CLOSE OF A CHURCH YEAR.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "CLOSE OF A CHURCH YEAR."

Transcription

1 VOLUME XXI. NO. 50. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDA, JUNE 7,1899. PAGES 1 TO 8. NO TROLLE CARS ET. NO DEFINITE TIME NOW SET FOB THEIR RUNNING. Mecelver James JS. Begnan Says tha The Cars Be Bought Must be Equpped Wth Sew Machnery The Insurance Beng Adjusted. _The trolley cat-8 have not yet begun Tunnng. Recever James E. Degnan says that the delay s caused by the changes whch had to be made n the cars he bought. He says, he was not wllng to accept the cars wth the motors and other equpment that was on them, and that to change >the motors and other machnery took a great deal of.tme. He says the cars may be runnng n a day or two, or t maybe a week yet before they are ready for operaton. He says the cars were not ready for shpment yesterday, and be does not know exactly how much more tme wll be requred. The nsurance ol the, burned buldng and ears s n process of adjustment. The nsurance companes have apponted ;a representatve, who has pad several vsts to Red Bank, and he and the trolley companys nsurance representatves are now adjustng the loss. Mr. Degnaa says that about theon(y matter on whch an agreement has not been reached s the value of the brck walls of the buldng whch are stll standng, and that ths matter.wll be settled n a few days. Mr. Degnan also says that whle the matter of leasng the Red Bank trolley road to the Asbury Park trolley road has been talked about for the past sx months, nothng has Vet been done. He says that the road could not be leased wthout, frst submttng the matter to the chancellor, and gettng hs consent to the lease of the road; and that there hare beon as yet no steps taken to have the matter presented to the chancellor.. Sckness Caused by Bcycle Rdng, Mrs. Wllam Pope of Lttle Slver s sck wth hemorrhage of the stomach. Last Sunday a week ago she rode to Navesnk on her bcycle to vst her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Green. The day was very warm and when Mrs. Green got to Nhvesnk she was nearly overcome. She was able to rde, back that nght, but the next, day she was taken sck and her mother has been n attendance at her bedsde ever snce. Contestng Charles Truazs Wll, Theresa Clay con of Lakewood s con-, testng the wll of her father, Charles Truox, who commtted sucde at Waysde a short tme ago. Mr. Truax left all hs property to hs wfe. Ms. Clayton charges that undue nfluence was used n gettng her father to make hs wll, and that her father was mentally - ncapable of makng a wll. Aaron E. Johnston s her counsel. Chrstan Dlet Hurt. A team of horses drven by Chrstan Detz of Mldletown got frghtened and ran away a few days ago, The houses ran as far as Harmony, where they were caught. The tongue of the wagon was broken and Mr, Detz was thrown out and hurt about the shoulders.. A Brused Thumb. Eugene Patterson of Borden street caught the thumb of hs rght hand n the sldng door of a baggage car on Monday nght whle on hs way home from Buffalo Blls wld west show. The thumb was badly brused. The njury -was dressed by Dr. Peter P. Rofferty. o «Btten by a Mnk. A mnk got n Mrs. Ann Kelseys chcken coop at ColtV Neck last week and klled sx chckens. Mrs, Kelseys daughter Sarah heard the nose and ran out to, the coops. She caught hold of the mnk and wns btten on the hand. The mnk escaped. Patent Medcne Exploded. Several bottles of patent medcne whch were n tho nhow wndow at Maurce Hollywoods drugstore on Mon mouth street, near the staton, " worked by tho nent yesterday mornng and the bottles exploded.. ; *~. An Eatontown Stage Lno. Snce tho trolley corn have stoppu runnng Wllam P. Red of Eatontow has started n stage lne between Eaton town and Rtd Dnnk. wle of summer mllnery I now n proprem. It ncltdoh every thng I" ljo! 1 trmmed nnd uttrmmc mllmcry. ItH to your ntercbt to make your HClfotlow whle stock n large Mru. E. Woa, Red Bnnl: Temple of Fashon. Adv, A SOCIABLE LAST NIGHT. Golden Rulers Sleet at Mrs, John Harrsons. The Guld of the Golden Rule of Trnty church held a socable last nght at Mrs. John Harrsons on Catharne street. On account of the ntense heat, and the trolley not runnng, the attendance was small. There was no, dancng. All the men but two wore whte duck, pants. One ofthese two men apologzed fornot wearng whte, duck pants. He sad be had bought a par of whte duck pants for 98 cents, but they dd not ft ard he had to wear hs ordnary clothes. The otlfer than wore hs Sunday clothes n order to be dressed up. All the men took off ther coats and sat on the veranda. They talked about the hot weather, and the church, and the trolley, and the wonderful magnaton of trolley men concernng the lre at the trolley barn. There were refreshments of cake and lemonade. The lemonade was cold and t was good. There was plenty of lemon n t to make t sour and plenty of sugar n t to make t sweet. Father Mac- Kellar sang a song, and the usual collecton was taken up. At the close of the socable the guests walked home, and those who lved near the trolley lne found relef from the heat n sayng thngs about Recever JamesE. Degnan for not havng the trolley cars runnng. KEEP OFF THE SIDEWALKS: Bcycle Rders Who Use the Sde- : tcalks Wll be Pned. At the meetng of the board of commssoners last nght t was stated that a great deal of complant, had been made by resdents of the town about bcycle rders usng the sdewalks as bcycle paths. It was stated that bcyclsts would frequently use the sdewalks when the roads were n perfect condton for rdng, and that they would ofteu drve pedestrans off the sdewalk. The commssoners, after bearng the complants, nstructed the marshals to enforce the provsons of the ordnance prohbtng the rdng of bcycles on the sdewalks. The ordnance s to be enforced n every part of the town where flagstone or gravel sdewalks have been made. Bcyclsts can not be prevented from usng the walks where sdewalks have not been constructed and where the walk conssts only of a path that has been worn by travel. <o «o. A Weddng Annversary. Dr. and Mrs. 0. A. Clark of Long Branch celebrated the ffth annversary of ther marrage on Monday nght of last week. The guests were entertaned wth pano soloes by Rev. Arthur M. Sler man and Mss D. Brtton, a song by Mrs. George Wllams, and speeches by Rev. George Wllams, Rev. Edmund Hewtt and Henry Jolne. Mr. and Mrs. Clark receved a large number of handsome presents. _. _ Tramps Try to Steal., On Saturday nght two tramps stopped at Mrs. H. J, Rosevelts soda stand on Branch avenue; near Lttle Slver, and asked for a glass of water. Mrs. Rose velt left the stand a mnute to get the water and thetramps began pocketng tobacco and other thngs. Mrs. Rosevelt saw them and she grabbed a pstol whch she kept at the stand. She ponted t at them and ordered them to put back the thngs they had taken. They dd sn and then fled down the road, A Pcnc for Chor Boys. An entertanment wll be held n the Sunday-school room of Trnty church tomorrow nght to rase money to take the chor boys on ther annual pcnc. The chor boys sng at two servces every Sunday throughout the year, and the pay they get for sngng s very small. They are taken on an excurson every year as a partal recompense for ther sngng. ^.«A New Mall Carrer. John Molloy of Port Monmouth has gven up hs contract wth the government for carryng the, mal between the Port Monmouth staton and the pqetofllce nnd Edwnrd Bothwlck has taken hs place. Molloy got.$160 a year, but thero are two mnla less a day now and Bothwlck taken the job for $1)0 u year. CLOSE OF A CHURCH EAR. ANNUAL MEETING OF THE RED BANK BAPTIST CHURCH. A Beacon, Two Trustees and Fve Vshers Elected-A. Xet Increase of Seven Members Durng the Past Tear.. The Red Bank Baptst church held ts annual meetng last Wednesday nght. The terms of some of the clurch offcals had expred, and all of these were reelected. L. P. Conkln was reflected deacon and John S. Applegate and James Bray were reflected trustees. The ushers elected were Stephen H. Allen, Benjamn H. Ford. Fred Burd, Walter Davs and Fred Hagerman. Fred Hagerman s an addton to the board of ushers, whch now numbers nne. The church voted to omt the regular Sunday nght servc.es durng July and August. The only Sunday nght servce durng ths perod wll be on July 2d, when ReM. W- B. Matteson, the pastor, wll preach a specal sermon to the Red Bank lodge of Foresters. Mr. Matteson wll take no vacaton ths year but wll be n regular servce all summer. Eleven members left the oburch durng the past year by letters of dsmssal to other churches. They were Mrs. Lzze VanPelt, Mr. and Mrs. Rchard Case, Mr. and Mrs. A, t,. Sora, Mss Mabel Sora, Augustus Voorhees, Mss Emma Bloodgood, Lyda S. Applegate, May Jane Wlson and Mrs. Mary Applegate. The church lost four members by death durng the year. They weremrs.,evallan Hendrckson Hance, John Gulck; Mss Mara L. Morford an,d Mrs. Ida B. Kelsey Wyckoff.. Twenty - two new members joned the church durng the year. Twelve of these were converted durng the revval last wnter and ten joned by letter from other churches. The membershp s now 512.., The most mportant act of the church durng the year was ts wthdrawal from the Trenton assocaton of Baptst churches, and ts jonng the Monmouth assocaton of Baptst churches, whch was recently formed. Attacked Wth Cramps. Frank J. Davs s the contractor n charge of the mprovements to Webster Swans house at Navesnk, Last Saturday mornng he went to Mr. Swans to lay out some work for the men. Whle there he was taken wth such a severe attack of cramps that he had to be helped nto hp house, It was two hours before he was able to start for home. He had recovered by the next day. a * A Dance at Mddletown. Mss Molle B. Ayres of Mddletown gave a dance last Frday nght at the home of her grandmother, Mrs. M. C. Blanck. About 35 people were present. Among the Red Bankers present were Mss Alce Morford, Mss Kate Conover and Mss Isabelle Johnstpn, Harry Sutton, George Hoppng, Charles McClees, Harry Burrowes and Wll Voorhees... Poltcans Vst Bed Bank. Dr. A. T. Applegate of Englshtown, one of the canddates for the Democratc nomnaton for county clerk, was n Red Bank on Monday and yesterday. Joe McDermott of Freehold, who wll be the Republcan canddate for county clerk, has also been n Red Bank two or three tmes durng the past week. m» A Busy Mll. Root&Dbben are so rushed wth work thnt all ther hands are workng an hour and a half overtme every day. Twentyfve men are employed n the mll. They are supposed to work but nne hours a day. but on account of the rush of busl ness they work 104 hours a day. Holmdels Schools Closng. All the schools n Holmdel townshp closed on Frday, exceptng the schoo at Holmdel vllage. The upper class n the vllage got through ts years work on Monday. The prmary-class wll no fnsh ts years work untl Frday. W. A. Truexe Storo Ronted. W. R. & J. A. Tuttle of Asbury Park have leased W, A. Truexs storo or Broad street for a term of two years, A lve nnd ten cent fltoru wll bo opened A Fnger Lacerated. n the buldng n about three weekb. Ralph Blnok of Bench Btroet, who s 1 employed In Root & Dlbbens mll, Wo havo more than cut glass bu caught tho forefnger of IIIB left hand h glassware only. Nowhere else can sucl n borng nchm on Mondy. Tlo lnger waa lacerated. Mr. Slack had tho predate ths fact. Dolllnners, l) an extensve varety hosnen. Those wh< have not vnlttd our atom cannot ap njury drenwd nnd was able to return to Broadway, near Ulft street, and 00<Mur work the next day. ray street, Now ork. Adv, THREE NEW MARSHALS. Appontments by the Board of Commssoners Last Nght, The prncpal busness done by the omm6soners last nght was n relaton to the marshals of the town. J. Stout Thompson,, who s employed to take ccount of the street lghts whch are not burnng each nght, was apponted a marshal wthout pay, The salary of Frankln Perce Stryker, ;he chef marshal of the town, was nreased from $250 per year, whch has been thesalary of, ths offcal for several years past, to $300 per year. James Walsh, who was superseded by Mr. Stryker as chef, marshal at the begnnng, of the present year, was apponted an all-nght marshal last nght. He wll go on servce at eght oclock at nght and wll reman on duty untl daylght. The appontment of a nght marshal who wll be on duty all nght was made at the request of the busness men of Red Bank, most of whom sgned a petton askng that such an offcer be apponted. Mr. Walsh wll receve a salary of $33 per month. The appontment was made at a monthly salary and not by the year, wth the understandng by the commssoners that the offce could be vacated at the end of any month. Eljah M. Conk, who was elected a constable on the Democratc tcket last prng, and who was the frst Democrat to get ths poston n Shrewsbury townshp snce got further honors and profts last nght. He was apponted a marshal whose specal duty wll be to preserve,, order among the marketmen who gather on Wharf avenue and on the green. Marshal Conk wll also have to see that the roads are not blocked by the farmers and marketmen vhle they are n town buyng and sellng produce. He wll get $50 for three months servces. THROWN FROM,. HIS WAGON. Wllam Ryan Injured on the Seabrght Brawbrldge, Wllam Ryan, who lves on the Rumson road, was thrown from hs wagon at the Seabrght drawbrdge last Thursday nght. Mr. Ryan was drrvng near the brdge when hs horse got frghtened and started across the brdge on a run. The. draw vas opened but the ron gates across the roadway were closed. The horse stopped suddenly when t reared the gates, and Mr. Ryan was thrown out. He struck on hs head. He was pcked up n a half-dazed condton and taken home. He receved several cuts on the head and hs shoulder was njured. Hs wounds were dressed by Drs. Feld and Warner and he s now slghtly mproved. Prentlss Mnton Loses Hs Shrt. Last nght Charles R. D. Fox well and Prentss Mnton of Red Bank went n swmmng. They took a boatand rowed to the Mddletown sde of the rver. Thep left ther coats and vests at home. They dved from the boat and bad a great deal of pleasure. When they got through swmmng Mnton found that hs shrt was gone. It had been lost overboard from the boat and was not recovered. He went home shrtless. Foxwell offered to hunt up a barrel for hm to walk home n, but Mnton succeeded n gettng home wthout attractng much attenton. m m Sarah Cartan Sent to Jal. Sarah Cartan, who s employed by Mrs. Elzabeth Baley of Front street, was arrested about two weeks ago. for beng drunk and dsorderly. Last Thursday nght she was arrested by Constable Wllam Wlson for agan beng drunk. She had been drunk for several days and had spent most of the tme along the rver, near J. Trafford Allens lum ber jtord, wth a lot of hnlf-grown young men. She was taken before Justce Chld, who sent her to the county ja for thrty days, Mrs. Margaret Thompson Improvng Mrs. Margaret Thompson of Lncroft, mother of Mrs. Oscar Blesse, Jr., of Red Bank, s; under treatment at Long Branch for tho removal of a cancer. The process under whch Mrs. Thompson s beng treated s now and s practced by Dr. O. H. Clark. Mrs, Thompson mprovng but t wll be a mouth before she can return home. Chldrens Bny When specal attenton s gven to ready to-wear suts, drrnscfl, separate Bkrt and wasts for msfts, chldren nnd n fnntfl. Good fortune WON wth UH tl: wemt when wo purchased tho entn sample lne from H. Dunenherg & Son o: Now ork at half current prces. Josop" Sato, led.bunk. N.J. M. MWS FROM MIDDLETOWN, INTERESTING ITEMS FROM BE- OND THE SHREWSBUR. t Operaton for Appendcts ffty Dollars Pad to Samuel. Connor for Sgnng a Qut Clam, Deed fo ( r Property n XetoVork. Wllam Pevesty of ^Navesnk was aken to the Hahnemann hosptal at ew ork by Dr. George D. Fay on Monday to have an operaton performed for appendcts. Mr. Devesty was sck,11 wnter wth pneumona and he has lot yet fully reganed hs strength. He 1 qute advanced n years and t s feared hat he wll not be able to stand the peraton. Samuel Connor of Navesnk receved 150 last week for sgnng a qut clam to pece of property n New ork n whch e was formerly nterested. A clear ;tle could not be gven to the property mless Mr, Connor and othersga\e a qut slam. They were offered $25 apece to lgn off. Mr. Connor held out for $50 nd hegott. Chldrens day exercses wll be held at he Reformed church at Mddleto-wn rllage on Sunday. The rte of nfant japtsm wll be admnstered, and there rlf be specal musc and a short address the pastor. A strawberry and ce :ream festval wll be held at the paronage of ths church next Wednesday fternoon and evenng. Whtal Crawford and Mr. and Mrs. - Vllam H. Maxson, Jr., of Hoboken, pent Sunday wth Wllam Maxson of Navesnk, Mr. and Mrs. Whtmore eed of New ork are guests at Wllam klaxsons ths week. Emmor Clayton and Bsmarck Ludow of Port Monmouth collded whle dng ther bcycles n opposte drectons last Frday nght. Ludlows leg was njured. Nether wheel was dam- Mr- and Mrs. James A. Barry of Locust Pontwere called to Greenwch,- N. J., last Frday, by the sudden death of Mr. Barrys brother, Edward S. Barry. Benjamn Burdge of Brooklyn, who s mployed on the Long Island ralroad, spent Sunday wth hs mother, Mrs. Jane Burdge of Locust Pont., Russell Swan of Navesok has left Mounts grocery store at that place and wll take charge of Mrs. C. G. Reeds golf grounds at Locust Pont. The New ork and New Jersey telephone company s puttng up a soundproof booth n C. A. Mounts store at Locust Pont. Harvey Lke of Port Monmouth has moved from Robert Taylors house at that place to John Glasss house near ;he shore, Howard Smth of Belford launched hs new sal boat last Snnday. The boat s about twenty feet long and s catrgged... Rev. J. W. Nckelson of Navesnk exhanged pulpts wth Hev. Matthas S. Messer of Oceanc lust Sunday nght. Joseph S. Clark of Belford has had hs house panted. The work was.done by- Frank arnell and Elwood Runyon. Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Bloodgood of Brooklyn spent Sunday wth Msses Belle and Mame Mount of Navesnk., Mr. and Mrs. Tenbroeck Davs of Red Bank spent Sunday wth Mrs. Davss brother. John L. Inglng. Mrs. H, Ballngham of Newark spent last week wth her daughter, Mrs, Leroy Carhart of Navesnk. Samuel Barry of Locust Porss workng for the Atlantc grocery company of Atlantc. Hghlands. Mss Bertha Leonard of Navesnk was confned to the house last week wth neuralga. J. M. Euane of New ork has moved nto Paul LaMarches house at Locust Pont. Henry Schnoor of Port- Monrooutl has started a newspaper route at that place. Mss Emma Swan of Navesnk s confned to tho house wth a heavy cold. Wllam Thompson of Belford s dangerously sck wth pneumona. Isaac Gaunt of Port Monmouth spent Sunday at Sprng Lake. Mes Bertha Swan of Navesnk s vstng at New ork. A Fsh Pound Damaged. A fsh pound belongng to Wllam T. VanDyke & Co., of North Long Branch, was run nto by a sohooner a few days ago nnd was almost totally dettroyed. Retn 1VOMI the. Fuht. The returns from tho Ftzsumons- JelTrey fltcht on Frday, June Oth, wll be receved ft the Sherdan hotel, by the hotel telephone, drect from, tho the Coney Island clubhoune. Re wll be receved by rounds. Adv.

2 CHILDRENS DA. Servces n the Bed Bank and Searby Churches. Chldrens day exercses wll be observed at Grace church next.sunday nght at half-past seven oclock. The exercses wll consst manly of rectatons and sngng by the Sunday-school chldren. A boys chor, under the leadershp of George.Worthley, wll sng several selectons. In addton to the organ and pano a cornet accompanment wll be played by George Hoffmre. The programme s beng arranged by George Worthley, Mrs. Dbben, Mss Alle Mount and Mss Edth Spnnng; Sunday mornng Rev. H. F.Gravatt wll receve probatoners nto the church n full membershp. The Frst Methodst church wll observe Chldrens day next Sunday nght wth specal musc and exercses by the chldren of the Sunclay-achool. Edward Lafetra wll play a flute, Lsle Hesley wll play a voln, and Harry W Lafetra wll play a cornet. The sngng wll be led by the full chor. Chldrens day wll be celebrated at the Presbyteran church next Sunday mornng. At eleven oclock there wll be a baptsm of chldren., Rev, Thaddeus Wlson wll assst Rev. R. G. Davey n the admnstraton of ths sacrament. At nght Rev. R. G. Davey wll delver the address postponed from last Sunday nght on " Lncoln, the elements of hs greatness." The chor wll render specal musc and wll be asssted by J. D. Otterson, Jr., wth tbe^yoloncello." The Chldrens day exercses n the Baptst church wll be held on Sunday nght. A fne programme s beng ar-. ranged. Chldrens day wll be observed at the West Red Bank Msson at four oclock on Sunday afternoon. The church wll be decorated by the flower commttee connected wth the church. There wl be a programme of sngng, rectatons etc. Chldrens day wll be observed n the Shrewsbury Presbjteran church next Sunday mornng. A specal exercse enttled "In Hs- Steps," wll be gjven. Those vcbo wll take the prncpal parts n ths exercse are Besse Cooper, May and Evelyn Sutphn, Lou and Rachel Green, Lbbe Bennett and Emma, Esse and bra Hurley. Mss Nelle Sutphn the organst of the church, wll play the accompanments. Walter B. Parsons wll sng a solo and Edwn Hobbs wll assst wth the cornet. The pastor, Rev Samuel D. Prce; wll gve a talk on " Close to Jesus." Both of the flower commttees connected wth the church wll unte n decoratng the church. " In Sunny June" s the ttle of the Chldrens day servce to be used at the Eatontown Presbyteran cbuch nexl Sunday nght. The Eatontown and Lo. cust Grove schools wll unte n cele bratng the day. The chldren wll be asssted by Malcolm Bell, who wll play the voln, and by Edwn Hobbs, who wll play the cornet. The programme wll consst of a solo, a duet, rectatons and choruses. A short talk on " Flowers and Sunshne" wll also be gven. An Epwortb League Group Meetng, A group meetng of the Epworth leagues of ths dstrct was held n the Red Bunk Methodst clvurch last Frday. Ths dstrct comprses the leagues a Long Branch, North Long Branch, Lttle Slver Far Haven, Oceanc, Seabrgh and Red Bank. John E. Chamberlanpresdent of the Red Bank league, had charge of the servce, The consecraton servce was led by Clarence M. Johnston and the address of welcome was wad by W. A. Sweeney. Rev. B. M. Van Sant of Seabvght spoke on "The besl method of rasng money for Epwortl: league work," and Rev, J. F. Shaw ol North Long Branch spoke on " Pente costal blessngs and how to secure them. The benedcton WBB pronounced by Rev Holmes F. Gravatt. Mssonary Women Meet. The mssonary crcle of the Bapts church held ts regular monthly meetn at Mrs. Chnrlea B. Parsonss on Broa street last Thursday afternoon. Abou 1 25 people wero present. Mrs. Joh Wherry, whose husband s a mssonnr; to Chna and who was thore herself few years ngo, gave an nterestng tnl on mssonary work n that country, progtamtue was rendered, ncludng duot by MIBBOB Emma and Vola Head ley and two soloa by Mrs. Frank Man son. Refreshments wero served durn tlo afternoon. A Talk About a Blcyclo Trp. An nterestng talk on "Remnscence, of a Trp through Northern New or on a Bcycle," was gvon n tho Ocean Presbyteran church last Frday nght b Rev, J. W. NIcklcBon of Nuveanlt, Tl church wna well tlled and tho tslk b Mr. NokkBon proved very entertanng Rev. B. C. HuncOck of Red Bank w«n t< have been py?scnt and mdo n short ml dress, but ho wnb not nblo to bo preaenl It puys to ndvcruuo n tho TO GO TO THE FIGHT. Xumber of Monmouth Countu Men vui be Spectators, Several of the county offcate and bout a dozen of the leadng sportng men of Red^Bank have nrranged to go o the Ftzsmmons-Jeffrey fght at the oney Island clubhouse on Frday nght ths week. A number of Monmouth lounty sportng men have been down to ee Jeffrey tran at hs quarters at Asmry Park, and most of them would lke o see hm wn." Fred Frck s one of te men who. are gong to seej the fght, nd he has arranged to have bulletns of ;be fght, by rounds, receved by telehone at the Sherdan hotel, as fast as ach round s fnshed. ;. Weakflshlng at Far Haven. Wllam Martn and Harry Denns of ar Haven caught nne weakfsh on unday. Wllam Sperb, who s rated,s the best angler at Far Haven, got 23 me day last week. A boarder who was toppng at the Shrewsbury hotel got sght on Saturday. Tranng at Oceanc. Dan Creedan, the prze fghter, began ranng at the Oceanc Inn on Monday, for hs fghtwth Joe Walcott. The Sght takes place at the Lenox athletc 3lub at New ork on the 27th of the resent month. r The Races at Freehold. The race meet of the Freehold drvng :lub on Decoraton day was attended by bout 3,000 people, The gate recepts nd entry fees were over $1,000. DEWES WINNING WA. An Imaglnarv Account of How He Wovld Veal Wth the Sultan. (om the Cleveland Plan Dealer.) A man wth a- gray mustache was tendng on the palace doorstep rngng he bell. Presently the door was jerked open and a swarthy offcal appeared on the threshold. "Ah, Mustapha," sad the gray mustached man, " s the Sultan n ths mornng?" The swarthy offcal scowled. "The commander of the fathful s wthn," he growled, -"but you can not see hm." ""I have no partcular desre to see hm," sad the gray-mustacled man, gently. "I only called concernng a trflng bll he owes the Unted States. Just ask hm, Mustapha, f he cant oblge me wth that lttle Armenan award ths mornng. I happened to be n the neghborhood and thought I mght possbly strke hm at a favorable moment. Wll you tell hm that, Mustapha f" And who are you?" snorted the ndgnant offcal, If you wll get upon your mnareted roof," repled the gray-ruustachedman, quetly, "you wll see my flagshp over n that drecton. I havent a card wth me.but just say to the Sultan, please, that Admral George Dewey s at the door, and ". But Mustapha had suddenly vanshed. Three mnutes later he reappeared. "How wll you have t, mghty Admral?" he breathlessly asked as he touched hs forehead at the callers feet. "Make t gold," sad the Admral, and let a couple of your boys chuck t n a wheelbarrow and run t down to my steam launch. Gve the Sultan and the ades my best regards, Mustapha. Eh, whats ths?" For the humbled offcal was projectng a bt of blue and yellow pasteboard toward hm. " That, mghty ruler of the wave," repled the salaamng Mussulman, s a season tcket whereby to you the commander of the fathful extends the freedom of the sacred precncts of the harem." The gray-mustached Admral bowed as he took the card, and smled merrly as he walked away. PAING TOR DEAD COWS. A Trcky Fa fllers Scheme for Feecnu a Ralway. "It was a great scheme," laughed the clam agent, "and f I hadnt by the merest chhnce tumbled to the old mans game t mght have been gong on yet. Some tme ago I was notfed that a man down the road had had a cow klled by the cars and that he had put n a clam for damages. I looked the matter up, and as t was perfectly straght on the face of t there wan nothng to do but to settle wth the old man on the bebt terms that I could get, I dd so, and was hardly back when I was agan notfed that the old.man had had another cow klled by the cars. " I looked nto that clam a lttle mon carefully, but t was all rght as far as could see, and I settled wth hm. Before I had had tme to catcl a tran hack to the cty tho old man Rent me won that he had had another cow klled b;, the cars. Ths struck me ns beng very strange, partcularly so as none of tho tran crews hnd reported kllng anv cowa. Moreover, they all. dened when questoned about t, "I wont out whore tho cow wna stll lyng by the ado of tho track and found t almost cut to peces. I was about t( fettlo wth tho old rantv m thore wns n other way out of t, when Ida ten-year old boy came runnng up. "Pop 1ho gasped, thoros anotlo: dead I Hurry up nntl well dr/r ho: down hero am malto tho old rnlrou thnk they have hlled two ths tme. "Well, tho truth of the matter wn that tho old nnno stock had boon, dynf from some cauho, and ho wth great foro thought had dragged tho votnh dow on thu rulrtmd gndo, pondul u fov hokh n thom wth a poknxe and the calmly notlktl tho ralroad to nettle." ELECTRICIAN. Wrng for Electrc Lghts. Battery, Magneto and Pneumatc Bells. Telephones a Specalty. 32 Broad ««... (ted Bank, N. J. * P.O. Box ?" Estlmp(e» for contracts on Applcaton. JOSEPH G. E8CHELBACH, 125 Wet Froflt street, near Pearl, Bed Bank, N. J. Kreugers Beer and F.tll. Schafert celebrated Welner Beer always on draugbt. ALSO BARTHOLOMA ROCHESTER -BEER IN BOTTI.ES.- Bcycle Skrts Made to Order for One Dollar. Another Busy Week! Ideal shoppng weather and extraordnary prces galore; Large crowds have been around the WASH GOODS counter and the CORSET and UNDERWEAR departments. Ths week youll fnd the,, store " alve " wth bargans..,, The Suts, the Skrts, the Slk Wasts and the Shrt Wast prces have fallen under the weght of our determnaton to have a busy w e e k. - I Wrappers Lght, medum and dark, made of lawn, percale, dmty, prnt, etc. Let [-tle prces preach the mportance to. you of ths specal sellng. That the values and effects are most desrable goes wthout sayng. They are yours for I 59c, 79c. and 98c. Corsets We have the sole agency for the new "Cresco" J, corsets. To ntroduce same ths weeks prce for one par only to each customer, at 980.; also a lot of summer corsets, szes 18 to 30, at 29c. and 38c. Shrt Wasts" for lades, msses and lttle grls, black, whte and colored, every knd of materal the market shows. ou cannot have too many shrt wasts and such a chance to buy them as ths sale of ours offers doesnt occur every day; weve every prce from $3.98 down to 38c. Parasols A sample lot, f no two of a knd. We have put prces on these that wll make buyers of you n a hurry, we are sure. Take your choce at 98c, $1.56 and $2.98. Lades Talor-Made Suts at Cood-by Prces. We^are carng nothng Jfor profts, gvng no heed tocost; our only object s to close out every sut we have at such low prces to make t advantageous for you. Suts worth up to $18.00 go at $9.98; $10.00 Suts must go at $4.98, and so on. JOSEPH SALZ, Red Bank. WE RENT AND SELL SEWING MACHINES. Telephone 24a. Fne Carrages! At my carrage store, nearly opposte the Globe hotel, Red Bank, wll be found a com-. plete lne of Carrages and Wagons of.all knds, ncludng RUNABOUTS,. SURRIES, BUGGIES, TRAPS, SPEEDING WAGONS, BUSINESS WAGONS, SPINDLE WAGONS, JUMPSEATS, ETC. These wagons are the new styles, well bult, very desrable n every way, and very reasonable n prce. F. B. GOWD, <: FRONT STREET, Nearly Opposte Globe Hotel, l RED BANK, N. J. J Hot Weather Clothng. We are ready to. supply, your wants for hot weather.clothng n thn suts of serge, flannels and crash fabrcs. Crash and duck trousers. Crash trousers up to 50-nch".wast. Neglgee shrts of all sorts, 25c. to-$.25,, The popular slk front shrt, 49c. and $1.00. Hats, Gaps and Furnshngs. A. LUDLOW, 19 BROAD ST., RED BANK. Old Enough, Fne enough, mellowenough to sell farly at $-.75- Preferrng t to go faster we place t at $ Great Western Rye.. JKUI&CI. Summer Photos, Pette Cards, Carbonette Fnsh,, Are very pleasng pctures for hot weather both n prce and fnsh. Dehart & Letaon make them for $1,35 per dozen. ou wll fnd ther Studo acool place to wat and pass, the tme away. Now s the tme to have vews taken of your Resdence DeHART & LETSON. PURE MILK. Why pay more when you can get the best for fve cents per quart. Delvered every mornng and afternoon. George lance Patterson. SOFT-SHELL CRABS Fresh from the Shrewsbury Rver are now beng served- Restaurant and DnngJRoom Open Sundays. Sxteen ncely furnshed rooms, whte enameled furnture. Suppers for Theater Partes at Reasonable Rates. Our Lades Watng Room, overlookng Broad street, s 11 pleasant and comfortable stoppng place whle watng,for the trolley or when shoppng n Red Bank. Parcels cared for wthout charge. All; tolet accessores, BROWER & FRICK, PROPRIETORS.

