stadlished 1893.—no. i 288. fininareil with motoring ...welfare of the class wsb offered by rev....

8
STADLISHED 1 8 9 3 . — N o . I 288. f Fishing <u an amusement : is not to be ininareil with motoring, provided [he car f right. Try a rldo iu thB ralveless linorf, of which the agent In this section II. Ii. Finlt,- Westllold. Homo fooda need a label as a guarantee purity, but Miller's vegetables carry wirown message equality lathe palate;- rites are always reasonable, too. Don't suffer the annoyanco of leaky ucels, or traps and run tbo risk of dani- ;o id floors, ceilingi and furniture. lumber's bills oan be kept down by tuk- ig a stitch in time, and employing 'illmra Isleib. . ' b For 811I0 at a bargain, 1 onk and 1 lackwnlnut bedstead, bed springs, lot of Mire, kerosene 'lamps, electric light fix- ires, carriage pole. May be seen at lOii ilnstieet. Tel. 250-1,. J. A. Polter. For Kent: Apartment, 5 rooms, all im- -orements, f 25 n month, in the W. M lerry building; J. C. W. llankin, act ! E. North avo. , h ' Desk blotters in several colors anil bris- il board are on sale nt the Chroniclo olllco 5o. ft sheet. ' - To let: Desirable offices in tlio Chroniole Hiding; best location, all conveniences. ^^ bursolfb-hiiving a, Well drilled on your f n premises by Frank T. Cladek, Ilah- (ay, N. J. Tef.-S57.lt. Kahway. .POPULAR OUTINGS New Jersey Central ILAKE HOPATCONG EVERY; SUNDAY AND HOLIDAY •ROUND £1 nil Truln ICUVI* ATLANTIC CITY NEXT SUNDAY, JUNE 25th vn 4 9 i n Tr " |n |pavi Children HALP PARI! Each OulInK -HOUSE AM) BARN FOR SALE •"Inquire at 3 Madtson "Ave. * asons, Builders & G)ntractors ' JotRini^a^Speclalty | Brick, Stone, Cement «nd Plastering Estimates Furnished t W. Lincoln Ave., - Crautord COMMENCEMENT Ooabtleas there were many in the crowd that witnessed the graduation exercises in the Presbyterian Church last Thursday night who could not translate the class motto. Fit Via Va, Bpelk'd in large letters cm a banner overhanging the pulpit, bat the first of the three words was plainly appli- cable to the eleven young men and women who sat upon the platform. They were Fit. TJie seniors entered the church at the center door and marched down the aisle between floral ropes held by pretty girls of lower classes. Tho procession included also members of line faculty and of the board of edu- cation. When the orchestra stopped playing, an earnest invocation for the welfare of the class WSB offered by Rev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor of the First M. E. Church. The salutatory, assigned to MIBS Freda Lewis, in recognition of her standing, second in sohQlarship during the High School course, was a gracious " " the teachers, classmates _ in turn, and she followed this with a description of the nature myths of the North American Indians. The.| word of greeting to trustees, friends: and Hiawatha, although by no means de- pendent upon Longfellow's famous poem for its subject matter. One of the prettiest of the many legends nar- rated was that concerning the origin of "New J e r s e y T moat famous bird, the mosquito. . .'; Kenneth Jones described the numerous political parties that have struggled for control in the United States from its beginnings as a nation untilnow.... JTh^ .diylsions ,.that f .j^WjJ of the constitution, itariff, -slavery colnagc.andtother isluee |w<jre"a«-' curately described, and {the essay closed with a declaration that the Republican party, on/ account of its recent failure to. revise the tariff, downward, as promised in" Its plat' form, had forfeited popular support and to give him a reputation that grows in lustre with the passage of the yean. He was bitterly censored during Us official life by thousands who no*r admit that they were wrong and be was right In proof of Us independence, Miss Uesiick pointed to his vetoes, outnumbering those Of all bia predecessors from the founda- tion of the government. It was shown in his dealing with the tariff question, the crisis in 1893, and in the settle- ment of the Venezuela boundary dis- pute, at the risk of a war with Eng- land. "• ' ! ' A.live question waa presented by Miss Mary Landrine in her essay on Local Conservation. The trees lining the river banks in Cranford ( were called a public asset which has. to a large extent already been lost tkroogh injudicious cutting; by property,'own- ers. The effect of this "improvements" if conti sorely be to destroy the the river, dficreaae its depth canoeing unpleasant and sort unpopular, scales that The fungus attack : trees were? also profiting by the experience of our friends across the water in this respect. Electrical phenomena was the theme of. George Lawrence who told of the properties of the Leyden Jar, bow it was proved that electricity waa akin U> lightning, the different kinds of lightning, the theories of the North- ern lights and other allied phenomena. Hiss Dorothy Smith sketched the dealings of the white man with the Indians, declaring that the reservation system had not . worked to the im- provement or benefit of the red man. His progress, she contended, is to be achieved by education and civilization. The modern girl Was contrasted by Miss Dorothy Wood with her grand- mother of colonial dayB, and each bad points of superiority to the other. The modem girl wears more showy clothes, shines more brilliantly, in society, knows more of music and fine arts, but on the other hand, has superficiality which, could not be foonoVin the Colonial girl. rThe latter' was a deep .thinker, and laid emphasis on character, rather than appearance. William Oakey, first honor student mentioned as subjects for attention by [ in the class of 1911, delivered the those who would have a part ii the conservation of Cranford'a attractions. line. about the man. who bath no moW in himself has a text. Miss Dfrotby Schindler spoke of the rhythm iff .the pulse beat, heart-action, the Human voice, andI the different kinds of ..snng. Nature baa a harmony, the stars, sing in their courses, there is Jnusie jentfalerection next year."•'" Grover Cleveland was'described by Misa .Florence Mcaaickaaar^ extra- d i P i d h l i to hold office in an ordinary time; But the two terms served to establish his independence and his firmness, in the echoes of the hills, ij rolling of the sea and in the that are cast upon the beaches.! life has its rhythm, and death with discord. __.^.._i_'_ Praxtical newspaper work ^ Student and the Roselle Review :n | eu-'-&*i]iiIton*8'*6rilt1dh' Ii on*" fbfl velopment of Journalism in the Ij States the unmistakable note A comment so abundant that it wa truly the ihelU All nines the gave De- nited evi- dent that'the production of the .ideal u newspaper awaits only the tipa,,, .oXwJfc, ^«nilton f *. A Leland Stanford University. The superiority of the industrial or continuation schoojs -of -Eornljt. vto ordinary'President Whose'lot it was"}Tbose'6T~bur own country was frankly admitted and enforced with facts and valedictory. Some of ua,.. he are going to college, some to said, busi- girls) are going to stay at home and help mother.. He proceeded to allege and buttress with instances the loyalty of the class to the school and to one another. The .board uf education and. the teachers were thanked handsomely for their.services and for tho interest constantly shown during the high school course in the welfare of the class. , • • - In the absence of President Swack- hamer of the. board of trustees, his .{ujijocialiip,^^ medals as follows: ::\rr: v ' ,: .. & »^Boari€ofgA£dDcatioa>''v#cholanbi]i' prize to Albert Medcr. . V. I. A. prizes for English compo- sition. toJSugene Towler, and Frederick Hamilton of the High School, and to Robert Hahlo and Tom Osborn of the grammar department. ^4^ : Chamberlain, Charles Gilmoie 2, Wil- liam Bell 2, George Lawrence and Edward Ha«en.—• -....,- •• The music of the evening in addi- tion to that of the 'school orchestra figures by Miss Leslie Wagstaff. Tho I consisted of choruses by pupils of tho importanMjfas clearly p o i n ^ out ofj school, directed by Miss Stewart. Uev. John Edgocubme, D. D., pro- nounced the benediction. Friday morning the members of the Eighth tirade had their exercises and received diplomas which are the_.ovi- dence' of "promotion to tho High School. The following programme was followed out: Overture, orchestra. Chorus, "Tho Miller," Eighth Gradaof Grant and Sherman. Essay, "A Canoe Trip on the Ruh- way River," Elizabeth Bush. Trio, Russell Freeman, - Hairy Heina, Harold Collins. Recitation, "The Legend of Bro- genr," Margaret Kansch. Chorus, "In June Time," Grunt School. Essay, "History of New Jcgsey,'' Augusta Gaffney. Chorus, "Boautiful Moonlight," Grant and Sherman. . Essay, "Historic Nouks and Corn- ers^of^liiab^bi'^-LoliBiniiiathe'wS:' Chorus, "Tho . Rhino Raft," Grant School. ... - . . Address, County Supt. J." J." Snvitz. Presentation of Diplomas. [IWbert Hulilo, 7th Grade, Grant School] Few people who ueu our l>e,autiful town to-day realizo that it was less Jhan fifty yoars ago that only a hand- ful 'ofjieppie lived here.., T ^,-- 7IiI .,, ,, ; ' "Cr'ariiford war originally part of Elizabeth town and was not mudo a township until riarchl4," 1871. For one hundred and twenty-eight years after Elizabethtown wafl settled it was undivided,- but West field was set apart on. January 27, 1794, Union on ^Febiiiary.'ilSfel. Other township's were Some children came to.Cranford on July 4, 1849, to visit josiah Cfiine. They put the name Craneville on n •boiWrnr-Ttear—tho ""rai Hfia'if'" ami" : i t stayed that way until 1869, when it wa3_ehangcd to. Cranford. Rcfbre 1867 the people of Crane- Connecticut Furms . popt offices for their mail. These post offices would Cranovitle" 6h'"Sal:urday night, andSunday morning in church the mail would be distributed. Then John Baldwin established the first poBt ofH;2. —--! Josiah prano owned all the property from the railroad to tho river which is one of tho principal features of the town. Ho stayed on the aamo farm all the time ho lived hero which was located at tho-/ present sito- of the opera house. Ho only sold hij farm for building lots and lived to BCH tho town grow and proiper. Ho d i d here. At about 1837 near tho dam of tho Rahway River their used to bo a grist mill which waa conducted by th 1 Gormana and on the opposite shorj was a cider mill and distillery which wore conducted by Josiah Crane and his sons. You cannot see anything of these mills to-day. The old Miller homestead is quite famous for its military fame ^xjcauao once General Lafayette dined with the Millers and drank from the well which has been in uso,oyer since the land was bought from tho Indians. The Millers themselve.5 we_ra-;.ro_ldiera_.,(n i£"R'vblUtWrili''rid''W'''ri : 8)2 ydWaori8)2 The farm was originally two hundrct acres and; waa located on the opposite Bide of Elizabeth avenue. Tho pro Bent Miller homestead was built ii 1800 and has some of the _doors 0. The first real bigboom in Cranevilli was in tho early sixties when Aldci B. Bigelow, L. Eastman and Miln I*. Dayton bought the Josiah Crane trac of land which was scarcely more thai art- -apple orchard, "although It"' wa- thirty-soven acres in oxtcnt. Stroott were then laid out and over thirty houses were built on the properly Aldon street was namod after Alder B. Bigolow, Miln street after Milt I*. Dayton and Eaatmr-I street, afto The name of Winans alto appear- BtndHg- tho early ^settlers. J. D WinahB conducted a blacksmith shot' at tho forks of tho roads leading t<> Rnhway, WostOuld and Ellzaboth. Mr,.JVinaok died. in. 1900, but the old- - blacksmith shop is still standing a its original, location, now known o> Centennial avonuo. , ' . opposito what is now tho Golf Clul and was situated at tho comer or what Is now Union -and 'Llncoli avenues. ThlB school was usod fo moro thno a century and was sue ceeded by a second and third. AH [cbNTINUKD OKIA»T PAOK| SALE at A FINE CHANCE TO BE FITTED OUT FOR THE SUMMER IN EVERYTHING Shoe Department FOR WOMEN AND PUMPS Gun metal, russet and patent leather. Latest and snappiest styles in all widths A to EE, $2^0 to $4.50. FOR CHILDREN for cfifidren, in~ozfi»ds anti pumps. Gun metal, russet and patent. Also a complete line of barefoot sandals and tennis slippers, in all colors*. .High-grade goods at low prices. FOR MEN AND BOYS Douglas and Just Right Shoes and Oxfords in all'leathers NOTE THESE SPECIALS Men's $3.00 Douglas at - $2.29 Boy's Gun Metal and Russet. v Oxfords, regular $2.00, at $1.5O , REPAIRING NEATLY AND PROMPTLY DONE. Furnishing^Qoods CLUETT & PEABODY SMRTS, negligee and Department Store BY MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN Clothing OUR LEADER IS THE Shirts, at $1.1.5 Balbriggan and Poros-Knit, B. V. D. union suits or 2-piece. FuD line of BATHING SUITS—Blue and Gray for Men and Boys. STRAW HATS AND CAPS At Special Prices from 8|p to $5.50 GREAT VALUES IN FANCY VESTS AND TROUSERS, BELTS AND NECKWEAR. FfFTEEN SUITS FOR MEN The finest clothing manufac- • tured in the United States. Every garment guaranteed or All the latest styles at one price S15 Men's Fancy Suits Gray, Blue Serge and other fancy goods, hand-made button holes, first-class lining, perfect fitting tO $12 Boy's Clothing Norfolk style, all wool goods $1.98 to $3 Also a- full line in wash suits at great reductions. Telephone 160=L S m •<

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Page 1: STADLISHED 1893.—No. I 288. fininareil with motoring ...welfare of the class WSB offered by Rev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor of the First M. E. Church. The salutatory, assigned to

STADLISHED 1 8 9 3 . — N o . I 288.

f Fishing <u an amusement: is not to beininareil with motoring, provided [he car

fright. Try a rldo iu thB ralveless

linorf, of which the agent In this sectionII. Ii. Finlt,- Westllold.Homo fooda need a label as a guaranteepurity, but Miller's vegetables carry

wirown message equal i ty lathe palate;-rites are always reasonable, too.Don't suffer the annoyanco of leakyucels, or traps and run tbo risk of dani-;o id floors, • ceilingi and furniture.lumber's bills oan be kept down by tuk-ig a stitch in time, and employing'illmra Isleib. . ' b

For 811I0 at a bargain, 1 onk and 1lackwnlnut bedstead, bed springs, lot ofMire, kerosene 'lamps, electric • light fix-ires, carriage pole. May be seen at lOiiilnstieet. Tel. 250-1,. J. A. Polter.For Kent: Apartment, 5 rooms, all im--orements, f 25 n month, in the W. Mlerry building; J. C. W. llankin, act

! E. North avo. , h '

Desk blotters in several colors anil bris-il board are on sale nt the Chroniclo olllco5o. ft sheet. • ' -

To let: Desirable offices in tlio ChronioleHiding; best location, all conveniences.

^ ^

bursolfb-hiiving a, Well drilled on yourf n premises by Frank T. Cladek, Ilah-(ay, N. J. Tef.-S57.lt. Kahway.

.POPULAR OUTINGS

New Jersey Central

ILAKE HOPATCONGEVERY; SUNDAY AND HOLIDAY

•ROUND £ 1 n i l Truln ICUVI*

ATLANTIC CITYNEXT SUNDAY, JUNE 25th

vn 4 9 i n Tr"|n |pavi'»

Children HALP PARI! Each OulInK

-HOUSE AM) BARNFOR SALE

•"Inquire at 3 Madtson "Ave. *

asons, Builders & G)ntractors' JotRini a^Speclalty

| Brick, Stone, Cement «nd PlasteringEstimates Furnished

t W. Lincoln Ave., - Crautord

COMMENCEMENTOoabtleas there were many in the

crowd that witnessed the graduationexercises in the Presbyterian Churchlast Thursday night who could nottranslate the class motto. Fit Via Va,Bpelk'd in large letters cm a banneroverhanging the pulpit, bat the firstof the three words was plainly appli-cable to the eleven young men andwomen who sat upon the platform.They were Fit.

TJie seniors entered the church atthe center door and marched down theaisle between floral ropes held bypretty girls of lower classes. Thoprocession included also members ofline faculty and of the board of edu-cation. When the orchestra stoppedplaying, an earnest invocation for thewelfare of the class WSB offered byRev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor ofthe First M. E. Church.

The salutatory, assigned to MIBSFreda Lewis, in recognition of herstanding, second in sohQlarship duringthe High School course, was a gracious

" " the teachers,classmates _ in

turn, and she followed this with adescription of the nature myths ofthe North American Indians. The.|

word of greeting totrustees, friends: and

Hiawatha, although by no means de-pendent upon Longfellow's famouspoem for its subject matter. One ofthe prettiest of the many legends nar-rated was that concerning the originof "New JerseyT moat famous bird, —the mosquito. . .';

Kenneth Jones described thenumerous political parties that havestruggled for control in the UnitedStates from its beginnings as a nationuntilnow....JTh^ .diylsions ,.thatf.j^WjJ

of the constitution, itariff, -slaverycolnagc.andtother isluee |w<jre"a«-'curately described, and {the essayclosed with a declaration that theRepublican party, on/ account of itsrecent failure to. revise the tariff,downward, as promised in" Its plat'form, had forfeited popular support

and to give him a reputation thatgrows in lustre with the passage ofthe yean. He was bitterly censoredduring Us official life by thousandswho no*r admit that they were wrongand be was right In proof of Usindependence, Miss Uesiick pointedto his vetoes, outnumbering those Ofall bia predecessors from the founda-tion of the government. It was shownin his dealing with the tariff question,the crisis in 1893, and in the settle-ment of the Venezuela boundary dis-pute, at the risk of a war with Eng-land. "• ' ! '

A.live question waa presented byMiss Mary Landrine in her essay onLocal Conservation. The trees liningthe river banks in Cranford( werecalled a public asset which has. to alarge extent already been lost tkrooghinjudicious cutting; by property,'own-ers. The effect of this"improvements" if contisorely be to destroy thethe river, dficreaae its depthcanoeing unpleasant and

sort

unpopular,scales that

The fungusattack : trees were? also

profiting by the experience of ourfriends across the water in this respect.

Electrical phenomena was thetheme of. George Lawrence who toldof the properties of the Leyden Jar,bow it was proved that electricity waaakin U> lightning, the different kinds oflightning, the theories of the North-ern lights and other allied phenomena.

Hiss Dorothy Smith sketched thedealings of the white man with theIndians, declaring that the reservationsystem had not . worked to the im-provement or benefit of the red man.His progress, she contended, is to beachieved by education and civilization.

The modern girl Was contrasted byMiss Dorothy Wood with her grand-mother of colonial dayB, and eachbad points of superiority to the other.The modem girl wears more showyclothes, shines more brilliantly, insociety, knows more of music andfine arts, but on the other hand, has

superficiality which, could not befoonoVin the Colonial girl. rThe latter'was a deep .thinker, and laid emphasison character, rather than appearance.

William Oakey, first honor studentmentioned as subjects for attention by [ in the class of 1911, delivered thethose who would have a part i i theconservation of Cranford'a attractions.

line.about the man. who bath no moW inhimself has a text. Miss DfrotbySchindler spoke of the rhythm iff .thepulse beat, heart-action, the Humanvoice, andI the different kinds of ..snng.Nature baa a harmony, the stars,sing in their courses, there is Jnusie

jentfalerection next year." •'"Grover Cleveland was'described by

Misa .Florence Mcaaickaaar^ extra-d i P i d h l i

to hold office in an ordinary time;But the two terms served to establishhis independence and his firmness,

in the echoes of the hills, ijrolling of the sea and in thethat are cast upon the beaches.!life has its rhythm, and deathwith discord. __.^.._i_'_

Praxtical newspaper work ^Student and the Roselle Review:n|eu-'-&*i]iiIton*8'*6rilt1dh'Ii on*" fbflvelopment of Journalism in the IjStates the unmistakable note A

comment so abundant that it wa

truly

theihelU

Allnines

thegaveDe-

nited

evi-dent that'the production of the .idealunewspaper awaits only thetipa,,, .oXwJfc, ^«ni l ton f *. ALeland Stanford University.

The superiority of the industrial orcontinuation schoojs -of -Eornljt. vto

ordinary'President Whose'lot it was"}Tbose'6T~bur own country was franklyadmitted and enforced with facts and

valedictory. Some of ua,.. heare going to college, some to

said,busi-

girls) are going to stay at home andhelp mother.. He proceeded to allegeand buttress with instances the loyaltyof the class to the school and to oneanother. The .board uf education and.the teachers were thanked handsomelyfor their.services and for tho interestconstantly shown during the highschool course in the welfare of theclass. , • • -

In the absence of President Swack-hamer of the. board of trustees, his. { u j i j o c i a l i i p , ^ ^medals as follows: ::\rr:v' ,: ..&»^Boari€ofgA£dDcatioa>''v#cholanbi]i'prize to Albert Medcr. .

V. I. A. prizes for English compo-sition. toJSugene Towler, and FrederickHamilton of the High School, and toRobert Hahlo and Tom Osborn of thegrammar department.^ 4 ^ :

Chamberlain, Charles Gilmoie 2, Wil-liam Bell 2, George Lawrence andEdward Ha«en .—• -....,- ••

The music of the evening in addi-tion to that of the 'school orchestra

figures by Miss Leslie Wagstaff. Tho I consisted of choruses by pupils of thoimportanMjfas clearly p o i n ^ out ofj school, directed by Miss Stewart.

Uev. John Edgocubme, D. D., pro-nounced the benediction.

