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UNOSTENTATIOUS. Our magnates show their riches may When in a foreign clime, But none of them make much display Around taxpaying time. A HAPPY RELEASE. Kind Friend — “Pardon me, but I ought to tell you that Jones has run away with your wife.” Husband (bored)—“But why run?"— liendon Punch. ;* A GOOD MATCH. Bell—“I never understood how that ugly Miss P:.saay got a man to marry her.” Nell—“I didn't, either—till I saw the Man.”—Detroit Free Press. THE- OTHER EXEEEME. \ Blinker—“Poverty is not a disgrace.” Clinker — “No, it's an honor these days. Look at the rich men falling over themselves in their efforts to apol ogize for their tainted money.” CHEEP! CHEEP! *“I declare.” remarked the duck, “if that little chick isn’t trying to talk al ready, but it doesn’t amount to mueb.” “No,” replied the young rooster, scornfully, “ail his talk is ‘cheep.’ ”— Philadelphia Press. THE ONE WEAK POINT. McFlub—“I suppose you find your new automobile superior iu every way ito your old horse?” Sleeth—“Not in every way. It balks just about as often.” A HASTY EXPLANATION. “I wonder'why all those swimmers [Who try to swim the English Channel always start from the English side?” “Probably it’s the shortest way.”— "Cleveland Plain Dealer. HE DIDN'T REQUIRE ANY. ' Mrs. Mutherly — ‘ That young Yale ivard is far too attentive to you, my dear. Don’t you give him any encour agement.” Miss Mutherly—“Mamma, he doesn’t need any.”—Albany Journal. . AN IMMUNE. ! “Mr. Cadsby never pays the slightest attention to flattery.” “No,” answered Miss Cayenne. “It [would be impossible to devise any form of flattery that would correspond to his good opinion of himself.”—Wash ington Star. AT HIS HEELS. " “How is that son of old Milligan's turning out?”, “Oh, he’s following right in his fath er’s footsteps.” “Making lots of money, eh?” “No, begging for it.” — Cleveland Plain Dealer. , THE CYNICAL CODGER, i “Ever notice,” asked the Cynical Cod ger, “how some Iay,y men will neglect their work just to brag about this country’s industries and prosperity? Reminds me of a barnyard—the hens laying all the eggs and the rooster doing nothing but crowing about It.” SUCCESS IS DIFFERENT. 1 Polk—“When a fellow starts to do anything he can always succeed if he only sticks to it.” . Jolk—“Notaiways. How about when you start to remove a sheet of sticky fly paper that you’ve sat down on?"— Philadelphia Ledger. UNDER DOG SOMETIMES WINS. “Yes, I think I have him at my mer cy. He has a few thousand dollars and I have millions.” “Well, why don’t you go ahead and smash him?" “I’ll tell you. Every time I start to do it I begin thinking of what hap pened to Russia.” _ SO NATURAL. “I dreamed last night, George,” said 'Mrs. Swellmau, “that I was with a box party at the opera and— “Yes,” interrupted her husband, "X might have known that.” “What! How do you mean?” ! “You were talking very loud in your Bleep.”—Philadelphia Press. WITH A PROVISO. I Customer (handing over the money) *—“I want to be sure about it. Can you guarantee that this stuff will kill off the cockroaches?” Druggist (wrapping up the bottle)— "I guarantee it absolutely, ma’am—if you can get them to take it according to directions.”—Chicago Tribune. ANOTHER DISAPPOINTED GIRL. “You want to marry my daughter, you say. But I don’t recall that she has ever mentioned you?” “You surprise me! Isn’t your name Timmons?” “No.” “Excuse me. I must have got into the wrong flat.” — Cleveland Plain Dealer. Good Things to Know. That it takes two to prolong a family quarrel; one can therefore terminate it. That filling a house with bargains keeps a couple from owning the house in which they place them. That if wc thought ail we said we'd be wise, but if we said all we thought We’d be foolish. That proud people seldom have friends. Xu prosperity they know no body; in adversity nobody knows them. That to make long-lived friendships one must be slow in making them. That the woman who gains a trifle meanly is meaner than the trifle. That “it is less pain to learn in youth than to be ignorant in old age.” That if she cannot throw brightness over her home it is best not to throw a wet blanket over it.