opinion,robbers and paupers—ha proceeds tohow that tlie brioolpte of a government

    instituted to sucare to its olUzeas life,liberty and tbe pursuit of bappinov, isradically opposed to the adoption of anypolicy tnat may in any waypwjUot them

    i their iadoBtrittl occupations.Uafortnnately for tbe moqmot bit

    argament, Mr, Wells bus himself token•good eare to demolish )fc: PirsUj, byshowing (hat tbe very men wbo coo*ceived aud eatablisUd tbU republic *traardent protectfonisu, or, la bis ownwords, "that in tbe first tariff enDotmentaof the Federal Congress, which embodiedfha priocfpla of protectlpo, tbopream-b\m o( the abt& openly »tat«d tm& reoog-

    H the nbj™t aimed at, vie., ' tbeBnpportof the (fovernwent and the en-couragement of manufactures;"' Sao*

    by-ooEreaaiup, in the followingterms of hitter diasppofntmant, that ifmob ft oonatitntiooal question shouldaver be raised by some: learned qnibbleriri the service of a foreign power noiuaicial authority could fiDd iq thepreuent tariff laws a reference to theirprotective purpose: " Io later years Ilia:loiiee relative tp mannfBcturcs has beenibrewdly omitUid from the tariff actreambles, poBtiblj from a Buspicioa

    that there was a constitutional questioncovered up ia this matter of protective

    atiea, which some day wonld not be•nnd able to stand* judicial eiamina-on."

    It is claimed for Mr. Wells, fincc haande bis entrance in tbe Oobden Olob

    a bug of ealt, that he is most com-petent to speak ot. tho. iniquity of pro-:eclion, for be was the very parson who,'rom 1885 to 1869, prepared areviaiou ofthe tariff and virtually made it tbeiniquitous piece of legislation that henrooloims it to be. Nobody else proba-bly could rell us so well who was shrewd

    lough to flnggset the suppoeed omis-JD. Bat even he cannot tell, Tor the

    imple reason that there was no ebrewd-iess whatever abont it. A large reveane

    id to be provided for, aud the pooploliversaUy demanded that it aboold be

    •aiaed, not only Jc the leant bnrdoneomeanner, but, if possible, in accordaucoith the patriotic purpose of t i e found-

    of tbis republic—-Ibat iaf ia sneu ay as to afford tbem, by proieelion,meano of no developing tho natural

    •oaourcos of the country, that in tbe:onrae of time tho burden would bft liglitmd (he nation indODflndont. The work

    u dono, nud done well in spite of tlioT mibtakcfl tben committed from wantsufficient Pipprieiice—niifltHkcfl that

    o ono ia more defliroiis to see correctedare. I t staudo to-day en its

    ranj results, not ou any preamble; aadr-e congratulate tlio ex-CommiBsicncr oft'veoiic on the part lie took in it.—Tha

    [merieon Protectionist.

    Kisses Id all Agt*.

    When WiHicm, ibo stout Dako ol Bar-Qfly saw his fair and haughty cousin,

    e Princess Matilda, riding by, Ue waaiBtontlyflmitton witb tbe pangs of love.lut Matilda, like a true woman, refused

    accept tho homage of the eye. Whene bold -wooer rushed forvard and

    iussd her before the wbols tmin-rtieas won. Hutory J'B full of instaneea ofe conquering prowess of tho kins.

    When Walter Raleigh received back hisoiled jacket from the capricions Queen,

    the kias implanted on tbo spat whereber foot rested caiued him the favor thatreara of sighing cod demotion had niitvon tbe proud and handsome Leicester.

    rhen tbo poor stndentin Nurembergell on bis knees and avowed to the royalPrincess that he had wagered witb hi*lomponiooB that she would kiss hiia in

    pablio place, the guerdon of bis

    imeritj was the presentation o[ tlm>ya] arelcheQ'B rosy lips nndtbe «maelisounded ia tbo oars ot the whole corpsalnpcflcd young reprobates. I t i sde -

    iriving womanhood ot half its jay andill ita. nmatery lo lemit the kiss. I t)bould bo taught to boja with their firstfdstol. It abatild be mode the subject *at prizes at schools. Mothers shouldinconrage it, daagbters should practice

    t—on their brothers—and no manshould be considered eligible who caa-

    ot kin In &11 UJB moaeB lemea. Thepoetic sido of the qaestion has beenmsrely tonobed here. The practical

    pens up a field to 3 exhaustive for pres-bnt treatment, bnt it need only be ang-gesled that Vlsstng properly encouragedwonia be ̂ means of, enforcing temper-ince, siuca neither coffw, beann ndrpep-pe.raont could diBgoiBO from a' well-grounded maiden the flavor of Bachtipple u (night have dofloed the masca-

    i j i

    Tbe Offloe of Sheriff.

    Tho office of Sheriff will not be n a o hof a prin binafter to ihe incumbents,and in bat few of the ootmHes will thebfflceba worth the tronble and expenseor gciniDg, owing to tbo reduction ofI«M which will be made Vhen the j»tes-ent jnenmbents retire. ' Tbe Sheriffsthoaa t«tauia,re8oaaito ClptnsreoeWedUeoty-five pe/cenC leui thin their pro-"deceasors, "uid ihfi' ia-oomiag Sberifb*fees: will botnirtf'tbree and one one-tliird lesa than the tarn the present offl-oialsteoeived; TbeWoodbarr Otmttitu-tion inya : " The danger is that the effi.olency of tbe public service U eaflan-gered by ibo refusal ot oomoetent wento nooept tbo office and the odOBeqaenkseleation of tnen who are not fitted forit. It will teaij oonipetent mob to >ay

    ftt they cannot afJord ti» run, wnubwould leave too oftakopea for a » t of

    ecnniMteDU and inefficient^ Id aeraubtsThe law redDdne* the fee* ought to be

    QDealed'to the extent Outmea Abo dk.public work shill bo properly paid, andpoblio intensU not ioopardind. Be-DAQM two or tfartM u « n m*y be omrptidis no joshfloBtian for tho pusage of «law that starves eighteen Othan,

  • The Dover Printing: Company,

    .Saiurday, Ans. 20th, 1881.

    Since tlio operation was performed 01

    president a woefc BEO lart Monday Ms con-

    dition ha* not been aa favorable as it W M

    previous to tlinl time, and more or leas

    utmuty ) I M csi=Uid at Washington tho pas

    •wet-k. Tlieie oat not been a dnj since that

    time but tlid Frftaiilant'B fever and temper,

    oture lias reached over 100. < >a Stmda;

    there wa* utill niorw uuiavnrabHi clmngae in

    tbtiliiilidoi'HuoiiditiuD and au MvaUy tbe

    physicians were alarmed. On (Sunday the

    putinuia Blomaob became very irritable

    liocauld nol retain any food taken. His

    fever was very high during tha day running

    up to W4 and luS, witb a temperature of

    1(10.8. H e w u very r»Ues8 durfug tbe

    night nurl did not ideep any until after

    o'clock, When he awoke Monday morali

    hi* fever bad not SUIKIIIH], wtauaiug at 10fi,

    with a temperature of OH. At noon it

    U S and at 6 o'clock Monday evening

    Daring tbe afternoon be Totalled twveral

    times, and wan in a Yor/weak condition.

    Atouday ni^ut there watt (ho tfraveBt appro

    lieusion Cull no the rinrt of tboeo in attond-

    nut* at tbe White House. SMfretarioH Maim

    and Liuuoln, v l o wore absout from Wnah-

    lugton, wera telfgwphcrt to return at

    Munition of tbo Cabinet remained at th<

    M'liitfl Houro all night, und in tbe evorii

    a larger number o f ]) arsons called In imciuire

    ubout tha candltiou of tho lVowdcut tbi

    at any one timo lor tbo p u t four weeki

    Tho jilmicfuas ad milted aiouday evooii

    Unit tbe case was considered very critical.

    which becania very irritable, refused

    perform its fund ions or to loUiu notirls

    meut, tbe failure of the Btnwnch to act beiuf

    dufltothfi patient's being troubled with thi

    c]jh|iepnitt. IIIN vomiting Hpullu oouUuui

    oa Tuesdiiy und be was compelled to laki

    nourishment by Injccttou.

    Tbe latest tiewB in I lint fbe President

    belter, thai, tho critJs lias probably posse

    tLnt he is able lo tufce fooil naturally

    unmVI ijaanlities, pulse lover and whole torn

    of tbe patient batter.

    Upon tbe first pnga of the En* thin wed

    will be found a very intt-icntiug artii

    allowing tbo growth of nianufaoturo9 in th(

    city of Newark. I t li one of the beet argil'

    inevts that con be offered to dhow tbe proa-

    tiual workings of tba American njute i

    protective tariff and riJenniMtrrte its utility

    Were it c o t for the impoflkion of tarii

    duties England would to-day be makii

    most of tbe articles niiinufactured In t1

    city of Newark, liut under tneie healtb-

    fill, Inhor-proteating influences Hewark 1

    advanced to the front rauk of maaufaoti

    Ing cities, Bud ha* to perfected ber indi

    tries that In many articles ntae i i able to oo

    pete witb England herself in her own mi

    kttn. A. gentleman of Newark, wbo wa

    viutting Shtffield, England, some time ago

    demred to bring home witb him a sp<

    of the cutlery for whieb tbat oily had f<

    a century been famous.