Friday morning the members of theEighth tirade had their exercises andreceived diplomas which are the_.ovi-dence' of "promotion to tho HighSchool. The following programmewas followed out:

Overture, orchestra.Chorus, "Tho Miller," Eighth

Gradaof Grant and Sherman.Essay, "A Canoe Trip on the Ruh-

way River," Elizabeth Bush.Trio, Russell Freeman, - Hairy

Heina, Harold Collins.Recitation, "The Legend of Bro-

genr," Margaret Kansch.Chorus, "In June Time," Grunt

School.Essay, "History of New Jcgsey,''

Augusta Gaffney.Chorus, "Boautiful Moonlight,"

Grant and Sherman. .Essay, "Historic Nouks and Corn-

ers^of^liiab^bi'^-LoliBiniiiathe'wS:'Chorus, "Tho . Rhino Raft,"

Grant School. ... - . .Address, County Supt. J." J." Snvitz.Presentation of Diplomas.

[IWbert Hulilo, 7th Grade, Grant School]Few people who ueu our l>e,autiful

town to-day realizo that it was lessJhan fifty yoars ago that only a hand-ful 'ofjieppie lived here.., T ,--7IiI.,, ,,;'"Cr'ariiford war originally part ofElizabeth town and was not mudo atownship until riarchl4," 1871. Forone hundred and twenty-eight yearsafter Elizabethtown wafl settled itwas undivided,- but West field was setapart on. January 27, 1794, Union on

^Febiiiary.'ilSfel. Other township's were

Some children came to.Cranford onJuly 4, 1849, to visit josiah Cfiine.They put the name Craneville on n•boiWrnr-Ttear—tho ""rai Hfia'if'" ami": i tstayed that way until 1869, when itwa3_ehangcd to. Cranford.

Rcfbre 1867 the people of Crane-

Connecticut Furms . popt offices fortheir mail. These post offices would

Cranovitle" 6h'"Sal:urdaynight, and Sunday morning in churchthe mail would be distributed. ThenJohn Baldwin established the firstpoBt ofH;2. —--!

Josiah prano owned all the propertyfrom the railroad to tho river whichis one of tho principal features ofthe town. Ho stayed on the aamofarm all the time ho lived hero whichwas located at tho-/ present sito- ofthe opera house. Ho only sold hijfarm for building lots and lived to BCHtho town grow and proiper. Ho d idhere.

At about 1837 near tho dam of thoRahway River their used to bo a gristmill which waa conducted by th 1Gormana and on the opposite shorjwas a cider mill and distillery whichwore conducted by Josiah Crane andhis sons. You cannot see anythingof these mills to-day.

The old Miller homestead is quitefamous for its military fame ^xjcauaoonce General Lafayette dined with theMillers and drank from the well whichhas been in uso,oyer since the landwas bought from tho Indians. • TheMillers themselve.5 „ we_ra-;.ro_ldiera_.,(ni£"R'vblUtWrili''rid''W'''ri:8)2y d W a o r i 8 ) 2The farm was originally two hundrctacres and; waa located on the oppositeBide of Elizabeth avenue. Tho proBent Miller homestead was built ii1800 and has some of the _ doors 0 .

The first real big boom in Cranevilliwas in tho early sixties when AldciB. Bigelow, L. Eastman and Miln I*.Dayton bought the Josiah Crane tracof land which was scarcely more thaiart- -apple orchard, "although It"' wa-thirty-soven acres in oxtcnt. Stroottwere then laid out and over thirtyhouses were built on the properlyAldon street was namod after AlderB. Bigolow, Miln street after MiltI*. Dayton and Eaatmr-I street, afto

The name of Winans alto appear-BtndHg- tho early ^settlers. J. DWinahB conducted a blacksmith shot'at tho forks of tho roads leading t<>Rnhway, WostOuld and Ellzaboth.Mr,.JVinaok died. in. 1900, but the old- -blacksmith shop is still standing aits original, location, now known o>Centennial avonuo. • , ' .

opposito what is now tho Golf Cluland was situated at tho comer orwhat Is now Union -and 'Llncoliavenues. ThlB school was usod fomoro thno a century and was sueceeded by a second and third. AH

[cbNTINUKD OK IA»T PAOK|

SALE atA FINE CHANCE TO BE FITTED OUT FOR THE SUMMER IN EVERYTHING

Shoe DepartmentFOR WOMEN

AND PUMPSGun metal, russet and patent leather. Latest and snappiest

styles in all widths A to EE, $2^0 to $4.50.

FOR CHILDREN

for cfifidren, in~ozfi»ds antipumps. Gun metal, russetand patent. Also a completeline of barefoot sandals andtennis slippers, in all colors*.

.High-grade goods at low prices.

FOR MEN AND BOYSDouglas and Just Right Shoes and Oxfords

in all'leathers

NOTE THESE SPECIALS

Men's $3.00 Douglas at - $ 2 . 2 9

Boy's Gun Metal and Russet.v Oxfords, regular $2.00, at $1.5O

, REPAIRING NEATLY ANDPROMPTLY DONE.

Furnishing^QoodsCLUETT & PEABODY SMRTS, negligee and

Department StoreBY MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN

ClothingOUR LEADER IS THE

Shirts, at $1.1.5

Balbriggan and Poros-Knit, B. V. D. union suits or2-piece.

FuD line of BATHING SUITS—Blue and Gray for

Men and Boys.

STRAW HATS AND CAPS

At Special Prices from

8|p to $5.50

GREAT VALUES IN FANCY VESTS ANDTROUSERS, BELTS AND NECKWEAR.

FfFTEENSUITS FOR MEN

The finest clothing manufac-• tured in the United States.

Every garment guaranteed or

All the latest styles at one price

S15

Men's Fancy SuitsGray, Blue Serge and otherfancy goods, hand-made buttonholes, first-class lining, perfectfitting

tO $12

Boy's ClothingNorfolk style, all wool goods

$1.98 to $3Also a- full line in wash suits

at great reductions.

Telephone 160=L S

m •<

Page 2: STADLISHED 1893.—No. I 288. fininareil with motoring ...welfare of the class WSB offered by Rev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor of the First M. E. Church. The salutatory, assigned to

The Chronicle.JOHN A. POTTEB. Editor and Prop.

ORAJiFonD. - . . . . K. J.

Keep cool and you will be cooL

Also, bash the pest that rocks thebeat

. It mu«t be great to J>e.skinny, in notweather.- * ' ~" ' "'""

^otoTerwweather advice.

younieif taking hot

The World's WondersSTRANGE THINGS FOUND IN VARIOUS %,

PORTIONS OF THE EARTH *?

More popular Iban others are hotwave* with broken backs.

Now the man who sleeps out ofdoors finds It easier to make converts.

There ought to be a Nobel prize forthe personage who Invented shirtwaists.

About the only time the^ women'areRood listeners Is when tho preacherIs talking.

New York complains of a shortageof water, despite the fact It la sur-rounded by It

Detroit's team loses a game on rareoccasions to prove that lta players aremerely human.

Chicago Is now advocating air baths.A short time ago one of Us citizensdied In a bathtub, .

"~-~A Sow "Jersey man who ate pietwice a day for 89 years Is dead—goneto his desserts, as It were. . .

After college professors, reach acertain ago they don't seem to carewhat they soy about women.

^^T-h«r*~ftar"treWiidISe6V'i»a~one'orthose old-fashioned baseball games Inwhich ono team, scores 20 runB.

At the Hoe library sale "The Swan | Wl,!pUBhtl?1.0fMi~-lt«4i«w<>

""would not read It for twice that

"London dressmakers now propose)a gown with a detachable train. Hub- ,by, we presume, will be tho switch-man.

However, th0 avintcx-who threaten** " » ; n ™ i * n r .will not be t te ,only nigh nyer on that wicked (hor-oughfare.

"The earnings of tho average NewYork lawyer amount to about $1,000 a

^ S n j c ^ ^ a j n t a s f e l d l l

Weird Home of The Proteus

HOUSE FROM A WOODEN BOXFormer Iowa Boy Erects Such a Horn*

In Georgia and Fare*• W e l l . ;•"

Macon, Ga.—That a wooden box.makes a rattling good house for a boywhen he hasn't got any place else togo has been demonstrated satlsfactor-ily by Dewey Conley, aged 12, who

rns«4r1orsb»^»;^%tU4cip*;temDsj«K

TEXAS WILD CAUGHTA wild man appeared In the vicin-

ity of Marlln, Teat., and for days darn-ed—Into - rancher" and -compelled" the1

women to cook meals for him.He had long matted hair and-beard

and wore only a few rags. It was Im-possible to determine his color andbis only talk was a rambling, unintel-ligible gibberish.

The sheriff with a posse finally tookup the chase and lassoed the wild manIn a desolate part of the wilder-ness.

The prisoner was tied and two ne*groes put to work.on him with shears.razor and soap. After laboring forone whole day the man turned out tobe. white.

If he can talk, be refuses to, andnothing is known about who he Is, orwhere be came from. The authori-ties believe be baa been hiding In the

Since Dewey came to Macon, he baabeen doing odd Jobs about town, run*nlflg errands, helping about restau-rants, shoveling snow, anything he canfind to do. But it took very close toevery cent he made to pay for lodgingand meals. So he decided to have a

MArWITH A "GLASS" SKULLA peculiar freak of nature was re-

vealed recently at Philadelphia, whichled to a suspected murderer securinght. ">'««» t« «•- ~ of a row

a Xui^cheonor Supper.

Brown the con-{«»«» of a tin ofL&by's ViennaSausages in the"Tins pan and•-*—• with baked

a blow on the bead, and. droppedto the floor, -afterward dying In hos-pital. His assailant was arrested onthe capital charge, but -was releasedwhen physicians testifled..at_the,:lnr.^est':wt'>1}Dlniii's'-*4sa^n'''Vas'''B6'''"U>uithat large print could be read throughIt'and could be! bent under pressureof the fingers.

DUELING BEFORE THE CAMERA

Dewey's Box House.

houso of his own and do his own c o o tlBfr He talked the matter over withbis friend, Ed1 8miley, a .drayman.Smiley lives out en a hill overlopk-

he could set up bis habitation at thecorner of his property.

The lad had a'few dollars In thebank. . It took his f entire reserve tosettle for the box, put In a door and

Etuy to serve•—/She to eat

|hlllf> Cayley, accused of a erlma ofIch ha Is not guilty, realcns from tha">• In disgrace and hla affection for

friend. Uttut. Perry Hunter, turns toireil. Cayley seeks solitude, where heTfects a flying machine. While soaring

tha Arctic regions, he plcka up a>usly shaped stick ha had seen In the

ianln's hand. Mounting again, he dls-itrs a yacht anchored In the bay. D«-rnling near the steamer, he meets a[ on nn Ice floe. Ho learns that the1'a niime Is Jeanne Fielding and that

_, yacht has come north to seek algnaBiirr father, Captain Fielding, an arcticllorer. A party from the yacht la ma-

f search ashore. After Cayley departanno finds that he had dropped a cu-

.jily-shapod stick. Captain Hanck andL surviving crew of hla wrecked whaleit In hl.llngon the coast. A giant ruf-

ji named Jloscoa, had murdered Field , , .I »nd his two companions, after the ex- !Ircr had revealed tha location of an 1 w

fcrmous ledge of pure gold. Roscoe then '• mIk command of the party. It develops !fct the ruffian had committed the mur- ! O(V witnessed by Cayley. Roscoe plan.-I capture the yacht and escape with al . l . . d o ( i ( 9 l i jMnm Jells JCanahaw. i.W4«r6f-tbe-.y^t.r.*boat:tn*;vlslt br ihel fh/•man nnd shows him tho stick left byivley. Fanahaw declares that It Is an[klfflo throwlng-stlck. used to shootrts. Tom Fanahaw returns from (he—hlnc party wltH a sprained ankle"

Hunter Is found murdered and

^Sjc^^ajn: .ofpiijting It

Stealing a base on the rest of the»SW|JJ«6

urbatting averages to stimulate In-terest in mathematics.

New York has just sent 12,000,000 ofworn out money to Washington. Thefellows tho New Yorkers took It awayfrom were probably sent to tho hos-pital

A New York miser .committed sul-£l<Jo because ..he was lonesome, "and'yet you can hardly blame people fornot wanting to keep a miser's com-pany.

A western, railroad has placed onIts rails a car reserved for'womenonly,, but tbe women do not - afterall prefer on Adamless Eden onwheels.

. Don't be discouraged If tbe resultsvou get from your garden make Itseem expensive. The price put uponMadison Square garden In New YorkIs $3,500,000.

One of the most famous stalactite caverns In the world Is the great Adels-berg Grotto InCarnlola, about. rwenty-two^ mUe» nortiMaat «f-Trt«»t«w-"lt Hsover two miles long and Is the home of the "Proteus" or "Hypocthon angui-nus," the foot-long saurian whose eyes are but rudimentary and covered bythe skin. The Proteus has a smooth, bare, eel-like body*tend four legs. Theforefeet are three-toed; the hinder, four-toed. In addition to pctrnjnenteMer;

After the service in a small countrychurch in Suffolk bad begun the otherSunday, extraordinary noises com-menced to come from the organplpea.which continued at Intervals to growlouder, and louder as the service pn>ceeded, and when the general thanks-giving was being read. It reached aclimax, tho clergyman's voice beingquite drowned, and then, with a splut-ter and dash, out flew a starling, whichflew about the church In all direc-tions. It was too much for the con-gregation, and they bad to let theirsuppressed feelings bave vent In sing-ing a hymn. Curiously enough theone wbich the minister had selectedwas one in which occurs the line:"Happy birds that sing and fly!"

A chewing gum famine Is threat-ened In Chicago ns the' result of. astrike. Our old-fashioned notion ofnothing to worry abou' Is a chewinggum famine.

idow,randforOTTjnrtoveBnaBmnlllamp.x Heavy blankets are laid on thefloor, tbe cooking utenBils being onshelves In the far end. Dewey hasslept in his little box house the coldestnights of winter, and declares henever suffered. All the cracks aremade rain proof, and once- Inside, withtfie-ttoor eloseu. Dewey # 4 4 *nug~a*t ie millionaire In his brownstono hab-itation.

There Isn't much room for exercise'n a house five feet by three, andwhen Dewey wants to cook or sew up

f iler l« accused of tha crime but JeanneItvej him Innocent A relief party goesnnd the searcher" m — — - ••. . . . . _ . . IR7B^BW"ve9 n l m innocent A relief party goes

L o o k f o r l h « f ikk« l»BSSBl[fl°d th^ < e a r c h eS!: T o m Professes hisl a b e l WrtTrKSSZrS Irn^m*™ un abandoned, hut, and there findsfather's diary, which discloses the ex

T'S suspicion of Roscoe. The • ruf-returns to th» hut and sees Jeanne.

Is Intent on murder, when the sky-1 snoops, down and the ruffian flees,

lanne gives Cayley her .father's diaryI read. The yacht disappears and Ros-••>••< plans to capture It are revealed.

Vienna .,StyleHisagf

IN ART CIRCLES.

Irlnusness of their situation becomes an-Irent to Jeanne and the aky-man. Cay-\ kills a polar bear. Next he finds afce to the hiding place of the stores.bBc(« is about to attack the girl whenk 1, ,»nt nv»ine In terror .hy tho ulirhtIthf sky-man swoonln* down. MeasuresS taken 10 fortify tho Tuit. Cayley kills

tvoiinileil polar bear and receives th«fsi Intimation that

A fls«r' •Roscoe

viirui.f. A fissure In tho Tro yields .UPimijr^^nny-ana^Bb^OTr^n^aingJtxo-.

gl

Inbepe

a place for the operation.The young householder fares well

on ten cents a day, his bill of fare bins potatoes, fried apples,

has learned to coo!c all these thingswell, and enjoys them Inbetter than he-would attaurant.

The French d.a>l has .»UB » « • m»-en as a Joke by the rest of the world,but the Parisians take their meetingson the field of honor with the .utmostseriousness and pride. Not Infrequent-ly photographers are allowed to bepresent and take pictures of the duel,and one of these is here reproduced.In this contest, between Lean Daudetand Georges Claretle, son of the di-rector of' the Theater Francals, thecombatants, after exchanging fourshots, had recourse to swords andClaretle was wounded.

A canvass of the co-eds In Chicagouniversity shows that only two percent of them are planning matrimony.That's 1 all right; there's no need tohurry tbe girls.

There are a great many unreason-—*abTe persons in the world, but few are

more so than tbe New Yorker wbnBtabbed a deaf mute because he failed

. to reply to a question. ~

A Boston street car conductorfound a (5,000 necklace on (he flooiof his car. And we thought that

• women who wear $5,000 necklace? al-ways rode in automobiles.

A Brooklyn woman who Is :01years old attributes the fact to berhabit of arising every mornlns at 6o'clock. Many feel that getting tipat 6 every morning Is enough to makea n y o n e o l d . .. < . ••."•'•

-'TnecolossaPiilafues' on'Easter isl-and are the mystery of the Pacific.Tbe features and general expressionof tbe faces of all the statues are ut-terly unlike in every detail any knowntype among the Polynesians of thepresent time. The Island containedno less than 655 statues. In size theyrange from a colossus seventy feet Inheight to a pigmy standing three feetEaster Island was a sacred spot theburial ground of J

"BILLIKIN" IS PREHISTORICPhiladelphia Academy of Natural Sci-

ences Flnds^the .OriaJnai^tos-*~"^r--~~''M6Vinii'of Arkansas.

Philadelphia.—The field committeeof the Academy of Natural Sciences,of Philadelphia, has found tbe original''Billlkin" In searching the prehistoricmounds of 'Arkansas. The report ofthe commission of Its work during tbeyear just closed has been made byProf.. Clarence D. Moore, who was tocharge. .Tbe work consisted of open-Ing the mounds found on the St. Fran-cis, Little, "White and Black rivers,where a vast number of skulls and rel-ics were discovered. Of the former,36 boxes were forwarded to the Unit-ed States museum.

Although It was unfortunate thatthe commission were pot permitted toexamine the mounds north of Lepanto,their quest on the S t Francis riverwaa:,falrly.-successful,'-Nineteen'pre?historic cemeteries were visited- andG70 graves were opened. Fifteen cem-eteries were searched on White river,two on Little river and eleven onBlack river.

Among tbe points brought out In. thoreport of the commission is that quan-tity rather than quality marks thepottery of the Bt Francis basin. Of

.. .._ „ ....e/-.-3le-discovers1

KjX.CuvU'y Is. a human-.being-.ond-not^s,llrlt. Tlio ruffian t* -t>affl«l In Hla plantTjniiTiWK'Cayi»v-Vhefl^The' •lnHef™and•wine take refuge In the cave where a•"'"••a storm keeps them Imprisoned.

confi'ss1 their Iovo for each other.liv).y. resolving.to seek the ruffian and

CHAPTER XXI^-Contlnued.

First Artist—How Is he as a sculo-ltor? I

•Second ArtlBt—Oh! he cuts qulUllfigure. • •, •

Professor Sargent of Harvard

h J ^ " * "I"101 aoven wl» bad boys. The next time your£1 son pour, water Into the

6Hen^^fW<ii)KYtieit6aefrom which statues were made wasquarried In the Island, but how Was Itpossible without elaborate machineryfor the vanished race who built themto move them from the quarry, takethem considerable distances, and setthem up In position? Since theseblocks weigh anything up to 250 tons,it becomes a puzzle. The statue-build-ers were Interrupted In their work.Who were these people that made thestatues? These works are probablyone of the few survivals of tbe Inhab-ited world prior to the time of thearchaic Noah. There is evidence thatboth a r&W of giants inhabited tbeland and that they were destroyed bya cataclysm.

the Kansas AgrlcuTtur

ntellects have not been coralled bythe eastern universities. *

WHOLE FAMILY AT COLLEGESomething in tbe form of a record

in school annals has been establishedat Lebanon, HI., where Rev. J, Lan-dis, his wife, and their eighteen-year-old daughter, are all students at theMcKendree college. A son. Herbertthirteen, next term will Join the, restof, the family at college. Father anddaughter are taking the an mo classiccourse—and^sttTnTThe"same class.After three more years they will grad-uate together,, Mrs. Landls, who Istaking a literary •••ud domestic set-

Historic Event Celebrated,Australia recently commemorate!

the one hundred and forty-first att•ersary of Captain Cook's first lan*ing. It was In 1770 that H. M. 8. E»deavor, a barque of .370 tons, enteredthe Inlet first called. Sting Rays Hi?bor, but afterwards Botany Bay, froathe beauty.and variety of the plantsgrowing^about Its shore. The vessel*" '"""• "" "arys..JBnd.Jtefp»jln

Sgwas hoiltedron each recurring

he expected . to' find there—nowht of him towering expectant,Hed, anticipating all that Cayley

ed to do, and ready to frustrate It,Id have been so terrifying to Philip

1 the thing he actually saw, which—nothing. At least, so. far as a-

gloncB-Into the_cayeLjf.ould_re-_, his onemy.wns not there.

