Stveral c|Mte> tfk aMfeMvwul police at Patrrtoo. Raptured Qcnnan cannon la noon to W plnwd in pcotnloent portion In Boclli Oranee. Tax appraisement of property to Tin eland la about to tm mUad. It ta dalmed (bat real eatot* has Iona been andcrmliH-d by the aaaeeann-. eoa the Cumberland Tax Board ha* tuatrocted them to mahe a/aeasmonie on .the haaU of ralht ' “ * ' * ▲ deOcit of <1.000 to Ua treejmry tor the ouUook OoOlnjurwood Volanteer rtre Company Ko. 1 Is fadnit-throtM
Resident* of Glooeeater CUy hate keen advised by President Miner of (bo Board ot Health to boil the etty aatcr for at l«aat a wash as a precau-. don ax*Inst Ofaasna. beeaue part of die aoppli U eomlng fr.
MMders at the Johnson foundry, ot Bainesport, hare received a wage ad- - oance of 90 cents a day. Gould town residents gave a welcome borne to tbe colored soldiers 'vho hare Just been •llsdiaryed from aervfca. 'The Mooreatown Improvement A**oetatton during the past year has pot ■beet sign* at corners, placed waste paper can's at varloas pohrtm. Induced many property owners to remove una^itly fences and be* given attention Ip Jbe ptaot Ing of shade trees /-*h»-BuHlng«oi* coonty -rreebotders M** awaaded a contract fur a section W -eottrme road connactltiR IrioMnCa with the Bnritogtoo-Bordeatonn aecerfc ofrtie state highway to thehfMel PT»irrete Company of Medford at <17,The Snbnrhan Engineering Company •f jtew fork ha* brought salt against the borough of Washington, Warren
■a; ■ iww«ae uum. .'MacBea, enibclally to Uyr no rthern dbrttlrt*. are bring aeriooslr affected hy brown rot. Reports Indicate a cot af 15 per ceau in tba hockwheut‘acreage. .and to all aeeUons of .the state beans ale being damaged by the green aisrsr worm. f The first arrests by the federal authorities for alleged violation of tbe mar time probfbWoc; art w*ae made at Trtbton tc hen John L. Thompson, proJglator of tbe lafayctia oafe, and an JM. Frederick W. Curtis, were taken frto cmrtodp by Special Agents Certs Urffipragur of ihe department of jut dee. Tbe men were arralgaad liefure Federal Judge Davis, pleaded not gnil* hr. *ad were released on <1,000 ball •tcti for further examlna'tlor. If con dieted they arp pach liable tp a.fine of I2.0CKJ or two years In prison or both. . More than Hid 41001 HUldroo of the lewly oegaalaad Camdsn City Outing AAc: -atlon- were entertained In the femCSfelTb weeds, ffaddonfieid. by the t»vtog Service. A progtati df games.
amttpo was filed In the Onlted States rttotrtct court ot Trenton ogainit tba Feigenapan Brewing Ootnpany ct Newark. charged with the manufacture ct beer containing alcohol to exoaaa of •ne-half of 1 per cent. Former Chief of Pol lee Clarence Fisher of Fennsgrova, who recently ■old out his garage bortnew and left hewn, much to the discomfort o' those •bo went on hi* bond tor ffijeO peel hag an appeal for three convict'.01. 'jot alleged grafting. Is uow working for a pteamshlp company to Philadelphia. Charles Hannah, a well known and wail to do farmer, committed suicide by hanging at his farm near DatMowti. Be had been In pooy health fora long time, and In addition there baa beeu much sickness to the family, which. It Is presumed, ’Jibalanced his u-tart. Banoafa was sixty-five years old and bad raised a large family. Tbe commlaaluners of Ocean City's public recreation grounds, who hare■barge of the concerts In the music paTfllon. have arranged to aril ten tlck•U for <1 to tbe on 1 certs, and the plan baa been approved by representatives •f the hotel kee|>ers. Charles Hurff. Joseph Nicholson and ■tram Nicholson of Kewril killed whai is krown aa a ''rattlesnake pilot" In barklebeiry swamps at WllUainatown. Tlu- men brought |n their trophy for proof Tbe technical name for the monster Is n “waraper.” It la fully ten feet long and as big around as a man’s arm. The men were just getting readyfar a good day’s picking when Hurff saw what be supi*osc<1 was an ordinary snake He broke Its bark with a Hub. After awarding arvenri contracts for (he traiiKportalion of pupils the Vineland Board of Kducathw found It would <ne< over Jfi/UlO this year. The •taic pays a |mrt of tbe bill. Frr.