Cape May Herald, 24 August 1905 IIIF issue link — Page 6

YOC MEVEB CAN TKU« You c»n'« trli ohrih.-r 4 tuiui.u p'“iyuim or not by tb* flower* «Mi.candy be tends you Yon nmnt to ®t>d out bow mui-b pm money be allow; •tster. And It is n.> stcn that l*rave Jun b«-anse be d:ve« off a ferryboat to save your Ilf' Yon want Bmt out bow be arts when the lamp

pipe liursts.

REIGN OF THE LONG GLOVE While white mousouefalre gloi-es reign supreme tor smart aftwfltxnj' wear, or wherever the elbow sleeve mast* their soft, wrinkly lengths ad-. Tillable, there la- a future before the new mouse eulored suede. . Thia grayish sUnile of moose, very pretty and soft. Vndressed kid l» preferred to glare for smart oerasions. Dell-i-a\e jK-stel etnbruideries are seen on the barks and around the fastenings of some Very advau.vd gloraa in ihc sofiest white suede of'glace kid. bat Pompadour, are. of eourse. not adapted

EFTTON SEWING TRICK. If you're nerer tried sewing buttons them on any.other way. especially for shirt wrist* und under clothes and children's clothes. Lay the pin across the top of the button and take your stitches over It taking the cross stitches. ^ When the pin is pulled out. yonr but ton will pass through the buttonhole Vithout puckering the material directly under It—the extra length of the stilcht* gives it room. And If yon want to make It very strong, wind yonr cotton several t arouml the threads between button and cloth. MUST GET OFF CABS PROPERLY. Women who get off the street cats backw-rd* will bother the Cleveland. Ohio. Electric Railway no more, at least not on the new open cars. A device. sprung from the inventure minds of President Andrews and Manager Stanley, will bring consternation femininity, but security to the railway company claim department. The*natural tendency of women on alighting. Andrewrs declares. Is t to grasp the handrail with the right hand and thus face the rear. On the new cays the only rail within reach will be the oae on the seat which can. of coarse, be grasped with only the left hand. It is believed that this simple arrangement will prevent many accidents In the future. A GIRL’S WABDBOBE. Fof a girl wij£^ limited income the best gowns she can buy are two tailor gowns, both with walking length ekirts. one of dark blue or oxford cheviot, with a long.coat very simply Another tailor gown of fine black broadcloth or velvet with an elaborate coat If sbe is slight a hip length or long coat: if stont an Eton. For the morning gown have three pretty lingerie blouses in white. For the after-' noon gown three elaborate waist*. Three pretty hats will be sufficient; vne for each suit and one for theater .wear. Have a reception and theater gown and two simple evening gowns. A black three-quarter loose coat or cape can be worn over the afternoon and evening gowns. These gown* worn with pretty accessories such as’ a lairabont boa or furs, good giortis and shoes will be quite enough. LIVELIHOOD IS DOLLJIO8PITAL. .Aside from the many occupations which women are undertaking nowadays there are quite a few which are not considered by the .profession, and these are the ones take* up hjtsafrlety girls or those who have becomn, tiled of their present positions. They are genteel in the extreme, and should one. have a special talent for doin^.one, thing nicely, -advantage may be taken of It. A young woman who found herself face to face with the problem of earning a livelihood for herself, and her mother, bad nothing to start on save a good name and an actjualntanae with wealthy people. Sbe waa about to etudy stenography and try for an office position, when a successful businesm woman asked her U an* bad no special bent. The girl replied, laughingly, that the only thing she had ever been good for wds to dress dolls The eaperlencrd woman saw poaslDliltits ia this one gift, and advised her to start a doll hospital In her mother's pretty parlor. Today not c%ly la the girl a a adept at

