27 - MTPL
Transcription
27 - MTPL
BED-BAN VOLUME XVIII. NO. 48. TRAMPSOTTACK A GIRL, HEW MAIL ARRANGEMENTS. A-Xetc Schedule for Closing anil Distributing Sails, THEY ATTEMPT TO ASSAULT RED BANK, N.J.V WEDNESDAY, MAT 27, 1896. 'LEADING AT FREEHOLD. A CHURCH ANNIVERSARY. .i ''... ' •- STEALING FROM F A R M E R S . John Bice Held for Stealing Chiehens and l<\ivm Tools. PERSONS GRACE CHURCH TO CELEBRATE $1.50 P E R YEAR. VEWSFKOM MIDDLETOWN, EVERAL CASES BEFORE JUSJohn Kice of Fair Haven was arrested TICE JOHN ELLIS. >n Monday and held in $200 bail to await ;be action of the grand jury on a charge Leontirdvtlle to Have a Xetc SchoolSpecial services of Jtlutlc—The Two Bed Bankers Plead Xot Guilty The Girl ia a Cripple—The Tramps CJiurch Mortoaae to be Burned f stealing chickens from llrs. Sarah J. —Sore Liquor Indictments-One house—The Benjamin Albcrtson Frightened. Away iy the AppearIllegal Lluuor Seller Fined 8HSO on Sunday Afternoon—Value of Hance, who lives hear Elkwood Park. Property Sola by the ShertfT-A ance of Two Sen, but After war il On Saturday night Mrs. Hance returned and Costs. the Church Property. Band at Middletown. Captured and Sent to Jail. home about half-pa'st ten o'clock from Grace Methodist church of Eed Bank The paBt few days in the court at FreeOn May 18th John R. Baedeker of AtTwo tramps named William Smith Red Bank. She saw Rice near her house. hold have been devoted to the arraign- will celebrate its sixteenth anniversary was arrested on comnnd John Davis attacked Jane Smith on Sunday morning Mrs. Hance found antio Highlands ment of persons indicted by tbe last on Sunday.' The anniversary exercises On of W. C. Shafto for calling him Pearl street,, near Oakland street, last that about 35 young chickens had been plaint will begin in the morning. At this sergrand jury. The petty jurors have been mproper names at the railroad depot, Wednesday night. .Miss Smith is about vice an anniversary sermon will be stolen. She went before Justice Child He was given a hearing before Justice • discharged until next Monday, eighteen years old and is. a cripple. The and swore out a search warrant against James Owens pleaded not guilt} to as- preached by the pastor of the church, Rice. Officers Bennett and Bray went Ellis and waB put under |100 bail to keep tramps attempted to assault the girl but saulting James Butler at Red Bank on Rev. William Mitchell. An elaborate to Fair Haven and found a lot of young the peace. George Brannin went pn.the were frightened off by the appearance , . Washington's birthday. He will be tried musical programme has been prepared chickens in a bag on Rice's premises. bond. of David Berry and' Charles Maguhre, June 16th. Louis E. Brown gavo bail undei the direction of Prof. H. K. All- When the chickens were found Rice The case of Lewis F. Burdge of Atlanwho afterward saw the girl safely home. Btrom, the organist of the church. The for his appearance a t court. tic Highlands against Ella DeCamp of The tramps followed the men for sotne claimed that he musi have been drunk William B. Whitmore of Red Bank choir will consist of Misses Sadie Child, nd asked for leniency. When he was Seaside for throwing, stones and other distance and cursed and-berated them was indicted on a charge of btenlinga Catherine Throckmorton and Joe and ;aken before Justice Child he denied missiles at his house came tip- before for their interference. The 'inert" were plush cape from Deborah Cole. He is in Lou Allaire, sopranos; Misses Addie hat he had stolen the chickens. Michael Justice Ellis last week. Miss DeCamp afterward described to- the police, and the county jail in default of bail and Knapp, Kate Nevius and Elizabeth Val- Dorsey of Monmouth Beach went on was discharged for lack of sufficient evion Thursday "they were captured in entine, altos; George Worthley, William dence, will be tried June 19th. Morford's wobdBby Marshals Bray and Rice's bond. : Annie Hurley pleaded guilty to selling 8. Child and Frank C. Storck, tenora; Lewis F, Burdge and Susan Johnson Bennett. Another tramp named John A lot of chickens were stolen from of Seaside were arrestefl last Thursday liquor illegally at Asbury Park. She and Dr. Elwood Morton, William B. Anderson was with them Si the time. Mount and Frank Conklin, bassos. The John Warden of Red Bank last Wedneswill be sentenced on Thursday July 9th; by Officer Job G. Liming for using indeThe tramps made a strong resistance to James O'Brien pleaded guilty to selling musical programme for this service will day night. Mr. Warden owns the James cent language on the street. They will the officers, but with the help of some be on follows : Romaine place at Lincroft and the chickbe given a hearing before Justice John whiskey at Asbury Park and will be senoutsiders they were overpowered and ens were stolen from there. A plow ^Uis on June 6th. Mnced on Thursday of next week, ";j • Verite." 0 Come Let Us Slug " Dudley Buck and taken to the town jail, They were a cultivator were stolen from James Gloria Patrl : Williams Mary F. Newman of Seaside" made Charles Frey retracted his former plea afterward given a hearing before Justice: of Jlorrisville the. same night. :omplaint before Justice Ellis on May and pleaded guilty to selling liquor ille- Te Deuin," We Praise Thee, O God ". ,T. 8. Lloyd Kelly Child, and Smith and Davis* were iden After Rice's arrest for stealing Mrs. gally at Freehold. Judge Conover fined The service in tbe afternoon will begin Hance's chickens, it was thought that he 18thagainst Lucinda Slratton forcalling tified by the girl as her assailants. They him $250 and costs. at half-past two o'clock. At this service might^have been the person who etole her 'bad names. Lucinda, was given a were also identified as her assailants by Tony Luzzardi also retracted and addresses will be mode by Rev. C. E. the chickens and farm tools from Lin- hearing on Jfay 23d and was fined f5 ' Berry and Mnguire. Justice Child sent pleaded guilty to selling liquor illegally Hill, Rev. J. K. Manning, Rev. E, C. croft, A second Bearch of his place was and costs. them to the • county jail to await the The Benjamin Alberteon property at JOSEPH S. BORDEN BURNED.; at Hamilton., He was sent to the county Hancock and Capt. Charles B. Parsons. made and the plow and cultivator was action of the next grand jury. jail for five months. :; The music will be rendered by the fihil- found, but nothing was learned of Mr. Atlantic Highlands was sold at sheriffs '•• m ••• Ue Filled a Lamp With Gasoline John T. Clements pleaded guilty to as- dren of the Sunday-school and the pro- Warden's chickens. Rice was again ar- sale on Tuesday of last "week at the suit WEDDING BELLS. saultingMargaretParkeratLong Branch, gramme to be given will be : Instead of Oil. rested and Mr. Dorsey again went on his of John S. Hubbard of Red Bank, Lot " Keep Btep wlfli tho Master." • No, 4 on Bay avenue was bought by J. He was, sent to jail to await sentence. baUbond;. "Hold Up the Cross." —Annie-Danielshasiretractedher-fonner ' • Miss Dolia McConaty of New Monplea and has pleaded guilty to keepirig.a and 132 on South avenue was bought by A New Manufacturing Company - -mouth and William Flood of Fair Haven an explosion' of gasoline. Mr. Borden disorderly house at Long Branch, She "TheTrlumi J. H. Hendrickson for $500; lot No. 181 "God's Free Mercy. were married at St, Mary's church at runs a chicken incubator and the oil in has not yet been sentenced. The Cutter Electrical manufacturing Highland avenue was bought by John S. In addition to tbe music a recitation New Monmouth on Sunday by Rev. the lamp which warmed the brooder ran The others indicted who have pleaded will be given by Mis9 Ada Hoifmire. company has filed articles of incorpora- Hubbard for $880; and lot 165 on South John R. O'Conner. The bride's dress low. Borden's-wife has a gasoline stove, not guilty are as follows: An interesting feature of the afternoon tion at Freehold. The company was or- avenue was bought by John S. Hubbard • •was of white Swiss and she wore hat and and the kerosene and gasoline cans stand service will be the burning of-the can- ganized by E. B. Cutter of New York for $185. Joseph Lewis, lighting at Asbury Pork; trial June side by side. When Mr. Borden rilled gloves to match. She carried a bouquet 15th. '' • • . . celled mortgage on the church by the and the stockholders are all residents of A colored band has been formed at of-white roses. The bridesmaid was the brooder lamp he filled it by mistake Thomas Washington, assaulting Thomas Dowa president of the board of trustees, Capt Atlantic Highlands. The company has Middletown. The members are Jesso Miss Delia Kearney of New Monmouth, with gasoline, and when he lighted the and David HcDaDle! at Matawan; trial June M b . James S. Throckmorton. a capital stock of $30,000, and will man- Harris, Joseph Harris, Harvey Bscey, Tony Fldello, Belling liquor at Asbury Park; trial who wore* a pink dress. The best man lamp there was an explosion. About a June ufacture toy telephones and other electriSamuel Mitchell, John Wallace, Albert Rev. Thomas Hanlon, president of 17th. •• was Edward P. Flood, a brqther of the gallon of gasoline ' exploded, and Mr. Boloman Welnsteln, receiving rugs stolen from Pennington seminary, will preach at the cal goods. It will commence business Cain, Alexander Nelson, 'William H. ' groom. A wedding supper was served Bordenjyas terribly burned about the 8. C. Garrison at Beltmir; trial June 17th, , at once, but for the present the parts Nelson, H. G. Nehon, Daniel Jackson, service. The mU6io at this serat the home of the bride's parents after head, neck and hands. Almost all of Arthur Garner, assaulting Annie Daniels at Long evening vice will be by the choir and the pro- will be made in New^Tork and assem- Charles Ball, Walter Boyd and Derry the young chickens were killed. Mr, Branch; trial June 17th. the ceremony. bled at Atlantic Highlandf-yn the Posten Jones. Harry Rose, keeping disorderly house In Neptune gramme will be as follows: Borden will be laid up for some time township; trial Junt- 19th. building, where the company will have Rev. and Mrs. F. ,C. Colby, T. H, Leonwith, bis in juries. He in»~me)nber of wlegond Jewell-Gordon. Santo, Tomalne, assaulting James Calne, Susan Anthem," O God to Thee " Gloria in Eicelsls WllBon its headquarters. It is intended that a ard and family and Mis.' Emma Leon4 i J 3 l l l Calne and Thomas Bunt at Long Branch; trial ~^—Grace,-daughter— of—Samuel—Jeivell -factory-will-be-built-at-AtlantiaJHighi June 19th; ——r keeper of the Sandy Hook lighthouse Odd Fellows lodge of Red Bank, He is Frederick Schwab, assaulting- Albert Cohen at — Gnice-ckurcli-was-organized-in-1880 lands in the fall. The officers of the aixLof-Atlantic-Highlands-werepresent— at the Baptist anniversary at Asbury with fourteen-niale and twenty-nine feand Clarence Gordon of Sandy Hook employed in L. & D . Edwards & Co.'s Long Branch; trial June lflth; * Park on Sunday. Rev. D. B. Harris ocmale members. It 'now has 118 mem- company are: , were married on April 16th, by Rev, J. mill. " ' . cupied the pulpit in the Baptist church bers, The church cost $14,434 to build, President—R. S. Snyder. R. Vonatta. The wedding has j u s t been WINNING E U C H K E P R I Z E S . while Mr. Colby was away. Misses Liland the parsonage $5,000. The lots upon vice-president— Ira Antonides. made public. The groom is a son of the MR. ROGERS'S STOLEN WAGON Treasurer—Charles T. Leonard. ian Davis, Blanche Posten, Evelyn and which the church and parsonage were Secretary—Charles R. Snyder. ; master mechanic in the government The Library clears About 885 bu Louise Snyder, Mabel and Edith Leonbuilt cost |3,250, the organ cost $2,250 mechanic shops nt Sandy Hook. Al. Boop, Mio is Xoie in the County These officers and E. W Cutter, W. H. ard, Mrs. Norris Fippitt, Albert Leonard, Its Euchre Party. and the furniture for the church and Jail, is Charged With the Theft. Jr.", Amzi Posten, D. Lane Con- •William C, Dawsotf and F. SI. Colby, atThe euchre party given in Vfm, W. parsonage cost $3,000, making a total Posten, About a year ago a wagon belonging Conover's vacant house on Front street cost of $20,934. AH the indebtedness on over and W. J. Leonard form the board tended the anniversary on Thursday. MARSHALS SWORN IN OFFICE. to Joseph V. H. Rogers was Btolen from by the women of the publio reading the church has been paid off, but a mort- of directors.Isaac Wales of Navesink was attacked old mill on Pearl street. Last week room on Friday was a very pleasant and gage of $4,000 still remains on the parTheir Bondsmen Accepted by the the with a suffusion of blood, on Monday Mr. Rogers heard that the wagon was in A New Mechanics' Lodge. sonage. enjoyable affair, although the attendance Commissioners, afternoon while at work in a field cutthe blacksmith shop of Edwin Barkalow A lodge of American Mechanics was ting asparagus. He WBB found in a BemiThe marshal and assistant marshals on Front street, and he got ont a search was not so great as at the euchre party riven in the town hall two months ago. conscioub condition by bis wife. He TBE TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS. formed at Marlboro on Tuesday night of were sworn in office last night. Their warrant from Justice Child. Officer last week with 43 members. The officers was carried into the house by some bondB Were presented to tho commis- Walsh went with Mr. Rogers to the shop The house had been carpeted with rugs, neighbors and is now almost recovered sioners and were accepted by them. and Mr. Rogers identified a wagon there and there were other efforts at decora- Mont of Them Will Close Next n'eel:. of tho new lodge are as follows: from tbe attack. He is 84 yejr^old. Teachers Be-Engaged. The bond of James Norman as street as the one Btolen from him. It was tion. Thirteen tables were filled with Junior past councilor—R. H. Brodbeod. the players. Six prizes were offered, This is the second time that htj*; jU1fleeri• H. Balrd. superintendent was also accepted. The found that Al. ROOD clatmed -to own the , The Wayside and Green Grove schools Councilor—James Vice councilor—Fonnan U. Cossaboom. the winners, in the order of their, score, thus attacked. * J , bondsmen of each offioer were oafOIIOWB wagon and that it had been taken by i-ri> the onlv schools in the township Recording secretary-Frederick K. Butcher. selecting whichever prizes they pre- that have closed for this term. The Assistant recording secretary—Prank T. Burke. r Only 53 votes were cast at the e lotion James Waten—William W.'Condver." Jacob'Roop, his brother, to Barkalow 8 ferred. Mrs. Harry Payne had the top *mnMyn Pierce, 8tryker-0. P. Kuhl. _ Financial secretary—Dr. J. b. Ely. held at Middletown last Thursday to shop to be sold. Roop is now,, in the (core, and she selected a handsome para- former closed on the 8th of this month Treasurer—David • William WoIcott-DavM Hance, Henry Supp. A. Baird. decide whether or not a schoolliouse David H. Bray-CharlM L. Dovls, Corlles <<W county jail serving out a sentence for sol. The other winners were Mrs. W. and the latter .closed lost Friday, All Conductor—ThomaB Fields. should be built at Leonardville. All the stealing a wagon from James Tomlinson R. Stevens, Mrs. Hnny Edwards, Mrs. the other township schools will close on Warden—Wlnfleld 8. Stryker. Amos Bennett—Theodore F. White. Inside sentinel—Henry P. Haywnrd. votes were in favor of building the of Lincroft. When he has served this Emile French, Miss Lily Ovens and Mrs. Friday of' next week. The commence- Outride Peter tang—Thomas J. Norman. sentinel—Charles U. Chasey. schoolhouse. The appropriation voted sentence a charge will be made againsi Charles B. Hendrickson. The reading ment exercises of the Oceanic school will Trustees—Thomas DavMRtddle-O. E. Nieman. Fields,six months; DavidR James Noruian-S. W. Morfonl. him for stealing the Wngon from Mr room will receive about $25 from the be held on Tuesday, June 9th. New Hobart, twelve months; David Richmond, elRliteen was $8,000. Of this amount the lot will teachers will be engaged for the schools months. cost $825 and the school building and _ ._ Alex Burleigk and J. Stout Thompson Rogers. party, at Wayside, Green Grove and ShrewsThe lodge will have rooms built over the necessary furniture the balance. were appointed assistant marshals withbury. All the other Bchools will have the store now occupied by O. R. RichJohn Heath, son of Eev. Calvin Heatb out pay. A BANJO RECITAL. CROWNING THE VIRGIN. ' the same teachers as last year. Georjje mond, of Middletown, gave a party ia celebra« The marshals reported eight arrests H. Morris will be principal of the Oceanic tion of his sixteenth birthday last during the past two weeks. Four of the A Large Audtence Present at Thurs—T6*** • An Interesting Service in St. school and he will be.assisted by Misses Wednesday night. About twenty of his persons were sent to the county jail and day Sight's Concert. Free Scholarships at Rutgers. Anna Curtis, Blanche Voorhees and Viola James's Church on Sunday. youug friends were1 present and the eventhe other four were fined by Justice The banio recital which was given in The Young Ladies' Sodality of St; Cubberly. E. E. Gaige will be principal On Saturday Wnext week a competi- ing was pleasantly spent in playing Child. the town hall last Thursday night by James's held their annual coron- of the Fair Haven school and Miss Sarah tive examination will be held at Free- games. A. A. Farland'brought out a large audi- ation in church the church on Sunday night. Nivison will be his assistant. At the hold to deBiile who will obtain the free William H. Egolf, principal of the Decorating Soldiers' Graves. ence, Many of the women were in even- Four new members were received into Little Silver school Kliss Louisa Irwin scholarship at Rutgers College, now NaveBihk public school, has decided not Arrowsmith Poet will decorate the ing dress. Mr. Farland's banjo playing the society. The church was filled. Al! will be principal and Miss Ida Hendrick- known as the New-Jersey State College to go to Toms River during his vacation aves of the soldiers of this locality on was a revelation to many who had never the seats were occupied and a good many son will teach the' lower grades. S. H. Those who stand highest in this exam- but to Cape May, where .he will act as coration das«->Tbe members of the before realized the capabilities of the had to stand during the service. The Lequier will (each the Tinton Falls ination will get the scholarships. Tl« bookkeeper for the principal grocery . PosVvill go to tbjl cemeteries at Little instrument. Mrs. L. B. Coleman's sing- members of the society wore white veils. school, J. H. Parnell the school at Maca- examination is open to everyone in the store of the place during the busy season. •y in the morning ing was exceptionally fine as was also They entered the church from Bide doors donia, and H. E. Nepean will teach the county. The studies in which examina- Louis Merrigold, F. M. Colby, A. T. tions will be made are algebra, geome- Leonard. Rufus Savidge, W. C. Dawson, and tx( jFjiiJ-View in the afternoon. At her piano playing. The other features near the altar and marched in single file colored school at Fair Haven. • try, arithmetic, United States history John Mount, Harry Savidge, John Bark' will attend service at Grace of the concert were singing by J. Emile down both Bide aisles. At the main Coleirian and banjo accompaniments by geography, grammar, chemistry and Donations of flowers will be aisle the two groups met and marched Herbert and Jfthn Sweeney, Peter Philip H. Coleman. The concert was physics. The questions are such as alow. called for if notice is sent to the Poat. W o . T. Sherman Returns. by twos up the main aisle, where a Perrine nnd Egbert F. Lufburrow made During the past year four members of much enjoyed and was the finest musical Btatue of the Blessed Virgin was crowned William T. Sherman of little Silver, should be readily answered by school rt bicycle trip to Asbury Park on Sunday. the Post have died. They were Frank- treat which has been given in Red Bank with flowers. After these ceremonies a who left his wife and child last July and boys fifteen or sixteen years old. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver C. Ayres of New lin R. Ewing, Hans J. Peterson, Mark L. in a long time. sermon waspreached by Rev. J, F. Brady who it was presumed had eloped with a York moved to (heir summer home at Mount and Edward E. Eustace. This is former servant girl in his family, Magof South Amboy. " Locust Point on Friday. They will have A Gust of Wind at Oceanport. a larger number of deaths than in any gie Singleton, returned to his home last as guests during the summer Mr. and To Close on Decoration D a y . A gust of wind which is supposed to be previous year since the Post was organweek; He wrote to his wife btfore lie Mrs. Jamea Thorns nnd Misses Nellie, Some of the stores of Red Bank will be wed. Church Services. came home, asking her to meet him in the " tailings " of the'Western cyclone, Gertrude and Katberine Bower. closed on Decoration day. Several of the passed through Ocennport last week. New York. This Mrs. Sherman refused The Church of the Precious Blood al Tbe commencement exercises of the principal stores have signed an agreeThe wind traveled in a narrow streak, B1<U tor Building Roiidi. to do, but Rent her daughter to New ment to close on that day. The grocery Monmouth Beach will open for the sum more than a hundred feet broad. Nnvesink public Bchool will be held in York and Sberman came home with the not The board of freeholders met to-day storeB say that on account of it being mer next Sunday. Limbs were broken from trees, and three Firemen's ball on Friday night. If that at Freehold to receive bids.for buildine Saturday it will be necessary for them to Baptism will lie .held in the Cnlvnry girl. He refuses to have anything to sailboats which had recently been pu night proves to be stormy, the exercises the stone road between Asbury Park and keep open in order to accommodate their Baptist church on Brldgo nyenue oi say about his travels and olrnins that he in the water by Capt. Tommy Riddle will be held the following night. is now employed by a produce eoumiiB- were capsized. One of tho boats had no Long Branch and the gravel and' iron customers, many Of whom buy their sup- Sunday morning at eleven o'clock. Richard L. Ellis of New York spent ore road between Manalapan and Eng- plies for the coming week on that day. Rev. Prophet Jones of Pennsylvania sion house in Brooklyn to solicit ship- mast, but the wind lifted up tho Bide of lost week with lite brother, Justice John gllshtown. Tlio bids for tho stone road The clothing store's will probably all keep will preach in the morning and after ments of fruit and vegetables from farm- the boat and turned it completely over. Ellis of Atlnntic Highlands. Mrs. Grace ranged from $51,220 to $101,883, and for open, and tho barber shops will remain noon service on Sunday in the Pilgriir ers. Nothing lias been heard from Mag- Other boats wore blown ashore. Trees Ellis of New York, mother of John Ellis, the Manalapan rood from $7,084 to open until noon. gie Singleton Bince she left Red Bank on and boate fifty feet from the path of tho has nlso been visiting him. Baptist church. $14,074. In both instances the'lowest The subject of Rev. E. C. Hancock's tlio Bame day that Sherman disappeared gale wore not disburbed by the wind. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Mousor of Linbid is about doublo tho estimated cost. sernion in tho First Methodist church oi croft, Mr. and JIr«. Charles Moust-r and Emory ErrlcUson Fined 8 8 . Tho contract for building the Manalapan Sunday night will be "Tho Secret of : Bon, and Lena Diotz of the Phalanx, Charles P. Conovor's Venture. road was awarded to David J. VanHorn A Farmer Trios S u i c i d e Emery Errickson of Red Bank was nrr Successful Life," spent Sunday at Gotlieb Dietz's at Midof New Brunswick, who was the lowes rested on Saturday night for being (lrunk Charles P, Conover of Marlboro has Charles B. Mertz, a furmer living in dletown. bidder. Tho contract for building tho nnd disorderly. Errickson took.somo not out n fleldrAvltb the new Upper Freehold township, tried tocomA Trolley Delay. Dnvid Reitl nnd family of Hoboken, stone road at Long Branch will be acted flowers from, a flower peddler and desweet potato. Mr. Conover is tho llrnt unt Biiicide last week by cutting bis Tho trolley road between Red Htmli farmer in that part of tbe county to tbront. Ho is Oi! yonrx old and ho wnn Frank P. Church of New York and Mr. upon at tho meeting of tlio board on stroyed them. He wns loolted up in the of Brooklyn, are at their sumJuno 10th. town jail ovor night and on Sunday and Long Branch will not bo opened oi niiso these potatoes It ie said that engaged to bo mnrried to Sophia Diet/., LiuiKley mer lioines nt Locust Point for the ueiimorning ho mis taken beforo Justice Decoration day on account of tlio bridgt tlio crop is almost twice an larp;e as who ia but twenty yearn of age. Her 6OI1, Improving Bordon S t r e e t . Child and was lined |2 and costs. Er over tlio Southern railroad at Shrews that of thu ortiiiiiiry.Hweet potato, while friends induced her to break olf the enChristian nnd Curl Dietz of Middlebury not Wing completed. A mistake tho plants iiro much easier cultivated gagement and Mertz, after vainly trying A petition was rccoived by tlio board rickson wns also mndo to pay for tin wan mndo by tho mill in furiiiHbinguoinc Hhould'tbjs town killed fourteen ruta in a corn stack yenr'H crop provn us prollt flowers ho destroyed. • to induce her to marry him, cut his of commissioners at thoir mooting last of the iron uciunH, and others hnd to Ix; ablo as is anticipate'!, Mr. Conover wil throat. Tlio wound WI\H not inmudiiite hint TlniiHdny. They had two doge. night, asking that Bordon street bo nent for. Tlio road will probably lie plant tiu'B variety entirely nest ycnY, Nimrod Woodward and Samuel Conl.V fatul, but the doctors say that lila re nan graded and put in tho same condition nr in opcrntion noxt Monday. of Nnvesink were attacked with ulckA Dangerous Countorfolt. covery is very doubtful. '* Wallace utrcet. A very largo number oi newi lust week, but havo recovered, A counterfeit live-dollar bill linn madi Tho Price of Gas Roduced, property owners hnd signed tho petition. Tho steamboat Monmouth began mnkA Sowor Ordinance Passod. The cornniissionerB will not on tlio matter its appearance. Ono or two of tlio bill Tlio Connoliiktril KIIH company, whirl1 Tho Schools to Colobrato. inic regulnr tripd between Atlunllc IlighImvo been passed in Red Bank, The bll at their noxt meeting. •• Tlio coniminuioncrs inHt night pniwr uupplioB jjns to Ited liwilc, LOIIK Ilnmeli liindn mill New York on Monday. An exhibition of school work will b ban a vlgnetto of Grant, with tho num an ordinance providing for putting (low ami Asbnry Park, him reduced tlio prleo Mr. and Mrn. William P. Yullnlcu of ber D10718088; Tho paper beam it r« Bowcni on UIOIIO iitrcctn which are to In of Ran to 1*1.00 a.thounnnd feet. Thu for- belli in the publio Hchools of lied Haul Morris P n c h Tftkcs a P a r t n e r . BOinblancu to tho pjipor used on tin nincndiuiiizL'd by thr> trolley company mer price- win! $2 in K< <1 Ilnnk and AH on Friday, In tlio afternoon a Bpecin! Brooklyn vlnlted their tmiimier home nt Locust Point on Sunday. Mori in I'ach has token hia non, Morti- uonuino liillii, but it in not nn utrong mid IlldH for tho wort will boopened WCIIIHH bury Park and $1.75, in I/>n(? limncli protfriiinmo in.cplobrntion of Deconitioi: Minn Delia Martin of Atlantic Highday will lie given. mer V. Piich. Into' full pnrtnernhip wltli mm not tho natiio " feel." dny night, Juno 17th, nt eight oVlooli A further reduction of ten lentil in alIIIIKIH IIIIII returned homo from a vinit to him in his wliolowilo nnd retail tobacco At thu noxt meeting of tlio eofiiiiilmlonei tlowiid to till conmunerH of ww who jmj relntiven nt Ilroolilvn, butilnciiu, Tho now partnership bogan iViiiiIord'n llox. tlio mutter of iiHklnir for bidn for tin thoir lilllii witlilu len (luyH lifter jiroHi'ii Thu M.otal McrchantH of Ucd Haul! Tim publio Holioof of Miildlulown clonoA on' Monday nnd tho firm nnmo luuimf to Whon Pandora ononixl her now cntira sownr wnrkn will bo connidcrcd, (Ion, Largo tmerti of (51111 iiro given HtH I [live iniulo a diiicovery, It wan not to-dny with appropriate exorciiieii. will bo Morria Pacli & Bon, further rmmotloiiH, mndo by accident, nor in tho twinkling famutiH box in anolcnl Union nho let on •» . — • — ' of mi «y<>, nor by all of tliom together. Altitcli of'cm I u bout of I'vlln. Wlinn you open u lritxl Mutawun'a Celebration. - , Important to Nmokern, t'rn Piiiidorii box of wrillon imj>rr nnl> Bhulvt'ii oininuicd with 'oiu I COUIIUTH Half tho bother of Jioii>iiiki>e|>lM|; i OniMif tlio lending inerelmntn inailo ii r.(iHt Wedntwluy Mntnwim wlcbrnkid Mnny iimolcem do not Binoko a pipe good enn come out. In tlio Imx aro 2i OIOKKC'I with Vin I Wlmt? All kliidnof iluo to poor i|UiilIty, tough ineatii, Avoii lioginniiip;— tho uiiuiil way. Ono folwho othorwlrio would, bcoaimo they can- nliouta of heavy, mnootli iiurfnwil writing rouily-to-wcnr gmiiln for Lftdlci)', Mlimcn (IIIH bother, lluy your meat here. You lowed, then another, ami another—th tint nirlviil of tlio pluiKi for their public not keep them froo nml clean. A plp papi.T and 34 wcll-RUininnil cnvoloniHi to and Clilldrcu for JJucoratloii Day. Hi<% urn ntwayn imro of tho bent quality iiHiinl way IIKIIIII. Now all tlui llvontore- tiohool which thoy won hi a rownt vottlint cim nlwnyH bo liopt clean r frai und inakili. You can got tliitt I'nndora'n box the lulvortlnomcntof Joiiopli Halr.uu |I"KO whollior you iiro 11 jiid«o of moat or not kw|terii in ltv<\ Dank know that Tun ing content, A jiuriulii of hurnciiietl, hlKicit HANK KiKiimicit In tho bout Irritl cyclcm, cnrriiiKW and llrcnimi wwi held fo a.—Adv. ,l(iiic|ih Rynii, llnmd Hlroel.—Adv. nwoot .without troublo in what nmokorn with papor olthor rulfHl or unrulml, 1 bringvr they over tried, during tho tiny nnd ut night an otiterhavo nt'i'ii looking, (or.over iilnco the 28 cento nt John II. Cook'n.-zWi , Dollart fc, F»tjnm'n ivirboiidttcii arc tlio If Till: HRdltiTicit hi'lngi! biiiiliieiui t tnlnnimit wan given.' Tlio town WIUI So. I Drw tjvmlu, luxury of. niiiokliig liao been Indulgm! In, pictured of to-day, Tbulr iiliow iimo him No 1 Orj'iuulloM, lawiui, llnenii, dlmltlt, Htoreii It will bring It to other limn ol .dvcoriihMl with HnK« ami limiting. A llttrn* ««CM, William CuDlngUm linn n lino of jun nueli iilpeii now, mi ldeul nolf-cloaning Honicn run nw«y nnd brenk down oiu noinu nrlliitlo tipoclinonii In it. JIIIIKO for c-tii,, nt No, 1 Ilroiul ulrcot, I'nttoriion St, Inriiifitry—to ('Hriicntwi nnd incchntiicH, mmilior of Hnl Ilmikom nud n tttw manto contractor!!, to (iverylnxly who luu bent o f tin) U0.1l Hunk Iiro department pipo, Unit can nlways bo kopt u« dry fenuo, but ittlll you oan Hnd uhlrt wnliit»i, yomnoU uml n'vo them a tr\n\.~Adv. Kplnuliig,—. iioinetlilnx to noil, whcilur that iiomc took part In I' nnd olcftrt' na-n now om>. Wllh It, plpo lindcrwfliir, oto,, at l'lltU.'rmm & HplnTlirie'n nn nimih In tin* way 11 nliiry In thing In dry «<KHIH orlnbor or fnrmn, A b»x of 'try" Our I'olntorn cl l'—Adv. limolfljiK bmi now ohnrmn,—Attv. (old nn In thbntory Mwlf. Tin; HI«IU,TKH Tlio ralwi iironot )il/(h, mid ovory vvottli BO for 09 ci'iltn nt I'IIVII'M. you omi tell 2,000 fmnlllen what you hnv U'llu nil tliero In to toll nnd telhi Hunrutlui flnu iililrt waliitu at A IWK of nlco froo imioklnK ol(;nrii foi All tho nowg, nil-tho tlino, In ' T U B 1 for wilts—Adv. 91,50 JK'r ytMir gi'tn Tim Iticdiuriiii. non & H|>limliiK'n,~vt(fi>. OUo«iitiintPnch'ii,—Adv.. t 1 I HER ON PEARL STREET. New mail arrangements went into effect at Red Bank on Monday. .The first mail for New York, Philadelphia, Trenton, Freehold, Matawan, Middletown, Keyport, Shrewsbury, EatonEown, and points north on the Central railroad and south on the Southern railroad now closes a(t seven o'clock in the morning instead of eight o'clock as formerly; ana the last maiffor these places closes 7:20 p. M. instead of 6:45 P. M. An afternoon mail for Long Branch, Asbury Park and Seabright, leaving Red Bank at 2:80, has been put on, and the last mail for these°places closes at 7:20 P. M. There is no change in the mails from New York. An afternoon mail from Philadelphia, Trenton, Freehold, Atlantic Highlands, and all points north on the Central railroad has been added to to the'former Schedule. This mail arrives at Red Bank at 3:15 on the same train with the afternoon mail from New York. The morning mail from Long Branch, Seabright, and all points south on the Southern railroad now reaches Red Bank at T:45, which is an hour earlier than in the past; and a later mail from these places has been added, which reaches Red Bank at 8:00 P. M. There is no change in the Fair Haven and Oceanic mails. ,RRAIGNMEMT OF . WHO WERE INDICTED. NEXT SUNDAY. CAVALRYMEN'S WONMOOTH'S HORSE SHOW. SPORTS. It Will Be UeULat Hollywood Park in August. The third annual exhibition ' of the Monmouth county horse show will take Bight Xutnbera on the Programme place at Hollywood Park on Thursday, . —A Parade Through Bed Bank to Friday and Saturday, August 18th, 14th 15th. Many entries have already Be Olven-The Games To Be Held and been received. On Their Parade Grounds. The contract for a new grand stand The programme of events for the cav- was to have been awarded last week. alrymen's sports pn Decoration day lias The plane called for a building with a been completed. There will be eight seating capacity of 2,700, in addition to . numbers on the .program me, which will eighty private Doxes. The building was . include a wide variety of games. The to have a frontage 400 feet, with steel cavalrymen have decided to have their pipe supports, . Theofinterior to donannualparade every yearon Decoration tatn parlor, .waiting-room was and accesday. They will? be in. full uniform and sories for women,'a smoking-room, a will parade through the principal streets and a directors' room. These rooms of the town. The parade will begin at cafe were to have been finished in hard wood. half-past one o'clock. Immediately after The association expected to get the buildthe parade the games will be held. complete.for $4,500. when the bids , The cavalrymen were unable to make ing were opened it was found that the bids satisfactory arrangements for the use of ranged from two times Ao thrce r times Stoutwood Park, and the games will this amount. The contract was not .therefore be held on their parade grounds made, and the contractors notified near Newman Springs. The card of to got up plans of their ownwere showing the events is as follows: M sort of grand stand which they could 1. TaiiHo. build for $4,500. These bids will bo Cutting ut wooden heads and spcarlner at rings opened next week. with the saber wbllo at full gallop. Distance, 875 Facing thft grand stand will be the yards. • ,• new tract, which ia in course of con2. WtTER RIDE, " Each contestant mast mount his Iwnn while car- struction. It will be one-fifth of a mile, lying a glass brimming full of water, and must oval, forty-five feet in width. An ornacover the course partly In a wait, partly In a trot, mental picket_ fence will enclose the and partly In a gallop. Distance, 7a yards. grounds. . THEIIt CARD OF EVENTS F O B - DECORATION OAT. 3. POTATO RACE. '4 '4 • Our stores, both at Seabright and Red Bank, will be open all day Decoration Day. You can buy wheels (for cash or on easy payments), we will rent you.a wheel for the day, fora week or forthe season, we will sell you a. lamp, a cyclometer, a bell.or any other fixture; or if your tire is punctured or your wheel breaks down, we will repair it for you. Small breaks and punctures repaired while you wait. ' • I I "Hark! Oar Salesmen are Talking! listen to What They Say: • • Three potatoes are placed ot a distance of 100 yards from a pall. ComraUmla start from the pall, pick up tlio potatoes ami return wltli them to tlio pall, one at a time, without dismounting. Horses must bo 14 bands or over. Cannle Tetley's M a y P a r t y . A May party was given by Gannie Tetleyof Stout street last Saturday-in Hance's grove, near East Side Park. The i. TEST PEGO1XO. day was spent in playing games. Eva Tent peg Is Scinches broad and 13 Inches long Conover was crowned queen and Fred and Is driven half-way in the ground. Spearing peg with saber and carrying it to enil of course Kaiser was made king. The other chilwhile horse la in a Kallop counts 3 ; dislodging It dren present at the party were Dollie scores 1. Distance, 75 yards. Course must lit' cov- Wall, Lizzie Hoop, Carrie Roop, Anna ered In 10 seconds. Glennon, Maud Patterson, Kittio and 0. DODDLE MOUNTIKO. Lily Owens, Hilda, Alma and Edith Horses are saddled and bridled. One man Is Braun, Ada Heyer, Jlollie Krugs, Irene mounted. Another takes hold of saddle and mounts tbreo times, once while liorao Is In a walk, onco Robinson, Fred Brower, Willie 'White, while trotting, and owio. while galloping. Then the Willie Simpson,-John Conover, Fred men change pluces and ropeut the perfonnuuee. Stier, Irving Brown, James Glennon, Horses must ho 15 hands or over. Everett Asay, George Krugs, Lester 0. PuitsrjiT. Woodward, George Roop, Frank Owens, One man. with rcsitto on right shoulder. Is pur- Willard_Koop and Fred and Frank Tet- m V 7. NOVELTY RACE, 8. HALF-MILE UACE. - ' . • • / - • • , • Thomas Walling Wins a Bicycle. A bicycle chanced ofl by George Bradford at Shrewsbury last Wednesday night was won by Thomas Walling. THE CRESENT MAN. ople are the largest bicycle makers in the country. They make all sizes of wheels. I canfitbut the whole family—the six-year-old boy to the six-foot father. I don't ask $100 for our best Crescent, because, I can afford to sell1 it for $75. The'other sizes sell from that amount down to $40. Step in the store and let me point out the little things about the Crescent that.make it the equal of any bicycle built. ' *' . • j 1 *4 4 " . . . A B i g Catch of Eels. ( Dr. E. W. Crater of Oceanport went No entries have yet been made in any bobbing for eels in the Shrewsbury river event, but most of the cavalrymen will and caught 88. take part'in some of them. .Some of the cavalrymen will take,part in all of them. The entry lists will remain open until the time for starting each event. Are free from all those little weak- This will bo a rcgulur ruanlng roco over the lialfmllu track on tue parade grounds. Windsor Bicycles nesses of construction and design PROTECTING WHEELMEN. ' that are found in the ordinary A Late ll'Mch Jlav Lessen the Chances of Punctured Tires. wheels, Windsors are faultless Governor Qriggs lial signed the bill which prohibits putting anything on and flawless inBido and out. sidewalks or roads which will puncture . bicycle tires. The law provides that whoever shall put on any sidewalk or on C. C. SMOCK, Agent, any highway used for public travel any broken glass, metal, loose etones, earth- FRONT STKEET, RED BANK, N. J. enware or any other substance likely to Near Southern Railroad, v puncture bicycle tires, Bhall be subject to a penalty of $5, which may be sued for and recovered by anybody who has mind to BUB for it. Road overseers are also prohibited from putting any atones larger than an inch and a half iu di»»»•»»•••••»••••»•••••»•»••»»•••••»••••»»»••»»»»••»»< t aniify xton the roads without covering themE<P with fine stone, earth or screen- POPE & PATTERSON, RED BANK AND SEABRIGHT. ' SHERIDAN HOTEL. i Bicycle Races a t Seabright. The Seabright bicycle club will hold three races on Decoration Day, One event will be for members of the club and the others will be open. Three prizes will be offered in each>ace, The chief prize in the club race will bo a gold badge with a diamond center. The events are as follows: FOR RED BANK'S FAVORITE SPORTING RESORT New York Papers. Front Street, opp. Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. GOOD ROOMS, '°'~^~-k A WELL-STOCKED BAE, IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC CIGARS, ;, ' ' GOOD MEALS. Wheelmen Accommodated Any Hour of t h e Day or Night. ' - • • Free Bicycle Racks for Visiting; Wheelmen. . INSERTED AT OFFICE RATES Five-mllo handicap, open. One-mile club cliMiiplnnsblp. Hulf-mllu handicap, open. AT . The entrance fee in each event will be fifty cents, and entriescaii be made at Pope & Patterson's bicycle store at Seabright until noon of Decoration Day, Decoration D a y Sports Two bicycle races, will bo held at Asbury Purk on Saturday. Tlio first will be a ten,-niile road race nnd the other will bo a slow race of about 200 yards. There will be 24 prizes awarded in both events. A Bhooting match will be held on Decoration day at Koyport between the Bayside 51m club nnd the South Ainboy gun club. Eddio J. Keid of North Long Branch will rido in tlio bicycle races at Unyonno on Saturday. Tetley's News Depot. Accommodations • OUR SUNDRY MAN. I'm-a modest man, as far as profit, is concerned. I have reduced the prices of Lamps, Cyclometers, Bells, etc., to where profit ought to be from the ^ -^-buyers'-point-of—view,—Lkeep-selling-more-and__@_ more all the time, as cyclers learn more and more about" v OUR GENERAL SALESMAN. myyprices. Here's an example: The 20th Century tamp I look after the Victor and Eagle at $100; the sells regular for $4, $4.50 and $5. My prices are $2.75, Diana at $65; the Ideal at $50; and the secondand $3.75. Everything else is in about the same hand weeels from $20 up. If you want a wheel, proportion. other than those sold by the salesman who have talked to you, come to me, perhaps I can suit you. (lie man pursued, Contestants mount, llghta cigarette, open nn umbrella, and rldo 10U yanjs and dismount; then remount anil return to starting point and dismount. Cigarette must bo kept lighted and -"umbrella must Ira kept opened. . THE PIERCE MAN. ' The Pierce was very much in evidence in this section .last year. Over seventy-five of these wheels i. were sold here, and they stood all the tests hard riders put them to! The 21 pound Pierce Costs l 2 5 d l l t $ 7 5 ' 8ued-hyt-Wft-otliei«i-wh(>inuHtrgo-iipon--leftBl(ltMind d h t l h t l f t l l d et rosi'tle without touching 5'ime of contest, i) minutes. THE RAMBLER MAN. For seventeen years Gormally & Jeffrey have been building Rambler Bicycles. The '96JRambler is as" perfect a Bicycle as experience can make it. Every little part that enters into its construction is thoroughly tested. Tie Eambler sells for $100. It conies in weights from 19 to 25 pounds, and in frames of different lieignts. I can tell you more about the Ranibler if you will step in. ' 4 4 4 4 '4 4 4 4 11 A FIret-Class Lunch Counter Is connected with the Hotel, and meals can bo nad without *> <i i i vdclay. ^ Claret Lemonade and Sborldan 8oda are specialties with us. They aro tho most cooling and retroshlnu drink wheolmon can use. , ^ 4 4 '4 I $125 BICYCLE FOR $59._ I have the'agency for toil best blcsSUe erermado. 8123 Bicycle for J59. Wamtntedto be as represented, or no sale. Other $75 wheels Mr $U, warrantedtorone year. Second-hand ones, $19, XU and 829, m good order. Send for a catalqgtxfe. SEWING MACHINES. S20,823 and 830, warranted ty the Company for 10 rears. Other agents would aal- you $50 and $00 for a machine not so Rood. I have sold hundreds of machines In Monmouth County, and all the machines I hare Bold hovo given tho best satisfaction. If you want a machine or a hloyole, give me a call. You know I am the only agent "(tint knows how to repair nil makes of machines. All work miaranteed. Bicycles and Sewing Machines to hire. I also soil tho Dnrllns Fertilizer. A'l farmers tnoiv tills Is the best. Orders takentorCoal and Wood. OFFICE: NO. 88 MAPLE AVENUE. . Post Office Box, 402. ' C . W. WOODWARD ^ R e d Bank, N'. J- A Factor in Regaining Health I .„ , In referring to a well-known Bishop of Trenton, a New York newspaper said last week: " H e takes the wheel for his health. He is a man of bilious temperament and suffers from hepatic troubles, which makes outdoor exercise a necessity." "What ia true in thia case will be equally true in yours. Our line of wheels embraces a dozen standard makes. •••»•••••»•••»»•••••••••••»••••»•»••••»•••»••»••»•»• FRANCIS WHITE, If BERRANG & ZACHARIAS, A Bicycle Plicht Save You a l a r g e Doctor's Bill. Asbury Park, N. J. Many wheelmen, while in town on business or otherwise The Patent Bulb Top On (bo bottle onnlita you to iitaco engaged, have no place to store just ttiu required amount ol powder, Office in R. T. Smith's Building, their wheels. I have had prolist when) you want It. No troublo, no n-oste. Try It. Woakllshing. vided for their use racks where FRONT STREET, RED BANK, N. J. Weaklish have begun running in the DR. BORDEN'S IDEAL Shrewsbury river and large catches have they can lcavo them and bo perDENTIFRICE. been mudu alrenclv. The best place su far to catch the fl»i bus been between fectly safe. Prepared by W. D. PAI19ON8. TO RENT-FURNISHED. Locust Point and BI'OWD'B Dock, Shrimp Sold by all druggUIS—25c. All are invited to make use of On bofh sides o£ the river, 10 houses, from $250 to $2,500. On Eroad street, 8 are used principully for bait as better catches have been mndi> with them than houses, from $250 to $1,000. Twenty-one houses, from $75 to $1,500 for the seawith other bait. The liah caught weigh them. They aro free at Real Estate, Loans and Insurance. 1 Fresh Eggs Wanted. son, in nearby places. froin two to three pounds. CIRTIS'S H/VT STORE, J. K. P a r k e r in Now York, 27 Broail Street, Red Bank. J. K. l'mlter, who formerly conducted u biliaril and pool room at Aibury Park, luiB bought tliu Academy, n billiard and TIIRLAUNUKY I REPRESENT pool room and bowling IIIIU.YH on FourDOES UODD WORK, teenth street, Now York. IlehnH reIll'MUlBO It 11119 fitted the place and it in now doing thu Modern Machinery, Inrguut buHinoKH in its) hiHtory. E.tpcrt Help, Purest Wttshlns Materials. Goorgo Gould Loasoa Polo Grounds. (ieoi'Ku (ioidil, who in Hiimuu'iiiijr nt Henlui^iil, ban leuucvl tliu gioumln of I ho Inivn ti'iuih and cricket club at tlmt pliico for thu HiMiKou. lluwill UBI> tlio ^roimiln for |ilnyl"K polo Mid oilier nportu, No rciiBijn why you Hlinulilii't Imvo your likumlry tluno IIH w i l l IIH It IH |HtKHlhlu U> do It. My ivuuoii urn* tlimuidi ovury pliiro ni'nr llcil Hunk 1'iioli.wcuk. l i m p a iiiwlnl niul I will «-iilI,m-imckniifHenii l» ' " FOR House, 10 rooma, 200 feet river front, flrst-olnss stnbles, fruit, coat over $20,000, will oxchango for city of Now York or Droolilyn property, or will, sell for $10,000 if sold soon. Property on Broad street, coBt $8,500, will Bell for $5,000,"flno house, barn, fruit and big lot. Storo property and neat cottago on Shrewsbury avenue, $3,100, rcntB for $20 per month, good for an Investment. 11 acres on river front by Ilonglnnd place, $32,000, worth $85,000. 1» acres, 085 foot on river, $18,000, worth $20,000. » aorea on Ridgo road, worth $3,500, will sell for, $1,500—$500 cash. Lota Worth $1,800, on Front Dtrcet, 50x200 foot, will Boll for $000—$300 CIIBII. 8 houses on "Willow street,.rent for $7 per month each, wilLscll for $750 wicli, $100 cash on cncli. I luive u million dollars' worth of property nt bottom priced. V. B. SMOCK, 31 Broad Street, KKII HANK, UXFUJIXI8IIED OIIIIH and Ends of Sport. • Hurry Maddux, tbo well-known Uioycl rider of AHlmry 1'nrk, ban i'litcral tbt" irvliiKton-Miluiirn road nice on Decora tlun day. I'artof tho com™ to be ridden In billy mid on Sunday Miulilox WIIII training (in (IKI Mlddk'liiwn tunipllco POOK8. from Uoo|i»r'n IIIIIIKO to llio villngo of llni'c. Curious. Current, IN STOCK. Mlddlt'town in order to lirciiinc IIOIJUHALMOST GIVEN AWAY. . loincil to l'ldinn ii]> hillii. lid hail lately UlTlilIra Hil|ilillnl Clirii]HT tliim lit mi) Hoik Htuit: joined IIKI Hlciirnn team and will rldu n III thu Win 111. inflow I'Vllow in IIIH IIHTH tliln Ht'iiiion, M l l l t A I M I C H A M I 1KIOKH MOIXJIIT. lllll(l At a K of b'Hii'ball bclwoi'ii tb( MA MI or 11 vATM.oaiw PUKN. Freehold unil Kimliiihtown elulm tlio LECCAT BROTHERS, neoro wan 111 tu 1H In favor of tlio FreeHI OIIAItlllKllH HTHKltT, Illllll (I'UIII, HOUSES. A few left from $7.00 to $50.00 per month, NKIV JKHBKV. A MILLION SALE—SPECIAL. Inmiranco in llcttt Compunien, LOANS— Anoint lid, $2,000 to loan. WHITH. I lance & Slmlls. 1 TIKI d u b biidxe (if llw Ilaynldo n u n olub of Koyport hint wwik WIIII won by ,\Vlnllnld Mnliror. / (Icorno HftolllllKK of ICe; JHIII IIIIII en tcrcd (bo Irvlngliin-JMUI'iiMi foocornllim duy. wen on 111 |)iw Wi'Hl of Olty Hull I'mk. WALL PAPERS NKW.VOKK. Ladion' Oxford lion that luivo been marked at $2 will '$2.50 nt 75 cents. We liavo Boino ni/.tm wo want to clone (jut. Cull in JIIKI fieo our stock; our pricon will givo you (UB. AT HARRISON'S. a? llroad Strenl, lied Uunk, N. S, 30 Broad Street, Red Bank. We want fresh egga in oxchango for butter, tea or coffee. We are eolling at present our Best Creamery ButterVt 23 cents. Very Fino Creamery Butter at 20 contfl, Teas fr'om 26\$nta.Jx> 50 ceula, Golleea from 30 couts to 03 cents. Cash paid for strictly fresh eggs, also. (•fliJapden's ©utter Broad Street, Had Bank. Dearest treasure in all the Innd, Each day in strength grows greater, Long life to it, the best of all, ' Iict's drink its health, and later, When others i\$k, who do not know 'Old Rye from new, why tell them Of what you know, then they will buy D d l d ! The best to sell them, " Thar, in uhvaya room on t<>}>" Dellwood Rye Whiskey. IT HOLDS THE PLACE OF HONOR. This whiskey is hold by ua exclusively and guaranteed absolutely "'"c GEORGE R. LAMB & CO.,. 25 and 27 Hast Front Street, Red Bank, N. J. Soles or Real Estate. • The following real estate transfers have been filed in the office of the county THE HARD .TIMES SEVERELY clerk at Freehold-for the. week ending FELT BY THEM. May 28d, 1896: • - - . • BANKS BORROW MONEY. They Have Borrowed Over $400,009 to Meet the Demands of Their • Customers - Hie Deposits and Loans of the National Banks. SHRKWSBBBT.TOWSSnlP.. MIDDIKIOWN TOWNSHIP.' The hard times are being felt by the wiuiam Tilton to Hiram Beely. Piece of property, banks of Momnouth county. This is the $80. Charles W. Humphreys to Frank B. Anderson. worst season of the year for the banks. at Highlands, {1,500. Many farmers have to borrow money for Land Water Witch Club to W. Atwooa French.: Lot at ; their spring purchases of seed, fertilizers Water Witch Park, S255. ^nd implements, and their bank accounts Ferdinand Fish to Lizzie J. Taylor. 2 lota at Witeh Park, 8L .. are always down low at this time; while Water Water Witch Club to F. Adalbert Dunham. 2 lots they have not as yet begun to get a re- at Water Witch Park, 8700. ' . • • turn on even their earliest crops. ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS. . •'•' Banks which have permanent custo- Margaret Emery and husband to James Wlllmore." mers always endeavor to carry them Lots 71,76 and 76, jfl. James Wlllmore to Robert Emery. Lots 74, vo along during thia dull season, and the and 70, $1. • T loans made by banks to farmers are EATOOTOWN TOWXBHIP. always greater at this.season than at lIBubbard Howland to Esek Wolcott, ex'r. Lots . . I any other. When the deposits at the at Eatontown, $1. May Pemberton to Mllford Jeffrey. Land at Ocean'.. banks are not sufficient to meet the port, $100. demands of their customers, the banks MATAWAN TOWNSHIP. borrow money from other sources, prinHenry S. Little to MUtoo A. Fardon. Piece of cipally from banks in New York city. property, $1,100. ' This is either done on their own account, EABITAN IWRSBIP. Alfred Walling, Jr., adm'r, to Albert A. Aumack. as' corporations, or noteB are taken to Piece of property, 81,622.60. New York and re-discounted'there. Wm. Hon. ex'r, to EliaB Seabrookj Piece of propEvery national bank in Monmoutb erty, 8107.20. A. Aumack to Nathaniel WalllDj, Piece county has had to borrow money this of Albert property, Stw. spring to meet the unusual demand George H, Winner to Wm. Dlllmar. Lots at Keycaused by the hard times. The borrowed port, jjioo. Board of Commissioners of Keyport to David W. amounts range from $5,000, which was borrowed by the Farmers' bank of Allen- VnnFelt. Lot at Keyport, ?1. OCEAN TOWNSHIP. town, the smallest borrower among the Balllngton Booth to Frederick de Lautour Boothnational banks of the county, to $96,000, Tucker. Piece of property, $1. which was borrowed by the First national Jane White and husband to Charles Bowne. Piece bank of Asbury Park, the heaviest bor- of property, $15(1. Alchey E. Conover and others to James H.Henrower in the county. The total amount drlckson. Piece of property, 'Si. borrowed by the National banks to meet Thomas O. Patten to Benjamin W. Singer. Lease the current pressing needs of their cus- of piece of property, 82,000. Benjamin W. Singer to Charlotte B. Singer. Leue tomers is nearly $425,000. of piece of property, $1,000. The deposits show a great shrinkage James Chasey to Benjamin 8. Wolcott. Lots at . from ordinary times, though they are Long Branch City, 8760. Simon A. Hendrickson and husband to Louisa 8. not much smaller than they were last Applegate. Lot at Long Branch City, $1,000. year when the May statement was made. tphralm Bell and others loTlromus P. Fay. Land It is in the amount of money borrowed at Long Branch, 51. E. Slocum to Robert C, Adameon, Jr. Lot by the banks that the greatest evidence at Susan Long Branch, $850. —of— hard—times. Us—shown. The—total —DealJ3each-Land-compnny-toAunlB-L.JIorfcrd.. amount borrowed by the banks is great- 8 lots at Deal Beach, $8^10. Land company to MaryL. Francis. Slots er than at any other time within the at Coast Deal Beach, H00O. . recollection of Bankers. Coast Land company to Esther H. Tremalne. 4 The deposits in the National banks of lots at Deal Beach, 84,000. NIPTONK TOWNSHIP. the county are a little less than two and a quarter millions of dollars. The loans Charlotte A. Buxton and husband to T. Frank Apmade by the banks reach almost to three pleby.' Piece of property, $3,000. Catherine Burke and husband to Julia Carroll. millions. The Second National bank of Piece of property, $1. Red Bank retains the leading position Julia Carroll to John Burke. Piece of property,*!. John E. Lannlng, master, to George D. Pettlngill. among the bonks both in the amount of at Asbury Park, $0,025. deposits and loans. Its deposits are over1 LotBelle Wltkosky to Sol Whit. Lot at West Asbury $380,000, and the First national bank Park, $1. of Bed Bank is second in the list with JolinE. Insklpto Isaac G. Flack and others. 2 deposits of nearly $850,000. • The three lots at Ocean Grove, $6,900.90. C. Symmes, adm'r, to Addlson H. Symmes. Red Bank banks together have $868,174.- LotHenry at Ocean Grove, 82,100. 10 on deposit. All the other national Elizabeth Jackson to Sarah S. Hollenbeck. 8 lots banks of the county together have only at Ocean Grove, 85,135. Eliza H. Fish WT. Frank Appleby. Lot at Ocean. ~^b^fo~ace"and'a*hah*aa-niuehTnoney-a8 1Grove, 8T,30K Z~~— J':...L'._ - _ . - . : : r the Bed Bank banks." Matilda W. Breck and husband to James A. Jack3 lots at pecan Grove, $2,200. The following tables show the amount in. James A. Jutkson to Elizabeth Jackson. 3 lots at of deposits of each national bank in the Ocean Grove, $1, ~ county, and also the amount of money T. Frank Appleby to Charlotte A. Buxton. Lot at West Aebury Park, $3,000. ««• each bank has loaned out: DEPOSITS. Second Notional or Red Ban* First National ot Red Bank First National of Anbury Park First National ofMaMsquan First National of Freehold First National ot Long Branch Navcslnlt National ol Red Bank Formers' Natlonarof Allentown Atlantic Highlands National Central National of Freehold Peoples' National of Keyport .•• ....,$380,021.81 848,660.44 324.678.M 203,631.73 228,882.67 218,851.M -138,585.83 100,430.15 91,859.35 80,823.08 71,748.00 LOANS. • Second National of Red Bank First National of ABbury Park First National of Bed Bank Firrt National of Manajquan First National ot Long Branch Navestnk National of Bed Bank First National of Freehold Atlantic Highlands National Farmers' National of Allentown Central National of Freehold Peoples' National of Keyport $550,605.93 ^^S-S 125,<O0^a H*3-871,-?! H0JM.C9 200,372.13 185,781.09 155,506.81 128,895^3 117,881.80 1U3.107.23 62,050,200.12 » •i Lire-Savors Moat Not FUh. Orders have been received from Washington that the members of the life-saving crews must not engage in fishing during the Reason they are employed by the government at the life-saving stations. In the past the members of the crews have made a good deal of money by fishing, and some of them have their surplus money invested in boats, nets and other fishing appliances. Wm. £. Page to llary E.Pimm. S lots at Avon. $1. Eliza Benson to Hannah McClane. Lot at Bradley Beach, $700. ¥ i U TOWNSniP. Ocean Beach association to Lemuel C. Ely. 4 lots atBelnuuv$l,40D. Ocean Beach association to George N. Robertson. LotatBelmar, $500. Ocean Beach association to Wm. A. Rlpley. 2 lots atBelmar,$800. Fred. J. Anspach to C. Edith Gould. Lots at Spring Lake,$l. ". • Watson & Brown Taken to the Asylum. Peter Kuuibcll of Long Branch has been taken to the Trenton insane asylum, His mind has been affected sinco be was six years old. He is now seventy years of age. The weakness of his mind resulted from a fright, caused by being chnsed by a panther when lie was a Binnll boy and lived In tho mountains. —«» * Aubui-y Park's Now Postmaster. Alfred \V. Doy wns npnointed postmaster at Aoblu-y Park by President Ctovelnnd lnat Wednesday. Tho now postmnster In only 83 yonrs okl nnd Is the only Democrat In bis family. A Grocer's Bad Luoli. Haninel 8. Bcoboy of. Lonit Urancli, whose ntore wan robbed iVHhort time HKO, liml nioro bnd luck liint week, Ilia dog wan poliionod nnd ono of hin hornet) ran uwny nnd wrecked one of bin delivery wugonn. A Pastor KoBlguri, ltov, II. O, Smith, iinntor of tho Prwibytorlnii churoh of Freehold linn rculKiivd nnd will liilio n poultloii In tlio Lnno theologian! auinlnnry nt Clnolmmtl, Ohio, Bought and Sold for Cash, or Carried on Margin. Koyport'K Hood Oysters. During tho iiminnt nnaiion fifty venmiln luvvu drought to Koyport 1111,000 Imftlidn of iHJotl oyntwii. Tiio cwit of tho oynlvrii wan about fM.IJOO, If you wnnt nil tho ntiwfl, you will find it only in TUB HiwiUTBtt.--vWt>, MAY Our Store Will be Closed All Hence we intend doing" three days' business in 2 DAYS Thursday -AND- Friday. We will sell goods at such prices that the people of Red Bank never witnessed its equal. Offerings that have been well planned, well calculated, will completely out-class any of our former efforts. The/^will out-shadow all previous or present values. Qualities will be, as usual, in every respect reliable, new and up-to-date, and the best. These are but a few of the specials: DKHien's wHite~Wd colored dresses, 50-cent kind, , ~ • - 25c. each Boys' Suits, 4 to 8 years, 75-cent kind, - 49c. '• " Ladies' White Dress Skirts, $2.00 kind, $1.29 " Fancy Silk Parasols, ruffle and novelty handles, • • .-: j • 88c. " —49creach Ladies' Chamois or Kid Gloves, $1.00 quality, • • ' - 79c. pair Ladies' " Crash Suits," worth $5.00, - $3.98 each Percale or Lawn Wrappers, 98c, 79c. and 59c, each And many other ready-to-wear goods for Decoration Day, at prices exceptional to every one who will be on hand during the above-mentioned . • "two days." JOSEPH SALZ, Corner Broad and Mechanic Streets, Red Bank, N. J. 8o -BROADWAY,-N^'Y. BRANCH OFFICE, Ocean Avenue, Scabrlght, IV. J. Coal and Wood. WM. N. W0RT/HLEY, Removedi Branch office of the Citizens' Mutual Life Insurance Company, removed from Spinhing & Patterson's building to second floor S Child's building. No. 5 Broad street, Red Bank. L. T. ROSSITER, Superintendent. 8CCCEB8OR 10 J . A. WOItTHLEY, •Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Scrnnton, Lehlgli, Wllkesbarrc and Cumberland Coal. The Same Story Told Two Ways. Fifty cents a month, eight years, $100, Thnt'a the whole etory condensed. In dotull—Fifty ccntH a month payn for 0110 idiaro in tho Stiito Building nnd Loan Aunoclntion, In (IIKIII ytari (lint fmmll monthly payment amount;) to tVnelilngton nnd Mechanic slivclc gooil view of the river and only one block from Bronil utrcet. Tho IIOIIBO Ims nlno rooinB nnd Ilio lot Is OOx K!> foot. Thin jn-oiHTty CUM tin bought If lie BO J . FRANK HAWKINS, O N KULW TO UAH C'KKWTOIW. Kwoiihim' Noli™. Anna i'«rkiir nnd J«WI>II I'urker, Jr., cuw.utom Anlirr H. PMknr.dixWMvl, by order nf llm min win (if llm roiint|f nf Momiiiiutn, iKTtnjr KIYII nntl. In Hin crwllhin of wild (l«iMi««U« lirlmr In llm., fliiliin, draimnilfl mil nliilnin iiHUlint Ihn i«tnl» o[ mild domlnnt, miller onlli or ntTlrintMmi, wltliln nil inoliUm (rum tlm NINTH DAY lir MAY, 1MM. limy will Im Jnmvur ImriiMl nf nny •ctlon llinrnl RlfslDJit til') RAIII t)xmUU)Itt. " ANNA 1'AHKF.II, JOIIKI'll rAHKI.lt, Jll, Koyport'a Boat Restaurant. r<v>|i|it YlillliiB Kn;|Kirtmil U ' t n RmHt nlr>l at YAiiony A nddiwm» reftlnunilit. (1IXH1 fiKMl nnd liurxl winic«, t ! « t w r for pnctli*, wrfldlnu', fl«. Notice to Delinquents A PPLEGATE&HOPE, COUNSELLORS AT LAW, • EDMUND WILSON, FRANK T. LENT, ARCHITECT, 94 Liberty S t r e e t , f*" N e w Y o r k . Special attention to Monmouth County work. fa" Architect (or tho Casino, tho residences of A.B.Cooke, Ed.Jansen and others o! Atlantic Highlauds; and for tho residence o! F. C. Moore, Nave- lnt Highlands. The Best of Reference). ESTAB1I8HED 1873. Ilod Dank Hull Balato and Imarance Agency, 21 Broad Street, Red Bank. Risks placed In tho Home and other Cret-dasa companies at Lowest Rates. P. O. BOX 177. ALLAIRE & 8ON. HOME IN8URANCE COMPANY OF NEW YOItK. OfHcc: No. 119 Broadway. Eighty-First BemlAnnunl Statement, January, 1800. CASH ASSETS ' J9,863,028.M ALLAIRE 4 SON, A«K.VTS, COUNSELLOR AT LAW, (Successor lo Nevlus 4 Wilson), RED BANE, N . J Offlces: POST-OFFICE BDILDINO. YILUAM PINTAED, COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Over Button's Stove Store. RED BANK, N. J . J AMES STEEN, COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Notary Public and Commissioner of Deeds for NuwYork. EATONTOWM, N. J. TACOB SHUTTS, O AUCTIONEER. Special attention given to sales of form «toc*. farm Implements and other iwreonnl property. P. O, Address, S1IRF.WSBURY, N.'J. TAMES WALSH, STEAM SAW ANFMOLDING MILL, Manufacturer of Hash and minds. MECHANIC 8THEET, RED BANK, N. J. COLLECTION OFFICES. E l l l « , Justice of tho reaco and Pollco Justice of Atlantic Highlands, .V. J. X HEAI. ESTATE AND INSURANCE. pollectlon Dc|>artment thoroughly organized. JU8TICSOVTIIEPEAUE. EXECUTOIt'S NOTICE. IIK1) BANK, N. J . Georfto P. Spinning, executor of nenjnmin W, Twcnty-llvo yeara' oxperlence, Cnretul attention Ilendrlcksoti Illock, Collvctlon of Illlln a Bpeclalty. Spinning, deceased, by order of the surroKnte of tho lo business In every part of tho County or Slato. county of Monmoiilh, hereby (fives notico to tho R, U. F. BORDEN, crtMlltora of the nnld dcccnticd to Virlnpr In their ilebui, Notary Public. BUH(i»:ON DENTIST. demands and claims agnlnyt the e»tate of said do> MUSIC 1IAU, UIIILDINQ, RED DANK, N. J. cutout, uuder onth or nfllmintlon, within nlno 1'urtlciilur attention givon to Ilio adnilnlatratlon ot months from the. twenty-Rlxlh day of Mnri'li. 1BSHI, AniHilhelli'H. nr lh«y will be forever barred ol nny action tlierofur ngnlnst I he enlil executor, R. J. I), 'fHROCIOrOBTON, • OK.OIIOE V. SPINNIKO. DENTAL HUIU1EUN.' O Jobn p O . F. WHITE, N RULE TO BA.R CREDITORS. D HONEST GOODS D DROP IN -AND- Get Your Straw Hat. wuy of (iiiviiiK money. M Kurt /'i-'inl M e " ' , H«l » « » ' ' . N. J. S At TI1K HKdIHTKK OfllOO. tf KM)., Thin in 1111 eimy, Kiitdiuil WM, V. DUniUJf, Bcerelury, HERIFFS SALE.-By virtue of a writ ut a lulr prloo nnd Ilio buyer enn lrnvo luilf tho ntiiount on inortf<iigo, A S . s. M C C A F F R E Y , D . V . S. •••• W 1 ocation. good liuusu In u KouO location; J VETERINARY SURGEON. Graduate of American Veterinary CoUeffe, N. Y. Residence, Irving Street between Broad Street and Maple Avenue, Red Bank, N. J. Wiring for Electric Lights. Battery, Magneto and RED BANK, Pneumatic Bells. Telephones a Specialty. M. H. SEELEY, POUT MONMOTJTH, NEW JERSEY, Branch Arenne, lied Bank, 17. J. MONMODTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY. Notary Public. Soldiers' Vouchers Prepared P. O. Box 818. JOHN S. APPLEOATE. FRED W. HOPE. Bills of Sale for Vessels. \S" Estimates for Contreclson Application. ELECTRICIAN. of 0. fa. to me directed. Issued out of tee Court of Chancery of the State of Now Jersey, will be exposed to Bale at public vendue, ON WEDNESDAY, When Coal Is purchased by tho carload the becem TDE 20TH DAY OF MAY, 1896, between the hours ot long tons, 2,210 pounds. Is given. of 12 and 5 o'clock, (at 2 o'clock), ID the afternoon of Bald da;, at the Globe Hotel at Red Bank, In the Best quality of Hickory, Oak and Pine township of Shrewsbury, count; of Uonmouth, New Jersey, all the following described tract or parcel of Wood at moderate prices, land and premises situate, lying and being in the township of Shrewsbury, In the county of Monmouth LUDLAM'8 AND CROCKER'S FERTILIZERS nnd Slaw of New Jersey, adjoining lnnd of Frank Johnson on tho west, the swimming River on the CONSTANTLY ON HAND. north, land of William McClane on the east, and the leading from LecdBVllle and Tlnton Palls road Yard at Worthier'* Dock, Red Dank' rond to Bod Bank on the souUi, and containing one hundred acres of lend, bo the«amo more or ICES. Belnn Branch Fard ot Seabrtaht., N. J. tho samo promises conveyed to the Bald Wbltfleld Bouchnin by the said Matthew Byrnes nnd wife, by ilecd bearlnff even date with the mortgage covering the above described premises. Belzed as the property of Franklin P. Itolierpo, ct ux, et ills, taken in execution at the suit of Matltiew Byrnes, and to be sold by ' MATTHIAS WOOLLEY, Sheriff. ArPLKOAiK k Hoi'K, Sol'rs. A good bouse In a poor locution Is Paled April 18th, 1B1X). [85.10,] worth less than a poor liouso In a gooil locution, I liavo tlio solo of n 8.B80 Dustpans a Day. Work wnn begun In tho now factory ut IiOng Hrnnuh liuit Friday. About n doKim liaiuln lire vinployud nnd twenty grunn of (luHtjinnn will bo turned out dully. ,-,.;., •••• SATURDAY, Bonds and-•. Steels Improving a Store. Two P e r s o n s Rent tho Same House. Edward ~ Price and Mrs. Woolley at Long Branch rented the same house, one from an agent and the other from the owner. Mrs. WooIIey got in first and wanted to stay. Price brought suit to get her out. The matter has been compromised and Mrs. Woolley will move out to-morrow, r Members New York Stock Eictmnec Connected by Private Wire. Tlie building on/ Front Btreot, near Pearl street, owned by Acton C. Hartshome of Freehold, and'lately occupied by Relief engine company, is being remodeled, and will be converted into a store. Two show windows will be built in front and some other improvements will be made to the interior. DECORATION DAY, Jobn 8. Applegate to Thomas McCoy. Lot near Oceanic, J5M. Tnomas McCoy to Mercantile Co-operative Bank. Land at Oceanic, S W . , They arc now ready. A fov Trices Mint tell tho Story of 11 Storcful. 0 pounds Bout Elf?!n Butter for 7 " Host Ontmonl for fl 'i Good Ulco for I) " Kent Htnrch for 10 Bnni Dlizznrd Hoap for tf Dabbilt'ti fionii 0 Octognti Soap 7 Papers Bonpinc 81'iipcra 1'rcnto or Siitlmi If 1.00 25c. L'fic. 25o. 25o. 25c. L'Ro. 25c. 25o. 8 p o i i n d n WnnliliiK H i i ' I u , " . . . . . , , , . . . O.ii), B dozen Clbllicii I'lim 05c. Notico is horoby given to the delinquent taxpayora of tho F. F. SUPP, towiiHJiip of Shrovvobiay tliftt umlor no cu'cuinntnnccs' will tho Near Kaltroad Station, Monmouth Street, paytnoiit of tho costH nnd in- THE UP-TO-DATE HATTER, Kill) DANK, NEW JI'JtSKY. torout on dolituniont taxoo bo waived or abated, but dolinquontfi will bo required to pay Nell™ In hcnibyiilvmi IlintrrHulnrmwIIiiuHul thn in full in all onsen. H Wrot Front lUrcot, urnr 1'inrl, lleO IlnnkiN. 3. 11OAKD OF HEALTH OF HHKBWSByordorof tho townuhip comI1VBY TOWN8HH' Kr(iii||<ir'a llmr nnd F. A H. Ocliaror'n cilobrnM niiuco. Will 1H) hclil on tint flrnt nml tlilnl llnturtlnyi nf mrh Wnliwr Ilwr alwuyt (in drauiifit. month. At (•mnmiwlmitiV Hull, awl Hunk, N, J., uX A. O. HARBISON, AU\O JUltTIIOU),VAY IIOOIICT'I'KII HKKtl IN [our o'clock, r. u. TownBliip Olerk. 110'ITI.KI), l K, HOPPING, IIFIII'E: No. B llnmil MrtK't, D Kril Ilnnk, N . J . K. WJI. H. LA WES, JR. VKTKIHNAIIY HUHOEON. (Iradimtii ot American Volerlnarr Uollene, N, Y. UeBlilence, 83 Front Mrect, Itiil llnulf. D, CIIANDLEU, R. W M. L. SNKDEN, AIK1H1TECT. Hiout'H liuiiiiiiiir, iiiiiwiito uioiio Hold, HKII IUNK, NK1V Jl'IlHKV. CIVIL KNdlNKKIl AND HUltVEYOR. No. 7 Itlvcmldo Avenue, P. (), Hin (11. . UIHI llant, N. J . 1JAV1H, J H . , X INSIIIIANOn AND ItKAIi KKTATE AflKNT, rilONVHT., IlKli HANK, N, J. ( C O . Ilnx81.) InnumiiM! |>litr<id hi tint Ix'Ht oiiiiimiiUi on moat rnwumlilo t<Tinn. ^ fl. HNYUKR! ~~" K.Bl«l.ll«hcd IWll. UKAL WITATK, OKNKHAL INHIIIIANUI! * WHN8 CoininMiinrr nt Hindi Mid Mnrveynr. Aluo luiur""•«>«» Ilroker fur Nnw York »nd Vicinity. Mootings of liwjldffi of lloal.- W O. AUMHTKONO, M. I). fc . i l I A N A M I U D N pi) ((innorly (wyinilwi liy I»r, Traffuni. 1H flrmd •tnmt, lliij Hank, N, J . Cmi 1M)rallnl \>J Mi!l<l»m* ony tlnw. ivitiiihunn Olotw Hofol. (I. V. JfATODKN, DU.1'HYHldUN AN?) BU1K»EON, IIIIMIKIII'AT l | ( l KT IWDDAHK.M.J THE RED BANK REGISTER, JOHN U. COOK, Editor and Proprietor. ,OFFICE ON FRONT STREET,' . .Hendrickson Block, Adjoining the Post-Offlce, '•'.'.'•: ttXD B A S K , N. J. ' SVB8CBIPTIO\PBICEi One Year ,.;.8150 .8UMonths..... '. .« Three Months '.... « IQ * ADVEBTI8E3IEXTS should reach us not later than Wednesday morning. (iKnple copies of THE BEO BIER and printed rates ot advertising will 1» BUM-to any address on application. Advertlsora liave tho privilege ol changing tnelr announcementsraoften as thoy deslro without extra charge. Reading notices will bo Inserted for 10 cento a line, eacli Insertion. These notices will be placed at the bottom of columns and marked .-till'. •Obituary notices and poetry, lodge resolutions, etc., will bo Inserted for 10 cents per Uno. Notices of births, marriages and deaths published free. WEDNESDAY. MAY 27, 1800. Next Month's Nomination. Everything now pointa to the nomination of William McKinley for president b y t h o Republican convention, which meets at St. Louis next month.-' McKinley has been BO identified for the past few years with the protective tariff, that his name has become almost a synonym for prosperity. During 1892 the Democratic papers and politicians of the country declared that McKinley was responsible for the. conditions then existing. The conditions of 1892, when business was brisk, when labor was well employed, and when the country was prosperous, were so different from the business conditions since Cleveland was inaugurated, that there is an ardent desire to return The New Era's Officers. . . . WANTED. for man anil wife In a quiet family for three The New Era association, a t their an- orBoard four months. Plain bat substantial inealg reThere has been some comment over- lual meeting last week, elected the fol- quired, i/ocatlon desired within five minutes' walk ' '" • ••....'.. :he size of the sewer mains which it is lowing officers i . >f Red Bank depot. Address, stating terms per Will begin bee regular tripe between Red • veek, F. t . A., New York Tribune, N.-r. President—Joseph Aul.••:.••••; proposed to put down in Bed Bank, and Bank and Highland Beach, stopping^ Vice-president—JacobDlctz. •"'••. .;•• many people^ think they are too 8ruallv • ' •• FairHayenandpceanlc,on Treaaurer-PhUlpJ.Kuhl. -..',1- • WANTED. Within the past dozen years the methods Bedretary—Henry Sclienleln. ••••-• of sewering have undergone a change. The association has about $400 in its At once, a bright young man about 18 years old, It used to be thought that the larger the >f good habits, living In or noar town, as clerk In a ' •^ • sewer the better; now it is believed that treasury. .tore. Salarysmalltocommence,lmt^goodcnauce the Bmnller the maiil that will suffice to or advancement. Steady Job. Addr& ' ''"" What Wheels They Use.•' carry the sewage, the better. The plans; Leave Red Bank daily, (Sunday included) • /° * v 9 » *"•» (From Printers' Ink.) , • • '• for the Red Bank sewers have been made 9:00 A.M.; 1 : 8 0 , 4 : 3 0 P . M . • " Care BEOifltiR Office. by competent engineers, and they say Wheelmen spin, In this hot weather, LeaTe.Highland.Beach-ll:0O A.M.; 8:00,. .