- bund concert* are to he hrid ta Brllurtl park. 1‘llman, every fbtlurday nigSi during the remainder of August •a 1. result of a umvrtnetit started by busiin-sa mm and ritlsens. Couiirilnmi Jelai H liolxlay has a too Iweti artl«e in |4unnlug for tbe free cot eert*. and hr Ofcir.iineed tiint -fiM iJU•rty hand, of a> !4e«W»,.ef «lipr.-.l.r City has he 1. ri gag' d to *l»e tip c«w
The annual camp meetings at Malaau win contlnae until Augun :& Farm kelp la uu ■scarce lhar anyone trim vHI pick n basket 01 tonwusw can have them.at half price from on* grouper ut tVrotmont. Tlie Nathma) Park Boned of Fdoratlon has derided that ti will he neces sary to open at least one soldi lUmal room tn accotuamdste the new pupil* who'wlll be enrolled. The Vineland Board of Commlasionera, voted le order a carload of foodstuffs trom Fw surplov anny rtorna. and the eatables will be disposed of :e the public by the Chamber of Commerce. •' ’» Residents of Blghlnnd Park, a suburb of tilpumstgr CUy. hsre organised a Methodist 'Kpiscopal Cborch. Service* will be held Sundays In the fire house muO a new edifice to.constructed. Jersey City will Issue <300.000 bands W buying food from the government ind aelltog at cut rates. '' Although be was promoted to a captaincy several months ago. before hla j I sell urge from service, notice of the fact has just reached Dr. John B. Con--oy of Burlington. Dr. Conroy was to the Medical Corps oversea* and spent several months at the front. He will bold his new rank In the Officers’ Reserve Corps. Recent excessive rains caused en-
try variety throughout New Jersey, according to the moi thly crop report of Alia Agee, secretary of the State Board of Agriculture. Two-fifths of the wheat and one-third of the rye crops were lb tbe fields during the excessive rains, and 10 j>er cent of the hay suffered damage to the field. Truck crop* suffered severe Injury. A writ of certiorari to review an assessment of <3,000 on the grounds and improvenjepts of. tbe La.u udale Cemetery Association, Pitesgrave township, Salem county, wgi allowed by Justice Block In tbe auptwute court. The tract consist* of an acre and a half, and exemption is claimed under the act providing for such exemption for cemeteries. The levy of tbe local board has *>een affirmed by the county »nd the state boartU. Work of clesnlng the old fair grounds for tbe Atlantic county agricultural anl educational field day, September 12 and 18. has been started. Henry Tapken has been made chair man; A. <5. Vnutrinot rtreaaurer .and William B. McDougall aecratary of the committee which will hate charge of the arraagemonts. tfnitam Darla colored, of South Seven’eenth street. 1’hiladelphla. pleaded guilty before United States Commissioner Wilson In Tvanton on a charge of having in his puageasion heroin and cocaine. Victor Tamer, colored, of Obadwlck street. Philadelphia, charged wltfc having KlufUar drugs and with offering.them Jor wtie. pleaded gnllly to the first and Dot guilty on the n-corul charge. Both avro coiamUted to the Mercer county Jail in default of <2U0 ball The Board of Education of Lopatcong township, Wcrrm county, lias awarded a contract to Albro Kanlper to haul the school children to the Delaware Park school at <60 a month. In recognition of their services at a Ore which destroy ^ s large canning plant at Newport, Peter Coaler & Sion, owners of the build.ng. sent the Millville Ore department a check for <73. Work will be pushed a* rapidly as ppaslole on the new <20.000 school HOT dng fit MmiNtodllC by’the contractors. it will replace an old schoolhouse destroyed by fire