the echo - digifind-it.com · the ten commandments adapt. ed to hygiene. * 1, thou sbuulfttveno...

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THE ECHO LONG BRANCH, NEW JEJ pEY, THURSDAY, MAY 4 , 1905. Washington Letter. THE TEN COMMANDMENTS ADAPT. ED TO HYGIENE. * 1, Thou sbuUlfttveno other good bc« ford good health, Thotf sholt not | make unto thee any. other image oi goodness or likeness of. anything that is in heaven above, or that Is i in'thi | earth beneath, or that under the earthy 2.. -Thou shalt notbow down thyaeilj to any rules or observations SH comj imandments that interfere wi th ^healths sound body. • For Nature the water . ltfi eration of them, thatdisu be ing health unto thousands | M ^ '‘tmV-TBBuIiBrgottew»iinclent. .: ------Dr-C.. April 29 —Postmaster Cortelyou U »Jealous mistreqq, Visiting thep&ysl ' " ' , , ~ . "7 7 7 f cal iniqutties of the fathers upon the Bae inaugurated a new regime in the prosecution ol irauai ehildren unto the third and Tomlh gen-j in hisriepartment, if it continues to be conducted - on it -present lines, promises to prove “a terror to wrong-doers,■ -In'fact, that is the Postmaster General’s announced purposed T® bdgin with, the postmaster general issued instructions Hthe,Subdivision of his department to investigate every ,„junn on itsfaoe appeared to be conducting a fraudulent! |-? -bn-..n - j- as fast as they could be reached, .without waiting, fo W as has been custom with former admininistrations, for person who-had been eyictimised to file a complaint. I result has'been that a larger number of fraud orders | have been‘issued during the last month than a n y |j month in. the history of the department. With the reorgan- j hands,! them wlu> ____ioinmand ments. - 3. -Thou shalt uot,feak° the name of Nature, thy mothex, in vain fo violate her commandments, fpr _she will ■keep-hlm in health.. WhO— tranagressethi BRIGHT THOUGHTS From Bright Men—Interesting Items Con- cerning the fUsCO in Various Parts of the Ccbhfty~-Other Notes. QtJvernor Jim Vardanian of Missis- -i]>] ji is quoted as having said - that B otanother N eg ro sh all ever. :vb^dn^ that -t it i im regardless r of' his 'A ' VSN" •daman is not only a standing disgrace to the state he represents,.but to th^ wiiole civilized world.—Borland (Ore) Advocate.-1 -- ---------- 4r. Remember thy pbysiealbody to keep it well. Six days shalt tho it fig bor and do all thy work, but the enth day-is-tbe resting day of- Nature. In it thou shalt not do any work, nellh-; previous J §g thy brail! nor thy muscles, iud thv feet, nor any part, what-i f yi^iihk of ft j ud£e who will allow damages for the loss ofa college student in a railroad wreck ?—Xhis, a mati on the bench- in Illinois declares is rigid, .because, he says,rtbe college boy, in- istead of. being k help to ,his parents, is l only a financial burden, and, as a sequence bisjos* is a pecuniary fit. thy body.. For in six days’ iz&tion of thbpostoffice department the inspectors have been, vork the b0lly bowmeth tired and. gilaeed under the direot supvision of the posmaster general,^oodetiMjos^mn^eatton. Therefore,! irt the renth' day) ’heretofore, and inspectors realize that the evidences of their, vigilance come tb the personal notice ef Mr. lln'i is every invBntive to do thorough -work! Ir t hy body a nd -thy mind vigilance come to the personal notice of Mr. Cortelyou. so thut they m.y ffi • " »n<i v :T , , .. ami thy (lays long upon tho loncl.whieb. ___ .*.'<• — -....... j . - III ujai t sstnrc, thy norther, ljgtb given the ’ - 5. postmaster General hopes to de^elope this good work to an n,..u .bait not breath, bad at ^ ~ ,a .n t .hdl villt n.il-1 . him to Imhl H.e ‘' ' n " - - ‘ ”""m it ____ i:r;trirs dr the.officials of the law divi&jofa when an apparently , Sr Thou shalt not qvereak H 1 f J ‘ ~- objectionable adwrliw men I appears poutin’' uisly for a given: 'ruon ettai t not bear m«iace |H |r i , , l in . 1 - «"S 'S by the postal hutfrorities. , VJL- ~A11AL 1health both in mind abd tXJdy IB f e fc • Blit Po^lmdslu General Cortelyou lias not confined lu s ^ ^ B B p H |B j-.' 4 ^ ^ - ^ ^ , \ , i '.-bor'. fashionable dlnoere^ Mosto rofy. bthe aistake. nurealw Ithe^fllb Tkia is 'd tt otliere bg the judga ivf your worth. Study each <ifty --t< . a-ftiliy ingratiate yourself in the wood grace, of your employer’s ' ddnff idwncR and can-pin so that little, if any doubt can be entertained of your abil fh- to-discharge the- dntie. iintweed upon you. Doings of the Race. Andrew Carnegte has 'given 110,- 900 for the colored normal school ,ia Montgomery, Ala. The gft was ■ utred by President Fattens®,. who i* totv in Hew York. It will he used to build a library. >*r THE ANNUAL SESSION OF Kali' ery, Ala, mpnt sert 1 New jerrey Coofaeac* the A. M. E. 7ion Church Helu ki Camden 31 Closed Monday r,inhl Otto j.c lu }ro , um boat SBSSiono * Messing- of Montgtim- of the Sew Jersey Suimul. oafyrencajef i preach the commence-|tbe a . M R,ZlastehTuchchned.Mo»ctay WalFT night. The conference was wftl'Jife. tend throughftul tl icv important, measures BC UHttmtul lsrtareJt^eiOTfnSdh inltndel^ihnro^w’lfQt w.wc paswd. ' ■the Tuskegee Institute pay 21. Ur. ' C. I I ^^Biiosta, Ga,, is to delfverl | the commencement address on Thuiw-B|| day, May 28. The -academic and in-! ltishop A. Walters,presided over the dustrial exhibits planned for this year jconference,,!!: with ‘dignity and grape. Ipromise to he more comprehensive and l hi c no r< n , wn^ ,17 that could i,e [satisfactory than any previous year, fexpeoted'frdm a financial and religions . —o— jstand point., 1 hi ledlpl' were brf#er ■M ay l'Oth in the tilinton rametery j than evei before and in general *tat- nt Lancaster, S, C., will be unveiled °f the cbnrcbsirwfk tbwngbout ifao the-beautiful white-marble monument state »as t \ i llttr ' Tiic et ntc"r lift erected iu honor of Bishop Isom c. [washighly honoredWifh thefSnoiHire t ’iiutoii. distlngntehed Blshopj^-- 1A sir _0 __ ^ j Hood, J I. Clinton, f. Tt. Harris and d Any one traveling from Gastonia IB- 01,1 . ’ ■of the Star of Klott, J U‘ ttwg|>Mi general i m i . 1 > if Jacob’s ,,sisttj [ant secretary, Mi R. t'raukliii fiimnciot td Lfrii ■Miipris 5 mttm.'lH."'this State will be I d at. the Cotton Mill industry! |Thon »halt not COTflt thy naig|^| MTnrr~r~ . dmnin^B m paifaS to the issuange of frknd orders against concerns at>- frouoll.telked of4 >.nquete, nor »ny-o{ f •( d-Jjshonegt bumfidss. He has also instituted a crusade {the nervous diseases by which tie <n>^ ii.« oonSacting or «otm? u ,w nti io e lotteri*.| -this, work, ip wlijch the.postofflce department lms) in | 1 ® | violation.ofjhygienn.- S 3 Jumpi ied r>\ lack of to <pet uton Inn 1 other d ratiiBB lAtretisiiry deptirfmeiif and o f - Uio depart- - Thy'silver kpray Hiib held t Thi Hegm may sit in hi. wordy, feouiusils and discuss with loud enthus- itiisin and clenched fist the race prob- lem until the day. of doom, and he will !£nd that discussion will not solve it. (e volution is in well-directed work, ipled with1 that maiality of motive j^hich marks the aetd of a just mam :Thc opjsjrtunitiea now open must M a n l used to btri am "nwgi I ern Railroad'follows the South Fork the Quarterly W w Prof-A# river all tlie entire route and every ]kin*bead of fine edaeafiotMt‘ Qj tew miles a large and flourishing Cot- ment, Rev. W!, T, Coffee secretary1 ton Mill town apwailT.. ■church ■This-little river is the-Merrimac of t«*al agent of 1 .lyiiiimions theBoUth-ond indeed this immediate; Mrs. Bishop Smdtl section is the center of the great South-1 The a|>i>olinnn-nta.-'.yjgil ern Cotton Mill district. Gastonia | Monday night bj Bhtliop Walter, . haCgiowil ill A night hmii a tillage of; *ey City, A,' I’- Mfltor; 'I’renUm^ t>r. three hundred to a town of eleven | J- jW .Rf ihi-n-rniil—St:iv Ziim n"-"1"; y ,-^--4 >|fe;n«ek«ai|fi^ " q •lor; I nidi u Jt i I t IV’ifimS - -It-has fallen-to-tha-lot-of a smithem1 linBtoh. J; g I race journal to he the first of our pa- ,:"v-J - R- ^vMvkt.yiov, pere to actiuire a Mergenthaler lino-1^ H H i R«V,A 6 .- pVatters, B [ Asbury T ark, Kev. J. !> UMft; l^tre- -■ JW wood, Pi H. Rrew*i; Beeve] ttrvn- B | k 11 B. Black; Tmebrook,, }$tovf jtieufigo It COtes. KM Hank Rl-i ir snu toliH^, NBMMRHHPBHRRRHi i im u i itmtwa p jf,' Hianton,^ ^ j type The Richmond Planet Is the thrifty possessor of this . up-to-date printing machine, and has also install- ed a Century No. 1- two-revolution press, the whole costing $7,000. "Rich- mond AfEmAmericansspell fboorbss with a capital'P-—and rrioifle tlyeivi’in all their prais|ivprthV; niphs —E* mm {am . Galvin II1ill, . ltev. J. B. ifltiMIce. Already ralfift liave been obnducted -and ot tho^residence or Mrs. i-awsm# made, m lacom a, ban Francisco and m The affair was well p;ltroniwd and ^ ffih HO arrests effected 111 a grand suceess.JH|| -i'l-' 'L-’ ' • -re iw 'ii re'» V"' 1 -I1 t tfun Ilaiilas Cl - _ , . , taken to-the Monm^oth Memorial ^pW ^ftfcer'.pties -where lotteries ot their agencies are flour- pital Monday. She Is in the 'aennwiing tir information which has reached the post- ward 'yjfiiMi^febaftmei11 oi'the secret service men. The' men -thus gJ31-11 aH^ited |laim that they represented the Mexican I Jit- tlJ iHry and feat' the tickets seized were for a Mexican drawing, AI imMi s M o f lt service men are of the opinion that the con- 6i“ has^m quaiters in San Francisco! They claim tiiatM the pHiiting of-Hm alluring tickets took place in' that city. jSSfidltion to the efficient assistance rendered to the! -J ^efetofficAinapectoi- by tlie Se®et s-ervitc men.” who""tiut k Vs 5 sjiS?ppf‘ts ami aid in the arrests, the department of justice g§PP^'.-has isss^d instriu tions to the United States district attnL- ueyn, rvherever raids or arrests are made, lb render e\ery possible assistance to the representatives of the other de- ^ partments. Tbe co-operation Of the detectives of the two .'J departments and tlie lawyers of a third will in the i 'tuna tlon of the high offii ials, rentlet life niiiieai.ihle for tlie lr a f ||L dotter'y agents in this country and they are confident the HK§L-~- s wfiOfbe thoroughly eradicated within a short tins a- a V j: s'.'-tesnlt of the drastic course now being pel-sued. 1 \ itlmi the f. ; past few days the postOffice de.partmi.Tit lias, iiKireoyer,: issu- 'jgd. fraud orders'against ageiits of the German Stale ’Lottery I■ AndIHungamn Lottery, both of whieii appear to iiave been S ■? c ■ doing business in the Uttilieri St ates; ^^^^ft?!#A nother reform which Postmaster General Cortelyou is ^ i Siting On foot is epneerns political activity, by postniastei's H E.■ j i|ind Other eiripToyfes of tfl'fe'dt4pftrIm'eivf.' Althciiigh the law : and the civil sen-ice regnlatioiis ^ g j l^ ^ p a lific a l activity on tive-.-yiartiof the fedentl employees. jKist- ^H H H pSnstern in various ^sections 1 1a ve ~1 ieeti-i ii 1 .1 111 1a 1 1 i 1 1> I-wfiling to tlie postmaster general or his assistance for special ruh- llpfclgiA:: Hngs: in t-fieii; enses hepingfrif^^ofrftl^fe-te-i^'.e.iilto-jmweJaig-tiaife, ejp' struction of the»law than lias been general. M r .' ( 'ni-te] vm.i I ' xiow purposes to iiave prepared,.aiiTt«Rijt to" aB postal em* ployees n rirm lfir of im-triietiens * ti thi'- subji-e.i. i-lea.i-.l.v -hr- | 5 r :; tilling llie.e'rient to ivliii li they an- vniilled in eugage nr politics and partisan nnflcrtak-i ngs; - • -- " the Yalley club Avill ial for lhe ^enefit of the Second Bap-* ~ chureir,. next- Tuesday evening, 9 , at the residence of Mrs. Carrie kson^of Central avenue. Admis- sion fee Id cents. j S The annual convention of the state medical society wifl be held at the Hoi-. 1 y\vood. hotel at Long Branch on June 20th, 21st and22ti. • TWO LOTS foTsale near Jiamhgt<m Square. Ajiply at The oltice. . I huLmcht, i^Wsteiice; ai the man % ikO r:i,.imili;iii, i- must be able to give n jomi^ aeeout^^-Sf hiraselfeA-Da]las K | E*^re»p. p e icfuiutive people MfiiBtaDtlyl ^■beting their own affairs and al-1 vreys prying into the atfhirs of their rneighbpra, art appropriately called | ‘.rubber-necks.” They-readily beBd their necks to catch a word of gossip lor to see what their neighbors are dd | ing. The name of rubber neck fij I them nicely, Jiain^fo a'cjm&lTip'^L .......... .. •tp p « te r », bthre aiiil ‘MV, 'Aliliiiiilis^^--j |Poole on the siierifi‘’s staff of v the ^erV t^'om tV ftSiiort arWeasy. I tfiawlffl —The Detroit Infoimer. ' ? -trya ’ tandtol tff^j —o— Browninv’s poems to There is much satisfaction among the i —Hxchan*<. colored people of this city over the etc- >* * - ••• rflon of the school board which recent-1 - .............. ........................ f- ly promoted John Smith, a colored N E G R O M AW " ■■^toAh^osjttOT^^bea^clCT^^f^^^ PARENT HACE. the board. Mr, Smith has for some; filled the position of first clerk j PINE BROOK NOTES death of the seeretary of the board led; to hik proiinition The <hief <lerfi was elevated to the secretaryship and Mr. .Smit-1) l)(iing next iu— line,—-was given, the office of chief clerk, with the Oxford Srfon&.V From the New York Oloiler' :t " | A Omit half of the white i ,oe ur MlStb- ing more.tha n Negroes with jrbitc skfo. COlirOM', AvilO died. pCCClltly lit this j i.lmd policy -0241 ;..Uiei s.' K<1 na Bay of Ridgewood, mad iff ttip to' this place Monday a « WHy<ftla»fh H ick s sp e n t -Wednot if wc arc to bcHcve th c ,^ recent; di& j ( "very made at Oxlonl University, hi '111itirwill have tile eight! entlrcefitu^- tliere~ Was^ 5 e with many . siderable dist• nssion-aiifo^^^ sujierviriio alists as OBITUARY. pioritv to act as' secretary in th] JencG()f‘thatoffi6er,^^ [ As head clerk Mr j chargel)f¥; 1 urge .1 -Uliitude-flihiuinler aud from what is already known of the * bleached Negro [superior executive IHlityuMthis^^n- blackened white tlemaii, the school department rta d l congt;atulate itself* ^ being able 'to place this J JjiortiUit !W|cli, i)f‘ -its Woflvt . such j iiighly VtheiQhitttiiil ‘jeapahle inaiv . j Mr..Smi’ihiha.s proven hiftiself’T to . be ^ j Yi hi n ! j1 1f n irig d o; . Phoebe Richardson. retqrtied frOipa -trip 1 |hettfer the trbftC.t^ain"^1* '.'^5 the Afriwan The wcdght-' p r 1 I opinion seemed fcObe toward the form- | ler theory, and that the Negro was* | jjjljte ii original parent race,'froth Which the ' : v ■ ~| whites eventually devetoped'-fisi 'ivlfat j - in science are known as aphrte, If this ■w e r e true one would expect 'to find .» HBn* promoting considerable number of the white* |ns ohlv v rewarded a with all, or many,:d tlie negroid . Sjw Irtcra*hyos”irgiTfSS6 . he cuttarmes, except -ir. black * l.,n Ifivd it.—W. Va. revival of the .e ancient theories seems 1 to indicate that snch is the case to a Ikr —- more starring degree than any ono KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS HELD SOCIAL had imagined. Asrthe result of an ap- ^^^LAST^THURSDAT^ilGHT^^^^' plicationof some hew data, recently “ HtrtdSittlr M M fbf.rio . I'Adyocate Mi s . Hf-br-ccir 1lolnnd inmherinfcdnhm f A y,.i’v i,lt.asj.in-.niito‘Miovabio-sooml-imh.nshoil by OattofA acleuttata, Stat, w t- h.'l.i :ii lin* «>r Mr. unci Nail Petwifi yrltak '■ -,rTku5 of tho' 1 iWhgSre- to iH i i i f a / Mo mht vi: --As-Mtr.- Hollaml-,was ah untiring ill)d-.;zttaTpujfe P ^ iT W w im r l i ^ ^ rr^ ^ r ia r y ; -” hote English popinafaori.T-.shglfis: [iiiitiii h.v .III!' mimnliers or. .Senatorial " '» « lh»“ » P«romit are either Jiuro [imlge -\U. LI, Knifjhta of Pythl.. The | oe«rold ot partialiy tiegrmd,*’ wblle ta fsijiTals I i e i a a i i t u a i Negre rafis tihtto .per 1one ‘ortho’most enjoyable soelai events Anw pure “nesilridaifav bin if? rthv r.initMlit^'iteA'r-vUh^iajf'ffii; jdi.u.iakii^^i.utl;n:iift». .n.ttar«. j&'arkor—i.n.. " t J ------ Sunday LscJjouj slie will bo, greatly;' iniKseil. 1»7 tho toiyn of Reii Bank. , W h apparentlydiiicbpt- 1. ... ipi,., u,,i(i.iwMo p n .le re ,...eieHwg- -room “si mfMuI. isq.Km^- remarkahle, in. tact T 5 v S S l3 " i »«.s mm fJLrinrty- . m : her so i wo rrrlmMted tir fH^ "»•» ----- ----- \»,> .... 1 ;lii.i jiniiin ronin 1.1 Mr! K guson'» ' an epoch-tnSStlJg,iltscovoiy whteli w.itt ' 1« , u7i7i|ioh,m>l iin;me!wBs!Ki voh "up to ' “! ottoo "aHraot 1 the imosts- for their eniovjnenL The,! 0 * ve*tre for a novelfCl^olof _o«nte-_ NEW JERSEY PATENTS. '.-''..[.Granted thin wed 1A. Bnow tfe Co., I Washington, JL> . < ; SapUftl L- > nlti -^atopf -Engerrc ' Ilonrhonville, ^ J ersev ^.City, pressure reducing valve; Law- YOuce i*\ Braine, Newark, tire; \Iberl B. CoItOu, Newark,, invisible JacDig ^3|fonry Cobrow, Asbury Park,' §tay- v«d|;^lnm n shaft, or similar article] f Converse, Newark, plumb I Orange, S | ttdjuKtabl' •eikhlnK sighr ini Mrs. Richard | lltil.f-tniTI't-rllt Robert Mdmffilino;'FhfHihsluirir. warnJ J -damp i Jyil >H 0T.WIw l.'WUrl w^ry. pendants; Louis j {l’f lotti. NewiFrlurbathFs toner ;Rod erutkl M. Banger, Eai1 (Grange, Dental pliers I for shaping r•insps and halfv”*pOTfar 1 i . F o r .copy, o f any of above patents i send ten cents in postage stamps with ] idate of tbis oaioer to C. AvS dow A CJ o.. I dnrtm-Sua pgirr<vin~ Cline Spen- j inadequate- the crowd being so fteeve, Miss about 150 persons being present. I MrSv John | - <J.am-ost-flSSlBg-and dancing family ■ ! Bd> i Mis ; A lie. J. A. ®iepivU-bearers R. D. Llewellyn, huiHiirs n -Watts, James Strothers and W HJcks. The liody was plaeed in • Mor- ris’ teco ivi ngTgTOl^mW^fSTnBjB THE NEW TRADE MARK LAW. Marks will be sent free j ed in Trade Mark Protei Snow A l'ii.. Opposite HWpsL-esiofmeDts indulged lin and everybody expressed themselves tas having had-a good time. The gen-1 tlemen pit sen ted to each lauy a beauti- I fnl colored Faster egg as a souvenlre._i IChaneelior Commander A. W, Wil-.j lliams, entertained, the guests with >f Trade I many very pleasing selections from ! interest- 1 bis phonograph and the young folks ^ j was favored with high class dancing n music.' Refreshments : 'Ware; amounts Fo the statement that 50 per cent, of the white race are N^?roes, ex- ! ctqit for.their color. ■ Office, | Finger Mashed In Praitmg Pre«. Daniel Van Brunt, who is employed in the Long Branch News office and whn owiiv ;uui edits thf- U'ity .lourpH!. caught his hand in a printing prt»s last Friday and dhe of Jus desert, ante mashed, ’ The injured .dSnger >w«c Aresa^l apdMi Va»Uray|^u» > ; »> ,>* ’> : • ' -Fr.n;-.ii - device xpioaive'j Washington, D. < rinterment. • Washihgton, D> 1 broke up about 2 ;30 ‘a *tt-Ol ft