-_„ 9'iir(he road macadamized,—~- ,.J— that the present mains will be sufficient And they use most altogether 5:45 p. M. to carry the sewage of Red Bank, no Wheels most largely advertised. matter how large the town may grow.' F a r e Same a s L a s t Season. A suitable reward will b« paid for the return of # *# Capt. H. B Black Spitz Dog, answering to tho name of SchneiNew Janitor for Town-Hall..;.. der. • . . . Two special marshals t without pay Michael Eganof'VVeat Red Bank has MBS. m .H . HOWGIITON, were appointed by the commissioners ieen appointed janitor of the town hall n i o n m o a t b U e a c b , N . Jr. last night., There was a special reason n place of John S. Bainton.. Monmouth Beach Olub House.. in each case why the men should be appointed. An indiscriminate appointN OKDINANACB EELATING TO ment of special marshals, however, such ,We call them " O u r Pointers," u SEWERS. as has been made in former years, can The measures of value to advertisers Be it ordained by the board of commissioners'of They are not pure Havana. They hardly be Baid to be to the advantage of »re the: extent and character of the pub- .ho town of Red Bank, as follows: Section 1. That sewer mains with connections to the town. • are Pennsylvania cigara, but,they icity they are able to obtain. That is, tlio sidewalk curb, In size, composition and all de;he kind of people as well as the number tails according to tbe plans, specifications and map are a good deal better than you'd if people they can reach. Gauged by heretofore made by Messrs. Hedenburg and Klnsoy, TOMB OF POCAHONTAS. engineers, under directions of Board of Comeither of these tests, the advertising civil think. We sell,them only by the missioners, and now on flle in the office of the town be built and constructed In and along the folThe Indian Princess Lies In an columns of T H E REGISTER are admitted clerk, box, and 69 cents gets a box .of 50, lowing streets or parts of streets: o occupy a phenomenal position. J?HE Unmarked Grave In England. From the Intersection of Shrewsbury avenue with REGISTER is essentially a family paper. Ijoyond tlieHo "Woods of Shorne" we It goes into more homes than any other Monmouth street eastwardly In and along Kon. conio to a grand park, a thousand norea o i paper in, Monmouth county. I t is of- in- mouth street to Broad street, thence northwardly in along Broad street, northwardly, to Front street, moro in extent, full., of old oaks, under ;eres£ to every member of the family. and thence eastwardly In arfd along Front street to which are browsing herd's of doBr, and That is why it pays people, BO well lo Wharf avenue, thence In and along Wharf avenue northwardly to a point In Wharf avenue opposite " through tho park a long nvonuo of stntoly advertise in T H E REGISTER.— Adv. ' center line of Union street. elms stretohos in n strnlghtrvlato to nn anSec. 2. And bo it ordained. That this ordinance cient hall. This Is Cobbnm hall nnd park, inall take effect immediately. belonging to Lord Darnloy. We may roO. E. DAVI8, For--09 cents y o u can get a box; of Attest: . Commissioner. mcinbor thnt It Is described in "Plokwlck Our Pointers " at Pach's.—Adv. A. C. HARRISON, Town Clerk. Papers," whoro llr. Plokwlok, Mr. Winkle TOWN TALK. HIGHtANp DECORATION DAY, Saturday, May 30th. and year? ttie ; Sphinx propounded riddles that were unguessable. :Weareijot the -Sphinx, butiW~y«a»wo haveclaimed that we~cSnld better serve .piano buyers than'anyone on this coast, andi these claims'" (are"... unanswerable. Facts always are unanswerable:* Our success in pleasing •• our customers ia no mystery, •y^e, know, pianos from keyboard to pin block, and our customers get the benefit of our knowledge. " 50 Good Cigars For 69 Cents! A R. /\. Tl/STING, 1 Decorations for f Decoration Day! and Mr. Snodgraas pass it going to tho WASHERWOMAN WANTED. Lonthor Dottle tavorn.' Apply at tbo Globe hotel. Red Bank. Soon wo nro In Cobhain vlllago and arrivo at thnt samo old Leather Bottlo tavTO L E T . , ern. Wo pass through a hnrrow hnll nnd Rooms for offices or business at 29 Broad'street.. are ushorod Into a dark, low- ooillngod PASTURE FOR HORSES. room. Hero Dickons used to sit and study In all the newest and daintiest Upland and mendoiv pasture, white clover bottom. tho guests. How many of his unique 11. T. Elr, Holmdel, N. 3. ohar'actors must havo passod all uncondesigns. Bicycle suits made in .sclouEly-undor-hls.doonseolng-gazo-ln-tbls -R-YE-STRAW-WANTEO.rcwrecrandTiomfortHblrfityteB: Flfteen tons of rye straw wanted. Address B. H. henoe there is a general desire through- old room, for bore ho would ninko notes ns ho sat In silcnool Hero, too, ho inndo the Wolcott 41 Co., Red Bank. . .- . ' • ' Also cutting and fitting done out the country for McKhiley'snomina- Plokwlqk club to moot. Tho walls of the at short notice. COOK WANTED; tion. • ' '.' . • • room aro now adorned with Grulkshank'i Mlildlo need colored woman as cook and laimThe Democrats are trying to show that quaint skotchos of Dlokons' clmraotora, areas. Address, W.^BEOisiEn oOlce." with newspaper prints and articles of tho IV1NS MODISTES, the country is suffering from financial tlmo and wltbinany portraits of Dickons THE BEST WINDMILL. 21 Broad street. Serges lulldlnz, Bo! B»ai, H. J, ilia. If that were true the' Democrats and his family. Strangely onough, tho Tins Eureka Is the best windmill on the market. have had abundant opportunity to reme- only two pictures In tho room not relating Bold by 0. II. Hurley, Shrewsbury, N. J. dy it. They \vere in control of the to Dickens nroportrnlts of tho American BARN TO RENT. ; aotross Mary Anderson. two branches of the national'legislature. Bam to rent on the corner of Broad and MouUoforo wo leavo tho inn wo write our moutu streets. Apply to Dr. J. H. Betts. If they failed to remedy the evils they nanios in tho vlBltors'book. It Is growcomplain of, it must bo because they ing late, nnd wo hurry baok. It Is still a BLACK AND TAN PUPS were incompetent to govern the country. boautiful walk, and afterflvo miles we aro For sale. Fine stock, medium size. Harry Woodwaid, Whlto street, near Broad, Rod Bank. Under the administration of Benjamin again In Gravosond. Entering tho town JIarrison the.national debt was reduced by tho Polhani road, wocomo to tho White CHOICE PICS FOR SALE. 5 t d t t -A-lot•-o!-oholeo.pira-for-8a.lo-vc^y-clleap.--Henry• —Gaa-Stpvea-are-cleanly-ahavfl-alL ^ver^OO,006,000"UndeFCbv^Iandlhe plnta nnotlicr spot of lntorost, Bcsldo tho C. McLean. P. O. address, Bed Bank, N. J. ', national debt has increased $202,000,000. tavern la a llttlo roctaugular yard, woll stovea. No dust, no smoke, no POLL PARROTS FOR SALE. This debt bears interest, and for a gener- covoroil with grass and Burraunded b y a ashes, no dirt. This much to I havo two good Poll Parrots for sale. CFMV ation to come the people of the United flower border. In tho middle la a olroular Woodward, 28 Maple avenue, Red Bank, N. J. recommend them to neat houseflowor bod filled with whlto tulips, with States will bo paying interest on a debt a Bplltnry rosobusli in Its con tor. Nothing SAIL BOAT FOR SALE. ' keepers. May we not give you created by the. incapacity of the Cleve- further marks tills spot, and fow know Perfect trim, lust been overhauled; 18 feet lon& the pleasure of cleanliness by the land administration, and incurred in t h a t . l t has a.apodal Intorest, yot undor Will be sold cheap. J. T. Lovett, Uttla Silver...; •that sod Is tho tomb of Pociihontns. time of absolute peace. use of A FEW BOARDERS WANTED.. In tho parish register of old St. Mary's Previous to Cleveland's administration PleosaDt rooms, good table board, at $4.50 per ohuroh, which onoo stood bore, Is ontorefl: "1017/ Wary 2lst. Kobocon Wrolfle,' week. Address P. O. Box 4W, Red Bank, N. J.' ' the publio debt was decreased during the term of office of every President, wyflo of Thomns Wrolffo, Gout., a VirTABLE BOARD. -; ginia Ladyo burnu, was burlod In ye Good tablobonrd, $3.00 per week. Riverside pot' and Grover Cleveland' was the first ohnuoolli" ' A variety may be 6een and your luge, Front street, near Broad street, lied Bank;;1:' President in thirty years who found it Thoro Is a niistnke In tho conio Thomas, inspection is solicited at our office, WACON FOR SA~LE. necessary to borrow money in order for It Ehould bo John. "Mary" Is old Natural wood, two-seated, carries four persdn3 to pay the running expenses of the stylo for Muy. comfortably. Apply to West End hotel. Red Bank. How strauguwaB the into ol Focahontaa country. The election of a Republican —a savage uuildon from tho primeval forBOAR FOR SALE. .. President and a Republican congress ests of A mortal, who dlod among tho olv- A Jersey Bed Boar, thirteen months old. Prloe, f tont Strcect, Near Fostofficc, will n'Dt only take the country back to lllzod wlilto people she loved, far from the $8. James McColgnnACo.,AtlanticHlghlands,N.J.! . ' , RED BANK, 1 *'•) * prosperous times, but it will put an end land of hqr blctlil Summer Pot Calls the Kettle Black" No More. A Gas Stove? Talk About Your ••Business^ An intelligent canvasser might FLOWERS, go through the towns and villages of Monmouth county.telling peo- ' ' -FLAGS, pie about your business. If you. could get a capable man to do BUNTING. ^JtMB_XQJOi?fluld.tlnnk_bim-oheap-at $15 per week. A large stock at low prices, at Mountains o f Man Calacd. A Syracuse tandem blcyclo In the best of order •an be bought cheap. Fred Cnlllngton, Red Bank, N.J. Our L o c o m o t i v e E n g i n e e r s Wliou thin Fystuiu of tho constant guunling of brldgos is ndoptod on nil ruilronilB, na It has loon on many uf tho loading ones, tho during horoos of rumunoo whu risk tliolr liven to keep Iniins from rushing to destruction whom brldgus or trostlua havo fnllou will find their oconpntlon gouu. As It 1B, tliu flotlon writers huvo probably boon unduly prodigal in tiio oruatlon of eucli ohnructors. So, tou, hnvo tlioy tnkun liberties with tho engineers who drlvo thu locomotives. They uro UHllnlly represented us bluff, superstitious persons, wliu consult this onieu and lliat, nnd in luomuuts o f ratroinu dnnger (lull upon the throttle nud put tliulr trust in 1'ruvldimco. see as many as a thousand fam* TETLEY& SON'S ilies a week. <^ / , Bfoatf and Front^ Streets. Consolidated Gas Company of New Jersey. ' / vasaerto tell people about your bustoess is to talk to them through the columns of THE ; RED -BANK The OneSteady Bright Light REQISTEB. different Is Electric Light. It's the most econom ical.-the-^afestjAlift-healthieatj-the-hest light in every way. No -expense for broken lamp chimneys; DO bad smell from spilled oil; no danger from escaping g a s ; no open flame to use up the oxygen in the air and make the room unhealthy. Pinup N. JACKBON, Prealifnt. 2,000 or more families. of this one, will cost only $48 per year,-or less than, a dollar a week.1 No method of informing people of your business will be so effective as this. Ifo method of reaching this number of families will be so ofieap as this. Becretary. . OHARIES 8. BAUSEB Superintendent, * I Furnished' • •TSfinfjflNfnP'Kflnnf'nmLL Store Service C. H. HURLEY, What Do You Care If nuythlnft thnlWoliiK on In wdi Ing, you'll llrul Itln Tint fcwniructi. "Adv, To do this, in an advertisement the size NEW JERSEY. P. OHAUDLES. Shangle's Two-Row Potato Sprinkler. Paris Green Puffer A lilniik IIIIHH of (IVIT Iwiipimuilii In wolght different week, and these interesting stories, PERCY INGALLS, Treasurer. Schanck Potato Sprayers, grabbed tho grizzly king nnd WIIH hooked. l l o put up n H'IIHI ll|(lit, but nt lnnt rolled up on IIIH Hlilo mid wim ill|ipiid up with thn JnilillrifT I"1*" 'rim nntlvon didn't liny viiry niuoli, lint limy did n wliolo lot of think. Illg. IIIRIII WUIMI rmhl iioiill linnnlno popu lnr tit tl)iit rnjjlmi, nnd Maunr in«"i»n»« ui ftdli wora thn rnlu . or of your buaineBS will be sent to SHORE ELECTRIC CO., RED BANK, YOU can'tell about goods branches of your business every ' Drop m a postal and we will call and arrange terms, etc. New rotes for store and house lighting Is as low as gas at $1.50 per thousand feet. Iron Age Riding Cultivators One-Horse Steel Cultivators till n boy who know nbiuil Adlromlmili trout JlrihliiK eunio along with n KOVOII , on mm t\y mil, with othor tnoklo to ninluh. 1 ;s "Tlmt toothplok ontoli n IIHIIV*' imlil tlio III>(,IVO flnhiiriniin. "Why, n Imlf inniuil ImiiH would nnmxli It nil to iilocun." A niiiiplii uf them worn ourlotiH tu know how tlm thliiK worked nnd voimitoornd ti mw tho bout. 'I'liny gut tu » bin, ilnrlc pool undor n uodnr Iron on n hidgn of roolcn, nnd n Krl/./,ly kliiK nnd yiilluw millln dropped on l(i Ilin wnlur IIUi) niiluml IHIIK, Wlmt followed \VIIH riiiivliKiliig ti) tho nnllvon, A much better way and a far cheaper way than hiring a-can- Two hundred miles north northeast of WANTED. BaButoland tbo great ••Kathlaiubn rango Young man to work In Rrocerystore. Former exrises in very bold Blopoa from tbo coast perience required. Address P. 0 . Box 207, Red McCormick Binders, lovels bohlnd Delagon bay, nml the scenery Bank, N.J. • WcCormlck Mowers, of tho valleys and passos Is said to bo exRESTAURANT FOR SALE. tromaly grand. KnowiiiK it, however, only Tiger All-Steel Hay Rakes, Doing good business. Located In center ol town. by_roport, I will nut venturo to doscrihelt. Apply to T. F. Clusey, Front street, near Broad New York Champion Hay Rakes, Noarly 600 miles still farther to the north, street, Red Bank, N. J. Emperor Hay Rakes. in tho dlstrlot culled ' Maqliialnnd, is a I consider theso the very beat mathird mountain roglon, less lofty than HORSE MANURE WANTED. cbtnes of their class manufactured. BnBUtolnnd, but derivingaslngular oliarm . will exchange coal, wood, feed, hay or grain for from tho dignity nnd variety of Its moun- horso manure. Thomas P. or L. E. Brown, tyharf uvenue, Red Bank, N. J. tain forms. Take out all weeds, cultivate the Tbo whole country is so elevated that wound nnd plow the soli up to A COOD BOARDING HOUSE. the rows. summits of 7,000 or ovon 8,000 foot do not Mm. Margaret Thompson can accommodate a few produco any gronter oiloot upon the oyo lioardGraatWSpringstreet. Pleasant location, good The Ohio Riding Cultivator table, coiufortable rooms. than doos Bon Lomond nB soon from Loch Is built on nearly the same plan A s a mutter of fact, nillwny engineers Lomond or Mount Washington from tho TRAINED NURSE. are murelr imliifitjiklng liiuii without ulluu- Glen Houso. Hut thoro is a boldness An experienced nurse In all diseases. Finest tatlon ami without protunso, who neud so of lino about tlioso grunlto poaks coinpnr- recommendations from leading pliyslcluna. Miss - From $3.50 to $8.00. That completely covers the state, constantly to lmvo tliulr wlla nbuut tlieni nhln to thnfio of tho west coast o[ Norway A.Ingalls.Llncrott, N. J. that thoy huvo no tluio forfiupurritkioiiHor or of tho finest parts of tbo Swiss Alps. giving you a continual supply of COW FOR SALE. luoludrnmntlo nosjngn. Tlioy lmvo defi- Somo of them rlso in smooth shnfts of npSprays eight rows. Anew milch cow, seven years old; well tired and parently lnaoocsslblo rook. Othora form the choicest merchandise in its nite duties to perform uf a hazardous nagood milker. Apply to Thomas Nolan, near W. W, ture, »ml Ihuso limits aru llvwl up to on long ridges of plnn/iolos of overy kind of Conover's, Mlddletown, N. J. , largest quantities, at its lowest pos175,000 miles uf rullruuil In tho Unltud shnpo, spoolnlly striking whon thoy stnnd NEW GROCERY WACON States with u single nilndud Ikkillty which out ngiiliiBt tho brllllnntly olonr morning sible prices. or owning 6ky, Tlio vnlloys nro woll For salo; also ono good second band grocery wagon. Vrurrunta us in belluvlng that uvery rallpainted and trimmed at short notice. C. Wuy ougluuor will llu wlmt la right for wooded, tbo lower stupes covorod with Carriages For potatoes. Cau bo used for RICH RUGS. II. Hurloy, Shrewsbury, N. J. nutting slug shot on pplants l t or 1)1)11 to do no innttor what tho uinorgiinoy, hurbaco, RO tho olloct of thoso wild poaks lings, 17x30 Indira. Wilton flnlin, largo assortment, hushes of any kind kind. "' ' no mattor wlmt 'thu oust tu IIIIIIKOK. They is heightened by the softnoss of tho surBOARDERS WANTED. boautiful patterns, valuo$1,at Repairs and parts for all makos of mowers and Wo 'ourtutuly liurolu iniMi, but as freo from roundings whloh thoy dominate, whllo nt Two or threo flrst-clasa boarders wanted in sm»ll .; . 69c mntlniontnl vuiiorlngii us tiny men in tho tho samo tlmo tho wholo lundscnpo bo- family. Private houso on Jlonmouth HlieeL Ad-' binders. Tooth for all makes of bay rakes. TABLE COVERS. world. It IH a iilounuru to correct » popu- comca moro oomplox nnd moro noblo by (lnws Box 1130, Rod Bank, N.J. , Any machlno not found In stock will bo got a Derby, good quality, SI Inches wide, 72 Inches lar nilBuppruhenulon In rogiird to a CIIIES of tho mingling of such dlvorso olomonts. Bhort notice. ' \ WANTED. . long, handsome center patterns, boarders, lnoi) whu arc mi honor to Ainerlcun iiiunNo sooiiory bottor doservofl tho nnino of Two furuWied rooms on tho river front; niso ono liood and Aintjrkiin ulUidlishlp. knotted fringe, Qvo colors, valuo 51.60, at romantic And nvou In tlio tumor parts, liiriio room for mother nnil two iliiiiKlilein. at onoo. 79c whoro instead of mountains thoro nro only r. J'hllllps, Box 1D7, Red Bank. Shrewsbury, New Jersey BOY8' 8UIT8, • low hills, or "kopjos," ns thoy nro cnllod Try Now Lures. WANTED. Tlireo to Dftcen ycara, smart, nobby, now ocason'i In South Africa, tho comparatively frlnblo If you want a situation or want help, use theso N E M O - N I C d I O If thoro Is anything 11 llHhoriimii likes to rook of those hills docomposoa undor tho little patterns, cholco goods, Onoly Onlshod, good $T nilviTtlitemoms IIITIIK RKUISTKII and you will do, It Is l o got 11 MUM uf Hull whoro otluira Influence of tho wonthor into ourlously get quick returns. They costal coins. kinds, nt hnvo fulli'il to Kut n blto, nnd no storing nro picturesque and fantnstlo formR, with 03.98 moro frequently toll! than thoso of ! ROW BOAT WANTED. orags' rlvon to tliolr bnso nnil dotaehnil pilLEATHER BELTS* A Winchester rifle. In (ratio for a row boat, Hat or bankets Ulli il »t lukoa or ponds known to lnr« supporting loono blookn nnd tabula: It we do not innko much of a White kid leiilliw bolta, 1)4 Inches wide, with COT bottom. Mny ndd ranli. Addrriro offum lo F* bo iillvu with (lull, lint In which tho llnli iig or upon wliloli tbo timid round prodton tho A. Plillli'S, Union street, Itcd Bank, N. J. ored buckles, good valuo at doublo woro iiiu'or hoforu known to blto. Thoro built tliolr huts In the hopu 25c nro lotn of poudn In wliloh llahonn bom>im of oscnplng tilts raids ot tliolr warllkoono ST. LAWRENCE 8KIFF but not tnlciiu. I n HOIIIO hikes fish mny bo HIIOH. the Mnliihelofl. , . WAI8T 8TUDS. Fur »alo. Flint-class onlcr-gnlln, oar», Ac. Will bo tnkon In tho spring only, or In iiildsnniwild cheap. Apply to Joseph Applegute, nt IIuilBtorllng ellver shirt waist BIUIIH, pretty plain and drlcksori & Appii^nteX or ID R. II. Kneden. mor, giving rlso to tlio belief tlmt thoy do fnnuy ile»tgii9, at , not food at ollior tlmon, In pl'aooH whoro A Timely Suggestion 5c BOARDERS AND ROOM8. trolling Himunn nlunci nro timid very oftni LADIES' BOOT8, II you wnnt bdiml or wnnt Inxinli^m, try thefio A HtutiiNiiiuii WIIH Invltnd to (linnet with l>l|? antc'liiM nro mndowilli Ulna of IMRH mid In't'iiK IU'.IIIHTHI. An atlvorIJU:I\ line Morocco call, dark uhndo, |iolnted toe, ulokornl, and In ]>1IIUOH whoro only imturnl another ouuully fninoim by n gontluninn of llltleiiilviTtlwiiii'iits tlsi'iiirnl thin BIZD In this (iiluinli oiwtji -ri ci'iitti.. tl|n mime, rump and liool foxed, tips and foxing! l)ultn—worniH, fro^fl, nilnnowrt—nro popu wnnltli, whomi Himliil pimllliiii wan more jierforated to niakh llnttorral by tho ontorlalnment of mioli lnr, nrtlllolnl Inron nro often HuooiiHHful. MAN WANTED. 32.23 guiwlH than IIIH mind could pniiRlhly hi A gmiil,ri'lliiblo. Indimtrlouii man in mt iu.foro It IN minted of n JcifTorHon mluiity VIIIIIKO Improved by thiMii. Thu dlnnor wim nx- limn mi a miiiill fnnii. (io >il i'{irnri'iii'i!i r<'i|i>lro<l TUXEDO VEILING, thnt no lino (ivnr UHOII Men fur IMHH IIH1IIII|J If he were en- ergetic and a hustler, he might- ' TANDEM BICYCLE FOR SALE. to further increase of the public debt. ., Asbury Park. PACH, Red Bank. ' Odllont, Tliu liiml laid groat ntrofid upor. tlm vnlini, Judged by llui only iitandnrd he bad nllinvcd lilinHiilf, In money of tbo novoral IngriidleiitH, In pnrtliiular did be ox pound upon tint vnhin of liIn wliiim. "TIIIH, Kuntlonioii," ho romnritod In tho niiinnor of II leoturiir an Mm nervnnt r« niovoil the cobwobn from n linttlo nnd ])laiioil it iipuii tho tnble, "thin wlno Irnn been in my cellnr tm H) yeiirn, I K It when 1 wan n yming iiinii, mid tlio Intoroiit, Kiiiilliiiniin, tlm InldriiNl upon wlmt I pul<! fur It would hnvn luiw niiniiiiilin to"— I'nitcHtant prufcrroil. Momiiiiiitli, N. J. Apply to A. (I, Itoliorlti, New ORAVEL FOR BALE. Fine i|iiallty, (mo-half mile nearer lied Hank than nliy iitluir |ilt, HIM>CIUI prlwn (nr lingo iiiiiintltliii. (.'.milHI In innil" r.ir (lulUi'iliin wunc, Aililrrm J. II. McU'iin, Hi'd Hunk. Tho Tho lulu HlniHflSo twlim worn tlio"7iillj( two limn who ovbr lot) lrrj)liro*()lmlilo rtoil lilu llviw. Hi-n' while chiiinolii monwiiietiilre liuiHth nlovi'H, cool and ntyllnh lB-liu ••> I At 75c. nnd 98c? NOTIOD. Tliorn In not n liotter roiw.'t innilo or imlil fur Iho money. JOSEPH SALZ. Itr.l) UANK.N.J., No Agcutfil No Urnnoli Btorwi! Mall onU'in ciirofuliy Illlod, During tin.' monlliu ot July nnd Augmil our utori'ii will clouo at ono o'clock Bntur iluyn 1 o|ioii tliu oviniliiK provlottn. FURNIttHED HOUBE FOR RENT. Ainu fnnilKluxl rim Ililllnn I'unlnliii nlno hioniH. (Inn ncninf uiiiunil, ninny nliniln tint^t tMI Met river front. Tw» iiiliuil wnlk lioni ilniiot, A'liluwitox null, llml Hunk. OENEHAL HOR8EEJHOCINQ. I liavn tnki'ii I'hMKi'ufllHt *l»i|i rornii<rly mvuM (IT Ji.llih llHIikliiMin unit |mn |iri>[>nn>d tixlojtu iliiMtiiitf, blnckmiillltliiK nn<l woiiit win (ml leiiwin n u « . (!,»•, Kliilk,Mi.ill»Ylll«,N,J, Property For Sale. I don't believe there's a street in town on which I haven't a house or a lot for sale.. Some of these proper.ties are very •< choice and some ai:e very.cheap. . Insurance. I represent some of the strongest insurance companies doing business in this country. In placing your insurance it is well to have tho policy written.by an agent who is thoroughly familiar with insurance, in order that there will be no dispute over tho payment of the loss, in case your proporty" should bo destroyed.,.. Money To Loan. fll.00 POSITION WANTED. A yoiiiiKlimn, " I yrinn oil.Iniliiiilrloiin,or UOIHI Hilillfi, IIIIHIIII'IIH ciillrun ixliinitlnii, two nml iiiuuinlf " iliii'wiix|H'rli'niKi,U'iiiitii|iim|||iiM. ini|iilrv (Ill mill llfl'T Jllllll IHIl, UltMl, |l,,i in | n , c,f u\()U, till' Input Illll til liiml III till' Wllllil Itllluitranv 'J'be iitiiliiKiiiiiM wim IH'KIIIIIIIIK l o tlm of nfnilM l w y , will Im iiilniHl l<i Mr,, John H, thin illminrliiMiili nnil wllikud pliiiiniintly nt nextmi, Knliintown, N . J . bin tiiinfri ii\, "Inilnoil," mill hit, rwmliliiK acninn tlm (nbhuitid iipprnprliilliiK tliu lintllo, "Him inipliime wn iitnp Mm Intermit," White and hlnck chenlllu dot, In extra wliltdn, wort! fully I1H centH per yunl, nt 25c CHAMOIS OLOVE8. I have .every desirable sort of a furnished house that, anybody may want. Some are in Bed Bank, some in Fair Haven, Oceanic and Little Silver. Many are on the river.. The rents go from $150 up. Township Committee Meetings. Tim llinnl ol 'l'Mmt*hl|> Oiiimiilttiio "f nhrewihunr luwmlilp will Iwlil rnuiilar iiilwtluin itt'l'own Mil nil Moniniiiitli ntmi'l. I M Ilmik, N. J,, on Ilin (1m RIHI thlnt FNtturdftyii of PIK'II innntli, from 4 to 5 r, A . «! I havo three- BUIUS of money to put^out on first bond and mortgage Thoso 8Uin8,aro $000, $1,000 mid $1,600. THEODORE r. WHITE, L. S. PLAUT & CO. 707 to 721 Brond Street, NEWARK, N. J. •Hi Real Estate and Insurance, v. <». JtviJ.niHa, Red Bonk, New JcrseyV THE RED B g K REGISTER. JOHN ; H . COOK, Editor and Proprietor, BEtWEEK-TWP FIRES. ; A SOLDIER'S BRAVERY. nair Baialna Experience of an Old Information Gained bvaSpu Prove* Valuable at Culp>8 mil. ' ^ . .. '' Necessities Cheapened. • ', While: our regiment,,the Nineteenth . Dr. B. N. Howard, who was -BBsistWe have a Btorefulof hpueehold Michigan infantry, lay at MoMinnville, ant eurgeoh of the Tenth Maine infannecessities—things for kitchen use, . - J BED BASK. N. J. •• . •' Tenn,, Jake Stone, who had' been a try, relates the followiibg incident in the ior the table and dining room, little Blave in that vicinity, oame into oamp Plttsburg Dispatch: things that help to make the sitting "On the second day of the battle of ", One.Tear . . ; . . . ; , . . . . , ..' ..$1 50 and wanted to "jine de Yankees." Aftroom and parlor more attractive and BixHonuia....:...i.<.. v n.:.;..,...;....... 75 er some questionings he was duly enlist- Gettysburg the Twelfth corps was on things that you couldn't get along ed and installed as cook of Company F. the right of the Union line. The first without in the bedroom. Buy here. Tbre6Months........ . „ . . ; . 40 In the spring of 1864 we broke oamp division (General Williams) occupied afliMa»eif^gsj,ihe.mounta_ln9 inIhe. Jthe.e?trjme_right at...the foot of lOnlp"*? -••—There aro big savings for you, 25 : hill, where slight earthworks had been —-WEDNESDAY -MATFrS7rl8?0.—- direction of Chattanooga, where Shercent articles at other stores coBts but man's . foroes were. gathering for the thrown up. In the afternoon the enemy 10 cents here, and usual 10 and 15 appeared to be massing on our left. Gen. • - . / - .;_-., P A G E S .9 10,'l$.^' •••-••, movement on Atlanta.- No partionlar opcent articles 'can be got here for 5 position ww enpountered in our immedi- eral Meade ordered the first division of cents. ate front till we approached the little the Twelfth corps over to the support of IiOVB Op.Cp'DMTRtr.•..••• the left This left the Tenth Maine ochamlet of Besaca, Ga., in front of which Tbuiiff People Should XotrBe Forthe extreme right ot the Union gotten In noltaav Celebrations. we found the gentlemen in gray quite cupying lines alone. • , - ,.'.•••'.. strongly, intrenched' and, holding a little , ioifb ot country is aa spontoneoDa aid "The enemy doubtless discovered the Weis's Building, . Gpd given an affecjfcign,and? prwqiplg ^ earthwork whioh stood right in the way love of home, of father and of mother. of farther progress. So one fine Sunday movement, as, after dark, it was found i4*East Front Street, Red Bank. . Yet-mnoh.Is dtiia,the.young peopleoi morning, bright and early, our regi- that they were moving by the left flank down the ravine baokof Cnlp's hill ment,,whioh formed apart of the stormout honjesteada-with respqot to these holidays., TOey should be. jnadei the moat ing foroe, was moved into position by When they reached our extreme left, of. Pftteiitii.and oraployars aionld rnalte battalion front to the right of the road, there would only Intervene the'Tenth Maine battalion, composed of three them holidays in very troth, relating where they "unBlung knapsacks.'' Our brave old colonel, H. C. Gilbert email., companies, between the foe and nil piJSBiblejOlalina.cin.tho., time ourrnlers havawlaely decreed shall be devoted of Goldwater, sat firmly in the Saddle, the entire ordnance trainof the Army of to freedom of. tiotlon, to rnlrtb or tho and with drawn saber turned the head the Potomac This was reported to Gen' oj&jar^an'QJj of sqbli eiero'iBes iti a holiday of his faithful old "clay bank" (cream eral Slooum.- He lost no time in informmay bririg.. The r man who eiacta na- colored horse) in the direction of the ing General Meade, who ordered a trusty n^&'aiy.tbii£rom.a boy (in Mijrnorial coveted fort, and by his direction the eoont to be sent out. at once to ascerday or tii'e Pbn'i-tli of .July represses his bugler sounded the "forward," ' The tain the faots. Captain Beardsley called patriotism, defrauds him of his legltl- regiment sprang forward as one man, for a volunteor for the deBperate service, mate right aa a subject of legislative and cleared the intervening gronnd in the night being black as ink. The risk law.j»nd takes fibrajilni d joy that after less time than, it takes to describe it, was great—the man was forthcoming. and planted their colors upon the cap- Henry Eallook threw off hisohevrons, years willfall to indemnify. .."...',.., •The efficiency of drugs and in the blouse of a private soldier A holiday-always points back to an tured redoubt. The colonel, several line announced himself ready: Kallook was results from their purity. ?. important history. It is not necessary officers and men went down under the first sergeant of Company D, as brave or jndiolous to prate too long even of fire. The next morning after the long line In p u r quarter of a X as he was daring and efficient. With very important events of the past. But of dead, in blue and gray, that had been century of preparing pre- X dread as to the result, Captain BeardBley taken oat of the hospital and laid side Memorial day as long as it lasts must sent him ont into the darkness. At midscriptions, we have used X always bean anniversary to bring many by side for burial, had been as decently night the brave sergeant., returned and a weary sigh and start many a bitter interred aa haste would admit, we saw only the purest drugs X .reportedJhatheiiad.penetratedtheJi&eB memory;—It-was-tha-ymithrthe-teauti-- -tLhejnosLforl<an_looking_darky-it.wasof the etfeiny, who were then ocoupying poesible to conceive of coming across ful, hopeful, opurageous yonth, that in the'works but a few hours before vacatwithout regard to cost. all the glory of their frSah young lives the field. As he came closer we saw it ed by General Williams' division. went forth in large numbers in those was Jake, and, it being the first we had By this method patients "This was at once reported to Genermournful days to do batt/e for their seen of his ebony highness since the get the full benefit of fight, some of the boys began to ohafl al Meade, who ordered General Wil^ awn dear land. And it is to many of their doctor's skill. them who yielded up their precious him about his lack of bravery. Ap- liains to return. Undercover of the lives in the cause of unity, freedom and proaching tho few charred ends of the darkness the movement was noiselessly justice that the* youth of today are al- sticks which had made our campfire accomplished. They approaohed so near ready indebted for the freedom, the (over whioh we had cooked our quite as to hear the whispered voices of the peace and the strong bands of union that frugal morning repast) he kicked them enemy within the intrenchrnents, and '^characterize us aa a people. Do not let up together and began to warm bis there remained until the first light of BERGEN A [Mils, PROPRIETORS, the young people overlook or forget it. hands. We gave him some hard tack dawn discovered to the enemy the imand a chunk of pork, which'he ate. with mediate vioinity of the Union forces, ', B;.vad Si Red Batik, N. J, an appetite sharpened by his compulsory Then was initiated the bloody assault Cover the Graves With Flowers. fast; and, between bites, to bur ques- upon Cnlp's .hill, where, in indiscrimiToday we cover the graves of the sol- tionings as to the part he had taken in nate heaps, lay the foes of either army. ^ersjwiUiifloTOrsLtliat_we may^feeep .tha-yesterday-s iiscrimmage,—-he-re.- -When-the sun-went-down.-Old-Glory-. green 'ffie~memory aElJuFceroIo dead.' plied about as follows: waved in triumph over the little earthThe private soldiers were as brave and "Whar's I been? Oh, out yandah in works on the extreme right of our lines, as true as their leadora We also scatter announcing the first victory gained in flowers on the graves of the dead that de bresh, Bah I. I'ze jus' mighty nigh the battle of Gettysburg. Sergeant Kalwe may leam again the holy lesson of done out, dat I is I Whar was I yest'd'y? look was cot forgotten, bnt after furpatriotism. This nation has eworn be- Well, I was long you all till 'bout noon, ther proofs of his soldierly qualities was PLANTS! PLANTS! PLANTS! fore high heaven that she will proteot I reckon, rite long 'ith de raigament I honored with promotion, and at the olosa the institutions for which these brave \'ou knows dat I'ze de cook fob. Cump'ny of the-war held the honorable position Do you want plants fpr your'larm and garden? ones died. Every flower put upon a F, an I waB goin to stay right 'ith 'em If jou do call and see nie, and leartl what I \v!U\Io -grave is an oath of' protection. . Let us all tho time. Bow'd I come to leave, of captain." « i » for you, II you give yourorder before t t e 20th ol love our country and live worthy of so huh? Why, you see, hit was a little misTHE PAST BECA1XED. r April for tbe plants you want you will save from splendid an inheritance, and when we calkerlasbun on my part. You see, Ical10 to 30 per cent on all you purchase. I have the pray let us ask him who watches over kerlated dat you all was goin up onmemories of Bygone Bays Return glass, the room, and do tbo work myself, therefore _ the destinies of nations to guard and dat hill fob to go into camp, an I knowcan raise better plants and cau sell Ibem cheaper With the Dau of Flowers, ed mighty well all you sogers'd be powkeep us.' • A martial echo from the past, a re- than they who have to hire tbe work done. 1 raise erful hungry like, so I done Ecraped up • m •m . own seed and see them growing and cannot' a armfu' o' dry bresh fcto make uflahto flex of the vivid war panorama of a> my Honor the Living. generation ago—such iB what each BUO-_ make & mistake and give you poor quality, I have bile yon alls ooffee on fry de poak. .'lotMaytJuUhe test Muds and best bearers to offer When cur republican institutions were cesslve Decoration day brings forthit threatened by internal discord, faithful Course I didn't know dap was goin to The tramp of armed men, the flashing yon. Early and Late Cabhage, Lettuce, Pareley and be no scrimmage I No, bressyouh soles, Tomato Plants, Egg and Pepper Plants, Sweet Pocitizens from all parts of the land oame of bayonets, the waving of Old Glory, forward willingly to risk their lives for hunny I Ef I had, I'd not been such a the passage of the "boys in blue"—to tato Sprouts and Celery Plants, all in their season. ole fool to get up dah so fuh, long o' their country's good. Today we revere many they call up memories of heartliB CHARLES M. WOODWARD, the memory of those who died'and em- you all I De fust t'ingdatl knowed wndered desolate long ago, of vacant CHAPEL HILL. N. J . phasize their bravery even unto death sumfin went boo-oozhl bingl bingi ohaira, of names long-fearfully sought and also honor the living veterans, who woo-shh, boo-oom I swoo-oosh! right a- and at length sadly found in the lists of pas' my ears, an, an—did I run I Why, manifested equally the same courage killed and wounded, of nameless graves and devotion in preserving the Union. chile, you mus' 'a* knowed I did I I drap- on southern battlefields, mournful memWe are not indifferent, however, to the ped dat dry bresh I was a-totin,.an I ories, yet destitate of hatred or malice. bravery of the foe, bnt recognize in the tore down froo dem woods dare like a The latter feelings, have long slnoe died soldiers of the south the Same spirit of harrycane. I runned so fas' dat I gath- out, trampled to death, <p it were, by do not fail to examine the latest Mason sacrifice which moved them to give their ered de dry leaves right up undah my the very feet of the soldierB who meet & Hainlin models. Recent improvecoattailsl Yes, I did, sah I Why, bross lives in defense of what to them was a youh hearts, I run ovah saplin'a as big as and march in commemoration of the ments render them unexcelled. Old noble causa gallant hearts that gave their blood in pianos or organs taken in exchange. my arm, an bent 'em right donble! Instruments sold for cash or easy pay"Aftah I'd named myBe'f all out o' defense of the Union and for the ad- ments. Went Forth In the Morning. vancement of humanity. bieff I sot down on a ole log an lent Catalognes and full information free. Yean ago tbosa whom wo honor today It is a festival of peaoe, hallowed by Pianos of reliable makers from $200 wore the pride and the hopo of this land. back 'gin a saplin to res' an get a broff All the paths ol fortuno and joy that man o' air. Yes, sahj I was a-joyin myself the noble memory W dead warriors and upwards. may tread were open to tbolr foot. Early den, I toll you, an hopin dat I was at las' the sanctity of the cause for which they In tho morning of their lives they gavo out o' .donjoh. Did I have to move laid down their lives. So far as north themselves to tho horrors of battlo and tho 'way from dah? You ought to seen me I and south are concerned, the olive chains of war, and today wo honor their branoh is tw*iod with the oypress:. The 136 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK. inomory. Today wo reap tho bonoflts that It wasn't moan dau no timo befoah grizzled veterans, with corded hats, who oame from that groat strugglo, but tho somet'ing come a-t'arin down froo dose men who foil in tho confllot lmvo nothing woods like one o' doso runaway 'tillery march by undor their dingy and tatterbut tho dust that oovorotb tholr bonos wagons, bonnoin agin do troes an splo- ed battleflaga, with the marks of Conhud tho lovo that all tho generations to din deir shells. Den sumfln struck do federate bullet or saber still on their Wholesale and Retail Dealer In oomo shall bear tboni.' ° log dat I was sittin on, soemod like right bodies, bear no animosity toward the atween my foet, glancin up an outtin off gallant enemies whom they met in fierce Passing of the Grand Army. dat saplin 'bout a quatali of on inch dis death grapple at Fredericksburg and Thirty thousand veterans—an entire Bido 6' my hoadl Did I run agin? Gettysburg. The trained regulars aud army corps—have laid down their arms Didn't I? Why, chile, I got now sper- trim national guards have no thought einca the surviving soldiers of the war rits dat ininnit I I jumped up from Oar, of the bloody fields of the early sixties. . We aro handling a large quantity of last paused to lay their wreaths on the I tell you I Do whole woods looked like It is a military celebration of a natombs of their fallen comrades. Thirty dey was aflah, and wif my ole hat in tional festival of peace and good will Marlboro and Holmdel Hay thousand more will win thoir honorable my lmn I runned as I novah wautor rim among all tho people of tho Union from of the very best quality. discharge befoio this day comes round agin. I ran, I reckon, uighj&bout two tho groat lakes to the gulf. again. Tho army of tho dead grows over milo, an jus' wlien I was iligii abont MONMOUTH STREET, ,. larger and tli'ut of tho living over fimall- beat out, au conldn't run no moah, I The Rock of Cblckamauga. Adjoining Town Hall, Red Bank. foun do bullots an balls a-comin from or,' ' • _ _ ^ .