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TUNNEL DISPUTE DECRIED PlNpyfiT PIaPFC RIAMF rli'bnUl rLnuLO DLnlllL WONT HIE BiG SONS NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SATURDAY. AUGUST IV. C9lO. Hoicis Heyourn. Carter and Mon- dei: Responsible for Fires. Military Experiment Would Have Cost Country $100,000. They Are Used for Simple and : Charming Color Effects. To the individual who has a mind toes pable of enjoying a beautiful effect without j trying to discover the means that ha*e ' been employed to produce it j the present { modes In woman's dress are likely to be somewhat fatlguinc - Gowns built of layers ! of different fabrics are often completely j mystifying at first glance, and it is only I after studying them from various points of] view that it is possible to give a guess as j is TV-earing Instead of talking to h«r. f'n- dtr such conditions the wtartr of a 'rook la fro»- from - «a] lea | a.s the on" illus- trated would find herself :it an advantage in a fashionable aFsernblag'?. Many such sJmpl*; models there ar<". and crystal beads, sometimes with the addition of silver em'jroiderie.3, are often chosen as a. decoration for then".. Nothing i: man a- •.\u25a0julsltrly delicate than tvhits mousselir.e tie sole with a. garnit'jre of crystal a^d sil- ver, and the combination can be success- fully worn by the woman ••vl.o is blessed with a brilliant color. The one who has lest th«» bloom of youth must a > r. touch of some warmer hue, and for this a satin belt of any preferred tint Is effective. Tho ,'r,--, r. in the picture has a girdle that would be a so°d model 23 to form. Itis drawn tip a little higher on tit* left side than at other STRANGE ABOUT HOLIDAYS I They Never Seem to Turn Out the Way They Were Planned. It> v strand thin? about holiday*. {Every worker who Is fortunate enonc'a l j have a summer vacation look* forward t'» : It through th*> whole hard year, and ?~Z ' •iomrhor,- when it comes he doesn't -'njo - \it nearly as much as he expected tu. \ When returned vacationists compare note-* [ the comparison generally runs something "Yes. I had a prettr good time. I did. want to so to the ... tfnd, stay at * hotel, but I thought a quiet sojourn at a jfarmhouse would r«*st me more. Yes, is j wa<» quiet, except for the roosters and th»* I dogs and the crows: but the food bad. !l nearly stjrved. And the b»ds were a-w- . fui: But I hart a pretty sood time." **W«Il, T «P'>nt my vacation at home. C 1 thoujht I'd have a xood. lazy time, an* I'd ?ave money by not taklnc I trip, t rnfght hsve if wo hadn't had a lot of tin- -"spectetl company, for it seemed '- i? all lour relatives took that month for comln< Ito our house. Of coursr-. I had to help ! motfifr v.-!th lii»-m. and I'm just tired out." It seems alvruy-t i>, !.- a oOsUka to be conscientious as>«>i!t raicatlons*; utilltajrU»Ji consitlerationa sl.otihl never enter into va- ! ration """n? lUe few**r plans th« better. ! anyhovr. Once there was a man trho alt i hla lif.' had pp^n: bis month's holiday at jthe seashore h^:n:se his physicians ?aiil sea alx vrxn what needed. One day ;«. friend hale«l him away on a ttshlns trip Ito the mountains at a season when h<* [ kixew h^> r.-a.«sr."t entitled to a vacation an<* j at si!ch sliort notice liiat the zr.er. in camp Ihad to lend him things till he could get j down to tlif village store, li" said after- j ward that he n^v^r had such a sroorj tin** I in his life, and he am^ l>ack in riotou-* f health and spirit?, but. all the same. th*» i next summer found him methodically packing his trunk for his wor.ted niontl> jit* the highly resp«ctabre hotel at the »a- ! side. » THE TRIBUNE PATTERN. Box pleat^l dreases are always pretty tor the youncer ?irt.H. This one is made witi* body an^i . portions in on*». and beW irt r>la<">! by means of a belt. In the Ulixstra- tion the material Ls one of the plaid novel- ties. With trimmin? of plain color. l»uc ser^e an<i cashnipr*. which are shown tx -. .great many nw siia<i- % 3. would be eq"allv^ appropriate- Tnr the trimming every ccn-» trastin;^ material or ready made bandin? til pretty, and the dr^.-'S can he made suitib!* for the morn in C or school wear or for Of Interest to 'Women GARNITURES OF OHM |Rooney ? s Attitude May Defeat ! , Him in Jersey Election. The tunnel station Question 'will be. as , issue in the mixed campaign in Jersey City : and may defeat Thomas F. Rooney, the | president of. the. Street and Water Board. who will be the Democratic organization candidate for re-election. The controversy has excited considerable interest, and has precedence at present over other issues, because of the activity of the Hudson & Manhattan Railroad Company, ': more popularly known as the McAdoo \u25a0 tunnel company, in" posting notices that It ( could not open its island station. Grove to ' Henderson street, on September 6, but would be limited to the "hole-in-the-wall" :station on Henderson street, owing to the \ attitude, of the Street and Water Board, which imposed conditions that were unjust and could not be accepted. The company says that In constructing the island station it yielded to a popular I demand, as the merchants and numerous \u25a0 citizens desired, the Grove street station, , which would be at the shopping district. i To open the Grove street station made necessary the vacation of a section of the street. Commissioner Rooney is flattering himself : that be is on the popular side of the con- i troversy, that the. Street and Water Board : offered to rent the portion of the street de- j sired at $400 a year if the company would I enter into an agreement to chargr<; only. a j five-cent fare from every point in Jersey City to Manhattan, or pay a rental of ; $10,000 a year without the fare limit. But j many persons say his optimism Is not I well founded, and that he will find the public will side with the company at elec- ! tion time by defeating him. The County Board of Freeholders a few months ago decided that as the contracts with the trolley company had expired , they should make new contracts and pay a higher rental for operating- their heavy cars over the bridge on the' Turnpike which spans the Hackensack and the bridge! over the canal which unites Jersey City and Bayonne. These bridges had been con- demned and had to be reconstructed, and the blame for the wearing out of the struct- ures was attributed to the heavy trolley cars. The result was the trolley company j declined to consider the proposition and was 1 excluded from the bridges. The passengers were compelled to walk across the bridges and this Inconvenience b*»asit a storm of protests and an irresistible claim that the comfort of the citizens was paramount to exacting a few dollars from the trolley company, and the Ft?"- holdera were forced to abandon their anti- corporation attitude. The Street and Water Commissioners modified their order' yesterday to the po- ' lice, which originally prohibited any one I from using the Grove street entrance and j led to the arrest of one of the employes . of the company. Th« new order permits the i employes of the company to use the en- ! trance. The commissioners were reminded . by the lawyer for the company that an j injunction Issued two years ago preventing ; the city <>f?k:ja.ls from Interfering with work j on the tunnel was still in force GOWN OF ROSE MOirSSEUICE DE BOIE, rr. \u25a0 \u25a0 ' \ " '\u25a0''' AND FRINGE OF CRYSTAL. TUI I 9 to what they ar really made of. The points nnd Is fastened there by one of the latest embroideries, too, are extremely com- j pretty choux that finish po ii:an;-' <j<* the plicated and ar<- made all the more so I>y ;newer girdle?. appearing unveiled and under different j , kinds of transparencies, all in the same . - own The difference between French bread. It la to be feared that this state -of af- j such as comes in lore rolls, an.l American fairs may lead to the decline of the art of ;homemade .r-ajl is due to the knoadtn^. conversation, for It may often require great : The French baker kneads his wt^h water str>»ng-th or* mind to refrain from gazing and but a little Hour while the American in speechless wonder at the gown a woman housewife kneads ben entirely with flour. JVeioifs of the Mar Mrs. BrLmar had pone to tho I>ong- Inland College tloppital to have an operation per- f<>T 1 33e4. but found it unnecessary yester- day, ar.'i st«irte<i for home. Asgsst Erunar. h^r husband, works in a bex factory in "tt'illiamsburc. Another Trortman thane is Louis Kruder. who has an invalid wjfo. Kruder answered the po- lice call to po to th*! Borou^li Hall instead of Brunar. und was much astonished at ia«etin^- :;. Mranjre woman. ilr. Brunar »ocr. arrived, !:owvcr; for his wife. Woman Ha? Hysteria After Leaving Brooklyn Hospital. Mrs. llargraret Brnnar. of N*o. IS2I Broad- way. \u25a0VYiJliaiiiEbunr. Lad left the Long- I.s;- zr.<} College Hospital only a short time yesterday whvn Ffa«- fell unconscious at •""ouTt and Bemscs frtreets. Brooklyn, t-lu- tras carr;<^d into the r^portrrs' room in the Bnrougli Hall, and became hysterical nixer b^inp revived by Dr. Budding] of the Brooklyn Hospital, sayinsr that she preferred to die rather than be ta-ken to ar.y hospitaL Uptown Prices. Ordinary sweet crapes are selling up- j i town for 18 cents a. pound; Japanese '\u25a0 plums are 40 cents a basket. Delaware ' : freestone peaches 20 cents a basket. New- } : town pippins SO cents a dozen. California j j red plums 15 cents a dozen, and Valencia; ! late oranges 60 cents a dozen. Alligator ; I pears are "') cents a head, muskmelons , : are 23 cents for seven, Eartlett pears are I ; 23 cents a small basket and red bananas \ | are 23 cents a. dozen. Meat prices are about the same as last j I week. Both lamb an.l veal chops are -3 \u25a0• | cents a pound and veal cutlet $ m 30 and 3- cents a pound. Round of beef is 20 ' and 22 nts a pound, sirloin is 22 cent.