Document 6494275
Transcription
Document 6494275
: . VOLUMEXXIII. HOW TO PAY FOR SEWERS, REDBACK, N. J.. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1901. WEDDINGS. Odell-Voorhees. PUPJLS TO BE PROMOTED. have.perfect records for the past year. Among those with exceptional records are tlie following: PAGES 1TO 8. NEWS FftOMl- A MEETING AT THE TOWN HALL A fashionable wedding occurred at the A LIST OF THOSE WHO WILL INTERESTING ITEMS FROM BEHEOIIASIC STRKET SCHOOL Red Bauk Baptist church at four o'clock Eleventh grade—Grace Riddle and Mury VanDorn ON MONDAY NIGHT. YOND THE SHREWSBURY. GO iti. HIGHER GRADES. have been neither absent nor tarOyln (he lasc two yesterday afternoon, when Miss Mary yeais. Herbert Dnvla has n perfect record for tlie Einina Odtll, daughter of MrB. Maria A DlsciiHsion of Methodsjar Assess' Some Exceptionally Good Records year. Peder (jlselson and Charles Allaire have not Daniel Clevenger Convicted of Jlitabsent but buve each been tardy once. ina the Coat of the Seiners by Prop- Louise Odell of Irving plate, became the • ting Ha mi ChadwUk and, Fined of Attendance-Over One TIiou- been Tenth grade—Mahel Wolcott, William Grovcr and bride of J r a Norjis Voorhees, son of erty Owners, Town Commission6U5-An Engineer Scalded—A Dog Hdntl l.'liildren Attended the Red George Leukel have been neither absent nor tardy William S. Voorhees, also of Irving ers and Sewer Commissioners. Shot. during the year. Mnry Cumberson lias a perfect Itanl; Schools Last Year. pkice. The ceremony was performed in attendance but has been tardy once.' About thirty property owners of Eed Daniel Clevenger. of the Highlands During the past-year the rolls of the record Ninth grado-tloyd Rush hn.su perfect record In Bank were at the town hall on Monday by the pastor, Rev. William B: Miitte- .Red Bank public school continued this both was tried at Freehold on Monday on an attcudunco and promptness for the past two night, at the meeting of the town com- son. The church, was'decorated with names-of 1,027 pupils. Of, these 590 years, and Arthur Davis for the past year. indictment charging him with commitmissioners, and the sewer assessment palms and cut ilowers, and the pews were in the primary department, 294 in Eighth grade-May ,0'onklln has a perfect record ting assault and battery on Harry Chadthe year. • commissioners. It was intended to have were draped with white taffeta ribbon. the grammar department and 137 in the forSeventhRiiido—WalterVanBruntand LeslleRob- wick, ' Jr., January 15th. Chadwick simply a conference of the two boards The bride •wore'a gown of white or- high school department.. The average inson both have perfect records for the vear. testified that he was employed at Barney and the lawyers o£ the town to consider gandie, over white tatFeta, trimmed with daily lutenclnnce during the year has Sixth grade-Agnes Cullen and Arthur Smock Keenan's hotel caring for horses driven white chiffon. She woro a'large white have perfect records for the year. Eddie Barber the sew-er assessment matter, but»a o been 707. The pupils who will be pro- been absent one half day during Ihe year and there to a dance; that, Clevenger acnumber oE ' property owners attended. picture hat, trimmed with chiifon and moted to higher.gradrs at the beginning has costed him in the dance hall and invited has not been tardy. . the meeting and toot part in the pro- roses,- and carried a banquet of Bride of the next school year are as followaj Fourth grade-Llllle Duncnn has been absent only him outside, saying that he would whip roses. Edward S. Allaire, Albert S. one half duy nnd.has not been taray. f ceedings. him ; that afterwai d, when he went out Miller and James Throckmorton of R?d "From tenth'lotleveutli grade—May Aytrs. Mary Second grade—Rosier White has a perfect record The meeting started out with a very Bunk and John II. Sanl'oiil.of New (,'nnibeisoii, I,(!« EnrlKht, Clarence Gray, Wlllinm in both attendance atld promptness for the year. to see if any other rifts had come, Clevenacrimonious discussion, and the sewer York, acted us uslirrs. They'wore cuta- (in>ver,llnrnliHlulines, Enetou Hcndrlcksdn, osepli Harry Asav has a perfect record in attendance but ger hit him with his fist several lluiniw. E. li. Hitrtiroiiffh, Gertimie Luu'es.'George bus been lardy once. times. Chadwick said he could not ac• commissioner^ weie pitched into iu ways, white crepe Ue» jihd pearl gloves. 1,1'ttkiil, I'arrle-KIouut. Formal) T. McLe'in, Ada OAKLAND STREET SCHOOL. count for Clevenger striking him. Clevgreat shape by John W. Stout, Samuel A 3:40 o'clock the orchestra began to Kteplions, Bayard 'l'lirochinortou. Warren VanOI«af, grade-Willie Va'nKIrk has a perfect rec- enger testified that Chadwick had made Walsh and one or two others. The conv play "The-Dawn of Love."' This \v;is Kthel VnnZec. Mabel Wolcott," Elizalmtli Wenok, ordieventh in l>6th nttendnncc and promptness extending Maiuio Wilbur, W. It. Walllnc, Joseph Warner, misaioners' bill for their services was de lollowed over the past two yeurs, und Hany AntonidcS and threats that he would lick the one-eyed llulplj Wilftuss, William Pedloiv.. by " I n Beauty's Bower." The Oussie Scott both have perfect records for the ptrnt cop that night, and that when he hit nounced and their work was ridiculed, From ninth to tenth grade—Alma Aul, Anna year. ' Clinton Malison hQS been absent only one party entered the cliurcli at four Brown. Chadwick he was only defending himFinally the comaiissioners were allowed bridal Adelin Carson, Minnie Cnse.v. Florence Cor- bull ilny and hail not been tardy durlnp the year. to the strains of'the wedding nfcy, Unisy Duvls, May Frauds, (ieitrude, Norman, / I'ifth grade—Willie Antonldej and Isauo Dl*on self. The jury found Clevenger guilty • to have an inniDg and Peter T. Brady, o'clock During the May Patterson. Florence S'wunnell, Muelrelle White, /hove perfect records Iu both attendance and prompt- and Judge Heisley fined him $35. He the chairman of the sewer commission- march from(heLohengrin. May Wilson, Ellznui'th Hlfrglnson, Esti'Ilo Voorliees, ness for the year. orchestra played with .diaries will have until August 1st to pay tlie ClKititllit. Hnrrv Clayton, Arthur Davis^ ers, made a statement. He told the ceremony Third grade—i;lintotiVanSohoickhosbeen neither fine. united strings " Under the simile,of the Willliuii Duiioan, KdSinond Eisner, Adolph Grapelr difficulties theyVj had labored under in palms;'1 a popular love ballad from.the Ule absent nor tardy during the year. Hcisley. EU. Hime.y. Fred Kaiser. Cliurlrs McWilliam Peck of Atlantic Highlands, . not having a map of the sewer system, opera of Fioroilorn. This selection w;is Claskpy, Lelloy Neumann; William Suyre. Joseph Second grade—Walter Antonldes has been absent and one-half days hut has not been tnrdy dur- engineer on the steamboat William V. and told how they had tried to do their especially appropriate as the couple, were Stephens. Frank Tetley, Joseph Valentine, Willluin one ing the year, Waterman. . • Wilson, of Port Monmouth, was badly work without putting the town to the married beneath a bower of pnlms. At SIIItEWSBUBY ATENUK SCHOOL. Fn>in uiprlith to ninth grade—Francis Atwatar, scalded on Saturday while repairing a /-^expense of getting a map made, but the conclusion of'the.ceremony the wed- Ferleti Bluisdell.MiiyConkliu, Minnie Commes, "EsSlx'h grade—Paul Stewa't and Tlliie VanPolt leaky valve on the boat's boiler. He was found that they had to do this before ding Uliirch from Mendelssohn's ''Mid- tclle Curlurt, Joseph Cooper, Henry Dowit. Ollio both have perfect records in attendance but have tightening up the valve, to prevent it Kstelle, May Hnckett, Fred. Hurley. Emma Lafetrn, :ach been tardy once during Ihe year. the work was completedi, He said he summer Night's Dream" w.-.s played. 1 Lipplnuutt, Thompson t.ovutt. • Slurnniet fifth crade—Grace Hnckett has a perfect record from leaking when the threads cut off realized that there were clerical errors in After the ceremony a reception was Hurold Minuiili, l!essle Morris. Haze) l'oole, Willie Sutton, extending over the past- two years, und Rucbael and the valve blew out. Steam and the worR-,;and that in some instances held at the bride's home and was at- Eliza White, OUvo Weaver, Aniin Belle Guruttr, Dsborn bus been neither absent nor late during the water rushed out on Mr. Peck's face and 1'rniii seventh ts oijrht Biade—truest Wortuley, Aast year. "there were errors of judgment in tlie tended by tin) inini'.'diale relatives mid Leslie lloblnsoD, Hilda uniun, Ellza-i Third grade—Agnes Hackett has a perfect record hands, scalding him so badly that he matter of fixing the amount of the as-friends of ihe contracting parties. Mr. LeormLuni, Until Broniliv, Kdille .(ioruey. Utter- Eisner, Issle' ituring the imst yeaJ. i sessments. He said they would have and Mrs. Voorhees sailed tathiy on tlie Guipiil, Ucrtha Hiinklns.UllieJlason. Ensley Smock, Vlrst KrnUe—Itobert Haekett has a perfect record had to give up work. An engi'neer from New York is filling his place temporarily. Mi'ta VotiGlahn; Walter VunDoin. Kthel White. called a public meeting, after ihe assess- Old ; Dominion lino for a wedding trip to From sixlh to seventh .ffnide—Florence Bulnton," fortho year. . John Gant of Beltord was passing ment was made if they had thought Washington, Old Puint Coaifurt and Jehu (,'ouiii?r, Harry Clinihucrlaini .Intncs Ulark, Stewart Mitchell's at tliat place on they~h"S3a legal right to do this; but Richmond. Virginia. CLASS DAT EXERCISES. Agnes L'ulleii. Hazel Dennis. Irviuir Davidson, Anna The bride's travel- Hanlioru. Benjamin VonKenren, Harry Itobedee, Thursday when Williarn Bailey's dog, that their construction of the law was ing flrcss was u tailor-made of blue LultuvclinuiUerliiln, Fred Uuueau, ltessieVanUoiu, which spends most" of its time at Mr. that after the work was completed it cheviot., with hat to match.'suit Tlie. Annual "Jolly" of the Red thf re- Lulu Weybreriit, Willie Smoeli, A-rlliur.Smock, Mitchell's, ran out and grabbed him by had to be turned over to the judge of turn from their wedding tripOn flank Graduating Class, tieorire 'iruux, Harry Mulehow, Kthel Brnudon, Mr. andHarold Curtis. Harry Lnsser, Jerome Matteson, tho leg. The dog's bite did not bring the court without further revision. Vuorhees will make their home Katie Dletz, .Miirmiri't Fowli-r. Huzi'l Ti'ton, Doro- The class day exercises of the graduat- blood, but it made Mr. Gant so mad Public meetings had been called before Mrs. ing class of the Ke'd Bank public school tliv Stllwell, Florence White. Kus-ell Tiltnn. the assessment was begun, at which with the groom's parents i'or the present. From Ilftli to sixth glade—.!<!<lie Conk, Burd .vcie held in the opera house on Thurs- that he went home and got hie gun and only two or three persons had been pres- The bride received many co'-tly and llunei1, Mamie Louun, Irvlnp l.in'ctt. M;iuel l.yle. day night. Class day is the wind-up of shot the dog. • ent. If one-quarter of the persons who useful presents, including cut glass, sil- Auiia- Mulone, Julia McCreerj1, llurry ltoblnsou, the school year and is the special occa- The sloops of William Dennis of Port I'rate. Monmouth and Albert Eunyon of Belwere present at Monday night's meeting verware, cutlery, hric-o-lirac, lumps, Miucio From fourth to fifth crude—Carrie lilalsdell. Floyd sion on which th« seniors and juniors had attended the earlier meetings of the table linen", pictures, bint's eye maple Brady, Mulivt hray. ctiurlrsBmnniii,Fred Hroadlev, /poke fun at each other and have a gen- ford raced from New York to Port Monstand and rocker, cliina, Bohemian ward, sewer commissioners and had given the Kllii DriAvn, William Bioivn. Lulu L'linfnlicrlnln, eral good time. The exercises this mouth on Friday. Runyon's boat had a Beuiah Crainiuer. Mary Diivisuii, Leslie - Detinls^ start of about three minutes, hut Dencommissioners the benefit of their judg- candelabra, etc. The Broom's gifts to Llie Kiiith Punras,. Lllliu Duncan, Monr,)u Eisner, jolin year were specially good, the scholars' ushers were opal scurf pins. finished about that much ment then, Mr. Brady thought the asFix, lluiiry FcrKiuou. Ada. Beyer. John Jordon, hits at each other being not oiily appre- nis's- boat v Both the bride and .groom are well H'lllfiiin Jonlon. Ilossia Kttiui'dv, Fi-ed Jfatthews, ciated by the scholars, bat by the audi- ahead. sessment might have given more.general known at Red Bank. Mr*. Vnorhees is J 'eon Stryker, I'larer.ceThomi.'sMi. lima VouGlahu, satisfaction. Charles Cotupton, who wefrkn in Franence as well. So clever were the hits granddaughter of the, late Isaac llurry VunNoto, Muv Warden, Diivlil Matthews. cis EL Leggett's wholesale grocery house Mr. Brady's remarks made a very the that the audience was kept in almost a From third to fnurth (trade -Morton Adeuck, of New York city, who was in- Eilith l!ni'ker,Gco''i;e Broun. LlV.zie B iiileu.Fnuiocs at New York, spent Sunday with his favorable impression, and the rest of the Odell continual roar of laughter. terested in thi) steamboat business. He ChiimUerluin, Minnie nuuuar. i'iiunie Duvl^on, parents, Mr.'and Mrs. J. J. Compron of meeting was devoted to a discussion of died 1 Tlie address of welcome was made by 'riiomiw Howard, Herbert James, 1'ercy [.oupstreet. about four years ngo, leaving a Belfqrd. He was accompanied by Miss the proper mode of making the assess- large estate, Frances Jinny, Kumia Jlai'Sliull, vurlon Mintou, Harvey Bruce. Grace Pqpe gave the part of which was inherited Anffehi McMuhon, Isiinc Smith, Ernest Wliitin(r, Jennie Little of New York. ment, in orderthatitwouldbear fairly on by bis grandchildren. class Statistics for the girls and Joseph Ki-iink Whlttlekl, I^ouba Jonlon. Benjamin Schanck, who works in the all interests. The assessment must be From second to third Krade—Florence Allen, Harrison for the boys. Herbert Davis postofflce at Belford, is considered the made under the provisions of the sewer Harry Asav. Ituymonil lleunutt. Juliu Bennett, Han- pave the class history. '• Zip Boom," a lieetne—Shaviro. •» " a c t which trie town voted to accepf. nali Dnvh', Surah Fay, M ijy-Iftx,'(iertnuliMfrapel, class paper got out by tlie clasa, wag crack' bicycle rider of that place. He Miss Minnie Levine, daughter of Men- I'hrlstnl (impel, Ksineraldn Graf, Mildred Heyer, read'.by Bessie Greene and Anna Morris. expects to enjter in the bicycle races to All the lawyers present agreed that Huirenmin. Bllth Johnson, Mattle Kelluui, under the provisions of this law no as-del Levine of Keyporfc, was married Helen Dorothy Lawrvuno, Maude Lyle. Michael Lasser, Julia Walling read anode on some ivy be held at Atlantic Highlands on the sessment could be made that would be last Wednesday night to Isaac Leo Kennetli Morford. Mary Mnlfine. Jamea Morford. that ihe. class planted about the oldafternoon of July Fourth. Bessie Ni'timnnii. Giigcno 1'iittcrson, Edith PatterE. Walt Havens of Belford has had a absolutely equitable. The judges of the Shapiro of New York. The ceremony son, llurold I'ltte.nger. (ieoive Hoope...Myrtle Kou- school building. Margaret Sinock, Anne courts who nave had to pass on other took place at Arlington ball at New- Insou, Ethel Smock, Clifford Stiles, Lilian Topplu, S. Tallmaia and Anna Atkinson, repre- gasoline engine put in his fishing boat. assessments made under this law have York and was performed by Rabbi Mos- Harold Voorhees. Ensley White. Dnlores Whltlnir, senting old maids of fifty-years hence, Harry Foster, who recently had an enUntil Zleeler, Harry Cullen, Albena Ferguwon. Crawgine placed in his boat, has had the declared the law to be,crude and illy cow itz. The couple stood under a ford' Douglass. Felix Santa Anuelo. Hcury Kruschka, gave the class prophecies. Mary Vanformed, but it was felt at the meeting canopy supported by golden poles. The Evil Broiid'oy, Charles Hurley. • Dorn gave the class dedication. Thomas boat's propellor wheel replaced by a that some plan should be devioed to bride's dress was of white chiffon, cut From Mr t to second Krade-Allce Krause, Goluie Bennett, of the graduating class, gave larger one. make the inequalities of the assessment en traine, and she carried a bouquet of Carr. Ethel fnrr. Clmrlesnnnti Watson. Ernest the juniors some good advice and Enola Henry Applegate, who mowd from white roses and lilies of the valley. Lily Grote, Ensley llrflndon, Kuthnlle Clmmeroy, Ethel Curtis handed down the key *f knowl- Belford to Ocean G-rove last fall to. work as light as possible. liohlihis. EMI Rintc, Vermin Brown. Gladys White, The assessment of corner lots,,.of busi- and Rachel Levine, sisters of the bride, Adullne Stllwell, Edith Wolcott. Marguerite McCol- edge from the graduates to their suc- at the carpenter trade with his father-inDaisy Duncnu, Mabel Duncun, Foster Spinning, ness property, of residence property, and were bridesmaids. Their dresses were Bun, Rnjniond Held, Bnrton Chamberlain, (Jussie cessors. The presentation of gifts to the law, Charles Lisk, has moved into -the proportioa oLthe_cost_whichjhould of white organdie. The couple will live -Schmidt^_Tessa J..ArtnstrQng,L_Johri Sagues. Gladys juniors was made by Myrtie Campbell, Thomas Carter's house at Port Moribe assessed on the town at large, were irTNew York, where the groonris"a~cloalr Watts, Virginia Jonlon. • mid'Mamie-Wilbur- made a great-hit- in mouth manufacturer. all discussed, and at the blose of the her response'ou'behalf of the juniors. Rev. E. C. Curtis of Atlantic HighOAKLAND STItEKT SCHOOL meeting the sewer commissioners stated From, seventh to elehtb gradd-Harold Allen, Herman Lasser gave a funeral oration lands preached at the Nuvesink MethoWells-Bodine. that they had derived much benefit from Harry AntonMes, Eddie Duvls, Edith Davis, Geortre while the class pretended to burn their dist church on Sunday morning. Rev. the discussion. They stated that they Bliss Kittie Wells, daughter of Mrs. Hackett. Clinton Harrison. Eflle Hibbetts. Sadie books and a dirge followed as the grad- J. W. Nickelson, the pastor of the UiccUis, CHuton Miinsjii, Ethel Oliver, Florenct . would ask the <ft>urt to allow them to re- Margaret Wells of Long Branch, was Oliver, Herbert Scott, Charles Thorpe, Mabel Wil- uates marched around the funeral pyre. church, preached a t Oceanport. call the assessment for revision, and that married on Wednesday to James R. Bo- bur. ' The gifts to the Seniors were presented Miss Sadie Despreaux of Locust Point From fltth to sixth frrade—Benjamin Atwater. by Margaret Blaisdell, and William W. has a position, as bookkeeper in J. G. on receiving it back they wculd revise dine, son of William Bodine of the same Katie Borden. Elsie Conover. Ike Dlxon,' Willard the assessment according to the general place. The ceremony took place at the Evaos, Frank Fenton. Lester Gaunt. Lester Hance. Conover read the class will. "The class Brookes & Co.'a grocery store at Atlanline which seemed to meet with most Star of the Sea church and was per-Walter Harrison, Morton Kelly. Ethel Utter, Sadie sang "Alma Mater" as the closing exer- tic Highlands. favor at the meeting. It was suggested formed by Rev. W. P. Cantwell. The Soden. Hilda Scott, Edith Smith. Carrio Tinker. i Mrs. John Glass of Port Monmouth White. Busle Wolt, Albeit Worden. that before they begin the actual work of bride wore a tailor-made suit of navy Elsie has a number of boarders for the sea* From fourth to fifth grade-Clifford Chandler, revising the assessment that a confer- blue, trimmed with Renaissance lace. Christina Hook, Edith O'Hara, Fbtllp Warner, Alice son. this is the first season that she has Alumni Reunion. . ence of the sewer commissioners, town Miss Mamie Wells, a sister of the bride, Weeks. • ,' taken boarders. From third to fourth grade—Enid Brand, Sadie The annual reunion of the Alumni MiBs Rose Benjamin of Navesink, who commissioners and lawyers be called, at was bridesmaid. She wore a Bteel gray Dlxon. Byron Davidson, Ruth Dlbben. Arthur which definite plans for the revision of suit. The couple went on a wedding Esclielhach. Wilheimlna F,scbelbach, George Gray,, association of the Red Bank public school fell and injured her back two weeks ago, Willard Elliott Anna Holmes. Burton Swnntit'U. Al- was held at the town hall on Friday while playing " sapling swing," is again . the assessmept be talked over; then to trip through New York state. berta Smock. Irene Siulrl), Henry Voorbees. Notta night. These officers were elected : call a public meeting after the assessable to be out. Woodward. Waller Cneesonian, Andrew Roberta, President—Joseph Blaisdell. ment is completed, and before it is subKettel-Cook. •• Mr, and Mrs. William Stewart of Troy, Boyd Jackson. -' VICB president—Edward S, Allaire, . mitted to the court. At this meeting Miss Anna May Kettel. daughter of From second to third (rrade-Waltcr Antonldes, fecrettry—Clifford Patterson, New York, are visiting Mr. Stewart's Aaron Dlxon. Harry Editor Leslie Hill, Emma Holthe assessment should be open to inspec- Mellin Kettel of' North Long Branch, tnao. Rebecca Hubbard, Mndellae Manson, Pearl Treasurer—Miss Julia Anl. parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart of tion, and anyone thinking he was un-was married at the Methodist parsonage Moody. Frauk Mount. Fred Noblo, tiertrudti Warner. Corresponding secretary—Warren 8mock. Navesink. Executive committee—Herbert Davis, Hiss Eloafairly assessed could present his object- at that place on Sunday, June 9th, toJosephine Zuma. The license formerly granted to Michael nor CumhetBOD, Mrs. William Elliott. • From Bret to second grade—Georne Moodv, Ltiions to the assessment to the commis- James Cook, son o£ Jesse B. Cook of cinilu Richurdson, Charles Gray.'Dorothy Matteson, Rowland for Swift's hotel at- tup HighThe exercises included recitations by sioners. •-. . Mon mo(ith Beach, Rev. T, S. Hammond John Reid. Chories Vcrnell, Harry VanNote* Eslelle Alice Blajsdell, a piano solo by Miss lands has been transferred to John E. ' When the meeting finally adjourned performed the ceremony. I h e couple Baldwin, Vinton Bishop. Agnes Anderson, Lester Miss Alma Austin, a soprano solo by Miss O'Connor. Conorer, Kutherlno Holmes. Eva Scott, Sarah Sunit was with the best of feeling on all will live at Monmouth Beach. Capt. Hiram Seeley of Belford has had born, Lester Butler, Mildred Blrdsall, Preston Anna Hayes and a baritone solo by Percy sides^ The'indications are that an asMorrla, Robeit Black,. Leon Burdgo, Beulali Mun- Parker, Nearly all tho numbers were his sloop overhauled and has commenced sessment, made on the general lines sug' ?, Adrian Mlnton. / j encored. Prof. Richard Case, a former his fishing trips between New York, and gested at Monday night's meeting, will A Business Anniversary. SHIlinVSDtlRY of the school, made a short Rondout. give general satisfaction and will be Next Saturday A. Salz & Co. of Key- From sixth to Boventh grade—Leslie. Austin, Bat- principal Joseph Covert of Port Monmouth is address. subject to only slight changes when the port will celebrate the 28d anniversary tle Barknlow. Kutherlno Cavenaugh, Eneena ManRefreshments of cake and ice cream confined to the house with liver trouble. Marlon McQueen, Paul Stewaid. assessment is opened for public inspec- of the opening of their present store. Ion, From fifth to sixth grade—Roba Bodine. Flomnce were served and the remainder of the Dr. O.' W. Budlongof Belford is attendtion. The occasion will also celebrate the 40th Fouotaln, Grace Htckctt, Josephlnu Mauier, Mary evening was spent in dancing, ' ing him. Muldoon,. Ernest Oliver, Ba*hul Osooru, Edward William Nieman of Port Monmouth is anniversary of their business career and Quinn, Ensluy Rogers. unable to work on account of a felon on the ,85th anniversary of their career in From fnurlh to fifth grade—Louise DenDett. MarProf. Allatrom's Concert. his hand. Cole. Edwin Duvls. LInnio Flnkle, Bessie A Child Bitten by a Dog. The annual concert by the pupils of Key port. Musio will be furnished -dur- garet Hackett, Jnmes Jeffrcjs, Joseph Johnston, Cassie Miss Hattie Turn en of Atlantic HighProf. H. E . Allstrom's academy of ing the day by the Young American Kerney. Alice Leonard, Kenneth Mytloger, Louise' Norraa Lane, aged two years, daughmusic was given in tlie Baptist church military band of New York and theMjtlnger, Emma Patterson. Loiln Patterson, GODOvn ter of MrB. Florence Lane of Fair Haven, lands spent. Sunday with Miss Mary Gibson of Port Bilonmouth. Pennlngton, John Qtilnn, Edltb Schroedcr. William last night. The church and lecture store will be specially decorated for theShields. Gertrude SnlfTen, Cora Tllton, Addle Van- was playing in the yard near the dog Reed Mageo has moved from Mrs. ' • room were crowded. The programme occasion. Brunt, Beatrice Warwick, Harold Warwick. \ kennel yesterday morning when the dog ,,,.r •»»• • From third to fourth arado—Alborla Bennott, grabbed the girl and dragged her into Mary Tbiel's.house at Belford to Frank was entirely instrumentaf^noluding solos Mnttlo Carroll, Tlnlu Eurich, Agnes Hackett, Fred the kennel, The girl was badly bitten Thlei's house at the same place. dnd selections on one, two, throe and • Mad D o g Scare. Ivlns, Willie LoValloy, Clifford Llpplncott, Arthur four pianos with orchestra accompani- The family of Charles WilDon of Nave- MCQUOOD, Howard Tllton, Honry Day. Kmirm Olnle- over the eye and there was also a slight Georgo Patterson of Belford, who was ment. The concert was very fine and sink were eating dinner last Wednesday son, Asio Holmes, Willie McNeil,' Atta McOloskey,' bite on the arm. Dr. A, A. Armstrong laid up last week with soro throat, is Ncstlor, John Prcdmoro, Jamea Predmore, cauterized the wound nnd it is not. able to be'out. reflected great credit alike on teacher in an out kitchen when a dog that gave Annlo Florence Rogers, Arabella Sanborn, 1 Miaa Lillian Richards of New York and pupils. ^ ^ ^ _ ^ every indication of being mad ran into From seconiLto thlid grado—AIIco Apolegato, thought that serious results will follow , spent Sunday at Dr. R. G. Andrew's of 1 Jero Applegato, Ethel Blako, John Carroll, Mary Tho dog is naturally cross and it has a the room. Mrs. Wilson fled,,with her Navesink. ^ ^ Herbert Colo, Chnrloa.Olblln, Jeroino litter of pups. It will b^ billed. ' grandaughter to the house and Bertlin Conover, The Oceanic Inn to Open. OlnBsoy, Willie Hnckett, clarencci JohnBon, Jennie ' The Oceanic Inn will oppn to-morrow and Sadie Wilson crawled up on a big Kcnlcr,- Walter Lane, Edna Noser. Mary Oakcs, An Indian Encampment anil Festival Osborn. Alysltifl Patterson, Ada Predmore, nigjit for the season. The dancing pa- desk in the' out kitchen. Joseph E. Amnry Mary Sortel, Walter Thompson, Charlos VanWicklo, A Race Meet at Freehold. Massabesic council of the degree of vilion has been roofed and the Inn hasJohnson was Bent for and he shot the U o n VanBrunt.EIIsha Warwick. Frank Pcdlow. The Freehold driving club will hold a Pocahontas of Red Bonk will bold an InFrom flret to socond gradc-Habel Abbey, Chrisbeen thoroughly renovated and put in tine Applogate, William Dowel, Jacob Eurloli, Helen matinee race on Saturday afternoon, dian encampment and strawberry festifirst-class condition. After the first of Grauflo, Rotiblo Ilnokctt, Arllo Holme), Harry Jnok- June 20th, at two o'clock. There will val in the vacant lot adjoining the flre The,Secret la Out, July there will be vaudeville performson, William Lane, NnrguorlU) luoss, MamloMcOuo, ances every night, followed by dancing, This Saturday, the 22d, A. Salz & Co., Hazel McQueen, Loo Mytlnirtir, Angolo Ostondorff, be three races for prizes, either club house on White street next Monday night. There will bo music and other To-morrow night a souvenir will be given Keyport, .celebrate the 23d anniversary Kenneth McQuoen, Vera Hooves, LOUIB SoITfll, Sadlo members or ntnatuers to drive. amusement. ' , to every lady who attends the opening. opening of present store with music, SoUul, Ailolla Volleau, Rcglualil VnnBrunt. superb decorations and attractions,— A number of thq .children have made To Introduce finger Tipped Silk Gloves, excellent records during the year for Tho ."Block Cat Brand" stockings for Grand Concert This Saturday „ Adv. . , ' • ' . - - •:— »»» •> • , ' promptness and regular attendance. boys and girls we will sell same Thurs- By the Young Amerioon Concert Band Fifty cent quality, limit one pair to each purchaser,.Thursday, Friday and Satur- THE. REGISTER—every , young man, Some of them have not missed a day, day, Friday-and Saturday at 11 cents a of Now York at A. Salz & Co,, Keyport, day at 88 cents a pair. Joseph Salz, every young woman and' every family nor have they beeif late, during tho last pair. No limit, buy all you want. Joseph will be a rare treat and in itself worth' two years, while a considerable' number Balz, Red Bank.—Adv. going miles to hoar.~.4eJv. RedBank4tfv noeds ft.—Adv. , SHOOTING FOR AN UMBRELLA The Prize Won bu Borden HViwce Jr.-Oiher, /Events. ' t A match for the umbrella given b. Jacob Kridel was shot at the Kiverside gun club grounds last Friday. The match was a handicap event and Albert L. Ivins was handicapper. The umbrella was won by Borden Hance, Jr., who made a score of 22. He had twenty extra targets as a handicap. He broke 12 out of his first 25. and he broke 10 out of his extra 20. Albert L. Ivins was second with 20 out of 25. . He had.no -handicap. Eddie VonKattengill got 19, with a hadioap of 2; and the other shooters came trailing along after. Several other events were shot. Eddie VonKattengill got a dollar in a sweep at ten birds with four entries ; Albert L. Ivinswon two similar events ; and Ivins won a quarter from VonKattengill in a five bird event. There was Borne field shooting for fun. Some of the new members of the club made some remark able scores—remarkably poor, that is. Ten new applications for membership in the dub. have been received. The proposed new members are Walter Lay ton. William A. Hopping and Borden Hance,-Jr.,_Df Red Bank ; Charles Bill ings and J. J. O'Donohue of Shrewsbury William D. Pontin of Little Silver, Frank Muldoon and E. I. Vanderveer of Freehold ; W. H. Perrine of Keansburg and A. A. Schoverling' of New York city. These propositions for membership will be acted on at the meeting of the club the coming Friday. Matches at live pigions will be shot at the meeting on Friday of this week. A Colossal Sale of Fine Shirt Waists 59c. THE FACTS IN THE CASE. The manufacturers of these shirt waists are bu ildere of the future. They ever seek to ally themselves to retailers with vast outlet and knovping us as large purchasers in combination with four "stores they strived by giving us extraordinary Values to beat competition. 59c. ONE THOUSAND SS-IIRT WAISTS, 98c. 1.25 : THE FINEST WE EVER HANDLED, are here in c onsequence of the idea. That the price has no bearing on value is patent when we say that right through and through the lot, the cheapest is worth one dollar, many $1.50 markings, and a goodly number would bring two to three dollars. Not even the Cheapest shows a raw seam; smooth, skilled sewing is the rule. Delicate and staple colors, in blends and contrasts,chic novelties in collars, yokes and cuffs, distinguish and stamp them choicest of all at 5 9 c , 98c. a n d $1.85. Imported Linens. Extra Quality l a w n s . Fancy Madras. Mercerized Fabrics. Plain and Fancy Pique. Galatens, Chambrays, etc. Perhaps the best point of all. This sale is sti ongest in, the moat wanted, WHITE SHIRT W A I S T S of every style and kind at 59c., 98c. and $1.26. 