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Got Something to Sell ? Half the business is done if you let the people know of a good article you have for sale through The Record A large class of trading people worth talking busi ness to are to be reached only through The Record. Merchants can double their Christmas Trade by ad vertising at once and in effective style in The Record. Business men who want to reach those buyers who are good payers should not overlook BUSINESS OFFICE, Harrison Street. THE.... Jamesburg RECORD. I S. F. ROCKHILL, SANITARY PLUMBER AND DEALER IN I. X.L. Wind Mills! flu* mriHD hill ano dbiry supplies. I will be glad to send estimates of -cost of Erecting Wind Mills, House Tanks, Bath Rooms, Closets, etc. Also furnish Steam and Hot Water Heating Plants. B. F. ROCKHILL, 'COLUMBUS, NEW JERSEY. LOCAL REFERENCE. Mr. Geo. VanArtsdalen, Jamesburg. YOU WILL FIND^ What you are looking for at our store in the line ot Toilet Requisites, Tortoise Shell and Manicure Goods, Jewelry and other novelties. •Character Wigs. Character Wigs turnished. Or ders by mail promptly attended to. Private rooms for Ladies’ Hair Dressing and Manicuring. Lady attendants. H. B. Zimmerman, <14 CHURCH ST.. NEW BRUNSWICK HEADQUARTERS -FOR Blank Books ot every description, in stock and made to order. Also, complete line of OFFICE SUPPLIES. Standard Diaries of 1900. CHARLES TAMM, Bookseller and Stationer, 69 Church St., New Brunswick WANTED—AGENTS FOR “GLADSTONE. HIS Life and Public Services," by Thos. W. Hand, 'ford. A wonderful story of a glorious career. ' Over 500 large, radiant pages, too superb, rare en igravings. Richest, biggest, best and only endorsed “Gladstone book" published. Only $1.50. Com mission 50 per cent. Credit given. Freight paid. ‘Outfit free. Drop all trash and clear $300 a month with the only true and good "Gladstone book." Address THE DOMINION COMPANY. Dept. 36, '35J-3.56 Dearborn street Chicago. Veterinary Surgeon ! The undersigned has removed bis Home and Office to the house ad joining “The Jamesburg Record” building on Harrison street. Cus tomers will be governed accordingly. DR. MARE DIER, if-jySO Veterinary Surgeon New York University LawSchool Sixty-sixth r«ar - Oct. 1,1*00. Day Claaaaa with■•■•ionafrom*JO to • P. M. (LL. B. aftar two I years.) Ev.alas Ciaaa. _- saaalons • to 10 P. R. (LL. B. afUr thres yoara.) Graduate Classes lead to LL. II. Tuition. *100. For circulars address L. J. TOMPKINS. Registrar. Washington Square, N. Y. City. Now is the time to advertise. NERVITA PILLS Restore Vitality Lost Vigor and Manhood... Cure Impotency, Might Emissions, Loss oi Memory, all wasting dis mi wi Vt CA^aa ftUU 1UUIM.1GUUU. A nerve tonic and blood builder. Brings the pink glow to pale cheeks and restores the fire of youth. By > mail 50c. per box, 6 boxes for $3.50, with our bank able guarantee to cure or refund the money paid. I Send for circular and copy of our bankable guarantee bond. CTS. NERVITA TABLETS bp™ *™™ (icllow xjabml) Immediate Results Positively guaranteed cure for Loss of Power, Varicocele, Undeveloped or Shrunken Organs, Paresis, Locomotor Ataxia, Nervous Prostration, Hysteria, Fits, Insanity, Paralysis and the Results of Excessive Use of Tobacco, Opium or Liquor. By mail in plain package, $1.00 a box, 6 for $5.00 with our bankable guarantee bond to cure in 30 day* or refund money paid. Address NERVITA MEDICAL COMPANY Clinton and Jackson Streets CHICACO, ILLINOIS H. L. JAQUES, DRUGGIST, RAILROAD AVENUE JAMESBURG, N. J. Designs Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patent* sent free. Oldest airency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive sptrial notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, $3 a year; four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN SCO.”"—-New York Blanch Office, OS F St, Washington. D. C. PIMPLES “Sly wife liad pimples on ber face, but ■he has been taking CASCARETS and they have all disappeared. I had been troubled with constipation for some time, but after tak ing the first Cascaret I bare had no trouble with this ailment. We cannot speak too high* ly of Cascarets." Frid Warmish, 0708 Germantown Aye.. Philadelphia, Pa CANDY CATHARTIC | EATnANTIG A bwdccogt® niAOf mamn Acewrywco Plesssnt. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 60c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... ■tsrllsf Itmoiy C—SMoy. CMssgs, Swlrttl, Isw Inrl. HI MTU BAA Bold and guaranteed by all drug ■ IU-DAU gists to CTKI Tobacco Habit. New Spring Clothing for Men, BoyS and Children. All New and Desirable. Vliet & Dahmer, a Paterson Block, NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. A Free Trip to Paris! Reliable persons of a mechanical or Inventive mind desiring a trip to the Paris Exposition* with good Homes Desired for Protestant and Catbolle Children. For particulars anil terms, apply to the State Board of Children's Guardians, Fuller Building. Jersey City.N. J. •^Printers’ Ink . . Judiciously applied will do wonders in building up your bualncaa MOST POPULAR SEWING MACHINE for a mere ecm*. Boy from reliable manufacturer* that have gained a reputation by honest and square