3 v THE SALT MAKING INDUSTR. Mow ths Necessary Artcle s Pre,- ". pared for the Market. ^Although the ndustry of catchng Mrds by Bprnklng salt on tber tals has never attaned the development whch t once promsed to acheve, there are. epough other demands for salt, to pake ts producton an extensve busness. In round numbers, 8,600,000,000 pounds : of salt are needed every year n ths country to offset the nherent freshness of Amercans, and of other people,, to whom we sell cured hams and the lke. Of ths amount about ffty pounds per capta an eghth, or more than an eghth, s mported, and all the rebt s home-made. As yet scarcely more than one per cent of our Amercan product s Bent abroad,-but ths branch of the trade s slowly ncreasng and the mportaton of salt s steadly dmnshng. - There are two general sources from \vhch salt,s obtaned, natural brnes and sold deposts.- A number of- theores have been advanced to^account for the latter. The general mpresson among; scentfc men s that rock salt has 4 been formed by evaporaton from ancent seas, whch had become nclosed n some way. In confrmaton of ths noton t s ponted out that deposts are beng made to-day at the bottom of several well-known salt lakes. But doubts have been expressed as to the applcablty of the explanaton to such thck strata as those at Stassfurt, Germany, 1,800 feet deep, and at Sperenberg, near Berln, 3,600 feet thck. However ths may be, the substance s found, n greater or less purty, n all parts of the world. The mnerals. assocated wth t are those whch are apt to exst n the ocean. What s commonly known as "salt" s prncpally chlorde of sodum. But chlordes of lme and magnesum, sulphates of lme and magnesum, and even mnute quanttes of oddes apd bromdes are usually mngled wth the chef consttuent. For a long tme Turks Island, n the West Indes, was a copous contrbutor to ths countrys supply of rock salt. But a number of mnes are now beng worked n the Unted States. The most famous at present are those at Lvona, N.. The salt s taken out n sold chunks, ground, passed through seves of dfferent mesh to be graded accordng to coarseness and put up n bags or barrels. There s a famous depost n Lousana, much nearer the surface of jtle ground and more easly worked, whch wll be an mportant producer some day. There are many salt deposts n ths country whch are made avalable, not by mnng, but by the pumpng of brne from ther vcnty. Through a largepart of Mchgan, for nstance, and from the central part of New ork state, out as far asbtfffao, there are beds varyng n thckness from 112 to 800 feet, and lyng from 600 to 2,600 feet below the surface. All through these two regons, as well as n Northern Oho, wells have been sunk, aod the brne s pumped up lke ol. Fresh-water sprngs supply the water, no doubt, and Ibs, flowng over and through the sold salt, dssolves the latter, and puts t wthn mans reach. In a few places there_ are salt sprngs whch eject ther mneral-laden fluds wtnout coaxng. There are fve prncpal methods of treatng brnes n order to get the salt from them. One of the oldest systems a that so extensvely employed at Syracuse. The brne s poured nto enormous, shallow, wooden vats, and exposed to the sun and wnd to dry. Whenever there s a ranstorm covers are drawn over them to exclude addtonal water. Preca u tons are a lso ta ken aganst the admsson of drt. The product obtaned n ths way s called "solar salt." Owng to the slowness of the evaporaton, process the grans thus formed are coarse. To hasten matters, artfcal heat a often used. For nstance, rows of kettles are arranged so that coal fres may be mantaned under them. As the water bols off the salt crystalze9 n the bottom of the receptacle. By regulatng the degree of beat appled, and provdng for marked dfferences of temperature n two sets of kettles, grans can be seoured the fner ones resultng from, the more rapd evaporaton. Ths method s an ancent one., In Wyomng county, N.., artfcal heat s used n another way. Metal pans, about 125 feet long, twenty-fve feet wde and perhaps two and one-half feet deep, are warmed by furnaces drectly under them. Coal s used n the latter. The heat beng applet drectly. The system s known as the "drect heat" plan. It s further characterstc of the process that t s conducted wth open pans. An ndrect mode of brngng the heat to bear on the brne s to lne the vats, whch are smaller receptacles than those just descrbed, wth steam ppes, whch run around the nner edge oj the / same and transmt ther heat to the flud. The ndrect heat apparntus s called a "graner." Fnally, t has beenfound feasble to save fuel and obtaned a purer salt by nclosng the brne n a tght ves&el from whch the nr has been almost entrely exhausted. Ths s called a " vacuum pan." It s a, well-known fact that evaporaton takes place at a lower temperature when the ar pressure s reduced than at ordnary pressures. Ths s tho reuson why water bols nt a lower temperature on a mountan top than on a plan- In the vacuum pan tle work can be done by heatng the brne to only 112 degrees. Vacuum pans are n servco at three places n New ork State Watkns, Ludlowvlle and Slver Sprngs. The product of the vucuum-pan process s a beautful artcle, and commando u hgher prce thnn other saltb. Tho, jarrnrn form n! cubes nstead of flntps. The salt obtaned from tho ndrect hent (steam ppe) system s also of an excellent qualty. ears uco there was a prejudce n tho mnds or somo provson packers ngnnut Amercan sut,, because It wan not quto no pure- no the more fastdouh buyeh wanted. That objecton n tlo nnn, a just one. no doubt WOH bhed on tho qunlty of Onondagu ault, whch contans a gooddeal of Ilmo md was obtaned by eolar ovnporntlon. But now that the gnuner or, ndrect lont proccbfl and the vacuum pan hnvo como Into voguo In ths country, and purer brnes have been found, t s possble to get as good a qualty of salt as can be had, anywhere n the world. There s now no reason for mportng the Englsh artcle any more. Salt has been obtaned from sea water n many parts of the world. Owng to the foulness of the dranage, nto the ocean from the land t s desrable to be partcular about the source of supply. Moreover, there are regons n the tro]> c^ where the salnty of the water s greater than t s n colder clmates, and where the same amount of labor wll yeld a larger quantty of solds. The ndustry s carred on, however, n a modest way on Cape Cod, and n Brstol County, Mass. A more consderable busness s done n San Francsco Bay, n the county of Alameda. From twentyfve to thrty establshments are n operaton n that part of the country. Other factores for gettng salt from the sea are stuated n Los Angeles and San Dego. The salt bedb of Amerca are found n varous geologcal formatons. Those of Western- New ork. Northern Oho and some parts of Mchgan represent the Sluran perod, when the earlest forms of anmal lfe made ther appearance. The deposts near East Sagpaw, Mchgan, belong to the Carbonferons age, whch s much later. The Kansas beds are placed n the Trassc seres by Professor Robert Hay, and some of the Vrgna wells tap Tertary rock. From the taste of the ocean of to-day t s apparent that a good deal of saltsstllleft undeposted. The work of soldfcaton and storage has been gong on, then, more or less ntermttently, for an almost ncalculable perod, and yet s not fnshed. The purty of salt n a commercal sense depends more upon the knd than the amount of other mnerals mxed wth the chlorde of sodum. Sulphates of calcum and sodum are less objectonable than chlordes of calcum and magnesum. The latter mpart a btter flavor to the salt. A sample contanng from one to one and one-half per cent pf the former mpurty s a farly marketable commodty, but half that amount of the.chlordes or carbonates of calcum and magnesum, s a seroub objecton. In addton to the chemcal composton trf a brand of Bat, the buyer s apt to consder also the appearance and mechancal condton to some extent. Looks count for good deal n ths busness, as n many, others. THE MACHINE GUN. Two Dstnct Tupes That Do Deadly " Work n Battle. > There are two dstnct types of the modern machne gun of rfle calber the sngle-barrel automatc, n whch the energy of recol, or of a porton of the powder gases, mantans a constant fre after the frst shot s dscharged by hand, and the mult-barrel type, n whch from two to ten barrels are grouped together, the operatons of loadng and frng them beng performed through the smple revoluton of a hand crank. The rate of fre, even from sngle-barrel guns, has reached 700 shots per mnute, and wth the mult-barrel type 1,200. There s no more deadly weapon than ths arm when t a sklfully banded aganst masses of troops wthn ts range, ether n steady am, or, f pvoted, swept slowly through an arc of tran. " A buzz-saw of death," says one observer of ts work; "t scoured the hlls lke a steam hose," says another; "the devl that apts bullets," the Svrazs named t, and one of Looengulas fghtng ndunas descrbes ts death-hall thus: I led my men on, but saw them fallng lke cut jorn. We then halted, knelt and fred ; but stll they fell. We lay down protected by our shelds; but most of the remander were klled. So I crawled bank:and fled." The place of the machne gun n the attack seems stll undetermned. It s unquestonably an ad to nfantry n close fghtng, Bnce under such escort a constant fre can be mantaned. Agan, n hgh angle frng a halstorm of bullets can be raned upon the heads of men behnd ntrenchments. Its effectveness n defence, however, s bfyond doubt. Nothng can equal t n stoppng the rush of desperate men or n renforcng the fre of nfantry. - The place of the arm, therefore, s essentally n the reserve, as a gun of poston. Why Men Do Not Marry. The extravagant theory of- the young people as to the necessty for keepng up a certan style a reason why so many of them put off marrage year after year and fnally drft nto the rremedable stage of celbacy. Grls wthout fortunes are supported n dleness and luxury by over-ndulgent parents tnd expected to be thus cared for after narrnge. The annual cost of such a grls mantenance s more than the ncome of a young man, unless he be exceptonally fortunate. The fault les wth parents. Unless they are prepared to gve a fortune wth a daughter when Bhe marres, they have no moral rght to mnke her unft for the poston of wfe n the home of a young man who has hs fortune to make. And ths s not a trval mstake, for t s a great and ncreasng souroe of personal unhappnesb, and t nevtably promotes mmoralty. InBterfd of thousands of bachelors and spnsters n boardng-houses n Baltmore, Washngton and other ctes, there should be thousands of modest homes, n whch young marred couples would bo helpng eaoh other to realze the dreams of ther youth. The old-fashoned vrtue, thrft, domestc, economy, savng up for n rany day, needs a revval, not especally n tho IIOMRB of the very poor, but n those who have far ncomes and whoso ambton to make a show prompts them to adopt the ImbU and ape, tho ways of tho very rch. Wlen tho Slavery Endod. " Ah 1" ho cred, kneelng at hor feet, "way you wll marry mo, and I wll bo your devoted BIUVC for llfu." " Arse, Henry," B1U> answered, " you wll not do. That IB what my frst IIUHband flud, and before wo had got farly out of tho church ho began U-llIng mo how he wanted me to wenr my hnr," A WILD ANIMAL FARM. Beasts of the Jungle to he Rased on Islands n Florda. A wld anmal farm s to be started on three of the slands among the Florda Keys. The scheme was devsed by the Rnglng Brothers, who are preparng a stock ahead for ther crcus. Wld anmals of every descrpton are to be brought from Asa, Afrca and South Amerca and turned loose n ther new homes. Parts of the slands are wooded, and n some places there are thck under-growths lke, jungles. The beasts wll be dvded nto three classes, accordng to ther ablty to get along together, and each class wll have an sland all to tself. Expedton are now beng ftted out to make extensve search n every part of the world for zoologcal specmens. The hunters depart wth the ntenton of brngng back from Asa and Afrca great numbers of tgers, elephants, lons, hppopotam, rhnocer, sacred oxen, hyenas, graffes, porcupnes and all the natves, of the hot countres; and from North and South Amerca black ana cnnamon bears, mountan lons and specmens of all the anmals nhabtng the Western Hemsphere. - Specally desgned boats wll be provded for the transportaton of the anmals to the slands. The completon of a work of such magntude wll requre some tme, and t s expected t wll be at least fve years before the farm s n perfect workng order. When the anmals are once landed on the slands ther surroundngs and food wll be as nearly as possble lke that to whch they are. accustomed n, ther natve haunts.. The hot clmate anmals wll be allowed to construct ther own dens n the woods and jungles, and calves, goats and sheep wll be drven out among them, so that they can brng down ther own provsons. Snall fresh water streams run almost across all three slands and empty nto the sea, so that the anmak that aren constant need of fresh water wll be suppled. Large and strongly bult houses wll be erected for the keepers. When t s desred to capture,any of the anmals regular huntng^expedtons wll be organzed to take them, just as they are trapped on ther natve heaths. But n ths case the hunters wll have an mmense advantage over the system used n the past. They wll know every foot of the sland, andwll be tbus enabled to lay traps for the wld beasts andxapture them wthout the least danger to lfe or lmb. On account of the dangers vstors never wll be allowed on the sland, and no boats wll be allowed to touch the shores exceptng those belongng to, the crcus. SURGERS SEARCHLIGHT. The Part. Played by Electrcty tt the Work of Medcal.Vel. A great deal of nterest has of late years been taken n medcal and surgcal subjects by laymen, and ths a not surprsng, snce the advances and dscoveres that have been made are such as to command attenton because of ther nov eltyand startlng character. Surgery, t s true, has always been more or less of an exact scence, and even n ancent tmes very serous operatons were successfully undertaken whch, are nowadays often consdered modern. But n the lght of revelatons regardng the germ theory of dsease, antseptc treatment of wounds, preservatve surgery, electrcty n medcne, organc extracts and ther admnstratons as remedes for varous dseases, t s notstrange that people are constantly on t watch for some dscovery even more orllant and startlng than anythng that has htherto been proclamed. Wonderful are the strdes whch have been made by the applcaton of electrcty n surgery and medcne. The electrc motor turns the drll of the dentst, bores out the noses of manknd n the hands of the rhnologsts, and may yet run the saw and the trepne of the surgeon. The electrc lght s made to llumnate all the cavtes and nterors of the human body, so that " the pestlence that walketh n darkness" n the black reces3 of the vscera s sought out and drven away by the electrc searchlght. It s nothng now to put an endoscope nto the. stomach and scrutnze ts walls from ont? end to the other, and n a dark room the very sze of the stomach s determned by the translumnaton of- the abdomnal walls when a lght s turned on nsde of that vscus. The use of the X-rays has brought about even more marvelous results n the exploraton of the human body. It s an age of wonders..»..». How to Quet Nervous Chldren. A lttle grl frequently fanced she saw bears and tgers whenever she happened to jwake n thje nght. Presumably she dreamed of some danger, maybe on account of havng eaten too much for supper, or havng eaten the wrong knd of food. At any rate, she frequently awoke cryng n the nght, and n her fear nterpreted the dm outlnes of a dress or a curtan as a fearful beast that was about to attack her. The best thng to do s to deal tonderly wth eual fances and remove the chld as far as possble from the object that hus caused her exctement. Then, f you can do so wthout dsturbng the other chldren, lght the lamp and let t fall full on the thng that has gven rso to her fear. Be slow, and express your opnon frst as a knd of prelmnary assumpton that tho bear tuny after all be mammas shrt or tho curtan movng n a draught; and when ths comfortng probablty s understood, follow up your advantage and declare t to bo a good oko thut a harmless pece of cloth ulould look lke u fearful anmal. Make tho chld flmle at the ncongruty of her fancy, and her laugh wll cure tho horror of tle dream and dspel tho nfthtmnro m HIIHHIUIH: (IIH- ROIVIB the t llnnt a Job V Somebody wants jflt tho nort of man you arc; you wll probablyllnd hm wth on advertsement n Tne UKOIHTKHS want column, It coat 25eentH for thrty d Adv. Thfe Town Hall CAN BE HAD FOR Dances, a* - * Partes, etc. For terms and partculars call on or address.. _ JOHN T. TETLE, CUSTODIAN, " BED BANK, - NEW JERSE. I I8 I WALL PAPERS., AT HARRISONS. 37 ltond street. Red Bank, N. J. Farm Machnery For A fulllneof McCormck Bnders,Mowt g-machnes wth roller bearngs, Hay Rakes, Tedders, Pars Green Guns. Puffers, Rdng and one-horse Cultvators, vz; Oho, Planet Jr., Iron Age, etc. Acme Harrowsand Sod Cutters, Plow Repars and all knds of farm machnery. Bnder Twne and Ol onhand. Also one platform-sprng grocery wagon, one 8-sprng grocery wagon, two secondhand two-horse wagons. C. H. HURLE, Shrewsbury,. - New Jersey, The Man Behnd the Gun, " of whom we heard so much last year, stood for the protecton of all the great nterests whch were menaced n the nternatonal conflct of Just so Lfe Insurance stands for Protecton to the home and M for the famly. Aval yourself of that protecton. -WRITE- The Prudental BSrance Co. of Amerca. John F. Dryden, Presdent. Lesle D. Ward, V. Prest. Edgar B. Ward, 2d V. Pres. and Counl. Forrest F. Dryden, Secy. H. KOLBENSPLA, Supt, Box 116, Broad and Wallace Sts., Red Bank, N. J. W. II. HOUSTON, Genl Agt., Rversde Ave., Red Bank, IS. J. LOUIS. MANNING, Genl Aet., Monmouth St., Red Bank, N. J. At $2.75, $3.50, and $5.00 each. Strongly made, natural fnsh frames, wre cloth panelng. COTTON HAMMOCKS at $1,00, $1.25, $1.50 and $2.00 each. MEXICAN SISAL HAMMOCKS at 90 cents, $1.10 and upwards. These hammocks can be left anywhere, as ran and dew do not hurt them. n red, green and natural fnsh at 98 cents. RED BANK, N. J. I

4 THE R I> BANK_ REGISTER. JOHN». COOK.. Edtor and VvopHetor should reach us not ltyer than Wednesday raomldg. sample coplesof THE ItKasEtt and prnted rates of advertsng wll be sent to any address on applcaton. Advertsers have the prvlege of changng ther announcements as of tea as tneydelre wthout extra charge. Readng notces wll be Inserted for 10 cents a lne, each nserton. These notces wll he placed at the bottom of columnsand markedddt). Obtuary notces and poetry, lodge resolutons, etc., wll be Inserted for 10 cents per lne. Notces of brths, marrages and deaths publshed free. WEDNESDA. JUNE f, On Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of nexfweek there wll be an exhbton of the work of the pupls of the publc school n the- manual tranng department. The ntroducton of ths class of work n the publc schools of New Jersey s coupartvely recent,,though n other states and n foregn countres t has been a promnent feature of publc nstructon for many years. The exhbton wll be gven on the frst floor of the Mechanc street school buldng. The school trustees and school teachers-are desrous that the taxpayers of the town, as well as the parents of the school chldren, shall vst he school on these days and judge for themselves of the character and value of ths work. A CLUBS RECEPTION. An Enjovable Jltvtnu of the Sh-ewHburu Readng Club. The Shrewsbury readng club held ts annual recepton at the home of A. - Holmes Borden of Shrewsbury last Frday nght. About 180 people were pres-. ent from Shrewsbury, Eatontpwn, Lttle.Slver and Red Bank.»The Borden house s large and well adopted to gatherngs of ths sort. The guests assembled n the large re- cepton hall and dnng room and the frst landng of the starway afforded a,place from whch those who took part n the exercses could be seen as well as heard. Everythng conduced to make the recepton one of the most enjoyable ones ever gven by" the>club. Mrs. W. E. Nafew., the presdent of the club, made the address of welcome. Mss Carre Kng rected, Mrs. Stevens sang a solo, Mss Blanche Spnnng played a pano solo and Mrs. Arthur Swft read n paper on "The Lterature of the Twenteth Century." There was also musc by an orchestra. Refreshments were served at the close of the 1 lterary exercses and a socal season followed. The recepton was to have been held at Charles M. Patterson*. Mr. Patterson offered the club the use of hs house about, a month ago. The readng club, followng ts usual custom, nvted the Eatontown club to ts recepton. Ths angpred Mr. Patterson, aud he wrote a very tart.letter to Mrs. Nafew, the presdent of the sooety. Ths letter was so severe n ts terms that Mr. Patterson, after he sent t, and after thnkng about the matter a. jfew days, went to Mrs. Nafew and got the letter back. Then le wrote another letter to the Bocety of smlar ntent but mlder n phrase, and ; ths letter was read at a recent meetng of the readng.club..after the letter was read tn the club the members decded not to hold ther meetng at Mr. Pattereoas. A.,..Holues Borden offered the use of hs house whch was accepted, and :the recepton, the.success of whch atone tme seemed to be mperled, turned out to be one of the mo6t enjoyable ever held by "the club. The club held ts lust meetng for the season at John Tralords yesterday afternopn. Ths meetng closed up the twenteth yenr of the clubs exstence. The club wll not meet agan untl.november. Advertsng for a Sexton. Tha trustees of tho Oceanport Methodst church wll hold a meetng to-nght n the church to receve bds for te eextonshp of the church. - Rchard B. Herrng, the present sexton, has held the poston for number of yenrs. He receved a salary of $90 a year. The trustees of tle church thought that ths wns too hgh a salary for achurch wth such n smnll congregaton to pay, The trustees feel confdent of gettng.several bds under tho sum formerly pad to Mr. Herrng. A Festval at Holmdol. A strawberry festvl wns held at the Holndel Reformed church lust Wednesday nght for tho bwcflt of the Sunluy- Hchool lbrary. Tlos who wated on, tho tables wore Msscu Cora nnd Nelle Lme, Ella VunOlonf, Mnggo Beers, FrnnceB Mngtc, Luvnlu Lunc and Rachel Conovor. A tnblu whch w,v» not on tho lawn wns n charge, of C. W. VuClcnf and Edgr Schnnck,. Tho Hum cleared W(\n $ A Tramp Sent to Jal. Wllam Glbert, utmn, was arreeled tln mornng by Cowtnblo Wlson for beng drunk and dworderly on Muplo Hvcnuc. Jusllco Chld n<jnt Glbert to tho county jnll for thrty <luyn. TOWN TALK. The conng to ths country of. Penelope--Stout, her shpwreck on Sandy Hook, the attack of the Indans who lef t her for dead, her marvelous recovery, her captvty and her restoraton to the whte settlers, s an old story^ but t,be comes more nterestng as tme goes on. A correspondent sends_ THE REGISTER ths story of Penelope Stout, as t has been compled from Smths hstory of New Jersey, publshed n 1765, and from Benedcts hstory of the Baptsts of the state. From Penelope Stout and her husband, Rchard Stout, sprang the entre famly of Stouts, now so numerous n every part of New Jersey. In 1712, when she ded at the age^of HO.years. she left 50S drect descendants. A genealogcal expert recently made a" computaton, gvng due allowance to the smaller, famles nowadays than were common n early tmes, and even wth ths allowance he fgured out that, the numberof drectdescendantsof Penelope Stout at the present tme s probably not less than 100,000. Wth the women descendants marryng nto other famles they lost the name of Stout, and probably not one n a hundred of her descendants who are now lvng can trace ther an- CPStry back to ths remarkable woman. The story of Penelope Stout s one of the most nterestng passages n the hstory of New Jersey and she has been aptly styled as one of the " mothers of the state.". Rdng bcycles on the sdewalks of Red Bank must come to an end for ths season. The commssoners have nstructed the marshals to enforce the bcycle ordnance, and all persons who rde on the sdewalks are to be arrested and fned. OBITUAR. John J. Mullgan. John J. Mullgan of Atlantc Hghlands ded last Saturday, aged 32 years. Death was due to a general collapse produced by overwork. Hs health frst faled hm about two months ago, at whch tme, on the advce of hs physcap, he went south. Two weeks ago he returned home, but there was no change for the better n hs condton. He was able to be around a lttle each day but could keep no food on hs stomach. Frday afternoon he was down to hs place of busness. Saturday mornng he had a hemorrhage of the stomach and sank gradually untl he ded. Mr. Mullgan was engaged n the plumbng busness and was one of the most enterprsng ctzens of Atlantc Hghlands. He was actve n the board of trade and was a generous contrbutor to every publc, enterprse.- Prevous to bs removal to Atlantc Hghlands sx years ago.he lved at Long Branch, where he had been employed by Bazley & Burns. He was a member of the Knghts of Columbus of Long Branch and of the Grand Vew hose company of Atlantc Hghlands. He leaves a wfe and sx 6hldren. The oldest chld s nne years old. He leaves also a father and several brothers and ssters at New Brunswck..The funeral was held on Tuesday at ten oclock at St. Agnes church and was conducted hy Rev. T. A. Roche. The Grand Vew hose company attendedthe funeral. The body was bured n the cemetery at Headdens Corner. J/j«. John /lasaelberj/e: Mrs. John Hasselberger, daughter of Mrs. Anne O. Parker of Newman Sprngs, ded at her home at New ork early last Thursday mornng. She gave brth to a chld on the prevous Tuesday. Her condton was consdered favorable untl Wednesday, when she had an attack of weakness. She dd not rally, but ded early Thursday mornng. The chld stll lves. Mrs. Hasselberger was 22 years old and was marred to Mr. Hasselburger about a year and a half ago. The body was brought to Red Bank on Saturday mornng nnd the funeral wns held at two oclock on Saturday afternoon from her mothers house at Newman Sprngs. The servce was conducted by Rev. J. K. Mannng. There were many handsome floral peces and t requred a specal wagon to take them to the Far Vew cemetery, where tho body was bured. Tho pull benrers were George R. Lnnb, Charles Mntou, Theodore Colyor and Wllam Chld of Red Bank, and August Ilerlck and Harry Montnguo of Now ork. John Ile.nv lrower. John Henry Brower of Bench street wns found dead n hs bed last Wednesday nght; HownH54yeuHold nnd death wabcnubcd, byltrl dsease. Mr. Browor was employed on Frank Blodgctts plnco nt Llncrofl. Two weeks ngo he (]ut work on account of not feelng well. He remaned homo but wan not confned to tho IIOUHO, LtHt Wednesday nght le to u herty supper an UHUIII, nnd went onrly to bed. About leu oclock, when Mm. Drawer went to bed, HIIO found her Inmband lwtl, lkhdh IIIH wfo M>. Hrower loavth four chldren. They ate George Brower.Tlle Brower and Mrs. held on Monday at the Catholc church Theodore Esters of Red Bank and Mrs. at the Hghlands. Rev. T. A. Roche of Rney Holmes of Atlantc Hghlands. Atlantc Hghlands had charge of the He leaves also a brother, Frank Brower servce. ol RedBank, Mr. Brower was nsured Srs. Deborah Perrt\e. n the Prudental nsurance company for Mrs. Deborah Perrne ded last Wednesday at the home of her daughter, $188. The company was notfed of hs death Thursday, mornng at eght oclock Mrs. E. P. Taylor of Mddletown, aged and at twelve oclock the clam was 83 years. Death was caused by paralyss pad. of the throat, wth whch she had been The funeral was held at the.house on sck a month. Mrs, Perrne was the Frday afternoon at two oclock, Rev. granddaughter of Capt. John Dey, an Charles E,,Hll had charge of the servce. The. body was bured at West Long : Branch, Srs, John Osborne. Mrs. Rebecca Jane Oshorne, wfe of John Osborne of Belford, ded at the Hahnemann hosptal at New ork last Saturday from the effects of an operaton performed for appendcts. She was 82 years old. She had been sck about two" weeks and on Thursday she was taken to the hosptal. The operaton was performed on Frday and. Saturday afternoon she ded,, She revved after the operaton was performed and was conscous up to wthn a few mnutes of her death. Mrs. Osborne leaves a husband and two small chldren. They are Ethel and Alma Osborne. Mrs. Osborne was a member of the Methodst church of Belford and a teacher n the Sunday-school. The body was brought to Belford on Monday on the steamer Wm. V. Wlson and the funeral was. held on Monday nght at the house. Rev. J. Ward Clark had charge,of the servce. On Tuesday mornng the body was taken to Brdgeton, Mrs. Osbornes former home, for bural. Harry Denns. Harry Denns, aged sx years, son of Wllam F. Denns of Brdg avenue, ded on Monday mornng of scarlet fever. He attended the publc school on Shrewsbury avenue and was n the second grade. He was consdered one of the brghtest pupls n hs clasfc. Ob Frday he attended school as- usual and early Saturday mornng he! complaned of beng sck. Dr. Wllam B. Armstrong was sent for and he pronounced the dsease scarlet fever. Dr. Armstrong forbd anyoneenterng or leavng the house. The chld lost conscousness soon after t was taken sck, and ded on Monday wthout reganng conscousness. The body was bured yesterday afternoon at Far Vew. No one was allowed to.see the body and no funeral servce was held. A few words were spoken at the grave by Rev. E. C. Hancock.. HI*s Lltla Myers. Mss Lda Myers, daughter of Martha Myers;,of Belford, ( ded on Tuesday of last week, aged forty years. Death was caused by Brghts dsease. She had been sck a long tme, but for a week prevous to her death she had been unusually actve. On Monday she was around the house and got dnner for the famly. That nght she was strcken down and was unconscous untl her death. She leaves three ssters and two brothers. They are Anne Myers, Mrs. Samuel Wallng, Mrs. Edwn McFeeley and Wllam and Lews Myers. She was an actve member of the (> Belford Methodst church and taught a class n Sunday-school. The funeral wns held on Frday at the Methodst church, Rev. J. Ward Clark had charge of the servce. Among the floral offerngs was a broken column from her Sunday-school class. Mrs, Warren S. Conkln. Mrs. Sarah Elzabeth Conkln, wfe of Warren S. Conkln of Mddletown, ded at Ocean Grove yesterday, aged about ffty years. Death was caused by con sumpton. Two years ago Mr. Conkln leased hs farm, on account of hs wfes falng health, and they have snco spent part of ther tme at Ocean Grove. Mrs. Conkln was the daughter, of Danel Wlson of Mddletown. A husband and one son, George N. Conkln of. Mddletown, survve her. She leaves also a sster and two brothers. They are Mrs, George M. Hendrckson and Wl lam Wlson of Mddletown and James Wlson of New ork, The funernl wll ba leld.dt the Mddletown Baptst church on Frday mornng nt eleven oclock. John V. Mount. John P. Mount, son of Rchard Mount, tender of the drawbrdge at tho Hghlands, ded last Thursday, aged nne years. Ho wns taken sck several weeks ngo wth typhod malara. He had nearly recovered from ths dsease when he Inul a rclapso and hs death ensued. The funeral wns held on Sunday at the Catholc church at tho Hghlands, Rev. T, A. Roche, of Atlantc HghlnudH conducted tho servce, and tho bural wrwat Mount Olvet cemetery nt.hoiuuiimih Corner. Hm. IHItltct north. Mrs. Brdget Worth, wfo of Wllam Worth of tho Hghlands, ded last Frday of dysentery, aged forty yetuu Re- Hdes n hunband nh,e leaves woven chldren/ tho vukbl of whom IH not over Jw^lyo yours of nge. Tho funeral \ynt» offcer of Revolutonary fame. The funeral was held at the Freehold Baptst church on Saturday afternoon. Owen Ive.s Borden. Owen lves Borden, son of M. C,.J}. Borden, a summer resdent of Oceanc, ded at New ork on Frday of pneumona. He was nneteen years old and had been sck but for days. He was a student at ale and had a large crcle of frends. The funeral was held yesterday mornng at half-past ten oclock at hs home at New ork. WEDBINGB. Henderson-Raffertp. Mss Emma Frances Henderson of New ork and Dr. Peter P. Rafferty of Red Bank were marred n New ork last Thursday mornng. The ceremony was performed at nne oclock at St. Pauls church on Columbus avenue. Rev. Mr. McSorley offcated. Prevous to the ceremony hgh nuptal mass was celebrated. The brde wore a whte slk dress trmmed wtb slk rbbon, and carred a bouquet of whte roses. The brdesmad was Mss Agnes Henderson, a sster of the brde. She was dressed lke her sster, and carred a bouquet of pnk roses. M, A. Terry of onkers acted as best man,. Dr. and Mrs. Rafferty came to Red Bank the same day, and started housekeepng mmedately on Monmouth street. Lawless Leach. Mss Ada Lawless, daughter of Rchard Lawless of Prospect avenue, was marred last Wednesday to Slas M. Leach of Jersey Cty. The ceremony was performed at the Epscopal parsonr age by Rev; Robert MacKellar and was wtnessed by the brdes parents. The brde wore a dress of brown Venetan clotty trmmed wth whte satn and mousselne de 8oe. Mr. and Ms. Leach have begun housekeepng at Jersey Cty. The brde receved a number of handsome presents, ncludng several sums of money, furnture, slverware, etc. Sckles-Coon, Mss Casse A. Sckles, daughter of Davd H. Sckles of Hazlet, was marred to Harry Way Coons of Phladelpha on Tuesday of last week.. The ceremony was performed at the brdes home by Rev. Robert Fsher of Holmdel, asssted by Rev. R. T. Leary of Mechancsvlle. The brdesmad was Mss Elzabeth Hdltz of Phladelpha and the groomsman was Ernest Hesler of Delanco, N. J. After a weddng supper, the couple left for Phladelpha, where they wll resde. Thomas Rchardson. Thomas Rchardson, generally known as "Tom Dck,"who lved n Mddletown townshp near/hubbards brdge, ded oh Sunday mornng. He was 61 years old and had been sck about three days, A wdow and two chldren survve hm. The funeral was held yesterday afternoon at the-eatontown Baptst church and the body was bured at Whte Rdge cemetery. He was nsured n the Prudental nsurance company for $100. Jllarttn Grover. Mss Carre Martn, daughter of O. E, Mnrtn of Far Haven, wns marred on Tuesday nght of last week at Grace church parsonage at Red Bank to Alfred Grover of Lake wood, who was formerly employed by Jacob Shutts at Shrews bury. The ceremony was preformed by Rev. Holmes F. Gravntt nnd was prvate. The couple nre at present lvng wth the brdes father. lackev-vankote..mes Kate Lackey, daughter of Wllam Lackey of Farmngdale, wns marred to Frank VanNote of the same place on Tuesday nght of last weok.. The ceremony wns performed at tho brdes homo by Rev. A, E. Weston. Mss Lzxo VanNote of Formngdalo was brdesnad and Joseph Lnkey of Long Branch was groomsman. _.» «. _ Msson Offcers. At v meetng of the West Red Bank msson last nght these o/llceh were elected:. PrcN«l>nt Ilcrort W. Cnllclt, Vlcu-prsllent W. w. xlm. Hceraury-Nlw Burl 0. (tnyton. Trcnmrur Mm. O. II, M-frll. ; "* Charman of prayer meetng cmmltlw-1... I. Conklln. Charman of lookout nmmlden \V. W. LOIMJII. Chntnnm of HOCIIII onnmlttut)- MIHH lloromo Murphy. Clmlnnn (f mmc rurnnttco MIHH Alrotlu Drown, Ohnlrnfl of bnlonnry commltta^-m. K, (). Mpplnootl. _. It pays to (dvertko n\ Turn bcctubo every famly horeabouth reul tlu paper. Adv,. COW FOR SALE. Fresh Alderney cow, $50. Address Box 5, Lttle Slver, N. J. DRESSMAKER WANTED., Dressmaker wanted; good sewer. Mss Anbe f woods, Monmouth street., FOR SALE. A Drst-claBs Jersey cow fresh wth calf. Apply at- W0 Front street, Red Bant, N. J. FLAGPOLES FOR SALE. Whte pne flagpoles, 26 to 100 leet long, for sale,- Apply to H. J. Kosevelt, Lttle Slver, N. J. H A AND STRAW FOR SALE; Tmothy and mxed nay nnd rye straw for sale,. delvered. Howard T. Ely, Holmdel, N. J. FLAT TO LET. Sutable for dwellngs or offces: over tne Cty market. Apply to D. G. Applegate 13 Broad street. CIRL WANTED. A whtetrl wanted for general housework; no washlne or ronng. No. 3 Front street. Red Bank. LOTS FOR SALE. s Throckmorton estate. Reasonable terms. $800 to 815O0. Apply to E. W. Throckmorton. Ked Bank, HARES FOR SALE. Forty young BelRtan hares, pure treed, two ard three months old, for sale by E. C. Sehl, Colts Neck- N.J. BLACKSMITH WANTED. A good blacksmth wanted at once on Job work;: also a carrage panter. 0. H. Hurley, Shrewsbury,. WANTED. Woman for lght housework; famly of two. Mddle aged womnn preferred: Call at 41 Oakland, s t r e e t.. < :. LIME FOR SALE. Oyster shell lme, n small or large quanttes, for sale. Inqure at the John H. Patterson farm, Rver sde Drve. WANTED. Mddle aged, whte Amercan woman for housekeeper, nqure of Mrs. A. Ludlow, 10 Broad street,. Red Bank. TOMATO PLANTS FOR SALE. For factory use; 135,000 Stoneand Paragon varetes ; $1.50 per thousand. J. W. Johnston, Eatontown, N. J. FOR SALE. One good second-hand buggy and a set of sngleharness, all n good order. O. H. Hurley, Shrewsbury, N.J. GIRL WANTED. Grl wanted for eeneral housework; 810 per month. Apply to Mrs. J. E. Sayre, Broad streer,. Red Bank. OUNG MAN WANTED. oung man wanted to drve a laundry wagon 1 Apply at 83 Monmonth street, between 7:0U P. t and 8:00 p. M. FOR SALE. Black road mare, Jersey bred. 15% hands ugb. 5 years old, broken sngle Or double. Address Box 51, Holmdel, N.J. WANTED. Old oold wanted. The hghest prce pad for old cold or n exchange for new goods. L. de la Reusslle, Red Bank. POSITION WANTED. Poston wanted by young man as engneer or u any capacty. References. Address F. E. R, Engllshtown, \. J. LOST. An account boowth A. H. Bordens name on front cover. Return to Frank C. Byrum, Prospect avenue. Red Bank. FOR SALE. A good secondhand McCormck bnder, used onu, year; also a second band hay tedder. C. H. Hurley; Shrewsbury, N. J. APPRENTICES WANTED. Two apprentces wanted at once to learn dressmakng. Apply at Ivlns, Modste, No. 21 Broad 1 street, Red Bank, N. J.. TO LET AT PORT MONMOUTH. House of nne rooms, ncely furnshed, to rent for the summer; good outbuldngs. Located at Port Monmoutb. Inqure of P. Kelly. WANTED. A competent chambermad and watress or us nurse to vounr chldren. Best references. Address K. F., 40 Unon street, Red Bank. N. J. GROCERS WAGON FOR SALE. For sale at your own prce, hand-made top delvery grocers wagon, used about one year. Apply any day at 59 Washngton street, Red Bank, N.,r. HOUSES FOR SALE. Two houses on Hector place. 10 and 14 rooms, for sale. Water, gas and heat. Barn nn one lot. Mrs. Helen E. Droban, Broad street. Red Bank. BOARD WANTED. Board wanted on Rver front, for gentleman aud wfe, between Red Bank ralroad brdge and Fulr Haven. Address Board, box 297, Red Bank. N. J. FARM FOR RENT. The Shepherd farm ot Mddletown vllage, con-, talnlng about 60 acres, s offered for rent or ouv Bhnrea. Apply to Henry C.Taylor, Mddletown, I J, WALL PAPER. Samples of Alfred Peats famous wall decorulocs;: br.mglt to your home to select from, by addressng V. VanDorn, agent for Red Bank and vcnty. All orders promptly executed. CARPET WEAVING. John Splllano has moved hs Carpet weavng shop, from James Walshs on Mechanc street to West. street, near Monmouth street. All knds ot weavng on sngle and double warp. CARPET WEAVING. Custom work woven to ordor on the best warps, rugs and mats In colored patterns nnd bonlors n specalty. Work dono on day promsed. W. J. West. WhteBtrtet, Shrewsbury. N.J. SWITCHE8 MADE. Mss Iona Brand, former Imlr dresser for Mrs. E. Wols, would Hko ordors for swtches, combngs, etc., to tnako up nt home. Address, Mss I. Brand, lr West Front street, led Bank, N. J. BOARD WANTED For tlo summer, by laly, nyo-yentvold grl anl baby ; must bo shady and nen: wntor. Want large, ary room wll] two tola. 8Ilpor-\ve.<k. Wood-, war* 4711 West Hfth Mreef,,No\vork, cty. COLLARETTE/LOST. Lost In Iho Flnt M. E, church, Rod Bank,on Tuesday nght, or on Broad street, bbtwcon Ihuchrcl nntl Langs confectonery store, a black fur collar- «tto. Fnder wll plewo leuvo tfltl( A. ). Clnyton, Wallaco street. Houso nnd Lot for 8nlo Ghoap. The hnklnonn cottage belongng to Mm. ltlolanl Doughty, contanng sx rooms, nftlo nnd collar, stuate In Fulr Ilvcn. on nouth.tllo of clay street, for sate on nxufluule turnm. Apply to 0,11, Ivlns, Red Bank, N. J., RKrHTKlbulldllu,. ACHT r "FOR~8ALB A comparatvely new yacht for nald; 8/1 feet ovnr nl, ;;H on tnt wator, 12 feet Imam, Kt Inchon draft. l.mlo load Imllmt, mnnermbn; cut) le used nn nrnt,catynwlornlodp; H.nUlvl, Cnnbngothm IIIKKT mll n Ll lourh. Prlra $70(1. On le nton at TUTtdM. IllIn Is t Imrgaln, Wllam At, lllnltn, WS Olnstnut Htroot, lhludolpln, IM, LOAN OF $4,000 WANTED. Wanwd. loan of HIHXI at 6 porcontctoar of lax, on bla. tm, wth lvng mmb lmvu; H-nfory, corner, I>llght wth mortgage on, Imll by Mln ll(< tmrud- omnpmy of Nmv ork. Wll Imvo mrlgng k^lhud, Wll pnvmcmmlmlm. Henton for ohylg lt towdurn rnloof lntot<»t. Atlnm 1, run fluvmvr Hd mnk.