Lfty(ley£i:aluiddered,^4iot~w4th-f«ar,Lnd yet wJth a sensation strongerban disgust. It was as if a leopardJd been standing over the desertedto of a hyena. A wild bekst's lairIt vas and not-a human habitation.The floor was littered with-feathers

' ' half-gnawed bones. The rocky1119 dripped with oil soot of his nor-ble • cooking. Tbe foul air of the

|)lace was actually Iridescent. But^be real horror of .It lay In the fact"pat Iloscoe was not there. " .';

Cayley'a reasoning faculties attack-i that blind. Irrational horror with

•il their force. From the condition ofthe fffeit was evident1 that Roscoetad been gone several hours. It wasilmost oertaln that he would returntoon. Cay ley's, arrival in his absenceRally gave him an Immense advant-»l». A man always comes unwarilyklO-the-place-heirealls-homei-^If-Ros-r.""" ~~"ie back, now he would have no

at all against Cayley's quick" 9 flash of tl

fquw

It.thiWwlho

;"'".! 1

epi'SoiCaan;_jpijcattheOnhelcliltorsitwh. 1the

It 1mo

bol

tuna Icllc

the

hismit

Played, and was saluted by the guntlof the warships In the harbor.

WANTED TO 8LEEP 1Curious That • tired Preacher Shoul<f|

Have Such Desire.

Certainly it was reasonable to ex-Kct that Roscoe would wait for an-tlner moonrlse before setting but ontoy serious, sort of expedition, and, if"tit assumption were correct, he™ght be returning to the1 cave at any"oment. ' •

. « . or urape-Nuts food on him anlhow It has relieved him.

"You will doubtless understand no»the suffering from Indigestion wl*which I used to be* troubled mode or"work on almost unendurable burden:and why it was that after my Sabbatiduties had been performed, sleep ff«a stranger to my pillow till neitlTdaylight • •

"I had to be very careful as to win'I ate, and'even with all my care la-Perlenced poignant physical distressafter meals, and my food never 1fled mft.

"Since I began the use of Grape-Nuts the benefits I have derived fromIt are very definite, I no longer suffer

Jrom Indigestion, and I began to "-'prove from the time' Grape-NutsBeared on our table. '

"I find that by eating a dish of thisfood after my'Sabbath work Is done,(and I always do so now) my nervessre quieted and rest and refresblnfsleep are ensured me.. "I feel that I could not possibly *>without Grape-Nuts food, now that Iknow Its value. It Is Invariably on ourtabkn-we feel that we need-lUo_aw»LtSemeal complete' and bur childrenWll eat Grape-NuU when they cannotne persuaded to touch anything else-Name given by Postnm Co.', Battl*Creek, Michigan. v '. i

Read the famous popkIet,"TbeB<i«'ito Weli-rtiie."-;in nkks. *•"••»'• • • f

oouth. As he did so,- however, bis

I'M alighted on something that made«lm pause—something so strangely"rat of keeping with its surroundings™t It caused him—or he thought that

|

*aa the reason—a sense- of recognl-M»n. almost of familiarity, •

"ne thing which so evidently did•°t belong to Roscoe that it seemed•moat to belong to Philip himself,•w a gold locket It lay on a flat bit«i rock, which seemed to serve Ros-

I »?,' p u r D o a e as a table. The objectsl*1lch surrounded It—an irregular

, 7 c e o t raw walrus 'hide, an over-•»med bottle of whale oil, with a

w l c ke oil, wia «allmaker-s

nnd some ravcllngs of canvas,»«her with some scraps of food—all«e ao loud of Roscoe and made such

•contrast with this bit of Jewelry that""a action in stopping to pick It

automatic- . •' .'•"""e held it In his hand a moment asne did not know quite what to do'" it, then put it.in.hls pocket and™ °ut of the cave. Only during•moment when it .had first f aught|»eW had it really commanded his

^S"on_at_alI,^-By-the-Ume-he-gotj t "e o t the cave he had forgotten

Jwo o r t n r e e hreBtha'of tae'dearI »L°.HtsWo o t •the.caw were all heT'to hi t o revlve him, physically. But

MitT,8urprl80 they did not- suffice to"t£«« Ot^e••«^taE3«*Wi he W-

. .— faji. b Z , f "uperstJtlous.: namely, the

Jea:andhadBUB]houhadRo'sthelanemuGwhifir'e<mat

-.mill-1

Dthehadcliffpurelatinturehimabatbestset 1throbloc

Tlofteifrombeac

attrtbutsalvior pivlctlto (1:that

Hicondthedlsaibodli

Evtemichanmarlbaddied-hapsFor.,occuj

''•ye

Page 3: STADLISHED 1893.—No. I 288. fininareil with motoring ...welfare of the class WSB offered by Rev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor of the First M. E. Church. The salutatory, assigned to

HEN

!

,i.i.i. Cayley, accused of a erlms ofIch ha Is not ("ullty, resigns from tha,>• in disgrace and his affection forfriend, llnut. Perry Hunter, turns tored. Cayley seeks solitude, where hefeels a flying machine. While soaringr th.j Arctic regions, he picks UD alously shaped stick hs had seen In theauln's hand. Mounting again, he dli-ira a yacht anchored In the bay. D«-uling near the steamer, he meets a

,. on nn Ice floe. Ho learns that theI'a niime Is Jeanne Fielding and that, yacht has come north to seek signs

> father, Captain Fielding, an arctic..,.,r. A party from the yacht Is ma-

rt jt-arch ashore. After Cayley deports•nno finds that he had dropped a cu-Tuily-shapod stick. Captain VTanck anil\ surviving crew of his wrecked whaleii In hiding on the coast. A giant ruf-n named Koicoe. had murdered Field

j »nd his two companions, after the ex-|rer had revealed tha location of an>rmou9 ledge of pure gold. Roscoe then

fk command of the party. It developst tho ruffian had committed the mur-wl.tnessed by Cayley. Roscoe plant

capture the yacht and escape with aload of gol i ^Jeann^ Jells „ - •

nsroi-uiu rauiiHiiHiui-UI»~VIBII or tne-r-man nnd shows him tho stick left byyley. Fanshaw declares that It Is anklfflo throwlng-stlck, used to shootrt«. Tom Fanshaw returns from (heirchlnc party wltn a sprained anklemr Hunter Is found murdered andi-ler Is accused of the crime but Jeannelltvej him Innocent A relief party goesnnd the searchers. Tom professes hi

OTD»W.ROSSER

she-was- safe: he told' hlmVe'if. Shewas armed with a heavy revolver, wasa good shot and had plenty of nerve.She was in a place, the only avenueof access to which wduld give her »tremendous advantage over any in-vader. So that, even supposing theworst—supposing that Roscoe's ab-sence were taken to mean that he hadgone to make an attack oa the pilothouse, there could hardly be a doubtthat Jeanne would kill him.

. His reasoning was all based on theassumption that the pllQt house wasinaccessible to any wingless creatureexcept by way of the Ice chimney.

I Even now, when hlu fear for the girl' was amounting to a superstltlon/of al-; most Irresistible Intensity, It did notj occur to him to question that| He steadied himself aj best he couldj and. crouched -down, - inTthe; ahelterynf.'the big rocktoawalt Roscoe's return.

He had hardly settled himself herewhen he saw something that. madehim Bhake his head impatiently, andswear a little. It was the winkingglow of an aurora borealls, oft to the

th2!kj!>mnh,TxSh*zxamx*aimtemGerf an abandoned hut, and there findsr father s diary, which discloses the exrtr's suspicion of Roscoe. The • ruf-i returns to th» hut and sees Jeanne.Is Intent on murder, when the sky-

n snoops, down and the ruffian flees.nne gives Cayley her .father's diary

I read. The yacht disappears and Ros-• plans to capture It are revealed.

V J y J h o i w r e t s s l : e 1 i T hnusness of their situation becomes ap--cnt to Jeanne and the sky-man. Cay-- kills a polar bear. Next he finds •» to the hiding place of the stores.iciie Is about to attack the elrl when•« »»nt nv«1ne In terror .by- tho night

I thr iky-mnn swooping down. Measuresk taken in fortify tha hut. Cayley killsI woumk'il polar Dear and receives th*hi Intimation that Roscoe possessesrranu*.' A fissure In tho l<-nyje>I<ls .upton»r!»^nny-anorRosfc6b,~flriaTng J t xo-

I<«»<h»a««a2m»«BHfle^SMedIsco^rsjiLCuyli-y.Js a human .betas-and .not-aIrlt. .Tho ruManls W ( l l I Hi |

take refuge In the cave where alirlous storm keeps them Imprisoned.11 y conr<-ss their love for each other.

t l-y. renolvlnsr to soek the ruffian andII'Mm, finds Roscoe's_pave.

CHAPTER XXI^-Contlrtued.

he expected. to find there—noht of him towering expectant,ued, anticipating all that Cayley

1 to do, and ready to frustrate It,1 have been so terrifying to Philip

i the thing he actually saw, which^u—nothing. At least, BQ far as *

, ills onemy.wns not there.

yet with a sensation strongeri disgust. It was as If a leopard

ud been standing over the deserted' of a hyena. A wild beast's lair

t wns and not-a human habitation.| The floor was littered with-feathersmil half-gnawed bones. The rockyalls dripped with oil soot of his nor-V cooking. Tbe four air of the

[Jlace was actually iridescent. But" ' real horror of .it lay In the fact*iat Iloscoe was not there. ' .';Cayley's reasoning faculties attack-1 that blind, irrational horror with

•il their force. From tbe condition ofthe flre I t was evident that Roscoetad been gone several hours. It wasilraost oertaln that he would returntoon. Cay ley's, arrival In his absencereally gave him an Immense advant-t«. A man always comes unwarily

"oe came back, now he would have nolance at'all against Cayley's quick|Prtng and the flash of the long knlfe-"ade. , . . '

Certainly It was reasonable to ex-Kct that Roscoe would wait for an-ler moonrlse before setting but on

serious, sort of expedition, and, if"at assumption were correct, he™ght be returning to t h » cave at any•foment. ' •

proouth. As he did so,- however, hisVe alighted on something that made«lm pause—something so strangely"rat of keeping with its surroundings™t It caused him—or he thought that•as the reason—a sense- of recognl-M°n, almost of familiarity, •

"he thing which so evidently did•°t belong to Roscoe that it seemed•imoat to belong to Philip himself,•w a gold locfcet. u j a y o n a flat b l t

«i rock, which qeemed to serve Ros-•«« purpose as a table. The objects*nicn surrounded it—an Irregular

ot raw walrus "hide, an over-J»rned bottle of whale oil, with a"ffludgy w l c k tn" it. a.- sallmaker-st i k " n d B o m e railings of canvas,m l w l t h some scraps of food—all•»*fl ao loud of Roscoe and made such•contrast with this bit of Jewelry thatJWey's action in stopping to pick It"p*a8 automatic- . ' :~

He held It in his hand a moment as

Win31 n o t k n o w " u l t e what to do„ ' , "• t h e » Put It.in.hls pocket and

ent out of the cave. Only during«e moment when it .had first caught

•twl° d U real}Jr commanded his

of the cave* he had forgottenJwo o r t n r e e breathg of the dear

t Lo " t s W o of the cave were all be

to hi t o revlve him, physically. ButH.7. 8urprlse they did not-suffice to

1 °f Jhe feeling" which he rje-8 8 BuperitJUoiuWMuim.eljr. tfie

Cayley gazed at the spectacle unwill-ingly, but still he gazed. And, some-how, though he fought the feeling des-perately, It began to assume a .per-sonal significance to him—a .signifi-cance of mockery. The whole Bky wasquivering .with-vasV-sJIent'laughter;Was It because be, with his fanciedcleverness and daring In finding' Ros-coe's lair and waiting for his return toIt, was really doing precisely the thingthat Roscoe would have had htm do?Were those sky-witches laughing overwhat was happening up at the pilot

.'•• -JW tttcliigence;- no'-sanW-power-bfconsecutive .reasoning can resist thislbttoI^tWngaeiin1te1y? a M a r i a sCayley's power of resistance came toan end.

_ p g _ ^ J . J j ^ j J L J M f c f l * I > .'plng"wlti~8weai£in'rspite of the told;caught up his bundled wings, unfurledthem and took the air with a rush.Once be bad Jerked himself aloft to ateight^UtUoabffvo lie-cfcst of nh»cliff, It was hardly more than a mat-ter of seconds before, he came oppo-site the dome-like mound of snowwhich covered the pilot-bouse.

There was no light shining out ofthe tunnel entrance. But that wasas be had expected it to be. He madeit out easily enough; -and In anothermoment bad alighted there.

It was not the'exertlon of flight, buta Budden Intolerable apprehension thatmade him breathless. The word hadbaited a little In his throat. Eaact-ly-as he uttered It he saw down thetunnel, and in the pilot bouse itself,a tiny spark of fire, and.heard theclick of steel against fllnf*

What the spark Illuminated werethe fingers ot a gigantic, hairy hand.

"Jeanne!" he called again, and. nowbis voice came clear enough. "Watt aminute and I'll make a light for you."

CHAPTER XXII.

In the Pilot House.Cayley bad been right In assuming.

as he did In his conversation withJeanne, upon the subject, that Roscoeon.d.4he:j^h.er_pepnl|._ _qJLJ6e_Wjj[rjiBHad never nbticed'tfie Ice'cBImney", norsuspected the existence of the pilothouBO upon the cliff-head. Also, hehad followed correctly the track ofRoscoe's mind In the deduction tbatthe two latest castaways upon thisland—that Is, Philip and Jeanne—must have perished In the great stormwhich began on the night when befired the hut, and continued for somany weeks that he, like them, lost

Watched Cayley's Flight to His Land Ing Place.

working without fatigue and withoutintermission—working eo long as themoonlight lasted.

He was Just setting out with his lastload when, glancing skyward to see

a^iab^riitipp^'tsjB^SaSlSSsriiS'^;K-Tjie;Bliht ^occasioned

return—not" evenT moinentary^-of theold terror. He cursed a little becauseho had not,,hls rifle with him; the sky-man soarln^^BlQwly^and jiotverj-ygb,presented i mark he could'almost cer-tainly have hit.

It was surprising, of course, to seehim alive, but Roscoe,' In bis present

pel-natural means to account for thefact Indeed, be was hardly moid than-a moment In approximating the trueex-planatlon. There might well be.""hesupposed, up somewhere In the faceof, the cliff a cave, or shelter, of wbli.hhe knew nothing, and easily acces-sible to anyone who happened to pos-sess a flying machine.^Skirting the cliff and keeping-»r«ll

In its shadow, he made bis way withbis last load, back to his cave. Herehe spent a few minutes cleaning hisrifle, making sure that the mechanismof the breech was working perfectly,and filling its magazine full of car-tridges.

The moon was Just setting, but thesky was still bright enough to givehim a good hope of making out Cay-Jey'a winged figure against It

Roscoe squatted- down In the lee ofthe great bum mock of Ice. surveyedthe heavens with keen, practised eyes,munching on a strip of. dried walrus-meat which he bad brought with himand waited very contentedly.

He bad not long to wait Long be-fore the moon twilight had gone outof the sky be saw In it silhouettedagainst it. the sight from .which

had oncje. .fled with • such - madbi -the sky

m a n ' s w i n g s . ••••••-

Instead of flrlng.heRcrainbled op tothe top ot the nearest ice hummockand from there watched Cayley'flightto his landing place. •_-He laughed aloud wo«n*e-BBW thnt

It was not in the side of the cliff, as bebad feared, but quite at tbe crest of It—where It was aa accessible to a man

He did not move from his attitudeof strained attention, on the summitof a little Ice bill, until he saw a faintglow of golden light diffusing Itselffront tbe mouth ot the tunnel tbat ledto the pilot bouse. Then, with thatqueer shuffling gait of his. which wasneither -wallraorTUnThe- begaiTmalring his way Inshore, over the Ice, to-ward' the^oot :.crthe' cliff.^—^*'^'

Cayley's tunnel was not at rightangles to the crest, but bore off diag-onally westward. Roscoe bad notedthis fact, and he figured it out fromthe top of the promontory, whichformed the western'boundary of theirstrip of beach, he should be able tocommand a view straight Into tbe tun-net Also, there was at this point aprecipitous trail up the cliff. No onebut Roscoo would have called it atrail, but that was the way it existedIn his mind." ""

His calculation of the angle of tbetunnel proved to be correct, for fromhis newly-gained coign, of vantage, hecould see straight Unto the pilot house

".During" the storm "he had"''lived' inthe cave, much as Philip and.Jeannehad lived In the pilot house on thecliff; he bad, that Is to say, In somepurely automatic fashion, kept on ex-isting. The mere momentum of a ma-ture man's vitality makes it hard forhim to die. But when tho storjnabated nnd milder weather came, hebestirred himself, as Cayley did, andset about digging a tunnel of his ownthrough the great drift which hadblocked the entrance to his cave. . •

The next time the moon came up,after he had completed the tunnelfrom the cave, he set but down thebeach toward the ruins of the but

H was not mere curiosity whichattracted him, nor any,lurking fear,but simply the hope of making somesalvage from the wreckage of the hut,or possibly, from the bodies of his twovictims, in case he was lucky enoughto find them. He had no doubt at allthat they were dead.

His pleasure over the quantity andcondition of the stores he found inthe ice=, cave compensated for bisdisappointment over not finding tbe-Uodier-of-hls-twoJatesLjrJetime^

Evidently they hod not even at-tempted to use such shelter as the icechamber afforded, for it showed nomark of human habitatipn at all. Theyhad probably wandered outside anddied in one of the near-by drifts. Per-haps he would find them some day.Fn.the present, however,.the storesoccupied His whole .'-attention.--. ; ^' methodically he set to work,

' themjipttyto-hli^owa;:;*"*

*i;;l*±

and make out clearly enough two fig-ures there.

Once more he was tempted to Ore,and might have yielded to the temp-tation had not the light been put outbefore he had fairly got bis eyes ad-justed to the distance.

It Is to be ,remem.b«rfd.,almaya,.tbat, ^ : ^ ° . ^ .RP. ioK^wha.tc'ver of'the tee?,chimney.' and suspecred'TE)"cSb'a'««JOD-|between tbe hut and the pilot house,except by tbe air. For anything heknew to the contrary, Jeanne mightbe able to fly. as well as Philip, orbe to carry ber with him upon hisflights. Consequently, he did not sus-pect, when he saw Cayley • take toflight again, that this action .had anyreference to himself; nor that thewoman who was left alone would beon her guard against blm.

The moment be glimpsed theshadow of Cayley's wings against thestars he began making bis way, cau-tiously, over the crusted >now, towardthe pilot house. The door was closed,but there was a light shining outthrough a crack beneath IL It was aglass door, but something had beenbung over tbe glass so that he couldnot see Into the Interior!

Both Jeanne and Philip had madethe mistake of assuming that tho onlyway of access to tho pilot house, ex-cept to Philip with his wings, was theIce chimney. It was a natural mis-take enough—one that almost any buta practised mountaineer would havemade. • __ . „,„„^:I^hWr%'6^'jffie7''iiatfJlio~TEaaonP^:

either of them—for anticipating on at-tack upon the pilot bouse while Philipwas gone. They had been living here,now fpr weeks. In unbroken security.So, though the girl obeyed Philip's In-junction literally and-flcruoulously,she dicFTt without the slightest sensl!of personal danger, and. Indeed shewould hardly have had room for suchan emotion oven If there had been amuch more -reasonable ground for i t

She was sitting beside the oil stovo,In onoof-the,XarthW--corncr«-£if.:thoroom. The chimney bole was In thecorresponding corner. The revolverlay on the table in tho middle of theroom, a few "paces behind her; Thepilot house door was directly In linowith it, and almost exactly beblnd herback. The door was hinged to swing

It wu'at that fnnunt Oat Pbm>alighted.

Philip sprang clear of bis planes,left them as they were thcr* at th*tunnel mouth, and walked steadily uptoward the pilot house door.

Roscoe, on bearing his voice th*.flrst 'tinie.-—had—dropped • the: ~; a n t"cles which'encumbered his hands and ,

^e^BttributedVthe• fact to no other agency than'1 the'wlni-^-fine; laid[rdowia -th*rM-fcouoa-book-upon the bench beside her androse, rather deliberately, before shoturned round. • • '

ward to the table and seized the re-volver. Her failure to turn Imme-diately had given him the second be

p .In.-thfl. strategic, possKMllfleS oftbe'rooiii: •""*' "---•••-•"-

His rifle was a clumBy weapon Inclose quarters. So, as lie sprang for-,ward, he dropped It and made for therevolver Instead. It only needed aglance at tbe girl to convince blmthat sbo.was unarmed. Quite deliber-ately he^broke_open_the. breech of then« broke open

er~and satisfip

rev61ver~and satisfied himself that Itwas loaded. Then he looked up afoln,bilnklngYt the" girt

It was no wonder that Carlson nndRose had mistaken ber for the ghostof the man their leader murdered. Shelooked like her' father as a womanmay resemble a man, and her white-ness/ her Oneness, her delicacy alt In-creased rather than diminished tbocredibility of the. idea that she was infact his spirit

The hand which held the revolverdropped nervously, at his side. Heswallowed hard, and wrung his cruellips with his other great hand. It wasthen that the girl looked up into hisface. It was then she uttered berfirst cry.

For she saw that be did not meanto kill her. • • • - ' •

Suddenly Jeanne's eyes detachedthemselves from his face. A look ofsudden alarm _<ame__llitQ-lhpm>_and-BhB ralsed'her"Band "to'Her UiroSt,' asthough she were .choking. She waslooking, post Roscoe, and straightdown tbe snow tunnel.

"Philip!" sho cried, "take care; ho"shere."

Tbe snow tunnel was empty, andfor aught she knew, her lover's bodymight be lying mangled in tbe mon-ster's cave. She had thought of thatbefore she tried the trick. But even Ifthat.-were, JQ,.,ihat,.cry,.of-.bcrs.-might

leaff'tHe-'riibriste'r'fO's'feairoW'iiiieas'yglanco at the door behind blm; andeven that would give ber time enough.If he' bad not killed Philip, but sim-ply eluded hfm, he would turn in-stantly.