98c. 1.25 Joseph Salz, Broad and Mechanic Sts., R e d Bank. A SHOOTING TOURNAMENT. Albert Z. lvlna Makes a Clean Score at Thirty Targets. A tournament was shot at Freehold last Saturday. One of the events was a match between Mr. Fiegenspan of Newark and E. I. Vanderveer of Freehold for the championship of the Btate of New Jersey. The match was at fifty targets per man and was won by Vanderveer by a score of 85 to 83. Another event was a team match between members of the Freehold gun club and members of a Newark gun club. Nine men were on a side in this event and each man shot at thirty targets. Albert L. IvinB of Red Bank, who is a member of the Freehold gun club, broke his thirty targets and made a clean score. He was the only man on either side who scored thirty. Frank Muldoon of Freehold scored 27. Nief Apgar of New York, a member of the Newark club, broke 20. • The Newark club won, they breaking eleven more targets than the Freehold club. . Eddie VonKattengill of Red Bank broke 14 out of 15 in one event and got first money. Albert L. Ivins got money in four out of five events in which he entered. Mr, Ivins and Mr. VonKatteagill were the only Red Bank shooters at the tournament. Bicycle Races at Asbury P a r k . A bicycle meet will be held on the athletic grounds at Asbury Park on the Fourth of July under the management of Joseph Harrison, the crack bicycle rider of that place. The races will include a two-thirds mile novice, halfmile handicap, a mile open and a fivemile handicap. In the five-mile race a special prize will be given to tho rider winning the greatest number of laps. This prize is offered in order to keep the riders from loafing around the track and to keep up the interest of the spectators in the race. Diamond prizes will be given in all the events. A Tie Race. There was a running race on the Al~lenhurst~speedway "lastnveek-between horses owned by Stephen Newberry and Thomas Tice. The race wa's best two out of three heats, for $25 a side. Newberry's horse won the first heat on a foul. Tiee's horse threw his o^uartei boots in the second heat and did not finish,'but he was given the heat. In the third heat the horses finished neck and neck and the race was not decided. It will be run over again on Friday, June 31st, for $100 a side. A Sunday Dog Fight. Two prize bulldogs belonging to Richard Croker engaged in a fight to a finish at Richard CrokcVs place at Denl on a recent Sunday. In separating the dogs at the finish of the fight the keeper, Martin HendrickB, was so badly bitten that he had to have the wounds cauterized. The dogs cost Mr. Croker $4,500 and $5,000 respectively. * •«» A Woman Bicycler Hurt. Mrs. Gilbert H. Worthley of Little Silver wus riding her wheel home from Red Bank on .Friday night, and on Branch avenue Bhe struck a had bit of road and fell off. She sprained her left arm and bruised her side. The injury is not severe, but she will be laid up a few days. ^ i «. Two B I R Bass Caught. •William Moore of West End cnught a bass last week weighing forty pounds and J. E. Green of the same place caught ono weighing thirty pounds. Minor Accidents Last Week. Elmor Buckalow and J. Danser of Iiulaystown collided while out driving. Danser's horse was badly injured and Bucknlew^s now buggy Was broken. Wilson Nixon of Marlboro was cleaning his bicycle when his hand caught between the chain and Bprookot. The nail of tho finger was torn o'fl. A horse bolonging to L. Yunker, the Keyport baker, and driven by Frank Warnock, rail away and damaged the rig to tho amount of $85. William H. Flitcroft of Farmingdnle was using a saw when tho flaw slipped and severed an artery in his hnnd. Freeholder W. F. Gravatt of Clarksburg mndo a misBtep and broke a small bone'in his ankle. Stephen Conover of Long Branoh fell from a wagon and was laid up for several days. | AT THE VARIETY STORE.| % Bargain Specials. E X T R A VALUE. 4-foot 65c. 6-foot 76c. ..$1.00 85percent off for 1 week only. $ Lights Bobbing in the Night. PORCH SCREENS. Japanese Outside Split, 6x8., »,..... 76c. *;•; 8x10, $1.85* 10x10 81.65* FOLDING CLOTHES H ORSE.& The Latest Patent, 98c. | FREDERIC STEVENS, 43 Broad St., rear Postoffice, Red Bank, N. J. g > • » » • • • • • 500 DOZEN CANNED GOODS j Yet to dispose of at the remarkably low price of ^ C * per can, which includes Tomatoes, Peas, Corn, Beans (stringless) and Soups. All varieties and grades of Flour worthy of confidence are offered our customers at Lowest Prices. J We use particular care in • selecting goods for our stock, and we believe that our J PALACE FLOUR~ar,#~5,0O per barreTtoT5e the"fin"e^t~:: ; in tlie county. • GRANULATED SUGAR at 5^0. * Canned Baked Beans at 5C. Parlor Matches, per pack'g. 5C. * Guaranteed Baking Powder, per lb., 1 0 c . * J. Clayton, Grocer, j 108 FRONT ST., Cor. Maple Ave., R E D BANK. Telephone Cali, No. 26. . ' . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • » • • • » • • • • • Shoes for Outing. An outing is all the better enjoyed if one has.the proper sort of footwear. It makes no difference whether you go to the mountains, the sea shore or stay at home, you'll find this store the place to fill your footwear needs satisfactorily and economically. A few price hints follow : Quality is better than price indicates because most of the shoes were made to order. Men's tan calf, rubber sole lace shoes, also Oxford ties .... $8.50, $3.00, $3.50 Men's white canvas uppers, rubber sole shoes, high and low cut $1.85 t o $8.50 Women's tennis shoes, rubber soles, either canvas or tnn uppers, make excellent golf shoes a t . . . . $8.00 a n d $3.00. FORD & MILLER, Broad St., Red Bank, N. J . Walk down Broad street some evening and watch the "little red glow" of a cigar ' as it bobs up and down while coming toward you. If you see a look of contentment on the man's face you can feel assured that' he is smoking a Joel' Parker or a Flor de Cuba cigar. There are many contented men in and around Red Bank. In fact the place is noted for them. The reason isn't hard to find. Joel Parkers and Flor de Cubas sell for 5 cents each and every man feels that he is getting more than his money's worth. WILLIAM CULLINGTON, Front Street, Near Broad Red Bank, N. J. 7 0 U MAKE MONEY If you consider these prices before buying your groceries. Read down the list and see if it is not true that we sell cheaper t h a n a n y other store. Prunes, Santa Clare, 10c. lb., 8 lb.. .25o. Peaches, California, 10c. lb., 15c. lb., 2 lbs 25c. Apricots, California, extra fine, per lb 15o. Apples, evaporated, 9c. lb., 8 lb 24o. Soap, 10 cakes good Laundry Soap.25c. Gold Duet, 4 lb; pkg.. . . . . . . . . . 15c. Kerkline, 4 lb. pkg 12c, Clothes Pins, per doz lc. Washing Soda, per lb. lc. Ammonia, per bottle *.. 5c' CRACKERS ALWAYS FRESH. 4 lbs. Lemon Crackers 25o. 4 lbs. Nic Nacks " Ginger Snaps 25c. 4 " Soda Crackers Peas, extra fine Sugar Peas, per can .15c. Corn, " " New York state, per can lOo. Tomatoes, extra fine, cold packed, 10c. caurUcans .....25c. Baked Beans, tomato sauce, 10c. can, Scans ...,25c. Good Oranges, 17 for ,25c. 25c. 25c. Mustard Sardines, per can Soused Maokerel, " " Oatmeal, 2 lb. pkg., best quality Cornstarch, per pkg., 4o., u pkgs 8c. 15c. 10c. 35c. Choice PineappleB, Bo. each; 3 for 24c. W. A. TRUEX & SON, Corner Broad and Wallace Streets, OUR SPECIALTY. Fruits ot All Kinds, STRAWBERRIES, CHERRIES, and other seasonable fruits. NUTS, All kinds; one varioty or mixed, just as you choose. CHOICE CANDY, 10c, per pound and upwards. Celery F r e s h E v e r y D a y . LOUIS PRATE, Broad Street, Jletl Hank, XT. J. Red Bank, N. J . McKEOWN & BURNIE, Granite, Marble, Blue Stone and Sewer Pipe. A monumept is an article t h a t a family buys only once; so it is better to buy one that will be satisfactory, even if it costs a few dollars more, than to get one of dome of 'the cheap granites which will always be an eyesore. We handle nothing but the b e s t granite and marble. Call and seo us. We*t and Jttontnouth 8ta.f ... RED BAKE, N. J. 949 WOMEN PLAY FOR PRIZES. Lawn Mowers Sharpened. A EUCHRE TOURNAMENT IN THE TOWN HALL. It Coat Flftp Cents to Sit in the Game and All the. Women Say They Got Their Sibney's. Worth Whether They Won Primes or Not. Ninety-two women turned out to the military e'ichre given in the town hall on Wednesday afternoon.for the benefit of the Bed Bank public library. It waB strictly a women's affair, no men being admitted. Mre. Halsey Wilcox of Asbury Park, who has bad much experience in giving military euchres for the benefit of the. Loug Branch hospital, had charge of the affair for the library women. The admission was fifty cents. The prizeB were donated by the business people of Bed bank and as,there was practically no expense in getting up the party the profits amounted to about $45. The hall was prettily decorated with the national colors to fully carry out the military idea. The heat in the hall was very oppressive, hut the discomfort of the' heat was not noticed in the excite tnent of the game. The playing began at half-past two o'clock and 23 tables were in operation. In military euchre each table is styled a fort. The aani& partners are retained throughout the game. As each five' point game ends, two of the players move to another fort to make an attack on that, •while the other two players defend the home fort, the partners alternating in their sorties until all the forts have been attacked. Every time a couple •win a game they are given aflag,and this flag they bring back with them to tbe home fort. If the couple defending the home fort win a game at the same time, they also get a flag, making two flags, in that game for the home fort. At the end of the game the four players at the fort having the most flags have first choice of the prizes and the players at the fort having the second highest number of flags have second choice of prizes. Altogether twelve.prizes were awarded at Wednesday's game. The last four prizes went to the couples having won the highest number of games regardless of the table they were at. The highest number of flags won by any fort was seventeen. The partners at this fort were Mrs. James E. Degnan and Miss Margaret Houlihan, and Mrs. George V. Sneden and Mrs. Riviere H. Sneden. Mrs. Degnan took a cracker jar as a prize, Miss Houlihan took a silk sunshade, Mrs. George Sneden took a Dresden plate and Mrs. Riviere Sneden took a silver candlestick. • Four forts tied for second place, each fort having sixteen flags. The tie was decided by cutting cards. The players at the table that won in the cut were Mrs. John James and Mies Nellie Bailey, and Mrs. Edward Whitehouse and Miss Florence English. Mrs. James took a cup and saucer, Miss Bailey took a china plate, Mrs. Whitehousjf took a mayonaise dish and Miss Englishrtook a handkerchief. The partners.^ one of the other forts of the four that tied were Mrs. Samuel Morford and Miss Minnie Boyd, and Mrs, Joseph Applegate and. Miss Minnie Cooper. At another fort the partners were Mrs. Charles Hendrickson and Miss Lillian Chadwick, and Mrs, Joseph P. Chadwick and Miss Florence Chndwick. Outside of the players at the winning tables the players winning the highest number of games were Mrs. Frank Lee and Mrs. Louis Y. Manning, and Mrs. Arthur A. Patterson and Miss Carrie McLean. Each couple won ten, games. They cut for choice of the prizes and Mrs". Lee and Mrs. Manning won. Mrs, Lee took a jardiniere and-asparagus ' plant, Mrs. Manning took an individual cream and sugar pitcher, Mrs. Arthur A. Patterson took a bottle of perfumery _and_Miss McLean took a two-pound box of candy. Refreshments of lemonade, fancy crackers and bon bons were served. Much interest was manifested by the players throughout the entire game and a very enjoyable time was had. Mrs. Wilcox's skill in managing the affair was largely responsible for its success, although she was ably assisted by the women of the library association. AH the women say they had a splendid time and got their money's worth in fun, not counting what some of them won in prizes. Bring your Lawn "Mowers to my shop and have them put in perfect order by Robert VanSchoick, who has had more experience in this work than any other man in Monmouth county. • All kinds of Farm Machines put in fine order. First-class horse-shoeing Sone. Reception! WALTER H. MERRITT. Shop at C5M6nmouth St.. Red Bank, N. J.' On Saturday, June 22c-, we shall celebrate the 23d anniversary opening of present 4tofe, the 40th of our buiriess career, and 35th in Keyport. We hope you will come and hear the music, see the superb decorations and innumerable attractions prepared for this day. Music Furnished by the Famous Young American Concert Band of New York City, will in itself be a rare-treat and worth your coming many miles. We mean to make this a gala occasion and- hope you will favor us with your presence. ' A Few Links inthe Chain of Supreme Bargains. MUSLIN UNDERWEAR. FOOTWEAR. Women's solid leather Oxfords, about 200 pairs in the lot, narrow widths, per pair Women's firfe shoes, about 200 pairs in the lot and worth up to $3 per pair... From the largest, shoe concern in the country, makers of a famous $3 shoe for women (Oxfords $2.50 and $3) we have closed out several grand lots of Oxfords. - We carry this make and could put them right in with our regular stock for $2.50, but to cause a mighty I C O attraction we offer them at, per pair., l i u l l They consist of women's fine dark tan and black kidskin Oxfords, all sizes and widths.' From another concern, makers of a well-known $3.50 make, we offer women's finest French kid, hand turned, stylish black Ox- I fordsrall sizes and widths, per pair.. 11 50c. CLOTHING. Fine cambric lace trimmed Corset Covers, standard 50c. quality, each., DRAWERS—Good muslin tucked drawers, per pair SKIXT3—Good muslin skirts,flounce,C C « , tucked and embroidery trimmed, each uUUl FOR THE TEETH. Preparations for the Teeth form an' important part of our stock, and there is no reason why any one should neglect this part of1 their toilet. We can especially recommend our own Tooth Powder aa an excellent Dentifrice! Whitens and beautifies the teeth, and is absolutely harmless. Price 15c. and 25c. per bottle. - All other Tooth, Powders in stock at lowest prices. Tooth Brushes, Soaps, and other Toilet Articles at prices that will please. • JAMES COOPER, JR., WASH GOODS—Pretty zephyrs, dress ginghams, standard 10c. value, per yard UMBRELLAS—Women's fine black Gloria silk .. rain and sun umbrellas, natural, Dresden and sterling silver handles, worth up to QQn $2.50, each. aOCl Yard wide standard 10c. bleached muslins, C per yard wui RIBBONS—Extra quality taffeta silk ribbons, four inches wide, regular 25c. value, I Q]U n per yard I t^Ci Men's and young men's all-wool blue serge Suits, positively fast colors, also the new and nobby cheviot suits in blue and black grounds with hair-lined stripes, properly tailored, per feet fit guaranteed, your choice of Solid oak bedroom suits, French plate IflflO these $12 suits , mirrors; solid brass trimmings | UlUU BEDROOM SUITS. 7.50 Prescription Druggist, Broad street, Bed Bank, X. J . MONEY TO LOAN IN 8BM8 OF ANT AMOUNT, ON DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, CLOTHING, ETC. F. FINKELSTE1N, Licensed Pawnbroker, 1OS Broadway, long Branch, X. J. , All business strictly conndenttal. IJp-to-date Market FISH, VEGETABLES AND POULTRY. iiiiiiiiiiiiHiuimiiHiiniiiiimimiui WEIS'S The Fish to Cook Just now Is Sea Buss and Blueasb. signment of each kind 1B recelyed. GORDON BENNETT FINED 8 3 5 . A fresh con- From River, Lake and Sea He Was Found Guilty of Breaking Fred Smock'8 Hotel Door. James Gordon Bennett of Red Bank was tried on Monday on two indictments, one charging him with committing an assault and battery, on Mrs. Carrie Stnock, wife of Frederick J . Smock of Front street, on January 25th, and the' other with breaking out a window glass in the door of Fred Smock's hotel on ihe same date. The glass was valued at $18. Mr. Smock claimed that Bennett came into his place drunk and began to make a lot of noise. He was ordered to cut it off by the bartender, which he refused to do. Mr. Smook tried to put Bennett out, when Mrs. Smock appeared and she was pushed by Bennett up against the bar. Smock said he succeeded in putting Bennett outside when he turned and kicked the window glass out of the door. Bennett denied having struck Mrs. Smock and claimed he did not know she was in the barroom. He said when Smook.put him outside, Smook struck him and that he kioked at him in* return just as Smook ahut the door, and his foot went through the window. Bennett was convioted of malicious mischief in breaking the glass, but he was acquitted of the charge of •assault and battery. He wasflnea$85 and allowed until August 1st in which to pay the fine. ' TRIMMED HATS Dally and customers will be well pleased with the quality, condition and flavor ol each. The best of fish lit a reasonable price I9 the cheapest flan. Less tlinn fair prices means undesirable quality. F. E. Wymbs, 37E.TrontSt., Red Bank. TELEPHONE CALL, 44-f. OFF. There are about Three Hundred in Stock. While they last they are yours to select from at One-Third Off ONLY THE PLUMBEft Of skill and experience can successfully cxebute REPAIRS It pays to advertise in THE REGISTER, $2 INCUBATORS, 82. Incubators wltbln (ijo roach of nil. A BO egg lflcubntor, all complote, with lamp and thermometer, $ 1 Tho Dovul Incubator stands to-day supremo of all incubators. Order direct. Vfo need uo agents. Our machines advertise themselves. Bond all onlore to William Bcott. manufacturer, 88 Nassau street, NowYorlt, ' • WALL PAPERS AT " HARRISON'S, 8* Proud Street, Bed Dank, W. J. "W- IR_ PARKER, ELECTRICIAN. Wiring for Eloctrlo Llgtitn. Battery,' Magneto and Pneumatic Bells. Tolophjmi» a Specialty. 989 Broad St., \ Ited Hank, N. J. pio.BOK818. 1ST Enlmatos' for Contracts on Application. DOMINIC A. MAZZA, ' Only Place \ TO FIX SHOES ,, • • , Cheap and Good. On- old work or install a new system which will satisfactorily perform all the work demanded of it. Long pruotioe in my trade has made* me perfect. No job top complicated to be successfully completed. None too small to receive my beat attention. Charges moderate. WILLIAM O'BRIEN. 81 WUITE 8TUEET, Noar Maplo Ayenue RED BANK. N. J . . SO WEST FBQNT BTJtEET ' HSD BAHK, N. J . V THE RED BANK REGISTER. TOWN TALK. , WANTED. PICS FOR SALE. M/EDDING INVITATIONS ' .Fifteen sraalLpIgs for sate. .Apply to Louis DiiTwo men and two women would like day's work, • . , First-class laundress, men who are experienced In The annual reunion and dance of the Bftls, HoImdet.N.\l. tending to lawns; Call op or address tbe Red Bank . alumni association of thp Red Ban b pubemployment agency, 14 pearl street, E. A. Carroll, :• ..-' VISITING CARDS. PIGEONS FOR SALE. proprietor. • • lic school is a pleasant conclusion of the 50 pair ol pigeons for sale cbeap. T. J» O'DonoLatest styles, finely enwayed, none better. Giveyear's school work. The qew graduates bue. Shrewsbury. N. J. me a call, I can please yon. •' JOHN H. COOK.. Editor nnd Proprietor, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1801. . • • " ; . • •• • ' A N D • • • ' A FRjsE CLAMBAKE. ' are received into the band of those who A free clambake will be glfen at tbe Everett CHARLES EVEBDELL, MONEY TO LOAN. The discussion at the town hull on have previously graduated, and old hotel on.tbe afternoon and evening of Saturday, . 2 9 Hlvoraldo Avenue, Bod Bank. gU^OCO to loan in amounts from SLCOO to $15,000. June 28th. Andrew J. Laytban of Penh Amboy. a friendships are renewed. The distincMonday night cleared away much of the tions of cliques, which may prevail dur- 8. C. Cowart. Freehold, N. J. . professional clambgfcer, will have charge. David Isenberg, proprietor. uncertainty regarding the sewer assess- ing most of the year, are Bwept aside on PONY FOR SALE. ment in Red Bank and shed much light these occasions. However much the Pony for sale; can be driven bV lady or child. GOOD LAUNDRY WORK. on the difficulties which the sewer com- lives of the graduates may become sepa- Address Box 76, Keypoit. N. J. Respectable colored woman will do family washrated they meet again with the old-time ing by lbe piece or dozen at her own home; also missioners had to labor under in making fellowship and on the same equal footing CIRL WANTED. shirts, collars, etc. First-class work. Woshlne A girl wanted for general housework. Apply at called for and delivered. Mrs. M. Schanck, 39 the assessment. The law under which at the annual reunion and danoo. White street. Red Bank. 38 west Front street, Bed Bank. the Bed Bank sewers were built, and * * * FOR SALE. under which the assessment must be , Whatever may be said of the shortFARM HAND WANTED A 7-year-old bay road borse, height 15.3. Happy A thorough knowledge of lumband, single, with good references, wanted made, was shown to be such that no comings of Asbury Park there is one1. Farm medium breed. Guaranteed sound, kind and true, W. Nuftent, Middlebusb, N. J. ber will enable a man to build a Notafrald of trains or trolleys, will drive single or man or set of men could make an assess- thing in which it excels^all the other house better and cheaper than could double and can trot u mile in about 3 minutes. Intowns of the county put together; and ' HORSES FOR SALE. quire of <i. L. Rapp. Keyport. N J. be done without it. On some parts ment that would be perfectly fair and that is in its progressiveness nnd civic Two family horses and one road more for sale. of a house a cheaper grade of lumjust. Almost every man present, law- pride. Asbury Parkers believe more in Henry C. Taylor, Middletown, N . J . Red Bank Employment Agency. ber will serve as well as a more ~yers and all, had a'different idea from their town than the people of any of the Help furnished and situations found for houseexpensive sort, and this is a saving WAGON FOR SALE. laundresses, .cooks, hous-keeoers. etc. Also, the rest ae to how the assessment should other towns of Monmouth county be- 1 Two-seated surrey for sale, (rood and new. Tre- maids, for the owner. In many other waiters for sociables, women to do days' work, men lieve in the towns where they live. vonlan Bennett, Shrewsbury avenue. ways a thorough knowledge of _ to do jobs or days' work. Call on or address E. A. be made. Carroll, 14 Pearl street, Red Bank, from 2:30 to 6:80 * «# . lumber helps the owner out on the < > COAT WANTED. Out of this diversity of opinion, howr . M. cost of a house. I've been in the A* The people of the other towns of the A billy eoatpwith wagon and harness preferred. ever, there were some general plans sug- county are largely people who were born Apply business many years .and have \ ' by Tetter, W. M., Seabright N. J . FOR SALE FOR WANT OF USE. made-a study of the strength and <>• gested which will probably prove of and brought up in the towns where they Thirty good second-hand doors, 4 eood slate manavailability oflumber as well as of * * 7 steam radiators In good order. 2-horse upright value when the assessment is taken,up live. Many of them feel that what was COW AMD HEIFER FOR SALE. tels, tubular boiler. 2-horse-power engine, wheel boxing tbe other departments of my busi- 3 > enough for their fathers .is good One Jersey cow and thirteen months' old heifer. machine, upright hand drill in good order, heavy for revision. Under the law there can- good Apply to H. Getty, tittle Silvet Point. ness. ' • ~ enouglvfor them, and consequently they power drill, small portable forge, two forge blowers not fail-to be some assessments made oppose improvements of every kind. for blacksmiths' use. J. W. Mount & Bios., Red FURNISHED ROOMS TO LET. Bank, N . J . which may seem unfair j but every effort Their opposition helps to ikeep their Three newly furnished rooms In'fine order to rent. should be made by the sewer commis- town in ruts, prevents it from advanc Apply at No. 11 Spring street, Red Bonk. ing, and even makes it lose money by sioners to deal equitably with all classes forcing THE OCEANIC INN FISH SCRAP FOR SALE. it to do things in old-fashioned of property in fixing the amounts to be ways, rather than in ways thab are more Apply at Vall's factory, near steamboat wharf, will open for tbe season ' ' Pert Monmoutb, N. J. Alwiys on hand. modern and advanced. paid, ' On Thursday Nighty June fSOth. Contractor find Builder, * ** '.. ' " " HORSE WANTED. On the opening night a handsome souvenir 'will DIED FROM LOCKJAW. be presented lo every ladv. „-, f, A Rood wort Dorse wanted'at once. Apply to Asbury Park, on the other band, has FAIR HAVEN, N. J. After July first there will be a vaudeville performJoseph White, Branch avenue, Rod Bank, N . J . ' t7 ance every night, followed by dancing. Only firstFrank Jlrvon Ban a Runty Xaii in been settled within the past 25 years. class talent will be employed and tbe Ian will be a It has been built up by people who were COLD WATER PAINT. pleasant resort. A. W. LOVELL, Proprietor. His Foot and Death Resulted. not satisfied with the things that satisfied Cold water paint Is sold by J. T. Allen, corner 1 Frank Bryon of Red Bank died of their fathers. The people of Asbury Front street and Maple nvenue. Card of colors free. lockjaw at the Long Branch hospital on ParJi moved away from their old homes TO RENT. ^Monday night. The boy was playing in search of better things than1 their Theodore Stilwell of Everett < > Ono bouse, all Improvements,-7 rooms; ODOhouse, fox with a number of companions on fathers had been satisfied with. Every 7 rooms; both fin Washington street. Doremus mates a specialty of the finest < ' Tuesday night of last week and he stepped new town is settled by people who areBros. ' • on a rusty nail, which ran in his foot. too adventurous, too enterprising, too TEAS AND COFFEES < • Very little was thought of the injury at energatic and too progressive to be satis$20,000 TO LOAN. the time, but late in the week the wound, fied with old conditions, and that is-why $20,000 to loan In sums to suit'borrowers on first < J at New York prices. One trial will convince. ] | bond and mortgage. A. L. Ivins, REGISTER buildbegan to give trouble and on Sunday" newly built towns and newly settled Ing, Red Bank, N. J . Of New Jersey* morning lockjaw set in. On Sunday communities distance older ones. They afternoon the boy was taken to thebring to the new location not only alBOARDERS WANTED.' hospital for treatment, but the physicians the knowledge which the older commul A comfortable home and cheerful rooms to parties NOTICE. wishing nrst-olasa board; modern improvements. there could do nothing for him and he nities had to impart, but they also bring W All persons having any claim against the Tinton Broad street, Red Bank. RF.D BANK, N. J. died the next day. energy and a progressiveness to which Falls' Turnpike company, and all persons holding Frank-was fourteen years old and was 'older towns are strangers. CLAZINC. stock of the Tinton Falls Turnpike company, will the son of David Bryon of No. 85 "West If you have a broken window send for me. I do please attend and present the same to tbe subscriber, * * * glazing-do It good and do It reasonable. • Address Front street,- Red Bank. He was a secretary and treasurer, at his residence, Scobey ville, Jjrigbt, active boy with a good many Asbury Parkers believe in their town. L. Cnameroy, Red Bank, N. J. N. J . ; o r o n friends and acquaintances among the They want it to go ahead and they are A CALF FOUND. lads of ihe town. He leaves three willing to push it ahead. If one man A heifer calf came on my place fast week. Owner Friday, June 28th, 1901. brothers and two sisters. Two of thedoes something that helps the place they may have same by paying expenses Incurred. WilA T 3:00 p. M., AT THE liam 1. LIppIncott. Litt*8ilver. N. J. ' brothers, Charles and David, are grown are anxious to give him a lift and help up. . • him boost the town along; while in older GLOBE HOTEL, RED BANK, N. J. The funeral will be held at the house towns the progressive man and the man Two Furnished Rooms Wanted., ' Also all persons indebted to tbe Turnpike comYoung couple with no children want two UDfurto-morrow night. The body will be who does something to make the"town a nished rooms, suitable for light housekeeping. Ad- pany will please settle without delay. taken to Evergreen cemetery, Brooklyn, better place to live in is frequently cri- dress M., i n Centerarenue. Red Bank. Wm. H. FOSTER, Friday morning, where it will be buried ticised and his work derided because of June 13th. 1001. Secretary and Treasurer. NOTICE. petty jealousies and enviousness. Asbury in the family plot. Second-hand furniture bought, sold and exWilliam S. Baker, Jr., of Laighton Park may have some of this feeling,' but changed at the Red Bank unction and commission avenue, a boy about fourteen years old, it is not so noticeable as it is in older house. No. 5 East Front street, Red Bank, N. J. died of lockjaw last Friday morning. towns. The people there are willing that About three weeks ago he stepped on a any man in the town shall make money, FRESH FISH. rusty nail which made a slight wound in because tliey know that every successful The place to buy fresh flsh. halibut, shad, salmon, flounders, codfish, smelts, eels, scallops, clams and his foot. -The foot healed up and noth- man is a direct aid to the place.. oysters Is at VanBrunt's market, 0 Wharf avenue. We will close out the baling more was thought of the matter until * * * early last week, when his neck got Btiff. WANTED. Asbury Park's latest move toward ance of our stock of On Wednesday lockjaw developed and helping the town was at an election held A good position fortue summer, by a young man has Just graduated from the Red Bank Hlgb caused his death. The funeral was held a short timp ago,,when the people voted wno Bchool. Address ",t..,".Po8tofflce, Red Bank, N. J. on Sunday at the Macedonia church, and to raise $18,000 to buy the public library .... ,.J \ *- .... :.._. the body was buried in the cemetery and grounds and Uiake a town library NAPTHA LAUNCH FOR RENT. ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS. 1 there. out of it. The library has been under Naptha launch. Presto, to rent for the summer. F. L. Blalsdoll. Red BaDk, -N.--J.i-or J . F . way for many years. A big ''lot of Address, Commencing the first of each month.. A SCHOOL'S CLOSING. ground in a good location was origi- Blalsdell, 111 aud 113 Kent avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. nally secured for the building, but the POOL TABLE FOR SALE. The Entontoicn School Gives a Fine work of erecting the building was slow. Brunswick & Ball make pool table, 4K>x9 feet, in at greatly reduced prices.. DR. J. E. 8ATRE, President. Entertainment. The library was from the first intended good condition, for sale cheap; or will rent for JOHN KINO. Cashier. Ernest Lautenslager. Atlantic Highlands, The closing exercises of the Eaton- to be a public library, but it was in pri- season. N.J. WM. H. HENDBICK8ON, Assistant Cashier. town public school were held in thevate hands and was intended to be unschoolroom last Thursday afternoon, der private management. After the ' New York Messenger Service. The room was so crowded that it is ex-foundation was up there was a long de- Daily messenger service between tied Bank and TRUSTEES: pected another year to hold the exer- lay. Finally money was borrowed and New York by F. A. Little. Orders can be left at I Capt. John A. Worthley, Dr. James J . Reed, MILLINERY, the Germanla hotel, or on tbe Sea Bird or cises in one of the churches. The school- the building was completed. The money Slorck's, James Enripbt. Jr., Richard Borden. Albertina. Dr. J. E. Sayre, , Benj. P. Morris, Esq. room was decorated with greens and borrowed to complete the building was Cor. Broad and Front Ste., Red Bank. flowers gathered by the scholars. The $18,000, and the library people offered WAGONS FOR SALE. exercises were in charge of Francis E. the property J o the town.of- Asbury One new pneumatic tire runabout; three-sealed second-hand; and a two-seated buckboard. •••©•••©•••••••©•©•••©•©•e Tilton, the principal of the school and Park, to be owned and controlled by the surry, an ice box. Can be seen at American hotel, included choruses by the school, read- town", provided the town would assume Also Red Bank. ings by Silas Taylor and Fred Richard- the debt on the property. The election eon; a'recitation by Eddie Reeves; an was held on the question of accepting MONEY TO LOAN. the I have 81.400 to loan on good mortgage security, essay by Eddie Sanford on . " The value the property on these terms, and v oE pleasing manners," solos by Bessie people of Asbury Park, Tiy a big ma- either as a whole or In smaller amounts. No comwill be charged. Address, Box 143, Red Bennett, Annie Brown and 'Wilfred jority, voted in favor ,xrt taking the missioD Bank, N . J . (Don't confuse our name with other firms.) Haynes, an instrumental selection by library, Bes"sie Dennis, a semi-chorus by Bessie FARM IMPLEMENTS FOR SALE. »* « Bennett, Elsie Walden, Valeria Ely, One Walter A Wood mowing machine, in good Susie Allgor, Lillian Prindel, Elsie Stout, Asbury Park thus becomes the first irder; one platform spring wagon and one twospring wagon. Frank Lawes, Shrewsbury, -BEST GOODS AT LOWEST Ethel Wolcott}- Pauline ' Barchwitz, town in Monmouth county to own a horse Annie Brown and Beesie Dennis; and nmunicipal library. It will no doubt be New Jersey. PRICES AS USUAL. semi-chorus by Wilfred and Leslie maintained in a way that -will do credit $250 REWARD. Haynes, Fred "and Ernest Richardson, to Asbury Park's well-known liberality. 