    So he went into a s top and asked

    for the very befit pair of shears made.

    bin surprise tha merchant Lauded bii

    puir made in our city of Newark, '.

    Jeraey. Then La learned to Lie entire

    infection tbat tin American lariff bad pro

    ttct id bla home aguiuBt Eugliah cbca]

    ' labor till the gtinius of bin countryraei

    duviaced methods to made a better article ol

    cuilerj cheaper tban England herself.

    Au iuiportaut brunch of niannfaott

    Newark not noltd in tbe article in this issue

    is the paUut and enamel leutber business

    ot S . U n i t y ' s H. u s , which will be tbe sub-

    ject of a special article in our neit .

    The Batikera, Con vent ion wliiuh adjourned

    at Niagara Falls on Saturday WM noteworth

    for liic value of p ft pet Bread by dUtl

    finiincirfl, not the least ouriutis And valuable

    being l i e (ttaUueut of Controller Knox

    thenmountof money in the oouotry. Th<

    National sod Statebauhaandprivntebanlei

    iiow hold one tbousacd six hundred and

    twenty eight millions of deposits. I t

    probable that there are At leaat twelve s

    a half millions of persons directly intereste

    in them. Tbe deposits or the baokg and

    banavra of the TIniUd HtateB. itolutlln

    aarlngi banks were In May, 1881, abnut

    r, 10.00(1,(ISO. The ffinings banks hare liulo

    or no capital, bat during the year endin

    May 81, lStll, hud average deposits amount-

    ing to $B81,B55(808.

    Tho enormous amount of money in

    country in (hu* clumlfied. On Mny 1, II

    there was $(M),000,000 of paper ontatnnd-

    ing nil nf which ivun and I* readily oomer-

    t ib le iatocuiu on deiatmd, There

    that dity tS60.OOD.000 of fiold coin in th<

    connlry, taxi about (179,000,000 of sill

    coin, which under onr present silver legis-

    hition, is still inoreaaiagat the rote of $2,-

    3U0,oOii monthlj. The total omoant

    coin and paper Dnrrency on that day, in-

    cluding $38,000,000 of silver certlfleateB,

    was *3,48Q.0O0.0DO. N o wonder that I

    Is plenty and the rale of interest loir.

    • m »

    Qnitean, the vonld-be dssassin, nttemptei

    l o m n n l e r O D e o f b i s gnardn on Wedt

    morning. Al 4 m o' dock vbi le W . 0 ,

    one of the guards at the jail, was

    through tho corridor something in the t p

    peanmce at Gniloan's cell at t mo ted his at

    toation. Entering tbe CBII he foand the.

    anouKin in poesMHion of K knife. How he

    obtained i t Is a mystery. Whtnhedemaodi

    the knife Qoiteua refused to a i 'moder i

    Mr. McQill drew hts pistol ftnd then an ex-

    citing tassel endued, Q«iteau making every

    exertion to get the pintol from tbe gtiai

    He suooeeded after t, struggle, bat Mr. Mo-

    Gill after tba most strenuous exertion re-

    gained poneHsioD of it. In the wjuffla that

    followed the weapon *** AitchtrgeS and

    tbe report brought other guards to the a*-

    eiatanc. of Mr. McQill and Ottlteau WRI

    finally disarmed. H e had succeeded, how-

    ever. ID cutting Mr. HoOIH'fl olotbing pretty

    badly and oame very near Inflicting a dan-

    gerous wound. Gnitaon preleaded to be

    crazy nod complained that his pistol t a d

    been taken from him.

    Tbe cotton eipwition to be held in Alanta, Oft., next month is evidently beinlooked forward to with interest by alltbe atatea ot the ootton belt, as well M bythose lew direcOj oonoerned in the produc-tion of the great itaple which in the Sonthetill U Upg. TLk lo the flnit Industrial ex-hibition oi any importanea that bai everbeen held In the South, and for thisalnnoitwouliboecliUedtfmark the per-iod of a new departure for those Slatet,even ]f It vets not Boootnpraued by » manyother signs, of their increasing mftterl.ilprosperity. It U really % "Mew Booth"whieb invites the country to pay It a vl.it inGeorgia's capita] city, anil the country willnot be alow to a.vdl itself the of invitation.

    • Hotbingbnt good oaa come of BQch an en-terprise, and donbtlus roftny still lingeringprejudices in the mind of both Tidton andTbuted will be dispelled.

    The death of Prerident Owfleld after nt>long and courageous itnggls with assarainaliun and dlacaae would move tbe countryonly less than the tngto detth of Lincoln.General Chufloldfc »man of noble qa tjpicaJ American with those train andpowen which the people lore, because they•esio them their own but self. There willbe gflnolae srief il be ihonkl now havs t<

    mb.

    f hs Shrievalty*•LedThe otSoe e l •hKilt will not be nnch or aprise hereafter to the Incumbent, and in batfew.of.tl>* eoantlM will it* be worih theironbleandc ipenMcf e«4plng,owiBg to thandaotfon of iee i which will be made whonth* presfint Inonmbouti retire. The sheriffswhine ttrnu i n soon 4o « i p l n rooalvei]tiientyrfive per ODUL IUM tbio their frmle>oesaori. and tbo iDOomias iherKTi fws willbe three aad one-third par JKni. !«•« than th»

    l

    OBITUARY.BKUWT 8. tMUOIl, X. D.

    Our former bfghlj ettaemed toirnimiDDr. H. B. Chambw, died inddeuly at biiborne in ttmntnw, N. Y., t t 19:80 o'clockOD Sunda; morning. Only a fuvr wtmhi >RU heir&t lo torn , unoag liii old friend! and w-qnainUDCfs. looting robnet and wall.But for a long linao ha had been t offer tog fromrheumatism of the lieart, whlcli be knew, indno iufornied bii friends, i u likely to end hit

    itence, n i d tbat aaddealy, at any timeLnntSa.tuiday be w u about tiin duiies, feel inn

    snd strong, and In the mure ing attendedmeg of importation undur liiij care. In tbe

    ttttoroooo, about four o'clock, b fell to the loi oNew Jersey, but was afterward transferred t-Pblladelpbbi aad HbtFo,nent)y bsok to HtwJoiioy. He wit o m of t i e most elnqnent »ndeffeotire preachers and generally filled theprincipal appointment. Ha «*'• Iwlcor the Horrlstows chnrah. We bellerobis l u t visit to Dover was on the oeeuinn ofthe dedication or the old H. B. Church lo theniea or the Second H. E, DOD(jrejatlon, whenhe preached the dedicatory iwrnon.

    A elerlail friend or Dr. Bartloe writes IhiE J U :

    t h e faaerml cr the Uie Be*. V. V. Dartlne,i.D., took plaes at Trenton on ToeidUy, Aug.

    ldtb. The dec tamdwi i a dietiaguwUed andhoaorHl number of tbe Newark OoDferenoe

    H. I . Ohnnb. His father, Ber. D. Bar-tine, w»a one of tbe earlr Uelhodlst itorerantsin Hew Jerwy. Ho formed the fiat clasi whichwai the noslens or ffeal«y Qbapel (n Halwy

    I, Newark. Thed>eoa»djohiedlfaePlu]-sdelphia Gonfennoe in U3% r o r l o a e yearsha wai p u t o r and Presiding Biter in theoityof PhlladHphla. In ISST b« was transferredto tfaftSewJeney Conference and; wai stationed

    a u t e i l n e t efanrob, Trenton. la 1870 hens to tbi! Kevark Conference and was ap-

    pointed to Trinity church, Jersey City. BisappoCDtnVots sines hare been Horriitown,Oruke, Emory cbortb, Jersey ffity. Pur thep u l truJve moqllis bia huaJth baa IHMU fait-tup;. IUa sermons en lbs camp ground will toJong remembered for thotr pithoi and elo-

    -end*. Hul hi lived onlll p i x l Oonfertneewoold bar* bees fifty j « n l o W.#ninl.Uy f

    A HORSE THIEF CAUGHT.

    IXXLlf I TOBTtmATJ OAJTtlll--THETBIW* an»>.