>;,"' Horo is a bit of militaryhistory that do uddor way too. As sunli as yon lives The Mission of Memorial Day. da robol scalvory had got nronnd Jar an vory fow of tho prosont gonoration aro Momorinl day will not aoaso to bo was a-flghtin ow' rah guard I I thought familiar with. In 1855, when Jefforsou oommemorative of, tho nation's dead, dat vna no plaoo foh a pooh olo niggali Davis was scorotary of war, tho cavalry What you want is bnt yonr after yonr, as personal rocolloc- like mo, an I 'gun to crawl long on my service of tho army was reorganized, and tho now Sooond regiment had for tloun fudo and tlio aotors ol tho trugody fuco to a littlo olo brunoh down oross do withdraw from tho soono, it will bo- road I Didn't I hug dat bank dough! Ef its principal officers tho following: Colooomo moro and moro an occasion for re- I hadn't a bcu mon' starved, so I could nol, Albert Sidney Johnston; liontouaut oolonol, Roboit E. Leo; sonior major, viving flagging pntriotiam and ro-onforo- spread out flat doy would 'a' got »no auab I William J. Hardoo; junior major, Doy IHOII' did ns it was I Do groun was goods. Not one, two or a ing tho loyalty of tho faithful.' all ling up roun mo Hko it was dun Goorgo H. Thomaa. dozen What great ovonts thoso names were plowod." All Should Unlto to Do Honor. dostinod to bo asBooiatod with a few Tho obsorvnuco of Doeorntion day Julio was n tlloronglily demoralized yoars lator. All woro of southern birth, should not bo loft to tho mirviving vot- "punson," no mlntuko, and if ho is livnud only ouo—Goorgo H. ThoinnB—roorans ovon now. To thorn tho Hint plaoo ing today, and you^sliould run ucroufl maiuod faithful to tho Union cauno. lie vlghtf nlly bolong«, but 'tho wliolo ooin- him, and nhould Bpouk to him about it, was tlio Rock of Chiokamauga and boto select from, but the largmnnlty should add itii trllmto to tholrs. uuo how ho will HIIOW lilii ivories nud camo ouo of tho grontoRt gouorals of tlio est, most stylish stock of Tho dnyjs a general holiday, and all roll up tho whltoa of his oyoa as ho tolls war.' you tho Htory in his own words. Though olnssos should nnlto in honoriiiK i*j Spring Millinery Goods • •••• — ho wmi with nu nil tho wny round, and U p h o l d Iho F l a £ . that can be rodo a pnek mulo, loading luicthor loaded Tlio Bluo and tho Gray. What socncH of Bublimo oourago linvo with oiunp kottlof), cto., ho always had boon ouaotcd about tho national oolorn Jnnlluut, luno r»«(iwi(iB 01 tunny n forimt Krtinili too nnioli rogard for do boys to run auy on almost ovory buttloflold of our warn I In tho vnlloyn, on tlio mountain!, ohauoen of loning tho "oooklii llxiii'n" Tho hetu'M boitror, loading a ohnrgo In Ovur nil thin ploiumut laiia, by konplng up with tha prooofiHlon, to tho fnoo of louden hall, gooa down rldIloni'Htli unihrnuwmu maple, m>y initliliiH of fiolntf "way out yondnli" dlod with linlln, but tho flag noaroely Huauro frum nooroliltiff rny, In Eastern New Jersey, at Or (in tho mosny rlvor tniik, in advanco of tlio column, if thoro wan touuhOH tho oarth boforo tlio hnndn of less than city prices. That lly nimiy it brokini wity, tlio fillglitwit iirolmbllity of nuotlior livpouu tlm wur nonrrwl horoca another uruiii) It, kmt thin troannrod cm- Will be Closed Decoration Day. OFFICE OH'FBONT 8TBEET, • Henarickson Bloci, Adjoining the Posi-Offlce, Warm Weather Wear For Women^±=^TheseTWarmllays are sufnTienTrlintiFto set' you gathering warm weather wear. Everything that's pretty, servicable and a help to enjoyment of summery weather is here how. .' . The newest styles in Lawn,'Cambric and / Calico wrappers. ' , All the pretty colorings and effects in Lawns, Dimities and hot weather stuffs. The newest and prettiest effects in shirt Waists with Bishop sleeves and detachable collars. , 5 and 10 Gent Store, r §ohrqedei's fharmacg, | And whatever else i/o« can think of that you and we ought to have* ADLEM & COLE. "For The Blood Is The Life." All persons, young or old," rich obpoor, Sick or, well, should, at this Beaion..of_tlip^earJJake_re^arly_some.J;md will remove bad humors, invigorate the system and • „ PURIFY THE BLOOD, for the reason that a great many diseasea have their origin from impure blood. Ariounce of prevention is worth apoundofciire, ana the best, cheapest and most economical medicine touse to prevent disease by purifying the blood is AUNT MARY'S SARSAPARILLAr _^_/ an article which must not he confused with similar preparations containing sarsaparilla, but the only genuine Aunt Mary's Sarsaparilla, which is prepared only by . . • 1COOPER &SNEDEN,Cof t . at 50'cents per bottle. Give this medicine a trial. The beneficial results which wiil surely follow will satisfy you that your money was well invested. f Hilt Greeiiiuses In Buying a Piano or anOrgan We Court Competition, We Admire Opposition, : And Under No Condition, Will We Budge from OurJPosition AS DEALEBS IN Fir^t-Class Groceries ? '" ONLY, AND PABTICULAKLY.. BUTTER, COFFEES AND TEAS. Orinoka Coffee at 83c. per pound. • Prime Butter at 20c. per pound. Our Gold Blend Tea at 60c. per pound. L. VAN GILLUWE, Cor. Front St. and Maple Avc. A great many people know we keep fruits and vegetables; do you? AS HOT AS YOU'D LIKE TO HAVE IT. That will be the condition of your • house if you put in a THATCHER HOT-AIR HEATER. R. HANGEC We're experts on the heat business. We employ only expert workmen, and assure you of satisfaction. HAY, STRAW, GRAIN. FLOOR, FEED, POULTRY SUPPLIES, ETC. THE SANITARY PLUMBING CO. Front Street, near Southern Railroad Crossing. Japanese Napkins. Stylish Hats Found I Of ninny n ifivllniit Irhy, Frwtii In Uwlr noutitry'ii memory, Knnhrlmxl nro tlio lilun mid grnyl AniUl tho nmr uf riuinuii TlK'T kluiml tho IJIIKHI »tnlnn,l «xl for ttaol' nltnrn end lliolr flronlilm, Vot tliulr iwiiiitry tmtl their (lodl Th*y lirAvtily fnuiMl tho totuponb Of hlnolllu, liuritlnu »lioll| Tlmy nuAltnl tlio Ynry imUlinnrmUltlght Uf, tlio muuth uf hnlll Wlwrn«luinlif>r tli»*fl in\itMj flnwl— Flow'n BliromJ it iMtltis (fnnrnnno O'er (ho Hlftot'j 0(Wimlcf« M l " l " " — ~ lilom of out country nhould uuffor dingraoo in tlio oyoii of itii oonrngootiii too. Thin In not n jiloturo oC Jtnuuy, but n Tlio Immortal Nam««. Snuio that trnunplrod in tho rankii ot Wo nto nob a tintluu of Imco wornlilpmuny n rviilinont. Neither wnn It nontlprtt. Wo nro n imtlon ot |{enoroun froomoiit tlmt OAVO birth to mioli oxtrnotdlirinn, Wo bow In atTootionnto roveronoo lmry uotii of nolf devotion. It han boon mid tho niont gralofnl lumrtn to thotu ropiiatod In ovory national war. and tho inimottiii nnniM, Wniililiigton, Lincoln Buirlb tlmt liromjiUirt Oi«m wmi lovo of and Urnut, and nil who waro annoolatnil oouiitry. with (IKSIII, mid will (to«r<l with' nlnople«n vl«llniiO(i tlmlr uilglitjr works «ua l l l tll l 'i'hore In no bott«.pii)ier than Tun UrnTRIIilJ is an easy matter—just call at the Red Bank TEMPLE OF FASHION. You will be pleased, so will MRS. E. WEIS. TTVTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT ' ! ••"••• I 1 These are handy for serving light refreshments, and for use at lawn parties and church sociables. They aro cheaper than laundering tho regular napkins. Wo offer them at less prices than like quality has ever been sold for before: I'rottlly floured lmpltlrin, in two colom, H u l l lucluwi, 32c. ft hundred, 'Id. n dozen. Two-colored border around the ctitlro napkin, MxU inclu'M, 1,'fic, a hundred, fie. n dozen. Naplcliui, 12x 1VJ Inchr.'i, ciprciiilly for chlldrcn'ii piutiw, tlnwnre(l|tml fimoy Jii|inn(wi IIKUICII ; and nnotlior nlr>, lUJxIII), niilto tough, !!0o. n hundred, Ho. u dozen, LuiK'nt nl/.c, 1(1x1(1 Inchon, Uulud eilpicii, iixtni line <|iiiillly, Wio, i\ Vory deep border of fanny (Igiinn mid flowum, a very (jood ipmllty, l)0«, n hundred, Ou. n dozen, I 1 I I I 8 '8 8 JOHN H. COOK, l»«Bt Ollice Building, Uud Hnnk, N. J. | tbey eald, to take a child that no one. townspeople had gathered. Tomorrow else would have. But all the townspeo- the veterans might be carpenters, shoeple were kind to the plain, ehy, tmr- makers and farmers, bat for today they were heroes. childish stranger. . The chnroh choir sang, the minister Day by day Miss Mehitable and Iioaetta grew nearer to each other, tho ono made a prayer, and then came the roll so-glad to give love, the other starving calL Before Miss Mehitable realized it to reoeive i t Little by little the child There's a grave on the hill; O west winS, opened her heart, euro of sympathy, and Louetta liad slipped her; hand away and Miss Mehitable was learning what a had ran op to Captain Townsend, the Posa by with plaintive moam , Bend low ttaegrasa above It, strange and unnatural product an orphan officer in charge, with a bit of paper in And sigh "unknown, unknown!"' her hand. __ asylum ohild is. ___Btoop down, O heavy ralocloud, "If you please, sir," ana said aa she Louetta's mind was BO full of queer And drop a pltjringrtcar. fancies that Misa Mehitable was not banded it to him, "won't you call tho It thou dost mourn earth's chosen, On, Bpend thy sorrow here I surprised, that stormy night when onr roll for the Revolutionary, soldiers over 1 Btory'-opens,-that the child's thought in the old parti tool Both my grandfaThere's a grave on tho hill, O Union. Pass not that mound o'ergrown. shpnld> turn as it did, and to- hear her thers are there—that is, not my really For theethla martyr eoldier ask if it would not be "nice to have a truly grondfatbers, only ones that I've Givea life and name. "Unknownl" adopted because they hadn't any little lot of dead folks all your own." Pass not, O wife, O woman. girl qnd I hadn't any grandfathers, and Stoop low, O brother, eon. "Dead folks, Lpuetta?" she said. . Forget not. He who sleopoth " y e s , " answered the child simply; I've copied their names on this paper, Thy homes, thy freedom, won. "grandfathers and grandmothers and if you'll only call them out I. I'm sure " There's a grave on the.hill. O Father, aunts and nnoles, all yonr own, with a they must be very lonesome way ovei Thy searching voico shall yet High fenoe aronnd to keep folks out. there In that corner." Bouse up the sleeping soldier, The dear little voice rang out in the Ah, it must beso nice I" Lonetta's faoe For thou dost not forget. silence. Filled with an absorbing emobrightened at the thought. There's a lonely gravo on the hillside. But, oh, before thy throne, "Sea, dear," Baid Misa Mehitable tion, the shy child became bold. There Tho liumblo shall be honored, softly. " I know what you mean. To was such an intensity of appeal in her Tiie unknown shall bo known! have one's dead together is a comfort." tone that the captain's eyes filled with "But, Miss Mebitable, do you think tears. A CHILD SHALL LEAD. "Comrades," said he, "after this we It wonld be wicked to adopt grandfathers, If they'd been dead so long they will call the roll of the Revolutionary "Miss Mehitnble," said Louetta aft- had no one left? There are two soldiers dead first." er a long pause, "shouldn't you think of the Revolution in the old part of the The crowd, all of whom knew the it must be nice to ha\e a lot of dead graveyard, and they have no ono to love child and her sad history, cheered. "flow glad they'll be I" she said, them and take care of them, and they'd • folks all your own?" "moke such nice grandfathers for me, if slipping back into her place beside Miss Mies Mehitable dropped the block you think they wouldn't objeot. Do Mehitable, whose stern faos was very Stocking she was knitting, pushed her you? I want some dead relations sol" tender as she looked at the unooneoious epeotaoles up on her smooth, Iron gray The nearsighted eyes wore dim with ohild. hair and stared at her newly adopted tears. One by one the names of those valr daughter. The girl eat in the little car"Who are they?" asked Miss Mehita- iant dead were called, and the voice of pet covered rocking chair, the lamplight ble. the drum was the only answer. There shining on her abundant red hair, her "One is Captain Jonathan Martin and were not many of them, but enough- to freckled face, her small, nearsighted the other is Lieutenant Thomas Ed- make everyheart fill with pride that the "eyeB.—Ncfc-efen-ber~own-mothor-ooold- mnndSjRnd they died before 1800." little town of Royton had borne her part hiivo culled her a pretty child, but Miss *~ "No7"~saTd Miss THeBta'BleTWffiP" "6O"brisvelyin~tha(rinighty-BtruggleT Mehitablo surveyed her with perfect .sat- swer to the child's inquiry, "the MarThen followed the muoh longer list isfaction. tin family are all gone, and the last Ed- of the civil war soldiers, and there was munds moved west yearB ago. There is not a veteran there who did not feel Only six months ago Hies Mehitable no one living who would care, and as glad that tho place of honor had been had gone to the orphan asylum in the for the dead—I don't think, they'd ob- given to tho earlier dead. . In the great oity and astonished the matron by ask- jeot I But what good will they do you?" heart of America there is love enough ing for tho homeliest girl they had for' "Ah," said Louetta, with fervor, to go around. adoption, . . . . . . "they will be such a comfort to me The minister then gave an address, "There's always plenty of folks to nights 1 I can make stories up about and his test was, " A little ohild shall take the good looking ones," she said, thorn after I go to bed, and 1 can take lead them." Louetta Luella felt the with a contemptuous sniff. care of their graves and put wreaths on blood rash to her face when, after the "My name is Mehitable Swettof Boy- them on their birthdays, and perhaps address, Captain Townsend holding her ton,'" continued the visitor, "and I can you will have the headstones straight- hand, they marched at the head of the refer you to the selectmen of the town." ened, and I will oleon and Bordpe them, Hue to the grass grown corner, 'where "Onr homeliest girl! \yell, I think and then on Decoraton day they will her "grandfathers' " graves testified we oughttooall up '42,' "eaid the iha- put Sags and flowers there, and I shall how muoh one little tender heart and —iron -to-ttie-amnsed first _nssistant.^_So- foeTBO proud and so^-scr respectable I" — two little willing hands oould do. "42," a shrinking, red haired child, not So with Miss Mehitable's consent and On these and on the adjoining graves beautiful, surely, was brought in to the aid Louotta Luella adopted her grand- the choicest blossoms were laid and the visitors'parlor. fathers. . largest flags planted. v . - "You can leave us alone," said Miss All through April the child worked How when a stranger visits Royton Mebitable, and the matron obediently every pleasant day after school hours almost the first place he is taken to is withdrew." patiently digging up witch grass and' "Revolutionary Corner," which the "Now, my diiar," said Misa Mehita- weeds from the neglected mounds and high school boys and girls keep in beauble to the frightened child, with a sad- the graveled walk that ran beside tiful order, and he hears the Btory how den softening of manner, "get up in my them. Miss Mohitablo had the Bagging Louetta adopted her grandfathers and lap." - " . . ' . • headstones straightened, but it was Lou- how the Eevolntiooory heroes came to The child allowed herself to be taken etta who laboriously scraped and cleanup. ed them till the old inscriptions were "There, now," said Misa Mehitable. legible. We Cannot Forget Our Heroes. "Why, I guess you ain't much used to There, too, the first wild flowers were It is a most touching act of patriotlaps. Well, we'll change all that. Now carefully transplanted,, and on ..Sunday ism in the American people pausing towhat's your name?" afternoons Miss Mehitable and Louetta day to recall the virtues of the heroes "Forty-two," lisped the little girl. often walked there, and the child show-. who lived and died to make their scran-. "Pshaw 1 Yon must have some other ed With delight the improvements made try possible. When a nation fails to' name than'43.' What is it?" during the week. » open the books of its history and forgets "My name's Chrissy Boylston, only " I gave Grandfather Martiuallof the its founders and defenders, it is hastenit's Christmas., not just Chrissy." cowslips, for "he was so fond of them, ing toward decay. Let us not be so anx' "Why do they call you Christmas?" you know.. Grandma says he always ious to read of the sons of Italy's fair The child remained silent. •••••••• kept a bowl of thorn on the sitting room plains, of the wars of Xerxes, Alexan"Oh, I guees I know," Bald Misa table while they were in blossom." der and Napoleon as we are to read the Mehitable. "They found you on Christ- The child lifted her eyebrows signifi- history from Plymouth Rock to New mas day on Boylston street. Have you cantly nnd whispered, "Make believe." Orleans, from Sumter to Appomattox. any relations or friends?" "But Grandpa Edmunds"liked violets Wo can no more forgot Sherman, Sheri"No, ma'am." beat, so I've given them all to him." dan and Grant and the gallant men who "No relations or frieuds-kWell, we'll Tba child rau on, full of mythical marched to the defense of the Union change all that too." / talcs of these pseudo grandfathers who than we can forget that Washington was Miss Mdritablo slowly nud gently had died nearly 100 years before. tho founder of our government. drew from tho child All the story she Roytou, like many old towns in New had to tell. Thero was! pitiably little of England, was rich in Revolutionary lore, it. She had been only a few weeks old Very Considerate. and in her graveyard were buried sevwhen the policeman found her. Her An old Georgia farmer one day joinoral of those who, by dying, had helped mother had abandoned her ou Christto muko tho nation. But thero was BO ed the Twenty-fifth regiment of that mas day. They had brought her here. much holy leal felt for those who had state, armed with .a long reaping nook, She had always had good food, clothes died to save tho nation that the Revolu- and.announced: "I'vecome to jineyou, and teaching. No; she, had never been tionary soldiers woro neglected, and boys. I kaiu't handle a gun worth held in any one's lap before She had Roytou almost forgot that the blood shucks, but if the Yanks'll only hold never beou kissed, nud she was 10 years Bhed in 1770 was the seed that brought still I kiu cut 'em down with tbia like old. fun." And when informed that the that eternal crop of glory in 1861. So " 4 3 " was legally adopted by Mies Thero they lay, in an obscure part of "1'uuka" would probably bo refractory Ilehitablo Swott, and renamed Louetta and unobliging enough uot to hold still Luollu Swett, after twin sisters of Hisu tbo old cometory, out of the line of whilo he had his fnu ho rotorted: march on Memorial day, out of tho lino Mohitable's who had died in infanoy. ^ J i o ' enough, they air tho most onconMiss Mohitablo kept a little, notion of men's.thoughts. Tho sound of tho siderate critters ou yeurth. How do they shop in Eoyton, where Bhe lectured tho fife and drum stolo over tho hill once a expect a man o' my iigo to ran after girls wlio came to buy corsots and re- year, and tho odor of blossoms strewn thorn?1'• ...fuscd-tp Hell cap pistols to tho little boys on patciota' graves, but thoy were not m •» ' or oolorod candy to tho littlo girls. Thero for thorn I Origin of Memorial Day. Becnnso of Port Douolsou and Gettyswas a story current that Miss Mohitablo In 1803 four ladies decoratod the had once uslaul a youug woman to lcavo burg tlio glory of Bunker Hill and Sargraves of tho soldiers at Arlington tho shop who hud dared to ask if sho kept utogn had grown dim. Louetta worked so faithfnlly that Heights. Iu 1864 congress took notice of crimping irons I In spite of thoso prejudices, her trado when Meinoriul day dawuod her grand- a ceremonial so significant and made was good. Tho farmero' wiveB for miles fathers' graves woro in perfect order, this day a legal holiday. Now tho groat acound knew that McbitnbloSwott's cal- and nothing remained to te dono bnt to national cemoterics uro decoratod, and icoes uovor "ran," aud that hot "nil decoruto the front of tho shop. M!BS the lonely gruvo of tho unknown is wool" meant all wool. Mchitablo was Mohitablo's bunting and flags wero tho sought out. And this beautiful custom ono of tho largest taxpayers in tho town best sho could find iu Boston, and as has coruo into Buch fiwor with all tbo and WOH one of thoquniut figures on tho Bho nnprosHcd into hor sorvico any com- people that tho graves of all our dead trniir WIIMI, on stockholders' day, all pctout man who passod thero was uo uro covorod with flowera. How appropriately beautiful I For all tho fluworu tho holders of stock in tho railroad com- lack of help. Around tbo awning posts Louotta had spoil tlui two worda, lovn und resurrecpany rido froo to Boston. tion. MISH Mnhitablo was a putriot, iiml tied bunches of lilacs and frouh grcon ^•-•••M during tbo civil war, when, cf course, bougliH, and a pitcher, without i\ hanNear to Death. dle, flllod with BuowbullB, was placed sho could not bo u uoldiur, KIIU hud inBiBtod upon Homling it rotatiuito. fjlw on tlio town piiiup opposite. " I think I hud tho closest Hlmvoof Soon tho ontlro population liad trust- you nil," caiuo from imotlior of tho had luon fuvorod by tho uuthoritlCH, who were niuoh iniprcnsod, with nn ofll- fully put their kcyH under thoir front group. "Thogovnruor of Maryland, who elul document cortlfyliig Hint Moliitablo doornmUt. and woro quietly wending wan my friend, oilorod mo tbo lloutoutiwott had furnliilieil a subHtitutu. Tho their way to tbu ccuiotcry, whilo tlio ancy of u regiment tlion forming. \ told curtifloutc, in n framo, win tbn crown Grand Army post full Into lino—at least him, us I hnd but ouo good oyo, I tliouo who woro ublo to walk, for poor oouldu't noo to dodgo tho bullota woll ing glory of hor shop. Tlio fact Unit tho aubntitutc vim eliot BlInn Mnuon lay on liln invalid olmlr in enough. Tho frioud who noooptod (ho in tlio Luck whilo running away from u the griKMiry WIIKIIII, mid tlio old miulro offer WIIH killod In tho flrnt ojmanomont il(j)it did not, In MiiiiiSwctt'fl judgment, drove Tom Carter, with hln cnitolimi, in of tho reHliiieiit."' ' iill'cot her roHpoiiHlbillty toward tlio IIIH own IIUKKV. It WIIH u very different iijilrH from innn'u family, mid uho hud watohud ovcir Maroli Of tho Romtiant. thorn—thoy woro n Hliiftloiui lot—and tilut whiuli nnlnmtoii a Momorlal dny Not iu thuy ninrclii'il In tlmu of wur borno with tlioin, uutll ouo happy duy otowil in a ((rent olty. '1'liuru WIIH much 'J'lm column" wovo tmlny, thoy all omlgrutod, mill woro forovur loiiii pomp, lriiii iiuluu mill urntury, but No driuii'n limplrliiK munlii or thoro WIIH II ncrlouHiicHH, u duptli of foulTim ilf™* ulirlll iiiiti n which iniuinliil fur iifUir uuablp to return. Tlwi trtriiim wlileh nmrchoil iiwny. Tlio vorllflunto hung over tho door ing, a lioinolliKinii, about tho iillnlr 'Jim (lriiiuu Innl mill tin, l,u«lni nill which lml Into tint parlor, mid tho jun- wliiolMMiidi) tlin nprotntor fftol that lioro In Hloxvur «i!ii1itiu:o mnv. HllnKlu'll riiiig uudor it nil tlio clny long. tho oitrniiionlcH woro no jiorfunctory Tluiii'u <:IIIIM||IIIK tmlvh In full l,y nil. ' MIIIH Mi'liilulilo unod to nit bohlnd lior mutter. Tliolr ilinul woro thulr own, not With filllltur I'Mlillil Ihn ri»itiiti'|iii full counter, llko II Jiiil(io on tlio linnoli, mid tho lndlfinrliiiiimti) (loud (if tlm cltlim. Whlrli riuiK mi iMkutlt'il brow. A iioiiid (if iiiK'utlty nud oniitoiitiiioiit thoatntoJy "Woll?" with whloli nho In HUH urn Uii> wiinkiuutl iralunn Uirlllnil. (Mod liuiiiitlu'ii linitrt UII, with her hand vnrliibly Ktootod hor (miitninnra wan Tim tlmu illiiinii'd uyon Kruw lirlwht lu Mini Maliltitbki'n, din walkud to tho enough to frlKhton timid ntniiigcini, With noiiiutliliiii o( HID Urn whloli tlllvil Tin. wihilora1 V<TIIW W , I |,I,,,,,,, |,ml B (|l|,,,l lint tlio vllliiyo jiuuplo kuuw her woll, Roldlern' monument. Him huluiiKwl to Tim tumult uf tlm llulil, nud though (hoy intigliod nt hor IKIUUI Rumo one. bin) hud n natni', it homo, i\ With iiloliitlvii rtlrn.., win, iiiimriiful mrltiof) thoro won no ono in ltoyton motlior, oven twiidoivdKtiinilfulliorii, mid hor oup nf 111 I tut wun full. Illlllllfllt, who won rttspoolod uiore tlmu dim. Tlui *\\\U IIIIIIIIIHI ruiilin tlrnw n< nr, 'J.'lio lit tin iiritcenidim, with innlllnd f bo adoption of frwMm Luolln lind Hiimll niiiiiMit of tlm Lout who dniulit, b«m a'ninttnr of iutcneo Jiitnrcat in tho ilruniliont mid tolllnij boll, em no nlovvlf I'rouil iiftlw >"«iiu mi il.,iuly lu,unlit. to tho nolillom' muiiutiKiiit, whoro tho tlmil Tho; uru iimruliliiK linrii, towo. It w*n Jiwt Hk« Minn Jloliluitl Unknown. y Thoro'i a grave on the faroS hiMde, A loudly, sunken grave, Whore grow the tall rank grasses Abovo the fallen brave, Where OUIUIDCT'S eun emlle3 warmly, Where -winter's enow lies deep, . Where', o'er tho unknown -dreamer. Unbidden voices weep. OUR WAY' Wines and Liquors, Of doing business is a fair w a y fair to you—fair to us. The highest quality for the leaat possible money, and full weight, too. ALES AND BEERS. P.;HAWKINS, CHAIN AJ»i> FEEI> r We Have a" full line of tlies^goods, in fact, all tlie brands of established reputation. In GalifoEnja Clarets, Ports, Sherries and Muscatels we Lave good .qualities at very reasonable prices. Buy a case of Claret; it is very inexpensive. Claret makes one of the most refreshing drinks for these liot days. We have a new thing for the American market: a genuine French Apple Cider. It is sold reasonable, only 25 cents a bottle. I Broai} Street, Red Bank, Nr J. Your Stomach DistressesYbu aftoreatlDgaheartymeal.nndtliB result Is a chronic Case of Indlgcetlon. Sour Stomach, Heartburn, pyojopsia, or a bilious attaok. • RIPAHS TflBULES Promote Dilation. Iteanlate, tbe Stomach, tlyer and Bowoln, l'utlfy tne Blood,« and or o a tor anaiire a Positive xrasiiive Cure xor Oonatipatlon, • "uure ion, Sic" Slok Heodnche, JUll- louflncfls, and and all aU < other .Dlse&sea orlslnff from a disordered - . the _ . Liver and rdered condition o( Stomach. They act gently yet promptly, and perfect digestion follows their use. *" TuimlestakethepUuMofo M e d i c i n e O b e » t , and should bo kept tor use In every family. DELICATESSEN. We have a very complete stock, containing about Price, SO Cents a box. At Druggists, or by maiu fflPANB CHBUtoil CO- • 1 0 6PBDC* ST., Nsw T o u t all the imported "and domestic Cheeses, Pickled Pigs' Feet, German Sausage, Deviled Crabs, Lambs' Tongues, Kussian Caviar, Rilletts, etc., etc. Specialties for Spring." . Dresden Ribbons Iubeautllul colorings and pretty designs at exceptionally loir prices. Kid. Gloves" In 'the new shades, heavy stltchings, .laced nnd buttoned. . Our Line of Hoisery Is complete, as usual. 32 BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J. • • & • • . ' ' ' • IT. J. WILSOIN", BROAD STREET. Ball Bearing Bicycle Shoe, RED BANK, N. J. s2 50 - and —The best blcycloshoe oa tbe market.- It's-mado--< of Bolt Kangaroo lentherjlts like a glore. Any ' size from 5 to 10. Three widths. High cut, S2.75; ' low cut, $2.50, < Other make bicycle slioes, both tan and black, ] 81.25, $1.50 aodSl.75. BERGEN, Broad Street. : ; « • • « • * • • • • • • » • • • » • • • • • • • • • » • • • » • • • • • > • • • • • « < « TJYE Shrewsbury Tomatoketcriup. CTRAW. EC-HA2AK0 & C9. THIS IS A VEIIY SCARCE ARTICLE THIS YEAU. HOWEVER I HAVE ABOUT 40 TONS TO OFFER VERf CHEAP. CALL AND BUT BEFORE THE PRICE ADVANCES. WHARF AVENUE, RED BANK. Comfort* Can be found in- a light, cool, Negligee Shirt. Our new patterns in Madras, Oxford, Percale and Cambrics' are the choicest goods the market affords. CURTIS'S HAT STORE, 27 Broad Street, THE Red Bank, N; J. BEST «• ... I * = 7 I am giddy. I) I Expectation whirls me round; The imaginary relish is So Sweet that il enchants my sense What will it be when that the watery Palate tastes Molasses Creams | 20 CENTS A POUND. p. $ This ia a candy everybody likes, >«J It's tbe finest old-fashioned mo- |«J lasses taffy, with a center of pep- $ permint cream. It's made by us |«j atjd sold by no one else. Stop in }»J and buy a pound to try. You'll (•) be glad that we suggested it. CROYER, Confectioner, BBOAD STREET, NEXT TO ADLEM & COLE'S. WHEELWRIGHT SHOP. Too friends ol 'Squire T . F . Bnlflfen will Dnd him at his old business ID Walsh's building on McoUanlo Street, I U d B a n k , N. J . , nhero ho does all kinds of W a g o n IKTork. New Farm Wagons, Harrows, Carts, Wbeolbarrows, i c , made to order, and Jobbing of all kinds neatly nnd promptly done. JAMBS W A L S H , Proproletr. ROOF Is A STEEL ROOF.. The man who has a good steel roof is secure from damage by the heaviest storms of winter or summer. There is no hurrying- up in the attic to put pails and basins under the leaks; there are no discolored walls, no falling ceilings, no decaying floors and timbers, by reason of rain finding its way through. ;' It's a comfort for a man to have steel roofs on his house and outbuildings. Such a roof gives complete protection. Hay and grain stored in a barn with such a roof arc kept dry and sweet. Such a roof also furnishes protection from fire, for no sparks or falling embers can set it ablaze. The best steel roofs cost only a trifle more than slate or shingles. They practically last forever, and a good roof will add many years tu the life of a building. In the end they are by far the cheapest roofs that can be had. . Send orders for steel roofs to . DANIEL H. COOK, THE STEEL HOOF MAN, TJNTON FALLS, I NEW JERSEY, OLD BEN'S MEMORIAL. CHIVALRY ON. BOTH SIDES. THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER. •••••»»»•»•»•»»»»»»•••»»•« of a Veteran Who Was Sot Bravery of Four Union Soldiers and Striking Demonstration of the Bespect Mexicans Have For It. the Nobility ofa Confederate. Forgotten. , Morning,—"Oh, here they oomel Here Tberespeot whloh our flag commands The* brigade of General W. B. flnzon, theyoomet Drams a-iolllD, flips a-tootln, an Ideal soldier and the true hero'of the at Iioma and abroad, on land and on sea, and there breaks' the whole band Into a battles ol Stone Eivor and Mission Ridge, baa In tho post been often demonstrated. great swell o' muslo, Well, they've got a advanced first to the assault at the battle No Inoldont to my mind Is inoro striking rights they've got a right! of Plokett'a Mills. For nearly an hour it than that whloh ooqurred In Mexico, when "you've eat here nigh an hour waltln battled with a valor and fortitude worthy Bon. Joel JEt. Polnsett of South Carolina for 'em, haven't you, Old Ben? An now of its renown under a fire aa terrible as was the United States minister at that hare they oomeftrooplnalong, the old max- any that, soldiers ever faoel While re- oourt. It was Immediately following on tlal ewlDg In their steady tramp, an-r-oh, treating under orders, firing resolutely as election whloh was bitterly fought, and ibttjMffltsajKgty-JBg-flBgpeffltB In lta. liorar-TnBte's Old Glory Jus'-asbraWan It'foll'baok, tho-oolor-eergeanf true as over. My, how shefloatsI Hooray 1 Hundred and Twenty-fourth Ohio, the disappointment. The esoltod popalaoe • Hooray! . ., . . regiment on its right, commanded by that took possession of the artillery barracks -H'What would you do, Old Ben, without typloal Amerloan offloer Colouel Oliver H. and planted batteries along tho streets, Jthe comfort o' talkin to yourself? The Payne, stepped from tho ranks and planted and the streets flowed with blood. While de^r Lord knows 'twould be bard lines It the oolors of the regiment as a rallying the firing was going on the widow of a you oouldn't get somethin ooneolln out o1 signal within 20 yards of the Confederate vlooroy of Mexico, who lived In the adjoin-' that. Borne old vets would think it ruther line. AB he did so and before beoould re- ing house to that of our inllSISKirytroiir-tough heln reduoed to havlh Just them- move his hand from the stall be was shot bllng with fear and almost overcome with selves fur company, but we're on tol'iabln dead, and the colors fell with him,- their exoltement, sought his home and appealed good terms with ourself, eh, old comrade? folds partially covering bis body. Another to him for proteotlon. While engaged In We've fought some pretty stiff battles to- soldier of the same regiment then advano- assuring her of fall proteotlon at his hands gether since the war, that's a fact, but ed, and as he stooped to lift tbo oolors ho a shot was fired ab him whloh passed through his coat and lodged In tbe shutter we've tried to have good oourago and keep too was Instantly killed. ' on the right elde, an we threaten to pull A third rushed forward to save the of his baloony window. ' through with a whole soul yet, eh, old treasured ensign and mingled his heart's The maddened mob, as.he disappeared, boyf" then orled ont to lire In the window and blood with that of his devoted comrades. A fourth eoldlen from tbo line of the break down the gates. At- tbo very moV Course things would 'a' been very, different 1( that bullet hadn't 'a' Btopped at little One Hundred and Twenty-fourth Ohio ment when passion was running highest Ben down there in the Wilderness 'long In thon advanced at double quiok toward tho and the men had become maddened with '68. Young Ben be kop' olose by Hooker fatal spot. He was a corporal, Wearing desperation, ready to batter down the gates all through till one day there oome confu- his sword, but without his rifle, and ap- and walls surrounding the house, Mr. sion an dismay, an oue o' poor Jaotaon'a parently about SO years of age. He had a Folnsett dlreotod the sooretary of the legatroopers sent eomotliln slngln right at the tall, lltho figure, and his fooo was hand- tion to throw out the American flag, whloh some despite the powder stains upon it. he did, and thon .tbo minister and secreheart o'my Bon. "1 Bay 'poor Jaokeon,' fur Lord knows I As he reaobed the point where the colors tary, In full view of the excited crowd, class 'em all togothor now. And that's a lay many of tbe Confederate soldiers colled stepped forth on tho veranda beneath Its gogfl deal fur me to eny—a good deal fur out to him to surrender. He smiled at the folds. Instantly the shouts wero hushBd, ma .to say. But I b'lleve white-souls with summons, and taking oft big oap with his the fury of the mob began to abate, and tbe holy namo 'patriot' on 'em went up to left hand waved It toward them and then tho muskots dropped by the soldiers' sides tbe throne o' Qod out o' northern ranks bent down to grasp tbo color staff with bia whloh a moment before had been pointed an southern ranks, an I've got an idee right. Many a deadly bead was drawn with deadly Intont at the homo and person there's a grand Union. o' souls up there upon him by the unerring marksmen of our minister. Dread and nwa of tho that no strife o' men nor clash o' arms can whose rifles were gleaming in the sunlight flag quieted tho mob. Ho announced that ever disrupt or disband—no strife o' men not 60 feet away when Captain William he was the aooredlted minister of our govcor olash o' arms con ever disrupt or dis- Nowellof the-Fourth Texas rifles, In front ernment, The leaders hastily consulted, of whose oompany the fallen flag lay,~call- the mob meltod away, and guards were band—never. : ed out In a olear, metallio YOICO that rang placed by the Insurgents by the minister's "But little EenP Wa EOG, he were 28 alongth(rUner"Don'trBhaotl~ForGodV "ta)moito"proteotrlfTrad"hlm~Bnd~nll-vrho Story Land Piaster^^ Green & " • AND AT \ ; "BROWN'S Wharf Avenue, Photographs •••••••••••••••••••••••A Electric Wiring. T T tt tt Y Y Y I do oil sorts o{ Electric wiring and I