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Page 1: THE ECHO - digifind-it.com · THE TEN COMMANDMENTS ADAPT. ED TO HYGIENE. * 1, Thou sbuUlfttveno other good bc« ford good health, Thotf sholt not | make unto thee any. other image

THE ECHOLONG BRANCH, NEW JE J pEY , THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1905.

WashingtonLetter.

THE TEN COMMANDMENTS ADAPT.ED TO HYGIENE.

* 1, Thou sbuUlfttveno other good bc« ford good health, Thotf sholt not | m ake unto thee any. other image oi goodness or likeness of. anything that is in heaven above, or that Is i i n ' t h i | earth beneath, or that under the earthy

2.. -Thou shalt no tbow down thyaeilj to any ru les or observations SH comj

im andm ents that interfere wi th healths sound body. • For Nature

the water

. ltf i eration of them, tha td isu be ing health unto thousands

| M ^ ' ‘tmV-TBBuIiBrgottew»iinclent..:------Dr-C.. April 29 —Postmaster Cortelyou U »Jealous mistreqq, Visiting thep&ysl

' " ' • , , ~ . " 7 7 7 f cal iniqutties of the fathers upon theBae inaugurated a new regime in the prosecution ol irauai ehildren unto the third and Tomlh gen-j in hisriepartm ent, i f it continues to be conducted - on it -present lines, promises to prove “a terror to wrong-doers,■-In'fact, th a t is the Postmaster General’s announced purposed T® bdgin with, the postmaster general issued instructions H the,S ubd iv ision of his department to investigate every ,„ ju n n on itsfaoe appeared to be conducting a fraudulent!

|-? -bn-..n -j- as fast as they could be reached, .without waiting,fo W a s has been custom with former admininistrations, for

person who-had been eyictimised to file a complaint. I result has'been th a t a larger number of fraud orders |

have been‘issued during the last month than a n y | j month in. the history of the department. W ith the reorgan- j hands,!

them wlu> ____ioinmand

ments. -3. -Thou shalt uot,feak° the name of

Nature, thy mothex, in vain fo violate her commandments, fpr _she will ■keep-hlm in health.. WhO—tranagressethi

BRIGHTTHOUGHTS

From Bright Men—Interesting Items Con­cerning the fUsCO in Various Parts of

the Ccbhfty~-Other Notes. QtJvernor Jim Vardanian of Missis-

-i]>]ji is quoted as having said - that B otanother N eg ro sh all ever. :vb^dn^ tha t -t it i im regardless r of' his

'A ' VSN"•daman is not only a standing disgraceto the state he represents,.but to th^wiiole civilized w orld.—Borland (Ore) Advocate.-1 -- ----------

4r. Remember thy pb y siea lb o d y to keep it well. Six days shalt tho it f ig bor and do all thy w ork, but the enth day-is-tbe resting day of- Nature. In i t thou shalt not do a n y work, ne llh -;

previous J §g thy brail! nor thy muscles, iud thv feet, nor any part, what-i

f yi iihk of ft j ud£e who will allow damages for the loss of a col lege student in a railroad wreck ?—Xhis, a mati on the bench- in Illinois declares is rigid, .because, he says, rtbe college boy, in- istead of. being k help to ,his parents, is lonly a financial burden, and, as a sequence bisjos* is a pecuniary fit.

thy body.. For in six days’iz&tion of thbpostoffice department the inspectors have been, vork the b0lly bowmeth tired and. gilaeed under the direot supvision of the posmaster general,^oodetiMjos^mn^eatton. Therefore,!

ir t the renth' day)

’heretofore, and inspectors realize tha t the evidences of th e ir , vigilance come tb the personal notice ef Mr. l ln 'i is every invBntive to do thorough -work!

Ir t hy body a nd - thy m indvigilance come to the personal notice of Mr. Cortelyou. so thut they m.y ffi • " »n<i v

:T, , . . ■ ami thy (lays long upon tho loncl.whieb.___ .* .'< • — -....... j — . - II I u j a i t s s tn r c , thy norther, ljgtb given the

’ - 5 . postmaster General hopes to de^elope this good work to an n,..u .b a it not b rea th , bad at

^ ~ , a . n t .hdl v illt n.il-1. him to Imhl H.e ‘‘' ' n" - - ‘ ”""mit____ i:r ;trirs dr the.officials of th e law divi&jofa when an apparently , Sr Thou shalt not qvereak H 1f J ‘ ~- objectionable adwrliw men I appears poutin’' uisly for a given: 'ruon ettai t not bear m«iace| H | r i , , l in .1 - « " S ' S

b y t h e p o s t a l h u t f r o r i t i e s . , VJL- ~ A 11A L 1 health both in mind abd tXJdyI B f e fc • Blit Po^lmdslu General Cortelyou lias not confined l u s ^ ^ B B p H | Bj-.' 4 ^ - ^ ^ , \ , i '.-bor'. fashionable dlnoere^

Mosto rofy. b the

aistake.

nurealwIth e ^ f llb Tkia is 'd tt otliere bg the judga

ivf your worth. Study each <ifty --t<.a-ftiliy ingratiate yourself in the

wood grace, of your employer’s ' ddnff idwncR and can-pin so that little, if any doubt can be entertained of your abil fh- to-discharge the- dntie. iintweed upon you.

Doings of the Race.Andrew Carnegte has 'given 110 ,-

9 0 0 for the colored normal school , ia Montgomery, A la. T he g f t was ■ utred by President F a tten s® ,. who i* totv in Hew York. I t will h e used

to build a library. >*r

THE ANNUALSESSION OF

Kali' ery, Ala, mpnt sert

1 New jerrey Coofaeac* the A. M .E. 7ion Church Helu k i Camden 31

Closed Monday r,inhl■ Otto j .c lu }ro ,um boat SBSSiono *

Messin g - o f Montgtim- of the Sew Jersey Suim ul. oafyrencajefi preach the commence-|tbe a . M R,ZlastehTuchchned.Mo»ctay

WalFTnight. The conference was wftl'Jife. tend throughftul tl icv im portant, measures BC UHttmtul lsrtareJt^eiOTfnSdhin ltn d e l^ ih n ro ^ w ’lfQt w.wc pasw d. '

■the T uskegee Institute p a y 21. Ur. ' C. I I

^^Biiosta, Ga,, is to delfverl | the commencement address on Thuiw-B||day, May 28. The -academic and in - ! ltishop A. Walters,presided over thedustrial exhibits planned for this year j conference,,!!: with ‘dignity and grape. Ipromise to he more comprehensive and l hi c no r< n , wn ,17 that could i,e [satisfactory than any previous year, fexpeoted'frdm a financial and religions

. —o— j stand point., 1 hi ledlpl' were brf#er■May l'Oth in the tilinton rametery j than evei before and in general *tat- nt Lancaster, S, C., will be unveiled °f the cbnrcbsirwfk tbwngbout ifao the-beautiful white-marble monument state »as t \ i llttr ' Tiic et ntc"r lift erected iu honor of Bishop Isom c. [washighly honoredWifh thefSnoiHire t ’iiutoii. distlngntehed Blshopj --1A sir

_0__ j Hood, J I. Clinton, f. Tt. Harris and dAny one traveling from Gastonia IB- 01,1 . ’■of the Star of Klott, J U‘ ttwg|>Mi

general i m i. 1> if Jacob’s ,,sisttj [ ant secretary, Mi R. t'raukliii fiimnciot

td Lfrii■Miipris

5mttm.'lH."'this State will be I d at. the Cotton Mill industry!

|Thon »halt no t COTflt thy n a ig |^ |

■M T n rr~ r~ . — d m n in ^ B

m p a i f a S to th e issuange of frknd orders against concerns at>- frouoll.telked of4>.nquete, nor »ny-o{ f •( d-Jjshonegt bumfidss. H e has also instituted a crusade {the nervous diseases by which tie <n> i i . « oonSacting or «otm? u , w n t i io e lo tteri* .|-this, work, ip wlijch the.postofflce department lms) in | 1® | violation.ofjhygienn.-

S3 Jumpi ied r>\ lack of to < pet uton Inn 1 other d ratiiBB

lAtretisiiry deptirfmeiif and o f - Uio depart- - Thy'silver kpray Hiib held

t Thi Hegm may sit in hi. wordy, feouiusils and discuss with loud enthus- itiisin and clenched fist the race prob­lem until the day. of doom, and he will !£nd that discussion will not solve it.