5 PERSONAL. Newton.Doremus, who wept to the Cj&tskls laet week for a rest, s expected home durrjg the comng week. Mr. Doremus has *beet over-worked durng the last few months and the trp was made for the beneft of hs health. Hs wfes mother, Mrs. John P. Whte, accompaned hm. Tleodore F: Whte has rented the Samuel Coggns house on Maple avenue to Dr. Km ball of Lakewood for the summer. John Kng, the casher of the Mercantle bank, who s now occupyng the house, wll spend the summer at Asbury Park., -. Mrs. Frank Payne of Rversde avenue,, who has been on a vst to the northern" part of New ork state for the past few.weeks for the beneftof her health, s expected home n a few days. She has much mproved. Mrs. C. B. Megll of Canal street was taken suddenly sck whle walkng n the yard last Frday. She was helped nto the house and has snce been con-. Jned to. her bed. Her condton s serous... John A. Perrne of the Unted States.navy, who has been spendng the past thfee months wth hs ssters, Mrs. Howard Champln-and the Msses Perrne of Borden street, has re-enlsted n J,he navy., Mrs. Thompson^ wfe of Col. ThompsoD, the owner of Brtokdale farm, ded n Pars, France, on Saturday. She had been sck but a short tme. She leaves a husband and Reveral chldren. Mss May Rogers, who was employed n Charles Rogerss bakery on Shrewsbury uvenue, las resgned her poston and Mss Ada Keeler s now employed n her place. Thomas F. Smth, secretary of Rchard Croker, and other members, of the New ork Democratc club, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Beatte on Sunday.. Thomas Tce of Red Bank, who formerly had charge of the lunch counter n the Sherdan hotel, has opened a lunch counter at the Oceanc Inn.. Danel H. Applegate, Jr., of Leroy place, who graduates from the Shrewsbury academy ths year, wll enter Rutgers college next fall. Mr. and Mrs. Ghnrles T. Whte of Eatortown wll celebrate the twenty-ffth annversary of ther marrage next Wednesday nght. Mrs. Elbert Dorsett of Shrewsbury avehas been spendng a. few days wth he* parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Sutphn of Holmdel... Mr. and Mrs, Dewtt Quackenbush anl JVIrs. Quackenbushs mother, Mrs. Jane Green of Herbert steeet, spent Sunday at Asbury Park. Thomas Keough of Wall street, who has been confned to hs bed wth sckness durng the past few weeks, s now able to be out, M8, Janea L. Roe of Brookdale farm wll go to Sleep3head Bay nest week, where she wll stay for the remander of the summer. Mrs. Warren Brand o^-oakhurst and her daughter Mldred spent last Thursday wth Mrs. George Woods of Brdge avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Robert A, Johnson of Navesnk spent Sunday wth ther daughter, Mrs. W, A. Sweeney of Wallace street; Mrs. Harry Morford of Broad street has returned home from a. New ork hosptal, where she underwent an operaton. James Bennett, Jr., of Sprng street, who broke hs leg about two months ago, was able to be out last week for the frst. Mart Phllps Havlanl of Mechanc street wll be marred to Mss Margaret Krase of Long Branch next Wednesday. John McGacken, who s employed at Jersey Cty, has been spendng a few days at hs home on Shrewsbury avenue. 1 Mss Edna Foster, daughter of George J. Foster of Irvng Place, s spendng ths week wth relatves at Brooklyn. Frank Clusey, a former conductor on the trolley, hns taken olmrge of the lunch counter n the Sherdan hotel. Frank Antondes of Red Banlc spenl. Sundny wth hs parents, Mr. and Mrs Ira Antondes of Chapel Hll. Thomas Haght and Chnpn McGlano of Red Banlc spent Sunday wth T. For man Taylor of Colts Neck. Mss Jula E. Shoehan, daughter o Commssoher John Sheohan of Shrews bury avenue^ s sck. Mrs. Rchard Lufburrov of Mddle town has beon vstng Mrs. James R Smoclrof Red Bank. Mss Floronco Mount, daughter of R. ft. Mount of Monmouth fltrcet, s vstng relatves ntcnnulen. Mm Wllam Ileuftcy of Brdge avenue spent Monday fnd Tuesday wth relntlvuh nt Elzabeth-. Mra. Edwn C. Dnrlcnlow of Shrewsbury avonuo n sck wth Inflammatory rhnntam. Mns Alce Clayton of Brdge avenue H.pont Sundny wth Mne Maud Tonllnuon of Uncroft,. Rev. B. C. Hancock attended tho funeral of bs sster at Medford, N. J., on Saturday.. - Rchard W. Herbert of Wckatunk was vstdg frends n Red Bank last Saturday. Mss Edth Grover of Brooklyn s vstng her uncle, James Grover of Irvng place. \ Abbott Worthley of Front street s employed astlerk n E. E. Morrss grocery store. Mss Estelle Nesbtt of Maple avenue s confned to her home wth sckness. Mss Sophe Schnell of Red Bank spent Sunday wth frends at Long Branch. Mrs. Rchard Thompson of Herbert street s sck.wth a sore throat. J. B., Brooke of New Mlford spent jart of last week at Red Bank. BIRTHS. McGABRlT. At Shrewsbury, on Wednesday, May 31s(; Mrs. Jobn McGarrlty, of a son.» WIL80N.-A*. Belford, on Saturday, June 3d, Mrs. Franlc Wlson, of a son. MARRIAGES. HOFF-HULAR.-At Keyport, on Tuesday, lay 30th. by Rev. B. J. Zelley, Lucy, daughter o" r.hjah Holl, and Abram Huylar, both of Keyport. L ACKE-VANNOTE.-At Farmlngdale, on Tuesday, May 30th, Kote, daughter of Wllam Lackey, and Frank VanNote, both of Farm Ingdale. LAWLESS-LEACH. At Eed Bank, on Wednesday. May 31st, by Re?. Robert MacKellar, Mss Ada Lawless of Ked Bank and Lllas M. Leach of Jersey "lty.. SICKLES-coON.-^t Hazlet, on Tuesday. May Ott. by Rev. Robert Fsher of Holmdel, Cassle A., daughter of Davd H. Sckles of Hazlet, and Harry Way Coon of Phladelpha. DEATHS. BORDEN. At New ork, on Frday, June 3d. )weu Ives, son "of M. C. D. Borden of Oceanc, atred 19 years. BLACK. At Keyport, on Saturday, May 2Tth, Thomas J. Black, aged, 87 years. CUBIC At East Keyport, on Thursday, May 25th. Mss Mary Cuslc. aged 20 years. CONKLW^-At Ocean Grove, oa Tuesday, June Oth, Mrs. Warren a. Conklln of Mlddletowu, aged about 60 years. DEJINIS. At Red BaDk, on Monday, June 5th, Harry Denns, son of Wllam F. Denns, aged 0 years. HASSELBEKGER.-At New ork, on Thursday, une 1st, Mrs. John Hasselberger, daughter of Mrs. Anne O. Parker of Newman Bprlngs, aged 22 years. KINNE.-At Long Branch, on Sunday. May28th, John Klnney, aged 31 years. MERS.-At tfelford, on Tuesday, May 30th, Mss LIdtt Myers, aged 40 years. MULLIGAN. At Atlantc Hghlands, on Saturday, June 3d, John J. Mullgan, aged 32 years. PERRINE. At Mddletmvn. on Wednesday, May JJst. Mrs. Deborah Perrne, aged 83 yeara. RICHARDSON.-In Mlddletown townshp, on udday, June 4th, Thomas RlclardsoD, aged 51 ears. SKILLMAN.-At Lon? Branch, on Tuesday, May Wth, George W. Sklllman, aged 50 vears. ART STORE THE CRAZE FOR Fancy Pllows IS STILL ON. The Art Store s prepared to meet the demand for them wth a large stock n endless varety.. I. STEPHENSON 50 BROAL} ST., Red Bank, New Jersey. The PREFECTION SPIHNO LOOK FENCE Is always makng frends because It Is a stay fence that stays. It never «!(/» nor svnau apnrt as moat wre fences do. It can be bult any heght you want, as many lne wres m yuu want, so that It wll turn anythng from a chcken to horsra and cnttle. And It Is the poor mans fence as well as tho rch mans. If you are thnkng of havng any fencng dono around your lawn, just send and get one of mv crculars. I can buld you a fancy lawn fence that wll save you noley as well as Mng an ornament to your home. I mako lve styles of It. ou set the posts, I do the rest. GEORGE N. CONHXIN, Agent for Monmouth Co. Mddletown, N. J. HE BEE HIVE. I J MISS S. WALKING, Fashonable Dressmakng. Guarantee Superor Work, Moderate Prces. Tulor-Made Suts a Bpeclalty. Xo. 140 Monmouth St., Red Bank. Notce To Bcyclers! The ordnance prohbtng the rdng of bcycles on the sdewalks wthn the lmts of thj? Town of Red Bank wll be enforced, and all persons rdng on the sdewalks wll be arrested and fned. A A. G HARRISON, Town Clerk. SPECIALS AT WELLERS EVER WEEK. 5 and 10-cent goods a specalty. 7a Broad Street, Red Bank. Albums for Amateur Photographs. Made of specal paper, whch wll make the pctures hold ther color. Szes from 4x5 up to 7x10. From 25 to 50 leaves n each, and prces from 35 cents to Cover s handsomely embossed. Tbese albums afford the best means of preservng your pctures. They make an ornament to any room and are a constant source of pleasure. 9 FOXWELL& WHITE, Room 9, Regster buldng, Broad street. Red Bank BEST FLOUR Sld BEST SKILL, makes BEST BREAD. J. W. Leave us your onler. V v V Cheap Houses Wanted, I wantmore houses at 10. Have several partes watng for them. Have rented many more houses ths sprng than ever before. Want all I can get to rent. I have three suras of money to loan, $1,000, $16,000 ana $2,500. I am lookng for small house and lot n western Red Bank, prce about $1,000. If you have such property for sale call on W. A. HOPPING, True* Bulttno, Red Bank. «*» ^^Tt LARGEST... FAHCT GOODS nousl IN MtW JERSC Grls Summer Wasts. g Danty cool garments, chocely made and fnshed n the most fashonable modes of the season, for Grls Wasts sutable for all tho comng summer occasons. Grls* Whte Wasts. Fne Whte Pque and Lawn, wth bas tucks and embrodery, three pont yoke backs, laundered collar and I AQ cuffs I *TU [t< Grls Slk Wasts, >$ F.nc qualty corded pnk, blue, > { rose and^lavender, sngle pont yoke back, round cuffs, O ~~~ full fronts. C Grls Whte Wasts, Fne Open Work Lawn, made plan wth three pont yoke, back plated, pearl buttons, neat laundered collar *7Cp and cuffs / UVl Grls Wasts In szes o, 12, 14 and 16 years, of neat patterns n strped and checked Percales, good pearl buttons, back sngle pont yoke, double sttch- Gflp ng UUu $ No fluents or Branch Stores Anywtere. free Delveres. Wall Orders Carefully Flled. % 707 to 721 Brotl St. and No. 8 Cedar St. N E W A R K, N. J. : Notce to Contractors. Sealed proposals for buldng a chapel or parsh louse. In the town of Shrewsbury, Monmouth coun- V,, New Jersey, for Chrst church, wll be receved >y.,a commttee of the wardens and vestrymen of ad church, at the resdence of Wllam R. SWVens, Jatontown, N. J., on RIDA, JUNE 23d, 1899, AT 8 P. M. Plans and specfcatons may be seen at the resfence of Wllam R. Stevens. A bond for 60 per cent of contract prce wll be relured, from the successful bdder lor the fathful performance of the contract. I The commttee reserves the rght to reject any or Holds.. JuneO,1899. AAAAAAAAAAAAA.J.. WILLIAM R. STEVENS, GEORGE W. BARLOW, BENJAMIN J. PARKER, Commttee.. Pqmenc A. Mazza,: CUSTO31. Boot and Shoe Maker. Good Ft and Frst Class Work Guaranteed. Shoes Made to Orderfqr $3.50 Up.. Frst class Reparng wth best whte oak leather at these prces : Mens Half Sole and Heel, (pegged) 76c. Mens ". " " " (sewed)..; $1.00 LadlesHalf Sole and Heel, (pegged) 60c. Ladles " " " " (sewed)...; 70c. Boys Half Sole nod Heel to 60c.- Chldrens Half Sole ttud Heel 85c. Try my work once and you wll be thoroughly satsfed.., 81 W/lte Street, Frst door from Maple Are., RED BANK, N. J. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA BIRDSALL & SON, Carrages and Harness I MONMOUTH ST., RED BANK. All up-to-date styles n. Pneumatc Runabouts, Fancy Traps, Canopy Surreys, Canopy Cabrolets, Rubber Tre and Steel Tre Runabouts, Stanhopes, Coverts, Boulevard,s, &c, &c. A nce assortment of the H. H. Babcock Co.s celebrated work always kept n stock. The standard make none "just as good." If you ntend purchasng a vehcle of any descrpton you should look us over our assortment s large and we can please you. - We advertsed a lot of mens suts at half prce: 515 Suts for $7.50. Most of them are sold. v\[e_add another lot ths week. Too many suts on hand makes ths reducton necessary.. Bg bargans n Boys and Chldrens Suts. 39 BROAD ST., RED BANK. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Our Annual Clearng Sale Of Summer Mllnery. Ths season has proved to be the most successful and mportant one we have ever had, as t gves everyone an opportunty to purchase. Hats for Chldrens Day at greatly reduced prces. Our stock s stll complete wth everythng that s new and desrable and at such remarkably low prces that they cant help sellng quckly. Come early to secure chocest goods whle stock s large. In Salor and Outng Hats... we are offerng specal bargans. Salor Hats at 23 cents, worth 49 cents, and for 39 cents we are sellng hats worth 75 cents. We are also agents for the celebrated Knox Salors. MRS. L WEIS, Red Bank Temple of Fashon.

6 valued the property at $20,000, lldlngs on Monmoutb Street. as Henry Grant s buldng a :ry stable on a plot owned by hm g the Amercan hotel on Monstreet. The buldng s a frame :e 80x74 feet. It wll contan sngle stalls awl one box stall, ldng wll be fnshed n about eks and wll cost $1,350." Mr. pll buld a two-story frame store jg the stable as soon as the plans npleted. Ths buldng wll, be ;et. ^ o» Buldng a Boathouse. H, McCarthy, who recently bult louse on the rver bank between ven and Oceanc,.wll soon buld oat house on hs property. The ldng wll be14x23 feet wth a t projectng pazza. The buldng bult wth all possble haste and nshed wll cost about 500. The t,for the work wll be gven out ek.» Lttle Slver Farm Sold. *IR Whtp hflr anlfl Hp Atbertus Newman and others, hers, to George E. Rogers. Pece of property. $1. Isetta Avs Snyder to Joseph Clayton. Lot at Avon Wstnr Newbold lo Edgar J. Howes. 2 lots at Bolnar, $1,800. Jenne E, Clayton and husband to Fanne C. Snyder. Lot at Avon, FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP. Lfura A. Pttenper and others to E. L. Brower. Pece of property. SLOW). James 3. Parker to Tnomas A. Ward/ Land at Freehold, $ HOWELL TOWNSHIP. Holmes H. Matthews to.james H. Matthews, Pece of property, SC05. Matthas Woolley, late sherff, to George H. Burdre. Pece of property, $uo.. Barah E. Conk to Georgo tv. MaeMllIan. pece of property, $350. Pennsylvana ralroad company to Freehold and JsuesburR Agrcultural ralroad company. Pece of property, S10. d VlrcrlDla Goodenougu to Wllam Demme. Land at Farmlngdale, S181.5O. UPPEB FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP. Hannah 8. Woodward to Elwood T. Johnson. Pece of property, Robert M. Everett lo Isaac S. Everett. Pece of property, 85, Emerson A. Pllen to Henretta Bob). Pece of property, 81. Henretta FIoll and husband to Anne E. Pullet). Pece of property, 81. Dont Wnlt Untl the Horse Is Stolen Before ou Lock tbe Stable. Of course you know all about t. ou have read t n the papers. ou know that Chamberlans Oolc, Cholera and Darrhoea Remedy s sold by druggsts everywhere. But you dont know all for 23 c Extra Broke D. Next Audo.

7 . «LITTLE SltVER NEWS. Tlrorn from a Wagon-Summer Resdent e Arrvng. : Mr. and Mrs. Edwards were drvng near thelttle Slver staton on Sunday afternoon when.tbe horse sbed and Mrs. Edwards waa thrown from the wagon. She was not hurt but her clothes were very much soled. Mrs; G. J. Mullner and Mrs. Sorrels of Brooklyn wll tke possesson of ther summer home near the Lttle Slver staton to-day. Albert Cahu and famly of New ork wll occupy the Sheppard Knapp place. Thomas N. McCarter, who recently bought one of the Keeler propertes oa the RwmBon road, s expected down ths week.. Dr. Wllam.A. Conover went as a delegate to the annual meetng of the Grand Army whch meets at Trenton today and to-morrow. He wll also attend the commencement exercses at 1 Prnceton unversty and the re-unon of the class of 1859, of whch he was a member. He wll delver anaddrebs at the aumtn meetng. " V John T. Lovett has opened hs soda water stands at Lttle Slver staton and on the Rumson road. The stand at Lttle Slver s n charge of Kobert Evans of Oceanport, and Mortmer Woolley has charge of the -Emson road stand. * Mr. Casey and famly of New ork have rented one of John T. Lovett 8 houses near Branch avenue. Jacob Conover has rented the house owned by Mr. Lovett, adjonng the postofflce. The subject of Rev. J. Wllam Lees sermon n the Metlodst church on Sunday mornng was >The Matchless Hero." At nght the servce w.aa conducted by Presdng Elder J. L. Roe. The graduatng exercses wll be held n the publc, school on Monday nght. "Theschool wll clo3e on the followng The advertsed letters n the-postoffce are for Wllam Mannng, Mrs. Bshop, Emma Farrow and Wellngton Fsher. JDurng the summer months the Amercan Mechancs lodge wll meet every two weeks nstead of once a week. E. J. Whte of New drk, a former resdeht of ths place, vsted frends and relatves here on Sunday. Mss Lllan Rchards of New ork spent part of last week wth Mrs; J. E. Harvey, Mss Florence Kemmerer of New ork s vstng; her uncle, Harry Kemmerer. Rchard Parker, Jr., s employed as a clerk n Harry Kemmerers store. Herman Klee hab a new bcycle. WASIDE NEWS. Teo Comng Fentlvals-The Publc School to Close Xext Week. A festval wll be held to-morrow nght for the beneft of the Methodst church. Another festval wll be held later for 1 the beneft of the Sunday-school. The Poplar publc school wll close nest Tuesday. Mss Vctora R. Smoyer, the present teacher, wll return next year. Mr. and Mrs. Mchael Fary have gone to Asbury Park for two weeks, where they wll occupy the house of ther sonn-law, Byron VanBenschoten. Jfr. and Mrs. VanBenschoten are vstng relatves n Dutchess county, New ork. Mss Eunce Woolley, who has been spendng two weeks wth her sster, Mss Etta Woolley, and wth her cousn, Mss Mary Cunnngham of New ork, 1 has returned home., Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Sutton of Ocean Grove Heghts have been- vstng Mrs. Suttons sster, Mrs. Charles V. Covert. Mrs. George McCloskey of Pont Pleasant has been vstng her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwn L. Havens. Mrs. "Wllam Carey of Long Branch and her daughter have been vstng. Mrs. Charles Bowne, Jr. Mrs. Albert M. VanNostrand of Key port spent part of last week wth her parents at Poplar. Edward Ferrs has moved from New ork to hs new house on Asbury avenue. Harry A. Bowne of Freehold spent a day last week wth hs brother, Charles Bowne, Jr. Wllam Brower has been vstng hs sster, Mss Tlle Brower of Marlboro. Mss Mary Stout of Hamlton spent Sunday wth her uncle, Job Wardell. Scoboyvlle News. Wllam E. Morrs, son-n-law of Joseph A. Golden of ths place, moved last Thursday from Smthburg to Eatontown, where he wll open a blacksmth shop. Mss S. Lutzons, John E. Beckman and H. Rehse of Brooklyn and W. H, Hnners of Edgewater spent last Wednesday wth John F. Beckman. Chrstopher Snedeker has a fne feld of clover, The clover s seventeen nches hgh. He wll cut t next week. J. H. Cordes of Brooklyn s vstng hs brother-n-law, Lous Wubber. Rchard Lard s gettng hs cder worltb n order for the apple crop. Hudson VanBrunt of Seabrghts vstng hs aunt, Mrs. Henry Brower. Robert Baley of Trenton spent Tues day wth frlendb here. Henry Polhemus s puttng up a wre fence about IUB place. Mrs. M. L. Oswald s spendng a.week at Belraar. m > m Cmpol Hll Nows, Thu publc school closed last Frday Tho teacher, Mrs, F. L. Brown, has re turned to her homo,at Englfhtown. Mr. and Mrs. Qeorgo DavlBon of New ork have been vstng Mrs. Mnrn Crawford. Charles Crhart hrblrosgned na lghthouse keeper am has noved to Hllsde Mss Habto Patterson has been spend ng a few duvs ut her homo here. Maa Kato Frost of Mddletown n veft ng her couuln, Danel Frost. Mra. J. Blls of AslturyPark has beer vhltng MM. "Ijmol P, Smth. Tho readers of Tns IlRcuyncuconDtltulc an unny of buyem. There a hnrdly n a famly In the townthlpa of ShrpwHuury, Mddlotown, Katontown, Atlantc and Ilolmlel whero Tm RcaBTKH In not the tho fnvorto paper. Itu crculaton I ovor 3,750 coplch per weclc Adv. PLAN FOR A PERFECT HOME. Remarks on Wnter Iluldho- > ng.brck n Frosty Weather. :Copyrght,18S9, by George Palllaer, 32 Park " place, JJew ork.] The best tme to buld Is when there 1B no frost. Any tme outsde of~wnter weather s sutable. To erect masonry n reezng weather s dangerous work, and specally so In the constructon of stonework. Stone holds the frost, and when t Is lad up n the wet mortar the mortar PERSPECTIVE VIEW. freezes and remans frozen untl warm weather. The thawng of the mortar s lkely to tumble the stonework over. Stone foundatons lad up In wnter are bad. I have known of houses sfarted In wnter the buldng of the cellars of whch dragged along for weeks. Moreover, the ground around tho walls beng,open, the rost penetrated and got -below the walls, naturally more so n some parts than n others. When tho ground was flled n, tho frost was burled Wth t. In the mddle of the summer, by whch tme the superstructure was up, the walls, of course, fnshed and possbly the house completed and occuped, much damage had resulted. Ths condton s sure to exst when work s BO donos -The frost gradually works out, the walls settle and crack, doors and wndows refuse to close or fasten, and tho house looks as f t had gone through an earthquake. Ths s more or less tho result of all -wnter buldng unless the utmost care Is used.. - r I should prefer to have tho 6tone on a- ple, tho Band n a heap and the cement n s FIRST STOR PLAN. _ tho barrels rather than Have thngs done badly. In tho sprng the work could be made to stay, and tho extra cost of dong It would be cheap compared wth the condtons named. In masonry substantalty must be as sured. Tho footngs must be clear of frost and none of It ever allowed under them. Ths carefully looked to, you can buld anythng on top of them and have It stay rgdly. Avod buldng brck walls, as faros possble,,n wnter. If the walls are heavy, the danger s slght, but f lght they oro very rsky and hard to keep straght and plumb. Dry brck, fresh mxed warm mortar, careful bracng and protecton from water aro necessary to keep walls In place. If frost strkes a groen wall and freezes It and tho sun strkes ono sde, as s always the case, tho wall warps and twsts, settlng on the sunny sldo, and crookedness ensues. Foundatons put In before wnter should alwaysbo well covered up on tho nsldo and protected from frost whle the other work Is gong on. Ths wll save settlng and crackng Inter and Is a caso of tho ounce of preventon beng better than tho BECOND BTOR PlAN. pound, of euro. Many peoplo buld In wnter for varous reasons. Somotlmes It Is oheapor, they thnk. I must confoss I novor found It so. Tho sprng, however, Is an admrable tlmo for movng. But mo chanlcs must havo work In wnter as woll as In summer, and wnter buldng wll no doubt contnue. Proper procuutlons must bo taken, though, to presorvo foundatons. Tho house hero shown wasorooted In tho wnter tlmo. It was complotcd and ready for oocupnnoy by sprng. It Is a houso wo can recommend as beng a porfoot homo. Pantng on Chna, Good materal 1B quto mportant. An old pece of chna wll do for a buglnner to tnt, as It may bo rubbed off and reappled untl perfecton Is arrved at, Dut for pantng peces to koop and that aro valuablo got now chna that has nover been used or washed, nays Amercan HonoB. Ueo a soft cloth to frco onoh ploco of dust and H» the lcht ols mul pant and Rulcct a Hlnplo desgn to begn wth. Tntng Booms Blmpln, but Is In realty Important. An ovm tnt over tho Rurfnoo enhanced tho hoauty of whatever desgn accompaned It, and tho only art thlh requres lfl prao tlco, Few boglnnoro can lay an oven tnt, but praotloo makes perfect. It payo to advorlbo n THE UICCHBTICU. Art and Decoraton. A new usefor rugs n the house s to form a wanscotng around the room wth.them. In Turkey and Persa, where, the exquste orental rugs are used exclusvely for floor coverng, they run the ends of a rug too large for a room up the sdes of the walls and took them there. The.effect s strkngly artstc and for less Injurous to the rugs than to turn the ends under. In Beveral,of the large Importng houses n ths country examples of ths method of decoratng the sdes as well as the floor of the rooms wth rugb. are gven. Long, narrow rugs of, vvd patterns are even made for ths sde decoraton. They take the place of the ordnary wanscotng, and when artstcally arranged they produce an exquste fnsh to the room. One large rug may be tacked up on ether end, and the other two sdes are flled n wth specal rugs made to ft the spaces. - A room furnshed In ths way has a warmer and brghter effect than one carpeted. Measurng Wndow" Shades. In measurng for anoutsde shade u. flat casng gve the length from the mddle of the casng to the wndow sll, and for the wdth measure two Inches on each sde- If the casng has a moldng, fnd a place sutable for a bracket when measurng. In measurng the wdth of the wndow for an nsde shade be exact n the measure. Ether the top or the bottom of the wndow should be measured never across the mddle. State whether the shade Is- gong on the stop bead or n the run of the wndow; also the thckness of the stop bead. State whether there Is a beadng oh the wndow for the" nsde slld J ng screens. "K. shade for a sweep wndow should go Insde, Take «" na»snres wth a foot rule f possble.- < Ktchen Floors. Ktchen floors wll gve better results f treated only wth an occasonal pantng wth lnseed ol. Ths snks nto the wood, and grease dropped on t wll bo quckly absorbed and leave no stan behnd. Old floors n the ktohen should frst be scrubbed and then sandpapered before the ol s appled. They wll look almost lke new then. Water mxed pants are far rom satsfactory on floors. The only successful mxture of ths knd n whch water s employed s calcmne and kndred preparatons. In these mxtures the hot water melts the glue and makes t stck, but them s no glue n EO called palnts.- Polshlng Up Old Furnture. To polsh up old furnture, where pant Is not desrable, there ore numerous furnture polshes, all sad to be good. A home remedy," whch If not repeated too often Is very effcacous, s a woolen cloth mostened wth coal ol. Ths removes the grease and smoke. It should, however, be used sparngly, as t s lkely to affeot tho varnsh. v If rubbed thoroughly afterward wth a chamos skn or fresh cloth, there s very lttle of the dsagree able odor left. Wth any of the polshes a good rule to remember s, Avod puttng on too muoh of the polsh, but dont be afrad of rubbng.- A Box For Baby. I saw a novelty n a bos the other day. It was In the shape of a huge packng box, covered outsde and n wth brght ere touno. Tho nbde was well padded, and the broad sde had hnges. At the top there were two hooks. When baby was placed Insldo, wth all her toys, she was supposed to hold sway for many a long hour whle mother was busy wth other ^dutes or perhapsthe nurse had a day off. Turksh Chars. No homo Is completely furnshed wthout one or more Turksh chars. They aro at once nvtng and an evdence of hosptalty. The cheaper ones are covered n denm and the hgher prced ones In leather. They also come In mtaton leather, whch has excellent wearng qualtes.- ; Care of Lamp Wcks. Lamp wcks need to bo boled out and oleansed every two weeks. Ths prevents danger from exploson and greatly.n creases tho sze and brllancy of tho flame. Imagnary Alment*. There are many.who have pans n the back and magne that ther kdneys are affected, whle the only trouble s rheumatsm of the. muscles, or, at worst lumbago, that can be cured by a few applcatons of Chamberlans Pan Balm or by dampenng a pece of flannel wt! Pan Balm and bndng t on over the affected parts. For sale by Charles A Mnton & Co., Druggsts, No. 3 Broad street. Keep the scalp clean and the har healthy by usng Schroeders har tonc. 50 cents a bottle at Schroeders Pharmacy. Wall Paper. CALL AT THE Central Wall Paper Store, Cor. Front and Poarl Streets, Ioryour Wall tnpor, Pnlnto, Ennmls nnd Wlndov (lluuu. Also n full lno of InMr Ilnffdrs Tools. l«k llanuura IIIBUI by thu nll or tmrrol. Klonln, 1utty, Wlltd l,ul, Olln, Hard Olln, Vnmlul md Drym. A Ionplto lno ot II, w. JnlnHy Uoaly Mlx«Iolntn. KlBonlullnnlcH nml Whltw/Hl IlnBlK. KollnnlM (locrjlly furlnl)(ml. Mull Odon 1 romltly ntotlud to. <> nt n«x W8. Hwl lnnk, N.J. XMVISOX. THEODORE F, WHITE, Real Estate, Insurance and Loans.! <,.. < MONE TO LOAN Amounts, $500 to $5,000. < TO LET. I Two stores on Front street, each $25 per month, ", \, One store on Broad street, 25x75, 60 per month. J One house on-front street, $40 per, month, all mprovements; tfne house < on Front street, $23 per month ; one at $2(K At EastSde Park, one at $18. On Wallace street, one at $25 >s> wth barn. Two new houses on Throck- j morton Btreet, all mprovements, $18 each. One large house on Broad j street, 11 rooms, all mprovements; stable, carrage house, $40. One on < Irvng street, 7^ rooms,?18. One on Bector place, 11 rooms, all mprove-! raents, $30. One on Monmouth street, 9 rooms, all mprovements, $22.,J... / *.. FOB SALE. -.! Houses for sale on every street n town. Prces range from $800 to ] $15,000.".. < INSURANCE. "! Insurance placed n the best companes at the lowest rates. j * THEODORE F. WHITE, : Rooms 1and 2, Eegster Buldng,. Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. Off OOG Gve Butter, Teas and Coffees ther specal attenton. We guarantee both qualty and prce to sut. VEGETABLES always fresh here and a full varety. DOREMUS BROS 11 BROAD ST., RED BANK, N. J Busness Wapns and Harness! We are showng a very attractve lne of Busness Wagons that are new n style, good n qualty and low n prce. These are hand made and are rhuch more durable than the ordnary factory wagons. We have them wth and wthout tops, for any knd of busness. We also have a lne of Farm Wagons, both for one and two horses, that, have been tested for the last few years, and they are gvng splendd satsfacton. They cost about half the prce charged by others. JERSE FARM HARNESS, both sngle and double. SPECIAL. We are closng out a few new Runabouts to make room for new stock and wll make the prces whle they last $35> $45) #55 an d $6S> whch s about half ther value. J. W. MOUNT & BRO., Cor. Maplo Avo. and Whte St., WHEBLWIHOHT SHOP. TI10 frlmtlo of >8<nlr«T. V. NnHTen wll llml hm ut hlhum IIU.HIIICNH luwnlhhutmlllln r<>n mechanc* Street, led Hank, N. J., whom I113 (Kxl ul klndh ot Wauon Work. Now Farm SVDKUIIH, IlnrrmvH, Ctrl. WloolbnrowH,,(n\, mnl to ohtf, unt Jobbng of nl klndtumtljp nml promptly dune. JTAINKN WALflll, Propretor. REP BANK. SASH AND DOORS. Tho ultblkctl lnn boklt thu mml nud blnd mhlnmof Jum WIIIHII on Muctmnln struct, am In )r«!>m>d to (In nl dmoh of work In tho lno ot bllmlf, WBII, <t«<r>, fonll rnwinr and flnm work, work nml Kmcnl Jobbng wll ulo 1)0 \VAt,L,KlIC UKNNIfXT.