    OnBundtjlwt KUnbal Xelley neeivsd atelegram faumChief of Poliee Oraol, of Pal-•rtoB, lellmg bim to look oat for a sorralbane, with white fiee, whieb hud been stolen

    oight before from CHI ton, near Pansaio,Iiate on tiundiy oveatng tbe Uarshal noticed

    u ROiug along the street, with aitrering the description, but a s the)

    sccoited bim ly naraa be thought no:the matter. Later he became con'inoed thatm night be wioug, aud so got a rig and foiurn-darter them. When be arrived at Buona-

    ennci be found be had gat oflthe track ol tbemen be was following, and that ii» bad by an-lident atumblad npon the real thief. Ot

    catling up tbe bostler at Haat's h# ronnd thaithe borte he wai looking after w u in the

    »nd that c young felloe who bad riddenhim Ibure wai aaleip iu the hotel. Ha t

    ill«d up Mr, Mut, and making; arraiicnls with him to hold the horse

    the morning bo returned to Doier ID tbe hopeof obtaining evidence tlttt woald warrant tbeirrest of the supposed thief. Then again hn

    oanu) to tbe oouoliiBiou tbat be had battertakebimoa suumelon. He rBtnrnod io fiao

    with officer Franoisoo, broke in oithe follow Budtleulyand diaarmed liiin of a re

    ai lutof oartridgos, tbe culprit ooolltelling him the while that If liu had known o

    tomitig bo would never hive been tilt en.is Hunibal brought bii man lo Coior and

    pat him in tbe look-op, wbero ho bad an iiterview witb litm Iu tbe maniintf. He wai a

    lookiug young man of about SI y<iitl ho lately osnio from ibe Kortb ol

    Eufilend.but refused to give tna place, or bisc tho ploa that he bad respiAbu would lie buatt-broktiu If the;

    k»e«r ol bin crime, Uoarrivea In flits coitry ibnnt five weekit ago, but immediatelytcr bis arrlf al a tuna united Samuel Bpriojwtio came over m Ibe abip witb hint, rob be iliiui or ISO ii) mtiney—nil be bd—ind titviuHli of uiolLloji- UiRtslUbi1 with (jftfjeri vhiIxo n id ebuiild nliow tbat be bad om

    •rib *25O,O00. He HrBt camo to OIIRI•hod for J. O. Cailmus, of whom 1eborso. Work falling than, for a few

    weeks he worked ntP»terBOii, at Lower Moct-illu, in thin count;, anil otber pluces. Last

    Hitnrdnylio rotarncd toOlifton aud wai abtitibMr. Cmliuus. Leaving him he (rent 1loroou, but returned on a lalor train au

    breaking open Ibo it able atotetbo hrrge ofMC. ll« bail procured a uisp or tbe Country, aowaamRkiug bls^ray lo Piltsbprg.Fa., wbereliu mid ha bad a friend and thought he couldoblcia work. He offered to soil the bur no tMr.Tboe. Onio, or till" plaje aud to otueuarlloB, for from ISO to (75, reprefODtlog thailit- liad imported luui from England.

    When BHked wbit prompted Llm to ileoIbe borae be Raid tbat another bad atoleiwhat hu bad sud ho bad made np bis mind tibe free with oilier peoplc'u pruportr. He eali

    lert a wife aud infant cLild In En^laudbavttifrbeoa nutrrled just ono year on tbe da;if h!u a-toet, snd bo wanted to gel money lo

    bring tbe to over. He l>ore no oviJeuoe tdls'sipnticD and appoarod tu bo a young maof fair education.

    jl Kolley telegraphed to Chid Qraihla capture, ami ttiat oftloer trrivetl in Bovi

    h Mr. Cudniu* at 2 u'olook In Ibn aficrnooiUr. 0, pmuptly paid ibe Marsbal Eollay »"0lewird wbicti lie bad offered for tha borse andgave him a written agreement for 125 mi1)0 viid upon Ibe ounviolion of the tblof. OnIbe next train the piny, witb the tbiufia coi-tody. left forrstertOD. Mr.Uaiimm said botfllnBdlhsborsoatlSSO.

    Sunday at Mt. Tsbor.An nothing la tbe contrary baa beoc pub-

    llebed it In fair to proaumo Uut tbe Triisteeaof Alt. Tabor will follow tbeir usual praotuopening the groimda to tba public on teaHubbnth during thu comiug onmp moelli

    reBpettfnllj Huggeat to them tbat thialice basin tho past canted tbe Sabbatii

    day In hu profiled in thia vicinity to agreat.

    extent tban any eroul which occurs (a thecoiirie of Hie nholo ye&r. We grant tbat nuny

    jpla go there oa the Hibbath with good in-it.butitl* eiro tosaythat the majority or

    ibevlsitora are governed ell her by itllo cnri-xity, thedesire foramueenient, or maliciousnUcbiof. Wlitn this promiflCBoHB crowd has[Sthoieii Iu thousands upon tbe goanda, tlielrfitaeral appearance In fat from that of a wor-djlppian; congregation, and the place wrarsmom of a holiday aspect tban to4 otherYOQDR men in Rre»t numbers go wandering

    itthflgroundB, smoking and flirting witbwomen. Young couples promenado. cbattingand laughlnK RMb boisterous gaivty. Tboloarding bouses are crowded and poiiiy.in &a<

    ti»R liuulnesB Is earned on iu oliarglng foitying epsce and soiling hay, oate, eto^ andtbo vhole scene is more like tbat of i greatfair than anything else. Many dlarepnta biipersons congregate tbere, also, and when thegreat trains of wagons get ipoo their uotno-wardwayatnifihttbe aoone i« Indeseribable.Dmnken ilrnuti fill iho air, mingled wilhgar talk and ribald longs, lad respeotable

    iple have been frequently innnltwl. We be*iieve if tbe Troittes could but wltneas annteof theie road atenei they vonld como to tbem mediate concluiiuo that the opening of

    Ht.'Taboi oo tbe Sibb alb conBervua neithertbe poblh morals nor the aanitltj of theLord's day.

    An Inoldentof the Revolution.Tbe following 1B ei trie ted from an inden

    newaraper:

    •. 13, 1719.—Last Thursday morning, apel-sou in LlienelghborboodofBotlleHDI.ueartbD Great Swamp, being earlj np, dleooTeitwo irmed men p^n by—one ol whioh be sup-posed to be Caleb Uwrezy, Jun., late an Inhab-itant of Black Bivtr, bet who bid joiienony, and, hiving many connections In thhconcty who harbored lilm, was Doubled, btboir infoinution tnd aBsisttnoe, t o commilsoveral atrooioBB roboerisa, which induced tb

    rtooffur 1300 regard for apprehendinghim, TIIIK person wbo saw them pan gaveInformation, when Capt. Garter and bis oftV>core, with 10 of their men, took tha necemn

    for the apprehending them, and, knowingthe proDinqnlty between Isaoe Badgelej'a wifeand Hwwic, lent a penoo to lay in arabnsh

    aald Badgelev's bouso, to bo a apy upon(beir oondtiot, and if posalble, flnd oat tbeirlurkiDB-plice-wbon he saw Badjelej's wife:arry vlotuals Into the swamp twice. Sellbua fully Informed, the party entered theiwamp Mma mllet from Badgelej'B house, toprevent tlifl leut alarm being given, and prn-ceoded wllbinV few rods or the bouse (plaoli

    '1s,as the? ptBMd, at ibe avEtnnes it WIBinpposed tney would endeavor U> maka theiriseapa through), vrhen they •ndJenljipoutQFin; and being nnprepared for delenoe

    tbe fllnti being out of tbelrpiatoli, they en-deavored to miku tbeir cscapa fay light—when

    received ibe flie oronaof tbe seutineliwhich pnt a period to his existence In a fewminutes, Tbe otber one, John Parr, whoconcerned in lio robbery of Mr. Stewart1* houseat Backeltsiotrn, wai slightly wannded, acdUkeu, tnd is now conBned In ICorriatawn jair.

    WEEKLY IRON REPORTS.Tbe Engineering and Hlnmg Jottreal of Utt

    wktaya:

    Aitbonjh tbere is no notloeable specoU-tion, and only K very n u l l proportion or t iebniiaeudooeeomeitotbssttrraca, U la sate

    that iron ia 'booming." This applie*more to the da maud and mevamsot or inntban lo an advance ! • priost, althongh tbatbaa itarted In some artlclM. and is liiuly toU observed all along lh« line. In fact, »s w<hire been reporting for woeki, then nerer w u

    leh an lmmonsa businem, and tha outlookrather fkvors an iooreamnii than dlmiaishinp;

    id. Altboagh prices will probabir tor, they a n not likely to be rooh aa to

    warnnt the •tartltig of aU the rattle-trap et-Ubliibneuls la theooonrrj. '

    Amaiout Pi».—Tboro baa been coDildew-bte bnsineiB dcn«, but there Is an fnoliuKtlitooonoeal tbe putlontars. Tbe best brands

    becoming scare*, and tbeie ire more eagerbnyen than Mdlen. Old material I* beeotn-ing so •caroe tnd laloabla thai Ibe maker*

    been »n!« to advance forge iron, - Woquote No. 1 Fooodry, at $H ind »26; No. Jfoauitiy, 129 and 13); and Forge, 131.60.

    laying them agalnit hiB face, remained per*hotly quiet, It nisds Vnolo Zeke look verydiabolical, but he erldoctly enjoyed it , far Inchuckled for t moment and then, whistling lii low, peculiar key, cuused the twine to plaeitbeniHelvfls *ide by side and juinp inlo liiibands, He then p'acod them on the ground,md tliey at onoe coiled themselves up Intnil and began rerolvlng rapidly aronnd

    ihe RUBB. Tbcy twfited thewuelvea Into ahoop, and in that shape Jumped Hi rang hUncle Zeke's arms, Thny wriggled throughtbe blades of grass so fiat that It to emod s»

    "i tbere wts a sea of nptnrned snakeheads in Ihe y»rd, ard then thoy lengtbonod

    id, Iirtlus up their lieid i,sodded at one another, Ttiat wasn't all. Byataries of signs, wbleh tbey sssmed to nuder-etBudatouoe, they formed themselves intoletter*, ending up with the leUere " S . V."rbich tTnole Zeke said stood for Biameea twins,'barn seemed no end lo their ooulortiuiif.luce Zeke Mid, as he put thorn back underia case: " There ain't a showman in this

    country bnt would give a good, fat prico forlose varmints, bnt ha can't bare 'om, I've>t a fine farm here, and don't need mo ney,it I do want thesocritters, for ftaoe niy wire,

    Maria, died,I hafen'thad anythin* to ooenpymy mind." _

    Tho County Poor House.The members of l b s Board of Freeholders

    paid tbeir *nnnal rlait to tbe County PoorHooift on Wednesday, and found fWrrthiot;

    capital eondltion under tb* able managa-ent of Superintendent Bkellengtr. Devtostnbtn were, preient, together with tx-Di-

    rnetor JaetBon, and *x-¥reoholden Johnsonand Vlllett, and ths company Mt down to a/inbtUnta i dinner. T h i laiutntion h u at

    i l S 5 Inmate*. The whsit , rje, sata andwops wete large, bat the eom la look-

    ing badlj . Preparation! a n b«tng made forXktt baiidiiig ol the high fenM nbieh la la•tpsrat* the IMBS, Th» nuwbars Of tbipress ware oousptcaDiu by their absenae;thoH at toe county t o i l being detained i t

    bf the aliens, whteb la about the oo l jtklaa; ibat eosid keep them from oomlngdawn to enjoj cat of BnptriDknflsflt BkeUcn.