—Womau’a Life. PARISIAN MAGAZINE METHODS OF TO-DAY. An Interesting Example Showing How a Periodical Can Cet Its Reading Matter. * __. There are various ways of launching a new magazine. This is the method adopted by the publishers of the latest Parisian review, Je Sais Tout. M. Georges Daniel, a well known Paris journalist, wrote for this magazine an article entitled “La Tournee des Grands-Ducs.” The article was ac cepted by the editor, but the author was considerably surprised when it appeared to find that it was signed, not by his name, but by that of an author with some reputation, M. Jean Lorrain. M. Georges Daniel wrote to M. Jean Lorrain protesting, and the latter at once replied recognizing in the most unconcerned fashion that’ the editor of Je Sais Tout had, a3 a matter of fact, requested him to contribute an article on “La Tournee des Grands Ducs.” He had replied that be had not the time, and thereupon he had been informed that no refusal would be accepted, and that bis task would be facilitated by means of “documents” that would be furnished to him. The “documents” were, it appears, the ar ticle of M. Georges Daniel. M. Jean Lorrain “resigned” himself to the pro posed plan, but he protests that he was not aware that his signature was to be apposed to the article of a confrere. And he terminates his letter, couched in charming language, by offering to his confrere all his regrets and the .as surance of his distinguished consider ation. A few days later M. Daniel re ceived from the manager of Je Sais Tout a letter asking him to call at the offices of the magazine, and when he put in an appearance there he learned that he had been accused by the editor of an attempt at blackmail. An ex change of seconds followed. To the seconds of M. Daniel those of the edi tor denied the accuracy of the accusa tion for which an excuse or “repara tion par les armes” was demanded, but be recognized having said that “the habit of the firm was to attach the sig natures of well-known writers to arti cles written by those cf less notoriety.” Now the public is warned, and has only itself to thank if it Is deceived. But the practice which has just been ex posed in connection with Je Sais Tout is, X am informed, the recognized cus tom in most publishing houses in Paris when writers with a name do not them selves write the articles attributed to them. The conclusion of the foregoing incident will probably be heard in the law courts.—-Paris Correspondence in London Globe. Swiss Attempts at Ungluh, The Swiss have not a grasp of Eng lish grammar, as the following exam ples show: The proprietor of an Alpine hotel addresses his clients thus: “Mis ters the venerable voyagers and mes darnes are requested earnestly not to take the clothes of the bed to see the sun rise, for the color changes.” Re cently the following advertisement ap peared in an “English” guide book pub lished at Berne: “The - hotel is a very favorite resort of people fond of solitude and rest. Those who are in search of loneliness are. In veritable fact, constantly flocking to the —'■ hotel from the fore quarters of this globe.” “Strange gentlemen will to please not to dress for dinner, etc., as this costume flutters the souls of the maid folk and no work is resulted. Humbly asked.” Such is the announce ment posted in the bedrooms of an inn In the Jura Mountains.—London Chron icle. j,. Londonderry or Derry? A movement has been initiated in Ulster, at the instance of the Gaelic League, for changing the name of the old city in the North of Ireland from Londonderry to Derry. The London companies, which possess considerable estates in the district, will, however, have something to say to the proposal. The “Maiden City,” as it was dubbed in 1089, when the Williamites held it against Jatnes II.. had its origin in an oak tree wood or forest called in the Gaelic “doire," or Derry. In the be ginning of the seventeenth century a body of London colonists were sent to settle in the district, and in considera tion of the corporation of London ex pending £20,000 in the establishment of the “new plantation in Ulster,” they received from the Crown a very liberal charter of rights. It was then that we first find the placed called London derry.