Ghost of the glacier and other tales . ountain i,277 To all of this country Waterloo, itself only a hamlet, isthe key. From this point the Lackawanna Railroad extendsthrough Warren county to Manunka Chunk on the DelawareRiver with a branch running from Washington to Phillipsburgand Easton. Oxford Furnace. Hackettstown, Washington,Blairstown and Bridgeville on the main line, and Change-water, New Hampton, Broadway and Stewartville on the NINE HUNDRED SQUARE MILES OF GRANDEUR. PhilHpsbiirg branch, each a delightful spot in itself, are gate-ways to the beauties of Warren county. From Waterloo, ru


Ghost of the glacier and other tales . ountain i,277 To all of this country Waterloo, itself only a hamlet, isthe key. From this point the Lackawanna Railroad extendsthrough Warren county to Manunka Chunk on the DelawareRiver with a branch running from Washington to Phillipsburgand Easton. Oxford Furnace. Hackettstown, Washington,Blairstown and Bridgeville on the main line, and Change-water, New Hampton, Broadway and Stewartville on the NINE HUNDRED SQUARE MILES OF GRANDEUR. PhilHpsbiirg branch, each a delightful spot in itself, are gate-ways to the beauties of Warren county. From Waterloo, running to the north and penetratingthe very heart of the mountains; following the KittatinnyValley, is another branch of the Lackawanna, known as theSussex Railroad. Andover, Newton, Branchville, Augusta,Lafayette and Franklin Furnace, all stations on this, theprettiest and most picturesque little railroad in the UnitedStates, are nestled in the very heart of the beauty oiSussex. MAKING A REVOLUTION. A STORY OF NEW JERSEY IN WAR Copyright, 1900, by Will Bo^ert Hunter. MONG the rugged mountains and smiling valleysof New Jersey was developed the full characterof the War of the Revolution. Driven to bay in the hills ; almost annihilatedl)y the British forces; ragged, tattered, torn, fam-ished, the shattered army of freedom there dis-played first the indomitable spirit that led it onto victory, and demonstrated to the nations ofthe world the true quality of the men who were to leadthe van of progress during the coming centuries. NewJersey no more than all of the struggling provinces of theNew World, is responsible for the vigorous, tenacious cour-age of the followers of Washington, but New Jersey justlycan lay claim to being the field from which these qualitieswere first strongly impressed upon the warriors of the OldWorld. From the Boston massacre of 1770, the events of the Rev-olution had led rapidly down to the famous retreat of Wash-ingtons tattered army through New Jers


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