Cape May Herald, 23 May 1903 IIIF issue link — Page 3

"fiKEATNESS” Sacla> Scrtnoa Br the Rev. Ur. v. II I arfchurst.

K rcnai Ms* Httt lami \irtBc (a \et It Mir Never Arr.ti U« W.rM » A Ileal Im.

Xkw To** Crrr.—Dr Cherin H. Park-' hurat, pastor ol the Madison Square Pres-ssr'-'firsfTKv arte iTTb" ^ ss:'™. ^iSf £ treasury, and many that were rich east in d3' , J ?S-?ff,i,'SSf.ES make a farthing And He callwl unto tlii His disciples and aaith -unto the

r abun.

in all

that she had. e ‘arkhurst said:

her want did :n all her liv-

ing ” Dr. Parkin

Which undoubtedly was an Imprudent thing for the woman lo do, for nerhaps at a later hour of the ume day she had to borrow, beg or steal in order to meet the Jieceasities of her subaiatence. but a beautiful intention may atill be beautiful even ivs. stSTb^ rrsti's woman with her alabaster box of ointment, who spent—in one sense of the word wasted—a prodigal amount of raodey on

7","™

and if she had been more soggi

and if she had been n

the anikenard less of . have floated down to our own day.

.rr,; might

— lay that took any*irrount of the woman with the two mites. She wss simply one of a crowd and as uninteresting sSy^sy-rWiir of cur fiord's character that He was imseemed to feel thst He had a good deal to '“iga elected HU disciples, as though any one would answer well enough for a disrinle.

B ^his accounts for the surprises ^diUd^th'abd”. 'either* i^n tel fectua 1 or te-'HHE SKirHiiS am'arement the heavy load that a person with seemingly no draft power, will pull when once he ha* been caught and harrsiarsp but in getting men to do enough to become themselves persuaded that they are compe-

tent.

Just as there are people that are an in the habit of thinking they are sick that they never ect well, and nothing less than a fright or an earthquake Mall convulse them ipto convalescence. sowScielv and the chugch and the State are pull of competent incapable* who ere good for nothing simply heeaiiv they have never' commenced to imngine'that they arc good, for almost any thing, and have never been so circutn•tsnred or have never so had responsibi'itv rolled upon them a« to shake them out of

their incapacity. Moses is a caw in pon who. up to the time he was eighty, ntvtr did anything noteworthy, so far as we ran learn, .except to kill an EgypUan-Tanda-

-e him have done since,"by

— to be constitutionally une_,— -- the task that was set him. If you ask a to take his "No." The advantage the T.ord hut dung to him. stood him up and put ‘he losd on him and told him to go along with it. and just 'he weight of the load made him able to go along with it. pressure found the limp muscles that lad been waiting for almost a century to be crushed into ever.«.£?£7S£5.rtf -

o have so many. .. venturing much to presume that He conld have come into this citv. res. and into this have made them as capable as Peter. James •nd John and the rest to lay. in cooperation with Him-rlt, the fonndations of the Probablv tt.e most Ardent lerelcr in the world would not claim that all men are fttn- . damentally alike, and fundamentally equal, and this is not the place, certainlv. to be tween people are not at all to-be taken as just measure of their actuah differences; Christ's eulogies are conspicuous for being >ng to change the attitude of our feelings sS£,rS'. u ^ t 5r.,V^ ss-s; •sz ■xz •pert and admiration are of nn undemonstratire type. Once let them have an onen The idea hss been rather hard ridden— overridden—that if the possibilities of effect are in a man or woman those possibilities are bound to come to their realization, however untoward mar be the circumstances that stand in their way. It was once elegantly stated b'- one whose eloquent face is still fresh in the memory of many of us—“How many Miltons may have died in their mothers' arms we cannot

ground

isnss'iTS'Sd,'

d eminently irhprobat mels of wheat scgrci

2SS ili'

^^discouragement of sbnrtfdojrs and early SS' srsi'ids injfewsm

gathering np disciples, at sea fishing instead

ap disciples. Peter, had beet

I. „ ^

is undoubtedly a proriderc* in things, but at the same time there is an accident in things in the sense in which thst word accident can be properly used by us. You will recall the inooeht which St. John relates as occurring at the pool of Deth eeda. There was some medicinal property in the waters of the pool perhsps. at any

rate at certain times an amiel descended ' into the pool and troubled the water and the one who was .fortunate enough to be the first to get into the water after it was troubled was healed of any infirmity from which he might be suffering. That is. the man who chanced to be closest to the track when the tram of opportunity went by

could go aboard and arrive.