’ ones only the use made of motors In tb« summer, wbllo living In the country, colors In costumes are the driving _ fashion tor wear while speeding about county highways and byways—always with reference, however, to the paint color given of the machine that Is used. Geranium reds and fruit reds are perhaps more In vogue than other colors, when they de not -conflict with tiie color of the antomoblle Warm reddish browns, certain shades of green, and chamois-leather tone*, ha .Weil as the deeper, more vivid saffrons, are used, together with gray* am^stone colors, the latter a capital color foil for the scarlet red machine. For country use automobiles offer the most enjoyable and satisfactory pleasure, and there is no little obligation on the part of the owners to dress in attractive ways for the drive. It ts In the country use of an automobile that the only chance Is given a family to Introduce a picturesque dress appearance by the wearing of costumes that, while being perfectly lit, are also pleasing to the eye. Greatly needed Is this contrast to the soiled, dust-colored clothes and wraps which so disfigure most men and women nowadays. Instead of suggesting pleasureable occasions. the majority of motor carriage occupants appear to be going through enfon-ed torture In a grimy, slovenly gloom that is depressing .to the on-

ook-r.

KNITTING AS RECREATION. A prominent physician near Boston idvocatcs knitting as an occupation especially suited to persona who. for a time, are equal to little exertion—mental or physical—and who find It truly hard work to sit In absolute Idleness. writer In Good Housekeeping. Moreover, he himself tried the prescription before giving it to bis patients. Recovering from h long and severe attack of typhoid fever, he found that merely to “live out of doors and keep cheerful' was much more difficult than it had seemed when be had prescribed It for other people. “ listening to reading proved fatiguing, and one day. In desperation, he began to cut out paper dolla and then to color pictures In a magazine. be bad seen bis children do. Another day he demanded silver to clean, and finally'he polished up some of the family Jewelry. All this, however, although providing the necessary occupation. was unsatisfactory because of its comparative uselessness, ft was not necessary that the silver should polished daily, and there were already more paper dolls In the bouse than the children could dress in a month. It was then that he learned from his mother the plain knitting ich has comforted so many women who "always want something In their hands.'' There was no counting "of' stitches, necessary, and the monotony proved restful, while the occupation was diverting. With hands.busy on some-tiling to be used by hi* wife, daughter, or even by the little girl’s he could toon listen to reading without weariness or Impatience. Even now. fully recovered and busy with a large and varied practice, be occasionally takes np knitting ta rest, literally working out In action his theory, that real recreation seldom comes to a naturally active man through absolute Idleness. One of his patients—a boy 19 years old—who was stricken with paralysis several months ago. now knits with much interest, and finds the prescription of cheerfulness more easily taken when his fingers are doing something worth while and bis mind Is free either to -work or rest.

The demand for lace ^on jgpwns and wraps is unabated. ’ . ‘ . Irish and Valenciennes laces are used separately also In combination. A pretty collar which needs very little sewing Is one made of Clnny

lace insertion.

Fa got ting in all colors cornu in the local shops, and in whits it is es-

pecially pretty.

In accordance with the erase for everything old-fashioned, coral sets of

jMwry*. U we

Teekp

all m

a are in vogns again.

Coral buckles for the belt both la front and back, are seen, as well aa coral stick pins for the ascot stock. A pretty bloose, cuff and turnover coral set It seen la the shape of goodaed beads mounted on tiny gold pins. Const covers mads of batiste with and-embroiderry aa the decoration are among the dainty artidos tor the tremble silk* is called radium, and at Its a me implies. It Is soft timy and has

-Caolsr thaa the 1

WASHINGTON, est service of the D of Agriculture has taken up of woods for special uses, and experiments will he conducted to produce wood for street parement which wl prove lasting. Mr. Conger, former Minister to China, has been appointed a special envoy to go to Pekin aud Investigate the boycott aud the Hankow Railway question. The contract for the construction of the new Custom House at San Frnn"Ueo has been awarded to Thomas Butler. of that city, nt his Ind of Sl.im.00U. the building to be completed- by March 1. 1008. W. E. Daucby. who has been the engineer In charge of tbe'Cnldbra dtvl■don of the cann! work and an appointee of former Chief Engineer Wallace, .has resigned. Theodore P. Shouts, who has returned from Panama, declared that the ••hlef problem at present was the housing and feeding of the employes. OPR ADOPTED ISLANDS. The transport Logan, with Secretary Taft. Mis* Roosevelt and the other member* of the party on board, arrived at Hollo. Philippine Islands, from Manila Tugs with the local governor and a large reception committee, cou*istlng of army and navy officers, and leading citizens, met the Logan down The Federal party has accepted Secretary Taft's statement of the attitude of the t’nlted States Government toard the Philippines, and will reconstruct its platform In accordance there-

with.