dealing. There is none In the world that can equal in mechanical construction, durability of working parts, fineness of finish, beauty in appearance, or has as many improvements as the NEW HOME. WRITE FOR CIRCULARS. The Hew Home Sewing Machine Co. Oxangx, Mass. Boston, Mass. *8 Union Squinn, N.Y. Chicago, III. St, Louis, Xo. Dallas. Texas. San Fbahcisco, Cal. Atlanta, Ga. FOR SALE BURTIS ft ZIMMERMAN, Agents, Freehold, N. J. « A DIAMOND FOR A DOLLAR A Limited Special Offer Will Last for Ten Days Only. Genuine Barrios Diamonds have a world-wide reputation. It is almost impossible to distinguish them from genuine diamonds costing hundreds of dollars each. They are worn by the best people. We will forward a Genuine Barrios Diamond mounted in a heavy ring, pin, or stud to any ad dress upon receipt of once, fx.oo each- Earrings, screws or drops, $2 per pair. Ring settings are made of one continuous piece of thick, shelled gold, and are warranted not to tarnish. Special combination offer for ten days only! Ring and stud sent to any address upon receipt of $1.50. In ordering ring give finger measurement by using a piece of string—also full particulars. Addtess plainly. THE BARRIOS DIAMOND CO., 1181-1183 Broadway, New York. Thos. C.Hill & Son, CATERERS &nd CONFECTIONERS. Wedding Receptions, Dinners and Luncheons • specialty. Tableware to hire to responsible par ties. First-class work only. Out-of-town orders a specialty. EO. II BROAD NT., TRENTON, N. -V. Dr. H. D. Zandt, PMYfttOIAN AND SUROEON Specialist in Diseases of the Eje and Ear. Has Removed his Office and Residence to the house formerly occupied by Mr. W. E. Paxton, on Railroad Avenue, JAMK8BURQ, y. J. Office Hours: M a. m. 12 to 1:30 p. m., toSp.n YOU CAN PATENT l-HktK, COPYRIGHTorO£S$» anything yon invent or CmATJIttDE-IUM. CO_ PROTECTION. Send model, .ketch, or photo, for free examination and advice. BOOK 01 PITOTS ST-VTUffi 'C.A.SHOW&CO. Patent Lawyers. WASH INGTON, D.C. Its In % ru to r Tit Ink* It \\ [1] tit erf' the A t i ph t b > nl Hurst iw**u tt> Mecbunicnl Vfclticit't* A French genius, M. Emile Lan grenne, says British Invention, hopes with his automotor horse to overcome the antipathy of horsemen to self-pro pelled vehicles. This equine-shaped device contains within its body the mechanism to propel it, and can be at tached to any form of horse-drawn ve- I hide, the steering being effected by means of reins or rods held by the rider or driver, the neck of the horse being for this purpose intersected and mounted upon ball bearings. The reins are attached to a cross-head mounted on a verticle spindle, to the lower end of which are attached arm* THE AUTOMOTOR HORSE. contained within the forelegs; and con nected to the axel of the front wheel. The motor mechanism consists of on« or two gasoline motors (according to the power desired) supported upon cross bars and driving wheels mounted on the hind legs of the horse. It is ex tremely doubtful whether M. Lan grenne’s hopes as regards the frighten ing of horses will be realized by hia device. AUTOMOBILE RULES. In France the Horseless Vehicle la Working a Revolstlos la Hasr Departments at Lite. The automobile has now thoroughly entered into the French mode of life; : timorous persons no longer exist; tha sight of an automobile running in tha streets no longer attracts any atten tion; and a breakdown alone causes the gathering of a crowd, and that of much smaller size than one that is col lected by the falling of a horse. Odors > no longer call forth protests, since ! people have got used to them. Horses have been pleased to put themselves upon a level with man (and for this the poor pedestrian should be thank ful to them), and no longer take fright ( or even sny at mechanical or other j street cars that come towards them at 15 miles an hour, and graze their noses at such speed. The noise made by pe trolettes, motorcycles and quadricy cles leaves everybody indifferent, and it may be said that the horse, the dog, and man are now trained. Another progress made by automobilism in its entrance into our mode of life is seen in the theater. For example, in a piece put upon the stage by the "Vari etes,” one of the principal incidents is an accident that happens to the auto mobile of the prince, and which is fol lowed by a happy denoument for the latter, the piece and the author.—Au tomobile. Stopping by the Wayside. Bicycle riders have a right to stop by the wtyside and leave their wheels i standing at the curb, and when so left it is the duty of drivers to refrain from running over or against them, and the person so negligently injuring a bicycle will be liable for the damage so caused. This right must, however, be subordinate to the necessary use of the highway for public travel, and there are doubtless many instances in which the narrowness of the way or the press of a crowded street would put the burden of proving ordinary j care on the person leaving his wheel at the mercy of heavy traffic. The rule is less strict with the bicycle than with a horse and wagon, for the former is not only smaller in bulk, but cannot take fright and collide with others. Moat Expensive Fentbers. The tail feathers