8' CLINKER PROOF I md TROUBLE PROOF tfs in the Grate / Here w see one of the amy important features of the / MODEL Boper — die most remarkable boiler for. Steam — ^ 7 HoTWmter heating. 5T3fe gnte-the wonderful triplex gate : t that meant no clinkers, no partly burned coal, no dead fires, no raking > or shaking, no dust through die hogse. All that is required is a slight touch to the handy ^ lever to keep die fire alive, bright and r-Wn, utilizing wtry particle of coal fed into the fire box. This is only one of the points of superiority of die MODEL Pnflfr -the boiler that has made hot air heating a thing of the past If yon ] -ould effect a saving in your coal ; have all parts of your house as , aim at early morning as at mid-day ; have a clean cellar ; have a cozy i ouse at all times, no matter how the wind blows ; — all at the feast ex- ' i ense and with minimum effort you should have a MODEL TWW in 1 our house— die easiest-to-manage, most practical and most economical < neater made. Can also be used for heating water for household purposes. , Any plumber or steam-fitter will tell you about it and explain its many advantages over all other « systems of heating. Do not come to any decision until you have seen the MODEL. 1
AND COMMENT SOME POINTS ON CAMPAI6N x Opinions nf Newspapers in Different sections of the Conn- - try na National Contest I Perhaps tb? strongest advocate in i the United States of Brvan's election i to the presidency, is the "Philadelphia i Record," hut it does not believe a < word it prints favoraMe to Bryan, 1 does not believe that Bryan will be elected and would undoubtedly Tie i chagrined and disnppointed, if by any c chance, Bryan should win out! Ia c proof of this quote from an issue of j the Record of April last in which the editor lis appealed toby a correspon- t dent for an expression on several a points, relating to the national cam- l paig'i. who a-ks replies to aiz ques- h tlon, of which 'he fourth wae, "Will c the Record "support Mr. Bryan if he E receives the overwhelming indorse- 2 ment of the next national convention." The answer was: f, "The Record will support Bfyan, if tl ,..v »vwv.u .. ..I I U1J aij, I i
be shall be put on a Democratic platform, though it does not consider him a full blooded Democrat. On» j •- ground of his weakness is a matter of mathematics. (See election returns, 1 1896. 1900.)", The sixth question was, "When ther I are summed up are the reasons not j compassed by the remark of a United States Senator in 1896, that 'He is too • honest?' " The answer of the editor of "The | Record" was, "No man can be too, honest It is not' doubt of Bryan's ; honesty that makes the people of tee ' United State* distrust him. It ia his dangerous tendencies. He is erratic. I He has kinks in hit bead. He can not be elected. " t ___ Speaking of the Republican party's. I'ccofo on legislation affect ing taxation [ an up-state paper says : "Tbe taxpayers have not as yet felt the full benefit of this increased revenue from the railroad, due to the fact" that all of the tax on the second-class property has not been paid owing to litigation, and none of the tax on < he : first-class property has been paid in ' time to make its distribution practicable. I This year, however, the taxpayers 1 will receive two years of the taxes on 1 the main stem of the railroads, that of 1906 and 1907. After deducting the one-half of one per cent, on the value j i«r cent, tne value
of the main stem to be reserved by the State for State uses, this ieaves for distribution a total of $4,785,376.46. ' The total local school tax of the entire State for this year ia $7, 142.174.33. ■0 that the distribution of the railroad moneys, which under the law must be used for current school expenses will : pay over aixtv per cent oT the local i ichool tax of the State and should re-, i dace the local tax rates corresponding- i ly. In Bome districts the sum re- 1 ceivea is sufficient to more than pay t the entire local school tax for current school expenses in the diatrilt. and in i such districts no local school tax should t be levied at alt These reduced tar i rates, due to the Increased taxes paid t by the jrailroada, will greatly benefit < every local taxpayer in New Jersey. < AS TO BRYAN i He talks in the morning and talks in ' the night. He talks when he's wrong and be talk. when he's right. I He talks at the office and talks in the ( hall, .1 He talks in the church and he talks at » the ball , He talks to the Senate and talks to t the House, A Bs folks, to the pengfc, a !ejl. C Mu i
mon souse; ..... j. He talks to the press and he talks to the crowd, ' j ' He talks and he talks with a voice long and loud. Like an old clapper mill, he'll aound to > the end, , - ' | ' And die disappointed for office and friend. I Jersey City Journal : Democratic leaders have been making claims and prophecies about Bryan carrying New Jersey and Democratic 1 ascendency in the Legislature, and ' the claims were so persistent that ' ^persons really thought there ' might he some grounds for the Demo- 1 cratic enthusiasm, but that was a mis- 1 take. There aren't any grounds. ' Democratic gains would mean Re- ^ publican losses ; that Is, if ttie Demo- c cratic total vote should materially in- ' it would have to be because Republicans had changed their politics. In the last Presidential election r there were 245,161 Republican voters ^ and 164,566 Democrats, therefore, at *• 40,298 Republican votes would f to be transferred to the Demo- <- cratic side if the State were to go for This would require at least per cent, of the .Republican votere. I Search was made in a general way evidence of this change. It was e thought that if such a large number of f* l mougni cast ii sucn a targe numDer oi