That was what he did. He spranground with a suddenness which be-spoke a perfectly genuine, common-sense alarm. And then be found him-self In darkness.

.He understood at once that be badbeen tricked. Without wasting the timeto turn back and look at Jeanne, besprang toward the pilot house door.Ho thought Bhe meant to attempt torush by him, gain the snow-tunnel andthrow herself over the crest of thocliff. He had not misread tbe sud-den loathing he had seen in ber eyeswhen they met bis face.

In the .open doorway he wheeledround, triumphantly. Sbo had' notgot ahead of him that time. He laugh-ed aloud Into the darkness, and thenspoke to her, with a vile. Jocular fa-miliarity.

But be got no answer, In words orotherwise. There was no outcry, noBtJfled^BObbingrT—Nothlng-nt-Bll^butsigh and whine of the wind.

Ho moved forward, groping In thedork, but stopped when bo felt thepressure of the fable across blB tblghs.He could do nothing without a lightHe would re-light the candle, first ofall, nd then be would find ber.

a. bit of flint, a nail and arope of tow from v his pocket Hestruck a spark, but-it failed to MndU

Before he could ljut his hand on~ It™"Cayley spoke the, iecOod time.

At that, wanting no weapon, confi-dent tbat be needed none, his greatarms aching for the feel of the sky-man's flesh beneath their grasp, bemoved a step nearer the door andwaited.'.,,

Ho saw Philip cross'the -threshold; ••unseeing — suspecting, apparently,nothing; saw him, at but within band'sreaoh.

Just as be touched blm be uttereda sobbing oath, and his great bind fal-tered, for Philip's knife bad atruekthrough, clean to ths hilt, and Justbelow the beart.

The effect of tho shock was onlymomentary. With a yell of rage, besprang upon Cayley, crowded himback against tho wall, tore et himblindly. Hike a wild beast, and finallygetting Philip's right fore-arm fairlyIn the grip of hoth hands, he snappedit like..n plpostem. -

In a moment Cayley got round be-hind him and with the crook of hisgood arm round Roscoe's neck, he suc-«eed«d.vin.-. forcing.: hlm^nni'TBu iSsBTbli:::grip and In throwing ,him heavily.

As he lay, his body projectedthrough . tho doorway, out into tb* 'tunnol.

Philip loft him huddled there, and •went back to the table.' He foundRoscoe's flint and steel beneath his

he could summon bis courage tostrlk*a light, for the Inferences front Ros-coe's presence here tn the pilot hous*began to crowd upon' him now, grimand horrible. Dut he Btruck a spark

around.The reaction of relief turned him,

for a moment giddy, as tho glanceabout tho room convinced blm thatwhat ho feared worst had not happen-ed. Dut another thought occurred tohim, almost at once, when ho saw

^inThlsi mlnll, of course. thatJiepro."TCtitSS5:'fSe"'"'way'Tlbscbo*' Untf-'come?''What if Jeanne, unable for some rea-son to defend herself, had chosen, astho lesser ivll, to flrig herself overlthe1

dff'tr6m'~tti8nunnel~molUnT^" i i i ;^The moment bo thought of that h*

went out Into the tunnel, stepping overRoscoe's body to do so. He went to,tho, edgo^ond-looked over, fbutilWM-too dark to see." The Ifght of "toe au-~rbra which still blazed In tha sky, da*.,zlod his eyes, without lighting th*surface of the world below.,

He must go down there, In order tobe sure. He bad not stopped to furlhis planes when ho alighted, and theyhad wedged themselves sideways Intothe tunnel, still extended and so readyJtor.fllght Jni an emergency. i_: . . „„

He righted them and slipped hisarms through the loops that awaitedthem. He stood for a moment test-ing the right wing tentatively. Thor*was a play about It that he did not un-derstand. So far as he could see noth-ing was broken. The fact that It wo*his own arm did not occur to him.

He wag Just turning to dive off thscliff-bead when, suddenly, he saw thsgreat form of the man he had sup-posed to bo dead, rlso and rush uponhim.

Philip's knife hod. Indeed, Inflicted amortal wound, but a man of RoscooV"physique lets go of life slowly. Hewas bleeding to death, internally, butthe process was, probably, retarded bybis huddled position as ho lay thoroIn tho tunnel.

So be bad lain still and awaited bischance. Cayloy was Btandlng quiteliFthe cdgelir^the-cIInVand-the man's)--momontum carried him over. Hisclutching bands grasped Cayley'sshoulders, and they went down to-,gether. over COO.feet of empty space.

For Cayley. the space was all too little.As they went over ho thought that hoand his gigantic enemy were goingdown to death together. Instinctive-ly, and much quicker than a man canthink, he swept his grcat-fantall for-ward and flung himself back In an at-touipt tocorreclthu'balance. deatroytHl"

'by the great weight that was clingingto hta shoulders.

They were, of courso, bound to godown. Neither his Btrength nor thoarea of his planes was sufficient tosupport them both In the air. But Intbe position Into which he had flunghimself they would go down a littlemore slowly. He would gain, perhaps,a precious second more.

But he did not waste even an In-finitesimal moment In any " struggleagainst the forco of gravity.

Twice, with all bis might, be sentbis left fist crashing against the face,the staring, horrible face, that con-fronted his own. But. still that con-vulsive, dying grasp held Jost

They wero now1 moro than a bar*200 feet above tho Ico. With a su-preme effort, an effort whoso sudden-ness availed it better than Its strength,bo wrenched himself free and tbegreat weight dropped off. Another ef-fort, the instantaneous exertion ofevery ounce of forco ho possessed, cor-rected the sudden change of balaacoand prevented him from falling, likethe great-Inert _ mass_ho had Just_cast off.

Trembling, exhausted, be managedto blunder around In a half-circle,slanted down Inland and ^tumbled toa. landing on the beach, not SO yardsfrom tho ice-clad ruins of the hut. .

As ho did BO, the thought was In hiamind that during bis struggle In th*air with Roscoe, he had heard a try,which neither he nor his antagonist:had ottered., -7 ^t-i^f^fflO':*-

vvv.dd:BB coNTDnJSix)1"^^-^.*' •

Page 4: STADLISHED 1893.—No. I 288. fininareil with motoring ...welfare of the class WSB offered by Rev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor of the First M. E. Church. The salutatory, assigned to

THE CRAN#OR# CHRONICLE. THURSDAY. JUNE 22. 19"

TheCranford Chronicle- C lUro lD . »."jr. "" •"•'""

l*BMlited m n TIramUj i t Sorth u d Cnloa

•s tand U the Port Offlco, Crmnford, S. J -Mcoad-cUaa mitur.

/0n."» ALFBSD rOTTEIl. . BJUor tm

MorePrudential

"I desire in my humble way, to thankyou for the prompt payment of policyon my wife, amounting: to $152.05,"

famished open ptllftlonJT&* Cbroalcto m»r be found on u]« at tbtj.Union mud Harris's 5 e v i SUiid*. Relf'fStore and the ciroolc!« office.

--The • History of <?rsnford, MasterKobert ilahlo'i composition whichwon the first prize given by the V.I. A. to the 7th and 8th grade pupilsin the public schools, i§ publishedelsewhere in this paper. We are surethat it will be read with pleasure byhundred* of the townspeople, andthey will recognize, as the judgesdid, and as we do, its all-round ex-cellence. Its chief merit, in ouropinion, is the note ' of youtbfulnesaand freedom from self-consciousnessthat Bounds through every paragraph.No effort is made to convey the im-pression that the writer is in posses-sion of great learning, or - that he

"She died at eleven o'clock on Wed=nesday night, November 30th, andbefore six o'clockth<2 , next...evening:,/our Agent hadf paid the money."

Will He Survive

! .

That is frequently a serious question w

you should always ask. yourself whening the Bxecutor or Trustee for your

The Prudential• • • • • ' % *

pays claims immediately upon receiptof due proofs of death.

you have in mind outlive the *Cqmremefll

the Trusteeship? s

Doesthe younger man, who will probably/so, indicate thaUie.WIU, possess the Jnand experience ?

FIDELITY TRUST CONEWARK, N.J.

/ •

as Trustee or Bxecutor for your estatesesses both-with the certainty of o 'the longest Trust. - / /

"Come in and talk it over'

TOWNSHIP COMMITTEEAttention of the Township Com-

mittee was called by Robert Rindelllast night to a bill juat received of1164.05 for hie share of the cost of

• • .

^ Wt,.JnJyjate,^a"the railroadI and Soiith avenue. The

entire COBI,'he said, wa* $389.50, andhis total fronttgo was only 40.feet oft h < L to^L ! 5 M 2 4 U f MMess's assessment was at 36 cents afoot, while Mr. liindell's was $3.28.The committee adviied Mr. Rindell tomake his; complaint in writing, andit would to submitted to tho ascssi-•nent commissioners.

On recommendation of the fire com-

«• - •? • •

^sti^tj^r?'

SWith electric service at your command youcanr light

in tTie slimmer wiVhmir nieinr* ik« •„„„ i... _>.t_

•^&»5iplaced on NormaDdio place and the

-'liHiCT^TiMl^fj'CranTordAaTOnueL:-:^:-^^An application by Charles CJ Harris

for permission to sell fireworks of thenon-dangerous! kind was denied, as it -<j-naismli&ftdt^WWno^tn

To the 'engineer was referred forinvestigation and report the questionof the need of new" or relaid walks on

... . • .« . ,^vug aicnuu, ournsias avenue,Hamilton avenue and Vf. North, avenue.

The clerk was directed to, notifyMr. Plumcr of Hampton street thatit wu customary for property ownersto fill in depressions between theircurb lines and the macadam pave-

... menU, and he could get rid of stand-Ing water by that mesns.

=^sGnuntTa;^ncctor=>l*a^itt,~Former Township Engineer Bauernude a pica on behalf of the Nor-mandie Park Company for permissionto connect their laterals with thetownship sewer syatetn. The boardreplied that all it wanted wai evidencethat the drains and manholes wereproperly built and did not admit anunreasonable amount of surface water.

I The matter was laid over to wait aI heavy storm, which will show how

much water under1 such conditionsfinds its way into the laterals.' The committee decided to rebuild(he crosswalks at South and Walnutavenues in case the Public Service- willraise its tracks sufficiently to shedthe water:

Permission was granted to

e'siifflmei'mthout raising the temperature of the rooms.

You can also utilize the current for doing the family

washing and ironing, or for cleaning by the vacuum process. Or

wait for our money. The work can be done without disturbing '

NKWAI1K, N. J

«k inning Monday, ,Jun/26,h I F r e e Vaudeville

ten outlets will suffice in the average house.

Let our agent explain it all to you.

PUBLIC SEBVICB ELECTRIC COMPANY

- An invitation to attend the: West-field Civic Celebration on July 3rdwaa accepted with thanks.

Engineer Moshcr was instructed toinvestigate the cost of a sewer ex-tension that would alTord drainage toresidences beyond the hill on E. Northavenue.

North avenue biidgo would end thatdanger entirely, and reduce thodanger at Union avenue by takingaway a large share of the traffic there.

Thomas Hammond made some hotremarKs, in which he said it waa tho

[township's fault that the crossing wasI dangerous; .they had failed to do their[ duty and compel the railroad to guardit properly. Property in the east endwould be decreased in value, parti-cularly as the closing would be permitthe extension of the railroad yard asfar westward as the Bell lumber yard.T__^-- . , . . . iTgsaFlJuVt" the

. „ » » . prevent the com-pany doing what it chose with its ownland.

F. & R. CLUBHEGATTAThe Field and River Club held its

first regatta Satuidsy, and a fineprogramme of events waa given, thecontestants being the three.Cranfordclubs and the Wlnonah and Tuscarora

[ clubs. The points scored by the localclubs being: F. & R., 14; C. C. C ,14; Ulhigb, 10.

The winners in the Beveral eventswore as follows:

Quarter-mile singles—Eric Ander-^ Jones, Field, 2.

|-=and:

As announced in its advertisementpublished for two weeks preceding,the Township Committeo'gave a hc»r-ing.last night to all interested in tho

• w«tterof the proposed closing of theElizabeth avenue crossing, and thenby the unanimous voto of tho memberspresent adopted tho ordinance effect-Ing that remit.

A protest against the cloaing of the.. signatures o{

MANUAL TRAINING PRIZESThe prizes donated by S. R. Droe

scher for work in the manual train-ing departments of the public schoolswere awarded Friday afternoon fay

Winckler, Cranford, 2.Quarter-mile club fours—Cranford,

1;' Winonah, 2.Quarter-mile tandem—Ulhigh, 1;

Field, 2. '- 'Hurry-scurry—Cranford, 1; Field, 2.Club fours—Cranford 1; ..Wino-

nah, 2.

"High SchooT-FTrat prize,'"William"Higbie, tool chest; secondWalter Chamberlain, plane.

Grades, Grant School-First prize.

crossing, bearing thoM residents set forth the followingobjections: That the town has atpresent only tbroo croaBings, and thataa it grows it will need more. Thatthe east end crossing is tho only meansof access to the trolley line .in - thatsection, and if closed,, would compelmany to go nearly a mile out of theirway to reach it. The closing wouldbe a step backward. Moreover thepetition for the election at which thenatter was pot to tho voters boreonly 65 signatures of resident* havingproperty in their own names.

;' 1° replft Committceman Smith saidtodid not think the ordinance would" P y conditions, as the crossing is

(jpSSHeally elpsed now by the constant* '»"•* of trains. It had cost several

•nd would coat more if main-i

referee; F. Hamilton,. starter, andRev.G. H.Russell, T. D'. Squiresand W. C. Mulvey, judges.

Herbert he"usch7B^7~w; JecTd ST. PAUL'S CHURCH NOTESprize, Wray Lewis, 22-incb saw. Sunday morning worship. 10:30;Grades, Sherman School-First pr^ze, evening worship, 8. Preaching bothMathcw Witting, 1 sot saws; second morning and evening by tho pastor.„.!.» u « • • — - • Sunday school at 12 o'cock.—

Epworth League vesper service at7 p.m. Subject; "The Developmentand Best Use of Spiritual Gifts.".

This everting at 8, the annual publicmeeting and rally of the Woman'sForeign Missionary Society will beheld in the church. Miss HortenseLong, of China, will deliver theaddress. All are cordially invited toattend.

Special Notices.Rooms nnd board, 105 Union Arc.Wanted": Girl for general housework,

4 in family, may go homo night.*; apply toMrs. Merrinm, Hampton st. .

Woman wanted to dn baking at her ownhome; address M., Chronicle olticif... For Sale: House, 10 rooms and bath »

9 Hampton st. .„ [7-31-Are your flowers, shrubs and vegetables

, rowing well ? If not. they may need tceiling. Buy wcll-rntted, orumbly cow manuro; try il bushol delivered in your gardenat 20c. 0 for SI. Send postal. Air K.

RESTAURANTl l N l* m u , MODISTE

WI1I1 Ada Mi'aile nn,\ an AH F^vorlln rost • DANCTNG, Aflernbonand Evtnlnj

MILLER BLOCK7 .i.ji. 10 •«>.«.- — — PHOXIMJ

ORDINANCE.

. ...v.,i.K, r m saws; secondprizo, Harry Rosendale, 22-inch saw.

Mr. Orocscher will renew the giftof prizes next year.

The Goerke Co. of Newark,erect an- eight Btoiy building:used as a department store icorner of Broad and W.streets, Elizabeth.

An Onltnance.to wento Kliziitlcth And Lincoln- Avonucti.tKtwccD Nortli Aveuuo and Huiitti

' Bo tt ordained hr tbo TowiiNhlp Contmfttrt1

of tao Township oiCranford In tiiu County ofUnion:

Section I. That that portion of tho .Hired oiroad between the southerly lino of North. Avo-nne and tho northorly lino of HonthAvonuccrossing tbo tracks of tneCVntnil IfntlroadCfini-panf of New JCIKOJT and thu tracks of tho Dal-ilmore & Now Vork Rullrond Oompanr neartho easterly end of the Township anil knownas Bllzabtith AT(.iuuo-irpm^tlio.rtra«KH-oHhe«ent«ll"nalVroBd otN«iwifcrtier*«rthofly'"iinaas Lincoln avonuo from the tracks of tho Con-tra] Kallrood southerly, bo and tt hereby Is va-cated.

HeotlonS. That this orillimnco ahull takeeffeot Immodlatoly.

Dated, Juno 21, 1011.JOHN W. IIEINS,

Chairman TownBlilp Committee.Attest:ALVAN 1!. IlBNMAN. -J-

. Tow/ship Clork.

Don't miss the Special Sale on

SATURDAY & MONDAY

North Ave. Meat Market16 E. North Avc%, Cranford

The BakerTelephonesI F «"« <iii V " M y , O I 8 1

o r a e r but 1 guessX J^fi"11- If you had called up an

=,=ho«rJate^,couWtiiaW^diwit^^derrSlS ^ J " W * b r has an unusualdemand upon the capacity of his plant.

l J l u l i S W 0 ^e ?h^ of material,

THE MOST INDUSTRIOUS STORE

Dcar Amy:— ' •

When a woman has a handsiindependent from the "cnticism,, of thfed Ilia! she- js socially free, because

'fc7^«er^sbMfe6USfl^dup Ink home.

I'lUcll you, Amy, il pays far nlooking presentable. ,

^TellllirTrieiids In &Tell (Hem they'll get the best, and, wlwanlqn the' " ' '~~.

L L MANNING|THE URGEST STEAW M«HBtE A

GRANITE WORKS IN THE STATE

Diniioiils und ikatlHtont'i for CVlnuteAll Orders Dcllroroil^and KS',1!J>.,^K ,^.E

I FUINFICLD, (oinio.ilto Klret linptlst chnrcb) |

COME AND SEETlic new and improved Ki-SiKht Toric

( ami I'ebblo Eyo Glasses. Two doctors inattendance to prescribe c!us.se3 for correct-ing visual defects, 9 a. in. to 6:31) p. m.

I.... - . . . . . . . , . « ,v . J1ST or HCILATCH,the AI'LAKATIC, 1NVISIIII.E Ill-'HlOMT, TOKIC,ssyl-TOK and othor leiines in " I I J I K I T "mnunting or frames. The EASY, COMKOKT-IDLE and STVLISII glasses that fit I lie ryeami never pinch tho nose.

IGlasses repaired. Spencer Lons Cleaner

tr«. Wo have no agents ortmvcliiij; re[irc-wntativesand only ONK placu of business.

SPENCER OPTICAL COMPANY,

III Maiden Lane, • New -York

i M f l B BEALTTCOMPANY

Cl

Cranford, N. J.In mldiiioii to choi

"" Ihc three tracts they are developing, they•"•offeriiij. for Bile, choice. SU«UUItAN•I0.MKS in all [larls of Cranfonl at prices'"•in fl,000 to J14.000. They havo also"ESIUADLE UOUSI3S KOK KKNT.Apply to • . ' • ' •

counts.

NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY

the Centre of the<Sy$tt

Q. D. STONE,fer. Home Dcpt, Chton'cl: Bid?.

For Fishermen!

LAKE HOPATCONOON JUNE 25th "?gS{ftl

Via New Jersey CentralWILL LEAVE

"iCRANFORt

Th« ladies' tea will be held to-morrow afternoon from H to S, at the

| parsonage.

We have just received informationthat the Herriek Seed Company ofRochester, N. Y., want a lady orgentleman representative in this sec-tion to sell all kinds" of Roses

Asbury Park, N.J.T H E SEVENTH AVENUE INN

reflued pntnumpe, conveniently located,second block from ocean, all improvements.Bates $30 up, two In room $10 up single,

$3.50 Saturday to Monday.

Booklet, R. 6 . WINDLE

^ ^ = 0 ^ — . . „ . u , . u ootui. TheyInform as that without-previous ex-perience it ia possible to make good

" every week. Any one out of

Gray Burial aiid Cremation Co. as-Funeral Directors and Embaimers--Camp-Ghairs-arftJCSrdTablestoreht

AND FUNERAL PARLORS*

NEW. JERSEY CENTRAL -

TltAINS LEAVK OKANFOltl)

^K KUZAI1BTH, NKWAKKANI) NBW YOltK

OS0,S5»».!<04.'i,712,"a)(TUr<iiialitr!lln l<> New-i"^ »'-<i.ntB. 815. 88n, new, o « , mil ii lr£ • « ; • ' ' • ISS*.I«>.SS8,4O1.4S9,4 5».«IK.e.Vi,Jluiir1;"1'1"1'1"" Nowark.) 749, ».M. 10*!,ion J •«• K»'»luysxsac,7ii.x8it. 9on, lisa,lOBp-i'- ' - 6 7 - • « . 258,811, 5 58, 7a-.. SSI,

« * N . Unlon

-^rsMJharclTbrDhrist, 8olonti«t, Crati-

Hun street. Serrices Sunday at H A HW « W » y erenlrig, 8 r. a. Bflulln(t ROOT,"ODeadailr.lOi.K tni9w -i.™-,"!?^^™

Tel. 1781-W, puhooA m

1140 A. M. U 4 1 4.1,

KelhlBhom, Allcntuwn. Maucli• S I T „ ?*• ™- tta>- » "> A. it.'VMt. (t -'• Snt-•n'tays 5 JT, 0 10 A. M. 1 « , O-JU. Ojr 1'. »!.

jnpV\'Illl"'»Iinrrnan<lBoranloii-4B(!, 0OHA. M.