* j an.l loin of pork is 22 cents a pound. ' Hindqtiarter of lamb is 20 cents a pound. \u25a0 Smoked tongue is 22 cents a pound. Lobsters are up to 40 cents a pound and i softshell crabs are 70 cents a dozen. Vel- ' low pike are 30 cents a pound, white) ' j are 20 cents and halibut 18 cents. Black- fish, blue pike and yellow perch are 18 cents pound: cod. bluefish. sea bass and ; poraries ure 14 cents. Spanish mackerel are j '•"'\u25a0\u25a0' a pound, weakrish and terflah ! are 12 cents md haddock, flounders and j carp are. 10 cents a pound. —^—^_ * NO S-CS-TISSfE PAPER PATTERN OF* GIRL'S BOX PL£ATEI> DRBeS, \u25a0«\u25a0 i 10 CENTS. m - I afternoon occasion?, a^cordin? to the ma I teria! an«l trimming- ufd. Just as fltas— itrattnl it makes an excellent sturdy frocio , for the first school days. The quantity of material required for the* medium size is five and one-fourth yards -*> : or 27 inches wide, three and Sve-eisbth* 1 |yards 22 inches wic!* or two and flve-els?hth-"»- yards 44 inches wide, with one yard 27; inches wide for hands. The pattern. No. 5.43i>. is cut in 3ize3 to& pirbJ four. six. elsht and ten years of as« t and will be maile-l to any acdress on re- ceipt .•:' io cents. Please give number of pattern and *g*» distinctly. Address Pattern Department.! •\u25a0'.•\u25a0. Tribune. If in a hurry for pat- tern send an extra 2-cent stamp. and \u25a0»»••' will mail by letter •,£\u25a0\u25a0 in sealed en-«i velopo Individual chicken salads ar-> attractive, when the salad fa moulded In cups of aspi.-»i Jolly on lettuce hearts, -with a rosette oZ. mayonnaise dressing 1 on top. RESORTS. NEW YOKK. RESORTS. .NEW ORE. LEH .- .ALLEY AIDS FARMERS. . \u25a0 \u25a0 _ - I . -. \u25a0 truct the ps. ai \u25a0 \u25a0 i£i)!isty's BatMtid 6irls By toward Chandler Ghnsiv the tmrd Cover Design *h'_ "Bathing- Girl" \u25a0exies with the Sunday Magazine HOTEL GRAMATAN Lawrence Park Bronxville New York OPEN ALL THE YEAR 260 Rooms 1 20 Private Baths EXCEPTIONAL CUISINE n*rfrt<- Train >•••»-» n-^ Minutes. TO GOLFERS: The NVw Lawrence Park Country Club, with its hastfsoxxM st.v* eJub bouse ami fli:.- c>!f links, only a f»-w minut-»- walk from Th* t;ramatan. -•'.-„ n««M- attraction. Th^ coitrse in now in ttrst-class romiition and ix uml»r the car* >' a competent professional. IIOTKI. GR.UUTAN, 1n... l'ropri^tor«l /! Till New York Tribune NEW JERSEY. THE NEW MONMOUTH SPRING LIKE BEACH, N. i, \u25a0 Aatomobllln;. rldlns. driving, tsaata. zslz. canocne, sea l^ptSlns. suilin*:. Sa^!ny. 275 ROOMS. "TOO B.\rif4 wwunsm f shcte. m«M«w. THE SHOREHAM THE ULSTER & DELAWARE R. R. offers complete train service to tha Catskill Mountains noted for picturesque and romantic scenery. The glorious air, the magnifi- cent views and romfortable accommo- dations are a. great attraction in this mountain region, which la \u25a0 paradise for children and a sanitarium for every- body. Send 9 cents postage .'or Illustrated Bummer Book with map ut the Cats- Icfl - : and list of hotels and boarding booses) N. A. SIMS. Ueneral I'assenge; Agent. Kingston. .V T. These beautiful 4< th- ing Girl " covers are in- tended as a special Mid- summer feature of the Sunday Tribune. WILL APPEAR TO-MORROW The Sunday Tribune is $2.0:) a year, sent by niail, or may he secured of any newsdealer. Th c Sunday Magazine TO-MORROW will on- ain several notab.e arti- cles, including \u25a0 story of President T2ft on the EmuS Hariom Man in Bellevue Second Tmfi Following Suicidal Attempt ... tint , of Xi .. - tree' ie Hos- 1 v.ith ide llooney was noticed sitting on the pJ<-I i at West 37th street. Finally he g'Jt u;> and divest od liimseif o!' his coat, ha; and shirt. Boys who had been watching him ran to Patrolman Schnecker, of the Fast r.jih street station, who came up just as Mxxraey Jumped into the water. He stuck, in the mud, and when Uf. stood up the water only reached t.> his ne.ek. Sehneckex dr-v liia revolver and ti;id him that unless ht walked to th* P' # "-' and nbed up- ho would Eh-joi. This \va? enough fur Mooney, who did as he was told. Mooney lai down in from o;' :i Leiinffton jtvonue car a: I"2d .\u25a0 on July si The ra;- '•*\u25a0'»* going slowly and he received only a few 6rui*e«. .. .....,_ Woman Intrusted with Missing Girl Says He Was Willing to Take Her. Tie police wert requested by Mrs. Mar- garet Walsh, of No. -Wu West 13d street, yesterday to search for her three-year-old daughter Nellie, who disappeared on Thurs- day morning while in charge of a woman who boarded with the Walshes. Mrs. Walsh declares that she turned the child over t<» her lodger, who is an old woman, and asked her to take tho little gir! out for a walk. Upon returning home at night Mrs. Walsh didn't find her youugst-r about, and upon inquiry the old woman- told Mrs. Walsh that while she was out walking with the child she met a man whom she asked to take the- girl horn-. Tho man was willing, and upon being told where to go started off. The •\u25a0\u25a0'''\u25a0 also disappeared yesterday. TRIES WATER; FAILS AGAIN TELLS OF MAN TAKING CHILD Grand Jury Again Indicts Man Be- cause of New Year's Killing. William Heineman, wlio was indicted last April for manslaughter in the second decree on the charge of shooting and kill- ing Robert Dooley at 14Cth street and Manhattan avenue, was indicted again yesterday by tho grand jury lor man- slaughter in the first degree, on the same charge. The second indictment, which supersedes tho first, was reported it the request of Acting District Attorney Moss when ho discovered that the facts in the ease did not warrant the original indictment. Dooley was one of a crowd of boys who jostled Heineman la^t Xcw Year's live, and was (struck by a bullet from Hein^- nian's revolver when he fired into the crowd. Heirieman was exonerated by a coroner's jury, but was later arrested on the indict- ment reported by the grand jury and re- leased in SIQ.OOo bail. He will be arraigned for pleading to the new indictment on Monday. NOW CHARGES FIRST DEGREE Reports received from the other forests, says tho forester, indicate a. general im- provement. The 'Old nights now prevalent and the absence of winds are greatly facil- itating the fire fighting. Ho declares the safety of the towns in the fire ...... now assured. According to reports, there was a greater loss of life among the unskilled fire fight- ers than among those I who had been trained. Mr. Gre< says in bis message that, all but two permanent forest officers have been accounted for, with no deaths. Among the temporary borers there are seventy-nine known deaths and fifteen men Nnaccounted for. Ea.y« Forest Rangers Are Illy Prepared in Numbers and Equipment to Fight Flames. tf'ashiasttra, Aug. 2t—Glffard Pinchot of t2.»» National ..... Association and formerly head of tho government Forest Service, in a statesnent is!--ued to-day holds that the loss cf property and life In the r«?- <v-r.t and present forest fires was unneces- sary. The" fatal results. he says. are tractable to the unpreparedness to deal with the fire ssru&tior:. He criticises members of Con- jrj-p.es who have opposed appropriations for tho p'-op^r equipment for forest ranger?, and names Senator HeyTnxrn. of Idaho, whose home town. Wallace. Idaho, suffered serious lof-t: Senator Carter, of Montana, and Representative MondelL of Wyoming. Tho statement follows: "I am proud of the splendid work the ;r.rn of the Forest Service have bees doing against the Western forest fires. Many of :hcm have given their lives to protect the homes of settlers and the forests on which -.he prosperity of the Western . pie do- i^-nds. To my mind, their conduct is be- yond n'l praise. \u25a0"Forest fires are preventable. It is a jrood thing for us to remember at this time that nearly or quite til of the loss, suffer- ing and death «.jese fires have caused is wholly unnecessary. A fire in the forest 1= the *ame kind of thing as a fire in the city. There is only one way to Us either. The fire department of every city is or- ganized with the prime idea of getting to the fire when it is young. So with forest fires. Tho time to conquer them is before they grow strong. If a forest is equipped \u25a0a ith roads, trails, telephone lines and a reasonable cumber of men for patrol there is no more likelihood that greavt fires will v able to get started tlian there is that rZViX ccr.riagrauons liko the Chicago fire trfll get started In a ....... a modem fire depanmtLjut- Under rare circumstances they may. hut the chances •-" against it. ••Th" Forest Service has dor.c wonders \u25a0R-tth :'- handful of devoted men. it lias r:t out f\''ry year many thousands of small fires, any one of -which under favor- able conditions might have developed Into :< (•or.fiacrari'in "which ten thousand ni^n rxrald not stop. This year, because of the rreat drouth— t "no worst in much of the West for more than twenty years— there \u25a0xere too many ilres itnd too few rangers. '7i:r Jesson fr&rn these forest fires is perfectly clear. When a city suffers from a crt-at fire it docs not retrench in Its fire department, bui strengthens it. That is \u25a0Rial the nation must do in the national f crests. "The men in '"ongrcss like Heyburn. Carter and M*=ndell. who hav<» made light ».f the efforts of the Forest Service to pre- pare itself to prevent ju^t such* a calamity as this, have in effect l>ee:i fighting on ibf 1 side of the fires against the general •w>eif2Te. If even a small fraction of the Joss from the prosrnt tires had been «*x- \u25a0perded i:i additional patrol and preventive equipment some or perhaps nearly all of t:;» loss could h<sv«e Jieeii avoided. "' believe uur peor>le •will tak' 1 this les- p«n to heart and insist ... . T.-J their wives and their children^ the lumbermen anj the miners and the two 'j:":ion dollars' worth* cf national property :r the national fircsts j-'liull lie adequately protected." Serious fires ore. racing- on tho Nez I' rr forest reserve, in the •western part of Idaho, according to a i°lf»rr:irn received at the Forest Service late to-day from Dis- trict Forester ireeley, at tflnnonla. Mont. Two forest officers have been sent to the scene from sßasoola and four from Ogden. Utah. i General Improvement in Forest Conditions Reported Through- out the Northwest. E Krom Th^ ' Tribune Bureau, j Washington. Aug. X.