—Westminster Gazette. Wildcat In New Haven. The neighbors of Charles Beeley, in Ward street, on the outskirts of Nauga tuck, were aroused from slumber by the banging of a shotgun early this morning and ran into the street to wit ness the end of a combat between Beeley’s bulldog and a big wildcat that had come down from the West Moun tain, not far away. The cat was snarling and the dog howling, and Beeley, with a lantern and a shotgun, was trying to kill the wildcat without shooting his dog. Frightened by the arrival of so many spectators, the wildcat bounded away toward the mountain with the bulldog in pursuit.—New Haven Special to the New York World. Bnei as Acrobats. When wax is needed a certain num ber of self-elected citizens gorge with honey and hang up in chains or cur tains, each bee clinging by her front feet to the hind feet of the one above her, like Japanese acrobats, and there they remain, sometimes for two days, until the was scales appear pushed out from every pocket. It is not hard to understand that, since much honey is needed for the manufacture of wax, a bee after filling with the raw material would produce much more wax by keeping quiet than by using any of the gorged honey for energy in moving about and working. But the necessity of “holding hands" while this work goes on must ever remain to us another occult evidence of the close relations in the bee commune.—Country Life in America. A Real English Joke. Leopards, it i3 stated, are becoming unpleasantly numerous in the neigh borhood of Simla. Two of them re cently lay in wait for the mail cart, but fortunately they were 3notted.-Punch. New York City.—No dress worn by the girl of twelve or younger is quite so pretty and quite so attractive as the one that includes a guimpe of white. Here is an exceedingly stylish and quite novel model that will be found most desirable for the first school days as well as for immediate wear and which is quite appropriate for autumn. In the illustration it is shown made of light weight serge stitched with beld ing silk and worn over a guimpe of white lawn, but linen, chambray and all similar materials can be utilized, while for the autumn, cashmere, challie and other light weight wools will be quite as fashionable as the serge. The dress itself consists of waist por tion and skirt. The waist oortion ex up at the back or side. Moreover brims may be wide or narrow. A1 widths are accepted, although, as I told you in my last, medium width will perhaps be the most generally adopted for the present.—The Millin ery Trade Review. Broadcloth In Demand. With the great vogue of broadclo't) will come the demand for less ex pensive goods which present much the same appearance. Henrietta and drap d'ete will answer exceedingly well foi the construction of costumes and house gowns, but are hardly likely to be in demand for tailored suits, since the material does not have the qualities essential for the construction of the plain tailored suit, which will be the prevailing style for winter. ACJanct* to Klbbon Bella, Very attractive adjuncts to dainty hibbon belts are the silver girdles in the stylish festoon effect, consisting of a row of cupids, with festoons of flow ers between, all in oxidized silver. The folds of ribbon are thus ornamented and held firmly in place, while being but slightly concealed by the girdle. A Cavalier Hat. A cavalier hat in a soft shade of green felt had a scarf of velvet tied in a large bow directly in front. The hat was turned up on the left side, and was trimmed with a beautifully shaded green feather, its tones varying- from white to deep green ou the edges. Blouse or Guiinpe Waist. The simple waist made with full front, such as this one, is always in demand, but especially so at this time, when princesse skirts and skeleton waists are so much worn by young girls. In this instance the material is chiffon taffeta combined with lace, but the list of available ones is nearly end less. Lingerie blouses will be worn __* a uvre pssigk by w^y wantok. tends under the arict and over the shoulder, giving something of a sus pender