(e volution is in well-directed work, ipled with1 that maiality of motive

j^hich marks the aetd of a just mam :Thc opjsjrtunitiea now open must

M a n l used to btri am "nwgi I

ern Railroad'follows the South Fork the Quarterly W w Prof-A# river all tlie entire route and every ] k in*bead of fine edaeafiotMt‘ Qj tew miles a large and flourishing Cot- ment, Rev. W!, T, Coffee secretary1 ton Mill town apwailT.. ■church■ This-little river is the-Merrimac of t«*al agent of 1 .lyiiiimions theBoUth-ond indeed this immediate; Mrs. Bishop Smdtl section is the center of the great South-1 The a|>i>olinnn-nta.-'.yjgil ern Cotton Mill district. Gastonia | Monday n igh t bj Bhtliop Walter, . haCgiowil ill A night hmii a tillage o f ; *ey City, A,' I’- Mfltor; 'I’renUm^ t>r. three hundred to a town of eleven | J- jW .Rfih i-n -rn i il— St:iv Ziim n "-"1"; y , -^--4 > |f e ; n « e k « a i | f i ^ "

— q • lor; I nidi u Jt i I t IV’ifimS- - It-has fallen-to-tha-lot-of a smithem1 linBtoh. J; g I race journal to he the first of our pa- ,:"v-J- R- ■ ^vMvkt.yiov,pere to actiuire a Mergenthaler lino-1 H H i R«V,A6.-

pVatters, B[ Asbury T a rk , Kev. J. !> UMft; l^tre- -■ JWwood, Pi H. Rrew*i; Beeve] ttrvn- B |k 11 B. B lack; Tmebrook,, } $ to v f jtieufigo It COtes. KM Hank Rl-i ir snu toliH ,

N BM M RHHPBHRRRHi i im u i itmtwa p jf , ' Hianton, j

type The Richmond Planet Is the thrifty possessor of this . up-to-date printing machine, and has also install­ed a Century No. 1- two-revolution press, the whole costing $7,000. "Rich­mond AfEmAmericans spell fboorbss with a capital'P-—and rrioifletlyeivi’ in all their prais|ivprthV;niphs —E* mm { a m . Galvin I I 1 ill, .

ltev. J. B.

ifltiMIce. A lready ralfift liave been obnducted -and ot tho residence or Mrs. i-awsm#m a d e , m l a c o m a , b a n F r a n c i s c o a n d m The affair was well p;ltroniwd and ^ ffih HO arrests effected 111 a grand suceess. JH||

-i'l-' 'L-’ ' • -re iw'ii re'» V"' 1 -I1’ t tfun Ilaiilas Cl— - _ , . , taken to-the Monm^oth Memorial

^ p W ^ ftfc e r '.p tie s -where lotteries ot their agencies are flour- pital Monday. She Is in the 'aennwiing tir information which has reached the post- ward

'yjfiiMi^febaftmei11 o i'the secret service men. The' men -thus gJ31-11 aH^ited |la im th a t they represented the Mexican I Jit- tlJ

iHry and fea t ' the tickets seized were for a Mexican drawing, AI imMi s M o f l t service men are of the opinion th a t the con- 6i“

h a s ^ m q u a ite r s in San Francisco! They claim t i ia tM the pHiiting of-Hm alluring tickets took place in' th a t city.

jSSfidltion to the efficient assistance rendered to the!- J

^efetofficAinapectoi- by tlie Se®et s-ervitc men.” who""tiut k Vs 5sjiS?ppf‘ts ami aid in the arrests, the department of justice

g § P P ^ '.-h a s isss^d instriu tions to th e United States d i s t r i c t attnL- ueyn, rvherever raids or arrests are made, lb render e\ery possible a s s i s t a n c e to the representatives of the other de-

^ partments. Tbe co-operation Of the detectives of t h e two. ' J departments and tlie lawyers of a third will in the i 'tuna

tlon of the high offii ials, rentlet life niiiieai.ihle for tlie l r a f | |L dotter'y agents in this country and they a r e confident the HK§L-~- s wfiOfbe thoroughly eradicated w ithin a short tins a- a

Vj: s'.'-tesn lt of the drastic course now being pel-sued. 1\ itlmi the f. ; p a s t f e w days the postOffice d e .p a r tm i.T it lias, iiKireoyer,: issu-

'jgd. fraud orders'against ageiits of the G e r m a n Stale ’Lottery I■ A ndIH ungam n Lottery, both of whieii appear to iiave been

S ■? c ■ doing business in the Uttilieri St ates;^ ^ ^ ^ f t? !# A n o th e r reform which Postmaster General Cortelyou is ^ i S i t in g On foot is epneerns political activity, by postniastei's

H E . ■ j i|ind Other eiripToyfes of tfl'fe'dt4pftrIm'eivf.' Althciiigh the law : and the civil sen-ice regnlatioiis

^ g j l ^ ^ p a l i f i c a l activity on tive-.-yiartiof the fedentl employees. jKist- ^ H H H p S n s te rn in various sections 11 a ve ~1 ieeti-i i i 1.111 • 11 a 11 i 1 1 > I- wfiling

to tlie postmaster general or his assistance for special ruh- llpfclgiA:: Hngs: in t-fieii; enses hepingfrif^^ofrftl^fe-te-i^'.e.iilto-jmweJaig-tiaife, e j p ' struction of the»law than lias been general. M r.' ( 'ni-te] vm.i

■ I ' xiow purposes to iiave prepared,.aiiTt«Rijt to" aB postal em* ployees n rirm lfir of im-triietiens *ti thi'- subji-e.i. i-lea.i-.l.v -hr-

| 5 r : ; tilling llie.e'rient to ivliii li they an- vniilled in eugage nrpolitics and partisan nnflcrtak-i ngs; - • - - "

the Yalley club Avill ial for lhe enefit of the Second Bap-* ~ chureir,. next- Tuesday evening, f§ 9, at the residence of Mrs. Carrie kson^of Central avenue. Admis­

sion fee Id cents. j S The annual convention of the state

medical society wifl be held at the Hoi-. 1 y\vood. hotel at Long Branch on June 20th, 21st and22ti. •

TWO LOTS foTsale near Jiamhgt<m Square. Ajiply at The oltice. . I

huLm cht, i^W steiice; ai the man %ikO

r:i,.imili;iii, i- must be able to give n jomi aeeout^^-Sf hiraselfeA-Da] las K | E* re»p.

p e icfuiutive people MfiiBtaDtlyl ^ ■ b e t in g their own affairs and al-1 vreys prying into the atfhirs of their rneighbpra, art appropriately called | ‘.rubber-necks.” They-readily beBd their necks to catch a w o rd of gossip

lo r to see what their neighbors are dd | ing. The name o f rubber neck fij I them nicely,

Jiain^fo a'cjm&lTip'^L .......... ..•t p p « t e r », bthre aiiil ‘MV, 'A liliiiiilis^^--j | Poole on the siierifi‘’s staff of v

the ^ e r V t^ 'o m tV f tS iio r t arW easy. I tfiawlffl—The Detroit Infoimer. ' ? -trya ’tandtol tff^ j

—o— Browninv’s poems to■ There is much satisfaction among the i —Hxchan*<. colored people o f this city over the etc- > * * - •••rflon of the school board which recent-1 - ...................................... ■ f -ly promoted John Smith, a colored N E G R O M A W " ■ ■ ^ t o A h ^ o s j t tO T ^ ^ b e a ^ c lC T ^ ^ f ^ ^ ^ P A R E N T H A C E .the board. Mr, Smith has for som e;

filled the position of first clerk j

P I N E B R O O K N O T E S

death of the seeretary of the board le d ; to hik proiinition The <hief < lerfi was elevated to the secretaryship and Mr. .Smit-1) l)(iing next iu—line,—-was given, the office of chief clerk, with the

Oxford Srfon&.V

From the New York Ol oiler' :t "| A Omit half o f the white i ,oe ur MlStb- ing more.tha n Negroes with jrb itc skfo.

COlirOM', AvilO died. pCCClltly lit this ji.lmd policy -0241 ;..Uie i

s.' K<1 na B a y o f R idgew ood, mad iff t t ip to' th is p la c e M onday a « WHy<ftla»fh H icks spent -Wednot

if wc arc to bcHcve t h c , ^ recent; di& j ( " v e ry m a d e a t O x lo n l U n iv e rs i ty , h i

'111itirw ill have tile eight! en tlrce fitu ^ - tliere~ Was5e w ith m a n y . s id e ra b le d is t• n s s io n - a i i f o ^ ^ ^

sujierviriio alists as

OBITUARY.

pioritv to act as' secretary in th] JencG()f‘thato ffi6er,^^[ As head clerk Mr j chargel)f¥; 1 urge .1

- U l i i t u d e - f l i h iu in l e r aud from what is already known of the * bleached Negro

[superior executive IHlityuM this^^n- blackened white tlemaii, the school department

r ta d l congt;atulate itself* being ■ able 'to place this JJjiortiUit !W|cli, i)f‘ -its Woflvt . suchj iiighly VtheiQhitttiiil ‘jeapahle inaiv . j Mr..Smi’ihiha.s proven hiftiself’Tto . be

j Yi hi n ! j 11 f n i rig d o;

. Phoebe Richardson.

retqrtied frOipa -trip 1

|hettfer the trbftC.t^ain"^1* '.'^5 the Afriwan The wcdght-' p r1

I opinion seemed fcO be toward the form- | le r theory, and that the Negro was* | j j j l j t e

ii original parent race,'froth Which the ' : v ■~| whites eventually devetoped'-fisi 'ivlfat j -

in science are know n as aphrte, I f this ■ w e r e true one would expect 'to find .»

H B n * promoting considerable num ber of the white*|ns ohlv v rewarded a w ith all, o r m any ,:d tlie negroid . S j wIrtcra*hyos”irgiTfSS6 . he cuttarm es, except -ir . black * l.,n Ifivd it.— W. Va. revival o f the .e ancient theories seems

1 to indicate that snch is the case to a Ikr — - more s ta rr in g degree than any ono

KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS HELD SOCIAL had imagined. Asrthe result of an ap- ^^^LA ST^TH U R SD A T^ilG H T^^^^' p licationof some hew data, recently

“ HtrtdSittlr M M fbf.rio . I'Adyocate

M i s . Hf-br-ccir 1 lolnnd inmherinfcdnhm f A y,.i’v i,lt.asj.in-.niito‘Miovabio-sooml-imh.nshoil by OattofA acleuttata, S ta t ,■ w t- h.'l.i :ii lin* «>r Mr. unci N ail P e tw ifi yrltak '■ -,rTku5 of th o '

1 iW h g S re -

to i H i i i f a / Mo mht vi: --As-M tr.- Hollaml-,was ah untiring ill)d-.;zttaTpujfe

P ^ iT W w i m r l i ^ ^ rr^ ^ r i a r y ; -” hote English popinafaori.T-.shglfis: [iiiitiii h.v .III!' mimnliers or. .Senatorial " '» « lh»“ » P«r om it are either J iu ro [imlge -\U. LI, Knifjhta of P y th l.. The | oe« rold o t pa rtia liy tiegrmd,*’ wblle tafsijiTals I i e i a a i i t u a i Negre rafis t ih tto .per1 one ‘ortho ’ most enjoyable soelai events A nw pure “ nesilrid a ifav bin

if? rthv r.in itM lit^ 'iteA 'r-vU h^ia jf'ffii;jdi.u.iakii^ i.utl;n:iift». .n.ttar«.

j&'arkor— i.n.. " t J ------SundayLscJjouj slie will bo, greatly;' iniKseil. 1 »7 tho toiyn of Reii Bank. , W h a p p a r e n t l y d i i i c b p t -

1....ipi,., u,,i(i.iwMo pn.lere,...eieHwg- -room “s i mfMuI. isq.Km^- remarkahle, in. ta c t

T 5 v S S f ® l3 " i »«.sm m fJLrinrty- . m :

her so i w o rrrlmMted t i r fH

"»•»----- ----- \»,> ....

1 ;lii.i jin iiin ronin 1.1 Mr! K g u s o n '» ' an epoch-tnSStlJg,iltscovoiy whteli w.itt ' 1 « , u7i7i|ioh,m>l iin;me!wBs!Ki voh "up t o ' “ ! ottoo "aHraot1 the imosts- for their eniovjnenL The,! 0 * ve*tre for a n o ve lfC l^o lo f _o«nte-_

NEW JERSEY PATENTS.

'.-''..[.Granted thin wed 1 A. Bnow tfe Co., I W ashington, JL>. <

; SapUftl L- > nlti-^atopf -Engerrc ' Ilonrhonville, J ersev

^.City, pressure reducing valve; Law- YOuce i*\ Braine, Newark, tire; \Iberl B . CoItOu, Newark,, invisible JacDig

^3|fonry Co brow, Asbury Park,' §tay- v « d |;^ ln m n shaft, or sim ilar article] f Converse, Newark, plum b

I Orange, S| ttdjuKtabl' •eikhlnK sig h r

ini Mrs. Richard

| lltil.f-tniT I't-rllt

Robert Mdmffilino;'FhfHihsluirir. warnJJ -damp i Jyil >H 0T.WIwl.'W Url w ^ ry . pendants; Louis j{ l ’f lotti. NewiFrlurbathFs toner ;Rod erutklM. Banger, Eai1 (Grange, Dental pliers

I for shaping r•insps and halfv”*pOTfar 1

i . For .copy, o f any of above patentsi send ten cents in postage stam ps with ]idate of tbis oaioer to C. AvS dow A CJo.. I

dnrtm -Sua

pgirr<vin~

Cline Spen- j inadequate- the crowd being so fteeve, Miss about 150 persons being present.