Republicans had changed their politics r they would be easily fonnd but the ■ j most systematic and exbauative effort f ! has failed to 4i (cover any evidence of , , the disaffection so much heralded by j Democratic newspapers and spell- | binders. J | One of the best abused men who ran ' j for office three years ago was Senator . Aaa T. Francis when he ran for Sheriff, but he pulled through. In noticing the fact that he has just drawn hia last ; grand jury, the Long Branch Record 1 ■ takes occasion .to call the attention of ' i his villifiera in the press and pulpit to 1 hia record, which calls for an apology ' j from them. The Record makes the 1 I assertion that "never in Monmuth ' County or in the State have there been ! I better juries drawn than those f> r 1 ! which Sheriff Francis is responsible. ' The jurors have been representative ( citizens of a higb class and have done ' their duty well. That ia stating not i an argument, but a generally conceded 1 fact." Will the Newark News take 1 auy stock" in that and apologize? As Chairman Nugent would say, "not on ' your life." — Camden Post Telegram. c Sheriff Francis has a number of ^ friends here by whom he ia highly es- 8 teemed. a o "The trouble with the Democratic ? party is, it ia a party of atatemen with e i out statesmanship, patriots without
■ patriotism, heroes without heroism. Their policy begets farmers without farming, laborers without labor, freemen without freedom. N "The Fifty-second Congress had a Democratic majority of 148, and if it redeemed a- single pledge, observed a single promise, kept a single command or discharged a single obligation made to the people of the United States I ' will quit the stump and retire from the canvass." "The Fifty -second Congnre was elected on retrenchmerrt and economy, the free coinage of silver and the re- , peal of the McKinley law. In the < matter of economy that Congress ex- j ceeded the Republican $ 1,000, 000, 000 ] Congress by $40,000,000. "—Senator T. ) P. Gore, Democrat, of Oklahoma, in a , speech delivered at Dallas, Texas, j in 1896. , t Republican mass meetings were i at Ocean City, Monday evening, c May. Tuesday evening, aod C Wiklwood. Wednesday evening. All a were great successes, the speakers a Hon. John J. Gardner, candidate E Congress; Hon. Joseph W. Sal us, e City, and Rev. Dr. ML W. of New York,, one of the most «
l eloqiwit epeakers erer heard in this i county. : . Aa election day approaches it becomes more jind more apparent that i all citizens should vote the Republican j ticket from top to bortora in order to I secure the prosperity of nation, state i and city. Many Democrats will vote for Gardner for Congress. They reason that if { they vote at all, they are compelled | to vote for a Republican and they pre- 1 fer staunch and reliable old John Gardner to Grubb, whom tbey think 1 merely trying to use them for his advancement to repudiate them afterward. They think that he ia likely to , throw down the Democratic party i just as readily as he did the Repubii- j party, when it suits his purpose, and, of course, they are right. i I As a proper comrliment to Congress- ' Gardner men of all parties should 1 join in Voting for him. It has always £ said that Cape May does not ap- 1 , predate its friends. A large vote for | , will show that it does. j e Republicans and Democrats, too. t who realize the urgency of electing Taft cannot overlook the necessity of 1 electing a Republican Congress to support him. The Republicans are pledged t
j to revise the tariff along the lines of ; protection to American labor and industries. This cannot be done unless ; the next Congress is Republican. In | voting for congressional candidates, therefore, the determining motive ' should be the tariff. Democratic can- 1 didates pledged to the Bryan politides are tied hand and foot to a diluted free ' trade proposition.— Jersey City Jour- 1 nal. Georgia has just joined the group of Democratic states which disfranchise the negro by imposing on him voting and registration teats that do not bear equally on the white voter. Here ia the list of commonwealths in which the negro does not get a fair deal aa an elector: Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida. Georgia, AlaMississippi and Louisiana. In and West Virginia the Democratic party is pledged to put the unequal system in force, so that r if those states ever become permanentDmocratic the negro will cease to '' a factor in their politics. h The states which have passed diB- a la*a have the sympathy of the Democratic organizations in E Tennessee, Oklahoma, ArkanMissouri, Delaware and Kentucky, ■nd were there to be a revival of Dem- ^ ocratic ascendancy in states like New K York, Indiana, Ohio and New Jersey F the determination of the South lo ^ - Wb^luliUBUWU Ui WIC OOUID IO