effect, while In reality it is simply made in skeleton -style with tucks that simulate box pleats at the edges. The skirt is five gored and is laid in box pleats that meet at the cen tre front and back. The guimpe is quite separate and absolutely simple, being madev with front and backs, gathered at the neck and finished with a collar and at the w*st where it is finished with a belt. The sleeves are in bishop style. The quantity of material required for the medium size (ten years) Is five yards twenty-seven or thirty-two, or three and three-eighth yards forty-four inches wide, with one and three-fourth yards thirty-six inches wide for the guimpe. Light Colored Taffeta*. Plain taffeta is rather old for a young girl, but the light colored striped flowered taffetas are lovely for even ing dresses. They are not in as good taste as organdies and muslins, which can be made dressier by colored or white taffeta slips worn underneath. Modiac»Hon of the Biwk." Many hats appear to be trimmed much higher at the back than they really are, owing to their forward in clination. It must not. be imagined that because a certain style of wearing bats has been adopted, anything like sameness is to be apprehended. For one thing, great diversity is to be noted in the shapes of crowns, and the importance of the crown is manifest under exist ing circumstances. It is placed full in 7iew, owing to the forward slant of the shape, and its form (at least in front) is not concealed by trimmings. Productive of almost endless variety also is what we call here the “move ment” given to the brim, that is to say, the particular curve or roll it is made to take, or the way it Is turned throughout the entire winter anil are always charming for indoor occasions, while there are also many pretty thin wools and silks, such as wool batiste, crepe de Chine and the like, which are greatly liked for waists of this style, and, again, all over lace or net is al ways charming so made. The waist is made with a fitted lin ing, which can be usSd or omitted a* may be liked, and itself consists of front and backs. The front is gathered at the neck edge and again at the waist line, but the backs are plain across the shoulders, the fulness being found at the belt only. The sleeves are the fav orite ones of the season with the deep cuffs, above which they are soft and full. The closing Is made Invisibly at the back. TJie quantity of material required for the medium size (fourteen years) is two and three-fourth yards twenty-one, two and one-half yard* twenty-seven or one and. five-eighth yards forty-foui inches wide, with one-half yard of all over lace. ^HOUSEHOLD WAIRS TO IMPROVE THE FISH. Salt water flsli are much improved, says Good Housekeeping, if they are soaked in salted water for half an hour before cooking. FOR CLEANING VASES It will be found that vinegar and tea leaves are excellent used together for cleaning vases that have become discolored by flowers. GARNISHING THE BEEF. A fillet of beef or a veal roast is ef fectively garnished with artichoke hearts, brimming with new peas, each choke placed in a nest of green. Deli cately grilled, they are even more in viting surrounded with asparagus tips or little hearts of blanched lettuce. POTATOES AS DECORATIVES. Mashed potatoes are pressed in the form of tiny pyramids with flat tops. These are dipped in the white of an egg, then in flue minced parsley, giv ing the effect of small green pyramids, through which the white of the potato gleams temptingly. These may be used with small pyramids cut from stale bread and fried a delicate brown in hot butter. They are arranged about a dish alternately with stars or :ubes of lemon between. NICE SANDWICHES. Cream cheese in combination with chopped olives or with chopped nuts Is recommended for sandwiches. Moist en the cheese with a little thick cream and add a little salt. About ten olives, stoned and chopped, to one cheese is the proper proportion. Mix the two and spread between thin slices of bread and butter. Trim the crusts and, if desired, cut the slices into rounds or triangles. Peanuts, English, walnuts, or pecans, or a mixture of these nuts, combines well with the