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Insurgents Destroy Turkish Posts Near Adrianople. Him,EES FLEE TOWARD THE PORTE Orarral /nut rlsr ft *stl«l t» Hr Or ■ unit Ing ■ « «*r|»» of A,INtO Hn« <■«<• nImim lu t ross Ihr F rtinllrr. • HnMA. Bnluarla. A tin- 21k—Abotlt C iaa> in«tiru>nt- now near Yo»lonn have In .-n ordered to eoim-ntrate in the mountain' of Mnvihovo. They art* ex pected to attaek Tlkvetdl anti Shev fhell A force of lti'M"KfHta attaekt*l Ne ve»ka. where U+t aohliera were *ta tlonotl drove them out ait.l killoil —to* of the nitrrl'ott The Inair-jent* then con*trn« t«*l earthwork*. Seven Imttnl toii* of Tnrkl'h trout'* which have ar lived near Sevtuka are ttow bombard Inn the defeti*e* Tlte general altnation in the vilayet of Atlrtaiio|'le i-otitintt'* iiliirnilini The rerohitlonarh'* hate deatrnyed all the Tnrkidi |M*«t* ulontf the frontier. A re|mrt any a Ilia I the Turkl*h 1-0111 ttlander In the tl 'triet of Here* ha* or Ui retl hi* atilMirtllnuli" to kill ami tie ntroy every Imdy ami 1 verythlltif llitlita lion imitwtall.it. It tl... illM'll*tra»ltt lilllllU n|HM-ur. The Turk -*h population Is fleeing toward Constantinople. Might hundred men women and children have gone to Bu«tllko. and the Turkish government is arranging to scud them to Asia Minor A fierce tight lias <x .it I'assa kill, twenty miles from Adrianople. wlnfe three Turkish Imitations stir rounded a I tody of insurgents, A sec ond Imtld of rebels eninc to tlie assist a nee of their comrades, who thereuimn broke through tlie cordon, killing Ibo Turks (iencrul ZontehclT Is -aid to lie organ Izillg a is sly of o.tKNl Maeedoiiiaus to cross (lie frontier. Tlie Ms.Ionian committee lias urgently appealed to I’rinee Ferdinand to show greater In terest in tint Macedonian situation, saying if Macedonia is not soon lilier riled tlie |sisitIon of Bulgaria will lie come exceedingly critical. A detailed report of the train out rage near 1 leli Harm - says that a package was placed in tlie restaurant car of tlie train at ltuda|»cst contain ing the hoiuh witii a clockwork attach Jlient which V a lilii- \ -I train was crossing t: i tza. it was intendisl to destroy ^bridge ami - it ell • i ' i • .:i fween Adrianople and Ha Ion A large number of ..pa havi ^Stationed in tile vainm- -iruirli- ol Constantinople as a pr eautiotmn measure in view of tlie appearance of insurgents less than a hundred miles from the capital. A train load of Turkish troops has hfe'n dispatched to 'I la rkes'.oi. vilayet of Adrianople. near which place three Bulgarian villages were recently at tacked by Circassians and their inhab itants massacred. The troops sen! to re-enforce tlie gar rison at Kirk-Kilisseh, thirty-two miles from Adrianople. w. re routed by in surgents. whose number in the vilayet of Adrianople is estimated to lie u.imki Itnltlirr* Prn<!l«*>. WASH I Squlers ;it Hnv.ini lias in *nn»*d tlit state department nf tlx* r , I C. liradle}* n< nr 11<< 1 uui11. <fu' mi [hum <1 Umwlloi v , . . . . old and a resident of I'uiifornln mil hud been trying to e>t; :>|;sh ,n t'n .a an American settlenieiit k iwii us “Bradley’s colony." The mi mein, ascribed for the murder \v . i,,Mh*i> although Bradley w . i <- milt Hit. ,| and badly beaten. The country in the \i elnity is infested by a cuna of niur defers and robbem. Children in Pe*iI Some of the most anxious hours of a mother's life are tli se w 1 en the little ones have the oi‘nn|>, Foley's Honey and Tar is a that never fails. “My boy would have died from membraneous croup if it had not. been for Foley’s Honey uni Tar,” waites (J. W. Lynch of Winchester, 1ml. Sexton’s Pham* ev 70 Smith Sr. I REAL ESTATE AD V Kin I SI XG. Money to loan on B0«D AND MORTGAGE. THE BISHOP CO , 122 Smith St. Perth Amboy, N J ECONOMY. . It you IV HO '* i‘" ll: t"'Hl t low cost, "Wi Ij. Ln fi i«i W iii, atre.» i " • Boynton Broth rs .A mboy Kb Jtv an t D instruction (omptny. A good > us pss i..j»« rt > ioi »ai* -n dim 111 Miti’f ouhp ii .oly ix w v • 20x44 fw 10 roomu • barge* iiij j in i i n *»ix P» 1 < ttfic Jfu iditii GEi.lv N & AriL, Mason.' and Builuars RATTLESNAKES OF GOOD OMEN. W here They Are Found Are Found Also Huckleberrte*, Trout und lleultb. *‘l have always noticed one thing about rattlesnakes,” said Simon Kent, ef Clinton county, reports the New York Sun. 