The viceroys of the Chinese provices of Kwau-Tung and Kwang-Se n.e sent dispatches to Manila asking when Secretary Tcft and bis party will the capitals of their respective provinces, and saying that preparation* for their suitable reception are under w«y. DOMESTIC. J H. Richards advocated the establishment of n Department of Mines at the Trans-Mississippi Congress. A petition addressed to President Diaz of Mexico, asking him to co-oper-in preventing Sunday bullfights circulating The police raided every gambling house in Milwaukee. Wit., making many arreita. Commissioners on uniform di 1 law appointed by the Governors of about thirty Suites met at Narragansett Pier. B. I. Arkansas Joined Kansas In the fight against the Packing Trust. Suits begun against the Swift and Cudahy companies in the Circuit Court of Pulaski County for $60,000 each and forfeiture of their charters. On Sunday before Labor Day 7U0C Presbyterian preachers throughout the Dulled States will, preach on , some phase of the labor question. In accordance with a plan outlined by the department of church and labor recently organized In the Presbyterian Chnrcli Pink Hanc.’of Mississippi, was killed by a quarantine guard whl/e attempt tog to run the Hue near Lagrange. Extensive damage is threatened from, vnki fires raging to Montana Idaho line. William Jennings Bryan, 1 Hon of Andrew Carnegie, is t pubifc library at Salem, 111., his birthplace. The United States torpedo planter, George E. Armlstend. reached Newport. B. I., for a month's stay, to give FortAd^mt army regulars Instruction. A delegation headed by Jacob H. Schiff held a conference with M. Witte regarding the condition of Russian Jews. The fever situation at New Orleans continued serious. Believed to be fatally hurt nt Spokane. Wash., while looping the gap In a circus. Tom Bumtier, known as "Volo.” is improving. Bombs were sent through the mall to Jacob H. Schiff and M. Guggenheim’s Sons, In New York City. FOBEiGN. The Cuban Senate. In session at Havana. by a rote of 11 to 2 rejected tbp bill to increase the duty on rice from $1-20 to $2.75 a hundred kilos. Professor GsrtiW. of London. • England. Is going to West Africa again to study the languages of monkeys aud other simians. Albert Edeifcld. the painter, of Copenhagen, is dead at the age of fifty-

one.

Judge Calhoun. Special Commission-er-from the United States, has arrived at Caracas and has been presented nt the Foreign Office. Honduras, ravaged by yellow fever, will ask the United Slates Marine Hospital Service to take complete charge of the sanitation of the country., England, according to Government officials, has ndt put asy pressure on Japan In urging an end of the war. The Minister of Finance In the Senate. at Valparaiso. Chile, announced a deficit of 7.000,000 pesos for the present year. The workmen U all the factories at Vienna. Austria, went on strike. Mr. Hugh Watt a former ihember of Partiamtat, representing Glasgow, was charged ia London by his formar wif* With an attsnpt to murder bar. Mr. WbIMaw BaM. lAmarten Ambassador to tho Court of 8t James. ‘ y ~ 1 tate Kan (.owpsr s country

THE NATIONAL O^UE. Chesbre still work* the “spit ball." Freeman Is doing tome of his oldtime stick work. “Ducky" Holmes <Am.) is batting well for Chicago. Second bsteman Huggins Is playing sensational ball for Cincinnati. The Washington Club has sold second baseman MulUn to the Baltimore Club. Pitcher Bernhard It acting manager of the Cleveland Club during Lajoie's disabilityBransfleld has already stolen more bases this season for the Phillies than he did all last year for Pittsburg. Stomach trouble, a bad ankle and blood poisoning make Lajoie's life a big load of discomfort these days. Walter Clarkson. It Is now announced. will not return to New Y'ork until the close of the Eastern "League season. Charley Hickman has strengthened the Washingtons sitjee he Joined the team, aud fans say that he U well worth the money paid for bis release. George McBride, the yonng shortstop secured by 8t. Louis from Pittsburg. handles himself well and looks like a good one. He also bats and throws well. Malachl Klttredge, of the Y^ishtogtons. thinks that Boston has a fine show for the pennant. "They'll come around all right bye and bye." says he. "They have the pitchers." When some of the Boston players ■earn to hold their bat a little shorter, and also to hurry their swings, their batting might bo a Uttle better. At least so Tim Murnane declares. Tim Murnane says that the erratic work of tiie New Y’ork pitching staff is caused by a desire to use the spit bait. It jtot Chesbro out of it. and A! Orth has lost his effectiveness while trying to master the new idea.