cheese. Prepare exactly as with the olives. RECIPES: ** Delicious Salad—A novel salad is made of grape fruit and tomatoes. Fill a ring mold with water, and set away on ice to freeze; or set a small mold heavily weighted inside. Sweetbreads in Cases—Cut the sweet breads, after being boiled, in very small pieces. Season with salt and pepper, and moisten well with cream sauce. Fill the paper cases and cover with bread crumbs. Brown and serve. Peppermint Drops—Boil one and one fourth pounds of sugar with a pint of water; add three drops of oil of pep permint. and after five minutes remove the mixture fro mthe fire and stir until it turns white, when it must be quickly poured out on buttered tins. Broiled Sweetbreads—Split the sweet bread after being boiled. Season with salt and pepper, rub thickly with but ter, and.sprinkle with flour. • Broil over a rather quick fire, turning constantly. Cook about ten minutes, and serve with cream sauce. Plum Sherbet—Cover plums with hot water. Simmer until thoroughly cooked. Then press through a wire strainer. Add water and sugar to suit the taste, and other fruit juices if de sired. Then freeze. They also make a nice pudding if used with tapioca in place oi apples. Toast For Invalids—Cut the crust from slices of stale bread and toast to a light brown. As each is done, dip into well salted boiling water. Ar range in a baking pan, salting and buttering each layer, and cover with boiling milk, adding cream if you have it. Cover and bake for fifteen min utes. _ A Cake Without an Egg—Beat half a cup of butter to a cream. Add grad ually one cup of sugar, then half a pound of seeded dates, chopped fine, and, alternately, one cup of thick, sour milk and two cups of flour sifted with one scant teaspoon of soda and half a teaspoonful each of cinnamon and clove. Cream of Squash Soup—Put one quart of milk with two stocks of celery and a small onion in a double boiler. Allow it to cook for one hour. Mix one tablespoon of flour with half a cup of sifted, cooked squash, and stir with the hot milk. Let cook about fifteen minutes. Have half a cup of whipped cream or a well beaten egg, and strain the mixture on to It. French Beefsteak—Dip the steak Into melted butter and broil on a gridiron over fresh coals. When nearly done, sprinkle with salt and pepper; have ready some finely chopped parsley, mix with softened butter and beaten to a cream and pour Into the middle of a platter. Dip the pieces of steak in this, turning them around the platter. Serve hot. A little lemon juice improves them for some. Russian Salad—Have ready cooked peas, string beans cut In pieces, beets cut In slices, tomatoes cat In slices and shaped to resemble a flower. Let all these vegetables become chilled by standing on ice for some time. Dis pose crisp, well cleaned lettuce leaves in nests on a large dish. In the cen tral nest place slices of bard-boiled eggs with the other vegetables in nests around them, and a radish flower here and there between the nests. Serve either French or mayonnaise dressing in a bowl apart. Offer a choice cf veg etables to each one served. Canadian Fruit Scarcer, The Canadian Department of Agri culture has issued a report on the fruit crop, which shows a continued failing off from the good indications of the previous reports. There is only half the quantity of apples gathered last year. The pear crop is light—scarcely enough for the local markets. There is a fair quantity of peaches. Nova Scotia will probably export 200,000 bar rels of apples.—London Chronicle. There is as much waste iu the effort t) do too much as to do too little. ■■■■■■■■■I Attorney-General Moody was direct ed by the President to begin proceed ings to break up the monopoly exist ing at St. Louis. Mo„ where the owners pf bridges and ferries have entered Into a combination in restraint of jtrade, exacting terminal charges from the railroads entering St. Lodls. At the Cabinet meeting at the White House it was decided that the building of the Panama Canal should remain under the supervision of Secretary l'aft. