WAI. BULLOCK ESCAPES.

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1 VOLUME XX NO. 12. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,1900. PAGES 1 TO OBJECTNG TO THE SEWER. -A COMPLANT TO THE STATE. SEWER COMMSSONERS. A Charge That the Rver s Beng n Jurcd-A Vst to Be Made to Red Bank To-Morrow to Vew the Rver and the 8etvpr Outlet. Last Saturday a petton was presented to the state board of sewerage eomms- -sorers, askng them to stop the town of Red Bank from sewerng nto the Shrewsbury rver. The petton had about 125 sgners. About a dozen resdents of Red Bank sgned the petton, and most of' the summer resdents along the rver were also among the sgners. Nearly one-half of. the sgners were made up of resdents of -Far Haven. Several persons sgned the petton twce.. Ths double sgnature was probably due to the fact that several pettons had been crculated for sgnatures. The petton and the sgnatures to t are as follows^: To. the State Sewerage Commsson of New Jersey r'-. ' -.". The undersgned, resdng D tbe vllage of Red Bank, N. J,, and upon ana soar the banks of tbe Naveslnk or NorthSbrewsourrrlver n tsmrnedlato vcnty, beg to call your attenton to tbe fact tbattne rllacje of Red Bank's pollutng and permlttldg the polluton of the waters of tbe sad rver Sowng past tbe sad vllage, and tbe property, of your pettoners to the Atlantc ocean, such polluton beng to the njury of your pettoners n tber health, comfort and property. * Tbe polluton ol the rver has proceeded to such an extent tuat the waters emt an offensve odor: they are dscolored aud tlled wth Coatng paper, anmal and other objectonable sewage matter. The tdes carry and depost upon.the Bbores (of tbe rver at tbe property of some of your pettoners offensve matter proceedng from these sewers. t s not only unpleasant but unsafe to bathe D tbe Wafers of ths rver, whch your pettoners heretofore have been able to do. Ths acton ol tbe vllage puts at a rsk tbe health and lves of your petl- - - tlonere and ther famles, and there s danger of an epdemc of dsease beng produced thereby. Ths.sewerng nto the rver Dy the vllage of Red Bank renders t also dangerous to use fsh, oysters or crabs taken from tbe sad rver, Tbe property of your pettoners s n danger of becomng untenantable and havng ts valuedesroyed. four pettoners have heretofore protested to the authortes of sad vllage aganst the use of the waters ot the sad rver as a cesspool, representng to them tbe dangers therefrom, and the authortes nave stated that such use was but a temporary one, lookng to the obtalntnent by tbe vllage of en unobjectonable and a permanent system for the dsposal of ts sewage matter. But a* long tme-has elapsed snce such statement was made, and the vllage authortes are not only contnung to use tbe sad waters n the objectonable) way, but seem to propose to adopt the present system as a permanent system by arrangng for the use of the sewers exstng n the vllage to a greater extent than at present by the noabltante thereof. The condton calls for attenton by your honorable body, and we respectfully request that such 'acton may be promptly bad and token. Fred W.Hope, O.A.Ubare. J. L. Terhune, Allen Tucker,-' - Wllam' N. Worthley, John Jay Whte. Jr. Wlam-A. Low)s, Wllam B.Parsons, Davd McClure,'".~ Cardllne'ffTteed, H. A. Curts,. C. A. Mount. J. L. Bergen, E. E. flurdge, W. 8. Hll. Lous Boeckel, Wllam T. Corlles, George W. Brower,. Theodore Sckles..Frederck Boeckel, Wllam Applegnw, Jr., Haslett McKlm, J. K. Sayre. Mrs. Phebe Young, James Cooper, Jr. - Wra. B. Baley, Jolm Wagner, ' Mrs. Phlp H. Langlcr, Danel F. Cooney, Gaston Blay, Walter B. Mnton. Henry D. VanSchook, Wllam Mackey, J. Curstoper O. Hupfel, Amos Bennett. Henry E. Meeker, Joseph F. Bennett, John H. Patterson, A. H. Mnton. Randolph Parmley. o John M. Bawser, Duncan D. Parmleyf James Parker, W. Strother Jones, James H. Mnton, P. 8. VnBrunt, Charles Parker, Mrs. J. S. Applegate, Jr., Than Pannley, Wllam T. Conover., Mary Nosvbold Reed, Mrs. Elvra McL'lees, C. Townsend, P. J. McClees, Robert Hartaborne, Charles Allen. John C- Lord, T. 0. E. Blanchtrd, H. 8. Washngton, H. W. Yerrnaton, Joseph Lufourrow, Louse E. Free, John G. Glllg, Davd F. Bernett, Frank D Covert, C. D. Chandler, Harry Blackson, J. A. Emanuel. Thomas P. Morressey, 8. G. B. Gourley, t. B. Merrtt. Arthur E. Smth. Mrs. George P. Gorman, Joseph R. Smtb, F. H, Brlce, Herbert Bnyder, Lous Lews, M. H. Chandler, J.. McCnrty, George J. Hondrlckson, George B. Snyder, Charles H. Letson, M. J. McAnerney, Florence M. McAnerney, 'Vncent H. Latnarche, W. H. Chandler. Henry. Lamarche, Wllam Curclln, Therlse 8. Werloman,. Harvey M. Lttle. M J. Lunnclo, Danel Allare. John H. Carponter, F. H, Carpenter, Charles VanUrunt, J. Hendcksnu, H. E. Smth. A. F. Trottord.. F. R, Bmtb, George SprnRsteon, N, J. Sclnuklor, James Enrlgb, Jr., R. 8. Merrtt, Harry n Box,. R. D. Chandler, J. D. Brower. 8. McCormlck, George E. Seaman, John L. Bennott, James E, Bogle. George Hcdrlc«son, Wllam Fentou, E. H. Mller. John Baley. A. L. Bennett, Joseph M. Emery, Davd M. Parker, Jqbn T. Nnflo. Harry W. Denns, James A. Hume, Edward M. Lttle, George lreltell, F. A. Lttle, B. Parmley, W.H. Mnton, F. B.Skldmore, Stanley J. Felder, Albert Bloodgood, Wllam E. Taylor. Hocry H. Strysor, Charles Doughty, / T. 6. tarkuloo, Frank W. Mortlnenu, H.J. Hlntclunnn.. Abo Bennott, Tle state sewerage commssoners wll pay a vst to Red Bank to-morrow afternooh rnd wll nspect the sewer outlet and vow the rver. Under the revsed newer law, as passed last wnter, tho flewertge connssorora have tho rght to order a change n the methods of sewago dsposal n any town, cty or town- Hhp.n tho state. f tho muncpalty n whch tloy nterfere s not satsfed wth tho dooalon of tho soworago comme- \ slonere, the muncpalty hts tho rght of'appeal to tho courts. Tho aowerago commssoners, n caeca where a muncpalty has adopted a certan mothod of oowngo dhpobal, cannot order that method dscontnued utoncc, but must allow a romonablo tme to mnko changes' n tho plan of nowago dh[)oaal. Tho longest tme thut enn l>o allowod to a cty or muncpalty to.make a ohunge ' n ts mothod ot sewage dsposal la fve..y'ftrtj. Tho ttoworngo commssoners can compel a change to be made n one year f they consder t wse to gve such an order. Most of the people who lve along the rver sewer drectly nto the rver. t s clamed that under recent decsons of the court of errors ard appeals of New Jersey a man who owns property on the rver can sewer drectly nto the rver. The sewerage commssoners, however, have the power to stop any person from sewerng nto the rver, f they deem that course advsable, JBefore they can act a complant must be made and t must be shown that such'sewerng nto the rver s productve of damage, ' WEDDNGS.. Battn Snodgrass. Mss Leala M. Battn, daughter of Lambert B.jBattn of New York,, was marred at noon yesterday to Robert B. Snodgrasa of Harrsburg,- Pa. The ceremony took place at the Battn summer home, on the Shrewsbury rjver, near FarHaven, and was performed by Rev. John R. Atknson of Trnty church, Elzabeth, Mss Llan'Battn, a sster of the brde, was brdesmad, and Hamlton S. Battn, a brother of the brde and vce commodore of the Shrewsbury boat club, was groomsman. The hoube was prettly decorated wth / flowers. Three hundred nvtatons to the weddng bad been extended and the couple -were the recpents of many costly and beautful presents. Among the guests was Unted States Senator. John Kean. The groom s a son of the attorney-general of Pennsylvana. _* Holmes-Bedte. Mss' Eva LaQuer Holmes, daughter of James D. Holmes of Keyport, was marred last Wednesday to Joseph Dorsett Bedle of the same place. The ceremony was performed at St. John's Methodst church at Keyport by Rev. C, R. Smth. The brde wore a gown of whte organdy, trmmed wth whte satn rbbon', The weddng march was played by Mss Adele. Ogden. George Hendrcks, W. E. and Clarence Bedle and Macy Carhart acted/s ushers, After the ceremony a recepton was held at the brde's home. Mr. and Mrs. Bedle went on a weddng trp to New York. They wrbegm-h-ousekeepng at Keyport n a house whch the groom has ready for 1 ther occupancy, * Wlams-nodges. The announcement has just been made of the marrage of Mss Matte Wllams, daughter of Edward Wllams of Eatontown, and Frank H. Hodges of Branch avenue, Red Bank. The ceremony was performed at Trenton on Wednesday, August 22d. Mr. a nd Mrs. Hodges are lvng at Mr. Hodges'B place on Branch avenue. Atcheson Dlts. Mss Hannah L. Atcheson of Jersey Cty, a summer resdent of West Long Branch, was marred last Wednesday to Frank B. Dlta of New York. The ceremony was performed at West Long Branch by Rev. P, K. Hageman of' Mddletown, * A Slver Weddng. Last Saturday was the 25th annversary of the marrage of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rex of Oceanc. Ther son,' Harry Rex, nvted them to hs house to spend the evenng and as a surprse to hs parents nvted a company of frends to spend the evenng wth them. The evenng wan pleasantly spent wth musc and n a general sooal way. Refreshments were served. Mr. and Mrs. Rex receved a number of presents of slver. They have nne chldren and all but Harry lve at home.. A Hotel Changes Hands. Wllam Kelly, propretor of the New Amsterdam hotel at Locust Pont, has bought tho lease of tho Amercan hotel on Monmouth street, near the staton, from 0. B. Shumway. Mr. Shumway leased tho hotel about a year and a half ago from Andrew Purtell, and he spont about $8,000 n makng mprovements and ohanges to the hotol. Mr. Kelly wll contnue to run tlo Now Amsterdam hotel at Locust Pont. Mr. Shumway wll rqtro from tho hotel busness. Mr. Shumway's lease was for ton yonra. School Clothes for Boys and [Grls. We've boen gettng ready for months and wo'vo bought BO well that now w.o aro confdent of makng a dsplay that wll Burrlso whle t wll delght tho school glrlf and boys. Joseph Snlz, Red Bank, yldv, Oponng of trmmed hats and furs, Thursday nnd Frday, Septoraber 20th nnd Slut. Mm. E, Wpfl.-j4rft>, WA. BULLOCK ESCAPES. DUO OUT OF JAL LAST THURS- DAY NGHT. An ron Skewer Enabled STm to nta Through tle Floor of Bs Cell nto a Passage t'av and the Rest Was JEasu- ] Wllam Bullock, who shot and klled James Walsh r last November, and who was confned.n the bpur of hs cell last Thursday nght and escaped. He hasnotantebeenheardfrom, though a reward of $500 has been offered for. bs capture, j. Bullock was confned n a cell on the ground floor of the jal. Part of hs cell was over an ^underground passage way, n whch were the wafer, sewer and gas ppes. The passage yay had been bult n order to make t easy to get;1at the ppes to make changes or.to:'repar leaks. Ths passage jtay was not generr ally known, though tnere was no secret fabout ts constructon. The floor of the cell over the pas3age':way was of brck, and the cell floor was covered wth a thn coatng 1 of cement.? Bullock n some way had learned^feha ths passage-way exsted; and he had also learned ts exact locaton, for the hole :Ee had made n hs cell led drectly nto t. He had secured an, ron skewef, and wth ths he had chpped off the coatng of cement. When he had goy through the cement t was an easy matter to remove the brcks and: make an'entrance nto the passage way. ' t s beleved that: Bullock had help from outsde the jal, for a hole had been dug at the end,0f the passage way whch led nto the jsjl yard. Ths drt at the entrance of ths hole ndcated that t had been dug from wthout and not from* wthn. A ; hgh board fence surrounds tha, jal yard. The jal yard gate s not as hgh as-the fence and ths could readly be scaled. There were marks on the gate whch showed that Bullock had got out''by clmbng over the gate. After leavng the jal yard all trace of Bullock was lost. Searchng partes secured the woods and felds near Freehold, but nothng could be found whch could show the route he had taken. ;3f he had outsde help n hs escape;*bff"hssstants probably had a wagon at hand n whch to gve hm a good start on hs way toward freedom. Many rumors have been afloat to the effect that he had been seen n varous places, but nvestgaton proved these rumors to be wthout foundaton. Reports have also been.many, declarng that he had been captured, but these reports, lke those declarng that he had been seen, had no bass n fact'. On Sunday t was postvely announced that he had been caught near Phladelpha, but nqury proved that Bullock had not been, seen nor heard of there. Yesterday t was sad that Bullock had been seen near Lakewood, and a number of offcers went there, but ther search was wthout results. An odd ncdent happened n Red Bank on the nght Bullock esoaped. J. Frank Patterson s the nght marshal. About three o'clock n the mornng he was talkng to W. H. Hamlton n front of the Sherdan hotel when a colored man went to ( the fountan and took a drnk. He had evdently been walkng a long dstance over the dusty roads, for he bathed hs face and hands n the fountan. On seeng the man Mr. Patterson remarked to Mr. Hamlton: * "f were not sure that Bullock was safe n the county jal would say that that man over there was Bullock." Jack Whte, the nght watchman, also saw ths colored man, but he Bays he dd not thnk t looked anythng lke Bullock.", Bullock has been tred threo tmes for the kllng of James Walsh. He was twce convcted of murder n tho frst degree and sentenced to bo hanged. Each tme the tral was upset by the. hgher courts on thd ground that there hld been errors n the cuso. n one of the Bullock trals the jury dsagreed. Bullock would have been agan tred for'nurder at tho comng, term of court f ho had not escaped. A concert wll bo gven n tho Baptst church next Tuesday nght for tho beneft of the musc fund. Mss Ray Allen Browne of Soffolk, Vrgna, wll be organst, "Vocal and whstlng solos. Admsson, 25 cents. Adv, ' A now lno of trmmed, fall mlllnory wll Be ready by September 20th at Mss A. L. Morrs's, cornor Broad and Front streets, Red Bank. -Advl»* Jl'caeh Grower*. Poach bankots f3.00 per 100 at Dorcmuf Broa'a. Adv. ft &. REPUBLCAN CLUB. t Was Orattnxedat Red Bank Last Thursday Sght. A Republcan club was organzed at the town hall last Thursday nght. M. V,' Pach was temporary charman of the meetng fend George V. Sneeden was temporary secretary: A meetng for the purpose of organzng a clut had been called by a notce n THE REGSTER, and after the matter had been dscussed and the organzaton of a campagn,fchbdecded on, these offcers were elected: Presldeut^HenryS.Whlte. Vce presldent-dr. Wllam A. Conover. Secretary Joseph Bwannell; f -: Trosurer Wllam T. Corlles... The; membershp of the club wll nclude Republcans of Shrewsbury townshp who care to jon, as well as those of Red Bank. The meetngs of the club wll be held n the town hall and there wll therefore be no expense for room rent. No dues of any sort, wll be charged., A commttee was apponted to prepare a crcular to be 6ent torepublcan^of the town and townshp, requestng them to jon the organzaton. The olub'wll meet-at the town hall every Thursday nght. Tax Rates ths Tear. The total tax rate n Red Bank ths year wll be $21.79 on $1,000. Ths tax s made up as follows : Countyta., :.} -.$'6.03 State school tax: ;.../ Bed-Bank specal school tax ' Townshp tax, tacludlog roads and poor 4 52 Borough tax. ; Watertax. '."-. l 00 Total......jaff The tax n. Shrewsbury townshp, outsde of the town of Red Bank, wll be $15.82 on $1,000. Ths total tax rate s made of these fgures. Conntytox : $ 6 03 State school tax... : 2 01 Townshp specal school tax...' 2 66 Townshp tax ', Total..... :...; The tax rate n the new borough of Hghlands wll be $ on $1,000 ths year. The borough wll rase $800 for borough purposes and a part of the townshp school tax, n addton to ts share'of the county and state school tax. " Ressted an Offcer. Charle* Anderson, a, telephone.. em* ployee at Red Bank, got drunk on Monday nght and created a dsturbance on West Front street. Offcer Wlson attempted to arrest hm and he pushed the offcer aganst a fence, sknnng the back of hs hand and njurng hs back. Word was telephoned down town and Chef Stryker went to Mr. Wlson's assstance. Anderson was arrested and was locked up n the town jal over ught. A hearng was gven hm yesterday mornng before Justce Chld and he was held n $200 bal to awat tle acton of the grand jury on the charge of resstng an offcer. Rney Holmes Fned $10. Rney Holmes of the Bay Shore got on one of hs customary drunks at Red Bank on Monday afternoon and created a dsturbance on Beach street. After "cubsng out" nearly everybody on the street he went to the house of hs sstern-law, Mrs. George Brewer, and attempted to throw her out of the house. Word was sent down town and an offcer went to Beach street and took Rney to the town jal. Yesterday mornng he had a hearng at the town hall before Justce' Chld and he was fned $10. BoDJamln P. Worthley a Bankrupt. Benjamn P. Worthley of Lttle Slver has been adjudcated a bankrupt by Frederck Parker, referee n bankruptcy. The schedules annexed to the petton show assets of $10,015 and labltes amountng to $14,405,09. Of the labltes the secured clams amount to $6, Notce of the adjudcaton has been sont to all of Mr. Worthley's credtors. "Noxt Door." Tho Bros, Royer wll present ther acrobatc' farce "Next Door," at the opera house to-nght. Tho play s a conglomeraton of farco comedy, sngng, acrobatc feats, chasca through trck housc and walla, and other "funny busness" n.the theatrcal lne. Aucton Sale of M<~tvnture, wll sol at aucton a lot of household furnture, tho property of Joseph Lobenthal of Newark, at tho Rtoro 85 East Front street, oppohlto Globe hotel, on Saturday, September 15th, at 1:80 o'olook. Tho fumturo k all flrst-claem. Also a lot of, fne oarpota. Jacob C, Shutta, auctoneer. Adv. Openng of trmmed hats and furs, ThurBday and Frday,. Soptotnbcr 20th nnd 31st. Mrs. B. Wes.