8 MIDDLETOWN VISAGE NEWS. Chldrens Day Exercse* to Be Held on SHlau XoM. The Chldrens day exercses of the Baptst church wll be held oh Sunday nght. An nterestng programme has been prepared- and the church wll be beautfully decorated. Gordon "P. Ellson of Freeport, Long Island, a member of the lfe savng Bta-r turn there, spent jart of last week wth hs uncle. D. G. Patterson. Lous R. Despreaux, who has been sck for the past who months wth a complcaton of dseases, s able to be about., Mss Harret H. Patterson, who attends the state normal school at "Trenton, spent Saturday wth the Msses Oonover..." Hnrry Lufburrow, who fractured hs collar bone n a bcycle accdent about a month ago, s now able to use he arm. Mrs. Mary Ghant of Lakewood and her granddaughter, Mary Irvng, have been vstng Mss Elzabeth Patterson. Fred Wlson of Mddletown and Wlbur Wallng and Joseph Shryer of Keypor spent Bonday at Long Branch. A number of Mddletowners attended Bufalo Blls Wld West show at Long Branch on Monday. Mss Whte of Astora, Long Island, spent a few days last week wth the Msses Hartshorne. Mss Emma Story returned home Saturday from a two weeks vst wth frends at Nutley. Mr. and Mrs. Lews R.. Bergen and Dasy and Lester tance spent Sunday at Long Branch. Mss Lzze E. Taylor wll sng at a concert at Jersey Cty to-morrow nght. A. E. Schneder, who has been sck for the past week, s now able to be out. Mrs. Knox McAffee of New ork has been vstng Mrs. E. P.Taylor. The womens msson crcle met at Mrs, VV, T. Castlers yesterday. John Osborn of Keyport speut Sunday wth Dr. D. D. Hendrckson. Wllam E. Crawford of Holmdel spent last Thursday here. Isaac Morrs spent Monday at Long Branch. o» ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS NEWS. Justce Ellns Pet Itva Posoned Lust Heel;. A pet dogj cm ted by Justce John Ells was posoned last Thursday. The dog followed Jerome Welsh, Mr. Ellss father-n-law, to W. W. Bentleys bathng grounds. Mr. Bentley had poson Bet about the place for cats. The dog ate some of the poson aud ded soon afterward. Frank E. Prce, engneer at the Atlantc Hghlands electrc lght works, was notfed last Frday that hs father was dyng n Canada and he left for there at once. Mr. Prce has not vsted hs Canadan home before n eleven years. Wllam C. Clark, manager of the Cornng lumber company, s havng an addton but to the offce, where he and hs): brother Austn wll establsh bachelor headquarters. Wllam Alexander has been engaged as cook. Thrteen famles moved nto ther summer homes at ths place last Thursday. The busness men say that the season s earler than t has been n several years. Thomas IJayward of Marlboro and hs daughter, Mrs. Rachel Conover, spent Sunday wth Joshua E. VanPelt. Chldrens day wll be observed n the Methodst. Baptst and Presbyteran churches next Sunday nght. Wllam Jackson, a brakeraan on the Central ralroad, s dangerously ll wth hemorrhage of the lungs. Wlbur A. Campbell, who has charge of a drug store at Englewood, was home over Sun Jay. Wllam Grevel of New, ork has moved nto hs house at Brevent Park. George H. Hammond of Rahwuy spent Sunday wth hs famly here. George Davs of Hllsde s havng two of hs houses panted. Mr?. Wllam T. Frankln s sck wt! nervous prostraton. Colts Neck News. Robert A. Casner and Frank Holmes went bobbng for eels n Soffels pond last Frday nght. They caught a number of eels. Mrs. Garett Buck, spent Saturday wth her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Enmons of Long,Branch. Wllam Wubber.of Brooklyn spent last week 1 wth hs parents, Mr. and Mrs Lous Wubber. Mss Margaret Cooney of Holnde.spent Saturday and Sunday wth Mss Anne Kelsey. Frederck VanNanU) and famly o Brooklyn are vstng Mrs. John Me Queen. Joseph Stewart and famly of Asburj Purl: spent Sunday wth Peter Hnger man.. Wllam T, Sherman of New ork spendng a two weeks vacaton here. Fred Luther has arranged two hand some (lower beds n hs hotel yard. MS3 Jenne Strong wll teach n th publc school here next season. Edward Kuhns of Newark bus beer vstng T. Formu Taylor. Rchard Lawrence of Trenton vste< John Lawrence last week. Wllam Matthews spent Sunday s Long-Branch. John Stupleton spent Snturdnv at Free hold. Shrewsbury Nowa. Cupt. R. C. VanVlol. who was n th Santago campagn, hns been spendng: few days here wth IUH famly. Mrs. Juntos Broadneadow; who ha: been spendng the wnter lt Orange, w.l move back hero ths week." Henry Trudord of New Itoohello, N., spent part of. last wouk wth h brother, John Tralford. lonflfl ODonough wll take posse non of hlo HutDT lono hero to-daj Gen. Stownrt VunVlet n occupylu hla summer homo hen.. The- Presbyteran parsonage n belt 1 repanted. Tn: RmSTKt prnts all the newe a IIJC-tlnu.-zlftv. HOLMDEL NEWS. lluvn Servce n the Reformed Church Vantage by the Mtrouaht. The Reformed church and Baptst hurch unted n servce last Sunday lght at the Reformed churcb. Tbe Bevce was conducted ^by Rev. Robert B. sher, pastor of the Baptst church. Farmers hereabouts predct a short rop of hay ths summer, on account of belongdrought. Strawberres and potaoes are also hurt, especally where the >atcbes are stuated on hgh ground. Decoraton day was "a very quet day ere.. A, few persons attended the bycle races-at Red Bank and Asbury ark, but. the majorty attended the orse races at Freehold. Dr: and Mrs. H. G. Cook of New Irunswck, former resdents of ths >lace; spent part of last week on ther arm here. They> returned home on Saturday. The advertsed letters n the postoffce re for D. R. Hollngstead &.Co,, Henry, Hendrckson, James Doyle and Mrs. rdget May. ".. Mrs. C. S. Holmes, who has been vstng frends and relatves at Atlantc Hghlands, returned borne" on Saturday. Mss Grace Sckles, daughter of Tuns ckles, s sck wth measles, whch she ontracted whle on a vst to Keyport. Mrs. Fanne Hammond s very sck th dropsy. She s at the home of her on, Henry Hammond. Sylvester Tton, who was strcken nth paralyss about three weeks ago, slgntly mproved. Mrs. Holmes Emmonsof Pennsylvana vstng her father-n-law, Wllam Mrs. Catherne Ely, mother of Eugene lly, s confned to her bed wth sckness. Mrs. Davd B. Schanck s vstng relates at Orange. W. W. Taylor has a new hose. : Eatontown News. The Ep worth league of the Methodst lrorch held a strawberry festval n V. R, Stevenss store buldng on Tueslay nght of last week. About $25 was :leared., J. B. Haggns and George B. Morrs f Sleepshead Bay were n town on Sunlay, lookng after Mr. Haggnss horses, vhch are stabled at Monmquth Park. Jacob Dcknson of Lakewood, formerly of Red Bank, s now employed by bs brother, Thomas Dcknson. Charles Watkns of New ork, who las been vstng hs parents, has reurned to New ork. Mrs. Howard M. Holly of New ork wll spend the summer wth her mother, Mrs. Blary L. Gftng. Mrs. Jamej Hathaway s spendng hh week wth relatves at Bedford, f.. Mss Sade Connn of New ork spent art of last week wth Mss Amy Calls. Mr. and Mrs. Harry B.Campbell spent ast week at Atlantc Cty. Mrs, S. F. Requa of Illnos s vstng Jrs. A. B, Nafew. Mss Jenne Waller s spendng a few ays at New ork. The publc school wll close next Monay. OCEANPOBT NEWS. A Surprse Party at Hss Anne Slapss Last Wednesday -SaM. Mss Anne Maps was surprsed last Wednesday nght by a vst from a number of frends. The "evenng was spent n playng games v and at eleven oclock refreshments were served. Those pres- :nt were Mr. and Mrs. Abbott.Worthlev, Mr. and Mrs. J3.W. Crater, Mr. and Mrs. George VanTassel, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Rddle, Mr, and Mrs. Wllam Hayward, Mss Lena Crater, Mss Nelle Prce and George Maps. < Sr. and Mrs; Olver Duncan and ther son Rchard, and Edward Butler and Mss Ida "Steele of Brooklyn, who have been vstng Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Corles, have returned home. The steam launch Llly Whte, owned by County Audtor Lyttleton Whte, s beng repared and repanted. The work s beng dore by Frank Lundy. Lous Stewart took a number of. hs horses to Sheepshead Bay last week. They wll be entered at the races there ths summer.. - Cant. Edward Prce of lfe savng staton No. 1 s home for a two months vacaton... Samuel Smock s hayng hs road scraper repared and repanted. Mss Nelle Prce, daughter of Mrs. W. S. Prce, has a new bcycle. John Ward, Jr., has a new tandem bcycle. Oceanc News. The regular monthly prase.servce whch wll be held n the Presbyteran church next Sunday nght, wll be led by Dr. A. A. Armstrong of Far Haven. Mss Alce Tyndall, Mss Mare Sprag and Mss Nelle Harvey of New ork spent Sunday wth Mss Harveys mother, Mrs. L. E. Harvey. George Kuhn exhbted some -very fne sweet peas at the last meetng of the hortcultural socety. Mrs. Reuben Thompson entertaned some relatves from New ork last week. Thomas Vantne of New ork spent Thursday at hs summer home herd J. A. Lawrence of New ork spent Sunday wth R.S; Dxson, Mrs. Frank Skdmore, who has been sck, s recoverng. Far Haven News.» A cake and bread sale was» held at Mrs.,E. H. Wlberslast Saturday afternoon for the beneft of the sewdg socety of the Methodst church. The Bale was well attended and everythng put on sale was quckly sold. About $15 was cleared. Mr. and Mrs. Newton Goltra of Jersey Cty and Mrs. Frank Clevenger of Obo are spendng a few days wth Mrs. Goltras father, Hon, George B. Snyder. Stephen McCormck of New ork has been spendng a few days at hs summer home here. Ida and Benjamn Brown, who are employed at Nev ork, spent Sunday here., Frank I. Scott of Rosevlle spent Sunday here... Quarterly. meetng Was held at Fsk chapel on Sunday. A collecton,of $87 was taken 1 up. Mrs. A, A. Armstrong and her three chldren, Helen, Mldred and Addaon, are vstng at Phladelpha. Mr. and Mrs. JamesNaok and Wllam Wallng of New ork spent Sunday wth Mrs. Henry Mnton. Mss Florence Smth of New. ork vsted Mrs. Frank Hendrckson on Sunday. -O I «BIC MONET MADE AT A FAIR. The Asburu Park Catholc Church % Clears 81,000. The church of the Holy Sprt of Asbury Park cleared $1,000 by ts recent far and festval.- A number of artcles were.offered as przes to the persons collectng the largest sums of money on them, and a large amount of money was made n ths manner. Freeholder Harry J. Rockerfeller collected. $115 and got a plfaeton wagon. James D. Carton collected $110 on ths wagon. Mss Sarah Walshgot a parlor sut for collectng $185, and the total amount collected on the parlor sut w.as $ Other amounts collected ncluded S73 on a cane, $101 on a wheelbarrow, 43 on a set of dshes, $93 on a doll, $10, on a ton of coal. $28 on. a gold nog, $10 on a washboard. 80 on.a gold watch.and 318 on a womans bcycle. He Knew He Would Keep Cool. " George," sad the far mad, " I hope you wll keep cool when you call to n tervew^ papa," "oubet I wll." muttered the fanthearted youth. <% Why, t gves me a chll to even thnk of callng on hm." Room Breezes, Sleepng Room Breezes, 111 Rnds of Breezes May be obtaned fom Electrc Fans. Tbnk of the Hot Weather comng and arrange to be cool whle others are lct. Estmates furnshed,. The Shore Electrc Co., - 35 EAST FRONT STREET,"., Red Bank.. -, New Jersey, "BROWN & WAR WICK, Slate and Tn Roofers, HOT AIR HEATING, LEAK WINDOWS, CHIM- NES AND JOBBING A SPECIALT. IJ you desre to have your cotta&re leated doat [all" to (flve us a call. We are agents for one ot the best, oldest and most relable furnacecompanes n New ork cty the Boyaton Furnace Company,. Ther furnaces are reasonable In prce and the most relable and powerful heaters on tbe market to-day. The nrm Is responsble and they guarantee ther furnaces to us. and through us to you. Remember, slate roofng? Is as cheap. If aotcneaper. than shngles or any other roof, and more durable than all. slate Roofs putover old shngles., BROWN & WARWICK, Cor. Plonmoutf St. and Brdge Ave.. Red Bank Makes the food more delcous and wholesome ROVAl BAKINQ POWDER CO., NEW VORK, <.»» 800 SAINGS ACCOUNTS OPENED IN Tflfe Mercantle Go-Operatve Bank MERCANTILE BANK BUILDISG. Sale of Cammeyers Shoes Contnued. OF HEW JERSE. UKDER SVPEBV1SIOS OF STATS BANMXO DS- PARTMENT In le?s than one year. Ae you ataong thp numlk>r of depostors/ It not, why 1 0/ Interest pad on deposts 4 /O commenplug the Bret of,cleh month. Safe Depost Boxes In Fre Proof Vault S3-00 per year aad upwards.. BED BANE, N. J. DR. J. E. BARE, Presdent. JOHN KING. Casher. W. H. HFNDRICK8ON. JB., Asst Casher. The rush last week upset our wldest expectatons. ( We regret that on Saturday, though we had doubled our force of clerks, scores had to go away not wated upon. Hundreds of people secured such bargans as have never been offered n Red Bank before. Good News for Late Comers. Whle the assortment of szes s somewhat broken, every par left s just as good as those sold, as all n the lot were good, fne shoes;- so t wll pay yojjo come n as your sze may be n the lot. In the lades shoes, 15 cents to $2.49, there s yet a good assortment* though they are gong fast. We have some great bargans n chldrens shoes at 59c, and msses shoes at 75c, 85c..and $1.60. A few mens and boys, shoes are, left at less than one-half prce. A Specal Bargan for Lades. Cammeyers lades hand-sewed common sense lace \nd button" shoes. These shoes are an elegant lot; $3.00 to $5.00, our prce, $2.19, Nearly all szes. They are hardly soled, and are soft and easy. East Sde of Broad Street, RED BANK, N. J.

9 A VOLUME XXI. NO. 50. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDA JUNE f, PAGES 9 TO 16. LONG LIST OF FIRES. BUILDINGS BURNED IN ALL PARTS OF THE COUNT. A Tenement House and a Barn at Aec Momouth Destroyed Last Thursday Maht-A Fre at Lor IIlard* the Same Xuht.. A small tenement house at New Mon- mouth, owned by George Morford, was burned-down last Thursday nght. The house was stuated at the juncton of the roads leadng to Red Bank ^and Chapel Hll. About mdnght Henry Frost, who lves near by, was awakened by the flames; He got up and dressed and f.roused hs next door neghbor, Howard Tndall. Together they went to the fre. v When they arrved at the house t was ; J^lmost burned downand they wentback. home wthout arousng the neghbors. The house was formerly the New Monmouth publc school buldng, but after ts purchase by Mr. Morford t-had been converted nto a tenement house. Of late t had not been occuped, except n the summer, when Mr. Morfords farm hands $lept there. Tramps bad made the place a rendezvous and t s thought thatthey set the house on fre. The loss s fully covered by nsurance. On the same nght a large barn on the farm of Joseph and James Frost, on the road frota New Monmouth to Mddjetown, was burned down. Charles Hen,- drckson lves just across the road from the barn. He was uot awakened by the fre and no one knew that the barn had burned down untl Frday mornng. The barn was used as a storage place for farm mplements and the entre loss was about $900. The barn and contents were nsured. How the fre started s a mystery* but t s supposed to have been the wbrk of nsendares. A barn on the Garrett Thorn homestead at Lorrllards was also burned down onj Thursday. nght. Ths barn was ownjea by the brckyard people and the loss s fully covered by nsurance. The orgn of ths fre s also a mystery. A FIRE ON BEACH STREET. The Result of, Sett t a Fre to a Hens Mat. Mrs. II. A. Fowler rents the Harret VanSchock place on Beacl street. There s a barn, chcken house,and other outbuldngs on the property, as well as the house.: Mrs. Fowler kept chckens and last week she found that the hens and ther -nests were nfested wth chcken lce. Last Frday afternoon she burned out one of the hens nests n the chcken house to destroy the chcken lce. She thought every Bpark had gone out when she left the chcken house, but half an hour afterward the upper part of the barn was found to be on fre. Some sparks had remaned n the hens nest and the fre had started from there. The barn s connected wth the chcken house, and the fre had spread to the barn. As soon as the fre wab seen Mrs. Fowler gave the alarm. A bucket brgade was formed by neghbors and the fre kept n check untl Unon hose company of West Red Bank arrved. The fremen put the fre out n a short tme, The upper part of the barn was damaged to the amount of $150. The loss s covered by nsurance. The chcken house was scorched on one sde, but was damaged only slghtly. A Slght Fre on Monmouth Street > A slght fre occurred on Sunday nght n one of Robert Allens houses on Monmouth street. The house s occuped by Mr. and Mrs. Wllam Page, They had gone out and left a candle burnng on a stand. The candle burned down and set fre to the cloth whch covered the Btand. 1,The east wndow of the room was up and the fre was seen by n boarder who lves n the adjonng house. He gave the alarm and wth help of sono neghbors the front door of the house was forced open nnd tlo fre was put out wth a few pals of water. The fre companes turned out, but ther ser vces were not needed. The damage wna slght. > A House Burned at Wall. Lewg Polands IIOUBO n Wall town ahp, near the Wnll Methodst church, caught fre last week and was burned down, together wth ts contents, Mr. and Mrs. Poland escaped from tlo house n ther nght clothng;. Tlo Ions was $l,ij0o, on whch there was an nsurnncc of f 800, Vrtu Wanted. Ffteen to twenty «lrla wanted to run aowltg machnes. Mnchnon nre operated by power. S. Esner, Wallace Htreot, Red Bank. Adv. BUILDINGS BURNED. All the Outbuldngs on Thomas A, Smths Farm Destroyed by Fre- All the outbuldngs, on Thomas A. Smths farm near West Freehold were destroyed by fre on Tuesday of last week. The buldngs burned were a new hay barn, 24x60 feet; a gran barn, 24x86 feet; a_ cow house, 20x55 feet; a stable, 80x58 feet; two wagon houses one 20x25 feet and the other 26x40 feet; and a shed 15x40 feet., There was an nsurance of $2,900 on the buldngs. Several sets of harness, two tons.of hay, one hundred bushels, of corn and a calf were- burned up. The farm machnery add all the lve stock, wth the excepton of the calf, were saved. Mr. Smths house s close to the burned buldngs but the house was saved by spreadng wet carpets from the roof. Some one stole $6 from a bureau drawer durng the fre. The buldngs are supposed to hare been set. on fre. Mr. Smth was at Freehold when the fre occurred and he dd not know of hs loss untl he reached home at nght. "Jack the Peeper" Shot At. Oceanports "Jack the peeper" s stll at work. On Sunday nght he annoyed Mrs. J. E. Wallng by walkng up on the front stoop and lookng n the frott wndow. Mrs. Wallngs son Charles happened to be at home. He got a gun and slpped out of doors. The peeper heard hm comng and made off. Mr. Wallng saw the man runnng and shot at hm, but be does not thnk he ht hm. Captan Robert Lews. Injured. Robert Lews of Long Branch, captan of the steamer Mary Patten was serously njured last Sunday by beng caught between the sde of the boat and a large furnture van that was beng taken from New ork to Long Branch. Capt. Lews s a brother of Wllam Lews, the Navesnk mal carrer. HoleB In a Brdge Sdewalk. There are two very dangerous holes n the sdewalk of the brdge at Far Haven. One of the boles s large enough for a, womans foot to slp through, but so far no one has been njured. Several bcyclsts have been thrown from ther wheels at ths spot, but they have caped wth Blght njures. "An Old Folks*" Pcture. The persons who took part n the " old folks" concert whch wgs recently gven at Shrewsbury and Eatontown, were photographed n costume at the close of one of the performances. The pcture was a flash-lght and was taken by Dr. W. U. Kurtz of Eatontown. The pcture s an excellent one, every face beng shown dstnctly. Changng the Locaton of a Staton. The~Central ralroad has bought a pece of land along ts tracks between the Hghlands and Seasde and wll buld a freght staton there at once. A passenger staton wll also be bult on the new tract after the present season, nnd the old staton near the Hghlands drawbrdge wll be abandoned, An Elberon House Burned. The old Edwn Adams house at Eberon, whch was recently bought by C. W. Luyster of New ork, was burned down last week. Mr. Luyster had just spent about $5,000 n mprovng the house. A Gasolne Stove Exploson. A gasolne stove n the resdence of James R. Shelds of Long Branch ex ploded Ia9t Wednesduy-and set fre to the ktchen. The fre was put out be fore much damage was done. THE OPEN DOOR. A Telephone s, an Open Door Through If/Wcf Mlualncan Enters. Telephone servco saves much tme and as " Tme s Money " t raves money. It coats less than an errand boy and t does, the work of a commercal gant. Telephone servce between offce and resdence s a tremendous convenence and at,the present message rates s an unmportant expense. If one telephone BO ncreases buseau that the "Open Door" s crowded, open another door) that s,havo another telephone, or hotter a Prvate Branch Exchange, wth trunk lnes to the "Contral, a swtchboard, and as many HtntloB na may bo requred. Low rutch, perfect servce. For nton and partculars address) tlo contract department, or call by telephone wthout charge. Tlo Now ork nnd New Jersey tolcphono company, 170 Broadway, Long Branch ; 81 Wlouglhy Htreet, Brooklyn, N,. Adv. Tne RcaBTK prnts nl tlo news all the tme. dr THE END OF SCHOOL DAS. THREE GRADUATES AT A PRI- VATE SCHOOL. Jane PrsetUa Sousa, Maron Itlta Frost and Alda Kennedy Lovett Fnsh Ther Studes at jthe Calhoun and Chamberlan School. The graduatng exercses of Mss Calhoun and Mss Chamberlans school on Maple, avenue were held n the Baptst church on Frday nght. About 200 people were present. Thechurch was decoratedwth palms whch-were donated by John T. Lovett and arrranged by hm. Suspended overthe altar was the class motto, Vrtute," n letters made of dases and underneath were the fgures " 99," made of the same flowers. The entre school, headed by the graduates, narched n a body frotn the school to the church, Mrs. Wllam Pntard played the organ as they made ther entrance. The graduates were Jane Prsclla Sou6a, Maron Rhea Frost and Alda Kennedy Lovett. The exercses opened wth a prayer by Rev. W. B. Matteson. Mss Sousa gave the clasb hstory, Mss Frost read an essay on "Shakespeares Treatment of Ambton n Macbeth," and Mss Lovett read an essay on "A Glmpse of Two Great Poets." After the exercses by the graduates an oraton was delvered by Prof, Enoch Perrne of BucknelL unversty. Rev. J. K. Mannng of Trenton gave the charge to the class, The dplomas were presented by Mss Calhoun., Musc was furnshed durng theexercses by a tro composed or J. C. Gravel, Rudolph Malchow and J. D. OttersOn, Jr. At the close of tbe exercses the pupls agan formed n lne and marched from the church n a body. On Wednesday afternoon of last week, the undergraduates of Mss Calhoun and Mss Chamberlans school gave a tea to the graduatng class. Refreshments were served on the l#wn, after whch the usual class sprt manfested tself n songs back and forth between the classes, and n toasts. On Thursday nght the puplsof the school gave a muscal recepton.. It was attended by about one hundred people, many of whom were frends or relatves of the pupls from out of town. The programme was arranged by Mss Helena Munch, teacher of musc at the school, and Mss Anna Geurnsey, nstructor n readng, In both musc and readng a marked mprovement over last year was shown. Those who gave muscal selectons were Lavna Applegate, Edna Wllams, Cordela Davs, Norma Hamlton, Anabel and Maron Frost and Alce Dawes. Readngs were gven by Anabel Frost, Helen Sousa, Llan Applegate and Norma Hamlton., Refreshments were served at the close of the entertanment. The prmary department of the school held ther closng exercses on the afternoon of Decoraton day. Only the parents of the pupls were present. The exercses opened wth songs by the prmary choral class. Those who took part n the entertanment were Rta Ressler, Gladys Hance, Lzze DavB, Helen Armstrong and Jean and Marjore Frost. A dumbbell drll was a feature of the exercses. NAVESINKS GRADUATES. A Clans of Seven Graduated Last Frday XI u lt. The graduatng exereseb of the Navesnk publc school were held at Navesnk hall last ; Frday nght. The graduates were Nelson F. Maxson of Locust Pont, Adelade M. Layton and Wllam Swan of Navesnk, Ada Mae Sweeney and Edward Johnson of Hllsde nnd LIIa and Roy Day of Port Monmoutb, The valedctory address was made by Llla Day. and the salutatory address by Roy Day. Tho clas3 prophecy was gven by Adelade Lnyton. Wllam Swan read an essay on " The patrotc sprt" and Ada Sweenoy and Llla Day gave rectatonb. Addresses to tho graduates were made by Rev. J. W. Nckleson, Rev. John C. Lord, Rev. W. W. Johnson and C. Herbert Wnllpg, the prncpal of the school. Mrs, W.-A. Sweeney Bang a solo and wth her sster, Mrs. II. B, Hart, Bang a dtfof. Mr. and MrB. Wyman of Navcank played a pnno and, voln duet. The prmary and ntermedate departments of tho BCIIOOI took part n tho excrclnes. Rectatons wero gven by Lly BolloMaxeon, Harry Cook,Sarah Tallman and Harry Ponton, and n fan drll ww gven by twolvo grls. An ndmseon was chnrged to the ontertnnmet and the recepts were $24. At tho begnnng of tho achool year medals were offered to the pupls attendng school every day durng tbe year. Those who receved medals were Nelson and Lly Belle Maxson, Emma Hendrckson and Llla Day. BED BANKS GRADUATES. Nelle Wlbur - Statute Hghest n the Class. The graduatng exercses of the Red Bank publc school wll he held n the opera house on Thursday nght of next week. Nelle Wlbur stands hghest n the class and wll be tbe valedctoran at the commencement exercses. The averages of the graduates are taken from ther last three years n school. Nelle Wlburs average for "that perod a Olga Aul wll be salutatoran. Her average for the three years s Horace VanDorn s a close thrd, hs average beng , To graduate t s necessary to have ah.average for the three years of at least 75. The graduates, besdes those mentoned above, are Jesse Bowne, Maron Byram Anne Edgar, Adele. Gaunt, "Florence Gbson, Lda Thome, Grace Stout, Jatrfes H. Hendrckson, Ralph Mount, Ernest Pach and Wllam Taylor. Charles D. Warner, the presdent of the Red* Bank board of educaton, has receved a letter from C. J. Baxter, the state school superntendent, n whch Mr. Baxter states that he wll be present at the graduatng exercses of the Red Bank publc school.», The graduatng exercses have "always been announced to begn at eght oclock, but,t has usually been nearly half an hour later when the exercses were actually begun. Ths delay has been caused by people comng n late, who caused so much dsturbance and confuson that the begnnng of the exercses was. put off untl all these late comers were seated. Ths year the exercses wll begn at eght oclock, sharp. The alumn assocaton wll hold ts annual reunon n the town hall on Frday nght, June 16th. THE HAZLET SCHOOL. Closed for the Summer Vacaton Pupls wth Hgh Standng- The publc school at Hazlet, whch has been taught by Danel T, Hendrckson for the past two years, has closed for the summer. Durng the year 94 pupls were enrolled and the average daly at tendance was 56. The school s one of the largest n Monmouth county where only oe teacher s employed. Books to the value of $20 have been added to the school lbrary durng the year and a new organ, lamps and curtans have been bought. Nelle Morrs, a pupl of the "Hazlet school, who s only thrteen years old, passed the recent examnaton for county grammer school dplomaswth a very hgh average. The pupls of the school who mantaned an average of nnety or over n ther studes durng the past year are as follows, the names beng gven n the order of mert n each grade : Frst grade Roy Clark, Josle Peseux, George Cowles. Second grade Hudson Carhort, Melvlle Wallng, Maud Ivlns, Los Sproul, Russell Polng, Edna Welgand. Thrd grade Fred Pollnp. Luelln Stout, Vola Hver. Fourth grade Besale Sproul, Nelle Polng, Ernest Peseux, Florence Denlbe. Ffth grade Lena McGovera. Sxth grade Maud Ackerson, Battle Webster. Sevnl grade Nelle Morrs. Anne Morrell. Eghth grade Mame Webster,.Wlllltm Morrell. Keyports Honor Roll. Keyport s probably the greatest town n the county for regular attendance at Bchool on the part of the Bchool chldren. One of the Keyport schoolgrls has not mssed a day at school n eght years. Another has been present every day for sx years. A boy has attended every sesson for fve years and another grl for four years. The, Keyport honor roll n attendance at school s as follows: Eght years Maud Stnnhope. Sx yoanj-flora smth. Klvo years Harold Collns. Four ycurs-llzzlo Polng. Tlroo yraun-glads Brown, Iva Tllton. Charley Woolloy, Llzzlo Uurrun. Two yearu-gerlrude Ileers, Hnttle Smmons, Cecl Ackerson, Anne Tllton, Tlnlo MaBon, Etlol Clarendon, WHuer Outtrull, Florence Woollny, Percy Wulllng. Ono ycur Raymond Me* Innoy, Wlle Wheeler, Bnh Medan, Illunclo lltlhnrt. Walter Cherry, Wlle Muurer, Kva Clorry, Clam Zelloy, Nellu llambrlnk, Nun McKlnmy, Alden Welch, Wlle Kmpp, Le)McCann. Shrewsbury Academy Graduates Tho commencement exercses of Shrewsbury academy wll bo hold at the school buldng on Leroy place on Frday mornng at ten oclock, The grnduateh are JoslcConover and Danel H. Applegate, Jr, Mlua Conover wll read an (way on "Queen Habelln," and Danel II, Applegnte, Jr,, wll npouk on " Trusts." There wll be recttlonf by other puplln of the BOIIOOI. CASES IN BANKRUPTC. A NUMBER OF THESE CASESIN MONMOUTH COUNT. Persons Apply to the Bankruj>tey Referee to be Releved of Debts Whch Then Cannot Pay Provsons of the Lac. A year or so ago a natonal bankruptcy - law was passed by congress. Under the provsons of ths law, f a man owes debts whch he cannot pay, he can fle a petton to be declared a bankrupt, or some of hs/credtors can begn proceed- ngs to have hm declared a bankrupt. If he fles a petton hmself to be declared a bankrupt, he has to turr over all hs property to trustees, who sell t. If some of hs credtors fle a petton, askng that he be declared a bankrupt, all hs property must also be turned over to trustees to be sold. When all hs property has been Bold, except BO much - as the law allows a man,to retan, the money receved from the property s dvded among all the credtors n proporton to the amount of ther clams. When ths has been done the bankrupt can apply for hs dscharge from bankruptcy. After he has been dscharged none of hs credtors can thereafter compel the bankrupt to pay any of hs old debts. Whle the bankruptcy proceedngs are gong on the bankrupt- must make oath to all the property he possesses and to all of the debtr aganst hm. If he conceals any of hs property, or f be trumps up any false debts, he can be sent to prson. Aftevbeng declared- a bankrupt the person s strpped of all hs property except the exempton allowed hm by law, but he s also releved of the debtsuwhch have been hangng over hm. The exempton n ths state s $200 n the case of marred men, "and goods to ths amount can be retaned by marred men who are declared bankrupts. Unmarred men have no exempton and cannot retan any property. Frederck Parker has been apponted referee n bankruptcy n Monmouth county, and a number of cases have already come before hm. Bankruptcy cases are lkely to ncrease n number as soon as the provsons of the bankruptcy law become more generally known. In. some of the cases whch have come up before Mr. Parfeer the credtors beleve that the bankrupt,has property whch has not been turned over to tbe trustees, and n these eases the credtors are opposng hs dscharge untl t s proven that he has no other property. Hon. Aaron B. Johnston has been apponted trustee n the Herbert A. Bushnell ease at Matawan.. A bll n equty has been fled by Mr. Johnston for the purpose of settng asde certan conveyances of real estate. Mr. Buslnell has appled for hs dscharge from bankruptcy, whch course s beng opposed by the credtors. If the dscharge s granted none of hs present credtors wll be able to come upon hm n the future for old debts. F. C. Breautgam of Loch Arbor has also appled for hs dscharge. Davd Harvey of Asbury Park s the trustee n the case. Dr. George S. Gagnon, the dentst who made a bg spread at Long Branch and fnally became bankrupt, leavng debts amountng to thousands of dollars, has returned from Europe and wll be examned at an early date. He has a host of credtors, some of vfhon dwell across the water. A very nterestng examnaton wll probably take place when hs case comes up. Tylee C. Morford of Long Branch has fled a petton to be declared a bankrupt, and Matthas Woolley has been apponted trustee.. Robert Appleton, Jr., of Deal, had no credtors appear aganst hm, as there are no assets, and Appleton wll, apply for hs dscharge from bankruptcy. Andrew J, Whte of Deal, who was nvolved n money transactons wth ha brother, the late Washngton Whte; and fnled, has two credtors. James D. Carton of Asbury Park has been apponted trusteo of the estate to look aftor ther nterests. Dr. Jacob A. Sherman of Freehold says ho has no abaetb outbdo of tho logul amount allowed h. Ho wll be examned by the credtors on June 12th to ascertan the true condton of hs uttnu George O. Ormerod of Aabury Park haa no asseta, He wll have an examnaton on Juno 7th. Hurry E. Taylor and Mrs. Anna A. Tnylor, tho mllers of Engllahtown, who recently faled, wll bo oxnmned on Juno (5th. Thn eotuto If In n comparatvely no>l condton am tlo credltoru wll receve almost dollar.for dollur.