last spring. * Despite dry conditions the Absecun Development Company, through William F. Da Via and Edward U. Wltooo, bare filed application with the borough council for renewal of the liquor license of tbe Rockingham hotel. A donation of 150 nooks have been received from the state library department by the new library aasucla'lun at Pitmen. Seventy-five carloads of peaches were shipped from Glasahoru last week. Tl>ey were mostly of the early cUngstune varieties, tlie Carmene predominating. Rot ton appeared among the lait-r varieties, which will decrease Uu- yield. Final action on the street paving ordinance, which Involves an expendltore of nearly A’l.VMk*'. will lx taken by borough commissioner* of Colling* wood, following which certain legal detail* will he concluded a* soon aa possible, that work may be cuuma-oced without further delay Arraagrenent* are In progress for the Cumberland county fair and farm STS’ picnic an August 27 and 2h Addresses will Iw deUCered by Governor Rsmyou and United State# Beuaior Krelluctiuysen. Anglers cto'm that fffi |>er cent of the Crown tmrt raised fj the ilarketts-t.-wn scale hairimry and shipped to MillvtU* to be liberated In I’iiinn tokv went dead when the coutaMieni were
U'llllatustowa will hold It* welcome borne crlriiratinu tor torsi boys to tbs serv ice <m 1-abor I>ay. While mowing graa* to front of his home at >VusliIiigtn , Ahralicni Shrope, forty-live years old, dropp'd dead. A unique nunlveraary criri>ratloa planned by the Pitman fire |iatrol will Imiude a inouiillght picnic at Boat
take.
Four vacancies due to reslgnntloii* will have to he filed In the teaching staff of the 'itoaaboro M-hools beforr Che new term Marts in Beptvinn** Gtotk-e-ter Oily dealers met the demand of residents anil Bold Ice nt thrir pieces of hUKluess between S nlid 10 Jto o’clock la tin- looming. After ar-iUv 1 ansi years as pna i tp*I of the U illtotnaiow 11 gcnmmnr arinxi! feiisa Util a Bughs* lois rrslguodi i^fjtitffjin^trt the romi.
HELPFUL HINTS. To the average epok with little insagination and leas Ingenuity a bowl of tfftlcken broth, a halfdciCTi cold hotted potatoes, a cupful of toanto, a wedgr of cheese srtll rppear like "the prim-
neither possible nor Is It wise to carry a targe number of recipe* or proportions of Ingredients to one’s mind, but tbe eflkdeni woman wir. hare a card Index, a notebook or a chart on which she notes tbe poestbUttlea of various small amounts of materials which to other home* are throws out. left to spot! or art used carelessly In foods so that thrir charm ot flavor hf tortt The pleasant thing shout this system Is *hat tt Is always growing, nbw dishes will occur to one and the Hat win grow. Then when going to the Ice cheat and finding a bowl 'J chickC* broth, virions of all the savory dishes which may be seasoned with that Savory food srtll be realised In some good dish, as It takes but a moment to tern tc the reript Anotber helpful confer ro of tbe card catalogue Idea to to the system carried out to o’.oer r ya to the household. Under linen* put card* labeled Tied linen” on tbe card Dumber* of sheets, pillowslips, rise and ■where they are. This U not only a
but to case of fire loro to give a correct torentory. Attached ta . Uto asedlciiie rioaet should be a card always where H can be feund at once, ecparially where there are many little people, giving first aids In case of accident and anBdotM for common polabna. The older children should be taught how to use this knowledge, aa often live* are loot because nobody knew what to do quickly. It to a frequently noted fact that the pespi* who know what to do or Where to go to find ocl. rarely take time to go Into hysterics to an emergency; they are too busy doing things. Start a card catalogue house and see what a pleasure It to to be methodical. It la not necessary to bare an filing cabinet.