-!ldw. CHARLES CROSS DEAD. HE WAS ONE OF. THE OLDEST RESDENTS OF FAR HAVEN. Hs Death Was Very Sudden and, Occurred on Monday Mornng Hs Grandfathers Were Revolu* ttonary JPutrots-Other Deaths. Charles Cross of Far Haven ded on. Monday of general:deblty, aged 83 years. He had been remarkably actve up to the tme'of hs death. He got up ' early on Monday mornng, shaved hmself and ate a hearty breakfast. After breakfast he sat down on the sofa to read a newspaper when he fell,over dead..... Mr. Cross was born n Pennsylvana", but moved to Far Haven when he was qute young. n hs younger days he was actve n busness affars but for many years he had lved a retred lfe.' About.sxty yeaft^go he marred Mary A. Lews, daughter of Jacob Lews of Far Haven. They began housekeepng n a house oh the Lews tract and had lved there ever snce. Mrs. Lews ded ; about ten "years ago. Three chldren survve Mr. Cross, They are Mrs. M. D. Snyder of BrooklyD, Mrs. B. Y. Pppey of New York and W.E. Crdss,of Far Haven. Mr. Cross was descended from Revolutonary stock, both hs maternal grandfather, Gles Wllams, and hs paternal grandfather, Thomas Cross, havng served n the Revolutonary war, The funeral was held ths afternoon at half-past one o'clock at the Far Haven Epscopal church. Rev. F. B. Crozer conducted the servce. The body was bured at Far Vew cemetery. Srs, John Warneker. Mrs. John Warneker of Morrsvlle ded on Saturday, September- 1st, of chronc darrhoea, aged 72 years. The funeral was held Tuesday mornng at half-past nne o'clock at the house and at half-past ten o'clock at Sant Catherne's church at Morrsvlle. Rev. W. P. Tracy of Hllsdale had charge of the servce. The body was bured at Headden's Corner. ", Mrs. Warneker was born n reland. She went to Holm del from reland 45 years ago. About 86 years ago she marred. John.Warnekerj^German mgrant of Holmdel. After lvng sx years on a farm n Holtndel she and.her husband bought ^farrrf Jh' 1 Morrsvlle, where they had snce lved. Her husband* and two chldren survve. her.- Both chldren are marred. They are Bernard Warneker, who lves at home, and John Warneker of Hoboken. Mrs. John A. Applegate. Mrs. Jane A. Applegate, wfe of John A. Applegate of Branchport, formerly of Freehold, ded on Tuesday, August 28th, aged 60 years. She was a daughter of Davd and Katherne DeBow and was born at Bordentown. Besdes a husband she leaves four chldren. They are John D. Applegate of. Branchport, James H. Applegate of Jackson's Mlls, Addson R. Applegate of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., and Mrs. saac Gravatt of West Freehold. Three ssters and a brother also survve her. They are Wllam DeBbw of Prnceton, Mrs. George Quackeubush of Paterson, Mrs.,George Cheesemrn of Metuohen, and Mrs. Samuel Hcks of Hghtstown. Mrs. Applegate had been a member of the Freehold Methodst church for 28 years... JW'8. A. R. Stonev. Anne M., wfe of Hon. A. B. Storey of Keyport, ded of acute Brght's dseaselast Wednesday, /aged' 52 years. Mrs. Stoney had been complanng sometme, but her death came unexpectedly whle she was sttng n a char. Mrs. Stoney was born at Jersey Cty and was the daughter of Capt. A. B. Person of Matawan. She leaves two sons and a daughter.»» Entertaned Frends on Hla Boat. Wllam A. Cole entertaned J. M. Duane, whp s stoppng at Locust Pont, and % number of Mr. Duane's frends on tho Gladys a few days ago. The party crused around the rver, stopped at Pleasure Bay nnd then proceeded to tho Black Hole, whore they wont ashore and had a olambako. After dnner the party saled out as far as the pont of Sandy Hook and roturnod homo about dark.»». M'atnnbroker'a Aucton Sate. Lnrgo pawnbroker's aucton sale of gold nnd slver watches, rngs, chans, etc., ut tho Red Bank aucton and comrnflhon house, No. B East Front street, on Saturday nght ut 7:!!0. Adv. Openng of trmmed hate and furs, ThurBday nnd Frday, September 20th and 31st. Mre. E, Wol. Adv.

2 T T T t t : Y X f? t T School Clothes for Boys and Grls. Customers tell us that n ths department our offerngs are very much the best they have seen and our prces the lowest. We beleve ths to be a fact! t s the natural result of. our effort. We shall be glad to.have all the people of Red Bank andvcnty call, examne and pass judgment on these suggestons of styles and prces., - 98c, Wool Plad Dresses, entrely new styles, very "fetchng" and pretty.' The trmmngs are partcularly tasteful. Szes 6 to 14 years, worth 1.50, 'sale prce ' 98c. Musln Drawers at 12%c) embrodery trmmed at 25c. School Umbrellas, 33c.) wth Steel Bod, 44c. Shrts, the same style your father wears, soft or laundered, wth yfqn or wthout collars, specal sale prce M'wlll School Umbrellas, 50c. qualty for 33c. $1.98 For Grls' School Dresses n brown, green, navy y and garnet g mxed plads, p, neatly y trmmed and lned throughout, szes 6 to 14 years, well worth $3.00, sale prce $1.08 Whte! plad, and gngham.aprons for 25c- School Handkerchefs, hemsttched 2 c, 4c. add 5c.? hrt Wasts > "mothers' frend" make,, n many styles and patterns, OC ft :' szes 3 to 13 years, at from 49C. to v... &U0l Extra Heavy School Hose, For All Wool Dresses n plan Henretta, 3 0 flannel, popln, etc.,'fancy yoke, a 4.00 *!' dressfor ' $2,98 +V Ferrs Wasts, all szes, 85c. The best XSMc. School Stockngs. RfJ YQ' Al1 slk Wndsor tes > P!a>n " and OyS W plads, hemmed and hem- J n * sttched, 25c. knd, at... A...'... JJy,-- ^ Knee FantS fpr Boys' fppm 3 to 16 years n great varety of patterns, hardly two par alk< a^ample lot purchased from a manufacturer at"f)clow enough prce to sell them 49C....to.,_..,.,.,_._.., ;...'... toc Y T*^ Sampson Suspender Wasts for Boys at 40c. E. Z. Wasts for Boys, 26c. value at 19c. Boys' School Handkerchefs, So., 4c, Sc. YV Stockng Kpee Protectors, 16c.. n fact a large dsplay of Keady-to-wear School Clothes for young lades and young tqen whose taste and wstes we seek to meet," See Our Autumn Cape* and Jackets for Gfrls. $Hfr»fr<*<<Hfr<^^ MDAS'S CAKE WALE. t Was Mela nthctoum Ball Last Wednesday Xght. The Bg Four's cake walk, n whch Jfdas Washngton of Bed Bank s the leadng sprt, was held n the town hall last Wednesday nght. About 160 people partcpated n the affar and there were about ffty spectators. The spectators were kept watng untl eleven o'clock for the cake walkng to begn. n the meantme a muscal tro played selectons and sang coon eongs, The partcpants' had a good tme dancng but the spectators grew mpatent over the. long delay n startng the man attracton of the affar. The delay WBB occasoned prncpally by the fact that the walkerb had not selected ther partners, wth whom they were to walk n the event. '. Seven couples competed for the prze. The judges decded that Mrs. RosaBchardscm and George Brown of Bed Bank and Mss Mary Lang and Albert Rchardson of Keyport were the two best couples and requested these two couples to walk agan to decde between frst and second przes. The judges decded n favor of the Red Bank couple and they got a slver water ptcher and tray and a glass tea set as.przes. The Keyport couple got a gentleman's dressng case and a glass candle holder as second przes..' Some of the men at the cake walk wore fall dress, some -wore shrt wasts and others wore ordnary suts. One man danced n a bcycle sut and another danced n a sweater. The dresses, rbbons and " fxngs " worn by the women afforded a greater varety of color than can ordnarly be found n the rbbon case of a dry goods store. But no sort of a costume was barred out and the man n.the sweater had all the prvlges of the men n full dress. Mdas sad that they all looked alke to hm. Yacht Races on the Rver. A race for boats of the frst and second class was held on the rver last Saturday by the Red Bank yacht club. Frst and second przes were gven n each event. The przes were of slver and were donated by the governors of the club. n the frst class George J. Gllg's Katherne was frst and Hupfel Bros' Trm was second. n the second class John 0. Gllg'a Phylld was frst, ajd the Baby; owned by W. L, Bass, was second. Charles Lbare's boat was a close thrd n the second class race. Thngs Won at a Far. At a far held by the Pastme socal club of Keyport on Labor day there wns a contest for a gold watch between Mes Mnerva Baley and Mss Nette Smth. Each turned n $30 and both of them receved a gold jwatoh. A boycle that wae chanced off was won by Annetta Ftzgerald, daughter of J John Ftzgorald. Tvvelve dollars was loot by the club on the bcyclo contest, but altogether tlo club cloared about $0..,, *-»-- ' A Brthday Celebraton. Mrs. Rebecca Stlwoll of West Long Branch reached her 80th brthday rocently and.the avonfc was coloornted by a trp to Now York by steamboat. Blo was accompaned on the trp by her daughter, Mrs. Wllam H. Tallman. t was Mrs, Stlwel'a frst vst to New York n 85 years., MrB. Btllwoll s vory octlvo and n possesson of all her facuhlo. A DAY'S OUTNG. Beach Plums, A. Shark, A Clambake and Plenty to JEat and Drnk. CaptaaAugustusHavlandtookHenry N.. Supp, Joseph Salz, Wallace and Charles Bennett and W. A. Sweeney on a day's outng'last Frday on hs yacht. A landng was made at Sandy Hook and each member of the party gathered about a peach basket of beach plums. A trp out to,sea was made and on the return trp a landng was rsade near Spermacet coye for a clambake. Whle the clams were beng eaten somethng was notced floppng n the water a short dstance away. t looked lke the flange of a screw propellor. A closer nspecton revealed a bg shark. Captan Havland and Wallace Bennett put off a row boat, hopng to scare the shark ashore. The'shark made for deep water but Captan Havland ht t a couple of blows wth an oar before t got away. Ho sad that the effect was about the same as though he had struok the oar on a rock. To those on shore the shark looked to be about severl or eght feet long and about as bg around as a man's body. Captan Havland says t was twelve feet long and as bg around as a cow. The salng party had plenty to eat and drnk on board, the weather condtons were favorable, and the day was very pleasantly spent. :» o A Str&wrde to Bradevelt. A number of, young people from Shrewsbury went on a strawrde' last Frday nght to Bradevelt and pad a surprse vst to Mss Ella Cooney of that place, The evenng was spent n a general socal way, refreshments beng served at a seasonable hour. n the party were Mrs. George Hughes and her two chldren; MsBes Kate McGure, Hannah Murphy, Lucy Cadden, Magge Scanlon, Dela Enes, Magge Cooney, Sarah McMams, Beatrce Gorman, Nelle, Magge and Jose Maher, Mary Comfort and Mara Ebattgun, Wllam and Jacob Jeffrey, Frank Thompson, Edward Conrow, Jesse Layton, Martn Carney, John Tourney, James, John und Thomas Maher, James Blye and Edward Mc- Cormck. m m A Race Track Leased. Tho Long Branch drvng assocaton has leased the Elkwood Park track and stables for a term of years from Phl Daly. t s proposed to mprove the track n' a manner that wll make t the fnest mlo course n the country. Tho plan of tho assocaton {9 to have races every Saturday durng the summer months, A trolley loop wll be run to tho grounds... «. Racoa Poorly Attended. At the bcyclo races gven by tho K?yport wheelmen on Sago's traok on Lnbor day only 85 persons pad an admsson fee to get n tho grounds. Charles Bedlo of Koyport won a mle novco rnce, P. Cooper of Rahway won a half-mlo and mlo open and G, H, Ttapp of Koyport won a two-mlo handcap. A Comng Clambake. An old-fashoned Rlodo nland clambako wll bo hold at tho New Amsterdam hotel pavlon nt Locmfc Pont on Thursday of next week. Tho bako wll begn at two o'clock. Tm RKOSTER prnts all tho OWH nl tho tluo. Adv. 1 JOSEPH SALZ, Red Bank. 2,,. THE GUNNNG SEASON, Some mportant Changed Made by the,aat Legslature. The last legslature made some mportant changes n the game laws. Last year the season for shootng gray, black and fox squrrels began on September 1st, but ths year the season s closed untl October 80th and s open for the months of November and December only. Babbt, hare and qual can be shot only durng the months of November and December. Woodcock can be shot durng the months of May, October, Novemberand up to December 10th. Gray, Englsh or Wlson snpe can be shot n March and Aprl and also'n September, October, November J.and December. Partrdge, grouse and pheasant can be shot from August 25th to December 81st, Grass or upland plover and dove can be shot durng all of August and September. Geese, duck and other webfooted fowls can be sh,qt from January 1st to May 1st, and agan from September 1st to the end of the year. Red Bankers Attend a Clambake. The Frankln Murphy assocaton of Hudson county held a clambake at Pleasure Bay on Monday. The bake was held prncpally to boom Frankln Murphy of Newark for the governorshp next year. Henry S.,Whte, Henry M. Nevus, Edmund Wlson, Morrs Pach and W. T. Corles of Red Bank attended the clambake.» 1 > Odds and Ends of Sport. Wllam A. Thompson, John Matthews and E. Hart Havens of Freehold went fshng at Manasquan last week. They caught 28 blueflsh, nne kngfjsh and one strped bass. The date of the regatta to be saled off Keyport hab been changed from September 15th to September 84th. At the sports held at Keansburg beach on Labor day Fred Seeley of Keansburg won a swmmng race and Samuel Tanner of Keansburg won a tub race. Boys' and Chldren's School Suts. Prces $1.00 to $ Separate Trousers 15 cents to $3.00. Shrts 25 cents upwards. Caps 10 cents to 50 cents: The largest stock n the county. LUDLOW HALL, 10 Mtroad Street, Red Bank, New Jersey. MSS SOPHE WALLNG, Dressmakng by the day. OH Oakland Street, ted llatlt, K, JT, Tallor-Mulo 8ull a ftpcclaltr. HELPFUL HNTS FOR PCNC OR LUNCH. Lobster, Shrmp, ' ' Salmon,, Soused Mackerel, Salad Dressng, Sardnes, Smoked Beef, ' Roast Beef, L Corned Beef, Potted Ham, _. ' Potted Tongue, Baked Beans, Olves, \ Pckles, Chow Chow, ' Root Beer, \ Gnger Ale. Y YT T *"^ T T f!- Tea for cng, Uneeda Bscut, UneedaJnjer Wafer, Uneeda Graham Wafer,-. '. Uneeda Mlk Crackers, Penola Sandwch,. nterseal Gnger Snaps. nterseal Vanlla W afer, nterseal Frut Crackers, nterseal Frut Cake, ' nterseal Banquet Wafer, nterseal water Thn, nterseal Butter Gems, Cocoanut Marshmallow,. Honey Jumbles, : ' Lemon Jumble s, Butter Tarts All other staple Crackers, such as Lemon Crackers, Snaps, NJcNacs,. " \ Anmal Crackers, etc., etc. F.F.SUPP, 166 Monmouth Street. Red Bank, N. J The New York Sample Shoe Store. \ pr V / n uuv 111 tll J 1 BU DVt. \D/ LMlllU) n. U. y WATERS & QSBORN, MANCPACTTOKBS OF Sash, Blnds, Doors, Mouldngs,, Brackets, etc* Screen Doors aod Wndow Screens made to order, GLAZNG A SPECALTY., Jobbng ol all hnds done at short notce. lr BulldlDr, Mantlos. Store Fronts, Scrull Sawng, and Hard wood Work n nl ts bmnetea, MECHANC ST., RED BANK, N. J. LOUS PRATE, Oldest Frut and Vegetable Market. \ ESTABLSHED N ALL KNDS OF FOREGN AND DOMESTC FRUTS, NUTS, &c. Fars and Church Festvals Suppled at Wholesale Prces. A full lno of Calforna Frulta of nl knde and choloo Georga Poaches and Watermelon*. XOUB PBATE, Broad street, " lltd Bank, N. J. ROBERT McKEOWN, DEALER N Grante, Marble, Bluestonc, Sewer Ppe and Fne Lnng. Orders taken for all hnds ofmonument work at reasonable prces. ~ ~ Havng had ffteen years' practcal experence as a grante cutter and letterer, Beven of whch were spent among the beet grante quarres n the Now England states, am enabled to quote you a low prce on anythng you wsh to buy, and to guarantee t frst class as to matornl and work. Front St., near West St.,, ' BANK, NEW JEH8EV. The Shrewsbury Academy LEROY PLACE, RED jbank, Monday, WLL BEON THE PALL TBltM September Collegate, Academc and Prmary Courses.