"•»• Sundays. 5 a, 9 *> A. JH. S 20 I'. M. •

ADVERTISE0.40 A. M., (1253 Sat-

^ ,oo2HutiinlayonIy)\ . J I . 1 II P.M.

^ ^ • M ^ ' y w i j ' v ' ' '*•'•''''•'' '2m. -' •' '•' ' ••

nt Newark.

::$k£fl4'$tt.

Crationa s|

Mo

c.

FIX

302

Page 5: STADLISHED 1893.—No. I 288. fininareil with motoring ...welfare of the class WSB offered by Rev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor of the First M. E. Church. The salutatory, assigned to

TH£ CRANFORD CHRONICLE.. THURSDAy, JUNE a2, , , „

GOLF CLUB DOINGSThe1 highest score ao far of the

month, 1122, was made by Mra. Sin-clair yesterday at the bridge fpllow-ing the luncheon at the Golf Club.Over sixty sat down to the luncheon,the menu being as follows: Broiledchicken, creamed potatoes, fruit

ilad, strawberry .shortcake, and icecream.' A limited"riumBer of ticketifor next week's luncheon, the last of

wriMyjWiB^TSS^iLuther Blake, [Hampton Hall. Thetrophy for high score at bridge willthen be awarded.

The hostesses Saturday afternoonwill be Mrs. Irwin and Miss.Krause.

Amy:—When a womanjas a handsomely furnished home she is free and

of lhose who come To her house. She canbecause she can ask anyone Io come Io *ee-

w * S * A m y - '•pays far T>lm"C0SIS t0 "ave '.*"*•'•'•' '•• - '••_•.' -'• • ' • ' — - • - A s e v e r , • • - • • ' • • . • .

. s (o f a in freedom by buvin? new furniture

EASYf^VYMENT CLUB PLANAtrNewark's Greatest Store

At a recent meeting of the someof Alumni of 1909, '10, and '11, an

| Alumni society waa suggested. Atemporary, chairman, W. E. Oakey,and a temporary secretary, S.Porcella,were elected to officiate at a meetingof all Alumni who wish to becomemembers of this society, which meet-ing will bo held in Grant Schoolchapel on the evening of Monday,

J June 26th, at 8 o'clock. Officers willthen be elected and a committeechosen to draw up a constitution.

The objeots of this society are tounite the alumni and to create interestin the progress and development ofthe Cranford schools.' Bi-annualmeottngB are suggested,"and-nominaldues. . * .

A cordial welcome is extended toall alumni to attend the meeting andto aid irf making the .society a

CRANFDRD LOCALSOlcott Payne and family are sum-

mering at Greenoch Inn, Lee, Mass.Mr. and Mrs. fi. F W. Randoplb

are at Cape May.The Daughters of . Liberty will

hold a box social in Masonic Hallto-night.

Buffalo^Miu Clare Bookhout, of New

of Springfield avenue.A four-legged chicken has been

hatched from a double yolked egg atthe Oakey farm.

Miss Miriam Humphrey left onTuesday for a visit in Toronto until

.September 1st.,.', ,.„,;.,.. „• ,..,: ...-,-:,•...;Miss Madge Plume is home for her

summer vacation frora-.Mt. liolyokeCollege.

Fully equipped witlf'khaki suits,knapsacks, etc., fora walking trip,Lstou Wanser, Eddie Hugcn, Den manPeniaton, Jack Miller and EildieJeambey will leave on Monday inorn-injr for Philadelphia.

The Sunday evening service and theFriday night service at the Presby-terian Church will be omitted afterJune 30 for two months. They willbe resumed the 2nd Sunday and the2nd Friday in September respectively.

Mr. and Mrs.- Fred Davis of Aldunstreet saJledjror_Pan.arna...VKcdiifi8day,:

PROPOSAL IS BUSINESS.New Olrl Must Now Be Wooed In t

Qystematlo Way."I want to tell you bow much I lova

yoal"

HIONEY-IN-THE BANKrThe Cranford Philharmonic

L. L MANNINGI'HE URGEST STEAW MAHBLE AN

GRANITE WORKS IN THE STATE

I Nonunion^ unil ifciulHtone* f*»r CYinotery 1All Ordersi ndiyi'rmlnml Set Vfi v^.

IFUINFICLD. (O|>|H>nlt<i Klrnt liupllat chcinli

|COME AND SEE

Tlic new and improved Ili-SMit Tori

I ml Pebble Eyo Glasses. Two doctors iitttciulanco to prescribe glasses for correctin; visual defects, 9 a. in. to 6:31) p. m.

rteRVoukTiiirthat liover MIST or SCUATCIthe AI'LAKATIC, INVISIBLE Hl-'HlCllIT. TORKSSH-TOK mid other lenses in " I I J I K I T 'mounting or fmnics. The EASY, COMFUIIT-IDLE mul STTMRU glasses that fit tho ryiami never pinch the nose.

Glasses repaired. Spencer Len&Clvancifree. We Imvc lio agents ortmvcliiiK retire-.tentative* and only ONK place of business

SPENCER OPTICAL COMPANY,

| II Maiden Lane, New -York

iMitNOB REALTYJS1L-Cranford, N. J.

In nililiiion to choiceI "n the three tracts they are developing, they

'offering for ailo clioica SUlSUUltANJMKS in all [.aria of Cranfonl at prices

'mm fi.OOO to $14,000. They liavo als<W-SIUADLE HOUSES Ft) It UKNT.Apply to " . ' • ' •

0. D. STONE,%r. Home Dept, Chron'd: Bid?.

NEW. JERSEY CENTRAL

TltAINS LEAVK OltANl'Oltl)

^K ELIZABETH. NEWAItKAND NHW YOltK

»M. ,i, '.MM, lisa,- 7or'- 8 M '

ait!i"'x."}' tr"I"<" Nowi o n i \ M - K"'»luy»HOC,• » « P ' M ' " 6 7 > ' 2 5 8 '

-iiP?-rr''iV"lfi<jld-1 !e> * 50.0 « . « si . r 6i>. n ra, ii oi,l , y - If I". 12 41. (1SI, suasnturduy). soil.

1 8 » ' / I l ) U H 838 4 13 4 401114

pjibarton, lioihiohon, Alicntuwn. Maucli

'?• *! '•"• »«>• 11 OI A. SI/ISM. (1 SI Snt-ys 5 JT, 0 10 A. M. I 4S, 5a).^0 4r I'. H.

VV.lll"'!'Iinrr<,an.lBoranloii-4 5(!, DOHA. M.M. Sundays. 5 CT. 9 40 A. JH. 5 20 I'. M. •

I ' a ^ v t " o < | - 3 5 8 . »40 A. M., (1253 »»•-n l y ) n o 4 03, (0O2HutiinlayonIy)Sundayg. 814. 8 50A.M. I l l P.M.

anch (Hank

Hiindaya,' "5 53 A.M.' HI

iBxcopt Nowark.

w.anon,flcn. Fa«. Aont

SJMMSBuilding Contractor

the result of the season's work:. Received from sale of tickets, $303.Paid reht,|55;music. $12.83; talent,$26;conductor. ; $100; -printing, $10.15;incidentals, $14.34; balance on bandin saving bank, $85.68. All bills arepaid with exception of one smallmusic bill, not received to date.

JOHN H. THOMPSON,Sec'y and Treks.

5g^BMembrt»*?Sincfl;CofflmJtt^

SS^OYS^BRIGADE^fe^When a number of boys start oil

for a'good time, they generally have

niitwee£a.Among the passengers sailing on

(he expresa steamship Prinz FricdrichWilhelm of the North German Lloydline, from New York to Bremen, viaPlymouth and Cherbourtf._to-day isMrsr'R. C. Plume." " "

In the ball game Saturday betweeneST^JSf f iTf t lS^

AND' GUARANTEED.

Manufacturer ol All Kinds ol •Artificial

Stone Products.!

Office: 33 Fourth Street

J. C. W. RANKINDealer in

LpHIQH VALLEY COAL

ALSO KINDLING WOOD

Office 11 E. North Ave.

—YAHU, CKNTKNNIAL AVENUE—

:RANF0UD, - New Jersey

caciT Saturday afternoon when themembers of the Brigade and theirfriends took the trip Co Governor's

ATTENTIVE~ and pleSsing~3rug store ser-

vice is offered to every cus-tomer. No" effort is over-looked,' no act left undoneo make buying: here a pleas-

ure ?nd satisfaction. Thisservice' costs nothing; extra.Why ' not take advantageof it?

15 Union Avenue

never cut' up so much anil ^splashedaround so lively as when they saw thenatty uniforms of the boys; even thewaves tried to splash the boys as t.heystood in the bow of the Governor'sIsland boat, and some were, in part,successful. The soldiers on the Islandtreated the boys handsomely, andmany of them came awrajr with_their;iibckets~fuir"of crbsa-arms," etc.7. assouvenirs of the trip. The relics ofthe wars, the large guns on the fort,the barracks, etc., were so interest-ing that the afternoon went aroundall too quickly. Few realized whenthe call came, that it was time to gohome.

Next Tuesday, the last drill nightof this season," will be' spent in jolli-fication and feasting and a good timeis promised to all.

The entire programme for thefourth of July has not been completedbut another good time ia promised.Details will bo announced later.

MEN'S CLUB DOINGSOn June'25th, the laBt Sunday in

the Golf Club, James H. Erazior ofthe latter team broke his arm duringthe sixth inning, while Viidinir to•second baa^,w^^™^=i^5v™^..«--,

Miss Ella McDanolSs is registered1 at-the-Mountai|r House, Montclair.

Mr. and Mra. Close will pass Julyand August at Laurel Beach, nearMilford, Conn. :

Th« Wards are occupying Col,-WygantWjQuse^-^i==^

^Mia^J6t)e'--MeK1nvsyfW*ih'-:'Bail~^i^~•??n^".^'S"y«n$«li',7«id~*'St"!Xu'gUsttnev-where"Bnev-"will" spend h'erv a c a t i o n . . . • - . : • • •

M « - Walker of Trinity choir,? and

Ume held us her band In token.of af-lenc* It n-as B o$9$lfi;j|p,v.tt«,*ttaa*rJ6otf.'"He"h'ad'JQBt'coma In' to makean afternoon call, had dlscOTorcd heralready Around for wclklnf and badUra» precipitately spokaia.

"Pardon ma for OM moment,"" «nesaid. wttn a imlla, "but I oust get myeojngemcnt book." Bba took It fromher dealt. Toca abo preeotded; . . ,.1 premime you -wisti to marry m»T"-Oh, yea!""And you will l«ad up to 1? by the

usual methods?""I d o n V -T o a wUl how my baud, put your

arm around me, try to kits me—endpossibly succeoa-asd ail tha Ume yoawill {MOslonotalr tatoro your undyingaSecfloa. Verj well. Xou know thattula takes time. I a s »Nl(«d' to rejn.lato taj eOfeirs oa a tyatematic basla,otbenrlka I eouM get ootolns; accom-pllshed. £e( me ana, I should say tbawhole ,Bffatr wotfld tako—now long•hould yoo aayt~

The yootn reflected."Four hours," bo vestured.

tip «6 mnch tlmo. douMn't yoq E tUirough ID, soy, forty •nlsutegt"

"Moke It an hour."Apnuse.

• "Very well."She opened her book at a page.T h i s wo«fc Js taien, 8o t» Doxt

week. Week after oext—«ay Thnr»-.

FRED H. JAHN,(Successor to ThUip Jahn)

HOUSE, SIGN, AND FRESCOPAINTING

Plainj^tjjqeoojratiyePaper Hanging

Glass, Oil, Paint, Varnishes andWall Paper.

Telephone 28-R.

Cranford, - New Jersey

Window ScreensSCREEN DOORS, SCREENFRAMES, SCREEN WIRE

of every description, also PoultryWire, Roof ing, et<u, now on sale at

A. C. tike'sHardware Store

Opern House lllwk 'Ml Connection

' "Itemember to be on time. Auvolr." . . . . . - '

And abe was gonev-Iife.

conset,: on the island of Nahtucket,where she has taken a cottage for thaaumm'er. Miss Ford of Philadelphia

of the'Men's Club until the fail, anda large attendance is earnestly re-quested at this meeting as plans forthe summer will be discussed. Themembership committee in particularwishes to tell each member what theyexpect in the matter of co-operationduring the vacation period. It ia ex-

.pected that other committees, mayhave something to report and) alto-

the quartet.Horace Merrill met with a serious

accident last week. Having a coldin his e^es he went to tho bath roomto wash them with boracic acid and

|iby mistake used carbolic acid. - Thepatieni JB doing, nicely and does not' ar^aSy1 permanent ill effects.

Mrs^ Henri Kgmane£^sailed ..Satury'ffohT Paris on her return home

after a 4 months' stay.Mrs. Crane and daughter Grace are

spending three weeks at North AsburyPark.

The supreme court at < Trenton hasdismissed the appeal taken by thecity of Rahway to prevent the boroughof Garwood constructing, sewer bodsin a location which Rahway contendedwould endanger the purity of itsdrinking water..

Local Italians are planning a cele-bration to be held on Columbus Day,Oct. 12th.

Mrs, Foster is entertaining -hersister, Mrs. Bruhnu, who wasformerly Mrs. Fett.

The Westfield Council Monday night

Trouble In the Camp.The new man In camp stared at bl»

band. Tneu bo laid down four acoi.Alkali Iko looked at the acci and

then at tho stranger."That's a little mlto funny," he quiet-

ly aild M_hejpfck<^_^.^_|MdoAlt.!CTrdi'.Tr-rr^ «oem to betwo-aeotvleftorer," r Elbv piineis and. inMttenad-hii

.^Vuy-.•%Mta*s^aea.•<:b^ta!».•tt:•^m^Oe."tariff J" ho eofOy edded. ,

"Mebliy I will an' mebby I won't"replied tks •tranger. "Anyway, I ain'tcoin'to cbs/iro If to either tho dopre-daUon of gold or to' greed of th'farmer."

Bo looked Alkali Ike aqutroly In the

fi1i

i

111If1i111r1

Parquet andHardwood Flooring

I"'ini.shin{r Supplies;WX£3*U&-JS£*ii*'*?e

Tel. 3113-W ", . .

150 North Avi;Plain{ield,N.J.

'Sif t k ' e t f :;; :And then the gun play bogan. —'

Cleveland Plata Dealer.

, , ; • • • ] . • • : • • ' • > : - : : • •

Photograph Studio. 245 E. Broad St., Weslfield

"Tommy,* said too pretty toacber,"yoa don't see Mr. Tollman, tha prin-cipal, coming to achool with a. aolloflfaeo." r " "•.

"No'rn," pouted Tommy.-=**raaf"why^ lalt"ycW anone u c h l condition?"

"Becanso Tto sot old enough to befond of you, that's why." And thepretty teacher tumod redder than thaitove and told Tommy bo would bar*to stay In after scbooL—Ohicago News.

A Real Huttlar. ' .Lady (to applicant)—Yea, I adver-

tised for a maid of all work. Are yonan early riser? , •

Applicant—Indade, an' Ol am, mum.At mo lasbt place Ol was up an' badbreakfast ready an' tha dishes washedan' put away an' all the bed) modebefore anybody elso In tho Jurats wasup.—Success Magatlne.

One of the best Studios inthe .State. Ground Floor.High-class work at,reasonableprices.

Also Films, Kodaks, Picture " -"

Vacuum Cleaningdone at short notice.

Work done by the hour or contractKstlnialcs .given for oleanlng Ofllccfl,Churches nnil KesMoncca. - :-:KtorytMiif,' cloaned without removal.

Selling; Agt. for Invincible Junior

H. L FINK,

THE

-DKAI.KK IN-

Carriages* HarnessCustomers of 20 years standing in

ranford who will vouch for satisfac-ion received. Repairing and painting

pecialty.

4o Elm Street Westfleld

interest and inspiration to evorymember.

Every man in Cranford should boa member of the Men's Club. Everymember wears a button. Ask himwhy? '

FIRST M. %. CHURCH NOTESSunday services Sunday school, 9:30

a.m.; preaching at 10:45 a.m., subject, "Life's Choice;" Men's BibleClass at 3 p.m.* closing meeting forthe summer; Epworth League at 7p.m.; preaching.at 7:45p.m., subject,

The-King'B Ferryboat."Prayer meeting to-morrow evening,

subject, "Let Your Light Shine,"Matt. 5, 16. . - •

mad&.a:30:yearr;Teontract.with^rthEPTainfield- Union Water Company forthe town's water supply. Tho ratesto be charged are the same as at pro-sent—hydrants at $25 per year, or$15, if 10 hydrants per mile are in-stalled; for private use 25 cents per1000 gallons, where meters are ' used.

A Footnoto.A. very protty girl applied for a post.

Oon In tho chorua.^heiriMM'to'~a^*a'e"6Mifra<!t'fine

bluahlngly admitted that sho waa un-able to write.

"Well," said the manager, "It doesnot matter. It Isn't jraur slgnaturo thepublic wants to soojmyhow."—-Judge.

lli! for ^booklet,

MILLER,121 (VsntrulAve., - Wostllelil, N. J

Ti'l. C^nii.

K..WHEELEK,•"

DEALER IN ICE

EXCEPTIONAL

. R. WHEELERDealer iii

FLOUR, FEED; BALED HAY

ST,RAW, POULTOY

FEED, ETC

Mrs. L. M. Lyon is stopping withMrs. Clark, 12 Cranfonl avenue for ashort time,' after which she willreturn to California.

ME. South Avc.

$100 Reward, $100.t i e Raden of t in paper wm be phaaM to laum-

Out uun • »t leut one dnaaed i m n i urn ecienMBu tiecn able to cure a ell He H i m and Oil"•"CaurA. mire Catarrh C m M Ike e a r Bauurecafe now known to the medical fraurnltr. Cturrnbeuu a comUUtlonal dkcue, reanm a eODitltn-U n l tnatmeftt. m i l l CaUrra Care ai taken m-terullr. actlnir dlrecur nan tM blood and jnotoiaaurouce of the • lyttem. therebjr. danrormc tl>ebandatloa ot tha dknje. a « r « M w Un patient•trentth brJmMtaf up .the eOMtltuOon »nd aanrt-

. tat n u n avdotni Ha wort, n e proprMon hire,m • nn n ' a» ™MO bnh to tta earaUra powara that taer onerTel. 80-R one Bandied Dolttn tor tar am that B Ma tf

Not That Muoh.

Buy a Mansfield Piano or Autoklifvfrrnt'miinufacturer's cost.

We hare secured exclusire sellingrights for this territory.

Upright Piano - $215

Autoklavlcr - - 450

Mast bo seen und heard to be appreciate*!.

ANDERSON BROS. 'T«l.«i-W 240W.N6rtl1Ave.,Cranfonlj " ^ ""^"J"' b € ? d il\tom0T''• c i . » j IT ' row-would you bo much njwet}

Hubby—I Bbouia nearly go m'nd.' "

Quality Unrivaled. Servico Prompt.

PRICES LOW.

Peter Markusson

CRANFORD, N. 1.

UP THE HUDSONPOPULAR EXCURSION

T o - _ - ^

West Pointand Newburg:

Every Wednesday»,.June 28to Sept. 13, ind.

VIA

NEW JERSEY CENTRAL-And Hudson River Day Line Steamer

"ALBANY"Direct connection be-

tween Train and Steamerat I'icr 1, adjoining Pas-senger Stationjersey City.Train leaves Cranford at8:18 a.m.

y g"Would you marry again?""No. I Bhonld Dot beajnlte so madtht"an that"

Attractive Figure. >He—And did tbo leodlnR lady In the

Dew drama know bcr lines?Bho—Did shel Why, every tlmo she

cams on tbo stago one could ten thatsho was conscious of thorn I—lookersStatesmao. :

GARBAGE COLLECTOR.

P. 0. BOX, 183, CRANFORD.

Reasonable Prices.

Wewer & McMahonMasons, Builders & Contractors

Jobbing; a SpecialtyBrick, Stone, Cement fnd Plastering

Estimates Furnished21 \V. Lincoln Avc, - Cranford

8omethlno DifFarent 'Bba had greatly worried tho dork, who'd

shown ot Ubledotba a acoro,Hut ebe couM not nni) s> cloth ahe'd hsvw

vnr

OO YEARS'EXPERIENOK

Till the dark remarked, "Hare/a eome-tnlnaT now—on that my word . I'llpledco—

With tha canter right In tho mlddlo—eo«T—• --, and tba) border round tho edgo."Aod the would ba pmicluuer azolaimad,

-W«UVth»t U1 eoniaUiIng nloal" 'jandatnlchtway bougKt a pair, nor paused

'to aak tba dark tbo Drica.—Rlxon Watansaa la ^dTerflilnaT and

PiaiaNBCOPVRIQHTa A C

AnTone tpndln« a ckettb and deeerlptlon mmt^qaleklr~a*«ertaln-ot}r-of>lnl(Hi4ree whether aA

InTflnunn it probably palenUbfe. ConnnDDleay—tloniitrlotl»conaiIentlalHAIDBOOX onPataotent free. O l d tw t tak

.. it&I.MlOB5orbnPataBtt„_ Jldeit uener for Mconna* patacila.-

Wtenta Uken tbroagh Mann & Co. raeetva.. ..^ . _ T untharnofki, without obanraTl]

ifi JHScicmific jfincricaH.Abwid*omel»lllaitrtt»s(l wteklr. Jjmm&tt*-mlAUon of any fctentlflo Joanuu, Tarns, II *

Page 6: STADLISHED 1893.—No. I 288. fininareil with motoring ...welfare of the class WSB offered by Rev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor of the First M. E. Church. The salutatory, assigned to

EXTENUATING.