8260 reward for the arrest arid conviction ol the John Wright, Silas and Arthur Taylor, That town ought to be proud, not only miscreant who poisoned a 8nint Bernard dog at My Tennis Shoes are still being sold at the special Arthur Roberts. George Bennett, Ber- because it will have a fine library, housed Tower Hill, Juno 10th. Andrew Free&nan, Tower tram Noe and Edward Reeves. Rev. in a fine building, but also because it is Hill, Red Bonk. . low price of Oscar Barchwitz, pastor of the Baptist the first town in Monmouth county to A COMING MUSICALE. church, made a prayer, and Rev.JDaniel lake this advanced step in the interest of 39c. ONLY THE PLUMBER The.ladles of Grace M. E. church will give a Y, Stephens, pastor of the Methodist the people. It will cost money to main- musicale in tho parlor of the church on Thursday church, made nn address in which he tain this library, but the taxes that will evening, June ~'Otb. Cake and Ice cream will be on Of skill and experience can successfully •• urged upon the scholars the importance liave to be paid will be made up ten ale. All are lnvitod. execute of having a definite aim in life. ;imes over by the people who will be a t REPAIRS CIRL WANTED. tracted to Asbury Park and who will Front St., foot of Broad, Red Bank. On old work or install a new system Girl wanted for general housework In family of Mr. Tilton presented county grammar settle there because of the town's public two. Must be good, plain cook. Apply to Mrs. L. which will satisfactorily perform all the school certificates to Elsie Walden, Maud library. Appleby; LeRoy place, second house from Broad » • » • • • • • • • » • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • work demanded of it. Ginnavan, Maurice Berzer,' and. Edward street, Red Bank, N. J. . • - Long practice in my trade has made Sanford. At the conclusion of the preme perfect. No job too complicated to Church News. IMPROVE YOUR EDUCATION. sentation of the diplomas Mr. Tilton retys successfully completed. " None too. would like to Improve your education we ceived a five-dollar gold piece from Rev. OharleB T. Baylis of New York, canIf-yon 'Bmall to receive my beBt attention. help you. For terms of complete course or any Valeria Ely, on behalf of the school, as representing the anti-saloon league, ad- subject address Interstate Correspondence school, Charges moderate. a token,of"the high esteem in which he dressed a union meeting of the Presby- 1031 Broadway, New York. is held by the scholars. Mr. Tilton re- terian and Methodist churches at the Fdr hot weather are the best. Save WILLIAM O'BRIEN, REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. ceived the Rift with a few appropriate Methodist church on Sunday night. 29 WEST FRONT RTBEET ' n ED BANK. N. J . $2 to $4 each by buying Cottages at Oceanic from $800 u p ; 75 farms, all remarks. The exercises ended with the Steps will be taken to organize a branch sections, $300 up; New York and suburban houses singing of "America." ' yours here. ( of the lengue at this place. The work of nnd lots for sale and exchange. Address, Louis the league is confined principally to Rlchteiyl'. O., Ited Bank. N; JC working up sentiment against Bnloons, Fined For Disorderly Conduct. POSITION WANTED. and compelling their1 proprietors to oboy B the law. Position wanted at all around work or as a coachMisB Sarah Simpson of Red Bank wa e man, porlor or at gonoral housowork by a young arrested for disorderly conduct on t h Miss Grace T-odd, a returned mission- man 25 years of age. Address, Major Jones,- 21) To wear with serge suits, cheviots, street on complaint of Ella Holmes- ary of West China, will spenk in the"respect avenue, Ited Bank, N, J . Justice Sickles fined her $1 and costs First Methodist - church next Sunday , Bedford cords, Madras, etc., MEADOW FOR SALE. night under the auspices of the women's amounting in all to about $0. Tract of meadow nt Newman Springs for sale. made in all the prevailing ^ Arthur Berry of Fair Haven created a foreign missionary society. Proporty of Win. B . Parker, deceased. Address J. disturbance at Eatontown on Saturday Rev. W. W. MoKinney, editor of The Parker. Jr., executor, 07 Cedar street, New York City, styles, and patterns, night, He was arrested on Monday and Preshytcrian of Philadelphia, is visiting or 50 Front stnjut, Red Bank, N. 3. 5o£r to $i.oo., Justice Sickles fined him $1 and costs Rev. S. H. Thompson and will occupy WORK. the pulpit of the Presbyterian church on fym prepared HAIR amounting in nil to $5.15. to devote my entire tlmoto making Belts ana Xeekicear to tise with Sunday. up switches, combings, and all kinds of hair work. Address, 20 West Front street, or send-mo word n n i ' above goods. Rev. William B: Matteson will preach An Addition to a School, at the Baptist church next Sunday night will call upon you. Miss I. Brand, Red Bank. A two story brick addition will be on "Savonarola, the last of tho pro- KINDLING WOOD FOR SALE.. Bicvcle Suits, Trousers, Sweaters, Golf Hose, &e. ' ':./' built to the Oceanio public school dur phete." Inuvonlargo quantity of kindling woodatlny •VTOTICIVOF SETTLEMENT. ing'the summer vacation. Only one The women of Graco church will give Bttw mill, which I will sell, dollvorea a t Rod Bank, I T ESTATE OF JAME8 H, PETERS. decOBBCd. room wili be-finished for tho present. a musical in the lecture room of theor near there, at twenty cents per barrel, six barrels Tlilrrt Account. for a dollar. Daniel H. Coo*-Tinton Falls N . J . Notice 1B noroby given that tho nccounta ot Ilio No extra teacher will be needed, as a church to-morrow night. Biibscrlumvoxcculorof said docoascd, will no auditedroom in the present building which hns The women of the Baptist clmrcli will and stated by the Burrot(nto, and reported fur sottloHANDKEROHIEF FOUND. been divided will be put back into one hold a fair the last week in August. ment to tho Orphans Court ot tho County of MonA linen handkerchief with laco edging and Insermouth, ON THUR8DAT, THE 11TH DAY OF room. , LUDLOW HALL, tion found on Monmoutb streot. Owner may havo JULY. Doff. iamo by proving proporty nnd'imylng for thia ad—.—.«-~«. — THE REGISTERS \i-nnt column is in- vertisement. Dated May 81st, 1001.. Apply St THE RKdlBIER OfflCO, Red 10 Broad St., Red Bank, N. J. teresting reading',—Adv, CHAItr.ES IT. IVINS, Want column—4th page.— Adv. Bank. . , . ;: Knowing Lumber.";: I A. E. SMITH, • • • < > Trimmed Millinery 4°|0 Interest Paid Trimmed Hats Miss .A. L. Morris, New York Sample Shoe Store. S. PRINCE, Blue Serge Suits >_.'. Smart Shirts A. LUDLOW, Schroeder's Hair Tonic should be used three or "four times a week to get the best results. Fifty cents a bottle at Schroeder's pharmacy. PERSONAL.. OBITUARY. FACTORY: DUNKIBK, N. Y. \ had been sick only a week. The funeral was held at the bouse last night.and the Edward E. Fnoat. ; :"• ':'•'."' body was buried in .Fair -View cemetery. James Laing, professional golfer and Edward Frost* son of Samuel H. Frost ' instructor of. the Crescent golf club of Brooklyn, was a guest of Fred Frick of of Riverside drive, Middle town townSirs. Charles F. Kennett. WHOLESiLE AND RETAIL' DEALER IN the Sheridan hotel on Monday. He ship, died on Thursday morning. He Mary Etta, wife of Charles F.'Kennett- For piano buyers. was fourteen years old and had been spent part of the day visiting professional of Snh'thburg, died on Wednesday, aged Lumber, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Glass friends at the Elkwood and Seabright sick with consumption about five months, 43 years. Besides a husband she leaves golf links. Later in the season he wjll but the cause of his d«ath was pneu- two children. Four brothers and' four We sell good pianos* and Builders' Hardware, come toRed.Bank and.will play.a, match monia. The funeral was held at the sisters also survive her, • house on Sunday afternoon. Rev. Wilgame on the Ked Bank golf links with RED BANK, N. J. liam B. Matleson of the Red Bank Bap*•• George Ixiw, a professional grtlfist. BIRTHS. -. tist church, Itey. W. H. J. Parker of the Mrs. Olivia Ingling of N e * York and BENNETT.-At Belford. on Tuesday, June 11th. at reasonable prices her daughters, Bertha, and Helen, spent Middletown Baptist church and Rev.Mrs. Edward Bennett, of a daughter. at corner of WeBfc and Chestnut P. K. Hagemati of Ihe Middletown ReSunday with Mrs. Tenbroeck Davis" of HART.—At Atlantic Highlands," on Tuesday, streets, near railroad. Front street. Miss Burd Davis of Front formed church officiated a t the service. June 18th, Mrs. H. B. Hart, of a son. street is visiting her sister, Mrs. Klmer Walter B. Parsons of Red Bank sang a MINCGH.—At Belford, on Saturday, Juue 15th, and tell the truth. BRANCH YARDS: Spring Lake aniJ AsBury Park. solo and the body was buried in Fair Mrs. James MlnuRh of Red Bank;-of a daughter. Garnsey of White Plains. Stephen H. LeQuier, principal of theView cemetery. Many handsome fl6ral MARRIAGES. Renting, Tinton Falls public school, has apesjtioh pieces were sent as tributes from rela- ODELL—VOORHEES.—At Red Bank, on Tues- Tuning, ' day, June 18th. bv.Rjsv.-iV. B. Matwson. Mary for the summer as room clerk at thetives and f riends.. Emma, daughter of Mrs. Maria Louise Odell. and Repairing., Monmouth hotel at Asbury Park. He Edward was a brigbt boy. He at-Ira Voorbees, Son of William S. Voorhees, tended the Shrewsbury Acadamyof Red bothNorrls "entered upon his duties on Saturday-. of Bed Bank. David McGlure, who lives along the Bank until two years ago. when he went New Postoffice Building, river bank, was stricken with vertigo to the Red Bank public schools. When DEATHS. Red Bank. while on his way to New York-last week. he left school on account of sickness he ALLGOR.—At Eatontown. on Monday, June 17th, He- soon recovered and was able to re-was in the eighth grade. Last October Miss Ellen S. Allgor, aged 57 years. he joined the Baptist church. He leaves FROST.—In Middletown township, on Thursday. turn home the same day. 13th, Edward, son of Samuel H. Frost, aged 14 The secret of our success in Warren 8. Silcocks moved from Brook- four sisters, Marion, Aaabel, Margery June years. and Jeun. pleasing people is that we do work lyn last Thursday to his summer home GOODENOUGH.—At Farrairigdale. on Monday, at Bed Bank. Mr. Silcocks has been sick June 10th, Mrs. Emily Goodenough, widow of Wilthe way folks want it done. A Frederick loiiis ilireehey. liam Goodenounb, aged 61) yeais. » . all winter but he is now improving in customer tells us. just how he Frederick Louis Hirschey, a Freehold HAVENS.—At Poplar, on Friday, June 14th, John health. Havens. wants a certain work done and Howard Miller of Turlington, who carpenter, died at the Long Branch hos- HIRSCHEY.—At tbo Long Branch hospital, on he gets it done just that way. has been» visiting his uncle, Albert S. pital on Tuesday of last week, aged 68 Tuesday. June 11th, Frederick Louis Hirschey of Miller of Irving place, visited at Eng-years. He had been sick for Home'time Freehold, aged 63 years. We make a specialty of chilTo those looking for lishtown last week, where he spent a few wiih a complication of diseases 'and he KENNETT.—At Smithburg, on Wednesday. June dren's hair cutting! Summer reswent to the hosp.tal to have'an operation 12tb, Mary Etta, wife of Charles F. Kennett, aged days. ' •years. Horses we would advise idents are evidencing their apMrs. James Walsh- of Newark, for- performed. He. died on the day set for 43LONGSTREET.-At on Tuesday, preciation of this fact by giving merly of Red Bank, and her daughters, performing the operation, but before the June 11th. Mrs. EmellneEngllsbtown, Longstreet, widow of Wilthem to look our stock over, Mrs. Paul Jaehnig :; and' Miss Carrie operation wus performed, liam Longstreel, aged CQ.je.ar8. ' us their trade. Ladiesfindour Walsh, have been visiting at Red Bank. Mr. Hirschey was a native of Switzer- LONGSTREET.—At Red Bank, on Wednesday, We have on hand one team, shop a pleasant place in which to Mrs. E. Nestler, wtidlffpeads the winter land and pqme to this country when 21 June 19th, JohnT. Longstreet, aged 17 years and 6 of bay readers, about 15 waif" while having their chilat Jersey City Heights, has returned to years old.' He located near Freehold months. MARSDFN.—At Red Bank, on Sunday, June Ifflh, her1 cottage on LoiSffst" avenue at Redand had lived in that vicinity ever since. Jeanette dren's hair cut. W,, daughter of Dr. G. F. Marsden, aged 2 hands high, well matched For a short time he followed the wheel-'years and 9 months. Bank for the summer. • Shaving. ight trade at Millhurst. He enlisted TOWNSEND.—At Manasquan. on Sunday, June . Mr. and Mrs. Theodore F. Sniffen of and fearless of all objects ; • Hair Cutting. in the civil war with the Fourteenth New 8th, Flora, wife of George,Townsend. Herbert street visited Mrs. Sniflen's sisShampooing, one cross match, and several ter, Mrs. Adam Smith of Asbury Park Jersey regiment, but served throughout, most of the war with Battery L of the PROHIBITION STATE CONVENon Sunday. Razor Honing a specialty. other horses, all ready for TION. Gilbert Redkless. who is employed in Fifth United States artillery. Of late years he had received a pension. He Popular brands of Cigars • the First national bank, is spending a Rednced .Rate* to Harrlsbnrg via tlie work. and Tobacco and Egyptwo weeks' vacation at Thousand Islands. waa a member of Tennent lodge of tian Cigarettes, '•' Pennsylvania Railroad. Mrs. W. A. Pettit of Wallace street Knights of Pythias, of the Grand Army For the benefit of those desiring to atAbout ten tons of fine and her daughter Gladys have returned Post of Freehold and of the Freehold tend the Prohibition State convention to fire department. A wife and four chilfrom a two weeks' visit to Manaequan. timothy hay for sale. be held at Harrisburg, June 26th'and William Pope of Lincroftris employed dren, two of whom lire at home, survive 27th, 1901, the Pennsylvania railroad ALBERT A. HEISER, him. • by Child Bros, of Red Bank. He drives company -will sell excursion tickets to the Rumson road bakery route. . RIGHT ACROSS FROM, THE POSIOFFI0E, John T. Longstreet. Harrisburg from all stations on its lines Miss Grace W. Holmes of Shrewsbury John T. Lorigstreet of Spring street- within the state of Pennsylvania at rate BED BANE. was the guest yesterday of Miss Grace died this morning of Bright's disease, of single fare for the round trip. These RED BANE. D. Johnston of Herbert street. tickets will1 be sold and good going on aged 47 years. He was taken sick with Miss Josephine McQueen of Krjont the disease last October. The funeral June 25th. 26th and 37th, and will be street has returned from a visit to Miss will be held at the house on Friday after- good to return until June 28th, inclusive. Jennie Craig of Pemberton. noon two o'clock and the burial will, Miss Emily B. Trafford of Red Bank be at at Railroad Reduced the West Long Branch cemetery. visited her brother, Charles Trafford of Rates to Detroit, account National Mr. Longstreet was born at Deal and Manasquan, last Wednesday. OP THE was § farmer by occupation. About" Educational Association. William and David Hftnee of Orange, twelve For the meeting of the National Eduyears ago he obtained employformer residents of Red Bank, have been ment with the Ocean Grove association. cational association at Detroit, July 8th visiting friends here. years later, while in the associa- to 12th, 1001, the Pennsylvania railroad Mrs. Craig Sickles of Red Bank was Four tion's employ, he was injured in the leg company will sell .excursion tickets to • the guest of Mrs. Charles Thompson of and had not been able to work since. Detroit from all stations on its lines, at Marlboro on Sunday. was unmarried and leaves three the rate of one fare for the round trip, Edward H. Lyle of Red Bank was aHe sisters and two brothers. They are plus $2.00. Tickets will be sold July 6th, AT TWO O'CLOCK, P . M. member of this year's graduating class James Longstreet, Wiiliom H. Long- 7th and 8th, good returning to leave Deof Peddie Institute, Mrs." Alice Strickland of Red troit not earlier than July fltl) nor later There will be three races for prizes, club members and amateurs to drive. Mrs. Ellen Johnston of Red Bunk has street, and Tueophilus Longstreet of Long than July 15th. By depositing tickets ADMISSION TO GROUNDS, 25 CENTS. GRAND STAND FREE, been visiting her sister, Mrs. John Bre- Bank, Branch and Mrs. Dayjd Patterson of As- with joint agent on or before July 12th, hany of Marlboro. ' , THOMAS E. MORRIS, President. and the payment of 50 cents, the return bury Park. Miss Emma Mills has returned from a limit may be extended to leave Detroit WS. U. CAR8OS, Secretary. visit lo Washington, D. C , where she Mies Ellen S. Allgor. not later than September l§t. spent two weeks. • ' MiBS Ellen S. Allgor of Eatontown Miss Sadie Megill of Red Bank is em- died on Monday morning of paralysis, ' ployed as bookkeeper by Japhia Clayton aged 57 years. She had suffered two Second-hand Machinery for Sale. of Front street. strokes of paralysis, one fifteen months i Cbarle3 L. Davis of Locust avenue in- ago and one last Tuesday. The iuneral 1 6-foot Osborne binder, A FEW OF THE BARGAINS AT THE RED BANK jured his finger slightly while at work a -will be held at the house to-morrow 8 Wood's binders, AUCTION ROOMS: few days ago. afternoon and the service will be con- 1 Champion mower, MIBB Abbie Elliott of Maple avenue ducted by Rev. Daniel Y. Stephens. The 1 Buckeye mower, New white enameled bed. $ 2.BO has.been visiting at Long Branch and body will be buried in the West Long Second-hand wooden bedstead : 1.00 2 chain gear mowers, 6 foot, Asbury Park, Branch cemetery. Miss Allgor was born 10.00 Oscar Woodward of Red Bank has in Eatontown and lived all her life in 1 McCormick mower, used three years, Go-cart, new, worth $18.00 Piano 16.00 been visiting Mrs. Gardiner Woodward that locality. She had been a member 1 Bullard hay tedder, good order, White enameled bureau 4.00 of Freehold. of the Methodist church for many years. 1 hay tedder, cheap, White enameledwashstand • .8.00 Mrs. Sarah Ford of Red Bank has been She leaves three sisters and two brothers. ' : visiting Mrs. William Ackerman of Free- They are Mrs. William Worthley, Miss 2 hay rakes, cheap. hold. RED BANK AUCTION ROOMS, Marv R. Allgory George P. Allgor and Albert A. Heiser of Wallace street Dewitt C. Allgor of Eatontown, and Mrs. C. H. Hurley. 37 East Front Street,' 9 . (Over Wymbs Fish Market). R^d Bank, N. J. visited his parents at Freehold on Mon- Frank Marshall of Boontown. Shrewsbury, • Neut Jersey. day. iiMimiiiniiiiini>immimmmo(i»Mnmi ~ Miss Bertha - Hance of -Bolmdel has Mrs. Emetine Longstreet. been visiting relatives at Red Bank. Miss Tessie .Kolbensplay of Brooklyn Mrs. Emetine Longstreet, widow of l l f You spent part of last week at Red Bank. * William Longstreet^ died at EnglishEmma Neilsen of Brooklyn has been town on Tuesday of last week, aged 65 ;; Were Dissatisfied years. Her death was caused by convisiting her father at Red Bank. Miss Mary Swift of Branch avenue sumption. She was the daughter of With that last job of plumbMary A. and Daniel Stevens. Her husspent Friday in New York City. ing or tinning that the other Carlton Keller of Washington street band died about fifteen years ago. Seven children survive her. They are Mrs. fellow did, call op me the spent Monday in New York. Harry Degenring of Front street is Robert Flett of Atlantic-Highlands, Mrs. next time. I'll do my best to Samuel Selover and Miss Margaret Longlaid up with the mumps, SHOES AT HALF WHAT make the work satisfactory. street of Sayreville, George Longstreet R. Duell of Keyport was in Red Bpnk of Matawan, and Harvey and James on Thursday. Longstreet of Philadelphia. She leaves JAMES F1TZGIBBON, OTHERS CHARGE. also four brothers and sisters. DEMOCRATS ORGANIZE. Wharf Arenue, Red Bank. John Haveiis. Officers of the County Committee - John Havens died last Friday at the >> Elected Yesterday^ • home of his sister, Mrs. E. L. Woolley of W. A. HOPPING, The new members of the Democratic Poplar. He ha'd been a cripple all his county committee met at Freehold yes- life and for the post two years he had terday and organized. The county com- kept his room most of "the time? The REAL ESTATE. mitteemen were' elected by the Demo- funeral was held on Sunday afternoon, cratic township committees last week. ftev. J. W. Morris, pastor of the WayEach township is entitled to oue county! side Methodist church, officiating. The Property for Sale and for Rent in committeeman, anyhow, and it is entitled body was buried at West Long Branch. all parts.of the town. to two if it costs more than 750 Democratic votes. The full list of county comMoney to loan in sums to suit Mrs. Emily A. GooUenouah. mitteemen is as follows: . Mrs. Emily A. Goodenough, widow of :' borrowers. Atlantic—Frank E. Hoyer. William Goodenough of Farmingdale, Entomown-Willinm R. Stevens. Freotaold-Davld 8. Crater, J. Clarcoce Conovor. died on Monday of last week, aged 09 Trucx Jtuildina, Broad Street, Holmdel—Thoodoro It. Tnorne. years. She had been a member of the RED BANK; N. J..' Howoll—Joseph L.Butctior. Farmingdale Methodist church for thirty Millstone—Reuben 0 . Strahaa. Monalnyan—Oliarlcs F. McDonald. years and until failing health prevented 'Telephone Call 48a. MUldlttosvn—Amzl M. Posten, John H> Patterson. she was very active in the affairs of the ,- Marlboro—John D. Honco. "'" church. Malawan—Oharleq E. Close. Point CHARLES LEWIS, Guyon. Our Secret. In Pleasing People. NOTICE! JOHN BAILEY, MATINEE RACE MEETING Freehold Saturday, June 29th, BARGAINS! The Sample Shoe Store. Men's Shoes at 8 9 c , 99c, j .25, $i.49 and up. Women's Shoes from 75 Cents Up. Children's Shoes from 65 Cents up. Neptuno—J. L. Kluniontli, Charles E. Cook. Ocenn—Jolin Gulrc, J. V, Jordan. Itarllan-0.0. Boeardua. SlirowBbury-Jnmcs li. Dognan, Albert L. Ivlns. Wall-Gcorgo R. nogcre,)E. P. Longstieet. JUrs. A. E. Burke. Charlotte M., wife of A. E. Burke of Long Branch, died on Friday of peritoniSpecialties. tis, after a sickness of two weeks.- Be- I sides a husband she leaves two daughters, aged six and three years respectively. a ~~~r4 Her maiden name was Wilt and her¥A A Line of New Tints In Box rA nutiye place was at Mount Kieco, New Zk Papers: 2 York. . _ _ VA Uppe'r Freehold has not yet elected a county committeeman, a n d that township is not represented in the committee. The committee organized by the election of these officers : . Oaalnnan-J. Okironci! Con'ovor of FreeHold. 5 Vlco chairman—James IC. Doinan of Hod Bank. Mrs. George Townsend. 5 8oorotary-J. L. Klromonth d Asbury Park. Trcasuror-J. V. Jordiin of Elberon. Mrs. Flora Townsend, wife of George 5 Sorgoant-at-arms-Clmrlcs McDonald of Mnnaln- Towneend of Manasquan. died of they. pan, • nieusloa on Sunday, June Oth, after a f ' There was some talk over the work it sickness of only n few days, She was4 wns expected tq have, done this fall, and the only daughter of Mrs: Samuel Mor- m the committee adjourned to meet a t ton of Manasquan.. A husband and a Elberon noxt Tuesday, where J . V. Jor- daughter survive her, ' 4 dan has promised t h e conamitteo a " blow-out. \ 2 i, Jcannettc. IF. Jllarnden. Jeannetta W. Marsden, infant daughT H E REGISTER is constantly getting new renders, I t holds old and newter of Dr. George F. Marsden of White read or B aliko because i t is a good paper. street, died of bronoUitis on Sunday. The 4 little girl wus nearly three years old and . —Adv. • Quaker.Gray, ' SageGreenJ,, Wood Violet, JJ Heliotrope, • V. Corn Flower Blue, f Our price, 25c. arid itOc. Regular 4 . price, 50c, 4 . ' 16 Pena for lQc. . .S 8 Pens for 5c. I — ^ TETLEY a SON'S HEW STORE, 10 Broad St., Red Bank. No argument ought be .needed to sell shoes at • , . these prices. I have told you of the prices, eome in'and satisfy yourself as to values. E. WOLF, S a m -pie SIb_oe BROAD ST., Next to Davidson's, RED BANK. IIIIIHillllHHIIIIHIIIHIIIHinHMHlllHIUM A BIG OYSTER CASE. William Butler Fined $95 for Talsiiia Ousters in Raritan Bay. ANOTHER GREAT WRAPPElt EVENT. Th6 big oyster case from Raritan township came up in court last Friday. This case was an indictment against William Butler for taking oyBters from • Raritan bay. The oysters were declared to be the property of Garrett Post. Some time ago some largo natural oyster beds were discovered in Raritan bay. The oystermen of that place began to harvest the oysters., Garrett E. Post of Keyport set up a claim that somej of the places where the oysters were be ing gathered were his private beds, and that the oysters at this place were his property. The oystermen, on the other hand, claimed that the beds were natural oyster beds, and that if Mr. Post had planted oysters there he had planted them on natural beds and tliat therefore the oysters were public property. The oyatermen continued to gather the oysters and some of them were arrested and indicted. At the trial of Butler last week, both sides presented a large number of witnesses. On the side of Garrett E. Post the witnesses were Harry Sproul, Garrett E. Post, Thomas Dawson, Israel Post, Leonard Aumack, William DeGroff, William McConkey,Kenney Ward, George M. Britton, Charles Kellogg and Joseph Aumack. They testified that the lands from which Butler took tho oysters were private lands and that Post had planted oysters there several years previously. Butler produced Forinan Smith, George W. Smith, Samuel Evans,.Joseph Harris, Morris T. Jacobs, William F. Grifflng. Emanuel Wilson, William Butler, Joseph, P. Ainsbow, Rosalind Vigne, Theodore Poland, Winfield Bailey, Charles Thompson; James M. Walling, Charles Tuttle and DSniel Harris as witnesses. These men testified that the beds from which Butler took the oyBters were natural oyster beds. John E. Foster, Edmund Wilson and E. W. Arrowsmith represented Post. William. T. Hoffman and Charles R. Snyder had charge of Butler's side of the case. The jury found Butler guilty* but recommended him to mercy. Judge Heisley fined Butler $35. He will have till July 11th to pay the fine. 'Some of the oystermen of Keyport are in favor of raising money and carrying the case to the higher courts off appeal in c d e r to settle the question of the ownership of the oyster lands in Raritan bay. Wrappers made of a,, good grade of Lawn in several patterns of stripes and figures in beautiful colorings, skirt 3 ^ yards wide, with a gathered flounce ten inches deep, shoulder ruffle, yoke and collar nicely trimmed with braid, separate body lining, all sizes from 32 to 44. This is not a poorly made garment made to sell cheap, but a first-class, well-sewed, perfect fitting Wrapper, made to sell aft $1.00, Our price dur- C f l p ing sale , UWui NEW LOT No. 2.—All silk washable Taffeta Ribbon, the new soft finished kind/your choice of about 20 difr . ferent'shades, including black and white, full 3 inches wide, a • grade sold all over.at 19c, I E n here per yard I UUl S h i r t W a i s t S u i t , made of fine quality chambray and dimities, several colors, • neatly trimmed with wash braid, skirt has deep graduatedvflounce, waist made blouse effect, nicely,trimmed, a regular dJQ A£ ' $5.00 suit, at.. .;.... striped and plain colors, oxblood and blue, graceful hanging skirts with shirred flounce, waist with.large sailor• collar, trimmed with white lawn. • A regular $2.98 A l Q Q style, a t . . . . . . . . tg) I 1 j Q W a s h S k i r t s , made of havy and black polka dot duck, tan and blue covert and, linen crash, all nicely trimmed with braid. Q D A A regular $1.25 style.jat. tJOlfl W a s h S k i r t S , made of white duck,full 3 }i yards wide, with circular flounce, a "7Qn 98c. quality, at...' ..;... / tflfi ATLANTIC n i G U I A K D B . Annirllla H. Owens a n d busband to George W. Davis. Lot 27,'SI. Bartoa F . Champion t o Josephine W. Harrison aud others. Piece of property. ?3,11K). EATONTO.WN TOWNSHIP. Walter Richardson to Georgo A. Henry. Lot on Howland estate, $70. Henrietta E. Monroand others to Thomas P . McKenna. Interest In land, S2UO.00O. Thomas C. Slmonton. tfuurdian, to Thomas P. McKenuii. Piece of property, $1011,333. IURITAN TOWNSHIP. Mary A.Oliver to Nora Griflln. Piece of property, p i ,0(10. • Albert U. Bedlo to Bert Lewis. Ploce of property. SIM. • • Llllio J . Mount and busband to John Vlgne. i lots nt Union. $125. Sophia H. Thistle and busband to Eugene- S. Goldberg. LanJnt Keyport, $l,8IKJ. ... ,,Saran E. Warnoto Annie L. Conovof and others. Land at Ktypoit, SI. MATAWAN TOWNSHIP. Charlotte Smith and husband to Mlno Johnson. Piece of propet IV, S1.85O. OCEAN TOWNSHIP. /James I,, Hays to Louis Schmidt. Pleco of propDenhls D. McKoon to Henry G. Ctttlln. 8 lots nt Mimuulmeset I'nrk. $],0(X). ' . Dennis 1). McKoon to Ezeklel X. Rose. 4.1otsat Munuahnswt Park, 81,(100. Wllllnin II. Vanllrunt and others to Martin II. Luvulloy. Laud at Long Branch, Sl.OOO. Veronica Pannucl and husliand to the Board of Chosen Freeholders. Lnnd at Scanrlnht, S500. • ^ Arthur Sossmau to Arthur I!. Mullen. Land at lontf Branch. 31. Catharine A. Million and husband to Arthur Sussnian, Lnnd at Limit Hrauoli, SI. Catharine SiKimauand husband to Arthur Sussraan. Lmitl ut Long Brunch. 31. Li.'V.'ls J. Philips mid others to Julia M. Uotebklss. Land at Deal. §'£50.(100. Julia M. llotchklssund husband toCoutral Realty Bonil k Trust. coni|)un,v. Lnnd at Deal, SK Luwa-uco 11. Ninvmun to Henrietta Morris. Land' ut Pleasure Hay, S2,H0. Glenwood cemetery to Allco Cothren. Lot in couioh'ry, S70. NKPTl'KK TOWNSHIP. Kousfelner W. Dayton and others to Frank Wntsoa. Lot at West Asbury Park, SB.200. Alexander A. Yard lo William M. Ivlns. Lot at West Aslmry 1'arn, 8801). « Charles O. Copelnnd to Th'imas F. Somers. Lot ut Bradley Bonch, $1,8IK). Nathan w . croiaoo to Mary L. Croxson. Lot at Eradloy neach, S10U. Carrio N. OloiiRlily. Lot at Henry o . Wlnsor nnd others to llnttlo M. Btrudwlot. Lot ut llmdldy Park, BOOu. Ocean Grovo association to Evolino Thompson Lot Ht West Ocean lirovo, $1,-100. ' WAM. TOWNSHIP. Maria Kittall to Union Klttell. Pleco or properly, Nelson Poland to Tim Trustees of ttio Wnl I Motho dint church.' Lot on Poland tract, 3500 Bnmuel Ludloiv to Iloraco II. Mooro. Lot at North Pprlng- Lnko. $500. , Emma E. Koth to Monroo WyckoIT. Lot a t Koy Q8t, SI*'HJ. • ' Thomas W. Morfordto Eva M. Mcrroreau. - Interest in lot In Green Grovo cemetery. 815. Green Grovo cemetery company toLuoy A. Patterson. % lot In cemotory, SID. Green Hnivo eomelery to John W. Wurcford. and others. Lot in cemetery. 830. • . •• , HAIlMIOItO TOWNSHlr. Annn Tnnanrt to Itobort Hossaok, Br. Pleco 01 property, Si.100, DI'PEIt H l E E H O t D TOWNSHIP. Martha A. Wikoil to Jnunes L. Wlkoft. Pleco 0 property, 81,000. JOSEPH G. ESCIIELB/VCII. COLUMBIA HOTEL, 125 Woit Front Btroet, near Pearl, Red Dank, N, J, Krougcr'H Boer nnd P. A M, Bclmfor's cnlcbrntod 1 Wolnor Beer always on clrotiijlit. ALSO BAKTHDLOHAY KOOIIEBTLlll BEER IN D0TTM& a u S Bergen & Morris, Proprietors, g SWhen You Need a Plumber-./ White P i q u e Skirts, made of heavy , welt pique, 4 yards wide, circular flare style, with embroidery strapped seams, flj I Q Q extra good value, worth $2.49, a t CD I i w O S a t e e n P e t t i c o a t s , made of good silk "• lustre sateen, variety of colors, accor- Q Q n deon pleated flounce, $1.50 grade, at J U u i 5 f 10 BROAD STREET, <RED BANK, f K .Tclephoiie 15-f. A Call on us. You will not regret it. You will be very glad of it. We do excellent work, and our charges are only reason able. We work on the principle that a satisfied customer is our best advertisement. We furnish estimates of any kind promptly and cheerfully. OAD STREET. RED BANK. N.J. SABATH& WHITE, 16 and 18 Front St., Red Banljj N. J FRANCIS WHITE, Real Estate, Loans and Insurance, Front Street, Red Bank, N. J. Sfxth Ave.. 22a and 23d Sts,, MONET TO LOAN. SHREWSBURY TOWNSHIP. John W. Holt niid wife to Wealttaii A. Palmer. Plecoof property, 31. Served in your room just before or after a^iesta one .of these al'fternoons when the atmosphere is in the nineties and the Kunvyss about 33 in the shade, is worth 'three times the price we .charge, 25c, a bottle, . •' WASH SKIRTS. 'Shirt Waist Suits, made of Percales, Seeds Recorded. The following real estate transfers have been recorded in the office of the county clerk at Freehold for the week ending June 10th, 1901: MIDDLETOWN TOWNSHIP. J ^ Kumyss TWO SILK RIBBON SPECIALS. LOT No. 1.—All Silk Ribbon, 3 inches Kwide, in pretty striped and figured patterns, in eight desirable colorings, just the kind for neck and belt trimmings., the regular price 15c, here I f t p ' at per yard. | UL'l Rebuilding a Factory. The factory of the Pneumatic wheel company of Freehold, which was recently burned down, will be rebuilt of brick. Robert Allen, Jr., special n: aster, to Robert F. Parker. Piece of property, 81,200. f A bottle I have $30,000 in sums to suit. Ctals in Summer Needs* We aim to offer unrivalled specials in seasonable merchandise. We undersell alf competition and offer most remarkable Values fast when you mosffteed the goods. It's this policy thai has tuitt a. 