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson will ask the Cabinet to consider a plan un der which small packers may have meat Inspectors as well is the larger houses. In order that the damages resulting from the recent typhoon in the Philip pine Islands may be at once repaired the quartermaster-general of the army has cabled to Manila that an extra al lotment of $30,000 has been made to meet the expenses. President Roosevelt, it was said, found demoralization in nearly every executive department on his return to Washington. Secretary Hitchcock has intimated that the next alleged laud conspiracy rase to receive the attention of the Government probably will be that of IV. N. Jones, a big lumberman, of Port and, Ore. OUR ADOPTED ISLANDS. Che arrival in Hawaii of thousands pf Japanese laborers has driven out many American workers from Hono lulu and the country plantations. Hawaii is importing minnows to de vour mosquito larvae. Government reports show that in the recent storm at least 200 natives and twenty-five Americans and for eigners were killed in the Philippines. The losses in life and property caused by the recent typhoon in the Philip pines are heavy. The coast guard cut ter Leyte was wrecked, eleven Amer icans were drowned, and army posts m the Southern Islands were destroyed. The loss on hemp plantations is esti mated at $1,000,000. All Honolulu drunkards have been jfflcially blacklisted, so that they may pe refused drink in the saloons. A cor respondent states that “nearly all on the list are steamship men.” Jap spies are studying tire defenses of the Philippines, a Spanish correspond int at Manila cables. Felizardo, chief of the outlaws in the Province of Cavite, was surrounded near the Batangas border and jumped pver a cliff to his death. The absence of a line of freight-car rying craft between San Francisco, Cal., Guam and Manila throws all the trade of the islands into the hands of Japanese. The commander of the Government forces at Guam urges the necessity of i system of water works in order that bad sanitary conditions may be im proved. The public school system is well established and attended with gratifying results. DOMESTIC. Fletcher Gladden, on his third trial pn the charge of criminal assanit, was convicted by a Simpson County (Ky.) Jury. The judge then sentepced him to death. On President Roosevelt’s homeward voyage from New Orleans, La., the ar mored cruisers West Virginia, Penn sylvania and Colorado will race under forced draught for 1200 miles. Secretary Shaw, addressing the Ohitf Bankers' Association, at Cleveland, urged that n more elastic currency system be adopted. The second tube of the New Jersey tunnel under the Hudson River, at New Vork City, was finished. AtrSTTt £00 delegates, 'representing Massachusetts ftfllldja of |he Royal Arcanum, a?a meetlngm Bosto'u voted to take legal measures to prevent en forcement of the new "fiteS of assess ment. -»i JtoM ijfwntr John D. Rockefeller gave $10,000,000 In cash to the General Education Board. A Coroner’s jury found that Cornel ius A. Jackson, towerman, and Paul Kelly, motorman, are criminally re sponsible for the wreck on the “L” train on September 11, In New York City. President Roosevelt will visit New Orleans, La., October 20, returning to Washington on a warship to avoid quarantine. Judge Tayler, In the United States Circuit Court, Cleveland, Ohio, ap proved the report of a referee cutting down the fees of lawyers who ap peared in the Cassle L. Chadwick bankruptcy proceedings. FOREIGN. Germany and France have come to an agreement on the Morrocco ques tion, regulating police and financial re forms, but affairs on the Algerian fron tier are to be under French control. For insulting the President of Nicar agua, William S. Albers, representing a Chicago mining company, has been sen tenced to three years' Imprisonment by the authorities of that cbmpauy. Albers will appeal. Fifty thousand Bengalis assembled at the Temple of Kallghat, in Iudia, have sworn by the goddess ICall to boycott British goods as a protest against the partition of the province of Bengal. A meeting of the Chamber of Com merce of the Japanese Empire was be gun in Tokio to consider the revival of trade and Industry now that the war is over. There was more rioting at Budapest