I MrSv John | - <J.am-ost-flSSlBg-and dancing

fam ily ■!Bd>

i Mis ; A lie.

■ J. A.®iepivU-bearersR. D. Llewellyn, huiHiirs n-Watts, James S trothers and W HJcks. The liody was plaeed in • Mor­ris’ tec o i v i ngTgTOl mW fSTnBjB

THE NEW TRADE MARK LAW.

M arks will be sent free j ed in Trade M ark Protei Snow A l'ii.. Opposite

H W p s L - e s i o f m e D t s indulged lin a n d everybody expressed themselves tas having had-a good time. The gen-1 tlemen p it sen ted to each lauy a beauti- I fnl colored Faster egg as a souvenlre._i

IChaneelior Commander A. W, Wil-.j lliams, enterta ined , the guests w ith

>f Trade I m any very pleasing selections from ! in te rest-1 bis phonograph and the young folks

^ j was favored with high class dancing n music.' Refreshments : 'Ware;

amounts Fo the statem ent that 50 per cent, o f the white race are N^?roes, ex-

! ctqit fo r.their color. ■

Office, |

Finger Mashed In Praitmg Pre«. Daniel Van Brunt, who is employed

in the Long Branch News office an dw hn owiiv ;uui e d its thf- U'ity .lourpH !.caught his hand in a printing prt»s las t Friday and dhe o f Jus desert, ante mashed, ’ The injured .dSnger > w«c Aresa^l apdM i V a » U ra y |^ u » > ; »>,>*

’>: • ' -Fr.n;-.ii - device xpioaive'j W ashington, D. < rin term en t. • Washihgton, D> 1 broke up about 2;30‘a * tt-Ol ft

Page 2: THE ECHO - digifind-it.com · THE TEN COMMANDMENTS ADAPT. ED TO HYGIENE. * 1, Thou sbuUlfttveno other good bc« ford good health, Thotf sholt not | make unto thee any. other image

Ml

Will be furnished on application, dopy 1 fbr advertlsememe should fee In the

t&aii 'W'ediiesdayj 9 Sjp-j m. of each week A-

W ^F ^ ^ W N B d K IP llO N RATES.One year. I .............| .. § . 1 . . . . . . f 1.00fcflx i t f ont os . .............. i p g | .60

i p ;Wilt MM E. ROCK 6 REUBEN 1. He WARD PROP'RS.

. . . T H U R S D A Y , MAY l, 1905. ~

W H il’a the matter with Uncle Ben ' TKllmanf We have not heard from

' Mm for quite a while.

SO M E T IM E L Y - A D V IC ETO F R A T E R N A L O R ­

G A N IZ A T IO N S .ifxom the Columbian.

Once in e .while it bo happens that wnartow minded person in a lodge «(0m insists on being the supreme jnonitor of that particular lodge,- and if an applicant applies for member- ship he dh she (the monitor) gets ex­ceedingly busy and proceeds to pick imaginary flaws in the habits and so­cial character of the proposed appli­cant This Same monitor always has two or three intimate friends who can easily be induced to cast the requisite number of black balls and the appli­cant is cast out with a stigma that clings to him as long as he lives, f i g 999 ease, out of 1,000 the man

ar woman who is made the victim of this feli( of the dark ages is better in

ievery. may than the persons posing as ' the "holier than thou guardians of the ntorals and general welfare of the lodge, Some one has said : ‘ One small matt can kick up more dust in one minute than one hundred big men can kick clown in one hour.” One uwrrOW minded, envious person in a lodge room ta n create more discon­tent and breed more trouble in one .meeting than one hundred ' faithful .hhfdwOrking members can ’counteract ip one hundred meetings. Tlhe. dead-

>i tofu'

|ill

8k&£& 'W

S'-'.

M ,

&

RED BANK..John Suiphin of Alexandria, V*.,

who is employed as eoachman at Avon 'which position pc has held for a num- ber of years, spent. Saturday and Sim-- day'-w ith1 Samuel Johnson . of Pearl street.~ William Bodine better known as “ Uncle Billie,” who has been living at Newark for the past|six -months, re­turned to Red Bank S a tu rd ay .. His wife Catherine and their daughter Mrs. Phoebe Sehanek, are both in a Newark hospital. Mr. Bodine is m aking his home with M rs. Phoebe fUbhardson of White street.

Edward Crum well of Deal Beach, spent Sunday with relatives in town.

Samuel Smock, who has been -ocGu - pylng the Reed 'Lanobouse on- Willow^ street, moved to William Reid’s pew bowe"OffBea"clrstreGtMTmdifyv^^==w=s=;ii

Samuel A. Johnson of Pearl..street,left for Avon where he. has' been em­ploy ednsoeachm an for the past fifteen years, Monday. Mr. Johnson is em­ployed by J . R Totten one of Tthe wealthiest men of that place.

Mrs. Alice Toombs and Miss Hattie TayJor of Em annei court-, were dele­gates to the Su

3h was held I Thursday. Rev. 1 is president of tbl M ary Jane Wed Union, T h e y e x i ^ ^ ly pleased witti the session. I

Rev J . F. Tunston pastor!Baptist church, will preach sermon next Sunday night J will be: The Stone With Sj Every person a t te n c H || requested to bring a I | Daniel Coach of I

CONSENT BY TELEPHONE.

r' school Union Lakewood last

4\ T ans ton, who

SO attended" the themselves high*

this e

Young Couple Receive Father’s Sanc­tion to Their M arriage

___ hyJEixe. , __j..Every day or two tin Nebraskd the tel \

ephone furnishes additional proof of its unquestionable righ t to pose as a ben­efactor of the w est Horse thieves have been traced and caught by its aid. Lives have been saved by the prompt visit of the physidian tha t it made possible. And only the other day it saved a wed* ding party from Ignominious failure, says the Nebraska State Journal.* A young couple of Oconto. Custer county, made the journey to Broken Bow one day recently to get a marriage license and to get married. Late in the afternoon they appeared a t the office of the county judge in search of the nec- esary papers*. When the necessary sta­tistics came to b e re c o rd e d th e bride was found-tp-be-only 16 years pld, and of course the judge refused to go-on with thea ffa lr . . . Cunid was for once appar­ently thwarted. But the old Baying that love will find a way was not to be dis­credited yet. •

There were telephones in Oconto, and the judge finally agreed to take the con­sent of the father of the bride to -her early marriage over the ’phone. By dint of two hour's’ effort the parent was reached, his verbal consent obtained, and the contract sealed. All credit for •whiefi is due, ofeourse, to the telephone.

; .................. • • ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ - • ■ - - • • • V’ « ’ •1 • 1 " 1 1 »» m f 11 r r i r r \ h i r r t r n r r r r r f r r p

I Caldwell Lawn MowersRED BANK ADVERTISEMENTS.

B e s t G e n t r a i L a w n O ra sR S e e d a t $ 3 .0 0 p e r b u s l p

I N G I M P L E M E N T S a t r i g h t p r ic e s .A l l k i n d s o f F A R M

| HENDRICKSON & APPLEGATE,E . F P .O 'N T S T R E E T , R E D B A N K , N E W J E R S E Y

adea-busiNew York las t Thtirsday. §§§ , -

Miss Mary E. Thoiiips6U7 Wbo Was a delegate to the New Jersey annual con­ference at Camden, returned home Tuesday.M f s s >Sa(lie tt e5T ^ m '~TreabK, Street.' who has been confined to her bed with sickness for. the past Awn weak s Afc'as removed to the Long Branch Memorial Hospital yesterday afternoon.

Mrs. Annie Anderson of JerseyxClty, is the guest of her mother Mrs. Hannah Johnson of Pearl street.

Samuel Carney of Beach street, has kept his bed the past week and is very weak. ', Mrs. Kittjye Jenkins, who had a bad

attack Of pleuricy as well as a broken ankle, j s recoveri ng.

Mrs Nannette Woodbul and he »rother Charles Anderson of

RUSSIAN PEASANT’S INCOME

The Average Earn ings of Agricul*. tu ra l Laborers Only Ten

Dollars a Year.

A. Russian correspondent , of the Lon­don Statist, vouched for by that journal .as “in a ’position tojhave the very best information,” asserts “ that the average revenue of a peasant in Russia Is only $10 a year, of which sum he has to pay $4.50 for the deeds of the government.” As the S tatist remar-ks,. that-f-may .well appear incredible to the ordinary read­er.” How a man can live on less than three ‘cents a ' day in Russia or in any ‘pther-ccdd- climate is not capable oi explanation. The strikers In Warsaw, the correspondent save. work 69 hours a week, and weavers there earn only $3.06, while other . Wegners get less, -They are not allowed to form unions, a very necessary restriction when the pay is so meager. Agricultural laborers re­ceive* very much, less pay. But the czar receives $12;000,000 annually, With fre t palaces and other things, and the grand dukes, etc;, are paid in proportion. Rus­sia will never have w hat may be called^ a settled government under such tions.

Principal Distinction. "Mamma, want is th e . -difference be­

tween a souvenir and a keepsake?” : “There isn’t much difference, dear.

If it’s a souvenir you pay more fur i t - ’ that is all.”-—Chicago TFIbune.

THE MAFIA FACE SLASH.

Cut in The Cheek T hat Is GKven to p People Who Refuse to Pay

Blackmail.

I The “Mafia cut” has been explained I to County Detective Phillips, of Lacka­wanna, by Joseph Collandro; who has made a general confession of the' work­ings of the Carbondale Mafia, says a

| Wilkesbarre (Pa.) repo rt Tbfs' c u H r a means taken by the society to mark a man who has aroused its ire by refusing to submit .to b laclynai 1.

It has been called the Mafia mark, the face slash, the. chop, and the sign, and

j Collandro says that every new member of the Mafia is Instructed how to Inflict

I t . Tbe lhstru c t^ wairfie declares. Pas- quale Cherreti, who is now in jail await­ing trla lw ith Beveralof, the mem hem of the society.

The cut is made with a rjazor down the cheek of a man from a point above the ear, over the cheek bone and dowh al­most to the corner of the mouth or nose. I t is too high on the face to be covered by whiskers, and while i t does not make

dangerous wound it leaves a lurid Which can easily be distinguished.

It Is made by one dfosh of a razor in- R ays Instead of Shots. L&teted by a man walking a t the side of

Attention was drawn some time ago | the victim, and can be done just as he Iby the Army and Navy G azet^^^JylB V ertakes and passes him. One quick, [method of representing a r t i l le i^ ^ re J J clean slash with a,sharp, razor and the

H W M & 0 & .....

............................................ . 1rtflMMM>I SEPARATE n r tSKIRTS U L 4

M A D E T O Y O U R O R D E R ,

FOR QNE DOLLARF r o m M a te r i a l s P u r c h a s e d a t t h e

DRY GOODS STORE OFJOSEPH SALZ,

RED BANK, - - NEW JERSEY.

\ R[FIMa A -»NJT

\ 1 1v w v

LJ, OIDAV

u)LIwlu. 111. ul llElt, 1\ .. - — wigisAiiE1 i /baTjEr iv»a— ' f!

f If?ported and Domestic Beers, Carbonated Waters, y

W 'WS ii

S»l. (Societies than all other causes combined. How many]

jhnocent persons have felt the stiiijr I and the cowardly stab in the dark be-1 cause some person had “heard” so and I so about them ? The highway robber] is a gentleman compared to the indi-1 vidual who cast a black ball for per-] sonal and spiteful reasons.:; Be charitable, be firaternal, and . itbffjB a l l things be honest Be ab- «o)utetv « lre ?6tl Are right before you 1 eaht ab ip llh to ll- Uoh’t forget your j

. bb^gati^fvF :);Let Mill who is without f trd t” ciiiVtlSj!3iij-' black ball.— Arner- ] Scan IlisuraWeeJournal. |

Strt. .Jennie W hite of jiow'urk. Who moved from Red Bank to that 'p lae^ kbott^two years ago, Yetnmed tb ’ Red ^ a» k Monday and will move in the house form erly occupied by Joshua Cooper on Leighton avenue.

Miss Dinee Drue of New Yoik City, I qpent Wednesday and T hursday in our I town. She was highly entertained I during her stay by-Mr; and Mrs; WIT-1 son Brown a t their home on Willow I street. . I

experimented with m iustrlfl^^_^ ray* being reflected upon the oBJ^L I These rays are visible to the troops! and to their leaders, as well as to the,] umpires, whose decisions are said thus | to be facilitated. The apparatus is used | from about ^000 to 3,000 yards.

TO FIND HIDDEN DOLLAR.

- A novel and unique entertainm ent will be given in Pilgrim Baptistchurchj Pearl sheet, Wednesday evening, May; 10th.1 A hidden dollar to be found, and fifteen, minutes 'w ill be spent in searching for tire hidden -coin. . The

W hat He’d Do.“Say, doc,” insinuated the man w hoj

was trying to get a little free medical!] advice, “supposing you had a case of! chronic dyspepsia, now; what’d you | consider the best course to pursueTu i

“Well, sir, i f -I had such a case, i f Bhould trea t it according to my pr6fes- | sionai ability, and then charge what l ‘| believed a fair fee. Do T make myself I plain?”—Cleveland Leader,

r U 6E OF UNION LABELS.fSMttatlons Prove T heir Value to the

tv; C aaee Of U nion lam .$he union label has a t all times been

-more or less a power, but never so much as ih the last few years has it made itself felt tha t Its enemies must needs copy i t Imitation Is the sin* cerest flqtterjr, they say, and its truth Is clearly demonstrated when the em­ployer who 'will not have the label be-

vcause he must pay more wages to get I t uses a* substitute or, in plainer lan- . guage, a forgery.---- -

Eveiy now and then we $ c k up a paper with an account in I t of some sweatshop cigarmaker being arrested and fined for counterfeiting the cigar- makers* lahfel. The garment workers w arn us against trademarks of certain drm s got up to resemble their label and

T cannot be detected except by a" close- ’ gcrutluy. There Is an association of

boss barbers in Chicago that issues a card Which Resembles the label of the

. Bailmrsi union ao thormigbly That lmn dreds are being deceived by it every

■’..day-_ I f the union men and Women would iearn to appreciate the strength of the fabet as Its enemies do there would b» no furthej use for strikes. This argu­ment has been offered time and time

n il lI tiC

___enll \□dtuldre

edThe

Ingenu ity of Jap*.J apanese soldiers alongrthe-Sha rlver

have shown their ingenuity in the utiliza.tion of an oversupply of rats. The rodents became a neat and the sol­diers set to work, to destroy them. Though destroyed, the rats were not7 wasted. The soldiers cured the rat skins and used them for e^r-flap.s, with the tails tied beneath the wearers’ chins; ----- . . - - ■

Vanished.

