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The Secret (ff Success. The Secret of Success is not so much in knowing how to make money as in the ability to save it. We assist people in their efforts to save money, If this matter concerns you, call and see us about it. Deposites by mail will be promptly acknowledged. Three per cent, interest paid on savinas accounts. t-—-; SECURITY TRUST CO., E. Cor. Third & Market Sts., CAMDEN, N. J. Automobili$ts We Protect You! By insuring you against liability arising from acci dents, causing personal injury. Our plan is inexpensive, and relieves you of worry and annoyance. For particulars call on or address, Wesley B. Richman, Agt. The Travelers Insurance Company 109 Hunter Street, - - - Woodbury, N. J. 333 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. f-^ Seed Potatoes I WILL HAVE 4 CARS STRICTLY Firss=Class Maine Grown Seed Potatoes They will arrive here by March ioth. All leading varities which I will sell at lowest market o , prices. Will be pleased to have any one wanting first-class seed to call and see my seed before plac ing their order elsewhere. f j. A. BALLINGER, | I Mullica Hill, New Jersey._Jj COAL COAL Best Grades of Lehigh Coal Especially prepared for family use. Oak and Hickory Wood Sawed in all lengths, Pine Kindling Wood. George’s Creek Blacksmith’s Coal. Building Lime, Plaster, Hair, Cement, Crushed Stone, Building Stone. PEDRICK BROS., SUCCESSORS TO CHAS. WALTON, 21 South Broad Street Woodbury, N. J TELEPHONE NO. 9 WOODBURY VALET EXPERT CLEANER, DYER AND PRESSER 214 South Broad St.— 3 doors helow Green’s Block. Ladies’ and Gents’ Garments Altered and Tailored to Fit any Style Gents’ Suits pressed.$ 40 Gents’ Suits dyed.• 2 00 Pants scoured. 35 Ladies Jackets Pressed. 25 Ladies Skirts pressed. 35 Oyerooats and Ladies’ Jackets Eelined. Get an estimate. PINTS 1(1 ff,, PRESSED IV vl5 «oods called for and Delivered In Paalsboro, I f\ ICAR Mantua, Wenonah and Westville- Send postal, * ■ V» LCMll> FOUR QUART BOTTLES OF TO IT FINE OLD MARYLAND RYE T litt In order to increase our capital to meet the requirements of our rapidly growing business, and at the same time to introduce our product into new fields, we offer for sale a limited amount of our preferred treasury stock at the par value of PS. OO per share. With each share of stock sold we give as a bonus Pour Quart Bottles of Nerve”— the finest Old Maryland Rye made, which will be shipped free to any address in plain package, express paid. Thus you receive a bonus equal in value to the total amount of your investitient, and your certificate of stock which is full paid, non-assessable and seven per cent dividend paying, is worth more to you every day in the year than gold coin in your pocket, because the coin pays no dividend while the stock does. Address Nerve Dtetllllng Co., 030 Calvert Building, Baltimore, Md. Incorporated under the laws of Delaware. Capital stock $100,001) preferred, T per cent cumulative; $150,000 common, all full paid and non-assessable. Agents Wanted. LACK MORAL COURAGE. One Great Reaeon For Women'* Fall* ore to Make Frocrreaa. “That was a fine tanner we had at the club,” Jones remarked to his friend Brown. “I wonder why we don’t have enter tainments like that at our club,” re marked Mrs. Jones to Mrs. Brown. “Ask me something harder,” retorted that slangy but experienced woman. "Women don’t hang together, that’s iwhy. They are. always quarreling, Ulways Jealous, and then, too, they lack moral courage.” “I never heard that lagt thing men tioned before as the cause why wom en’s clubs are not more successful!” “That's because you haven’t a thought ful mind, my child. I’ll prove it to you that it Is at the bottom of a good deal of the trouble. In men’s clubs does the “I’M BOBBY TO OUT HER, BUT”— poor man get snubbed because his rai ment is less gorgeous than that of his rich brother? Let a woman appear in a last year’s tailor made at a smart club, one she has been seen in a good deal, and her speech will not receive half the attention her old gown will excite. Men Are So Different. “Then, again, friendship and club feeling mean very little to women. Men will stand by each other regard less of misfortune, poverty, scandal even. Women — well, they simply haven't the moral courage. They take their opinions first from their parents and then from their husbands. The other day I was walking with a friend, and we met a woman with whom she had been intimate for years. To my surprise, when this woman bowed my friend cut her dead. I expressed sur prise. I couldn’t help it. She looked very embarrassed and said: ‘I am very sorry to cut her, but she has had trou ble with her husband and has left him, and John says I mustn’t have her at the house any more.’ ‘But,’ I exclaim ed, ‘has she done anything wrong?’ ‘I don’t know anything about that. It’s the scandal.’ she answered. ‘People are talking about her.’ ‘Now, isn’t that the limit? Would a man desert his friend just at the time the latter needed him most? And would he do it just because his wife asked him? Not much if he were a real man.” HELEN CLIFTON. THE BACHELOR GIRL’S ROOM It la Perhapa the Eaaieat of AU Rooms to Furnish. Of all the single rooms I have seen those of bachelor girls appeal to me A SIMPLE EFPECTj the most. The color effects are usually good, and there is an absence of stiff “interior decoration’’ effects. The room in the picture belongs to a girl who is on the editorial staff of a 'magazine. The walls are covered with striped paper in a soft tone of yellow. Colored magazine illustrations framed in brown or gilt ornament the wall. R. DE LA BAUME. JERSEY HAPPENINGS HI WEEK. An ioe plant will be erected at Tucker ton as a result of the soarcity of the natur al commodity. The Broadway Methodist Church of Salem has paid off a larger percentage of debt than any other Methodist Church in the State. Jacob Gross, an aged resident of Roads town, grieved so bitterly over the death of bis Son-in-law that he died suddenly, Mon day, of heart failure. The Vineland Evening News, edited by J. M. Landis and James Cooper, which was instituted in September 1905, suspended publication this ypeek. The trustees of Eglington Cemetery near Paulsboro, recently bought back fiye aores of land at $500 an acre which they sold for $75 an aore a few year ago. Henry Harris, of Woodstown, has in his possession 20 pounds of flax that was grown 54 years ago, when it was a leading industry in Salem County. About twenty men and boys who were working on the railroad at Tuckahoe have quit because the company wanted them to work a half hour longer each day. A horse attaoked to a milk wagon struok at Broadway and Berkley street, Camden, one day last week, was carried a square on the fender of a oar and escaped injury. It is feared the snow storms whioh ocour ed last week and Monday have killed many of the young quail liberated by the game wardens. Seyeral have been fonnd that were frozen. Rey. William E. Rink, of Burlington, is celebrating his sixty-first year of service in the ministry, Mr. Rink thinks his term of servioe the longest of any in the ministry in the United States. After suffering fiye days, A. Atwood Grant died of hiccoughs at his home in Riverton on Wednesday of last week. Mr. Grant was first taken with grip which later developed into hiccoughs. William H. Siddell, aged 19 years, of 1148 Cooper street, Camden, was badly scalded last Monday at the plant of the Moro Phillips Company, bv a boiling chemical, and died on Thursday at Cooper Hospital. Judge Endioott, sitting in the Camden Circuit Conn, on Thursday last reprimand ed and discharged Daniel Burke, a jury man for being late when cburt convened. The jury or eleven men continued to hear the case. • Hit in the eye by a crust of bread, Dan’l Chew may lose the sight of one eye. He is emDloyed in a glass factory at Millville and during lunch time a fellow workman threw a piece of bread at him whioh landed squarely in the eye. Point Pleasant was visited by the most disastrous fire in its history, early Wednes day morning. The business block occu pied by the post-office and several other business houses were totally destroyed. The loss is estimated at $30,000. Charles H. Myers and the city of Atlantic City applied to Vice-Chancellor Garrison, for a rule to compel the Steel Pier Co. to show cause why it should not be restrained from constructing conorete piers for a pro posed extension of the Steel Pier. Samuel Siegel, of Roselle Park, sub mitted on Saturday at MoKinley Hospital, Trenton, to the amputation of both feet, with the hope of saving his life. A few days previous hi^ feet were badly frozen. He neglected treatment, with above result. Joel James, of Bordentown a heater at the Union Steam Forge, at White Hill, while breaking iron