3 , /, OLD STAGE EFFEQTSr ' " WN" AMD " lose." STCK TO SMPLE FOOD. NGHTMARE. Scenes That Used to Thrll Aud- Sportng BLen gnore Ther TensesThe Amerbat Busness Stan's Pace The Sensaton TJatAltcays Slakes 't encea Years Ado. Demands Easly MHgested lotahes. a Stan a Coward. *' "Great Soott, how a modern audence would gbe at tbe stage effects wear and teat upon the. nerves, and, ardly n nghtmares," remarked a New "There was n the old days for less "Strange that we are always so cow- that used to thrll folks thrty or so under such condtons, dgeston was Orleans lawyer who has a taste for years agop sad aa old theatrcal manager who was. n the cty recently ea ever rred who stood up and made more completely performed," wrtes the bzarre, " dont beleve anybody a route 'to Frsco. "Take the famous wolf scene n 'Davy Crockett,' for n- stance, that made a fortune for dear son came nto common use. among old Frank Mayo. That was consdered one of the most realstc thngs of hear talkng n.that style and notce gamblers. Watch the frst' sport you ts day, and t strred audences to absolutely frantc exctement You re- ng he method of expresson. The the pleasure he seems to take n roll-. member how t went: Davy and thetense-he uses evdently carres hm.herone have taken refuge n'a mountan cabn, and suddenly they hear ent the pleasures of the act when he back, and he enjoys agan n the pres- s long -/drawn wall Ow-o-o-o-o! speaks of t Even f he says he 'lose* Ow-o-o-o-oo! t sounded yce a tom- t gves hm gratfcaton, accordng to cat on a moonlt fence and was emtted the phlosophy of Charles Fox, who s 1 fby the 'prop' man, standng n the authorty for the, statement that the wngs. Davy sprngs to bs feet. He greatest pleasure n the world, next to lstens wth hs band to hs ear. The wnnng money, s to-lose t orchestra plays tremolo. 'The wolves!' The ungrammatlcal fashon among Je cres, and the house begns to bold gamblers dates back about 13 years. ts breath. t seems mpossble to conceve any "Meanwhllo the prop man puts on reason for the custom other than the : more steam. The beasts are nearlng. one have mentoned. That form of Davy glares around.dstractedly,. Mer- speech s stll growng n popularty. clful heyngsl He has burned up the - door bar for fuel! The prop 1 man howls at the top of hs voce. Davy dashes up hts sleeve. He sprngs to the door, rams hs bare arm through -the' empty staples, and two stuffed ^olves' heads are poked suddenly through a hole at the bottom Then the curtan drops, there s more tremolo, and t'rses agan to dscover Davy fantng at the portal wth a couple of streaks of red pant around hs good rght arm to show where the staples :plnched. That scene would excte derson* today, but t kept the wolf from!mayo's own door for many'a long year. ncdentally t was responsble for. some ludcrous mshaps. ' "On one occason, whle tourng through owa, the specal scenery was >. delayed by a ralroad wreck and a local r stage carpenter undertook to 'fake up' the cabn nteror. By some mstake he made the staples several nches too emal, and when Mayo, who was rather portly, rushed to the rescue he was horrfed to dscover that he cojld not get hs arm through the rons. He pushed and squrmed and. sweat blood, but t was no go, and as the wolves were supposed to be advancng on a dead lope the stuaton was decdedly crtcal! t so happened, that the -.actress who played the herone that season was very sprtuelle, not to say scrawny, and whle ^poor Davy was stll wrgglng at the door some gallery. god suddenly pped out: 'Break away, fatty, and let de lady try!' The audt- once roared and Mayo sgnaled for a quck curtan. - -_-- "Fre effects are regarded wth dsfavor nowadays;" contnued the manager, "because f too realstc they are. apt to create a panc n a crowded theater, but n the old melodramas there was no danger of mstakng them for the real thng, and they were great drawng cards.' Back a the early seventes Joe Murphy, the rsh comedan, toured the country n a play called 'Help,' ^whlch contaned a flrc scene that was regarded as the most remarkable ever produced on the road. "The curtan rose on a barnllke nteror, supposed to represent an opum den n San Franclscor Presently a Chnaman passed an open door n the back, carryng a lamp, and a moment later a crash was heard, ndcatng that he had dropped t A red glow mmedately came through the chnks n the rear.wall and grew rapdly brghter and brghter, whle there was a Sound of excted footsteps, lndlbtlnct shoutng and furnlture'bemg dragged across the floor. All that, occurrng out of sght, worked the audence to a hgh ptch of nervous tenson. Then smoke began to ooze through * the cracks, the red glow contnued to ncrease, and all of a sudden the entre back w&u tottered and sank forward on the stage, dsclosng a dm- perspectve, wth flames shootng up here and there and fremen rushng pellmell n every drecton. - "That spectacle created a tremendous sensaton wherever t was' put on, yet the entre effect was produced by a few shovelfuls of red fre burned n the wngs and a lttle lycopodlum powder, whch flashes nto a bg, harmless blaze and was concealed n tn boxes attached to dfferent parts of the settng. The back wall was let down on a couple'of pano wres, whch used to get stuck occasonally and suspend t n mdar. There was a celebrated flre scene n Ohanfrau's play of *Mose,' but t was admtted to bo nferor to the onel have descrbed, and the crudtes of both ore very laughable when compared to modern attempts along tho same lno. ','. "The last thng of that knd saw was n'london a few years ago, t represented the burnng of a tonement. Smoke and flames poured oat of.tho cascmonts; lnmonso beams crashed down, scatterng showers of sparks; walls crumbled, poc-plo leaped from tho.wndows and were caught n note, and fremen sent streams of real water ln-, to the blazng rulna. As watched tho mmc conflagraton my mnd reverted to the days of Ouanfrau and Murphy, and Btnolo wovoral smllcfl a ytrd wdo rfnd all teeth." Tun tkostffb s growng all tho tme more bublnoes, more mployoob, moro typo and more Machnery. Folks' busl ' h th TUB RKOBTE to toll abqut tholr bublnono. Adv. and Seem Pleased. 'Have you ever notced the satsfed manner of gamblers Whle twstng ther tenses nto the ' wn' and Tlose" common to the fraternty?" remarked 1 a man who has a fowlness for nvestgatng the peculartes of he fello'ws. " hove thought of that for a long tme ever snce that form of expres- Th«so called.'sportng men' have ex*, tended the scope of the presenttense to all ther verbs. t jare on me sometmes, but even then fnd consolaton n the knowledge that f the 'sports' dd not affect that partcular style of speech 95 n 100 of them would do even worse, and ther present pcturesque defance of grammar s a relef from the possbltes of such expressons as ' seen 1 and ' done.'" ; HAM SMELLNG A BUSNESS. Pecular Occupaton For Whch Only a Few are Qualfed: The ham smeller's only tools are a long steel trer and hs nose. He stands n a barrel to keep hs clothes from beng soled by the drppng brne, and the hams are brought to hm, and he plunges hs sharp ponted trer nto them, wthdraws t and passes t swftly beneath hs nose. The trer always goes d6wn to the knuckle Jont n testng meat n that manner the man wth the trer Judges by the slghtest shade of dfference between the smell of one pece of meat and another. The smell of the meat s almost unversally sweet, and that s what be smells. The slghtest tant or devaton from the sweet smell s therefore apprecable. t s not the degree of tant that he expects to fnd, but the slghtest odor that s not sweet When he defects an odor, be throws the meat asde, and f t s not unwholesome t s sold as "rejected" meat, but f t s tanted tt goes to the renderng tank. The ham tester smells meat from 7 o'clock n the mornng untl 5 o'clock at nght, and hs sense must never become Jaded or nexact or hs usefulness would be at an end. Ham testng's not a pursut danger-, ous to the health, as tea testng s supposed to be, but the ham smeller wth a cold n hs head s lke a pano player who loses hs arm n a ralroad wreck. A Test of Accuracy. Drawng from memory s one of the moat dffcult thngs n the world to do. Even professonal artsts fnd that they must rely largely upon basty Jottngs.made upon the spot as suggestons for ther pctures. Those who are not artsts need to look keenly, and closely at what they wsh to recollect, for they must depend upon ther memory to brng detals back to them. t s an excellent correctve of superfcal observaton to sketch a scene as we thnk we saw,t and afterward return to the scene and take another vew. t s a tranng both n accuracy and humlty, for we learn how easy t s to deceve ourselves as to what we have remarked-» She Got a New Far. - Sarcastcus and hs wfe were gong to the theater. "Wll you please go.n and get. my goats off tbe dressng table?' sad Mrs. 8. ; ''Ypr goats?" quered tbe puzzled Sarcastcus. "What fangle have you women got now?" "'ll Bhow you!" snapped the wfe, and she saled away and soon returned puttng on her gloves. "Are those what you mean? Why, call those klda," " UBed to," repled Mrs. Sarcastlcus,- "but they are gettng so old am ashamed to any longer." He took the hnt- Economy. "What's ths?" exclamed tho young husband, referrng to the raomornndum sho had gven hm. * "One dozen eggs, one pound of rnlslna. a bottle of lemon extract, a tn of ground cnnamon and half a pound of sugar what do.you want wth all these thngs, Belnda?" "'ve sot a Btalo loaf," repled tho young wfe, "that 'm gong to save 4>jr workng t up nto a bread puddng. never let anythng go to waste, Henry.* Oar tamre Claw Lord 8ayvan-Do Llvruo Ah, but yonr lclnuro clawss n ths country lnvo no ttles, Mss Slarpc NODBCUBO What's tho muttor wth "hnbo," Weary "Duety Bdftdo, 11 and BO Mrs. S.' T. Borer of "Why Am Opposed to Ptas," n The Ladles' Home Journal. The mothers of today must look more carefully to the buldng of ther bodes and brans than ther mothers and grandmothers dd. ndeed at the pace at whch we Amercans are gong we use our brans at full speed nearly all the tme., What man can buld bran and brawn on pes, lnyer cakes or preserves or any other mass of materal whch from ts very complexty requres labor and tme for dgeston, drawng the blood from the bran to the stomach durng hs workng hours? Observe those who eat ther complex foods carelessly and hastly and you wll see at a glance the condtons that necesstate a'complete reet every now and then, or on early nervous breakdown. "n my close observaton n tbe last 20 years fnd very few people n our common struggle for exstence who can for any length of thne eat carelessly of complex foods. At 40 or 50 a maa may perhaps have accumulated wealth, but not health, and o what earthly use s the flrat wtthout the second? Many persons to the generaton gone before have eaten pes at least once a day, but they have-not had meat three tmes a day, nor have they rushed at our pace..they gave more tlne to the dgeston of the pte. People who recommend these rch foods rarely know anythng of ther complex condtons and stll less of the complexty of dgeston." THE COLLAR BUTTON. ts Blessngs Realsed Only by Tlose TF7to Have Lved Wthout t, ' ~ "n lookng over a trunk.full of old truck the other day,".sad the elderly own, " came across a lot of old shrts 'nth the buttons sewed on, and as looked at them 1 realzed anew what the collar button means to humanty. There. have been greater nventons, surely, but not many that have conferred a more unmxed blessng on manknd. "The younger person of today, accustomed to the collar button always, cannot realze what t was to be wth-, out t He can never know what tt was to have shrts' wth the 'buttons sewed on or hot, as the case mght be. Not so very many years ago, when the collar button was yet comparatvely new, before persons had come to keep, as everybody commonly does now, a lot of buttons on hand, the man who had lost hs collar button thought hmself enttled to the sympathy of hs fellows, but wrung as he mght be by that loss *e could -not even guess at the angush that n the sewed on button days flled the heart of the man who, when-he came to put on hs last clean shrt, found that key button, the one on the collar bond, most mportant one of all, gone entrely or only just hangng by a thread " " knew a man once who had ths happen to htm and ddnt swear. That was the only great thng he ever dd, but have always thought that that alone was enough to stamp'hm as a most extraordnary man."-"~ "" '" Baldness. t bos been found on study of 800 cases of loss of har that baldness prevals most wth unmarred men, whch s contrary to the general belef. The worres of the bachelor may be fewer, but they are more tryng to the scalp than are the multtudnous cares of the man of famly. Most bald people are found to lead ndoor lves, and almost all of them belong to the ntellectual class. Usually the loss of har begns before the thrteth, year. n woman t usually consttutes a general thnnng; n men t affects the top of the bead. Dseases that affect the general nutrton of.the body are lkely to thn the har. Heredty s a factor. f one has baldheaded an cestors, all the drugs of the pbarma eoptea wll not brng out flowng locks. Four to One. An Englsh offcer n Malta stopped n rdng to' ask, a natve the way. He was answered by a. shrug of the shoulders and a "No speak Englsh." "You're a fool then," sad the offcer. But the man know enough Englsh to ask:.' "Do you understand Maltese?" "No." "Do you know Arabc?" "No." "Do you know talan?" \*t(. ^j^ "No.".. '"su"*!,: "Do you know Greek?" "No." "Then you four foolb. only one!" ; «- * -». Four Good Habts., There are four good hablta^-punctuallty, accuracy, uteadnoas and dspatch. Wthout tho frst of these tme s wasted. Wthout the second, mstakes tho moot hurtful to our own credt and nterest and that of others may bo commtted. Wthout the thrd, nothng can bo well done, and wthout tho fourth opportuntes of great advantage ore lost, whch t la lmpoa< elblo to recall. square stand aganst the amorphous horror that nvarably pursues us n such vsons. When have a nghtmare and tbe usual monster gets on my tral, my blood turns to water, and my conduct would dsgrace a sheep. am besde myself wth stark, downrght fear, and have no dea left n rny head except to run lke a rabbt. All prde, self respect dread of rdcule and even the nstnct of self defense are' scattered to the wnds, and beleve, honestly, would be capable of any nfamy n ortler to escape. have no hestaton n confessng ths, because, as far as have been able to fnd out, everybody acts exactly the same way n the throes of nghtmare, and feel certan would not make such a ptable spectacle of myself n real lfe, no matter what mght befall. 1 thnk that the explanaton! of the nghtmare panc s to be found n the fact" that the dream s almost tnvaramy accompaned by a seaee of suffocaton. Jt s' Well establshed that chokng the *Bhuttlng off of one's wnd,' to use a homely phrase has an effect upon tbe mnd whch s entrely dstnct and dfferent from.that produced by any other rorm of pan or perl. t flls the vctm wth such horror and dstracton that he s for tbe moment nsane. He wll do anythng to get relef. Ths has been brought out on more than one occason n the defense of men who have been choked and klled ther assalants, and. Judges have held > that tbe crcumstances of such an attack should he ghren specal consderaton as extenuatng the deed. n dreams the entre nervous system s relaxed, and t s natural to suppose that the mental effect of suffocaton would be ntensfed. At least, that s the bebt apology have to offer for my sprnts through nghtmare land." \ Who's s s \ Your \ Druggst? 8 g WE'D LKE TO BE. g 5 p Soda Water would make a R s s Kk good starter, any day. 5 0SGhroeder f PharmaGy p Bergen & Morrs, Propretors. 5 K 19 BROAD STREET, RED BANK. K Telephone lsj-f. Fne Gabnet Carbonettes KDEHART&LETSON's FOB #3.00 Per Dozen. J Pette Card Carbonettes, wth two slttnrs ;. to Belect rom, $1.35 for 12. ; We guarantee our wor to be flret-clnss n every way. t pays to be satlsoed by paympr a lttle more and gettng somethng that lasts, DEHART & LETSON. BED BANK, SEA BEGHT ATLANTC HGHLANDS^ 1 A CARD TO OUR PATRONS. You have favored us n the past wth your valuable -patronage and we want you to feelthat we apprecate your busness., The fact that you have placed confdence n our -ablty-to gve'ydtrtletbesrgoljds~f6r"the"least' money s a great ncentve for us to surtfass our prevous efforts. Sellng satsfactory goods at satsfactory prces and a satsfactory way of dong busness has won the favor of many. 'ts the secret of our success. For fall and wnter we have made a greater effort than ever before to please you. You wll fnd our stock of Men's and Boys' Clothng, Furnshngs and Hats, larger, more complete' and orgnahhan heretofore. You may rest assured that we are able to gve you better goods for less money than any other store. Now all we ask s that you pay us a vst n our new store, our offerngs wll speak for themselves. Thankng you for past favors, and trustng to have a contnuance of your patronage, we are Yours truly, EAGLE CLOTHNG CO., \,, - #. 26 BROAD ST., RED BANK. j OPPOSTE MECHANC STREET. Three More Days To Save Money. New Fall Shoes are arrvng daly, and to make room for them we have been sellng summer shoes at cost and less for the past month. Only a few more days of ths sale s left. f you thnk t worth whle to save money you better take advantage of the opportunty now offered to you. Aftor ths week you wll not have t. A FEW SAMPLES OF REDUCTONS: Eton's $8.60 Shoos, now $2 50 ' " ««..... ; 2."oo rt " " «' O FORD & MLLER, BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N.J.