    > J . A • l ^ - l * - 4 ~ » A "*** ^ . M_. 1_C

    Uncle Zeke'i Twin Snakei.

    •Yoo want to ne« roySlamefB twla snakes,do you? Well, come right along np lha mona-

    aploo* aud I will show tbata to jou."It was UneleZeke HoUanoi, of Germin Valley,

    wbo spoke,in answer to a question reipeotlag »curious natural pbenomenoa which be was

    ii-1 tu have In bis possession, and be Imme-diately started op the road which goes frcmtb» Valley to the top of Bchooley's HoaDUiTUewiik was not long, aud was octopied bUncle Zeke ID t history of bin repillei.

    Yon iee, they were born that way— twrattLtanakes fasteaed togethar right near tbetil l . At first off I was gulng to out 'em apart,sadthenlwatareard it tniKht kkll'ep, so Ileft 'em bo. It was good I did, for It's sanlnsore tb»t tbej can't get along without eachother. If one of 'em gets sick, so doei the

    tb d h f ' i llithtr, and when one of 'em givaa a call,abowio' there is so met bin' lyia' aronnd to bile,the other one jines ID at once. And tlinn tbeyboth bite at the same time, wbicb, to me, !•

    it carious thing about'em. Tbey oantwist thdmselrei around quiokeru' lightning',BD that their heads are close together, andthen they run tbeir fanga out aide by uide and•tick am1 into whatever tbey a n drlvm' at.Tbev mean buelaeia every time.

    ought to see 'em light, although neith-n alone la so r*ry Urge, bavin' only

    eight rattles; tbe two oa 'em is a team tbatiaway witb any thi Q" In the makeio part*. Tbey uau run away fromuntil they form almost a atraigbt

    Hue, and then, when any of tbe big Ttrmlntsi, tbey ji i i tcnrl aronnd and bite tlio

    curs In two places at onue. Ob, It's fan, It&llyor, stranger, to see 'era fig tit, a n l will*lor nights I tike 'urn fnto tbe Uvern barroomand pat'em undora glass cas-a aloue with at ig blank uuako or ooppDrhccd, aad tbe boyswill come ror ten-mile around lo nee tbo sport.SnmolimeB we put a lotof big (oada in, to iflotUe little varmlots try to swallow *eni.There's notlifn'nan fjltatray with 'em, for IfibeySud tLey are geltin' shipped tbey barei way of twimln'theniBelrsB into a ball, with.beir Uos.d* clear out of sight, and theurollia1

    over snd over Ilka a bate ball. They go likechain llghtnin'loo, and bump into whatever

    icy are flgbtin'taklu'-tbe orlttsr off bin pineir /often. Toon ihe biinaia thoy ifrllto

    an jthiii" thoy will run their head out fromurthocollaandglvealiltle tbrust with theirfai gs, causin' the other roller to yell with

    in.

    "Did tboy eror bite mtke'reaa fond of measedo jast about what I pleaee. Pve tiughl 'em

    iov TOU. There are the litttls cusses now,Undor a glass caso in tho doorjard wei

    coiled tbe twin rattlers. TbejworeappsreDtlyitil Unole 2eke removed tbe glaw,

    wbeu tbey fumjicd upon b i s arm, wriggledtbeir way to his shoulders, and, onrtlog them'IOIVBH around his neck in tba oddest wayImaginable, ran their hoi dacheek and Ibe other along tbe ether, and then

    dm* Dti,T h e n is no deputing the faot that Dover

    la ono of ths * " • * M n i that a oircn» oa»•trlke for l t | buatneu I s the country. Theweather w u of the Blest unpromising cn»r»o-Ur oa Thursday morning, yet people cameflouking in town in drove* in tbe earl; morn-ing, prepared to endure, all possible ilisoom-forU in oxdar to see toe ciruos. WLno tba

    m Btartod, *t ten (Al.nb, tbe streetswere filled, tod tbe numliaia were augmentedby rrt-sh arrivals alt tbroogb the day. Manystaid old gentlnmen catno to town on hnainessaud many ladies fonad tbey had •hoppingnecessary to be done on this partioniar day.Tbe mm who finds it necessary to aik for aittle support during tbo long months of tb<

    winter wss out witb ihe wholi family, and tothem tlie pleasures of tbe woria were crowdedinto this delightful day. ffomea labp/odalong uudcr heavy bundles o f living freightdeposited In tbeir arms, moo marched con-tentedly along, muRtictliog ptanuts aod all

    ntin'iful of jostHog ur ot hor iueunvenit>tieiilovisioDs of tbe paraduan* anticipations

    of tho forthcoming porforms nee were beforethoai. The careless, happy crowd wan aftrutesnue btudy to tbe atadout of bamaiDttore, wbo in watching the crown alwi?obtafnv more aubaUntial enjoyment from tbiadvent of tbe circus tbau anybody oUo.

    The Mauch-Ghurik Excursion.Wo trust a great many people are prepared

    to go ou tbn great eiCureion lo Mao oh ChunkIbe famous Bwit--lj-Cack ni> J Qlon Opoko, oexiTnesday, lar we wu Boris no utjl'tr trip foipleasure has benn liorlacj tlita season. Tii<management is in the bauds el geutienjeti whoaro a j;iiaranlce that evory i»ins will bo takento provide fur the eomfuit nf those wbo go,and again we aaBure'auj «bo bavo noYer takentbe trip ibat Bhould tbey conclude to do so at

    S U S M K Falter*.Vwo c u « of parwiM living without food forlong tim* have nosnthr been oVvelnped in

    SOSIDX Dbnnlf, "

    ost *ingnlar c a w is that otWatLznot*8»lon, wh» Urea r> tBcemervjile, aboat IDnDes frtia "ifewUm- Sha # w tlieu about91 yearnoiil, wr ighUj , ipUlIi«Bni and come-

    Sh l d f being 111 abonl a

    tbi* time they will I

    lives, i l i

    i moat iiviews from t

    mbar It hi after daysi of tbei!

    jlunjrtbe Switcli-Back tub or sucb gtandueithat au indelible impresiiluu is made tbat mi lnever bo effaced. One of tlie fiiieat descrip-tive writers 1B tbe coutilry, aftot- a visit toMauck Obuok, declared tbat riVticrlptiau wasIwyuud Ibe power ofbumin poo. Tbia ia thonrst eicDBiun tbat ban gone to tbat lapoua lo-cality iu many jours, and nuolber opportunityfur visiting the place at »uub a small coat maynot occur io many yo^ra mure.

    ? Ob, bless, jmu, no,u he, anil I make 'em

    P h '

    The Summer Season-

    According to the i.hnapdo we bavs yet

    S3 diys^of summer before na; bnt acoordinsMr. Veunor, and In harmonT with th e

    ather this week ifae harvest is past and thenmer Is ended. Tfalc, however, miv provebe a mistake. Humm.r beflin* when the

    ana en tore Cancer, Jnne 91, and ends whon it

    Noxious Weeds.To THB BJJITOH of Tff« Inott Esi. :—

    Uillyouploasu puullth tbo law relative tutbe duty or properly owners deetroylug allnoxious weods growl ng on tbe road ilda ad.joining Ihdr lands. Tbe amonnt of wild currut and otlior foul wteds aluug our thorough

    fares is a groat eye wire to noit and thriftyfarmers. Tbe peunlty for permitting thoseIIIIURB would be quite a l i t , aadouxbtto bfrigidly enforced. It II plea mint to speak wordsof mo ouiagonnint and. prates, but a properregard for truth would not admit of tbo

    cine ot that virtne, in npenkinp;ofapor-tlou of the old Morrla turnpike in ynnr town-uliip, below Walnut Grove. The road from

    A Pad Mictahe.OQ Tuesday or thiBweekacoutile of Irsvsl-

    Ing Halesmen. dealing in nickel plated wares,nailed upon a laity residing on BcbooTej'sMoon tain, and by falsely representing that her

    ors bntl ptirohuod large qnantitiea.ofmoceoded in making a sale. In pay-tie tendered tuora a SO dollar bill wbiob

    iltliom changed, handing her a number

    p,Plerson'i store to tbe tup of tliflboyond Mr. Wheolor'e

    di It i I t

    tain

    y sadondition. It is In etrihinff ouutrnit withnidRt other roads in Morris Cnnnty, nnd Itought to receive tbe at lent ion of tlieinthur-itieB. TflAVBLHE.