with a steam hammer Wednesday last was strnok in the head by a splinter. He was taken from the forge into the office and died a few miuutes later. Thomas Lewis, a young farmer of New Egypt, while on his way home on Wednes day last, was seized with an epileptic fit and fell face downwards into the road. His face was buried in the snow and mud, and he strangled to death before aid could reach him. At Atlantic City the proprietors of saloons and cafes, from Pacific avenue to the beach front, have abolished their street signs, so that the wayfarer along that sec tion of the oity will see nothing to indicate the presence of a drinking places except the general aspeot of the place. Counsel for Thomas J. Stanton has in stituted proceedings in the Supreme Court to compel the Pennsylvania Railroad to tear down its retaining wall on the elevated tracks from in front of 35 Haddon avenue, Camden. Stanton claims he has a deed showing he owns the ground on which the wall now stands. Negroes in the southern seotion of Cam den have a scheme for the segregation of their race. The promoters intend to pur chase a tract of land, in the extreme south ern seotion of the oity. This is to be owned by the colored people only, who will be oome stock holders in a corporation already formed. On this land houses and stores are to be erected. At a meeting of the taxpayers of Mount Holly last week it was voted that a five year oontraot be entered into with the Pub lio Service Corporation with the under standing that gas to light the oity be fur nished at one dollar per thousand feet in stead of one twenty-five. The Public Ser vice Corporation has not yet deoided what aotion they will take. They cure Ml^^^^^^^^^biliousness, dyspepsia, constipation, P sick-headache and many nervous troubles. ■, Pleasant to take. Mild but sure. Get them of your druggist and keep them on hand. A test of the land on whiok Haddonfield will sink its artesian wells has shown that the flow of water is not influenced by the tides. Mayor Ellis has threatened to dose a number of resorts in South Camden because of the unruly conduct of young men and women who frequent them. A check for $9500 for the fund being raised by Camden citizens for the families of the firemen who lost their lives at the armory fire was reoeived by Mayor Charles H. Ellis Friday night, from the West Jersey & Seashore Railroad. It was signed by Seoond Vice-President Charles A. Pugh. THE TAIL OF A COMET. Its Ever ChungiiiK Maas and Why It Flees From the Sun. The tail of a comet is not formed of the same particles which composed it yesterday or even an hour or a moment ago. It is constantly being renewed at the expense of the nucleus. As the long stream of black smoke from the neigh boring factory or mill is being continu ally renewed by fresh particles of car bon released by the combustion going on in the furnace below, so is the won derful luminous train of cometary bod ies being constantly replenished by particles flying from or rather driven from the nucleus by the intense heat of the sun. Then, again, how Infinitely small and how intensely luminous must these par ticles that go to make up the tail of a comet be! This thought is suggested by the fact that it has been proved that in some cases the nucleus of comets which are only a few hundred miles in diame ter will have enormous fanlike tails stretching across space for a distance exceeding 200,000,000 miles and having a bulk exceeding that of the sun by more than 10,000 times! Professor E. E. Barnard beautifully illustrates the formation of a comet’s-tail by “suppos ing” thus: “Suppose, for example, that the nucleus of a comet is composed of ice. Then suppose the heat of the sun to be so intense as to rapidly melt that portion of the ice globe exposed to the action of its rays, which are strong enough to immediately convert it Into vapor, which ascends toward the sun. “Imagine* now a. fierce wind blowing out from the sun, causing the vapor which meets it to be whirled out Into space behind the comet. This will clearly illustrate the theory of the for mation of a comet’s-tail, only that the nucleus of the comet is not ice and the vapor is not water vapor, neither is the force which drives it away from the sun a fierce wind.” The unknown force hinted at by the astronomer above quoted readily ex plains why a comet’s tail, as a rule, points in an opposite direction to