10 THE FAMIL OF STOUTS. THE STORT5 ov THEIR SETTLE- MENT IN NJEW JERSE. Penelope Stout, the maternal Ancestor, Shpwrecked on Sandy Hook -nearly Klled by Indlans-Bes- jced Her Many Descendants. In Nottnghamshre, England, n the year 1585, there was born to John Stout a son named Rchard. The father was a man of some standng..and the boy was reared n a manner befttng hs staton. In the nature of event9 t was supposable that le would marry n the land of hs brth, succeed to the paternal acres, and perpetuate the famly name n the shre of hs ancestors. - But fate had ordered another and a strange outcome. WJen Rchard arrved at manhood he fell n love wth, and was about to marry, a neghbors daughter who was somewhat below hm" n the socal scale. The elder Stout n anger forbade the marrage, and Rchard left hs home and enlsted n the Englsh navy. He served seven years on a man-of-war and, at the expraton of ns servce, the vessel beng then at New Amsterdam, or New ork, he was dscharged. He had nether forgotten nor forgven hs fathers act, and had no desre to return to hs natve land. He settled among the Dutch of New Amsterdam and became thoroughly assmlated n language and customs. Here he lved for a number of years. In 1602 only a year or two before young Stout had left hs home Mynheer Vanprncs, at Amsterdam, Holland, was blest wth a daughter to whom the name of Penelope was gven. In her twentyfrst year she was marred to a young man of her natve cty, whose name has escaped the search of the hstoran. The young par determned to cast lots wth ther countrymen n" the New World, and n the year 1024 they embarked n a Dutch shp for New Amsterdam. The shp, lke many another one snce, made an nvoluntary landng on the treacherous sands of New Jersey, gong ashore some lttle dstance south of the extremty of Sandy Hook, then known as Columns Pont, or Sandy Pont. Fortunately the passengers and crew all reached the elore ; buo Penelopes husband, who had been sck on shpboard, and who was n a feeble condton, was badly njured by wreckage n the surf. The presence of Indans n that vcnty and ther hostlty to the whtes were well known to the people of the shp, and ther frst thought was to get to New Amsterdam as speedly as possble. They agreed to start on foot at once, and, as Penelopes husband was so badly hurt that he could not travel, they decded that the safety of, the others demanded that they should leave hm there and press forward, hopng that ad could be sent hm from New Amsterdam as soon as they reached there. But Penelope was a fathful wfe and she absolutely refused to abandon hm ; so she and her husband were left on that wld neck of land and the remander of the company started for New Amsterdam, whch place they reached n safety. Scarcely bad they left when a band oe Indans came upon the dstressed couple. They klled the man, crushed the womans skull wth a tomahawk, broke her arm, tore her clothng from her, and ended by cuttng a gash across her abdomen from whch her ntestnes protruded. She was horrbly mangled and they thought her dead. When the savages of those days left a whte person for deud t wna usually safe to assume that such was the tact; but Penelope was not dead. In that mangled body there was yet nnety years of lfe After the Indans hud left, Penelope became conscous and was able to crawl to a near-by hollow log, holdng together the gapng edges of her fearful wound In nnd by the log she found some vega taton whch she ate nnd by t was-refreshed. She lay there n that condto* for seven full days, wonderng at her own vtalty and never dreamng thn for her there was anythng but speed; death. On the mornng of the eghth day she WIIH actually glad to.see two Indans approach tho place where she lay, for she felt assured that now her sufferng would soon end. Ono of the Indans was young and the other old. When they came to her they fell nto a volent dspute, whch she aftcnvnrdu learned was because the younger one wanted to kll her at once, whle the older desred to wve her and hold her for ransom. Th^ old Indan fnally prevaled and, throwng a " match coat" over her, he lfted her to hs shoulder and curred her to lm wgwam, nenr where Mlddletown now Btandw. Under hs sklful treatment her wounds healed t ml she recovered, Of all her WOUIKIH but one left a permanent njury hor left shoulder vvw HO hacked that oho never reganed the UHO of tha an, After Htuyng wth tho old Indan for 1 Bomo nontlh ho dually took IIIT to New AnBtdun and prewted her to her frends, recevng umy valuable; gftn for II!H Immunty. Tlnm nle at lmt, reached tlc end of tho journey begun many months before n Holland, and thus 1 ; ame that the last and completng lnk f fate was made and welded. At New Amsterdam Rchard Stout met Penelope and marred her. He was 40 years of age and she but 22. How long they lved n^ew Amsterdam after that s not now defntely known, but t must have been for several years. Wth the. spread of Dutch colonsts to outlyng dstrcts they moved to Mddletown, New Jersey, to almost the very spot where Penelope had been nursed back to lfe. The old Indan was stll here and afterwards saved her lfe a second tme.by gvng her nformaton of an ntended massacre by hs trbe. The. settlers, were put on ther guard, and the Indans retred wthout molestng them. To Rchard Stout and eleven other assocates Governor Ncolls grantgd the patent for Blonmouth county, New Jersey, n Penelope bore Rchard Stout seven, sons and three daughters. Tre chldren were Jonathan, John, Rchard, James, Peter, Davd, Benjamn, Mary, Sarah and Alce. The daughters marred nto thefamles of Bownds, Pkesand Throckmotons, and so lost the name of Stout. The sons marred nto the famles of Bullenp, Crawfords, Ashtons, Truexs and others, and had many chldren. The mother ded n ]712 at the age of 110 years, and n the 88 years of her lfe as Penelope Stout her offsprng numbered 502 souls. The name of Stout was spread to nearly every hamlet of New Jersey, and none s better known to-day throughout the state, yet every one can trace s lneage back to the horrbly mutlated young Dutch_ grl that lay seemngly dead on a Sandy Hook hummock n N. J. WILSON, DEALER IN DR GOODS, NOTIONS, HOSIER, &c. BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J. I Baseball Goods I Fshng Tackle, Statonery, AT ltetley&sons. ** Dust Absorbng Floor Ol " Reduced,to 50c. a Gallon. S: Plumbng rwork! t X We take contracts for plumb- X ng new houses V ^> We take contracts for makng v* changes n the plumbng of «The Lake Maron Ice Company. houses and puttng" n m- <*> proved santary devces...!. Z We do odd jobs of plumbng, X large or small, by contract or t, otherwse ^ We do good plumbng all the ^* tme % ; Cook & Oakley, X 18 Front Street, «S> RED BANK, NEW JERSE. LOCAL TELEPHONE 52. PURE SPRING LAKE ICE FROM LAKE MARION. DELIVERED FREE TO RED BANK, FAIR HAVEN, OCEANIC, LITTLE SILVER, SHREWSBUR.... Send a Postal nnd a wagon wll call. Ice on hand constantly at our offce : Front and West Streets, Red Bank. Suts to Order f f X r f t 1 T W. B. LAWRENCE, Manager. > $15 and upward. Also Cleanng and Reparng promptly attended to. CORLIES, The Merchant Talor and Clother, BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J.» «+ + *«««+ + + My coal yard s handy and the coal you get from t s good coal, well screened, and the best.the market affords. We delver our coal promptly, and the prces are as low as the market wll allow., WM.N. WORTH LE, : Foot of Worthlcys Hll, RED BANJC, N. J. :: > J 6 The Unted States uses more coffee than any other country on the Globe. The very chocest coffees are sent to ths country. As her people are the most prosperous they.can ; afford, to be the most crtcal n regard to the qualty of ther coffee.. Best Coffee has always been a hobby wth us. We know what s the best and where to get twthoutexpermentng wth dfferentbrands. We quote" prce on the best coffee n the. market:. _ Best Old Government Java ;...; 29c..per pound. Best Old Government Java and AAA Mara- ". cabo... 24c. " ", Best AAA Maracabo.- J.9c.- " " CHEAPER COFFEE. Mld Flavored Santos 15c. " " Santos c. " " The best Elgn Creamery Butter s too well-known to need comment. We quote :. Best-Elgn Creamery : 23c. per pound. Best New ork State Dary *. 20C " 132 Broad Street, Red Bank, NJJ OLD AND PURE WHISKIES, THE BEST y RED CAN BE FOUND AT THE STORE OF SOUTH SIDE OF FRONT STRET, NEAR BROAD STREET. ou wll be satsfed wth the qualty and prce. A full assortment of Old Whskes and Brandes, and the best Imported and Domestc Wnes, Ales, Porters, &c, &c. Extract of Malt, $1.50 per dozen pnts. I make a specalty of Chamberlans Old Cabnet Rye, aged 10 years. Gallon, $4.75 ; full quart, $1.25. VT RED BANK, f 13 Broad Street, AW meats sold are NEW JERSE. V f t I Cty Dressed Meats. I <» Customers at the CIT, MARKET are thus A assured of healthy meat, wth no artfcal pre- servatves. t,. - ^ X Prces are reasonable and are usually lower J^ «than the prces of Chcago dressed meats. * IX D. G. APPLEGATE,! 13 BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J. 1

11 < \ DEATHS ABOARD SHIP. How Burals at Sea From Ocean Lners are Jflanaaed. > There s no place where death s more tnwelcome than.- on board a jpaesenger steamer, and between the death and bural of. a sea traveler the melancholy nfluence of the event extends to every one on board. The lmtatons of space are very lkely responsble n part for ths, for there s the feelng that untl the body has been cast nto the arms of the sea there s no gettng away from t. So spake a man who has crossed the Atlantc ocean many tmes and who on more than one occason had been a passenger on one of the bg lners whed death had clamed a vctm from, amonf those on board... Salors dread a death on board ther vessel as much as anythng, and when one occurs they are all anxety to render the body (he last servce, *nd ths fact s often responsble fo-the haste and scant consderaton wth whch burals at sea are too often conducted. But the days of snch ceremones are fast dyng, and efforts are now bedg. made whch wll permt of the body beng carred for the remander of the jonrney after death and properly bured on land. Even now t s generally only salors and steerage passengers who are bured at sea, and frequently these are cast to the waves wthout BO much a s the vessel beng slowed down and wthn an our or two of ther death. Often enough a death occurs n a vessel wthout the f act becomng Known to more than one or two of the crew.or steerage passengers, Every effort s made to keep the event secret, and n the stllness of nght, when better class passengers are comfortably carled tp n ther bunks, a lttle band of men, movng lke shadows across the deck, bear a body from below, and, whle the vessel. a plowng the sea, the mortal remans wrapped n canvas or nclosed n a.crudely made box, are quetly slpped over the shps sde nto the mysterous deep. The presence pf a dead body on board has sometmes not even been suspected by the passengers untl some one has notced the sharks that are followng, for t s no mere jalors story that sharks know when a shp contans u corpse. A vessel carryng a dead body and passng through waters frequented by sharks s almost sure to be followed by one or more of thrjse fshes, f t does not outspeed them. Rather than bury a corpse whle sharks are followng a vessel the captan wll sometmes have the bcdy placed n the ce chamber and full steam put on the engnes untl the hungry fshes have dropped astern completely. In one cnse nt least a body was actually cremated on board by the captans orders because of the sharks. But sharks are not often obstacles to prompt bural, and, generally speakng, when a death occurs at sea, the body selpped nto the water at nght wth none to wtness the proceedng but n couple of the crew and the captan, who reads an abrdgment of the servce from the prayer book. The manner of bural of course depends greatly upon the captans own feelngs n respect to the dead, and t must be acknowledged that these feelngs are n some cases all that they should be. Some captans have the greatest objecton to "dumpng" a dead body nto toe sea and, when t s unavodable, wll do ther uttermost to conduct the ceremony wth all possble reverence and respect. For all that, there s always the feelng of the shps crew nnd the melancholy effect of the presence of a corpse 1o be reckoned wth, and the argument that more consderaton s due to tho lvng than the dead often prompts a captan to "dnmp" a steerage passenger n the dead of nght wthout mentonng th,e event to more than a couple of hands. Thus t often happens that whlo a concert or n prvate theatrcal performance s gqng on n the salcon the captan s engaged makng arrangements for the buraf of some unfortunate creature. Tbe "Change of Ar" Cure. "Thero s no sense, 1 sad a New ork physcnn, who lns passed the days when ho must practce even f he does nqt wsh to, "n the haphazard wny n Whch a patent s sent away from home to exhaust hs strength and spend hs nwey n the hopo that a chango of nr wll do hm good. There s no uso n sendng a person awny to <lc. "Many physcnns aro not nt all consderate ubott tla. sort of thng. Thero aro 8omo cusea n whch the nflnenco of clnuto s a potent factor n tho treatment of certan dseases, but not half so many of them as H generally supposed. Qnetnhd rest nt home, plenty of sunshne, good foofl nnd pnro nr aro worth far. noro than n chongo of clmnto, that n BO often recommondort IIH a euro ull." ", Tho Rulng Passon. Customer Whnt 1H tho prce of tla calco? SlcmnuM Sxteen contn n yard. CnBtomer Sxteen cento I Ill glvo you 18. BulcHnnn on nhuderhtnd mo. I md 0 conto, not 10. CtBtomcr 8x,cents a yard! Hml Ill RIVO you f.. H pyh to ndvurtflo In Tun RICMHTISII. HEARSE DRIVING. Men Steadly JEmtloyed at It In the Larger Ctes. In smaller ctes fnd njjtbe country the hearse drver may between tmes drve other vehcles or engage n some other work, but n a cty of great populaton lke New ork, where, n the natural course of thngs, many deaths occur daly and where many hearses are used and kept constantly employed, hearse drvng s a regular occupaton.* There are many hearse drvers n the cty who have been, thus steadly employed for many years. Only careful and skllful drvers are employed n ths; capacty. The lettng of hearses a long establshed custom n ths cty. Many lverymen own from one to a ddzen hearses and let them to sextons and undertakers. Perhaps half of the undertakers of the cty do not keep hearses, but hre of tbe lvery owners: So t commonly happens that n answerng calls from one source and another the hearses owned by the lverymen are constantly employed. It mght be that all the hearses owned n a stable, whatever ther number, would be called for day after day and week after week, as regularly as so many carrages or other vehcles mght, be, and so t comes about that hearse drvng a here a steady occupaton, just lke any other. Whle hearees are commonly drven to and from. the varous cemeteres n and about the cty, they are sometmes drven out of the cty to varous nearby ctes and towns. Hearses have been drven to greater dstances, but they are not often drven more than 12 or 15 mles away. ; _ " Lmts of Heat and Cold. Extremes of heat and told can be produced artfcally to such ntense extents nowadays that t s a physcal mpossblty to measure them "wth ^absolute accuracy. "We cannot measure the nfntesmal," says Charles Whtng Baker, edtor of Engneerng News. "The best we can do s to make careful estmates. The greatest heat produced artfcally s that of an electrc arc.furnace, the knd ythat s used n the producton of artfcal damonds, calcum carbde, etc. It s so ntense that nothng exsts wth whch to record t. It s estmated,- however, to-be of about 4,000 degrees f. "The coldest known temperature s that of lqud ar, whch freezes alcohol and mercury and dstances all means of measurng. It s clamed for t that wth t a temperature of 400 degrees below zero Fahrenhet a reached. The present lmts of, heat and cold are therefore represented by the arc furnace and tho lqud ar." < Pano Practce and Peas. Leschetzky, the famous teacher of the pano n ennn, often brghtens hs talk wth remnscence. "I always practced a pece wth sx dred peas," he sad to one pupl, "When I began, I would lay the sx peas on the pano rack sde by sde. Then when I had played the pece through perfectly or a part of t I would pnt one of the peas n my pocket. That would leave ^fve peas, and when I had played t through perfectly a second tme I would put another pea n my pocket, and so I would go on untl I had played t through perfectly ss tmes n successon, and all the pens were n my pockets. But f I made a sngle mstake, say n tho thrd playng or the fourth playng, I would put the sx peas back on the rack and begn all over agan. Whoever practces wth sx dred peas s sure to play as well as he can." How Coffee Grows. Tbs.JB how coffee leaves and berres look at about the tme for the harvest; The coffee tree s an.evergreen plant, growng 10 or 12 feet hgh.. Its leaves are a dark, shny green on the upper sde and paler underneath. They are fve or sx nches long and from two to three nches wde. Flowers come n fragrant whte clusters and gve place to berrea whch when ready for gatlorng aro a deep red. It takes from four to seven years to brng a plant to bearng. We Pulled a Rose n Sunmer Tme, Wo pulled a rose n Bummo- tlmo Bosklo truo lovors gnto. Our lps Sent up BO awcot a chtmo That twlght lngorcd Into. Now loolt how ta tho year grown old, How loofleas lodgo and treol TIB Bnld that oven lovo grows cold; _ 8o hero 1B rosemary. When ou Need a Plumber Call on us. ou wll not regret t. ou wll be very glad of t. Wo do excellent work, and our charged are only reasonable. Wo work on tho prncple that a satsfed customer e our best advertsement. Wo furnsh estmates of any knd promptly and cheerfully. SABATH& WHITE, 10 mul 18 front St., Hod II an It, N, jr. r G. F. HOLMES, JR., FANC GROCER,! 26, BROAD STREET. Goods Guaranteed. Prces Reasonable. F. K. FRENCH, MANAGER. *^*^^ *^^^^^^ To Farmers and Truckers.! I have my fresh supply of Bakers and Bowkers Fe- 0 tlzers for ths season. These goods need no explanaton, j! They always sell upo ther merts and prove ther results. Land Lme n car lots at 10 cents per bushel. - Coal and Wood as usual. Sole agent for South Bend Plows a,nd Fxtures. I! Also have Boss and Olver Plows and Fxtures, and Planet, Jr., Cultvators and Fxtures. TELEPHONE 27. WHARF AVENUE, RED BANK, 5OO0 O O QO9 O O OOOO OOO OO O OO OOGOSOOO 0 0 The Best Roof! The Most Durable Roof! The Cheapest Roof!. One of My Steel Roofs! BILLS HEAD Commsson Stables Nos. 495 and 497 Broad St., NEWARK, IN. J. Tle Largest Sale Stables n New Jersey. Large Aucton Sales of 150 to 250 Head vo Horses every Tuesday and Frday... * COMMENCING AT 10 OCLOCK, A. M. Thesasale nclude Trotters. Pacers, Cobs, Famly, Saddle, Matched Pars, Busness, Farm, Express, Jersey Chunks and Heavy Draught Horses, wetruldg from 1,410 to 1,800 pounds. We always have lor each Tuesdays and Frdays sale, from 40 to 50 head of second-hand cty horses that aro a lttle pavement sore In front feet, sutable for farm use, whch are sold very cheap. Tlls s the cheapest place n the East to buy horses of any descrpton, and we Invte all ntendng purchasers to coll and look our stock over and we wll convnce them that we can sell them 20 percent, cheaper than any other place In the East. We are not lke a retal stable. We have to close tbeso horses out each week to make room for fresh conslrnments whch are constantly arrtvlug from the large western shppers. We ulve all purchasers two da$s tral on all horses, and If not as represented purchase money cheerfully refunded, partes lvng nt a dstance and cannot Ret horses back before the warrantee expres, we wll accept telegram or telephone message for same. Ths wll be a grand opportunty for farm and cty people to get a horse of any descrpton. HO & FOX, Propretors. J. 6, MOHEHOUS, Salesman. JOS. 8. HO and JACOB C. SBtJTTS, Auctoneers. COAL AND WOOD. W. B. LAWRENCE, Dealer n Coa) and Wood. galso FEED, CORN, OATS, HA AND STRAW TJpper Lebgh and all the Frst-Class Coals at Lowest Prces., When coal s purchased by the carload the beneft Of long tons, 2,240 pounds, s gven. ARD : Cor. Front and West Sts, ed Ba"k.K,. THE MATCHLESS»o LIGHT... IS ELECTKIC OF COURSE. DO OU USE IT? t All modern houses are wred for electrc lghts. We do wrng at actual cost to us. Informaton glatlly furnshed. The Shore Electrc Co., Red Bank. 25 EAST FRONT STREET, " New Jersey. As people learn how good a good steel roof s: (thats the only knd 1 1 put on); As people learn how long my steel roofs last: (for the steel roofs I put on eleven years ago are as good to-day as they were the day the work was done); As people learn how cheap my steel roofs are: (when the goodness and durablty of the roof s taken nto consderaton); As people learn all these thngs, why, they just send for me to put on more steel roofs. *,. Im busy now; buser than I have ever been before wth steel work; but Im not too busy to talk steel roof wth you f you are thnkng of havng some of ths "work done. \. Send me a postal card about your roof, and Ill be at yor house n a day or two. Dont forget about that twenty-year guarantee T gve wth all my steel roofs. DANIEL ft COOK, The Steel Roof Man. T1NTON PALLS, NEW JERSE.

12 A DRUNKEN MAN HURT. Tuns Layton Thrown, out of Mls : naton. Turns Layton of Seasde got drunk at Atlantc Hghlands last Saturday and started to drve home. At Navesnk he drove around the corner at Swans grocery 60 fakt that the wagon upset and threw hm-out. Ha face was cut so badly that he was covered w(l blood n a few mnutes. The horse ran on down the sdewalk wth the overturned wagon to Mrs, Mary Nelsons grocery > store, where t was caught. Dr.,R. G. Andrew saw the accdent from h-j offce and went to Laytons assstance, He dressed hs njures and Layton was able to drce home. Rescung a Bather. Cornell Lke and Augustus Bowman went n bathng at Port Monmouth on Monday. Lke could not swm and he got out beyond hs depth and cred for help. Bowman went to hs rescue and both were strugglng n the water when Edward Botbwck threw out a rope from hs boat and haul&d them n. A Grl Thrown From Her Wheel. Sade Despreaux of Locust Pont, who s employed n C. A^Mounts store at that place, ;rode to Red BanJt on her wheel on Decoraton day. Whle crossng Ihe brdge atjfar Haven the front wheel of her bcycle got caught n a crack between two planks. She was thrown to. the ground Jbut escaped njury. About a week prevous Mss Despreaux was comng to Red Bank when her wheel struck one of the tmbers of Throckmortons brdge and broke the fork of the bcycle.. v A Boys Foot Hant. George Reed, son of Jula Reed of Navesnk, was leadng a torse up Mll street near that place on Saturday, when the horse got frghtened and made a plunge. The horses foot came down on Reeds bare foot and the sharp edge of the horses shoe cut a gash n Reeds foot. The njury was dressed by Dr. R. G. Andrew.- Belfords Postmastershlp. Douglas Cooks term as postmaster at Belford expres next fall. Danel W. VanNote wll probably behs aucbeesor. Frends of Mr. VanNote gay that he 3 so sure of the appontment that he* s; gong to buld a store near the.staton nwhch to conduct the gostofacebusnesl Albert Mount Apponted Keeper. Albert Mount of Belford baa been apponted keeper of Ife-savrf; staton No. 3 at Seabrgbt, to succeed Abner H West, who resgned. Mount was formerly a member of the Sandy Hook sta-, ton crew. He ha.s been n the servce about twelve years. ouse > > ; JL! 4 New thngs are constantly arryng at our store. We have never before done so large a busness as we have enjoyed ths sprng, and we attrbute ths n large measure to the fact that we are contnually gettng n whatever s new and desrable n house-"" hold goods, farm and garden tools, etc.. We am to keep the very newest styles, the very latest patterns, and the chocest and largest assortment, n k\\ the lnes of goods we.handle. Customers.from places twenty mles away come to our store to trade, because of the large stocks to choose from, the hgh qualty of the goods, and the low prces at whch they are sold.. Hammocks. No home can be sad to be complete wthout a Hammock. They can be hung on the porch, or from the trees on the lawn. There sxtothng so nvtng, nothng no comfortable, as a hammock durng the warm summer days. We have them n a multtude of styles, and at prces whch range from 80 cents to $1.00. They are n Mexcan grass, n colored cord, wth and wthout head rests, and n varous szes. Every.taste can be suted and every hammock-want suppled from our,stock. Croquet Sets. The good old-fashoned game of croquet s agan becomng popular. We have croquet sets as low as 90 cents and as hgh as #3.50. They are well-made, even the- cheap sets beng durable and strong. The posts and arches can be set up n a small yard, and the young people of the house can have no end of pleasure. Screen Doors and Wndows. Nothng equals these for keepng out fles and bugs. The doors come n all regular szes and ft all ordnary szed doors. They can be readly made to ft odd szed doors. The wndow screens are adjustable and wll ftany wndow. Both doors and wndows are strongly made. The screen s of strong wre cloth, and wth proper care both doors and wndows wll last twelve to twenty years. Rattan and Wcker Furnture. We have Rattan and Wcker Chars, Lounges and Couches that are durable as well as comfortable, and substantal as well as showy. Ths class of furnture s very popular for summer use. It s cool, fne lookng, and cheap. Those chars are used largely for porches and are woll suted for ths use.. Ths pcture shows our fne lawn swng. We have sspld hundreds of these lawn swngs durng the past two or three years, and the demand seems to be ncreasng. They are an ornament to a lawn, and they provde a healthy sport and an agreeable pastme for old folks and young folks alke. Our latest lawn swng s so bult trat t affords a safe place for the baby. A Swng on the Lawn. Once put n the swng the youngster cannot fall out, and the natu- l < ral swayng of the swng keeps hm "contented and happy.. These swngs are strong, they cannot break down, and wth reasonable care they wll last a lfetme. We sell them at $4.50. Utlty Boxes. These are strong boxes, wth strong covers, and are covered wth chntz, carpet, and other stuffs. They are made n all szes, and are used to hold shoes, or soled clothng, or anythng that s wanted out of sght untl the tme cones for usng t, or for takng t away. Raffa. Strong, well-cured Raffa for tyng asparagus. Experence has shown that ths s the best materal for ths purpose. The Masury Pants. The Masury Pants come n cans ready for use. An nexperenced hand can apply them. A can of pant wll brghten up the nteror of a house untl t looks lke a new place. Masury pants spread evenly. They are made n the rght way, of the rght materals. They wear well. They cost $1.40 a gallon, and because of ther durablty they are the cheapest pants on the market., Champon Dry Powder Gun. Farmers have so many nsect pests to fght nowa- «J& teggetjs days that a good powder gun s a necessty on a farm. The Champon Dry Powder Gun s the best of these devces. It weghs about fve pounds and wll hold four pounds of Pars Green. It has two tubes, so that two rows of potatoes can be dusted at a tme. The tubes are adjustable to any wdth^bf rows. It has an adjustable gauge to regulate the amount of powder used. It can be a used on any knd of, plants or frut trees. Only one tubo can be used f desred. We sell ths Powder Gun, whch s by far tho best on the market, for $0.75. Ths Powder.Gun s smplo to operate, and t can be so adjusted that there s no waste of the Pars Green or other powder used. The powct8r s spread evenly over tho plants and not put on n patches. It wll do aa much work n a day as a horso-power sprayer, and at a much less cost for poson. > > > > :! I*! Front Street, next to Post-Offce, Red Bank, N. J.

13 MARGARET BUTLER ACQUITTED.,,\\ >.. v Tjve Woman Charged Wth Mnr&er- ng Her Daughter Goes Free. Margaret Buuer of Long Brarcb, who waf ndcted by the. last grand juryfortfye murder of her daughter, Elzabeth Butler, by throwng a lghted lamp at her, was acqutted at her tqal last Frday. Several wtnesses swore to havrg heard the. screams of Elzabeth Butler and of seeng her mmedately after she was.burned, but none of them saw Mrs. Butler throw the lamp. The man evdence upon whch the prosecuton defended waff the ante.-mortem "statement of the dyng grl, whch she made to Coroner Herbert. E. W. Arrowsmjth, counsel for Mrs, Butler, objected to the statement beng admtted" as evdence* on the ground that the questons n the statement were all leadng and that the statement had nether been sgned nor sworn, to by the grl. Judge Collns ruled the statement out, whereupon Prosecutor Hesley dropped, the case, -and Judge Collns nstructed the jury to brng n a verdct of not gulty. " >- - t JAMES APPLEGATE HURT. - Run Down By a Team Whle Flag- ;..., ahb «* Freehold*," James E. Applegate of Freehold, the flagman at the Man,street crossng at the Pennsylvana ralroad, was run nto by a wagon drven by John Daly on Decoraton day. He was standng n the mddle of the street flaggng a tran and Daly drove up behnd hm. Daly was drvng fast and could not stop hs horses. n tme to avod the accdent. The pole t>f the wagon struck Mr. Applegate n the back and knocked hm down. The horses trampled on hm as helay on the ground. Hs rght arm was cut from,tfye elbow to the shoulder and hs leg was njured. Mr. Applegate, although sufferng consderable pan, contnued at hs work. O- O Accdents to Weddng GuestB. Harry 0. VanNote of Oakhurst and Joseph Lackey of Long Branch attended a. weddng at Farmngdale last Tuesday. VanNote went by carrage and Lackey by bcycle. Whle ^returnng home after dark VanNote collded wth a rg gong n an opposte drecton. He wasslghtly njured and hs wagon and harness were damaged. Lackey was run Into by Charles Butcher of Farmngdale and was badly hurt. Hurt by a Fallng Iron Post. John Geran of Matawan was workng n the Matawun match factory last week Isfle an ron post whch had Teen set up, but whch had not been securely fastened, fell over on hm. A long gash was cut D bs bead and he was knocked ftconscpus. After recoverng hs senses he: 1 went; to a physcan, had the cut sewed up, and returned to vvork.j ^ Long Branch Street Sprnklers. The men who wll sprnkle the streets at Long Branch the comng summer are Mlton Castler, Davd A. Groves, John F. Conrow, John McCarthy, Elsha T. Smth, Thomas L. Worthley, Samuel Throckmorton, John Hnes and John A. Eaton. They furnsh ther, own teams and each man gets $70 a month. A Thef Caught at Keansburg, parallel Felds of Mddlesex county was caught breakng nto the staton at Keans bn,rg last Thursday mornng. Felds tred to escape but he was captured by W. W. Ramsay, the staton agent, and taken.to Keyport. A justce at that place sent hm to the county jal to awat the acton of the grand jury. Mrs. Rchard Wests LOBSBB. Mrs. Rchard West of Long Branch lost her pocketbook n Brooklyn a few days ago. The pocketbook contaned a rlfty-dollnr bll, a check and a few blls of emal denomnaton. Mrs. WeBt has lost hfer pocketbook on several dfferent occasons durng the last two years and altogether she has lost about $250. A Boy Run Down by a Bcyclst. WlleShumpskey, thethree-yeor-old son of Morrs "Shumpskey of Freehold was run down by n bcyclst whle playng n front of hs home a few days ago He was cut and brused about the hend and heck, The boyolat dd not slop after strkng tho boy. A Stabbng Affray. Francsco Mancuso, a Long Brune Italan, was Htabbcd n the rght sde last week durng a fght wth n fellou* countryman. Mancuso wa taken to the Long Branch hosptal. Tho mnn who dd tho stubbng has not yet been nrrcbtud. _ A Sulkoy Wrecked. Frank Bowkvr, who worlm for Wllam Plrkcr of Imluyntown, woo drvng new borne to a Hulkny ono dny hnt weol whun th) horne Imcluxl Into n dtch m nntlo a wreck of the nlkoy, Uuwkc -Hunpol Injury.. tr*vo«dont eu t n THE HICOIHTKII <Vl<rTlm>pon,--.fldt (. THROWN FROM A WAGON. Jacob Wenxe of Atlantc HlqMmtdn Injured u a Collson. Jacob Wenzel and Wllam Qurn of Atlantc Hghlands drove to Matawan on Sunday of last week ^ wth a colt. Whle gong through Matawan the colt shed and the buggy collded wth a lvery rg drven by George Cox. Wenzel and Qunn were both thrown out of ther wagon and Wenzel was cut n two places under the eye. Qunn and Cox escaped njury. Both wagons were damaged. Mr. Wenzol, s 82 years old. He sthe father-n-law of George Lnzmayer^ -who farms fle Thdnpsoh place near Atlantc Hghlands, A HOKSE DROPS QEAD. \ Ruptured a Blood Veenel Whle Ilac- 1 na at.freehold. >The trottng horse Omelet, owned by Wllam N. Thompson,of Freehold, was klled by a fall whle racng at Freehold on Decoraton day. The horse was drven by George Gatn. It was n the lead on the home stretch when t plunged forward and fell on ts neck. Examnaton showed that the horse had ruptured a blood vessel n the fall. Gatn, the drver, was pulled from the sulkey and was slghtly njured. > Two Falls From Roofs. Julus Crawford of. Keyport fell from the roof of a two,-story buldng at that place last Wednesday. He struck on a one-btory addton and fell from that.to the ground. He receved a long cut on the scalp and was rendered unconscous. It took several sttches to close the cut, Austn Curts of Sprng Lake fell from the roof of a two-story house at that place a few days ago. Hs rght. arm was cut and brused and he was lad up several days. v,, Mnor Accdents. A, J. Rpley fellfrom a second story scaffold at Long;Branch whle pantng a sgn. He struck on a ladder on the way down. Ths broke hb fall and he escaped wth a fewbruses. Lous Roth en burg of Long Branch ran a nal,n &s foot whle at work n hs store. He was lad up several days. Polceman Wllam Mller of Long Branch, whle rdng a bcycle one nght last week, was run nto by another wheelman anl was badly brused. Margaret Johnson of Long Branch fell down stars last week, She_ receved a bad scalp wound and was taken to the Long Branch hosptal for treatment. :*: t t T t ft tv Two gentlemen were -dscussng the qualty of dfferent Beers the other day. One sad that of all ^> * -:^:^:^:^<K^;^^.:^:^:^*9* *0* We want you to come to our store an^ see the THAT WE SELL , -.. <~ ; The strongest nducement that we can offer s to make the, Prces so Low \\\?Xyot wll be nterested, then... A Call Wll Make ou a Customer.,.. (INCORPORATED.), Cheapest Clothers n the Country. 7 BROAD STREET, *_ RED BANK, N, J. the brands he had tred, the Rochester " Boheman "^was the best of all. Ours n Green Bottles.!< GEO. R. LAMB & CO., FRONT ST., RED BANK, N. J. A SPECIAL SALE OF... WRITING PAPER... Commences ths week. A Box of good Wrtng Paper wth 30 sheets of Paper and 30 Envelopes, only 10 cents A Pound Package of Wrtng Paper, over 100 Sheets of Paper n the Package, 25 cents... ADLEM & COLE,..... Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J.. f t t I v t AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Do ou Thnk of Buldng A NewHouse, Or makng alteratons t6 your present, home? If so, you want to nclude n your plans nce wood work. A handsome star case wll set off a hall wonderfully. Fancy grll work over doors or alongsde of openngs looks artstc.! A paneled wanscotngn the hall and dnng room adds a hundred per cent to ther appearance. A nce hardwood floor s another acquston. These thngs make the dfference between the modern and tre old-tme home. I do all ths work and do t well. The cost s not great. ARTHUR E. SMITH, FAIR HAVEN, N. J. We ae Sellng, Good Groceres For Iless Money Than Any Other-Store. Pound Good Mxed Tea. 25C. Best E^lgn. Creamery Butter, per pound 20C. 7 Packages Cornstarch 25C. 7 Pounds Laundry Starch 25C, 7 Pounds Pearl Tapoca. 25C. S Cans Baked Beans 25O. 1 Pound Bakng. Powder, 10c. 2 Pounds Arbuckles 1 Coffee 25C. Mocha and Java Coffee 250. Maracabo Coffee. 20C. Ro Coffee.;... IOC. Lemons, per do/, IOC W. A. TRUEX & SON, The Oldest EsUthlMed Grocers, Cor. Broad and Wallace Sts., RED BANK, N. J.