ITU raedlseval splen-dor, imsatlj out ofkeeping «lih thetrend of thought Iccod era EBgland. yeteagerly looked for-ward to by a peoplewho, la >[ilte ofprogress, .'ling, to ..a..

~i'iii~ of '' pegcantrr—'•'of aizitted retro-sjfcetlon u It were—the coronation of-

Oeorge V, exceeds in majrnlflcenceanything that tbe modern world has

:-;- se*n. ^ The pemp and pageiiatry .willnot make him on* whlLmora

^w^^ri^mm^irirtiufoi addone Jot or tittle to bis power. Cutthe corooatlon Is a.pageant bis peo-ple await with no alight degree of ex-elteiaent, that the whole world would

3^«W-/«rUl:,-tOcSeei--""-™r~~r^^^is=7^ncThen, being crowned ruler of Great

. Britain and Ireland, U will visit In-•' dla. with lil» queen eoTCrort. aBd there

b» proclaimed aod crowned emperor.He l« the first ruler of lirltalns em-pire nt India to KO to that distant do-minion to receive the 'symbol of his

i;.:"'toiiS^;i:fcira;i^"p^^S-tK'v7ce£~rT?)W"oMiridi_a-lia*^*ja7i^''ojie"BfW"iM|irWIe^«p'oi'=W-^toa iomc^"'«ia'Ci

for a brief space, at a demonstrationalmost barbaric in Its splendor hecould stand In the stead_of blsjjsjrs .

::.^sMd''rertlvr'ti't-bbwat*7iu^p»vtetttsl^emperor. The kingdom of make-be-lieve Is to go. George. Imperator etBex; will himself receive tbe fealty

a' nisii of' native potentates there willbe to claim places near the throne ofthe great while king!

Tbe ceremony of the coronation Is

r.--o-otrr as weii as with ts* accreditedrepresest&Sves cf tie British Empire,so that it is a veritable parf^iaent of~as. a federation c! the world, wtaproceed to chairs set before aod belowtieir ttroses.

At this jssct=re the archSISIioJ ofCanterbury, who. 1: U Interesting at

Parson—Boys, don't you know that. you shouldn't play ball on Sunday?

Jimmy—Oh: that's all right Parson.T We alnt playing; we're practicing (ertoaonoWs game.

FREED FROM SKIN DISEASE

': 'Our boy was born in Toronto onOct. 13.'150$, and when three monthsold a slight rash, appeared on hischeek. What appeared 'to be a

. ter blister would form. When Itbroke, matter would run out starting

' cew blisters until his entire face,bead and shoulders were a mass ofscabs and you could not see a par-

TTomen anfferlnz fron,..,

Mass. AUlettersarel«*d_an4*nswered ly

"~ ~ man can

ctil at tie ceresaosynot oaly In Ciat ' t!s body were effected; but not to' W

tie ceremony—not oaly ln fiathe crowns t ie king, bat also In viewof t ie fact that, ia tie event of thecrown prince's enforced absence from

: such 811 extent We tried about every: advertised remedy without avail. In-' deed some of them only added to bis

<t i I

, y&r ~*

the kingdom oa the death of the mon- \ iuffertns;. and one In particular, the'arch, or ac icMregnam would be re- i Remedy, almost put the Infant"i?*«Gi«SclfflpaS!eWfr9&Tl*a^

proclaim once more the Keg to j Prescribed for him and told us tohis subjects and to the world. The [tithe the, baby In buttermilk. Thisfo=r digaltaries are the lord chanceK j d I d not do any good, so we took himlor, the lord great chamberlain, the j to a hospital. He was treated as anlord high constable and earf marshal. ! out-patient twice a wee.k and he gotThey iffl march solemnly to the fonr J,*orse." " anything. We then called

rs?d%rcf^¥T3SneyFibf:~UTObJ^as it might be_caHe-l and address the'j *»«k the boy was, to all appearances.assemblage. The king, at the moment

-of-their-procession.'will have risen asIf to show himself to those to whomti9 is being proclaimed. The arch-bishop .will speak this message:

"Sirs. I

cored and the ..doctor said his workwas done. But the very next day Itbroke out as bad aa ever.

"We decided that it could not becured and must run Its course and so

SSiWnTrfthont the written c o S i•writer, and never has the Calowed these conf id t i lY

hundreds of thouiands oftheir flies wUl attest.

OntoftheTastTolumoofwhich Mrs. Pinkham has"to Sfrom. It lii more than possibleHJ*has gained the Terr knowledSflta your ease, Sbtuuks jjotiLSJH'a *«*Pt77>nr food will, t£adrlee has helped thousandj.T*?£ w o m a . n ' ", c n <« poor, ihogladtatake «dTantage ot wous offer of assistance. Addaistance. A

Medicine Co., Lynn, Masa

. I here present tq you King J *e JusVlk£?* B& SJ™? b.*Pdsge4

v w h p r p f o r B ' i l i •«>-»^^-K»'«^-»i»^i--T'-Be»l»--1~'W«(--!»«t»-vTApi>w»«----j----i»-^=»

" "willing' fiTdo* the sameFAs by one voice the people will take

up the cry that .will reverberate^t_hjmgb...,Ue.-w)iplev:j0jtV^s^«mj^.t.oaT wbfeb the sun never sets:~"Gbd'save

tbe king:" ,Following this. acclamation both

king and ..queen-consort wUl.tako-tbei:'xrim&-'r^ni&'i6fikem"yfoT'fatQw'their thrones.'The regalia of the king at the begin-

ning of the service will be that al-ready described; except that when the

•uraT'Reinedles were [ ..........We started using them ln Mar, 1909,md soon the cure was complete.! youwould not think, be was the; samechild for Cutlcura made bis skin per-fectly clear and be Is entirely freefrom the skin disease. There has

this .tJmo.

PurelyvveBetabte;_ . - - .i^*"fcetsureljf*sflKi~

.....^jft.Cutlr.j.gentrjrioa the-recommended, rfiver. Cure" — 'Biliousness.

H e a d T ^ '

bath. Robert Mann, Proctor, Mian,Hay S, 1910U-

«*-G&aevTari.

Good maxims are germs of all good;firmly Impressed on the memory, tAeynourish the will.—Joubert.

wmm%>m

nv»;' . •9*1 >mmmw&

%%%;//'"<*m\

W*:. I- S

— -- -The-Herb laxative, Garfieia'Tea," overrcomes constipation, giving freedom from

_ ^•jck-headacht««LMioa»«iUefcai-====~=f=

To apprehend contempt Is to havedeserved It already.—Pierre LotL

Mrs. Wraalow*« Soot&liur S j m p for 'Childrenteething. MOfieoa the iruins. reduces Influniu-Uon. +Umjm p a l s . a u r a wind colic. *Sc« bolUo.

. Take Garneld Tea to regulate tbe liverand overcome constipation.

Friendship is one Soul in two bod-ies.—Diogenes.

I**,

WM

•<gj&£^i~

•£*&?e***sa*re.

a survival of an ancient custom of sacrlng orhallowing tho king*. From tbe standpoint of tbopublic at large tbo actual placing of the- crownupon tho,monarch's hi.ud la tbo most Importantft-ittaru of tho ceremony. Hut from the ntand-

' point of the ceremony's manning of symbolism,•'tho-nprvlco of unction |> iicrhapH tho most note-

worthy. And then, t'"O, there in that moment ln,th« festivity—for'such It reully IB, In nplto'of Itsr e l i g i o u s s e t t i n g — • > » > » • • •••-••-'

ual coronation, will be tbe cap or state or main-tenance, made of red velvet Tbe queen con-eon will be a regal figure ln tbe' purple of berrank. She will wear a small gold coronet, and

-<•'—• •*•- vn later, following

-,,?"'"0 °.f ""• medieval observances have beenabandoned, but their abandonment baa not less-ened the- splendor of tho pageant for tflere havel>een manv addlt nn, «,<,h <k ... _. .. _ ..

riii i ' u r "u c" " r<««ly IB In BDlto'of it. . . 7 . 1 , • uuanuonment baa not less-religious setUng-wben tho king Inuvo" ho cha r b ? ^ "" ° f t h o p a g e a n t - f o r tfle™ ° « e

mr-~"^Sm^^£Z^'£'Z gedlu'ke'otarfolk.ls the general fantntnm !„ ,»,« •..•• ... ... *

'of her dominions over tho neu;I in a rujlglous setting tlio ceremony of tho cor-onation, when ittudlod by tho layman,. InstantlyrecallH tlio sorvlco'bf consecrating a IITHIIOP, andtho rcsomblance In admitted by tho clergy, though

. tbo most linportant fcaturo of tho consecration ofa bishop Is omitted, that of the "laying on ofbands." ' ' ..," •'

Thon, too^ the corortatlon Is not merely a festiv-ity. It Is abiiiotlilng more, much tnoru, For Itmarks the formal setting apart of tlio king an aperson dlfforont from all his nubjocts, not onlyby virtue of his position an tbcjr ruler, hut by

~ an anointing with boly oil—an otmorvuuco thathn« Uibllcal panllols and sanctions.

King George will bo robed In u whlto nllk shirt,and ovor (hat will bo placed a cloao-nttlni; coatof red sarcenat Thoso vestments ure providedwith openings at tho broast, for tho purpuno ofanointment. Originally thcro w«ro fivo open-ings, but as the anointing coromony._ha« becorao

—loss^alnborato with timo tho nueii of iiddltlonalopenings bus vanished. Tho- openings In thovemncnts will be fastened with rllibonn, nndanother of tho manifold duties of tho (loan ofWestminster will bo to soo Ihnt thoy jjju In readi-ness for Uio function. Tbon, too, bo will havo tosee tliat they are fastened again', so that his ma-

JeHty will not pronont an untidy appearanceIn tho onrlT d«v«ihn i«in» - i~.^ bareleggod to

Litany and Sacrament of the lard's Supper arereached be will remain uncovered, the little capof maintenance being put aside for the time.« >

At the altar the coronation; oath will be admin-istered Jo the king, and, casting aside his red robe,his majesty will proceed to St Edward's chair,which, as has already been pointed out la for hissole occupancy. '

Then follows what Is. perhaps, the most pictur-..?.8A«?_.fsajturje..,.oX.. the-whole- ceremony,-excepting

^Ewr*-woman--engirt-™Iijndis> E. Ptnkham's 80-™Text Book. I t Is not a book,treneral dlstrlbntlon, as it litoxpenslre. It Is free and •obtainable t>7 mall. "Write ji t today..

The WretchedL.of ConstipationCan quickly be overcome byCARTER'S LITTLElfl5ER«ll&

ness, and Indigestion. TheydotidriSMALL PUJL, SMALL DOSE. SMAll m

Gfiniiirle innst htar-SignafllltJ

$20 to $50 hr Week iSiswKffllr. ootflt Ira*. w« i w t yon ukim.nit.ip

B o n 10 men self i- - - fann, 9 room dwelll.^. »>

nopa frait, 45 mlnntea from New Vurk.-it. «««• r°or want*. Ikta

Of thepMs^Eiwn^hut^uclimate or to a moro

..... , . S , U U I U I I / ran morsnai, the aged duke otNorfolk,. Is tbe general factotum In tbe ball of theabbey. Ho will direct tbe. procession of tbo kingand tho quean consort. The dean of Westminster .will havo fulfilled part of his duties at this time,having tbe robes aBd regalia properly assem-bled for tho monarch and his queen. The robeswill have boon brought from the Jerusalem cham-ber of tbe abbey, where tbe dean will have beenIn constant ami terrified guard over them.

To greet tho - king and queen on 'their ar-rival at tho abboy will be crowded tiers. Thoseprvsont will be the favored of all England. The •tleru will bo draped In yellow and blue velvet.Thu abbey will* bd richly carpeted In blue—thecolor, of tho Darter—In accordance with a time-honored custom. Hero and there will be IndianruKH, tokens from the.empire potentates to thoRreut whlto king., There will be nothing extrav-nK'i'it about the rug or drapory display. Every ef-fort will bo made to prevent the concealment of-(!>•• permanent beauty of tho abbey, and tbe doco-ratlons will serve a useful purposo In biding tbestands that find place only at coronation times..

On a raised dais In full, view of all tboso pres- 'out will bo placed two thrones. 'Tbe king'sthrnno will havo tbo place of honor elevated twosteps abovo that of his consort in token ofhis sovereignty. Facing tbe altar, and for tbVNuso of tho king only, will be another throne, no \

•BO— »• longercallodjJhrone^but-knowffTurSCTSd^rMi'slfcf-freak*'1—chaiyrTTT* wbon he leaves this -*--•ite lense tired In all tfc-

The Btene will be of great splendor. A doth ofgold pall, whose value, represents a fortune of It-self, will be held over the king by Garter knightsall arrayed. In the picturesque habiliments of theirstation. Then the Westminster dean, taking fromtbe altar the historic vessels known as the am-pulla and spoon, will. attend the primate of. allEngland, who. will anoint the sovereign, on beadand breast and hands. .

Apart from Its plcturesqueness, this moment Intbe ceremony Is perhaps tbe most solemn of thewhole proceeding. And the king, being formallyanointed—set apart, hallowed—will then be ar-rayed in .the historic regalia Jmown'as the Colo-blum Slndonls and the Supertunlca. -The mon-arch's heels are to.be accoutred with the goldenspurs, tbe lord chamberlain will gird him with asword and the Imperial mantle will be thrownabout him. Tbe ceremony, reaching another *fcU-,max now, the monarch will be. seated, -where he

-will receive^ the"orb7the" ring for" the fourth fingerof his right hand and the scepter of royalty.

Now everything Is ready for the actual corona-tion. The archbishop will take the historic symbolfrom its resting place on the altar and put It uponthe head of the king. The assemblage will break outInto a tumultuous protestation of loyalty In the'old familiar words: "God save the king!"

Choir and clergy. lords and ladles, all who can- - ' " — - . — - — wfllTSeaT

ifoaud buskins of cloth,of gold.' He will

• we*r.:sandals of dark-.loatherYwith, red.straps.:

''Cowing••«rVerythJng.'«Ue.will b»j((he:lrwl:'O^*par-1i

^njLwJlfc^ia-nioatortttoriviU^^forth Into a great Te Deum, a Te Deum that willecho throughout the world. The king will returnto the chair by the side of bis consort that he oc-cupied when the ceremony b a d hcupled "when, the ceremony began and^_then»^ to

'Ot-the~r«oronatlonr qfflcer, 7I1^ quote the words „ „ . v-.w™.uyu queer -lifted"—-bat not UteralljWup. into his'throne!*

>'\,Crownl^sEnsfland^^kta»suii»is^

The Kind You

IDlisa

For Overthirty Years

.0 ApofcctRemedy f

s.Fevwisrr-ness and L o s s OF S u e P .

AND ECONOMY si.w

LAN OF TASTE CAN MAKETHREE GARMENTS DO.

(etlon Must Be Used In Selecting\e and Material—Is Then Pre-pared to Meet Any 8oclai

Emergency,

> woman who understands mak-good appearance, and who, ln

• event, would buy her materialsI taste and select styles with dls-on, finds no difficulty In making1 garments the basis of her sum-

J wardrobe. These would consist•trim tailored suit for street wear,[essy Indoor gown that could be

Inofth<coiApit

•Ic3 and an attractive wrap forlag and fine afternoon wear. ,th this triolet of pretty things notsmart or,too simple for day orIng occasion, she Is provided forsocial emergency, and may travel

d t l U I J B i b W

Is in ber own country. Acces-3 would bo In corresponding sim-y—one good hat for day, with exrlmmlngs to put on when somelal dressiness called for-lt, a neat

Iof^ay Bhocs and 'amnrtpr blnckera and twb"palrs of white ones;ft silk petticoat, a long undersltpbe indoor dress, etc."'.'."" V""';.making the summer wrap so

1 latitude Is allowed for cuts, ma-Is and colors thaCono needs toder mainly becomlngneBs and

lie-lii -klmono-form;-a-specleB of'H^anae^^*e"ta^<he"iBape;'t>fHr:

perfectly straight scarf, loopedlie back and caught under the

9 for sleeves. Some short wrap1 suggest the talma of-the

t l

gget the talma o f t h e U i -I tie same sharp points being used'he front, with the rounded backstie shorter or longer.ftBte!ittsilcB»fli^;«Wffls«^tffi white are used under marquls-!, veilings and grenadines fore becoming and needed garments.

• If In kimono style, they are stll^

stltcand

Miinch<

lace.

Raw-IGl

. Thiyouth

1-TM.fneedeskirtBhortiafterthe bito foil

: • : A jiblossoveiLarrantmay tshowcap; textentthouglthat dFor diJulietcrystalsidesvery b

A Jpopula

'of oralook,the he:head f,be genthis mi

Thesforth bfor brlIs stillbrides

' frequently unllned, as it Is quite'"< to have the Un.es"of.the flg-

through, and If the gown it-[" made a rich color the Blight°8 made by the coat makes it sUllEffective. ' 'f "lustration shows a short coat1 of a plain gored skirt, the two

representing an unusually1 model for the street suit The

•material Is a champagne-colored^er serge, the banding is of white™ put over black taffeta and, the

«cJf tered D l e c e s °n the rovers of" « are of moire poplin ln a pole

The buttons of the coat arecovered with the blue. •_.__

«,*"? "'becoming" feature of this^ wket is the shaping of the side*

«eeves in one. this resulting in•pece1 sleeves on the kimono order.•>™f l s In one piece and the

"easting adds much to theof the short cut A coat

the focionly atveils Uleave Iments ithe abssome sfor theerlng ftfor tulli

REVIVJ

String (Be.

, "leeves. eveFlf trtmmidrte. £ y> c o u I d- w l t h • 8 I t a l

S b e mad l£ y> couId- wlth 8 n I t a D l « ao"b e made almost the piece

„ ,"co o f the summer wardrobe.J ">e figure-Is soUd enough not

« «tra thickness there aret » U? t h a t c o u l d *• 'nade up

Goldstringsshouldnlshed tsoapsud:

The rthe old <marble.

A novplain an"tKe~enttiones, bu

A collibeads Isslender.Signs' balarger tl

Gold Icoming \should Igown nmm

Page 7: STADLISHED 1893.—No. I 288. fininareil with motoring ...welfare of the class WSB offered by Rev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor of the First M. E. Church. The salutatory, assigned to

flf AND ECONOMY

OF TASTE CAN MAKETHREE GARMENTS DO.

•etlon Must Be Used In Selecting

Ile and Material—Is Than Pre-pared to Meet Any 8oclai

Emergency,

> woman who understands mak-good appearance, and who. In

Ievent, would buy her materialstaste and select styles with dls-in, finds no difficulty ln makingi garments the basis of her sum-

I wardrobe. These would consist•trim tailored suit for street wear,Jessy indoor gown that could be

ie3 and on attractive"'"wrap forlag and fine afternoon wear,tli .tills triolet of pretty things notsmart or ,too simple for day orIng occasion, she Is provided forsocial emergency, and may travel

ln ber own country. Accea-i would be In corresponding slra-;y—one good hat for day, with ex-rlmmlngs to put on when somelal dressiness called forlt, a neatof ^ay Bhocs and ,'amartpr blnckers nn'd"twb"palrs of white ones;rt silk petticoat, a long underslipbe indoor dress, etc. *"".." '..[ making the summer wrap soi latitude Is allowed for cuts, ma-

lls and colors thatvone needs toflder mainly becomlngneBs and

^ ^ ^ p y|tie -la^i!mono-fonn;~a~BpecleB of

nUe, ortwlnthe-shape of aperfectly straight scarf, looped

he back and caught under thei for sleeves. Some short wrap

t h l i i

SIMPLE AND PRETTY BODICE, Will Look Well 4n Cloth or. Linen to

Be Worn With 8klrt ofSame.

This Is simple and would look wellin cloth or linen to be worn with skirtof the same; guipure lace is uned forthe under-sleeves and yoke, this iscontinued at center front' to waistA band of satin forms-an edglug,pieces of it are taken at Intervals

INTERIOR OF POULTRY HOUSEMost Farm Buildings Intended for

Fowls Are Large and Difficult toKeep Warm In1 Winter.

Mr. F. W. Reynolds Bends the Home-stead the accompanying' diagramwhich shows the end view of the In-terior of a poultry house fixed for win-ter use. Most farm poultry housesare built rather large and are hard tokeep warm In winter. This arrange-

Interior View. YR, Root*; D. 8loplng -flpor;;.P^JEa!«o

i l l ' C i Curtain: N, NenU; O, Gutter

1 tie same sharp points being usedlbs front, with the rounded backs

§tle shorter or longer.

white are used under marquis-veilings and grenadines for

e becoming and needed garments.| | [ In kimono style, they are *tl\\

frequently unllned, as It is quite"i to have the lines of the flg-

' through, and If the gown it-'s made a rich color the Blight

^8 made by the coat makes It still*8 effective. ". '

f "lustration shows a short coat11 of a plain gored skirt, the two

representing an unusuallyi model for the street suit The•material Is a champagne-coloredffler serge, the banding is of whiteOTe Put over block taffeta and, the

u _Jftere<i Pieces on the revers ofP™M are of moire poplin ln a pale

The buttons of the coat arecovered with the blue. •_.__»ery" becorning feature of this

. ,:"*" 'a the shaping of the sides«eeves in one. this resulting ln

rkTi. T e s ° n t n a Wmono order.M. 1 is In one piece and the

"easting adds much to the8 of the short cut A coat

•ooitsleeves. eve¥l f trimmed'rti £ y> c o u M - w l t h ""'table ao-

be made almost the piecea of the summer wardrobe.fleur<Ms solid enough not"i thickness ;there, are

1 that could be made up

too.