W ISE W IFE ’S S U R P R IS E S .kittle A ttentions W hich She Renders

H ake H arried Life a Com­plete Success.

The successful wife keeps on hand 'k little bomb in case "of need. She keeps a surprise tucked up her sleeve, where it can be fired on a moment’s notice, says, the Philadelphia Inquirer. Maybe it is a carnation^for his coat lapel; maybe it is his favorite pud­ding served extra; perhaps it is the baby’s picture framed for h is desk. Something she has ready, and when his affection needs jogging she does not hesitate to do the jogging.

Why, a bunch of yiqlets or, a 'k n o t of bright ribbon where it adds the most to the wife’s . charms almost makes a man forget that he is hungry. A Saucy pinch with the usual kiss or a merry chase away from the accus- tomed greeting will almost make a man forget that he is married to the adorable creature. A, stage w h isp r now and then and a twinkle,,of mis­chief are worth hours of cooing. The woman who* buries her rojfuishness on her ' wedding day robs^her home -of much of its happiness.

Retailer of H igh Grade Wines, Liquors, (etc.

SOLE AG EN T FOR AM ERICAN BREW ­ING CO.’S RO C H ESTER BEER.212 W. Front St., - Red Bank, New Jersey.’

’ TELEPHOKE NO. l £

FRANCIS WHITE & SON,

INSURANCE,Real Estate, Loans, Property; for Sale and to Rent.) Many Special Bargans in Business and Store Pro­perties, u Knickerbocker Building,

BROAD AND MONMOUTH STB

R ID BANK, NEW JERSEY.

A Surprise Tendered Miu Eliza Ferguson ■ at Her Her Home on Stput St. Mon­

day Night;Promise of the Resurrection.

BOXES OF SPANISH CEDAR. 4*

Those In Which Imported Cigars Are Packed Im p art a Delicate •

F lavor? 7

IF YOU AREIn need of High Grade Wines and

iLiiiuors call at our store- and inspect onr goods. We have all brands at reasonable

given at the residetme oJ' Mr . a ml Mrs | Augustus 1'ergu-sonis...-of—DW..:’8toU

| was given in honor of Mias, For

God has writteu the promiHe of the * i resurrection, riot in books alone, but.jp : r ’ evervy leaf in spring time.—Luther.

“The ofst cigar box^is made of Span-■"tFlr-xetlar;" "salil s ..lubacixmist.— “Ail~

our imported cigars come in Spanish cedar boxes. Look here.” ‘ 41-

fgu botF wTi tTi¥ aTOrfrning-.fho Ttlgh-#trH f5* An~yonr-beeume-oldev-ftOGUStom youft «;: self-to neglect. —

' I n 1 prom ises for the fu tu re yo ttf

cigars, says the Philadelphia Bulletin*'.! " and“tfie o(lor di ffQsedTln^U'gh"therBiioptiH I f t J t L K R i

7 ^ 7 7 ”. iwflg lindgsefirbahlvr^leaaaitt; ftn- odey-, halLjpf jobac.^o,. seeiuedTrif''

f 'l 'hee g ]nTTrT13T~spDuj i npi living gum us, singing and Unfit ±jgg, ami uvery one htul n good yoinalrl

t Mends are all-good to you;-------1 lis ten sister: if you marry money or

a title, that is all you ought to expect

i apices."“That spicy smell-^do you* notice it?”

-»said, the ideated 1 “Well, tha t is the

(Short by Prof, t The jolly trowrt

midnight. Tho

! When a man le sick and thinks h . ! is going to- die he is so badly scared that he Is not Crose.

If- -you -want- tflG_pleo.se tile hostess don’t accept all the invitations extend­ed by the boet and the children.

"•"smell o f'S ia , Spanleli- cedar. ~nrself t the i

delicate and subtle is it, it actually;. im proves the ir llayor. ;

“ if we put up our gotros ta-chcstV]- nut or. walnut or nine txryes. the tlavor j- of the M'ood impregnating life tobacco. |

Apple ,fcck, J5.>lllt-. .‘itl t o - T A p p l e - J a c k S.ynu bid, bottle. 81.25. Dellu-mxl KvC, Spei-itti 7.'it-., 81.00, 81.25 per bottle;

| H r , Rhine - fViues. Port. Muscatel, Tokay.

J . I. MONSKY,M im -o r to (> ;. R. Lami)" DIs'tilliilfc Co.,

S ' S T . . RED BANK, N. J .

' ......“ O H Y E S T -

B.L. LEONARD & CO.,- 170 M onraoiitli S t.. ‘ R ed B an k , X . J .

bel goods is increasing, it is nothing to w hat it should be. There are enflugh union men and women In this country to make the non unionist an impossibil­ity by demandlng the label on all goods th a t they.»qrciw■e.-TmalzterB■ Maga- dne.

a T unB ar it, Mai rRbj

‘'ergusc s-M es t

Slmln* Him Up.“Pardon me/* said the seedy looking

man "ho was laboring over a letter.tee betel writing room, “but dan you

tel! me how to spell ‘temporarily F ” / ’Certainly,” replied his shrewd neigh-

Anderson, Green, Bebe Allen, Her bert W iggihs, J ^ e o n a m 1 th . Will iag Sm ith , H ow ard T t o ^ e r e T ^ a s r i f f l ^

Ferguson, Jr .

• t . - V Oct. 1,1008. DayCIsmUniversity J“sotos LawSchool s i., cium. mmioh s u

w it, m w the old love letters.be wrote her let him write, her new ones.

A man has many advantages Over a i woman. A man can stop on the street and watch other-men work and make

S suggMSona, but #: woman e a n 't do l t , without being talked about—Atchliion i Globe.

T b . s . o . t o r ' . I ta l ia n .A prominent senator, who claims to

be rather more cultivated than some i of hia colleagues, prides himself on his ; knowledge of Italian. During a recent

i Hush lead to LL.M. sod J. D. Tottloo (ISO Btreet bootblacking stand and ai i r ®' e Ll j TOMPKINS Registnr got into the eeat directed the booth

Washington Soture. N.w York CH». * In his beet Italian to make haste, s was trying to catch a train.

he

| moderately good cigars are; pu t lo a; 1f box th a t is qu ite odorless and the f best cigars, are pu t ug in this aromatu?.

11 and costly box. -— '

Bar® W ild A n im al-

Y —

_ S 11.1IK'Vary r ic h . retfi&TKhb 1 e Trnt»

mals are the- uib oh fam ous and remote , co rne rs of Alaska and . British Qolum-

T b ia7 "They have produeed the huge

/ ■ ( Ic

1 Kadiak bear, the largest In the world;I tb l largest moose known, the sea otter I and the Alaskan mountain sheep. What

_Lis, thought, to be a new species of bear ,NEAT AND

ah inland white bear, not an albino of • th e Common -black or brown bear, but I apparently a true specie*. ARTISTIC

■ ...___'

c l , l i v e d , l u r e d an d K epa ired . Ove-rcoi

W IL L AN'SWKH lHW vV!,.

JOB PNINTINC.

Page 3: THE ECHO - digifind-it.com · THE TEN COMMANDMENTS ADAPT. ED TO HYGIENE. * 1, Thou sbuUlfttveno other good bc« ford good health, Thotf sholt not | make unto thee any. other image

Si THE MINIMUM WAGES.'■ (■ M W C M M I O f t f l A t i N K T

Labor should Bare Kore Thau a ■ P I ■ Hand to Month I.ivlna.'. 'A fair agreement means a fa ir (Jay’s ♦ork for n fa ir .day’s pay. Men who fry to use the brotherhood to hold their jobs when they are incapable, on-1 (Willing or too lazy to do a day’s work I in a -workmanlike manner are enemies to tlwl principles that unionism is .founded upon, and an organization I th a t will, perm it its strength to be I .used for such.'.purposes will eventual-1 ly come to grief.

The foregoing involves the principle I of fair dealing betWeten employers and I workmen and should enable labor or-1 ganlzatlons a t all. times to settle justly I §> both sides the numerous differences I tbatloonstantly arise, the stric t observ-1 ance of which has heeu and iWill. be I effective in Increasing wages and lm* I proving the condition of those repre-1 tented In any legitimate organization. I Ijlvery worthy brotherhood man be­lieves In the principle. No wise and-

‘hohorable employer will dispute its application to the conduct of his bush In ess ,'an d : tbe"day'®45‘-n6t--far-^dl»tM»t- When the foolish and arrogant em­ployer will be compelled to act upon it I or quit business.> Tbs eiviilzed world loves right and I Will do right as fas t as It learns what.1 right is. Character makes the man, .Whether -he works With Uls hands or wields the capital out o f which the I workingman’s wages are paid, and, I while experience proves th a t the more l

, possession of money Will not make I character, certain I t Is th a t no man I can build up. moral worth and useful-1 ness upon starvation wages. Any man whoso labor is considered w orth using I should bo paid enough to support him I and gradually improve him, This I

: Should he the minimum wage and I Should be exacted for every worker! whom a h employer bas shown a -will-1

.’ inguess to pu t to work. Above this .lowest grade of labor, .o f w bat kind I soever, the scale of efficiency rises to th a t of the most skilled, the most capa­ble, the ’most faithful, the most ener-l gotic, and the wage scale fo r suchl should rigfe proportionally. In no case, I However, should the wage be so lowl

■ as to prevent ffiie.-Workman’s emergence from a band to mouth condition oflife.

Unionism bas Its most useful and most righteous duty to perform In helping the least efficient to become more efficient and’ in protecting them during this progress. The abler and more skilled will b f offered even more than they ought to demand for their,

firless favored brethren V '.A . good, capable, honest an d indus­

trious employee should never have to depend on the wage scale o f any un­ion, b u t should always receive more if

W e believe th a t th e lowest of pgy to be considered fa ir for craftsm an who can secure work be kept up 10 a decent standard

Jiving by the union. the fact

M Y ST E R IE S o r ' N A TU R E.

t F te*

There i s o» b m m M tg b t to f t r a i t l a m young or the eld then ffiH M e r m r tn m and epanus— off nature, tha t transperenqf of ahw ee t f which late u» see th e beet and the woret in « m i , their strong and their week points; w ithout any effort at- conceal­m ent

Everybody admires the open heart­ed, the people who bee* nothing to conceal, and who do not try to oover . UP their faults and weaknesses. They j are, as a rule, larged hearted and ; magnanimous. They inspire love and j confidence, add, by their very, frank­ness and simplicity, Invite the same qualities In others.

Secretiveness repels as much as frankness attracts. There Is. .some­thing about the verylncllnatlon to con­ceal or cover up which arouses sus­picion and distrust. We cannot have tbo same confidence In people who possess this trait, n d m atter how good llirj may aeem to bo as In frnna, sunny natures. Dealing with these

3 |cIetive=people=tg'Tlte-traYellng “oii-n- stagecoach on a dark n l^ b t There la always a feeling of uncertainty. We may come put all r ig h t bu t there Is a. lurking fear of some pitfall or unknown danger ahead of us. We are uncomfortable because of the un­certainties. They may be all righ t fn d m ay deal squarely with us, bui the trouble; is tha t we are pot sure, and cannot tru st them. No matter

[how polite or gracious' s secretive per­son may; bo, we can never rid our­selves of tb« feeling th a t there Is a

I motive behind his gradbusriesa, and that he haa an ulterior purpose In view. He Is always more or less of an enigma, because be goes through life wearing a mask. H e endeavors,

I to bide every tra it tha t Is not favor- I able to himself. Never. If he can help li t , do we get a glimpBe o f tile real

lo n e of tile Many filing* Th*Vo Ready Explanndou.

Whatever opens up new doors qi windows for us intp (be world about us, whatever widens the -field of out Interests and . sympathies, bas some sort of value, says John Burroughs fin Country Life In America. But mud: y the so called nature, study opens n< new doors or vHudoHws. I t affords nc mental satisfaction or illumination 01 aoethetlc pleasure. I t is mainly po tte r lng w ith dry, unimportant facts and details.(krWersafte r you have merely analysed and .classified th in ? No mo know a man after having

LOVE IN JAPAN.Different Frr

Which Warm* Heart*i Tl)e boys and girls, the young men hnd young women of Japan do love %acl other, r*.suppose, but ene never sees the slightest shadow of evidence to prove i t The spirit of love does not

JU ST BREATHE.

w hen i

T H E TWO HEAPED SNAKE.

4 Boa t Raw «

Vorn Out Don’ t Take a Stim­ulant} Jaffit Breathe.

D on 't take a stimulant; ju s t breathe.This is the advice of a defector nrbo does not believe in the old medical policy of mystery, bu t who undertakes

_ _ philosophically to explain; to any pa* ....fiomidate the national life as it does tlsn t why such and such a remedy tells of’ a iw o liead ed snake w hich# jn America and the countries of Eu- should be beneficial, say« the Philn- tots In Egypt, and whenever the na» to p e .. Japan 's poets go BPt_ sing of duIptUa Telegraph. _ rator hasn 't seen the suake himself,'.1 ; her story Writers tell no tales of "W hen you are ‘let down,” ” contln- be to more or less disposed to assert

. tha t can thrill an Anglo-Saxon usd th is physician, "don’t take a cock- tha t there really to a suake w ith tw o

Every

m stnictor 1DeecptlTe Tall.

r nud then some traveler

leart, and her artists paint no pictures know the edeLwelH 1 W to p that can reach the Anglo-Saxon

matchless arbutu* “ aerstaudl,1S’ Now, considering aU this, bow can there be .such a thing as

■ ■ good old summer time’’- in. this land pf sunrise? And yet there to, and It Is

m e a s u r e d t o t n ^ h H u n S of thing, i ^specially delightful In Its way, too, to always Interesting. -What do they because the Japanese are a nation o f f t d o r IIow do they pay their way In -the Masters and picnickers, of nature lpv- piece of machinery, say a typewriter, rigid economy of nature? How do they I a"d world beautlflera and if one ; w hat do you do to make It run more b tv lv e? Why do the roots of onlJ ,0Be ei*ht ,“ “„l j , l ° * , ! w

through the ground -like

tall; Just breathe. P u t yiout finger on your pulse and get Its rhythm. Dur­ing > eight beets draw In the breath, breathing deep and tow and forcing the diaphragm down first, then filling the upper lungs. Then exhale this breath during four beats of. the pulse.