14 ». * A Wet Eventng.. [Lady Day In Harvest, County Kerry.] Tho slvern crcle of ths summer lake, Encl rpplob curl a pelal of mother o 1 pearl. Curves ron grm, snce rufflng-wnda awake And tented msts unfurl. The kngly shndnvr of the mountan wall, That purple and gold flung down wth every fold Across the crystnl floor, s vanshed all In graynesh blank and cold. *. Its lfted peak," that whle clear skes bershonp Wth hyacnth crest (her bluebell awnng broke, Btoops fantly, grown an old wan vtaaggd crone, Huddled n her hodden cloak, Far, far to seek the shnng, lost and flown, As yerterovens smoke,.. et f tomorrow benm through amber rft, How swftly brght ahull all flush back on t sght? Stll waters ehecn, hgh slopes that glnt and shft Wth sudden lawns of lght. Only n small checkered fluds, begun to glow Wth burnng bloom of hulm and ear and plume, - The glory, blurred away and strckon low, What torch shall rellume? Storm tangled, drenched, tossed dank on black peat mro, Foam flame of feathery uold.-ah, wnd nnd ran That now conspre, forbear our hourts desre, And, lest our year long hope lo quelled and slan, No spark bo quenched.save that the worlds hearth lro Wth morn may kndle agan. AN OHIO GOLCOWDA. Mngo county people were aghast when they learned that Gracchus Magnre had obtaned an opton on the Ffobsber farm, for the story of the prde and fall of Peter Frobsher was stll freeh n ther mnds. Only a year before the old dry goods merchant began to buld what he called "the fnest resdence n southern Oho." A storm of ndgnaton had swept over the county when t was announced that the house would beerected upon an Indan mound. There are all knds of uncanny legends connected wth the earthworks scattered by a prehstorc race throughout southern Oho. Not a man n ValleyCty could be hred to dg the cellar, and Frobsher had to send to Rand Bun for some of the Poles. They hud no scruples, for the reason that the legends of the mound bulders were to them sealed books. The laborers dug down eght feet to R pocket of whte sand, n whch they found a human skull, varoub strange lookng mplements, an altar of sun dred brcks and a tablet, shaped lke fhe Boundng board of- a baas vol and.covered wth heroglyphcs. The news of the dscovery spread all over the countrysde. The farmers after durk avoded the road whch passed the desecrated Indan mound. The masons and the carpenters employed n buldng the house went away half an hour earler tban customary to keep from beng on unhallowed ground after sunset. All ths amused Gracchus Magure. He could have rfled 100 Indan wounds and felt no tremor of the nerves. Hs lfe had been the road of the rough. He had been found 24 years before n a basket nt the ralroad crossng. Around hs neck were a chan of gold and a locket, whch were promptly confscated by the trackwalker who dscovered hm. The Presbyteran mnster, remnded by ths acton of the hstorc remark of Cornela, the mother of the Gracch, named the foundlng Gracchus. Magure WHS the name of the last man who was klled at the crossng. GRCchus MagTtxe wan reared n the Mngo County Orphans home. At the age of 14 he was taken nto Peter Frobehers dry goods store us An errand boy. He had a taste for learnng, saved hs money, and wth the ad of Frobsher made hs way through college. He was n Valley Cty teachng school n order to get funds to carry hm through a course of medcne. Magure took u lvely nterest n the thngs whch were found n the ancent landmark, whch he called a sacrfcal mound. He «ven rend a paper upon the subject before the State Archcologcal socety, n whch hu sad that the fndng of the tablet amply demonstrated that the mound bulders had a wrtten language. The symbols upon the tablet conssted of nn oar, t wurclub and a rude altar, whch he transluted to mean that vengeance would fall upon the man who dsturbed the ancent sacrfce. The renderng astonshed Peter Frohsher a lttle. He was stll further surprsed by a remarkable phenomenon whch he notced shortly before the bouse was completed. A black scum had been notced from tme to tme upon a sprng baclrof the old homestead. Magure and Frobeltr were standng by ths sprng one day when the young man lghted n cgar and toased away the burnng match. There was a slght exploson. A blue flano rested over the water for a moment and dsappeared. Fobshur pnlud nt tho sght. "Do you beleve t?" he uscland. "Do you thnk that ths place a cursed by Injun sprtuv" "Nonsenuel" repled Mngurc. "Coma to thnk of t, I remember that I \vnn cleanng uu old coat down here wth benzne. ou wll havu to BOO moro than that before yon can kclcvu all ths old womans talk about tho tnonud bulders." Tho now dwellng, when completed, fulflled tho fondest hopuo of the Frobahcrfl. It could bo nten for mlch over tho country. At nght, whw thf lunph n tho front hall were lghted, KIOIIIIIH of yellow, red and cobalt ulono through tho colored «lnw on olthor nd) of tho great front door, At tho mggcnton of Orncolna Maguro tho now hotm) wan chrstened "Mpu.mluun. 1." m ccqnt ot~ts sfe art "becausttt was~not rar away from a horse pond. The Frobshers had ther house warmng n the form of -an afternoon recepton, ndeference to the prejudces of the vllagers. The guests came wth trepdaton. The Wdow Smpkns was observed to look furtvely about her be-, tween the servng of the chcken salad fnd the "passng" of the ce cream. Mss Belnda Sommera uttered a percng shrek and nearly fanted when a table was accdentally overturned. As evenng approached the guests hastened to take ther departure. Sam Johnspn, the nearest neghbor, wus awakened shortly after mdnght by some one poundng at hs door. He opened t, and Rebecca Frobsher fell fantng across the threshold. Behnd, her, wth eyes n wbch there was a ttrange terror, half clothed, shakng lke a leaf, stood Peter. "The mound bulder I" he cred. The mound bulder!" It was several days before.tle eld couple could, be persuaded to tell of ther experence. Peter Frobsher sad that he had been awakened by some one swayng theporteres n the doorway of the adjonng room. The drapery parted, and he saw the form of a man clothed lke the Egyptans depcted n, hs subscrpton "Hstory of the World." The ntruder ponted at the full, round moon, whch could be seen from the wndow, and waved a weapon resemblng a battleax. Heremaned for a moment and then seemed to fade away. The aged couple fled shrekng frcm ther new abode and ran for a mle along the dusty road to the home cf the Johnsons. The Frobshers deserted Moundmere for all tme. The stock and farmng mplements were sold for half ther mlue. The rch acres became fallow ground and the lawn a waste of weeds. Peter and Rebecca moved to Valley ty and made ther home n three lttle rooms over the dry goods store. Such was the state of affars when Magure obtaned hs opton. Astonshment grew n Mngo one mornng when a curl of enoke ssued from one of the chmneys of the Frobsher homestead. Investgaton proved that Gracchus Manre had actually made hs home n the lar of the dsemboded mound bulder) He had transported ls trunks to Moundmere and carted several loads of cheap furnture out to the place. The boards were taken down from the wndows, and the house began to look agan lke a human habtaton. The rumor spread all over Valley Cty that Gracchus Magnre had obtaned money from some mysterous source. The young schoolteacher "bad even taken eases upon some of the adjonng farms. These documents were coached n ambguous language and provded that the agrcultural operatons of the owners should not be dsturbed. Packng cases arrved at the lttle ralroad staton and n the nght were hauled through the vllage streets to theold farm. There were hundreds of feet of ron ppe, odd lookng wheels and ggantc tool chests. Half a dozen men alghted from the Columbus tran one evenng and were drven tomoundmere. The sgns. "No Admsson" and "Trespassng Forbdden" were posted on all the fences. These seemed lke a work of supererogaton, for nobody then dared to even stop bs horse wthn a mleof the gateway., The young schoolteacher wthdrew hmself more and more from the socety of Valley Cty. Hardly a Sunday passed n the old days when he ddnot walk home from church wth Ellen Spencer. The grl now saw hm seldom. There were several young women who secretly rejoced.at that, for Gracchus Magnre, the learned, the affable and the courteonsxwajh regarded ah one of the most elgbw-young men of the town. As to the ralroad crossng ncdent, that had long been forgotten. No hgher trbute could be pndr to any man than that, for n the vllage the arstocracy was frmly founded on "famly." The elect were the drect descendants of the sturdy New Euglanders who had come to the regon early u the century, chopped down the trees, klled Indans and made the wlderness to blossom wth whte churches and red schoolhouses. Ellen Spence was descended n the drect lno from the man who carred n the frst (surveyors chan through the prmeval forests of Mngo. Strange utorch were whspered about Gracchna Magnre. The mothers of he whole country upoke of hm as one who had obtaned fabulous wealth by robbng the mound bulder dead of ther golden ornaments. There were those n the vllago who hnted 4hat no rght thnkng young man could ocenpy the lonae from whch old Peter Frobnhcr had been drven by tho chastenng hand of Provdence. Valljy Cty, waa flled wth uproar not long after thn by ntellgence of n most alarmng nature. The news cumo Unt GracchuH Maguru had begun to drll «holu nto the earth n the vury cunter of a crclu of Indan nonndh n tho eht meadow of the FrobHher place, Concdent wth thn wjvernl COWH ded on adjonng fnrnh and a colt broko k:a lug, 1 Ihtd thu Hlultor of tho tmeu tombs, nyhturloh operatons wore conducted. A Hltlutonlku scaffoldng uroho, the Hjht of whch flled tlouu who Haw t wth nvrvonu apprehenson. Ono day a Hlntunry engne WHO Hot up nnar tlm Htmvtm anl Hrroumlol by II rtud. A narrow alleyway, rthunbllng a rojut wll[,.wfl_bnljtl«tw<a;nlo.tmber skeleton and the boler. Before very long the farmers notced a rope tghtenng and saggng wthn the network of wooden braces. Sonetmea a rod of ron rose from the ground and they heard a persbtept drubbng sound. The patence of Mngo county could not further go. A mass meetng was held n thetown, hall one nght whch resulted n a commttee beng sent to the gates of^ Monndmere. A mastff prevented thpn from gong any farther. Gracchus Magurecame down from the house. "We. have cone," sad Bolvar Wrght, a lawyer and therefore the spokesman) "to protest aganst your dsturbng the graves of a prehstorc race and thus brngng msfortune upon ths peacetal farmng communty. WtT have already seen Peter Frobaher turn- ed from thtj home of hs forefathers because he desecrated.the tomb of an ancent people. We ask you n the name of humapty and n the name of all thngs of good report to abandontheee drllng operatons. Whether yon seek coal or ron or trnkets of gold, no good can come to yon or to us by such an mpous queat." To whch Gracchus Magnre repled n rhetorc equally well balanced that he would do as he pleased. The commttee returned to Valley Cty.- Sgns, of greater actvty were notced about Moundmere after that. The operatons of whch the vllagers had complaned were carred on day and nght. When the sun shone, the curous saw the whrlng rope, and n the evenng a glow hung over the engne shed. Gracchus Magure stood at the base of the skeleton of tmbers one evenng n June watchng hs workmen at ther task. He was thnkng of the thousands of dollars whch he had sunk n a hole n the ground and of the returns whch had yet to come. Magure was aroueed from hs revere by a shout. The man who twrled the handle of the rope seemed lke one possessed of an evl sprt. He had served hs tme as a drller n the days when Pennsylvana was covered wth derrcks. "Bal I" be cred. "Get out of the wayl" Magure stepped back. A thn stream of tlack slme flowed from the ron cylnder as the valve of the boler was loosened. "Its the proper shale,", growled the tool dresser, who had just come from bn forge. The drll rattled downjthe ron casng. The rope tghtened, and the steady beat of the polshed shaft kept tme to the dronng of the leather beltng. The great rod was thrown from ts socket. It struck the sde of the derrck and sent wooden braces clatterng to the ground. Held by the repe, t swung far out. A dull roar flled the ar. A slgltly sulphurous odcr rose from the earth. The drller rushed from the well wth hs hands before hs face. "Draw that fre!" Je yelled at one of the helpers. "Draw that fre, you blockhead!" The helper rresolutely grasped the shovel and started to the furnace door. Hs eyes were fxed upon the swngng drll. He took another look at the derrck and fled as fast as bs legs could carry hm. Gracchus Magare pcked up the shovel..whch the man bad dropped n hs flght. "Look out!" he heard the drller say. The voce seemed to be that of one who was mles away. There were a loud report and a flash of lght. Over the mud and slme a yellow tral sped from furnace to derrck. From the well darted a tongue of flame. A thng of fre rolled over and over and fell nto the shallow creek back of the mounds. Gracchus Magure, when he recovered conscousness, was lyng n a spare room of Moundmere swathed n bandages. Through the small paned wndows shone a brllant lght whch llumned every nook andlcorner cf the apartment. A Valley Cty physcan was bendng over the joung schoolteacher, "Where s the fre?" nsked Magure. Then the occurrences of the nght crowded back upon hm. He looked out toward the meadow. He saw a shaft of flame quverng nto the ar for 100 feet. It sprang above the top of the burnng-derrck. The structure toppled and fell blazng to the ground. It lay there hssng and wrthng. Around the burnng well swarmed Valley Ctys volunteer fre company. A atream of water had been turned upon tho flamng jet. The drller and hs nntes were tryng to persuade the fremen that ther work would be of no aval. "Fools, foclsl" muttered Gracchna Magure. "They mght as well try to stop tho progress of a man who has never sad fal." Ho turned panfully n lb bod. In that shaft cf fre ho saw a dull red buldng, surrounded by u dlapdated fence. He beheld the faces of the dots ad tho epleptcs wth whom ho had spent hs chldhood. They faded away, and hs gnzo fell upon a ngged boy bendng over rowa of young 1 corn. He daw. tho fuco of u whto hared man whom.- Mlu was gentlo and whoso look WHH kndly and bengn then a youth uluupluk beneath the counter of n dry goods Htoro. Tho prnt ludun shelvon dsappeared. Ho beheld n congregaton comng. from n lttle whto church. Thoro woro gravo faced womon n alpaca glwn uml mol n mlts of nlny broadcloth. "MOH not famly, you know, they m;om;.d to IMI any ng. Then thorp, appeared a pretty grl^a Marguerte wth hjunal and golden brads. She smled at hm and passed on. - Magure leaned hs,head upon he hands and looked fxedly at tbe dartng jet whch to hm meant rches, prosperty and power. The sullen- roar of tbe gas waa to hm the sweetest mn- Btreley. Then there came to hm an overwhelmng sense of gult. He saw before hm the mage of a man whom he had wronged. "I have reached the gol,".he sad, but at wbat a cost I All these years I have worked that I mght ask her to be the wfe of a man who hal obscured mean orgn by success. To<:l&y Ian a leper nner sght and n tbe eght of Godl" - He remembered now that whle he had tojed and planned she ha,l grown further away from hm. He staned to hear agan the "words whcb Ellen Spencer had spoken to hm months ago. Tbey were standng beneath the old elm at the foot of Hnnterstreet. "ou are ambtous!" shewaa Bayng. "There are tmes when I fear that you forget that there s no true success ganed at the sacrfce of the-hghest deals.", In the lght of those words all ha reasonng became bare sophstry. "What f he had agreed to gve Peter Frobsher the full value of bs land and cf the deserted home? By whose plot had tbe farm become fallow ground and tbe new house desolate? It was true that Frobsher would have laughed at hm f he had told hm that the farm mght become an Oho Golconda. Even the state geologst had- sneered and- told hm that the stratfcaton of Mngocountys rocks made hs belef utter foolshness. Whether the rock strata wouldpermt t or not, Gracchus Magnre hr^ staked everythng on hs belef. Every cent he had n the world, every cent he could borrow, had been sunk n a hole n the jearth. "lam further from real success," sad Gracchus Magnre, "than the end of that tube n tlje ground s from the pure ar and the sunshne." On the edge of the group gathered about the well he saw a carrage. Two women walked around the wndng path toward the front of the house. He recognzed Ellen Spencer and her mother. Gracchus Magure leaned forward and took a letter pad from the table. Wth bandaged fngers ba panfully wrote. It waa a bref message a few lnes huddled together wth a batng sgnature at the end yet they made the man who wrote them thousands of dollars poorer than a pauper. He drected the note and settled brck upon the pllows. "Mss Spencer wshes to speak to you," sad the negro man servant who entered the room. "I wll see her," sad Magure, "Take ths note to Mr. Frobsher anc lose no tme about t!" The door opened a moment later and Ellen Spencer entered. "I am not worthy that you should see me," sad Gracchus Maugre. "I drove an old man from ha home that I mght, gan, the rches whch lay beneath hs land. I deserve no sypmathy. It was I, Gracchus Maogre, and not a sprt, who exled Peter Frobsber. I have tred to lake some tardy atonement. I have juat surrendered the opton on ths farm." "It seems lke a dream to me," sad the grl. "I only knew that you had done wrong that you were strugglng Wth a temptaton. I could see t n your face, n your every act." "It means," repled Gracchus Magnre very slowly, "that f I had not surrendered all clam upon ths land today I mght be a mllonare and not a beggar. It was to wn a Woman whose famly despsed me because I was a foundlng that I struggled for rches and power. Do you know her?" "ou do not!" reped the grl. "If you dd, you would have felt she waa not capable of carng for a man merely on account of hs success." 1 Thehpresent generaton n Valley Cty knows the story of Moundmere as a tradton. The sght of hundreds of derrcks n southern Oho calls to ts mnd the day when the telegraph carred the news to the whole world that two prospectors, by the names of Frobsher and Magure, bad dscovered the greatest reservor of natural gas whch drll had ever perced. To me every derrck s eloquent o the secret of Moundmere,.known for years only to Peter and Rebecca Frobsher, to Gracchus Mngtto nnd ha wfe, whoso numo was Ellen.- MsS A. L. Morrs, HlLLIHER, COR..BROAD AND FRONT STREETS, RED BANK. H. J. Each week fnds somethng now ndded to our stock and we nnlto nn eftort to have u full uasortmont of ulraw and fancy llntf, Flowers, MouHellnP, Malnes and whatever s needed to make n pretty Hut. AIHO a. neo.lno of Trmmed llntt at n ^ varety of prces. R. HANCE, Wholesale and Retal Dealer n M, STRAW, GRAIN. FLOUR, FEED, POULTR SUPPLIES, ETC. We are handlng a large quantty of Marlboro and Holmde! Hay of the very best qualty. BIONMOUTH STREET. Adjonng Town Hall, Red Bank, N. J. D. W. SMITH, Practcal Horseshoer. BRICK SHOP ON MECHANIC STREET, Red Bank,. New Jersey. Specal shoes Tor quartercraclt, tender-footed and nterferng horses. Extra attenton to trotters nm roadsters. D. W. SMITH For a Grocery Harnqss, sutable for butcher,.mlkman, baker or groceryman, $5.00 For a far Buggy Harness. We make a specalty of buldng Harness accordng to other peoples deas and guarantee you prce and qualty. Brdsall & Son, Monmouth St., Red Bank. WILLIAM OBRIEN, Practcal Plumber, STEAM AND GAS FITTER. Hot Water Heatng a Specalty. No. 26 Front Street, RED BANK, NEW JERSE. j: We Buy Back Unsatsfactory Goods. I If you fnd any fault wth anythng you buy at ths store we wll buy t back at full prce, just as pleasantly aa we sold t to you. Thats practcally what our "money back f you want t" guarantee provdes. It covers every possble thng that mght arse from a purchase. If you fnd that you could get < I more for your money elsewhere all youve got to do s to tell us. <> Well buy t back. If you nd that the qualty s J not as represented, well buy t * back. Curts, Davs X Hll Pano Co.,::!! BEOAD ST., RED BANK., <, Bf.W. Moselle &Co I \ and. ^ Statoners. Newsdealers