'anu that is that it I am trout fishing and the trout are biting good I am cer.ain to run across all the rattle snalu any snake hunter would care to find in a day s hunting for them. But If the trout are not biting briskly I will not run across a rattler maybe all day long. "I can't explain why it is, because I don't know. I can't account for it any more than I can account for the fact that there are always rattlesnakes where there are trout and huckleberries, or for that other curious fact that there is never malaria where you find this eom ■ nation of reptile, fish and fruit. I am ! .ing >f our own brilliant-liued and I up-th-sauff rattlesnake, and not the I \ overgrown, vindictive rattler of l'l»: ida. Ti xas and other unfavored lo •alities where poisonous reptiles seem :o hill'll along with levers. “Wherever you find one of our ever |'i i rful rattlers giving forth its music and telling von to watch out. there you will find the purest water, the freshest air and the highest, dryest land. As Inn as you live In a country where you have to Melt a rattler off your doorstep even now and then you needn’t he afraid of i hills and ‘.ever sneaking across your threshold. “Instead of a locality being shunned !■ nuse ratth -n1'is abound therein it should h" just ,th? one for people to seek.” MEN HAVE A SIXTH SENSE. *«•!••»» • *•»•« riiilni Tlml One lliininn IVrc*«‘|M ion Hum ( orlnlnly lit*on (herlooktMl, it Is eontmonly supposed that a hu ll an being hns five senses sight, hrar lia feeling, smelling and tasting. It is now held, however, that to thesi must lie added a slxl h. T'i i nse of nuisrular tension that we expi rldiee when we sustain or raise a wi ik. lit is really distinct from any or all of the so-called "tivi -a •.•.si s." and is en titled to he eons id i r <1 a sixth sense, says Sure*ss Physiologists who have trird to measure it, however, arp confronted by numerous difficulties. Not only Is It hard to separate Its indications from those of the sense of toneh, as experi enced by the skin on which the weight rests. but the feeling of heaviness differs when the sustaining member is moved In order to "heft" the weight, as the provincial term has it. A recent French i xpr rimentcr avoids all this trouble by cau-lng the subject to hold the weight suspended bv a thread betweeen his thumb and fn- finger When the weight Is suddenly supported from below by raising a hoard till contact is made with It the person w ho holds the weight feels a sensation. If the wifght he sufficient, and this is ertlrelv independent of all the elements that have hitherto proved troublesome The smallest weight that 1= necessary to produce the sensation Is the measure of the nuisrular sense in the P' rson experimented upon. COFFEE MAKING IN 1662. I'rorPM of That Tim#* Wim to for On«* liotir I util l-'it for l • #». Fir TI. .111 l.iptr n has among the tr isuri-s nf ids library an old cook hnr1 tut:■:ieh’ i! i:i iiiiiL’. that gives what I rl .'i first Et gltsh recipe for i uf,i i . .-»• - ill" I). itoit Free Press. The reelpe reads' ' To nu,1 e lii" :r ink that Is now much tisi'd. railed coffee. “The iiiffei berries are to be bought a; any dr.i .i-i about si veil shillings to the pound. Take what quantity you p'":,. and l ur a ehareoal tire, in an old frying pan. keep them always stir ring until Hu y ti" quite- black, and when you rrarl- one with your teeth that it i« Idack within ns it Is without, yet If you '\""<i! then do you waste the oyl. and If |i-s. then will It not deliver Its oyl: ape if you -houid continue fire till it bo white, it will then make no coffee, but iu.lv clve you Its salt. Peat and force through a lawn sieve Take Hear water, and boil one-third o' it iiwni. and It 1-. fit fur use. Take mi" qunrt of thi“ nr, |mre,| water, put In ii on, ounce of \nur pr> pared coffee.and boll it gently one hour and It is tit for vc ,r use; drink on, quart, r of a pint ns hot as you can sip it." X -- - In I'fMgfN