"Now, If you are working with

Everywhere, one goes the poor little | oil on it and gum and clog It all up.. . . . i women toddle meekly along behind the You clean It f irs t Sou can best cleanand unlttmr-agalh while the ? rs n h h ^ Jnetti who- stalk pompously ahead a . I the blood by-breathlng. The blood

If flSy owned the earth, one may al- : passes through-the lungs, and It needsjnoBr en joy gpneself. ...............1-and-expects to find plenty of fresh air'pUBFtffeVW ..I f it can't-floc^pei^Irapau, not even with a glance; one I fectly fresh air it needs more air vMiicb

Seldom sees a baby fondled—in fact, j ta not perfectly fresh) I t needs to be ill human tenderness or-expresslon of j cleaned by contact with the atr, mman tenderness is conspicuous by Its I “Once In awhile hold the lungs full .bsence, and I believe th a t is the one ■ of breath as long as you can without mpussable great gulf tha t Is fixed be* j expulsion. In doing this you are aim- ween us and this people. And yet the ; Ply cleaning the machine.. You are (people are happy, w ith a simple, sweet I cleaning tire blood. A t the sam e'tim e

L t , l k ? Why <t o . 1 happiness tha t to charmlug. That is you are giving tha t HtUe fillip tp . t t e Channel down Its tiunkT w hy (toy }• .• atmosDhere that mildly < action of the heari-and the nervous

i—,e bumblebee complain so -loudly i ^ &Tms but ^ever thrills the western {jystem which you thought you were [when working upon certain flowers r . ’ *» tb natinn’s love is ebneeh* I giving when you took the cocktail. In Why does the honeybee lore to . e tta , M ^ to e e ^ e r o r and th ^ h to ^ ! toe latter case you didn’t clean the ma-

thrust out in righ t __Whv is onr common fellow Mrcb

more often than any other tree planted upon a rock? Why do oaks o r chest* outs so often spring up whei\e a pi no or hemlock" forest has Ih'en cleared away? Why- does lightning so com* monly strike a hemlock tree or a pine or an oak and rarely or never a birch I Why does. the bolt sometimes scatter the free about and a t- others craiy plou

when .It atinga a person, whlto You simply ran It a Httle fasterwasp, the hornet and the bumblebee | ! £ j J j K } 5 sptolt, pa- , gummed It up a little more. You

i . .. . r. . . . . . . ...... ■ ..... i nor, crot !no sftiriA rpunltiS

be sufficient evidence th a t the Is competent and w orth the

a n d bo persssk 'shotdd b e admit* Wko p not ab le to eotam asd thd

Standard ra te and most assuredly not if he be so dishonest as to b e willing to take the b ay and tin willing to do the required work.W FLCW ERS IN M liX iou .

. How different th e man who comes out in the open, who has no secrets, who reveals his heart to us! and who is frank, broad and liberal! How quick* ly be wins our confidence! How we all love and tru st him! We forgive him for many a slip or weakness because

u r t r a lw a y s ready to confess bis faults aiid to make amends for them. If he hasbad -qua lities—they-arealw ayslD L sigh t and we are ready to make al­lowances for them. H is heart is sound and true; his sympathies are broad and active. The very qualities he possesses, —frankness and simplicity—are con­ducive to the growth of the highest manhood and womanhood.—Success.

t o act? How does tbc chimney swab j our ' can get the same results,“ thelow get tbo twigs It builds Its nc8t v i^ re h e n a io a because It Is empty of feeling of exhilaration and of accom-

■itb? From what, does the hornet comprehension, “ “ u*®11 1 “ W ot- the cock-make its paper? T o t ^ 5 “ toe same rime the machine

l have never been greatly Interested j ^ en anPa b4 v e men’1 even upon tbs--1 will steadily improve In lto running battlefield:—Eleanor Frankllo In Lea- quality. Breathe .the best air you a lie’s Weekly . ~ v , •'

DROWN 1 NO IS QUICK.

in spiders, but I have always wanted | to know how a certain spider managed to stretch her cable squarely across the road in the woods about my height from the ground.

SENTENCE SERMONS.

The 'aimless life c&hnbt be the end• life.

A rough diamond is Worth much pol tehed-dirtr-—

There is ho comfort where ho com­passion is.

Ib e y who put pleasure first are the lest to find I the muae no headway. He could not su it himself, he made a jumble of it, and each morning's installment

0

So P ltS tlfa l That Ttiey Are I'aed Fee Great Pablle Decoration*.

As a people the Mexicans a re very fond of flowers, and -every Tillage, town snd city has its* place where flowers ore sold, and many o f the larger places have extensive flower markets. Often the flowers brought to the m arket are wild specimens found la the woods and the fields, bu t all are beautiful. . In many of the smaller towns and villages the public paiks and the sidewalks of the streets a re used as places for the MUe of flowers. Everywhere they may be bought a t surprisingly low prices. Bo plentiful a re flowers they a re used for great public decorations. Some times whole parks and the fronts of buildings for many streets a re covered With floral decorations on a feast day.

The Mexican love of flowers has been Inherited from a long line of flower loving ancestors. More than a . thou­sand years ago the chief feature of Worship among the Toltecs Was the great floral offering which w as made to the fair god once a year and which lasted for a whole Mexican week. Dur­ing thU festival one of the features was a great floral procession, which traversed the principal streets of the City to the sound of musical instru­ments. g v e ry -o n » -In- thfr-p rocesaion carried flowers to lay upon the altar of the god or to place upon the steps or walls of his temple. In this procession were; princes, nobles, priests and com* monera. This floral festival was an expression of the love of nature for which the Toltecs were noted. . .Unlli they came into contact w ith the Az tecs la ter on in history they were pure­ly nature worshipers, and flowers and fruits formed the chief part of their offerings. So the Mexloan comes by bis love of flowers honestly.

jNGH there was a girl who answer*. “Wanted—Female Help” She was invited into the

kitchen and ; requested to s it tyon an Upholstered chair. Before answering any questions she announced that she bad unanimously adopted the following platform: ... \

Cbtt&*en.! "Tf;• titered more ’th a n two people' In fhfs'famITy' AT w o iff^ S T or me. I Will not do* washing and I ain’t golh* to stay where I -<an*t have all day 'Thursday off and g it through wi,th me work a t 7 o’clock, se I can have m e evenirfs to meself. I m ust have Sunday afternoons off, too,, and no ffwvepln’ nor porch, scrubbin’ nor-win* dow washhi’. If yon aiaft regular at your m eals the place w on't do fer me. and there’s only one kind of stove that I’ll cook on. I t costs $85. I'm not to answ er th e fron t door- bell- nor make beds nor tend the fires in .the winter, .and I m ust have gas in me room.” —

Not. long after th a t she was wooetl and won by a man who .had a job in a coal yard, and it came to pass in due tim e th a t she h a d re H for a family ;lp wbl sets of -twins and. so :Sbe/ a iso ■ scrubbed |I made b e d s H II

heads in.^Sgypt, he has beentold about i t by 'many reliable persona. M ■ Indeed; sometimes a traveler who - ' f[has actually caught a glimpse of the * j j l snake is likely to declare that it truly *Is two headed, for the serpent certainly; appears to be so When seen only by* ; ■

[chance.■ i t is only when the snake is actually, i [taken up and examined closely th a t th ir [truth Is revealed! (I The two headed snake ls nOt apoisom ous serpent. I t is only a boa cpn*; '5m»| stridor, and it is fairly common. But

l i t is so secretive th a t i t hides aw ay In I its sandy burrows almost constantly. ^ li t" is 8trangeiy formed in so f a r th a t ^I Its tail, instead of tapering off to a*I point as the ta ils of other snakes do/.I widens out into a bludgeon shape, Ulus’I making it took so utterly unlike a tofll. : V I that i t is almost impomibie thisku I i t is anything but a bead when the I snake is seen for only-a moment. - , v " - 4I T-o add to the deception, juggler*I catch these' boas and p a in t jaw * a n d . .I eyes on -the tall. - The work is so* earfe § I fully done tha t only a trained o h sm sp r I can distinguish the real head from* t e e I false. Thus the story of the two head!*I ed snake has obtained Wide d re u la - • v "

tlon, and has even crept into the books. . .I of otherwise accurate writers. ; „ 'I B u t the second “head” to only a tftl£ " ^I a fte r all.—Exchange, . -a ;' t , •. * '

'm m

•ated aboutito ry freq u m tly re professional divers who have I)t*eo able

m ain under water for over two m inutes is slily,,, said a doctorr- “No

remain under w ater tha t long

ied diver or n o t At Navarino,' where the sponge divers are reported to be able to remain under water three and four minutes,-te s ts were made re cently and resulted in conclusively proving th a t none-.J3f them remained down- as long as a minute and a h a l t

get and plenty of it, I t is as necessary as food: -ThO heart and lungs act- i n ­voluntarily....In hurried business lifethey, become too involuntary. In th a t case doh’t Take a codktaii; JtlHt breathe.”

written in a different mood. A t las t he [ j^inety seconds seems a veiy long time destroy ed it and began over agala, I fio tile watcher on shore, a u d i t to about wondering w hat wak toe m atter w ith ^ Umit ^ endurance under

, , |iw ater. At Ceylon, whore trine testaH e soon fojwd, o u t Meanwhile he *1*0■ w ade among the fam on.

found himself .nt an Inexplicable stoad- J , dtoBrg. lt wag aacertalnod t atUl in his acquaintance wlto J w u m f t j i j ^ ot them remained below to e a who seemed to avoid Uio- One <thm’rejmgg|fcg ,0 1 . be entered to e atndto whUe ehe w iy l ; ...posing, aftd, ‘ bar eyes fuel'ills

POINTED PARAGRAPHS.

volunteer too much' Informs-

e w aste wonder-

Room For IwproT. mowC..At a dinner given by Sir Joshuas

Reynolds, a t which were present Gar­rick, Johnson,. Fox and others, Dr~ Bernard, toe dean, of Derry, had sorted th a t after the age of forfy-flvtr,! a man does not improve. “1 differ w ith yon, sir." said Johnson. “A man- may Improve, and you younelf havA great room for Improvement” Tbw dean w as confounded and for to* In­stan t s ilen t Recovering himself, h e remarked, "On reflection I see no eauafr to a lte r my opinion, allies* I were to call It Improvement .fur a m aa to grow —Which, 1 allow, lie may—positive.’ rude and Insolent and save argum ent^

l song |question new to them. The she broke off in toe midst of to ask:

"To compose a heart breaking th in s like that did be have to have th e experience himself?"

"Not necessarily. I f be bad suffi­cient a rtistic1 Imagination he would get a b itte r perspective of the suffer­ing of another."

Don’’Hop.............—__,___-| W hat a lot of t i m e ^ R lng w hy, ; .■ pB tflh f Toureelf t o r the b ad t Is a difficult task—seldom done gracefully,

■ There are more talkers than think- I by brutality." rs. Here yon have tile .solution of j m

gossip.People whose reputation* depend

upon their clothes have to keep dreesed I up all toe time.

One of the greatest vlrtnes and the hardest is the moral courage to proc-

b a tJ lc e self denial. ■■ . .| Conrtew—eb, ,how th a t ' lubricate* j folded hta arms,"

minute, 4tnd other pife! And' good histure—wh t an asset | "Well, Ineyer! Wa* he not m ore S»v

lan»e and" s !' som e ‘folks i r e determined to

Folded ’ lit."Madge, H arry asked i

him last n igh t” " .‘ Oh, I am delighted,'' replied, hen-;■

friend. “How did It happen r "Well, you sec, he Jutoasked.m e.aadi

I said ’Yes,’ and then he stood op and.1 y S j

] tereeted than . to a t? . Whateven

1 n i t" or die, and as there a

> do th e cookii

ojher f lnldrc

*r0V![IjpiHftr >was the longest tii^ -iiidur* Wlthoot a fresh breath, fc ] rtse to toe Orst degree there are many i ,,‘lQn toe coast of England several } Who fall to the second.—Schoolmaster.years ago a diver, a trained d iver,one I ■ ...... *Cft toe best on -toe coast renowned for j The voice of Hxperirmce. his endurance, went down and Was [ The wedding is t o . occur soon, and

, pulled up so slowly when lie gave the ahe was- telling her mother about her .signal that be was under Water nbnut plans.tw * minutes and live seconds. H e.wav "W hen Fred Is out late a t n igh t" she

|S h e struck up a gay melody, but her N “ wn out o f. the water Insensible, Isold, “I shall not scold him. 1 shall face wa* thoughtful. Then Lier mood 1’Wlth blood flowing from bis nose and j try to-be reasonable. I to ln k le h a l l j changed, arid he .could not keep up 1'**™’. was on'J after long, nud , go so far as to keepwith her brilliant sallies. She ceased E«rduons work that hi* recovery from |lo r him and dared blin, half bewildered and |l tha effects of that two minute slay | setnrns.'Wholly charmed him. He decided th a t j'« ffito ^> le r was assured Drowning Is j Her mother w as silent she could flirt, most gloriously and ||* qmcsKenth. Even though-lb was ready for her, but by eveulag she r *■ kept out of the -lungs, laser was again uuapproachahle.V jl w**1 easue( In one minute and. c*

The next'm orning he ivas. called to krachm'doastMM In two, The the studio, where he found Joanna pos* l of people who have been ffigma

■ tag tou i-- rekusci tatedil

i, , ^ o ; W hir could l-do” U i i T r i A i l s ; -1!hls arm s when he folded them.” ’

W ILD B IL L 'S F IR S T F IG H T . .■

Be W u W oena**, to rt K lllce S lw e tj . ' th e MoKaedles GeB». .’v ’ iy?

Wild BUI, whose real name Jam es Hickok, first cams West tn I85T and drove an ox team on to* plalns for Ms,ore A Russell In 1800. He subft-'

I light "burning | qaentlJ engaged himself to to* ever* make him cheery when he ,and st"-*e company as stock tender end

( w as p u t in charge of a new stage st^>”v tion on Bock creek, near the old Mc^

| Kandjas station, which; w as generally 1 I known as Robbeis’ B oost This was -- [the headquarters for the McKandlas •

stakes untrue.•earthly hours and had no days off. It—t—“Rhe- cnirt-getritr-^-Hplp-T ict.T I ow*

erally 10 or 11 o’clock a t nighj- bridge.- T here has to be a mai1 anyway. ((Tbefore $ and sbe

ibe got the-day rs work tiorn often had to put-off 1 gooi

1 ...You kho\i g° "

v how the scene

deal of \ t e 'c n th e n mV ■iTilnV c . j ; i Money For the- Al

j-4be-A

r-ftn

“Don’t you think it would be a good idea to keep the light burning?” She persisted. ,

"Well, It might do very well for toe 8 CM’f a ^ “ad held togzffiagfirst mooto or so. But after you have : • lnceJth* MIssouri-Kansas border ru fr - paid a few gas bills you’ll probably I flan <Ja7? ..an^conclude tha t It will be ju s t as well their own way. A man named FlciliS; to pu t tlre'm atches where he can find ! an“ a.niimber one stage hand, was til* them and sure the light o u t”"-New superintendent He tried to buy eoC -York. Press,

the gloilamp

Moral.—Someth dependence are they cost.—Chlfe

SENTENCE SERMONS.