— The War Depart- \ ment refused to-day to grant the request of j Senator Piles and Representative Hum- j phreys. of AVashington. that all bis: guns to I the vicinity of Puget Sound be fired aimnl- | taneously in order to hasten rain in the territory now seriously menaced by forest fires. The department declared thai the i plan was not feasible and would mean a I waste of ammunition costing Sluo.Qno. The request cam? to Associate [forester Potter, who forwarded it to the War De- partment. In several instances the War Department has tried the means suggested to induce rainfall, but at no time has the experiment proved successful. The great [distance between the s>eacoast and the.fire- swept region also influenced the War De- , partment in its decision. The Xavy Department was also asked \u25a0" to fire what few guns ire under its control on j the coast, but on learning the decision of i tho War Department decided that compQ- |ance with. jn.> request would not ' bring I rain. The Navy Department is practically ! without guns near Puget Sound at the pres- j ent time, the monitor Cheyenne, xvith two 12 and four 4 inch guns, being the I only vessel available. The cruiser Chatta- ! n^oga is at the navy yard there, but is be- i ir.sr put of out of commission. The experiment would have been one of I the most \u25a0 \u25a0.».\u25a0;'.::- over attempted in the ; United States. Around Puget Sound, at Forts Worden. Casey and Flagler. the army | has forty 12-inch mortars, six 12-inch rifles, I eighteen 10-inch guns an/i twenty 6-inch *!z-ii\> besides a large number of guns of smaller calibre. ••\u25a0•.-\u25a0 : of the Co- ulmbia River, in Forts Columbia and Bte- , yens. are oijht 12-inoh mortars, eight 10- ; in<"h guns, three S-inch guns and eleven 6- inch guns, in addition to the smaller ones. To Tir* these on« simultaneously, loaded properly for the purpose In mind, would i have cost the government, It tvsis esti- I mated at the War Department. JIOJOOO. A.d- I niittingr the possibility of effeetivrnesf.. it j was considered that probably tea rounds I would have boen required. This would have run the cost up to a figure, that the officials did not feel •.-•\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 in incurring without specific authorization from higher author- ity, particularly in view of the anaiunt al- ready spent in potting' thirty-twocompanies of troops into the \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-- to \u25a0_--.' fires. Besides the element of cost. It vas stated at th" War Department that the army was not equippei] with projectiles with time fuse? for the guns just enumerated, and hpn^e the only atmospheric disturbance created would be by the formation of gases on the ground at the time of the diseharce of the guns and by the pussage of the pro- jectile through tfi«* air. The disturbance caused by -.••\u25a0_:• of the projectiles, it was said, would b^ comj>aratlvely negligi- ble for The purposes of creating a violent confusion among the air «:urrents. To fire the biggest crr.i^ in the coast ar- 1 tillery- costs about '-- each, it has been estimated. To fire the 12-inch mortars costs aboui $<r' or %' { > each. ; CALLED IN WRONG HUSBAND' "OPPOSEO APPROPRIATIONS" WITHOUT EFFECT ON FIRES T. C. Hayes, of Newark. Expelled, Says He Knows of No Graft. Thomas " Hayes of Newark, .V. J.. w/ic wa- expelled on Thursday from the Eaglet fraternity, in annual Besalon at rit. Louis, in charg* a "t sraft. said yesterday be would have little troubli in disproving the .•\u25a0l, "80 s.i.'- •\u25a0 graft w:thln the )rd>T la concerned," be said. "I . ao only : ; . \u25a0\u25a0 never known that it cxli \u25a0- ed, ami most assuredly I never .^.l a iianu .: it " Hayes served -i \u25a0 trustee of the Grand Aerie for two years, being elected to his first term in ll***l I *** He was under $lo.«j"O bond during this time. He laid he understood the charges were In connection with the purchase of a lot of perforating machines used. by th«; lodges. ''.'.. -•\u25a0 wore purchased by advertist-d bids and tun bed the. lodsrew at cost price, pi:i;< S! SO for the Grand I/»jdge"s trouble, said Mr, Hayes. OAK TREE HAS $25,000 FIRE. r'.ainiield. >.*. J., Aug. j<i t.Speoial).— The largo barn, a sawmill anO all outbuilding*, together with contents^ at Oak Tree, about two miles from this city, th^ property of John V. Ton Evtk. wer? destroyed by rir-i this morn entailing \u25a0 losa of about 125.- iM. Viva horses were burned to death. Th« rtrc if- believed to huve b^t-n of incendiary orlji' 11 .. Son Chief Witness Against Contractor at the Coroner's Inquest. River. N. V.. Aug. 36 CSpe< Edward Wagner, the contractor, arrested on a •\u25a0 - \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 having killed his wifi \u25a0-. Wednesday morning, was i.eid to-day for - -..nil iur>' by th< verdict of a con- ner - :\u25a0 . in which it was directly stated that Wagner shot and killed his wife. Tl»e chief witnjese ntgftn*^ Wagner wa." : \u25a0 n-year-old son. Tho boy heard the shot while be was dressing, and when he reached the window he saw hia M c ' .. clump of bushes. Mrs. R agner was i n her way to the barn to i<-ed the horses when she was shot. The el, ]\u25a0\u25a0 had been separated for two months ; ..\u25a0 \u25a0 >i Wagner's alleged abuse. Hf back to the New City iai! after refusing to make a statement other tl tn a i- denial. EAGLES OFFICER MAKES DENIAL Driver of Car Held in $1,000 Bail for New Jersey Grand Jury. Montclair. N. J., Aug. 36 (Special).— Barnett. sixty years old. a harmless para- noiac at Overbrook Insane Asylum, stepped In front of an automobile stage coach on the Pompton Turnpike, near Cedar Grove, ia.-n night and was fatally injured, dying at the Mountainside Hospital an hour later. The car was owned by Edward E. Taylor and was in charge of his son. Elmer B. Taylor, who was held in $1,000 to-day to answer before the grand jury. Taylor and other occupants of the stage coach, which included "William Greenfield, Miss Helen Greenfield and John Ingraham, of New York, say that Barnett stepped directly in front of the coach from the side of the road and that the accident was unavoidable. Barnett. the victim of the accidi ; " had been an inmate of the asy- lum for thirty years and got occasional holidays. I' was while out 01 one of tin occasions that he was run down and killed. HELD AS SLAYER OF WIPE Lively Contest at Highlands, N. J., Preparatory to Carnival. Long Branch, X. -T.. .\\\k. 26 (Special.— Highlands i.< excited over tho selection of a queen by popular vote to rule over Its three-day demonstration next week, open- ing .hi Thursday. Until last night Miss Ir^nc McGuire had a clear l^ari. To-day Miss Josephine Snoboda, a semmer resi- dent. H-ads Miss McGuire by a vote of 2.<TiO 1 : < -sterday the leader did not tipure at all fn the voting contest, others w ho ar^ dose behind are Miss Irene Leigh- U«9. and Mi.ss rfophio Muasell, 1.2.W There are a number of others whose votes range From '••\u25a0 •\u25a0 '.\u25a0"\u25a0'. They Include Miss Madeline Lev\ . Miss Kitti*-Beck, Miss Eva Roscnba.um. Mis:- Aprne= McDermott, Mi.-s Mildred Gardiner. Miss Irene Sherman, Miss Carrie Lynch, Mis* Sylvia Smith, Miss Sadie Hand. ICiss Bessie Wright .md Muss Ben i '-\u25a0 . midsummer ni^etin? of th< ffew Jcr- <=«>- Kditori .' a. latioi wD •<\u25a0 I Pleasure Bay to-morrow. President -1. I,yie Kinmonth. of "The Asbury Park ;\u25a0 - - \u25a0 reside at tin \u25a0 meeting and the clambake which follows, and will have a guests Pittsfieid. Mass.. men who •' the New Jersey editors at th° annual "-iriTisr in the Berksbires in June. North Jersey shot business men "who are spending the summer at the various resorts between Atlantic Highlands and Long Branch enjoyed a day's outing to-day at Coney Island, leaving Atlantic Highlands at 2 o'clock on the steamer Sirlus. They returned late to-night. Edward D Adams, who has a cottage at Sea Bright, was chairman of the committee on outing. Others who took an active part wen Mr'- vin A. Rice, Lewis S. Thompson and I. B. Hosford. enhurst ?a- c ar. entertainment •"-nip":* in aid of the Monmouth Memorial Hospital. which was* largely attended. The perform- er were all summer folk living in the vi- cinity of Long Branch. The Paint :\rA Powder Club, of Orange, was down foi a number that waf thoroughly enjoyed. Nathaniel Jahnes has left Sea Bright for a stay in the < "atskiUf=. Dr Robert 1... Sprcr. who has just re- turned from the World's Missionary < 'on.- ference ;it Kdinburyij. Scotland, will till the pulpit of the. Presbyterian chapel at. >ph Bricht on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Phiiip Ixiwisohn. who have tKjen abroad all summer. are expected at their summer home next week. Mrs. C. O. McFaddin, Mrs. I"itman "West and Mrs. A. m. Townley left here yester- day for a stay in the Catakill Mountains. Mr. and Mr.-. John 11. Houghton, of Rah- \u25a0way, ire visiting Mr. and Mr?, If. P. Ben- nett, of Washington street. AUTO KILLS INSANE MAN His Fine Cigars and Wines Were Stolen, Say Police. Although employed as a] driver at ?15 a week. .lamps F. Kelly, of, Newark. N. .T.. had a taste for wines,^cigars and diamond? that would have done .-redit to a million- aire. lie was arrested yesterday, and the police say he bam been systematically rob- bing one of the largest grocery stores in Newark for the last year. Kelly, a man with a family, drove a bak- ery wagon. His last stop was at the gro- cery store of Aaron Ward Sons at Xo. 9GI Broad street. , Kelly always fed his horses there. The firm began to miss high class goods. Kelly was suspected and two de- tectives watched him. They say that yes- terday morning they saw him go into the store and hi'; his pockets with loose coffee. After arresting him the officers went to his home and were amazed at the abundance of things there; which included champagne, boxes of S9-oent cigars, fancy groceries, , etc All these things were seized by the detectives. . The police estimate that the goods they got at Kelly's apartments are worth 11.000. ' MANY WANT TO BE QUEEN a: the station bouse, where Kelly was searched, another surprise awaited the po- lice. On one of the lingers of the prisoner was a diamond ring- as big as a hickory nut, which the police declare Is worth $1,200. They discovered something glittering in his shirt front, and when they extracted it they saw it was a diamond stud valued at about 5300. ; . , BAKERY DRIVER LIVED HIGH -fKix; Ukt Mfc.u M. >. J. A r.