Tourist Did you- er—ever shoot a wan? Iii-ono Hill No lady. I re plugged a few Indians greasers, an dudes, but 1 never killed a human! Puck. $30. to Colorado and Return Via Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Chicago to Denver, Colorado St,rings and Pnehlo, dailv throughout the summer. Correspondingly low rate* from all points cast. Only one night to Denver from Chicago and the Cen tral States. Two fast trains daily. Tourist sleeping ,-ars to Denver daily. !WJOH-7-18-*t o. «*. w. A Physician Healed Dr. Geo. Ewing, a practicing physi cian ol Smith’s Grove, Ky.. for over thir ty .V"-is. write is personal rx)srriencc with Fotey’s Kidney cure: “For year* I Ii ,1 iM-en greatly blithered with kidney and bladder trouble and enlarged pros tate g and. I tisid everything known to the brofeasion without rebel, until I com menced to use Foley's kidney Cure. Af ter taking ttuee bottles I was entirely 'clieved and cured. I presctilre it now daily in my practice and heartily recom mend its use to all physicians for such iroubles. I have prescribed it in bun d eils of cases with perfect success. Sex ton's •'harms, v 70 ^mir* °t FUTURE OF THE AUTOMOBILE. Some of the Clinnuril Condition* It* ll*e Will Probably Bring? About. The automobile is no longer an ex periment. and motoring is no longer a pastime or a luxury, says World's Work. What is the probable influence of the automobile upon contemporary life? Every car owner has at once a vastly increased radius of movement. The old coaching roads and coach ing inns will once more he thronged with travelers. Weshallknow the land we live in—its rural interests, Its beauties, its antiquities. The man who has business in the town will no longer be dependent upon a slow and rare service of trains. Therefore, thousands of the town dwellers of to day will he the country dwellers of to-morrow. This will bring into the market at good prices a great number of country places unletable and un salable to-day. There will soon arise, In consequence, an irresistible demand for better roads. The present absurd laws regarding s-"od will soon be .al ien'd by abolishing a!! restriction upon speed, and making etcrv driver re sponsible, under heavy penalties, for inconsiderate or dangerous driving. One grea organ'/otton alone—the greatest ot all—the railways, will suf fer from tive coming of the motor. The motor will rob them ot passenger (raffle of the transport of mails ex cept for long distances, of the carry ing of light goods and light, agricul tural produce, and will prevent them from opening up new disl riots, which will be served by the light. lines and motor vehicles as to-day in America by the electric trolley. To some ex tent the injury will lie mitigated by I lie motor bringing to them agricul tural produce from wider areas than can produce it profitably to cart to the rail; and, of course, the motor engine or rapid succession of motor car riages, as already planned in France and Ausiralia, will replace the s*eam locomotive for suburban and light fast traffic. But on the whole, the stage coach will be avenged upon the rail way by the motor PflinOII.M Moillt‘ll lllHISPM. Tne moat which so often surround ed halls and castles in the old days is now generally dry and filled up, but some remarkable specimens still re main. Perhaps the finest example of a moated house is Helmingham Hall, the seat of Lord Tollemache. in Suf folk, about eight miles from Ipswich. The drawbridge still remains, and it has been raised every night for mors than (iOO years, the ancient precaution being observed even though the need for it has long passed by. The moat which surrounds Leeds Castle, near Maidstone, is so wide that it may al most be called a lake. The ancient episcopal palace ay Wells is surround ed hy walls which inclose nearly seven acres of ground, and by a moat which is supplied with water from St. An drew's well. A venerable bridge spans the moat, giving access through a tower gateway to the outer court.