15 WORSHIP OF THE HEROIC. Memoral Day a Contnuaton of a Custom Born n Antquty. Runnng n parallel lnes throughout the hstory of cvlzaton -we fnd, love of the beautful and worshp of the heroc joned together, the ever remndng evdence of tho presence of those hgher and better qualtes of our mperfect natures whoh lfthumanlty to a plane above the, commonplace- of a merely materal exstence.... Ths companonshp of the artstc wth the heroo hns taught us that the offce of tho beautful and noble n art s to gve lvrg nnd endurng expresson to the herosm of tho ages., Today n our humblo and mperfect way we assst to contlnuo the beautful custom born of antquty. 3?he solemn and mpressve mngntude of thework bofore us wll attest for many generatons to corne tho love and respect a people bear for our bravo oomrades who, nearly 85 years ago, lad down ther lves upon ths never fadng luld of honor; not only a feld of honor for thoso who fell face to-the foe, buttorthoso who fought shoulder to shoulder wth thorn. Jnny have snce fallen by tho way, but those here today who tread agan ths sacred sol testfy ther lovo and loyalty for tho dead of ther regment, who hero gave ther lves for a cause they hul sworn topromote and When Fort Donelson Fell. 1 General Buells troops occuped central Kentucky untl about tho begnnng of February, 1803, when ho wont to co-operate wth General Grant at Fort Donelsou. One brgado of hs army played an mportant part n that battle, whlo the? bulk of t went overland to Nashvlle Colonel Stone was wth ths body, and says that when tho news of the surrender of Fort Donelson reached Knshvllo thero was a unversal panc. Tlo news on Saturday nght was that Grant was whpped, and nest day everybody went to church n acknowledgment of tlo ovont. But before tho ctzens had dono wth ther publc thanksgvng reports of tljo success of Grant wore receved, wth tho addton that tho Unon army was marchng on Nnshvlle. It was 50 mles away, but tho people were n such a panc that they sezed tho flrst means of transportaton and ran away. When Grants army reached thero soveral days afterward, tho placo was almost entrely desorted. Tho cty was surrendered to General Buell, tho mayor conng from hs retrent across th(> rver to make a dgnfed captulaton. The Rank and Fle. Whle wo must honor tho memory of such generals as Grunt, Sherman and Sherdan, belevng them to bo as great solders as over eat In sddlo, let us teach our chldren to gather flowers for tho graves of the. solders who obeyed ther commands and who carred to ther deaths the wounds ndcatve of ther loyalty and bravery, The war s over. Tbcvctory s ours The Unon stands. We are stll ctzens of tho greatest and grandest country upon the face of tho globe. The glory of tho vctory belongs to tho men who fought n the ranks, and through ths vctory wo have secured somo natonal blessngs, for whch wo ought to be profoundly thankful as» naton. Patrotc Massachusetts. n nb state n tho Unon s Memoral day so generally observed as n Mussachusetts. Tho 185 posts scattered, all over the old commonwealth not only decorate tho graves n ther own jursdcton, but n many Instances vst by delegatons outlyng dstrcts and rohembcr tho fallen by flag and flower, and so prevalent has been tho custom that n towns where no veteran organzaton exsts the ctzens tako upon themselves the responsblty of thus honorng the memory of thoso who n tme of K-cd wont, forth to <1<> or de.»» " Confederate Dead. The 9,800 Confederate- dead known to bo n natonal cemeteres arc for tho most pnrt nt Camp Butler, n,ear Chcago; Cypress Hlls, New ork; Fnns Pont, New Jersey; Fort Smth,.Ark.; Hampton, Va.; Jefferson Barracks, JIo., and Woodlawn, New ork. There wero many noro Confederate grav«b n natonal cemeteres than thero are now. For years the removal from.natonal to local comcteres has boon gong on under tho auspces of Confederate organzatons. < ^ Gettysburg.. Tho felds of Gettysburg nro greon Where once tho red blood.ran. Tho oak lonveb throw n dancng sheon Whero pershed hnrso nnd man. Tho saplngs whsper on tho hll Where rolled a (lory fde, And song brds splnsh the laughng rll Whero armes (ought nnd ded. A marble sentry senna the feld And grante cannons frown Whoro dusty reglmonts onco wheeled And shot and shell mned down, Bnfc oor the sentrys mnrtal faco Now Btn the coong dove, Breakng tho slence of tlo plnco Wth murmurng notes of lovq. Tho only colors In tho glndefl Aro those of buds and flowers, Tlo HWlft nnd.sudden fusllades Aro nndo by passng showers. Buyo lny enrta now aro chnrot enrs, And HolllcrH ImyH ut pny. Tho only cumpflren nro tho stars, Tho llery glory, day. Thank God Hnt all thlrh n ths llfo Together move for rght; That Nluht and her half Hfltor, Btrfo, Shnll do In joy mcl lglt; Tlnt throtkl n mystery abovo Ht) nuralch mer Bhnll conso; flnt out of hnto HIIIIII IHHUO lovo, And out of war cono pcacel />/d A t fjth Inr oull fnd out nl nbout t f you runj TIIK JlvxtTKn. Alv. O0 Q0 000 O 0 O OOO 0 When you take a Partcular :, Prescrpton to a partcular druj* store. you do so becaus you have confdence m that store. ou beleve that " the drugs are pure and fresh, the methods rght,. the skll the best, and the prces far and reasonable. We conduct our prescrpton department on the prncple that THERE IS NOTHING TOO GOOD FOR THE SICK. ISchroeders PharnLaey Bergen & Morrs, Propretors. TELEPHONE 12 F. 16 Broad Street. Red Bank. O J. 8. FLITCROFT, Practcal Plumber, Gas and, Steam Ftter. Ollce. fo Front Street, Red Bank HIJWMI, ATTENTION (J1VKN TO JOIIIIINO., E XECUTORS SALE OF HOUSES - AND LOTS. n the matter of the sale of lands ot Adalne Brggs, deceased, for the payment of her debts. Jacob C. Sbutts, auctoneer. ". -!l By vrtue of an order entered In the above stated matter, on the fourth day ot May, eghteen hundred nd nnetv-nlne, I shall sell at publc vende at the premses In the vllage of Oceanporl, townshp of EatoDtown. Monmouth county, New Jersey, on Saturday, June twenty-fourth.. eghteen hundred and nnety-nne, at the hour of ten oclock n the orenoon,-all the followng descrbed lands and premses wth the appurtenances, beng the same descrbed n sad order, tbat s to say: All that certan house and lot of land stuate, ylngnnd beng n the vllage of OceanporU n sad townshlpof Lncoln, formerly Ocean. (now townshp )f Entontown), begnnng at the northwest corner )f a lot of land belongng to Edward T. Welch, on :he south sde of the road leadng from snld vllage to Eatontown, thence (1) along the lot of sad Welch south four degrees and forty-fve mnutes east one :haln and seventy-two lnks to a corner In sad lne of sad Welchs lot. thence (2) contnung along the lne ot. sad lot, south forty-one degrees and flh>en mnutes east sxty-seven lnks to.lohn P. Cotless land, thence (3) along sad Cores lne 60uth forty-four degrees and forty-fve mnutes west :venty-one lnks, tbence (4) north forty degrees vest two chans and twenty-seven lluks more or less to the aforesad road, thence (5) along sad :oad to the place of begnnng. Ths beng ntended as the same land and premses conveyed to Adalne Brggs, wfe of Zudoc M, Brans by Wllam L. Brown and wfe bv deed dated March 23d. 130". whch sad deed s recorded n Book WO, page 338 c. Exceptng nud reservng out therefrom a certan jract of land descrbed as follows: All that certan pece, tract or parcel of land and premses herenlfter partcularly descrbed, stuate, lyng nnd beng Jn the vllage of Oceauport of the townshp of Eatontown, n the county of Monmouth md n the tnte of New Jersey, as follows: Begnnng on a lne dvdng the property of sad Bngs and Welch on the road leadng from Oceanport to the vllage of Entontowu from the front fence ot land parallel wth sad Welchs uouse (1) eghteen feel southerly on sad dvdng lne, tht-nce (2) runnng northwesterly on a lne leadng to the aforesad mentoned road to sad rotd; theneo (31 from the frst pont or plnce of begnnng, southwesterly four feet to a pont where sad Brlggss house now stands on sad road, or thrteen feet from the northwest corner of sad Welchs house as per dagram, ths beng ntended as tn* same land and premses conveyed to Edward T. Welch by Adalne Brcgsand Zadoc Brees. her husband, by deed dated January IStb. 187(1, whch sad deed s recorded n Book 277, pape 372. SECOND TRACT. All that certan hpuse and lot of land stuate, lyng ard beng at Oceanport n sad townshp of Lncoln, (now townshp of Eutontown), begnnng at the northeast corner of a lot of land belongng to Wllam W. Clayton on-tho south sde of the road leadng from sad Oceauport to Eatontown. thence along the lne of the sad Claytons lot one hundred and ffty-two feet Ove nches to lohn P. Corlless land, thence along the lneof sad Corlless land to the corner ot land ot Adalne Brlggs, wfe ot sad Zudoc jr. Brlpgs, tleuce along the lne of sad Adaltne Brlggss land to the sad road, thence along the sad road sxty-one feet four nches to the place of begnnng, contanng about \ of an acre more or less, nnu beng tho same land and premses conveyed to Zadoc M. Brgps bv Edmund T. Wllams and wfe by deed dated Aprl 1st, 1808, whch sad ed s recorded In Book 201), page 253. Also all that certan pece, tract or parcel of land nnd premses herenafter pa 1 tlcularly descrbed, stuate, lyng and beng In the vllage of Oceanport, of tle Townshp of Eatontown, n the County of Monmouth aft State of New Jersey, as follows: Ttn TnXcr. Begnnng on a lne dvdng the property of the sad Welch and Brgas eghteen feel from the front lno fcnuc, whch Is parallel wth sad Welchs store on the road leadng from Oceanpr.rt to Eatoutown. Cst) runnng on sad dvdng lne, southerly nneteen feet, nne nches or to the rear of sad lrlggs house, thence (2ntl) northeasterly four feet three nches along the lne of sad lrlggs house to ts corner or to a pont lve feet from the southwest corner of sad Welchs house and parallel wth the rear of sad house, thence (3rd) northwesterly eghteen feet.to the place of bcglnnnc. Ths beng Intended ns the same land and premses conveved to Atnllnc Brggs, wfe of Zadoc,Brggs, by Edvard T. Welch and wfe by deed dated JnrunT 13, whch sad deed Is recorded n Book 277, page.sm&c. -ATHIE L. VAN KIRK. Executrx, JACOB C. SHUrrs, Auctoneer., S HERIFFS SALE. By vrtue of a wrt of f. fa to me drected, ssued out of tut Court of Chancery of the State of New Jersey, wll be. exposed to sad at publc veudue ON WEDVES- DA, THE 28th DA OF JUNE, 1890, between the hours of 12 oclock nnd f oclock wt 2 oclock.) In the afternoon of sold day, at the Globe Hotel at Red Hank, In the townshp ot Shrewsbury, county or Monmoutb, New Jersey, all that tractor parcel ol lml and premses stuated, lyng and beng n tn townshp of Shrewsbury, In tlo county of Monmouth and Stto of New Jersey, and adjonng land! sold by th! executors of Hubert Coleman, deceased to Robert Drnnmond nnd slstes, and begnnng nl the northeast corner thereuf In tho mddle of lt brook by t largo onk tree: thence (I) north, sx rteurees and forty-lve mnutes east, nne chans tn forty lnks; (2) thence mrth, eghty-four detre and foty-tlve mnutes west, seventeen chans an seventy-eght lnks; (l) thence south, sx degree and ffteen mnutes west, eght chans and thrty llvcn to the mddle, oftho brook nfousald; thence (losr tho mddle thereof n» t runs to tlo JIIBCII of begnnng, contanng seventeen acres and three hnndrcdtlh of un acre. The foregong premses beng descrbed as u meadow contaned nnl thereby descrbed In a deed ot conveyance made by Iorden Ihncn nnd wfe to Oeurg llnnco. bearng date May!M, IBID, nnd recorded In tho Clerks olllco In Book I 5of Heeds, page 5M1, Ac., and tho tmmo conveyed hv Susan J. Allen nnd husbnd to Wllam I. Llpplnott by deed hearng even date herewth, (tlo mortgage) nnd ths nnrtfjgo n gven to serure tlm lurehmu money therefor. Sezed IIH the property of Wllam I. IJplnott, et IIIH, taken In executon lt the unt of NIIHIIII.1. Allen, nnd to l>o Bold by HOUSTON FIELIM, McllT. It. AI.I.KN, Jr., flor. Dated May 22(1, lnltl., $7,211 N CHANCER ON NEW JERSE. Between Carolne H. Allare, Complanant, and Esek Henry Whte, et ux, et ajs, defendants. Sale on decree In Partton. Henry S. Whte, solctor. Bv vrtue of a decree for sale made n the above enttled cause, I shall sell at publc vtndue at the Slobe hotel n Red Bank, Monmouth county, New lersey, ON TUESDA, THE THIRTEENTH,.DA OF JUNE, A. D., I860, at two oclock n the afterucon. all the followng descrbed lands and premses, that sto say: All that certan lot or parcel of land, stuate n ;he vllage of Red Bank. In the townshp of Shrewsbury, n the county of Monmouth and state ot New lereey. Begnnng In Ine center of the road leadng to Shrewsbury town, thence runnng eghty-eght degrees and thrty mnutes east, one hundred am thrty-three feet to a stake; thence south one degree and thrty mnutes«ast thrty (30) feet to a stoke; ;bence south elpbty-elgat degrees and thrty mnutes vest. one hundred and thrty-three (13a) feet to the mddle of the road; thence north one degree and thrty mnutes west thrty feet to the place of begn Dng. Contanng nne one-hundredths" of an acre, more or less, subject to a lease held by Joseph Salz, dated Aprl l. 180t),at the yearly rent or sum 3f 8500.(10, for the term, otflve years from the date.hereof.. Also all tbat lot of land stuate, lyng and beng n be vllage of Red Bank, county of Monmouth and tate of New Jersey, Begnnng at a stake standng n the northwest cornef of lot number hrty-tlve 35); thence (1) south forty-bve mnutes, east one hundred and thrty-four and ball U34H) feet to a stake; thence (2) south eghty-nne degrees and thrty mnutes west forty feet to a stake; thence (3) north forty-bye mnutes west one hundred and thrty-four and a half (134J4>) feet to a stake on the 3outh sde of Wallace street; thence (4) north elbhtynlne degrees and thrty mnutes east forty (40) feet to the place of begnnng. Contanng twelve and a half hundredths of an acre, be the same more or lest. Subject to an easement, as provded for a agreements made between Esek Whte and one Slegmund Esner, dotefl Decembers, 1889, recorded n Book 4(10 of Deeds, n Monmouth County Clerks offce, one on page 12Uand one on page 121, provdng for a rght of way between the sad land of Esek Whte and land of sad Slenmutd Elsuer. Also all that tractor parcel of land and premses herenafter partcularly descrbed, stuate, lyng and beng n the townshp of Shrewsbury. In the county of Monmouth and state of New Jersey. In the town ot Red Bank, and descrbed as follows: Beglnntog at the northwestwardly corner of now or formerly Sarah Cnadwlcks lot of land: thence (1) south forty-fve mnutes east one hundred and twenty feet more or less; thence (2) west sxty (GO) feet to the southeastwnrdly corner of Jane E. Cochranes lot of land; thence 3) north forty-lve mnutes west one hundred and twenty (120) feet more or less along the lne of Jane E. fochranes; thence (4) along the sad Wallace street, north eghty-nne degrees and thrty mnutes east sxty (lb) feet to the place of begnnng. Beng ntended to be the same premses conveyed to :he sad EseU H. Whte by Margaret Bennett and husband, by deed dated November 6, and recorded n the Clerks offce nt Freehold n Book 212 ot deeds, page 130. Also all that lot of land stuate, lyng nnd beng n the sad townshp of Shrewsbury, begnnng at the southwest coner of a lot of land belongng to Robert H. Hart, on the east sde of the new road from Red Bank to Long Branch. Thence runnng (1) north sxty-two degrees and flfteen mnutes east, nne chans nnd eghty-one lnks; <2) south, twentythree degrees and ffteen mnutes east three chans and twenty-eght lnks; thence (3) south sxty-two degrees and flfteen mnutes west, nne chans and ffty-two lnks to the aforesad road; thence (4) along sad road noth twenty-eght degrees thrty mnutes west three chans and twenty-eght lnks to the place of begnnng. Contanng three acres and fourteen hundredths of an acre, be the same more or less. And by vrtue of same decree I shall sell at publc veudue on the premses n Xeptune townshp In salt) county nnd sute ON TUESDA. THE TWEN- TIETH DA OF JUNE, A. D., 1««), nt twooolock In the afternoon, ol the followng descrbed lands and premses, that Is to say: All those two certau lots, tracts or parcels of land and premses, herenafter patcularly dtscroed, stuate, lyng and beng n the townshp of Ocean, (now the townshp of Neptune) n tle county of Monmouth nnd state ot New Jersey, descrbed on map of the Samuel Morell property «near Ocean Grove, and known thereon as lets Xos. 05 and ll, beng bounded ou the north by a street runnng In a drecton of north sxty-nne degrees and llfteen mnutes east, sad land hereby descrbed; Begnnng at a stake standng on the south sde of sad street, and n the northeast corner of another lot marked n the aforesad mnp as lot No. <H; thence (1) runnng easterly along the south sde of sad street eghty leet to a stake n the northwest corner of unottcr lot marked on sad map as lot No. 07;. thence (2) runnng aloog the westerly lne of last aforesad lot, one hundred and ttty feet southerly to a stake n the southwe:>t corner ot sad last aforesad lot, aud on tle north lne of another lot marked on sad map ns lot 71; thence (3) westerly or nearly so, eghty feet along (te north lne of sad lot 71, to a stake n the south cornerof aforesad lot No. lt; thence (4) northerly along the westely lne of snd lot No. 04 one hundred and ffty feet,4(n a course pamllel wth the second aforesad course to the place of begnnng. The property hereby descrbed Is eghtv feet wde frontng on sad street, and one hundred and ffty feet deep. Tn* sad street lyng nnd belwr on the north lne ol property,hereby descrbed Is ntended to connect wth Asbury Avenue. Dated May 4,1MW. CHARLES L. CARRICK, Specal Master In Chancery of New Jersey HKNR S. WHITE, Solctor of Complanant, 7t Montgomcy street, Jersey Cty, N. J. PENNSLVANIA RAILROAD COM- I PAN. On and after October 4th, 1898,. TRAINS WILL LEAV.E BED BANK For New ork. 740,9 43 a.m.: 308,0 03 p.m. Sundays, 0 43 a. m.; 0UO p. m. " Newark. 7 40,9 43 a. m.; 8 08, 0 03 p. m. Sundays, 843a. m.; 6 00 p.m. " Elzabeth, 0 43 a. m.; 80S, 003 p. w.< Sundays, 9 43 a. m.: (100 p. a,. " Ralnvay, 9 43 a. tn.; 3 08,8 03 p.m. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; 6 08 p. m. " Woodbrldge, 9 43 a.m.; 3 08,603 p.m. Sundays, f 43 a. m.; 8 Of p. m. " Perth Anboy, 3 08, t) 03 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a.m.: 6 00p.m. " South Anboy, 9 43 a.m.; 3 08, 6 03 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; 8 06 p. m. " Matawan, 043 a.m.; 308, 6 03p.m. Sundays, 9 43 a.m.; 6 0«p".m. " Mddletown, 9 43a.m.; 3 08,f03p.m, Sundays, 9 43 a.m.; 0.06 p.m... " Phladelpha a d Trenton, correctng at Ralway, 943 a. n.; 6 03 p. m. Sundays, a 43 a. n.; 0 00 p. m. -. " Long Branch, Pont Pleasant and ntermedate statons a. m.: nnd 022 p. m. Sundays, 1120 a. m.; 0 47 p m. (Do not stop at Asbury park or cean Grove on Sundays.) " Toms Rver, Bay Head and ntermedate statons, J03B a. n. Trans leave Phladelpha. Broad street (varahway), for Red Bank, at 6 B a. m.; 4 02 p.m. Sundays.Jb20 a.m.; 4 02p.m. TRAIN3A.EAVE NEW OltK, For Red Bank from West Twenty-thrd street staton, 8 50 a. at.; 12 20,3 20,4 50 p. m. Sundays 0 20 a.m.; 4 60 p.m. Desbrosses and Cortlandt street, 910a.m.; (1 p. ra. Sundays, 9 45 a. m.; 5 15 p. m. J. B. HUTCHINSON, - J. R. WOOl>J General Manager. Gen. Passenger Agent, J OHN 8. APPLEGATE, JR. SOLICITOR AND MASTEIt IN CHANCER. In offces of Appleate & Hope, Eed BanK, H.J. JACOB SHUTTS, tl, - AUCTIONEER. Specal attenton gven to sales ot farm atocs rm mplements and other personal property: P,A Address, SHREWSBUR, N. 1. D R. E. F. BORDEN, SURGEON DENTIST. CSIC HALL BDJLDIK6, RED BANK, N. J. artcular attenton gven to "the admnstraton of -.. Anaesthetcs. N EW ORK AN6 LONG BRANCH - RAItROAD. Statons In New ork: Central R. R. of New Jer 8ey, foot of Lberty Street, and foot ot Whtehall Street (South Ferry Termnal); Pennsylvana R. R., fort of Cortlandt Street, Desbrosses Street and West 23d Street. On and after May 28th, 1890, TRAINS LEAVE RED BANK. For New ork, Newark and Elzabeth C7 27 New ork onlv). (*7 40, New ork and Newark only), (*8 00, Newark and Elzabeth only),-*8 11, (*8 24, New ork only). *828. *8 43, a. DI.: 12 35,3 ()?, 4 33, p. m. Sundays, 8 03, 9 43 a. m.: 4 50, 6 00, 7 50 p. m. For Long Branch, Ocean Grove, Asbury Park and ntermedate statons to Pont Pleasant, 6 23, 9 52, 1(13t a.m.; , 2 55, 3 52, 4 50,515, , 8 27, 0 47,741 p. w. Sundays a. m.; p. n. Sunday trans do not stop at Ocean Grove and Asbury Park. FOR FREEBbLD VIA MATAWAN. Leave Red Bank (Sundays excepted), 8 28,1130a.m.: 4 85, 0 03 p.m. TRAINS LEAVE NEW ORK FOB RED BANK. Foot of Lberty street, , 1130 a. m.; 1 30, 3 53, *4 30. *4 45, 5 3D, l 15 p. m. Sundays, 90(1. "ID 15 a.m.; 4CO p.m., > Foot of Whtehall street (South Ferry termnal,) 825, 1125 a. m.: , *4 25, *4 35, 525, 010 p.m. Sundays 8 55,9 55 a. n.; 3 55 p. m. Foot of West Twenty-thrd street staton, 8 55 a.m.; 12 40, 2 25, *3 2o, *4 10, *5 10 p. m. Sundays 9 25 a. m.: 4 55 p. m. Foot of Desbrosses street. 910 a. m.: 12 50, 2 30, *3 4O, «410, *510p.n. Sundays, 9 45 a. n.; 515 P. n. Foot of Cortlandt street a. m.: *3 3?, *4 23, *515 p.m. Sundays,!) 45 a. m.; 5 15p. n. TRAINS LEA"E FREEHOLD FOR RED BANK. Va Matawan. (Sundays excepted), 810,1115 a. n. 05,4 20. f I5 p. m. For further partculars see tme tables ut statons. Denotes express trans. J. R. WOOB, Genl Pass. Agent, Pecn. R. R. H. P. BALDWIN, Genl Pass. Agent, Central ft. R. of N. J. RUFUS BLODGETT, Superntendent N.. and h. B. R. R.... D R. F. L. WEIGHT,, SURGEON DENTIST, RED BANK, N. J. road street, opposte Bergens. D R. J. D. THROCKMORTON, DENTAL SURGEON. OFFICE: o. 5 Broad Street. - Red Bank, N. J. D R. WM. H. LAWES, JR. VETERINAR SURGEON. Graduate of Amercan Veternary College, N.. Resdence: MoDnftutb Street, letween Broad street and JIaple avenue. Red JJank, JR., JL INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. TIONT ST., RED BANK, NTJ. (P. O. Box 21.) Insurance placed In the best companes on mosl reasonable, terms. R S. SNDER.. " Establshed IEAL ESTATE, GENERAL INSURANCE & LOANS lommlssloner of Deed3 and Surveyor. Also Insurance Broke" for New ork and Vcnty. ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS, N. J. D JUNE, Jlerclanta Steamboat Co.s Lne. Telephone Call, 14 A, Red Bank. Shrewsbury,Hghlands, Hghland }Seach Oceanc, Locust Pont, Far Haven, Jtt Bank, Long Branch and Asbury Park. Tle strong and commodous steamboat,. ALBERTINA, CAPT. L. PUICF,. Wll leave Ht! Bank, am Per 24, foot of Fraukln street. New ork, us follows: Leave l&dlltnk. _ Leave Xew ork. Thursday, 1st...7:1)0 A. M. Thursday. 1st..2:00 P. s JUNE, The large and commodous steamer, WM. V. WILSON, CAPT. BENJAMIN GRIGGS. Wll run between Port Monnoulh and New ork, (foot of Bloonucld Street, West Washngton Muket,)as follows: Ltute Port MonmoHth. l.tttce Xen: Io/-. Foot Bloomfleld Street. Thursday, 1st...2:3(11\ M. Thursday. 1st..8:00A. M. Frday, a 8;») " Frday, Sl»:00 Saturday,(d...l<:00 " Saturday, 3d... 1;<KI r-. M. Monday, oth...tl:ofl " Monday, fth..)2;0) M. Tuesday, Oth...7:1X1 " Tuesdny,(tb...]:()O\ M. Weday. 7lt...7:0ll " Wedday, 7th..1:30 " Thursday, 8th...7:11) " Thursday, fth..tl:oo A. M. Frday,9th ;T;nO " Frday,tllh...0:30 " Saturday, Kth..7:00 " Saturday, 10th.8:(H " Monday. 12th...7:00 " Monday. 12tl...!l.l!0 " Tuesday, 13th..8:00 " Tuesday. 13th.,9;00 " Wedday. 14th..8:00 " Weddny, 14th.(1:00 " Thursday. 15th.8:00 " Thursday,lftl.lMU " Frday, «tl...h:xl " Frday, lfth...0:00 " Saturday, 17th..S:(K) Saturday,Uth 12:00 M. Monday, Kth...WW " Monday, 10th. 11:00 A. M. Tuesday. Stu...IWHI " THesdny,2(lth.l2:0O M. Wedday. 2lst..«:(KI " Wedday, 21st..l:00v. M. Thursday, 22<1..7:110 " Thursday,.!2d..2:00 " Frday. 2*1 7M> " Frday, Jld....«:»(> A. Jf. Saturday. 24th..7:10 " 8turday.24tl..::((l v. M. Mondny, 2(lth...7:lK " Monday, atl..8:ik> A. M. Tuesday, arth.,7:1x1 " "Tuesday, 27th..9;00 " Weddny, 28th..K:IKl " Wcrlay.28th..9:(HI " Tmrwly, MtluWKI " Thursday, 2MIMWKI " Frday. UOth...R:l!ll " Frday,!!uth..,l;tK> " All back freght, must le pnld before delvery. Ths lmts tlne-tuble Is advertsed In tlm Monmmth Press nnd HK.I> HANK 1U:(IISTKU ; UIMI n Blllngers and Mckeys Steamboat (Juldcs. Tlne-Ubles may be obtaned nt M. ollrlcn A Son, 21 WnahllBIostvct.; A. Morrs A Co., ((r. 14(h St. mll 9th Avenue. Nluflo Tcket*! 30 Don n. llotur Tlcknt*, SOOmU. Freght receved on New ork Iler untl ":001: M. everyday. Thursday. 1st...7:00 Frday. 2<1 7:(X) Saturday, 3d... 7:0(1 Monday,5th...7:00 Tuesday, l!th...7:tlo Wedday,7th...7:00 Thursday. 8th...":*> Frday. Uth 7:00 Saturday, rth..7:(kl Monday, 12th..7:00 Tuesday, 13th...l-.m Wedday, 14th..7:(«l Thursday, 15th.7:(d Frday. 10th.:..7;:0 Saturday, 17th..K:(XI Frday. 2d 3:10 Saturday, 3d...3:IKI Monday, 5th... 3:00 Tuesday. mh...3:0o Wedday, 7th.,.3:0(1 Thursday, «b,..3:l» Frday, 9th 3:10 Saturday, l(th..3;3u Mofldny, 12tb..4:OO Tuesday. 13th. 12:00 M. Weddny. 14th.l2:00 " Thursday, lsth.l:lo\ M Frday l6th... 1:30 " Saturday, 17th. 3:0(1 " A MILLION BOOKS.. Knre. Curous, Current. IN STOCK. ALMOST GIVEN AWA. IJImrlcn Hu >plu<l Cheaper than lt nuy Hook Fl<nv n tn; world, MIIIIAHIICN ANO IIOOKN UOIKJIIT. MAMMOTH CATALOGUE 1WKK. LEGCAT BROTHERS. 81 OIIAnnCHN NTIlItlCT, Ikl I) WlHt (f Cty Hull Iwk, NEW ORK. Tomatoes "Wanted. 1.wll gve $8.00 per ton for red, rpe, sound tomatoes ths comng season, Farmers ntendng to contract wth 11s wll please apply-at once to " JOHN VV, STOUT, Cannng Factory, foot of Broad St., Red Bank, N, J. Subject to chauge wthout notce. nnnecs wth trolley cars nt Red Bnnk fo Shrewsbury, Eatontovn. Long Branch nud Asltrj lnrk.., " HARVE LITTLE, Messenger. Frut end confectonery on board. N. B. All freght ntended for tlls "boat must bt on tle wharf a suffcent length of tme to handle, a: she wll postvely leave promptly on her advertsed tme. Ths bnats tlne-tahle s advertsed In TIIK MV.V BANK HKOISTKU. New Jersey Stamlnnl also n th Collatng House Montor, Mckeys Steamboat Oud and Bullgers (utde., Excurson Tckets, 5Oc Morolmts Stonmbont CVs Lne, Telephone Call 14 A. Red Bnuk. Slrtr.l)ur/,JI>,Unnl., Hghland Heach Oceanc, Zoewt Iotnt, JFalr Haven, Ited Hank, Long llraneh nnd Asbury Park, The strong and commodous steamboat, SEA BIRD, Clt. C. E. TIIIIOCKMOHTOK, Wll leave Ited Bunk md IlerSI. foot of Kmkll.street,.New ork, as follows : J.ttvt! llt\l Hunk. l.euty Xtv Vork. Thursday, ]H..l:0l)>, M. Thursday. 1st..H:l)0 A.»I Frlduv.2(l :;lll " Frday,2(1 lukl Saturday, ;M.;...l:tK) " Satunlay, :W...lll:IKI " Sluy, 4tl...::UI " Sunday. 4tl...l(l;:(l " Momly, ftl)...4:(ki " Mulny, Mh... 11:110 " Tuesday, Ml...Ml " Tucsdy, «h...,h:ll(l " Wedday,7lh...:):(Kl " Wlday, 7th...K:IKI " Thmdny. 8th..<!:(») " Tualy,Htl..:(Kl " Frday, Utl!!:(») " Frday, Dl «:IKl " Knttrlny.lllh..ll:lMI " Stunuy, ll..l;ih) Kmlny, llth...,1:1*1 " Smlny. lltl...l:lx) Mddy, 12th...4:m ". Mndy, I2tl...,l:lltl Tuesday,llllh...,:(l " Tuwlay, llltl..l:0» Wellny, llll..l:l») " Weddny, llth..ll:(io Thuwlv. rth..2:(«" Thmlny. lf)tl.»:lhl IVldny, tlth «:«> " Frldny. flth...\»(l " Htnly,17ll,,]I:INI " Xnrduy. ltl,.l:<m " Hnly, IKIl 11:110 " Kunluy, lwh...h:ll( " t t( CIIIIIIUII wthout notce. «vllh Inllr.v nh n led Dunk h HhvwHhury, Ktmtuwn, Lung Brunch anl Aflnr lm-l. IIAIlVKV LIITLK, MesHllgtl 1, luit anl cnfetlcv (n bnl. N. It. All frlght InlctlHl for thn lmt nrt I on Hd wlmrt a Hlllclcnt length of tlnn tohudl 1 mkh wll postvely ICIIVC n tly< lc Hed llm, Ihl bmth Ile-tllc l ulvttlfld In the IIr. HANK IIKIIIHTKN, NllW.lewy.Sldlllfllll, Ulsn III tl CountInu IIIIUKK Munllor, MkcyHSIclutould md llulllurh (Iulde. Tckets, SOCcnU A PPLEGATE & HOPE, f COUNSELLOES AT LAW, RED BANK, v MONMOUTH COUNT, NEW JERSE. OHN S. APPLEGATE. FRED W. HOPE HHAELES H. T U COUNSELLOR AT LAW,. Rooms A and 4, Regster Buldng, ROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J. E DMUND WILSON,. COUNSELLOR AT LAW, (Successor to Nevus S Wlson). RED BANK, N.J. Offces: POST-OFFICE BUILDING. ^ILLIAMPINTARD, COUNSELLOR AT LAW, ver Suttons Stove Store. RED BANK, N.J. W U. KURTZ, M. D., C. If., PHSICIAN AND SURGEON, EATO.VTO1VN, N. J. fllce on Broad street, north sde, frst door west of post-ouce, OFFICE Houns: 9 to 11 A. U.: 1 to 3, 6 to 8 r. M. R. ELLA. PRENTISS UPHAM. DISEASES OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN. ELECTRICIT. toom 8. REGISTER BUILDIXO, RKD BANK, N. J t Red Bank Offce Tuesday and Frday afternoons J AS. S. MCCAFFRE, D. V. S. VETERINAR SURGEON. Graduate ol Amercan Veternary College, N.. Resdence. Irvng Street between Broad Street and Maple Avenue, Red Bank, N. J. W M. H. SEELE, PORT MONMOUTH, NEW JERSE. otary Publc. Solders Vouchers Prepared Blls of Sale for Vessels. A C. HURLE. SURVEOR AND CONVEANCER, 15 Brdge Avenue. RED BANK, N. J Wth George Cooper for nfleen years. G EO. D. COOPER, CIVIL ENGINEER. Successor to.geo. Cooper, C. E..)nce^47J!ector_P]ace,_ RED BANK, N. J. H ENR OSTENDORFF, TUNER AND REPAIRER OF PIANOS AND ORGANS. Offce at Worthleys Statonery Store. Telephone Cull I6B. BROAD ST., RED BANK, N. J HOME INSURANCE COMPAN OF NEW ORK. Offce: No. 119 Broadway. Nnety-Frst Seml- Aunual Statement, January, 1SC9. CASH ASSETS 512,101, ALLAIRE & SON. AGENTS. ESTABLISHED 1S73. Red Bank Reel Estate and Insurance Agency. 21 Broad Street, Red Bank. Rjsks placed n the Homeam! other frst-class companes at Low- straws. P.O. BOX 177. ALLAIRE A SON. specal Notce RELATING TO- USANCES IN THE Townshp of Shrewsbury. Nusances wthn HIR townshp of Shrewsbury are hereby denned and declared to be, and they shul!.nclude and embrace: 1. The placng or depostng In or upon any street or alley, or In or upon any publc or prvate property In ths townshp, any dead anmal or any pnrt of tho same, or any dead llsh or any part of the same, or flltl from prves or cesspools tr catch basns, or rubbsh of nuy knd or descrpton, or any house or ktchen slops or garlmpe, manure or syeeplnrs (pro vded that stable manure and olber manure may bo used as a fertlzer), or any foul or offensve, or obnoxous matter or substance whatever. Any fuller leaky prvy vault, cesspool or other receptacle for flth. t. Allowng or pprmltlufr any nght sol, garbago or other offemlvo or de composng sold orflud matter or substance to lenk or ooze Irom nnycartor wnjron or vessel In whch tle sune may lo conveyed or carred. 4. The curryng or-cnnveylug through any street any substance whch has been removed from any prvy vault or csspool, unless the same shall be nclosed In nlr-tlkht barrels, or In a perfectly tght and properly covered wagon. fl. All cartng of rorlnge through Ihe streetsof tle townshp except between the hours ot Hunsct rtnd sx A. M. 0. The burnng (f any nlnttet or substance whch shall emt, or en use. or produce, or cast off any foul or ouuoxnns, or "Un.lve, or hurtful, or annoyng gas. Bnukc, steun nr odot. 7. The custlng ordlsclmrglng Into tho Shrewsbury or Nnvfsnk, or South Slnewslur.v. rvers, or Into any stream n thlatownshlp, or on the boundary lne of ths townshp, any substance whch hns been remuvd from any vault. COSSIKHII or snk, or lny offal or oler refuse, lquds :r solds,>by. any ppes or otherwse. H. Any and every nnlfnnce m abovo denned Is hereby prohbted and forthlt-n wthn tlo townshp of Shrewsbury, nnd nny person mklnjf.creatng, causng, mantanng ur rcrmltng any of snld nusances shall fofelt and pay a penalty or twentylve dollars. Thbnvu lanncjtrarcfrom tlconllnutueaof tho lmnl of health of Slrewsbuy townshp, and tlo fume wll be thoroughly enforced.» W. S. WHIT-MODE. M. D. Presdent of tho Hoard of Health. K.C. FJAKIIIKUN, Secretary. O N RULE TO BAR CREDITORS. A UMINISTIlATOrtH NOTIOI,. Dnvll M. Wllhll. admnstrator of Wllam I. Wlllott, deccned, by nrder ot tho Surrogate of tlo ("lmy of Mmnmth, lcmyglveh not lev to Urn credtors uf the mll UecensMl lo brng Intllr deht«, lnulh nnd clhm galht tlo estuto of suld decend, mller untl nr fllrmlln, wlln nm months fou IhoTWKI.Vn DA OF AIMtll,. 1WKI, or IbV wll tn forever barred ot any acton therefor lht the Mld admnstrator IlAVIIt M, WILLETT. N OTICE OF SETTLEMENT. ESTATE OF (!ATIIF,HINK AM.KN. llecethed. (Kurnnl Account) Notl" In hereby gven that He IKWOIMU* of tln HlweHcrH, executorh ut Hld dmwmcl, wll le audted mll uttfd ty the Surfftto, a)<l mported fur ttleeut tllorpham Cnrt of tlo (.nltv (f Mdnnolth, (IHTIIIIIIHI)A, TIIK Mll HA Of JUNK next. Hlled MnylNI, lm>. ItOHKItT AI.l.EN, Jn., JOHN T. AM.KN. (Kt)IWIB K. ALI.KN...

16 IN AND OUT OF TOWN. Short unt Interestng Items From All Over the County.. More than half the chldren n the. lower grades of the Hanasquan publc school are sck wth numps. - The prevalence of the dsease has greatly nter fered wth the yearly examnatons. Charles S. Tuns of Imlaystown has been apponted supervsor of the fourth census dstrct of New Jersey. The dstrct ncludes the countes of Mddlesex, Somerset, Unon and Hunterdon. The Mercantle Co-operatve bank of Red Bank has opened a branch offce n the Ctzens bank buldng at Long Branch. T. Con. Morford s n charge of the offce. Conrad Hume Pnches, son of Conrad Pnches, edtor of the Belnar Coast Echo, wll be marred to Mss Kate Shpman Ely of Peekskll next Wednesday* : : Mss Dasy S. Laws, daughter of Mrs. Agnes Laws of Long Branch, wllfce marred to Charles H. Watts of the same place next Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamn P. Morrs of Long Branch returned home last week from a wheelng trp to Lake Hopatcong, Morrstown and other ponts.... Mrs. John W. Herbert of Wckatunk, wfe of the late ex-judge Herbert, has gone to Omaha, Nebraska, to vst her son, Wllam H. Herbert. The Long Branch commssoners have nstructed the polcemen to see that stages do not congregate on the prncpal streets of that place. The Manasquan school dstrct has 414 chldren of school age, an ncrease of thrteen over last year. The grls number 200 and the boys 208. Tle contract for puttng the heatng apparatus n the new Methodst church at Turkey has been gven to Eljah Van- Cleaf of Asbury Park. Long Branchs budget of expenses for the ensung year amounts to $75,100, whch s $35 j excess of the appropratons made last year. Rufus Ogden Wallng ha3 been elected presdent, of tlfe alumn assocaton of the Keyport graded school. Mss Ada Poole s secretary, Assemblyman Joseph L. Butcher of Farnngdale has a potato patch of sx acres that s sad to be the fnest n Monmouth county. Dr. W. W. Trout of Sprng Lake has taken Dr. Harry E. Snow of Calforna n partnershp wth hm n the practce of medcne. A snappng turtle, weghng 2B pounds, was caught n front of Garret Breeces resdence at Allentown a fendays ago. A sub-postal staton s to be establshed at Asbury Park on July 1st, on whch date the stamp agences wll be dscontnued. Dr. C. H. W. Stockng, who has been prncpal of the young lades semnary of Freehold the past two years, has resgned. Mrs. Stephen D. Woolley of Ocean Grove has been elected vce-presdent of the Pharmaceutcal assocaton of New Jersey.. The death rale at Long Branch durng the past month was lower than the death rate- of any month durng the past ten years. There are so many cases of mumps at Irulaystown that the chldrens day servces n the churches wll be postponed. There are 77o chldren of school age n the townshp of Mutawan. Of ths number 380 are grls and 3U» are boys. Mss Mabel L. Clark of Matawan has graduated from abrooklyn school of stenography and typewrtng. A ojtotlce has been establshed at Sweetmnns Lane, near Freehold. It wll he known as Sweetmans. A lodge of the Knghts of Pythas wll he organzed at Mutawan by the colored people of that place. The next state conventon of the lrenu3 relef assocaton wll be held at Long Branch n September. St. Lukes church lt Long Branch cleared $53 by a m.pp>r gven on the nght of Decoraton dny, John LulslHtt of Fannngdale has graduated from Crozer theologcal seulnry of Clu-ater, Pa. JunPA C. Ellott of Kcypart bus been ordaned to the prest hood of the Epsco- / pal church. Dr. Edmund MeKnney of Keyport s now clerk n a drug Htore at Ocean Grove. Manahun BIOH. of Monmouth Bench lost n hose last week that was 25 years old. The Daughters ol Lberty of Fuvmngdale ndc$70 by n recent ctcrtunnunt. Mrfl. Jacob Gurahrant of lrmchport has gone to Chcago for the Hummer. John Deppeler, S\, of Frtungdnlu, las gone on u trp to Europo, ClnrU Burknlow of Turkey s n nwnbcr of the Asbury Park band. lven f you do buy ehenp Cut UIIIHH for youraelf, when t COIIIOH to u weddng Rft nothng wlldobutdorllngrh, 015 Bromlwny, nenr 21st otwt, and!)0 Murray Htrcet, Now ork, TUB ltkobtc conta $1.50 a your, o worth l,00 a year. Adv. It Corner Broad and Whte Streets, Red Bank. Harry Bownes Mssng Rg. Harry Bowne of Keyport drove to Freehold on Decoraton day to attend the races. He put hs horse n a lvery stable and when he went-to get t at nght t was gone. The next day Bowne was notfed that hs rg was at. Lakewood, the hostler at the lvery stable havng- gven t to two Lakewood men by mstake. The Lakewood men were too drunk when they started to leave Freehold to know the dfference between Bownes rg and ther own. Threatened to Kll hs Employer. Joseph Rosenfeld, manager of a Long Branch butcher shop, ordered Joseph Haytl, a handy man about the place, to wash the wndows one day last week. Hayth ddnt obey and Rosenfeld made some remarks concernng Hayths ambton. Ths made Hayth mad and he pcked up a sharp butcher knfe and threatened to " stck t clean through Rosenfeld and kll hm." Rosenfeld had Hayth arrested, but the justce let hm go after a hearng. A Sneak Thef at Monmouth Beach. G. N. Gardners house at Monmouth Beach was entered by a thef a few nghts ago and robbed of jewelry valued at about $100. The thef was dscovered whle he was n the house, but he escaped by jumpng through a wndow sash. Ht Wth a Baseball. Murray E. Foster of Atlantc HghlandB was ht on the nose by.a ball and qute badly njured whle he was umprng a game of ball at Navesmk last week between the Black Damonds, and a Red Bank team. SUCCESSOR TO ALLSTROM & CO. LEADING MAKES. PRICES RIGHt. The Oxford Te s the deal hot weather shoe. It s < not only neat lookng on the foot, but t s the most comfortable summer shoe ever-made. Mens and womens Oxfords here n all the proper \ styles, all the good qualtes., t Womens Tan or Black Oxfords, 75 C., $.00, $.25, $ 1.50 and $2.00 Mens Tan or Black Oxfords, $ j.oo, $ 1.25, $1.50, $2.00, $3.00, $3.50 Shoes for bkng, for lawn tenns,-for any and every user Womens Bcycle Boots, - -. ^ $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 Mens Bcycle Shoes, - - -" , 1.50?* 3.00 KubberSole SLoes, hgh and low cut, forme, women and chldren,, from 25C. to $1.50 BROAD STREET, A Gas Range IS GOOD ALL THE EAR LV.SUMMER. ITS INDISPENSABLE. TOUCH A MATCH TO IT-ITS HEAD. TlBN X VALVE-ITS OUT. Ktchen stays cool and clean, Cookng s done perfectly, expense stops when the gas s turned off. RANGES, AT OUR OFFICE. AS LOW AS 310. Prce ncludes connectng. Consoldated Gas Co. of New Jersey, FRONT STREET, OPPOSITE "GLOBE HOTEL. In a Pretty Pckle" IR tlm wona who must vntertnn unexpected com puny HIIIOHH HIIP u well suppled wth canned nnd bottled KrocoroH, If her pantry shclvra are ncely lned wth our fmoh hnuul of p-kkh, uouph, vkelableh, canned nelh nnd HHII and crackers, HIIC (H complncently rendy for any emergency. Wlmt HIIIIII vohcmlyuu to-duy? Honest Goods at Honest Prces. The Celebrated E. D. Butter, per lb..., 22c. Best Dary Butter, per lb.. 20c, Cookng Butter, per lb... 18c. Pure Lard, pur lb Tc. Fresh Eggs, ]>or doz. > ISc. F. F. 166 Monmouth Street, Red Batk) N. J 1 (Formerly Bergeus). RED BANK, N..J. -4 ««* ««««*«*«««+ * «* ** + * «j Pars Crees. ADVANCED PRICES. 14 cents n 100-pound Lots. 15 cents n 86 and 28 pound Lots. 16 cents n 14-pound Lots. 17 cents n 10 and 8 pound Lots 18 cents n Lots less than 8 pounds. JAMES COOPER, Druggst, :: Cor. Broad and Whte Sts., RED BANK, N.J. The Paul T. Norton Co., EVERTHING FOR ; Horses, Cattle and Poultry. FERTILIZERS AND COAL. AT CORRECT PRICES. Elzabeth, Elzabcthport, Platofcld, Soncrvllc, AND C N. J. :

Twenty-Third Publications

Twenty-Third Publications Introducton Advent s a tme to wat for Jesus and to prepare for hs comng at Chrstmas. People all over the world wat and watch n dfferent ways for Jesus comng. You wll learn about some of them n ths book.

More information

Philip Goes. Lesson at a Glance. Go! Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3

Philip Goes. Lesson at a Glance. Go! Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll name the Ethopan as the man who Phlp taught about Jesus. The chldren wll practce sharng the Bble wth each other. The chldren wll state that God wants

More information

I Am Special. Lesson at a Glance. God Made Me. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 1

I Am Special. Lesson at a Glance. God Made Me. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 1 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state that God created the frst man and woman, Adam and Eve. The chldren wll dentfy dfferent parts of the human body. The chldren wll thank God for ther

More information

c The dogs did what they were told so that their masters did not hit them.

c The dogs did what they were told so that their masters did not hit them. The Call of the Wld Jack London The story step by step 1 Lsten to Chapter 1 (from Judge Mller s place... to...he never forgot t. ). Lst the parts of the body that you hear. The frst one s an example. Check

More information

Hannah Talks to God. Lesson Plan

Hannah Talks to God. Lesson Plan Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll understand that prayng s how we talk to God. The chldren wll learn that Hannah prayed for a baby and God answered her prayers. The chldren wll pray.

More information

Brothers and Sisters

Brothers and Sisters Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state that God makes famles. The chldren wll demonstrate ways to be helpers at home. The chldren wll thank God for ther famles. Bble Story Text Geness

More information

We Go to Church. Lesson at a Glance. Worshiping God. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3

We Go to Church. Lesson at a Glance. Worshiping God. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state a characterstc of a dscple. The chldren wll sng and pray together. The chldren wll state how they can be lke dscples, e.g., share, pray, read the

More information

\ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043,

\ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043, \ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043, 373 FOR\* 374 Indat- T \';"..c >fjl. - TTlRD INTERVIEW 5043. Feld porker's Ths report wad'? on (ta^" February 1, I.)3 7. *V' ~" * "" "" "" 1.. Name JL!^-?!!! 1^^

More information

This Child Has Been Sent by God

This Child Has Been Sent by God Consensus Volume 20 ssue 2 n Prase of Valant Women Artcle 10 11-1-1994 Ths Chld Has Been Sent by God Bonne J. Scharf Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://scholars.wlu.ca/consensus Recommended Ctaton

More information

I i. to read them to you and as you u~derstznd them and read along Kewark Avenue, J. C. ti. J. I 38- Inv. James P.

I i. to read them to you and as you u~derstznd them and read along Kewark Avenue, J. C. ti. J. I 38- Inv. James P. AND PLACE OF Dstectve Charles F. llvas, Dsde County Publc Safety, kpartment, Homcde Sectoq obert Hlavac, nv. James P. Farrell, ~udsoh County Prosecutor% Offce 59 5 Kewark Avenue, J. C. t. J. Lor1 12, 1973,

More information

The Great Chain of Being

The Great Chain of Being The Great Chan of Beng AUTHOR: Susan Barry Frankln Hgh School, Frankln, WI Introducton In ths lesson, students wll use prmary and secondary sources to develop a better understandng of the contnuty and

More information

And God is able to make all grace abound to you...