j*issS 5Ka4Srs

NEWSY GLEANINGS. The Nile dam at Assouan has saved Egypt's cotton crop. Norway still favors a monarchy, says the President of the Storthing. A Michigan court has decided that a husband ts the heir-at-law of his wife. Within a few years the Steel Corporation will need 20.000.000 tons of ore a

year.

Since the first of the year this country has Imported 52.000,000 worth of automobiles. A Kentucky woman, only thirtythree years old. has Just acquired her ninth husband. Horace C. Silsbury. inventor of the steam fire engine, is dead at his home In Seneca Falls. N. Y. Mme. Sarah Bernhardt's extravagance Is well known, and .her house to Paris shows It In every way. The telephone and rural free delivery of mall hare Increased Georgia farm lands from $10 to $100 an acre. The Yaqui Indians, of Sonora. Mexico. tiring of the long, dlastrons ware against the Government, are now asking peace. The New York Central Ball road has obtained the State's co-Operhtlon to Its plans to abolish all grade crossings within fifty miles of New York City. Of the wounded Russian soldiers treated at Harbin. 1200 were found to have mntllnted themselves by catting off the first fingers of the right hand. Twenty-six school teachers at Ct cago attached a tourist car to which they had traveled to Portland. Ore., claiming they had not been fed as well as agreed upon. The annual report ol Postmaster George H. Hibbard ahows a revenue from the Boston district of $1,508,745 for the fiscal year ended July L The cost of clerk and carrier hire waa $L026,078, and of the rural free delivery service, $972,581.

NEW JERSEY' STATE NWS

'Desth Wakes Police.

Aroused at last by the frightening to death of Miss Ixiretta A. Pfeiffer to "Little Coney island," near North Bergen. the police of upper Hudson County are determined to Starr- out the disreputable resorts of !•' reality. Crooks from New Yort. / hare docked there for several year- without interference. "Strong arm" men. "yegg" men and an organized gang of "rreepers" hare flourished. The hoodlum* and ruffian* frequently disabled the electric lights along the Hudson Boulevard loop to aid their work. Many couple* have been held up. When money was not Immediately forthcoming, threats to drag the woman Into the woods to assault her were often made, which generally brought forth the money from her escort. The notorious'resorts to that locality hare aided the •'creepers.*' They have attracted many strangers, who have made-It Impossible for decent women to use the trolley cam Saturday and Sunday evenings, owlng'to the drunken hullle* that Infest them. County Physician Con verse, of Hudson Connty. examined the body of Miss Pfeiffer and gave It as lit* official opinion that the girl's death wa» due to heart disease. He confirmed the report of the physician* who were culled after the girl wa* found dying on the perch - of Sullivan's hotel that there had been

10 attempt at assault. Music For Restless Girls.

The trustees of the State Home For •Iris have been working for some time o secure funds for -instruction to mull for the Inmates, with the resnlt that Mr*. Henry Blrkbolz will next month be installed as music Instructor. The funds for her salary and'Incidental expenses come from friends of the institution. The idea came to the trustees while they were listening to the girls sing. A new girl would come to the home, bringing with iter the new-, out popular songs, and in a week all would be singing the new songs. When the girls became restless singing would set them right The Inmates will be given tostruction In the piano, guitar, violin and other instrument*. and to a short time the home will have Us own orchestra.

THE LABOR WORLD. Buffalo. N. Y.. has 184 unions ana

30,158 members.

Detroit. Mich., emplpys 8000 men In the automobile Industry. . Lynn. Mats., carpenters' unions are to build a hall of their own. Mexican railroads are badly in need of men for construction work. Statistic# show that four-fifths of all educated mechanics arc members of

their trade union.

There are 177 women engaged as stationary engineers and firemen In

the United Stages,

It is estimated that 30.000 men trill be needed in the Northwest this year

to harvest the crop.