'wonderfully targe business for us. Two Waist Specials. FOR 2.00 FINE WAISTS made of French lawn, cluster tucks back and front, with insertions of Hamburg embroidery or Valenciennea lace, new Bishop sleeves, detachable linen collar. 1 5 0 FOR 2.50 AND 3.00 WAISTS made of finest quality Victoria ' " " " - V lawn, trimmed with two rows of Hamburg insertion or Valenciennes lace, clusters of'fine pin tucks froDt and back, newest sleeve, soft cuff with row'of insertion to match front; would be cheap at 2.50. Sale of cMeris Shirts* 2,400 dozen SHIRTS; these are the fine woven madraa plaited bosom shirts, French percales with separate link cuffs, handsome designs in Bedford cords; soft shirts with collars and cuffs attached; domestic percales with cuffs attached and two separate collars; also a -very swell plaited bosom white negligee (the 1.25 kind). The wholesale price of the above 9hirts ranges from 9.00 to 12.00, and would retail for 1.00,1.25 aind 1.50; sizes from 12 to 18}*. We have divided Zf\m £ them into two lots, and will sell them at. 3L»C FURNISHED HOUSES. On river one for $350, $500, $350, $800, $700, $1,500. In town, Broad street, beautiful place, all the year, fully furnished, $1,000; one for season, $1,000. One pretty cottage, barn, all improvements fully furnished, $350. Center street, pretty cottage, fully furnished' $300. Riverside avenue and river, fully furnished, $600; near the same,' cottage/fully furnished, all improvements, $300. Whole year, on line of trolley, 2 cottages, $125 and $150. Washington street, 2 cottages, one $150, one all improvements, fully furnished, $300. Some twenty others, . • . . ./ \ I have a few unfurnished ones left at $7 to $40. ° ' FOR SALE. Cottages, Farm Lots and Store Properties. For sale, an old-established business in town, profitable, large trade, owner cannot attend to it, satisfactory reason for selling, other business will take owner's time. — INSURANCE. _ Insurance in the best companies. Office of the Trenton Investment Co. Office opposite Globe Hotel, Front St. FRANCIS WHITE. Underwear for cMen, 'MEN'S BA1.BRIQGAN UNDERWEAR MEN'S FINE BALBRIGGAN UNDERof fine quality, In unbleached and f.incy WEAR In fancy colors, also hair liae red or blue stripes, shlita have long and broad stripes, shlrtB have long sleeveo, sizes 84 to 40. drawers 30 lo sleeves, sizes M to 44, drawers have 42; the unbleached shirts can be had double Inserted patent gusset, [icurl 'In hnlf Bleevea also; would be extra buttons and suspender tapes, sizes 30 good value at 60c., for SS5c to 40. for ..50c Belts for Men and 'Boys. 150 dozen of men's and boys'fine BELTS, all the latest effects in ooze skin,calf, imitation and Russian leather; similar belts areshown CT^ everywhere at 50c Our price fora limited ttme only Notes df the Underwear Sale. DRAWERS, Cnmbrlc, Cmbrelln ruffle, GOWNS—Empire style, pointed revers, two tucks and rows of hemstitchfront of Insertion of torchcra and riblnK • 2 0 c bon, finished with torchon lace....5Oc DRAWERS, Umbrella ruffle, trimmed GOWNS—High neck, yoke of four Inserwith torchon or embroidery, tions of neat, wldo embroidery between 3 0 c and 5 O c clusters nf rive tucks; neck and sleeves CORSET O O V K R B-Nnlnsooli, new finished and trimmed wltb etnbrolil5 0 o , 7 D c and O 8 c straight front, short to the wnlst, front , cry of six Valenciennes lace Insertions, cir- SKIRTS, Umbrella ruffle, torchon lace cular neck Qnlshed with beading, rlh- Insertion and edge of deep embroidery bon and lace oage,5J)e. 7Oc "nf 0 8 c ruffle ...OOc, O 8 0 . 1 . 2 9 « n d 1 . 4 0 CHEMISE-Sklrt length, Victoria Invfo, KIMON'A DRESSING SACQDES. fancy circular yoke, Itnllnn lace Insertion and colored or plain white lawn dressing fall-over ruffle, edged with loco, nock snequcs. Onfshed with ruffle of f«ncy and sleeves finished with lace edge, colored lawn, and B0 othor styles, J5O<! OOc, and 0 8 C In ' white.. 7Oo to 6.00 . 6 PLOTS FORSALE. Six plots of ground, 5 of which are situated on Beach street and one on Leighton avenue. Plot No. 1, 75x300 ; No. 2, 75x3O0i contains 5-roorri house ; plot No. 3, 75x300 ; plot No. 4, 75x300 and^contains 6room house; plot No. 5, 150x75 on Leighton avenue; plot No. 6, 150x75 but this property will be sold very cheap, $1,000 cash or less. v Terms to suit. Apply to . FRANCIS WHITE, Good Giina. Cheap. Housefurnlshing Specials. TOILET SETS-Ewcr nnd baBlii, chnm- WINDOW 8CHE1E1NS to extend to 83 her' water pitcher, muR, soap dish nnd Inches 0 c bruBh vase 1 . 0 8 GARDEN HOSE. 25 ( t , oonpled,2comDINNER 8ETS-112 pen; a few of them plete nnd warranted 2.O0 may be subject <o plight Imperfections MOTH SHBKTS-40I48 Tttrlne sheets' but nre good enough for ordinary tme' doz 4Rc 112 pen., set 3 . 7 5 OILSTOVH, tlie wlcltlesa. blno fltme! warranted , .".. S . S O TEA SETS. 50 pcs. complete, name stylo as above I . O J ) WASH BOAItDS, the glass ones, Tesnfar 86c, now , XtJc GOBLETS, largo slzo for water, dnz.. SPADER, eolll (tool, extra quality R » c , ROc RAKES, malleable. 14 tooth, long ban-, die, strong ." Sic rnMBLBRS. thin blown, cloitti crvsextra strong and large 1 0 c tal, doz • 4 S « TROWELS, GRABS 80XTHE8 or COTTERS, extra. ^MS heavy, 4 styles, crystal, quality'steel ,. 82e ••....24c RED BANK, N. J . OPPOSITE GLOBE HOTEL, N TO THE FARMERS. YOU SHOULD SEE OUR LINE OF D. M. Osborne 8c Co. Harvesting- Machinery AND . First class Agricultural Implements of all kinds, Binder twine and Machine Oil, r before buying. Green & Btirden, Shrewsbury, N. J. f UpholsteringandCabinet Work i\ CARPETS.LAID AND MATTRESSES MADE OVER.. AWNINGS AT CITY I^RICES. . , Beat Work Guarnnteod, A.SGHMIDT, Our Agout, Mr. Joseph W. Sliorman, Cor. White street and Maple 80 BROAD STREET, . '. ftED BANK, N. J . t avonuo, will tako orders for and deliver all good* montionecj In the aoovo advertisement. - . •.; ; ••»»••••»•»»•••»••»••••••»+»••»•»•»••»•»••»•»••»•»••' TINTON FALLS NEWS. MIDDLETOWN VILLAGE HEWS AA,^|A^ VWWVWVWVVY The Toligate Closed Last Weilnes- Children's'PayExercttien in the Reformed and Baptist Churches. dau-A Hard Working Warmer, Daniel Callabar, the toligate keeper Children's day waa observed in the Rehere, hardly knows what to do with formed church on Sunday morning, himselfsince the purchase of the turn- The church was prettily trimmed with pike by the county and the closing of cut flowers and palms. Besides choruses --.the toligate. Within fifteen" minutes of by the school there was a duet by Miss. the time when the county paid over the Marie Conover and Miss Carrie Pentermoney for the turnpike last Wednesday, maim; a quartette by Miss Conover, Miss ' he received notice to close the tollhouse Mabel Irwin, Charles Root and Harry and collect no more toll. He lives alone Gulick; recitations by Hilda French and about three-quarters of a mile west of Viola Hankins; an exercise by Susie the tollhouse. For seventeen years he Stout, Dell and Lillian Conover, Nettie has been keeper of the toligate, reaching Wilson and Alice Root;' and an exercise' the toligate at six o'clock in the morn- by Edward Osborn, Frank and Allen ing and remaining there until eight Hesketh, Harold Stout, Clifford Easto'clock at night. He never missed a day mond and Willie Wyckoff. The pastor, because of sickness during all that time Rev. P. E. Hageman, made a short adand he has missed very few days from dress appropriate to the occasion. William S. Heyer, Jr., the infant son of anycause. William VanKirk is one of the hardest' William S.. Heyer, Sr., was baptized at workers of Tinton Falls and he probably this service. makes more money than any other The Children's day exercises at the V. fanner here. He owns two farms and Baptist church were held on Sunday he farms his father's place in connection night. There was no service at the Rewith his own farms. This year he hasformed church and a large number of the rented the Adam Berry place and he Reformed people attended the exercisesat runs this place also. All the farms are the Baptist church. Rev. P. K. Hagecarried on as truck; farms. He runs man, pastor of the Reformed chiirch, routes to the shore and has already be- made the opening prayer. The church gun marketing his produce. He uses was decorated witli> an abundance of large quantities of manure, which he pretty flowers and the next day these carts from the stables on the shore, and were sent to the flower mission at New he also is a great user of chemical fer- York. The address of welcome was tilizers. made by Irwin Sutphen, recitations were Daniel H. Gook was affected with a given by Edna Naser, Lulu Hopping and 1 sore knee on Saturday. He was work- Willie Lufburrow j Miss Lizzie Taylor ing at the saw mill when1 his left knee and Miss Gussie Patterson^Bang a duet; began to pain him.~ The knee began and the pastor, Rev. W. H. J. Parker, ' swelling aud toward night he had to be made an address on the work of the edutaken home in a wagon. Dr. Field of cational society of the church. A colBed Bank was called to attend him and lection of $11 was taken up, which will go he said be thought Mr. Cook must have to the educational society for the church •'knocked his knee against something and car work on the western frontier. The car injured it in that way,.but Mr. Cook travels from place to place where there does not remember hitting it against are no Baptist churches and 42 railroads anything or of having injured it at all have given the car free transportation " He is almost wholly disabled. over their lines. John W. Bennett has plowed up one Rev. W. E. Chalmers of Brooklyn of his potato fields and has planted it to will preach at the Baptist church next corn. The potatoes used as seed and the Sunday on account of the abfertilizer used on the potatoes cost $100., sence of morning the pastor. Miss Lizzie Taylor B. C. Wyckoff has plowed up one of his will sing " He shall feed Hisflock."At potato fields and has planted millet. night the Junior American Mechanics Isaac Emmons, who is on the property lodge will attend service in a body at owned by Michael Clancy of Jersey City, the Episcopal church and the Baptist is making many improvements to theand Reformed churches will unite with property. He has' got a fine garden and the Episcopal church in the service. the place looks better than it has forThe pastors of the three churches will years past. make addresses. - Charles VanBrunt is cutting chestnut Frank 8. Perrine, the barber, has been timber on the John J. O'Donohue wood- engaged by a number of residents to put land near Chestnut Plains. The timber their lawns and sidewalks in order. He is to be used for fencing on the O'Dono- has put Mrs. J. D. Thomas's place and hue place near Shrewsbury. the Episcopal church property in fine The local' trout fishermen have1 not shape and he is now at work on E. A. caught many trout. The weather has Merdian's lawn and sidewalk. He has not been favorable for troutfishing,andbeen engaged by the month to look after • the long continued rainy*weather also the property of the Episcopal church interfered with the sport. and keep it in order. James Walsh and A. W. Tilton are The women's missionary society of both busy in their blacksmith shops. the "Reformed church will meet at the Repairing farm tools and farm machinery parsonage to-morrow afternoon at tbree forms a large part of their work at this o'clock. The Steady Gleaners, the young season of the year. women's society of the church, will Thomas Riordan of Scobeyville is meet at the parsonage on Friday afterfarming the Thomas Truswell place in noon at half-past tjiree o'clock. connection with his own farm across the Thomas Megan, who is employed with road. He has planted the farm mostly the bridge crew on the New York and in corn, Long Branch'railroad, is laid up. with Capt. David Walling will build a newinflammatory rheumatism. He is unable cypress receiving tank for Jiis cider mill to move band or foot. and lie will also build a new cradle for Rev. P. K. Hageman attended the Oo-o-XL-ty. O n l y Lcyvsr P r i c e d Olot-Ib.±exis ±n. his press. The tank will hold 8,000 gal- alumni reunion and the commencement lons, exercises of Rutgers college yesterday Benjamin C. Wyckoff has afieldofand to-day. Mr. Hageman is a'graduate •wheat of about twelve acres which the of the-college. farmers of the Falls say is the finest Miss Katherine Stout, daughter of wheat field in all out-doors. , Abram Stout, returned last Friday from Crawford brothers are busy slaughter- the state normal school for the summer OCEANPORT NEWS. ing calves. They kill about 45 calves a vacation. ' week and sell them j principally at Long Mrs. George L. Crane, who has been filterarv Meeting of the Methodist Branch and AsburylPark. Epicerth League. very sick with a heavy cold,1 bordering John Robinson will build 200 panels of on pneumonia, is recovering. The Methodist Epworth league literary fence on the Sherman place near ScobeyHenry C. Taylor ljas sola his team of meeting was held in the church last ville. He gets ten cents per panel formatched bay horses to an Elberon party. night. R. P. Miller offered tha prayer putting up the fence. and Miss Carrie Wolcott read from the Strawberries hereabouts are very much bible. " The City of Washington " was damaged by the weather and there will Scobeyville News. Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J; i the subject taken, up and a paper on the not be much more than one-third of a Ernest Hiltbrunner has a fine truck history of the city was read by Miss • crop. farm. The tomatoes on his vines are Edith McCreery. The Capitol building Henry Brower, who lives between already as large as eggs, his peach trees was described by Rev. M. S. Mesler, the here and Scobeyville, is building a new are laden with fine fruit, and his vegeta- Congressional library by Mrs. Harry picket fence on his place. bles are above the average at this sea- Herbert, the White House by Crawford David Buck is farming the Robert son of the year. Haynes, the Treasury building by Mrs. Drum mond place this year. John Riordan has the finest crop of George VanTassel, the dead letter office lima beans of any one in this vicinity. by William Tilton, the Washington monument by Miss Harriet Haynes and Mount The plants are three feet high. MARLBORO NEWS. John Newell of Belmar was a Sunday Vernor^ by Miss Hattie Smith. The William Duoan Now in Charge of guest of his mother, Mrs. Thomas New- meeting closed with the song, "Amerthe Marlboro Hotel. ell, i • ica." I have six houses to let from $8 to $25 each. Two stores * Rev. and Mrs. M. S. Mesler returned William Dugan is now landlord of the Dr. and Mrs. H. O. Allen of Broad to let on Front street; one at $25 and one at $30. village inn. Mrs. Williams, the former Brook, Connecticut, were guests last home on Monday night from a few days visit at". Thorofare. Mr. Mesler attended week of C. Polhemus. landlady, has moved to Princeton. Special Bargain. The foundation of William C. Hulse's Thomas Enright and family of Colt's the re-union of his conference class. new store, whose building was recently Neck were guests of Thomas Riordan on Rev. J . W. Nickelson of Navesink ! preached in the Methodist church ott The restaurant adjoining the opera house, and five nice A destroyed by fire, has been laid. Alonzo Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William N. Tilton spent Sunday morning and at night Samuel Brower has charge of the work. rooms over the restaurant. Possession at once. A John E. Humphrey, a graduate of Sunday with Mrs. John E. Lewis of Wiseman and Isaac D. White of Oakburst had charge of the service. • • • • j Crozier'B theological seminary, has ac- Jerseyville. Mrs. Henry Polhemus, who has been TheodoreUpdyke, who is employed by cepted a call to the Baptist church here Samuel Smock, was driving through visiting at Red Bank, has returned and he will commence his work next town on Monday morning with a load of 4 HOUSES FOB SALE ON EVERY STREET IN RED BANK. home.. Sunday Children's day was observed nt the Mr. and Mrs. John Riordan were Sun- hay when the frone part of the wagon Baptist church on Sunday night. The day guests of Michael Riordan of Colt's broke down and the hay fell off. The wagon was repaired and the hay rechurch was prettily decorated and a fine Neck. Z INSURANCE PLACED IN BEST COMPANIES AND A Mr. and Mrs. James Tilton of Marl- loaded. programme wns rendered. Miss Sophia Neiberlain of Freehold boro Bpent Sunday a.t William A. Til- Mrs. Harry A. Boyd of Matawan and 5 LOSSES PBOMPTLt PAID. 9 Mrs. William D. Walling of North Long • _ epdnt Sunday with her brother, John ton's. S.- S. Scobey of Long Branch Bpent Branch spent port of this week with Mrs. r Neiberlain. Junius S, Walljng. A Rooms l a n d 2, Register Building. THEODORE F. WHITE, f Mtss Sarah Digging, who has been Sunday with Mrs. J. F. Scobey. Howard Davison moved last week to visiting friends at Long B/anch, has re- John Smith lost a mule last week. Long Branch. Mr. DaviRon is employed turned home. •»» — by the telephone company and he now John Heiser and Harry VanPelt spent lives much nearer his work. ••»•••»•••••••••»•••••••«••»»••••»»••»»•••••»»»»+»+» Sunday with Mr. Heiser,'s parents at Everett News. Dr. E, W. Crater returned home on "West Freehold. (V James Cartan and family of Asbury Mrs. Catherine Perrine is visiting her Park took possession of Mrs. Mary Mc- Saturday from a week's visit to his mother, Mrs. S. A. Crater of Bound son, Edward Perrine of Holmdel. house on Saturday, for the sum- Brook. v T. P. Haywnrd spent Sunday at Long Carthy's Paints, Oils and Varnishes. mer. Frank Langwit'h is employed by the Branch. David Isenberg. the hotel keeper here, DEVOE'8 RK1DY MIXED PAINTS. Miu John Ireland and her son are visit- will give a clambake on Saturday, June Asbury Park gas company. He goes back and forth to Asbury Pnrk daily. OBVOE'S neadr Mixed Glo» Faint* for Floors; will dry over nlcht. ing Mrs. Ireland's father at Lakehurst. Miss Rose Cook of Eatontown visited Eva and Samuel Chasey of Bedford 29th. SUPREiniS FLOOR V A H N I S H ; quick drying. Miss Mary Finner is confined to theher grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Have been visiting relatives here. ' lUndr Mixed Graphite Paint*forTin Rooft j win euro a leaky roof. house with sickness. Miss Finner is DuBois, on Sunday. Miss Clara Smith is visiting at Phila- about ninety years old. GlIiVAMZRD POULTRY NETTING. The ladies' aid society of tho Methodelphia and Maryland. ) LATH, nOSBDALB AND PORTLAND CEMENTS. Christopher Dye haB Gandy strawdist; church will hold a strawberry festiMrs. Raphel Conover and her sister berries that average 18 to 20 berries to val in the truck house to-night. Libbie spent Sunday at Tennent. the quart. . • William H. Garrlgan and Harry EdMiss Catharine Ryan spent one daywards spent Monday and Tuesday in STREET, opposite Maple Avenue, RED BAN^, N. J . , Chapel Hill NOWB. nst week visiting her brother, Martin New York. 'i • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • » • • • » • • • • • • » • • » » » » • • ••••••••••••••• Miss Adelo Conover of Middletown is Ryan of Little Silver.' Thomas Leddy of Red Bank spent Sunvisiting Miss Ethol Sutphen. John MoLaughliri has had his.house day with William AntonideB, George Conover of Brooklyn was apainted white. Lemuel Sutphen of Francis Oill of Nowark is spending a Sunday guest of D. C. Bennett. ,\ Hohndel did the work. few days here. ' Tho best In nod Dank can bo found at tlia store of Miss Mabel Applegate is visiting her John P. Stilwell spent last week with JohmWard, Sr., is putting down a cousin, Miss Maud'Mngeo of Oceanic • Alfred Conover of Allenhurst. brick sidewalk in front of his houBe. Miss Elsie Bennett is tho guest of her Patrick Oartan's cow died last Satur- Mrs. Frank Price is visiting relatives South Side of Front Street, Near Broad Street. aunt, Mrs. George Conovor of Brooklyn.' day. '.•-• ' ' . : •••••.••. • • - . ' . •; ot Hoboken. You will bo Butlstlcd with tho quality and price. A full assortment of Old Whiskies and Brafldtoe,aQ Wcbcst Imported and Domestic Wines, Ales I'ottors, *c.,Ao. ' • . Tho flint consignment of children arMr. nnd Mrs. Benjamin Hankinson Extract of Malt, 81.60 per dozen pints. . rived tit the Eunice home on Tuesday. pent Friday visiting friends at Freehold. THE REGISTER is $1.50 n year. I make a spoclaltj of Chamberlain's Old. Cabinet RTC, aged 10 years. Galon $4.78; tull quart, ( 1 . . Anticipate Your Wants By Baying Now! I Every Dollar Will Almost Do Double Duty! Four Days yet remain in which to buy Clothing for Men, Boys and, Children at 25 cents less on the dollar than our former low prices. * • I This sale has proved to the public as well as to us the most successful one in our career. ,No previous sale has been appreciated so much by the money saving people as .our present one; never was reliable clothing sold at such marvelous low prices as at this 25 per cent Reduction Sale. We want everybody in Red Bank and vicinity to come at once and realize the great savings that can be derived through purchasing at this 25 Per Cent Reduction Sale, % f 1 Which closes Saturday night, June 22d. I €agle Clothing Co I 26 Broad St., Red Bank, N. J. THEODORE F. WHITE, \ I_ , 1 Real Estate, Insurance and Loans, i 5 5 LUMBER AND HARDWARE, f J. TRAFFORD ALLEN, AND PURE WHISKIES OCEANIC NEWS. EATONTOWN NEWS. FAIR HAVEN-NEWS. The Presbyterian Chureh to Cele- The Baptist Voting People to Give an A Horsq Takes Fright at a Piece, of brate Its Fortieth Anniversary. Entertainment, Paper and Runs Aicay. Pa rag re It le a deadly log to insect peets and bags. It Is cheaper than P a r i s Green, more bnlky, kills A special service will be held in the The Baptist ydnng people's union will John Gillig's horse, attached to a rubPresbyteriaif church on Sunday, June give a musical entertainment in the Bap- ber tire runabout, shied at a piece of 30th, at eleven o'clock, to celebrate the ist church; on Friday night for the paper while standing in front of Richard A NEW V INSECTICIDE. fortieth anniversary of the church's or- general churcti fund. Rev. and Mrfi. Allaire's butcher shop.on Monday and injare the foliage. Combines oil the effective properties of Bordeaux Mlitoio and Paris Green, ganization. Rev. Albert B. King, the Oscar Baichwitz and Misses A. Marie ran into a tree on the opposite aide of resulting In a combined Fungicldo and Inocctlcidc. For many years we have been the sole manufacturers of the well-known Star Brand of Strictly first pastor of the church, will give some Huylai>, Etta. White, .Maggie Wolcott the road. A front wheel of the wagon Paris dreen, and know that Paragrene is an effective and reliable lmprovemtnt on Paris recollections of its early history; Rev. and Birdie Lawrence have the affair in was wrecked; The horse then ran to the Pure Green. Our reputation as Paris Green manufacturers Is a guarantee that Paragrene will do all Thomas S. Hastings, whose interest in charge. Miss Ruth.Heyer, Mrs. G. W. other side of the street and upset the the church for more tlian a quarter of a Mosby, MiBS Birdie Lawrence and W. B. wagon on a stone in front of Edward century'luis been a prime factor in its Parsons will sing; Miss Sarah Conrow, Wilber's cigar store. Miss Emma Gillig growth, will make an addre.ss; and the Miss Lizzie Conrow and Walter Haynes and Miss Ethel Covert were in the wagon present pa?tbr, Rav. S. W. Kuipe, will will give recitations; and Charles Nie- and were thrown out, but were not hurt. give a• statistical'report. All the orig- man of Red Bank and Edwin Hobbs of The horse was caught near the cedars. ALL NEW, GOOD SHOES. inal nitmbera of the church who are hrewsbury will give a cornet duet. Children's day will be celebrated in now living are requested to bu present at A number of people from here at- the Methodist church, on Sunday night. the service or to send greetings. ended the commencement exercises at. The church will be deporated with plants Children's day exercises were held in ong Branch last Friday night;/Ana : and flowers and stringed daisies. The the Methodist church on Sunday after- iel Wolcott, one of the graduates, read entertainment will consist of an exercise noon in charge of the pastor, Rev. J. W. ,n_essay on, "'Out of School Life, Into entitled " In Sunny June," arranged by Nickelson.' The church was trimmed jife's School." Edward-Wolcott gave Mrs: John Bennett and Mrs. John Harwith roses, daisies and potted plants. n essay on " Why We Should Study vey ; recitations by William VanNote, The singing was led by a choir com- 'olitics," Both essays were well de- Frank Bennett, Bessie Bennett, Irma posed of Mrs.. Dawitt Scott, Mrs. S. S. ivered and called forth a great deal of Metritt, Clarabel Doughty, Ethel VanVanBrunt, Mrs. George Curtis, Misses ppluuse. . " • Brunt, Delia Evans, Helen Armstrong. I have just received a handsome lot for boys and men with •$ Ida Jeffrey, Margaret Rex, Myrtle FenThe Children's day exercises in the Viola Little, Elsie-Magee, Edith Tom, ton and Addle Sewing, Dewitt Biower Baptist church last Sunday night were Carrie Smith, Florence Smith and Clinextra heavy rubber sofes, 8 5 c . $ 1 . 0 0 , $ 1 . 5 0 a n d $ 2 . 0 0 . |J< 1 and Dewitt Scott. Recitations were well given and the church was crowded. ton Wilbur ; a duet entitled " Beautiful given by Zoa, Lizzie and Barry Rex, he Church decorations called forth the World" by Thddo, Parker and Helen >Lida Curtis, Gertrude Parker, Zola, Mil- dmiration of all. A collection of $C Armstrong'; u solo and duet by Mrs. ton and Charles Emery, . and Katie as taken up, arid this money will be John Harvey and Mrs. Frank Mulfonj. Itemig.. Solos were sung by Miss Myrtle ient to the Baptist publication house to and.chornses.by the school. Fenton and Miss Margaret Rex. Jose- je used in issuing bibles, tracts, etc. An entertainment will be given in the phine and Adu Bmeline Allen, daughters Asher Waller, who has been employed Methodist church tonight for the benefit of Joseph Allen, were baptized at this tt Sheepshead Bay and elsewhere with of the church. Miss SarahNivison is service. ' ace horses, has come back home here, getting up the eutertain'm'ent. Miss CasMrs. J. VanKeuren of Brooklyn and iome time ago a team of horses ran ler, teacherot elocution in the Freehold started off in great shape X her daughters, Dorothy, Marjnrie and way with him and threw him out of public school, will give readings and •' s Aliene, who have been visiting Mrs. he wagon. One of his Tinkle bones was recitations. 1'here will also bu music by last week l have beauties, • • < John Gilbertson, • have returned home. roken. home talent. Mrs. Charles Cameron of Deal Beach Samuel Aumack led the Epwofth Mrs. K. L. Bennett,. Miss Nettie Chandand her children spent Monday with eague meeting in the Methodist church ler, Miss Sydney Martine.u and Miss Mrs. Gilbertson. ast Sunday night. Next Sunday night Mabel Ward of this pLice and Warren The Monmouth county horticultural ;he meeting will be led by'Mrs. Edward and Albeit Schneider and Phillip Blatt society will give a strawberry and out- lohnston. . Plenty stylish ones, T 5 C , : of Brooklyn we're entertained on Saturdoor rose exhibit in Red Men's hall on The junior league of the. Methodist day by Miss Olive Curchin, Friday night. Twelve prizes will be :hurch will go on its annual picnic to John L. Bennett, John Honclrickson., $1 00 1Mt $ l i 5 0 awarded. Nicholas Butterbach is in Lsbury Park next Friday. Miss Cath- E'igar Smith, Williiini Bennett, Elwoodcharge or the affair. Admission will be nine E. Budd will look after the uhil- South and Alfred Bell took'a trip'on frae. en. their wheels across Stnien Inland on Sun Albert Bloodgood, Jr., son of Albert The "women's foreign missionary sp- day? Thev rode as.far as Fort Lee and Bloodgood, Sr., was playing about a iety of the P esbyterian church will had a very pleasnit trip. „ lawn swing at his home last week when neet at Mrs. Levi Scobey's to-morrow George Vjx and faiinly of New York Little boys'spring heel lace shoes, sizes 8)4 to nj£, regular he fell and cut a gash across his fore- fternoon at.three o'clock. have moved into thi' Sonnlon eottiigp, $1.35 grade, at.. -....'.., :. . . . , . 85C. head. Dr.' Whitmore took stveral Maurice Berzer, one of the grammi-r and AiigustusPliintizauii.fiiinily of New stitches in the cut. ichool graduates from ibis KCIIOOI, is' York Irive moved into Mrs. C. L. HenA few more babies' 50c. shoes at v 39C. Miss Nellie Harvey's kindergarden smployed in the office of a large cigar drickson's lionse for the summer. Boys' and Men's good 65c. tennii (regular goods) at...:.39C< school at New York1 will close to mor- louse in New York, — — ' Benjamin B. Brown. Jr.. who' has row and she and her sister. Miss Jessie Rev. Samuel D. Price will ,preach at been doing carpenter work in the New Some bdds and ends of women'e arid children's shoes l/2 price. Harvey, will, return home for the sum- ;he Presbyterian church next Sunday England states,'is visiting at his home mer. ight on " I know that my Redeemer here, The receipts at the. graduation exer- ivelh." ,. Mr. and Mrs. John Schenck of Colt's cises of the public school on Thursday Mrs. S. R, Probasco and two sons, Neck and George Ha'fstroen of Newark night were $21. The money will be ames and Samuel, and Miss May Budd spent Sunday with Williiini Curchin. used in buying new library books, if Burlington, are visiting relatives here. Mrs. N. S. Golira of New York, who has C. Herbert Walling and Tunis Barka- Miss^Lena Roberts spent Saturday and been visiting her father, George B. Snyloo have gone to Trenton to attend the xirt of Sunday with her aunt, Mrs. der, returned home on Monday. commencement exercises of the state Charles Haggerty of New York. Mrs. John Pearsall of New York has normal school to-night. •" Anabel' Vandermark gave a birthday been spending a week in town with Mrs. William VanNest of Eatontown party to a number of her friendB on friends. and her children, Beatrice and Walter, Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Rankin are on a spent Monday with Mrs. K. LS. VanNest, New'doors have been put up at the two weeks' trip to the Buffalo exposiJr. ront entrance to the Methodist church. tion. Henry Yerrington, who was badly Frank Beach of Long Branch is spend- Robert F. Cross is employed as a clerk burned some time ago by a gasoline ex- ng a few days with J. M. Roberts. in George Hendnckson's grocery store. When buying food, and doubly critical when buying canned plosion, is again able to be around. Miss Sarah M. Fay has returned from Mrs. Charles Soden of New York is John Keller of New York has moved a visit of several weeks atNutley. here for the eumruer. food—One can't be too careful in selecting things to eat. with his family into John Wilson's house Samuel Smock has the contract to for the summer. , „• iprinkle the stone road here. We can't and don't expect to hold the trade of tjje person who Wayside News. Miss Bessie Allen is spending several Rev. and Mrs. Oscar Barchwitz spent weeks with her sister, Mrs. Edward Fen- Monday in New York. thinks "any old thing" to eat is good enough if it's only cheap. Mrs. William Davis and family spent ton of Lincroft. Mrs. Charles Fish is sick with acute a few days last; week with Mrs. Catherine But we can and do expect to hold the trade of the critical Irving and Cortland Striker of Brook- ndigestion. Fary. Mrs/ Mary L. Fields and Mrs. lyn .spprit Sunday with their father, Mrs. G. W. Mosby spent Monday in ByrojiL VanBenschoten .of Asbury Park buyer who gives our B a k e d B e a n s one trial. Henry Striker. Slew York. ._• visited Mrs, Fary last week. Miss Bessie Mulligan is spending this Isaac B. White conducted church serSome Beans cost more than ours and some less, but in neither week with Mrs. Hugh McCarron of Fair vice on Sunday afternoon.' His talk SHREWSBURY NEWS. Haven. case is the quality better. was on the golden text of the SundayMiss Ida Murphy of New York spent school lesson, "Jesus Christ, the same liiHt of Characters in the Coming This can be put down as a fact B U C k l i n ' S B a k e d Sundny with her uncle, Robert Murpliy. yesterday and to-day and forever." Cantata of Esther. Mias Carrie Longstreet of Newark William Golden, wljo has been envB e a n s are as good as can be bought at any price—But supThe cast of characters in the cantata ployed by John Truax on his farm, will spent Monday with Mrs. Nelson Jeffrey. Mrs. Priscilla Hakes' of Nfcw York is if Esther to be given on Friday night begin work to-morrow as book-keeper in pose you order a can from your grocer. f next week will be as follows : • spending a week with Mrs. J. C. Brill. the Atlantic pavilion at Long Branch. Mrs. George W. Mosby Albert Busch of New York spent Esther, the Queon He has them in little, big and bigger cans, with Tomato Mrs. George McCloskey of Point PleasbnaiiL'rus, iLn King '.' William Getty Thursday with Ealph Longstreet. Human, tlio King's Counsellor... .William E. Morris ant and her daughter Marian, who have —Sauceforthose-who like'this dressing7affd""Praiirfor others. Miss Chrissie Bogle is visiting Mrs. M o r t a l , a Jevv^..