As already said, these are matter* to dwell upon because the consideration of them enhances our respect for those about ns and strengthens* our confidence in the final outworking of things. It quite changes out attitude toward what we take tint off ; to be "

n ordinary man, even to sv there are in him the makings of considerably .:«or- ,: -

tbough circumstat

as to prevent h what the good I-ord

Then He made

is a fair chance — — fore the Lord is entirely through If yon r ispect—no l ^ ~

t off that even

inces are so nnpropitious his becoming at present ’ * * 'ad in mind

i w}«t there becoming be-

with him.

iog a.

bad in i him end what i of hi* U --

■ than suspect—that

-. d is rich in mineral

r;r k.* si& T. such properties possibilities hive a Urge about and ore for to see the met*! mined and cast into ingoU before we reckon it as assets. It is for thst reason we can elbow oar way through a crowd of commonplace men and women or through a swarm of i dirty children, oblivious of the diamonds

1 In Macaulay’* essay on histom- there oe- ficisnlly cultivated to make them esrs this frustration, which, without «ny and service*ha potency, f-uch ones straining, lends itself to the matter we an shout f» end we could give their :

now ronsidsnng. “At Lincoln Cathedral there ia a besutiful painted window which waa made by an apprentice out cf the pieces of glass which had been rejected and thrown away by his master. It ta an far raperior to every other in tbe chinch that, according to tradition, the vanquished artist killed himself from mortification." Which means that the finest window in the entire edifice was made out of glaai that to ac inapnrsciatiee and unsympathetic eye was good for nothing and cast out as abrer refuse. Tbe miracle of tbe feeding of the SOOO let* ua are among other things that Christ had a rerr distinct regard for what tbe diaicple* probably thought were mere odds and ends, and at the end of tbe r»-

t than enough cruata whole company over

THE SABBAT.i SCHOOL InlernatlMtl Lesion Comments For

May 24.

Subject: Paal Befarv A|.i ipa. Acts aivL I* 29—0*14ta T.-It, Act* xiv „ 22-Memory Vers*a, 2I-2*—Commentary os thr

Diy’l Lesson.

IB. “Agrippa." Herod Agripr-* II- was king et the country oast of thr upper Jordan and the Sea of Galilee. He had a t pelare at Jerusalem, and was professedly • Jew, usd was vemnd in Jewish customs,

a was the son ol '"d J tructio ^ jf

was dethroned, but permitted to retain hi» wealth, and lived at Borne until A. D. 100. He was immoral in life, but not unjust in his rule, and has been considered the beat in the Herodian familv. “Not disobedient.” This is one of tbe ffksnd point* ot instruction and personal application in Paul’* whole career. He began on the in atant. where be was, to obey. He uought on the instant, and ever afterward, to know and do the Lord’s will. “Heavenly viaion.” The vision which appeared to rmanifestly from heaven. ” ,: -

and yet At certainly cost glc to renounce all for C

20. "First unto—Dat ..

to preach at Damascus immediately (Acts B: 20-22). but soon went to Arabia. From Arabia he returned again to Datnaacus (Gal. 1: 17. 181. where the Jews sought to take his life. 1’anl escaped by night, being let down by tbe wall in a basket (Act* 9: 23-25). “At Jerusalem” etc. He specific*, as his fourfold field of labor, first, the two eitie. of Damascus and Jerusalem, then the whole regior. of Judea, and, lastly, the heithen world. “Should repent." He had

ight to win men baric to God. to reveal

kI to me.