There is no short cut to happiness. Virtue Is not a m atter of vocabulary. Nothing succeeds' where the soul falls. A little, silence may save 'a loFolTsor*

The devices . of the daughters or rich men to make their own money are perfectly well known to the m ana­gers of women's exchanges, which are established solely to help poor w om et put their work on the market. One flay I was in- a n exchange when t wo* man, evidently a lady's maid, came in and registered some embroidery \m her own name. The superintend^ST took up the w$rk and in a casual way asked the supposed artist to show her how to do a particular Stitch. The woman

-pleaded lack of tim e:and went

SILENT FAMOUS MENHerdfim In Animal*,

j Animals are. eapable of should..call heroism in ma: field was a donkey, in anoth

hatIn <

their oand a number o superintendent, the McKandlas station; bnt, failing ist* (Ilia, he built" a new one hear by, putV ‘ ting young Hickok In charge, ftp to th a t time be bad never experienced' trouble with any one and was not like-

| have friction, especially with the

iter* Ha*e 1 nconge as T1 al o< Deeds a

I t is a curious and interesting fact that many of the world’s greatest men have been as sparing of words as they

m P ■ (HH afoot. They had a rope around tbff nd like a base* | ol^ Nllow’s neck, and occasionally they

|j— “'ould take i . few turns around th e

With God life and love are synouy*

pinwi

stories, I am. my deax A^piiuvitl ever, ' WASHINGTON IR

M artin Van Buren was secre■tote and alaieU , Irvme'a

'A sharp man always cuts his own fingers,

| Bcccntanw cannot tear up theT-ootr [ of the past______ __ :___ -

No man reaches the stage of triumph j but by the steps of trial.

TIih man who takes life ae a do-M3 ai ways finds It a bitter one.

j a man makes no particular progress I by patting himself on the back. - j •" V lrtw nw y 'be1‘ta"owBrrewgrd;-*but4f-

is not it8 ownadvertising a gent.Some men expect to acquire All their

good habits In their second childhood. - Chicago TObuoe -

Spiders.Spiders are not insects, as most peo*

pie think. The spider has eight legs, whereas an insect cannot have more than slx, T h e nervou8 sy>tem ls oon- structed on a totally different basis, and so are. the clfcvlatidn and respire* tion... The eyes are .different, the. in* sects having many compound .eyes and th e spider never' ih*Ting more than eight and all of them simple. Then a spider has no separate head, the bead and the thorax being fused together.

ba r r assed om>gu i H vlook in g. ‘‘ith o u g h t f^6A'e..b^n prQdlgarqfjdegds l___so,” said the superintendent. “She . I t is doubtful if there ever lived a brings her mistress’ w ork .. Her mis* jl.more taciturn man than Wallenstein, tress is the daughter of a very rich J the famous commander of the Austrian; man7~but" she 'has no pocEeT^money; andtW pQ or-thlng-ha fL-toclie a ttb e e x - change by aelilng her .work here- underher: m^a:iiaam^'^Ev»7> h^y%" Magv

CELEBRITIES THAT HAVE BEEN NOTED Through the first went a mastiff and i keeper, McKandlas, or hi&ac m icp pc n c wriRnQ made for the ass, sells ed him by the i f v .AO m lot no ot- WQHUb. , throat pulled hlm fluWn apd tha t so In the winter of 1800-61 McKandtax

suddenly that the donkey .looked like- j and hls nephew and four otoer men " ,y t0 bB uuigij ihe-horae In toe n e rH Dasaed ^ the new station on horse-

'* field leaped the hedge dividing the back‘ leadln* an old inan whotwo pastures, collared the dog — .g j^ jfo o t. Thev

' hls teeth, swung til;:t ball player caught him on toe foil— , . ,n ' w ith tilk heels. The mastiff was whisk* aorn of the «*ddle, make a run on tM

ed over, the hedge which jhe horse ropa and Jerk the old man down and hod Just crossed, anil the donkey was <lrag htm on the grrnjnd vmtli be wasleft*.In pence to ~ recover—from- Ills*-.-n®arly- dead. The only spile they had,wounds. against him was tha t be was a North.

------------------------- Methodist preacher. If Wild Bill wasin . occs.ioBKi w ith . anything h» was an abolitionist and.

"Why don’t you ever w an t to go to tree soils* and- loyal to the United t wedding?” snapped Mrs. Enpeck. States, The McKandlas crowd was. 'I don’t believe^you^ve"been to a wed- planning to make a raid on several sta*

irmy durlng the thirty yearsr w a r . I l is said of Wallenstciu tha t ire~"ilf gil ~in_'

a t mu^TTFfrirf Htiimee*,i"nnd^n

Aglas. tgred a word that wqa not absolutolj *inct "ntwessary, nor would he"permit ot * ' ~to speak in his presence more than essential Otw> of-iiis-ch amberla ins

itte n d e d j tions to secure the stock and go south.. - _j "No,” mildly -responded Mr. Enpeck, ‘ They told young Hickok they w ou ld , "I haven't. And,” he added softly to take th e stock. He, replied th a t he h im s e l f "1 arnimtlm** wish t badnlt j would h« thore — ,— ' - - -

coreets.”tufting hanged for- wakittg 1

; needless noise. His iWallens tel servants \

IT" with" -attended- that- one."—Philadelphia Bul- letin.

-— hen they returned late In the evcai- , lng tw o stopped a t the corral; tw o

"Why?"! MBecaU§h-liaate makes w York Ti.ii. s ------

. many mutes, not dar Sgio ' Ncv. | lips Jn_ hls presence,

loll nil.’ll by I ini mis. ;u

mg to ope and, he w Id tfi& ftnff

1 their

roachesMerely W lahc t to Know.

, "M iss Passay," he said, "there is

, went to the front and two to the b a c k . i door of the cabin or h u t JEEickok told

toera-bew ouldebeotthe first nm rv rb o r^ ______ ~ i to hls house were ban

to preserve him f-rom lrn-this yeav ance. In comparison '

-loaded by chains the least- disturb- with Wallenstein.'

MmMliiug’ I liflye fo r some tlnre wish-’ ■ ed to ask you.’’

"Oh,” she gasped, "I’m so glad—that

r took down the bars of the corraL The^ i elder McKandlas fired at Hickok, but

missed him. Hickok returned the -fire-Ppobably he never would h a ^ J I pointed secretary of the legation if it hpd not been for bis older brother, John T. Irving, judge qf the court of corn* mon pleas In New York -city in 1829. Washington Irying a sh^rt time before his appointment as secretary of lega­tion had received $15,000 for his “Co* Inmbus.” He immediately invested it In a-steam boat enterprise and lost iU: Judge Irving thought lt might be u good thing if be had something in the. shape o f a regular income* and he used hls influence to have him appointed

4 JflfBilBtar.ffffiNew York Tribune

-[-it " h a s - ''b ie c u iT ^ '^ '^ r 'l^ '^ g e h e s - w ou ld ■I have been a chatterbox and William j- the Silent a brtw ler.

But silence ief a*characteristic of many ' o f the world's most famous soldiers, i -Napoleon^ bpasted tha t in hls dealings , with men'he never wasted a word and.I made monosyllables answ er most- pur-': j poses. But nothing escaped his eyes,: and be could compress more w ithin , a

seutenee than most men could convey rTn a quarter of an bour. . ’ v|] The great Duke of Marlborough when ;

receiving reports from his generals; would produce hls watch aiid sav. “I

al?”—Chicago Record-Herald.

Bo.Passenger (oh ocean liner of toe fu-

tnre>—Will you please direct me to my stateroom? It** No. 727, . Clsrk— It's about half a mil* a f t Take trolley ear on starboard promenade.—Chicago Tribune.

Remember th a t yonr neighbor l t eon* Jtantly taking an inventory of your blessings and wondering w bat yon can possibly have' to Worry about.—Atchl-

a HUB H1H1 SUM s icK B M u n ra r- j toe heart. The next shot from Hickok

killed to* nephew, and the two fen a t : toe front door. Ju st then the two. a t j the becks door opened fir*. One shot I from a double barreled gun lodged | seven full grown buckshot into H ick- j ok’a right side and b re a s t two of wtocb ! entered hie lungs. The two men w h»- ; stopped a i the'corral came to toe. us- : slstance of the two men a t the houee.

Hickok was then in * hand to hand fight with four men.' He kUled three-

I of them-lri the house and wounded the ether so badly tha t be died <

will glv* you a minute,” —PTBgier^ PBBTWT HIBr aSTtStfRT

Page 4: THE ECHO - digifind-it.com · THE TEN COMMANDMENTS ADAPT. ED TO HYGIENE. * 1, Thou sbuUlfttveno other good bc« ford good health, Thotf sholt not | make unto thee any. other image

THE ECHO.—A$ ACTOR'S STORY.

e r o c k .'■ /R . J . - H O W A R D , '

FBOTflBS.1

TJStTBSDAY, WtAY; 4, 1905.

rftOM PROCTOR NEWS BUREAU.

a te s38T1I s

v.;piio.bTOR:a

"One of the times when J did not walk ln,” satd~an actor 'of a various pedestrian experience ; who was contributing his

• j share of the hard-luck stories a t a recent afler-the-show symposium, “was when I our dngei vanished, one bright Sunday

' morning, and left the company strand­ed in a little Iowa town of 6, coo or T.OOo Inhabitants.

"The angel had started off with us from Chicago, and I am bound to admit

j tha t he was gamer than the average. ! angel for a m atter Of threedism ai weeks

i nbrWABtc, -Ai.BA.Nv. of one-night stands, during, which w<■’ I f there Really is such an expression j had ‘played to capacity* in the shape o',

as "pain ting the' town red ," Mr. i \ : F. j teeming multitudes tha t often figured up S rpetpr itfuSt have tha t distinction, so W ? W.35 on counts of the houses. . ihr.Se New York City is concerned.; “The angel had not said anything ■New Y orh is 'a very la t te place, and i t ! about flagging the outfit, b u t we all feu

| that he couldn’t and wouldn’t .Stand the ' i gaff, as it were, much longer. - I i riot greatly s^rpTiBed'

| ;.when he.turned, u p m issi ng.o n t b aU bril**

takes si few pails ol punit and d u m b e r of men ;tcf mako a

; large impression <m it, so that those: fign^e t t o u t . mU?< Ap - ; lIaati summer-morning l epeakotyWherr

p a l a t e that when -there is hardly ax ; we gloomily piled-out p f - th e traffi and to turn a com er wiUiout seeing ].tn a d e ^ O W S o te l-B -^ h i^ U tl te - io w

. the?^rdotOr tfa rifl m^rk op walljT nf ! town Of fi.-flflO.nr 7 0nn_pfto.plft, - ■■■ buildings and on roofs and sides : of ;-' “The show had been advertised there, I houses, a very great deal o f pain t m u s t1 tort none of us had the rem otest idea that!

'V t S H & J w M and a. g rea t deal . i f t h e r e ^ f f i e were, for------r ' all of our expectation, o f It, too much I

H H H j stunned by the disappearancer of the h | angel to. care to speculate on '^ha tw asl I 0 *5eJ going to become of us, and especially

■ i enter- j as to how we were going to get back to ]^ s is .e s . W h e t theatrical proposi-, New York, whepe most of us-belonged [1 on. e y e r^ e se n te d In New Y ork City j and had sonje sort .of sh e lte r; [Y oung Men ahd W omen Mhk&-basLeveraktempted to d o ;w h a t Mr; H *’We just sa t downtobTFakrast in the | " Trouble for the 'Gov* * I

1 JPfpotor has done.' j H i estim ated tha t 1 hotel d inIng -roo^jrander^B B

; laborem ployod. Nor „ ha] to r stopped a t this, for in eve V6ad leading ihtoN ew Y ork i»een the announcement o f hi:

M r. Pri

O N E -F A M IL Y S E T T L E M E N T .Households in Ind ia Become Formid*'

| ab le by Accretion of Relations.