do It .veil and cheaply. . I put la Burglar Alarms, Electric Bells, Telephones, SpenWng Tubes, etc. If you wont any of tnls sort of work done or U you want any small machinery repaired, give me a trial. t * F. WEBERLING, Postal Telegraph Office, t I Y ft Y Eed Bank, N. J. Veterans, Attention! t Y T •I* It seems hardly necessary to tell G. A. R. men, who know what a good clothing store we |>eep, that we have looked out for their wants for Decoration Day. We would want no better introduction to those who have not as yet become acquainted with us than bur , Blue Flannel Suits at $5, $7, $8 and $10. An extra set of G. A. R. Buttons with each suit. Other dealers may offer you suits at the same prices, but don't let that form the basis of your comparison—our unusual qualities are what we desire to emphasize. t f T f T t t t T T f T T T T- sake, men, let tho brave fellow toko the sought proteotlon under Its roof and within FRONT STEEET, iED~B~ANKrNr-Jr seemed to como. Ihoro ain't ever been a oolors." Its walls. • roal bright, old; fashioned sunshiny day His appeal was hooded, and although Why! It represented the dignity and slnoe then; not one, has thoro now, Bonf "Ah, this imislol It's got the same the line continued its tiro upon tho retir- power of tho United States and commanded ing Union tioops the daring corporal was Instant respect. When our flag was unstlrtln old ring that marched some o' us through Georgia on along miles an miles considerately spared and' bore tho blood furled It did what an unnocl force could o' weary trompln elsewhere, tbe very ring, dyod flag baok^ to the ranks of his regi- not havo dono without bloodshot!. It was * tho voloo of command. It represented tho only It's slower today, a good deal slower, ment. '*•" force of the United States. A shot fired an—oh, Lord, again I Horo comes Com••• tho flag was a shot fired at the United p'nyH. My, how they step off I An— YOUTHFUL PATRIOTISM. . ' at Btatos, and as tho wild mob respeoted Its . why, they're gettlb upward o' 60,1 should soy. Can't be young Ben would 'a' looked It Is Well For the Bov* anil Girls power It respected the flag whloh symbolW. B. LAWRENCE, ized It. Let all of us unito ha securing like that, can it? Gettln real gray Is to Share In Holiilau Exercises. continued respect for the glorious old banDealer in Coal and Wood. Comp'ny H, roal gray. Lord bloss 'em Thanks to tbo Inherent patriotism born ner and hold fast and true to that spirit foravennorol They're a good ago to lean ALSO FEED. CORN, OATS, HAY AND STRAW. on a little. Don't look like men to lot with nearly orory child tbat lives and whloh in the past has been quick to resent Upper Leliigb and all the First-Class Coals at ... . their old fathers como to want as thoy go breathes, most of our boys and girls do any Insult to It. , Lowest Prices. down toward the time for 'taps' to sound. know and understand what it moans, this When coal is purcnased by the carload the benent strewing with flowers the grass grown Ab, well, God Almighty's good. ol loug tons, 2,siO pounds. Is given. Too Much For the General, graves marked with, an upright flag on A'iKD:L£<ffJtohL4mtStRdBkNJ "Hahi What'srthlsf Why, see- hoi-er MemoilaTday. ""Should the Stranger with. Wnon the news of General Leonldas old Bon, one o' those comrades marohln in our gates lnqulro at random what by must 'a' reo'nlzod you or else took you moans tbo solemn parade, the young peo- Polk's .death was received by General this branch of work. We're agents • . fur some one be knew, fur bore's a little ple would be few and far betwuon who Grant, that general said, "Then the most trim bouquot swung right into your b p as would fall of answering tho question in- perfeot gentleman I over mot Is gone." for the celebrated ' you sit here on the burial lot stops. Now, telligently. Such days are educators and Gentlo as a woman in his manner, It seemed an unspeakable offense to uttor an I call that sweet." produce a far deeper impression than Is oath or a coarse expression in his presence. "Hob, again! What's this? A" big, "generally realized at tho time. His men never forgot this, and the genergen'rouB paokago o' 'flno cut!' That'll Those who haven't tried It is said tbat tho old time town meet- al's dismay may be well imagined when send some o' your lonosomo rumlnntlons ing was what mado tha stnnchcst, most ono day bo como aoross two privates hav the easy cooking method, oft In Bootbln emoko, old Ben; on Lord fiery patriots in tho days of our nation's lug a little scrapping matoh beside the blessthoglvorl earlier history. Perched on window sills, rood. Ono of the combatants, being still by using oil and gasoline / noted for its economy in the consump- "Well.what'sgotComp'ny HP Salutln, loaning on the backs of chairs, orowdod In sober enough to recognize tho officer, fell stoves, have done much evory blessed mpthor's sonb' them! Got between tall mou, huddled on' the plat- bock, but the other turned and stared Inup, old man, an saluto book. Kow they're form steps—anywhere, everywhere where solently at tho handsome old man on bis ,, tion of fuel, satisfactory results and work they might have burstln into o grave, hearty cheer. Oh, only a footing could be secured—wern horse. "Sorgoant, sergeant, oome and put Lord! I can't stand it I I can't I Whero'll found tbe eager, Interested lads, who found thlB man'in irons," called tbo general. avoided. There is no ashes, durability. Igor Where'UIgo? no greater treat or diversion than to creop And the follow shouted: "Who In h—1 are no worry, with these stoves. "Ihcro, they've got past, an I'm glad o' into tho church or hall whero "town meet- you, old mule ear? Git off that horse, and All sorts of Heating Apparatus put in on approval. W,e as"it, though thol* gifts an their ehoorlnd'ld 'in" was to bo held. Tho excltemont leap- I'll lick you for a 10 cent postage stamp!' • -^Svo burner stoves, $5.50. mo good—did me good. ' I'll like to think idg from eyes and tongues of tho spoakors Itwas toojnuoh. General Polk turned Three .burner stoves, $8 and $10. o' It back in my room In tho homo tonight. was rofleotcd'In the eyes and faces at least and fled, sume all responsibility and our charges are reasonable. Smaller sizes, smaller prices. They'll have to oxouso my turnlnmy back of the attentive boy who lost no part of on 'em an rubbln my sloevocrost my cyesi tho hcatod dlsouesion, and long yoars boGrant's D o m i n a n t Characteristic. but I got a notion they'll understand. fora they could voto eaoh embryo patriot If I wore nskod to express lu ono word "Now, here's somothln else one o' them know beyond tho shadow of a doubt whloh' tho most dominant characteristic of Genmust 'a' threw me, a outo llttlo speolmon eido ho was on. Red Bank. eral Grant, I"should say "loyally." He Front Street, o' Old Glory, with a sllvor lookln band an Tho boys 60 rapidly grow into men, tho a roll tuokod in at the top. Got out your urchins sometimes in the way at tbo po- was loyal to his country, loyal to his cause, glassos, Old Bon, an lo's see what's printed litical caucus so soon aro throwing a voto loyal to bis family, loyal to his friends. here. 'Boll o' Honor o' Comp'ny H. or wielding power and authority In mu- This trait was lu him so woll developed Now, that's flue—find 'Somethln clso to nicipal affairs, it stands tho nation In that ho could not understand tho lack of 1: examlno an talk ovorwhon wo'roallolono. good stead to GOO to it that the national in others. There were two classes of men for whom ho had the most supreme conWhat a help it'll bo. holidays are obsorved In a way to stir up 1 'Gottln titod, old manf Woll, it's 'bout all that is truest and noblost in tho hearts tempt, and thoso were liars and oowards. tlmo to go. Hero cornea a soldier hurryln of trio boj'S and girls. Wo say girls ad Magnanimity was almost as strong a feathis way. Wonder If ho's lost nnythlngP vlsodly, nyo, with emphasis. Many tho ture In tho oharaotor of General Grant at Ho looks klndor oager. One o' Comp'ny good motlior into the hearts of whoso fa- loyalty, and this was shown in many lit' H again. I'd know that badge in king- therless boys havo boon instilled suoh prin- tlo things. Thus after theTsurrondor at dom come. Eh, goln to have coffee and a ciples of honor, patriotism and equity that Port Donelson ho had called General BuckEstipatea Furnished Without Charge and o Visit Solicited. nor aside and sold to him, "Goneral, I dc iilco lunch at the armory? All the boys the land hns reason to call hor blessed. BRANCH S T O R E S : OCEAN GROVE A N D A S B U R Y P A R K . not know In what condition the fortunes say I must come? Well, thnt's a good of war have loft you; but," handing hi, strong arm you offor an old n a n . Don't pookotbook to his lato adversary, "I hope Honor t o P a t r i o t i s m . see how I can rofuso, but I'll liavo to go you will accept thls."4 809 BROAD STREET, NEWARK,, N. jJ.S slow, my boy—I'll havo to go slow." Thlrty-ono yenrs have passed slnoo the Evening.—"Back lu our room, at the last soldlor fell in tbo war for tho Union, homo, Old Bon, all tired out, but pleased and to a very largo part of cur people now H o n o r B r a v e r y a n d Virtue. We have over 300 wagons of all for all that, pleased and comfortci to tho tho commemoration of tho horolo dead Tho military horo has been applauded, vory tporrow. It doosn't take so very noccssarlly has not the personal associadescriptions in our stock. We have mnoh to renoh nn old man's heart, doos tion that nt first gavo such solemnity to bis name inscribed on pages of history, tlit overy kind of vehicle, from the Hf I wouldn't 'a' b'lloved tho oomp'ny tho annual decoration of their graves. But gallantry of bis deeds written in song would 'a' stuck to Its oolors all thoso years whllo tho ceremony has thus lost some- throughout all porlods of tho world's hisfancy trap to the cheapest business in tho way o' remembrance nn loyalty for thing of Its spontaneity It may really bare tory. Tho soulptor'a ohlsol in purest ranr wagon. Our leader is the Cortland a fallon comrado tho way it has. Cropped gained more than It has lost In valuo. bio, tho paintor with pencil and mlnstrol out right royally whon they como on to tho This day of flowers, whlob was at first do- with harp havo vlod with eaoh other h Manufacturingcompany's "Special" poor old fathorsittln on forlorn, with only votcd to tho personal commemoration of eulogizing his bravory olid doing honor to buggy. No other firm in the county • himself fur a companion. tho dead, grows inoro and moro Into a cele- his genius. Hero today, as olsowbore throughout this broad lund, a free, grateful "What a oheor they ralsod, nn how tholr bration ol tho Impersonal vlrtuo of patil offers such a variety to select from, And tip-to-date, buy your clothing of me. Every and patrlotlo people bavo assembled to puj llttlo gifts como flyln spontaneous right at otlsm whloh was illustrated In. tholr dovo homage and offor tho annual trlbuto of of- and no other firm can match our tlon nntu doatbv ' " tho old man I And at tho table, Lord, desirable sort of a suit that you may want will footlun to tbo huroes whose rooords have they'd 'a' given us tbo wholo spread If prices. boon olosod. Tholr work was dono when wo oould 'a' hold it—tho wholo eproad, M a k e the Memorial D a y Joyful. thoy lay down to sloop, so tbla ceremony be found here at a price you can't find fault Our Blue Ribbon Harness at 518 is wouldn't thoy,' BonP Any celebration of this day whioh should doos thorn no good, but It teaches those "Woll, wo'vo done our best all this long the best made for tho money. Wo who follow In rising generations that a ivith'. Tlie same with Hats and Furnishing whllo, to Jjoop our courage up—can't help tend to revive and lioop in memory thoso nation Is grateful for bravery and manlj \ make all our own harness—make it ropoatln that. Mother, sbo didn't Btand burlod causes of confllot, jealousy and sua- virtueGoods. If anything you buy here is not satisit so very Ions. Boln n woman, she plolon would bo destructive of ltstruo elgright and sell it right. oouldn't go out Into tho world an partly nlflcauoo and baleful only. Lot tho pooplo run up tholr flags to tho top of tho mast. factory, I will gladly return your money. Not D e a d I t f V a t a . forgot bor Borrow tryiii to ongngo in busluosfl. A D thon, I b'lluvo tlioro'a BOincthlu Lot the bands play joyful airs and not ro Tho lesson of Memorial dny Is to keep quloms. Lot tho flowora with which tho There's no risk in buying of me. about a motlior that loses lior only ohlld frosh tho inomijrloa of our illustrious (lend, that's dlilrohtlu sonmrospoo's from any grnvos of tbo dead aro dovoratod be sym to piwrvolnUiot what thoy fought for nnd Successors f o Ooxrilu <£• Pitcher, other grlot. Onoolior heart's broko that bols of tho beauty and symmetry of a euvod, to koo» alive tlio patriotic spirit and way sho's novorqultohorsolf again—novor. Union strongthonod nnd a pooplo harino rcsolvo In tha immortal words of Abrahnm MONUOUTH STREET, RED BANK. nlzod by tholr common dovotlon to It. 8ho may go roun tho houeo enillln an Lincoln, "tllat from thoso honored doad On whloli sldo did bo flghtj It mattors no take lodroosixl dovotlon to that. cause tryln to Interest liorsnlf in what's goln on not Wonrufrll togothor now. ThoBamo an tn!:ln up bravely what oomos lu tho for wbloh Mioy gavo tho last full measure way o' duty, but tUoro'B a room In lior flagwavoa ovor all, und woo to Its enemies. ot devotion, tlmt wo lioro lilfthly rooolv deep hoart that's flllud with n snorod prosthat these ( W l shall notlmvo dlud In vnlu, onoo, an nho l\\m thuru o good part o' tho that this nhtloii under Qod shall linvo n Whtlo Memory Llvoa, roat o' bor IIfo. As tho votornns pass away tho boautlful now birth )ot freedom, and Unit govern"But ttioro'e uomcthln amnzlu drawln oiietom thoy havo Instituted and main- ment of tlio pooplo, by tlio pooplo, for tin nn Haul lnaplrln koops comluovurnioov'ry tained will not bo uoglootod. Nolson'a pooplo nlmll not iiorish from tlio earth."tlmo I think o1 tlmt ipry atoppln noldlcir flagship Vlotory la wroathoil with flowers Double or single breasted oomln book lookln furino—mo, Juntos I'd ovory yonr on tho annlvorsnry of tho bnttlo Tho Grcatoet SaorlOco I n Dlatory. 'bout oonoludod tho day's pomelo wnuovor. of Trafalgar, although tlio mou that fought we can sell you what yoi Nn matter what tho moaauro of our obllComo to loud mu to n luuiquotln hall, I wltli NolKon aro gono. And so, wlion tlio n-lnnnlu on liln linn. Hnoina to bo nonio- lnnt soldlor of our civil war him Joined Ills gntlonn to Uio voluntoora oj 1BU1-0, they want, tntulc up In the best thin famlllnr 'bout it nil, till, Old Bonf old coimnamlorn, Grnnt and Hliormnn and did uot go 4nto tho war for pay or oven for "Just an you'vu nab droiimlp no mnny BhorldikU, on tliu other iiHle, Momurlnl day glory, i'li/t world uovur Daw a grander expossible manner, of tlio best tlniun tlmt tlioro'd ooino boforc loutf a ronl will titlll ho mierodly obourvoil. An thohibition tjl unnelllnli saorlflco than thoy goods for bright, old fnulilonod, nunnliliiy dny, wbon nntlon grows Krontor nnd ntroii|{or nml nindd in buro duvotlou tu tliubr country, Old Bon, nil tlrud out, would think tlio iiioro milted tlm rmrvloen of tlio men who und tbla ltlwliutwo havo toooniniciuuratv, what wo liftvo to umulato, whut wo hnvo tu IIOHH parado—life's toUmtiuo ninroh—'bout nnvod It will liiio twoli our children to hold in lasting lionor. ovor. An tlian, nil m ouoo, out from hotter uppriioliiU'd S l a t e Xj0,ia.ixcLi?3r Momorlal tiny thus tnlcen lta (ilnoo auiong nlilnln rnnkn thoru'd o o yi Ku ouU U Uo, our Anicrlonii liolldnys na tho festlvnl <mi>oHlorloim with linmoHitl youth, While on the subject of blue Thoughts Tor Memorial Day otallyof tho military vlrtimn, an Iiidapond-' uomo liiukln fur »iu>—tnil" ' " — " Memorial day uiiKondors lionutlJul enoo dny coininoiiiorntuH tlio olvlo virtue, clothing, would like to eal tluniKliU 111 other wivys than through tlio aud dulUm uf pnlrlntlnnw A Oloiia flnll. roiiiomlirniioo of tho unnolllnh dovotlon to n your attention to our blue Ity tlic quart, pint, hiilf-pint or In small five-cent "Tin) oluacnt onll I ovor rnvw," Mild a grout noMtlmont whloli leil tlio men of 1801 I T o Htrow Flowcrn o n tho Oocnn. serges for men at $y, $ia am mnn o( i5 yunra1 aiporhmoo in tlio rinvy, tu lny down their llvoa. lTloworrytlio maxbottles. Black Ink, red Ink, nil the various Tlioiinvnl votiirniiii of tho port of New wlm waft with l'ortiirdtirlntt tliuolvll wnr, imum of tho yimr'n beauty In tlio tilty and York ill"! vicinity will obnnrvo Momorlnl §15, all good values, colored Inkii made. Inks for ordinary nscs, Inks on tlio onrtb, tlio honor nfaurdod tu tbo "wnn wlroii n nlinll onmo MOIIR nndtonk dny by K«I"K out to Handy Hook ll)(htnlilp off llio linrtd irf tlio limit unit to HID nnd agod,' tlio nolomli wimln of praynr and and ij/ltur norvloen they will nonttitr llowori for copying, and Indelible Inkn, nt ntiiiinod nui tut in mlmituo, And yut,mmtt, nil tohil to tlio uplifting of lioatu on t/,0 oomni, tlii> univo of imvnl lionxin. wlillrt thnni) Monpiul wuro iKinntimtly oouur- nml (ho turnliiK ul tho mluiln uf tlio younu )|>U, I'thnr mini imnmoil tu lio fii|li>w«(l liyn toliluli nml nolilo tliliiH', "Veil IrroHpootlva of tlm inorn dlrtwt nuiiiinrlc* ovnltntl by tlio Haiiylhlnictlmt'ngolng oniiiwirtlitclttotality, to tia woumlml tt( uvury tiny. 22 Broad Stroot, Hod Btmk. lNut <>ni«e IliiUiUnsr, R o d D u n k , IV. J . Ink, you'll Hp*l Itlfi 'filB R:IMllHTlCIt,—A(lv imrnt.'1 COAL AND WOOD. t T T T •:-M. NirD/WIDSONr BRO/VD STREET, REQIBANK. T T T v Very Important Feature Of Your Home is the Heating. Less Bother.. In Cooking/^ TORRID FURNACE, \ S. SABATH, 300 THE SANITARY PLUMBING CO., W. J. BROADMEADOW, - - Manager. I Our Prices are Reasonable and We Provide Liberallv. \ W. F. DAY & BRO., Wagons. If You Want to Be Well Dressed Birdsall & Son, Iffafed 1 HUB Uniform, -£ •-.-• J. KRtDEL, Broad Street, RedBmik,N.J. ARNOLD & WILSON, Mantels, Tiling and Fireplaces. MARBLE AND SLATE WORK. $10 PER SUIT. 43 EAST 59th STREET, - - INK A. LUDLOW JOHN H. COOK'S, NEW YORK. The Child's Face. There's nothing more pare in heaven, ' And nothing on earth more mild, More full of the light that is all divine, Than the emlle, of a. little child. Tho sinless lips, half parted With breath as sweet as the air, . And tha light that seems so glad to shine In the gold of tbe ennny hair. 0 little one, smile and bless me, _^__For_BOBiebowrJ.fellQH not wby*~ . . 1 feel in my BOHI when chlldreiTBmUe That angels aropaising by. I feel that the gates of heaven Aro nearer than I know; That the light and the hope of tbateweoter world, . Like the dawn, are breaking through. GKIERSON, T H E T O R T . . Tho old Episcopal chnrcbyord of St. Paul's, In Augusta; Ga., Is nob entirely unknown to fame, bavlDg. boon (during tbe days of the Amerioan Revolution) no.toilouB Fort Grlerson, built by tho British fibortly before the ooloulos throw off tliolr dominion and ohrlstonod In boDor of tho Irish-Italian Tory who later on beat baok cf its ramporfs tho stubborn elogo of Elijah Clarke and made It tho rofnge and stronghold of a band of Hessians and renegados tbat eoourged the obuotry thereabout with flro and sword. Ita site la directly on the bank of the Savannah rlvor, ond, etandlng oa what is now the rsarwall-soi tho^hurohynril, one ' looks aorosstho brondf ffluddy current Into Carolina, directly into old Edgoflold district, the theator of many a sanguinary enuotmont In tboso times, and tho most turbulent spot today In all that hot hcadedfitnto, whore the crstwbllo populous city and commorclnl mart of Hamburg, now decayed and almost dosoitod, blonds Its ruins Into a landscape not altogether unlovely, with a succession of riBlng blue bills in tho background. Below, tho rlvor sweeps to tbo south and tho bold white bluffs of Boooh Island would bo flnoly In Eight were It not for tho viow obstructing —;—railroad brldgos.—J?rom-tho-watcr-to-the churchyard thorooro two precipitous rises, both faced with anolonb briokwork and requiring no groat strotohof fanoy or vivid imagination to'ooncelvo as parapets, with bore and there the plain trace of an cmbrasuro or oasomont. Tho situation commands oEy approaoh by water, and in Itcoif procludos any attaok from tho front, tho Carolina side. Otherwise tbo metamorphosis has boon complete, yet, though, for all that air of abiding peaoo, tbe loafy OIIEB and ebadod eword, blooming rose vinos, quaintly InEorlbod gravostonos and old bliok ohurob, ivlth its stained glass windows and white bolfry effect, it was the storm conter of a ——runnlug'scrlosof uotBofbloodandTjruolty and oarnago and tbe eoono of murders and ' brutalities galore. Around It and I t s crafty, oouragoous defender thoro is woven one of thoso historical logonds still current throughout tho Carollnaa and Georgia, that deal with mon and deeds of that perlCdand out of whloh Gllmore Sims, tho Soott of tho south, might have wrought a novel as lntoroutlug and as true as his incomputable "Eutnw" or "Blaok Riders of the Congarco"—Inspired by and spun of this folklore—with its conclusion an aot of bloody but fitting Justice, well In kooplng with the theme. ty, and plunging in at a point aqnarter of a mile below tbe for A started across, serene in the cocEDlouEnesi that no torse but bis could breast tbe current at that place and twirling his blaok mustaoie In well as&amed indifference. But wbea 20 rods from the bank a blroh canoe shot oub from under tho IrlDgo of willows, and from another point came another, and then nfaother, nnd another, until nearly a dozen appeared, each piled by two patriot skilled and sinowy arms and. racing .towiird_thoswimming horseman. He recognized then • tho completeness of tho trap In whloh at last he was fated to be so miserably oaught. As tbe first of them camo up be flung bis empty pistols u( their beads and was knookej from bis scat with a paddle for his pains. In tho water ho fought like an otter, diving and struggling, upsetting a couple of boats and fairly getting the best of it until a well dlreoted blow struck him BoneoloES, and then, bound band and foot, be was paddled ashore and bis horse swum baok by ono of tho party. Baok up to thostookade on tho bill they oarrlod him, whore, with returning coneolousnpss, his audacity returned, and he flung grim jests at his capturors, railing n fellow ho had noarly drowned, and with raoy songs and witty etorlos worked thorn all Into a rollicking humor ore tho sun reached Its meridian. And then bo cast aside tbe assumed air of goou followelhp and stood forth an unmitigated, braggart, boasting of bis own prowd'ss and tolling of feats his horse had performed. "I s'poso your mare can jump tbat palisadef" one of them, the leader, sarcastically suggested. " Certainly she can," Grlorson replied indifferently. ''Make her do it, and you are a free man," was tho sneorlngly given response. The Tory rolled lazily over, opposing tho thongs that held him, and though tho men understood bis meaning there was some hesitation boforo thoy were out, being one and all surprised at his seriousness In proposing to tabo ndvaotago of tho merely idle proposition and attempt a feat made abeurd bocauso of Its utter impossibility. But tbo effort promlsod some sport and reoommended itsolf as a bit of roflnod tor-tunyand ho.wns UElooselamldEoma Jok-. Ing and coarsoly satirical oomments. He sab up and for a moment eab ohaflng his wrists, oontiqulng unblusblngly all tbe wbllo the flow of braggadoolo, and then, whistling t o his maro, whloh came trotting up with a low wblnny of delight, he climbed Into tbe saddle with a stillness born of his recent rough handling. It was all a grim farce, but Gricrson was taking it with an earnostness tbat woa pathotlo; soomingly persuaded by his own lies that tho animal was roally ablo to do It. Grlorson, tho tradition runs, was tho Son ol an Irish nobleman and an Italian woman of gontlo blood, who Bottled in Goorgla alter bis birth. Nature had ondowed him with a military genius in a small way, unquavoring courago and a wonderfully shrewd and cruel nature, displaying the human tiger in his liseomo figure and oatlike graoo. Educated abroad ho returned to America skilled In all tbo athlotlo accomplishments . ofneoldlor of tho time nnd possessed of the onsy graoo and pollshod manner of tho true gallant, but tho diabolical nature underneath was manifested in tho wrestling matohes with which ho would engage Eoino proud young Crook or Chootnw and, catobing him iu a vlsellke grip, with tho advantago a sclontiflo knowledge of tho game gave hhn7 snap a thigh or shank, blighting tho aboriginal's life, as though It was glorious fun. To many of a rural youngsters of today In that section who has listened open mouthed to these talcs by their gray halrod grandparents bo, like Marlon and Suinter, Plokona nnd Clarke, Is almost a living, breathing reality and not a persDnago passed Into tho grave ami history, and thoy sbuddor at bis atroolty, marvel at his uillness—that outwitted ovon for a time the Swamp .Fox and liluo Hen's Chlokon—and dollght in tho suddennoss and vlolcnoo albolt tho justlcoot his death. At first lio had espoused tho patriot cauEC, but Inter forsook it and Jolncil tho British. Tho Infamous Brown, who commanded Augusta, recognized his capaolty and mado him liis lloutenant, plaolng Fort Grlerson und lbs garrison uudor Ills command. And then how Elijah Clurko and his mountniucors and rUlomon sought to tako it, their bravo oflorts proving lmpotont against tho brick walls nnd artillery, and how tbo uttiioks woro resolved Into a starving out process which BO nearly BUOccedoil, and yet failed, almost In tho very hour of triumph, bocauso his forces woro Imperatively noeded and cnllod olsowlioro, 1B a matter of history. And so, too, la tho fact that with their departure tho Tory bogan to wrenk rovengo for tho liiconvenlouco and confinement ho had been obliged to umkrgu, though not aa fully^'hrouloUid as its lutorost uud Importance, would scnii to desorve. Ho hnd n bny mure, Wild Gooso, mi animal that hail filled his pookotu with inouey at tho rneen rouudnbout and won entirely nnd oxoluslvely hln altotlon, that was famous IIB being unmatched In point of speed, ondumiioo and ln(elll«i'ncc by nny liorno In all that district. .Mounted on it. and at tho hrud of his limn], tills dashing, tigrish mtbrour would en™ tho river on a wild campaign of miinler nnd arson and plunder and lust. An tho not of n coward who foara tho tlmo ho may ho caught and does 11 In order to hnvo Kinio banls on whloh to outer u pliui for iiinrny, lio refused to shiold lilmsolf by granting tbo hollow mookory ol a trial and luing Ills captives without attempting to con Juro up a protoxt. ; On a bright summer's morning a rioooy party appeared on tho Carolina slioro, and (Irleroon anil bin mon nalllnd nut to meet thimi, fording tbo wtrcain nnd liuitUng on tho nppnnlto hunk without a (.hut lining llrcd, Tin) Ainorloann woro Inferior In foroo and retreated slowly up tho hill making n stand finally nualnnt a ntockndo iienr the oroal that won built of plno IcigH wit on und nnd fully ton foot high. Tim Urltluli ehnnged the iiurniilt into » nbaruo, nnd their ndrnnou failed to bo nheckod by tin) went; nnd ponrly dlrooUid volley flrml ab tboin. Ill n moment tlln two foronii lind lulngJotl, nnd tho fight limwiiio a Imnd to linilil innloo, an affair of nwlrllnu miytho blade* nnd twinkling ItfQfuliivruriU i l l l With no tnoughbof jucrey nrgimrlor. Ab ila liultfht Ptpntrlotj ro-imforoemimt |inuro<I they Jmd been M Into 5 trou, m>uniit w Withdraw ond nock B&foty iiillinlrfdrli, lint tbe rpireat do««ll«ir»l«<l Into ft rout nnrt the rout two « mamaoro. tirlenon only rmh<4 tho watwr In mfe- The small dlanietor of tho inolosure mado it impossible to spouro a running start for the attempt, and so, in Jlou of bat, ho began by trotting around the olrlojr gradually lnorcaslnghlfl speed until it was a mod run, and then, with a wild yell and a taunting laugh, ho burled tho rowels of his spurs in Wild Goose'ssldcB and over sbowont, as lightly as a bird. With oaths and orles tho patriots rushed outside, their woapons oooked and primed, but already ho was beyond rlflo shot, riding with an easy graoo that showed his stiffness in the stookaile to have boon oountorfoltod and bonevclently smiling baok over his shoulder at tho thick beaded downs he BO easily outwittod. But his period of freedom was not long, for Boon Augusta itsolf was taken, and With it Brown and Grlerson. Tho loader of tbo party responsible for tho lattor's capture and subsequent escape had boon a vorltablo Nomcsla on tho trail ol tho Tory ovor slnoo, spurred on by tho double motive of ohagrln and revongo, and fanolod that "at last the man's just deserts would bo motoc] out to him, but dlecoverod that, by tbo terms of capitulation, ho was to be held invlolato from all bodily harm. Grlerson had hung his brotbor and shot down his old fathor without provooation or warning, and the ponalty of this and a hundred similar misdeeds ho Boomed about toosoapo and to rdtarn to England, an honored officer iu his majesty's sorvloo, porhaps to bolaudod for his loyalty and plaood In a position to win further honors. A detachment had boon detailed to guard his plaoo of conflnomont—a collar on Broad stroot, undor a building on the slto of tho present old Eaglo and Phenli hotel—to prevent tho onragod soldiery from doing vlolonco to him. Ho had for a moment como to tho top to catch a breath of fresh air, and sitting thoro on tho stops, with hla head abovo ground, was tho cyn.osuro of a thousand nugry eyes. Up the strcot and slowly trotting in his dlrootlon was a continental mounted on tbo blooded horso of tho oaptive, with bis rlflo.acrosa tho saddlo pomuiol and his sword dangling at his side Grlerson watohed With a sort of bitterness what ho oonsldorod tbo dobasomont of tho Intelligent bruto that caught Bight of him and whlnnlodarooognltlon. Tho rldor, absorbed In hlmsolf, fatlod to notlco it until dlreotly opposite and..thon, only with a darting undor glanco that swopt from tho Tory'B bead to the rlllo and from tho rlflo back to the Tory. A breath of llaino leaped from tho lattor's muzzle, and cro tho Ehnrp roport bad died awny Wild Gooso, urged rolontlessly on with whip and spur, had carried Its rider—who nt last had vindicated his ability to act as astutoly as tho Tory had dono, and at tho snmo tlmo eatlatcd his rovengo—safoly away, whllo Grlorson lay dead on tho collar steps, a jagged liolo botweon his oyoa and an ounce bullet In his brain. WALTERS CALYANIZED STEJEL SHINGLES: Standard Painted Tin Sningles! Don't be deceifefl with poor ^heet Metal BooDDg. Our Painted Tin Shingles are more durable than it Is possible to make a tin roof, put on In the old style. Our Galvanized Shingles are both BUST end ItAIN PROOF WITHOUT FAINTING. No otner» are. Manufactured fcy.TBE NATIONAL BHEET METAL HOOFING CO. Why use corjbustible Vood shingles when you can get the -f ery oeal Fire-proof-Sbingles at about the same price? JOHN BUTTON. .Bed Bank, N, J. .Wlicro nnturu HtmwB fnlr diilsleH swcot Abovu thn heartD long (icnliud to bent, I]ii|>ti7.liiK them with light mid ruin, Uuu wo behold with coul rtiiklnin Tho ifltt u( flowiTii On moumlH \vherti Lloop thu lovt U of oursT TIIIH dny let fruitrnnt oilorn rluo Lllio lueeiiHt to thu riulliint HldeH From ct'iiHtir eupH of hluu ami tfold, l^lijstiDitiH that burn ubovo thu mold Of horooH Iruo To tliu old Jlug, roil, wliltti uml bhio. Tim ri'inutt.-ry'H mvollliiK «rnveii ljuuk lllio » ullullt nea of wnvdi, Win.ne lillKiwi, ntnmUiiK iitlll, IIUKB'1"' Not tlui rmlu iiUirw, but inmrefiil ri'»t Whum death nut frno, Whmm furlmiKh In iitcrnlty, I'onco. Tlio H<>UUu itgo of iienoit linn como on cnrthl hi), In tlin blood iitulmid floliln tho llllimbloo! Anil iioftly (MI tho nllun noldlor'n tomb In lulil tint wrunth Hint owna lilx niimly wortri Ko nioni, ihiinlt Ofxl, tlio (innnoii tlmtidortf forth Or Ijiihur rtiinlifiH In tho mnohn nnd KUMIIII. l'rnop, pnnntit For pnow/ lunlitliicl l^nno innkii riHim, And l^>vo, Hint In tlm honrt uf (toil luttl Mrtli ltMU'i'futlli lot I'lillilrrn (in lh(i linutloiiN piny Anil viiU\ Nuwi'rA liltHiiKMii 111 tlK> oniiuou' 1*1; |p|l(<if iiipiiiuflm iMi WMIIWJ (iwny, KUn, Hint of l^tvii, cm tivvry lmtil Un\*y\ / n i l litiKl(«, bluw tliu «l»Mt VYn»(d iiotnl Carriage Goods, Rims, Spokes, Hubs and Wheels. Wire Rope, Boat Nails, Rivets,. Copper _Blooirs, Pfi^leSrs.Jinchors ana Pure Manilla _ Rigging. J. TRAFFORD ALLEN, FRONT ST., Oipp. MAPLE A"VE., A new brand of Cigar, made of Clear Havana, at 5 cents straight. Bailey's Combination, Exports and Smoketts, the old reliable brhnde, I've been selling for 5 cents for years; • • • • • • Bailey's Best Bouquet and El llapa are the best 10 cent cigars sold in Red Bank. •, ..,,. _. _. A few Houlton Seed Potatoes for sale. Also Early Rose [and Beauty of JOH3ST B A I L E T , WHOLESALE DEALER, RED BANK, FREEHOED AHD MANASQUAN, H. J Wagon Talk And Harness Hints. COBRUOATED IRON ROOFINO, ; . PELT ROOFINO. PATENT METAL SUINOLE ROOFING. Ah'Repairs and Jobbing Work Promptlvand Well Done. Ranges, Furnaces, H o t Air a n d Steam Heating. Slate Ilenrius, L l n i e h . a n d Caps. Tbia firm is controlled by practical nnd responsible men. All work is done promptly and guaranteed and strictly in accordance with agreement. Our prices are as low as tne work can be done for to pay our honest debts, live and make a reasonable profit. ' • • . - . . . . ---'• > S T O R E : Near New York a n d Long B r a n c h R n l i r o a d Station, PROMPT ATTENTION TO IHAIL ORDERS. FRANK VAN DORM, - - Manager. ia .. - Is due in many cases to BAD PLUMBING. If the plumbing in'your home is defective thereTis no rnore opportune time-than—NOW-to-havethe'troublecorrrectedr——-—:— We constantly employ a force of experienced men and are prepared to make repairs of any character on short notice— at vefy moderate prices: Drop us a postal—we'll do the rest. THE SANITARY PLUMBING CO., W. J. BROADMEADCW, We have all sorts of wagons taken [in trade. We have marked every one of them at a bargain price. HARNESS—Our harness department is replete with'special good :::: values—Forrinstanee-': a hand made genuinejrubberunaunted. harness at §16. Surrey harness, $12 up/JICoachJharness, §50 up. Double .surrey harness, $20 up. . - - Manager. We Take All Kinds of Views. Both interior and exterior. We make a specialty JOHN W. MOUNT & BRO., Corner Maple Avenue and White Street, RED BANK, JI. J . Red Bank Slate and Metal Roofing, Go; • . There isn't any sort of a carriage made that we haven't got. Moreover, we're manufacturers, the biggest in 'this section; that accounts for a price difference in our favor, flere's a iarm wagon at §35; across the room is a $900 opera bus and the betweens are scattered about the room. BUGGIES—We have top buggies from-$50 up to $185'. We've a _^bugg-y-that-we-.selLlor-.§85 lt'.s.±tung_oji._Br.e.w£.tei:_Qr__EnA springs. Your choice of .plain or phaeton seat. We warrant this buggy because we know we can safely do so. RUNABOUTS—This is a popular road wagon for light driving. It's stylish and comfortable. We have these in different styles, different colorings and seats, at prices ranging from $70 to $150. Second Hand Wagons. • SLATE ROOFINO, TINRObHNO, • ' . - • • • • • of homes and landscapes. RED BANK, N. J. -•-.••• Have us take your' summer home,' We use only the finest lenses— which insures accurate work. ^ i)EHART... &. LETSON, ]| Building Houses! I Building a Reputation 1 27 Broad Street, Every time I do a job for a new customer that person becomes another witness to my good work methods. No matter how small the job may be, no matter how large, I can't afford to slight it in any way. To do that would tear down the good reputation it has taken me years to build .up. - • . ' '• Red Bank, N.J. SANITARY WORK A SPECIALTY. No. 27 Front Street, Red Bank, N. J. Children's Writing Paper. Children, as well as' grown folks, have writing paper niadje especially for their use. The paper and the envelopes are much smaller than regular sizes. I have this paper in various styles, put up in pretty ARTHUR E. SMITH, FAIR HAVEN, > . "V". , ....