It it estimated that but 75,000 of the 300,000 clothing workers In the United States are organized. Coopers , at Ban Fras

fight for an Increase from the brewery owners. Street car men are urging the introduction of centre alalee on summer care foe greater safety of conductors. Jap labor Is Colorado earns seventyeight cents a day and lives on twelve. American labor, earns $2J0 and Uvea

on $2.

Minneapolis.' xri-- local union' of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America has a member* ship of 1800. Chicago Building Material Trades Council has increased Its delegate representation to 32.000 members within the past year. The order of Bailway Conductors has established a home at Nashville. Tenn., for tho children of dead members of the organisation. Tho Brotherhood of Carpenters and Jotnors of New Haven. Conn., have anecsoded In their demands for an etght-honr flay and a $3 wage.

musi it Knayen, a ranaiv, or new BnuMwfcfc. K. A. enmnlng thedeora of his ham. tend WBUnm Matthews, a bay mvmlmm junk eld. hanging. He was the nan * a neighbor •■MM-tesW ’

Newarif Jersey's Biggest City. The population of Newark.-the largest city of New Jersey, as shown by returns filed with the Secretary of State nt Trenton Is 283.289. This Is an increase to five years of 37.219. or 15.1 per cent.. Of the total population 198.749 are American born. 0398 are English. 1LO0G Irish. 23.889 German. 14.021 Italians and 20.037 of other nationalities. The population of other cities in the bulletin issued follows: New Brunswick. 23.133. Increase 15.6 per cent: Long Branch. 12.183. Increase. 37.3 per cent.: MHlrliie. 11.884. increase. 122 per cent; Princeton, 0029. Increase. 54.8 per cent Fifty Year* Under One Boor. Fifty years in the same bouse Is the record of Mr. and Mrs. L N. Dobbins, of Verona. They moved Into the house in August. 1855, and to their half century of married life they have known no other home. The old homestead l* to the centre of the town. In Bloomfield avenue, opposite the Jfethodiat Church, and has undergone few changes since it was built. Mr. and Mrs. Dobbins, who are bale, hare received many congratulations upon the completion of fifty years of housekeeping under one roof. To Enlarge Girl*' State Home. The trustees of the State Home for Girls met at Trenton in the office of Governor Stokes, and decided to Increase the number of rooms In the new cottage to be erected from thirty to fifty, and to segregate the colored girls In this new cottage. Governor Stokes opposed building a cottage costing $45,000 for thirty girls. The managers finally agreed with the Governor, and the increase to the number of rooms was decided .upon. The cottage will be erected tidjifaU. .» Boating in Streets. An electrical storm burst at YineInqd In the afternoon, and so flooded the streets that pleasure parties In boats rode up and down the principal thoroughfares. The telephone and fire alarm systems were rendered: useless, and U»e barn of Peter Haughey was struck'by Hgbtplng and totally consumed lielfEa *r8 could be summoned. One hundred chickens were roasted In the blase. The Insurance on the barn expired tn May. The lots will be

about $1500.

Forty Yean a Militiaman.

service medal for grant John G. Boss, of the Second Regiment. The medal means that Sergeant Boss has been In the State military service for forty continuous years. This will be the first fortyyear continuous service medal issued to any one but an officer. Mystery in Death.

8POSTING BREVITIES. The New York Yacht Clnb made Itff tnnusl cruise. Alfred G. Vanderbilt took the honor* n a hunt at Newport. The Westchester C. C.'s polo teem won the Point Judith Cups. Sidle Mac won the $10,090 Empire Stale trotting stake at Buffalo Menus Bedell easily defeated Louis nettling to the ten-mile motor paced The Westchester C. C.'s second polo team defeated, Squadron A by * score >r mi «o 12. Klernn, the Australia! swam 500 meters to 7 minutes 18 2-0 seconds, near Stockholm, Sweden The prize-wincing French bulldog Felix wa* run over by an atgomoblle md died almost instantly ’ Golfers representing the Western Pennsylvania Association won the Olympic Cup on Chicago ilnka. Colonel John Jacob Aator'a yacht Nourmabal, to starting for the Astor Cups race at Newport, ran on the rocks. Deleree. a green trotter driven by D. (V. Maloney, of White Plains, won lu 1.09Y4 at the Poughkepeslo Grand Circuit meeting. Frank Kramer scored a victory over iver Lawson in the two-mlle chainylonsblp at Madison Square Garden, "ew York City. W. A. Lamed successfully defended She lawn tennis championship by de'eatlng Clarence Hobart to straight lets for the Longwood Cup. The Vanderbilt Cup Commission derided to hold the automobile race for !he Vanderbilt trophy orer the twenty‘ine mile‘course In Long Island. Tom Butler, who wa* hilled looping Uie loop to the West the other day. 1* the lad who was at one time the short distance cycle champion of thls c