    [We believe tbe penalty for pormtttlnp; tbegrowth of CanadH Iblitlee and other noxiouswoed*iBt50,-ED.]

    correct. Tbo nickel-plated m m then, u k e dfor tho money that bo might count It again

    id be surellmt it was right «ltor which helUilBrl it buck la a roll and left. Sbe ufter-

    wtrdafouud that tbe 5dollar bill wai nti8Blng,but by the lime Bhe made tlie discover;, thunan was missing too. Next tnoruing beriMBUBud went to Uaokettatown' wben heformd the gentleman to whom be broacliudtho subject Htadly,and the money WMjirompt*IT returned wilb an apology for tbo misinke.Tho public cannot be too careful in their

    ahngB with such mon.—Harksttstown Qa-

    Propagating Rotes.t h o month of Ao«o»t is probably tbn best

    time to propagate rosea by illpn. There arevarious nodes by whlob it Is done. Nursery-men set tho slips fn asncdri or shallow dlibei,wilb'aliarp sand and water, io as to be abouttbn oonalBtenco of mud, and renew tlie waterdaily. Tbe youngest of tbia year's wood isthe best,and wilh due care any number canbe rawed in this wny. But then are otberand iomewhat simpler ways for private fami-ies to obtain all they noed. The young wood

    cau be set In a cold frame, or la any rich, loosesoil and watered daily. Inabo&ta month tbep h o t c m be taken up carefully and eaah onewet In a era nil pot, and treated as would beolder plants, always remembering tbat fre-qnent moderate watering Is Indliipenaibla.Tbe wood should Le cut off a little below a

    int or eye, leaving one or two eyes oo tbegronnd, and stripping off Ihe leaves. Theyounger tho wood tho better.

    A Rosy View of the Iron Trade.'The iron trade in in ant-elans condi-

    tion," said Hon. Daniel J. Morrel, presidentof tbe American Iron and steel uwooiKtlon."Tbe demand 1B large, and tbe prises while

    to the consumer are on a basis whlobgive the manufacturers a oorofoitable profit.The beet feature of the demand la that It is

    healthy one, with none of tbe ipeoulativeir booming tendencies whieb narked II a

    yaw ago when people were making fortuneson paper. The trad* Is doing a good bvai-

    ss simply because the business la here to. Tbe progident'a death would h*ve hurtconsiderably in common with all other

    trades of the country, but now that theager is put t&e outlook, for the balance

    of the year rJ. least, is a very rosy one."

    B Libra, Beptem-er32..Wa should hat least, flro more weeks of very plaaiani•nmmer weather, and With the exception ofan oocaslonal diaagreeabts day, It may be ro»-

    aablj bopod thitrhll will bo pleasant at theiflUo resorts. If the weather should unfor-

    tunately continne to be cold anddtsagreoablo!tbo seaside and monnutn ootal proprietor*will have a dreary proipeet before them. Theseason was lat« and nnpropltlons in opening,and to make up for the IOBKI thni bronghtabomitabonldbaUte ln dosing anl attrao-tlve to tbe end or September.

    A Remarkable Colncldonce.A n.ther Blnn«e coloeidenee ooanrrad at

    Asunry Park, on Thartday of laat week. Ai walked into tbe store or Joseph IT.

    Halse, and preaented a card on whioh waiIhe name of J. W. Bnlse. When u k e d whstit meant be nlft that It waa hU name, audihal bs had oome to ascertain If tbeir fam*lliea were related. Bo hailed from McCains-'Me, Morris county, and bis name waa JonasUBtDid of Joseph W, Hnise. And what ii

    •till mare aingnlar, both have otdy brotherswhos e names are precisely the same, both bfr-ln|[ John B. Hulae. They exebaugad cants,and no doobt etch will pteiwr' e tbe Other asa curious relio, bearing the name ol two very;ooil looking men, both of wboi

    iMnebtMioesain theaameSiate.-

    Worth Knowing-Tha following 11 worth knowing: Bel

    pitcher of water in a room, and in a few hon r*It will have absorbed all tbe perspired gamin the room, the atr of which will have becomepore, bnt the water nttorlr filthy. Theeoldaitbe water Is, the greater capacity to oontaii

    " " i pailacid

    these gales. At ordinary temperstmof water will contain a pint or eorbonigas, and several pints of amouia. Tbe oa pac-It; ii nearly doubled l y redncing tbe water to

    the temperature of ioia, room lor a while 1

    Honce water kept tiaUays unfit for aee

    For the same reason, the water fro m a plpoahonia alwaysbe pnmped ont in the marbefore'any i t mod. Impuro wator is i

    impure air.

    For ft Little Heroine.

    To TBX Euitoa or THB TBIBDMB.SIR :—Let me add roy mite for medicine fbt

    Lizsie MoQaide, mentioned in to-dav's TBI-BOWK, . , TlOlIA

    N. T.,Aog.l8th.lB81.Ttla is tbe Uttlogirl who prevented tba de-

    ttnolioD of a railway tmin oa the New Yorkand Greenwood Lake Line by running to atelegraph station when ibo ftacovercd tboFeqninnoo bridge bad been burned, and RIT-IOR wirnlng ol danger. Her horoto exertioniha*» bronght en a asvero at of sickness, andtbe family ia deetltuto. We forward tbii mite{50 cents), as well as 11 from " C . M." ofBrooklyn, lo bor address, •• Mlsa Liule Hc-qoBde, Pcquaanw, Morrli County, N. J.N—H."[. Tribune.

    Tha Trottirtj Maetlnj.EiMewbera will be fonna the premiani list of

    he coming trolling meeting: or Ihe HarrisOonnty Agricultural Society, Aug, Slit, andfiep-.. lat and 3d. Aa will b* m n Ihe pursesarc liberal *ncraft- to bring t«|S)ther a greatmany good horioi, and some flne ezbibttloalofspetd mtTbeeipected. Th« trwkbisro-eenlly been wldentd, and o tbarwias imnrond,Ihe grand atand remodeled, and ill tha a

    oentipat In tb* bandi of genUemen wboienames are a gntnatea that erary feature oftbe meeting will be properly oondaoted. Tbebiojele rtoei eaob day are alio eipeoted »contribute large]? to tbe Interest or ibe meet*I n * . • ' - ••• • ' • • • " • ' = '

    An •Ulian'Prebably Fatally InjjrtdAn tUBan workman wbo was riding on I

    Oentral gravel train dear Port Oram on Thurs-day, bast-with a Urrible mishap tbat - i l lprobably teraluaU fatally. Tb« Inaded caro& whktb fas WM moving indaealy dumped oohim, a n d h s w i i d n g g e d aoma dlitanoe beforeIhe train wae stopped. An arm and leg werebroken, a railroad iplk* enterefl under hisjaw and w u driven through the aids of hisfcoe, and be was otberwlt* cat and braised,bwldei being Internally Injnrfld, B e was

    lo Dorer, and boat hero H a t io St.Joseph's Hospital, Fa tenon, but It was not

    ,iown whether ha would reaon t h e n alive.

    v Optnlnk; of Camp M w t l n fThe innni l camp mut ing at Mount Tibor

    opened ou ThorBdij efenlng. Brief iddreueson panonal ooosectttton ware delivered audwere followed witb tbe Sacrament of tbaL o n f i Snppar. Barneit p n y e n were offendthat the Borf Spirit n i g h t rat upon the as-sembled DBltHndea during the ton days of U>«meeting, For to-day—It V u arrangsd tni(Rar. Dr. Milty, of Drew Seminar j , shouldpreach In the. nonlna:, and Ber. Dr. ft TBaldwin, the •Lsatonarr, In the afternbon.

    Not a Jokt.l a the following from tha Dtmr Era. afollowing front th

    joke upon onr old friand•npe ILue- or " '

    tr En. ai Bar. J .*POM. hue of this vioinliv, haa stM.

    of tba dehtoaeded ia clasrlug of the YmaaaL K. Chnren, of which hm ft now naitar—

    Blamlown Frets.