W* tn rlts what w» tear, the aatoa as by different atUuri* of mlnfl WO invite mad attract the tiOuence* and conditions wo dostra-B. W. Trtna. SUMMER SALAD WITH DRESSINGS We all enjoy somrihlag different to aaladi. and the Ingenious cook to ever combining new materials to make appetising dishes Virginia Salad. —Cut coM cooked potato to cubes, using one and a half cupfuls, add one cooked cauliflower cut to flowerettes and three tomatoes cut to quarters. Marinate each of these vegetables separately to French dressing using four tablrapoonfuls of olive oil and two of tarragon vinegar, three-fot-rths of a teaspoonful of pepper rouce and naif r leaapoonful of salt Cut on. sad one-half cupful* of chicken to cubes, three hard-cooked eggs cut In small pieces and mix with the marinated potato, with mayonnalwaraaooed with catsup. Place the rtlrttaa mixture to the center of the
and garnish with cauliflower and tore with 00c tomato arranged alternately. Decorate with one hardcooked eggs, cut to eighth*, and nas-
Tomato Jelly Sa'id.—Take two cupfuls of tomato juice, either fresh or fanned; to It add one-fourth cupful of mild vinegar, two tableapoonfuls oi gelatin, a tablespoonful of sugar, bit of baylaaf, leave* from two stalks of celery, two rilcea of onion and one and on (‘-half tableapoonfuls of lemon Juice. Stir and cook over heat until the gelatin to dissolved, then strain. Bet jelly In crushed Ice and when It begin* to stiffen, add fresh raw dandelion Iravrs cut to bits. Mold the jelly; when firm turn out on a platter anu garnish with rooked egg. green pepper and scallions which have been cut to piece* and fringed at each end. then put Into Ice water to curl. Cablige may uused Instead of dandelion leavra. Joe 1 * Dressing.—Take one teaspoonful each of as.lt and mustard, two tea»t*M>iifuls of sugar, a dash of cayi-mis, a whole egg. one and one half table sp-HKifuU of flour, two tablespoonfuls of corn oil. half a cupful of evaporut.d milk, ooe-founh cupful each of vine, gar and water. Mix the dry lngre.llent« and then cook all, together In a double holler. Hot Salmon With Egg Sauce.—Set the can of salmon lr^ a saucepan of t-oiling water and eook for half an hour. Out th* rap dose; drain off ■hi liquid and turn out the fish In a solid piece on a hot fllsh. Hurround with well areaoced but lured pen*, and verve wltn an egg sauce. ThU Is a rich white sauce, -using some of tbe liquid from the can and milk, then add owe hard-rooked egg mashed, and (Mil through a riora. Garnish with
l-r*ley.
ORTifiHT 8N CAME BORER PsraStss From Tropical Countries Offer Best ■•ant of prrtroyfns Pests. ^ C8NFHED TOTHKE REGIONS
20 Per Cent—Feed on Other Plants Than Sugar Cam. (Prepared by tba United Btatro Departtoen. of Agrhrirttare ) Importation of pararitw from Cuba
uost hopeful method of ridding the sugar-cane growing region of the United State* at tbe ougarcane mothborer, or at least of keeping It under control and reducing the Injury from
The cngartcane moth borer to the United Stutw to confined to three Isolated regions, cioariy conforming to the areag «f large comrocretol plantlncs of swar cane—southern Louisiana, southern PI' rids, aad the extreme southern tip of Toma. Throughou* tboae region* It red urea the yield of sugar to varying measure, averaging, perhaps, about 20 per cent. The chief damage results from tbe larva tunneling lengthwise through the mature cane, not kilting It but Injuring It severely, retarding Its growth, and subjecting It to the fungous disease known as red rot A measure of damage follows larval attacks upon very young plants, resulting In wbnt Is known as dead hearts. Tbe moth borer feed* on a number of pleats other than sugar cane, rendering usual methods of control extraordinarily difficult and, for the most part, not efficacious. Experiments In poisoning, attraction 'o light traps and the tike have not proved effective. Five definite recommendations are made, however, other than the introduction of parasites. How to Fight Posts. Scraps of cane left aboi: tbe factory and derricks after the grinding secBon should be destroyed, probably by burning, and cam in which cane Is shipped should be kept free of such scraps. Seed cane should be planted In the fall and kept as deeply covered a* practicable. Cane for shipment beyond the Infested area should be selected vo as to obtain It free from borers ot. tf this to Impracticable, It should be rooked for at least an hour