1 educated at Wash

PERSONAL GOSSIP. Secretary Boot went to Labradot isblng. Dr. Horatio W. Parker Yale Musical School. Dr. W. G. Grace ts the most fan^ii rrlcketer in England. Sarasate. the great Spanish violinist, has a belief in talismans. Colonel Daniel 8. Lament left resld3ary bequests to his daughters. Congressman Frank L. Dickson Is extremely youthful to appearance. Dr. Joseph Spencer Kennard is to be knighted by the King of Italy at the oext levee. The late C. J. Hamiln. of Bnffalo, N. Y.. the veteran horseman, left an estate jf $1,548,000. . „ William Pinkney Whyte, former Governor of Maryland, celebrated his eighty-first birthday. Sir Anthony MncDonakL Under Secretary for Ireland, has undergone a serere surgical operation. Alfred de Rothschild, a member of the famous banking family, has a private circus at his country seat The Swedish decoration entitled 'Lltteris et Artlbni" has been awarded Oy King Oscar to Dr. John A. Enander. Alphonse Bertillon, the Inventor of the finger print system of Identifying criminals. Is described as a quiet modCharles Bouxel. lately professor of belles-lettres to the University of Honduras. was sent to the workhouse in New York. The late Speaker of the British House of Commons. Mr. Gully, on his elevation to the peerage, took the title it Viscount Selby. Colonel “Dick” Martin, who introduced in Parliament in 1822 an act for the protection of animals against cruelty. was the pioneer of such legislation.

PROMINENT PEOPLE. Mark Twain defines a dry dock as a thirsty physician. Tolstoi spends much of his time In roaming through the woods. Mr. Boosevelt la the first President »f the United States to attempt preaching. Sir William Laird Clowes, a wellknown English naval critic, historical and miscellaneous writer. Is dead. Sena tor* Sturgis, author of Maine's most drastic legislation for the enforcement of prohibition, announces that be Is not s total abstainer. Vincent d'lndy, the well-known French composer. Is coming here to conduct the Boston Symphony Orchestra during the coming season. The German Kaiser surprised President Butler. «f Columbia University, during their recent Interview, by his

VMa* Mo Owtii * In Trt

Onamery—Westvni -xtr» $ 20*<»$ 21 Fir*U 19>*ta 50 Slate dairy tub., firau.... ISVfr imitation emmet* . is ® Jtii Factory, third* 19 tints ... jj ® ntj nir.tMB. fall cream, laucr 10 ® 10« Ml ft Part akima, goofl -- •——— « <2 Part skim*, conn Full akims •Teraey—Fancy . HUte and Penn Western—Chula MAI Bean*—M*rrow. cheir. Medium, choice ' Pea, rijoior Bed kidney, choice White kidney Yellow eye Black turtle aoon Lama. Cal c . .. esrirs axd nrnaisp—*1 Apple*, Pippin, per bbi .. I 7S ft 3 00 Jersey, per b*akei . . 50 ft 75 HoeUeberriM, per qe ... 5ft 11 Moikmeluns. per b>./. 22- ft 1 25 Watermelon*, per 100 . 8 00 ft XI 00 Raspberries, per pi. ... 4 ® 10 Blackbem**, per qt 9ft 13 Pear he*, per bukrl . 50 ft 1 50 . Pear*, Kiefer, per bb! I 00 ft 2 50 Bartlett, per bbi 3 50 ft 1 50 Plums, per qt 3ft 5. urs pouL-rnr. Fowls, per lb -* ft 12 M Turkeys, per lb -* ft 12 Ducks, per pair 40 ft 80 (See*e, per pair 1 00 ft 1 25 Pigeons, per pair — ft 20 DRESSED POCLTUT.

