■ 7- ' ■ ,
NEWS OF. NEW JERSEY. The Lalc»t News Happcoiois Glcaoct)
From All (her the Stele.
SI.0M.M0 FOR ROGERS WORKS Atlaatk Cttj •» Bit Slort-Cr».ice Car WreefcW -Faafki Wirt Twa TBkvca-aBardlaaa ol Childrco--Rr>. K. W. Wbfeart to EdU a Papci Stncy Ccatrml Bcctloo-She Was Qaidtdb)
Spirit*••Hsnard Debater* Wla.
An open trolley car, on whith were about 115 persons. Rot beyond the control ol the motorman near Fort Lee and dashed down fc-—
The road is a vtindtnK 01 '’loot of the hill it caret
When the front trucks struck the t they started around it and made it. The nes followed part of the way. The
1-conia Hill.
At the shatply.
r ones followed part of the way. rnch upon the car. however, -at -- about •--•*-
COMMERCIAL REVIEW. Oeaentl Trade Ctw«tk>as. New York (Special).—IL G. Dun & Co.’a ■ Weekly Reriew of Trade" aays: "A panic in Wall street does no: mesii that legitimate business has suddenly crased to prosper, nor is-the comNtion of mercantile trade and manufacture advorsefy affected by a rioleen fall m peters ol seeurhies. Tbrouubout the entire country fundamental conditions were never a* sound as at the present that, reports from nearly every erty this week showing an exceptional volume ol transaction, and payments promptly met. "Production is not overtaking demand at the finished steel nfll*. and ail Pittsburg plants are two months behind order*. while ninety days is the limit at many. ■'Although the total number of furnaces in blatt on May 1 was 40 smaller than on February U-jpOO. khe Iron Age —ttes the weekly ctpttity at 30t.H1 which exceeds all previous high
rolled over. The passen-
gers were caught in and under the car. ■ .'Every person ton ihc car was bruised. Frank Sunstnick. the conductor, it is feared, may lose his life on account of possible internal injuries. J. E. Robinson and his wife, of this city, were se-
riously hurt.
Harvard won the seventh anneal deYork, and Gen. Avery D. Andrews of New York. The question for debate ups: "Resolved. That Congress was iusTtfied in imposing the terms embodied in the Platt amendment to the army appropriation bill as conditions precedent to leaving the government and control of Cuba to its pcoplc(lhc provision with regard to the title of the Isle of Pines
of the Central Rai
Tew Jersey at their annu
meeting in Jersey City re-elected thet. directors: George F. Baer, J. Roger
I. George F. Baker. Harris C ack. J. Lowlier Welsh. Henry Joseph S. Harris^E. B. Thora-
Iroad company: sacted wav" that t is understood
U- Maxwt
Fahnes . . HUB Graves. Joseph S. Harris. E. B. Thomas and Charles Steele. The rumor tha: Second Vice-President S. M. Williams will retire from that office called
this statement by the railroai "The only business trans of electing directors. It
v. that any questions relating to the posi siblc retirement of any of the former [ officers of the road and the possible ' ‘ abolition of any offices will come up be-
f fore the board of directors.”
f* In the Orphan’s Court at New Bruns1 “ wick the contest over the will of the late Mrs. Mary V. Laughton was cootinned. The property was left to two ‘ stepsons, and Henry F. Rig!”', a nephew, has appeared in contest. Thos. Trace}-, a witness, swore that Mrs. Laughton was a spiritualist, and had told him that she planted no corn ekcept as the spirits directed, and that the spirits guided her in all her actions. ' Frank H. Laird and Thomas Hoffman. Who witnessed the will, swore that the woman was in her right mind when the i. documen; was sjgncd. which was two years before she went to the asylum.