4 THE RED BANK REGSTER. JOHN H. COOK., Edtor and Propretor ADVERT18E3EXT8 Should reach us not atertban Wednesday mornng Sample coplesof THE RKGSES ana prnted rates of advertsng wll be sent to any address on applcaton. Advertsers have the prvlege of changng ther announcements avteu as they desre wthout extra ftnarge. Readng notces ww be nserted tor 10 cento a lne, each tnsertton. These notces wll be placed at toe bottom of columns and marked Adv. Obtuary notces and poetry, lodge resolutons, etc., wll be nserted tor 10 cents per lne. Notlces;of Wtts, marrages'aud deltas, publshed free. WEDNESDAY,' SEPTEMBER 13, Mr. Howell Re-Nomnated. Last Wednesday Benjamn F. Howell was nomnated by the Republcans for another term n congress from ths dstrct., Mr. How«?H has always voted wth hs party on party measures, but hs am has been to represent hs dstrct fathfully wthout takng poltcs nto specal consderaton. Democrats as well as Republcans have found n Mr. Howell a representatve who w.as anxous to do for hs dstrct whatever could be done to advance ts nterests. - For ths reason many Democrats make no secret of ther preference for Mr. Howell over any Democrat that can be named. They wll support hm heartly because they have found n hm a frend. Mr. Howell's labors.have "been who'ly rrespectve of the queston of the poltcal preferences of those who wshed hs o&cal assstance n carryng through.legslaton ntended to beneft any. part of the dstrct. The unform courtesy and the unfalng attenton whch Mr. fovvel- has gven to those who have had offcal busness wth hm have gven hm a popularty n the dstrct wboh few congressmen have possessed. Every ndcaton ponts to the electon of Mr. Howell. t s doubtful f there s n the whole dstrct one Republcan who wll vote aganst hm. t s certan that hundreds of Democrats wll vote for hm. Hs reflecton wll keep n offce an offcal whose work has merted such a recognton. Church News. ' Msson servces are beng held every mornng and evenng ths week n St. James's church. The msson opened at late mass on Sunday mornng. The openng sermon and the Sunday and, Monday evenng sermons were preached by Rev. John F. Kennedy. The other sermons wll be preached byrev.'m.j, '(Seraghty. The msson wll close next Sunday evenng at half-past seven o'olooltr- Rove.- M,- J. Gernghty- and John Kennedy are from Vllanova college, Vllanova, Pennsylvana.^ Thef are now the guests of Rev. James Rey. 1 nolds.. Quarterly meetng wll be held at Zon church on Central avenue next Sunday. Love feast wll be observed at half-past ten o'clock, a communon servce wll be held at half-past two o'clock and there wll be preachng at nght. The tent meetngs on Oakland street are stll beng contnued. Servces are held every Thursday and Frday nghts and on Sunday afternoons and evenngs. Elder L. B. Gles of Brooklyn wll address the meetngs next Sunday; An entertanment was held n a tent on the lawn of Zon church on Central avenue last Thursday and Frday nghts and $15 wns cleared. Ths wll go tot ward payng the pastor's salary..,' The lades' ad socety of the Frst methodst church wll hold a frut and ce-cream festval n the lecture room on Thursday, September 20th. An'Asbury Park Robbery. A house,at ABbury Park, occuped by E. D. Harrngton, a New York broker was entered by burglars on Monday, nght and $3,000 worth of jewelry and money Were stolen. The robbery was.dscovered yesterday,mornng by Mrs. Harrngton, who found her husband's clothng; and. her jewel cases on the landng of the starway. Among the stolen goods was a sun burat, qontanng 59 damonds, valued at $2,800; an opal pn and about $30 n taoney. Mr.. Harrngton's watch had not been touched and several hundred dollars n money n a coat pocket had been overlooked.. Vstors at Locust Pont. ' Benjamn Mount, who for a number of years waa employed by the Atlantc grocory company of Atlantc Hghlands and who s now employed by the nternatlon nowa company of New York epent Sunday wth hs parents, Mr. and Uta. Joseph Mount of Locut Pont. Ho wns accompaned by Mss Florence Cook of Harlem. Stephen B. Callahan, a oon 'fltoblo from.washngton, D. C, was cecont gueot of Mrs. Mount, who s hs KunC, Mrs, Mount mud a n vst a few days ago to her mother^ who e n' a homo at Fordham, Now York.. '. A now lne of.trmmed, fall mllnery 'wll bo ready byscptlmtwr SOtll nt Mto A^m^%Jx^andFrm TOWN TALK. For a presdental :year poltcs's very quet. Around here t seems to be taken for granted by both sdes that no tght s to be made n Monmouth by the Democrats. About half the Democrats have mot say that McKnley s sure to carry the county. The other half don't say anythng. They probably thnk so, too, but they don't lke to say that they thnk so, for fear, f ther sayngs should be repeated, that they, mght OBB caste wth ther party. '. «*..,.. Occasonally, however, one meets a Democrat who s full of enthusam for hs party and who actually beleves that Bryan s gong to wn. These men are met wth very seldom, but wthout them poltcs would be a dreary, monotonous waste ths year. They are the only, people who. put any change whatever nto tbe poltcal landscape. The Republcans and nne-tenths.of the Democrats feel so certan that McKnley has'^got a walkover, especally n ths state of New, Jersey, that they don't thnk t's worth whle to talk about t. < j... ; '. # # # Everyone concedes,' of oourse, that McKnley won't get the vote he got n 1896 n'monmouth. Fred Frck tells me that le has heard about.twenty farmers flay n the Sherdan hotel that they voted for McKnley n 1896, but that they are gong yft> vote for Bryan ths, The Sherdan hotel s the stampng ground of local poltcans, and more poltcs s heard there than n any other p]apenred Bank,. Men from many^f the near-by townshps are seen there every day) and the tweftty men who fald they had dbanged ther rotes probably represented four or fve townshps. McKnley can lose a great many tmes twenty votes and yet have a very large majorty n the county. '» * Down at Long Branch t s sad that the Germans among the laborng men are gong to change to Bryan ths fall and that the talans, of whom there famly and a few frends down the rver are many n Ocean townshp, wll also yesterday for a clambake. A start was be for Bryan ths year, although both made early n the mornng and the these classes of voters were for McKn-. party dd not get back to Red Bank untl ley n The well-to-do Germans at after dark. Those n the party.were Mr. Long Branch' are prncpally for McKnley. Tha condton s sad to exst n Mrs. Mart Havland, Mrs. Zegler.and and Mr. Augustus Havland, Mr. and other parts of the county. Most of these her daughter Ruth, Mss Llan Havland, Albert Havland,.Mrs. McCullom, voters, however, are sad to be naturally Democrats, who are now smply returnng to ther party. A promnent Demo- daughter Alce and Mrs. W. A. Sweeney. Mr. and Mrs. Henry N. Supp and ther Tat of Freehold stated the other day that about half.of. the Democrats n that Fred Tuzenue's Promoton. secton of the county who voted for Mc- Fred Tuzenue of Toronto, Canada, son Knley four years ago would vote for of Ovd Tuzenue of Mddle town,.has been Bryan tha year, and he- estmated-that apponted-superntendent of trapksand McKnley would carry the county by constructon by the Nagara, St. Cathernes and Toroqto'. ralway company. about 900. Ths s about the estmate whch most-democratc poltcans gve Mr. Tuzenue's ttle wll be "General when they are not talkng for publcaton. Roadmaster." He has been employed ' *.. Allenhurst people are dong the rght thng by ther town. Ths town s a new borough. a short dstance north of Asbury Park. The town s beng lad out on a lberal scale, and on Saturday nght, at a meetng of the property owners of the place, t was decded to recommend to the borough authortes that they purchase the entre ocean front. Ths wll gve to the town the aano now bult, the swmmng pool, and, the other mprovements on the beach front, * * * The entre beach front, ncludng the mprovements,, can now be bought for 75,000. n a few years t wll be worth four or fve tmeb as much as t s now. The Allenhurst people are wse n buyng the property before t reaches an enormous fgure, although such propertes had better be bought for the publc, even at enormous fgures, than not to be owned by the publc at all. * *» -. ' The ocean ought to be free to the people of a town whch borders on t. t ought to be free to everybody, n fact. Bat a order that ths should be so the publc should own the water front. Whle the ocean may be really free, t s actually not free f there s no way of gettng to tf The state of New Jersey, through the operaton of tho rparan law, has sold to prvate ndvduals the water front of ts rvers and sea, thus practcally deprvng tho people of the state from tho use and enjoyment of the publc waters; snce f there s no way of gettng to the publo waters except over prvate land, there ore few who can enjoy thorn, * Every town ought to follow tho lead of Allonhurflt n ths matter, t wll cost a good deal of nonoy to get theuo r parlun lands back, but they ought to be got back at whatever coat. Tho rghtful wny of dong t would be to pass v law, appropratng tho property for publo UBO, und allowng each communty to pny back to the prvnto ndvduals who now own'lt whatever they may have pad, n addton to tho coot of whatever mprovomontb they may have put on t, f BUO property JH not noedod by,tho l ml >Ho> andjt,fo flooded forjwyatp.uao,' tlo p'ropc 1 mtlodwdud' bo"toloao t for a term of years. n ths way t would be kept jn possesson of the publc, and the publc would get an ncome from tdurngthe tme t was n prvate hands.. " _, - *_ #, should lke to see Red Bank begn the operaton; of gettng back ts' rver front nto, publc possesson,, A- begnnng should be made by gettng nto publc. ownershp the lands frontng on every street. Ths would of tself gve the publc free access to the rver. At the present tme, although there are a number of streets that run to the rver, there are only two or three where the water frontof the street s owned by the publc. beleve that the: entre rver front should be owned by-the publo, and further beleve that 1 some day, a' good many years hence, maybe, the entre rver, front wll get back nto publc possesson,. -. ' *.. # # # ' ' t no doubt was a scheme on the part of the corporatons who wanted to gobble up stretches of the publc water fronts, when they had the law passed declarng that all money rased by the sale of rparan lands should go nto the publc school, fund. They fgured out that no legslator would lke to oppose ther scheme, because f he dd they could make an outcry aganst hm and could declare tjat he was opposed to the publc. schools. Such an outcry has been rased every'jme any effort, however slght, has been made toward gettng back; these lands nto publc possesson. But f, nstead of sellng these lands at afew Cents per foot front, the water fronts had been leased and the' money thus obtaned put nto the publc school fund, that fund would, now be a great deal larger than t s, the publc would have retaned possesson, and the land could be jused for publo purposes, f t were BO needed, at the expraton of any lea.se. ' ' ' ', A Clambake and a Sal. Capt. Augustus. Havland took bs by the company for some tme. Mr. Tuzenue's wfe s on from Toronto and hs son attends Bchool here. Mrs, Tuzenue wll return to Toronto n October, but the boy wll reman here.». * ' * Red Bankers Flay Ball. Two scrub baseball teams, one captaned by J. Hubbard and the other captaned' by W. B. Conover, played a game yesterday at Charles S. Hll's at Lttle Slver pont. Fred, Smock was ptcher and Joseph Burrowes catcher on Conover's team, and George Lamb was ptcher and Benjamn H. Ford catcher on Hub bard's team. Hubbard's team won by a score of 14 to (.: >.. A Spraned Hand. James Marne, the bootblack at -the Sherdan ho.te^.fell off a bcycle on Thursday nght and spraned hs rght hand. He got a rde on a bcycle that had a coaster brake, and Btarted down Front street. When opposte Sherman's market, beng' unused, to a brake, he jammed t down so hard that the wheel came to a sudden stop and he was thrown nthe road Money n the Banks. The September statement of the banks of Red Bank s publshed n THE REQS- TET to-day. The total sum on depost n the throe banks s nearly a mllon and a half of dollars. The amount of deposts n each bank s as follows: Frst natonal bank.....$ 580,065 B Second natonal bank 581, Naresnk natonal bunk , Total...';...'..$1.4.45,809 O ^» A Comng: Concert. A concert whbc'gv.dn n tho Red Bank Baptst church' next Tesdoy nght for the beneft of tho nuso fund of tho church.. Mss Ray Allen Browne of Suffolk, Vrgna, has boon engaged aa organst for the evenng. n addton to tho selectons whch' Mss Browno wll render the programme wll consst of loctons by the Sunday-school orclest and vocal and whstlng doloa. Mr, T. Regan, tho artst of Koytort, has mado a vory lno pcture of Frank M. rwoolley, for hs mother. Adv, ; Openng, of trmmed hats and fuw,.thurbduy and Frday, Boptombor. 