among university students, and the hostility of the Socialists to the coal ition plans is expected to provoke fur ther outbreaks. Notwithstanding the silence of iho Government, the fact is disclosed that Japan made peace at Portsmouth from fpar of a financial breakdown. The war proved moVe costly than had been calculated. A thoroughly modern electric light and refrigerating plant was put into use in Panama. It cost $250,000. Fifteen persons were drowned, in cluding two engineers, by the destruc tion of a Chinese coasting vessel which was blown up by a floating mine m the China Sea. The failure of two leading operators in the French sugar market was an nounced at Paris. Advices from St. Petersburg say that alarm is shown regarding the new treaty of alliance between Japan and Great Britain. OR^almond MEAL a>s A Toiuet /Jecessity ; t !.POWDER A PROTECTIVE COVERING FOR . ALL INFLAMED AND RAW SUR FACES .9* & J* > Cures Chafing Overnight AND PREVENTS RETURN A Waterproof Dusting Powder Superior to All Talcums For Sale by Druggists _A—_—_ AMERICAN PEROXIDE AND CHEMICAL CO. 88 Maiden Lane, New York Citv MRS. O. C. FREYGANG From New York Ctfrf Teacher of German, Vocal and Instrumental Music. i Open for Engagements for Song Redtali and Musicals. STUDIO, Bscfccr Building, Morristown, If. J 4105 ; r—r”—■ .. I WHICH THE EIRE BELL BINGS.} Look at This and Ton Will Be Abl* to Locate the Blaze. now TO SEND IN AH AI.Aftn. To send in an alarm, open box and pull down the lever on tho lnulde. When an alarm la •ent In, the fire bell will sound the number ol the box and repeat the alarm four ttmea. There are several keys to each box, which are held by persons living nearby—a card attached to each box gives the names of snob bolder*. Policemen also have key*. HOW TO LOOATH AH ALARM. ^ If the alarm is sounded from box 25, the fir* bell will strike two, then -pause and strike five, which will indicate that the fire Is In the vicin ity of No. 25 box. Every alarm la repeated four times. »0. BOX. LO0ATIO*. * .Western Ave., near Miller P*. * .Mendham Ave., corner Mills Bt, *7.Corner Early and Harrison Bt*. * .Speedwell Ave., near Early Bt. *4...Water St, corner Oole Ave. B.Morris St., at Depot * .Morris St, near Washington H’d'q’* •7.Madison Ave., near Ford Are. 18.Franklin St., near Franklin Pine* *5.Maple Ave . between Oak & BoykenSta. **.Market St., oorner Haocullooh Are, *7. Washington St., at Boy's drug store a.Police Headquarters, Speedwell Are. ‘58.Memorial Hospital, Morris St. 14.Water St. corner Linden Arm *•.Maple Ave., oorner Madiaon Bt, "82.All Sonia’ Hospital, Mt. Kemble ATX *8.South St., front Morristown Otnb 14. Sussex Are., corner Mills St, * .Washington Bt, corner Atno Aval 18.Macculloch Ave., corner Boy Icon Bt | 18.corner Park Place and Sonth Bt, M. .Oor. Kidgedale and Abbott Area, | *To be rung at Polioe Headquarters. MORRISTOWN POSTOFFICB. ■>peu from 7 la the Morning Until T la the Evening. MAILS GLOSS. 7.30 A. M.—For New York and all IntermedW ite stations. i 8.15 A. M.—For Easton, Newton, Chester and. ill intermediate stations. Whippanjr. 8.15 A. m.—For Brookside, Uendham and aNj tations on the Rockaway Valley Railroad. | 9.15 A. M.—For New Yorkj and intermediate! ■tations. 9.16 A. M.—For Uonnt Freedom. 9.15 A. M.—For Newark, New York Jnd be*1 rood. 11.35 A. M.— For Newark, New York and be rond. 13.15 p. u.—For New York and all intense*: Hate stations 13.45 P. 11.—For Rockaway and Dover. 8® P. M.—For New York end all interns* Hate stations. J HAILS KBADT POB DBL1VBBT. *7.30 A. m.—Frost New York and IntermedN ite stations. 8.30 A. M.—From Hackettatown and inter nediate stations. Whippany. Mt. Freedom. 9 A. M.—From Brookside, Uendham and ll ■tations on the Rockaway Valley Railroad. *0.30 A. M.— From New York and intermedia ite stations. S3 A. M —From Dover. •1.10 p. M.—From New York und intermedfr its stations. 1.38 P. M. -From New York. 8.30 P. m.— From Philadelphia, Buton, Nap. ten, Chester and Intermediate stations. 1.30 p. M.—From Brookside, Uendham and sBi itatlons on tho Rockaway Valley Railroad. | *1,11 p. M- -From New York and Intenaodfc* ite stations. I *1.11 From Newark and Now York. •Delivered by carriers.