    Ko, Jacob, It Is sot. The oompoalter in oot-(Ing a proof last week got UnflM woraaD i o u organ of ipstob. W a v n d s n d i h a

    woald ba ths Arst to take acivanfagt of the | lbsv> -_,

    The Auembly Districts-By the re-dtetrJction of tbe county last Win-

    tor & considerable change was made in ths Ass«n.b1y Cislriats, which now are compoaad as

    Sllowl:FtBaT—Morris, Chatham, Hanovor, Moot-

    til*.Sioonn—Boonton, Peqnannoo, Jefferson,

    ^THiKD^Itandol^i', Wai'blflgton, Oheator,HeBdkam.Paisaia. . ' ' '

    Tbe preseulAfsombiymen, Messrs. Johnson',Port and Linailey, h iv ing gerred bot lcneynsr, ana heitsg atill in the districts they rep-roncntcd last year, wHl^onbttesB all bo ielected. lUiaslngularCQinOifl^nTOtlutthimembers all live upon the extreme ^outskirtsof the oounty

    A Cool Place for the Season- '•'In one part or tbo Huff wins , jioar Port

    Oram, loe tbat was froiaa last winter 'tnaynow be found to aibiakoeMoffrpm eight ttten f w i . Tbe cante of this aingnlar phenoniie n o n t i t h l i ; One part of Ifae miae ia expoaadt o d n f l i a t a point when "the water trtekleislowly, wbicb fm-iing a* It falls forms an im-raonse mass i f ice, which never wholly melta•wiy; Thni they have now tdn» bf Ice In themine, some of which wUl nmnln unt i lice begini to form again. - For drinking waterthe miners hang a bucket foil iu a abaft neithis formation and the draft coming up fromtbe oold recess below keeps It as'cold BB leewaterall the day. This Is a chlllr sort of astory for August, bat is nevertheless* true.

    A Child Attaeked by & Hortw-On Ttmnday of lMt week a little gnndion

    of lit. David Onoper. at Pranklln, aged five orsix yoaw, wan engaged In feeding bogs whenhorse lUndlng nesx mada avialooB attack oiotro, bltiDR him in the face. Ho then tnrneabout to HoV him, but w u prevented by Ur.Cooper, who happened to be near. Tbe biUof tbe horse extended from tbe top of thechild's forehead to hii month, diiagarloR bisfsc* horribly and making him totally blind.It w u at flrat thought he would lose tbe useof his eyes permanently, bat at last accounit was reported that he could begin to aeo

    Roekaway Rolling Mills.Owing to l t d or water a now ongim

    been pnt In this week to run oueot tbo blow-ers. Thewoik of making blooms with petro-leum is claimed to be gi riug«»Btdsrabtesat is-fkcUon to the projectors. Two heating far-D U B S are now used and running on sera]inn.' In working these about 1,000 gallonare oonanmad every twenty-four hours. Morefurnaces a n contemplated snd will probablysoon be crested. One or the greatest advan-tages 1cund ID tbeprooessls t u e d o i n s awayof the necessity of eleanlpg fnrnsoe grates,tiini enabling the psridlen lo get.pnt t t leastan extra heat every turn*' > . .

    A Bridge Needed.We bftlleve it Is the design nr the oonnly t ooiM w d maintain .briJjeJ Ibr: the pnblw

    good. A street from Bliokwell 8treet ,at apoint the Ihe lumber yard, to Mt. HopeAveauo would be »|rreaio»utenl8iiqfl to manypeople In Urn towB> U well u to tho travellingpnbUe, ud 'wa beliefs the iaMr WenJ4 be laiaout by parties In Urea ted If they Ihonghi, Uprobable that tfafloonnty woabSbnllu a b n d nover tbe canal w&e» it woald Interseal It,, Atthis point qniti an easy grade cnald b .enVotod, and tbe street and bridge should bothbe oonitrocted.

    Another New Block.

    Be v.Mr. Hoffman, cf New Totk, the ownero l the l e u oo BlaskweU street, opposite thelomber yard between lha • reaideiiets orSurrogate OUlen and W n . V; HID, nai dscloV«d toarecttfaereonati1ne)tofsoveadfe]liB««,

    d M J J T U 4 h tak thJ. J . TreelauJ has takes tbe eonlractfor the entire work of m c U o a . The block

    ba 109x80 feet, with kitchen addition inTh-wcrk of building wlU b* o o n -

    S h |r and

    charge of her. She

    righUj, ipUlIi«Bni annplaiDed of being 111 abonl ahalf ago, M * physician took

    ippsrently quite

    well at timta, bnt a relapae.invarisblv fol-lowed tho revival of hor Bpiriis. There wasnothing peculiar anont ber . ORBS, bowerer,untU lsst sprjos. when she refoted to eatany kind of food, rejnoting ewen strawberriesand otbsr fruit procured .from iiot houeos atconsiderable faipauie. For U days she exist-ed wihout partaking of soy food whatever,and it I* assorted by hor frlauds that aha didnut drink a drop of water. But o i her for-tyi lxth day iho askedfor milk, frequent sipsor which she drank daring the next U days,then sfae died.

    Ttirrence Oonoolly, an old iwident of New-ton, i i endoavoriug to ont-fHBt OriBCom sndTatmer. It is oUImud that ae has not par-taken of food for tblrty-slxdays, Blnue Ihefirst of Julr lsst ho has been oonQoed tu hi

    bed, bot ho a in ill hoilth for a year pro-

    'ious. On tuomornrih of tickets weresold at tbe » . , L, * W. R. B. station at Hack-eitatown, and during July fl,700.

    X horse, wagon and h&roois stolen l u tweek from Abiah WI loon, Hear Dcokertowa ,were recovered, bat tbe tbiuf escaped.

    •Toho Oocbran, of Philadelphia, a metobotof Ihe Utatt Senate of Fenn'sylrsnis, snd sonof Detinia Ooshran, Esq., or Newton, died on

    undiiy.

    Bliss Lizzie Hall, daughtor of Norman Hall,of Deckertown, was thrown from a wagon bya rnnaway hvrK, and so badly injured thatlier life le despaired of.

    Burglars made unsuccessful attempts tonteribe residences ofei-Mayor A. W,Cutler,

    JV*ho!der I*ri»in snd Alfred Brown s iXaekctlatoVo, last wook o

    Tbe InvesHgBlioD of tbe affairs pf Spartstownohlp waa oonbloded l u t Saturday evening,The lenurt'of Mr, S. H. Little, who took Ihetestimony, wilt bo made to Judge Haste uponbis return from Europe,

    Cbas, Bttrd, o f OifortJ Fnraaoo, aged abontflftoea years, was killed near BridgevilJa lastwee k by a train of the D., L, & W. railroad.He was Jampfna; on • oosl trstn. He survivedabout five hours after his Injury.

    Willie Bandoiph, >gefl.lO, son of BeT. Ur.Randolph, of Mt. Herman, barren ponntv,while asleep In hU bed near a window, thi

    is leg through a pane ot RISBS, severing anirtery, from which he nearly bled lo deitb

    The Warren Journal sagely remarks that

    shot President GarBeht

    Morrii M j A^ritdtural Scdeij.MORRISTOWN, N. J.

    TROTTING MEETING,

    AUG. 30, 31, ana SEPT. 1. 1881.PREMIUMS, $1,665!

    HIBST PAY.8:00 rolnnte CI»BB, purae *15O; a:30 CIMH,

    pur«e 1200 i blcrolu race, half-mile da«hBoraloh) prizet value ot I1U.

    HBCOND DAT.9:80 olaai, pnrse ISOO ; 11:60 class, puree *160;

    3MdftB, purea t2QQ; bic.vclo rai-u, quartermile dasb (scratch) b^st t r o Ia three IUJSIHprisji value BffSfi.- THIFtD BKY.

    anocliBl, purse llfiO ; niEF FOB ALL, purge$800; 3:46 elsBI. purse (175; bicycle rncc, twomile d«ib (handicap) prizes value of 130.

    Trot ting under the rules nf I IK, Nutsiociatloo. Track widi-ueii, turn rannO stand rent ode led,

    IOT iwfse f sad found It Nothing short*or a massive Intellect couldhave made tbfs discovery. It wi'l new be liorder, on the »ime principle, to find out whichparty k i !M Wncoln.

    Over forty Italians, who oamo to work ciIfae N. T. 8. & W. B. B., are quarto red aPaulina, Warren county. The number will beItioreased to two hundred. Tbey wore much

    ' ited over tbe capture or a floe ground bot',ind tuu&a a henrtjmoal off him.

    Mr.Jimea Bnekley of Quaker Brttlsmcnl,forma tbe Hackettatown Heralc! that in n on

    of tbo n o r railroad near bin place, large logiperfectly aolid, a to founa aii ft>et belon t l

    ~ ce of tbe ground, and directly uvor whicho fuel cf solid clfcj. tbe balance btiui;

    muok.

    Edwin Bovans sowed abont 1160 worth <aion Beed m the mendow iu Trout ur hiODB6 at WasliiDgloaville, neur New ton, an

    Ihe prospeota aro that be nil] liavo aboul G,fl(uliiiU oT tim Bceuted vegetable, Equal lucvisible in a patch OD tho hog mcadov

    We have bad n

    Natural Cavec

    Mr. E, Sharp and a party of friends were aTew days age exploring thi» high maunUiipeak in the roar of Stiles' dletillerr, noa'r Mill-brock, when, near tbojnnnnit, they dlieoveredfour caves, tbe Itrgeat or whioh is: a oarioilty.

    t biB two entrances very iiui&ll Iu size, butbe interior^ Urga enough for s person of or-

    Unary size to stand in. It ia triangular inshape, about fourteen feet at Us giwidth, and has a. dry, bird floor. A piece orouarooal picked up in tbo cave showed thaBUDH one mutt have visited it before tit aom

    ie, but ibe oldest residents any that the;uever knew of its existence. From thi

    ilt abore tbo CSTO ia to ba hnf the Crjno Iron Company, by whlob Ann.Tnshburn, the foroman, was killed, aud WI

    liam Curllug a laborer, bad his Irg huliy i,Jured. Waibhurti WM working uador a "lulwhioh, oating iu buried him completely,

    faing the sknll nutil tha brains oozeand munRling his body horribly. The :wai ODO that made strong men sick, Oarllogwas oovered with dirt. Tbe body or tho de-

    ed waa taken ofaarge of by Coroner Pri<whoenpanelod ajar?,which, after hearluglumber of witnDBies, returoea a verdict thai

    Wtebburncwneto bii death by his own c e e -ligenee. The yorioistt*^al6a, to i n j U i giay.haired old oftids imd haobeloni to bailor

    boUt toelalr and floan.