™^....Dr. .Herbert, E. Williams. been visiting Mrs. E . L . Havens^ "liavtT Mrs. Frank Wifcofl returned home. -Henry-Puncliard of New Yorkr ~ Zefesli, Human's w(fo ' P, S.—The Tomato Sauce is good. Mrs. Frank Pintard has returned from 'roplietess and Mordecal's sisterMrs. H. G. Holloway John Blegill lost a horse last week. . It a visit to Freeport, Long Island. 'rincessi'9 Mrs. Holmes Dennett. bad been kicked by another horse and Very truly, Harry Frankenstein of New York was Miss Eva Green, Miss Bessie Dennis, Miss May could not live, Mr. Megillshotit to put Sutphen, Miss Mabel Smock. a visitor in town on Sunday. i'gRar Myron Campbell it out of its misery. Miss Annie Ferguson of Red Bank is Uegal and high priest Percy Parker Mr. and Mrs. John Crawford of Brick visiting Miss Margaret Rex. Herald anil Hurljouali Hugh Getty Church, New York, who have been visitScrlue A. Holmes Shoemaker ing Misa Matilda Belshaw, have reIn addition to the solo parts there will turned holne. LITTLE SILVER NEWS. be a chorus of about fifty voices. The Mrs, Fary is enclosing her back porch instrumental music will bo by Malcolm The JUIIHOII Fresh Air Home to T. Bell and George Dennis, violins; Ed- and will use it as a summer kitchen. George Hagerman is doing the work. , Open To-HorroiCr ~ win Hobbs, cornet; Charles Dennis, William Wilson King dug some new The Judson memorial fresh air home rombone; Mrs. Leve of Jacksonville, potatoes on Saturday. They were about opened on Saturday. The home is sup- Florida, accompanist. the size of walnutp. ported by the Judson memorial Baptist In place of the regular prayer meeting Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Tilton of Belford church of New York. Miss Ruth D. at the Presbyterian church to-night the Stelle has charge of the home. The first Christian Endeavor society will cele- are visiting Mrs. Tilton's father, John lot of children from the city will arrive brate its ninth anniversary]! Rev. Sam- Truax. to-morrow. uel H. Thompson, pastor of tho Rgd John Lutz has bought a new bicycle Mrs. Mary E; Smith has a can of crab Bunk Presbyterian church, will deliver from Charles Breese of Eatontown. apples that she put up twenty years ago. an address. Miss Sad'e Walling will Webb Dangler, Jr., and Benjamin DanThe apples are in an old-fashioned glaes- j v e . a report of the work of the society gler have bought new bicycles. tuppud Mason jar and appear to be in and there will be special singing by a Mrs. Lucinda Hall of Asbury Park has good condition. They were put up quartette composed of M;iss Eva Green, been visiting at Green Grove. work inside his bouse painted and varwhen Mrs. Smith was living on Long Miss May Sutphen, Hugh Getty and Ednished and the house papered. Ruliff • Island, und whon she moved here, two win Hobba. ? Giberson is having his house painted a Atlantic Highlands News. yeara later, she had several cans of appleB Arthur Swift, graduated from the BOOKS. Work has been commenced on the drab color and "papered inside. The Rare. Curious. Current, IN STOCK. that had not been opened. The one now Lr>ng Branch public school laBt Friday work on both houses is laing done by on hand is the last of the lot. • ALMOST GIVEN AWAY. night. At the commenceinent exercises sprinkling of the stone road. Wilson Lemuel Sutphen* . , Gilbert H. Worthley bought a new he read an essay. Arthur IB a small boy Stryker does the sprinkling, within the One of the sorrel horses which John Libraries Supplied Cbeapertban at. any Book Stoie wheel last summer. It broke down on but he handled the large subject, "Is the borough limits and Frank Polhemus W. Ely used on his butcher route died > ID tho world. Thanksgiving day and he sent it to the World Growing Morally Better?" He does the sprinkling from the borough LIBRARIES AND BOOKS BOUGHT last Tuesday. • . ,.. Mammoth Catalocnie Free. factory for repairs, the wheel having a was well applauded for his excellaat limits to tlm Oceanic bridge. William C. Ely is having a porch built Mrs. J. W. Sampson, WIIOBO husband LECCAT BROTHERS, guarantee of one year. The factory did delivery, not charge anything for repairing the The mission band of the Presbyterian died recently from lockjaw, has bought to the front and sides of Ins house. 81 Chambers Street, 1 George Sutphen, who has been quite 3d Door West of Cltv Hall Park. ., NEW YORK. damage, but Mr. Worthley did not gel church held a meeting in the Sunday- the residence property of Dr. VanMater is now out of doorB. the wheel back until last week. school room on Saturday afternoon. on Second avenue. Dr. VanMater is eiok, William C. Ely Bpent Wednesday in The junior league of the MetbodiH The band will hold a fair in library hall negotiating for the purchase of a propPhiladelphia. church will go on a picnic to ©onover'i 6n Friday. July 5th. A fair was held erty on Third avenue. Captain and Mrs. J. H. Heyer spent a woods to-morrow. Miss Emma Green by the mission band last year and it William' N. Burdge, who recently retur> ed from navy nervice, has a position couple of days last week in Newark. Mrs. J. W. Preaby, Mrs. Oilman Browe provod to be a great success. and Miss Ella lling will go with tin Rev. Samuel D. Price will preach at in Brooklyn. H. C. Phraner of BrookLincroft News. league.. The children will be treated it the Presbyterian church riext Sunday lyn spent Sunday with Mr. Burdge at ico ctetini and soft drinks. Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves,. J"£, have morning on " The Exaltation of Christ.'" his homo here. Mrs. Raymond G. Johnson of New moved from Shrewsbury avenue, Bed Miss Lilian Fowler and II. Allen Stob There will be soloa by Dr. Herbert E. bins will be married next Wednesday al W illiamH,, tho regular soloist, and by York and her children spunt last week Bank, to Mrs. A. A. Sanborn's house. We have been in business a «?• with Mrs. Johnson's parents, Mr. and Mr. Reeves is employed on tho farm by the Methodist church at four o'clock Mrs. Leve of Jacksonville, Florida. good many years, and we can • A reception will be held at tho hous " A. Holmes Shoemaker led the Chris- Mrs. C. N. Patterson. Mrs.Sanborn. Two weeks a 0 he^niarpoint with pride'to many a jr after tho wedding. tian Endeavor meeting at tho Presby- Mrs. George E. Jenkinson was under ried Miss Jane Reevey of Red Bank. plumbing undertaking that is • > JtisB Mary Lovett, daughter of John T terian church on'Sunday. Mrs, Frank tho doctor's care last week. Her health After hfi and his wife moved here they giving unlimited satisfaction X Lovett, has returned home for the sum- Wickoff and Dr. Herbert E. Williams was generally run down, but she is now wereserennded. j to-day. ... Y '' mer from Columbia University in Now sang a duefat the Pre3byterian church much improved. John Riddle, George Thompson and No plumbing problem ia too • > York. • Mra. Wobster Davis fell down stairs John Fenton picked the first peas or the on Sunday. • . perplexing for UB to solve. J> broke her shoulder soaBon early last week. Mrs. J. B. Worthloy and Mrs. Henry Miss Grace W. HplmeB, daughter,of on Saturday and -; • ; ~_ , VanMater of Red Bank were guests of Joseph V. Holmes, who has been teach- bone. Mrs. Fred Cullington and Miss JoseMlfisLibbio Worthloy on Sunday. phine Fenton bf Red Bank spent Tuesday ing school at Woodridge. has returned ' Holmdel News. Rqv. J. W: Presby spent yesterday i home for the summer, Next year Miss and Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Jnmea New York. Holmes will teach at West Long Branch. Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Doreett will more T • 8> FHONT STREET, Miss Bortha King spent Monday a Benjamin W. Vandervcer lias been to Brown's Point, near Keyport, next M r " a r i d W William J. Gilmartin of New York will spend the summer with sick. , , New York. week,, Mr, Dorsett has employment on Bed Bank, Now Jor«ey. \ •> , . • , • m•» •' " • . ' . . • z tho trolley lino botweon Keyport and Mrs. Joseph Thompson,. Each Issue of Trie Rmiwrzn in brim Miss Elizabeth Snydcr of Newark ia ^A ^All&L A^A J&k. A^A ^ f c t&A. t&A. t&A. X ^ ^A If you would never miss any newi Matawan. / full of newiff new*,—Adt, : visiting James Tomlipson. take THE REGISTER.—Adv. ? Jumee Ooriover is having the wood g White Canvas Yachting Shoes. Low Shoes for Wen ^ and Women 8 I ThePatent Uather Shoe . , ^ . That Won't Break Thro' THIS WEEK'S BARGAIN TABLE. I CLARENCE WHITE, RED BANK. | It Pays to beCritical MILL MILLION Perplexing Plumbing Problems. t COOK & OAKLEY, REDBi VOLUME XXIII; NO. 5& PAGES 9 TO 16. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY. JUNE W, 1901. by accident, as it were. He liked the He is a so"n of A. Holmes Borden of beside the girls. The pianist struck up has taught in the school 22 years; Miss " The star spangled banner" and the Cora W. Jennings, of Shrewsbury, who business, and, his many years of study, Shrewsbury. while on the farm had'given him a vast The school has .nine grades. The audience joined spiritedly in the singing. has taught three years; and Miss Abigail TWENTY-FIVE GRADUATES AT fund of information • which became in- course of study is prepared for all the This exercise brought forth lots of ap- Richardson, who "has taught one year. stantly of value when he tpok up the schools by the county superintendent, plause. The valedictory and an essay Miss Richardson has charge of the RED BANK THIS YEAR. teacher's vocation. He was very suc- and those who complete the nine years' oil "Independence of Character," were colored scholars. In point of attendance • the past year This is the Largest Class in the cessful in this work, and in three years course in the country schools are as far given by Thomas Holland. • Blstortl of the School—An Address he was advanced to the principalship of advanced as those who go,.through the Other exercises included songs by the was the best in the history of the> Fair by Prof) B, C. Gregory, Superin- the Keyport schools, which position he ninth grade in the schools in the big school, led by Miss Hendrickson; a prayer Haven school. The total enrollment retained until be came to Red Bank. • towns of the county. t byBev. J. W. Presby, a piano and banjo was 213 and the average attendance was tendent of Trenton's Schools. The Shrewsbury school library is quite duet by Mrs. M. H. Parker and her son 192. During the year 175 volumes were The graduating exercises of the Red "Mandy Lee," a solo, by Harry added to the library, bringing the total Bank public school were held in the NO EXERCISES AT TINTON FALLS small at present. This is due largely to Kenneth; the flourishing library , association at Lippincott; the conferring of the di- number of volumes up to 511, all of which opera house last Wednesday night. The by Dr. Benjamin F. King, secre- have been placed in the library during opera house boxes were draped in the" The School Closed on ^Account. of Shrewsbury, which for twenty years plomas past has furnished books for the people tary of the township coard of education; the past four years. class colors of blue and gold and this Diphtheria. address to the graduates by Rev. color effect was carried out in the class There*were no graduating exercises at of the village. With an excellent li- aM.fine S.. Messier of Oceanport; and the motto, "Forward," at the back of the Tinton Falls, owing to diphtheria hav- brary in tbe village, there was not so awarding grammar school diplomas OCEANIC'S GRADUATES. stage. There were no other decorations ing broken out among some of the pu.pils great a demand for a school library as to KennethofParker, Mary K. Parker and in most places. Latterly, however, the of the class colors. Thestagewas banked demand for books at the school has in- Harry Lippincott by Winfleld Scott A Class of Four Girls and Tico Boys •with greens and as a background to the Graduated on Thursday Sight. creased, and at the entertainment which Robinson, the principal of the school. girl graduates in white it made a very was given a month' ago over thirty dol- Mr. Robinson, the principal of the The graduating exercises of the pleasing effect. S. V. Arrowsmith, the lars was cleared. This money, together Little Silver school, has been teaching Oceanic public school were held in the -principalof the school, waa,seated.on with what is received from the state, in Monmouth county since 1879. He assembly room of the school on Thursthe platform with the graduates.' will enable the school to increase its first taught at the school at Belford (then day night. Every seat in the room was The graduating exercises this year library to more than double tho present Port Mon'mouth).- Other schools in taken and many people had to stand. differed materially from those of former number of books. , . Middletown township where he taught The back of the platform was draped years. It has been the practice to have were those at Harmony . and the High- with the class- colors of orange arid The scholars of the district have made an essay or recitation from every memr lands. He also taught at Oak Grove black. Over the stage was the class good progress during the year, and the ber of the class and the exercises were and Union in Raritan township. In 1887 motto, "Through trials to triumph." board of education of the township have often tiresome, particularly when there he went to .Perriheville, in Millstone The letters were'in black on a backrecognized this by_ giving'the principal were large graduating classes. This year township, where he taught nine years. ground of orange. A row of palms of the school an increase of $100 in his only two graduates read essays. Grace salary for next year. The attendance During the last three years of his stay at circled the front of the platform. The "Riddle gave the salutatory address and has been very much better than in for- Perrineville he was supervising princi- graduates were Daisy C. Ligier, Bessie. an essay on " Queen Victoria, a moral pal of the schools of Millstone township. j * . Mulligan, Avis S. Oiem, Eleanor T. mer years. ... force." Both address and essay were Ralph E. Longstreet and ChesThe number of school days in the year He has been at Little Silver four years. VanNest, well thought out and were delivered in is 200, but legaT'hoIidays, the teachers' .The total enrollment during the year ter Robinson. Ralph C. Longstreet was institute,.etc., make the actual number in the Little Silver school was 136'and of school days about 185. Mary Casey,. the average attendance was 85. Cleora Hurley,,.-Frank- Borden, John Casey and-Frank..Dennis were present more than ISO, days ; Clarence Wioder- FAIR HAVEN'S GRAbuATION. holt, Emma Hurley, Daniel Lang, Martin Marx, John Kelly, Edward Kelly, The Exercises the finest Ever Given by the School. George Lang, Katherine Sickles, Wilford Wiederholt, Mae McCue, William Casey The graduation exejreises of the Fair STEPHEN H. LEQUIER. and Margaretta Kelly were present more Haven public .school were held on FriPrincipal of the Tinton Falls School. than 170 days; and Ralph Wiederholt, day nigbt and'were said to have been James Casey, .Charles Qt>re, Essie Hur- the beBt that the-school ever held. The of the school a few days before the close ley,, Nellie Hancock, Charles Armstrong, attendance was the largest that ever of school. Elaborate preparations had Alice Pollitt and Helen.Lang were pres- gathered together at Fair Haven on a been made for .the closing exercises, and ent more than 160 days. similar occasion. The stage was decorthey sjjere expected to be-the finest in George Oliver Nelson, the principal of ated by Henry Kettel with flowers and the history of the school. . On account plants from .Mr. Loeb's greenhouses, of of the outbreak of diphtheria the school the Shrewsbury school, has had twelve which Mr. Kettel has charge. The colwas suddenly closed and no .exerefses years' experience as a teacher. >He is a leclion embraced caladmms, drascenas, native of Upper Freehold township and were held. a grandson of the late Gordon Hyers, paln|8, ferns and a variety of cut flowThe school maintained its attendance is noted, farmer of-that township., Hjs ers. Besides these the room was feBup to the time the school was closed. aeducation was gained at the public tooned with streamers of the class colors Years ago the attendance at the school schools of Upper Freehold township and of gold and white. The class motto, fell off as soon as farm work beg-an, and at Peddie institute. taught for three " By our efforts we hope to rise," was from that time on to the end of school years at Hamilton He in Mercer worked in the same colors. the attendance was very small. Of late county, and during Square, time he was The graduates were Philip W. Allen, years this tendency to withdraw the supervising principal that tbe schools of Percy D. Bennett, Robert F. Cross, STEPHEN V. ABROWSMITH. C, HEEBEET WALLING. children from the school has been Hamilton township. ofAfter teaching Peter J. Mulvihill and Lilian G. Coy. Principal of the Red Bank School. ohecked. and. in consequence a higher these three years he took a special Principal of the Oceanic School. course' Lilian Goy' is a colored girl and is the scholarship is attained. This result has very good style. Anne S. Tallman gave been brought about largely through tbe at.Rutgers college. He taught for sev- flTst of her race to graduate from the valedictorian-and Daisy C. Ligier was the valedictory address. The vale- 'personal work and personal influence of eral years at Hornerstown; in Upper Fair Haven school. The graduates all salutatorian. On the platform, besides dictory was on the same general line as Stephen H, LeQuier, the principal of the Freehold township, and three years ago acquitted themselves in a very creditable the graduates, wereC. Herbert Walling, most valedictory addresses, and was de- school. He has urged parents to keep he was selected as principal of the manner. The essays had been com- the principal of the school; and Rev. J. mitted to memory and were delivered in livered with ease and grace. The fare- their children continuously in school as Shrewsbury school. good style. Robert F. Cross, who stood W. Nickelson of Navesink, who made well to her classmates and teachers was long as it remained open on the ground •"",: highest in his class, gave the valedictory the opening "prayer. given with a good deal of feeling. that they could not otherwise hope to The exercises opened with a song by Outside of the part taken by the stand equal in their studies with the LITTLE SILVER'S EXERCISES. address, and Percy D. Bennett, who the echool choir. Daisy C. Ligier gave won second honor, gave the salutatory graduates the principal feature of the children of other districts. the salutatory address and she also preevening was ah address by B. C. Gregoryj) Mr, LeQuier has been principal of the A Cla8S of Eight Graduated on Fri- address. Peter J. Mulvihill gave an es- sented the mementoes from the class to say on the Philippines, Philip W. Allen supervising principal of the schools of school for several years. He lives at dav Night. each, member. The mementoes " took Trenton. He started out in a humorous Red Bank and drives^to and from the The graduating exercises of the Little gave an oration on the class motto, and off" the foibles of the class, and their vein, but his humor was employed to school every day. He has become a Silver public school were held in the Lilian G. Coy recited "Elocution of presentation caused considerable merrigood advantage in giving the speaker's favorite with the children and with the hall at that place on Friday nigbt. Fair Action." ment. Bessie Mulligan, who has a local ' opinion of school boards who stand in people of the district generally. He is Haven's graduation exercises were held . A gcod programme was given outside reputation as a singer, was given a box . the way of progress along educational a-conscientious of the parts taken by the graduates, and carefuReacher.- -A the same jiightand-by_astrange T coinciof- troches for- her throat; Eleanor T. -linesr— He~ said t h a t t h e opinionrfiTof ten number of his pupils, after graduating dent the class motto and the class colors The elocution class recited " The Wreck VanNest, who has been neither absent expressed that a good deal of what is from the Tinton Falls school, of the Hesperus " in concert. Mrs. L. B. have gone taught in the publie schools in these Caldwell, a summer resident, sang a nor tardy from school in six years, was the Long Branch school and have endays, such as music, art, literature, etc., to solo. Lizzie Ellenburg recited " K a t e given a porous plaster to show-that the next higher grade in that is useless, and that the only proper tered Shelly," Charles L. Hendrickson recited she was a sticker; Ralph Longstreet. thus showing that up to the limit things to teach.are those that will assist school, "Goin' in Swimmin'," Meta B. Hen- who once had to crawl in a window studies taught at Tinton Falls the the student in making a living. The of drickson gave a piano solo, and the class when he came home late at night from children are as proficient as those in the speaker held that it is as much the duty larger song was sung by May Cross, Burton calling on a young woman, was given a schools in the county. of the public school to prepare the Allaire, Olive Gardner, Helen Snyder, toy ladder; and the other gifts called to scholars to properly enjoy their leisure Thelda Parker, Lilian Curchin, Florence mind some special incident connected time as it is to provide them with the Smith, Bessie Bennett, Adele Johnson, with the scholars. After Miss Ligier means of gaining a livelihood. He said GRADUATES AT SHREWSBURY. Florence Ellenburg and Mi;dred Arm- had presented the mementoes to the other graduates Eleanor VanNest gave that, the temptations to young people strong. her a whitewash brush as her memento. come in their leisure hours and that if Tico M^upils Graduate from that At the conclusion of the exercises by School This Year. . Bessie Mulligan sang a v solo that they develop a taste for things that are the scholars George B.Snyder, president brought forth a lot of applause and she elevating while at school they will seek The Shrewsbury public school closed of the Shrewsbury township board of last Fridav, There were no formal closalso gave the class retrospect and prosenjoyments along those lines when they education, mado a few remarks. He ing exercises. About a month ago an Bright futures were in store for grow to manhood and womanhood. was followed by William Allen Lewis, a pect. entertainment waa given by the school all the graduates, according to Miss member of the board of education of Mulligan's Music was furnished during the exer- and it was then understood that this was Eleanor T. VanNest Jersey City and a summer resident of recited " T hview. .cises by Walter B. Parsons's orchestra to take the place of the closing exercises e pride of battery B," a Fair Haven. He presented the diplomas and each selection was received with a of the school. story of the civil war, and was to the graduates. Rev. Robert Mac- pathetic good deal of applause. Several choruses The school has bad a larger attendance liberally applauded. Avis S. Orem reKellar of Red Bank and Rev. J. W. were sung by the scholars of the other than usual during the year. The enrolls oited the story of " John Burns of GettysNickelson of Navesink also spoke. The burg grades of the school, the music altogether merit has been about 100 and the average " with a great deal of patriotic enbeing of a very high order. thusiasm. Ralph E. Longstreet gave an The diplomas to the graduates were essay on "Can communication with presented by Charles D. Warner, secreMars be established?" and he gave the tary of the Red Bank hoard of education. valedictory address. He acquitted him- : WINFIELD 8. ROBINSON. In presenting the diplomas he congratuself well in both. Chester Robinson, in Principal ot tbe Little SUvet School. lated the graduates and wished for them an essay on " The Marvels of Elecsuccess and happiness through life. The tricity," gave an exhaustive researoh of of each school were the same. The prayer at the graduating exercises was the subject. motto was " By our efforts we hope to made by Rev..Robert MacKellar. Besides the part taken by'the gradurise," and the class colors were gold and The graduates this year number 25 ates the elocution class of the school white. The interior of the hall in which ' and the class is the largest in the history gave " T h e Pied Piper of, Hamelin' in the exercises were held is in an unfinof the school. The graduates a r e : concert. Chrissie Bogle gave a piano ished state, hut this unsightliness was Anna Adelaide Atkinson, Josepb Stllwell Harrison, solo and the school choir sang anotner overcome by decorating the walls with Charles Allolro, Herman Lasser. chorus. American fings. The stage was decorMnrirnret N. Dlnisrtoll, Anna E. Morris, ated wit)i bunting of the class colors and The diplomas were presented by Dr, Thomas lliilctt Bennett, Ada Graham Otterson, Thomas Harraynrnco, Graco Mae Popo, with white and yellow flowers. • Walters. Whitmore. The doctor, who Enola Rockwell Curtis, Graco Riddle, . is always very eloquent, was at his best The graduates were Hattie L. Holland, William V. Cpnovor, Margaret Anna Smock, on this'occasion, and he gave the CIOSB Anna Bhrlvor Oonover, Ollvotto Aray Twllord, Ella S, Curtia, Lottie M. Quackenbush, M. Myrllo Campbell, Anno Sberraon Tollman, some very good advice. Annie M. Ayres, Lilian A. Robinson, Gcorgo Oscnr Dennis, Mary U. VnnDorn, C. Horbe'rt" Walling, the principal of Katie O'Brion, Thomas Holland, Jr., Herbert llycr Davis, Julia Smith Wolllnfr, tho sohool, read his annual report at the and Henry C. Parker. " Besslo Mae Green, Nellie Adolaldo Wilson. Fodor John Glslesun, graduation exercises. The total enroll• Timothy M, White, ono of the memment for the year was 220. Of these The class honors wero won by Anne bers of the, township board of education, 121 were girls and 108 wero boys. The Tallman, Grace Riddle, Margaret Blniswelcomed tho. audience" in a good adaverage attendance was about 200. Mr. dell and Ada Otterson. dress. Henry C. Parker gave the class Walling called attention to the new ., , Mr. Arrowsmith has been principal of retrospect and prospect. Ella S. Curtis method of apportioning the school money gave* a monologue, entitled " When the Red Bank public school for the past CtKOKOE OLIVER NELSON. E. E. GAIOE. according to tho attendance at school Jack comes late, Lottie Quackenbush four yeara, he havingcome to Red Bank Principal of tho Shrewsbury Sohool. Principal ol tho Fair Haven School. and urged upon the- parents tho necessity gave a piano solo, Lilian Robinson rein the fall of 1807. For 21 years provious to that time ho had been teaching attendance at the school has been nearly cited " The fall of the Pemberton mill," exorcises were interspersed with choruses of sending, their children to school school at Key port and for eighteen years seventy. Mies Bertha King, daughter Annie Ayres gave the class mementoes, by the school and with , instrumental regularly. The sohool has a number of scholars with exceptionally good records he was principal of the Keyport publio of Dr. Benjamin F. King of Little Silver, and Katie O'Brien read an essay on music. attendance, Eleanor VanNest has a school. Mr. Arrowsmith got his early is the assistant teacher of the sohool. "Friendship" that was written by E. E. Gaige, the-prinoipal of the school, of education in the public1 schools of Middle- Both rooms in the schoolhoufio are on Hattie Holland. The six girls of the has had ten years' experience as a teacher. perfect record of attendance for six town township, and ho afterward at- tho first floor, the' building being only class gave a pantomime on ''The Old He graduated from the academy at iiis years, ROBIO VanNost, for five years, Folks at Home," the song being sung by home at Knox, Now York, in 1888, and Daisy. Ligier for thrco years and Martended Glenwood institute ot Matawnn ono story In height. "VanNcBt for two years. Tho • for two years. He was o farmer by oc- One girl and one boy graduated from Miss Adele HendricltBOii, one of the in 1801 ho gruduatcd from the stuto Kuerito girls aro daughters of Justice cupation until he wds over thirty years the sohool this year, tho graduates being touchers in tho school. Tho six girl normal college at Albany. Ho taught VanNcst B, VanNi'st. Other soholars who old, and for two years he ran a mill. Ida Weidorliolt and Franois Borden. graduates, with Mary Parker, Hetty ono year at his home town, ono your at Lovi ' During his early manhood he pursued his Both of these pupils secured grammar Dean and Mabel Pope, also gave a hoop Altamont, New York, and eight years wero neither absent nor lato during the . At tho last pose of the drill a large ear just closed were Josio Ligier, Evie studies, but without any idea of becoming school certificates at the county examin- drill. flag w^ns displayed on the pint- ago ho became principal at Fair Haven, ogle, Juno VnnNobt, Ella Ryan and a tonohor. In 1870 ho took a position In ation, Francis Borden will attend tho American Tho other teachers nt Fair Havon aro the Keyport school as a teacher, almost Long Branch public school next year. form And four boys bearing flogs stepped MiBS S."E. Nivison of Fair Haven, who ' (OontimW on 18th $ago.) THE CLOSE OF SCHOOL. S \ > I V i1 'i " i v i " . I ' M *'' ,'• •*-, FREE ROADS. Sine Turnpike Jtoatla Made Free . Last Week. Last week the board of freeholders paid for nine toll roads in Monrnouth county and these roads are now free public roada. The turnpikes which were bought and converted into free roads •were: • The Freehold nnd Colt's Neck road. The Colt's f t a * nnd Tlnton Fulls road, The Freehold ood Engllslitown road. ' Tbo Freehold ondManalapun road. The Freehold and Turkey read. The Red BaDk and Mlddletown rood. , , The Mlddletown oud Ke.vport road. The Monalapin and Patton's Corner road. The Holradel and Keyport rond. . f- . RICH t CUT GLASS tT Fine Household LINENS At Money-SaLving Prices Rarely has such a wonderfully interesting group of household linens been offered at such low prices—prices, by,, the way, that are for fresh, brand-new goods, every thread pure linen* and reduced from prices that were already low. "• . .• ; • THE GENUINE ARTICLE. «V Every housekeeper, who has Summer visitors to provide for; proprietois of Summer hotels and boarding houses, who have supplies to purchase, should read" the following items carefully: -• ' — Before the county would take the turnpikes the freeholders made them Table Linen— I Napkins— .tie yard, regularly 50c—Old-fashioned Loom-dice $i.7S doz.. regularly $3—Bleached Scotch linen; » pay for having legal searches made. Table Linen; Is while after a few washings; and ' In. square, matching cloths above. Same, 34 This cost nearly $50 in each case, and has double the strength of bleached linen at the In. square, $2.75, from $3. the turnpike 'people' say that it was same price. 56 In. wide. 50c yard, regularly 56c—Bleached German Table Towels— simply a " hold-up" to give fees to lawLJnen, heavy and serviceable. 60 In. wide. 35c each, regularly 30c— Bleached, fancy weave, yers. Some of the turnpike men say the hemmed ends; of soft silky flax, and one of the Cloths— only thing they could sell was the Table best towels we know for ready use. 21 x <o In. $2 each, regularly $1.25—Bleached Scotch Linen 17c. regularly 20c — Snow-white Turkish Bath franchise, or the right to collect toll; Table Cltrths, unhemmed; sizes 2x2 yds, Same, Towals; fringed ends; colored borders. 23 x 50 In. 2 « K yds., $3.50, instead of $2.7j; axiyds., $3, and that this did not need any search at Instead of $3.25, • ' Bed Linen— all. Other turnpike rain say that their $3.75 pair, regularly $4—Hemstitched sheets; full' Napkins— roads had been in possession of the turnbed sirs, 90x96 In.; of good quality of Irish linen. $1.25 doz., regularly $1,50—Bleached German linen; pike companies for more than twenty pair, regularly ooc-Hemstltched German linen 20 In. square; matching 50c Table Linen above. 