20th uud21at. MM. E.WolB. Mv: V "' A HGH WND. Some Damage Already Done and More Expected. The Jburrcane whch Bwept over the lower part of the Unted States, and whch dd so much damage there, kllng thousands of people and destroyng mllons of property, reached the North today. Accordng to the. weather reports last nght the tal end of the hurrcane would reach New Jersey to-day, and t arrved on tme. The wnd s strong butno great amount,of damage s predcted for ths secton pf the country by the weather bureau. Some damage to frut and shade trees by the wnd has already been reported" and the wnd s expected to reach ts heght to-nght or to-morrow. Ths noon the wnd blew down, the wndmll on the buldng o' W. A. French & Co., on Broad street. The wndmll was blown off the oof of the buldng nto the alley near the postoffce. The wndmll was wrecked. The alleyway s usually crowded wth wagons, but t was dnner tme when the accdent occurred and no one.happened to be n the alley way at that tme. Female Helf) Wanted. More than lkely there are a hundred women readers of THE RED BANK REGSTER who wsh to engage good household help, but they, don't know where to fnd t Any servant who s out of a poston should advertse n THE RED BANK REGSTER'S want column, so those who want help can fnd f FRESH COW FOR SALE. A fresh cow for sale. Apply to W. K. Warden, 17 Washngton street, Red Bant. N, J. WANTED. Blacksmth's apprentce wanted. One wth some experence preferred. ra Meglll, Farmlngdale^ N. J. : ~ ROOMS FOR RENT. Two rooms n Borgon bulldlrjg, second floor, specally suted for dressmaker.' Apply to W. B. Parsons, RedBan... -, :.... v LME FOR SALE. Oyster shell lme, n small or large quanttes, for sale. nqure at the John H. Patterson farm. Rversde Drve. ' KEYPORT'S RESTAURANT. When you are D Keyport, go to Yancey Anderson's restaurant for your meals. Caterer for, weddngs and partes. Crayons, Water Color, Pastels, T. Regan, Keyport, N. J. Send me photo or drop me postal and wll call and see you. Best work n the county.- $20,000 TO LOAN. $30,000toloan n sums to sut borrowers on frst bond and mortgage. A. L. vlns, RKQSKR buld. ng, Red Bank, N. J. HORSES PASTURED. ' Horses wanted for pasture; fne meadow and upland ; runnng water; stabled n storms, terms reasonable. Address, Allen P. Applegate, Red Bank, N. J. HELP WANTED.- Frst class cook wanted; also a gentlemanly boy wanted for butler; both colored. Apply at llev. E. D. Dromroole's employment agency. No. 14 Pearl street, Red Bank. BOARDERS WANTED. A comfortable hnme nd cheerful rooms to partes wshng 11 rat-class board; modern mprovements. D4 Broad street; Red Bank. BOARDNd FOR HORSES. Horses boarded summer and wnter; upland and meadow pasture; good pasture now. For terms and references address Howard T. Ely, Holmdel. N. J CARPET WEAVNG. > John Splllano has moved bs carpet weavng s from James Walsh's on Meclranlo street to West street, near Monmouth street. All knds of weavng on sngle and double warp. WEDDNG AND VSTNG CARDS Engraved at Everdoll'. Fnest work, reduced prces, also seals, not* papor monograms, rubber Btamps.'stencolg, and plates ot every descrpton, H) nversldo avenue, Red Bank. LAUNCH FOR SALE. 17 feet long,2hs horso power, elcotro-vapor engne. Fully equpped. Quatanteod to be n flret class runnng order. Prce $150. Charles E. Burd, 112 Morford place, Red Bank, N. J. EMPLOYMENT AGENCY. fnd stuatons for mon and women and furnsh employore wth trustworthy holp. Alsn wtont^for Natonal Buldng l<dan assocaton, Uov. S. ). Dromgoolo, 14 Ponrl ntrcot, Hod Bank. fb ~-^ HAR WORK. am prepared to dovoto my wtlro tlmo to makng up swtches, combngs, and all knds of har work. AddrcM.OT Went Front atroot; or «ond me word nnd wll call upon you.- Mss. Brand, led Bank. : KNDLNG WOOD FOR SALE. lmvoft largo quantty of kndlng.wood at my. oaw mll, wlloh wll Bull, dollvoroa nt Red Dank or nonr tlorc, nt twenty conl por barrol, «l*barr61> for a tlollur. Danel. Oook,,Tlnton Falls, N. J. A CLAMBAKE DNNER. An old-fnahtoood Bhodo slahd clam bako Wll bo Klvon nt tho Now Anntcrdaw Hotel Pavlon at x>cut Pont on Thumlay, floptumwr Ht, undur tlo UMtMramont' of Wllam Kolly.,B«ke wll bo opocd nt two o'clock, pnner tlokot, 81., - TOLET. Half of bouse to let. nqure of Doremus Bros.-. HOUSE FOR 8A1E OR RENT. Bltuated on RprJng street, near Tower Hll avenue, contanng elpht rooms and an eut ktchen. Bare. wagon houses, hen bouses, sheds, etc,, on the property ; ajso rult trees*, -Lot fc! fegt front by'sp feet deep, J. Edear Brower, Box 654, Red Bank, or call on the premses. '. v.-..: : :. L O S T. >... Between Patrck Salmon's house and a pont, about ave hundred yards.pasfrthe resdence oooseph Feld,on the turnpke road leadng to Red' Bank* a slver lnk sleeve button, bearng a Japaneae lnscclpton A sutable rewadwlll be gven* for ts return to E. T. Feld, Mlddletown,' N. J..- COOK'S RESTAURANTS, desre to announce that have taken charge of " the restaurant n the opera house block at Red Bank Therestauran,t.wlUbe open seven days to a week, ' Steaks, chops, oysters, clamb, and everythng usually " found n a frst-class restaurant wll be served, My restaurant on Sront street, near the foot of" Broad street, wll bat open sx days a "Week, from' half-past sx: to eleven o'clock, on the samo plan as * heretofore, Good servce at both places and at reasonable prces; Meals any hour. 9HARLB8 L.'COOK. FERTLZERS. Farmers, erardeuere, superntendents of country seats, ana others D need of Fertlzers or nsect!- - oldes, are hereby notlfled that we, tte only resdent manufacturers ol the above artcles D tbe County ot ' Monmouth, are ready to supply them wth any of " sach goods a large or small quanttes. Orders for, Specal Fertlzers are also BOllclted. Ground bone, bone phosphate, complete corn or potato tnamjfe,, tankage, ntrate ol soda, sulphate of ammona, sul- phaw and murate of potabh, odorless lawn dressng,., and Earls green are Sept constantly on hand. Telephone drect to works from all parts. /JONES'S SOAP AND FERTLZER WORK3," BED BANK. N. J. "DEPORT OF THE CONDTON OP At the Frst Notonal Bank of Red Bank, at Red Bank,'n the State of New Jersey, at the olose of ' busness, September, 6th, ' RESOTOCEB. loans and dscounts... $524, Overdrafts, secured and unsecured TJ. 8. Bonds tosecure crculaton 25, Stocks, securtes, etc,.. 00, Bankng-house, furnture and fxtures.. 17,000 00' Due from Natonal Bonks (not Reserve' ' Agents)...:, 22, Due from State Banks and bankers 9, Due from approved reserve agents 235, Checks and other cash tems Notes of other Natonal Banks... 5, Fractonal paper currency, nckels and cents,-...,.. CO 10 Lawful Money Reserve n Bank, vz: Spece..$88,02000 Legal tender notes 9, , 47,72000 Redempton fund wth TJ. 8. Treasurer / (5 per cent of crculaton) '1,250 Oft ' Total 8938,406.61' ' UABHTKS. Captal stock pad n, 8100,000 00> Snrplusfund.. ' 75,000 00, Undvded profts, less expenses and toes pad a , Natonal Bank notes outstandng 25, Due to other Natonal Banfcs. 7, Dvdends unpad ndvdual deposts subject to check , Total... 8»83, STATE OF NEW JERSEY, CODNTT OF MONUOUTH, S., H. CampDell.casher of tbe above-named bant, do solemnly swear that the above statement s true to the best of my knowledge and belef.,. H. CAMPBELL, Casher. Subscrbed and sworn to before me ths 12th day of Soptombor, 1B0O. DANEL B. APPLEBATB, Notary Publc. CORRECT-^Attest: GEO. F. COOPER, ) WM. APPLEOATE, JR, }Dtreton.. 0. L. TERHDNE. 1 "DEPORT OF THE CONDTON OF X\ the Second Natonal Bank of Red Bank, at Red Bank, n the State of New Jersey, nt tbe close of busness, September 6th, BE3OURCS. Loans and dscounts. $020, Overdrafts, secured and unsecured U. S. Bondsto secure crculaton... 75, Btocks, securtes,etc...\ 57, Bankng-house, furnltureandflztures Other real estate ownedv.;..;...'..:... FURNSHED ROOMS TO LET. Due from Natonal Banks (not reserve One-balf of a furnshed house to let and also furnshed roomb. Apply at 61 Shrewsbury avenue. agents) Red Bank. 27, v 0,514 1s Due from State Banks and bankers... 14, Due from approved reserve agents 86, Checks and other cash tems 5, Notes of other Natonal Banks 1,78200 Fractonal paper currency, nckels and cents Lawful Money Reserve n Bank, vz: Spece..'...;... 3,11982 Legal tender notes 40, v 43, Redempton fund wth U. 8. Treasurer (5 per cent of crculaton) 3, Total» '. 8903, AD1LX1KS. Captal stock pad n...,, 375,00000 Surplusfund 75, Undvded proflta, less expenses and taxespald 132, Nntonal Bank notes outstandng 75,( Dueto other Natonal Banks 22,050 8S Dueto State Banks and bankers Dvdends unpad... 1,76800 ndvdual deposts subject tocheck 8578, Demand certfcates of depost Certfed cbecks...' 2, , Total S TAB OF NEW JERSEY, COUNTY OP MONMOtJTH, 88:,. B. Edwards, ensher of the nbove-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement s true to the beat of my knowledge and belef.. B. EDWARDS. Casher. Subscrbed and sworn to before me ths Htb day of September HARRY EDWARDS, Notary Publo. CORRECT Attest: JOHN 8. APPLEaATE. ) J. A. THRO0KMORT0N, }Drectors. J. TflAFFORD ALLEN, TJEPOET OF THE CONDTON OP JLtu thenaveslnk Natonal Bank at Red Bank, n tto State of New Jorsey, nt too closa of bubldtss, September 5th, RESOURCE!). Loans and dlsmunt3 S200,«2 82' Overdrafts, secured and unsecured 2U7 80 [1.8. Bondsto secure crculaton 12, PremUusson U.S.bonds 1, Stocks, securtes, etc Bankng house, furnture and fxtures... 14, Other real estate and mortgages owned Duo from Natonal Banks (not reserve agents) Duo from State Banks and bankers Duo from approved reserve agents Checks and other cash tems.-. 3, Notes of other Natonal Banks 1, Fractonal paper currency, nckels and cent,...t.. Lawful Money Boservo n Bank, vz.:., Spcco 8 a H, Legal tender notes..; 15, Redempton fund wth U. S. treasurer, (6 por cent of crculaton) , SO0, Total..!;......'.$877,177 88! ''' LMBUTK8. Captal Block pad n 8W00 0O Surplus (und.. 115, Undvded ' profts, less oxponma and ' taxcspnld; : 8, Natonal bank notes outstandng Oft Due to other Natonal banks 0,457 W- Duo to Stato Danks and bankers... 1, , Dlvldonds unpad ndvdual depost* nuboot to.chook , Demandcortlncatvaof dopoat. 0fl200> Ccrunod checks,...,.m 40. Total..*,..,...$877,177 88' HATK or NKW jknmty. COUNTY OV MONMOUTH, US., Enoch L. Cowurt, cuhlor ot tto above-named bank, do eolomnly swear that tbo abovo statomont s truo to tho bust ol my knowledge and belef., B. L. COVVABT, Oashlor. Babeorbbdand sworn to before mo ths mt4ny Of BcpUmbor J. 8. TntOCKMOlTON, JR.. Notary Publo. COttUKOT AttOBt JAB. B. TmOOKMOnTON. TUO8-BA.V8.JR,,, \DrcDUm. O. B. PA118ON8, j

5 PERSONAL.,. Rev. James D. Corrotbes, pastor of Zon church on Central avenue, has wrtten a poem enttled "A Thanksgvn' Turkey," for the Century magazne, The poem wll appear n the Thanksgvng number of the Century. Mr. Corrothers has also wrtten a poem for Truth, enttled" 'De Man Ah Owea F' Dollahs To." He has wrtten several poems for Truth. M6s Lena Henderson of Wall street, 'who has been employed as a compostor on the Standard for several years, wll leave ther employ and wll accept a poston as stenographer n the Red Bank offce of the Metropolan lfe nsurance company. Mss Henderson wll take Mss Sarah C. Clayton's poston. s attendng the Normal tranng school Herbert G. Ferrs, son of Mrs. May 51 for teachers n Newark. Ferrs of New York, formerly of Red Herbert Sweeney of Atlantc Hghlands spent Sunday wth frends and Bank, has been spendng a short vacaton here. Mr. Ferns s connected wth relatves at Red Bank.^ the Metropoltan street ralway company of New York. Herbert Crag of Long Branoh spent yesterday wth ha sster, Mrs. M. V. Mr. and Mrs. L'. E. Pease of Sprngfeld, Massachusetts, are guests at the <jhamplat house on Unon street. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Dwght of.chcago are vstng Mr, Dwght's sster, Mrs; T. D. Champln, Mss Jula El. Sheehan, daughter of Commssoner John Bheehan of Shrewsbury avenue, who^as been spendng the past fve weeks wth Mss Anne Powell of Pemberton, returned home on Monday. ' ;1 '- Harry Smock of Monmouth, street, who s employed by the Fdelty^and Casualty company of New York, and who has open enjoyng a week's vacaton, returned to work on Monday. Mrs. J. M. Mnugh of Broad street and her nece, Mss Mae EL Key'ser of Brooklyn, have returned from a trp to Eghtstown. Mrs. R. G. Bradford of Brooklyn s the gue3t of Mrs. MmRb. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Pollock of New York and ther daughter da, who have been spendng a month at the Garrson house on Broad street, returned home yesterday.. Clfton & Sherman's "Real Wdow Brown " company opens at Long Branchto-morrow nght. Mss Gertrude Smthof Maple avenue has sgned wth the company. John McUackenJ Jr., who s employed at Jersey Cty, was a Sunday guebt of hs parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Mc- Gacken of Shrewsbury avenue. Mss Bertha Krdel, daughter of Jacob Krdel of Broad street, who has been vstng Mss. Jula Snudmacl? of Phladelpha; has returned home. George Lang of Locust Pont, who haa been employed by Wllam Kelly of that plaqe for the past four years; s enjoyng a month's vacaton. "", ;. Mss Jenne Crag of Pemberton'has returned home after a vst to Mss Magge Rddle, daughter of Davd Rddle of Shrewsbury avenue. Mss Abbe Ellott of Maple avenue, who has been spendng several weeks wth Mrs. A. E.Wes of Asbury Park, returned home yesterday. "Vncent Pach of New York, who haa been spendng the summer wth hs grandfather, Morrs Pach of Monmouth' street, has>xeturned home. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Hoenemann of Newark vsted Mrs Hoenemann's parents, Mr. and Mrs.' J. H. Sckles of Mechanc street, on Sunday. Mrs. Frank Wnte of Gold street and her daughter Meta spent Sunday wth Mrs. Whte's father, Andrew S., Buckelew of Manasquan. Harry Noble, who s employed at Jersey Cty, spent Sunday and Monday wth hs mother, Mrs. Wllam! J. Sckles of Monmouth street., Corporal Howard B. Crenshaw and Prvate Alvn Curts of Fort Hancock made a short vst to frends at Red Bank on Sunday. Mrs., James B. s Weaver of Front street and Mrs. James C. Doughty of Oakland street spent Monday wth frends at Long Branch. Mrs. Charles Holmes and her brother, Henry Rblett of New York, have been vstng ther Bster, Mrs, Kate Smock of Broad street, - > Mrs. Henry N. Supp of Wallace street and he"r daughter Alce have returned 'from a vst wth relatves at Ocean Grove.. '# Mrs. Samuel Hubbard of New Brunswck spent part of last week wth Mr. and Mrs. John 8. Hubbard of Front street. jtbs Clara Knecht of.hobokon, who. haa been vstng frends at Red Bank and Far Haven, returned homo yesterday, '' MES Sade- Chamberlan of Catherno street, who s employed os a compostor on the Standard, s enjoyng a vaoaton. Lydu VaMater of Marlboro, who hds been vstng her unole, Samuel Campboll of Red Bunk, hns returned homo. Mrs, Hnrry VnnPelt of Marlboro n spendng a foyv duya wth hur>fltotor, Mrs. Oscar losec, Jr;, of Sprng street. J. LoRoy Hess has left Red Bank for Now York whore le 1B rohonrang wth Lodorer'n company at tlo casno. MBS Nottlo Conovor of Wnllaco otroot, who'tas been employed as panst at the Parker house at Sea Grt durng the summer, returned home on Sunday, Wallace Burton, who represents the Electrc vehcle company of New Jersey, spent part of last week here. Adams's.express company of.red Bank has receved a new express wagon to be used, for local delvery. Mrs, Ev$ rons of Seabrght spent Thursday wth Mr. and Mrs. J. W. J. Bonnell of Maple avenue.,.,, _ Mss Laura Patterson of Newman Sprngs has returned from a week's vst wth frends at New York. Oscar Wqodward ~ : 6f Long Branch Bpent Saturday and Sunday wth bs parents on Whte street. ' * Mss Emma Sckles of Mechanc street Pach of Broad Btreet.. John G. Mau'sser of Herbert, street spent Sunday wth Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Mertz of Lncroft. W. H. Mllcan, the state agent of the Unted States express company, was n town last Frday. Mrs. Davd E. Thompson of Red Bank and her son.clarence have been vstng at Atlantc Cty. " - Fred Asher of New York was a Sunday guest of W. H. Hamlton at the Sherdan hotel.' ; ". Clayton Scott of Shrewsbury avenue s employed ncook & Oakley'a plumbng shop..';'.. ' - JosjphKng of New York spent Sunday wth W,. H. Hamlton of Front street.. H, Waldo Curts of Ked Bank s vstng relatves at Bloomfeld and Montclar. '.''". H. Sherman & Co. wll open a branch meat market at Lakewood ths fall.. ' " Charles Hunter of New York s employed as water at the Sherdan hotel. George Parker of Washngton street s employed n Knapp's grocery store. Mrs. Harry Wortbley of Red Bank vsted at Mddletown on Sunda'y. Fred Curts s now actng as manager of the Sherdan hotel restaurant. Jacob W. Corn well has sold hs team of trotters to Solomon Ketcham. H. K. Ramsay of Bound Brook spent yesterday wth frends n town. W. Tabor Par,ker of Broad street spent last Frday at New York. Habt n a Horse's' Work. "When retred from the contract- ng busness a short tme ago," sad a well known man, " had a number of horses that was anxous to dspose of. Among them was one named Jerry, whch for several years had been used, to workng on a drum. n such work a horse becomes accustomed to lftng hs feet hgh to avod strkng the hostng ropes. When the horses' were put under the hammer, Jerry went to a Harlem grocer. "About a week later the purchaser of Jerry called at my house and told me that he had a lot of trouble wth the horse. He sad that'jerry would go a short dstance, when he' would stop short and lft hs feet hgh, and after dong ths would go a lttle farther, only to repeat t agan. told the grocer why the horse stopped short and lfted hs feet and also advsed hm to look up some contractor and sell the anmal to hm for hostng purposes. He dd so, notfyng me that he receved a larger prc _than he no d me for the horse." '. ~~"~': How He Got t... n- one of Chauncey M. Depew's stores he told of meetng a man as funny as hmself. "One day," sad Mr. Depew, " met a solder who had been wounded n the face. Ho was a Unon man, and asked hm n whch battle he hod been njured. * " 'n the last battle of Bull Run, sr,' he repled. "'But how could you get ht n the face at Bull Run? asked. " 'Well, sr,' sad the man, half apologetcally, 'after had ran a mle or. two got careless and looked back.'" Better to Have Wated, <,ho other mornng Jones turned up at the offce even later than usual. Hs employer, tred of watng for hm, hnd hmself set about regsterng the day's transactons, usually Jones' frst 'duty. Tho onraked'merchantlald he pen asldo very delberately and sad to Jonoa, very stornly ndeed, "Jones, ths wll not dol" "No, Blr," repled Jones gently, draw- ng off hs cont an ho glanced over bs employer's shoulder, "t wll not. You Javo entered McKurken's order n,tho wrong book. Far bettor to have wat-; cdtlllcamul" BOB of Thng*. "Dd you over reflect on tho mrnot Blty of thq Bolar ByBtoh?" "No. 'vo got my nln<l full reflectng on tho HZO of tho note have to pay noxt d 1 *^" 7 Dregs Well, _ t s not enough that people shall be Clad; tbey must be dressed. "Costly thy habt as thy purse can buy," was the advce of Polonns -to' bs son; "rch, But not gaudy,, for the apparel o'ft proclams the man," and- the advce s just as good today as t was 300 years ago*. ' 1 Resolutons of Respect, At a regular meetng of Shrewsbu/v Councl, No. 11,, order of Unted Amercan Mechancs, held on Tuesday evenng, September 4th, 1800,,the followng resolutons were unanmously adopted. WOHEAS: t has pleased Almghty God, the Great Archtect ot the unverse, to remove from among us our Mead and brother. James M. Sellers, vrho ded Aumst 24tb Therefore be t Rcolvea, That whle we numbly submt to the dvne wll t becomes to us to renter a Sung trbute to tte memory ot oar deceased brother. Eesolyed, That we. extend our sncere sympathy to the wdow and (atnly of our deceased brother n ths the tme o( ther bejf vement. Resolved, Tbat onr charter be draped lor a perod of thrty days; that copes of these resolutons be sent to tho famly of our deceased brother; tbat a copy be placed on fllo n our Councl Chamber, and ulsu be publshed n Tns RED BANK REGB- TEB. Respectfully submtted n B. A. and S. S. L. OBRE. CH KLES Drams, JOSEPH HULEK, Commttee. BRTHS. CASLEtt. At Oceatoport,,on Frday, September 7th, Mrs- Josepa easer, of a daughter. HAVLAND. At Brpoklyn, on Tuesday, SBptenber 4th, Mrs. Henry Morrs Ravlland, ot a son. ' HE8SENGER. At Bed' Bant, on Saturday, September 1st, Mrs. Wllam Hessenger, of a son.. VALENTNE. At Bed Bank, on Saturday, September ttr, Mre. Peter Valentne, of a daughter; WLSON. At Oceanc, on Sunday, September ftb, Mrs. John Wlson, Jr., ot a son. 3ABRAGES. ATCHEBON DLTS. At West Long Branch, on Wednesday, September Bn, by Eev. p. KrHageman of Mddletown; Mss, Hannah h. Atchesonof Jersey Cty and Frank B. Dllta of New York. HOLMES BEDLB.-rAt Keyport. on Wednesday,.September 5th, by Rev. O.B. Bmth, Mrs. Eva La- Quler Holmes and Joseph Dorsett Bedle. both of Keyport. '.';..., DJEATHS.. HENDRCK80S.-.At New Monmouth, on Frday, September 7tb, Anta, daughter ot James G. HendrlcBson. aged 9 moaths. STONEr. At Keyport, on \rednesday, Septem ber 6th. Anne M., wfe of Hon. A. B, Stone;, aged 52 years, 4 months and 3 days. _ UP HB HUDSON. Fopalar Excaralon va Penoarlranla Ralroad. ' ; On Saturday, September 22d, the Penpsylvana ralroad company wll run a- popular excurson tq West Pont (Cranston's Dock)! and off Newburgh, passng. Dunderberg, Anthony's Nose, Crow Nest and Storm Kng Mountans.. A specal tran wll be run to Jersey Cty and,the ron steamboat "STUS'" has been' specally", chartered for that day. The round trp, ncludng ral and boat rde, s but $1.25 from all statons on the New York and Long Branch ralroad, wth chldren'from lve to twelve years of age sxty-fve cents. Specal tran wll run as follows:. '. ' A. S.. Lv. Pont Pleasant :49 " Brelle. 6:43 " Mauusquan,...;;<.. 6:45 "..Seagrt ; \ a:4s "' Sprng Luke :5-2 ",Como,..,..:-.'<.. f 6:64 " Belmsr.....; ;.7...r 6:67 ' Avon...;.'...t:...16:69 " Bradley Beach,...f7:Ul " Asbury Park. '.., "'OceanGrove f >'..: '.«> " North Asbury Park ',: 7:07 " oterlafen ;..."... f7:c9 " Allenhurs 7:11 " Deal Beach... 17:14 " Elberon... ; : 7:17 " WestEnd T:S1 " Lontt Branch...,... 7:25 " Brancbport,..,.;'....'. 7:S8 " Lttle Slver. 7:33 " RedBank 7:38 ' Mddletown, '. 17:«" Hazlet ;. f7;53 " Matawan ;... ;-7:56 " Clfflwood f 7-59 " Morgan :. 8:03 South Amboy..A 8:03." Perth Amboy 8: Eefreshments wll be served at popular prces by the Keystone Hotel Con- P» nv '. Suberb musc, under the drecton of Professor Peterschen. One and a half hours may be spent at West Pont n vewng the world-renowned Unted States Mltary Academy.! W.[ MSSES CAHOUH & CHAHBERU^S HOMESCftOOL FOR GRLS, Maple Avcaac, Opposte rvne Place, RED BANK, N. J., Opens September 18, Thorough coll'tre preparatory course. Especal attenton gven to Languages and Musc. Prmary and ntermedate Classep. Torms for day pupls per quarter: Prmary Secondary prmary ntermedate t lacadcmlc 'MuBc (two lessons a week)... 15,00 Prvate lessons srven n LanptuaRes and MUBC. Msses Calbout & Chamberlan wll be at ther home on Maploavenuu,Red Bank. A(tcr8eptember lqtn applcaton may bo made at the school. FOR SALE. Second-hand lumber and buldng materal, for sale at Monmouth Park. nqure of M. t. VAN KEUREN, Eatontown, N. J. NOTCE. The Board of Educaton of Mddletown townshp request bds to furnsh from seventy to nnety tons (long'tons) Of "Plymouth, Red Ash coal," Bzes egg ^tnd stove, for the use of the schools n sad townshp The sad coal to be delvered and stored n places provded for the same n the dfferent schools, n such quanttes, such szes and at such tmes as may be determned by the trusr tees representng ther respectve dstrcts. ;.. :, : _' The board reserves,the rght to reject any or ajl bds, ;. '...'.. Bds to be n wrtng, sealed and ndorsed '' Bds for Coal," and delvered to the clerk on or before Thursday at two o'clock p. M., September 27th, HENRY C. TAYLOR, Dstrct Clerk, Mddletown, N. J. When you want a pleasant physc try the new remedy, Chamberlan's.Stomach and Lver Tablets. They are easy to take and pleasant n effect. ; Prce, 25 cents, Samples free at Chas. A. Mnton & Co.'s drug store, No. 8 Broad St. MONEY TO LOAN. bave qute a bg- fcukt of money to loan now and would lke to place t on Red Bank property t possble. HOUSES FOR RENT OR FOR SALE (o all parts of the town; $8 to 830 per month. FURNSHED HOUSES-WANTED. S P E C A L...';' bare a small house and lot for sale. Prce $1,600. Ths s a great bargan. W. A. HOPPNG, Heal Eatate. Trteao Buldng. RED BANK; & N. J. Telephone Call 48a. THE GREAT Mount Holly Far, XOVST HOLLY, XT. J., October 3d, 4th, 5th Greater Than Ever Before.. New ma&ar&tnent. ovnera, attractons and features, wth wblcb wll be combned new blood and sprt. Large stake, rac^s BDd a goodly-number of open classes. $S,0OO wll be pad n casl, purses and premums, u*n borses, cattle, agrcultural products and artcles n tbe wotned'a Fne Atts Department. The spacous dlddsr room under the grand stand, wth a Beatng capacty of seven buudred, wll be to chnrge of a [tret-class caterer and meals wll be sold n elegant style at reasonable prces. Handsome catalogue premum lst and entry Monks for stake ODd open class events wll be malle] upon applcaton to Samuel W. Bhlon, secretary. Mount Holly, N. J., or to Benajan P. Wlls, presdent. {S^Reduced rates on ralroads for passengere anl frelult. Coal anfood, \ Now s the tme to buy good coal before bad' weather comes.... keep n stock the best red and whte ash coals that can be bought and sell at the very lowest prces THOMAS P. BROWN, g 24 WHARF AVENUE. Bed Bank, Now Jersey, g 'A TELEPHONE NO. 27. S AGATEWARE V At Half Prce. 1 ' ' >:< CLEANS PURE, PERFECT *' AND DURABLE.. AT. THS SALE Coffee and Teapots ' 19c, Buckets wth Cover. 10c, 8-Quart Saucepan '. 15c. 2-Quart Mtk Pan 10c. PePlates... Oc. Cuspdors. 12c. Fry Pans.....;.'...> 10c. Culanders...:... /. 14c. J Teakettles 49o. \. AND MANY OTHERS AT TUTTLE'S 1. S % 48 BRffAD STREET, RED BANK. ana lo-cent ptore, HEAD WORK s brouebt nto actve nse n all PLUMBNG, STEAM AND GAS FTTNG Jobs undertaken by me. That la one reason wb? am ever successful and always Frst Exhbt RVB satsfacton. nave an extensve theoretcal and practcal fenowedge of my busness and use both n Olng orders. Not any too early to have the plurabn? put n order for the comng season. Trmmed Mllnery -OF- -AND- WtLtlAM O'BREN, 29 WEST FRONT STREET, BED BANK. N. 3 Thursday and Frday, September 20th and 21st. MRS. E. WES,, * '. ',. ' ' '. ' ' '. ' ' 7 Red Bank Temple of Fashon.