    A PhUaddlphU paper s»ys: "All thopapOTs b a n b esn.dmwB up preparitoty totaking tbe New Jcntny Chntnl Railroad Oo.aad the Leblgh and Wllkosbam Coal Oo.onlof tba bauds fif the meeiver "

    The'bueiif fhe Stab) n . Secretary of Stal*U h f kKeUey, on a charge of taking l

    UI btmu,y g g g mu,

    J U I be argnid on. tbe senoad day qf Ui» Ha-•ember term of ths Baprene Court.

    The poUto crop It caU ,(o bo far belowthe aveng*. m& aa a oonaequBnes tbey areretailing, ailhl»a«a*oa of the y«*r, *t <' U b b U

    Warren Gnaty agrUqltmal Boejtlywill hold tbeir trenlMaird unati ttxhlbiUonoa the Kthfinh andfctth ofB*pt«mb«.

    'he Denver. Western and PacificRailway Company,

    >F COLORADO- First Mor!fiit|,'e7 per rcni.QnldDouda duo J;itt, lnt, 1011. hiti'ii^t |nv-*b1e Jun. 1st aud July iKt. Fr/e from tmtx livthe United SfateaatdSt&tiM.rOiIorsitli). run'-1clpaiand Intcrent pnyidilo In thu City ol NewYnrh in gold coin. Hfcuruil by niortKHs1' ttan reina uuclalmedi n t b e P o i i O l T c e ftt D o v e r . N . J

    DOTTO, H. J., Aug. lutu, 1881.Ura T Benrmm, Mrs. T. 0. Bennetts,AI'rod Obriitoflerion, Eliia Oonnmd.John Oonnory, ** ' '- • • mi,..

    Michael 3Michael fl.Patrlob HSLUcsporA Hi- - - I Kir,Julian Lnnd, fc)W B PalmarMr* L Ayers

    . John Hardqmit,Mrs O P. Mtickal,

    Itater Tonne,.7o obtain any of the abora l«tl»ra My"*4>rttied •andglVBdataof thliUjt.

    G. O. HINCHHAN, P. M.

    AKNDTSUSSEX S t GROCER,•tiU ooatiiiiiM to kMp • fall u l bmib q i u .

    Groceries and Provisions,

    SEASONABLE FRUITS,

    Y «rntem or Small Profit* eppnoiatad.Quality aodworkmanihip of tbe best.

    Uy thanks for liberal pitrdniga ID the past.Ordars by telegraph messenger or telephone

    ttended to. ^ ^ joKEfl, UndcrUler.•ly , Boeksway, N. J.

    Om will alwayibt hVm t« «.Or,g«,d,of the Beit qwality Bud equal paina lo ^n

    •Wwt with the imiclrolii f ^

    sPHILADELPHIA ICE CREAM,

    3 QIMIITS PACKED IN M i FOB 11.

    CANSOT HE BEAT IK THIS S T i T E

    "\VH(]IJ:HM,E ANU ltKTAIIx

    IBA C. COOPER,MASON AND BUILDER!Culltr&dB taktn BL.1 madrinlfl furniHh.il r,r

    BUILDINGS, UIIUJUKS.

    BO. H. KmoHT, Socr

    very preparatBll.v inlpfpHiin

    B. C. (1UEHIml .11 lm.1. of ̂ o.t. »l,,,,l,i

    KTOKK

    w EUA iHiildiiif, bU>rrm

    « . H . J . «-tf

    I - T O CONEY Ittt,AKD

    \IATI1E NKW YnilK AND BRIGHTONlii'.ACH RAILWAY.

    Klt.L Vt)S KUI.LMT(!i«rior47, f.

    11.15 n. as , Iid Fini- 3, I*. \i. 11.30 A. M., 1.15, 4.St

    li.i'j r. M.EKTJU TRIPS ON RUNIHYS.

    BOAT LEAVES 1'lEJl 47 at 'J A. H ,A N D I ' I E H 3 A T ' J . I G A . a.

    14nfHuriinJM«ll|i'St!'iroas™o»meBJtBtorc.witb tJiml. E(J

    ;ETB m i BAI.R *T VODOIIT A KILLOO

    WANTED!GOOD ROCK MINERS

    Urn tninoa of tlio CANADA CONSOLIDATED

    GOLD MINING CO., Marmora, Canada.

    truct work. Oooil board a n j Icdging mav* l>"

    I ad lor 12.50 per week. Tlio mines arc ail-

    atea within twentj-tour hoars of New York.

    ddrfist, Seetetury of thn Cutiarta CotiHululHti'il

    Gold Micmg Co., crnitU DuiWing, B Court-

    indt St., New York. SC-2w

    GREAT REDUCTIONMILLINERYFANCY GOODS!

    NOLANin closinROnt hor eatiro stock of IIA.TR ,BONNEJB at qiihrter prices. DatH.nn 20(1300 bain ami buiineta at 20 ct». each ; loi[>rku Imiu 50 vis. Iu *2. Most of Ihoiu aiedark ami will bt> eniUbte foe ni l wear. A D -

    lliurlol a t lOcU. uarb; all nottL more thitiouUo iba inoiii!icKtlon of thJ t i it i

    !icKtlon\ J utrii it is ollmt naiil Eicouiriti ll r l

    nbovennil bv Ibo

    pabiiQniro

    pabiiQ uoticotil D ere ill lore ur tlio CM Into i)f n»W duquJinLring >n ttieir dubta, ileuiaudu ami cla•qalnst thu name, u ltd fir ostb, wlttiin itaontliB from this (late, bj puttiuR up » uop

    ' f ithis onUithi

    itln.witlnn twentyilajiplitnaftcr.iii CT. . ..je most public plaecm In ibe oouiitj-"/Moris for ivro mouttii, itnrt »J»u within tbo nnic

    BIT davs b j ulrcrilfliiiff dm h tli' E ; " f tb w

    fur I ha

    j ulrcrof tbebe nmpw*0

    O of tlmu (tboi t b

    am o h0*Uli"

    for Ihe same HI>»CO of tlmu (tjQd(;iii)» any Itariber notice to be unncooMtiry•nd il any oreditor shall ucgli-et to exhibit bior tier debt, demand nnd claim witinu thn »«perlocl of niiiu mootha, peblio DQticn beinfliOt ftsaforomiiil, such creilitor nhsll be fiiever (Icbarrea of hiB or lier Btliou tborer.against tbo mud Eiocntrii .

    A Irno copy troin tbe mlnatci.3C-J5 t*C,Otl] CHAR. A. GILLEN, HorroKali •

    BENSON'SCAPCINE POROUS PLASTER.

    [t Is rat>I(l ill rclifvinR, qmi-l* in curing. ForLIMG Uiefe, Ubc-imiKtie-n, Kiilncy Aflccllonu,md aclicti %m\ pains genen l l j , it ia tbe nn-

    GREAT CLOSING OUTAUGUST SALE!

    To make room for early Fall

    Goods, W m . B . Bakerwill close out during the month

    of August all his stock of SUM-

    MER DRY GOODS WAY

    tTNDBR COST, and a general

    reduction will be made on

    everything in the store during

    August. An early call will in-

    sure BARGAINS.

  • TBE IBONERA.BA T'JRDAV. AUU. >Oth. 1881

    LOCAL jorrmca.flpMlal election next Tn»nJay.Han* OM. A. a * i » f m> In t e n on Xma-

    dtf.Tbe Hist National Bank of Kftdboa opeu

    Sept. l it ,; ll>«.KioWM»d daughter a n tWttog in Con-nwttent.

    Mr. Beoj. Brown, ot Hadiwn, is spoken olfor Sheriff.

    If in Agffio Gage ia enjojlng the breww alOOMD Qrora.

    Dr. Join I . MHIB, of BnoUiMtf.fcM MOMta Poagbheepsie,

    Tbe exact number of children in Hi

    Mr. John Dotting, of Buccimnna, nailed forG&nu&ivj ofl Thursday,

    The new tribe of Bed Men at Fort Or»m iiDittlL'd Hopocoa tribe.

    F*t t i r llnulej KKR too ill to hold lorrico inSi. Mary'a l*Jt Sunday.

    Mt«. Jui. D. Bold it eDtertuning hmnV?OTG boarders at Olienter,

    It ia reported that tbo Bcaoh Glen mi nee arsoon to be worked again.

    Tlie rreifitt boaio of the Central R*iiro*d i

    Mis. Partiuftton fa abroad again. "Toriuroue Wi-iUjiiiga" is goud.

    The Morris Canal Company are altering tbciibridges to conform to tho law.