And God is able to make all grace abound to you... And God s able to make all grace abound to you... And God s able to make all grace abound to you, so that havng all suffcency n all thngs at all tmes, you may abound n every good work. Thnk of t. God hmself

More information

UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38

UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38 UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38 Can anyone tell me what the theme of our summer seres on Acts s? That s rght UNSTOPPABLE. In the power of the Holy Sprt, the Good News of Jesus

More information

Josiah Loves God s Word

Josiah Loves God s Word Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll dentfy the Bble as God s word. The chldren wll dentfy Josah and specfc events surroundng the Bble s dscovery n the temple. The chldren wll vew the Bble

More information

air will make their nests in it.

air will make their nests in it. 355 "THE FOURTH DIMENSION AND ITS USES BY MAN" By Charles Fllmore Unty Tranng School July 31, 1933 Lesgon l "How Sprtually to Qucken Man' 8 Supermnd Facultes and Use,"Them In Character Buldng" ' The am

More information

Friends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report

Friends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report Ths publcaton was dgtsed by Rochester Cathedral Research Guld Homepage: www.rochestercathedralresearchguld.org Adran s Wall Frends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report 20-202 G. Keevll Abstract: Test pts

More information

Evaluation of geometrical characteristics of Korean pagodas

Evaluation of geometrical characteristics of Korean pagodas Evaluaton of geometrcal characterstcs of Korean pagodas *Fahmeh Yavartanoo 1) and Thomas Kang 2) 1), 2) Department of Archtecture and Archtectural Engneerng, Seoul Natonal Unversty, Seoul 08826, Korea

More information

Unit 2. Spelling Most Common Words Root Words. Student Page. Most Common Words

Unit 2. Spelling Most Common Words Root Words. Student Page. Most Common Words 1. the 2. of 3. and 4. a 5. to 6. in 7. is 8. you 9. that 10. it 11. he 12. for 13. was 14. on 15. are 16. as 17. with 18. his 19. they 20. at 21. be 22. this 23. from 24. I 25. have 26. or 27. by 28.

More information

Copyr ight Copyright Tridonic GmbH & Co KG All rights reserved. Manufactur er

Copyr ight Copyright Tridonic GmbH & Co KG All rights reserved. Manufactur er luxcontrol DALI XC Copyr ght Copyrght Trdonc GmbH & Co KG All rghts reserved. Manufactur er Trdonc GmbH & Co KG Färbergasse 15 6851 Dornbrn Austra Tel. +43-(0)5572-395-0 Fax +43-(0)5572-20176 www.trdonc.com

More information

.tl",- ' --;'.~~ TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH \ '.~-, ":~~~ A Response to Recent Allegation~':,: :~;..:;~~~ ::f4

.tl,- ' --;'.~~ TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH \ '.~-, :~~~ A Response to Recent Allegation~':,: :~;..:;~~~ ::f4 ~ ' I c l! 'I I tl"- ' --;'~~ " :" ~- --t"' ~ : r tcj"'" :: " ~~' "! j ":;;c' :;;t ~ ; r TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH " ' : ; \!';[~J" 1 "1t~:::::~ f" ; j I ; : '~;: t A Response to Recent Allegaton~'::

More information

Methods for Measuring and Compensating Ball Screw Error on Multi-mode Industrial CT Scanning Platform

Methods for Measuring and Compensating Ball Screw Error on Multi-mode Industrial CT Scanning Platform 5th Internatonal Conference on Measurement, Instrumentaton and Automaton (ICMIA 06) Methods for Measurng and Compensatng Ball Screw Error on Mult-mode Industral CT Scannng Platform Yuje Zhang, a, Shangfeng

More information

VOLUME XXI. NO, 46. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MAX 10,1899. PAGES 1 TO 8. END OF A WILL CONTEST.

VOLUME XXI. NO, 46. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MAX 10,1899. PAGES 1 TO 8. END OF A WILL CONTEST. VOLUME XX. NO, 46. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MAX 10,1899. PAGES 1 TO 8. A NEW CHEF OF POLCE. FRANKLN PERCE STRYKER APr PONTED LAST NGHT. Wllam. Wlson Apponted to Fll Strker's Place tts Assstant Sdrshal-Janes

More information

Design Review Board. John Ellsworth, Environmental Planner on behalf of Verizon Wireless, First Presbyterian Church

Design Review Board. John Ellsworth, Environmental Planner on behalf of Verizon Wireless, First Presbyterian Church I t 1 s Desgn Revew Board F February 6, 2018 Those present were: s I $ James H. McMullan, Vce Charman Carolyn D. Presche, Member C. Sherrll Dayton, Member Robert D. Caruso, Member Bruce A.T. Sska, Member

More information

v. Theresa Keeping Defendant

v. Theresa Keeping Defendant UNTED STATES DSTRCT COURT for the Central Dstrct of Calforna Chuck Foster Plantff v. Theresa Keepng Defendant Cvl Acton No. SACV14-0004-AG-DFMx; consoldated wth SACV14-0012-AG-DFMx PRODUCTON OF DOCUMENTS

More information

A DIGEST OF CHAPTER 14

A DIGEST OF CHAPTER 14 STUDES N JOSHUA- JUDGES-RUTH A DGEST OF CHAPTER 14 Vv. 1-5 The plan for dvdng the land. God told Joshua to dvde the land by lot (v. 2). Ths plan had already been selected durng the days of Moses (Numbers

More information

The Murders in the Rue Morgue

The Murders in the Rue Morgue E d g a r A l l a n P o e The Murders in the Rue Morgue Part Three It Was in Paris that I met August Dupin. He was an unusually interesting young man with a busy, forceful mind. This mind could, it seemed,

More information

Processional. a writer s cottage. Alexandria, Virginia, 2017

Processional. a writer s cottage. Alexandria, Virginia, 2017 Introducton to the 2017 edton Processonal a wrter s cottage Alexandra, Vrgna, 2017 A plaque hangs above my desk: Tell Your Story. Those words serve as a daly nvtaton to a sprtual practce. Tellng a story

More information

The Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica 30th Anniversary Rededication. March 6, 2011 University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries.

The Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica 30th Anniversary Rededication. March 6, 2011 University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries. The Isser and Rae Prce Lbrary of Judaca 30th Annversary Rededcaton March 6, 2011 Unversty of Florda George A. Smathers Lbrares Thrty Years of The Isser and Rae Prce Lbrary of Judaca Unversty of Florda

More information

i» M < 1 I I MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION CHICAGO REGIONAL OFFICE

i» M < 1 I I MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION CHICAGO REGIONAL OFFICE » M < 1 I I ~W ' TT UNITED STTES OF MERIC TCOM HERING MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BORD CHICGO REGIONL OFFICE IN THE MTTER OF: LEROY J. PLETTEN vs. UNITED STTES OF THE RMY DEPRTMENT Transcrpt of the" Deposton

More information

an imprint of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY

an imprint of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY an mprnt of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY Publshed 2012 by Pyr, an mprnt of Prometheus Books A Gule of Dragons. Copyrght 2012 James Enge. All rghts reserved. No part of ths publcaton may be reproduced,

More information

Section-A (Reading) Bhagat Singh

Section-A (Reading) Bhagat Singh SAMPLE PAPER TERM I SESSION- 2017-18 ENGLISH CLASS- VII Tme allowed: 3 hrs Maxmum Marks: 80 Ths paper s dvded nto three sectons: Secton A (Readng) - 20 marks Secton B (Wrtng - 20 marks Grammar) - 10 marks

More information

5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT: Your Honor. the State would. BY MR. SERMOS: Yes, sir. We'll agree to that. We will release him, too, Your

5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT: Your Honor. the State would. BY MR. SERMOS: Yes, sir. We'll agree to that. We will release him, too, Your Drect Examnaton - Manley 465 1 BY MR. HARPER: Your Honor, we would ask that 2 Deputy Frank be fnally released from our subpoena. 3 BY THE COURT: He '11 be released from hs 4 subpoena. 5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT:

More information

The Ensign. Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye

The Ensign. Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER 2015 Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye by Hgh Prest Brad Gault Prepare ye, prepare ye, O nhabtants of the earth, for the judgment of our God s come: behold, and lo, the Brdegroom

More information

History of the Pequot War

History of the Pequot War I!n 1636 there was unrest and suspcon between the Englsh Colonsts n New England and the Natve Amercan People who had lved there snce tme beyond memory. Each group was worred about the ntentons of the other.!

More information

989 James Robert Todd

989 James Robert Todd xv. 989 James Robert Todd Bographcal Sumnnary (1324) Todd was born on December 10, 1919, n Groesbeck, Tex. (2165) He held a varety of occupatons. He worked approxmately 2 years at Sue's Used Car Lot n

More information

A WEDlpG" DAY MISHAP.

A WEDlpG DAY MISHAP. RED BANK REGSTER VOLUME XXV. NO. 9 RED BANK, N. J.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 28, 1901. PAGES 1 TO 8, SEWAGE DSPOSAL PLANS. COMMSSONERS ABOUT BEADY TO MAKE A SELECTON. Thev Have Vsted Several Plants and Wll Vst

More information

and Pasturage are the two breasts the State. Sully. P. D. BERNARD, Proprietor.

and Pasturage are the two breasts the State. Sully. P. D. BERNARD, Proprietor. renovatng t crops. prved upon 1 Tllage 1 of THE SOUTHERN -PLANTER, Stroteo to.sltnculture, hortculture, nno tlxt ^ouseltoltr grts. Agrculture s the nursng mother of the Arts. Xenoplwn. and Pasturage are

More information

MISS SCHENCUVEDDED. failure to maintain the county roads in good order. The appointment of numerous men in various parts of the county

MISS SCHENCUVEDDED. failure to maintain the county roads in good order. The appointment of numerous men in various parts of the county BANK REGSTER VOLUME XXX. NO. 15. RED BANK, N, J., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1907. PAGES 1 TO 8. BULLET ENDS HS LFE. STEPHEN BOBKOV1CB OF RED BANK A SUCDE, The Deed Commtted at G. Fred Nttpt'tt Hnu*e on Hprlna

More information

RED CROSS CHAPTER TO BE ORGANIZED

RED CROSS CHAPTER TO BE ORGANIZED Lbrary, r>ublg / X T h e A d v e r t s e r S t a n d s f o r t h e B e s t n t e r e s t s o f B e l m a r B O T H 0

More information

The Apostle Peter in the Four Gospels

The Apostle Peter in the Four Gospels 1 The Apostle Peter in the Four Gospels By Joelee Chamberlain Once upon a time, in a far away land, there was a fisherman. He had a brother who was also a fisherman, and they lived near a great big lake.

More information

Rulon Ricks-Experiences of the Depresssion. Box 2 Folder 31

Rulon Ricks-Experiences of the Depresssion. Box 2 Folder 31 Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Rulon Ricks-Experiences of the Depresssion By Rulon Ricks November 23, 1975 Box 2 Folder 31 Oral Interview conducted by Suzanne H. Ricks Transcribed by Sarah

More information

SALEM-WITCH-L Archives

SALEM-WITCH-L Archives 1 of 5 2009 09 19 01:16 Welcome to RootsWeb.com Sgn n DISCOVER MORE > Home Searches Famly Trees Malng Lsts Message Boards Web Stes Passwords Help Archver > SALEM WITCH > 1999 08 > 0933867296 SALEM-WITCH-L

More information

VOLUME 44;, RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, PAGES 1 TO ;, %i. THE RIVER STEAMBOATS.

VOLUME 44;, RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, PAGES 1 TO ;, %i. THE RIVER STEAMBOATS. BANK REGISTER. VOLUME 44;, RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 90. PAGES TO ;, %. THE RIVER STEAMBOATS. MAN? BOATTS HAVE RUN ON THE NORTH AND ; SOUTH SHREWSBURY RIVERS. The Frst Steamboat Hereabouts

More information

MINUTES. Seventy Seventh Annual Session. Arkansas State Association. Free Will Baptists. At The. Free Will Baptist Youth Camp

MINUTES. Seventy Seventh Annual Session. Arkansas State Association. Free Will Baptists. At The. Free Will Baptist Youth Camp ...., [.., :,... MNUTES Of The Seventy Seventh Annual Sesson Of The Arkansas State Assocaton t,,,,,,. j,. of Free Wll Baptsts At The Free Wll Baptst Youth Camp - On Beaver Lake-Conway, Arkansas August

More information

JOHN D. JONES Father of Charles E. Jones

JOHN D. JONES Father of Charles E. Jones JOHN D. JONES Father of Charles E. Jones John D. Jones was a most successful farmer and fruit growers of Utah County. His residence has been in Provo, Utah, most of the time since 1851. He was born in

More information

BOY'S EAR CUT m TJSJO. ovr A BJOTO&B i n WAS BUW OYB3BV BT AXJTO.

BOY'S EAR CUT m TJSJO. ovr A BJOTO&B i n WAS BUW OYB3BV BT AXJTO. REI VOLUME XXXIII. NO. 15. REP BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1910." PAGES 1 TO 8. JBRUEBUYg THE LYCEUM HE TOOK.POSSESSION OF THE PROPERTY LAST SATURDAY MORNING. He Wll Install a.new Heatng Plant and

More information

SAVING LABOR ON FARMS.

SAVING LABOR ON FARMS. REGISTER VOLUME XL. NO. 1 43. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1918. PAGES 1 TO 8. NEW CALL FOR SOLDIERS., /. MORE OF OUR BOYS TO LEAVE ON APRIL 26TH AND ON MAY loth. Seventeen Wll Be Called Into

More information

Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRIL 9, NO. 13.

Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRIL 9, NO. 13. Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRL 9, 1891. NO. 13. Publshed on alternate Thursdays, durng the college year, by the students of the Massachusetts nsttute of Technology. BOARD OF EDTORS. FREDERCK HOPPN HOWLAND,

More information

OF SAN FRANCISCO CONSULTATI ON

OF SAN FRANCISCO CONSULTATI ON www FfcaSta& TJ S WEATHER BUREAU, September 3 Last 24lOurs, ranfall 00 SUGAR 96 Degree Test? Centrfugals, 395a; Per Ton, $7900 Temperature Max 85; Ma 76 Weather, far 83 Analyss Beets, 9s Ud; per Ton, SS70

More information

VOLUME XXVI. NO. 35 RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY PAGES 1 TO 8. EDWARDj\CHENEY DEAD END OF A LONG AMD EVENTFUL CAREEB-

VOLUME XXVI. NO. 35 RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY PAGES 1 TO 8. EDWARDj\CHENEY DEAD END OF A LONG AMD EVENTFUL CAREEB- RED BANK REGSER. VOLUME XXV. NO. 35 RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDA. FEBRUAR 24. 1904. PAGES 1 O 8. WO ELECON^ FGHS. A CONES FOR FREEHOLDER NO CONSABLE, Vharlem /,. Davs to Hun Aganst Jacob v, Hhuttm for Freeholder-

More information

Rule of Law. Skit #1: Order and Security. Name:

Rule of Law. Skit #1: Order and Security. Name: Skit #1: Order and Security Friend #1 Friend #2 Robber Officer Two friends are attacked by a robber on the street. After searching for half an hour, they finally find a police officer. The police officer

More information

Eisenkopf. The Crimson Fairy Book

Eisenkopf. The Crimson Fairy Book Eisenkopf Once upon a time there lived an old man who had only one son, whom he loved dearly; but they were very poor, and often had scarcely enough to eat. Then the old man fell ill, and things grew worse

More information

BRIBERF AT ELECTIONS.

BRIBERF AT ELECTIONS. Tm. VOLUME NO. *-?& ^ RED BANK, N J., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1902. PAGES 1 TO 8; MANY RECENT MATHS. A TRYNG SEASON ON THOSE OF FEEBLE HEALTH. George lake, the Adopted Sen of John Lake of Sector Place, Des

More information

VOLUME XXL NO. 20. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY/ NOYEMBER 9,1898. PAGES 1 TO' 8.

VOLUME XXL NO. 20. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY/ NOYEMBER 9,1898. PAGES 1 TO' 8. VOLUME XXL NO. 20. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY/ NOYEMBER 9,1898. PAGES 1 TO' 8. FOSTER M-VOORHBtS WNS, ELECTED GOVERNOR OP NEW JERSEY YESTERDAY. JUonmouth Goes Democratc Wth Tleolore. Aumack Aldad of Hs

More information

The First Pioneer Company Crosses the Plains.

The First Pioneer Company Crosses the Plains. The First Pioneer Company Crosses the Plains. Blindfold someone and turn them around several times. Then ask the child to find the doorway to the classroom. Have the other children stand as obstacles in

More information

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections Notce of Copyrght Publshed and unpublshed materals may be protected by Copyrght Law (Ttle 17, U.S. Code). Any copes of publshed and unpublshed materals provded by the Western Hstory Collectons are for

More information

,. Social Band. Association -_. ill Baptists : l. Freer < - _._ l i. l i. . I .. -_ I. i i '...!.. ' - ' '. -.. ' J .

,. Social Band. Association -_. ill Baptists : l. Freer < - _._ l i. l i. . I .. -_ I. i i '...!.. ' - ' '. -.. ' J . ,_o,o_,_o_,,_,004111h-~cj-&c-,, thr:8o, e \ THE - ~, - - l, Socal Band Assocaton -_ - e OF Freer ll Baptsts : l " -_ ----- 1949 PROCEEDNGS OF THE / SEVENTY-FFTH ANNUAL

More information

Cornell Critical Thinking Test Series THE CORNELL CONDITIONAL-REASONING TEST, FORM X

Cornell Critical Thinking Test Series THE CORNELL CONDITIONAL-REASONING TEST, FORM X Cornell Critical Thinking Test Series THE CORNELL CONDITIONAL-REASONING TEST, FORM X by Robert H. Ennis William L. Gardiner John Guzzetta Richard Morrow Dieter Paulus LuciIIe Ringel Fill in the blanks

More information

OF FREE "/ILL BAPTISTS. FIFTY- FIFTH ANNUAL MINUTES

OF FREE /ILL BAPTISTS. FIFTY- FIFTH ANNUAL MINUTES -------- FRST ARZONA DSTRCT ASSOCATON OF FREE "/LL BAPTSTS FFTY- FFTH ANNUAL MNUTES 2006-2007 - - - FRST ARZONA - - DSTRCT ASSOCATON OF FREE WLL BAPTSTS FFTY- FFTH ANNUAL TES 2006-2007 \ - - : : -! - -

More information

VOLUME XXL NO. 38. RED^ANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15,1899. PAGES 1 TO 8, NEWS FROM MlDDLElWN. DEMOCRATS MAKE A GAIN.

VOLUME XXL NO. 38. RED^ANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15,1899. PAGES 1 TO 8, NEWS FROM MlDDLElWN. DEMOCRATS MAKE A GAIN. VOLUME XXL NO. 38. RED^ANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15,1899. PAGES 1 TO 8, DEMOCRATS MAKE A GAIN. FOEMAN K. SMITH IS ELECTED TOWN COMMITTEEMAN. Eljah HI. Conk Wns Hs Oft-Tred Battle for Constable-The Beat

More information

CHAPTER ONE - Scrooge

CHAPTER ONE - Scrooge CHAPTER ONE - Scrooge Marley was dead. That was certain because there were people at his funeral. Scrooge was there too. He and Marley were business partners, and he was Marley's only friend. But Scrooge

More information

TER VOLUME XXXVi; NO. 16. RED BANK, N.' J M WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1913 PAGES 1 TO 8.

TER VOLUME XXXVi; NO. 16. RED BANK, N.' J M WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1913 PAGES 1 TO 8. RED BANK TER VOLUME XXXV; NO. 16. RED BANK, N. J M WEDNESDA, OCTOBER 15, 1913 PAGES 1 TO 8. FOR A BETTER RED BANK. WOMEN TO START WORK TO MPROVE CONDTONS N TOWN. About a Score of Women Met at Mrs. Frank

More information

ETERNALLY INDEBTED TO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER (Mosiah 1-3) by Ted L. Gibbons

ETERNALLY INDEBTED TO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER (Mosiah 1-3) by Ted L. Gibbons ETERNALLY INDEBTED TO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER (Mosah 1-3) by Ted L. Gbbons QUOTE OF THE WEEK: The Book of Mormon contans the fullness of the everlastng Gospel--the record of the ancent Nephtes, translated

More information

Wye flerhnratt Publlhed '09! b! the students ( the North Engneerng. Carolna State College of Agrculture was!" Member North Carolna Collegate Press Ass

Wye flerhnratt Publlhed '09! b! the students ( the North Engneerng. Carolna State College of Agrculture was! Member North Carolna Collegate Press Ass .1",_r s r Gratutes 'Vol. V, No. 12 Publshed Weekly by the Students of N. 0. State College of Agrculture Engneerng J) ṗ STATE COLLEGE STATON, RALEGH, N. C., DECEMBER 5,1924 Sngle Copes 10 Cents - ~. r...

More information

Jeff Patton. Experience Grace! Lead Pastor. History of the Grace Brethren Church of Norwalk, California

Jeff Patton. Experience Grace!   Lead Pastor. History of the Grace Brethren Church of Norwalk, California History of the Grace Brethren Church of Norwalk, California The Brethren Church began with a very small group of people who wanted to be Bible believing Christians following the Scriptures in simple faith

More information

BIG GRANGE MEETING. OVEB FTvs mnrnuu> i

BIG GRANGE MEETING. OVEB FTvs mnrnuu> i .VOLUME XXXIII. NO. 2. RED BANK, N. J.; WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 90. PAGES TO 8. REOPENING OF CHURCH. V NAVESINK METHODIST CHURCH REOPENS AFTER BEING CLOSED REPAIRS. Approprate Servces Arranged for Last

More information

I I. I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I. i fi Natural Histor~ Societ~ ~ i ~ti~ f. ~ ofthe ~ f~ Pubiished by the Society. 11.

I I. I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I. i fi Natural Histor~ Societ~ ~ i ~ti~ f. ~ ofthe ~ f~ Pubiished by the Society. 11. If)?S ~ 2 67 f=---=--~----~ f! CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS j ~ ofthe ~ f Natural Hstor~ Socet~ ~ ~ of the ~ ~ Uf\verst':J of lllf\os, lf I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I ~t~ f I I f~ Pubshed by the

More information

The Murders in the Rue Morgue

The Murders in the Rue Morgue E d g a r A l l a n P o e p The Murders in the Rue Morgue Part One Paris! In Paris it was, in the summer of 1840. There I first met that strange and interesting young fellow, August Dupin. Dupin was the

More information

J '' MMkSII. . - an Tim, ' 1 II II 1UI 1 ED-T- WO

J '' MMkSII. . - an Tim, ' 1 II II 1UI 1 ED-T- WO : ; Ma? Else Wlcox " J - yn- - fev v at-- --??r - j - m&z sugar j; n MMkS w -- B6W Rl J g vs ) mm "m&mmwv$)& y-- - ; - - an Tm - " Garden Urn! - RT ESTABLSHED 904 VOL 3 NO 23 LUE KAUA TERRTORY OF HAWA

More information

BKTKH. Palace. ADMIRAL. HAWSOX'S REPORT.

BKTKH. Palace. ADMIRAL. HAWSOX'S REPORT. Establshed July t, 85. VOL. XXV., NO. 4399. HONOLULU, HAWAAN SLS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 896. PRCE FVE CENTS. V J. Q. WOOD, Attorney at Law And Notary Publc. OFFCE: Corner Kng and Bethel Streets. Dr. C.

More information

A life sketch of Margaret Harley Randall

A life sketch of Margaret Harley Randall A life sketch of Margaret Harley Randall 1823 1919 (Wife of Alfred Randall) Margaret Harley, daughter of Benjamin and Elizabeth Harley, was born January 13, 1823 in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Her mother

More information

Mailed To The Finest People In The World. ':I/r LEROY JENKINS EVANGELISTIC ASSOCIATION, INC. P. O. BOX 15796, TAMPA, FLORIDA 33614

Mailed To The Finest People In The World. ':I/r LEROY JENKINS EVANGELISTIC ASSOCIATION, INC. P. O. BOX 15796, TAMPA, FLORIDA 33614 ~-...", ':/r.tt'.~: ;--,... LEROY JENKNS EVANGELSTC ASSOCATON, NC. P. O. BOX 15796, TAMPA, FLORDA 33614 Address Correction Requested Return Pos tage Guar anteed Non'profit 0 rga nization U.S. Postage PAD

More information

THEOLOGICAL QUAKfERLY.

THEOLOGICAL QUAKfERLY. THEOLOGCAL QUAKfERLY. VOL.. APRL 1897. No. 2. BBLOLOGY. 'fhs chapter of theology was by our earler dogmatcans commonly dealt wth. n ther Prolegomena, where they treated of the nature and the prncples and

More information

E [Type text] [Type text]

E [Type text] [Type text] Rules 1-5 SV Agreement 1) Verbs after the Introductory Adverbs Here and There agree with the subjects that follow them. There is a book on the table. There are three books on the table. Here comes the

More information

By High Priest Brad Gault

By High Priest Brad Gault The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch NOVEMBER 2015 By Hgh Prest Brad Gault Lsten to the voce of Jesus Chrst, your Redeemer, the great I AM, whose arm of mercy hath atoned for your sns, who wll gather hs people even

More information

STOP THE SUN. Gary Paulsen

STOP THE SUN. Gary Paulsen STOP THE SUN Gary Paulsen Terry Erickson was a tall boy; 13, starting to fill out with muscle but still a little awkward. He was on the edge of being a good athlete, which meant a lot to him. He felt it

More information

i = ! i t BOOK OF MORMON J i Is It "The Stick of Ephraim" j i Referred to in the Thirty-seventh Chapter of i BY ELDER JOSEPH LUFF

i = ! i t BOOK OF MORMON J i Is It The Stick of Ephraim j i Referred to in the Thirty-seventh Chapter of i BY ELDER JOSEPH LUFF +~-llll_.lltl-t--1!11-h-1111-fl-ltl!-lll-h-k~--1111-hu-uh--tt-~-~~-m--1111-l!-llll-l+ ~ : THE ~ f! t BOOK OF MORMON J s t "The Stck of Ephram" j Referred to n the Thrty-seventh Chapter of EzekeL, Verses

More information

STAVE ONE: MARLEY S GHOST. Marley was dead, to begin with there s no doubt about that. He was as dead as a doornail.

STAVE ONE: MARLEY S GHOST. Marley was dead, to begin with there s no doubt about that. He was as dead as a doornail. STAVE ONE: MARLEY S GHOST Marley was dead, to begin with there s no doubt about that. He was as dead as a doornail. Marley and Scrooge were business partners once. But then Marley died and now their firm

More information

DENNIS H. ATWATER'S WILL.

DENNIS H. ATWATER'S WILL. yolumexl. NO." 8. nued Weoklr. Entered u B«on4-0!u Htter «t the Postoffloe at Bed Dank, N.J., ftnda the A««o( Mrch d, 1879. RED BANK; N: J., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1918. $1.50 Per Year. PAGES 1 TO 8. SX

More information

WORLD HERITAGE CONVENTION ACT, 1999

WORLD HERITAGE CONVENTION ACT, 1999 10 NO.31832 GOVERNMENT GAZETTE. 30 JANUARY 2009 No. 72 30.January 2009 WORLD HERTAGE CONVENTON ACT, 1999 PROCLAMATON OF THE CAPE FLORAL REGON PROTECTED AREAS AS A WORLD HERTAGE STE AND DELEGATON BY THE

More information

ti if W M F II! J I'l!.l,t(,. I M 71 III I'f I Established Jnly 2, today recorded a certificate

ti if W M F II! J I'l!.l,t(,. I M 71 III I'f I Established Jnly 2, today recorded a certificate ! n p Yl AM Ws f t f W M F! J 'l!.l,t(,. M 7 'f a!. Establshed Jnly 2, 850. VOL. XXV., NO. HONOLULU, HAWAAN SLS, FRDAY, DECEMBER, S9G. PRCE FVE CENTS. J. Q. WOOD, Attorney at Law And Notary Publc. OFFCE:

More information

HARRY the NEWSBOY and Other Stories

HARRY the NEWSBOY and Other Stories HARRY the NEWSBOY and Other Stories BY Isabel C. Byrum FAITH PUBLISHING HOUSE Digitally Published by THE GOSPEL TRUTH www.churchofgodeveninglight.com Contents Harry the Newsboy...1 Jimmy s Friend...10

More information

Vision and. Focus Areas. Catholic Schools Youth Ministry Australia CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR AND YOUTH

Vision and. Focus Areas. Catholic Schools Youth Ministry Australia CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR AND YOUTH Catholc Schools Youth Mnstry Australa Vson and Focus Areas JUNIOR AND YOUTH MINISTRY YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK STUDENT POST SCHOOL YOUTH MINISTERS TEACHER AND CHURCH

More information

commercial and otherwise between

commercial and otherwise between &m : UUUJp. ju jj m &,v r - VOL. XXX, NO. 99.. HONOLULU, H. L FRDAY, DECEMBER 3, 893. SEM-WEEKL- WHOLE NO. 75., latraraatt (Sprte BUSNESS CARDS..ORRN A. THURSTON. Attorney at Law. 3 Street, Honolulu, K!.

More information

f uilty to illegal liqupr selling at Asbury

f uilty to illegal liqupr selling at Asbury AN VOLUME XV. NO. 52. RED BANK, N.J., WEDNESDA, JUNE 24, 1896. $1.50 PER EAR. GRADUATNG WTH HONORS TWELVE PUPLS CLOSE THER ~ SCHOOL LFE.. No Valedctoran or Salutatoran Ths ear-fve Pupls Carry Off Frst

More information

ffinekneg fii^^ff- ^r^mm UMET. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON COUNTY, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, JULY 25, NUMBER 29, Local Gatherings. .

ffinekneg fii^^ff- ^r^mm UMET. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON COUNTY, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, JULY 25, NUMBER 29, Local Gatherings. . ^r^mm wm..** v, ",..m-" "»^WI»IIPM ^ >» mm town " ' *»*' -' WP BBF R^Sy "*% #.4> *» ' J* v ' ny. mutny 3J*fcVJ- '- ^4^.- >».*;» *4L >-._ :JVA* m ('!' K,. K; >>, yf. V-" 'If, \" w UMET. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON

More information

JOHN G. JONES By Martha Jamimah Jones

JOHN G. JONES By Martha Jamimah Jones JOHN G. JONES By Martha Jamimah Jones John G. Jones, About 40 Years Old stories of which he often told us children. My father, John G. Jones, was born November 27, 1830, in the beautiful city of Llanely,

More information

1 BIG MTEft SCHEME. TO OPEN A NEW STREET. NO ELECTION CONTEST.

1 BIG MTEft SCHEME. TO OPEN A NEW STREET. NO ELECTION CONTEST. . VNE. _ - : VOLUME XX. NO. 22. RED BANK, N.J., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22,1899. PAGES 1 TO 8 1 BG MTEft SCHEME. A PROPOSAL MADE TO THE COMMSSONERS. An Offer to Take the'town's Water Works and Make the Totcn

More information

CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER

CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch APRIL 2016 CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER SEVERAL YEARS AGO WHEN I WAS WORKING FOR THE MARRIOTT CORPORATION, I WAS SENT FOR NINE MONTHS TO BAYLOR MEDICAL CENTER IN DALLAS,

More information

The Ten Minute Tutor Read-a-long Book Video Chapter 32 TREASURE ISLAND. Author - Robert Louis Stevenson

The Ten Minute Tutor Read-a-long Book Video Chapter 32 TREASURE ISLAND. Author - Robert Louis Stevenson TREASURE ISLAND Author - Robert Louis Stevenson Adapted for The Ten Minute Tutor by: Debra Treloar BOOK SIX CAPTAIN SILVER CHAPTER 32. TREASURE HUNT THE VOICE AMONG THE TREES Partly from worrying about

More information

LITTLE FLOWER PARISH CONFIRMATION REFERENCE GUIDE

LITTLE FLOWER PARISH CONFIRMATION REFERENCE GUIDE Part 1: WHAT IS CONFIRMATION? LITTLE FLOWER PARISH CONFIRMATION REFERENCE GUIDE Confrmaton s the sacrament of ntaton that completes Baptsm and gves us the Holy Sprt n the fullness of hs gfts, thereby empowerng

More information

ITS SIXTIETH BIRTHDAY.

ITS SIXTIETH BIRTHDAY. »> I % V VOLUME XXVIII NO. M V RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 906. PAGES TO 8. ITS SIXTIETH BIRTHDAY. NAVESINK LODGE OF 02)2) FELLOWS OF RED BANK HAS A CELEBRATION. Many Vstors Attend the Annversary,

More information

A BENEFITJSALLOWED. ING SHAPE. The Probable Site is the George

A BENEFITJSALLOWED. ING SHAPE. The Probable Site is the George .."CS'WU»: :. I.' 00D CITIZEN GONE. APPLEGATE OP RED L-' BANK PASSES A WAT. Occw''ed Suddenly on nelay Mornng A 8etf-Made n, Who Became Promnent n ^XSuoneaa Ilfe of Mted Banh:.leoOth year of hs age, n

More information

BIRTHDAY OF A CHURCH.

BIRTHDAY OF A CHURCH. If H -/,«VOLUME XL. NO. 5; RED BANK,, N fl J., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 0, 97. PAGES TO 8. FACTORY THIEVES NABBED. GOODS WORTH OVER $500 RECOVERED AS RESULT OF ARRESTS. Robberes Have Been Gong on at Esners Factory

More information

WHITNEY OPPOSED TO HARMONY TALK

WHITNEY OPPOSED TO HARMONY TALK g$j>, v" m m ywt-xa'x u.....r When In Doubt Always Try Frst / A Tmes Cent-a-Word Adv..faaV e'h elped Others; Wll Help You A Man Somewhere Way Out West Never Heard of Ocean Grove Because He Ddn t Read The

More information

Tuppence for Christmas

Tuppence for Christmas Tuppence for Christmas A book from www.storiesformylittlesister.com Free Online Books for 21st Century Kids Chapter 1 Our Christmas Tree We stood at the edge of our ice floe to see the twinkling lights

More information

The Iowa Homemaker vol.3, no.7

The Iowa Homemaker vol.3, no.7 Volume 3 Number 7 The owa Homemaker vol.3, no.7 Artcle 1 1923 The owa Homemaker vol.3, no.7 Anna E. Rchardson owa State College C. L. Ftch owa State College Katherne Cranor owa State College Ruth Elane

More information

422 HENRY E. JENKINS OXEN TO AIRPLANE 423

422 HENRY E. JENKINS OXEN TO AIRPLANE 423 422 HENRY E. JENKINS OXEN TO AIRPLANE 423 the logs were hauled from the Island Park area, and he traded a team of horses for the rest. This potato cellar stood until after Henry's death. 1928 was a good

More information

ISLANDS. TUESDAY, AUGUST. as well they had to to beat Yale. We went to the boat house where the fellows were. Phil (Bailey) and I said not.

ISLANDS. TUESDAY, AUGUST. as well they had to to beat Yale. We went to the boat house where the fellows were. Phil (Bailey) and I said not. XXV., VOL NO. J. Q. WOOD, Atrney at Law And Notary Publc. Corner Klntc JBethel Streets. OFFCTC HONOLULU, 437f5. Dr. C. B. HGH. Dentst. HAWAAN SLS. by k wmm m All knds SECOND H FURN TURE sold cheap for

More information

Rev. Alpheus F. W. Wooldridge Pioneer of 1852/53 compiled by Stephenie Flora oregonpioneers.com

Rev. Alpheus F. W. Wooldridge Pioneer of 1852/53 compiled by Stephenie Flora oregonpioneers.com Rev. Alpheus F. W. Wooldridge Pioneer of 1852/53 compiled by Stephenie Flora oregonpioneers.com Alpheus F. W. Wooldridge b. 09 Aug 1819 Montgomery County, Tennessee d. 10 Sep 1890 Applegate, Jackson County,

More information