6 RED BANK LOTS SOLD. FVE PROPERTES CHANGED HANDS XAST WEEK. Jharles T. Leonard's house at Leonardo, A Resdence Bought Bu Dr. W. C. Attmtrona Sale of two lots on ear Atlantc Hghlands. He was behnd n hs rent and last week Mr. Leon- Peters Place- General John Slcehan Sells a Lot on Beach Street, ard receved an ntmaton that he was A number of lots n Red Bank have gong to.move out on a certan nght teen sold durng the past week. The and php hs goods away by a sloop that most mportant of these sales was the purchase of the Hoenemann house and lot On Wallace street by Dr. W. C, Armstrong. When Dr. J. E. Sayre sold hs, Broad street property to the Mercantle bank he moved hs house to the rear of the lot and fronted t on Wallace street. He practcally rebult the house, and soon after the work was completed he sold t to. Prof. W. B. Hoenemann, who' was then prncpal of the Oakland street school. Mr. Hoenemann occuped the house for a tttle. A couple of years ago he got a poston n Newark and he has moved there. Hs house and lot were offered for sale and last Saturday t was bought by Dr. W. C. Armstrong for $8,500. Dr. Armstrong wll occupy the - house as a resdence and offce. The lot has a frontage of 46 feet on Wallace street, t s 55 feet wde n the rear, and t s 75 feet deep. The sale was tnadaby Theodore F. Whte. ' After the frst sale of lots n a new localty, and the knowledge that a fne class of houses wll be bult there, prces always go up. Ths has proved to.be the case wth the lots on Peters place. When ths street was frst opened, lots sold at $1,000 each, A number of. fne resdences wll be bult ths fall, and the prces of the lots remanng unsold hare tfeen put up, The lots whch were frst sold are. also held at ncreased fgures. The frst lot on ths street to be resold s that owned by George F. Norman, who bought one of the lots on the Peters tract. He pad $1,000 for t. Last week t was sold by Theodore F. Whte to Herman Koch of Shrewsbury avenue for $1,200. Ths s $200 more than Mr. Norman pad for t, but he pays ths year's taxes, the cost of conveyancng, etc., and the-nterest on the purchase money also forms an tem of expense; but hs proft on the transacton wll be above $100 Mrs. Hetaan Koch,- who bought a lot oh' Peters^>lace some tme ago,, contemplates buldng a double house that wll cast about $4,000 on her lot. '. " ' - ' Mr. Whte has also gold a lot-on the Schroeder tract' on Peters place to Mss Mnne Cooper, daughter of the late George F. Cooper of Front street. Mss Cooper pays $1,200 for the. lot and she wll buld a resdence' on the property.. When the sale of,the^ Duffy property n Texas took place several months ago General John Sheehan bought fve lots on Beach street, The lots were about 50 f-<et front and they- were all n one plot. Mr. Sheehan pad $80 each for some of the lots and $75 each- for the others. He has rearranged the' lnes 6f the lots and has made sx lots out of the plot. Last week he sold one of these lots, 40x128 feet, to Mrs. Laura E. Davs, wfe of vns Davs of Red Bank, for $150. Mrs. Davs wll buld a house on the lot whch she wll occupy as a resdence. The Broadmeadow house and lot on West Front street, between Brdge avenue and the Southern ralroad, has been sold to Mrs. Mary M, Brown, who now lves on a farm at Newman Sprngs, adjonng the Rdgwny place. The lot s COxlOO feet. The house contans seven 1 ' rooms. The prce pad was $975. Mrs. Brown bought the property as an nvestment, The sale was made by Francs A. Whte. To Sue for Damages. Captan Wllam H. Seeley of Belford wll brng sut aganst,the Lorllard company of KeanBburg to recover damages for a schooner that wab wrecked aganst the Lorllard dock a lttle over a year ago, The schooner dragged her anchor durng a storm and went to peces aganst the dock. The sut wll bo based on the fact thut tho Lorllard dock extonds 800 feet beyond the establshed per lne and s therefore an obstructon n the bay. The schooner wont to peces at tho end of tho per and the Captan clams that f the per had not extended beyond the establshed per lne the accdent would not have happened. Navosluk Property Sold. Robert EdcBot, a summer readont of NaveBnk, who bought the Baptst pnrflonago property at Navesnk soveral years ago, and who has snco occuped tho pln'co as a summer home, bus sold tho property to a MUM who wts n hs employ on ho plnco ths summer. Mr. uul Mrs. Edeson wll conduct a boardng loueo n Hummer and wll engage n chcken ranng. Keepng Prnter* Prnters' promses hnvo become almost n, by-word. When Tut tcabtbt promloou to havo certan work dono (t a certan tme, nothng short of n catastrophe prevents tho fulfllment of tho pronloo Adv. A CONSTABLE'S VGL. An Attempt to Uteal a Starch on a Landlord. Matthew Olsen has been lvng n Chunk and the Delaware Valley; specal ay*'n the bay. Mr. Leonard got Con-trajstable Joseph Johnson to watch the A.M.; on other, dates specal'tran wll wll leave Broad street staton 8:00 louse all nght so as to. attach the goods leave Phladelpha at 8:10 A. M. n case Olsen attempted to move. Whep Round-trp tckets wll be sold at $10 from Phladelpha, Baltmore, Washngton, and all ponts on the Delaware d- mornng dawned and no attempt had been made by Olsen' to move, Constable vson ; $11.85 from AtlantorCJty; $9.60 Johnson gave up hs vgl vand went from Lancaster; $B.5O fronl Altoona home. The, constable had been gone and Harrsburg; $6.90 from Sunbury and Wlkesbarre; $5.75 from Wllamsport;' but a. few mnutes when Mr. Leonard and at proportonate rates- from other saw Olsen loadng hs furnture on a ponts, ncludng Trfcnton, Mt. Holly, wagon, He hurred to Atlantc Hghands and got out an attachment aganst Palmyra, New Brunswck, and prncpal ntermedate statons,, For descrptve pamphlet, tme of connectng trans, stop-over prvleges, and Olsen that was served on hm before he got bs goods aboard the boat. Olsen further nformaton apply to nearest pad up hs back rent and the goods were released. mprovements. C. C. Flemng of Englshtown s puttng a new floor and new metal walls and celng n hs hotel. A bluestone walk s'to be lad n front of the hotel.. Frank Hendrckson, who lves near Freehold, s buldng a new barn to re. place the one blown down by the recent tornado. The barn s 33x51 feet. Deeds Recorded. The followng real estate transfers have been recorded n the offce of the county clerk at Freehold for the week endng September 8th, 1900:... SHREWSBURY TOWNSHP.. Robert Allen, Jr, and others to Amos Blrdsall. Lot at ted Bank, $8,030. Amos Blrdsall to Wllam Applegate, Jr. Lot at Red Bant. $,0O0. George F. Norman to Herman Koch. Lot at Red Bank. 1,200..George O. Waterman, ex'r, to Jobn Clmdwlck. Lot at Far Haven, $125. MDDLKTOWN TOWNSHP. ' John West to Oscar Hesse. Pece of property, Joseph T. Feld and others to Oscar Hesse. ol property, Pece Obadlah E. Davla, sherff, to Frst.Natonal bank of Freehold. 2 lots at Hghlands ATLANTC HQHLANDB. Joanna Rltterband to Dora Rltterband. Lots 162, 103,671, 072 and 673 at Atlantc Hghlands, also lot near Long Branch, $ EATONTOWN TOWNSHP. Bloomfleld D. Wolcott to Charles F. Aumack. Pece of property, 855. Henry Corles to PaXl Wolcott. Lot at Gatontown, 83T.0. - RARTAN TOWNSHP. Hattle S. Tllton and husband to Charles H. Cherry..Lot at Keyport, $850. OCEAN TOWNSHP. ' John reland to Martha Keenan. Pece of property, Lews Edwards and others to sabella Gatewood. Lot at Long Branch, $1,200. Lews Edwards to Emma Benjamn. Lot at Long Branon, $8,800. Leonora Joehnlg and husband to John Burke. Lot at Long Branca, $4,000. J. Wesley Seaman to John B. Osborn. Lot at Long Branch, $50. Church of our Lady Star of Sea, Long Branch, to Eleanor L, Vandoren. Part of lot at Long Branch, $800. Belgmond T. Meyer to Synagogue House Merlam, etc. Lot at Long Branch, $1. Nelle Meyer to Wllam S. Hull. Lots at Long Branch, $1,000. : James Paulson to Charles H. Ames.' Lot at Long. Branch. $485. John Burke to Mary K. Byrom. Lot at North Long Branch. $1. Martha Carbart and husband toadele Hover, Lot at North Long Branch. $1,260. Mary K. Fay W Rebecca t. McDanel. 2 lots at Deal Beach, $1. Charles J. McDanel to Mary K. Fay. 2 lots at Deal Beach, $1: Anne E.Ettenhouso to Anna M. Austn. Lot at Deal, 81,450.. Charles S. Brown and others, ex'r. to Danel Ouggenholner. 2 lots at Elberon, $45,000. NKPTUNK TOWNSHP. George R. Lord, ex'r, to Stephen MoTague. Lot at West Asbury Park, $115. Ocean Grove Camp Meetng Assocaton to Frst Methodst church. Ocean Park. Lot nt Bradley Beach. S. Mary E. Roso and husband to Benjamn M. Phllps. Lot at Ocean Grove, $2,500. WAL TOWNSHP. Hannah A. Hulett to Nlles M. Mller. Lot at Key East, S. Wllam Downey, ex'r, to Grace W. Davs. Lot at Ocean Park, $500. FMfKOLD TOWNSHP. S. Perrno Voorhees and others to Elza Q. Voorbera. Lot at Freohold. S0O0. Wllam MoDormott to Kullof P. Smock and others, Lot at Freehold, $80. Frances E. McUratb and husband to James Mc- Nlnnle. Lot at Freehold, $600. HOWKLL TOWNSHP. Fanny O. Young to Albert 8. Larrabeo. Pece o property, $1,085. ' MANALAPAN TOWNSHP.. Charles H. Clayton to Horato Clayton. Plecoo property, $4110. REDVCBD KATES TO RCHMOND. Va Pennsylvana Ralroad, Account of Meetng of the Soveregn Grand Lodge,. O. O. V. For the meetng of the Soveregn Grand Lodge,. O. O. F., to be held at Rchmond, Va., September 17-22, tlu Pennsylvana ralroad company wll set excurson tckets to Rchmond, from al statons ol ts lne, at the rate of one fare for the round trp. Tckets wll be sold and good gong September 14th, 15tl and 10th and wll be good to return unt September 25th, nclusve, For partculars n regard to stop-off at Phladelpha, Baltmore and Washngton, consult nearest tcket agent. N. J. WLSON, DEALER N DRY GOODS, BROAD STREET, HOSERY, &o. NOTOHS, RED BANK, N. J NAGARA. PALLS. EXCURSONS.- low. Bate Personally -Conducted Trlp«va Pennsylvana Ralroad. September 6th and 20th, October 4th and 18th are the remanng dates for the Pennsylvana ralroad company's populor ten-day'excursons to Nagara Falls from Phladelpha, Baltmore and Washngtoo. Specal tran wll leave Washngton 8:00 A. M., Baltjrftore Offe A. M. Excurson of September 20th from Phladelpha wll run" va Manunla tcket agent, or address George W. Boyd, Assstant General Passenger Agent, Broad Street Staton, Phladelpha. Have you a sense of fullness n the regon of your stomach after eatng? f so you wll be benefted by usng Chamberlan's Stomach and Lver Tablets. They also cure belchng and sour stomach. They regulate tle r bowels too. Prce, 25 cents., Sold by Chas, A. Mln ton & Co., No. 3 Broad St. 4 WAX Don't te the top of your Jel lelly and preserve jars n ho old fabboned way. Seal them by the new, quck, absolutely sure way by a thn coatng of pure, refned Paramne Wax. Has no taste or odor. s ar tght and acd proof. Easly appled. Useful n a dozen other ways about the house. Full drectons wth each pound cake. Bold everywhere. Made by STANDARD OL CO' SOMETMES YOU EAT TOO MUCH SOMETMES YOU DRKK TOO MUCH Sometmes you do both Leavng a bad to*te, clouded bran and genera rocky, feelng for the ret day. JOHNSON'S Wll Brace Yon Up. Nothng Ba'srood for Stomach Troubles, Blousness or Malara, and none so cheap. Large Box, 10 Cents (»5 Tablets.) By mal,for fve 3-centatamps. Made at Tho Johnson Laboratores. nc., Phladelpha. James Cooper, Jr.,. Broad and Whte Streets. M. L. H^lyw oud Co., 168 Monmouth Street. SfWSt Now s tbe tme to bare all the fences axed before the snows and freezng ground set n. Delays are dangerous. Let me put you up some of the Perfecton Sprng Lock Wre Fence and all the trouble of mendng fences s past for the next twenty years. can buld them any heght, as many wres and stays as you want, and furthermore every wre s the best heavy galvanzed steel wre that can be made. Sond and get crculars and prces and learn more of the best fence of the nneteenth century. Estmates cheerfully gven on ether farm or lawn fencng. GEORGE N. CONKL N, Agent for Monmoutaco. Mddletown N. J, FALL STYLES OF HATS Now ARE AT READY Curts& Son's.! BROAD STREET, fj RED BANK, N. J. FRANCS WHTE, Real Estate, Loans and nsurance, Front Street, Red Bank, N. J.. o - MONEY TO LOAN. have the followldff sups; , $6,000, $2,000, $400, $4,000, and several otter sums raulnfr from to $1,500. Money can be bad at once U all condtons are rght. 6 per cent and as lone as you : maywantlt.....,. > '- ' MVER PBOPEBTJt. '.., have a pece contanng 13 acres. 638 feet good. Tnls wll sell' for $13,000; termb" easy. 800x1000 Se,600; 300x300, S5.U00; 100x1(0. $8,000; 248x900, $77,000; 600x1000, $S0,000. 6everal other parcels; Rver property 19 advancng all the tme as t becomes better Known. GENTLEMAN'S RESDENCE'AT SHREWSBURY.. House 40x45. steam heat, 7 bedrooms on second floor, frut, lawns, near trolley, lot 160x800. wll sell for SO.OOO; easy terms. Larje double house on Maple avenue n fne order; to settle estate wll sell for $8,000; $1,400 can reman. > TO EXCHANGE FOJEt FABM. Two double houses, well rented, never vacant, on leadng street; farm must be n good order and n good localty. 13.acres.Kood house, 600 feet road front. 8 mles from Red Bank, ; fne frut and poultry farm. Farm, 10a acres, rult. wll sell to wnd up estate lor ; $1,000 cash. Farm near Eed Bank, good stocu farm, llo acres, prce 815,000; terms verv easy. 25 acres on road to Lnoroft. near Red Bank, no buldngs, wll sell for $s!,500; terms very easy. Double house on Borden street, 88,400. House on lne of trolley, \% acres, large lawn, house contans 14 rooms, prce 82,800; $800 cash. V:.. -. ; _.. _. TO LET,, ' ". " :, ' ; ' Maple avenue, twe neat cottages, $85. Broad street, two houses. $35 and 821. Wallace street, house, cas, water and furnace, $16. Houses on Rversde avenue, Beach street, Lelglton avenue. Rector Place, Front street, Throckmorton street, and Locust avenue; also cottage at Lttle Slver, rent 88.00; pretty. NSURANCE N THE BEST COMPANES. Offce of the Trenton Buldng Loan and nvestment Company;/captal ten mllons. Property apprased and cared for. Rents collected, repars made, etc. After 5;30 rents can be left wth my son, Clarence Whte, at hs shoe establshment, 9 Brood street. Offce'opposte Globe hotel, Front street. FRANCS WHTE. Rany Day and Walkng Skrts. Every desrable knd n Blue, Brown, Gray and Black mxtures, plad or plan back materals, cut n the latest styles' and perfect hangng shapes, every skrt talored n the best possble manner, all prced to sut your purse from $1.98 to A Sale of Percale Wrappers. Wrappers made of the best qualty percale, all warranted fast colors, your choce of several elegant patterns n strpes, pqlka dots and fgures, made n a varety of styles, all have a deep _. flounce, 3^2. yards wde, body lned and bound arm-holes, a qualty worth',$1.25, here at 95c. Grand Dsplay of New Fancy Hosery. Lades' New mported FANCY HOSERY," every concevable shade and style. The new vertcle strpe, plads, dots and fgures, plan and drop-sttch, lsle and Egyptan thread. These are postvely the newest thngs n hosery, and a great many are our exclusve styles for ths secton. They are prced at 39c, and 49c, ADVANCE SHOWNGS Fall Talor-made Costumes, Jackets, Rbbon, Jewelry, Velngs, Flannel and Slk Wasts, Pettcoats, Musjn Underwear and nfants' Caps. ABROAD STREET, RED BANK. N.J. f You Were Dssatsfed Wth that last jdb of plumbng or tnnng that the other ' fellow dll, call on mo the next tme, 'll do my beat to make tho work satsfactory., JAMES FTZCBBON, Wharf Avenue. led Hank. Schroeder's Har Tonc should be used three or four tmes.a week to get the best results. Ffty cents a bottle at Schroeder's pharmacy. V