•JoolcP

*rtpYiha:overdeeTeIstrlmmed in -theBamo -wny. "Two"lacks: are-made^on-'encliBhcmWer,stitched, a few inches down both backand front ;'. . ; • >

Materials required: i% yards. 46Inches -wide,; H = ! y a r d i ^lace.

Raw-Edged Tulle Is Most Favored-Girls' Height Decides Quantity

Needed.

The veil most approved for ver>youthful brides Is of raw-edged tulle,

height..decides .the quantity

ment may be applied to most anyhouse except that the roosts must bebuilt on a level ,ond not graduatedstair-step fashion. The slanting floor<BJLJS ,a.nTfld.y_antage Jn ,thotJt ,fann»fadeaa air spnce below and facilitatescleaning the chicken house. The roostsare" * 2x2-lnch strips with cornersrounded, extending from back to frontabout 18 Inches apart. About 18 Inchesabove the roosts a false celling maybe built of loose strips and covered

JWWan^oldstripSficarjietys^ungirom the -frontot•this'Ceiting-andi bylacking », narrow strip ©a 4fc«sloweredge of, this curtain, It can be'raisedand fastened to tho rafters above at'(O) during the day. The curtain,straw .and ceiling may all b« taken oatIn warm weather so that spraying maybe easily done. Nests can be arrangedln the same room, as Bhown.

IfIOME

needed, as well as the length of heri^k^b^MQiu.QS<&JimJamJ»itaishorter than that at the back, andafter the veil Is adjusted on the headthe bottom is slashed with big shearsto follow the lines of the Bklrt. .

A Juliet cap, made solidly of orangeblossoms, is a pretty finish for a tullevelL it Is put on after the tulle laarranged on the head, and the veilmay be Blashed away at the front toshow only a little ruffle under thecap; but tradition still calls to a greatextent for veiling the face, eventhough many brides prefer the veilthat drops only at the sides and back.For dresses trimmed with beads theJuliet caps are ln matching pearls orcrystals, the flattops' and bunchysides of the little fixing proving avery becoming flnlsh»to tho face.

A Judy-cap arrangement Is verypopular for the lace veil, a gathering

If Handled Right Will Return 8urplusof Pillows or Wllf Bring Good

Price If 8old.

Feathers, may be cured at homeand_if_ handled-right- secure -to-tbehousewife a surplus of pillows and

'of orange blossoms giving the caplook. The cap.part sits low down onthe head, and at a smart wedding thehead fixings of the bridesmaids maybe genuine caps covering the head inthis mop way.

These are the two arrangements setforth by fashion as the newest stylesfor bridal veils, but as becomlngneBsis still a most Important matter, manybrides have-their veils caught up at

p fsold. Before the chicken Is scalded,'take the scissors and cut off the soft,downy end of the feathers about thetall. Separate the feathers ln pick-ing and. dry thoroughly. Immerse thefeathers In lime water made by de-canting one pound quick lime in onegallon water. Allow the feathers toremain in this two or three days,stirring frequently, then skim the sur-face of the water and lift the feath-ers out to drain on a wire-sieve.

When drained rinse them first inhot water, then in two cold waters,then place again on the sieve todrain. If an old hammock Is at handstretch it tightly in a warm room nearthe. floor, spread the feathers thinlyupon i t Once a day tap the nettinglightly with a stick and the feathersthat are sufficiently dry will fall

A Heartless Eather. -"I need some help with my household

duties," announced a woman when herhusband came home the other night.

; "What's the matter with our daugh-ter?" the husband wanted to know.- "Our daughter? The idea! Why,Jim, you know she's awfully delicate,and she_w°MMLrtle-Jf .fbe^J*?*-*?^0

mnjr-hciureh'old" work." She has herjch^oi?_and==rr^____^,•''•'' "And what?'- Her teacher's "reportshows that she isn't doing a bit ofschool work."

"But she Is the star member of herbasketball team, and you know she Iseager to take the prize at the gym-nasium contest. But that's just likea man—wanting a delicate girl to en-gage hr rough;' hard Tabor. Be asham-ed of yourself, Jim Jenkins! Youhate no feeling." .

ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WEAKf

Thousands suffer from sick or weak-ened kidneys without knowing thecause.'1"If you have backache, head-ache,--urinary disorders, look to your

kidneys—give the helpthe kidneys need.Mrs. E. C. Tlllman,Franklin Pike, Lewis-'burg, Tenn., says:'My kidneys were in

terrible shape and Isuffered Intensely.My back* ached and Ifelt all worn out I

|seemed tobe runttlnginto" dropsy and my'weight dropped 35

pounds. For a year I was practicallyan Invalid. From the time I startedusing Doan's Kidney Pi:", I improveduntil completely cured. ? he'would be in my grave iVi ; hot for

Remember the name—Doan's!For sale by druggists and general

storekeepers everywhere.. Price 60c.Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.

The Rev. George F. Culmer, "thebard of Odon." celebrated bis eighty-Blxth birthday yesterday. The Rev.Mr. Culmer was born May 22, 1825, lnKent, England, during the reign ofGeorge Frederick (Gelrge IV.), forwhom he was named. At the time_of

IB'..', was

"Dr: Culmer has".-beeni 9minister Jfor.

pal church until his advanced agemade It necessary for him to retire.He is a. scholar,and poet... Many..ofh1r:p'6eins~have"'"been "published 1nmagazines and newspapers.—Washing-ton ' Correspondence IndianapolisN e W * " ' • : • ' • • • \

. • Dress.

If a man prefer* the kind of clotheshe can Jump into and wears anotheronly under"compulsion;

While a'woman prefers Buch clothesas Bhe cannot put on without toll andtrouble add the expenditure of time,and will .unless under compulsion,

-wear"nothln"g""else;~ r"Then what of permanent equality Is

^ h t d ^ f l j t e h ' l i V " ^sexes back to the tape and start themall over again?—Puck.

Old 8uperstltion.It was prescribed by an old super-

stition that if those who were affectedwith ague would Visit at dead of nightthe nearest crossroad five differenttimes land then bury a new laid egg,the disease would be burled. If theexperiment failed, they- attributed Itto some unlucky accident that mayhave befallen them on the way.

Hood'sSarsaparilla

AUTOMOBILEINSTRUCTION $151

T!» INTKRSiTIONAL II ntoKsliod •• tn BKL1AUH Or»- TUAININO

other humors, cures all theirefects,jnakes the blood richand abundant, strengthens allthe vital organs. Take it.

Get it today in usual iiqufd form or••••-•- 1 tablets call*! S a r a a t a b s .

townugnlr BmU-maQd lb« aalomoblin. COW-' H-HTK «i in« of practical Ihga work; 1NCLUD-I INll t»emr DHIV1NU Icouni. (or tol « utberI tueiuri. Wo u-icb all UtfU-liiKITHlN Vrtlri]••»•*-•'««• r*hsa»w.'"ncuxauasmsg'-. w?wi! you the rnaofffor hmlnesa yuirKI.T" ana TH

roa to .ACCapT'a |ana MAKB UOO1> tin tna JOB. Knelliri. Urr-t. . '-»lian Imtrnrton. I'BEltl.BSH,

. . l i t ,N*TI -HIANKI.I.N

anll>vronrb an<t Italian Imimci

AC'KAUII, PiaKi;Bv^jNATlONAI._

MOTHER GRAY'S SWEETPOrXmRJFORCHlLDREHT£li?°, ,f ewjihneM, Conrtip,-tion.Colil.and correct Jijordftjofthe •toro.ch anil bowclj. f»»rf isW M m / g r U m , , . A-tallDnu-IiiU :5c. Sample mailed FHFK.

UlllBlN_ ...» .A01LUAO

I cart uxvl (or A(Ti;At. llKMONSTRATIONpor-f « n Ikr H i Ornlni c l u m . L1CKSSS All-SULl'TBLV UUAUANTEBll.

SckM) .fM A H . (EalaMlab«d IMS)

A self-made man? Yes. and wor-ships his crcator.=Henry Clapp.

O.irfiel.l Tun will wt the livrr ricl>t.correct con*ti|tntion, clennHe the nyfteni,purify'thc-blood aud cloar the comiilciibn.

Fatherly Advice."Now that you are married, my son,

listen to me.""What is It, dad?""Try to be a husband, not merely

an ex-bachelor."

""Our (tedders.Write Murlne Eye Remedy Co., Chicago,

for 48-pnge Illustrated Eye Hook Kri'e.Write all about Your Eye Trouble nndthey will aiiviic na to the Proper Applica-tion of the Murinc Kye Kcmeiiica ln YourSpecial Caae. Your Druggist n-lll tell youthat Murlne TU'licvi'j Bore E>f». fitrcnith-tns Weak Kyes. Doesn't Smart. Sootlieii-Eye-Pttinr-nnii-iiellB^tnr'Wc. "Try It InYoui^Eyes and In'Kaby'a Eye.s for ticalyEyelids and Granulation.- • •

Two Varieties.Little Willie—Say. pa, what |s busi-

ness courtesy.Pa—There are two kinds of'busl-

jiesarioouitesyp'my-w>n7 Onei-1s"ifcbkind extended to peoplo who pay ensh,and -the-other is-extended to peoplowho don't. '

The Old Gag.Miss Lillian B. Rowe, at an adver-

tisement writers' dinner in Denver,l-ofrtho-harenr;sklrt;-:^^'^-^:r;

V ^ t )<het)ld'irag;iierpBtratO(riij the*40s"on

iwomen victims.

"Some sharper, you know, wll) re-vive the gag by advertising in thoI ^ l G ^ " ' :

"--Send $1 and - learn -how-to keepyour harem skirt from ' becomingfringed at' the bottom.'

ifiii to 'each victim the Bbarper willreply:

"Wear knickers.'"

Couldn't 8ee the Resemblinee.They have been Joking Assistant

Treasurer James A. Mathews of theGuardian bank, on his resemblance to.

"PfesldenrTHrt, and Mr. Mathews has^ L p . ^ ^ e j t ksubsided'and the

Joke died a natural death.Until the other night, when Mr. and

Mrs. MathewB dined together withMr. and Mrs. Frank Harmon and theirlittle daughter, when the Taft resem-blance was revived. Turning to youngMISB Harmon, Mr. MathewB askedwhether she, too, thought he lookedike the president. v .

Dorothy studied long and earnestly.Then she answered:

Not in the face. Undo Jim."—Cleveland Loader.

I AitsOltiYlNK'. J l l . lliilmrnt V H fI for mankind. Kur Il.iUi, MruUm, ^HHHj t>l(lS<>rTiii.!4wf]llriKtl,.Guti™,V*r1ft>fte H H I

Vclna. Varjowlllra, Aliar" r«HV ^ ^ ^{ I'rlcfl It ana U a IM>tn<t ut dniCKtiU or di'llTflr i.' Will tril tuiTe If juu write. Manufacturetinlf b;

W.f.VOUNG.P.D.F..3IOIfmilltlL.Sprinllltld.Ml»l.

To the Pacific Coast by Special Train .Ttioerfatrkl. arandest ami ton taur ever nffpnvl totlin Auiorican Ifrnplr. ApplT ft>r rxtf t fnim' Tuarbitinc. MaKDldraut train <>) rlrclric HimlM iiulliQmncan. a rlub car, latlica drrwdng rttoni in Ibr* baitsa^•car. IMnrr with ulihurpakMsi culntnn. A world of•lubt-AcrlnR, auiumobillntf, hanquvti. atan citrrtae-lylow rmii*. tfmm llulTalo Jurmao, H:H) p.m. rrturn-Inff July Kth. Itatft Inrludea alteiptttiM*, o dart InHan Franrlneo at Hallrvui*. nxitnt with bivlti.* PiTOand one-balf dafB in YrlUiwateim Park. Vltlli tojUXputpt*4^4nwrrf^«sAmlaWrirTKm»vl1Mf~

jn« HwVal^r'ApplV ulSij"foiUuffdlii. N. T. i*ei " "

fur bfnht. and.fel tb«nc.. &a Killcult Sanara

dlrmlml l>j Mr. Qruia'

SILOSWe will mtn>\ you abnoitiMlr freeArvernl buuka*nti epHllngt anilKllim If you write m fur same

rorntlontnfrihlH pat>er. "Diin'l deln y u auppljr4. iimiwj. Q.JSLIAB A BRO,. Wlonufao- -turera, Buffalo, New York • .

niXtt.m«.ITv:yD0?fi

"DEAF" BEGGAR COULD HEARiricldehrThat Struck His^sehoider i s

Being Along Slightly Humor-,'.'-. ous Lines. —

"Many funny things happen In aflat during the course . of a fewmonths," said a Mllwaukeo flat clwoll-

pp j yJ'.tl.iwag;'suadanly.rrousi(l tram tnyBf!fflMt.feMhffiS.lPV'«J^nock« on thedoor. i .futnping to my feet and Into abathrobe, 1 hnstened to see what waswanted. I opened the door In timetqsee ayoung^cllotv hallway up the."flight toi'the"next-floor. ~'

"'Hello, there!' I yelled at him.,"He turned around, hastened back

and.banded out a small envelope

at It. It was an appeal for aid be-cause the applicant was deaf anddumb. . — . . •

"Say, I was mad enough to kick himdown stairs. Then the Joke struckme and I Blammed the door In his faceand went back to bed laughing."

intricate Letter.

on a long business trip, he got a letterfrom his wife that still puzzles him.It ended thus:—

"Baby Is well and lots brighter thanshe used to be. Hoping you ore thosame, I remain, your loving wife."—Everybody's.

Tile Exception.Post—There are as good fish In. tho

sea as ever were caught.Parker—Hm! I guess you haven't

heard Thompson's latest fish story.—Harper's Bazar.

(J ihort human-inUml itorj •writun bj C. *f. Pott far tie Postum Ctrtal Co., Ltf.)

bring a better price on the marketthan colored and duck and geesefeathers better than chicken feathers.

the face.. So there are veils that hangonly at the back ot the Bead, tulleveils that hang over the face or thatleave It exposed, high head arrange-ments and low ones. But If one wantsthe.absolutely fashionable thing, havesome sort of a broad low cap fixingfor the top of the head, a mop gath-ering for lace, and the Juliet bonnetfor tulle. . - • . ••-

REVIVAL OF GOLD;> BEADSString of Alternate Plain and Chased

Beads Is One of Latest Nov-elties.

i • _ _ _

Gold beads are In fashion. Oldstrings that have not been wornTshould be brought out and If tar-nished they can be,brightened by hotsoapsuds or a good slfver polish. -

The newer beads'are larger 'thanthe old ofles, some the slie of a smallmarble. These are not In good taste.

A novelty Is the string of alternatePlain and chased beads. Sometimesthe~enUre strlnris-of encrusted-goldones, but they are hard to keep dean.

A collar effect made of rows of smallbeads Is becoming to the girl with a.lender Jhrpat One of the new d ^signs' has nine rows, each lead notlareer than an ordinary plnhead.

Gold beads are not especially be;

CHICKEN RUN QUITE CURIOUSLos Angeles Dealer In Feed and Qrain

Utilizes Waste From 8toradeIn Unusual Manner.

:--An lnK«nloufl Los Angeles-deaieriinihay, feed and- grain. Is utilizing thewaste from his storage shed in theunusual manner shown by the illus-tration, says the Popular Mechanics.The Space, under the floor has beenconverted into a chicken run, and theloose grain, feed and chaff falls or Isswept through the cracks. This wasteall of which would otherwise be Of nouse, is sufficient to feed a large num-ber of chickens. A small Indosure

Your PhysicianTo tell you the curious story ot how the mind

dark

frock.

rather- .tbanLfor :.a>;

A Curious Chicken Run.

Is also provided outside of the sheds"goJiat the -chickens can range In theo p e n . ' •••"-•— — • • • -——••• • • - • ' • - • - i - r - * • - • - •-

The dealer derives an Income of $10a month from the sale of eggs.

— MadlunvSlxed Turkey Best.Forty-pound turkeys are all right

for the showroom, but for marketthere is little demand.. The medium-sized ^tukeys, , weighing Uteen toeighteen pounds, jwU J>«tt||r, tojthe

I refer to the condition the mind Is In, Justbe/ore, at the time, or Just 1ollowln% the takingof food. .

/ / he has been properly educated (the major-ity have) he will help you understand the curiousmachinery of digestion.

To start you thinking on this Interestingsubject, I will try to lay out the plan la a generalway and you can then follow Into more minutedetails. ' _; i ' .

Pawlow (pronounce Pavloff) a famous Russian Phy-sician and Chemist, experimenting on some dogs, cutinto the tube leading, from the throat to the stomach.

They were first put under chloroform or some otheranaesthetic and the operation was painless. They werekept for months In very good condition. ^

When quite hungry some un-appetlzlng food" wasplaced before them and,, although hunger forced themto eat, it was shown by analysis of th« contents of thestomach that little if any of the digestive Juices werefound. ; . . .

Then, in contrast, some raw meat was put where theycouldn't reach It at once, and » little time allowed for ,

Jhe minds_of_the-dogs-to—'nntJcipate!Land create an ap^_petite. When the food was finally; given Diem, theyde-voured it ravenously and with every evidence of sat-isfaction. The food was passed out into a dish throughthe opening before It reached the stomach. It wasfound to be mixed with> "Ptyalln" the alkaline Juice ofthe mouth, which is important for the first step In dl-jestion. Then an analysis was made of the contents of

. the stomncb. Into which no food had entered. It was^pwn_y^ttje.d!ge.sufreely, exactly as.If the desirable food had entered.

This proved that It was. nof tho presence of toodwhich caused the digestive Juices to flow, but the flowwas caused entirely and alone as a result of tho actionof the mind, from "anticipation," .. , '

, . • • - '

One dog continued to eat the food he liked for overan hour believing he was getting It Into his Ktomacb,whereas, not an ounce went there; every particle went ,out through the opening and yet all this time the di-gestive Juices flowed to the stomach, prepared to •quickly digest food, in response to tho curious orders of.the mind.

Do you pick up tho lesson?Unappetizing food, that which falls to create mental

anticipation," does not cause the necessary digestiveJuices to flow, whereas, food that Is pleasing 'to thesight, and hence to the mind, will cauBe the complicatedmachinery of the body to prepare In n wonderful wayfor ItB digestion. v. • . <

How natural, then, to reason that one should sit downto a meal In a peaceful, happy state of mind and start"off the breakfast, say with some ripe delicious fruit,then follow with a bowl of crisp, lightly browned, thinbits of corn like Post Toasties, add a sprinkle of sugarand some good yellow cream and the attractive, appetiz-ing picture cannot escape your eye and will produce thecondition of mind wblcb causes the digestive Julceonature has hidden In mouth and stomach, to come forthand jlo^theb- workw , ' V _.-.-.

These digestive Juices can bf driven backrby-BTni'nit 'oppressed with worry, hate, .anger or dlsliko of the dis-agreeable appearance of food placed before one.

Solid facts.that are worthy the attention of anyone-who esteems prime health and human happlne.»-aa avaluable asset in the game of life;

''There's * Ration" for saying "The.Memory Lingers" when breakfast is*

POST TOASTIES. \, mm

Page 8: STADLISHED 1893.—No. I 288. fininareil with motoring ...welfare of the class WSB offered by Rev. Herbert Rhinesmith, pastor of the First M. E. Church. The salutatory, assigned to

THE CRANFORd CHRONICL& THURSDAY. JUNE 22. 1911

II b interesting, and somenmea, to tne« the origin of word*.

• is the word "pecuniary," forrramplei which, 70a know, meana re-latlac to money. Strange to uy, Itsoriginal meaning was "cattle." It• a m i that oxen were toe medium of•trhinge between the ancient Ro-laaas, one ox being the oclt of value.Th» flrtt Roman coins bore the imageof an oj, and the word "pecus" meant•a oz or a coin, according to how

FORMULAS FOR PROPOSALS.

Modern NovaOsto Olhr Notlifeg N MFor U» HurUlck.«s

ADVANCES nav« been mate laeverything except reUgloa andtil* formula for proposing. Soon

w* ahall aO be flying and kaow an toegerms by name so that when we ealttaesa they will coma and teed oat of

PRIZE ESSAY:}•

were at the same place and the lastbuilding, taking it altogether, was amodel school for its day, as it had somany windows which gave good ven-tilation and it was used until 1867.Tbe school was not only used forschool purposes, but was sometimesused aa a church, and entertainment*

SA tb 5B— Mortimer Gross, James 1 Lens, Kenneth Lofgren.McCioskey, Robert La Var, George I 8th grade to ' High School—Louise

Charleaj Bailey, Fannie Diamond, Robert Droes-cher, William Farrell, Charles Gould,Philip Keenan, George Kreie, Frank

McCIain, Albert Mount,Pierce, Leon Schindler, PrestonWoodling, Theodore Chamberlain,Georgia Hansel, Helen? Van dc Carr,Mary Miller, Betty Sholes, EstelleMulvey, Ethel Radut -

5B to GA—Kenneth Hopkins, RobertAddoms, Joseph Hennessey, Win

iDickinson^ ._Howhi

A Good Hunt Rewarded. 'Aa old man in Atchlson writes to

the Atchieon Globe: "(a 1S66 I knewa Methodist preacher who would an-nounce big text in this manner: 'Youwill Cud my text in tho eighth chapterof. Isaiah, ninth verse. If you don'tftBd.lt thaiv,youwiU and K'eoraewhar,'

r If, you hunt the book through fromOeoeals to Revelation. And If youdont find it then you will have founda great many things which will do toyou a power of good.'"