*:\ *:: : dellKhtfully located hot*!. »:ta ail moriirn improvement.*. ramalnlna* <»?•« throughout rt\a *ntlr? ytrar. urji!<»r ta» m«j- ' mj:<-r.\*n' nt F. SHTTE. QDarlborongb-lßien^r vv 111 1 v vru CITY. v J. ' ln«ii«li \\ hit.- X \u25a0»..!». I nmpMT GALEN HALL ATL%>TIC CITY. v J. HOTEL AND SANATORIUM. :: l cw_T25lt Otßce. 1122 Broadway. rr.Nxs\i.v.\M.%. WfITER G£IP HOUSE Tfce Mouutala FaraUlae. I'M vw \\ irt.K <;.\p. p\. RfTßHtna op»-n ti> Lvormlx-r. Unqutstionabiv ii» l^a.lins ai:>l ttn«»!ti hotel U\ thi.-* r»jflun for tSo*», who s«^h the b^u in appointment, calsise. s«r\ic> comfort i»ml locHtion; hUh-*' altitude, coolest stt— u.ittii.. Every in.i .>;\u25a0 fnt#rralr.m*-nt and .u--l. , r tastim*". .--•\u25a0»- xnd Autumn rat«* ' Booklet of ramtra views an-I Auto Mapa mailed Fourth »^-*«oti FOHN PL'KDT COPS. * The ld-al Hot :l at which to «nioy the Autumn Seaaon. THE KITTATINNY, b k) r. tpec. Sept. £ Oct. ra.:uL G- T7UXK CO?% i Advance in Butter and Eggs. ; ! One of the signs of coming fall is no- j ticcable at Washington Market this week ; in the first advance in butter and egs? for ; many weeks. Eggs are now 29 cents a ; '\u25a0 dozen; butter Is 35 cents a pound, and ! I sweet butter la 39 cents. Fish Reasonable. Fish in general is reasonable at present, j ! Blue pik<- are just in from the Western , lakes, and are la cents a pound; lobsters j an still at the high figure of SO and 02 j cents a pound: soft shell crabs are $1 a! ' dozen for prime and 75 cents a dozen for i | uudium. Yellow pike and California I salmon are -)•" cents a pound; whiteflsh are \u25a0 20 cents, porgies IS cents, bluefish V, to 19 \u25a0 its, yellow perch, halibut, butterfish and sea bass are 15 cents, cod, flounders, black- ; fish, carp and haddock are 10 cents and weakSsh are 12 cents a pound. Corn Abundant. Cantaloupes are 10 and 15 cents each; | sweet melons are 20 cents a basket of about eight Peas are 15 cents a quart i this week but wax beans, string' beans and lima beans are still 10 cents a quart. rooms are high again •• cents a ; ' pound— and tomatoes are 15 cents a pound. Potatoes and sweet potatoes are 10 cents a : quart, red cabbages are la cents apiece j white cabbages 10 cents and cauliflowers j 25 to 35 cents each. Sweet corn is 40 cents j , a dozen and of good quality, and the sup- ! '. ply is so abundant that it is ma* the j vegetable stalls at the market look quite ; \u25a0 full again. There are some poor bunches j of asparagus to bo had at 25 cents \u25a0 bum h. ; i Eggplant is 13 cents apiece, celery :j: j \u25a0{<• cents a largo bunch and kohlrabi Is 5 cents , a .bunch. Onions are 10 .\u25a0out.-- a. quart and ; ; spring onions are 10 cents for three \ bunches Cucumbers aro 5 to 10 cents ! apiece, lettuces are 10 cents and beets are ! 5 cents a bunch. Chicory is 10 cents and j escarole 15 cents a head. Late Strawberries. Peaches are plentiful and range from U5 j cents a basket to 63 cents a till for white ! Po.lawares and California peaches, a till when measuring large fruit being about five pounds in weight. Sixteen quart bas- \u25a0 kets of preserving peaches are 50 cents. Henry Kelly & Sons are showing a ship- ment of strawberries which is unique at ; this time of the year. The fruit is small, but very sweet, and finds a quick sale at 35 cents a basket. Watermelons are 65 1 cents each, alligator pears are 25 and 30 I cents each, and grapefruit are 20 and 25 cents ........ Oranges are : ; cents ami : $1 a dozen, persimmons are $1 .i dozen, j mangoes are the lame, German blue j plums are 03 cents a dozen, and California j red plums are 85 and To cents a till. Seckel pears are 75 cents \u25a0 till, Bartlett pears are 60 and 85 cents a dozen, and winesap apoles nre $1 a dozen. Huckle- berries and blackberries are each 20 cents , a basket. Hothouse Muscats are $- and $1 25 a pound, seedless grapes ure So cents : a basket, Delawares 15 cents, Concords 25 cents. Malagas 50 and GO cents and Tokays \u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0 cents a basket Veal a Little Higher. Veal la a little higher this week The j best milk fed city dressed calves are »ell- j ing at '•\u25a0 and ;'\u25a0'•.• cents a pound whole- ! sale, and this rise in the wholesale price i has sent hindquarters up to 20 cents ami i legs to 2H i ••'•\u25a0 a pound. ! '' •• supply " : ' j fancy lamb is limited, and this, of course, i is keeping the prtc* up. but there Is plenty j of tho second grade \u25a0•\u25a0 \u25a0 :r . naij :l , falrl: reasonably rate*. rtoastin's beef H •\u25a0• ' j cents \u25a0'•\u25a0. \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 c»ts 22 '•"in- a poun<l Corned beof i.^ from !2 to 20 ( \u25a0•<.;< \u25a0 .. pound. JticVoJ'dlnK to cut; lives* liver is < il.",i 1 .", rent*a pound, swe«'tbreads are •••' cent? ;r pair ami calves' hearts are 50 cents each, M Bacon i. it cents . pound. I, \u25a0 r— . ,; I DAY LINESummer tic Book. <'»«\u25a0*::;\u25a0». -t Be- fore selfctlns - ntl « trip sen,! tic. pu^tj^u to Hudson Rl -r :.:•\u25a0- D«>sbrosses_St.. X. T. Garden City Hotel Mantra City, x .mi- Islam). IS M!-» Tom New York. Open all MSB A MICH CIAS- MOl)i:itN HOTEL i;rn\Eii ASM EXCLUSIVE. '\u25a0en a la Cart* Restaurant. .-. ,i. u.NM> toMr.\xv. puorr*. IDEAL SUMMER HOME SSffiSS .\u25a0.uuuiir »h-' s»outnl and :t beautiful porV Forty \\ . >•• from Cltv. I »•">»'.- vtrtori » H'J'Ql Urfhmoni. X. Y. NEW JERSEY. FOtt ',: p\..--~ BOOK Illustrating and des<-rlb- in« Anbury Park '•'""I - c»nts to Municipal Informatlun Bureau, Asbury I'arU, N\ J. WOMAN HURT IN RUNAWAY. Montoluir. X. J.. Aug. 36 (Special) -Miss Anna Bruen. of Brooklyn, was severely in- jured In a runaway here to-day. She was th<" guest of Miss France I C. Harris, of thi.^ city, and was uHiij^ driven in a carriage to the Lackawiinr.a station, when the hors* ran away down the steep bill m Glctn Ridge avenue. Miss Bruen and the driver were thrown into the street when the vehicle overturned. Idas Bruen was taken to Miss Harris's home, suffering from a bud ..'\u25a0• \u25a0\u25a0 .' md and a dislocated shoulder. NEAR DEATH IN ELEVATOR FALL. Franklin Furnace, x J. Aug. SO (Special) —His tlrst trial at running the elevator in tho separator mill of the New Jersey Zinc Company pro ed nearly fatal for George Smith to-day. The elevator dropped v ins- tance of seventy feel Smith's lees were fractured and be was hurt internally. Smith was In th« highest p:»rt of the shaft \*hen the mechanism got out of order. Paterson Health Officials Urge Sewer System Along Passaic River. Paterson, X. J., Aug. 26 (Special):— Prompted by the prevalence of typhoid fever In this city and vicinity, the health officials of Paterson made an inspection to- day of the Passaic River above Little Falls and decided that the trouble was due large- ly, If not entirely, to the great number of camps and bungalows established along The river bants and used during the summer season. The summer population in these camps and bungalows this year has been about four hundred, and the campers use the river as a sewer. The water used to supply Pateraon and surrounding cities enters the filtration plant of the East Jersey Water Company below Little Falls, but the dis- ease germs are not entirely killed when the water enters the mains to be pumped to the cities, It is said. The local health officials have no juris- diction, but they v.illnot;:;- the state health board and will request that the camps be abolished or that some system of sewage disposal be adopted. I GATHER FOR CAMP MEETING I Bishop Wilson Leads at First Ocean Grove Service. I Ocean Grove. v. .t . Aug. % (Special).-fA large number of persons gathered this af- | ternoon In the Janes Memorial Tabernacle J for a season of prayer and meditation in- cident to the forty-first annual camp meet- in;, which opened to-day and will continue until September 5. This service T as In charge of Bishop Luther B. Wilson of I Philadelphia, vice-president of the Camp jMeeting Association and chairman of the j devotional committee. Bishop Wilson, the i Rev. Dr. John It. Alday and the Rev. Dr. , Henry Wheeler made brief addresses. j This evening-, in the Auditorium, the an- ' nual sacramental service was held. The I first three tables were occupied by clergy- 1 men, and then followed the laymen of the 1 Church. Fully two thousand partook of the I communion. j The camp meeting services proper will begin to-morrow. The Initial sermon will |be preached at 10:30 a. m. by the Rev. J. iB. Kulp. pastor or" the Bradley Beach | Methodist Episcopal Church. In the even- ing there will be a platform meeting-, with j brief addresses by visiting clergymen. ' Bishop Joseph F. Berry, of Detroit, will preach Sunday morning-, and in the evening a platform meeting, with a number of speakers, will he held. J. Lincoln Hall, of I Philadelphia, will have charge of the singing in the Auditorium during the camp j meeting. The camp meeting schedule of meetings will be as follows: Early consecration meet- Ing- in the Tabernacle at 5:45 a. m. ; family devotions in the Auditorium at 6:45; holi- ness meeting in the Tabernacle. Young People's meeting in the Temple and Juniors' meeting in the Thornley Chapel at 9; preaching In the Auditorium at 10:30; de- cision meeting in the Tabernacle at 1:30 p. m. and Helping Hand meeting in the Thornley Chapel at the same hour; pente- costal service in the Temple at 3; twilight revival service in the Tab* made at 6, led by Miss Helen Gertrude Rumse: . and preaching in the Auditorium at 7::;". On Sunday, in addition to the regular services, there will be four different ser- vices of the summer Sunday School at 2:30 | p. m. ; the service on the North. End Pa- j villon at 4 and the Surf meeting at Ocean Pathway at 6. The annual love re;,.-.- ser- vice, in charge of Bishop Wilson, will be held at 3 £•.. m. on Sunday, September 4. SAY CAMPERS SPREAD TYPHOID i 5