_ obedient

hard itrug He began

|S£

ally tbewan. ~ 3"A !!£. w™rt£;'ES£S5 during his first four score years to be so ;i£n:rir£s. , t.£’s«ii.i £ was not a nonentity, and when summoned

. baric to (

and His complete wi

redemption, that they might repent, i turn to God; that, with a divinely . nevred heart and reversed life they nugl do works acceptable to God. The doctor

* —ntanc *—

, to revea work for man's ;ht repent, and

ine .by

of repentance was frequently Pi —— » the apostles. It include* both contrition and reformation. The truly repentant on* ia heartily aorry for all his sins, so sorry that he turns away from »in forever, and if possible would undo all ho has sinfully done. Confessions are made, wrongs are righted, and the aonl, loathing iteelf, cries

to God for mercy.

21, 22. “For there causes." Because he had obeyed God according to his distinct ’ iner displeasing to the It to kill him. "In the

isra

COMMERCEL REVIEW. 0-rcrsl Irsd; keadlUosi. R. G. Dun & Co.’e weekly review o(

trade says:

Warmer weather has made it potiible for the retail trade to regain part of thr earlier losies in volume of transaction*,

level of quotations for

ndite is well

I NEW

lines

tained. Roods

lerchandite is > lolcsalc trade in

r staple

main-

trade in seasalthough tht .

-upidetnmtary business,

□rt increased

a^pai

tr ° r * o' f -——.-f and jobbers report increased activity in

ral lines ol wearing apparel. matiufacturers are busy i vhich arc unusually lat

ivity i Cloth-

Fall

several

ing ma —__ —» ... . samples, which are unusually late. Furniture and harness factories are notably well supplied with orders and ther* is no evidence of dullness in machiner

or hardware.

At most points there are indicatior of improvement in mercantile collei if. the favorable progress of

U::iy to the extenme preparation fo lavgr crop?. Industrial condition wviuld be exceptionally encouraging ere it not for the vast army of men

s'„£r ss.r'.ir," continue to show the usual sain. May

c t hi-. k | ar r"'"'’'*'"”

1 per cent..

figure by 13=9J H

passing la ft year's id those of 1901 by

Failures this week were 19b in the United States, against zaS la«t year.

‘JZfL

IJ in ago.

LATEST QUOTATIONS. PhteW^: SIS 2Esr\^ or ^c“&;iS, No. ’. 5«®52c. ~ is—New York No. 2. 41c; Phila No. 2, 40c; Baltimore No. 2.

JEKSET

STATE NEWS. Latest Happeninib Qleaued From All

Over tbe Sute

Only about six weeks remain of the glass season in South Jersey, ft has been an exceptionally good year for both manufacturer and blower, and but for a great shortage of boy help would have been even better on each side. The recent introduction of bottle-mak-

—chinery in some of the Sol•■ , ’ ' tones is full - f ; —

ing mad Jersey fa the Wowei

Hirers have been similar machines.

trsey factories it full of m.

it blowers. For years the manulac-

1 have been looking into these or

‘ it until now little

one machine will do what six men are capable of doing in the way of turning out ware, which is said to be much finer than that done by hapd. One of these has been tried at Clayton witli such success that the firm at once got an oution on several more. They cost about $800 Even with the machines the glassblowcrs will remain. There arc many medirine and other firms Ufing thousands of gross of bottles each year. They will not have ware made

other than by hand.

the quarantine at the tenant farm hou*.

men**! Grew^V'had ^dedired the same , per case $2.2.^52-50. S gospel before .Felix and Festus, and non ' Potomac, yellow, per L before M Ayrippa ;j “Siying none other ! do. do? North Carolina.

—.'ore Ajrippa. things.” He adc

” he tanyht

nd th

40'Ac.

Hay.—No. I timothy. large bales $20.so(52i.oo: do. small bales $20.5015' 21-co; No. 2 timothy. $t9.00(520.00; No. iSStS.SZ&'SS.fSJSSS cd. $14.50(516.50; No. 1 clover. $13.50 (5 14 00; No. 2 clover. $io.oo(gixoo; no grade hay. $7.00(5 11 00. Fruits and Vegetables.—Cabbage. Southern, new. per crate $1.25(0'1.50 Potatoes—Weslcrn. per bu 68^7700: do. plan:. Florida, per orange box $2.00*.