Broiler*. Phil., per lb. Fowl*, per lb 8pnng ducks,' L. 1., per to

10VW

Squab*, per dozen 150 §2

„ HOPS.

Slate. 1904, choice 23 ft Medinm to prime 20 ft Pacific Cnast, 1904, choice.. 23 ft Old odds 9 ft

BAT AVD STRAW.

Hay. prime, per 100 ib 90 ft No. d. per MO lb 80 ft No. 2. per 100 lb 70 ft Clover mixed, per 100 R>. 60 ft Straw, long rye GC ft

lurnipa. per bb! 1 00 ft 1 25 Tomatoes, per box 20 ft 1 25 Egg plant, t*r bo; 40 ‘ ft GO Squash, per bbi 75 ft 1 25 Peas, per bag 60 ft 1 25 Peppers, .per box 20 ft 35 Lettuce, per basket 75-ftlOO Cabbages, per 100 4 00 ft 6'00 String beans, per basket... 75 ft 1 50 OnioS*. L. I.. per bbi lls ft 1 50 R Shore, per basket 00 ft 75 Jersey. |ier basket 50 ft 1 00 Celery, per doxen bunches. 15 ft SO Carrot*, per bbi: 1 50 ft 1 75 Beets, oer 100 bunches 75 ft 1 00 Cucumbers, per box 25 ft 40 Cucumber pickle.. i«r 1O0U. 1 00 A g 50 Lima bean*, per basket 100 ft 2 00 . Corn, per 103 CO ft 1 37 Cauliflower, per bbi ISO ft 3 00 Radishes, per 100 bnnche*.. — ft 75 Okra, per basket 100 ft 1 50 ocare. etc. Flour—Winter patents 4 50 ft 5 00 Spring patent*..' 5.50 ««6S Wheat. Ko. 1 N. Duluth... — ft 1 10U So. 2 red 88*A 8714 Cora, No. 2 white — ft 8H4 Oati. mixed 30 ft SOU” Clipped white 34 ft 35 L*rd, city 714ft 71f roc*. Beeves, city dressed.. Calves, city dressed . Country dressed ..

Lather Burbank, the plant wizard, •ays that children can be educated according to the same principles that he uses In the cultivation of plants. Prevalence of fellow fever will probably cause the President to divide his Southern tour into two parts, taking only Atlantic Coast States tn October. Gertrude Bloede, best known under her pen name of “Stuart Sterne.” died at Baldwin. L. L, after a long tltnesa. She was sixty yean old. having been born In Dresden. Saxony, In 1845. Mr. Cleveland has survived hts entire first cabinet, with the exception of Mr. Vllnt, and conttoncz to be. ta

of Women JournaUftz is 1 O'Connor, the wife of the . Parliament of that name.

FOB FARM MORTGAGES. What is Happening on the Once Tabooed Irrigated Lands. Wichita. Kan. — Mortgage* on Irrigated lands of the Western States are attracting attention from Investors more than ever before. The treasurer and farm loan manager of a leading Cincinnati life insurance company that has nearly $40,000,000 in farm loans, has been traveling orer tiie Irrigated portions of the West during the past three weeks Inspecting the offerings In this line. "We hare been placing money on farm loans many years." said he, "bat in the aider settled portions of the West the demand for money is very light and we are looking for new fields. The irrigated lands of Colorado and Utah are very attractive Investments, and I am mneb pleased with them. The new lairs' of Colorado by which permanency of the water supply Is assured gives a chance for the settler to secure a steady Income for his lifetime, and he will be able to meet his interest and principal.’'

Foreign Crop Report In Great Britain and Ireland the area under wheat is estimated at 1.800,000 acres. The area under wheat in Manitoba and the Northwest Territories Is ten per cent larger than ever before. In Australasia the crop is very promising. The outlook In Germany seemed fair. In Russia the crop prospects remained satisfactory. In Argentine there is a good crop .outlook. Ia Hungary the prospect Was considerably worse than In Jane.

Banana Supply Short With the supply et bananas reduced to less than half the usual amount bemse of the qaaraatine at XevF Or-