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Page 1: PlNpyfiTrli'bnUl PIaPFCrLnuLO RIAMFDLnlllL WONT HIE BiG ... · PlNpyfiTrli'bnUl PIaPFCrLnuLO RIAMFDLnlllL WONT HIE BiG SONS TUNNEL DISPUTE DECRIED NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SATURDAY

TUNNEL DISPUTE DECRIEDPlNpyfiT PIaPFC RIAMFrli'bnUl rLnuLO DLnlllL WONT HIE BiG SONSNEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SATURDAY. AUGUST IV. C9lO.

Hoicis Heyourn. Carter and Mon-dei: Responsible for Fires.

MilitaryExperiment Would HaveCost Country $100,000.

They Are Used for Simple and :

Charming Color Effects.To the individual who has a mind toes •

pable of enjoying a beautiful effect without jtrying to discover the means that ha*e

'been employed to produce it jthe present {modes In woman's dress are likely to besomewhat fatlguinc - Gowns built of layers !of different fabrics are often completely jmystifying at first glance, and it is onlyIafter studying them from various points of]view that it is possible to give a guess as j

is TV-earing Instead of talking to h«r. f'n-

dtr such conditions the wtartr of a 'rookla fro»- from

-«a] lea | a.s the on" illus-

trated would find herself :it an advantagein a fashionable aFsernblag'?.

Many such sJmpl*; models there ar<". andcrystal beads, sometimes with the additionof silver em'jroiderie.3, are often chosen asa. decoration for then".. Nothing i: man a-•.\u25a0julsltrly delicate than tvhits mousselir.e tiesole with a. garnit'jre of crystal a^d sil-ver, and the combination can be success-fully worn by the woman ••vl.o is blessedwith a brilliant color. The one who haslest th«» bloom of youth must a > r. touch ofsome warmer hue, and for this a satin beltof any preferred tint Is effective. Tho,'r,--, r.in the picture has a girdle that wouldbe a so°d model 23 to form. Itis drawn tip

a littlehigher on tit* left side than at other

STRANGE ABOUT HOLIDAYSIThey Never Seem to Turn Out

the Way They Were Planned.It> v strand thin? about holiday*.

{Every worker who Is fortunate enonc'a l'»

jhave a summer vacation look* forward t'»

:It through th*> whole hard year, and ?~Z'•iomrhor,- when it comes he doesn't -'njo

-\it nearly as much as he expected tu.

\ When returned vacationists compare note-*[ the comparison generally runs something

"Yes. Ihad a prettr good time. Idid.want to so to the ... tfnd, stay at *hotel, but Ithought a quiet sojourn at a

jfarmhouse would r«*st me more. Yes, is

j wa<» quiet, except for the roosters and th»*

Idogs and the crows: but the food bad.!lnearly stjrved. And the b»ds were a-w-.fui: ButIhart a pretty sood time."

**W«Il, T «P'>nt my vacation at home. C1thoujht I'd have a xood. lazy time, an*• I'd ?ave money by not taklnc Itrip, t• rnfght hsve if wo hadn't had a lot of tin-

-"spectetl company, for it seemed '- i? all

lour relatives took that month for comln<Ito our house. Of coursr-. Ihad to help

!motfifr v.-!th lii»-m. and I'm just tired out."It seems alvruy-t i>, !.- a oOsUka to be

conscientious as>«>i!t raicatlons*; utilltajrU»Ji

consitlerationa sl.otihl never enter into va-

!ration """n? lUe few**r plans th« better.

!anyhovr. Once there was a man trho altihla lif.' had pp^n: bis month's holiday atjthe seashore h^:n:se his physicians ?aiilsea alx vrxn what h« needed. One day ;«.

friend hale«l him away on a ttshlns trip

Ito the mountains at a season when h<*[ kixew h^> r.-a.«sr."t entitled to a vacation an<*jat si!ch sliort notice liiat the zr.er. incampIhad to lend him things tillhe could get

jdown to tlif village store, li"said after-jward that he n^v^rhad such a sroorj tin**Iin his life, and he am^ l>ack in riotou-*f health and spirit?, but. all the same. th*»inext summer found him methodically• packing his trunk for his wor.ted niontl>jit* the highly resp«ctabre hotel at the »a-

!side.»

THE TRIBUNE PATTERN.Box pleat^l dreases are always pretty tor

the youncer ?irt.H. This one is made witi*body an^i . portions in on*». and beW irtr>la<">! by means of a belt. In the Ulixstra-

tion the material Ls one of the plaid novel-ties. With trimmin? of plain color. l»ucser^e an<i cashnipr*. which are shown tx -..great many nw siia<i-%3. would be eq"allv^appropriate- Tnr the trimming every ccn-»trastin;^ material or ready made bandin? tilpretty, and the dr^.-'S can he made suitib!*for the morn inC or school wear or for

Of Interest to 'Women

GARNITURES OF OHM|Rooney ?s Attitude May Defeat! , Him in Jersey Election.

The tunnel station Question 'will be. as, issue in the mixed campaign in Jersey City:and may defeat Thomas F. Rooney, the| president of. the. Street and Water Board.

who will be the Democratic organizationcandidate for re-election.

The controversy has excited considerableinterest, and has precedence at present overother issues, because of the activity of theHudson & Manhattan Railroad Company,

': more popularly known as the McAdoo\u25a0 tunnel company, in" posting notices that It

(could not open its island station. Grove to'Henderson street, on September 6, butwould be limited to the "hole-in-the-wall"

:station on Henderson street, owing to the\ attitude, of the Street and Water Board,

which imposed conditions that were unjustand could not be accepted.

The company says that In constructingthe island station it yielded to a popular

Idemand, as the merchants and numerous\u25a0 citizens desired, the Grove street station,, which would be at the shopping district.i To open the Grove street station made

necessary the vacation of a section of thestreet.

Commissioner Rooney is flattering himself:that be is on the popular side of the con-i troversy, that the. Street and Water Board:offered to rent the portion of the street de-j sired at $400 a year if the company wouldIenter into an agreement to chargr<; only.aj five-cent fare from every point in JerseyCity to Manhattan, or pay a rental of;

$10,000 a year without the fare limit. Butj many persons say his optimism Is notIwell founded, and that he will find thepublic will side with the company at elec-

! tion time by defeating him.The County Board of Freeholders a few

months ago decided that as the contractswith the trolley company had expired

, they should make new contracts and paya higher rental for operating- their heavycars over the bridge on the' Turnpikewhich spans the Hackensack and the bridge!over the canal which unites Jersey City andBayonne. These bridges had been con-demned and had to be reconstructed, andthe blame for the wearing out of the struct-ures was attributed to the heavy trolleycars. The result was the trolley company jdeclined to consider the proposition and was

1excluded from the bridges.The passengers were compelled to walk

across the bridges and this Inconvenienceb*»asit a storm of protests and an irresistibleclaim that the comfort of the citizenswas paramount to exacting a few dollarsfrom the trolley company, and the Ft?"-holdera were forced to abandon their anti-corporation attitude.

The Street and Water Commissionersmodified their order' yesterday to the po-

'lice, which originally prohibited any oneIfrom using the Grove street entrance and jled to the arrest of one of the employes .of the company. Th« new order permits the iemployes of the company to use the en- !trance. The commissioners were reminded .by the lawyer for the company that an jinjunction Issued two years ago preventing ;the city <>f?k:ja.ls from Interfering with work jon the tunnel was still in force

GOWN OF ROSE MOirSSEUICE DE BOIE, rr. \u25a0 \u25a0'

\"

'\u25a0'''

AND FRINGE OF CRYSTAL. TUII9

to what they ar really made of. The points nnd Is fastened there by one of thelatest embroideries, too, are extremely com- j pretty choux that finish po ii:an;-' <j<* theplicated and ar<- made all the more so I>y ;newer girdle?.appearing unveiled and under different j ,kinds of transparencies, all in the same .-

own The difference between French bread.

It la to be feared that this state -of af- j such as comes in lore rolls, an.l Americanfairs may lead to the decline of the art of ;homemade .r-ajl is due to the knoadtn^.conversation, for Itmay often require great :The French baker kneads his wt^h waterstr>»ng-th or* mind to refrain from gazing and but a little Hour while the Americanin speechless wonder at the gown a woman housewife kneads ben entirely with flour.

JVeioifs of the Mar

Mrs. BrLmar had pone to tho I>ong- InlandCollege tloppital to have an operation per-f<>T133e4. but found it unnecessary yester-day, ar.'i st«irte<i for home.

Asgsst Erunar. h^r husband, works ina bex factory in "tt'illiamsburc. AnotherTrortman thane is Louis Kruder. who hasan invalid wjfo. Kruder answered the po-lice call to po to th*! Borou^li Hall insteadof Brunar. und was much astonished at

ia«etin^- :;. Mranjre woman. ilr. Brunar»ocr. arrived, !:owvcr; for his wife.

Woman Ha? Hysteria After Leaving

Brooklyn Hospital.Mrs. llargraret Brnnar. of N*o. IS2I Broad-

way. \u25a0VYiJliaiiiEbunr. Lad left the Long- I.s;-zr.<} College Hospital only a short timeyesterday whvn Ffa«- fell unconscious at

•""ouTt and Bemscs frtreets. Brooklyn, t-lu-tras carr;<^d into the r^portrrs' room inthe Bnrougli Hall, and became hystericalnixer b^inp revived by Dr. Budding] ofthe Brooklyn Hospital, sayinsr that shepreferred to die rather than be ta-ken toar.y hospitaL

Uptown Prices.Ordinary sweet crapes are selling up- j

i town for 18 cents a. pound; Japanese'\u25a0 plums are 40 cents a basket. Delaware

'

: freestone peaches 20 cents a basket. New- }:town pippins SO cents a dozen. California jj red plums 15 cents a dozen, and Valencia;!late oranges 60 cents a dozen. Alligator ;

Ipears are "') cents a head, muskmelons ,:are 23 cents for seven, Eartlett pears are I;23 cents a small basket and red bananas \|are 23 cents a. dozen.

Meat prices are about the same as last jIweek. Both lamb an.l veal chops are -3 \u25a0•

|cents a pound and veal cutlet $ m 30 and3- cents a pound. Round of beef is 20

'

and 22 nts a pound, sirloin is 22 cent.* jan.l loin of pork is 22 cents a pound.

'Hindqtiarter of lamb is 20 cents a pound. \u25a0

Smoked tongue is 22 cents a pound.Lobsters are up to 40 cents a pound and i

softshell crabs are 70 cents a dozen. Vel-'

low pike are 30 cents a pound, white)'

jare 20 cents and halibut 18 cents. Black- •

fish, blue pike and yellow perch are 18cents pound: cod. bluefish. sea bass and ;poraries ure 14 cents. Spanish mackerel are j

'•"'\u25a0\u25a0' a pound, weakrish and terflah !are 12 cents md haddock, flounders and

jcarp are. 10 cents a pound.——^—^_

*

NO S-CS-TISSfE PAPER PATTERN OF*GIRL'S BOX PL£ATEI> DRBeS, \u25a0«\u25a0

i 10 CENTS.m-

Iafternoon occasion?, a^cordin? to the maIteria! an«l trimming- ufd. Just as fltas—

itrattnl it makes an excellent sturdy frocio, for the first school days.

The quantity of material required for the*

medium size is five and one-fourth yards -*>:or 27 inches wide, three and Sve-eisbth* 1

|yards 22 inches wic!* or two and flve-els?hth-"»-yards 44 inches wide, with one yard 27;inches wide for hands.