^ eliminate thu negro as a voter would be reinforced and heightened. Can any ^ negro citizen view such a menace with equanimity?— New York Tribune. ^ There are always ludicrous contrasts between the preaching and practice in ' every Democratic camjaign whether | national or locaL Here is one in the local Democratic arrangements. The : only trust official and trust promoter in this city ia in charge of the local ' Democratic campaign. Congressman Gardner saw veryac-j hive service in the Civil War and his I regiment had the record of being in over twenty important battles. The New Jersey Brigade went into 1 service 4.CC0 strong r.-vj at Chancel- 1 where Congressm .n Gardner ! severely wounit I uw- vi re only I of the original r.jmtier to answer ' the roil ca.'l. Among i>e engage | can be mentioned tli -. many j 8kinr.isr.es before Yorktow.i, lmttlea of Williamsburg, Bottoms Brioae, i' lir Oaks, two enzagementa, Seven Pine-. , seven days battles including Gimulale •nd M.lvem L»li, Br ston Station, : Bull liun. Frede; ickaburg, two ] and Chancellorvsille. During bis last term of service l.a I was offered a commission which he de-
clined from . financial standpoint Mbe tad no resources other, than his pay. The officers were>pending til armors than their pay and be, Gardner, minted to go to school when he returned home. He was only twenty-one ysaxs of age when he retired from the service aa Sergeant of Company F, 9th United States Veteran Volunteer Infantry, Much 81, 1866. "1 Bryan is beginning to. shout 'JFrcod." 1 They all do! it when they resize tbey 1 are on the toboggan. And. also, pern-' 1 ocratic leaders always judge others fay 1 Congressman Gardner is and always t has been s working man In the fullest i sense of the term. M his early days he was s seafaring man. He Went i through the Civil War es a worker when C most people were seeking to be Brigadier Generals instead . of faithful t soldiers in the ranks. He then worked e a carpenter. He has worked at farming more or less ever siqce and is yne of the hardest workers for the interests of the people ever sent to Congress. He knows whtt work ia ° •nd he knows boat to sympathetically for the interests q£ workers. . What do you think of Grubb wbo per- f nmiooyou iniMoi U'UDo who per-
~ taps never did a stroke of manual 7 tag labia me, l>ylHg m AfHWlVP I Iff people' by accusing Gardner of being against the interests of the working man ! ■ . RAD QUIT WORK = 6IVE UP IN DESPAIR Bestoredto Health By Vinol "I was sick, run-down and finally ■ j had to give up work. After trying a number of renTedies and several phyI i slclans. I was Just about ready to give i up In despair. I saw Vlnol adi vertlsed and decided to try It, and it has done more good for . me than all other meanB combined. It baa built me up and restored my strength until I now feel twenty years younger, and am able to attend to my work again as usual." Job Jeavons. Llnd street. Wheeling, W. Va. The reason Vlnol ie so successful In j such cases is because It contains tonic and all of the strengthening ! blood-making and body-building elements of cod liver oil, but no olL I Vlnol Is unexcelled as a strength i ! creator for old people, delicate children, , | weak, run-down persona, and after I sickness and Is the best known rem- , j edy for oougha. colds and bronchitis. , We return your money If Vlnol falls to give satisfaction. 1 For sale at MECRAY'S 1 PHARMACY '
,f ( Charles S. Scherer. the well known s merchant tailor, has remove'd hia ean tabliahment from the corner of Decatur and Washington streets, where he j has been established for several months _ and ia now located in the store fortnerg 'y occupied by him at 30^ Washington , street, where he is shoeing a floe line _ of goods. CASTOR I A For Irian ts and Children, ; Tti (bill You Hare Always Bought FISHING CREEK. Fran<?Bate fans recovered from hia' recent attack of lumbago. Master Edwin Cummings is recover- , ing from an attack of measles at the of hia grandparents, Mr. and , Mrs. J. C. Bate. Mrs Rietta Yearicks called on Mrs. Matthews at Cold Spring Thursday. Meadamaa S. Bate and Abigail . took dinner with Mr. and Albert Matthews At Cold Spring 1 Mr. and Mrs. John C. Bate are enio — - - onu mio. jumi v.. dbw ure en-
Id joying a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Jack 1 ,y Bate, New York.b Claude Yearicks was a recent Tisitor ' in the village. Mrs. Harry Fisher attended the fun- ' tg eral of her niece, Ruth Yearicks, Wed- ' n nesday of last week. ir Mr. and Mrs. Johnson and Mr. and , « Mrs. White drove to Cape May City e Tuesday. f ^ t The Shaw girls enjoyed riding in J | their pong-cart. M. I " Caleb Woolaon ia improving at this ! y • j writing we are pleased to state. n 3 Mrs. William Cummings and Mrs. a s William G. Essens, were calling on it e relations on Monday. p 3 1 Master Edwin Cummings of Cape fc - 1 May. has the measles at hia grand- - r mother's. Mra. John Bate. j Cape May Foint parties had better r 1 be careful" how tbey take things if they don't want to get in trouble ' Mrs. Joe Snyder, of.Coid Spring, and ijher graud children, |Marie, Levina and : j Gretta Buck, of Court House, called on relatives here on Friday last. Rumor ia that Mr. Reuben Foster's farm ii about to change into new Mra. Mary Bates is visiting her i brother, John Bates for a few days. Rumor says we will have Mrs. A.