: quarantine at the tenant farm house of Charles Knight, on the outskirt*- of Woodbury, there was a fresh outbreak of small-pox, and the entire family wa? hustled off to the isolation hospital, on the county farm. Some weeks ago George Garland, a colored farm hand, developed a case, and the family with which he lived have been kept in quarantine since, but three cases developed. 1 The Almshouse Committee met and decided to discharge the nurse who ha« been with Garland, and let the tami!>' have full possession of the pest house,

members are pot dow-

BONG OF THE BEST.

But, better far than hopin', Aa’ more eupremeljr meet, -Atlanta Connitutloo.

i.-s.wi'SaT. Is workla' ter the tx —AUai

HUMOROUS. Tommy—Pop. what Is a white Hoi Tommy’s Pop—A white lie, my son. Is the kind you generally find on tombs tones. Silllcus—Every man should know himself. Cynicus—If he did. the chance* are he would be ashamed of the acquaintance. Davl—Where Is little Reginald going in that circus suit, to a masque ball? Jonathan—No. can’t you .tell go!' tegs when you aec them? L lobba (at the art exhibit)—I think

ah'-uld have been bung instead. Bentley—l hear that Johnson took out an accident policy this morning. Is he going on a long trip? Bradley— No. Just shopping with his wife. Clare—By the way. Uncle Charles, is there any difference betyeen a cook and a chef? Uncle Charles—Oh, dear, yea; oftentimes several thousand dol-

lars a year.

Briggs—Do you consider Mercer

much cf a French scholar? Pretty fair. He understands

loed ’ 5 uae sufficiently well not to attempt

^ ' to speak It.

Griggs— i the Ian-

: a-EsS-~ ts titrv ►een a locomotive looming mft of thr j. «3.V “Should auffer.” Mirey of Hie quart 6ft 12c. Cukes. Florida, per box

likelv discovered

(renenilly *.

ritb the circuinjacent refle

' * plus tbe a

original iisht tor^ added in—central flame

Now the penies with tore means rard appeal

.. reflector* < tore. A man maj

the polita and learned Greek* .

—and of th* manner in which this 'ed to him—all this would lead anch a -thinker and a pagan ax Fntm to conclude ronudly that Paul was a visionary

i-s. i. hu 1

me*ns when it says that on the ontward apj - misled by reflectoi >f ieflectore. A m* rirtue and yet put that ihowy achieremeni with

sencc of fi little virti

being many allusions to

The tendency e mental apderangement

Sfr'EiS

or br the ab- j plication to prodace mental dcranj

may have very f u everywhere known,

hat virtue into HI. Panl’a reply to Feslns (vs. rith a Urge su- 1 25. “I am not mad." Either Paul 1

^jtet oufc [ tus " *

1 great deal of virtue; that - On tbe other her.d, a pers n immenre^ouv of virt,

25-29).

. — , _2ther Paul or Few

tns was beside himself. They lived in different worlds, and one or the other was w, Paul was mad;

* There

wrong. If Festna was sane, Paul was , if Paul was sane, Festua was mad. ’ • is no madneaa so great, no delirium so awfnl, as to neglect the eternal interests ot the soul tor the sake of the poor pleasures

rhich this life can give. Tha (d man misrepresent* Chris-

lie. addii^

hut, r.m shining it with a halo.

ine last the contribution box. Tbe Lord. ’ Jesusyof His death and reaarrection, of the with whom nimbus does not count, saw • events that occurred on the day of Pentesnd felt wlat the woman herself meant , eost, and the preaching of the goxpel since and was. T» Him she was tbe same su Jesus had been crucified. A corner.” though she bad dtuffped iu a thouaand { There was a wide knowledge of the fact* shekels, but not to others who were pres- connectof with the life, death and resurrecroiild have reasoned iu«t ax tion of Christ. "Beliere*t.” Agrippa had

been instructed in the Scriptures and accepted them intellectually. The writings of the prophet* fotAold the events ol which Paul had been speaking, and had their fulfilment in Christ. "I know.” Paul answers his own question, for although Agrippa was ap immoral man, ret incident* in connection with his life show that he

was a sincere Jew.