** . . . Plumbing, Steam and Gas Fitting. I want to do your work whenever you need anything in the ' building line. My work is good and my prices are fair. boxes, containing 2i sheets of paper and 24 envel- NEW JERSEY, opes, at 15 cents to 35 cents a box. JOHN H. COOK. Hard to Believe! Tho Furlough of tho Dead. Wo Btmttor ilowurn of ovttry huo Btur drupt on petals wlilto null blue, Ami urlnibu)i a» thu Hcivru und utuluu Of horocH t f thu purplo plains, And biulH IIH red AH tho uott lips of wounds thiit bled. Paints and Oils at Wholesale and Retail. Preilon'i Fertiliser (odorless) for Lawns. , . Also Done Photpbate and Pish Gnano, A Clear Havana Cigar for 5 Cents. H e b r o n Potatoes'. LUMBER AND HARDWARE. But it's true all the same. Some people are so blind to their own interests that they willingly pay 9 or 10 cents per pound, for California Hams, while their neighbors are buying the very same thing for seven cents per poiincl. Their is only one item, but we mention it because we want it to be known that we are making a Leader of these goods. This is not quite so much difference in our prices of Beef, Lamb, etc., as compared with other dealers, but you may be sure that the prices are "Right," and the quality can't be beat by anybody, because we buy the best. It VJ\\\ Jiay yon to deal with ROBINSON & CR/WFORD, Enterprise Market, Opposite Central Hotel; Minton's Compound Extract of Celery Is a pure nervine, and tho best possible tonic for tho nerves. 50 CENTS A PINT BOTTLE. C. A. MINTON k CO., No, 3 Dread SI, Red BankJ.J.. felt and Gravel Roofing. I havo put on wool-folt roofs for tho puat 20 yearn. Thoy have given perfect satiofactlon. I will gunnmtoo such roofn for 25 yoar« if thoy nro kopt coutod. My Oomonfc and (him Coating ia tho bofll that win bo iiood on tin nnd Hliinglo roofw. I g i v o a 10-your warranty on all rooCn Hum coutcd. , rlilmneju rnmlird. «i«l nntun (or wif wort In Ui)r lino iirumiillr (lonij, I'rlctm urn nwwn- OGDEN MeCLASKEY, i'. 0. B»x 400, Red Bunk, N. J PERSON 4X. 'Miss Carrie Sandt of Broad Btreetis very sick, v Robert Allen, Jr., is laid up with a sore foot. Joseph 'Ryan of Broad street visited JiiflpaientB at Jersey City on Sunday. - Bfoward WiUett of New York spent Snnday with ffis father, T. Jasper WiUett. -VMr/andMrs. Theodore F. White of Bed Bank are visiting friends at Pater- MrsTTfHughes-of-fWauhington ktreet is visiting Mrs.'Samuel Hughes of N e w a r k . " ~ • „•••>' . •''.'... > , . Matthew Ott of New York.is visiting his sister, Mrs. •William Mestayer of Beetor place. . : .,. • <~ . Mies Leonia A. Walsh of Newark spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Walsh.. .• " Samuel Woolley of Oakland street is now employed by the Prudential insurance company. • '•":'. Miss Margaret TownBend of Long Branch was the giiest of Miss Addie Knapp on Sunday. • T. H. Letsonot New Brunswick, a student at Rutgers college, spent Sunday with hia brother, W. W, Leteon. Allaire & Son have rented Mrs. Chaa. Maomonigle's house on the Humson road to A. B. Vanlioan of New York. Rev. and Mrs. Walter V. Gray of Cali-. fornia are the-guests of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Button of Front street. Miss Helen Coriell and J. B. Fletcher v ot Dunellen were.,the. Sunday guests of Francis White of East Front Btreet. Edwin Wessel of the Riverside Wheelmen of New York was the guest of William Many of Spring street on Sunday. Miss. Laura Moore of Washington street spent Saturday and Sunday -with her fattier, Bev. James Moore, at Trenton. " ' • Miss Delia Pettingill of AsburyFark, has been the guest of Miss Sarah Venable of Monmouth street during the past . week. Mr. and Mrs. James G. Lane of Long Branch celebrated their silver wedding anniversary on Monday night of last k John MaoLaugnlin an"d~Haaaon""TvinB of Metuchen rode to Red Bank on Saturdey and spent Sunday with Mr. Ivina's parents. Miss Madie Lovett, daughter of John :1. Lovett, who is attending school at Englewood, N. J., will graduate next Monday. Miss Mertie B. Buulert daughter of John A. Buhler of Belruar, and Clarence B. Jones of Trenton, will be married on Tuesday afternoon. 1 Edward Worrell of Brooklyn, a former resident of Red Bank, who is now traveling in the interests of a bicycle concern, has been in town this week. _L Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Herbert, Jr., of_ Marlboro, will start for St. Louis, Missouri, on June 10th. They will also visit Sir. Herbert's brother in Iowa. Isaac Sherman, who was recently injured by an omnibus upsetting, has recovered sufficiently from- his injuries to be out and to attend to his business, Florence Hagermatf of Wallace street and Percy Howe of Lincroft, two of the members of the graduating class of the Bed Bank public school, are sick with roseola. M. M.Davidson, who has been seriously sick with typhoid fever, is now conva—lescent. -He is able .to be down stairs and it is expected "that he .will be out in • a few dajs. Harry C. Scobey-of Long Branch has passed the examination at the New York college of Dentistry, and is now associated in the dentistry business with Dr. Horace B. VanDorn. , Miss Cornelia H. Bateman, a former resident of Bed Bank, graduated from the young women's Christian association school iu New York on Monday night, She took special courses in clay modeling and art. John T. Tetley, who is a member of the Mozart Veteran association and of the 40th New York Volunteers, will go to Jamaica, Long Island, on Decoration day to assist in the dedication of a soldiers' monument. . Mrs. Genevieve Cameron of New York city has rented through Francis White the Peter S. VanBrunt property in Middletown township, adjoining the Hupfel place. Mrs. Cameron took possession of the property last night. At the annual meeting of the Monmouth county medical society, held laBt week, Dr, W. S. Whitmore of Red Bank, Dr; John H. VanMater of Atlantio Highhinds and Dr. E. W. Crater of Oceanport were elected members. Jacob Hascher of Florida, who was formerly connected with H. A. Peek in the piano business at Red Bank, was the guest of Mrs. Herman Koch ot Shrewsbury avenue last week. 'He was accom' panted by his young bride and by his slaters, Miss Louise Haschetf and Mrs. Annie Knodels of Newark. Mr. Hascber sailed for Europe on Saturday, where ho will spend the. summer. . The frontispiece, in Scribner's Magazine for June is a reproduction of a painting by 8. W. VanSohaiok, entitled " The Troubadours." The picture represents three old-time traveling minetrola who are taking a rest in a quiet spot. 1 Mr. VanSchaick was at ono tune a resident of Bed Bank, and many Red Bankers who aro now among tho forty-ycaroldcrs 'wont to school with him in tho littlo old two-story Bchoolhouse that used to be on tho Meclinnio street school lot, For a timo while lie Hvod in Bed Bank his family occupied tho house on Front street now owned by Dr. Rtdgway, OBITUARY. Jlln. Barah JE. Amtu. '• Mrs. Snrah 15/ Asiiy, wife of Daniel Aimy, died suddenly at her homo .on Cathorlno Btreot on Sunday night, sliortlv aftor midnight, of heart disease, ngod tfl years. Sho had been a member of tlio Methodist church for a numbor of yemn and liail attended Borvlco on Bundny night, Shortly ,-of tor returning home from church sho complained of fooling dlclc, but sho ocornltigly grow bottor ngnlii, She went to licit and about midnight iilio awoke hor luinbnnd itiul*npiln complained of feollng ulok. Mr. Anny wont immediately tot u doctor but HIIC dleil about an hour Inter. Sho wim coiificloun until her doiith, Mm Aimy had Iniun married thrco tlnu'ii nnil Hix ohililton iiurvlvo her. Thiiy aro J. V. Carver of Itoxl Bank luul Wllilnm Gnrvor ot I'lillndolphla liy hor uooonil iniiirlngo, und Mm. Liuim Morrlii of K«<(1 llunlc, Aim, II. II. Ilnrrlnon of Jordoy City, nnil Mlmion Hnnlc nnd Nolllo Anny of Itod Hank; Hho wim iv momlrcr of tliolodjjoof Dinmhtornof Llbmty, Hor fiitiornl wun lidM thin morning ul, tlio Find MiitliDilliitolinroh, Thu interment win ul Fair Viow, Mr». Maru J, Jenfer. Mm, Mnry J. Fowler, wlfo of Jimitn Fowlur, illoil ut Honlirldliion.Thumliiy inorniiiKi OK"*! 1* yu»fo.' Hor ilentlt wan (hiB to ounoor of tlio woii»1>, froti* whloli she had been suffering for over a year. She'had been a devoted member and steward of the Methodist church at Seabright for a number of years. Eight children survive her. They are James H., William B., John, Charles B. and Harry Fowler, Mrs. Brasilia Johnson, Stokes and Effie Fowler. ..All the children are married with the exception of the last two. The funeral services were held from - the Seabright Methodist church on Sunday afternoon, Rev.'W. §.' Zane officiating. The intorment was at Asbury-Park,—— • .'[,,' John Carter! • _ ... John Carter died very .suddenly at Port Monmouth on Thursday of heart disease. - He went to bed the previous night with no pain and arose the next morning and ate a hearty breakfast. He went outside to feed the chickens, but soon came in complaining'of a pain sear his heart. Efforts were made to assauge the pain, but he died within two hours. Mr. Carter was 57 years old and leaives a widow and two sons. The eons are Edwin Carter of North Carolina and Fletcher Carter of Port MonmoutH. The body was buried in the Keyport cemetery on Sunday; J Sirs. Hannah E. Conove); Mrs. Hannah E. Conover died of Bright's disease at the home of her granddaughter, Mrs. E. Henry Boardman, near Fair Haven, last Wednesday. She was 73 years old, and was a sister of Miss Jerusha Jones of Red Bank. She lived at' Washington and was visiting Mrs, Boardman, Four children survive her. The funeral services were held on Thursday night at tbe house by Eev. S. W. Knipe and the body was taken to Philadelphia on Friday for burial. Angus. James Angus, one of the earliest settlers at Asbury Park, died at that place on Friday, aged 80 years. He lived at Trenton during the winter but moved to his Asbury Park home several weeks ago on the adviceof his doctor. The change proved of no benefit. He was prominent in the Presbyterian church and at tbe time the First Presbyterian church was built-he-contributed-$5,-()00atowards-itHe was very wealthy and leaves a son and a daughter. DEATHS. AUMACK.-At Kojport.on Tljursday, Moy»9t. Carrie E., daughter of Samuel F. AumacKi sired 8 years. ASAX.-At Red Bank, on Monday, Hay 25tb, Sarah E., wlfo of Daniel isay, aged 01 jcare4nd,8 months. - ANGUS.—At Asbury Part, on Friday, May SSil Jamm Angus, aged 8U years. DILMNQS.-At New York; OD Sunday, May 21th, John Billings of Eatontown, aged 27 years. CONOVER.—Near Fair Haven, oa VVodilcwliiT, May 20th, Mrs. Hannon •%. Conomr, aged 78 yean. CARTER.—At Port U^Dmoutli, oa Thursday May Slgt, John Carter, ngotl Slyeara. ENDEBUE.—At Trenton, on Tuesday, May 10th, John Enilerllo of Long Ilrancli, aged 42 years. F0WLER.-At Beabrlght, on Friday, May 22d, Mrs. Jftmca Fowler. BEYER.—At Hazlet, on Friday, Hay 15th, JhOUlta t. Beyer, aged 47. yeare. HAL8BT.—At Port Monmouth, on Tuesday. May 10th, Deborah, wife ot Jacob Ilalsey, aged el yean, 7 months and 19 days. . -HENDRICK8ON.-At FalrHafen, on Wednosday, May 2Ot6, Harry M. Uendricksou, aged £3 years. JONES.—At Keyport, on Tuesday, May 10th, Viola, daughter of Garret Jones, aged 5 months. JACKSON.-At Little BUvc-r, on Sunday, May 24th, John Jackson, aged 08 years, LITTLE.—At Fair Haven, on Sunday, May 17th, Mrs. WllllamD. Little, of a daughter. . MOERW.-At Long Branch, on Friday, May 2&J, Erallne, widow of John V. Morris, aged 05 years. MAT.—At Arm, oh Saturday, May 16U1, Lester C, son of A. p . May, aged 10 years. NEVIUS.-At Mlddletown, on Tuesday, May SOth, Lavlnia, daughter of John Nevlus, oged 1 year add t moaths. PATTEit8ON.-At Oceanic, on ffedDesday, May SOtb, Mrs. James Fattereon, of a son.. RUSS.-At Bed Bank, on Tuesday, May Mta, John Buss, aged (S3 years. SIBADLING.-At Ocean Grove, on Tuesday, May1 ldtli, Mrs. Mary Stradling, aged 00 years. WILSON.-At Freneau, on Thursday, May 21st* Mary H., wife of-£dwanl Wilson, aged 40>ears and 10 months. WHITE.—At ton* Branch, on Sunday, May 17tb, tho Infant child of WlUlam White. Pure California Wines. Pure native wines are more and in6re "used instead of duty-paying imported,"".which;are so inuclT"d"eaTeE~rGood jii9geT^vho"watcH'"tTie maiieTwith" ready money can often purchase selected vintages at cost of production, as we have done frequently the. past hard-timee year! Please bear in mind that we recommend these wines for quality and purity, not for cheapness; though they are so cheap that it would pay anyone to fill his cellar. The low price is a mere accident of our half-price purchase for cash. Anyone welcome to taste before buying. Pure Ultro Port. GAS^, FOB Lighting and Fuel ~AT^ tO W-P RICES. — Muscatel Wine. Important Seduction in the Price of " John Jackson, who lived near the Ga3 Furnished by the Consolidated Little Silver station, died on Sunday Gas Company ot New Jersey, afternoon of a complication of diseases, John Jackson. aged 68 years. He had been sick but a short time, and he had taken to his bed only the day before his death. He lost a hand some years ago. A widow survives him. His funeral was held yesterday and was conducted bv Rev. Win. N. Dunnell, rector of All Saints' church", New York. • The interment was at White Ridge cemetery. . I>choraJi lialscu. Mrs.' Deborah Halsey, wife of Jacob 'Halsey, died at Port MOD mouth on Tuesday or last week of heart disease. She was 81 years old, and leaves a husband, three daughters and one son. The children are Mrs. Charles B. Lisk, Mrs. Wm.Ludlow and Mrs. Stephen Carhart, all of Port Monmoutb, aha George Halsey of Green Point, Long Island. The body was buried in the Green Grove cemetery at Keyport. ' ; Mrs. JKarv Stradting., Mrs. Mary Stradling died at Ocean Grove on Tuesday of 'last -weeks aged 00 years. She had been sick with'malarial fever and had been in the habit of taking small quantities of opium. It is thought that she died.from accidentally taking an overdose of the drug. The doctor in attendance refused to give a burial permit,. but one was issued by Coroner Oliver. John Buss. LOKO BKANCH, N. J., June 1st, 1890. To our Patrons and the Public: The Consoldated Gas Company of yew Jersey having united the Gas and Electric interests of Long Branch' with the gas companies of Red Bank and; Asbury Park, for the improvement o£ liie^fviclfoTtKe several companTesTTE having practically completed the work; of building the new works, in fulfilment' of the promise made when the company' began business, has now the pleasure of; announcing important reductions in the' price of gas. •'•'-. It is evident that the business can be more economically conducted under one' management than under several as here-) tofore, and it is the purpose of the new; company to share with its customers the advantages resulting from the consolidation. The management of the new com-; pany proposes to pursue a liberal policy,] giving all consumers as good Bervice and) as much for their money as possible, be-1 liering as we do, that the increased business which we confidently expect as the result of the reduction in price with the improved service, will in the end be to the company's credit. The price of gas has heretofore been $2 per 1,000 cubic feet in Asbury Park and Red Bank, and $1.75 per 1,000 cubic feet in Long Branch. Beginning with bills for gas used-during the month of May, 1896, important reductions will be made. The bills for gas will hereafter be rendered at the uniform rate of $1.60 per 1,000 cubic feet from the several offices of the company. iKiml or Hnnfonli Mulnu. JKWKU,-(l(llllM)N/.-At llnnily Hook, onTliurnCONSOLIDATED C A S COMPANY oy, Ainll Jnili. liyutnv. i, II, Vmmlla, (HUM. innxlilrr»( HIIIIIIIIH Jowiill, niul ClnrtiiHi (luulim, Or*. NEW-JERSEY. l«)UiiiflWiiily IIIMIII, ' . liy VAVl DOTY, (li'luiml Nanniii.r. MufiONATV- VMMID.-At Nmr Monmmith. »n NuiHlur, Hsy Mill, liy H«t, John It. O'Oumuir, Him fMlft M.CuiiMy ol Now MyiiiiiDiiUi unit William Principal ORIcc I ld iWIlti li)s nroaijiv&y, l<jir Rrugh, R, J, Pure Brandy. Amber Sherry. An excellent dinner wine, first-rate with a fresh Does' not equal the best imported in flavor, but egg in the morning. Strictly pure, delicious excels it in purity. The price—$1.25 a quart—is T=; "flavor. "30~centslf bottle. ?ngtlurd~of~eo3tTof foreign equally~goodr A. FRENCH & CO., PURE WINES AND LIQUORS, Comer Broad and Front Streets, For the accommodation of ilte Vtdiet, a waiting room has been provided, where they mag meet endsg rettt write letters, etc. You are cordially invited to use theie rooms at any time. John Russ died at hia home on East Front street last night, aged 02 years. He had been sick for tbe past five years and had been confined to his bed for over a year. He was bora in Wurtemburg, Germany, and came to this country about twenty years ago. He leaves a widow but no children. His funeral will be held on Friday afternoon at two o'clock, , John Billings. • John Billings, a resident of Entontown and a eon of the late Stephen Billings, died in Bellevue hospital at New York on Sunday. He was 27 years old. His But a discount of 10 cents per 1,000 death was caused by Bright's disease. His body was sent by train to .Little cubic feet will be allowed on all bills Silver yesterday and from there it was paid at the office of the company on or taken to West Long Branch, where it before the 10th of the month next folwan buried. lowing the month in which the gas wns Stvs. Evallne Jlonts, Mrs. Evaline Morris, widow of John consumed, thus making the net price of V. Morris of LoDg Branch, died last gas per 1,000 cubio feet, $1.50, for Friday morning after six weeks' sickness. both fuel and illuminating purposes. Her husband died in 1894. bhe leaves five To obtain tho benefit of this reduction children, they being ex-Judge Charles Morris, John V. Morris, James Morris, the company asks that consumers comMrs. Charles A. Halldok of Huntington, ply with only this one condition—I'uy L. I., nnd Addison Morris. ' at the office or to the Collector on of before the 10th of the mouth, ttarrv W.1 UeiirfWclwan. Harry M. Hendrickson, son of Mrs. positively no discount will be alHenry Hendrickson, died at Fair Haven lowed after that. date. last Wednesday of consumption, He was I t is- the desire of the company to 22 years old. He had been confined to tho house since last October. The body was greatly extend the use of gas for all purburied on Saturday in Fair Viow ceme- poses of light, heat, and power, nnd to tery. gain this larger consumption the company will give a further discount for Mary it. Wilson. Mary H. Wilson, wife of Edward Wil- prompt payment of 10 cents per 1,000 son, died at Frcnenn last Thursday of cubio feet, making net prico $1AO plcuro-pneumonia, aged forty years. where bills amount to sales of gasboShe leaves ton ohildren. tween 50,000 and 100,000 cubic feet per month, and ot 20 cents per 1,000 cubic itenoluHons. Resolutions, of Nnrumsunk Tribo, No. foet, making net prico $1.30, whero 148, Improved O. R. M. bills aro for over 100,000 cubio foet of gna WIIEMAB, tlio Great Spirit, Hulor of ttao UUIVIMWI, per month. In his ull-wlsn provldunw, Una soon nt to entor our wigwam anil reinovo from our midst Urother In addition to this liberal reduction on Jncoli I.. Demur, Jtaolml, Tlint In tlio doMUot our brolhorwe tlio prico of g«s wo will connect all gnu hnvo lint an lmorrat«l uiouibor ana a faithful and ranges free that arc purchased from us tnw frlond. ltcttilrctl, Tlint HID immilK'rfl oINnninmink Trltx), previous to Soptombor 1st, nnd your No. 148, hnprovod O, K. M,, Umilor tlmlr nlncoro Artnnntlilcrt tu (lit) t&'itiuvofl fitfully In tfiolr end hour early order In solicited for prompt attenof nnurtim. itroolvMl, That our olmrtor bo ilraixxl In mourn- tion. ing for n iwrloil of tlilrty tlayn, and a copy of tlioso Gno Fuol for Cooking linn no rival from rotmliitlonn IMI )>laml unou our mconl look, nnd n copy bn BMII ID UIO fumlly of our doawaod Irotlior, any point of vlow, and wo want our pannd ulno nrlnluu In Tin: lU:i) HANK imaiATin. trons and tha publla to know it. JAMEH I1. llltllDK, lIAHItY KKTI'I.K, Wo will continue the policy of tho old A.O. IIAHVKV, oompuny In rogard to nelllng gnn ranged V l l l nt cotit. IIIM'IIH. Recognizing thu fact that a coniplolo (IBIKriN.-At North I/nm llronili, on WudniDnnd iintlnfaotory oervlco ID greatly to ho ilny, Muy tfMi, Mm. I). II. Urlitln, of nmm. dcnlrcil by both the puhllo nnd tlifa com•HOWKN—IlllOWN.—At Nnw York, on I'rlilay, pany, correnpondunoo or convornallon In Ifny 1MU, Him Ktlml 1.. IIIIWIMI of Yonknni, N. Y., rosipoclfully fiollolteil from any pnrtiuii ml Wlllliini V. I), Drown of Hud Hunk. lllir-K.HK-HNYI)KH,-At 1.0ll(( llhlirll (litv, Oil ivho doiilro (,'xtonUoii for llio lino of /{/w, iiiulny, tiny lTtli, liy Itur. II, It, ltiiMnnun, Kllzn- or who liuvo nny duiiiatiufaotlon exiting K^UI. iinuuliU'r i>l Mm. till/.nlioui lirtxwis mid W. in Uiolr pri'iiont MTVICC, • ' lwtxdl Hnydor, iwlli i)f Ki\i«nt«Hii. DOluiK'n'-lfAMMOND.-At Anbury l'ntlc, on Public nervice in a public truut, Wodnraliiy.'Miiy »itli, liy l l w . '/,. 0, MnWIii, Minn Ada II. Diiiwttof Anliury I'uik mill Huniuor K. 1ln»iObodlunlly, Pure Burgundy Wine. When Port wine is made with the extreme care The grapes from which our Burgundy wine is and given the same ripe age that our Old Port made are grown upon a soil which closely resempossesses, it has no eqiiid for its value in the Bick bles that of the famous Bordeaux district, in room. " ' f •. France. The climate of the surrounding countryThe grapes from which tlltro Port wine is-made is so salubrious that persons afflicted with conare grown in California, where the soil is largely sumption and related diseases are sent there from impregnated with iron. The character of the all parts of America. The wine produced,from climate of this region is well known to medical these grapes contains more "tonic" properties gentlemen; but it is cot only favorable to pul- than any other. When used freely at the table at monary patients—it is also well adapted to the least one-third of water should be added, as 'it proper ripening of crops of wine grapes. Soil and contains about twelve per cent of spirit. Being a climate together enable the production of a grape natural wine, it cannot bo used from a demijohn. not to be equaled on this continent for containing If a quart bottle is likely to last a consumer the required properties of a blood-making, tonic, more than three or four days, it is better to have health-giving wine. it in smaller bottles. It has a peculiar value as a In presenting "our Port wine for the use of the blood producer and as a restorative for the overBick room we request those who use it to Bubmit worked and debilitated. It assists digestion; and it to the severest possible test. ,->•• a generous. glaBs of Burgundy will give new life Foreign wine, whatever else may be in it, con- to the depleted system. Full quart bottles, 60 tains from twenty to twenty-four per cent of spirit cents; per dozen, $0. (mostly crude distilled spirit, added in the process of manufacture), while our Port contains only sixteen and a half per cent. We frequently use the expression " a colt does not requre a spur," and so it is with healthy young This wine is manufactured from the Muscat men with reference to wine. Every man and grape, of Alexandria, now grown in great perfec• eve.ry woman, however; who has passed the tion in California. When made into a sweet wine meridian of life feels the effects of years, if not of it is excellent to bring upon the table with the other burdens, and requires the help of some desert. Per bottle, 40 cents. healthful, natural stimulant, and there is no other equal to pure wine. Per bottle, 80 cents. v , • , RED BANK, N. J. WHITE & KNAPP, The People's Shoe Saturday, May 30th (Decoration Day), our store will be closed all day. We will •keep open late Friday night for the accommodation of customers who may • '-• not be able to get in early. We have a very complete line of bicycle and sporting shoes of all kinds. Bicycle shoes, #1.25 to $3.00. Tennis shoes, white, black and brown, low and high cut. Anything you want—at your price. WHITE & KNAPP, Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. " Whoso has sixpence is sovereign, to t h e length of sixpence, over all men." And he who rides a Columbia is sovereign (to the limit of Columbia possibilities) over all other bicyclists. And the possibilities of a Columbia are almost unlimited. It lords it over all. Everything that enters into Columbia construction has to run the gauntlet of our complete Department of Tests, and with the aid of the most skillful mechanics and artificers in metals, the product is the strongest, lightest and most beautiful bicycle ever buijt. • It is applied wisdom to buy j COLUMBIA BICYCLES. Standard of the World. SiOO to all alike. The handsomest cntnloguo ever issued tells fully of Columbia, and of Hartford bicycles—$90, $00, $50—next beat to Columbia. Tlio book is free. W. A. COLE, Agent. No Crutches! jj Gasoline i Stoves. ! N e w (ityk'ii for 1HO0, 1 K ' ooluto ixifclu wltli comfort, ( ; Pratt's Stove Gasoline ! Delivered freo of clmiK" WIUIIH | i ! llvo mlloii of llwl Dunk, (live UB it ctrtll)«for« ifohiKolnuwlicru, Our jirlcou will mill you, i PARLOR OIL CO., I i!0 WnnhliiKtoil luul 1 Ilioml Btrrrt. ! UUO HANK, N. ,1. When you buy n lioroo of mo and I toll you ho in Bound, you don't need to got a pnlr of criitolicti for him a few duyo nftiirwiird. I'vo Ix'on In tlio home IMIIIIIOIIM for youifi nnil I expect to bo In It ycurii nioro. I can't afford to noil you n luinic tlint Inu't rlglit, In hlii II'HH or litnvlicro ulnn. io Fed of CREPE PAPER For 18 Cents. Thin In rwuiu'i (" maht a (/noil Hiuii l(iini» iidaito. Tho mill/ rciMoii that 1/iln )»I|MT dim'! aell fur SO ccnfi In IkCHUM u'« rnmU (u l/ilt country, ll'o llnvc tho (raiwrlfd («>, nt so WN. T . HENDKICKSON, Stablos In Middlolown Township, Ncnr Irwln'rt Mill*. MliMlotDwn nnd ccnU if y»u limit (ft(i( Kind, Hut lirajilo U7ii> fwi1* tiMil lutth Uht din A inn Itdii na m i l « « I fin other. JOHN H. CQ0K\ trembled, " I was'feared, too, but i t wns THE FAMH-T HOTELS. pit) toflbwhat J oan VV years after «u» > to free John Dunsoombe's same from because I was thlnkin that my legs Was Schroeder's Hair Tonic a-goln to carry me off. I know I sbonld They are Becoming a Xotieeable shaiuo. Whatever am I to do?" I Why do;the banners fly? Feature of Sen Vork Life. Ho went down to the postofBco as a run. They made us charge with our bayo;1 Why do the drama so mcrarnf ul Botmdf does not affect the color of mattor of form, having nothing to go nets all p'inted nt the rebs, and I did." The development- of family hotels in .Ob, toll me, tell me why I At that tho men stiffened Involuntarily, Hew fork In tbe last five years or so has down for, as the morning mall had already the hair. It contains no Those men yon yondor see approach been delivered to him, and it was a good and the women all exolalmed under their beoD quite as remarkable in its way as tho Are remnants of the band breath, "Shanio on blm|" three hours bofore tho ovonlcg mall would sudden expansion and increase In ningnlflThat fought and bled for liberty, grease. It stops the hair bo In, and as ho casually passed two or "Go on," Bald tho parson in a low Voice, oence whloh have marked the growth of For their endong'red land! thrco romarks to tbo old postmaster sitting and the room was still as death. the ordinary hotels of this oity In tho same rj When a baking powder Is Btlrred from falling out arid; pre"Sure enough, I did run; never looked period. The result is that lots of people K injhe.baok_room ho felMntoJwo orjtbreo wltli a little water, comes from A other baking powders. It Indicates They go where buried He behind-mo.- I just loapodout of my place ancient ]6kei with liim. "~ ptli]f_.witl]. Y^nte_baldhe_si^_5o_ cents_ Those heroes who, for love of right, "By the way, "said Mr. Hlnghanibothnm, and run. But I'll tell you what made me. a solution of the great problem of bow to j———aJnmntUmej«lult«rBflon._J.tli._ Kent forth to bleed and diet "that story of yours makes me think of It was arattle behind' my ear, and a ball live, which was formerly within the reach a bottle, at Schroeder's tho first time you told it, just after tho whizzing by my arm, and John dropped of only a few. There -aro probably more Go, Join tho nolle hoartod throng! ' by my Bide. Just like this," > ' Give honor to tho dead 1 war oloaod. You remember, hoy?" Keystar so tested, because Keystar than 20 largo hotels of the first olass in K Pharmacy. Is always pare and sweet and there&D& strew with flow'rs of gentle May Tho old man put bis trembling hand this olty which are the permanent homes "Wolljlflon'tknow/'sold parson Bean, fore makes the most delicious and Their peaceful, lonesome bod. His mind was not eo muoh upon tbo story down and broughtjt, with a crash, on the of the major proportion of their guests, wholesome foods. For health's Bake table, so that several women already made and In addition there are any number of as npon his client commonts. better test Kefstar baking powder. But listen. All we may provide "Why, you BOO," said Mr. Hlnghnm- norvous by the oioltoraont skipped invol- smaller and less pretentious houses whoso To glorify the brave AT GIJOCERS: untarily out from their seats. ' Is Justice merely, dno to them botham, crossing his kneos, "this is tho patronage has the same fixed oharaeter. . And to their doleful grave. " I hoard.'em say baok of me, with a Quarler-pousd cans, 12c, way it was: You onmo in hero, and you All the newer hotols of this type are of Half-pound cans, 22c. smothorod oath—I won't ropeat It here"— had had a letter, you know, somebody had the most Improved construction, and tho i For what they did for nation's weal, One-pound cans, 40c. "No, no," orled Parson Bean sharply. Bent to you to give Jason Sparks. Yon division of the floor space and arrangement 'When froodom was at bay, Money bach it wanted. "And they oallod me John Dunscombe of the suits of rooms 60 that each shall remember JasonP Ho was a likely follow Hay—openly and verily— Factory: Red Bank, N. J. V. S. A. 4 We never iwn rpimvt , enough, wnrn't lief . Only his hair wag a as I was running. I presume la the Con- havo tho greatest possible amount of light There Is such a thins as spending a little littlo mito too carrotty. 'A good mark fusion that it was kind of mixed op, and and fresh air are carried out according to money for tailoring and wasttDfr It &U. Taere for tho bullets,' thoy usod to say to tease they couldn't tell whether it was me run- the latest notions of arohlteots and buildla such a thing as spending a lair price and JUSTICE WAS SLOW. getting more than the worth of your money. Jason as lie was going off to tho war. ning and John that fell, or John running ers of Outhouses, A few of the mosfexI do the best tailoring that can be done and Woll, you had had a letter from Jason, and mo that fell. I couldn't hardly tell poDslvo and exclusive of these hotols ore ask considerably less/or it thao similar tailormyself." The old man drew his hand "Hotty fools dreadful, doesn't eho, now and nobody know whoro ,ho'd gono to. fitted up, decorated and furnished with ing can be had. You romombor Jason cloarod out just aftor aorosa Iil6fowhoo.il, "andlhaln'tfeltright luxurlqusness surpassed only in the most Decoration day Is oorolngf" costly apartments of such places as the "Yoa, and I don.'t wonder.'KAna, her the hoys come homoP Then you told this about it for years." same are story—this one about.tlio two "Oh, what a Bhamol" orlod several Waldorf and Savoy. They have all the brightfacoclouded and droope<lvnt)lt. dogs, and"— / Front Street, Red Bank, N. J . ' voloos. "To keep it to yoursolf all these newest conveniences and aro under regu"Soo hero, Natty, It mnkos nioXwlflh," •-• "Did If" oxclalmod tho minister, nnd ho years 1" pried anothor. lar hotol management. So it Is not surMaker of. Clothes that Fit. bo said between hla sot teeth, "olrHost >looked "Sllencel" thundered tboparson, bring' prising that people enter thom with hoposo startlod that Mr. Hlnghamboththat there was nothing like Dooorntlon, am pcotod lul sontiments after long unsuccessful ovor his groon glasses in sun ing his band down hard upon tho tablo, flay. How Is a follow to go np to town •prlEo Tlio old man wavered and seemed to struggling with tbo problem of living. at him. ball and carry wreaths and march In tlio sink under tho scorn of tho faces upturned In those- hotels a good many deroliots procossion to the tune of tho bnnda and p^*ij& tho way, did you evor Ilnd out to his. nnd shelter. They aro parsons who have Which is as tastefully and skilleverything, nearly billing himself to' do /whoro Jason Sparks wont to?" asked tho "Go on," said tbeparson. "Tell all you tried housekeeping and boon routed by Its \ honor to the eoldlers In tho civil war, and minister Irrelevantly. fully executed as can he, costs no "Well, if ho hn't dead," Bald Mr. Hing- know, Mr. Sparks. This is what you (lifllcultlos; tried boarding and robellod think of Hotty Dunsoombo sitting thoro "more tlian the poor sort, and it is against constant, forood intlmaoy with unIn tho oornor of that littlo brown houeo, hnmbotlmm, "why, ho is living, and that oamo for, you know." "Yes, yes!" said tho other feebly. congonlnl pooplo; tried ordinary hotels and always such satisfaction to know stuffing her flngore in Jior oars and hiding: might bo ovor in Sandham. You know that your invitations and visiting her faoo BO ns not tohonrorBooanythlngf' his wife's fathor lived thoro, and when "Well, when I got home it did not soom fled from the publio character of the llfo Jason wont to tho war ho gave up his own to mako muoh Uifferonco to John—he was thoro; tried flats and bocoino acquainted cards are the best that can be had. "And all of the yoar I have to bonr It, homo, and his wife went to live with hor dead, you know—whether he run or not. with despair. Tho family hotol does afthinking of Hetty DunBcombe, droadlng own folks." Not so dear as you'd think, either. So I did not try to let 'om know the mis- ford freedom from a good many of tho obIJeooratlon dny, aud now it has como," jections to their former modes of life. BoTho minister got his tall longtb out of take" Bald Natallo botwoon her Bobs. "Is this all, now!"' asked the parson as ing arranged in suits, it gives as muoh tho ohalr into whioh ho had planted himBex onmo up euddenly to hor nldo, nnd, eolf and reached forward and took tho Jason stopped. prlvaoy and independence as a flathouse; laying his hand on his sister's shoulder, postmaster's ruBty ponholder. "Yes," said the old man, "and I hain't its charaoter is less publio than that of an Corner Broad and Front Streets, ldd i "Hand-us-«-shoot-of-papor,-will-you, nover,thought.o£itmuoh_tlllyon£amoJor ordinary-hotel.