• fatare in part of Mrs. Aaron Woolaon '8 1 Garner Hand. Of Burleigh, preached a fine sermon in the Chapel on 8anday t evening. • Mr -end Mr*. John Bites are visiting I relatives in New York for a few days. We understand a week or two eso two of our neighbors went to Trenton Flair end had bed im*- One loet his hat. The other lost his hosiery, and his shoes. " We hope tbey may find the thieves. Burdette Tomlin. of Killville. with «eT B. TomHn and Kre» Sereb Matbewe, called on Mrs. F. Bete. Aak tbem how they enjoyed their first auto ride Mrs. Frank Bate spent Stinky evenwith her sister, Mrs. K Tomlin at Spring. The Shew Bxtia. finiah+d their cranberry picking on Wednesday. The were pretty good this year. Si EMA Bertram Snyder, oar efficient and obliging dene, ia erecting a new boose, on his lot next to Wm. S challenger's. Mrs. Annie Hawn did some paperhanging for -Miss Widdie Hoffman at Cn.i n rr la.t <H. u k
j last week. R- T. Johnson ii much improved in health since recent his trip. * We consider the wheels of the school machinery are "well oiled'" under the efficient management of tbe Misses Douglass and McNeill. Mrs. Robert EL Hand visited her sister during the week. Mrs. Jacob Oox is at Cold Spring j caring for Eli Snyder, wjio is ill at the r home of his sister. Mrs. Mason. 1 ' A HEAHIf FJUULT~' "Our whole f«miiy ha« enjoyed good ' health since we began using Dr. King's New Life Pills, -three years ago," - savs L. A. Bartlet, of Rural Route 1, Guilford, Maine. They cleanse and tone the system in a genteel way that : does you goo a. 26c at All' Druggists. • COLD "SPRING. Norma Hildreth, of Cape May, took t advantage of the vacation, caused l-y I Teachers' Institute, for visiting among l relatives here. Sneppard Taylor took a load of Grangers to Diss Creek Tuesday to j attend an all day session of the Po- j Imona Grange. Eli Snyder, of Fishing Creek, has j brought to the home of hie eis ^ Mrs. David Mason, to be cared . r for during en illness of typhoid. ! ^ Marie and Iverna Buck, of Court 1 1 House, spent last w eek with their j j, grand parents. ' The school 'bus ia so lull as to be -t me svuuui uus is so mil as to oe P-
over-crowded. n Emily Thompson, of Cape May, ! spent Saturday and 8unday with her I c rand mother, Mrs. Emily Schellenger. j e Lucius Chambers, after a serious 8 illness.'is able to be about again. Howard Hoffman ,we regret to aay. | 1 ia at this writing, very ill of typhoid ; e fevei. A favorable turn in the disease I ia earnestly hoped for by hia many j frien-ia. It$has been suggested that garbage from the resorts be burned rather than need as food for the awinc. It ia feared | that much illness is due to this prac- ' tice. Mrs. Lois Mathis, of New Gretna, j N. J., visited'rtlativfcs during the past, week. Mrs. De Witt EUdredRe, of Norfolk, 1 , Va., is making a protracted stay . among relatives. Her daughter, . . Mabel, has assumed school duties while ] 1 here. Mrs. EL J. Connelly made a trip to C^pe May during the week. j Mrs. LindaTMcPherson read a paper , the Pomona Grange at Dias r Creek Tuesday which was well re- , ceived. The subject dealt with was t "The.Sunny Side of Farm Life." t Mrs. Millicent Garrison Howell via- t ited her aunt, Mra. B. Matthews, last week. Mrs. Spicer Harris, of Temple Col- j lege, Philadelphia, visited under the 1 c rental rmf Htirino- FmmHero' Waal, I t parental roof
Edna Weeks has beer, suffering from ! jaundice. Harry Snyder has been quite ill dur- i ing the past two weeks, but is alowiy regaining his health. Mrs. William Tomlin accompanied ! by her daughter Mary, called on Mra. i Schellenger during the week. Mrs. William Thompson dined with I relativea Wednesday. MISS MARY CHURCHSIDE j Mfss Mary Churchaide, aged 84 J years, died at fhe residence of her | nephew, J. F. Jacoby, on Columbia avenue, on Tuesday. She had been an for a considerable period. The were conveyed to Philadelphia ' interment. . 1