The pattern. No. 5.43i>. is cut in 3ize3 to&pirbJ four. six. elsht and ten years of as« t

and will be maile-l to any acdress on re-ceipt .•:' io cents.

Please give number of pattern and *g*»

distinctly. Address Pattern Department.!•\u25a0'.•\u25a0. Tribune. Ifin a hurry for pat-

tern send an extra 2-cent stamp. and \u25a0»»••'will mail by letter •,£\u25a0\u25a0 in sealed en-«ivelopo

Individual chicken salads ar-> attractive,

when the salad fa moulded Incups of aspi.-»iJolly on lettuce hearts, -with a rosette oZ.mayonnaise dressing 1 on top.

RESORTS.NEW YOKK.

RESORTS..NEW ORE.

LEH .- .ALLEY AIDS FARMERS.. \u25a0

\u25a0

• _ -I

• . -.

\u25a0 • truct theps. ai

\u25a0\u25a0

i£i)!isty's

BatMtid 6irlsBy toward Chandler Ghnsiv

the tmrd Cover Design*h'_ "Bathing- Girl"

\u25a0exies with the

Sunday Magazine

HOTEL GRAMATANLawrence Park • Bronxville • New York

OPEN ALL THE YEAR260 Rooms

120 Private BathsEXCEPTIONAL CUISINE

n*rfrt<- Train >•••»-» n-—̂

Minutes.TO GOLFERS: The NVw Lawrence Park Country Club, with its hastfsoxxM st.v*eJub bouse ami fli:.- c>!f links, only a f»-w minut-»- walk from Th* t;ramatan. -•'.-„

n««M- attraction. Th^ coitrse in now in ttrst-class romiition and ix uml»r the car* >'a competent professional. IIOTKI. GR.UUTAN, 1n... l'ropri^tor«l

/! Till

New York TribuneNEW JERSEY.

THE NEW MONMOUTHSPRING LIKE BEACH, N. i, \u25a0

Aatomobllln;. rldlns. driving, tsaata. zslz.canocne, sea l^ptSlns. suilin*:. Sa^!ny.

275 ROOMS. "TOO B.\rif4wwunsm f shcte. m«M«w.

THE SHOREHAM

THE ULSTER & DELAWARE R. R.offers complete train service to tha

Catskill Mountainsnoted for picturesque and romanticscenery. The glorious air, the magnifi-cent views and romfortable accommo-dations are a. great attraction in thismountain region, which la \u25a0 paradisefor children and a sanitarium forevery-body.

Send 9 cents postage .'or IllustratedBummer Book with map ut the Cats-Icfl

-: and list of hotels and boarding

booses)

N. A. SIMS.Ueneral I'assenge; Agent.

Kingston. .V T.

These beautiful 4< th-ing Girl

"covers are in-

tended as a special Mid-summer feature of theSunday Tribune.

WILL APPEAR

TO-MORROW

The Sunday Tribune is$2.0:) a year, sent byniail,or may he securedof any newsdealer.

Thc Sunday MagazineTO-MORROW will • on-ain several notab.e arti-

cles, including \u25a0 story ofPresident T2ft on theEmuS

Hariom Man in Bellevue Second TmfiFollowing Suicidal Attempt

... tint, of Xi .. • - tree'

ie Hos-1 v.ith

idellooney was noticed sitting on the pJ<-Ii

at West 37th street. Finally he g'Jt u;>

and divest od liimseif o!' his coat, ha; and

shirt. Boys who had been watching himran to Patrolman Schnecker, of the Fastr.jih street station, who came up just as

Mxxraey Jumped into the water. He stuck,

in the mud, and when Uf. stood up thewater only reached t.> his ne.ek. Sehneckexdr-v liia revolver and ti;id him that unless

ht walked to th* P'#"-' and nbed up-ho

would Eh-joi. This \va? enough fur Mooney,

who did as he was told.Mooney lai down in from o;' :iLeiinffton

jtvonue car a: I"2d .\u25a0 on July si Thera;- '•*\u25a0'»* going slowly and he received only

a few 6rui*e«. .. .....,_

Woman Intrusted with Missing Girl

Says He Was Willing to Take Her.Tie police wert requested by Mrs. Mar-

garet Walsh, of No. -Wu West 13d street,

yesterday to search for her three-year-old

daughter Nellie, who disappeared on Thurs-

day morning while in charge of a womanwho boarded with the Walshes.

Mrs. Walsh declares that she turned the

child over t<» her lodger, who is an oldwoman, and asked her to take tho littlegir!

out for a walk. Upon returning home at

night Mrs. Walsh didn't find her youugst-r

about, and upon inquiry the old woman-told Mrs. Walsh that while she was out

walking with the child she met a manwhom she asked to take the- girl horn-.

Tho man was willing,and upon being told

where to go started off. The •\u25a0\u25a0'''\u25a0 alsodisappeared yesterday.

TRIES WATER; FAILS AGAIN

TELLS OF MAN TAKING CHILD

Grand Jury Again Indicts Man Be-cause of New Year's Killing.

William Heineman, wlio was indictedlast April for manslaughter in the seconddecree on the charge of shooting and kill-ing Robert Dooley at 14Cth street andManhattan avenue, was indicted againyesterday by tho grand jury lor man-slaughter in the first degree, on the samecharge.

The second indictment, which supersedes

tho first, was reported it the request ofActing District Attorney Moss when hodiscovered that the facts in the ease didnot warrant the original indictment.

Dooley was one of a crowd of boys whojostled Heineman la^t Xcw Year's live,

and was (struck by a bullet from Hein^-nian's revolver when he fired into thecrowd.

Heirieman was exonerated by a coroner'sjury, but was later arrested on the indict-

ment reported by the grand jury and re-leased in SIQ.OOo bail. He will be arraigned

for pleading to the new indictment onMonday.

NOW CHARGES FIRST DEGREE

Reports received from the other forests,says tho forester, indicate a. general im-provement. The 'Old nights now prevalentand the absence of winds are greatly facil-itating the fire fighting. Ho declares thesafety of the towns in the fire ......now assured.

According to reports, there was a greaterloss of life among the unskilled fire fight-ers than among those Iwho had beentrained. Mr. Gre< says in bis messagethat, all but two permanent forest officershave been accounted for, with no deaths.Among the temporary borers there areseventy-nine known deaths and fifteen menNnaccounted for.

Ea.y« Forest Rangers Are IllyPrepared in Numbers andEquipment to Fight Flames.

tf'ashiasttra, Aug. 2t—Glffard Pinchot oft2.»» National ..... Association andformerly head of tho government ForestService, in a statesnent is!--ued to-day holds

that the loss cf property and lifeIn the r«?-

<v-r.t and present forest fires was unneces-sary.

The" fatal results. he says. are tractableto the unpreparedness to deal with the fire

ssru&tior:. He criticises members of Con-

jrj-p.es who have opposed appropriations for

tho p'-op^r equipment for forest ranger?,

and names Senator HeyTnxrn. of Idaho,

whose home town. Wallace. Idaho, sufferedserious lof-t: Senator Carter, of Montana,

and Representative MondelL of Wyoming.

Tho statement follows:"I am proud of the splendid work the

;r.rn of the Forest Service have bees doingagainst the Western forest fires. Many of

:hcm have given their lives to protect thehomes of settlers and the forests on which-.he prosperity of the Western • . pie do-i^-nds. To my mind, their conduct is be-yond n'l praise.

\u25a0"Forest fires are preventable. It is ajrood thing for us to remember at this timethat nearly or quite tilof the loss, suffer-ing and death «.jese fires have caused iswholly unnecessary. A fire in the forest1= the *ame kind of thing as a fire in thecity. There is only one way to Us either.The fire department of every city is or-ganized with the prime idea of getting to

the fire when it is young. So with forestfires. Tho time to conquer them is beforethey grow strong. Ifa forest is equipped

\u25a0a ith roads, trails, telephone lines and areasonable cumber of men for patrol thereis no more likelihood that greavt fires willv able to get started tlian there is thatrZViX ccr.riagrauons liko the Chicago firetrfll get started In a ....... a modemfire depanmtLjut- Under rare circumstancesthey may. hut the chances •-" against it.

••Th" Forest Service has dor.c wonders

\u25a0R-tth :'- handful of devoted men. it liasr:t out f\''ry year many thousands ofsmall fires, any one of -which under favor-able conditions might have developed Into:< (•or.fiacrari'in "which ten thousand ni^n

rxrald not stop. This year, because of the

rreat drouth— t"no worst in much of theWest for more than twenty years— there\u25a0xere too many ilres itnd too few rangers.

'7i:r Jesson fr&rn these forest fires isperfectly clear. When a city suffers froma crt-at fire it docs not retrench in Its firedepartment, bui strengthens it. That is\u25a0Rial the nation must do in the nationalfcrests.

"The men in '"ongrcss like Heyburn.

Carter and M*=ndell. who hav<» made light».f the efforts of the Forest Service to pre-pare itself to prevent ju^t such* a calamity

as this, have in effect l>ee:i fighting onibf1 side of the fires against the general•w>eif2Te. If even a small fraction of theJoss from the prosrnt tires had been «*x-

\u25a0perded i:i additional patrol and preventiveequipment some or perhaps nearly all oft:;» loss could h<sv«e Jieeii avoided."'

believe uur peor>le •will tak'1 this les-p«n to heart and insist .... T.-J their wives and their children^ thelumbermen anj the miners and the two'j:":ion dollars' worth* cf national property:r the national fircsts j-'liull lie adequatelyprotected."

Serious fires ore. racing- on tho Nez I'rr

forest reserve, in the •western part ofIdaho, according to a i°lf»rr:irn received atthe Forest Service late to-day from Dis-

trict Forester ireeley, at tflnnonla. Mont.Two forest officers have been sent to thescene from sßasoola and four from Ogden.Utah.

iGeneral Improvement in ForestConditions Reported Through-

out the Northwest.EKrom Th^

'Tribune Bureau, j

Washington. Aug. X.—The War Depart-\ ment refused to-day to grant the request ofjSenator Piles and Representative Hum-j phreys. of AVashington. that all bis: guns toI the vicinityof Puget Sound be fired aimnl-| taneously in order to hasten rain in theterritory now seriously menaced by forestfires. The department declared thai the

iplan was not feasible and would mean a

Iwaste of ammunition costing Sluo.Qno.The request cam? to Associate [forester

Potter, who forwarded it to the War De-partment. In several instances the WarDepartment has tried the means suggestedto induce rainfall, but at no time has theexperiment proved successful. The great

[distance between the s>eacoast and the.fire-swept region also influenced the War De-

,partment in its decision. •

The Xavy Department was also asked \u25a0"tofire what few guns ire under its control on

jthe coast, but on learning the decision ofitho War Department decided that compQ-|ance with. jn.> request would not

'bring

Irain. The Navy Department is practically!without guns near Puget Sound at the pres-jent time, the monitor Cheyenne, xvithtwo 12 and four 4 inch guns, being the

Ionly vessel available. The cruiser Chatta-!n^oga is at the navy yard there, but is be-

iir.sr put of out of commission.The experiment would have been one of

Ithe most \u25a0 \u25a0.».\u25a0;'.::- over attempted in the;United States. Around Puget Sound, atForts Worden. Casey and Flagler. the army

|has forty 12-inch mortars, six 12-inch rifles,Ieighteen 10-inch guns an/i twenty 6-inch*!z-ii\> besides a large number of guns ofsmaller calibre. ••\u25a0•.-\u25a0 : of the Co-ulmbia River, in Forts Columbia and Bte-,yens. are oijht 12-inoh mortars, eight 10-;in<"h guns, three S-inch guns and eleven 6-inch guns, in addition to the smaller ones.