—Ihe-ohlof--unnoyanco>of"It has oomo for thn lost tlmo. l a m Mi. HlnghambbthnmP" he Bald.brleny. mo today and sold it was tlmo 1for mo to boardlng houso life are eliminated, and Just going to find out tho troth about And whon tho lottor was finished Mr. got ready to leave the world In peace, as I there is none of the troubles of houseHotty'8 grandfather and fix ltoncofor all, Hlnghambotham, not being ablo to see have got to now before long, aa I'm goin keeping. BO that the town shall not havo to say ev- over tho parson's shoulder Just what was on nigh 80, and then you said I'd bottur The family hotel and the ordinary hotol ery tlmo Doooratlon day comos around that being 'written, rooolvod it aftor it was como mid do it tonight. So bore I be," aro two distinct varieties, although some thoro is one gravo whloh BrlorHlll oonnot stuck together in Its envolopo and duly Pastor Boan raised his band again and of the latter type have guests who live in deoorate with any Bort of eelf rcspoot." Were called upon to decide upon-our stamped, poured at it on all sides and on said,. "Lot us pray I" and now all the peo- them the whole year round, and most of the "Natty," and Box leanod forward and- account of tho minister's presence bblng ple did listen, and many were the tears former are glad to entertain any casual goods, they would unite in saying whiepored, "I don't bollovo that Hetty unablo to hold it up between tho light and that foil down on the shawl ends and on transients who happen to find their way Dunscombo'e grandfather over ran away his eyes (a method which ha rollglously tho laps of tho women, while the men to them. Some of the family hotels, howthat "our stock of Hats was as on tho edge of tho battle in all this world. observed with all other postal mattor), he wiped thoir faces vigorously with their ovor, oio BO strlot in construing the regu. pretty and reasonable as any in the So thoro IV droppod it Into tho box with a sigh. bandannas and pretended to keep quiet lations which are intended to guard the "Oh, Roi," crloij Natalio, "how oan county." "Now," said Pastor Bean, turning and composod. comfort and GUBOoptibllitlos of their guests youeaysoP Nobody would evor bollovo around and facing Mm, "If you can gathor Afterward, whon all was over, and they that thoy will accommodate visitors to the We are always glad to have you your Btory, If you do niako it a good one. anything olso about Jason Sparks—I have went to their different homes, a prooosslon olty only as a favor not granted to every It 1B 20yoais"— call and see for yourselves what we not thought of him for a score of years, or of people went around by the little brown ono, just as on the other hand thoro are H N J ! ^ •_ hotels that_pMf8rJo> .depend altuge.lh.or_gn_ nnyono olso that was In tho samooompnny -CdttageJnths moonlight, are offering, as .we try to keep pace nnd, lnBtcad of plotting flowers, making (Company C, you know, of Vermont "Sh—shl" said the Bympathotlo women. their transient trade and do not care to Wreaths and marohiog in the prooosslon, guards) you just lot mo know as qulok"' Don't let's wako them, Thon we'll show enoourago permanentresktence bya roduowith the times. spend tho tlmo in seeing if wo onn't got UH you oan get down to tbo pnrsonago." them a good Decoration day as a surprise I" tlon in races. The family hotel, indeed, is gomo news about Hotty's grnndfathor and Stamping of All Kinds Done. an evolution of the boarding house and the A good Decoration day Indeed it was. Tho noxt day Rox and Natalio had a let'B make It our offering to Mrs. Duns- quoor, solemn looking mlsslvo handed in How oan I tell of tho {lowers that fairly flathouse rather than the ordinary hotel. oombo,,anil Hotty'e dear old grandmother, by tbo minister's maid of all work. It flew ID to the brown cottage! Tho freshly It is the great progress whioh has been and to all the littlo Dunsoombes, big and was dlroetod to both of the young pooplo, gathered posies were taken by a stream of littlo," flnlBhoi Box,' with a whoop of do- and lnsldo was a very short letter that ro- littlo ohlldrorj, beginning at daybreak, to mads in methods of construction in reoent years that has mado posBiblo tho presont light. solvod ltsolf iDto four words, "Como over bo handed In to tho grateful and astonished development of family hotels in this city. widow and Hotty and the children, who Tho family hotels always oflored a favorite That afternoon aftor eohool Pastor-Bcan this afternoon." MILLINERY. had two oallora in his study. Ho left his Novor WOB bidding moro joyfully ao- had had an eurly visit from tho old parson, solution of the problem of living, but the Sunday Gorman, Btuok fast In tho "fifthly," centcd, and that afternoon In tbo pastor's with his story of contrition for his oare- older ones did not afford any great; degree COR. BH0AD AND FRONT STREET8. pDBhoii up hla Bpodtooles over his forehead study thoro wns a conforenoo of throe, so lcssncos in delaying all effort to free John of luxury and besides ranged from rather and asked them to Bib down, thon folded quiet and Boorot that not oven a whlspor DuQscombe'B name from the stigma rest- exponslvo to extromoly expensive. They ing upon it.' his hands, matching his flngors and oscapod through tho study walla. wcro found mostly on or noar Fifth avenue,, thumbs neatly togother, and waited for flow oan I desorlbe Hetty, her ohooks and to live In eome of them Is a proof in "Mow, not a word to any ono,"said tho thom to spook. pink with sudden joy, walking between minister, "and don't you look as though itsoU not of respectability alone, but also "Mf. Boan," said Hatnllo, feeling naif you bad anything that you could toll if Reginald and Natalio, while Hetty car- a olaim of long descent. Some of these her laBt hour had como, " I wish, wo both you wanted to." rlod a wreath of white rosebuds and a Btar places are eourcoB of wonder and envy to' V. Wish, and I gucBa ovorybody olso wishes"— It was the night boforo Decoration day, In the othor hand to put on the grave that the newer generation at hotel keepers. We cannot gif e. but we can glre . 'And iioro she stuck fast, unablo to go on and it was prayer mooting night, tho sorv- Bhe had longed all her life to soa decorated I They have been gold mines to their hindFinest Creamery Butter at 22c. per pound with anothor word. loo being hold in tho old vostry. Thoro "Natalie," conQded Box that evening, lords for years and still aro, though thoy Good " " " 18c •'• " Bex then plunged in, woro not many thcro, to bo euro. Perhaps whon they sat on the baok stops and un- may hdvo been left in out of tbo way lo- If you have been getting your Wines Best Evaporated Peaches " 10c. " " "Mr. Boon," ho said, "It soema too bad thoy were saving ttiolr enorglos for the burdened their hearts, "I'mgladitlsover, calities by the growth of the olty, and may " " Apples, 8 pounds torSSc tor Hotty Dnnscombo to beorylng heroyoa next day. But thoro wore enough to be booauso it was so good. I should have be old, badly constructed buildings with- and Liquors elsewhere, and are well Batisfied with the quality and prices, it is Good California Prunes, 5 pounds lor 25c. out Doooratlon day. Doesn't in?" astonlshod whon Pastor Boan said at the burst into pieces if it bad lasted much out the conveniences whioh are gonorally poor policy to change. Good Flour per 25 found bag at 55c. Pastor Boan gavo'a loud ahom and and of tho sorvloo: longer. Why, I've had a perfect cyolone regardod now ns Indispensable. Their But if you are not thoroughly satisfied, looked bolplosslyat tlio young people, whllo inside of me all day!" ' • Champagne Clderon draught. Also sweet "Thoro is an aot of Justlco to bo done guests havo becomo attached to them aftor his brow darkened. 'i pickles and Clow Chow by measure. Call hero In Brlor Hill tonight so startling that having grown old in thorn and know no or if you want something specially good, we would like you to give us a trial. " I t is averysolomn thing," bo'said, it will require a largo hall, that all tho and loot at the valuable prizes given away other homo. So thoy go on living in thom He Tied H e r Shoestring. "for a person to commit a sin, and to break hoarors may bo scatod. Evory ono who with Baking Powder. year after year. Among thesa guests aro Every bottle of Wine or Liquor that one's word la bad onougli, but to bo a do- wishes to go can adjourn after this meetSho was protty and pert, and as tho ttio- some ourlous characters, such as solitary leaves our store is guaranteed as repreAT " ' eorter from tho army whon our country ing to tho town hall. This is all I shall otor train swayed around the high ourves millionaires who keep thoir rolntlves at a sented. Was in peril is terrible, and for a black sin saypow." of Harlem four men In dresa suits glanced distance, llvo with extreme simplicity and We are just as careful of the lowest no ono ought to lay n wreath on John It "was not nooossary for him to say any at her approvingly. All at onoe Bhe made leave estates that delight tho heirs by prov- priced goods as we are of the highest. JDunscombo's gravo on Decoration day," moro, and tho fow at pray or mooting could a discovery and hor manner lot evory ono ing larger than anybody ever suspooted That is one of the reasouB why we retain 18 Pe&rl Street. "Oh, Mr. Bean I Supposo itwaa your Boarcoly wait with docont patlonoo until into bor soorot. Ono of hor shoos was un- them to be. our patrons. fathor or grandfathor?" tbo minister EQIU "Ameul" and adjourned lacod. At first she made a show of stoopAll goods delivered. We have some pretty particular cusIf the older hotols can bo kept going by "My dour Natalie," oxolalmod tho pas- tho mooting. ing to tie It up, but she was not comfort- thoir naino and established custom, the tomers ! We please them, and we know tor, storting baok, "you don't supposo for Thou thoro was n 6camporlng ovor to tho ably adjusted for lacing her own shoos— new TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTV bavo to offer all possible attrao- we can please you, too. a tnliiute that my father or grandfather town hall, those «t tlio ond of tho procossion In fact, It was a physical Impossibility. tionsones to eecuro guests. Thoy are from Would havo run away on tho edge of bat- foarlug that thoy would bo unr.blo to got The four young mon in dress suits saw it eight to ten stories and upward In height. tlo?" soats, nnd all lost in wonder and amazo at and soon woro dlsousslng tho young wom- Thoy aro as nearly fireproof as tho noweBt an's dllomma. "Ob, no, no," said Katnlloln confusion. tbo whole thing. methods of construction can make them. "Of courso I don't supposo so, but thon ho I have opened a Urst-class harness Nobody knew what thoy wore assouiblod "I'll mako a bluff at It anyway,1'said Their framework is of tho steel cage typo, might. You would fool dreadfully. I for; whothor tho bank Inthocountry town ono of thom ns tho train left tho Fiftieth like tho big office buildings down town, No. 20 Front Street, near Broad, store at Holmdel. The public will nnd know you would, and Just think of Bon had burst, or whether tlio minister was street station, Whereupon, to the delight and all the motal work Is inolosed in firehere everything In my line, Including NEW JERSEY. and Polly and your littlo Ned crying al- going to resign and thought tho church of his companions and tho astonishment proof matorinl. Thofloorsaro of terra cot- RED BANK, Whips, Blnnkets, Sheets, Ac. most to doatli ovor Doooratlon day. Oh, would bo too small for tbo nudlenoe that of those who hadn't observed tho situa- tn or other flro resisting material, and so Mr. Bean I Do lot's find out if Mr. Duns- would naturally bo lntorostod In tho nows, tion, lio aroso aud, knoollng dollborntoly are tho partition tvnlls, This affords a Heavy Farm Harness, with Collars, combo did rwilly run away from his oom- or whothor a dozon nml ono othor things at tlio feet of the fair one, ho raised his doublo advantage—it gives protection from THREE FAMOUS PLACES. 883 to $28 a set. 4 One assortment of pany." woro about to burst upon thom with ono hat politely and snld: flro and it provonts tho occupants of one Single and Double Light Harness at Chicago is famous for Its PORK Pastor Boan coughod, took out hla foil Bwoop. suit from being annoyed by sounds In tin "May I have the"— eto. AND low prices. lnrgo, red bandnnun, wiped ills fnco severTho tumult of all this whispering and Hor red llpa portod, showing two rows suits on elthor sldo or above or balow. al times, his spectuoloa tumbling off in hln nxoltomunt auddonly censed ns Parson of ponrly tooth, whllo a faint color mount- floors and walla are soundproof. The \ \ Boston Is famous for its BEANS JOHN W. HANCE, nervousness, so that it was Bomo tlmo lio- Boau ontorod tho sldo door, tho soleotmon od to hor ohtoks. rooms uruBomoiiineg 11 ttiid with telephones foro lio wns finally rostcrod to ordor uloso at his lieolfl, and tliou thoro woro Boon oonnooting with tho ofQco as tlio control "If you will bo so kind," sho said. S Holmdel. New Jersey. . enough to resumo tho oonvorsatlon. S " 1 m T0.MATO SAUCE. to omorgo from tlio two doors of tho comIt was a mighty protty foot, and none station, but moro commonly with more "Well, woll, well," ho Bald, arousing mlttoo room, baok of tho platform, a small too qulokly tho job was dono nontly and speaking tubas. Thoy aro lighted with AND out of his rovorio to moot tho wnitlng oyos crowd of pooplo, oaoh looking as If ho had doftly. Tho protty woman thanked him, olectrlolty, of course Tho plumbing is Tula1 combination makes tlio DELICIOUS . / ana WHOLESOME FOOD known as, of tho young pooplo that woro fastened on Bomothliig Interesting to communicate. and ho returned to his soat. Ho wns plain- exposed, tho bathrooms aro tiled. Tholargor his face "Of oourso I \YW do nil I oan"— Tho parson stopped right to tho front of' ly Inollncd to plumo hlmBoll In tho oyos of suits have private halls and aro in all re;; Shrewsbury Baked Beans "But, Mr. Bonn," broko In Hoi, and tho platform and said, "Lot us prriyl" his oumpanlons, who made various ro- epoots like flats of tho first cuss, savo that WWII now nil his timidity seemed to havo rushDown wont ovory head, although eomo- mnrka nbout "having her an tlio string," hoy aro without kltohons or rooms for < I od away, and ho felt as bold ns a mountain tlmos oyus pbokod out botwoon tho flngors oto., nil of whloh was hoard by hor, ns was Ecrvuuts, Gonurally thoro aro hardwood lion, "you BOO wo hnvo not muoh tlmo tfl of tho hands hold decorously boforo their ovldontly Intended, At tho Forty-seoond floors for thoso who profor thom. In those I Shrewsbury Tomato Sauce. loso. Decoration day comes noxt wook, fnocB. It is safo to say that very fow por- stroot station sho nrosu, nml, pausing a hotoln somo pooplo hire their rooms by tho and you know wo have lots to do if wo BOUB knew what tho parson prayod. Ev- moment boforo tho young mnn an uho ear or for longer purluda and UBO thoir Always Ready. Can be scncJ Hot or Cold. own furnlturo. Loss furnlturo being noodfind out Hint John Dunsoomuo, aftor all, ory ono was watching tho group on the pnsficid, swootly Inquired: . od than would be ruqulrod for a houso or did not run away." platform. "May I ii8,k whoro your etoro Isf" an ordinary lint, tlioru Is a, tendency to oxPACKED ny "Hoy I" exclaimed tho old olorKyman. Hut aftor tho prayor was ended tho And thon sho vanished. peml the dlflurunou In cost for tilings of a "Of oourflo ho ran away." liondH were up ngnln, and It was the propor C.C. HAZARD & CO., bettor quality, so that ono finds a surpris"But wo dun'lkuuw that," wild Hex " ng to Htnru In n straightforward way as ingly laigo mini bor of apartments in uuoh SflREWSHURV, N. J. boldly. JIoKtixid qulto CIOBO now to tlio Parson Bonn drew forward a tall, angular Now Soui-eo of Cochincnl. hotole absolutely crowded wltli handsome nilnlftor'H chnlr. old man, hunt ami withered, who Kuomod Ono of tho mor,t (lurloun agricultural furnlturo mid eipoimlvo brloa-brno and I will toll ttils year, n» I have In Hie past, tlio very "Dear mo I" wild tho old iilorgynian. to lwivo ffWiiit (lllllunlty to walk own it fow products known, if it can boplnood liiouoh decorations. Tho hotol Borvnnta do tlio "Woll, I'll (lilnlc iilimit It, mid nmy lio wo \v.\ to tliu frunt of tho plutform. tot Farm Machinery otitalnnblo. For early spring a oatcgnry, I N quuhinuiil, the ohluf Bunt of housework, BO that tbo mistress linn abso'l''rlemln nnd follow citlzoiiH," iiihl tho wiiluh indimtry linn for ninny yours boon H work I havo tho following: utoly nothing to do nnvo BOD Unit tho Horv1 Tim old olcrgymun f,'nt out of 1 lift chnlr IIIIIIIHUT in ilnep tiiiiiiH, "wo havu with us tho Canary IHIIUHIH, Tho story ol tho estab- nntn do not bronk her clilim whon they aro f The Red Bank 4 a riiKlilmit ii( another town wlm IIUH (imergsuiliUmly nml raiuliml ^nr MH tall Imt. eiiehlneiil unit lire In tho Inlands diluting. Tho rciiu.lt in about aa cany a Oliver, South Bond and l)lrt;ell Chilled from thu HOUIUKIOII that linn enviilnped llHliinontuf When lio «ot It on IIIH II'UKI, IKI felt (jiilto in a mirluuu ono. In IMiO n niillvo Kontlo- muUo of vxlstonco on uould bo desired by a hliunclt ngnln, but Natalio and llei, feel- him to do a Htinplu aot of Ju>,tli;e to one uf niHii bconmo ncquaiutud with thu inethudii uzy pursoii. Tho mnnagor of tbo kitel PilllYH. I n j fiiirii tlmt If they Uiht night tit hli> our t<iwiiH|iiiiiiiUi, TIIIH In .Iiisiin HimrliH, IWHiiod (or pidihielnii Milady,, In IIoiulu- praotloally rollovcn hla guoHtd of nil Vlio Lcvor AllStcol Harrow*. then tho opportunity would ntivor ciimi) 1'iirlmpH mmiiinf you know him." rnn, and brought with him (mm tlmtplaoo carua nf living mwo Hint of paying tlmlr fltfiUn, folliinixl (lionet alter, mid tin i,™>u Two <ir thr<i(i pdojilti In tho fiinllonco BlKiislnioim of tho ouulilmml Jumiot ami (ho blllu. Spring; Tooth HnrrowH. »n In) ntooil mi tlio lint diKirntdiio'dpenltiK Htiulnl, cmnrd tlmlr IUUIICHIIIHI Htnrod long oaotuH upon which It thriven, At that b Latest Novels Acme HnrrowB. out from tliy ntudy tliny trotted nfUir, rn- and hard at tint old. iiiuii on tlm platform, tlmo Uio wlno griiworn lit tho (Jaiinrlufl enforced hy I ho lit in family lncliinlve, lint tlio runt liiuliiid mi (uirulrniHly, jiut. wcru llourlHhliiK, and nootlior kind of InI)I«|t, Solid nnd Outnwny llnrroiru. and Magazines. J'lirsmi Jlwin looked uji nt tliu «lty nml )illnv,'lli|< In tlm IciKit ii'ho .JMIIIUI HjmrliH dustry wan lutlliivdd In. IM0W8 nntl Furrow I iig down lit tlio nrouiul and on olthor lniiul. Wan. Tho uuUuro uf ttm uoohlniinl WIIN regardHo hull uHvnyit iialil Hint lie lnvoil elilldron "Now, tliim, Mr. BimrltH," wild 1'antor ed mi n mud freak, nnd Un Introducer inuti Daily and Sunday Papers r and yniiliK |HM>I>1O nnd iihmilil never Imno llcan, "toll un what you Icimw iiliniiL tho Delivered nt Your Door. 4 AHplinvnll l'otftto r tlrort lint tin «i»ild M'II tlm youthful jiniin- lAittliMif Dull Him—HID Jlltln II|)IHI>I1I) In wltli opiidiillliiii on nil iddiiH. Thon tho dromlfld |ihylluxurn iimdd lt« «p[i( IIMIIOO in beril of bin flunk, wlilnh you nnd ynur oomrixli), John Ilium- thu vlmiyai'ilH, nml ruin faced the wlno r. _. Wi hccl KabOH, S[oiv<!fH mid HIIKIOIH. Hut lin wan Ki'tUiiK a llttlii ton muoh (if OOIIIIKI, tnnk purl." Kruwora. Tiny wnro Kind, Indowl, to tnko I IIIHO li(ic|i n full l i n o of Cn«tln«H. thorn now, nml ho wlrhinl tlm wliolo niivon Thoro'H Nothing Hottw At tho iniiiitloil (if John Diimirimilmov- up thu ilenjiliid ilenjili'i'd ooolilmml, nnd tlm old Slalioiicri/, Toys, Games, of Uiuni luiull 111 Umlr ri»|iunMvu Jilnoiu), vy jimii wim jilirl witli liiill|(iiatl»i), nnd viimynrd* worn KIVIUI IIJI to ' l l to tl tli« iio'wlmluii. for a lloof. It's Durable giving lilin n Komi irnfo (llnlniion luitwomi UK> women nliiohnd n mirloimlook uf noiirn 5 Shelf and Toilal J'apem. YA try with niicli HUOCOOH tlmt In ono yenr tho tliiim. Klrnt, llkii n llnnli of li^liiIIII>K, un tlmlr fmiiin, no deep bud \mlt i\m tmWiin If hot <*>ilvcnl<lit In cull nt my fiirni at tlw Jt'H Fireproof, Snowproof, CMiiit themo rliiKliiK nnutxiiioeii: "Why IIIH'O if tinner at tint dim olMzmi (if JlrlerllUI valuo of thu uiportod dye rcnolind nut (ar I'linlnnx, wii 1 n \KHM ciml, dinting wlmt yon Wnnt Bhnrtof il,UOU,000. Tho iiitrodiivtlnii of you nut iloJin thin Uitotot" Utat, "Why vlio Imil hiwii n illmiroillt In tliiim hi Did nnllliii) ilyoa UIKIIIKRI] nil thin, /mil It ]« Waterproof and proof Tennis Balln nnd RackvtH. (1 I Will '^Illlt^ yoll ITiTfl, •Mil'dyou d o l t nowf" you of tlm world, fdnruil that tho ooehlmml Induxtry oan In n nwinont ho nnlil, "Wnll, y(iuii« JIMIuguiimt ovoryftiing, tlmt a "I wiin with Jiilin I)uiiiio<)inlm."'iinl(l iiDVor niKiiln lt« fotiuiir piwlthm In Uio |ilij," nnd lin miilleil n* Im tiirnitd nroiuid ho Iroiublliift volno u( t h o ninn, " I t I n n Onimry Inliiiidn. ; Memorial D a y . I TTho aro the men that crowd the street? J-THAT | NASTY iSMELL jS Not Smelted In High-Class Tailoring Leavens Most^g Always Pure.- Our Engraving,. jSBAKING \ POWDER.^ EFERDELL'S, If a Jury of Ladies ^ Miss A. L. Morris's A Gold Dollar For Fifty Cents Are You Satisfied? Reilly's Grocery, Holmdel Harness Store. J. J. ANTONIDES, FARM MACHINERY FOR SPRING. £ Book, Hews and Toy Store j SLATE! 9 roof.ought not to )mvo. IIJIOU IIIOIII, " w e ' l l «1» i t , " (i)Oil iMnny ]«ii({ yram JIOW, nuil I'vn kind "All Unlit," nrlnd Jti-i. "Wliim tlio if f«r«iib 'liout inoiit of it, bull it wnn lu minister «nyi ha'll du n tlilnir, lia'll do It. <li ID wnyi Ctonio H)O«H, now, nil of you, ' " I t WIK ]n»t thin wnyt Jolui unlii t o mn, "Wlmtovnr urn I to dof" ho nnld t«i him- Cottirmln, I niu 'Amrnd, I nm, b u t 'tnln'li M I ( In dlamsy, communtng itiwply, "Jlnrn 'or iiiymiir. H'n tlint Uin (KXintry will limn I hurnglrnn ft prornlw tothwwi/oiilig \m>lila diiy,1 Now," nut] the old ninii'n volrni Ai Modloino. men my tint nu aold ornngo tmkn ilnlly boforo bronkfaili twm ilwoinln» to April proiliioon uaunlly n oondltloa t Mnibit ncrfcet Imnltli, JOHN DUQAN, RED DANK, NEW JERSEY. I \ MOSELLE & CO., V A ori'imli'K MKCIUNHI In1., ^ 111 DroiKl Htroct, 5 2 Itral Ilnuk, f WM. A. WALLING, PHALANX. N. J. 1\ 0. Addrcw, JIEDUANK, N. J, DEADLY PRAYERS. Hypnotic fascination Exercised bu • Jlawaiian TTttch Women. LIlluoknlaDl, an untranslatable word, signifying one belonging to heaven and o( chiefly rank, or Lydla, as ehe was familiarly onllod In ohlldhood, waa taught her letters at the Young ChleCa sohool. She was, very.amiable and rather backward, la strange yet not Inexplicable contrast with tier oonduot In after years, . Mode queen, she reworded by dismissal , every effort on the part of her counselors -to-upbold-good-faith-BBila-wlBB-aud-res'eonable oondnot of publlo affaire. In one wdok LUIuokala.nl dtssolveu'.three oablneta cppoacd to her. Deposed by her indignant subjects, when • false to her onroDatlon oath, and attemptIng a ooup d'etat (the whites, her ohosen .teachers and supporters, had, as property holders and voters, at least equal tights with the oatlves), the. ex-queen, whenever generously treated, was found secreting arms, ooncootlng rebellion and oonnlvlng with a filibustering raid. from the Paolflo ooast. Ill may not ba amiss, in an ago ever xeady, for political reasons, to extol a lie, and when a certain sort of poesy Is discovered In tho maudlin tragedy of Lllluokalanl, to present tho briefest possible analysis of a belief and praotloo not popularly known anil creating an environment teeming with disturbing, faotors for the exqueen. Laoklng serpents, the fair Islands of the Hawaiian group possess a snake life, with tattle (knkeko), hypnotlo fcsuluatlon, secreted poison, and the power of douling death, whioh may justly olalm study from the standpoint of psychology, with a curl' oua bearing upon the unwritten history of LUiuokalnui'a aberration and (all. K we except the atrooloDB details of ohlld murder, whore a native father has beoa -known to break his child's back for the sake of annoying the mother, there Is no darker outgrowth of savagery than the anaana. This power of "praying" any person to death, even his ohlol or the king, gives to the native kahuna or sorcerer an influence far transcending the force of arms among all the tribes of Polynesia. _^TiioJboard_Qf_hj3altlL.flt_HonolulviJaldoni. * fails to make a monthly report of ton or . more deaths of tho ordinary natives from the "deadly prayers." Death Is almost certain to follow the maohlnatlons of a kahuna, unless tho intervention of a kahuna of greater ago oan be scoured. The vlotlm sits quietly befaro his antagonist, takes no food and but llttlo drink, and dies in a few. days. "All the divinity that doth liodgo a king" must prove'of small avail If a nail paring, a balr, or a speck of the royal saliva fall into tho possession of any sorcerer ready for regloldo. The kahuna seems to ddlfy thiB,material, which ho addresses as an Idol or fetloh, praying it to destroy the life 61 the vlotlini r_—_ y p y , "death is due to a superstitious belief in a demon whom t h e Dative feels working in his vitals a n d . whom it is hopeless to resist. ' •-•- •; ' 'A conspicuous triumph of tho sorcerers ooours In the career of throe members of Idlluokalnnl's Immediate: family, and finally In her loss of right to rule her little kingdom of Hawaii. Lottors from reliable sonroos'tn 1893 roprpsont tho q u e e n t o havo been long I D knhunn tolls and vaolllatlng pitifully betweon good and evil counsels. Sacrifices wore offered In tho u n d e n t way, and by the kahunas, In tho palaoo premises. Yet next day wo find hor calling l a the Protestant clergy for their prayers to Jehovah. Once nioro she explained to a deputation of ladles hor desire t o do right, . finally, however, yielding 'gludly to the baddereud.* "Theqnoon reasonod with Parkor, her prlmo minister, who opposed her oonduot. Sbo Boomed besldo hersolf with terror concorning the Dumakaos, who aro threatening to bury her. "Tho quoon la noting under t h o suggestions of tho kahunas. A wltoh womnn, Pulolo of Lanal, has announced herself a goddess, threatening tho quoen, at behest of thedoltlos, In case she falls to restore the anolont prlvllogos of tho 6oroorors, even to- re-ostabltshmont of tho rites of heathendom and repossession of lands, to be taken back from tlio foreigners." Clearly conspiracy of kahunaa with avaricious politicians. " I n caso sho, t h o quoon, falls i n all this, vengoanoe will follow promptly, nnd she will be burlod alivo, with a n a a n a . " A native addressing tho mob urged tho people to 8olzo and bury hor, t h o kakunas assisting. Whonover tho snnke life has opportunity, It booomes dangerous to nil who would ovoid a return tu t h e anarchy and lioonso'of tho nutlvo life Pitied and pardoned again and again, LUluokalanl returns to courses alike destructive t o herBelt and subjects. At tho tlmo It soomod incredible, yot the history of hor brothers and slstor point to tho especially superstitious a n d yielding naturo of this family. Lclolohoku, brothor and hoir apparent of Knlakaun, is known to havo boon prnyod to doath. Tho wrltor woll romorabors Llkollko, a bright and charming prlnooss, woll educated and speaking French anil English. An eruption of the volcano KUauoa had persisted nearly ulno months, whon tho nkuos announood that a royal vlotlm must bo saorlflood to stay tho progress of tho advanolng lava. Llkollko Immediately offered horsolf as a eacrlfloo for hor pcopla. Sho slowly sank, in epltoof modloal treatment, which hor husband Inslstod on, and died hi February, 1887.' Kulnkaun, tho Into king, osoapod all posfilhlo nttnok from nnnann by his ooncosBIOHB. In fact, ho was dolflod and worshlpodnsn godafovv days boforo his death. Sorrowful, lndood, must bo o u r thought as wo rnvlow Lllluokuliiiil'n nhort onroor. Alas, poor quoon, provokod na the world lias boon !>y your dupllolty, thoro Is much to pity I ilow sad to you tho tmnnfor from your freo life of old I No wttoli woman on your horizon then. Aftor a morulug gallop; your pn-ti Htrcninlng fur behind, you oould Inltor nil dny undornulgpivu, whllo your mnldous ntrunx yollow lulu of the lnuhaln, which you had u olilofliiin'H right to wonr. • , Vory happy and haughty and Inuidsomo you looked, wltli fluo blnok Inoo ovurthe lunplo folds of your rich olilnn Bilk, Froo than yo\ir will, ooneolonoo niul olmrnotor, until it cortnlii Homo light luld bare your uownrdloo, lloklomi.inaml RUIIO, with (liml forfolt ur lull, jowolt nnd crown, In tho avltnblo pnnloof liiKmlnoil nnvnuo miner- --QiiiLStQreAAdll..be^Qsed..all:.4ayJDecorati.on Day. We would like to do as much in five do in six days. If there's anything you want.in the way of household goods to secure your comfort in hot weather,, we've got it—-got lots of thtngs that perhaps you haven't thought of and yet which will add greatly to your comfort in the summer. . KEEP OUT THE FLIES. ' There is no greater annoyance in the summer time than . a pest of flies. They are an annoyance in the kitchen, in the dining room, in the sitting room, and especially in the bedroom early in the morning, when the lastnap is being enjoyed. Our screen doors and adjustable window screens ,permit free ventilation. They give good air. but they keep • out flies, mosquitoes and other insects. They are cheap. A screen door costs only 74 cents. ' - • . - • • • ' ' I . ' . RUGS. HAMMOCKS. There is nothing which-will give more enjoyment for We have some Japanese Rugs for light summer furnish-' the, money spent than a hammock. A good Mexican grass ing. They are both inexpensive and durable, and the colare soft and harmonious. All sizes, from a single hammook, colored, strong enough to hold half a dozen, orings door mat to a big carpet. Prices from 69 cents up. durable enough to last several seasons with ordinary care, costs 65 cents. Pillow hammocks, comfortable and restCHINA MATTING. ful, delightful for use on porches or yards, 68 centB to $6. This is the coolesHtnd best floor covering that can be had for bedrooms, up-stairs sitting rooms, or general summer use. We have a good China matting at 10 cents a yard that is usually sold at 14 to 18; cents; and our stock ranges from this figure all the way up to. GO cents a.yard. . LAWN MOWERS. The best Lawn Mower we sell is the Coldwell. It's not a cheap mower, but it's a good one, and it will outlast a dozen of the cheap sorts and will do better work all the time you are using it. They cost $7.90 to $10.40,,according to Adjustable Window Screens, Made to fit any window, cost from 31 cents up, according to sige. Any window can be fitted without a carpenter. WINDOW SHADES-Spring- Rollers, Ready to Hang, 16 Cents. This is the'greatest bargain in Window: Shades ever offered. We have them in a variety of colors and tints, that will harmonize with any room. PORCH, CHAIRS. Easy chairs for the piazza are needed in every house. No matter how small the porch, there is room on it for a rocker or an arm chair. The old folks like them in the cool of the eyening.;.T.lie young folkajikethem all the time. A fine reed porch arni.chair, with or without rockers, costs $1.90. Other porch chairs at lower and higher prices, and a durable chair with splint seat and slat back ait 63 cents. We have a lot p'f other makes. We have a mower at $2.25, which is perhaps the best lawn mower sold at the price,"imt we can't recommend it. Most people who get lawn mowers jvant a-machine-that will_last>a-long_time,_ and that's the sort we prefer to sell. CROQUET SETS. A good set of croquet, including arches, mallets, balls and stakes, for eight players, at 85 cents. Other sets at higher prices, but the above will last two or three seasons, These are growing in great favor. They can be rolled and by that time the highest priced set you could buy is up or down, like a window screen, and are used toshade likely to have some of the balls or mallets lost. porches and piazzas. They are made of bamboo, and while ASPARAGUS TOOLS. they are great for keeping outthesun, they do not entirely Raphia, for tying, asparagus bunches, 11 cents a poimd. Hammond's Slug-Shot Kills Bugs obstruct the view. They come in various Bizes, to fit any Asparagus knives, 17 cents-each. Best sort made; blade porch, and cost from 72 cents to $1.25, according to size. On currants, potatoes, cabbage, beans, melons, cueutribers, of good steel, and handle such as to grasp it without tiring roses, &c. Used for sixteen vears. It is safe and cheap. We have a big stock of these goods and they are selling rap- the hand. idly. These shades, will last several seasons. We eel lit... Watts'a asparagus bunchers, $2.75. JAPANESE PORCH SHADES. Hendrickson & Applegate, FRONT STREET, DARK SIDE OF GLORY. Instances of War's Horrors niileh Add the Somber, Hues. Tho editor of Good Words met two German ofScora once In a smoking room, and he said to ono of them: " You hnve taken part In tho greatest war of modern times, and you have soon nil that can bo coon of that side of war tu which wo attach tho inamo of 'glory,' but what of tho othor eldof What of the miseries and sufferings?" "Ach," ho replied, "do not eponk of them I They nro unuttorablo. Tho gonernl thero could.tell you much, nnd so could I. It was terrlblo to think ol It. "Do you romomber, W , that mauat tho brldgo of Orleans? Hlmuicl, whnt a thing It wnsl Wo hnd boon oannonndlng tho brldgo and hnd.drivon the Fronch across, but whon following thorn up, as I reached tho nearer end of tho brldgo, I saw thoro a Fronch soldier propped up against tho sldo of tho brldgo. All his Btomnoh and entrails had boon shot oomplotoly nway, but ho WBB alive and apparontly conBoIous nnd lookod up at mo with encli a pleading look. What oould I do? His wound wns mortnl—woreo than mortal, It was hlduous—so I oallod toon army doctor who was near mo and onld, 'For hoavon's sako, glvo thai poor man somothlng which nmy put aa mul to his miffuiIngs, for ho cannot llvo, and It la too awful to lonvo him I1 'My duty, sir, la to savo llfo—not to destroy It.' 'But you oan't savo him, and It will ho tho grcntost moroy •to glvo him roloaso.' 'That, sir, I dnro not do.' Woll, thoro wiin nothing for It but to got a Boldtor'e blnnkot and to tlo It tight nround him nnd to glvo him KOIIIOthing to wot his llpn with, and, having done tl|ls as rnpldly aa wo oould, wo loft him, but I could not got over tho look of hlu cyo following mo na I wuut uway. Restraint Upon t h e Veto Power. General Harrison writes of tho veto and treaty making powers of tho prcsldont In The Ladlos' Home Journal "This Country of Ours" series of artloles. He discusses tho "pocket veto" and Baysooncornlng tho restraints against tho eierolso of tho voto power thnt aro Imposed upon the president: "Thoro Is another practice In loglalatlon that greatly restrains tbo freodom of the president In using the veto power. What are called 'riders' aro often plncod In gonoral appropriation bills—that la, legislation of a general oharactor having nothing to do with appropriations is put Into an appropriation bill. This Is equivalent to saying to the prosldont, 'Give your approval to this gonoral legislation of go without tho appropriations necessary to carry on tho government.1 "Thoro are othor prnctloal restraints upon tho froodoin of tho proeldont In tho ox.erleo of tho voto power. Very many laws contain nioro than ono proposition—BOIUO a number of suoh—and tho prosldont must deal with thorn as thus associated. In euoh of tbo great appropriation bills many hundrods of dlsttnot appropriations aro inado. Somo of thoso tho president may think to bo wrong, olthor as n matter of polloy or of constitutional powor, but ho cannot slnglo theso out. Ho must tako tho bill us a wholo. It has boon muoh oontonded that tho voto wns glvon to onablo tho prosldont to dofond hlniBolf against lcglslntlvu attempts to ouoronoh upon his constitutional powers or thoso of tho judlolary, nnd that ho should oxcrolBO It only whuro ho finds constitutional objootlons to a bill. Out tho powor la not so limited, and from tlio beginning hna boon oxorolGod upon tho ground of tho lnoxpodlenoy or unwisdom of tho loRlslntlon proposed nn woll us uiioii ciuifiUtiitloiml grounds, I do not suppose that any pto.ildont him over denlt with tlio bills submitted for hl« approval upon tho prlnolpla thnt ho idiould approve only miuli nn ho would havu votod for If ho I mil lionn n immihur of oinigriiHH, Muoh diifuronoo IH dun ID thoodngrcnii, and viiliinn hnvn miiitoiiinrlly boon timid only whon tlio limit in till) propound loKlnlntlon wim FurluiiH In ltnulf or as a liniiitiilent." "And thoro was still nworsoHpootaolo— If nuoh thoro oould bo—at tho other mid of tho brldgo, for thoro wna nnothor Roldlur who hnd a pnrtof hlsuliull allot awny, and ho was leaping up In tho air, ns ymi may havo noon n wounded Imro do, looping up anil than tumbling, 'Aoli,' I nnhl to tlio dootor onoo mciro, 'horo'fl anllH nioro fivirfiiI unfuil Glvo Mm flomothliiK, do (jlvn him BDinuthliiK to (nib him nut of hU KtlllDII. ' ' ' On Dnngcroua Orouiul. ngony.' 'It la linponilblo, nlr, for mo to do no.' Wlmt nlmll I do, I thought, but "TIIIH book on Kninim that wo havo Merely an Advortlsomont. its I wanHhltikliiK ho gnvti ODD itroot loop "Tho pnpnr miyii that » nmrrlod woniiui whioh mint him ovor tlio hrldgo Into the oompllod"— mild tho Clorman publlnher himlioim nl|duutral nt Knnitiionil, l m l , , " wnlnr, and no I wan tliinil.ful Hint lio nl thuuglitfiilly, '•In thiiro nnyUiliiR wron« with It?" Innhn wild. lant not rulmno In dimth," i|lllrod tlio editor. " I don't ImllovoIt," )ioroylloilpromptly. "No; It'll n good thing, but I'm n lltlln " I ' l l bob ll'ii nothing but nn ndvurtlimhltnonrod nbuut [lutlliig It on tho ninrmont, Tlwy'ro trying to induon nmrrlod I t May Bolvo tho Problem, kot," ""in to K<> Hioro t<i nuttlo, nnd thoy imn't "1'liin X rny In I1IIII>K wnmlun fur Hutu"Why? 1 toniiit mu nnlmit thoy onu product) nflMiikind," lio ronmrlioil, " I t innknn tho ntntotixmb roticmlodly thnt vltn." "You," hid wlfo ruiillnd, "it hnn dono thi) noo In hlKKnr limn tlm kliig, If Uml Thou iihii until hn wmi n "ninnn thlnn," mill hn oliiieldml miftlv <<i lilnmoir nnd lulu for iiiitiikUul, Mnylm It'll ho ilovul- oiimiiH tu tho nttinitlon of tlm ompuror. opiiit In tin) muirno of tlmo to whtiro It will ho'll havo ua ii|> for Incn innjmty, nur«." Mnrtnil for Iliiiulill). nnnliki \riimitiiltliiil lu miu wholliiir hor lint la on atrnlKhti ur tint WIIJKIII^ InukliiH In Till! IliaiiHTitn In t h o hrMiUvit nnd IK^HI Ailvorlino In Tiiie Hittilnritit.—Ailv thu uluan." counlry ii(iwH|in|M)r on e n r l l i . — M v . Post Office Building, MAY, 1896. RED BANK, N. J. MAY, 1896. NEW YOEK AND LONG BRANCH RAILROAD. Stations In New York: Central B. It. of New Jer- Nercliants' Steamboat Company's Line. Merchants' Steamboat Company's Line. sey, foot of Liberty Street; Pennsylvania H. It., foot Street and Deshrosses Street. Shrewsbury, Highlands, Highland Beacb. Oceanic, Shrewsbury, Highlands, Highland Beach, Oceanic, of Cortlandt Commencing May 23th, 1890. Locust Point, Brown's Dock, Fair Haven and Locust Point, Brown's Dock, Fair Haven and TRAINS FOB BED BANK. RED BANK. Leave New Vork via Central B. It. of N.J., 4 30, RED BANK. 880, 1130 a.m.; 180. 88O». 4 00, 4 30*, 615, Tho strong and eouiiuodlous steamboat, p.m. .Sundays, 000 a.m.: 4 00 p.m. Via Tlio strong and commodious steamboat. P. R. H., 010 a. m.; 1210,8 30.310*, 610,1160 p.m. Sundays, I) 45 a.m.; 5fflp.ni. 1 lava Brunch, 0 35,700, 71\B15, 8 85, 9 CO, 9 80,1125 n.m.: 130,2 80, 4 20, 6 47, 7 30 p.m. Capt. C. JS. TEHOCKMOnTON, Sundays, 7 50,0 80 a. m.; 4 40, a 50 p. m. Will run between New York, Pier 84, foot'of FrankCapt. J. J>. CUAHWICK, Ocean Grovo and Asbury Park, 017,0 48, 7 00, lin street, and Red Bank, us follows: 7 45,8 00. 