85cpillow cases; extra quality; a4xj6la. years, and that therefore no search was Same, 32 In, square, $1.50, from $1.75. necessary. All of them agreed that the money paid for a search was money Men's Serge SUITS For WOMEN'S Wear , thrown aivay so far as they were conDressing Sacques, Wrappeis and Shirt The most sensible, most serviceable, and cerned, but was not thrown away so far Waists, prettily made of thin, cool materials, best looking suit for Men's Summer Wey is as the lawyers were concerned. the suit of serge. But eare must be taken in and at prices that can't fail to be interesting When the' time came for the compaits choosing—there are too many glittering to all comfort-loving women: nies to get the money the county agreed sacques of white lawn, Kimono style; shams afloat, that will lose their color and 50c—Dressing with light blue, pink or lavender lawn border. to pay for the roads, there waa another wear out quickly. ' $1—Wrappers, of wkltelawn, Kimono style; trim"hold-up." C. Ewing Patterson, the These "Wanamaker suits are tested for both med with light blue, pink or lavender laws; or in counsel of the 'board of freeholders, neat stripes, with white lawn bordar. these qualities—fast color and wear, and $i—9tilrt waists of white lawn; full front; plaited charged^each company $51) for preparing . • French back; sailor collar of lawn, plaited and the papers in the case. The freeholders guaranteed: reliable blue serge sack .'suit for busihemstitched; plaited shield; standlngcollarandtle backed up the counsel and $50 was paid A't$8.5o—A ness wear. . $1—Waists of plain black lawn; full front With eight to Mr. Patterson by each of the nine com- At $id-Blue and black serce sulls, with hand- hemstitched plaits; plaited back. panies before the checks for the- pur- made collars and buttonholes; single-breasted half-lined. chase of the roads were turned over. At In—Ulue serjo suits, single or double-breasted Furniture Coverings The turnpike men declared that it was —the kind you get two seasons' wear out of. little less than blackmail or robbery to At $15—The best-wearing suit ever made at the You are probably thinking of having cerprice. Of black or blue serge; half-lined. Splenhave to pay these bills. Some of them tain pieces of your furniture done over this did workmanship. determined to fight the payment, but Flannel outing trousers, too, to wear with Summer. Haro you picked out the new coverthey figured out that the interest they the serge coat, with turn-up, in handsome pat- ings? Perhaps word of the following handwould lose would amount to $50 in a some stuffs, in new patterns and a variety of couple of months, and this caused them terns, at $3.50. colorings, and much reduced in price, may to change their minds and pay the bill. Shirt-WeJst suggestive: H A T S prove Another reason for paying the.bill and $1.10, S1.15 and $2.2; yard, And other charming kinds, for women's Cotton Tapestry—$1, making the roads free was that people nr . . , f r o m *••*>• *»-3'' 5 t * J an<1 $ J - « ' along the roads expected the roads to be Summer wear. They're all dainty products Wool Tapestry—$1.35 and $4.5oyard, from $4.35 and $5 free after that day, and if they were not of our own woriiooms; and are Stylish as Silk Tapestry—$1.50, $».T J, $4.25 and $4,50 yard, free they might refuse to pay toll or well as inexpensire: frora $4.35, $3.7?. S5 and $5.65 otherwise make trouble and create an- At $1.50—Sailor hats of Tuscan straw, draptd with silk raull; slda.band, with cluster of black roses. noyance. The turnpike men paid the Worth * Plaited"Shirts At $1.50— S. waist tints of Tasean straw. In the Men's • bill, but they thpught it was dead wrong. prevailing i. shape; stylishly trimmed with blue, bUckorwhlu Liberty satin, polka-dotted, and As soon as the money was paid some Fifty CenU Would cost$6 to duplicate, of the turnpike men telephoned to the AtqulUs. The first time 3 negligee shirt has been $5—Hats of great variety, In butter-colored toll gate keepers to open all gates and black or white soft braids, draped with polka- offered at this little price that is really plaited, take no more toll. The other turnpike dotted Liberty satin; trimmed with breasts or as these shirts are—not with sewed plaits. qollls. men could not reach the,ir tollgate by At $2 to $4—Charming garden hats of mull, In Splendidly made,as to Stand finish,of percale telephone, and on these roads toll was white, pink, yellow—some with a touch of narrow in a wide range of attractive^pattarns. 'With taken until night. black velvet ribbon—and black. one pair detachable cuffs. All sizes, 14 to There are still two turnpikes of con17 in. siderable importance in the county. One Delicious Chocolates Fifty Cents Each of these is the Freehold and Smithburg We guarantee them to be absolutely pure road. This road is in good condition and has been paying six per cent divi- and harmless—make therjj ourselves, in onr 20th Century Freezer dends for many years. Jehn J. Ely, great, clean factory, so we ought to know. The 20th. Century Ice Cream Freezer'rJrowho has been secretary of the turnpike The other facts about them you canfindoutvides all the delights of home - made ice company for thirty years, went before the yoursehes—how deliciously good they taste. cream, without the labor usually involved. Chocolate Marsbtnallows freeholders last Wednesday and offered The process is simple. Just fill the can with the road to the county at forty per cent Chocolate Nougat the cream, pack it with ice and rock salt, of its cost, This is the baBis on which ^Assorted Chocolates piit on the cover, and the cream freezes by all the toll roads have bpen bought. The They're always fresh. And the price is itself. Smooth, hard, delicious. freeholders said they could not buy the ridiculously little: There is no dasher, of course, so the mould road this year, under the law. but • - 20c, a pound of ice cream comes out unbroken—a hot cloth would take up the matter next spring •Put up in one-pound boxes. Try a box does that. and would probably buy the road then. Eve sizes: $1.50, $1.75, #2, $3 and $4. The other turnpike is the old Mifflin the next time you come to the Store, Paul turnpike between Seabright and . Eigbland Beach. Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Ninth and Tenth Streets, NEW YORK. Koyport'a School Teachers. The appointment of teachers for the JKeypqrt gradedschool was made last week.~ Miss Maggie Bedle, whose health is not good, was given a year's leave of absence with the privilege of returning to her position at the expiration of that the matter of Life Insurtime if she so desires. Mrs. Mary 'Woolley^ Miss S. C. Warson, Miss Maggie ance and failed to find Clayton and Miss Estelle Jennings each received an advance of ?25 in salary. The full list of teachers and the yearly a satisfactory policy ? salary each will receive are as follows: JOHN • At. L. de la REUSSILLE, 3L Child Building. •;• A Bicyclist Partially Paralyzed. • Ralph E. Thompson of Aabury Park is partially paralyzed OB the result of a bicycle accident. Last fall Mr. Thompson was struck on the head by the sweep . of a lumber wagon and both legs were partially paralyzed. He had recovered the use of his Jegs sufficiently to ride a bicycle, although he had not fully recovered. jyrhiJo riding a, bicycle last Wednesday he was-run into by another wheelman. This accident aggravated his old injury and he iB again unable to use his legs. «•-•-•» Kicked In the Face. William BriggB, who is employed by Dr. 0. A. Clark of Long Branch, was working in the stable last week when the horse kicked him in the fnce. His nose was broken and he received a bad cut acrosB the forehead. Tho blow rendered him unconscious. Dr. Clark dressed the injury and the young man if recovering. . _ A Boy's Check Cut. Henry White, Bon of Berk White ol Freehold, was hiuigiug on to the back o a wagon last week when he lost his bold and fell to the ground. Before he could get up Harold McDermott ran into him with hia bicycle. The pedal of the bicycle struck young White on the oheek and made a bad wound. Restrained From Courting. Alfred VanDorn of llnrlboro has been placed under $200 bonds to restrain him from courting MIBB Flora Willotr, daugb ter of Henry Willotfc of Marlboro, who ic not of age. VanDorn says he will wait until tfau girl is of ago and that then they will get married. I <s> SH BROAD STREET, RED BANK. X. ^•^•^•••••^••••••••••^••J4 COAL! My coal yard is handy and the coal you get from it is good coal, well screened, and the best the market affords. We deliver our coal promptly, and the prices are as low as the market will allow. ' WM. N. WORTHLEY, foot ofWortbley's Hil, RED BANK, IN. J. **************** It Will Pay You To come around the corner and look over our stock of Fruits and Vegetables and get our prices before making your purchase. We have everything seasonable in this line and we are satisfied that we can save you money. WANAMAKER. That should- not deter you from communicating with us,—The Prudential's policies are adapted to every need, condition and requirement. $K0O 000 600 475 425 400 300 475 4(10 4CO ,. 400 860 350 400 T China Hand-Painted t THE FINEST GRADE OF •!• t GOODS. X YouHaveConsidered James T. SchocS, Principal Mary W. Holmes, Vice President EllaVanBrokle Hattle\V. Sayles AdaF. Poole. Sallle C. Watson Florence JenntnRs " Llnnle Lnfburrow AonaH. Bedle ! Lydlii 1).Tetnpleton .i BorenaCbltiery Maggie Clavton Estelle JennitiRs Mary M.Woolley, f • Oar Stock of Groceries Is complete, and we are all prepared for the summer rush. Prices areright,too. W.H.KNAPP, \ Hendrickson Block, . 8 Front S'treet, Eed Bank. »•••••»•»•»••»•••••••••»•»••»•••»»•»••••»••«»»•••••• THE Prudential Red Streak Apple Jack Insurance Co. of America.! Home Office: Newark, N. J . JOHN F. DRYDEN, President. LESLIE D . WARD, Vico President. EDGAR B . WAKD, 2d Vice President and Counsel. FORUE8T F. DRyDEN, Secretary. h O. WARNER, Bupt., Broad and Wallace Streets, Rod Bank, N . J . ff; n. HOUSTON, General Ajent, No. 120 Broad street, lied Bank, N. J, PUREST AND BEST. DRINK NO OTHER. Stylish Clothing For Men, Boys and Children. At all Hotels and Cafes. ALSO HATS, UMBRELLAS, MACKINTOSHES, TRUNKS, BAGS AND TELESCOPES, SHIRTS, COLLARS, 4 NECKWEAR, OVERALLS AND • JUMPERS. CLOTHING CLEANED AND REPAIRED AT < CORLIES', The Clothier and Merchant Tailor. « BROAD STREET, RED BANK, V. J. The George R.Lamb Distilling Co., • RED BANK, NEW JERSEY- mniiiiimiiiM>miM««iHMiMii I, ),' >V*$#$ft$#$#$#$#$#$! 1 4 •©•©•©•©•©•©•©•••©•©•©•©•©•©•©•o* My Surplus Spring Clothing Selling Very Rapidly. 1 $ i i i 1 1 I have served the people of Red Bank and of" this part of Monmouth county season after season, and I hope to continue to do so. fy[y policy is and always has been to sell good clothing at fair prices, and it is. this policy which has built up my trade. But the story of the business this spring is a short one and is known to everyone. Rain, floods, cold and no sale for spring goods until spring was over. My special business story is that the weather caught me with a:big stock of excellent spring clothing; that I could sell only a part of it during the spring; that when summer opened I had a great deal of spring clothes left; and that I decided to sell it at a special sale at specially low prices rather than carry it over. _ , . . . • : ...."' Well, that's the story, all except the selling. And the selling has been beyond what I expected. The clbthes sold fast. I have had a number of similar sales in the past to close out what was left ofa season's stock, but I never have had such a sale as that ofthis year. , I suppose the reputation I have made at my sales in former years helped to convince customers that the sale was genuine, and that the goods were genuine, too. . ' There are'goods left in all the lines, but when these special spring goods are gone the sale will end. Look over yourself, and if you feel that you ought to have a new suit, now's the time to get it and to get it at a low figure. If you need the suit or if you need any of the other goods offered in this "sale, now's your time. It's up to you. ,. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 '4 4 4 4 4 4 4 One-Price Clothier, Hatter andrFurnisher, 4 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J.4 M. M. DAVIDS *4+#*o*#***#$#**4#*#*#$*$#$6*#Ntt**#*t$#* A. DEFECTIVE SANITARY CODE. A Trip to the Orient. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Morris, 8r,, • An Asbiiry Park Man Wins a Suit of Freehold, will start the first of July Against the Board of Health. for an extended trip through the Orient. In the appeal case of August Herman They will first visit famous places in the Rosenthal of Asbury Park against the Rocky Mountain region and toward the board of health of that place, the su-last of July they will sail from Vancoupreme court has decided -that the health ver, British Columbia. At Japan they _crdinanceB-_Hce_defectiy_e. Rosenthal will be met-by their son,. Rev._D'uBois_ was fined $25 for violating one of theSchanck Morris, who is a missionary . health ordinances. In arguing the case there and whom they have not seen in on appeal Rosenthal's lawyer, E. T. three years. After a month or so spent Stout, called attention to thefaot thai in Japan with their son they will sail RF.D BANK, N. J. the law which created the city of As- far Shanghai and from there they will bury Park gave the councilmen au- visit Nanking, Ningpoo, Soochovy and thority to establish a board of health Hankow. If the condition of affairs are and define its powers. He said that the settled in Northern China they will visit councilmen established aboard of health Pekin and other large cities in that secbut did not define its powers, and that tion. They will return by way of Honothe ordinances are therefore defective.- lulu and San Francisco. The court took this view of the case, but the board of health's lawyer will be allowed to present a, brief in support of- Suing for Her Husband's Death. his claim that the board of health had Mrs. Catherine Brookes of Oakhurst authority outside of that given in the or- has brought suit against the Consolidinances. dated gas company of Long Branch for $25,000 damages for the death of her husband, John Brookes. Mr. Brookes The Age of Conversion. was painting the Elias Asiel cottage at St. Rev, 1VCY, IIUUU John JLXUUU1DJ, Handley, fJtlOtUl pastor of Ul kill last winter when he grabbed an Luke's church of Long Branch, recently Elberon light wire of the Consolidated preached a sermon on " The Science of electric company's line to balance himself. Conversion in Youth." ' In the course_ of gas wire was charged and Mr. Brookes his sermon he gave statistics showing The was instantly killed. Mrs. Brookes that the greatest number of Christians claims that the wire was not properly were converted between the ages of insulated and that the current had been twelve and sixteen years. At the close ordered turned off at the cottage several of the sermon he asked the converted days before the accident happened. persona in the audience to indicate the year of their conversion. Out of 189 ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS. who responded twelve were converted A Verdict Set Aside. between the ages of. ten and twelve, Louis • Feltman of Long Branch was sixty between twelve and sixteen, thirtyCommencing the first of each month. nine between sixteen and twenty, four- recently ordered to pny $ 8 ' a week toward the support of his family in" a teen between twenty and twenty-four, ton between twenty-four and thirty, suit brought against him by the overDR. J. E. SAYRE, President. three between thirty and forty, and one seer of the gopr of Ocean township. The JOHN KING, Cashier. caaewas appealed to the supreme court; between forty and fifty. That court last week reversed the de- WM. H. HENDIUCKSON. Assistant Cashier. cision on the ground that the papers did not set forth that'Feltman had wilfully TRUSTEES: Wont Township to Fay Tax. . neglected to support his family, or that John A. Worthloy, Dr. James J. Heed, A delegation of property owners along the family was really dependent on. him Copt. Jamcu Enrlght, Jr., Rlclinrd Hordon, , ' the Keyport and Keansburg stono road for support. Dr. J. E. snyre, Ben], p. Morris, Esq. went before the township committee at its last meeting and asked that the ten : « { ~ ^ per cent of the cost of the road assessed against the property owners be assumed by the township at largo. This plan has been adopted in other townships where new county roads have been built. The township committee referred the matter to its counsel for an opinion. £ LIGHT IN THE WORLD. Perfect service. Reasonable .rates. i, You cannot afford to be without it in your store, office or home. ,., A Slight Flro In a School. «{• ELECTRIC POWER for all purposes. Always there when needed. .*. Saves the time, bother and expense, smoke, heat and dirt of any other •,• The senior class of the freehold milimethod. tary academy gave a dnnoo at Seminary JUST. CLOSE THE SWITCH. THAT'S ALL. hall on Tuesday night of last wcok. Just after tho hall was lighted the draperies blow over a'.gaa jot and got on fire. The flro was put out before much dauiago was done,' Of New Jersey, A. V.EVANS, 106 BEEKMAN STREET, NEW YORK. Launches and Motors. Gas or Gasoline Engines for Boats, Factories, Pumps, Printing Presses; everything in fact where power is needed. EVERYTHING FOR GASENGINES AND LAUNCHES. 4°|0 Interest Paid SAFEST, COOLEST. CLEANEST SHORE ELECTRIC COMPANY, ? Dizziness and headaches cannot bo cured in any other mannor than b™ getting at tho root of tho troublo and curing tho cause. The causo is almost invariably a disordered digostivo system, or else a. bad stomaoh and clogged bowola aro responsible. Laxakola, tho great Tonio Laxative, is an unfailing euro. It works gently and painlessly and at tho aamo time acts as a tonio to tho bowols, Btomach, livor and kidneys and builds up tho systom instoad of weakening and irritating.it as othor laxatives do. Its romarkablo properties roach ovory organ—tho liver, kidnoys and Btomach, norvo, heart and brain—and romoves tho causo of your debilitated condition. This is tho only way to Bccuro an absolute and permanent Cure. Laxakola is the only medicine for babies, is purely vogotablo and its aotion id gontlo, spoedy and offootivo. For coated tonguo, siinplo fovors, colds, chills and languid fooling it is tho idoal modioino. , .• s It tastes good. 13 * Children like it and ash for.it. LAXAKOLA FOR It Is a, gentle and sate remedy to use during oil condition) of health o( tho gentler sex whenever their peculiar and delicate constitutions require a mild and efficient laicatlva and tonic, and la Invaluable in assisting to relieve obstruction* which otherwise would lead to more or less sevcro pain or illness. |o women aunering tram enrome constipation.n« and<dyspepsia. Laxakola will Invariably bring reusf. At druggists, « c , and 50c., or send lor free lampU toT HE LAXAKOLA CO., 131 Nassau Street, N. Y.,or 556 Dearborn Street, Chicago. Trade auppllod by James Ooopor, Jr. >>:^2*$$**^^x<*m<^ SEKT TO STATE PRISON. THE CLOSE OF SCHOOL, Wtu. Heiulr{pkQon Gets a,t Seven. (Continued from 9th page), Thomas Mulligan. Avis Orem and Lucy Month TiVni for Stealing Chickens. Scultborpe entered the school •some time William Hendrickson of Asbury Park' after the beginning of the term and they wKo was arrested several months ago on have perfect records since that time. a charge of stealing several bogs of Fannie Bloddgood was present every day, chickens, valued at $20, has been senbut was late once. Arthur Emery ant tenced to seven months in state prison. . May Bloodgood lost but one day, and When Hendrickson was arrested Frank '•'there'are a number of Scholars who lost Shutts of Asbury Park was arrested witl: less than four days. A number of the him on the same charge. Hendrickson scholars would have had perfect records waived indictment and pleaded guilty. except for "sickness.' ~" ™ Shutts did not plead guilty and he was The library of the school has 510 indicted. Wiieu the case against Sbutts volumes, all" of which are practically came up the indictment was found to be | serviceable, books. Thirty new books, defective because it did not tell from mostly works of reference, were added whom the chickens had been stolen, and | during the year. The total number of Shutls got clear. Hendrickson had been books taken out.'of the library during kept in jail in order to use him as a wit- } the year wasl.395.- Of these, 1.205 books ness in the Shutts case. Judge Heisley, were taken out by 153 pupils and 190in sentencing Hendrickson, told him that I books were t^ken out by 67 townspeople. the fact that h^ had been in the county Air. Walling graduated from the Key-jailfora long time kept him from get- "\ port public school in the «lasa of 1891 ting a heavier sentence. • under Professor S. V. Arrowsmith. He entered the state normal school and finConvicted of Assault. ished a three year's-course in two years. Ernest Herbert Bartow was convicted His first •school was at Saddle River, where he taught two years. He taught of assaulting Michael Dorsey at East at Keansburg one year, at Na vesta k two Long Branch on April 1st. Dorsey testiyears and has just finished bis second fied that Bartow had hit him but had year at Oceanic. He holds a first grade not hurt him much. Bartow was fine'd state certificate. He gets a salary of $85 and <was given until to-morrow to t $1,000 per year, which is the highest sal- pay the fine. . ary paid in any of the schools of ShrewB- Samuel Palmer of Ocean Grove, who bury township, outside of- the town of was convicted of attempted assault on Bed Bank. Miss PrudenceJSewbury of Mildred Opdype, a girl five yeaWold, Toms River teaches the senior grade of was sent to state prison, for five years. the school. She has been teacher for John B. Morgan of Upper; Freehold four years, Oceanic being'the first township, who was convicted of assaultschool in which she taught. Her sister, ing Susan M. Schooley, was sentenced | Miss Elizabeth Newbury. who lias been to three months in the county jail. teaching in the school, has resigned, and her place next year will be filled by Mips Alf Want the Best. Irn>a Smith of Wenonab. Miss Mariette We live in an age of improvements, and each Bloodgood, who taught last year, has individual should aim to enjoy the benefit of the also resigned. Her place Will be filled advances made in all departments of life. No one hy Miss Beth Woodward of Ocean •would be likely to-day to prefer the old slow going Grove. Miss Ada Heritage, who taught stage coach to the electric car or automobile. We last year for the first time, has been re- all prefer gas or electric light to the candle, a n * engaged at an advance of $50 in salary. so on through all the innumerable advantages of The school hasten grades. modern ideas and appliances, we are all endeavorThe Oceanic school has tlie distinction ing toavailourselve9of the latest and best. Then of having had more scholars pass the are some people, however, who, when it comes b county examination for grammar grade painting, seem to prefer to stick to the old niethoc certificates than any other school in of buying ]ead and oil, and mixing these with a Shrewsbury township. paddle. Not so many people making paint that Our new repository building is filled with a fresh stock of new carriages $ and harness of all the latest styles. ,<£•/' f You.can get a better carriage and harness here for less m o r ^ : than any- $ where else in the state. / { :'& Business wagons of every style for all kinds of business. / :»: Farmers'Jagger and Farm Wagons. • , | Second Hand. \ • " , • • • • • • 1 . • • • . . • • • • ? We have a number of good second hand wagons of different styles that $ we are closing; out"at low prices. :| | J. W, MOUNT & BRO., Factory and Repository>Cor. Maple Ave.and White St. I RED BANK, N. J . |: COMFORT; SECURITY. NECESSITY. 1 way nowadays—fewer of them every year. Gradu- A High Price Offered F o r a Book. ally people are learning that machinery and the lead and oil together better and Coroner John T. Tetley is offering $20 mills get than is possible by hand. The machine fora copy of "Old Times in Old Mon-closer article wears longer, covers more and is less mouth." This book was published nearly made to fade. The H. W. Johns' Liquid paints twenty years ago by James S. Yard. It liable for thirty years have been growing in popularwas made up of historical clippings ity—because are well made, of pure mawhich had appeared from time to time terials. Theythey have become recognized generally in the Freehold Democrat, and which as the " Standard Paints forStructural Purposes." had been contributed to that paper by the H. W. Johns M'fg Co.. ioo •William various writers on old time topics. After Address New York, for complete Color Card and the papers containing these articles had Street, been printed the type was Bet aside and Pamphlet "Exterior Decorations." afterward 100 copies were struck,, off from this type. These copies were hound and were sold at the time for $5 In every town each. It took Mr. Yard over five years to dispose of the hundred copies of the and village book. They had hardly been all sold, however, before they began to go up in ' may be had price, and for a long time past the current price for a copy of the book has the been $10. Blr. Tetley's offer is the highest figure tbat has ever been offered for the book. A Protege of Tammany Leaders. •William E. Murphy, son of,John Murphy of Tinton Falls, is studying law in New York. He went to New York several years ago and got a position as a policeman on tlie Broadway squad at Liberty street. He became acquainted with many of the prominent members of Tammany and under their advice he haB begun to study law while continuing in service as a policeman. He iaa protege of Mayor VanWyck and other Tammany leaders. All of the children ~ofthe~JolurMurphy "family -have more than usual abilities. John Jr. ie in New York; Ella is attending the state normal school at Trenton; Katie graduated from the Tinton Falls school and is now attending the Long Branch school; and Julia, the youngest daughter, attends the Tinton Falls school, where she stands high in her class. Free Scholarships a t Rutgers. The result of the competitive examination for free scholarships at Rutgers college has just been announced. The Monmouth county scholars who won free scholarships are Bayard Applegate of Red Bank, Frank H. Kenworthy of Atlantic Highlands, Martin Malia _of East Freehold, William D. Herbert of West Freehold and Harvey L. Wilson and B. P. Romaine of Asbury Park. Mica Axle Orease that makes your horses glad. FIRST-CLASS Farm Machinery. The undersigned desires to inform the public that he has on hand the Famous McCormick Binders, Mowers and allsteel Horse Raises, South Bend and Oliver Plows, one and two-horse; Iron Age Riding Cultivators,1 pivot and fixed axle ; one-horse Cultivator, Success, A spin wall and Wiard We'eders, Corn Planters, Paris Green Guns, Disc and Spike Tooth steel Harrows, Binder Twine and Machine Oil. Repairs for all makes of Plows, &c, &c. No trouble to show goods and would be pleased to have you call. .' • • , A Church Improvement. Ever since Rev. W. R. Wedderspoon -wos appointed pastor of the ABbury Parjj Methodist church there has been a groViug sentiment in the congregation in favor of enlarging the church. A committee has been nppointed to secure plans for enlarging the church and it is expected that work on the improvement will soon begin. The improvement will cost about $20,000. Shrewsbury, N, J. DAILY AND SUNDAY , 170 Broadway, Long: Branch, N. J. | 160 Market Street, Newark, H.J, NEWSPAPERS, BOOKS, v * ALLAIRE & SON, !I HOWARD FREY, MAGAZINES, MONMOUTH ST., TELEPHONE GO-b. PERIODICALS, A Trip to Europe. Eev. Joseph F. Shaw, pastor of Simpson Methodist church of Lonf* Branch, will go on a six weeks' trip to Europe about the last of July. He will attend the Bcuneinical conference of the Methodist Episcopal church at London from Augim 4th to August 16th. m i » THE NEW YORK & NEW JERSEY TELEPHONE COMPANY. C. H. HURLEY, : A Trial Postponed. The trial of Alfred Bowles of Red Bank, who wan indicted for hitting his •wife, Sarah Bowles, has been postponed to.the next term of court. Prosecutor Foster said he could not try the case at this term of court and Bowles was released on his own recognizance. Perfect Service. $ Low Rates. 20 Broad Street. Red Bank, N. J. AND A FULL LINE OP ! INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE, PAPETERIES . To Manufacture a Dyspepsia Cure. 13. Van DuLois of Colt'B Neck Is about to.go into the patent mediclno business. He has discovered a dyspepsia cure and will 'manufacture it.. Ho is confident tbatits virtues will make it a ready sol Wr; AT P. W. MOSELLE'S, j . It pays to advertise in THE REGIBTER. ! 28 BROAD BT., MID HANK. ( - . • ' • - . • • ' • — - - . ' • • • • • • • REPRESENT HOME INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORE AND OTHER LEADING COMPANIES. ESTABLISHED 1873. flM3» BAXK, P XE1V JEllSEY. ractical lumber. E8TIMATE8 CHEEBPULLV FUBM8HED. CONTRACTS TAKEN. JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. ALL WOKE GUARANTEED. I carry constantly on band all tho latest sanitary appliances, and liontjc am prepared < • .to do work without dolajr. ••to—#•••»•••••» w » i A TIGHT OVER A GIRL. Ernest Reed of Xaveaink Held For .''•:' the Grand Juru- ' . ..-.. .. Trying for a Trolley. , Ex-Sheriff Houston Fields and Garrett Carson of Freehold have been busy for some time past gettiqg'conaents of property owners fora trolley line alone toe turnpike from Freehold to Shrewsbury. The plan is to buy a strip of land twenty feet'wide along the front of the farms on the south side of the turnpike. The road is intended for freight as well as passengers, and it is expected that it will be built and in operation within two years. Most of the farmers are rejoiced over the prospect. Thb road will increase the value of their, farms and will give them easy and quijek communication to the county seat and to the shore towns. -Ernest Eeed of Navesink has gtoen bonds in $200 to await the action of the grand jury on a * charge of having threatened the life of Vernal Greene, a young man of that place. • The trouble between Greene and Eeed arose over a girl employed by Mrs. Ball of Navesink. Reed kept company with the girl until Greene supplanted him in "her affections. A couple of weeks ago Reed learned that Greene was taking a walk with the young woman. He lay in wait for' him and a fight was the result. Reed fired a beer'bottle at Greene, but the bottle went wide of its mark. Greene retaliated by throwing a brick at Court a t Long Branch. Reed. Greene's aim was better and the A room in Red Men's hallr at Long brick cut Reed's scalp open. • Reed had the injury dressed by Dr. R. G. Andrew Branch has been rented to the county of Navesink and he gave out a story to for court purposes. A branch of the the effect that he had been waylaid by supreme court will convene there on July 11th to hear cases from this part of some unknown person. . Last week Greene learned that Reed the state, • m i » We have them like the cut. ID White and Black, was carrying a revolver and had threatat $2.00.'; others as low as $1.00. ened to "do him u p " the first chance A Cow Dies of Hydrophobia. he got. Greene swore out a warrant A cow belonging to Samuel Horton of We are Belling a number of styles ol 5-taooi Coragainst Reed and Reed was arrested. Farmingdale died last week of hydro- sets at about half price. He waived examination before Justice phobia. A mad dog ran through FarmChild of Red Bank on Saturday night ingdale a short time ago and it is sup. and gave bonds in $200 to await the posed that the cow was bitten by the action of the grand jury. John I. Sick- dog. • • Red Bank Temple of Fashion, les and Joseph Johnson are his bondsmen. . / • ' " " • • | Pillows ReadytoUse! Pillows to Hake Up! I ••••<Ail endless variety, including all the new ideas. ff| *04. I I- ".••. Prices greatly reduced. THE AET .