of the feriwah, a rare member of the family of para diseidae. or birds of paradise, are the most expensive known. The only tuft existing in England—probably in any civilized land—was procured with such difficulty that it is considered to be worth $50,000. It now adorns the apex of the coronet worn on state occasions by the prince of Wales. Automobile Stage Coaehea. An automobile stage coach and mail line has been established in Speyer, Germany, and has carried 40.000 pas sengers in its five months of existence. Each coach will carry 28 passengers, and is propelled by a benzine motor of ten-horse power. The route is ten miles, and the company has a contract with the government to carry tha mails. Not as Jflavb of Her. “Does Miss Biffin ride her wheel as much as she did last year? It doesn’t teem to me as if I see as mueh of her.” "No, she's thinner.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Mean Thins. Mrs. Peckham—I never told you how my husband proposed to me, did I? Mrs. Dashum—No; did he propose to you?—N. Y. World. Diagnosed Ills Case. He—1 feel like a fool to-night. She—So glad you've recovered.— Journal Pour Tous. NOTES ON AUTOMOBILES. D»|«r< to Be Anticipated from Serr ou Hornet and lleatroctlre Gasoline Eiplotloai, ,« The horseless carriage is of interest to many people besides the man who owns it. Inasmuch as it is liable to be encountered on the highway by all who drive or walk there, it is coming to be commonly observed all through the better settled portions of the coun try, more particularly in the neighbor hood of large cities and fashionable resorts, like New York, Newport, Nar ragansett Pier and Long Branch. Those who are liable to meet auto mobiles on the road have occasion to view such vehicles with something more than mere curiosity. Xow and then an automobile makes such a racket as to alarm a nervous horse. An animal that will stand serenely near a puffing locomotive is not like ly to view an automobile calmly. The electric automobile makes rather less noise than one whch uses gasoline or steam for propulsion, but nearly all of them, regardless of the power em ployed, clank more or less. Now and then one is as noisy as a mower or reaper; and if, in addition to having this fault, they also emit a lot of steam and makes a hissing noise, it will be well to keep on one's guard while driving past them. Caution is the more desirable, since automobiles often run over a good road at a rate of 20 or 30 miles an hour. Automobiles which use gasoline, either as fuel under the Eteam boiler or to be exploded inside the cylinder of a regular gas engine, are obliged to carry a supply of liquid in storage tanks, just as so-called naphtha launches do; and if the tanks should leak and the escaping and rapidly va porizing stuff should take fire there would be an explosion. An accident of that kind occurred in New Rochelle harbor on a naphtha launch, and the owner's son and wife were instantly killed. The man himself was badly in jured, but may survive. In like man ner an automobile at Lenox, Mass., blew up while standing in the stable. A man standing near by was hurt, and the building was set on Are. The farmhands rescued six horses and nearly all the other carriages in the stable before it was destroyed. Event ually. when people acquire habits of greater caution the automobile will be as safe as a locomotive engine, but while it is a novelty and is not con trolled by law there is some danger of accident both to owner ana to other people.—N. Y. Tribune. NEW BICYCLE TRACK. As iBsrnloai Device Po«e»lss Soi Advantages, Among Them Dis tinct Xovelty. A very ingenious bicycle track has been newly invented by two southern ers. While not a circle, nor an oval, nor kite-shaped, it has neither begin ning nor end. and the arrangement of it is such that a rider may travel on it for an infinite distance with out ever encountering another bi cycler coming in the other direc tion. One advantage of this style of track, a diagram of which is shown here with, is that a long stretch of bicycle NEWEST BICYCLE TRACK. path is condensed into a very small space. At the same time the con tinual rotary movement in one direc tion is avoided, thus preventing dizzi ness. As will be observed from the diagram, the rider Moves in steadily decreasing curves toward the center, and then returns over increasing curves until he reaches the outer ter mination of the track. The word termination, however, is properly speaking a misnomer, because a loop at that point carries the bicycle back to the place of starting.—Philadel phia Saturday Evening Post. a Girt That Adhered. “What a lovely fan, Clara." “Isn’t it sweet? I bought it for Julia on her birthday and liked it so well that I kept it myself."—Chicago Rec ord. Love. Sentimental One—Love makes the world go round. Growler—Yes; but it doesn't make the dollar go round by some 30 cents.— Syracuse Herald. Different Points ot View. Bridegroom—Well, I've been marriea one month to-day. Old Stager—You mean 30 days.— Town Topics. The Thins Made Clear. She—He says he loves me; yet he has only known me two days. Her Friend—Well, perhaps that’s the Teason, dear.—Tit-Bits.