— London Tit-Bits. Chliu'Mc IfoinoMpiin. The Chinese of Ningpo are success fully introducing their hand-woven cotton goods in Manchuria. The cloth is made from yarns spun in Chinese mills and from imported yarns. The yarns are colored before being woven and the colors are fast ami durable. The cloth is made in pieces g"i yards ion'.’ ami 25 inches wide. The price of these goods at Xipgnn is three dollars Mexican ($1.85 United States) per piece. The company furnishes the yarn to the villm ■ • and pays them by the fool i' r «< aving. The work is done on hamliooms in the homes by women and chi!' • n. whose earnings are only a few cents per day. for 1 Himself. Mr. Blttiuitr- Why. your mothi rlooks as young as you do. Miss Stale. Mi S. (siliiiy) Thai is ’ ot very complimentary to me. Mr. Bin'der Mr. B. (confusedly)—I—I didn't rm-an that. I— I mean you it ok as . oui g as your mother!—Tit-Bi . --- | CALENDAR OF LOCAL EVENTS AUGUST SEPT. SMTWTFS SMTWTFS __ _'_I _ _ __ . 1 .. .. I 2 3 4 5 j 2 3 4 5 0 7 S 6 7 8 9 io II 12 ! 9 io ii 12 13 14 15 13 14 15 16 17 18 ig 16 17 18 19 20 ii 22 20212223242526 23 24 25 26 27 2S 29 27 28 29 30.' 3°3xL^^L .I Sept 1.—Elks’ clambake at Sea Breeze. Sept. 3 —Picnic, Woodmen of the World, Bonytou Beach. Sept. 7.—Carnival. Nov. 18, 19, 20—Fair, Presbyterian Chapel. THOMAS M. THICKSTUN Attorney-at-Law 122 Smith Street, Scheuer Building PEKTH AM HOY, N. J. an .1 II IIWIi IIHHdi !«■ ■■ IMBWI iai — an I Forrest I„. Smltli CITY SURVEYOR, | Scbeuer Building. i ■*■■■■■'■ TtitBi.mrTra»u-T ’»r W R Fred Lupton. Herbert A. Busfinem.,. I LUPTON & BUSHNELL SUCCESSORS TO L.UPTOM & LUPTON ..Granite and Marble.. Monuments I Headstones and Fencing. Your Patronage Solicited. New Bruns k Av. & Central R. R. noaBBBMHBBOBMBSo Lost anything: A cent -a- word* ad! in the Evening News will find it for yon. Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine. "'*r Rotary Motion a ad Ball Beariags. If You are Thinking About getting a first-class Machine have one sent to your house on a free trial. Teacher will cal' aud in < struct on the best steel attachments made ; or call and examine at ofiiec. So d for very reasonable prices. A. JENSEN, Dealer 336 State Street ,n W liy She Cooked It. The happy-faced man swung onto a College avenue car, and this was the story he had to tall as an explanation for his good humor: “I have a good joke on my wife. We have a new girl, a German, just over from the Fatherland. She is a hard and willing worker, but is greatly in tieed of judgment and common sense. Yesterday my wife ordered fish and in structed the girl to serve it for dinner. As soon as I tasted it I knew there would be something interesting when my wife discovered it was not as fresh as it should be. Her first mouthful caused her to ring for the girl. “ 'Mary, is this the fish that came to-day?’ “ ‘Yes, ma'am.’ “ ‘Didn’t you know it was not good when you cooked it?’ “ ‘Yes, ma’am.’ “ ‘Then, why did you cook it?’ “Well, you bought it, and I thought you knew it, too.’ ” — Indianapolis News. Waiting:. “How soon do they intend to embark upon the sea of matrimony?” “Just as soon as her father raises tin blockade.”—Puck. Q Feigenspan’s E x p oW \ by you r experience jj with other kinds of JP table beer. There’s no comparison. Its delicate ilavor N and its digestibility are I l its strong features. B>.' Bottled or ( on Draught. FEIGENSPAN’S Breweries, Newark, N. J. ± A FAMOUS SCHOOL Wood’s College, 876 BROAD ST., NEWARK, N. J._ TIIE success of the school is the greatest in the history of commercial schools. The attendance is larger, more positions are filled and at better prices than any other school. ........ TWO BUILDINGS. ELEVEN ROOMS During the past year 1251 students attended the school, 1200 students were placed in positions, and 22 teachers were employed. Methods thorough and up to-date. A GOOD POSITION GUARANTEED Ott MONET REFUNDED. Any one desiring further particulars should inquire by letter, or call. You can make no mistake in patronizing a new school that, beats the old. Wood’s College is the oldest under one management in this city. rtSEsasasasasasasasasas'iasasasasHsasaiaasasasasasasasH! asHsa'assrsaaHsasasasasasESESHsasasasasasasasaBsase* | The New Jersey Title Guarantee and Trust Company, j 83 and 85 Montgomery Street, Jersey City. Capital, - #300,000 Undivided Urolith, #800,000 S Will laccommodote you—will save you time and evpense—wili giv * you courteous 5 gj ailention—and will consult your interests carefully IF you want to buy a Home and ne^d s m« cadi, k IF you want to Borrow Mon y on Bond and Mortgage, 5 k IF you want to Borrow Money on i ollateral Security, jg | IF you want a Safe Deposit, Box—fr^m $*> a year up 1 !j{ IF you want a Title to Real r,,Ftate iu New Jersey Searched and Guaranteed. jfl LIF you want to open a B ink Account and secure Interest on your Deposits Subject to i* Check. ess asasasasasasa sa ^ asasasasasesasas asasasasasasa sa t bs aeasasasasasasas sasasrf as as asasasasasasasas as sesesB A BREATH OF PINE jut find HARFINA Indis BALSAM IN EVERY CAKE. iTlCii pensable for shaving, as a shampoo, to keep the hair and beard In fine condition, and to remove and cure dandruff WniTIPfl recommend YV UlllCIl HARFINA highly as a hair wash, for all sanative purposes, for the eradication of black heads, pimples, freckles, moth patches, liver spots, to stop hair falling and to make the skin soft, clear and beautiful. __i __ vnuui ^ 11 In their baths are much benefited by its use, as it keeps the pores open and the skin free from blemish. B«’fn*^Carea,'va>'s t4iUaL-OgWeet and healthy if washed with HAR- 1 FINA, the best toilet and com plexion soap in the world. Pre vents chafing. HARFINA SOAF> sold at, loadingdruggists.Coo.percakeor 3cakesfor &5c.Hailed on receipt of price by fiAV SPECIALTIES CO.,331 Lafayette Street, Newark, N. J. Un-flnn and a book telling bow to have beautiful I" f PH IA r? slrflTirirt halrandcoinplexion.scntforSc.stampto S i L*U uunc iml liMQ wuap cover postage, by Hay Specialties Co. HARFINA SOAP AND HAY’S HAIR HEALTH sold by the following druggists CITY PHARMACY, 160 Smith Street; EE ABBEY & BARNAKOV, 335 State, SI AM AN, 50 Smith; 220 State; SEXTON, 70 Smith. =_ __4 I Unless they are> good health is impossible. I Every drop of blood in the body passes through and is filtered by healthy kidneys every three minutes. Sound kidneys strain out the impurities from the blood, diseased kidneys do not, hence you are sick. FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE makes the kidneys well so they will eliminate the poisons from the blood. It removes the cause of the many diseases resulting from disordered kidneys which have allowed your whole system to become poisoned. Rheumatism, Bad Blood, Gout, Gravel, Dropsy, Inflammation of the Bladder, Diabetes and Bright’s Disease, and many others, are all due to disordered Kidneys. A simple test for Kidney disease is to set aside your urine H A in a bottle or glass for twenty-four hours. If there is a sediment or a cloudy appearance, it indicates that your kidneys are diseased, and unless something is done they become more and more affected until Bright’s Disease H ■ or Diabetes develops. * H ^ I* v--'*-*- * *-» Liic uixxy picpdidiiuii which win pubitivciy cure an luruib ui rwianey «uu Bladder troubles, and cure you permanently. It is a safe remedy and certain in results. If You are a sufferer, take FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE at once. It will make you well. Some Pronounced Incurable Mr. G. A. Stillson. a merchant of Tampico, 111., writes: “FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE is meeting with wonderful success. It has cured some cases here that physicians pronounced incurable. I myself am able to testify to its merits. My face today is a living picture of health and FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE has made it such.’’ Had Lumbago and Kidney Trouble Edward Huss, a well known business man of Salisbury,Mo., writes: “1 wish to say for the benefit of others, that I was a sufferer from lumbago and kidney trouble, and all the remedies I took gave me no relief. I began to take FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE, and after the uae of three bottles I am cured.” ■__Two Sizes, 60 Cents and $1.00. ^B^^HNBHM^^HNN^- SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY ) Sf xton’s Pharmacy, 70-72 Smitty/Street