’Almost/’ etc. See R. V. There

hundred year* ■ 'rzsng*

,_ when the threw

kH 1 ’

e anythiii:

air bright

,-are Lter the same principle that "nobody has a right to do die rich" was announced by one quite difr .i_ —ited from tbe widow with two

enough upon her advertisement of the iciple to make the air bright about it.

ineteen hundred • that "nol fcrently cituatei mites; and the announced it w

dear around tL. — — stance there was only a two penny halo, and in -the other a mulion-dollar halo, and the big halo won. It cannot be part of to claim that the illustriouc not just as charitable aa tbe inconspicuous Jewess. We are only claiming that the reflector that you frame around the lamp is no part of the lamp and certainly no part of the blaze that the

burning oil sustain*.

It would ’be interesting tc ace tbe comotion that would have been excited over rr there in the temple had a heart as rret and beautiful aa the Lord saw her -jart to be. not been held under -be limi tatious of ungenerous circumstances, and hid it been within her means to do all that her heart prompted—in other word*, had the condition* tinder which she lived been wide and open encash to tpst.-h her own personal nobilitv. Most peop'e lire in s very small world; they are in it and they bare to stay in it. Irfloences hereditary, and providental if you please, bare built around them an environment close and im-

, .seed of hearti and intelTh larger than the apbere that despotic net* nee* permit them to fill, femeit may be due to phyaical debility; imes it come* a* the resuit oikhose rxrd conditions in early Hie that pre rented tbe discipline of personal powers sod grate*, certainly pomiatsd. but «uffieisntly cultivated to make them a -’ad

Pa., V*., 245125c.

Eggs.—Weatem Maryland and Penn sylvania. per dozen. —(£15=: Eastern Shore (Maryland and Virginia) —(5is: Virginia —(rfie; West - Virginia —@15. Western —@15: Southern M'/j'C.—' guinea t/r£to; duck. Eastern Shore fancy —<3J|; d<* Western and SouthCheese—Large. 60-lbs. I3$4@i3$ie; do. 36-lbs. >3H i S'3Hc; 23-lbs. 14® ^Cive Poultry- — Chickens — Hens, heavy to medium. 12*4@I3c; old roasters each, 25(533: young, good to choice. 145115; do. n.ugh and staggj-. —<$13:

agg}’. - —@25;

ivy

Geese, W’esti fowL each, strong flyer, young. 255230Provisions ant

it rib

ich. J0(540c. Guinea -(q'asc. Pigeons, old per pak, —(gjoc; do, Hog Products.—Bulk

clear rib sides. He: bulk clear sides, bulk shoulders. 9'A'. hulk fat backs. t8 lbs and under, 10: bulk bellies, 12: bulk ham bptts, 10; bacon cle rib sides, it#: dear tide*, ntf :,bac<

,1: sugar-cut

gar-cured

loulder loulder

ides. 11 A: iders. >oJ--

small. :iA: sugar-i

blade cuts. 10A ; sugar-cured

narrow. !0’/i; sugar-cured shoulders, extra broad, utf: sugar-cured Califo--nia hams, lotf '■ canvased and uncanvas-

ed-jiams, 12 lbs and over, 14;

28. 29. H H are two widely different opinions a* to th* meaning of this verse. The first is thst Agrippa’* heart was touched and that, according to tbe Authorized Version he declared with *11 serionsneas that he waa al1 - to become a Christum.

that the words were apo--v. jfcrised

theJesat

Paul * answer ia sublime. He is so thoroughlr satisfied with the salvation he ha* experienced that he doe* not hesitate to heartily_commend it to all his royal hearer*. “Except," etc. What a gentle reproof to these ruler* who were keeping him in chain*! What a delicate appeal to

Nsedl**. Pina aryj Buttons.

Hare yon ever met a gdrl whe pinned on her ahoe buttons? I remember one that I used to know at school.

d on her ne that I

re girl* pit 1. We ha p]

1 aU oar e an old

aed to 1 In the

1 a ein to use a pi* it ton should be. and that a waa a deception, girl with pinned a criminal In oar eye*. This teacher who taught liter ature had a eewlng basket oa Ber desk and loaned needle* with thread to anyom who had a button off A a glove to

ntftbac ired breaj shoulders,

shot

over, 14; hams,

invased and uncanvased. jx lbs and over. 13)4; skinned, 14)4; refined lard second-hand tubs. 10A: refined lard, half-barrels and new tubs, io)4; tierces,

lard, lOjfi. Ure Stock.