*>•••«! STOZRIE, | 50 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. SUMMERTIME. Straight front Corsets. Here are a, few necessities and pleasures for the MRS.E.WEIS, m • » LIQUOR CASES. Several Anbury Parkers Convicted and Two Acquitted. A number of Asbury Parkers who were convicted "of selling liquor were sentenced last week. Daniel O'Rourke, who is eighty years old, was -before the court once "before for this ofierice. Judge Heisley told him then that if he ever came before the court again on a similar offence he would send him to jail. He was convicted at the present term of court and last Thursday Judge Heisley sentenced him to the county jail for three months. Benjamin Yanutza was sentenced .td five months in the county jail. Frank Rozzo, Joseph^arcozone, Frank Petitto, Muzor Maro<)zone and Michael Iicord were fined%200 and costs. All of these men are Asbury Parkers and were convicted of selling liquor. Joseph Poppo, Thomas Proctor and' Felix Cittadono were tried for selling liquor and acquitted. Most of the Asbury Parkers who were convicted of selling liquor have carried their cases to the supreme court on appeal and have been released on bail. m im : Diphtheria Cases Recovering. The excitement and fear over diphtheria at Tinton Falh has subsided. The only death has been that of Lottie Morris, daughter of Augustus Morris,'who died over a week ago, Willie, the other child of Mr. Morris, who was sick with the disease,- is-^recovering and he is wholly out of danger. David Holmes,' son of Charles Holmes, who was attacked with the disease, is likewise almost wholly recovered. Two of- John Crawford's children were sick about the time the others were taken with!,djph-. theria, and it was feared that they might have this disease, but their JgjknesB turned out to be only colds. Thefe is no danger whatever of new. cases, enveloping. •''.';' Detectives Escape. Elilm Marriner and William 0. HBVK land, two detectives who were indicted on a charge of conspiring to accept money from. Asbury Park beer sellers against whom they had collected evidence, got clear because the indiciment did not name the men whom thty had agreed to protect on tHe payment of moDey. Officers had been stationed in theroom when them|oney was paid over bjMb<rbeef~Bellers, and the detectives .were caught in the very act of getting the money. _ George West Taken to the Hospital. "George West, who works at Qerbrach's hotel at the Highlands; was found unconscious near the hotel stables on Saturday night. One eye was gouged , nearly out of the socket and his back was injured. Dr. R. G. Andrew, Jr., of Atlantic Highlands, dressed the injuries and sent West to the Long Branch hospital. West had been drinking and it is not known whether the injury was the result of an accident, or whether West was the victim of an assault. Cleared 81,350. Mrs, Charles D. Preston, a former resident of Oceanport, moved to Arizona last fall; When Bhe went West she had $1,000, which she invested in twenty shares of Northern Pacific railroad stock; which was then selling at $50 per share. During the recent flurry in Wall street she sold the stook at $115 per share, and thus cleared $1,350 on the transaction. Freehold's Big Bullfrog. The family of T. S. Walling of Freehold was startled a few nights ago by the loud croaking of a bullfrog in their cellar. The frog was captured and it was found to measure fourte«n inohes from the tip of its nose to the tip of its toes. No one in the family was fond of frogB' legs and the frog was liberated. —« m " '"' Marlboro's New Teacher. R. E. Hendershot of Matawan will succeed Foi'man Consaboom next year as principal of the Marlboro public school. Mft Cossaboom will take a college course. Mr. Hendershot formerly hod charge of a school nt Matawan. He is a son-inlaw of John Whitlock of that place. Raising .Cattle for Market. Allentown is about the only" part of Monmouth cpunty where cattle are rnised for market to any extent, Albert Nelson of that place recently delivered 21 steers, averaging 1,072 pounds ip weight, to a Trenton butcher. The Btccra brought $1,105. Keep in mind Tan RnaiBTint's want oolumn. You'll useitBomo day.—Adv. NEW JERSEY'^ GREATEST 4T0RB. OUR NEW STORE WILt BE READYi IN JULY! hot season. Keep Out the Flies. Croquet. Our screen doors and our win- A set of croquet will give the dow . screens will keep out the children more pleasure in the flies. The frames are made of summer time than, any other game you could give them. And then, too, the pleasure is a healthful one. There is just enough excitement about a game of croquet to be exhilarating to children, and it keeps them out'of doors and in the sunshine. We have these sets of croquet at all prices, according to quality. They come in" boxes and will last several seasons with proper care. One of the good things about croquet is that it can be accommodated to the smallest yard. Hammocks. MAMMOTH REMOVAL Has Ever These can be put up on the lawn, or on the porch, or in any nook or corner of the place. Like the lawn swings, they are frequented most by the children and the young folks, but the head of the household is not averse to taking a nap in a good, sound wood, and thehammock on a Sunday, or restscreens are of the strongest wire ing in the hammock in the cool netting used for this purpose. of. the evening, after he gets The doors,;fit.every ordinary home from work. "We have sized doorway and the window many sizes, many kinds, and screens are • adjustable. The many colors. various sizes will fit almost any Porch Screens. at Amazing Bargain Prices. Never before in New without a carpenter beJersey such a chance to furnish a window ing needed to fit them. Houses are kept neater" and the househome or purchase raiment. Every wife is relieved of many annoythrough the use of these price reduced in our too departments, an.ces screens. For the money they there is probably nothing except as to a few restricted articles. cost that will bring so much'comfort to the home. HAHNE & GO., Newark. HENDRICKSON »itiiiiM>eMti>ii»mmMMiiiimiiiiii»eiiiMi These are made to hang from the edges of piazza roofs and are intended to keep out the sun, the dust, and the gaze of passers-by. They do not keep out the breezes. They give to a porch all the seclusion of a room, while they give it the coolness and comfort of out-doors. "We have them in all sizes, from 4x8 feet to 10x12 feet. No matter how small nor how large your porch may be, one of these screens will double its value to you. & APPLEGATE, Hendrickson Block, Front St., Eed Bank, N. J. THOHRAS P. 24 Wharf Avenue, Red Bank, N. J. . The Song of the Drums-, make baste to pick It up. And even in on La Viga broke the new state'of iu- wwecewoe«owa»o«w—aaoado»w—aaaaaaaa aaoaa tho remote case that she preferred fairs to him, and over the young felJuatf— "Well, then Gonzalez, her to- low's rage, incredulity, despair and protbi)r, could knock reason info her pret- faulty we must perforce,draw a veil. ty Mack head. In all of which, as you Not for three days did the discarded •will perceive, Tlo Pepe was In the lover show himself. On the evening of the third day he appeared to the famiright. It was upon'a,sunpy. fiesta dav hi ly of Gonzalez, minus Paz, who was early September that Tio finally de- still locked up. So downcast was he, '< Thei&'8 » witchcraft ccmcealeiAjn our hollow, cided to propose, warned thereto by in- BO meek and utterly dejected, that even ' Here's a mystery hid in our round, creasing rheumatism and new creaks the hard hearts of the Gonzalez couple For we beat, and men cannot bat follow. Keeping time with tlicir feet on the ground, In his poor old joints. Immediately, melted a t the sight of him. He bad ,With a dream and a glamour of glory therefore, after closing his shop for the brought some cigarettes "of the finest" Uke a wave ol the ocean it comes, day lie laboriously drew on his holiday for Papa Gonzalez and a magnificently " As wo sing nnd we'eny. garments—black, silver buttoned trou- enrved rosary for the mamacita. To ' • "Come *wayl Come away! We direct your special attention to our facilities for '•• Follow me I Follow me I" Bay the drums. sers BO tight that he could barely sit Paz, as he broken heartedly •murmured, he dared bring nothing, not even a tiny down in them, a gay, short coat and v executing orders from out of town points. We have a .We tap, and we hum, and we mutter; costly sombrero of tan felt and gold. flower of S t Johnl * We throb to the ncrcum of the fife, .' No* should one omit to mention hia And at every note that we utter Melted almost to tear-s at bis ^misery large department thoroughly organized for this purpose, ' The scarlet blood leaps. Into life. i tight, creaking shoes of bright yellow and further moved by the bottle of ted TVOTOII, and wo crash, and we thunder, leather. Thus arrayed for conquest wine which Juan dismally produced and we assume you that any orders you may send to us • lAbe the roar ere the avalanche comes, Tib pricked forth on his amatory Jour- from - the depths1 of his blouse, these And there's many a lad, ney to the house of Gonzalez, Paz's parents began to palliate-their seeming So gallaiiLimd glad, •through the mails will be executed just as intelligently . Who's been caught by.Ike song of the druiDJ, father. hardness and with one accord began to and promptly and receive just as much attention as if In the patio were reposing the entire make excuse: "Ay Dlos, Juanito of our When we rattle a lively chorus T-o the long shining column a-wind, Gonzalez family—father, mother and hearts, well thou knowest that we love With the. cavalry waltzing before us ; . you were present in person. Watch the New York pretty Paz. This latter, however, sat thee a thousand times more than Tlo , And the foot doing two step behind, • Pepe. Of a verity, as thou knowest, we very close to none other than Junn, the • is: we pass through the streets of the city " Daily papers for Timely Bargains. , boatman. One of her hands were would wish thee for the husband of our Not a heart to our music but thrums, And for oil the long way clasped in his, and they were both en- Paz. But—there is the nfoney." ;'•, Not a horse, in a dray We deliver all Purchases, except Bicycles and Sewdeavoring to smoke, 'with much mirth Juan, his' head-iient and sorrowful ; - But will dance to the time of the drums. ing Machines, free to any railroad station within 100 and an occasional sly kiss or so, thevelvet eyes fixed jipon the Viga before •Then the guns aro unlimbercd for action ' same cornhusk cigarette. Prom nfar him, with its gi'Cen islets and brilliant miles of New York City. And the men for the slaughter a-chafe, the father and mother of Paz beamed flowers, said little. Perhaps, like the Tct the hell must attend for a fraction approval. For, poor though Juan might parrot, he thought all the more, for a Till the drurnmeri are stowed away eafoj be, he was diligent and very serious. sudden idea seemed to strike him. -Though tho ranks may be reeling and broken •When the charge like a thunderclap comes, He would get ahead. And then, though Turning to the old people, he said Though the roods may be red "all the world may love a lover," in softly: "Friends of my heart, perhaps 6th Avenue, 2Oth t o 21st Street, N e w York. And the officers dead,Latin countries he is adored. I can,borrow from the good Senor EsTou can run to the tune of the drums. aeaBcaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa—aaaaaaaaaaaoaaa Into this peaceful peon Eden ;came meefb^for whom I labored at the dynathat elderly snake, Tlo Pepe. And mite deposit, money sufficient to buy a TIO PEPE'S FLOATING GARDEN. even while the young people were bill-' small floating garden. If .so', may I and ing and cooing under his very eye this hot that sneaking old Pepe have the -WITH IT VANISHED THE MISER'S LAST unregenerate old man proceeded to ask little Paz? Tell me?" HOPE OP A YOUTHFUL BRIDE, tho girl's hand In marriage, announc- Now, only mark the soft heartedness, T Down dose to the Viga was the em- ing that Upon the day of the wedding the veritable duplicity of this brace^of peno, OF pawnshop, of l?epe Diaz, fa- ho would present to the parents no less peon parents. For with pne accord, in than 50 good, hard silver dollars. a single breath; as it were, Papa and miliarly and contemptuously knovrn Mamma Gonzalez gave vent to emphatHis proposal was at first politely thereabouts as "Tlo Pepe," or, as it turned down. Then, as Tio persisted ic "yes-es." Therefore before the de•would be In English, ".Uncle Pete." No In his blandishments, the father of Paz, parture of Juan it was mutually agreed ene cared for the shrunken, dwarfish always poor and thirsty, began to wav- and understood that Juan, being first old fellow, and the custom that came to er. "But, my friend," he temporized, (and evidently last) m the nffections of Ills musty, dark and ancient shop was "It is only today that wehave consent- Pnz, was secretty to be given several -mostly foreign. Mot that Tlo Pepe had ed to Juan, as you see. Figure to your- days' grace in the gathering together no really good and valuable things to self their anguish if we should, with of something to offer as a dower to his bride elect. If by the lTth of Septemoffer; far from It. For 10 cents you such brevity, make a ceasing to it. 'It ber at latest ho had "gathered togethis true that Juan Is young—as young as could buy dingy, faded old samplers, our Paz—and has no money. But what er" nothing, then he was to retire himworked in 1785 or thereabouts; old altar care we?" self, leaving Tib Pepe a clear field. If, cloths stolen from heaven only knows To the tottering objections of Gonza- however, he could beg, borrow or steal •where, old brasses, quaintly bound lez Tio Pete had many plausible an- from his friend Senor Esmeeth money books In crabbed ancient Spanish and swers and more silvery promises, after to buy a small garden which would many other things too numerous to which there -was the mother to tackle. guarantee a .comfortable living, he mention. So that during the tourist Not by mere words was her consent would be permitted to accompany Paz Benson Miser Pepe flourished and wax- won.' Tio Pete was first forced to ex- and her parents without delay to Padre hibit under secrecy of the house itself Ignacio.' ed exceedingly well off. As a matter of, fact, the untie -was and over a bottle of red wine the pre- Transfigured with joy and beaming cious little bankbook which he carried like a yoting sun god, Juan embraced •whispered to be worth at the very least next his breast (Then, and not until the old couple and departed, like the $5,000, much of which of course had then, did the mother- of Paz counte- immortal Sir Galahad, on his quest. teen inade from the pawnshop. Most nance her daughter's engagement to "Not that the poor little one had much ''"//llliiiiiilllllH of Pope's revenue, however, was deriv- Tlo, who, with many bland adloses to chanee," as Mamma Gonzalez sighed, FOR SALE BY ed from the cultivation o£ his "floating the smiling parents and a leer that con- "for there' was nothing more difficult . gardenj^farther down the Viga rtt vulsed poor unsuspecting Paz, now pro- than to get money out of these stingy Santa; Anita. On this little square ceeded to take his departure. After Americanos/'" "True," grunted papaeito, on whom patch of ground, owned by his forefa- which, the deluge! For, when Juan departed to pole a mingled emotion and red wine were bethers and himself since the days of Montezunin, old Pepe raised a' hodge- gringo down to Ixtacalco, Paz wasginning to tell. "We will wait. We will see." podge assortment of cabbages, radish- mn.de acquainted with her latest and most flattering proposal,* Which she reSqon Enrique, the present guardian es, water cress and other toothsome ceived with furious teal's," Indignant of Mr. Smith's dynamite deposit at vegetables for. sale at the San Juan and profane words as regarded the Tio Rio Hondo, was enchanted to receive market, while along the borders of the and finally angry words and unwise a visit from his friend Juan, for it was garden flourished flowers of all sorts ones as to the conduct of her parents lonely out nt the dynamite magazine, DEALEF IN and conditions. Fragrant white tube- themselves in thus being wound about and he had no more pulque or cigaroses, gay red and yellow nasturtiums, the small finger" of old Pete, whom.evrettes. In his capacious blouse the •brilliant, saucy scarlet popples; vio- ery one well knew to be a liar, a miser good Juan carried both. The two imlets, white and purple, lifted their fra- and an old wretch utterly without bibed several glasses of pulque, after _gront,_:mjjdest_'_faeM to tlic sun, and _wl)lch,._smoklng their cigarettes, they je swoet pens such ns one nevefsces outNow, in all this Paz was ill advised, betook themselves to tlHTvoultrto-sortside of that favored land overran the out some dynamite and fuse which borders and clambered Impudently over for In Latin countries no parent will Senor Esmeeth had ordered Bhlpped indurc Impudence or questionlng^words the cabbages and radishes themselves. next day. from his or her children. Wherefore •^TJto Pepe, ernbbed old miser that he The shipment reached its destination BLUE FLAME PURITAN OIL STOVE A SPECIALTY. TO, loved this little garden. Here you Pnz was promptly spanked by her could find him when he was not on mother, despite the young lady's 15 several sticks and coils short, which duty nt the empeno weeding his flow- years, and safely deposited In a .room made trouble for Mr. Smith and led ers, cutting them reluctantly for the with tiarivd windows, the door of which to the dismissal of Enrique, who fruitAGENT FOR THE BURGESS STEAM WASHER. flower market and on plaza days pack- they locked on the outside, recommend- lessly and with tears and? lamentations Ing carefully counted vegetables into ing that the uudutlful one engage in protested his innocence. Juan, howThe most convenient and the cheapest place for the people of Middletown the boat of old Vicente, who attended prayer to the Virgin, who would of a ever, reached home" Intact and joyful, '•to tlieir vending. Of late, to the certainty soften her hard heart and with throe sticks of dynamite and sev- ownshi p to buy the above goods. amazement and mirth of onlookers, a reconcile her to marriage with that eral yards of fuse concealed in that JOSEPH S. CLARK, BELFORD, N. J. minute bunch of forgetmenots was most opulent and generously Inclined hold nil, his manta blouse, and during the next few days he "lay low," not • • • • » • • • • » • • » » • » • • • • » • • • • • • • • • » • • • • • » • • • • • • • • • • » • • • • • placed gingerly on top of Vicente's Don Pope. • So fur, so Rood. Leaving the weeping even going near the house of Paz, but freight and the servitor commanded to Your inspection is invited to the largest stock in the State of «> carry it with great care to pretty Taz, Paz boohoolng indignantly In her dur- spending a great deal of time on the<> ance vile, Mother Gonzalez hastened to canal below the floating gardens. "An daughter of old Gonzalez, at the Emdon her best blue rebozo and waddle old aunt of mine," he stated in a lordly larcmlero. I regret to state that the pretty blue about 'gleefully, spreading the joyous way, "is thinking of selling to me a llossonis were Invariably presented news: "Behold, only figure to your- small garden. Qulen sabo whether I We can show you,more variety and originality of style and accepted to the accompaniment of selves, little neighbors!" she explained. will buy or not." And those who knew, than any dealer outside the large cities. mirthful roars, after which they adorn- "Paz has been asked for In marriage being well aware that no floating ed the purplish black braids of Paz's by Don I'epe of the empeno. Dlos de la gardens were to be bought for love or Hackney Carts, Runabouts. lair up to tlie how nt -which she daily Vlda, but It was luck of the very best! money below Santa Anita, smiled good - (All styles of seats. Cushion, Pony Governess Cars, Only think of the riches, the many dolnaturodly and passed on. stole away to the water side to greet pneumatic, hard rubber and Extension Cabriolets, ler lover, Juan, who always "happen- lars gained from the stupid tourists steel tires). ** Now »rew on apace that great and Carryalls, ed" to pole his Qrit bottomed boat by at who go about seeking Into everything, glorious day, the 15th of September, Pneumatic Buggies, (Light and heavy. With and « certain time. Then the blue flowers the large sums of money in the loterla and "the world" was prepared or prePneumatic Surreys, without doors). voulff find their last resting pla'ce In and, above all, that magnificent floating paring to celebrate the occasion. All Rockaways, ' Jumpseats, the Viga waters, down which they gawleu from which Don Pepe derives the city was agog, elaborately uni(Light or heavy, Cnrtain or Buggies, •would llont until they perhnps reached $15 every month! Ay de ml, girls hadn't formed bands played In every direc(Over 80 styles). their birthplace again. And a red such chances when I was young!" tion, squads of blue clad foot soldiers Boulevards, Sulkeys, poppy or sonie sweet peas may be "True, senora; hut is not Tlo Pepe a and bunches of yellow clad cavalry Coverts, Tfotild usurp their place with that co- trifle too old for your little muchachlta formed for the. procession, flowers decRoad Carts, Stanhopes, Pnz?" scnrchlngly Inquired a tall, Ju- orated buildings and people, the naquette, Paz. Speed Wagons, TrajSs, For many/weeks, as knew, the little noesque washerwoman, who had de-tional colors floated from every flagGrocery Wagons, (Many new desjgns). •world aiong La Viga, Junn and Paz hod serted her washing stones to listen to staff and gayly dressed holiday m'fikers (Many styles). the news. Trapottes, . lieen swecthenrtlng. Even miserly old paraded the streets. Every one, in fact, Slilk Wagons, "Of what Importance is the ngo? was abroad In, the land and having a Tio Pepe knew of tlie, courtship Hint Parasol Surreys, Low.Down Wagons, > Think to yourself of all that money, •was going on between the handsome veritable "hurrah" so far as within Wagonettes, Jagger Wagons, joung boatman and pretty Paz, onthe rlcb garments, the many fine things him or her lay. Even decrepit, wheezy Surreys, ' , whom the old scamp for long had had that my daughter will have!" valnglo- old Tio *Pepo had shut up the pawnExpress Wagons, (Many grades). Ills own bleared eye. But little did he rlously retorted tho mother. shop and, attired In skin tight trousers, Farm Wagons, Beach Cabriolets, And the Juno, bending again to herlaced jacket and hat, limped about, care.*,, Tlo had seen enough of, the world •(Single or double), Low Wheel Surreys, during his CO years to know that money tiresome task, did think and sigh. She smirking and ogling and "setting up" (Hard rubber and cushion tires). discounts love In nine cases out of ten. had married at 13 for love.. Now sho innumerable "treats" to that heartless WE PUT ON SOLID RUBBER TIRES. He lilmself was getting too infirm to ,was tho solo support, despite prayers and suddenly resigned Paz, with her much longer tend both pawnshop and and offerings to the Virgin, of a pulque fnther and mother. Oh, it waa all very A good assortment of second-hand Carriages can usually bo found on our garden, and Paz was n strong/capable soaking husband and ten hungry chil- lovely and gay!, Too bad that poor floors. giri.' She would malto ft good wife, ho dren. "Perhaps," she reflected, "the Juan could not bo there too!' thought, niid when he got ready to con- mother of Paz was In the right. But "Poor Junn," as It hnppened, was still . descendingly "drop his handkerchief" poor Juan I" he doubted not but that Paz would Poor Juan Indeed. Jollvlng bontmci (Oontii\ucd on next page,) ••»••••»»»•••••••»»•••»•»••»»•••»••••••»•«•»•»•»»•»• rre «te naught but a little bras kettle, ~ With a tight'llttlc cover at top, Fust a circle of ebccpskln and metal An&a pair of quick drumsticks o-hop, tad we make quite the poorest of mudo, Just & rhythmical rattle anii hum, .Yet there's never a slave In the lieaK of .the brave But resounds to the beat ol the drunk' S LL'S To Out of Town Patrons. • • • • . . • H. O'NEILL & CO., F. F.SUPP, 166 Monmouth Street, Red Bank, N. J. JOSEPH S. CLARK, Lumber, Coal, Hay and Feed, Hardware, Paints, Oils, Poultry Wire, &c. CARRIAGES AND HARNESS. BIRPSALL & • EW Y0KK AND LONG BRANCH ' A PPLEGATE & HOPE, at La Viga, the only living being there, , JUNE, 1901. RAILROAD. 'XV ' . . for every chiek and child of the resiStations In New York: Central R. R. of New Jersey, foot of Liberty Street, and South Ferry Terdents was with the great crowd in the COUNSELLORS AT LAW, Merchants' Steamboat Co.'s Line. minal; Pennsylvania R. R., foot of West 23d, Cortpli>^a, awaiting "el Grito" and firelandt and Desbrosses Streets, RED BANK, " works at 11 of that night Juan had On and after June 16tb, 1901, Telephone Call, U A, Red Bank. , TRAINS LEAVE RED BANJC. MONMOUTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY. other work to do, evidently connected Highland Beach For New Yorlt .1.80 (Thursdays only), 648, *7 25, FRED W, HOPE. Notice is hereby given that Shrewsbury,Highlands, with the floating garden of Tio-Pepe, *7 48, *818, *8 27.8 30, *S 43, 9 53. 11 £0 a. m.; JOHN 8. APPLEGATE. Oceania, Locust Feint, Fair Haven, 2 68, "4 05.4 25,4 35,6 08, *7 83,7 45 p. m. Sunabout which he had been furtively lurkPHARLES H, IVINS, lied Bank, Zong Branch and days 180,803,943a.m.:450, (106,750 p.m. ing since the departure of Its owner at the property of all delinquent COUNSELLOR AT LAW, •m Asbury Parh. For Newark and Elizabeth, 6 48, *7 43 lexcept Eltz- \J Rooms 3 and i, Heglster Building, abaih), *801, *818, 8 39, *8 48 (except Eliza6 o'clock. And just at 11 o'clock, when BROAD STREET, > BED BAMK, N. J. beth),053, 1130 a. m.; 2 68..»4 05, 4 35, 8 08, Tbe strong and commodious steamboat, there arose a deafening clamor from •783,746p. m. Sundays,803,943a.m.; 450, DMUND WILSON, taxpayers in the town of Red 6 00, 7 JO p. m. COUNSELLOR AT LAW, the city, with the continued jingling of For Long Branch, Asbury Park, Ocean Grove and (Successor to Nevlus 4 Wilson), bells, screaming and cheering of 15,000 Intermediate stations to -Point Pleasant, 5 s», RED BANK, N. J. 610.10 00,10 24 a in.; 12 62.2 20, 3 62,4(14,4 48, people and the banging of innumerable Bank, whose taxes are not paid • -, . ' CAPT. L. PRICE, Offlces: POST-OFFICB BUILDING. 515. 5 87. 5 32, 5 45. 8 20, 7 60 p. m. Sundays, fireworks, Juan was fleeing In his boat 10 30; 11 "2 a.- m.\ 6 80, 6 50 p. m. Sunday trains OHN S. APPLEGATE, JR. Red Bank, and Pier 24, foot Of Franklin do not stop lit Asbury Park and ocean Grove. away from the garden of Tio Pepe. within the time required hy Will leave street. SOLICITOR AND MASTER IN OHANCERT.' iJew York, as follows: FOB FREEHOLD VIA MATAWAN. In offlces of. Applegute & Hope, Red Bank, N. J, Two minutes after he was safely disLEAVE NEW YORK. LEAVE RED BANK, Leave Red Bank(Sunda;s excepted), 8 30,1130 a. in.; tant therefrom there was the arising of law, will be advertised and Saturduy, 1st...7:00 A . M. Saturday, 1st...8:00 P . M . 4 35. 0 08 p. m. AMES E.. DEGNAN, Monday,3d....4:00 " Monday. 3d 7:«) " TRAINS LEAVE FREEHOLD FOR RED BANK. that selfsame island into the astonishCOUNSELLOR AT LAW, Tuesday, 4th.,4:30 " Tuesday, 4 t h . . . T:00 " Via <Matawan (Sundays excepted), 8 20, 1115 28 BROAD STBKET, '. B E D BANK, N. J . ed air, and its subsequent settling in Wed'day, Eth..5:0U '• Wed'day, 6th. .7=00 " a. m.; 216. 420,605p.m. Thursday. 6th.10:30 A. M. TRAINS LEAVE NEW YORK FOR RED BANK. £th.:O:OO " about 15 fragments upon the placid wa- sold, in accordance with the Thursday, E. A. G. BROWN, .Friday, 7th....11:00 •' Foot Libeity street, 400,8 30.040,11 30a.in.; *130, Friday, 7 t h . . . . . 7:00 ". EYE, EAR. NOSE AND THROAT SPECIALIST ters of La Viga. And so a long, last Saturday, 8th.)2:0O M. 245.363. 430. M45, 023. 1145 (Wednesdays Saturday, 8th..8:00 " Monday, 10th..2:00 P . M . Residence 139 Broad Street. Red Bank.N. J., and Saturdays only) p. m. Sundays, 9 00,1016 adios to the garden of poor old Tio provisions of the statute gov- Monday, 10th.. 9:30 " Tuesday,'llth..8:00 " Ofllce hours 0 to 8 p. M. dally and Tuesday and a.m.; 400p.m. Tuesday, Ilth..lO:OO " Wed'day, l2th.4:00 " Pope! South Ferry Terminal. 8 25, 9 85, 1125 a. in.; *125; Saturday afternoons. W«d'day, 18th. 11:00 " Thursday, 13th.3:C0 . " 2 S6,3 85,4 25, *4 35,610,1140 (Wednesdays and Telepbnoe G-B, Red Bank. Thursday, 13th .6;00 " And bright and early the nest morn erning such cases. Friday, 14tb....3:00 '• Saturdays only) p. in. Sundays, 8 55, 9 55 a. m.; Friday, 14tn....0:00 " Saturday, !5th..3:00 " 3 85 p. m. E. ELLA PRENTISS UPHAM. Saturday, 15th..7:00 " behold- a wonder—two wonders, in fact Monday, 17th..4:00 " Foot West 23d street, 8 65 a m.j 12 40, 2 25, *3.25, Monday, 17th...7:00 " —even for a land in which mountains Tuesday. 10th..4:30 " *410, »4 65 p. m. Sundays, 0.25 a m.; 4 65 p. m. 18th..7:00 " DI8EASES OF.-, WOMEN AND CHILDREN. THEODORE F. WHITE, Tuesday, Wed'day,19th..6:0u " Foot Cortlandt and Desbrosses streets, 3 30. 0 00 appear in a single night and lakes disWed'day, 19th .7:00 'I ELECTRICITY. Tbu'day, 20tb.10:00 A . M . a. m.; 18 50, 2 30, *3 40, *4 20, *510 p m. Sun- ROOM 6, REGISTER BUILDING, Thursday. Kt)th,O:0O " R E D B A N E , N. J. Friday, Mint... 11:00 " appear forever from mortal-ken. The! days, 0 45 a m.; 5 16 p. in. Friday, 2 1 s t . . . 7:00 " At Red Bank Office Tuesday and Friday afternoons;•„ Town Treasurer. Saturday, 22d. 12:00 M. For further particulars see time tables at stations. island of Tio Pepe had sunk (so wonSaturday,iHd...8:00 " Monday. 24th..2:00 p. M. * Denotes express trains. Monday. 24th...9:00 " Tuesday,25th..3:00 " E. HERBERT E. WILLIAMS, ilering people said) beneath the Viga J. R. WOOD, Gen'l Pnss. Agent,.Penn. K. It. HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a Tuesday, 25th. 10:00 Wed'day, 20th..3:30 -" SURGEON DENTIST. C. W. BUBT, Geu'l Passenger Agent, Central R. R. writ ot fl: fa. to me directed, Issued out ot Wed'day, 26tta.lI:00 waters—at any rate, It was gone. The Thu'day,27th..4:00 " Graduate University of Pennsylvania. the Common Pleas Court ot the county of Mon- Tbu'day, 27th. 11:30 ofN. J. Friday, 28th ...3:00 " devil must have .done It, they conclud- mouth and State of New Jereey, will be exposed Friday, 2 £ t b . . . . 5:00 RUFUS BLODGETT, Superintendent N. Y. and L. Register Building, 42 Broad Street, Red BanlfN.'J Saturday,29th..3:00 " Rooms 10 and 11. B. R. R. ' • . ed, and they all hurried to mass and to sale at public vendiie, ON MONDAY. THE 8tn Saturday, 29th..0:00 DAY OF JULY. 1001, between the bouiB of 12 Bprlnkjed holjr water upon themselves o'clock and 5 o'clock (at 2 o'clock) In tbe afterE. R. F. BORDEN, Subject to changetoithout notice. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COM.. BURGEON DENTI8T. and prayed numerous "Padre Nues- noon of said day. at the Court House, at Freehold, X PANY. • In the township of Freehold, county ot Monmoutb, MTJ8IC BALL BUILDING, RED BANK, N. J. tros." On and after'November S6th, 1900. New Jersey, all those certain lots, tracts or parcels Particular attention given to tbe administration of F. A. LITTLE, MESSENGER. of land and premises hereinafter particularly de: TRAINS WILL LEAVE RED BANK Anaasthetlca. . Meanwhile farther down the Viga a scribed, situate, lying and being In tbe township ot For New York, 7 37, 0 83 a. m.; 2 58, 6 08 p. m., R. J. D. THROCKMORTON,Shrewsbury, In the county of Monmouth, and State solitary, crippled old dame, hobbling of week days. Sundays, 9 43 a. m; 8 06 p. m. New Jersey, In the town of Bed Bank. DENTAL SURGEON. ^"Connects with trolley cars at Red Bank for " Newark, 7 87, 9 23 a. m.; 2 58. 608,p. m., about early in th& morning, lifted up OFFICE: FIRST LOT.—Beginning at tbe southeast corner of Shrewsbury, Eatontown, Long Branch and Asbury week days. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.: 6 06 p. m. her dim eyes and beheld a little green Joseph Wood's lot at the west side of a street called Park. Red Bank, N.J. " Elizabeth; fl 23 a. m.; 2 68, 6 08 p. m., week No. 5.Broad Street, Bridge avenue; thence running southward, along days. Sundays, 9 43 a. m,: 6 00>rm. . Tt. F. L. WRIGHT, Islet where the night before no. islet the N. B.—All freight Intended for this boat must be " Rabway, 9 23a. m.; 2W,-008p. m., week days. west side of said street fifty (60) feet to Ihe SURGEON DENTIST, had been. She, Instead of taking the northeast corner of Thomas H. Grant's plot; thence on thewhanta sufficient length of time to handle.as Sundays,943a.m.; 6 08 p.m. • • RED BANK, N . J . running westwardly, aloug the north side of'said she will positively leave promptly on her advertised " Woodbrldge, 9 23 a. m.; 2 58. 608 p.m., week • • - • , ' • ' name of the devil in vain, smiled to land time. Broad street, opposite Bergen'e. one hundred and forty-two feet, more or less, days., Sundays, 9 48 a. m.; 6 06 p. m. herself and muttered: "Que muchacho! to the line of the New York and Long Branch Rail- This boat's time-table is advertised in THE RED " Perth Amboy, 9 23 a. m.; 2 58. 