The case will be continued,
i ' Thieves attempted to enter the new cottage of Dr‘. Simon Baruch, at Elberon. but escaped alter a fight with DavU Jones. Dr. Baruch's colored ' coachman. Jones encountered the two mcnf on the north piazza of the cottage. As )« approached one of the men an- : other struck him on the back Of die head. A tussle ensued and the second r'dtan cut Jones with a penknife, laccrat1'. tng his leff hand. Jones picked up a f heavy sticlf-fb defend himself and the [ men jumped off the piazza and escaped. £ The New jersey State Board of ChilL dren's Guardians have decided to engage Seymour H. Stone, of Boston, as f superintendent of the work of the board. This work has been done un- | r der the supervision of Mrs. Emily E. " Williamson, chairman of the Executive IV.' Committee. Mrs. Williamson has L, served without remuneration, because [ the Legislature, untij its last session, i failed to prdvide enough money to pay the expenses of the Board of Guardi-
ans.
The syndicate of Atlantic City -merra chants who formed a company for the r. • purpose of operating a department ! store formally organized with a capital - of $1,000x100. The election of officers j resulted as follows: President, Charles Evans; vice-president. J. Haines Lip"7^ pineott; treasurer. Loup Kuehnle; sec \retary. William .Wahl] assistant secreMary. J. C. Fairbairn. The company ^.bought a block at Tennessee and Atr hntic avenue*.- opposite the city hall, for iyoo.oaft and will erect c five or
six-story molding.
s reported that Smith & Holaran.
—' j the Rogi ’
used off a few cents, but ik out to cents a bushel, or nearly
2$ per cent., above the quotation at the corresponding date in the two preceding years. For the week arrivals aggregated 3.247.004 bushels against 3.196.S02 last year. Foreign purchasers have been -•--en out of the domestic markets by
oretgn purchasers ha
driven out of the domestic markets , the high Quotations, and Atlantic exports tor the week have been 1,211,244 bushels compared with 3.709.880 a year
ago.
“Shipments ol boots and she a rose to an unusual point
:s for the
Bosti gatin
from
it. agjtre:k against
gating 103.328 cases for the week against 79J7I in the previous week and 08.151 in the corresponding period last year. "Recovery in the price of cotton was
heavy liquidation ?anied by a fall in
the lowest
It is t
who hai —notir
ifirmation I cred to dis|
comotive Works, in Paterson, subject
on by the Chancellor, ha' dispose cf the plan: to r locomotive syndicate for St.c
i syndicate
jThe price which Smith and reed to pay to the receive
lave--the.
1.000.Hotb-
The Mosuqito Extermination Committee of the Summit Town Improvement Associatsonjias decided to calf the Standard Oil TriiM^to its aid. Pipe . lines will be laid to. all the swamp land about the village and the surface of the waters will be covered with oiL This, it is declared. Will prevent the mosquitoes from breeding. -Rev. Alfred W. Wishirt, pastor of. the Central Baptist .Church of Trenton.’ assumed the editorship of the Trenton Evening Timet in connection with bis minister*! work. The owners of the paper are Rev. Mr. Wishart. A. C. Reeves, Owen Moon and Walter H. SaFrank Petro, of Jersey Chy. was arretted in Burlington charged with robbing a till in a saloon in Jertcy City of $102 and stealing jewelry in Hoboken and New York at*. , Henry SUiyayson. aged 45. was fttend dead in 1m room at Atlantic Chy. The gas in the room was turned
Use journeymen marble and sandstone cutters have inerraaed their de- . minds from 4i’4 cents to 45 cents per boor (or an eight-boor day. and the Ce- ' mast Finishers' Union has asked for «o
r instead of 35 cents, for day Both these seised rrsi?.*ae£
rut* per hoa; v&rzl
csponding period last y<
rery in the price of eoRon Only temporary, and heavy liqr :j - of options was accompani * *
spot middling uplands 1 figtwe recorded this year.
"Failures for the week numbered 187 in the United States against 92 last year, and 26 in Canada against 15 last year."
LATEST QUOTATIONS.
Flour.—Best Patent, $4.7584.50; High Grade Extra, $4.3504.00; Minnesou
bakers. $2.9013.35.
Wheat.—New Y’ork. No. 2 red. a8oHc; Philadelphia, No. 2 red, 7B>79c;
Baltimore. 793800.
Corn.—New York, No. 2. 5i14c; Philadelphia. No. 2. 48ji«49Y4c: Balti-
more, No. 2, 502510.