L ‘‘Ko one is a separata junit in Indip,/' says Edmund Russell, in Everybody’? Magazine. “The sons never leave thtv parental \ rooftree? All marry—man-

I. riage with them is as Girth and death;* inevitable—and their children are adde$ to the family. There are always widf

|owed S[dnts, other- grandparen ts—nP relative is .ever. left to sh ift for himself

| In India—so that households of 150 ar?I not uncommon. Add almost -an manyii ; servants, and we have some idea of lii)' ocunation and Cares of the mistress ofr

[such a home. The servants' quarter,a Surround the yard or 'compound, ' and thP ladiesl of the household care for therh

lasdld^the s tately dames of old Virgini? Jg^hA^plkh^atipn-liie before th§ wav* The p e a t zenana o f courtyards stgeteft: back'IiQ-fruTC'and |VegR^hja- nnd ihere are tunics or artificial-pondl^-

r.&'-ladies and-"children bathe in sg*_ irtusionr; b lossoming J ttCCS- Jdae abov!-U hedges tha t jcalpusly guard these sa* cred retreats, where a family may spoi1

private with freedom unknown 1 5 and suited U> their shy, pS e^ rp le

ful natures, tha to n ly unfold when wil ■ ■ otherij earing as little-to see t

d outside as I f be Been by■ ■

rwONDFRFuTi ..........................................l S S l f CASH G R O C W V ^ lCurly Hair Made Straight By

i* O li a fresh supply of Groce­ries, Provisions, fancy candies, calces, Sugar anfl Tobaccos at lowest cash Trices go to

FORD’S ORIGINAL OZONIZED OX MARROW

(Copyrighted)

THE STUDENTS OF RUSSIA-

11I P

“ there is over one; million square :yvalil a n d Sign, boards taken up §

! 4^# 'P r^ tipr Announcements, and cost of tliis th ing is enormous.— -

ir;> Tj^e j great improvem ents made . Y l^ P io o to r 's 28d street S S

• a re a|t^»etipg alm ost un iversal a t ^ t t^ 'k ^ e 'f tp n t- 'W tth its beautiful i popper canopy, fts ’im proved tic

^office’'faeftiiaes and i ts attracti ve no is the cause o f much corn mein

tion from both patrons and passers Mnfel^Prly ibe thcatre is in -the n <peVl‘9p,t fduipelor the gratifuiation %he;^leftsure of the audiences, the sc ^ r k '4®4dmo4teritipely-' new g fche- hn i':‘ihgfj fA^erids have ’been renm lifli.^ndV^f.,emirg<L. like all o f M|

theatres,v is- j^orfnctly I A dded to these features is t!i>

ernment.

r and pn

pm6nthfhl=how-ttip m e M ^ w S ^ 5g B B B |B B B B B B P B [B j[B B B Ipaid far by tBS angellesa organ ize tlp . l There are more than ISOO Btud'eatal but not-the less-glad and thankful to I the tThivefslty of Moscow, nearly 4 0(

I . . _- ____ _____- In tha-IlnLvarHity.nR gtv Eet-eraburg| "■K'ell, there was along, uncertain day U ,a6o; at- Kiev The_attentlance',atM ahead of us, and none of us cared partlc tTuUersltiee of "Kharkow, Dorpat, Wai ularly to be compelled to engage 1n Sun- | saw, Odessa and Kasan a \ crages abm

____ ;=day th ink ing which Is, a t best, sad sort fT.iOO sludeSii¥i>iece anil n io r e a i i l l iI new | of work In one-night stands, go, when eral smaller institutions of. high, leket one of the men suggested th a t t i e whole ucation In ptHer cities. Altogethl Bor-1 outfit go to church the suggestion was universities of Russia are eduJ lida- 1 reoelved with instant applause ~ nhnnt w l th y . I " "W e all togged out In the best tha t we j a lm o s ttl no; t | had left and sallied off, bitthaiv egSugb [SSSE C s]

nj on the surface for jglks whose n earu ptBsTtoTsi ■ i »ere really heavy, -for the nearest empire's!

|°0” -1 church. ^ : r ; r gjia nu-tMt-n g- j -—"J. don1 t k'npw w hat aori-of -churcli R j S» eoiil Ivat- was—of what denomination: l mean—'1 need of LwM .j.bat,I-do-h now th a t t hey trea ted ns t'^rV I trial','Ban. j kindly, considering th a t we were j tt&r'y. Til nost strangers and certainly not prosperous-1 standiaj Ever i looking actor folk In hard luck. T-befprogreJ Iwis j lsh e r gava ns good seats away up- In li ia v E ta n JH

f a i is o resontftm ! tro,n t- A” h oa each out with a hymnal, H V c t the students arg always a sour!I , -,?• | S | And quite won us by the kindly„attent-Lot-uucaftiusbs aii(l-ofteni)f“gTaveaDxiet ?

‘ . P. . ' UOn he bestpwed upon U8' to the Imperial court a n d ih e m in istep^Unices in New i ork, and the sp lon - , “Mow, one of the strong features of l of the czar. They are generally very aj t

.y | l^ tronago attests universal apjire- j our show was onr Quartette. I t was I vanced in their vlews. only a few, ■ I ^toPOseiL of two men and two women, pdratlvoly, siding with the reactionap 1

\R lF f Pgbgtor's beautilnl vaudeville I They all had very sweet voices, IndeeiL j imperial princes and their retainers. ] theatre id S ew ark . w fifeh has since its | “ A tllelr tonea blended beautifully. 9 \ -------- ------- ------- -

a o o lhodtstW uO n o fb ei^ 1 times on tha t trip | H A S M U L E -F O O T E D j H O G S .

| .w♦ Bend ppstal or'express money o?de? Please ♦ ♦

♦ __________________O ZO XIZF.B O X M A B K O W CO,, * *

i qL J ,«ly e W abash A ve ., Chicago, IUiools.1

WATTS SMITH,

1 L i b e r t y S t „ I x in g B r a n c h , k J . |

• M M W t M M N M N M M N Ip * * ' ......................................................... ..................................................................... ......ADVERTISE YOUR

— W A N T S I N —

i THE ECHO,I I LO-VG BIJANCU,- - . , . ,

# - ,r u.^,«u. o r V., t/u iuagu , tillUOlS. W

>♦♦♦♦♦ ♦'>»<Yb «ae»y » y e i t e e e e ♦ * ♦ * »♦ ♦ ♦ •♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ « ♦ » ♦ ♦ » ♦ » ♦ » ♦♦»»♦♦♦♦>»» » ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ « ♦ » ♦ » « ♦ ♦ ♦ &

I JACOB GASSMAN 11 3 -1 7 L IB ER TY ST.,

| LONG BRAN CH , - NEW JER SEY, f '

N . J .

PATENTS

-• ‘.g iv e n in N eu Y«n-k. M r. T im

tj'H ago.v Neec 1 a il rnuUi uf lb ce?- s irc n g th ( sorve-the &tat(

tioua Is the government of th ed ue,ated-m&n:lt6-fea4-fhg iudu;

■ of the couutTy that, notw itt |i ts nerB'eniiHrtri- o f pnllflAnil Zj

-iw -sttito ts ; i t ehcoufqges th ®

5rawiCUorplioto fo?e?Ert searcfSTd -ee copyright*, etc., |N ALL COUNTRIES. mousy ami often the patent. ^

Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.

WA3HINGTOPT, C

'm ml i p s ? St«i-k•of-WiiifiF!;'t Ognacs, Whiskies, Brandies,,etc;'!

I THE MATHUSHEk I § 6 SON

g lA itoly J rrRfaQaais..totLi«k». ami Pure Liqu^i^"iFor M ulii'al Purposes.. • '

, •*<*S»*1«i,»d«adSreaikW ifefelf listen to the mdilow singlpg ot that I , -wiflirBemarkable Tladei-

r ^b^W -Years' a g ^ ' -haW | “W dl,- when the m inister gave out t i e on .any week, clay hymn the quartette members; who.hap-

afternoon or evening. W hetlier the pened to be standing right together, sum m er shh fhines w ann, o r t b ^ win-' I looked a t eaeh other, and then ’ they

’f- 'Yter 4 1*fd bloW^kAMij tb is 'I jp m e___: ^ fthff good hfieer has remained open I for l i ' T f e e o f ^ N ewark’s amiiso-

Y4 f|»iibtKc* The audiences “ kliAY^aPivays - beejf distinguished for

class aiid qftlok apprecia- and nmny of the stars have been

jf i^M srk iloct tbeyv have never 'V>:‘ ; seeii morer^appreciative .audiences in

vlile theatre in this country.^Y hr-the spring and sum m er season M r.

R r^ to r ’ s book logs are sim ply wondgrr ^ 'iQ ie '-^a^ and character of the

1" | War feattires engaged ., He has rhacle H T a p o in t never to diminish. the*eost of

^ fp : his -Newark b j» sf and has aT«o glvniLh^ iS astiW tions that in the m atter c»f erea-

.^.'tlttre^cotaforts, such.as ice wa ter. palm f e S:v' l e a f fanSj etc.^his ancliem e^slma.1 Jia-vr

special attention. Unde r these r-j r< nm. k , I stances, it is hacdly a .xvonder^th tff

■’: e' YrooTOr’s Newark means nvm h to tli© Jerseyites.

somewhat faintly joined in the singing. They were a b it nervous a t first, for It had been a good many years, probably, since they h a d . sung any hymn music,, but afte r, the first verse they got. to­gether and began ta king!’ “The hymn was ’Lead, KlndlyJLighU When the quartette began to let them-

! selves out in the second H H I aymn it was singular to d voices of the oongregati

* 5f"| | The George Ringler A Co.’s Real Gerard and Export Lager Beer.

AGENT FOR

- - - - pinning. * - ■

Not many people know that* profit ably the only herd of “mule-foot^dj hogs of any size is located in Kansi 8 and is the property of a state senatof The, herd is in Labette epunty, n e ir

V

1 YOUR TRA D E SO LIC ITED .M l EHHEH M H M m m t m

H O P S I N G L O W . f S f . K t l » R I S .

irop ( l long i

Labette,."and belongs to. Senator W Connor, reports the Topeka Capital.

Senator Connor has been breedini® these hogs for a number of years,■ a n r

Isays they will live and prosper when®..... an ordinary hog will starve to deatirhat | The name ‘‘raul.e^fbot’-’ comes”from th® th6 fact that' the hoof is not sp lit like th£p

[of an ordinary hog. I t does not great" hat i !*' resemble the hoof of a mule, excejJ*

I quartet t.w an t

te"was> singing all aleme * (And thatrit is; rdhndV r60 year$ ago." saj!stft !?| fo'n record as ;s;ayirig tha t | ’ Tliese hogs, some

before or since, haye I heard j " m l u Connor, “were orlginall!yhymn i so perfectly nib\ ing as our |'b rought - here from th e ^ o u th Sea isrj

oleedlbbt poor an^stc rra-beaten f lands and turned loose lgpjEe Kimislhrqilar.t.et usic-on i-hat qui et Sunday-

ow ir.w ith i the use of the It1"| the birK c f j |rrubt ng- ih ' ih e trees out - ! dians, and have \iy .ed and. prospers^1 side. there up to the presiapt time. They aifej “The:«quartlette | wlTh- th e l |g § very nearly.oxii:ncL -Mapy:of the^®

1 unsi^oked but u m ie r s tS colli f the j hugs arc1' sold’wT d^ ||tin v- market.- an^

| Grand and Upright Pianos. "

HU S250 to S650.’

T H K O V E K A

PIANO

CHINESE* RESTAURANT,

4 M |l Urnana i\ Lon_ Ui mj li > .

First-Class Cook. Mvakat-all Hotifis.

EMANUEL & CO.UFA I, L>T tT E and IN SritA X C F .

W H O LESALE-D E A L E R IN — .J

W I N E S A N D L IQ U O R S

192 Broadway,

Long Branch, • N. j . ;

JA M ES R. HARRIS, CHEF CATERER

.LESS EATING in public..

j PiiTato ariff Tublic _Diiinera,| Parties and H all Work - — A Specialty.| 'i l.ini.iln P liu r , Ijnng Dm mill, N . J . ~

Journeym en T r io r s »W orkers Reach Aki

A Washington c o rt^ p o h d e n tH H B p H tha t the United Garment Workers of ! the Quart]America and the Journeymen T a ilo r^ ^ 2 5 ^ ® 2 il

~of Amer ica have Teached an agreeinen., for defining the jurisdiction of the two I guess ; t h e H | bodies and for1 the creation of a com* company oi su onei s ui;tti naru c tet m.ctee looking to the flmfligflm«tinn of | abQht tkeuji/ tha^~we li^ve-duim-these bodies, to comprise fill elpthing | whole k ' workers in the United States. • times, ij

This consolidation, which it experts j^^W toeJ to effect within a year, will bring In f lH approximately 100,000 rfieb, the itrem7 hemhip of the United GarmehOYork*]

f embracing 60,000 and d f the]-Journeymen T aiiors' H»lon-dtUQ0O: werv : the- tw & -^ ^ :a n d

The journeymen taHors' orgnn4zotitm:j the^iwo women-o f th e qua rte tte ware covers the custom tailoring branrtf nndLBurrounded by the congregalion and ; the •United Garment Workers the ready ; overwhelmed with kindly, words for

- 1 tbeh*J sweet gniH^;~"TfiB cOSSregatlbh. i t n i aidt^t s l d J B j

? weSe. j

made clothing branch,; T%e garm ent workers agree |

g ran t a charter to the employl____any m erchant tailor in.any city where ; theatrical folk, . .they have no union without first noti. “On ihn nm ii ai v aSS^^aL-fclHssm^st

- ■ tying- the general office-of the journey* 1 importan t and fTnhieriTfg'r iliyTTfWmif men tailors for the latter’s Investlga* »-the-congregation inslstPd_That>w o_£i^ tkra as to where the proper Jnrisdictlou 2 0 S2^ 2i ^ i ^ ^ 3 B B I

A ctively; A d v b c a t^ % e q ry :T ^ p a ing Marked Effect- On the I . • -Business Lunches. • i _ ■■■• -• -.

UA msn w hii'u i^u iv i.h ... .. fi!’" '1 Shave- and a _*»*-' ' Hair Cut,; Go to the

'■'S'¥iirams u i i i j T o i i s o r i a l Pai'loi'S ofTon j A. E. GARN ER,

pai7iiiv. th e le a d in g Coloredrtu-ics. an il! B a rb e r S h o p in to w n .'

- -in-TTta’iiW"nriTanrSvrrysX&JiUi iixtent i.nat-j ^ — • 7 " - Tiu whu Uufes ((> Broadway,- - Loug Draucb, IS*. J : "

SHOE REPAIRING,H .A . C IO FFI

a l l K in d s ,

7 A singii». egg is Tuid which is ;hi 1-"T90n \ed betwee a the bir as‘ feet ftpd the

• piuniage o F W l J o g y r TJie <-hirB_idathed=AEi grayish ■white downl w

,-Whe.ri-Ahb;after,

tit a i-yMrflvo‘ mopths.— ar-4-[

K W I-^immatilre f^tg^dxeRSngjBd"

M A T H ! N i l E K A: S O N

- P t V N O t 0 . ,

ISiBIIPmipmBPIIIIBiHIBWPipmei^>4pi^~r^~^K.-,AVey"^T5^ 'TW*11'the nHi^fi^ minini orivinou, -Ihtuupt Ser-

v.; l.:....; i .vim and b e v ^ o n a b l eP'R-IGE* GOO IT WORK

BBliHr~WlU.jiot-J)e-erattto»l to Uiey t.l any firm making thistomcloth big under , to the the factory system where the firm does{ ^ 7 not furnish i ts own workshop. No lo- i house again, cal tmlomof eltfaet organization will be “There was aWair | j | p | permitted to place a boycott on x!loth- j crtpts,: ahd—wellr wfi alll ing bearing the union label of the other | York in the varnished cai organization. . i " “And, although probahl

’ Whenever local unions cannot adjust has gone tq church v e r f iH disputes- regarding jurisdiction oven then, I’d he willing to wager 6Q cents employees the question will ho referred that th e re ,isn 't * ons o f us Uhat iHn't' to the general secretary of the two J a lo t better down beneath the epidermis uSIohik SS&jlcf 16 appeal to the prvsts | for th a t little-accidental stack^up W& dent off the American Federation of | had at church In-the little Tdwa—

f tiaapir

k GOOD HORSE,

- ‘SENSEM. will teach you thatV coffee in to air-tight, l/j tealad package It // purer, cleaner aid

1 /. freiher than ceffeaV kept in open bine,

I COFFEEa ivovetr a a M lit

.Washington Star,