Advice to Mother*.Bg positive with the children. Lay

flown the" law. It is rvpiarkable howsoon they discover when you arc Inearnest. Do not go to the breakfasttabl* in » flurry, but stop long enoughto count 100 slowly, and then enterwith a calm manner determining thatthere will be no squabbling. It isnatural for the young anln^al to•crap, and while not criminal, mill itBtut bo checked to acIf-controL

_8uffocat<ld_lll.HlarJ<ai_.

B«tD Bn*anr»**rw«rt*toten -mvery old story Is apparently aa Im-possibility.

It would not matter maea. possibly.If young girls were act so keenly aliveto the attnadoa. But tbey read an tt»latest novels, and tfcey are pretty Uka-ry to know what Is coming. '

What U.theuae ot atroiUm into tt»conservatory under a potttd pslm andstarting to bold her fisttertas handIn wain when the whole thing Isdon* In a recent novel.

Then, again, the vocabulary Is lim-ited. Too cant aak a girl to marry

•yoo In many more ways than (ha fol-lowing:

"Darting.;I love you.""Will yon be miner-Say yes.""Only tell me that yon do not lor*

another."Ton can. should yon think best

throw yourself frankly on the mercyof the girl and announce beforehandtbe author in. whose langaagp yon In-tend to propose. If ahe is a sweetgirl graduate and baa been studyingKant and Spencer yoo can say:

when7 <S«nefiiie™Deean»Cranford tbe first large schoolboasewas erected upon the site of the pre-sent Grant-School. It was also, usedfor political meetings and a numberof other things. Tbe school had onlytwo class rooms but later it became

Igraded «ne.. Some years after the building of

the echoolhouse I mentioned in mylast paragraph a meeting was calledas to whether or not to have a newschool building. Mr. Austin presid-ed at • the meeting- and such strongand bitter opposition developed thatthe ladies called a meeting and Mr.Austin again presided,' but nothingbecame of these two meetings,. Athird meeting, was called and Mrs.F. E. Bates presided. After alengthy discussion the four hundredand fifty votes for the new schoolbuidling, won by just seven, theothers having four hundred and forty-three, u The Grant and ShermanSchools|,were then built:

^^£T^^4;;j^«r;Taylor, Madeline Adams,; GeorgiaArmstrong, Jean LsMont, HelenFromme, . Hamilton Fay, HowardBeadle, John Simerville, Gladys Pet-tit, Margaret tilackburn, Frances(iourne, Margaret Chamberla'inc, RuthEvans, Grace Clark, Ida Shapiro,Margaret GYobcStineV" " - ' < . > :

6A to 6B—Helen Cunkling, JohnGafTney, Roy Hearon. Dorothy Mil-lett, Wm Stollc, Frances Spaeth,Rosa Stolk; Helen Werner, MatthewFischer, Fred Knapp.

6B to 7A-Allen Clark, MinnieDreyer, Clifford Fink, Ruth Me-Kinncy, Gladys Mulvey, Marian West,Aubrey Neidecker, Pauline Newton,David Plume, Elinor Potter, HenryTomlinson.

7A to 7B—Heater Burrel, ThomasLeavy, Kathfeen Ofdham, KatherineRumble, Viola Tucker, David Summerville.

7B to 8A—Raymond Dickinson,Robert Hahlo, Margaret Hansel,

Lenx, Ebba Lofgren,Julius Natbarius,M i l d ^ R iSchaefer, Edwin

W l hWarner

h ^in War

Welch, Margaret Yansch

GNaylor's

Evening

PLA1NF1ELD

J23NorthAvc J20E.2dSt.

IF EPICURUS WERE AMVEHe Vould FoHow the Crowd to the PhmBeU City Market

• « , - , - , , 0 H r ">»»y Cranford patrons for their appreciation ofKigl ideals with coinraeremlism.- The highest 'sanitationofh_from street dust.) Co-operation in purveying tho best goods at tiie'l'ow

Saturdav .evcnlnR-wo believe a liberal ,loso of aZMedical authorities nffroo that the tin

m street .lust.Mn»m free-every

( ( n»

GROCERIES, FRESH MEAT, BUTTER, EGGS andAT SPECIAL PRICES. .:

Delivetla nude In Cranford -

ESTABLISHED 1893.—NO. I:

•: *re i r into- his hat" and suffdeatcd.''This '• the lndqrsompnt on the .deathcertificate of Alfred I'arlow, who wasfound dead by tbo roadside in North

• Itaynham, Mass., by a neighbor. The: _i__ man was on his way to his homer and-_~-:_.—tripped and fell, His-flfrty hat slipped

voice of th»- categorical ImperarJvetWill yoo ba my pbenomeaon of exist-ence? Can I walk with yon intuitive-ly as well as Imperially?"

Or yoo can tempt her with a rendi-tion a la a new sea story:

'Darling, 1 have laid to-ln the offlng

Radut, Prudence Rjndell

A FEW DOLLARSup-to-date and attractive town. Oneof the moat attractive things is theCasino. The'first one was burned

SfinpntonVBatreyTTiniliiigdn,]Raymond Weit. • -

8th to High School-Elizabeth I. . i-iiush', Orel Burey, .'Augusta GafTncy, I

down, but in 1897 the present Casino (Miriam " '

start a checking account with

forced Into It. .Tho man never recov-ered sufficiently to extricate himself.uylnf of suffocation.

Where Napoleon Failed.

make Napoleon one's ideal. Morc-:-over, we bavo to remember that to

construct a perfect household Is anachievement greater than any of Na-poleon's. A truth which Is illustratedby the fact that when he devoted hisabilities to housekeeping ho failed. It

together with a Ugbt 10 knot breeseover the Quarter Into the southernocean while you take your trick at thewheel? Oh,.say that henceforth 1 canbe your first mater*

P r ' ? « ' " ' I«PSP»«« of a recent snto_

v p r TiTKnrosrpiiiiio SEXA- her way, which -was -wu-aTsrmt, bat

tomforuble.

Work of Women Inventors.Women are said to have boon issued

I

j > i

States ofllceL They are" riot all domes--tlc by any means, either, as Eomo ofthem are for car couplers, night signalInfc life rafts, c a r , , v w J

l!f6? Jo'anWoc 'urtnK'.oto'Oe tfn'd 'a' fpwriterfor the .blind. A pocke t sewlnsmachine and a sash that will go upwithout sticking are other Inventionsby women.

For Bluing Steel Goods.A mcthod_of bluing _smal|_j!jc'

~t«WlUrby~oTppinB is tb W i t saltpeterto.an iron JgUJhen lmmersc_lhe-;

" and cleaned articlessufflclenUy blued. The goods

should then b e removed nnd cooled in' petroleum and afterward dried out in

sawdust

: Lova'at'Fln(~ SightIt exists, but It 1B utterly fallacious

and dangerous, for it Is bascdonly onthat fragile thine—looks. It may beromantic, but It Is not lasting, and isseldom genuine.—Klustraclon, Barce-lona.

. A Weighty Question.1 took in two <dollars Just now,"

said tbe first promoter. "Good enough,"declared the second promoter. "Shallwe lame additional stock topond with our Increasedshall we havelunchr^—

corres-capital, or

The Short and the Tall Woman.There la no longer a perfect type of

woman, such aa the "Greeks admired.There Is tbe Ideal short woman andthe ideal tall woman,, but they arevery different.

8a'ves Telegraph Tolli.A pigeon used by a Manchester

(Enf.) firm of mill-owners to carry..

"Darling, henceforth may our en-gines beat as one! Ton shall be mycarbureter, and I. will be your differ-ential. No limousine shall part us Ifyou wOl only explode the word, and Ipromise you that for life I win b*muffled dpwuj* __

Another Borelirt^s prchapa Joo com-mon: ,

-Oartloz-ttuu Is to My. flearett-.something subtle. mtulOve. evanea-cent tella me that yoo—may L hide-flnably, yet nnntterably, be permitted

But Th^eTTffieKall^on^ehbw-towhat straits lovers may be driven.We await some hitherto unknown

- •—•- Miriam Humphrey, Gertrude Love-w a s b u l l t - . • land, Luvera Morris, Marcuerita

[ of out-door sports so the^Golf Fomatli Bertrand Neidecker, RobertClub plays an important part. Cran- \J^r."..t.At- 1—•- • > - - . . j | a r y

Blake,

Thr Cranford National Bank

p y importaford's Golf. Club is a

h

Cranfeaturo of-tbe

town as it has an artistic little clubhouse and fine grounds. It also hasthree tennis courts.' ,

Loderstadt,Stolk, Ruth

g t j i i S n t 5 r ois that it is not very far from NewYork and on Saturdays and-Sundaysmeji often come out here to play golfor tennis.

The Rahway River

Jack Penistbn,Smith,.,]Spencer, .Spencer Blake,

Frank Bell, Dean Bell, Harold Cham-berlain, William Dreyer, Harry

y e w i 9 f T h o n i a s 0 8 r 'horn, Occar Lewis, Raymond Moore.

SHERMAN -SCHOOL;-—1A to IB—Roswell Cushing, Lena

Creficld, CharlesI B R o s

Colmen, Petery hich flows

through Cranford gives the people sowhich flows j Greve, Elizabeth Hahnc

At the time • of your first deposit we will supply you

with a check book, pass book, etc

Paying by checkis not only sensible and convenicntr

but is also the best manner to keep check i

• ' > ajl your expenditureson

~,w«w.there are carnivals, whilo in theWinter ; there ia fine1 skating andhockey.•=^ranfrira:TsTiow-a~town of: net

four ard ?ix thousand people and someday we hope it will become quite| i u i i u p cme quite _

l^Wth0c%eiiMtly to mystify, surprtso and.to charmtbe sophisticated maiden of this bias*today.-IJfe.

Th« Right P I L _An anxious father got wind of the

rtunor that his son was leading a con-vivial life at eottstrenuously denied

PUPILS PROMOTEDGRANT SCHOOL.

IA to IB-Margaret Addoms, SarahAldrich, Ethel Bratton, -WinchesterBritton, Walter Dickenson, Edna Me-

- James_Cox. IMabelCoi. - ^ r - ^ -^^^KJame,Haljigan. CKftNTORp,

Kreie. Louis Kreie, • NellieMeCaffery, Hazel Miller. Joseph

Rodgers, Phoebe ScottaE^tl^BaiaMn«f

tb* father made an unexpected visitto his son's lodging place and. givingthe bell a manly pull, was met by agrim faced landlady.

-Does llr. J. live berer asked tbefather.

"He does," replied the landlady.'Bring bio right la-"-Harpef a Week-17

p.1

embarrassing."Ill have to get another typewriter,'*

said the bustling man. Tills one Isconstantly stopping my dictation toask bow some word Is spelled."

"Thaf/B a great loss of time."1 don't mind the time, but It Inter-

feres with discipline, tor m* to naveto keep saying, I don't know."—Wash-ington Star.' '

'aaveid the firm £229 in telegrams dur-ing the past ten years.

-— - Simply Packed.Tbe courts decide that the .sardines

are not a combination in restraint oftrade. This leaves yiem In the oldcategory of little flsnea tiled in H e -Boston Herald.

Barker—I've an absolutely new ideala Insurance. V'

Parker—Elucidate. t

Barker—A scheme whereby alimonywill be paid both parties in case mar"Hage should prove a faiinre.—Illustrat-ed Sunday Magazine.

Coming. v .T v e never been offered a bribe,"

TrWaltejrIB to 2A—Helen Snedcker, Viola

Kahl, Elinor Robinson, Catherine Da-!mon, Ethel La Var, Evelyn HoughtonJNannctte Ahalt, Constance West,1

Elsie Orf, Florence Ruseo, Carolyn1

Cruikehank, Dorothy Cnrothers, Ger-|trade Marshall, EfTa Maronoy, Joseph'Mann, Wilbur Schindlcr, Henry Man-!ko, Leonard Richards, Joseph Fischer, >|Charles Ventres, Carl Pfender, Wai-;ter McCowatt, GoorgD Myers, Nicho-las "

. t-.-.T--7-.r- .•ayr****v

Loretta Wimrnctt.?A to 2B-Elennore Cobb,

Cox, Charles Cox, Albert. Grube,Kurt Jiittner, Nellie JohnBon, CharlesJohnsoh, Francis Nelson, GeorgeRosendale, John Ryan.

2B to 3A—Grace Alshousc, Bernard

be o n r tstOBabd. orities

GROCERIES; FRESH MEATAT SPEC

Dcthnrrits made ia Cualon]

4 ^ ^ ^ =

soiiffi DAY; opport

-^and then the Ea

^ a a m g M fwJthT-(

•Beir Hard Luck stori

etc" And while they t

tbe Man with the Rea

bridles Opportunity ai

NOTETHB!_ The man wit

^ir^^i^^i-L-V »;<-;

las

_„ , Uvvuup, Richard]Loderstadt, %theri=NathariU8,JJHsJ«aJPe'nfBlon.'Catherino Ruhtard, EvelynLenz, Fred Meyers, Charles Malperc,Elizabeth McFadden. John1 Pendorf,Lcrny Reinhart, John Spurlock.

3A to 3B-Aby Diamond, Walterjiittner, Henry Wimmett, ElizabethBehnert, Sarah Doyle, Anna Mc-Mahon, Gladys Swendsen, JohnGleason, James Park, Joseph Redrup,Annie Rezio.

3B to 4A—Elizabeth Carey, AnnaDoyle, May Grube, Annie

From July 7th to September 2nd, Inclusive, this store will close Friday cvealapat 6 o'clock and Saturdays at I P.M.. other days as usual at 5:30 P. M.

All Cranford and Newark Trolley Cars Pass Our Door.

. , ...uuc Kuhlon-Severage, Ralph Bonsall, Brooks eehmldt; Lillian Wirnmett, Andrew

Boyteaux. Robert Newton. j McFadden, Everett Penieton, George2A to 2B-Darwin Dickinson, Leo! R e d r °P. F l ? n d s W e l c h -

Hammond, Edward MonteneeODrt,Jos-! 4A to 4B-GladyB Houghton, Theo-eph Severag A d l i d R i h d *» Mthe A i

, MonteneeODrt,Jos-! 4BGladyB Houghton, Theo-eph Severage, Adelaide Richards, Han- * » Mathews. Angelina Pendorf, Irmanah Weaighan,TbomasWo6us,Blanche, We|tervelt, Margaret Ridley. LilyColeman, Gertrude Fischer, Katherine JJf'son, P e r c y ^ P a u j a J I J iP a t t fidirf^d £htoU

'""Cfiecfup, old man!" sbonted a pikerIn the front row. ''Tour luck maychange."— Buffalo Express.

encrantz. .2B to 3A— George Aldrich, Roger

Aldrich, Jack Babcock, John Clark,Howard Johnson, Edwin Lewis,Samuel Shapiro, Latham Sholes,Donald Sinclair, Stendman Stephens,Colden TorbUBh, William Van de Carr,Stanley Waterson, Elizabeth Adams,Emma Anderson, Katberine Bodo,

1 Ethel Bradow, Nettie Hobbs, Bettine

Fruit for Health. ' 'As a health restorative, a- French

medical expert recommends a ten orfifteen days' diet of fruit alone, twice ayear. '

/• i~S,*ml:'ir Can ** Foun°-thaf?nHnF oI" r t m c l a I «*«a. for ovll,ttat spring from want of

j _ thought must find awhen.

thousht,remedjf gome-'

, 8eed* of Happlnesi. . '; We do not know how cheap thoMeds of happlnoBs are, or we shouldMatter them ofteneri—Lowell.

',''..:;, . Common Fault.Bbme peopIodonMt_know_jmuohr-ttnd-

rvso-tbat-Uniy can't keep _to them-aalvas.

Italian Proverb. ___;_l^mi tort

"Why-don't yoo. mover asked, sneighbor of the woman who stood Inthe doorway, of a tenement sadly Inneed of repairs. - , • _

"We intended, to a long time ago.for/the landlord has not'kept bis wordabout fixing tbe place." .

"You must be on ang«l of'patience.""Ob, no; It Is not that_0ot. y<m-wtt,-

mj-buBband U an' old cbess player."

Poor N.III - ';•'Uttl« Ed Ballwoy kwtoa a rmnWi... Nell Besiar •tototbraa potato ot tm,_t* law. caUarcd N*n: 'Bd was, aiaM• • W f t T i r r . t ~ - - • • • • • • • • ••••••' • • - • • • • • ' • •

Evelyn Taylor, , Virgipla

. N111*

b.c, Oh. what W » < ^ ifitfiiife

Stolk,Taylor.

3A. to 3B-Kenncth -Bell, JohnDreyer, Charles Dorsey, GeorgeDavis, Francis Hehnesaey, ArthurHack. Guy Martin, Walter Taylor,Edward Tomlinson.

3B to 4A—Sloan Bacbock, WilliamBradley, Russell Damon,. GeorgeFischer, Gerald Furrnan, EdwardJones, BMward Marshall, James Moon,Richard Mulvey, Mnrgaretta Denman,Helen, Dowdell, Edna Montenecourt,Yola Radut, Fabyan Msthey, AlbertMeder, Peter Miller, 'Jennings Munn,"Thomas LaVar, Elliott Park, SidneySmith, Howard Waterson, HelenChamberlaine, Margaret Conkling,Eetcllo Knapp, -Anna Woodsr ;AnhaMcCIain, Ethel Thomas.

4A to 4B— Rutb Bonsai, CarrieGaffncyf Joy Hansel, Emetine La-Mont, Rosamond Moore, Grace Tripp,Bennlo Station, Alex Jussel, WilliamMaroney,' Hubbard Nitchie, BurtonPinkham, Ewdin vonSothen, ElsaZleblkev-MaryMeeiainr---^"-""^"

4B to SA—Lillian-Babcock, Theo-'Hore Bradley, Malcolm Bratton-,'Marguerite DuMond.v Anton Fischer,Raymond Tojrboah (from 4A), MarciaV^tfM Ifi^ai^i^oaiio •; J

to 5A—Marion a.nayyi-u>uisaPendorf, Edith Rankin, Harold Ruh-tard, Elmore Driver, RaymondCbristman, Samuel Natharius, HaroldLawrence, Joseph Malpero, TonyDel Nero, Isaac Diamond, FredaLoderstadt. ,

5A to SB—Helen Babel, May Costa,Cameron DaviB, Bessie Ditzel, JamesDoyle, Kathryo Geiger, '

Knit Underwear

NEWAIJK,Nuraui'j. Oulf First Claw)

Week Beginning July 3rd IABOKX tUJSlC «PEU4 OU. I °

-6»- . . I

"HUG DODO** I R

M-ittnee WtJarytay. a i m i j i t & Sunday I 1

The surplus stock's of rters and manutacturers-

trice Spurlock.6B to 6A—Louise Behnert, Edith

Cox, Lillian Darwent, Herbert Dit-rel, Zellan Hall, Herbert Kreie,Clarence Schmitz, Emily Smith, Les-ter Topi, Frank Witting, Hazel Wood.

6A to 6B—Rose Aklan,Julia Blgge, IFlorence Brennan, Margaret ChriBt-1man, Harry Cox, Laurence Dqyle,John Kunkel.Siri Lofrgen, Emily Sax,Ernest Schutlz. '

6B to 7A—Theresa Altenberger, El-sie Behnert, William Greeve, HelenHansen, Ethel I'Anson, Harry Rosen-dale, .Walter Jahn, Stephen Jussel,

[Martha Loderstadt, Douglas Renigar,Muriel Rice. \

7A to 7B—Jeanetto Armstrong,Louise Cox, Madeline Geiger, Mat-thew Witting, 'Lillian Jensen, SaraNatharius, Gladys Stetson. .

7B to 8tb—Warren Darwent, AnnieDiamond, Viola Firmbacb, WilburHummer, Victoria Johanson, Vera

following-special prices: •

Women's 15c to 17c Vests

SPECIAL &

urawn

Women's flM S

no sleovcs, with fancy cro35o, special 7 W

low neck, no sleeves, silk drawn tni*sns Swiss, rib vests in low nqok,yKes, assorted pattonis, rog.

.. MU

Women's 39c and 50c Swiss Vests

Women's SOc Union Suits

I To dear out our large stock ofancy goods, we are offe

25c and 35c goi50c and 75c go($1 accordcon ti

neck '8 white lisle vest"

Women's 1.00 Union Suitstrimn,cd w & V v a l

Men's 50c Gauze

38cE

Men's50c goods at 39c, for

IPOROS KNIT and B. V. D. 5

CLUETT & PEAB(Special, $1.50 goo'

ISPECIA1V IN STRAW HATS$2 and $2.^0 Hat

In Our Shoe Deportment, Menat very low. ]

A. M. SHAPIROEXCEPTIONAL

OPPORTUNITY

Electrical Contractor, Prompt attention to

Bell Woffci0BMVBtUe5DAU.V BV OUR OWN WAO0N5TOCRAW0Rtt

VJ6WTV."

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