Oats—New York. No. 2. 33Vic; Phih. adelphia. No. 2 w-hitff34c; Baltimore,
No. 2 white. 33VSa34c.
Rye.—New Y’ork. No. 2, 61c; Phila-* delphia. No. 2, 60c; Baltimore, No. 2, MtB Feed.—Light weight, $18.00 per
ton: medium, $17 5° Pec to n -
Hay.—No. 1 timothy. $17.02117.50;
No. 1 clover. $15.50*16.00.
- Beans and Peas.—Choice hand picked, $2-3pa2.35- Blackeye peas, per bushel, choice new. $1.60*1.65. Black peas, per
bushel, choice, new. $1.5511.60. Green Fruits and Vesrrtables. ion*, per bushel. $1.40. Cobh ish. per. ton. $15*16; do, Chari
North Carolina, per crate. $2.2513.00. Celery. Florida, per crate. $2.0002.50. Apples, per bbl. $2.0033.75. Oranges, I2.ooa3.oo. Strawberries, per quart, 12
S35C.
Potatoes.—White.Maryland and Pennsylvania primes per bushel. 40045c; Mo. New York primes, per bushel. 45047c-. do. Michigan and Ohio, per bushel. 42 a45c; do. new. Bermuda, per bbl. No. 1, $6.0017.00; do. nepr. Florida, per bbl. 1. $6.0007.50. Sweets, kiln dried, bbl.. $1.7502.00; fancy bright Jer-
ctables.—Onabbage. Danharleston and
HOU&N'S OVtKHi.AU FERRY How ■ Kiroch City Solv*4 ■ Kopid Trt
•11 rrobtaia.
Just now. npm so much 1* being Mid ot bridge* and tunnels between Manhattan and Brooklyn. It '-a Int tng to note how the dty of Row Prance, ha* solved for Itself, at the problem of trans-river communication. The city He* on the Seine, but a short distance from the sea, and
there
hose prevailing In the North
and East rivers here. In the first
with
tee ft
many of the condition* there are simi-
lar to tl
t rivers 1 ,
place, the Seine is very busy shipping, and the chief aim of the engineers was to build a bridge that would least Interfere with navlga-
drar was considered Impracecause of the delay that would
low Ht frequent opening and sbu and a bridge 160 feet above water. *0 aa to clear ZHHBHH held to be too costly on accout •roaches. So the engineers
tlon. A tlrable b
folio ting.
ostly
approaches. So planned an overhead call It, a "pont^ransl la described In a repo:
all shipping. '
unt of englai
overhead ferry, or. ns they
ibordeur,” which
Just 1
the American vice-consul at 1 The structure Is of especial Interest as being the first of Its kind, though the principle has been used before in some very small bridges. The essential part of the system may be described aa a horizontal railway sup-
t he chanhclght as
will allow the tallest-masted vessels
luenting the channel cath. The platform of
carries the lines of rails over which a carriage on small wheels rolls, the number of wbecls varying with the weight to be carried. The roller* are connected with a movable frame under the line of rails, which may freely move in a longitudinal direction quite close to the platform and from one end to the other of same. In order to make this vehicle of practicsd use. Iron rods or cables are attached to the frame above mentioned, the object ot these being to carry a platform or carrier from shore to shore, banging at the same level as that of the quays on each bank, but In any case above high water and the reach of waves.
There Is thus a little railt
crossing the river, with this dlf ' that the body of the vehicle, instead being above the rail! and wheels as usual, la some 140 or Kb feet below
these. It possesses, nevertheless, the speed and regularity of motion which
can be obtained on any straight and
horizontal railway line, with the advantage that, thanks to its long suspension. this new kind of wagon enjoys a smoother motion than the best
railway coaches.
Any kind of motive power may be
cable driven by
ported by a bridge spenr.'ng tl nel and built up at such a h
e tallest
freque bcncat
nnel to pass 1 of the bridge
railway for
b this difference, chicle, Instead of
used to more the car. steam, compressed air
II. electricity. • dynamo, ins on shore, as U
tly placed
:stead of being erected as the steam-engine, is pre-
ferably placed qn the movable frpme. 'which It carries along with Itself by' moans of a pinion working into the teeth of a rack Sxad to the bridge.—
New Y'ork Post.