To Tir* these on« simultaneously, loadedproperly for the purpose In mind, would ihave cost the government, It tvsis esti- Imated at the War Department. JIOJOOO. A.d-Iniittingr the possibility of effeetivrnesf.. it jwas considered that probably tea rounds Iwould have boen required. This would haverun the cost up to a figure, that the officialsdid not feel •.-•\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 in incurring withoutspecific authorization from higher author-ity, particularly in view of the anaiunt al-ready spent in potting' thirty-twocompaniesof troops into the \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-- to \u25a0_--.' fires.

Besides the element of cost. It vas statedat th" War Department that the army wasnot equippei] with projectiles with timefuse? for the guns just enumerated, andhpn^e the only atmospheric disturbancecreated would be by the formation of gaseson the ground at the time of the diseharceof the guns and by the pussage of the pro-jectile through tfi«* air. The disturbancecaused by -.••\u25a0_:• of the projectiles, itwas said, would b^ comj>aratlvely negligi-ble for The purposes of creating a violentconfusion among the air «:urrents.

To fire the biggest crr.i^ in the coast ar- 1

tillery- costs about '-- each, it has beenestimated. To fire the 12-inch mortars costs

aboui $<r' or %'{> each. ;

CALLED IN WRONG HUSBAND'

"OPPOSEO APPROPRIATIONS" WITHOUT EFFECT ON FIRES

T. C. Hayes, of Newark. Expelled, Says

He Knows of No Graft.Thomas

" Hayes of Newark, .V. J.. w/ic

wa- expelled on Thursday from the Eagletfraternity, in annual Besalon at rit. Louis,

in charg* a "t sraft. said yesterday bewould have little troubli in disproving the

.•\u25a0l, "80 s.i.'- •\u25a0 graft w:thln the)rd>T la concerned," be said. "I . ao only

: ;. \u25a0\u25a0 never known that it cxli \u25a0-

ed, ami most assuredly Inever .^.l a iianu.: it

"

Hayes served -i \u25a0 trustee of the GrandAerie for two years, being elected to hisfirst term inll***lI*** He was under $lo.«j"O bondduring this time. He laid he understoodthe charges were In connection with thepurchase of a lot of perforating machinesused. by th«; lodges. ''.'.. -•\u25a0 wore purchasedby advertist-d bids and tun bed the.lodsrew at cost price, pi:i;< S!SO for theGrand I/»jdge"s trouble, said Mr, Hayes.

OAK TREE HAS $25,000 FIRE.r'.ainiield. >.*. J., Aug. j<i t.Speoial).— The

largo barn, a sawmill anO all outbuilding*,together with contents^ at Oak Tree, abouttwo miles from this city, th^ property ofJohn V. Ton Evtk. wer? destroyed by rir-ithis morn entailing \u25a0 losa of about 125.-iM. Viva horses were burned to death. Th«rtrc if- believed to huve b^t-n of incendiaryorlji'11..

Son Chief Witness Against Contractorat the Coroner's Inquest.

River. N. V.. Aug. 36 CSpe<

Edward Wagner, the contractor, arrested

on a ••\u25a0

- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 having killed his wifi \u25a0-.

Wednesday morning, was i.eid to-day for- -..nil iur>' by th< verdict of a con-ner -

:\u25a0 . in which it was directly statedthat Wagner shot and killed his wife.

Tl»e chief witnjese ntgftn*^ Wagner wa."

: \u25a0 n-year-old son. Tho boy heardthe shot while be was dressing, and whenhe reached the window he saw hia M c'.. clump of bushes. Mrs.R agner was in her way to the barn toi<-ed the horses when she was shot. The

• el, ]\u25a0\u25a0 had been separated for two months; ..\u25a0 \u25a0 >i Wagner's alleged abuse. Hf

back to the New City iai! afterrefusing to make a statement other tl tn a

i- denial.

EAGLES OFFICER MAKES DENIAL

Driver of Car Held in $1,000 Bail forNew Jersey Grand Jury.

Montclair. N. J., Aug. 36 (Special).—

Barnett. sixty years old. a harmless para-noiac at Overbrook Insane Asylum, stepped

In front of an automobile stage coach onthe Pompton Turnpike, near Cedar Grove,

ia.-n night and was fatally injured, dying

at the Mountainside Hospital an hour later.The car was owned by Edward E. Taylor

and was in charge of his son. Elmer B.Taylor, who was held in $1,000 to-day to

answer before the grand jury.Taylor and other occupants of the stage

coach, which included "William Greenfield,

Miss Helen Greenfield and John Ingraham,

of New York, say that Barnett steppeddirectly in front of the coach from the sideof the road and that the accident wasunavoidable. Barnett. the victim of theaccidi ;" had been an inmate of the asy-

lum for thirty years and got occasionalholidays. I'was while out 01 one of tin •

occasions that he was run down and killed.

HELD AS SLAYER OF WIPE

Lively Contest at Highlands,N. J., Preparatory to Carnival.Long Branch, X. -T.. .\\\k. 26 (Special.—

Highlands i.< excited over tho selection ofa queen by popular vote to rule over Itsthree-day demonstration next week, open-ing .hi Thursday. Until last night MissIr^nc McGuire had a clear l^ari. To-day

Miss Josephine Snoboda, a semmer resi-dent. H-ads Miss McGuire by a vote of 2.<TiO

1 :• <-sterday the leader did nottipure at all fn the voting contest, othersw ho ar^ dose behind are Miss Irene Leigh-

U«9. and Mi.ss rfophio Muasell, 1.2.WThere are a number of others whose votes

range From '••\u25a0 •\u25a0 '.\u25a0"\u25a0'. They Include MissMadeline Lev\ . Miss Kitti*-Beck, Miss EvaRoscnba.um. Mis:- Aprne= McDermott, Mi.-sMildred Gardiner. Miss Irene Sherman, MissCarrie Lynch, Mis* Sylvia Smith, Miss

Sadie Hand. ICiss Bessie Wright .md MussBen i'-\u25a0 .

midsummer ni^etin? of th< ffew Jcr-<=«>- Kditori .' a. latioi wD •<\u25a0 IPleasure Bay to-morrow. President -1.I,yie Kinmonth. of "The Asbury Park

;\u25a0- -

\u25a0 reside at tin \u25a0 meeting

and the clambake which follows, and willhave a guests Pittsfieid. Mass.. menwho •' the New Jersey editors

at th° annual "-iriTisr in the Berksbires inJune.

North Jersey shot business men "who arespending the summer at the various resortsbetween Atlantic Highlands and Long

Branch enjoyed a day's outing to-day atConey Island, leaving Atlantic Highlands

at 2 o'clock on the steamer Sirlus. They

returned late to-night. Edward D Adams,

who has a cottage at Sea Bright, waschairman of the committee on outing.

Others who took an active part wen Mr'-vin A. Rice, Lewis S. Thompson and I. B.Hosford.

enhurst ?a- c ar. entertainment •"-nip":*

in aid of the Monmouth Memorial Hospital.

which was*largely attended. The perform-

er were all summer folk livingin the vi-cinity of Long Branch. The Paint :\rAPowder Club, of Orange, was down foi anumber that waf thoroughly enjoyed.

Nathaniel Jahnes has left Sea Bright fora stay in the <"atskiUf=.

Dr Robert 1... Sprcr. who has just re-turned from the World's Missionary < 'on.-ference ;it Kdinburyij.Scotland, will till thepulpit of the. Presbyterian chapel at. >ph

Bricht on Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Phiiip Ixiwisohn. who havetKjen abroad all summer. are expected attheir summer home next week.

Mrs. C. O. McFaddin, Mrs. I"itman "Westand Mrs. A. m. Townley left here yester-day for a stay in the Catakill Mountains.

Mr. and Mr.-. John 11. Houghton, of Rah-\u25a0way, ire visiting Mr. and Mr?, If.P. Ben-nett, of Washington street.

AUTO KILLS INSANE MAN

His Fine Cigars and Wines WereStolen, Say Police.

Although employed as a] driver at ?15 aweek. .lamps F. Kelly, of,Newark. N. .T..had a taste for wines,^cigars and diamond?that would have done .-redit to a million-aire. lie was arrested yesterday, and thepolice say he bam been systematically rob-bing one of the largest grocery stores inNewark for the last year.

Kelly,a man with a family, drove a bak-ery wagon. His last stop was at the gro-cery store of Aaron Ward Sons at Xo. 9GIBroad street. ,Kelly always fed his horsesthere. The firm began to miss high classgoods. Kelly was suspected and two de-tectives watched him. They say that yes-terday morning they saw him go into the

store and hi'; his pockets with loose coffee.After arresting him the officers went to hishome and were amazed at the abundanceof things there; which included champagne,boxes of S9-oent cigars, fancy groceries, ,etc All these things were seized by

the detectives. . The police estimate thatthe goods they got at Kelly's apartmentsare worth 11.000.

'

MANY WANT TO BE QUEEN

a: the station bouse, where Kelly wassearched, another surprise awaited the po-lice. On one of the lingers of the prisonerwas a diamond ring- as big as a hickorynut, which the police declare Is worth $1,200.They discovered something glittering in hisshirt front, and when they extracted it they

saw it was a diamond stud valued at about5300. ;. ,

BAKERY DRIVER LIVED HIGH

-fKix; Ukt Mfc.u M. >. J.A r.*:\ *:::dellKhtfully located hot*!. »:ta ailmoriirn improvement.*. ramalnlna* <»?•«throughout rt\a *ntlr? ytrar. urji!<»r ta» m«j-

'mj:<-r.\*n' nt F. SHTTE.

QDarlborongb-lßien^rvv 111 1 v vru CITY. v J.'

ln«ii«li \\ hit.- X \u25a0»..!». InmpMT

GALEN HALLATL%>TIC CITY. v J.

HOTEL AND SANATORIUM.::lcw_T25lt Otßce. 1122 Broadway.

rr.Nxs\i.v.\M.%.