Person* havr hrm $hiim in! not do before, aod thai b fln way the gain b made. A certain amount of Sesh b neceeeary for health; If yon ** It you can* it SCOTT'S K EMULSION SadOkadvattacaMat ' I " m' '
^Mdd.ttMan.aaidtaaZ D fcarccnti to emm pastsac. aad nd 1— » ~Cei&&at ttindr AIW ml lb. tSJjT* e' 800TT* BOWNE, 409 IVto St, N*.Y«k . Interesting New Notes , ' ^ ' Continued from First Page day while patrolling the tracks beI tween Stone Harbor and Peermont. J His bodv was found in the bushes along the track, his head beaten in by I the handle of the maul he carried. Hia pockets were cut open and about $200 which the dead man was known to have had was missing. Jolianna had been employed by the railroad for ten yean and lived with his brother at the bridge at Avalon. He badjt wife and family in Italy. » C <• We are indebted to Mr. S. R. Morse, Curator of the State Museum] for a copy of the "Report of the New Jersey State Museum, for 1907," which a list of specimens received I the year and a report on the mammals of New Jersey, illustrated, j who visit Tren'on should not fail see the grooms devoted to tbe collections of the State Museum which are | on the third floor kin the State House. are verv infupnuHnr, ,mi jn.t,.. ! interesting
j tive and will give an idea of the nat- • j ural resources and life of the state rj difficult to obtain otherewise The • | museum has reached large proportions, B j bo much bo that it has outgrown its quarters and Curator Morse suggests • | in the report that "There should be a | j new building built especially for the 1 State Moaeum, Geological Survey and ' | kindred (departments" and this will | be self-evident to all who examine into 5 1 the matter. The -exhibite which have ' been made at the various worlds fairs { are also stored and cared for by the Curator, who prepares many of them, j belonging to his department and alI ways has charge of the State's educa- ' j tionai exhibits. He has won a great I deal of cemmendation for the skill shown in these matters at successive fairs and has secured for the State prominent and honorable place in^to' history of these great national and^B ternational exposition. The repbrta of tbe State . Museum form a valuable addition to the libraries of those who are interested in the natural history of the State, and are much sought after. H. Walker Hand, the enthusiastic naturalist of this city, receives credit in them for much valuable information furnished. < « « I Mrs. Ulysses Catlett, of WashingI was attacked on the streets of I thit city by a negro who attemnted to I attempted
„ j rob her of her puree. She st reamed i andjthe negro fled. The police later . | caught him and the Judge gave him . six months. •) V •) 1 ' Judge and Mrs. James M. E Hil- ■ j dreth will entertain at their bome over Friday, Saturday luid Sunday a house i party, composed of _ Supretrie Court 'justice and Mrs. Thomas W.^Trenchard, of BriJgeton ; Circuit Judge and Mrs. Allen B. Endicott, of Atlantic City ; aod Vice Chancellor and Mr. Edmund B. Learning. The most invigorating sport is bowl- ; inz. Finest equipment made, at ConBowling Alleys. Try it. tf
Falling Flair AscTt Hair Vigor tummiMj destrm tbe gtrrm that cause (aBtas hair. It nourishes the hair-(-1*. restores them to n*i Tbe stops
Dandruff Aid's Hab Vigor just^as proenptlr destroys tbe trace of dandruff itself, and keeps tbe scalp ckao and lo a h—t'-r condition. j
Does not Color the Hair We with yon to positively and distinctly understand that Aycr*t Hair j , Vigor doc* not affect tbe color of tbe hair, even to the sflghtcst degree. Persons wtt the whitest or the Bghtest and nod deficate biood tudrmxy use it fredy without having tbe hair nude a shade darker. , Show thk formula to yoar doctor. Ask fatal what be thlaha ef K. — ^ ^ wmm - '