ta horde*ux mfxture or •‘"•nlutiou of nicotine sulphate previous in shipment. The “trash.” "toavea.” or "shuck*" left on tbe Arid* after cutting should not be burned but should be llfhtly covered with earth In the faR and plowed out tn the spring. The cutting out of "dro& heart*." and dead plants to said to be theoretically sound practice and. where an abundance of cheap labor to obtainable, might be recommended. It to pointed out that tbe In trod nett on of paraidte* has proved effertlve In Bawali. and that experiments In the United States have given prnmls Inf results. If the Introdurtlm, <>f beneficial iiarasltr* can be undertaken It rtmald lx done an a tore* scale, and It would t-e advisable to station two men In Cuba to collect tbe parasites, and one in Louisiana to receive and ultimately to release them on the
KILL SQUIRREL-TAIL GRASS Weed Can Be Eradicated by Preventing it e rom Producing Seed—It to Harmful to Btock. Bqulrrcl-tnll grass or wild barley to a bad weed. It helps apretd the rust of wheat and onto which has been found on It every year for 30 years to lows, snd It to Injurious to stork, and especlali/ borers. Tbe awn* pierce the mucous membrane of the mouth causing Irritation and finally "Icrralion of the Jawbonrs and teeth. The wild barley can bo extermlnnt.-d by keeping It from producing seed. This I* simple • Dough, but it to often dllD cult lo do on land (hst enunot tie plowed or mowed.—North Dakota Agrictfltund College
WORST WEED ENEMY OF ALFALFA PLANT
IfYnMitl
YH SIMM Bill tB Bui
Care ShouM Be Taken to Proven! Introduction of Dodder.
Grazing Close With Sheep Ha* Been Recommended a* Effactlv# Control Against Noxious Pistil—Bum Off Affected Parts. (Prepared by the United Btatas Department of Agriculture.) Dodder to considered by many as one of the worst weed enemies of alfalfa. The dodder seeds germinate u tbe ground and the young Jltnts ■non attach themselves to the attalfa seedlings. As soon as the threadlike stem of dodder Is attached firmly to the alfalfa plant the stem connecting It with the ground wither* away. Thenceforth the dodder Uvea entirely 00 the alfalfa. Special care should Be exercised to avoid Introducing It to the alfalfa seed at planting time. Gracing dose with sheep nas been recommended aa an effective control against dodder. In tbe East however, where dodder Is most abundant, sheep are not plentiful and It to not possibto for every alfalfa grower to use the grazing plan. Besides, grazing an alfalfa field too closely with sheep often
Protect AtfaHa Fields Against Dodder by Rigid Control
results in peramnent Injury to the stand. Some authorities recommend the complete removal of tbe affected alfalfa plants where tbe. dqdder appears only to Isolated spots through the field, fills p met lev however, to only successful to tbe very eaMy stages of tbe pest and before it has gained much foothold. A rapid and e Sica don* method of stamping out dodder, recommended by apedallsta of the United States Department of Agriculture, to to watch t he. f Half a field* for tbe Initial erb deuce* of flodder. and it boos as signs of ths pest appear to aprinke the Infected spots with kerosene, apply th* match, and burn oil the affected areas. This practice Id Us out the dodder and. property applied, does not Injure lb# alfalfa permanently. In burning the doddered porftoss <tf the field a blowtorch to useful, but where such a device Is not available some readily IDflammable material, such as waste or old rags wrapped with wire on the end of a click and aoakdd to kerosene, will