the sun. The Russian astronomer Bredie chen distinguishes three different types of cometary tails—those composed of particles having the specific gravity of hydrogen, those having the specific gravity of hydrocarbon gas and a third class having all the peculiarities of an equal mixture of hydrogen and Iron vapor. BEAUTY SPOTS. Japanese women gild their teeth. In Greenland women paint their faces blue and yellow. The ladles of Arabia stain their fin gers and toes red. In India the women of three high castes paint their teeth black. Borneo women dye the hair in fantas tic colors—pink, green, blue and scarlet. A Hindoo bride is anointed from head to foot with grease and saffron. In New Holland scars made carefully with shells form elaborate patterns on the ladies’ faces. In some South American tribes the women draw the front teeth, esteeming as an ornament the black gap thus made. In New Guinea the ladies wear nose rings, piercing the nose in the same fiendish way that civilized women pierce the ears.—Philadelphia Bulletin. His Working Clothes. Lord Ellenborough once reproved a bricklayer for coming to bd sworn in his usual habiliments. “When you have to appear before this court it is your bounden duty to be clean and decent in your appearance.” “Upon my life, if it comes to that,” said the bricklayer, “I’m every bit as well dressed as your lordship.” “How do you mean, sir?” exclaimed the chief justice angrily. “Well, it’s just this. You come here in your working clothes, and I come in mine.” It was very seldom, however, that anybody got the better of Lord Ellen borough. A witness dressed In a fan tastical manner and who had given dis creditable evidence was asked in cross examination what he was. “I employ myself,” he said, “as a surgeon.” “But does any one else,” inquired the chief lustice, “employ you as a surgeon?” The living. Sis—Why did you throw up your sit uation, Ernest? Brother—Because I am going to get married. Sis—But what will you live on—love? Brother —Oh, no! We are going to live on my love’s father. , L ,v John ICienzle here. They are strictly true to name and sold at the very lowest prices under a full GUARANTEE. White bliss, red bliss, early Ohio, dew drop 2.40 sack Irisfl Coblers, Early Rose, fir. Mountains, State , of Maine, Early Fortune, Bovee ■ • $2.25. SEED POTATOES STRICTLY CASH. \ All prices subject to market changes without notice. F. 0. B. cars here. Choice Yellow Onion Sets, - $1.90 Per Buv Choice White Onion Sets, - 3-50 Per Bu, BOTH PHONES. John Kienzle, 126 Dock St., Phllada. □OW PEAS draw nitrogen from the air in large amounts, if sufficient Potash and phosphoric acid are supplied to the plant. The multitude of purposes served by the remarkable cow pea, are told in the 65- page illustrated book, “The Cow Pea,” which also tells of the splendid results obtained from fertilizing cow peas with Potash. The book is free to farmers for the asking. Address, GERMAN KAL! WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. y Uoyou want a horse? c If you want a horse, or a bicycle, a gun, a camera, or anything else you’ve i set your heart on, do what other boys are doing to get these things—sell THE SA TUPJDA Y , EVENING POST in your town on Friday afternoons and Saturdays. Maybe y u think it’ll take a long while to earn enough money for what you want. But that all depends L on yourself. Some boys make as vv much as $15 a week, others make a ween, xu ua utuiuoumc booklet,«* Boys Who Make Money, ’ ’ some of our boys tell, in their | own way, how they got money for things they had long wanted, by selling THE POST. This booklet is iree for the asking. We will send along with it, the complete outfit for starting in business, including ten free copies of THE POST. You sell these at 5c the copy, and that furnishes all the money you need for b lying further supplies. Besides the money you make each week, we give, among other prizes, watches, sweaters, etc. And in addition $250 in Extra Cash Prizes each month to boys who make the biggest increase in their sales. Better send us a "letter to-day. LtHE CURTIS PUBLISHING COflPANV, 425 ARCH ST.. PHILADELPHIA $mwftrtJIPRIGHT PIANOS « ™ “ OTHERS $250, I— $300 *5 AND UP. MONTHLY BELLA* 1129 OHFSTNHT PHILADELPHIA, Pa. 4 Marshall’s Cherry Expectorant, 25c. For Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Etc Safe, Sure, Pleasant, Always the Same, at Marshall's Drug Store