6 08 p. m,, week THOMAS DAVIS, JR. ,., road; thence running from said southeast comer ot BANK -REGISTER. New Jersey Standard; also in the days. Sundays, 9 43 a. m ; 6 06 p. m. How. the poor little one must have la- said 4INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. Joseph Wood's plot .westwardly, along said Counting House Monitor, Mackey's Steamboat Guide South Amboy, 923 am.; 258, 608 p. m., week FRONT ST.V BED BANK, N. J . (P.O.Box 21.) bored during the night! I will take a Joseph Wood's line one hundred and Beventr-four Buliinger's Qulde, New York World, New York " days. Sundays, 9 43 ». m.: 6 06 p. m. Insurance placed In the best companies on mo». feet, more or less, to the line of the said New York Journal and Brooklyn Eagle. hurried look before his coming. If on- and Long Branch Railroad; thence southeasterly, Time-tables may be obtained at Borden's job print- " Matawan, 923 a. m.; 258, 6 08 p. m., week reasonable terms. days. Sundays.948a.m.;606p.m. ions are there, I might as well have along the line of tbe said New York and Long ing office, Broad street, near Front, Red Bank, N. J. " Middletown, E. WM. H. LAWES, JR. 9 23 a. m.; 6 08 p. m., week days. Branch Railroad to tbe intersection of this plot with VETERINARY SURGEON. them as any one else!" » Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; 6 06 p. m. 50 Cents. land of Thpmas H. Grant. Belne same premises E x e u r s l o u T i c k e t * " Trenton and Philadelphia, connecting at Rah- Graduate of American Veterinary College, N. Y. to Thomas 8. Field by John H. Schanck Tio Pepe, reaching home at midday conveyed way, 9 23 a. m.; 2 58, 6 08 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 Residence: Monmouth Street, and wife, by deed dated June 6.1870, and recorded a. m.; 6 08 p. m. Between Broad street and Maple avenue. Red Bank on the Kith, muddled as to legs and In Book 282 ot Deeds, page 403,4c. In tbe Clerk's JUNE, 1901. " Long Branch, Point Pleasant and Intermediate of Monmouth cuunty, from which deed the head and repentant as to his mind, was office AS. S. McCAFFEEY, D. V; S. stations, 1035 a. m.; 2 80, 4 64, 0 25 p. m., foregoing description is taken. VETERINARY SURGEON. week days. Sundays, 1122 a. m.; 6 50 p. m. met with the news that his floating Merchants' Steamboat Co's Line. Graduate of American Veterinary College, N. Y. Do not stop at Asbury Park or Ocean Grove SECOND LOT.—Beginning in the easterly line of garden had been swallowed up, even as Shrewsbury avenue at the westerly ornorthwesterly Residence. Irving Street between Broad Street and Telephone Call 14 A, Red Bank. on Sundays. Maple Avenue, Bed Bank, N. J. the volcano at Jorullo had been. Ev- corner of tbe lot hereby conveyed; thence easterly, " Toms River, Bay Head and intermediate stathe southerly line of S. Chadwick's lot one Shrewsbury,Highlands, tlons.'lO 35 a. m., week days, Highland Beach, EO. D. COOPER, ery one had noted the smell of brim- along hundred and fifty feet; thence southerly, on a line Trains leave Philadelphia, Broad Street, (via RailOceanic, Locust Point, Fair Haven, CIVIL ENGINEER. stone in the air. Old .Toaquln, the car- parallel with the east Une of Shrewsbury avenue way) for Red Bank, at 6 50, 1103 a, m.; 400 Successor to Geo. Cooper, C. E. fifty feet; tbence westward, along the Hoe of tbe Red Bank, Long Branch and p. m., week days. Sundays, 4 00 p. m. gador, paddling late up the Viga, had Morford land and parallel with the line of the first RED BANK, N. J. Trains leavo New York for Red Bank, from West Poat Office Building, Aabury Park. Been an awful figure with horns and a course herein described to the easterly, line of 23d street station, 8 55 a. m.; 1240, 325, C. HURLEY, Shrewsbury avenue, being one hundred and fifty 4 55 p. tn. Sundays. 9 26 a. m.; 455 p. m. The strong and commodious steamboat, long tall carrying the island off bodily feet; thence along the easterly line of Shrewsbury • SURVEYOR AND CONVEYANCEB, From Desbrosses and Coitlandt streets, 900 BED BANK, N. 1 am.; 12 50, 3 40, 510 p. in., wees days. Sun- 116 Bridge Avenue. on his pitchfork. It was assuredly the avenue to tbe place of beginning, being fifty feet. The above lot Is conveyed subject to the right of days. 9 45 a. m.; 5 15 p. na. With George Cooper for <Uteen years. work of the devil. Of a truth had Tio way across the same of the New York and Long J. B. HUTCHIN6ON, J. R. WOOD, Branch Railroad Company. Being the same premACOB C. SHUTTS, best make his peace with the world ises General Manager. Gen. Fassenser Agent conveyed to Thomas 8. Field by Mary Haviland AUCTIONEER. Capt. C. E. THROCKMORTON, and live In godliness, else the demon and husband and others, by" deed dated October 10, Special attention given to sales of farm stock 1B78, and recorded in the Clerk's office of Monmouth ' would carry him off, too, as he'had county, farm implements and other personal property* la Book 806 of • Deeds, page 801. Ac, from Will leave Red Bank and Pier 24, foot of Franklin P^O. Address, 8HBEWSBURY, N. J. street. New York, as follows: done the island. which deed the foregoing description is talen. ENRY OSTENDORFF, LEAVE NFTW YORK. LEAVE HED DANK. Frightened, speechless, Tio Pepe had THIRD LOT.—Beglnoipg at a point In tbe west- Saturday. A . M. Saturday, 1st...3:00P.M. The Steamer Magenta TUNER AND REPAIRER OF PIANOS AND line of Bridge avenue, in the said town of Sunday, 2d1st..7:00 several fits, after which he hastened to erly 7:30 " Sunday. !d 4:0C " OBGAN8. Red Bank, and In tbe division ot Thomas S. Monday, 3d....8:00 " Monday, 3d....4:30 " Office L. de la ReussllTs Jewelry Store. Will leave Keyport daily at 7 A, M.,Telephone at clear out MB pawnshop and, with his Grant, (minor) and said Reckless; tbence north- Tuesday,4th...8:30 " Tuesday,4th...5:00 " Call 1 8 B . NO. 8HJ Broad St., Red Bank. erly, along said line of Bridge avenue Hfty (50) precious bankbook, set hurried sail, ser feet to tbe division line ot said Reckless and Wed'day.5tb...l):00 " Wed'day,6tb...5:00 " landing at pier 6, North river, just below M. H. SEELEY, 6th..6:00 " Thursday.6th..lO:30A.M. Rector street, for passengers only ; also burro, for his own land. It was not other lands of said Grant; tbonce westerly, in Thursday. PORT MONMOUTH, NEW JERSEY. Friday,7th....11:00 " last named division line, seventy feet six Inches Friday. 7th—7:00 " landing at pier 50, North river, foot of Notary Public. Soldiers' Vouchers Prepared •well, as he knew, to tempt the-devil. (71)' 6") to a point sixty-seven feet easterly from Baturday. 8th..8:00 •" Saturday.8th..l2:00 M. Gansevoort street, for freight and pass Bills of Sale for Vessels. Sunday, flth....9:00 " Sunday, Oth.... 1 : 0 0 P . M . The garden wa^gone, enchanted away, the centre line ot tbe New York and Long Branch Monday, 10th..9.30 " Monday, 10th;.2.00 " engers. Railroad at right angles; thence, southerly, parbut he could and would save the bank- allel In said centre linS and sixty-seven feet dis- Tuesday. I ltb. 10.00-" Tuesday. 11th.3.00 " Returning, will leave New York daily, Wed'day, 12th..4.00 " tant therefrom sixty (00) feet,, more or less, to the Wed'day, ISth.ll 00 ••' book and himself. Sundays excepted, for freight and passfirst mentioned division line; theoce easterly,In Thu'day. 13th.12.C0 M. Thu'day, 13th..5.00 " As regards pretty Paz and that grace- said line thirty-seven feet six Inches (87' 0") to Friday, 14th....0.00 A.M. Friday, 14tb... .3.00 " engers, from pier 56, N. R., old number, Saturday, 16th..3.00 " place of beginning. Being the sane prem- Saturday. 15th..7.00 •• back of West Washington Market, 4 less and jubilant Juan, little remains to tbe Sunday. 10ib...3.0a " ises conveyed to Tbomas 8. Field by Anthony Sunday, 10th...7.30 "' be told. The very day after Tio Pepe's Reckless and wife, by deed dated June 3. 1876. and Monday, 17th...8.00 " , MoDday, 17th...4.00 '• blocks south from the foot of West 14th IN THE street, and one block west from West to the aforesaid Clerk's office, in Book Tuesday, 18th..9.00 " Tuesday, 18th.5.00 " flight Juan, in spotless white, a flower recorded 2B2 of deeds, page 401, &c. from which deed the Wed'day, 19th..9.00 " Wed'day, 19th..5.00 " street at 4 p. M., Saturdays at 3 p. M. In his sombrero and another over his foregoing description is takeu. Beginning at tbe Tbu'day, 20th..6.00 " Tbu'day,80th.10.30A.M. Leave pier 6 for paRsengers only, at 4:15 corner of the other lot of said Field at Frid»y, 21st....7.00 " Friday. Mat...11.80 •" ear, appeared again at the house of his northeast p. M. Saturdays at 8:15 p. M. NO freight Nuisances within the township of Shrewsbury are the weat side of Bridge avenue; thence nortn- Saturday,22d...8.00 " Saturday. IBd.12.00 M. beloved, entreating that the family ac- wardly, along Bridge avenue fifty feet to the Sunday,23d....8.30 " Sunday,23d.... 1.00P.M. received or landed at pier 6 hereafter, hereby denned and declared tp be, and they shall Include and embrace: corner of Field's other lot; tbence Monday, 24th...9.00 " Monday, 24th..2.00 " company him In bis own boat to a southeast On Sundays the Bteamer Magenta will 1. The placing or depositing In or upon any street westwardly, along tbe south side of the last 25th..l0.00 " Tuesday,25th..8.00 " email plefie of property which, aided by aforesaid lot ot said Field's one hundred and two Tuesday, or alley, or In or upon any publio or private property leave Keyport at 7 A. M. and 4 p. M. Wed'day. 2Cth.11.00 " Wed'day,26th.A00 " four Inches, more or less, to tbe eastward Thu'day.27th..ll.3O " In this township, any dead animal or any part of the Thu'day,S7th..4.30 " Returning, leave New York, pief 6, at 9 same, a loan from his benefactor, Senor Es- feet side of the New York and Long Branch Railroad Friday.28th....5.00 " or any dead fish or any part of the same, or " A. sr. and 6 p. M. Pier 6 is ithe only fllth Irom privies or cesspools or catch basins or meeth, he had only just purchased. V Company's land; thence southeastwordly along Baturday.29tb..«.0O " Friday,28th....3.00 Saturday.29th..3.00 " said Railroad Company's land Dfty-sBven feet, Sunday,30th....7.00 " rubbish of any kind or description, or any house or landing in New York on Sunday, Sunday,80th...3.00 " Kapture ensued. Embraces were more or less, to tbe north side of said otber lot of kitchen slops or garbage, manure or sweeping! (prosaid Field; thence eastwardly. along the north vided that stable manure and other manure m»y be ' Excursion Tickets, SO Cents Bach. Subject to change without notice. bandied about, 'many healths drunk, aide of the last aforesaid lot seventy feet eigin used as a fertilizer), or any foul or offensive or ob-' and eventually the happy party of four inches, more or less, to said Bridge avenue, at (be Single tickets, S0c- Books containing 10 noxious Tnattcr or substance, whatever. beginning. Together with tbe right of floated down the canal through the low aforesaid excursion tickets, good only for person 2. Any full or leaky privy vault, cesspool or other F. A. LITTLE, MESSENGER. the party of tbe first port of, in and to the land . purchased, $4.. Children 12 years and receptacle for filth. gates, where, unless you duck your lylug between the Hues of tbe north and south, Allowing or permitting any night soil, garbage of the aforesaid lot hereby conveyed, exover full fare. Children between 5 and or3.other heads, you are more than apt to bump sides offensive or decomposing solid orfluidmuttended westwaraly to the middle of the said E5T" Connects with trolley cars at Red Bank for or substance to leak or oozo from any cart or them, past the grim, ptony old churches Railroad route as at present located, subject to Shrewsbury, Eatontown, Long Branch and Asbury 12 years, single tickets, 15c; excursion, ter wagon or vessel in which the same may be conveyed 25c. Children under 5 years, no charge. or rights'and property of the said Railroad Com- Park. - and past the pretty, sunny gardens at the carried. pany therein. Being tbe same premises conTickets good until used. freight intended for this boat must be 4. The carrying or conveying through any street Santa Anita. And finally on a some- veyed to Thomas S. Field by T. Henry Grant, by onN.B.—All the wharf a sufficient length of time to handle, Matawan tickets by way of Keyport and Matawan any substance which has been removed from aor deed dated the first day of October, A. D. 3878, what remotely situated Island 'Juan and recorded in Book 319 of deeds, page 145, Ac, as she will positively leave promptly on her adver- street cars, single tickets, 35 cents; excursion, 60 privy vault or cfKspool, unless tbe Bame shall be Intime. closed in alr-tigbt barrels, or In a perfectly tight and cents. Tickets sold on boat and cars. ' landed his party. "It is our little gar- October 81, 1870, In Monmoutb count; clerk's tised This boat's time-table is advertised In the RED ' Also by stone to Holmdel and Colt's Neck and lo- properly covered wagon. The above described premises, including a den now," he announced proudly, office. 5. All carting of garbage through the streets lot conveyed to said Henry Field by said Thomas BANK REGISTER, New Jersey .Standard, also in the cal stage to all parti of the town. Monitor, Mackey'sSteamboatGulde, Meals and refreshments at reasonable prices from the township except between the hours of sunset "bought from the old aunt, who had 8. Field, in his life time, by'deed dated the second CountingBouse Buliinger's Guide, New York World, New York 7 A. M. to 0 p. M. and six A. M. day of January. A. D. eighteen hundred and eightymoved away to her own tlerra; bought two, and recorded in Monmoutb county Clerk's Journal and Brooklyn Eagle. 6. The burning of any matter or substance which - Mdynard's Keyport nnd New York express office Tlme-tableB may be obtained at Borden's printing on boat. Goods delivered and called for la any part shall emit, or cause, or produce, or cast off any foul with the money of the good, kind Senor office, in book 848 of deeds, page 103. &c. ofllce. Broad street, near Front, Red Bank. or obnoxious, or offensive, or hurtful, or annoying of city and vicinity. Es-meeth and offered now, with my Tbe steamboat company reserves the right to gas, smoke, steam or odor. as the property of Ada D. Field, guardian Excursion Ticket!, SO Cents. change time table on account of weather and holi- 7. The casting ordlscharglng Into tho Shrewsbury eoul's devotion and adoration, to my otSeized the person and property of Henry Field, a lunadays without notice. or Nnveslnk, or South Shrewsbury rivers, or into own Paz, that heart of my heart." tic, nnd Joseph T. Field, defendants, taken in exeany stream in this township, or on the boundary Une Time tables to be bad at ticket office. cution at the suit of First National Bank of Red JUNE, 1901. of this township, any substance which has been reWhereat more Joyful embraces, ^ank.andtobesoldby ^ D A V l a ; „ moved from any vault, cesspool or sink, or any offal KEYPORT STEAMBOAT COMPANY, or The large and commodious steamer, shrieks of rapture and the christening other refuse, liquids or solids, by any pipes or EDMUND WILSON, Att'y. of the pretty new island In many A. F . WALLING. Agent. othorAlse. Dated May 28th. KKH. . $23.10 8. Any and every nuisance as above defined, is bumpers of pulque and good red wine. hereby prohibited and forbidden within the*townRUSTEE'S AUCTION SALE OF ship ONMOUTH COUNTY ORPHANS of Shrewsbury, and any person making, creatShould you eve,r go down the Viga REAL ESTATE. COURT. United States District Court, District of Now Jersey. ing, causing, maintaining or permitting any oX salt! In Juan's boat you are hereby advised In the Mattw of the Application! CAPT. BENJAMIN GRIGG8. In the matter of William D. TIerncy, Sarah J. nuisances shall forfeit and pay a penalty of twentyfive dollars. • r not to go near that persistent boatof Albert G. Spaldlng and ElizTIerney, Partners, trading as William Tienicy, The abovo Is an extract from tho ordinances of tho abeth C. Bpnlding, bis wife, lor} Notice, -* Will run between Port Monmoutb and New York Bankrupts In Bankruptcy. man's pretty garden, where, with Paz board of health of Shrewsbury township, and tba loavo to adopt Spnlding Brown, (foot of flansovoort street. weBt WashTho undersigned, TruBtce of tho above named fume will be thoroughly enforced. J ' dimpling and smiling among her vio- n minor. ington Market, N. U.), as follows: bankrupts, will sell at public auction on tlio premW. C. ARMSTRONG, M. D., is hereby givBn that bv order of Bald court ises at Oceanic, Monmouth County, Stato ot New lets and popples, you are morally sure theNottco Leave Leave Presldei t of tho Board of Health. petition of Albert G. Spaldlng and Elizabeth O. Honmouth. New York. Jersey, on Wednesday, July 10th, at three o'clock to spend your worldly all on totally un-. 8paldlng, his wife, was this flay filed with the clerk Saturday, Port A. C. HAMIISON, Secretary. in tbo nfternooo, all bis right, titlo and Interest In 1st...7:00P.M. Saturday, 1st...2:00 P . M . sold court, praying leave to adopt 8palding Brown Monday, 3d.,..7:(fl Monday. 3d 0:00 A . M. tbe following described property. Said sale will be .necessary and irresistible bouquets of of a minor child, by virtue of tho provisions ot "An act Tuesday, 4th...7:00 subject to all encumbrances which may exist on tho Tuesday. 4th... 7:00 those aforesaid flowers provtdt»g for tbe adoption ot children," ipproved Wed'day, 5tb...7:00 property at the day of sato: Wed'day, 5th...8:00 N Notice to Deli E ALBERTINA, J J D D D S D D D D J G A SEA BIRD, J Keyport Boat Time-Table. H W special Notice RELATING TO Township of Shrewsbury. WM. V. WILSON.T M WATERS & OSBORN, MANUFACTPBERS OP Sash, Blinds, Doors, Mouldings, Brackets, etc. March ninth, olghteen hundred and seventy-seven, nnd tbo supplements thereto, and tlint said court has flxed THUR8DAY, THE TWENTIETH DAY OF JUNK, nlnoteen hundred and one, at ten o'clock in tliu forenoon at tho court house, Freehold, Monnioutfc county. Now Jersey, us tho time, and place when nnd where the appointment of a noxtfrlondto the said child will bo made. Dated May 28,1001. ALBERT « . BPALDING, ELIZABETH 0. SPALDING. Petltlonors. Screen Doors and Window Screens made to order. The Town Hall GLAZISG A SPECIALTY. CAN BE HAD FOR Jobbing ot all kinds done at short notice. Stair Building, Mantlos. Storo Fronts, Scroll Sawing, and Hard Wood Work In all Its branches, MECHANIC ST., BED BANK, N. J N OTICE'OF SETTLEMENT. . ESTATE OF JAMES II. PETEBB, deceased". Third Account. Notlco Is hereby ulven tlint tbo accounts of Ilio BUbaorlbor, exooutorof said deceased, will DO audited and Stated by tlio Burrogato, and reported lor settlement to tlio Orphans Court ot tlio County of Monnioutb, O1T THURSDAY, THE 11T1I DAY OF JULY, noxt. Dances, Parties, etc. Thursday, tith...7:00 Friday, 7th 8:00 Saturday, 8th...8:00 Monday. 10th...4:00 Tuesday, 11th..S'.OOWed'day, 12th.. 5:00 Thursday. 18th. 5:dO Friday, 14th ...0:00 Saturday. 15th.. 7:00 Monday, 17th...7:00 Tuesday, 18th..7:00 Wed'day. 19th.. 7:00 Thursday, 20th.7:00 Friday, 21st... 8:00 Saturday, 22(1..8:00 Mopday, 24tb...4:O0 Tuesday, 25t!i..4:O0 Wed'day, 20th.. 5:00 Thursday, 27th..5:00 Friday,S(8th... 0:00 8aturday,.£0th..7:00 Thursday, 0th..l>;00 Friday, 7th..1...9:00 Saturday, 8th..0:00 Monday, 10th..0:n0 Tucsdny, lllb..0:0O Wed'duy, 12th.,fi:0O Thursday, lilih. 0:00 Friday, 14th.... 0:00 Saturday. 16tli..2:00 p. M. Monday, I7tli.. ,7:00 A . M . TucBdav,18tb..B:00 ' Wed'day, 10th,. 0:00 Thursday, 2(th:9:0O Friday, 2ist »:0O Saturday, 22d..9:00 Monday, 24th...»:0O Tuesday, 25th.. 0:00 Wed'day. 2fltb.,fl:(lO Thursday, 27th.t:O0 Friday, 28th.... »:00 Saturday, 29th.£:C0 p. u. Township of Shrewsbury, Monmouth county, at' Oceanic Now Jersey. Known ainUeslRmUml on tho map of the sub division of tbomacfiof land of late Maria A. Bergon of about twenty ucras, made bv T. W. Tlirockmorton, surveyor, May 24th, 1873, entitled a " Map of Property oi M. llorgen lit Oceanic, Monmouth Co., N. J.", and Olod In Monmouth County clerk's oOlce, AURUst6th, 1S71), as lot number (97) twentvseven, bounded and described as follows, v i z : Beginning at a point In tlio westorly lino of First street, distant |36O) two hundred and tlfty feet, (0) six Inches, south of tho southerly lino of Oceiin avonuo or Rod Bank road, and running(henco westerly on a line parallel with Ocean avenuo (100) one hundred feet, thence southerly parallel with first street (GO) fifty feet, thence easterly again parallel with Ocean nvenuo or Rod Bank road (100) ono hundred feet to Jflrat street, and thence northerly along tho westerly lino of Fliet. street, (6(1) flflv feet to tbe place of beginning, as said streets onu lota nro laid down on said map, Tfao promises hereby conveyed All back frol: „ «ro Intended to bo tho Bamu promises convoyed to This boat's.time-table is advertised In T H E RED said GeorRo B. Wild by deed of Archibald L, DorBANK REGISTER and Monmouth Frees; also In gen, Martomus Ilergcn, Jr., Charles L. Ilergen and John L. Bergen, dated February sixteenth, eighteen BiMngcr'f Steamboat Guide. * Tlmo-tnbles may bo obtained at M. O.'Btfon & Son, hundred anil .eovonty-olght, nnd duly recorded In 213 Washington street nnd A. Morrla & " m , Cor. tlio Monniuuth County clerk's office. In books H01 of 14th street nnd Ninth avonuo, j • For terms and particulars call on or Positively no Free Tloket'a. address SlnKlo tflcUeM) 30 cent*. Ileturn Tlckcu, 50 cent*. JOHN T. TETLEY> CUSTODIAN, , NEW JERSEY. Children twelve years and ovor fall fare. Cblldron between flvo nnd twelve one-half faro, Freight rocolvod on Now York I'lor until 7 r . M. Tel. coll, S-t 4 bells. Port Monmoutb. 008,1816 street, New YorK, Notice To Bicyclers! The ordinance prohibiting the^riding of bicycles on the sidewajki? within the limits of the (Town of Ked Bank will be strictly enforced. All persona riding on the sidewalks, nil per 'sons riding without .lighted lamps at night, and all persona riding faster than six miles an deeds, nt pnfeo 120, etc., on March 11th, eighteen hundred and sovonty-olRht. hour, within the corporate limTerms of Bale: twenty por cont cimti of purchase money at day of sale: balanco of purohnso monoy its of the Town of Ked Bank, tin) week from day of sale, whon deed will bo delivered to puichaner. On failure to pay bttlanco of will be arrested and fined. purchaeo tnonoy on tho day above mentioned, Ibo purchusor will forfolt all moooya paid. F. P. STJJYKER, Balo subject to adjournment. FERDINAND U. WISMEIt, Tmstfo. Chief of Police Newark, N.J., Juno JOtb.lOQli IN AND OtTT OF TOWN. Short anil Interentina Items From All Over the County. ^ res Miss Emily Wedderepbon, daughter of Eevi W. ft. Wedderspoou, pastor of the First MethodiBt church of Asbury Park and a former resident of Red Bank, will graduate from the Wilson business college at New Brunswick this month. 1'lie New York and Long Branch steamboat company has offered to pay tlie town of Long Branch $100 toward the expense of sprinkling Rockwell avenue. The company's boats land at the foot of Rockwell avenue. .„ Mrs. Maggie Brown of Keyport has received ' word that her brother, who worked in a mine at Wisconsin, was injured in an explosion recently. His band was blown off and one of bis legs was broken. Sidney Thorne of Keyport has been held in"?50 bail to await the action of the grand jury on a charge of having assaulted his son-in-law, A.rchie Watts, and biting off part of his ear. Homer B. Anderson, who loses his job, by the closing of the tollgate on the Keyport turnpike at Hazlet, would have completed 21 years' of service as a tollgate keeper on July 1st. The family of William Mooney of Atlantic Highlands has moved to Atlantic City in order to be nearer Mr,• Moouey's •work as a locomotive engineer of the Central railroad. ' . The ladles' parlor reading circle of Keyport had its annual outing at Hilton Park, near Atlantic Highlands, last Thursday. The trip home was made by way of the. Bumson road. Miss Eluiira, C. Tully and Robert Fielder Fountain of Matawan will be . married to-morrow afternoon at the . home of Mrs. W. Augustus Smith. — A Child's Dangerous Climb. Rev.-William Conger of New BrunsRussell VanKirk, aged two years, son wick will be installed as pastor of the Reformed church at Asbury Park on of John VanKirk of Keyport, was left last week with his grandparents, Mr. Thursday night, June 27th. John B. Metzgar of Long Branch has and-Mrs. Abram Morris, at the Keans- been seized with a serious paralytic burg lighthouse, while his mother went to •stroke, Mr. Metzgar is one of the oldest New York for the day. Mr. Morris was cleaning the lens and lamp at the top of hackmen along the shore. Fred Appel, John Minzer, William the high lighthouse when he heard a noise Pyne, John Pyne and William-Togel- just below him. On looking around he sand, Long Branch boys, were each saw his grandson only a few steps below. fined $3.50 last week for crap shooting. The little fellow had climbed 125 steps All persons running unlicensed scaven- of the spiral stairway alone and unaided. ger wagons in LoDg Branch are to be ar- A fall would have no doubt meant inrested. Only wagons "with steel bodies stant death. »;» . and covers will be licensed. •William Dougher of West End has Raising Church Money. been held in $100 to await the action of Each member of the Epworth league the grand jury on a charge of assault of the Matawan Methodist church has , and battery ba Jolin'Gilmartin, agreed to raise a dollar toward paying The Clarksburg Methodist church will for some improvements to the church. hold campmeeting the last two Sundays Several of the young women have made , in July. This is the first campmeeting their dollar by sweeping and scrubbing of this church in a number of years. the offices of business men.' One day The graduating exercises of the train- last week two young women went about ing school of the Long Branch hospital the town with a hand organ, one grindwill be held on Thursday afternoon, ing out music while the other passed June 27th. ' the cup around for contributions, '", Township Clerk Fitzgerald of Baritan township 1ms taken a position as colNearly a Hundred Tears Old. lector in that territory for the Metropolitan insurance company. .' Mrs. Eleanor S. VanKirk celebrated The contract for sprinkling the new her 91st birthday on June 8th at the Keyport and Keansburg stone road hap home of her son, John VanKirk of been awarded to Abram Morris, Jr., of Wickatunk. Mrs. VanKirk is a daughKeyport, ter of 8arah Schanck and Garrett ConoWilliam Lockwood, son of Nelson irer. She was born in Marlboro town• Lockwood of Galilee, has been taken to ship and has spent all her life there." . the Long Branch hospital to be treated She has never been in New York city. for abscess of the bowels. She is very vigorous in health and exJames H. Craig, who was appointed septing a slight deafness all her faculclerk of Mannsquan and failed to qualify, ties are good. has been reappointed and has accepted the office. Fined for Abusing a Cow. William H. Tuthill of Matawan is on Moses Golden, a butcher employed by a Western trip. He will visit his sister Philip Metts of. Asbury Park, was fined in Wyoming before he returns home. Norman L. Bedle of Keyport, who re- $5 by Justice Murphy of Long Branch .cently graduated in dentistry, has opened last week for abusing a cow. He was driving three cows in a street at Long a dental office at SpottewooJ. The hook und ladder company of Key- Branch and because one of the cows did port gave an entertainment last week not move fast enough to suit him he beat hit with a club. ' • and cleared $20. John J. Deppeler of Farmingdale is on A Boat Capsizes. a three months' business trip to California. Andrew Heyer, Augustus Rheinhold Mrs. William Parker of Matawan has aid Joseph Walling of Keyport .were suffered a Btroke of paralysis, which out sailing last'week when the boat capaffects her right side. sized about a quarter of a mile off shore. The medical Bociety of New Jersey 7hev swam tcghallow water and eswill hold its annual: meeting at Allen- japed with nothing more serious than a hurst on Juiie 25th, 2Cth and 27th. thorough soaking." The Long Branch commissioners have appropriated $250 to lay out a public park around the Long Branch hospital. THE , . Tlieron Bedle of Matawan has takencharge of Alexander Gaston's store at that place. Chalmers Rue of Freehold hasreceived a degree of bachelor'of law from a Chicago correspondence school. An up-to-date drug store, Johnson Apnlegato will be principal of carrying a full line of the school at DeBoivs in Millstone township next year. pure, fresh drugs. Pre-Mrs. J. O. Burtt of Freehold and her scriptioris accurately comdaughter, Mrs. Dodge, have gone on a Irip to Buffalo and Michigan. pounded at all h<>urs. Heyer.& Flock, undertakers at Long - Branch, have bought a new white hearse Your patronage and a. set of silver mounted harness. solicited,;, A valualilocow owned by Mrs. George Parker of West Long Branch . died last week. ( William Stevens of Long Branch has received a degree of bachelor of arts PROPRIETORS, '> from the New Yoi k law school. Cor. Broad and Monnioniu 8l»,, Mrs. Thelbert Edwards of Long Branch City entertained a company of friends RED BANK,-N, J. last week in celebration of her birthday. Mrs. 8. H, McKeen and family of Keyport huva goue to Oak, Virginia, for the •••••»••••••»»»••»•••••••• summer. David YV, VaiiPelt of Keyport had a cancer removed from his back a few days ago. A set of clam rakes valued at $50 was 1B-18 Front St., Red Dank/ « stolen from Til Ion & Cherry's boat ut • Keyport one night last week, THE GERMANIA, formerly'con- ' Mr. nnd Mrs. E. R. Brown of Keyport ducted by J. I)eBenring,'i8 well are visiting at the. Buffalo exposition this equipped with all the essentials > week. . and accessories of a first-claea ', Robert G. Bedle of Keyport has •a pohotel. The features include < i sition for the summer in Joseph Lufburrow's meat inarketat Atlantic Highlands. Lunch and Cigar Counters, < A boiler weighing seventeen tons has Pool and Billiard TableB, ! been installed in the power houad of the And a B e a d i n g Room. ' Keyport and Matawnn trolley road. . Manahan Bros, of North Long Branch The bar is supplied with first- ', lost a horse last week from lockjaw. clues Liquors, wines, Beers and < P, J. Casey of Long Branch is visiting Cigars. . at the Buffalo exposition. First-class accommodalions'aro , , William JlcDonnott of Freehold has furnished for permanent and returned from a trip to Buffalo. . transient guests. Special attenJames Bowno lias moved from Free tion paW to getting updinnerB. hold to Engliahtown. j 3-.-EDGAB BROWEB, Proprietor. »i» But in the eating of the pudding is - The , « • • » • « • • • « « • « • • • • • • « • • » • • Tradesmen,.are given to flambuoyant statements in their advertisements we admit. We state facts when we say that the opportunities we have to offer are not excelled anywhere. Our line of pianos, bicycles and talking machines is complete. Our guarantee is safe, because in case of need, you are sure to find us still in business, in the same place. Do you stop to think what that is worth to a purchaser ? Tuning, repairing and moving on short notice. . , RED BANK. LONG BRANCH. ! Honest Lower Than Ever! On account of the backward season and the consequent surplus of spring goods I have marked down the price on these goods in order to close them out quickly. Men's, Boys' and Children's Clothing reduced 25 per'cent and on sotn^ goods the reduction is as much as 50 per cent. \ If this is not so, your money back more freely than I received it from you. J. KRIDEL, 6 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. ••••»••••••••••••••••••••• Rolls and Coffee For Breakfast! ASALEOL We can supply you with any kind of rolls, fresh from our steam I oven, every morning. CHILDS' BAKERY Schroeder's Hair .VANDERVEER& VANBUSKlftK, Tonic should-be used three or four times a week to get the best results. Fifty cents a ' THE GEBMU HOTEL, ] bottle at Schroeder's pharmacy. *•••••••••*••••••••••••• • • As to value, none do or can give better. Summer Separate Skirts, It's almost a "neckand neck" race between the out-put of Shirt Waists and Separate Skirts, the one suggests the other. . . *Knictotaker Pharmacy THE EKGJBIEU ie $1.50 a year. " • \ ADLEM & CO, Broad Street, T. HANSON & SON. Successors to II, Flel€l, High Grade Granite Work, Blue Stone, Sand Stone, Sewer Pipe, k It you'ore considering about orectln'g a, monument or licniletono, come and BCO our large stocfc, and let us (lgiiro on your worlr, and wo will please you both to quality and prlcp. JWo havo been in business 15 years and bavo erected upwards of 800 monuments and headstones, and have never failed to do as wo agreed and nover receiving ono complain^ from our work. Wo superintend tho building of tbp foundation and it will be built from tlio. bottom of tho grave with solid utono and cement, Insuring a permanent Job. J. F. REILLY, Funeral Director and Embalmer, Jfo. »« Pearl Street, • RED BANK, NEW JERSEY. Long Distance '.Phono, 10-D. Red Bank, N. J. ' ' ' "• Y A B D i . . . , . ' r Konmouth Street, near Town Hall, •^^^^X'g^^SS^toKS •'' RED BANK, N. J.