Cheese.—Fancy, large, colored, lo'Ac; fanev. large, white. io!4aio)4c; fancy, small, colored, tiJ5c; fancy, small.
white, ilUc. Eggs.—State
1 Pennsylvania. 14a 12; Western storage.
I3«a»4-
Provitiqns.—Bulk shoulders. 8a8| do short ribs, 955c; do clear sides, bacon rib sides, toj-je; do clear :
' ’ - alders
. . .. . __ clear tides,
to5{c; bapon shoulders, 9c. Fat backs. 855c. Suftsr cured breasts. tl54c; sugar cured shoulders. 9c. Hams.—Small, Il55c; large. lie; smoked skinned hams. 1255c; picnic hams, 8j5c. Lard.—Best refined, pare, in tierces. 954c: in tubs. 9*ic per lb. Mess pork, per bbl. $16.00., Live Poultry.—Hens, nc: old roost-t ers. each, asayoc; young chickens. 12a 13c; spring. :54 to 154 lbs, 26028c. Ducks. Satoc. Geese, apiece, 30040c.
Uvc Slock.
Chicago, HI.—Good to prime «teers, $3-85*4 9°; «
*5ib5i.
4->S; nati’ $4-55*5-15-
East Liberty, Fa.—Cattle steady; ra. $5djtt£6o; prime, $5^0*5.40; ^
a to he 1
for a thousand years,
j- shall be born. Uoops of generations 1. br tbt uttuj “ - - - - -
«• $5-3°»5-4°; good. :e*dy: prime heavy
$4.0025.40. Sheep $4.3014.40; choice
good.
wethen. $4.3014 40; 0015.13: common to
LABOR AND INDUSTRY.
sheet iron led the nine-
Portland (Ore.) painters now earn $j a day. New Orleans carpenters and bricklayers enjoy the eight-hour dog. There are more than 1.250,000 square miles of unexplored lands ‘Sg—|g Elmirs carpenters and _ workers have been conceded hour day. The coal miners and the mine operators of Southwestern Kentucky have agreed upon an eight-hour woikday at $1-8* for screened coal. At Portland, Ore., the bakers' union got a raise m wages that amounts to about 25 per cent, and shorter hours without trouble. One of the prominent retail grocers of Philadelphia, who operates about sixty stores, attempted to forestaH the organization of clerks and granted hi* mnploycts a reduction of two hoars a day on four days ol the week, and instead ol closing at 9 P- «. they now close at At Besrdstowa.
Irlli gall on. says Gerald Stanley Lee. in the Atlantic. The only beauty of art or life that such a civilization can protkfng the
Choice Vegetables always bring high prices. To raise them successfully, a fertilizer containing at least 8% Potash should be used. Our books furnish useful information on all subjects relating to
Constipation tKassaasystw-
by lx He c
crowd beautiful. The crowd can-only be made beautiful by the great man In It. ■ A mr.n can only be great In It
two-world man. an artlsL r be a great artist by pos-
sessing and expressing the New Testament temperament, the temperament ot the great novelist, making crowd beautiful by being a crowd In himself. In Its last analysis, the solution of the crowd is the practical man In It; that Is. the diviner, the Interpreter of persons. He sees so much that he makes us all see. He is the lifter of the horizons In which we live our live*. He Is the men whose seeing is so deep a seeing that it Is a
kind of (.colossal doing—who
about amVgat us. world-making « his eyes. He gazes on each of through the world's heart. He Is eye of a thousand years. It take
thousand years for the world
goes
t with
him, and when he Is made, he tnaki the world for a thousand years. Men
tern, and go through their days and
die, that the visions of a man Uke this may be lived upon the platform of the
earth. History is the long si
tomlne acted by all ef row. and now in Joy-
of a men Uke this. We cannot _ cape blm. He Is unlvertaL \3nly by
ley ; w in
dream* mot eP
The stars are his footW" ore born in the cast of bis •earns. He Is the playwright over us alL
lights dr can
“Say. pal, me name's Clcky Donahue from St. Louie, an* I want de price fur a san'wich." The tramp, named Micky, was the
ked hut
the reporter “dug down.” “Dls is a heap dlffrnnt town dan Chicago.” continued Micky, “an' de
hoboes don't
Dero's so many of
dot a man like dls guy can't get room I cant go dat- town, dat's
such a fcfrap hi f 'em down In (
In Chi' Is wise In on*
Dey dont trouble der-
s. I got to de Hal-
lo sleep,
a fac'.