Chicago.—Cattle—Good to prime steers $5.20(55.50; poor to medinra $4.25 @5.10; stockers and feeders $3-255(5-to, cows $1-5064-5: heiiers $2.5065^5; canners $1-50(52-60; bulls $2.5064.50; eah-w $2.5066.25; Texas fed steers $4.00(54-75- Hogs—Receipts today 25,000 head: tomorrow 20.000; left ovet 5000 opened roc lower: closed strong; and butchers. [email protected]; gi oice heavy $6-8s(37-oo: rot

of s 8000 head; sheep to strong; good, t

66.C0; fair to choice rats native lambs $4-5°67- 2 5-

East Liberty.—Cattle lower,

i; choi * —-

:p—Rcceii-t--tntbs stead*

i”i

ne heav)

_ Yorker*. .ight Yorkers and pigs $7-00; rough.* $5005660. Sheep slow; best wcthci $+856510: calls and common $a.oo5i 3.00: choice_ lambs $6.75®7- 0 °: vc *' calves $5-606.6.00-

STRAWS FROM THE WORLD’S CURRENTS Electric railways kill one hundred

persons a month.

Consumption claims 6300 persons a ^Manchuria is primarily # grain-pro during country. , .. . The Transvaal * output of go.d :o

March was 230,000 ounce*.

Ethiopia’s railway b-inq ronp’r Americans are exploiting that k:n?

tii’ lihri ■ *' - . ^

„.ji railwy hriicn.

.fries, road are lJ ;

as some members are not down wui the disease and can take care of the 0, Minotola4 had another shooting affray the otficr night. It was just bciore 12 o'clock when a fnsilade was opened on the store of the Jonas Glass Company. The watchman of the factfffy ran out but could see no one. W hen daylight appeared no . less than ten bullets were found in various parts of

c building. Three : windows. No

ions parts of through the

one was in the

and the attacking party left no clue ns to their identity. The authorities think the bullets were from rifles. This mysterious shooting has greatly alarmed the law-abiding citizens. The excitement over the shooting of Nunzio Capri!! has been revived. The pickets withdrawn from their posts several days ago have again been placed about the glass factory. The annual union meeting 01 the

rrdon County Teachers' Associa‘louse r*

1. Com

Miss

Ion County Teachers

s held in the court bom ton. Jason S. Hoffman. Coun- • j—. presided. _ Miss

the Stat

Hur.tei

tion was

Jlcmingtoa. _

ty Superintendent, , Kate D. Stout, of the State Nou.._

School, spoke on "Some Mistakes Tha; I Have Observed in Teaching and

How to Correct Them." George J

Vot'd of the State Department of Public Instruction, talked on "School Matters.” anc Miss Grace Glazcr, of Clinton. had ’’The Cultivation of Imagination in Language From a Psychological Standpoint." as her theme. John Montcith. of South Orange, discussed ’ Reading Aloud in School and Home," and V. C Pilgrim. 0$ Belle-

ville. talked on “Teaching History. Not for years has a spring drought

caused such, damage to farm and garden crops as is resulting from the present continued dry weather. The condi tion in Burlington and vicinity if alarming, no rain of any account having fallen for six weeks, and the losse* to truck farmers especially will be severe. On many places the fanners have called their men from p'.owirjR and cultivating and have set them to carrying water to the fields to nourish the grow-

Mifs Bessie Howell, niece of the not-

ed singer. Madam Surike, who is stopping at Cape May. had a narrow escape from asphyxiation. Before retiring tor the night she turned off the gas. and it is supposed that in some manner she disarranged the thumb screw later, but did not notice the escaping gas before going to sleep. Later her mother, who was downstairs, detected the odor of gas and started an investigation, and it is due to the latter that the .young woman escaped death, for she was in an

sault." "Hot 2 for $10.’’

they spared no expense

ding? Patrice—Yea; why even the old shoes they threw at the bride and groom were all fresh polished. Glummer—If we ccold see ourselves as others see us we probably wouldn't feel flattered. Glide—If we could see ourselves as others see us we wouldn’t recognize ourselves, my dear fellow. Mrs. DeJones—Why are you looking over all of those mid love letters that wrote me. dffar? Mr. De Jcnes—

you v 1 mer

rations you. William—1 hear that you are going to tafte that long journey by easy slat?’- Roger*—Not on your life. 1 ha*' 2 been In them, and a railroad tra.2. trolley or even a push cart will do tor me.

moza. "You see," said he. “the sun comes at daylight, when we could just as well without It. but the moon's some use—It shines at night." Mrs. Grimes—The Idea of Martha marrying that worthless Tom Nip pins! I am ashamed of her! Widow Qceeds—Oh. don’t be too hard upon the girl. It’s only her first essay, you know. Doubtless she’’! do better

next time.