    John B. Tlonlkisr, RU eminent musical compoflcr, is BUProering at WhlpjJioy,

    The lane year tbo Port Or*m furnace wan nilIt tiudfi n«aily 13,000 toot or iron.

    Mr. I. Hull, of Summit, 1BH hld flT. orfana OA TUur--A d d ' k "

    l l i e Oooniy Oollwtor'a qQarterly rt|»fl willb» foonfl D I onr lwt pi«».

    B n Winter1* Kiudergarteii Hhool will opwO M i»«k b o s next Houday.

    Vanww'r pr«dloted ooo] ap«ll, bahrtcn the15th and flCth arriisd o& t ine .

    r tlie katy-didl ara rigbt, Iroit will comeabout tba laiddJe of September.

    Sx-Barrogate E . £ . WilUs it treasurer for tVeatero railroad, with offloe in Haw York.

    H I M HoCloikuy and brother, coaiim of Oar-Anal MfiCbiVeT, are (topping la MorrliBtowu.

    Mr.L-O. Stife*, of the Jeneyman, •• camp.s for ievtral *acka in tha Ad iron Jack region.Win. f. Wright, formerly of Dover, bai been

    appointed bookkeeper for llie new bank i t«4UaiuHattio E. Wagner, di lighter or Daniel Wng-

    ner, formeily of Dadd'* Lake, died in Brooklyn

    of tho Mt. Freedom

    Tiiel'rciibptoriMi Cliuroh will be re-i-'imnod>T BarrlMs on Sunday and Itov.T. B. (JnuiliiH occupy the putpil.'ITi&ro li»* Vet'tt » »uJJm avid nmrkfitl ad-

    mice in the price- of fjraiu of iroiu riflit t»olvo tents per biiuhol.Bui-. Cornetiiia Clnrb, 8r., who onUWiniiei

    .o llrst Mothuiliat soclctr in Uoualuareaclit'd Ui that piaco hot Hiuiilaj emnin^.Dr. H. B. JiJliupuo and Fred. C»iifiutthn. Mr. Hill Ktili Imvioi;waal.yll,(. lurob of tho \>c>u\v\- thii iltii.li Lnari) and

    .r... »•••• IU. driver Wt, >m-ciif BIKI U{»( tin- hsr«

    jnd cutll Mr. H. had IT«ilieffason. 'Ilitiyaoon en. wliUuut liavSog t(i «ul i

    •vcr. Tlio waj;

    PORT MORRIS.Vbo ffaabl hea 1

    We doo'i o n . Bat th* awrt«« ASWIMIIwill b . askiaff" Wfco wooU fa«

    Preiidei.tr bj aad by.Botne of lit* w w i w p m a n twgioninf |o*ch MMlr rM4«n that ail that ia newwary

    taak. the Vice Pr*aid*nt thiaotatl Fnddeittti*» United ijtatci ti W abwt tU» Pmldaotao lie wlli bars to b« laid, np a couple of

    th««fttoWoUt; and tteaaftectht aiiabiilly 1* retnotrf tbe n u who m ial«cted President will bive to step down and

    udo Preudrat b j tbebullet of aa MWftaln vllt aerre tbe term oat.Suppose f'.:.: President hid an attack olamsJIpoi or loarlet lever wonid that oosititote ina-bility? aid would the Vice Pretidont bouncetho President oat of the White Houee, uaumtbe duties or an office to whiob lie tnta nciJectml, and remain in It until Ibo eui ot thecrm tor which the other man was eloctedTt wonld not be 'jeiltby for any Viea Prtsilent tn nmlertakv tbat job iu tbeprcaant staUif public ftH'ling. This is a croftt country aucto a.ru * trru&t pnofAa, With all OUT fsultiI'he Hun may work itiotf intn fiU, and theVurlil may P. top atar, hut if "wo, the PEUPLH'Imuno ID let tht fiovoniDioiit run itbtif fativhil,' I rtt'kun wu'll ehnldoi

    iog. Thu», dioriin

    ilio siuginft of Bolus,

    Morrlt County MHk CondemnedDr. W K. hewton.aute Iimpector of milk,atie Another raid on Wednesday night or Uetork. This tiuieliis-jpeutiona wore ouoBQcd

    to NetfRik. Be first pr^ceedod to tbe Enede-end awaited tho arrival of theOraogotj" milk. Theinspoction roiolted in theviTj of fourteen cam oT tltnmutl milk

    s Tor N.

    3. P. Cole 4 Son, of Piiie Brook, t only-fouricd, of which tlireq or four

    •ail been slimiuod and the b&lanco watered,o the extent of from SO lo W par cent. Onhe waROn of E. Jacoba&, of 1'ic.e Bronk. fir-eon cann were found. Four wero slimmna,ind elHVnn,watercil to the ei lent of from ten,& fnxtj per ci;tit. Colo k Hon »nd JaeolniBrare Bneil fifty dolUii each. Sevanl xmali•nisi] deilprs were itoppod and the milk foundjfl nw tlie miaininm. Atinat 8,5M quarts wire.UMitdintliBieworsbytheloKprwtfir mi thu'ifiitt.. Newark.

    MIIL IuKpector Newtnn pni,] Newart aonthrrrixil Tuesday niplit, and Iminioe tbtf milklliat had bt-on akioimcd sad watered, w n ao.la way to Now York through Newark, pro-

    Chiif HaRRtrty and

    BinaolL Tho Uwyeri, W, W. Portei and Mr.Wood, BCin of honorable Isnac Wood of Trenton,nbo U vtBUltipj at Bov. J . ff. PorlecI*,defsnd«ttheir rcapootive cliouti iu tbo liigbeiit slyhir the prorc«»Ion, ' 'Little Tot" was rfloltodIT Heta WIDA and ll GonA Night(1 by Austin'an Atednlo. " Tho GodJcas of Liberty " waa

    repreeoutcJ byMiaa H.May. Scripturo on athrone, a goldon crowD upon bar bead and theglorious . tarr j banner at bar right handTo ofTer thuir aervicea to her la the New World

    it Hits QIKIUDBI or Agriculture re pro-tout uj by Him Ella Btackhouae, »tsr-oyed 3ci-

    itUlsaSalli* ttnlRht, Ml»i

    iDTBoa of Sculpture, H I M Tick Bast ofMiW Kmnib Case ot ladustrj t a d UlaiFortor of White-robed Religion) to

    whom the Goddefi and her hand miidemboKci iu it^etBTiC*. Ths wliole ended with%D cieollenl tftbltiau.

    I hope ibis will not bo tho last entertain-ment ol thu Bwnbrpe lltncl of Hopo *Uu 1would like to see every boy and girl ia the vi-:inityioinil.

    Whtrv erory nnc wlio took part m It done BOwell, I refrain from praJsing anjbodj in par-licnlar, contenting niy»olf with (imply giving(he lumiis of ihote who contribnle'l to amusa[heir parents and friendn for a couple of bournin Tneisdjy evening. Bet. Joseph W. Purler,lticI>iBioroftboPi'eib.viori«[itOhiircb,de»orvei:n-ditfjr the pationca he muni bave ban in[raining the linyg and plrli iu thuir parlB, do Jihe IM>J» and HIIS ilttl Jimton to llmir teacher.*t the cliian ItPT. J . W. Purtor gave oaih nmm-

    [)l Ibo Baud of Hupu a box of cauily direct

    Dt-tc ot theDetccUTo ItuiUBti, nnJ deIn)mined Iu mub-v

    saK'Jii owned l̂ y Thomas O. Bmith, ot Pai-ilppsny, and luilo«-Qg, tlio Imiicfttlimu iro tliat there wjti bt- rain•tim«whore in the United SUten or Oaiiftda.Wbco itbtKinn to tliooaor lock out fjrUght-Dins. To ica tbo held of the fimilT heUnn IDliia right hand pocket, lien in bit ielt h&ud[>oclnrt«n InatrnotD'n 308PPH BhOHTLlDUK.

    BteiW!ft

    DUlUSa TIIIE MOHTH W E ARK OOISQ TO OVVGB OUR 1TOCK OP

    STRAW HATS,WHITE "VESTS,

    ALPACA COATS,SUMMER UNDERCLOTHING

    AND

    LIGHT GASSIHEBX SUITSAT

    SLAUGHTERING PEIGES.DON'T MISS T1US OPPOCTufli-lT TO SAVE MONEY.

    J. BE. PIERSON,OPP. THE BANK.

    August Stli, 1881. DOVER, N. J.

    OVER 100,000 MILES

    OF THIS FENCING

    IS AGENT FOR DOVEII, IV. J., AT HIB

    HARDWARE AND IRON STOREHE ALWAYS KEEPS IN STOCK HVUftYTHINU IN TDK

    HAUmVAltE LINE IN ITS KKASOJV AT LOWESTMARKET PHICKS.

    THE PADLOCK,

    OPPOSITE BRICK BLOCK.

    REMOVAL!J. EAIRHOVSE,

    T U B J E W E L . e B , b>» reinimil to upait ol ilie .lorn of M. Kingsbnrg,

    No. 4, Brick Block,NEXT TO EREESE'B, whete h« will remain airing lbs erection of Lia now building,

    and will continue to keep as large utocks u ever of

    n̂ > WATCHES, ̂ 23Including the FAMOUS KOaEFOItD,

    CLOCKS! CLOCKS!OUA1NS, RINGS