8 20,8 40,010,1105 a.m.; 110,210, Will leave Pier SI, foot of Franklin street, Now 4 00, 5 27. 710 p. in. Leave Eed Bank Daily nt 7:00 A. M. York, and Red Bank as follows: (Sundays excepted). TRAINS LEAVE RED BANK. Will commence running Wednesday, Nay 13th. York, Newark and Elizabeth, 0 48, 719, Leave New York Daily at 3:00 P. M. For New 7 27, 8 10«, 8 28, 8 43* 013, 0 43, 1130% 11 40, Leave New York Daily nt 9:00 A. M. (Sundays excepfed). a.m.: 143,2 45,4 37, 0 03,7 45 p. in. Sundays, (Sundays included). 803,0 43a. m.; 455,600p.m. For Long Branch, Ocean Grove, Bclmar and Will not make h e r trip on Decoration Lenve Eed Bank Daily nt 4:00 P. M. Point Pleasant, 133, 025, 047, 1088 a..m.; (Sundays included). Day (May 30). 13 47,140,2 55,353,483,449,6 25,6 43, 640, 7 40 p.m. Sundays (except Ocean Grove), 10 85, . EDOAH BROWEH, Messenger. 1120a.m.: 6 27,(152p.m. • JOHN MORFOnn, 8ulcsmnn. TELEPHONE CALL, HA, ItED BANK. FOR FREEHOLD VIA MATAWAN. EDGAR BROWEIt, McssenRor. N. B.—All freight Intended fur tbla boat must bo Lcavo Red Bank, 828, 0 13, 1140 a. m.; 1 43, 487, on tho wharf a sufllelent length of time to Imnille, 003 p.m. as sho will positively leavo promptly on her adverTELEPHONE CALL, HA, RED BANK. FOR RED BANK VIA MATAWAN. tlmo. N. B.—All freight Intended for tbls boat must bo tised Freehold, 815,1115 a.m.; 2 05, 4 20, 0 10 n.m Tills boat's time-table Is advertised In THE RED Leavo on the wharf n suMclcnt lengtu ol tlmo to handle, BANK For furtber particulars seo tlmo tables nt station) REOIBTKK nnd Now Jersey Stnmhml; also In as sho will positively leave promptly on bur adver- tbo Counting Hmwc Afaiiltor, Kow York IKor/rf, RUFUS BLODGETT. II. P. BALDWIN, tised tlmo. SupC G. P. A. O. R. R. of N. J. Steamboat OuWc and J?u/lfiioer'» Oil file. This boat'u tlmc-tablo Is advertised In tbo Hi:n MacUcy'H J. It. WOOD, (i. P. A. Ponn. R. R. Timo-tabltti may bo obtained at Bunion & LonfDANK RKoisTtnnnd Now JerseyStatulanl; also In • Denotes express trains. thu OotmtliiB lluutie AfnnUnr, Now York H'orW, stroet's prlnllnif offlco, Bed Banki MacketfaStcamtmatauUlcuwlllulHnocr'tauMc. EXCURSION TICKETS, 60 CENTS. • 'l'lmo-tnbles may In ohuilnod at llordcn * IxinnPENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMslravt's printing olilco. Rod Bank. X • l'ANY. , 1898. On Olid ntter October 13tb, 1695. EXCUltSION TICKETS, 50 CENTS. SEA IBIIRD, ALBERTINA, TRAINS WILL LEAVE RED BANK V For Newark and New York, 7 ID, 8 40,9 43 a. in.1, 140, IKKIp.m. On Sundays,043a.m.: 0(10p.m. " Elizabeth, 7 10, 8 4!), 0 4!) a. in.; 140, 0 03 p. m. Sundays, I) 4:i a. in.: 0 Oil, p . in. CA1T. BENJAMIN GRKifiB, " Itahwuy, 710 uud I) 43 a. in.; 143,0 03 p.m. On Siiuilnyn, I) W a. in.; I) 01) p. in. Will run between -Port Mnnnioiith nnd Now Vork " WoodlirhlKP, H43 n. in,; 1411, 0 03 p . m . On Itootol 13tliBlreel,,,\Vti»t Washington Market), Sundays, 01.1a, m,; 000 p . m . at fulbwH: " Perth Aiiibc>v,943 a.m.; a . m . ;143, 143, 0 00 p . m . On S I V U 41 411 II. in.; in.; 00 (10 (10p. m. SUIHUH. Lriii'c Port ilfoniiioiil/i. Lctnx New York. Vii " South Amuoy, Vii a . m . ; 143, 0 03 p . m . On MAY. MAY. SundayH, I) 4,'l n. in.; 0 00 p. m. Friday, ltd fl 00 i>.m. d l d u y , ly» t, . ., . .l 110 CO n.m. l IHi " Malawnn, 7 Id, (143 n. in.; 1 43, 0 03 p. m. On Hiitnnlny, ttl.i..Hl)0 Monday, 4 t l i . . . U i m Sundays. 0 411 n.m.; 0 00 p . m . Monday, 4th....l>IK) TiKwdny, t i l l . . ,llli(l " Mlildletown, 7 111, 9 43 a. in.; 1 43, 0 03 p. m. Wi-il'mluy,Dili.,Him in. Wixi'mlny, fltii'.'. '.3 IKl On Bumh\y», 9 40 a.m.; 0 IM p.m. Thumluy, 7th...l IN) p.m. Tlinnulav,7th...4iK> ' " lxmn Umni'li, Point Plensunt and IntenncillaUi Frlilny. Mil 1 IK) " Friday, *th BIKi ntutloim, 1lii, 10118 a. in.; 1 40, 4 4U, I) 40 n. m . ' Hntnnlay, Wh..,:ilKI Hiitiiiilny, 1Kb.,.H0II OnHnnilayH. lUVn.iii.; O40p.ni. (Uonoiitop Minulny, ]llli,,,.IHKl Monilny, 11(1 7IKI ot Anliury Park nrDcuiin (irovo on Huniliivn). Turadiy, laii...1)0(1 a.m. •I'niwbiy, I Sill.,.7 IK) " Toms Itlvcrnnd lnt«rmedlato slnllons, 140p.m., Wnl'mliiy, llllb,.lll«) " WiHl'mlay, 1iltb..HIKl week days. Thiiralny, lltli..HI»l 'I'biindiiy. U(h..7IKI TIIAINH LEAVE NEW YORK, Friday, loth DIM Krltlny, lBtli Hl» 1 BCHIHUWH nnd uoitlandt mraot lorrldn. ' Hntnrdiiy, Kith,.Hill)' Hiitimluy, liltb,.Dim For Hod Hank. 1) III a. in.; 12 10,1140,510.11 GO p.m. Monilny, 1Mb...I) 00 Mondiiy, ll<tli.,.lMK) On HumliiVH, U 45 a. in,; 6 I t p. in. Turadny, I M I I . , , 0 1 1 0 Tiiraluy, l « b . , . H i m H> H. PUKVIWT, J. It. WOOD, Wi'ilMny, ai!b..a0O Woil'ndny, aitb..llim (iomrnl Mnniniw. (Ion. Pawinniier Aaonl. Tliurmliiy, Ulnt..lllHI 'I'liiimilnv, Ulnt.lllim 1'rlday, a t 4 0(1 Vilduv.tol 1(1 (K) Hntiirtlay, ^kl,,.HI)O Hiitunlny, an,,.I!(HIp.m, Mondny, S!Ub...7DO Monilny, With,,.ami Tui'mlny, :.11lli...7l»l "riii'i<dny,Wli,,.llim VVi'>l'nduy,mii.,l)imn.m, wi.iCjKii.y,irrih-.Kixi ' Tlinmilny, "Illh.Jim " Tliiinnlay. »i(li..H0O Frlilny, teh Him Kiliiay, nnn Him Itaturdny, IMHti. ,l> 1X1 Hntnnlay, tuilli. .fl Oil Invitations, AtinouncciiiuntB, CIUIIFI, All bunk Iri'ljlil IIIIKI Ixi imld iKidini ilnllvery. Tbl» l»iiit'» tliiio-lnliln In mlyi'ilHiil In TIIK UKII etc. I correctly printed—mid ovcry IIAHK ItKUIUTKli, Hiintnnutlt l'rcm; nltu ilutllii l/rr'H nnd Mmttru't MeninlMinl (IUIIIMI. TlniKlniilra nmy Im olitnlnnd ol M. O'llrlen ti attention |>uld to tlio minutest iloMIIII'H, 1!1D Wsnlilnutiiii ntrn't| A, Mmrh \Vo,, Nirm r nf Kill »tiwt nml Uih nvetluo. • Tho Liiruo nnd Commodious Bteniner, $20 and $25 suits WM. V. WILSON, Made to order for #15.00. A large assortment of styles to make selection from. All Wool Black Serge, skeleton coat, vest and, pants to match, to order for #12. CORLIES, MERCHANT - TAILOR, WEDDING STATIONERY. oktt, HOC ISx'oa.cDL ©tx-Got. Helurn Tlokol, UOe, irlit rtwlvcd cm Now York I'lur unlll 7 1 . M,, dny. tall—nt rcaeonablo prlcmi, nt The Rciflster Office. .y\I BOLMDELNEWS. OCEANIC NEWS. OBIENTAt SLDEPEB9. An Addition to Be Made to theMeXew l'orls Residents Oeeupytna A Story of Luxurious Trateltno on Short anil Interestlna Items front lire. A. a. Borden Gitea an Afterformed Church, ;/ Their 8»mmer Homes. an Indian Batltcav. noon Tea. all Over the Countv. ',': IN AKD OUT OF TOWN. SHREWSBURY NEWS. A Bleeping oar on an oriental railway Is Mrs. A. H. Borden gave an afternoon j . Plans .are under way for remodeling Dr. n . E.Owens and family; William Company Eo£ Freehold is building a tea to about 185 guests on Tlinrsday. the Reformed church. New pews will Hughes and family; Rev. Thomas Hast- death toarUtooratlo airs. Tho early mornnew mess hall tit Sea Girt. . Charles. J. M, Smith of Broad street The gueeta were residents of RedVBanb, be placed in the church and an addition ings and family; Charles B. Foote and ing—tho tourist joyfully rises with the Shrewsbury, Oceanport, Coil's Neck, will be added to the rear,' to which the amily; and Thomas Brady and family, sun—finds his meekness only exceeded by has bought a new bicycle. Mrs. S. A. Conine of Freehold is build- Little Silver and Middletown. Mrs. C. pulpit will be moved, i Leaded glass all of New York, are occupying their hla BhabbinesB; and during the lone, long nlgliji bow often does he wish that be was H. Bum), Mrs. J. H. Stilwell, Mrs. F. windows and a new horseshoe gallery summer homes at this place. ing a new porch to her house. Rev. John E. Parmley preached in the sleeping amid the jungles through which A new set of agitators has beeii placed Borden and Mrs. C. M. Patterson assisted will be put in. • Frank Tilton, who has been attending Presbyterian church on Sunday in the ho is passing instead of tossing up and Mrs. 'Borden in receiving the guests. In the water station at Keyport. The public drain at Koyport will be ex- They were welcomed in the south parlor, Rutgers college, has graduated with absence of the pastor, Rev. 8, WYKnipe, down, round and round, pver and over, in this wabbling, rattling, snorting, creaktended forty-feet outin-thejiayi. , which_was beautifully decorated with fourth honor in his class. He will make who is visiting at Belvidere. The weakfisbing at Keyport ia better mBldeirliairfefnT-Tea was-poured by- Ihejjresentation speech for the memorial The ChristianJSndeaxor-Bociety gave a- ing -tblDg-that is oarrylng^filEr~nrerTir window of theclaBsin tho-collegei——miles an bonif . Mrs. W. C. Bunn and lemonade was festivalinTheXyceum on Thursday and this year than for many years past. A strawberry and ice cream festival Friday nights." About $8 was cleared. • I am sure that tbo Indian sleeping oor ' Charles Smith, Jr., has bought the served by Miss Mnggie Borden. Misses Miss Nellie Ellenburg of New York possesses a patent of Its own, and that it. • meat business of Lehn Brothers at Key- Annie Cooper, Cora JenningB,EdithBrad- will be held m the Reformed church ford, Sadie Parker, Lalage Bunn, Mrs. next Friday afternoon and night by the spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs. has novel been duplicated is a blessing to port. young people's Christian Endeavor EOthat part of humanity thai; does not enjoy Jacob Ellenburg. .!..."" A large organ with 802 pipes has been Mamie Smith and Mrs. Harry Borden :iety. . Miss Ella Dixson and sister of Brook- ;ho nightmare while taking nocturnal trips put in. the merry-go-round at Asbury aided in entertaining the guests. William Hurley, who is now employed The Shrewsbury reading club held a ihrougn this country. yn are visiting their aunt, Mrs. J. E. ' Park. V^ The oar itself Is a wondor in InconvenDo not be deceived by infringeThe propellor S. S. Wyckoff began her meeting at Mrs. William H. Lawes'a by Roy Sutphin, is confined to bis home DeNyse. Miss Hettie Brill is visiting her uncle, ient workmanship. When It remains still ments of name, package or cigartrips between Matawan and New York Holly Farm yesterday. The subject was at Lincroft with sickness. Communion services will be held in David Harvey of Asbury Park. " Music and Drama/' The following IB long enough to bo measured, you nnd that yesterday. the Reformed church the first Sunday in Miss Ida Murphy of New York spent It measures about 10 by 6 foot, contains Henry Gugel has been elected health the programme given: THE ONLY GENUINE June. four indosorlbable affairs called beds—two Sunday with relatives here. , inspector of Long Branch at a salary of PiQooduet Exercises are being held in the Mrs. Mamie Holby, Mte Knlie VauSctioick stationary and two hanging In a threatenWilliam Fenton and Andrew Wilson $50 per month. Career churches in preparation for Children's [in.ye bought new bicycles. ing manner from above by leather covered Frank M. Chapman of Atlantic High- Jennie Llnd, Art Life- and Dramatic MIBS E. 8. Valentine day. Miss Mallie Halbertson of Brooklyn ropos; 1B lighted by a Blnglo ulokeilns light ; Bear the locelmlloslgnoture ol lands has bought A. J. Foss's butcher Selection, "A Day at Pattl'8 Cnstle Mrs. Henry C onover and Mrs. Eugene ibat In too dim to read by and too bright Mrs. Qecrge W. Barlow spent Sunday here. ' '^ . ; route at that place. Vocal duet. .Mrs. It." H. SlcKlta, Mrs. FranK Wyckoff Ely are confined to the house with Bick0 sloop by and Is entered-by tho. tourist Herman Frederil'kS Will move to Red Prof. H. C. Tnlniagq of, Freehold lias Operatic Reminiscences Mrs. J. E. Davis hrough a side door, which Is often too Bank thia week. been appointed superintendent of the Calve at Home Mrs. Harry Borden neBS. Piano solo Mrs. G. 0 . Bradford ' No services will be held in the Re- Miss Jessie Harvey is visiting relatives narrow for the bundle of bedclothes that Belniar public school. on the package and on each cigarette. Modem Singers and Their Songs the railroad kindly ullows him to furnish: formed church next Sunday. at Asbury Park. During a storm last week a windmill • Mrs. William H. Lawes TAKE NONE WITHOUT. Miss Emma Polhemus is recovering Having us my companion during the on the property of B. Watts & Son of ocal quartette....... Mrs. Sickles. Mrs. J . first night out on my way to the'mounL. Allen, Mrs. M. Gifllutf, Mrs. Jennings from an attack of bickness. Keyport was blown down. LITTLE SILVER NEWS.. James G. Crawford cut 490 bunches of tnlnB of India a blight, congenial fellow Randolph 'Martin of Chapel Hill was The World ol M u s i c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . M r a . E . C , Hazard The next meeting of the Shrewsbury asparagus on Saturday. made a member of ..the Keyport lodge of Jessie Bowman's Shoulder Dislo- from tho City of Brotherly Love, the trip reading club will be held next Tuesday Thomas O'Harn is confined to the was crowded with Incidents, some of American Mechanics last week. cated-by a Fall. Mrs. M. J. Farrand, an old lady of at Mrsr J . W. Nafew'a at Eatontown. house with malaria. Jessie Bowman, aged fourteen, fell which wore vory laughable several days Current Events " will be the subject. William Morrell is recovering from an from a haystack recently and dislocated after they happened. . . Ocean Grove, fell out of a hammock and A number of the people in this place attack of sickness, severely bruised her back and legs. Far In tho dark eight It turned suddenher shoulder. She is slowly recovering Henry S. Schenak has bought a new and is able to be about with her arm ly very chilly, and wewero aroused to find Mrs. Caroline Eogera of Long Branch attended the May devotions in £he Catheverything In a stiff gale, and fearing that lias been sent to the county jail for thirty ilic church at Red Bank on Sunday bicycle". in a sling. night. tho moulioyBln the jungles would have the days for keeping a disorderly house. Are the most delicious fruit Mrs. Iford, Miss Iford,, Miss Horfmire, Mrs. A. Eocknfeller, Mrs. H. 8. Kin- The Shrewsbury reading club will hold Mrs. George Curtis, Miss Grace Curtis, joy of appearing noxt day In eome of our WEST LONG BRANCH NEWS. now on the market. At my ts third annual reception at Mrs. E. C. month and Wiufleld Stanford of Asbury Miss Fanme Parker, Miss Gussie Bates, garmonts wo arose to soizo them In the Hazard's June 12th. store you can get them by the Park sailed for Europe on Saturday. Harold Corney and Harmon Co'rney were midst of tholr wild career as tboy danced Preparlna for Children's Day-A Miss May Shutts, Charles Moore and Jeremiah Connelly of Shrewsbury had confirmed in St. John's chapel on Sun- In the whirlwind, and to our surprlso wo Little Folks Party. box or by the pound. found that our door was swinging wide a fit on FroTit street last Saturday night. James M. Sellers have bought new bicyActivepreparations are being made by day afternoon by Bishop Scarborough. cles. open, and from the mountains the cold air Some excitement was created thereby. Choice • Apples, Bananas, William Margerum is confined Bweeplng through the> car from door Madame Demorest of New York has the members of the Sunday-school for toRev. Milton H. Housel, Charles B. Eeimulthe house with sickness. Rev. John was Orangea and other fruits althe celebration of Children's day, which to window and window to door. ented the C. S. Meert house this 6eason. _ ler and Benjamin D. Cooper graduated J-uueJth._The_^xercise3_v?ill be Hanton of Long Branch occupied the __l]hose Bleoplng cars enoourage domestic wayeon hand. "iromtho Belmar'puTflic BohooriasFweekT ^i69"Cora—JenniirgBiB-conf)ned-to-her -occurs PTdphVoirSunday in charge of Mrs. George VanHuel,"Van-' eoonomyTh that "they require you to carry" There have been four births, two mar- home with sickness. Wilson and family of New York about with you ail the bedolotnlng tbat Mies Annie Cooper is visiting relatives nie Harvey, Mamie White and Dora areAllen riages and six deaths in Raritan townoccupying their summer home here. Clayton. .. you use and make' up your own bed when ship during the month ending May 15th. at Brooklyn. Mrs. C. Pbilbrick of New York is Miss Delia Golden entertained a numyou desire to use It. As my good natured . J. D. Newlin, J. H. Cook and M. F. School will close on June 5th. LOUIS PRATE, ber of her little friends on Saturday occupying her summer home here. friend possesses a passionior such art and Bird have been elected members of the Mrs. Ada VanBrunt of New York is 1 afternoon. Those present were. Ida as It la my crodd that every one should be Asbury Park lodge of American • Mevisiting Mrs J. Ehvood Harvey. Golden, Jessie Golden, Helen Bowman encouraged In developing his talent In a n ; chanics. FAIR HAVEN NEWS. Mrs. John Murgatroyd of New York is given dlreotlon, I allowed him to practice N E X T TO R. F. WILBUR'S. and Edna Bowman. . Henry VanBrurit of Long Branch, visiting Mrs. Harry Kemmerer. The ladies'aid society of the Methowho is generally known there BB, Uncle Improvements to Houses—Summer dist church will hold an ice cream and : The Epworth League will hold a busi- on my bed, but when the time oamo* to Broad Street, Red|Bank, N. J. blow up my newly patented atr pillow then Residents Arriving! Henry, reached his eightieth birthday festival in Abbotsford hall on ness meeting to-morrow night. came tho tug of war. We blow Into tbat last week. •William "Walling, Arthur Hendrick- strawberry David Maarschalk ia spending a few day.. perversely empty pillow by turns until oar W. W. Jeffrey & Co., pound fishermen son, Richard Bollard, and Deborah and Decoration The Epworth League will hold a busi- days at New York. heads grow dizzy and we seemed to bo at Elberon, made their first haul on Tues- Ida Brown, all of New York, were vis- ness Edward Woolley isfvisiting friends meeting on Thursday night, after Mowing our brains oat, but as we held 16 day of last week and caught 35 barrels itors here on Sunday. at Brooklyn. the regular prayer meeting. up aftor every windstorm It resembled in of seabass. Misses May Hendrickson and Olive diameter a- pancake ratbor than a pillow. Mi9ses Arljne and Georgian! Sherman Miss Belle E. Miller, who taught the Curehin have returned from visiting have SEALED PROPOSALS iorrconstiuctlns a section been Visiting relatives at Jersey COLT'S NECK NEWS. At last my companion, thinking perhaps • Wayside school last year, has been en- friends and relatives in New York and S of the eewerago sjetem of Red Bank will be rei t e ' thttt-lfc-waajiot. worth while to put on alrs_ Brooklyn; :— r"—gaged'toTeaclfarBeloTarforthe" coming Miss E. Victoria Goiaen has returned Dr. William Thompson Opens a while trying to put In air, assumed an at- ceived by the Beard of Town Commissioners up to schoolyear. Daniel Rankin of New York will Dental Office at Freehold. titude of strength rather than ot grace, light o'clock, p. JI.^OD Wednesday, JUNE 17tU, 1800. ' Arthur 'Williams, who was charged move to hiB summer home next Friday. from a visit to the Misses Magee at Holmwith robbing the grocery store of S. S. A flagpole was raised on' his lawn on Dr. William Thompson opened a dental and, turning himself into a veritable hol- Proposals snail be addressed ttfA. C. Haniaon.Tovra Monroe V. Poole is visiting Rev. and Scobey at Long Branch, Eiaa been sent to Monday. office at Freehold yesterday in the office lows, inflated tho pillow to on enormous the connty jail, Mrs. Vanderveer is putting a new roof Mrs. Pennington Corsonat Clayton, N. J, lately occupied by Dr. W. E. Truax. elzo and uncomfortable tightness, which Clerk, lied Bank, N: J., and shall be endorsed on ho now banded to mo with an air of tri- tto outside with the name and address of tho party Mr. and Mrs. John C. Cline of Manar on ker house. William McMahon is buildMi6S Clara B. Allgor is visiting Mr. He spent Thursday at Philadelphia. or parties making the bid, and marked "Proposal squan celebrated the sixteenth anni- ing an addition to his house. Dr. I. J. Woodward is visiting rela- umph. and Mrs. William J. Conrow. In tho jnorslDg we expected a scene of or Sewer Wort." Further information may be obversary of their marriage on Tuesday A clipping sociable will be held at-Mrs. Mrs. George L. Gibbs spent Wednesday tives at Baltimore. Mrs. Woodward has desolation to greet us, as wo would be In tained and plant and epeclncaUons eeen at tbe night of last week. been at-that place about six weeks. F. A. Little s to-night for the benefit of with relatives at Oceanporr. Isaac T. Rue of Matawan has cone to the Daughters of Liberty. Charles Harris is visiting Mr. nnd Mrs. Dr. J. M. Bean, an eye specialist from tho mountains, but, as we looked through ifflco of tbcVrown Clerk In Bed Bank, or at tbe Clearfleld, Pa., whero ho will be em- Mr, and Mrs. William Lauckhnrdt of Uiarles E. Mitchell. Brooklyn, is boarding at Charles Thomp- the windows, everything was greon. Not. only tbo trees oxtO grass, but our eyes office of the engineers, 108 Pulton Street, Netr Tort ployed by a concern thnt will manufac- New York spent Sunday with Mr. and Tiie public school atthis place will close son's Atlantic hotel. ture brick, on a largo scale. Mrs, Samuel Hendrickson. Drs. J. M, Bean and.William Thomp- could not rest upon anything Jhnt was not City. June 14th. Warren D. Brand and other residents Rev. and Mrs. Tuttleson and Mrs. ElizPercy Vunck is recovering from the son spent Sunday with Charles Brower gtoon—green birds, green r~cow8, groan The Board uf Commissioners expressly reserve the pigs, green goats, gioon duoks, greon skies, of Oakhurst are making an effort to pre- abeth Sands spent Sunday with friends mumps. of Farmingdale. vont the garbage of Lon{» Branch froin in New York. Theodore Snedeker is completing tlie ood, stranger Btlll—a sigbt.whloh wo look right to reject any or ali;t>ld«. mim for In valii in our country—groon men and being dumped.in that vicinity. ivork on bis new bam. Mrs. George Smith and her daughter O. E. DAVIS, WAYSIDE NEWS. The woods in the vicinity of Belmar Etta are visiting friends at Norwich, Joseph Francis has enclosed hiB prop- wornon. . W. P. FBET. What kind of country is this, anyhow? were Bet on fire by a spark from a loco- New York. erty with a new fence. P.' T. BRADY, Schanek Hunt's motive last week. Some woodland wns Eva Cook was confirmed in the EpisThoma8 Thompson spent Friday with In muto wondor wo gazed upon the green M. P. COBNWELL. ors in Town. panorama, fearing to speak lost woeiposburned over, but no other damngo was copal church last Sundjy by Bishop Scarfriends at Tinton Falls. SAMUEL 8ABATH, Benjamin T. Matthews says that it done, t . borough. ' Charles E. Strong is remodeling his ot] our greonnoss. Commissioners. In a ftiw moments tho window pane was A. C. HABBIEON, Town Clerk. Tho borough council of Mannsquan The house on the riv*er bank, formerly was his two hired men and not himself outbuildings. who raced on the Shrewsbury road when dropped and tho verdant doluslon enmo to was petitioned by a number of citizens owned by Mr. Blay, is undergoing reCharles Wilson is sick with sore throat. one of tho wagons fell in the gas trench. on cud. Tbo windows wero of green color- UEDENBCEG & KIN6EV. last week to sprinkle the principal streets pairs. George Stout is building a new barn. Mrs. Mary L. Fields and her daughter ed glass and the greenness, alas 1 was not Moy20tn,18M.-in tho town, but tho petition wns re- Richard Doughty of Jersey City is • 9 • two sons, Effle, and Aurellus and outside, but inside of the car. fused. building a new house on Catherine street. and Scobeyvlllo News. Myron, of Asbury Park, spent Sunday Dullbdratoness to a painful degroo is tbo William Sperb, Jr., of New York, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fary. Albert Polhemus and his daughter, dominant olmrnoturljtlo of these trains, cs8EABRIGHT NEWS. spent Sunday at his summer home here. with Mr. and Mrs. William Lawyer and Mr. Mrs. Frank Hance, spent Sunday with puolally in northern India. Whllo riding JRestrainlnu the Ardor of BustncsH Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Little aro visit- and Mrs. Eugene Miller of Long Branch Daniel Robinson at Keanaburg. horsobaok with a party near Darjoollng the ing relatives at Farmingdale. ]Hen-Setc Stores Opened. were the guests of Miss Lilian Dangler on Mrs. Daniel I. Schanek and daughter oars were seon approaohlDg us, aud the Mrs. Martha Bennett is having lier Sunday. The borough council has passed an of Holmdel were the guests of Mrs. Luke Btcod of ono of tho young men. became unreshingled. William Jackson, Thomas Walling ordinance compelling huckmen nnd ex- house manngeablo and succeeded In getting away George Doughty is visiting friends and John Riordan, all of Shrewsbury, Hance on Sunday. pressmen to,.keep a certain distance from at Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. William Morris of Smith- from tho rider, who bad dismounted. Tho Freehold. were visiting friends here on Sunday. the railroad platform when soliciting burg were guests of Joseph A. Golden on engineer stoppod his train, and tho brabetrade.. Mrs. Fred Finck of New York and Sunday. man caught tho borso, which had run Eomo Ltncroft News. Mrs, Elizabeth Dangler of Philadelphia Cook & Kettle have opened a wholeWIIITIIEB FOR BACINO. R O A D l R l D l N O A valuable cow owned by William H. distance awny. sale fish market on East New street, and OR TOERIKO, About three weeks ago William Bray, are visiting Mrs. James H. Dangler. Foster died last week. While on n railroad near the boundary H. M. Rogers & Co. have also opened n while in the woods near his home, lost Schanek Hunt picked over a bushel of harles V. Scobey has a new bicycle. line of India aud Assam tho conduotor was THE market on Church street. bin watch. He prized it very highly, it potato bugs from an acre of potatoes one asked why there wuro not more collisions, The Madison avenue dairy company being left him by his uncle, William A. day last week, OB thoro was only a slugla track. "Tho Vanderburg News. of Now York has opened a branch store Bray, at his death, Search wns made Philip Dangler of Red Bank spent Sunreason Is very slmplo," ho repllod. "Wo in the Brelmi building. for the watch, but without success, and day with his mother, Mrs. Lydia A. Mr, and Mrs. C. 8. Conover and family havo only ono engine." Fi L. Kniipp & Co. liuve opened a bi- all hope of ever finding it was abandoned. Dangler. visited Conover Taylor of Colt's Neck To pass away tho tlmo during a tedious On Sunday Mr. Bray found tho watch cycle store in tlie Heidi building. Miss Alice Green of Poplar has re-one day last week. Mrs. Kato Thomp- dolayof tho Wain In tlio wilds of Assam Will more thsn fuinilltB purpose. Its speed , George W. Robinson of New York, a while walking through the woods, a long turned from a visit to relatives at Asbury son and Mrs. Ashton of New York were my frlond from Philadelphia and I tossod is unlimited. former resident of Seabright, visited distance from where he supposed he had Park. / guests of Mr. Taylor the same day. small coins in tbo grass, and tho vlolont lust it. friends here on Sunday. He will start Miss Ida Wliire of Ocean Grove spent Mia. Thompson will spend the summer scramblo tbut followed un tho part of tho 22 World's Records Prove This. for a trip around the world about July at Colt's Neck. Miss Edna Evans entertnined about Sunday with relatives here. natives was a romarlcablo sight, I count1st with Jamea StokeH. He will bo gone twenty of her young friends at a May William WhifeLOf Tinton Falls spent Miss Flora Taylor took first honors at ed 07grown mon^struggling In a hoap over about two years. Its wearing ciunlltli* have teen tried and party on Saturday. Maud Bray was Sunday with friends here. Peddie institute in her class. ucolu valued at 11 bout ono-balf of our coat. never found wanting. David S. I'oppingn has bought a new queen of the May. Tho day was pleasMiss Emma Davis has recovered from When tbo ainusoinoct becatno a little Victor bicycle. The frame mid the rims antly spent in playing games, and at an attack of sickness. monotonous, I.oxclatmod, "Is it not tlmo Shakespeare on t h e S t a g e . are nickei-pluted nnd Mr. Poppinga it four o'clock refreshments, consisting of George Bennett of Poplar is sodding V for ua to bo going, or wbub onuses tho long proud of his mount. cake, candy, oranges, bananas and soda his front yard. Why did Browning, Tonnysbn, Swln- dolayf" A gentleman noar mo said, "Yon H. D. CURTIS, G. \V. Osborn nnd C. II. Megill re- water, were served, after which the Howard Miller spent Sunday out of burno, MqUhew Arnold and others de- dor is tho oDglucor ecrambllug with those turned from Edgewnter on Thursday, guests returned to their homes having town. voted to tho the.itor fall as dramatists? Bo- other mon for tho coin just thrown out," Stearns and Tourist whore they have been engaged in blind spent a very pleasant day with their Ida Triiax of Poplar is sick with mea- CBUBO thoy thought only of litoraturo and and sure enough thoio bo was, with bl» fishing. . .young hostess. sles. disdained to study tho nrtof dramntlo oon- firoinan. In tho midst of tho luoloo. BICYCLES, Irons & Hnrveynro biiilding a store on Gtruotlon. Lord Tonnyson would uovor The public school closed on Friday and 27 Broad Street, Red Bask, If. J. East Ocean avenue which will bo occu- Clmiles 8. Aitltins. tho teacher, hns rehave succoodod on tho etago If his work EATONTOWN NEWS. X. pied by them us a grocery store when turned to hia home nt Trenton. Miss had not boon taken In-hand by Sir Honry Ingenuons. finished. Mary Wyckoff of Ocean Grove has been ,l<iroi« IF. Tllton .W<ifce« a fliarge Irving nnil Augustln Daly, both prnoticnl Mr. Stllby—Roally, Miss Chatter, I The children of the Holy Cross school engaged as teacher for tho coming yeiir, men, nnd Shnkn/tponro himself would not don't BOO how you find BO 111110I1 to talk Against II tlltain Hurley. will give nn entertainment in Holy suoccoil on any Kngllal) stagoof today it hla Mrs. Michael Culciunn and daughter, Aaron W. Tilton, Sr., of Tinton FallB, I am very glad to havo boon lntroCross hull on Monday night. and Mrs. John Sheehnn of Red Bank, has made a charge, against William Hur- plnys wore not faBhlonod for tliu Btago by about. iluood to you. It la a plcnsuro to hoar an Miss LoniBo Kogurty of Lakewood is spent Sunday at Long Branch. practical stago nmnngors. ley for assault nnd buttery. On May 23d original porson talk. now assistant operator at the telephone Mix. Mitrgnret Thompson of Ili-d Bunk Tilton was passing Hurley's homo when And yot tiioro nr« poowlo Idlotlo enough Miss Cliattor—Yes. Our hostess said sho exchange at this place. visited her daughter, Mis. Harry Viin- ho heard a noluo itiHide. Mr. Tilton ia a tn tnlk nlinut tho vandalism and tba thought wo would got nn nlooly togothor. Nearly every inhabitant of thih place 1'elt, lust week. ntroolouflly bad tnsto of touching onoword countable. Ho Hays that Ilurloy was pooplo of opposlto oharaotorlstloa weuru one of 1\ Hull Packer's tscnnlurlii JoKepli Evans and daughter of Free- drunk and wns creating n row and wns or syllnblo of Shakespearo, when thoy Iarothink '• push " billions. Cheaper tlie tei IMB, poor- j hold Hjient Stmdiiy, with liin futher, disturbing tlio peace ntitl neighbors. He know tlinfc ovury tib/ilcunpunrunn produc- youf always likely to ^ho oongonlal, don't The addition to the house of I,ovi (1 Tlioimm EvniiH, went into tho lioiiBe to suppress the riot tion by Clmrlon Kami and Irving was most er the organ or piano. 4A Invili 1H completed nnd tln> IHIIIHK in now Minn Nellie A. Colemnn hns bought a and Hurley threw a lighted lamp nt him. oarofully. and JudluloiiHly edited for tho n'rttlnii Paperi' . being repainted. llarlford bicycle fruin William A.'Coin Hurley wns taken before Juntico Ed- i;tngo. J)o tlicRo lntoinjinrnta wrltorn want Good quality, unruled, smooth aurfaco Eook at tho niiine on any A Htriitt'lierry festival for tlni of lied Hunk, wnrdH and wna held in $1(1(1 bail to nwttit an oxnmpluf Lot tliiim look nt tlio Ijyoe.11111 conts for 24 sheets ; DO eontfl for n packof the Methodist clmrcli WIIN I -III Kdini KVIIIIH nnvo a May party on Sat- tho action of the grand jury. He waived noting edition of "Much Ado About 7ngoof instrument advertised for 120 sheets; or ifl.10 forapaclingc Monday, urday to 11 number of,, her young M'hixil- u hearing. James II. Miirllu was lilt) Nothing." What Imn booonio of nonr Dotf of <1BO nlieetH, at John II. Coolt'c— Adv. berry, 1 HIIOUIII Ilka to knowf Cut down W. nothing clown nnd almost iimtes. bondsman. TINTON FALLS NEWS. hl Arthur Coiiovcr IKIH been rnnlinril to Tho DnugliU'rH of Liberty gave ft 5 uothiDg A month nnd you']). 4 tlie IIOIIHI' with a HCVI' I ' I I attack of hickWith Hlialuwpmro, It niiiHt ho ulthor it Hlrnwberry and ice cream fmtivnl in Uliod 1'lnliiiti/ lit SHIM in inn IIIKI' lieHs, ensi) ol cutting or no Bliakcspoaro for tho Creiicent hull on WedncHdny night. ".HOC it is dear JIB a gift. J J^ummer Boarders AnIrlnii. Thniiinii F.VUIIK in Herioiisly nick and And It IH nousuiiHu loxiiy)>liiU wlint lCiigeiicMiincc, DmigliiHHIuoiim, HIIIT liii rri'iivcry in ilimblfnl, JJc itt 70 vennt Thii Kntniitown Cornet Hand will givo Btago. Blr Iliuiry Irvlnit can do with liupnnltr Famous nidkcb: Ilmdnian, 5 it fewtlvnl in the h/ill on Ifrt/ornlioii Dny. Ilivwcr ami llciijniTilii I'ninUliii went l< old. limy not liu diino l>y miy oilier manager Hwinuiiini: Uivcr nfter HIIIKI Hiitiirdn IVCIH &> Pond, Cmckering, J The iichool nl thin plue.c cloned on Frl Who IH /< ''"vcrntiMiil uliuUmt tit HhakuHnight. They wi'iu awiiv Mi'iirly nil ni|;l day with a few excrciiien by tho children, potiro. __ _ MorrUvlllo Nona, niul cnii|;li( clcvcii iiliuif, S Standard, Story ita Clark, f !)]'. llognn of Oxford, N. J., WIIH the llattio Drown of Oceanic, wlio In viiiil gueiit of Clmiieii H. Ail It in hmt week. Among the people, of llm plnco who Amorlcnno a t Stratford. ^ aro not hawked about, like j . ing Mm. Ahcl Colemnn, fninti'il in Join have been visiting friends in nearby MIHH Hiirnh lliown of Matawnii w the "Of oourso," nays tho KIIHIIHII bout to JJennett'n (;i(iooiy HIOIO IIIIII Hntiirduy, towns during the punt week am Jamco Kiiciit of Aim. Kilwnrd Model). Hproutcd potatoeH.for what 5 hlfl Ainiuii'iiii visitor, "you will run dowi Mm. Aaron w. Tllton, Hi., and he Mr. nnd Mrn. Jucoh Antonlden HJKStiI K. Crawford, Clinrleii 1'. (,'oiiovor, Mlna to Blrutfonl to ilrnj> n (car nt tlio tomb 0 AIIH Htllwell, MIHH Catherine Kyiin, <liuiKht<'r llcllci vMUrt filendn at Ncv Hiindiiy nt •Ji.Tiniyvlll<>. you will givo. Yot wo j Hhnlcu«|nmro, All Ainorloann do thai.' York olio day Imit week, Jiiini'ii Dyiiiiii In hiiildini; a ni'w wnj;<>n .lumen Mancy mid MIH. John I). Htll- Thougli W(W|ilnf( Ainoilcniiu nr» nuldon waKon and her daughter Rachel. Mr, nnd Mm. .Iniiicii Tillon of WCH ulied to hiii burn. can't make m much on S In Hlratford, tlio uthur kind iiru nc J/Oiin llranrli hpt'iil, Sunday with Mr, inn Minn Hiirah Coiitello, who linn been nt ft noon A, IJ. ('(mover in uoiilincd to the limuic nii'ii(>ri>u» Ilinru tlmt 11 MI!r ]ii'iinunoii nnil 4 two an other dealci'H do on w. Mrn, Aaron W. Tllton. Now York Imipltnl for treatment for licr wllh glvu tlio trniii|ull, ilnvimy old cycii, ban returneil homo fully recovered. patroimito (lc(irn« Crawford iipenl Kiitiirility will town i > Immil «v<iry mimniui that knepil I In 8 ono cheap ono. Mfl riiiilciy MiH, Trtivonlau lleinii'll i Mrn. K. W. (loldim IH building nnow limlwldarit Impiiy nil wlntcir. I'lin town r Jtcd I limit. Kirch to her hotuio. Tlio jxirvhh t Ocmiujiort Nuwn. )|yo/i on rJlialujsjii'ivni anil AliiiirlonnH, - Mm. Hniimcl J, Ileiindt'ii IIOIIIUI Im A ciiiniiiillce nppoliiti'd liy Hid lionid uilf tlm IUIIKIII of tlio lioimo, "Who do you Huppnnn nvor lmyn thorn) nlrcmly rrwlvml n miindcr of mimim of fri'i'lidldein iiii'l (it (ho (loosf> Nin.'k Mrn, John It. Conovor ami her fftinf tliliiH'if'' All lCngllnhmnii wnn liNird nnklii id iHinrdom, of 1 /liKirof I irpont pint of lant we«k with bi'lilf^i) on Tlmmiluy. They di'eldeil to blfl Imlycoint'iiiilun lul tlmy imored Into Hi Krrd /\ 11 KU it nnd John llniiiictl iip IU tlm l)ili]|;i' li'iiiiiornilly IIIKI to widen Mrs. Wllllani Antonlilcn, window of a k.ihilihnnnk nliop, "Oli, Hnndiiy with frii'iidil at I/mi< Itmnch, Mlfti Annlo Kolly of N<nv York wnn AiiMirli'ailn," WIM tlm rii|ily. "Tluiy'll liny thn i/iaw in dm full, Aboolutoly Pure. tho iccint gueul of her fiither. Joint nnytbliiu; at Blrntforil," Wllilatii A. UlildlK of Anbury 1'nrli Wlnlli'ld H, i'rled linn r( ImII'MI IK A ormn. of Urt»r Mkln« l«>wJ;»V l"»'""l« Kelly. BjwntHiinilny iitTinton Knlln. from Vlrj/lim Iti'iich for it nhoit vl ilt. In InMimlnji MrMiirtii.' ViiiM t/nltfit Mldt'i <luv Jimioit ('. Hli1 kleu WIIII it rwtntvlnltor Frod MnijCti linn l«ni(.;ht n ('rciicent III trnmrnt WH»* /I'l""'. .,_,„ „ „ „ „ Mrn, (/'liurleii (I. Mrl'iuldru lit cm lined Jt pnyuUi nilvvrtlifv III cycle, I I I HiKiHil riiwiimi ( 0,, NKW VOIIK In lu-r IIOIIKI ivltli ii|i'l<(icii«. ' e t t e . i - •••"' « • •••.. •- • '• Sweet Caporal Cigarettes California Cherries Proposals for Sewer Work. *-»• .».»•«. • A BUSINESS WHEEL. CTEARNS O I J 8 \ Cheap Terms, \ Poor Pianos. £ I POWDER