WfITER G£IP HOUSETfce Mouutala FaraUlae.I'M vw \\ irt.K <;.\p. p\.

RfTßHtna op»-n ti>Lvormlx-r. Unqutstionabiv ii»l^a.lins ai:>l ttn«»!ti hotel U\ thi.-* r»jflun for tSo*»,who s«^h the b^uinappointment, calsise. s«r\ic>comfort i»ml locHtion; hUh-*' altitude, coolest stt—u.ittii.. Every in.i .>;\u25a0 fnt#rralr.m*-nt and .u--l.,rtastim*". .--•\u25a0»- xnd Autumn rat«*

'Booklet of ramtra views an-I Auto Mapa mailedFourth »^-*«oti FOHN PL'KDT COPS.

*

The ld-al Hot :l at which to «nioythe Autumn Seaaon.

THE KITTATINNY,b k) r. tpec. Sept. £ Oct. ra.:uL G- T7UXK CO?%

i Advance in Butter and Eggs. ;

! One of the signs of coming fall is no- jticcable at Washington Market this week ;

in the first advance in butter and egs? for ;many weeks. Eggs are now 29 cents a ;

'\u25a0 dozen; butter Is 35 cents a pound, and !I sweet butter la 39 cents.

Fish Reasonable.Fish in general is reasonable at present, j

! Blue pik<- are just in from the Western ,lakes, and are la cents a pound; lobsters jan still at the high figure of SO and 02 j

cents a pound: soft shell crabs are $1 a!'dozen for prime and 75 cents a dozen for i

| uudium. Yellow pike and California I• salmon are -)•" cents a pound; whiteflsh are

\u25a0 20 cents, porgies IS cents, bluefish V, to 19\u25a0 its, yellow perch, halibut, butterfish and

sea bass are 15 cents, cod, flounders, black- ;fish, carp and haddock are 10 cents and

weakSsh are 12 cents a pound.

Corn Abundant.Cantaloupes are 10 and 15 cents each; |

sweet melons are 20 cents a basket ofabout eight Peas are 15 cents a quart i

this week but wax beans, string' beansand lima beans are still 10 cents a quart.

rooms are high again •• cents a ;'pound— and tomatoes are 15 cents a pound.

Potatoes and sweet potatoes are 10 cents a:

quart, red cabbages are la cents apiece

j white cabbages 10 cents and cauliflowers j25 to 35 cents each. Sweet corn is 40 cents j

, a dozen and of good quality, and the sup- !'. ply is so abundant that it is ma* the j

vegetable stalls at the market look quite ;\u25a0 full again. There are some poor bunches jof asparagus to bo had at 25 cents \u25a0 bum h. ;

iEggplant is 13 cents apiece, celery :j: j \u25a0{<•

cents a largo bunch and kohlrabi Is 5 cents ,a .bunch. Onions are 10 .\u25a0out.-- a. quart and ;;spring onions are 10 cents for three \

bunches Cucumbers aro 5 to 10 cents !

apiece, lettuces are 10 cents and beets are !5 cents a bunch. Chicory is 10 cents and jescarole 15 cents a head.

Late Strawberries.

Peaches are plentiful and range from U5 jcents a basket to 63 cents a till for white !

Po.lawares and California peaches, a tillwhen measuring large fruit being about

five pounds in weight. Sixteen quart bas- \u25a0

kets of preserving peaches are 50 cents.Henry Kelly & Sons are showing a ship-

ment of strawberries which is unique at ;this time of the year. The fruit is small,

but very sweet, and finds a quick sale at

35 cents a basket. Watermelons are 651cents each, alligator pears are 25 and 30Icents each, and grapefruit are 20 and 25

cents ........ Oranges are :; cents ami :$1 a dozen, persimmons are $1 .i dozen, jmangoes are the lame, German blue jplums are 03 cents a dozen, and California jred plums are 85 and To cents a till.

Seckel pears are 75 cents \u25a0 till, Bartlettpears are 60 and 85 cents a dozen, andwinesap apoles nre $1 a dozen. Huckle-berries and blackberries are each 20 cents ,a basket. Hothouse Muscats are $- and$1 25 a pound, seedless grapes ure So cents :a basket, Delawares 15 cents, Concords 25cents. Malagas 50 and GO cents and Tokays

\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0 cents a basketVeal a Little Higher.

Veal la a little higher this week The jbest milk fed city dressed calves are »ell- jing at '•\u25a0 and ;'\u25a0'•.• cents a pound whole- !sale, and this rise in the wholesale price i

has sent hindquarters up to 20 cents ami ilegs to 2H i••'•\u25a0 a pound. !

'' •• supply ":' j

fancy lamb is limited, and this, of course, iis keeping the prtc* up. but there Is plenty j

of tho second grade \u25a0•\u25a0 \u25a0:r. naij :l,

falrl:reasonably rate*. rtoastin's beef H •\u25a0•

'j

cents \u25a0'•\u25a0. \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 c»ts 22 '•"in- a poun<l

Corned beof i.^ from !2 to 20 ( \u25a0•<.;< \u25a0 ..pound. JticVoJ'dlnK to cut; lives* liver is <

il.",i1.", rent*a pound, swe«'tbreads are •••' cent? •

;r pair ami calves' hearts are 50 cents each, MBacon i. it cents. pound. I,

——\u25a0 r—

———.,; I

DAY LINESummer tic Book. <'»«\u25a0*::;\u25a0». -t Be-fore selfctlns

-ntl « trip sen,! tic. pu^tj^u to

Hudson Rl -r :.:•\u25a0- D«>sbrosses_St.. X. T.

Garden City HotelMantra City, x .mi- Islam).

IS M!-» Tom New York. Open all MSBA MICH CIAS- MOl)i:itNHOTEL

i;rn\Eii ASM EXCLUSIVE.'\u25a0en a la Cart* Restaurant..-. ,i. u.NM> toMr.\xv. puorr*.

IDEAL SUMMER HOME SSffiSS.\u25a0.uuuiir »h-' s»outnl and :t beautiful porV

Forty \\ . >•• from Cltv.I»•">»'.-vtrtori» H'J'Ql Urfhmoni. X. Y.

NEW JERSEY.FOtt ',: p\..--~ BOOK Illustrating and des<-rlb-

in« Anbury Park '•'""I-

c»nts to MunicipalInformatlun Bureau, Asbury I'arU, N\ J.

WOMAN HURT IN RUNAWAY.Montoluir. X. J.. Aug. 36 (Special) -Miss

Anna Bruen. of Brooklyn, was severely in-jured Ina runaway here to-day. She wasth<" guest of Miss France IC. Harris, of thi.^city, and was uHiij^ driven in a carriage tothe Lackawiinr.a station, when the hors*ran away down the steep bill m Glctn Ridgeavenue. Miss Bruen and the driver werethrown into the street when the vehicleoverturned. Idas Bruen was taken to MissHarris's home, suffering from a bud ..'\u25a0•

\u25a0\u25a0 .'md and a dislocated shoulder.

NEAR DEATH IN ELEVATOR FALL.Franklin Furnace, x J. Aug. SO (Special)

—His tlrst trial at running the elevator intho separator mill of the New Jersey ZincCompany pro ed nearly fatal for George

Smith to-day. The elevator dropped v ins-tance of seventy feel Smith's lees werefractured and be was hurt internally.Smith was In th« highest p:»rt of the shaft\*hen the mechanism got out of order.

Paterson Health Officials Urge SewerSystem Along Passaic River.

Paterson, X. J., Aug. 26 (Special):—Prompted by the prevalence of typhoidfever In this city and vicinity, the healthofficials of Paterson made an inspection to-day of the Passaic River above Little Fallsand decided that the trouble was due large-ly, If not entirely, to the great number ofcamps and bungalows established along Theriver bants and used during the summerseason.

The summer population in these campsand bungalows this year has been aboutfour hundred, and the campers use theriver as a sewer. The water used to supplyPateraon and surrounding cities enters thefiltration plant of the East Jersey WaterCompany below Little Falls, but the dis-ease germs are not entirely killed when thewater enters the mains to be pumped tothe cities, It is said.

The local health officials have no juris-diction, but they v.illnot;:;- the state healthboard and will request that the campsbe abolished or that some system of sewagedisposal be adopted.

IGATHER FOR CAMP MEETINGIBishop Wilson Leads at First• Ocean Grove Service.I Ocean Grove. v. .t. Aug. % (Special).-fAlarge number of persons gathered this af-

| ternoon In the Janes Memorial TabernacleJ for a season of prayer and meditation in-

cident to the forty-first annual camp meet-in;, which opened to-day and will continueuntil September 5. This service Tas Incharge of Bishop Luther B. Wilson ofIPhiladelphia, vice-president of the Camp

jMeeting Association and chairman of thejdevotional committee. Bishop Wilson, theiRev. Dr. John It. Alday and the Rev. Dr., Henry Wheeler made brief addresses.j This evening-, in the Auditorium, the an-'nual sacramental service was held. The

Ifirst three tables were occupied by clergy-1men, and then followed the laymen of the1 Church. Fully two thousand partook of theIcommunion.j The camp meeting services proper willbegin to-morrow. The Initial sermon will

|be preached at 10:30 a. m. by the Rev. J.iB. Kulp. pastor or" the Bradley Beach|Methodist Episcopal Church. In the even-ing there will be a platform meeting-, withjbrief addresses by visiting clergymen.'Bishop Joseph F. Berry, of Detroit, willpreach Sunday morning-, and in the eveninga platform meeting, with a number ofspeakers, willhe held. J. Lincoln Hall, of

IPhiladelphia, will have charge of thesinging in the Auditorium during the campjmeeting.

The camp meeting schedule of meetingswillbe as follows: Early consecration meet-

Ing- in the Tabernacle at 5:45 a. m.; familydevotions in the Auditorium at 6:45; holi-ness meeting in the Tabernacle. YoungPeople's meeting in the Temple and Juniors'meeting in the Thornley Chapel at 9;preaching In the Auditorium at 10:30; de-cision meeting in the Tabernacle at 1:30 p.m. and Helping Hand meeting in theThornley Chapel at the same hour; pente-costal service in the Temple at 3; twilightrevival service in the Tab* made at 6, ledby Miss Helen Gertrude Rumse: . andpreaching in the Auditorium at 7::;".

On Sunday, in addition to the regularservices, there will be four different ser-vices of the summer Sunday School at 2:30 |p. m.; the service on the North. End Pa- jvillon at 4 and the Surf meeting at OceanPathway at 6. The annual love re;,.-.- ser-vice, in charge of Bishop Wilson, will beheld at 3 £•.. m. on Sunday, September 4.

SAY CAMPERS SPREAD TYPHOID i

5