"De coppers tin*, dough.
selves Wtd de hoboes. 1 got to d stand street police station one night, an' dev had a hobo lodgin' house sn- —. Dere-wns about MO of d* tramps »■ I* w»m copper* got on* easy otndesUdt work. Dey giro# him mwl a day. sad fur dat h* has t* b out de point, and writ* down
Hedge Plan!* For Sale. pums&Y’Wftmsts. .HfJSES.lK.'SSSSi'KL'Sll •Is** and *»yie*. Address P.M-WMLBL Haioreton, 1 VIU.S PILLS—tlGaES T OFFEIEVU WK. mgn» SIXTY DOLLARS' IT PAYS JMVljj^*
LION COFFEE A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL!
Lion Coffee is not GLAZED. COATED,
treated with EGG mixtures, rhcrrrir-als, Riue, etc., etc. Lion Coffee is a Pure Coffee.
Watch our next advertlnnment. J.w tl, » pKii.ee Of LION COFFEE and you will understand the reason of its popularity. LION COFFEE K now nsed in millions of homes.
"THE NEW YANKEE DOODLE."
stUfy the craving Of millions, and their pleasure crown By also money saving. LION COFFEE JS the best, LION COFFEE stand* the test, LION COFFEE'* sale* attest The road to fame 11* paving. LION COFFEE is not glazed. It has no foreign coating. Its purity is always praised— Good health it Is promoting. LION COFFEE takes the lead. LION COFFEE'* grand, indeed, LION COFFEE all concede Perfection it-denoting. LION corrtrs in the bean— Nothing there to hide it. Lion head on package seen. Premium List inside it! LION COFFEE'S gifts art great, LION COFFEE'S one-pound weight, LION COFFEE'S up-to-date, AH grocers will provide It.
In every package of LION COFFEE you will find a fully illustrated and descriptive Tart. No housekeeper, is fact, no woman, man. boy or girl will foil to find in the list some article which will contribute tc their happiness, comfort and convenience, and which they may have by simply cutting out a certain number of Lion Head* from
•sled packages (which is the only form in which this excellent coffee 1* sold).
the wrappers of our one pound sealed packages (which
i the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold).
WOOLSON SPICE CO.. TOLEDO. OtOO.
30 FEET OF BOWELS
the tehste and dog the channel If not most carefully
_ryday. > ' -
When this Ion; canal 2s blockaded, look out for
te your fnddes and must ty kept rie.n,
Itji a Ion; way, with many terns and pitfalls to estvl.
refuse and do- ■**“ —* ’ r
cleaned out every <
When this 1 , ___ _ ^
trouble furred tongue, bad brextb, belching of raa& ydkzw spots, pimplea and bolls, headaches, spittmg Spot
Mod after catin;—an all-around disgusting nuisance. Violent calohul purges or griping suits ere dtnr germs to use for denning out fht bowls. They force out the obstrudbn by causing violent spasms of the bowels, but they leave the Intestines 'lotah and even less able to keep op regular movements than before, and make a
larger dose necessary neat time.
i you have the pill habit, which kills nxyc no the morphine and whiskey habits ^ The only safe, gentle but certain bowel '
■ fragrant CA5CARETS.
and rotore healthy, natural action. Buy and try (Lode out for imitations and substitutes or you ouaft Ftt rtmdts. Cascarcts are never sold in bulk. Lookfe tfc trade-mark, the long-tailed “C” on the box.) Y<So wifi find that in an entirely natural way your bowels wflf be
Made CLEANaadSTRONG by