"Madam." said the conductor to the plain and somewhat elderly woman

standing

ask

in the street car. “why

e of these n

blc was 1

lieved.

George Hitchi mer. was throw: land ‘ ‘

ir she

tnd some tro was finally re-

t. a Stoe Creek far-

from his scat on s *-•- *- -trees’ heels

you ask one of these men to give his seat?" “Because," she answered, grimly sarcasfc, “1 haven't

the face to ido It."

Fuddy—Come, now, what would you propose to bring about an ideal state cf things? Duddy—Nothing eas ler, my friend. I’d just put everybody at work upon somebody else's Job. and then, of course, every Wnd of work would be done perfectly. aLdy—Aren’t you the tramp who iere yesterday? Hobo—Yes, deal I came back to tell you dat de !g£8 you give me had chickens In dom.” Lady—Well, what of It? Ho-

was 1 lady.

land^roller ^and under hif holes’ hcri passed over him. breaking his am in two places, crushing his knee cap spraining an ankle and causing »y.-

ous bruises.

Frank W. Horner, one of Glassboro's well-known citizens, died frost:

he Protestant Episcopal Cht

active member of the Independent

of Mechanics. Mrs. He

3 sons and Contention

hanics.

daughter st between the

rvive him. boss bar-

the

;he shops on Memorial result in a strike at Trei plete tying up of the

dosiogof th^shops'on^Memoriai Day . ... r 1. :— t— -• tv-jiton

ton-

ent hatt cuts a la cowboy and shave* a la hobo will be the prevailing- styles for Tren,0 Adrian Vermuele. an old and wellknown citizen, died at his home in New Brunswick. He was 83 years of age He was influential in polirics for many years and held a number of local of-

fices. He leaves six children.

~ * Goan, a past officer ol

No. 99. Foresters ' session of the

r City,

rank J. G rt Washini

Churchman Art Excited.

The^tomlng election of a new dean of the general theological seminary. New York city, ia atlrrlng up more Interest and excitement among Protestant Episcopalian* than any event of the sort slnca Phillips Brooks wax elected bishop of Massachusetts notwithstanding his antlsacerdotal view* and Unitarian friendship. Thu* far the deans--Forbe*. Seymour. Hoffman -hava been -high charchmtn.”

Manila Barbers Must Be Clean. Grusades are In order all along the line, and following the recent one* against gamblers, opium dens and or-dinance-evading cocberos In San Nicholas district last week comes a “roundnp' in Blnondo of 40 razor wleldcrs. Not the class who reach down for one when angry, but the gentlemen who earn a livelihood In keeping the facial appearance of others in a neat and

cleanly condition.

Last night Capt. Shxttuck’a men of Auloague station, gathered in a collection of Chinese and native barbers who have been guilty of not keeping up to the terms of a city ordinance

which demands a standard of nlc* the way of white coats, clean I

good soap and sterilised parapherna Ha of the trade In order that the spread

of disease may be obviated.

The act was passed by the municipal board some Ume ago. but many of the native# and Chinos have perelstenUj ignored it; hence the round-up on the

part of the pollco—Manila Time#.

nicety In q hands.

A Piccadilly Rebuke.

A London pickpocket tried to m more the valuables of a Piccadilly “Irreproachable” aa he sauntered to hia club the other morning. The Irreproachable seised the thief by the wrist, gased at his filthy paw. and flung it from him with disgust, saying. “For goodness sake, my good man, wash your hands before you put them in a gentleman's pocket,”

Supplementary Set.

During a lesson in physiology WU-

ieacher asked him If he knew - - t teeth people get.

the last ti _ replied:

false teeth."—Little Cfaron-