CONVERT SUMAC INTO MONET Plant Mar Ba Gathered and Gold Profitably to Tanner* and Gy# Manufacturers. (Prepared hr tba Ualtad Stalsa JV; irtmsnt of Agriculture.) Sumac, which grows abundantly to certain sections of the United States, may be gathered and sold profitably to 'annera and dyv fnanuafeturere, say the specialist* of the bureau of chemistry. United States department of egriculture. Tbe price of sumac baa increased to recent year*, because of Th* decrease to Importatlhus of this ;>!*nt from Slrtlr. The American aomae. If property gathered and cured, la equal to tbe Imported article. In certain aectlou* of Pennsylvania, Maryland. Virginia and West Virginia good Wage* car be made, the detriment of agriculture aaya, by gathering and aelling aumcc during July. August and September. Arrangements tor 1.1# ■ale of the sums.' should lx made before It to gathered. Department Bulletin No. 706. which rive# useful information regarding curIng and mile of *u»*r. can he had upoe anpllretton to the United States department of agriculture. WaKhti.e. ton. D. C
PUREBRED FOWL PREFERRED Given flame Car* and Feed They Will Make Better Profit Than Mongrels Account Uniformity. tPrepsred by th* r-,i,*4 Btsts. Deport, meat of Agriculture.) Purebred poultry means uniformity of products. Uniformity of products means Increased profits If they aro properly marketed. Given the care and feed, purebred fowls wiu wake a better profit than umngrek. INJURIOUS WORK OF CROWS Rob Nests of Many Small Birds Which Are Helpful to Farmer in Destroying Insects. Most of the small bird* are 1ir| r fn| p the fartne,' In dcMroylgg In mm Is and every protection ahntPd he affo, • ed them. They have much to • with, one of Iholr worst ettcmlr. txl the crow. wUch rob. ao Many .. ^ nwH* durtag ths hauiiog x
applies mere partfaakrir to a madieur A medicinal preparetk-a that hm ml rarstlea value almost mdk ttsrif l,v.
td the preparetiaa. the mmesm of Dr. hheris Swamp-Root, is Aa* to the (act. many people dsim. Mat tt fulfill* allot every wish it rrrWnrmrias kidnry. er and bladder SihaaM*; easneta anna ry trouble* and ssatrettom (ha arte ted which eatuH rheamatato. Ton may recede* a sxrople bottle of Framp-Root by Phrceh Foot. Addree* Dr. Kilmer A Co., Bmghamtou, N Y„ and encloee tec cent*; she msntioc t-ii paper. Large and median mm bottlm form!* atan drat sttna-Adv. Speaking of cooserratloc. th* UMMoa tost in rolling cigarette* m'gbi cultlrate an empire.
TO Ml WOMEN WHOJREIU. ^djTlELM.Wrv^ table Coeewsnd—Rw Personal £spfli3flnccb
JlL&'h&m'k PiridSato T^rthbfc _________ Com poend to all
both e&gws women.’'-Mr*. John EorrXiJCAWf, R. Mul J. MrLras. Nebraska. . UdtoRKSws^e^S^TS: pound, has bean restoring women of America to health for mot* than forty a and U will well pay flay wo
remedy a tziaL w ■ For special suggestions la regard to your ailment write Lydia EL Hnkbara Medicine Co., Lynn. Masa. Tha result -'*-g tongexpsnanca'' ‘ —
BILIOUSNESS Caused by Acid-Stomach If SMpl. who ore fclltaea ore trestsS •onus* to Usol cyKMMM thoy oolioiv. ««. th. ifc. ora last Ua pa-Uaat wtU r» taols stnew sad t-osWhw boci.ra MS (bat smre (ksa (* Sf*»oK dtaoosM ua to treuC la aa Arid »«—»h BdtatMMa ta ou af Utau lo-ervrs-s.rissNcr rsu »«aM.re. BAroMic. aa* —cSj;
tsts &3££ Mraas. real 0*4 COM tort stoa Kalpa dl«c wsssSrHHifes gomarh ratoaur la Ua warM ll ta <0* roti saad. Try tt aa aw Maaor-Oato-lf BrtMattaSad (uaraBtaa At all Oe’T i» cast, fee a Ms baa. giVTONIC [ Far Skin froibres euch as ecaores. rashes, sorea stmga, pUes, insect totaa. *<c, CONSTANTINE’S Persian Hrallng ( PINE TAR SOAP .m b, . honriowi remedy. Do not experiment with Inferior tar neaps — um
■ A 40 Year Success
Msthm Remedy
m
Ai
rfitg samplc. „ v Northrop tLSMnCo.lnc.,BulU'«''