7 MARLBORO NEWS. { A $8,000 HOUSE. Howard Cook Fall* JFVon a Ths Attractve Cottage Contans and Breaks Hs Arm.' Eght Rooms and JD<fth. Howard Cook was playng on a farm The buldng herewth presented s of wagon on Frday when he fell and fractured hs arm. The underpnnng s constructed of red a plan desgn, and the plan s excellent. Haselton Wllams of Phladelpha, brck lad up n red mortar. The superstructure 1B bult of wood and s covered who.husbeen spendng several months wth Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Sherman, wth clapboards panted olve green, wth has returned home." Mrs. Edward Schanckof Brooklyn and her son Harold, who nave been spendng the summer wth Mr. and Srs. Henry Hay wood, have also returned home;, Mss Clara C. Smth, who has been takng a sx weeks' course n bble study, returned home pn Tuesday. She spent Sunday wth Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Smth bfpemberton. ' ". John Holland and,m. N. Smth spent Saturday at Morrell's Corner, lookng after Mr. Smth's cranbury bog. The crop s very lght. 4 ' ' Aaron Vanaerveer, who s employed by George Parker of Long Branch, spent Sunday wth hs father, Joseph Augustus Vanderveer. Mes 8arah VanSchock of Msnasquan s vstng Mrs. Perrne Cook, MasEUe Heyer of Brooklyn s vstng her sster, Mrs. J. D. Ely. ' Wllam Mller of New York, who has been spendng the summer wth Mr. and Mrs. John Neberlan, has returned home... " - Homer Smth, who ran the elevator at the Resort house at Pont Pleasant dur- ngthe summer, has returned borne. Hepry Wllett accdentfy sat down n Frank T. Burke's ol tank a few days ago and runed a par of trousers.., ' Msses/Lzze and Mary-Martne wll attend Moody's tranng school at Northfleld, Massachusetts, ths year, Henry Hay wopd took a number 'of f >ersons BSt Wednesday to the Robertsvlle nght. harvest home : Mss T. Mnkeraon of New York spent Sunday wth' her brother, Hezekah Mnkerson. Mr. and Mrs. John "Hardy of New York are spendng a few days wth Mrs. Dugan. ' - Mrs. D. VanDorn of Manasnuan spent Sunday here wth-mss Laura VanDorn. Herbert Wyckoff of Dunellen vsted Rev. and Mrs. A. T. Martne last week. Mss Elta Jones of Holmdel spent last week wth Mss Nelle Schanck. James Henry Mnkerson s puttng a new roof on hs barber shop.. Nelle Russell spent Saturday at New York. m * HOLMDEL NEWS. An Attack vf Xervous Prostraton. A Tall Cornstalk, Alex Guy has a co'rnstalk ted to a post on the_ porch of hs Btore that measures sxteen feet, four nches. t has one ear of corn on t, and ths s eght feet from the base. The stalk grew n John S. Holnes's cornfeld. Dr. F. V. Thompson: s at the Long Branch hosptal to be treated for typhod fever. Hs famly s vstng Mrs. Thompson's father, Mr. Gassn of Belmar. ' Msses Rhoda and Hulda Holmes' of ths place and Msses Ella and Anne Thome of Matawan are spendng a few days at Saranac Lake, New York. Walter Melee of New York Cty ysted hs mother, Mrs. Margaret Melee, on Saturday. Mr. Melee s n busness on Eghth avenue, New York Cty. Sr. and Mrs. Tuns Sckles andamly, and Mr. Sckles's nece, Pearl Sckles of Allenhurst, went on a pcnc to Clff wood "on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. John S. Holmes, Joseph and John Holmes, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Ely have gone to Saratoga for a few days. Mss Sarah Armstrong was taken sck on Suuday of last week -wth nervous prostraton. She s now mprovng. Msses Emma and Marea Cox of Brooklyn nre vstng ther uncle, 'Wllam R. Crawford. A strawrde party of eghteen from Shrewsbury stopped at ths place last Frday ngbt. ' Oceanport News, TheTntern water company s drvng plng near the east brdge on whch ther ppes wll run over the rver. The company s layng ts water ppes through town. The talans who lve n the house near Parker's creek brdge, and who dg the trenches and lay the ppes, went on strke on Monday because they had not been pad the wages due them for over a month. They were promsed money several tmes but dd not receve t. * They spent the day sttng under the trees and n crabbng oa the brdge. The company had a small force of men at work. The Oceanport school opened on Monday. Mlo. Crego of Belraar s the prncpal and Mss Lzze Durnell of ths place s assstant. Each teacher held the same poston last year. Danel Sweeney of Brown's Mlls N. J., vsted hs son, Alexander Sweeney on Sunday.. Srs. Joseph Mertz of New Brunswck spent last week wth her father, Charles B, Champln. Thomas Felds of Mount Holly was a Sunday guest of hs uncle, Clayton Felds. E. C. Maps of Yonkers spent Sunday wth hs. mother, Mrs. Lyda-A. Maps. Ohapol Bll News. Mss Sade A. Applogate, who ho been vstng rolatvob at Farmngdale, s now the guest of her aunt, Mrs. John W. Eylea of Seabrght^ LoRoy Eyles of Seabrglt, who lne been vatng lte grandfather, Petor 9. Conover, has roturned home. Mr. nnd Mrs. Wllam Prloo of Allendale, llnos, and ther son Tracy, who havo been epondlng tho summer wth Mrs. Prlco'H mother, Mre. EUzabetl Tracy, lmve roturned home. -.Blanche and Margaret Patterson, Elm M. Bennett, Walter Wallng and Poroy H. Evana attend school tt Rod Bank. Charlwt Bonnott spont part of lam wools wth hs undo, Hnrry Marks, ol Morrs Park, Long sland. Man Hatto Patterson las returned to the state normal dohool «t Trenton. t pays to advertse n Tnn RKCBTEH bottle green-trmmngs. The roof s shn- ;led and left natural. Dmensons front, 18 feet; sde, SO feet; heght* of celngs cellar, 7 feet; frst story, 9 feet; second story, 8 feet 6 nches. The nteror s trmmed wth pne fnshed natural. The hall has an ornamental starcase and s connected wth, * KHST FXOOB PLAN. ' :? parlor by an openng fve feet wde, wth a fancy turned grll overhead. The parlor has a wood mantel of excellent desgn and s separated from the dnng room by sldng doors. The ktchen s ftted up wth-modetn fxtures, such as a porcelan snk, soapstonc tubs and a galvanzed ron boler,. r The second story has three large rooms and bath, wth open fxtures and nckel SECOND FLOOD PLAT'. plated ppes and traps whore exposed, Tbctro s a box stars leadng to the attc, whch contans two Bleepng rooms and nmplo room for storage, makng n al eght rooms and bath. Cost to buld, $2,000.' Cleanng Waxed Floors, Common kerosene s excellent for clean ng floors. Frst sweep tho Door nn carefully dust t before applyng the kcro none. Do not uso much kerosene at v tme, Wlon the floor s drty, however, apply t wth a brush, usng only us mc, no wll clean the floor. Do a Bmnll spue ot a tme. Then rub tho ol up wth ttoft nbsorbont flannel doth. t a floo has been waxed properly from tho begn nlng, there wll be no great trouble. t l dlolcut to get workmen to upend tlrn enough on floors to wax them, and t 1 hard for many pcoplo who Uuvo tho wor dono to undcrntnnd "that labor nnd tlm nlono wll produce tlo propor polsh. Th majorty of pcoplo want a floor flnlslo "pormunontly." t s not jopmlblo to RC a floor fnshed permanently or so that 1 wll no on for any groat length of tm wthout any further enro than sweepng. *"7 " Jt payo to advortoo n THE The Mantle. The mantel of a room s* ts most'con: spcnous 'feature, as ths la almost the frst thng, we notce upon enterng, and a room n whch a mantelpece s lackng ;au never be qute satsfactory, no mat- :er how ornamental the shelf or wall cabnet that supples the place. Stll t s not always possble to have a mantel n every room of the house, for. the regular mantel means a chmney as wel, and t s only the superor class of modern bouses whch are suppled wth open freplaces n every room. t s an added expense whch many feel they must do wthout even when buldng a 1 new house, or there may not be a chmney convenent, and an extra chmney.' means extra money, and ths perhaps s the reason why mantel dealers keep on hand- a good stock ofornameotal shelves wth mrror* and cabnets for decoratng walls.-' The Ktchen. The possble, deal and already exstng ktchen has a hard wood floor and rounded cornera, and.the walls are whte tled fve feet op and ether soapstone, plaster fnshed or enamel panted on up to the celng, says the Phladelpha Press. Buff s te best tone to use. The wndows of a ktchen should run. up almost to the celng to allow the hot vapors ot.cookng; to escape. The best placed ranffe s s an alcove, wndowed on each sde,' and t s "hood- Ad" BO that the hood flue draws up all escapng dust, smoke or gas.' The dust flao tf rtafly mportant, but the success of every range depends upon ts beng kejjt properly clean.. To Clean Ol Pantngs. Take the pcture down from the wall; dust off all cobwebs and. drt, wash the canvas wth a sponge and water and cover, t wth shavng soap for a-few mnutes. Wash ths off wth.a^brush, and when the mosture has dred; rub the canvas wth a lnen' rag soaked wth ntrobenzne. ' Ths wll, leave, the pantng clean but dull'of surface,'butths defect may be remeded by. an applcaton of olve ol and a fnal coatng of fne colorless varnsh.' Glt framf8-can-^be brghtened by a washng of onon, water, obtaned by bolng some, cut onons and mashng them 'to extract tho flud,-.. Ponts n Buldng 1. One rule follow n choosng your plan and buldng have a square hall and flghts of stars; wth rght angle' turns. There can be no dversty of opnon on ths pont ' Have no straght, stars and no wndng: ones; Wascot the walls on. the starcase, 1.of the handlng of trunks and furnture wll scar and mar t' so that repars wll cost more tljan Would the orgnal proper buldng... Have jour- bqler, ; col or tank "wrapped." That 'means,' have t plastered n after the new method by a nonconductng plaster, nnd keep the heat n. You'll always'have hot water- f you do.- Concernng Hedegs. Dp away wth. fences. Establsh n hedge. Avod tbe : osage ordnge, as ta ro6ts stretch out wldly, robbng the lawn of nutrton. The hemlock and spruce o tew nstances are successful, too frequently the undergrowth dyfg out. Select the Calforna prvet, rapd n growth and obedent to the hedge cutter's shears. The prvet hedge s beautful n summer tme, but the charm of tho green and volet mass when lghted by the late afternoon, sun of a day n early wnter s beyond the possblty of mere verbal descrpton. ^.» 'Walks and Drves. Hayng establshed the house and other buldngs on your premses, lay out the drves and walks, says the Phladelpha Press. Do not have a straght lne or even a true arc n the whole plan. Take a long rope and throw t wth a snap from pont to pont between the placefl you would connect, and you wll have undulatng, restful curveb, nothng stff and wearsome by reason of ts stffness. WalkB must be dry. Dran them and let ther foundatons be porous, mada of broken stone. The Open Fre Place. The majorty of men wll probably lke to have at least one good, large, open freplace n the house. Ths wll be a source of great joy nnd comfort. Much art and ngenuty may be expended on the freplace. t s not only, healthful, bu economcal, for n the sprng and fall one can lght a fre here nght and mornng and save the cost of lghtng the furnace. t s an obvous economy to have ell too smoke go up on» chmney, Closet Arrangement. The average heght of women s 5 fee' 2 nches, but rarely does one fnd a house n cty or country to whch any attenton has been pad to ths fact n arrangng the closets. Sometmes the hocks are placed fully sx feet from the floor. Buldng Btes. Buldng stes should be clean and dr? and ought also to allow abundant fren ar to all occupants of tbo structures erected there. Grovel and other porous nals, wth permeable Bubsolls, are^to bo preferred. ' _ ~" Look After tho Plumbng. Sec that your plumbng s beyond reptonch. t may seem to you as n mcro bagatelle untl you como to pay that lt tn bll, say?0 fr a lcakv Scourng Proporton. Ordnary m«rbl* dn»t (whch may b* proourod from < any marble cuttng OBtnb* ll>hm«nt) and soap make th* best preparaton tor oourtoa. ChnrlcH A, Mnt on & Co,, druggsts, havo a now and relable kd glo v«cleaner. t s not a lqud, lcavos no odor an can bo used whlo tho RQVO n on tn hand. ALLARE & SON, TELEPHONE 3S-b. 20 Broad Street. Red Bank, N. J..'.... ' - S E L L '.. _ '., ' '.. NSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE. REPRESENT HOME NSURANCE COUP ANY OF NEW YORK AND OTHER LEADNG COMPANES. ESTABLSHED &n. THEODORE F. WHTE, [Real Estate, nsurance and Loans," RED BANK, Roomg 1 and 2, Regster Buldng, -O-- NEW JERSEY. have a demand for small farms of from thfee to ten acres, wth house (and outbuldngs, hear Red Bank. can sell several such places at once,!* f.prce and locaton are satsfactory. Persons C who have places of ths knd whch they want to X 1 sell can quckly get a customer by puttng the :«: property n my hands. THEODORE F. WHTE. :l 1900 and 1901 Fall and Wnter Stock Now Ready. v CORLES, MERCHANT TALOM BROAD STREET, RED BANE, N. J. 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,. < 1V RUNABOUTS,, j SURRES, BUGGES, j TRAPS, ; SPEEDNG WAGONS,. ' ; BUSNESS WAGONS, t \ SPNDLE WAGONS, / JUMPSEATS, ETC. \ These wagons are the new styles, well ' bult, very desrable n every way, and very : reasonable n prce. F. B. GOWDY, Nearly Opposte Globe Hotel, FRONT STREET, RED BANK, N. J.»»»»»» OLD AND PURE WHSKES. Tho best n Ucd Bank can bd found ot (ho store of cr. j. -A.qsrTO3srr>B3s,. South HMe 0/ /Von* Street, Xear tlfoatl Htreet. You wll l»o sotlhflod wltl U10 nunllty anl prloo. A full Bsorlmont (t 014 Whlgklun and UrnmloD.nnd tlo x'st mport«(l am Domontla Wlnct, Aloo rotcn, Ac, *o.' Kxtroct of Malt, (1.60 por loo pnts, 1 mute n«(mx;lolty of C'lnnljorlnfn's Old, Cabnet nycukod 10 ycara. aalon $4,70; full quart, $1.

8 OCEANC NEWS. The Junor Eptcorth League Goes. on a Pcnc to Anbury Park. The Junor Epworth. league went on a pcnc to Asbury Park on Thursday. The trp was nade by stage. The chldren who wf-nt were Jesse Brower, Volet Wllkme, Ouda, Etta, Lzze and Barry Rex, dares Emery, Zola Emery and Molho Emmons, Mss.Adde Sewng, superntendent of the league, Mrs. Dewtt Brower and Mss Margaret Rex, went, along to look after the chldren. Joseph Maboney,'Oceanc's swft swmmer, had a frendly swmmng match on Sunday wthaproesaonalswnner from New York.. The dstance was a hundred yards and the professonal was an easy wnner. After the match the professonal swan 75 yards as an exhbton and made the dstance n 45 seconds. The professonal Bad that Mahoney was the swftest amatuer swmmer that he had ever ran across and sad that wth a lttle tranng le would be auletnnake the best of them hustle. The Methodst church wll ""have an all-day servce "on Sunday, September '23d, n celebraton of (.he recent extensve mprovements to the church. Rev. Marshall Owens of Mount Holly, a former pastor, wll preach n'the mornng, Presdng Elder J, L Roe wll preach n the afternoon, and Rev. E. C. Hancock of Red Bank wll preach at nght, Mr. Hancock!- was the second pastor of the church, succeedng Rev. W. P. C. Strckland, who afterward became presdng elder. A concert wll be gven by professonal talent n the Presbyteran church en Frday nght for the beneft of the Sunday-school. The entertanment wll consst of vocaland nstrumental musc and rectatons, Those who wll take part are Mrs. Elzabeth Northrop, soprano ;' Mrs, A. F. Rejchelt, reader; Mrs. Ferdnand Torran, panst; Mss lart Johnstone, volnst; Mss Kate Stella Burr, accompanst; and Ferdnand Torran, bartone. Mss Clara Goodman, who has been spendng a week.at Oornwall-on-the- Hudson,. Mss Rube Rddle, who has been spendng the summer wth Mrs. Frank Supp of Red Bank, and Mss Eye Bogle, who has been spendng a week wth Mrs*. Henry Punchard of New York, have returned hcjne.. Turn's Barkaloo, James Enrght, John Youmans and Charles T. Allen are attendng the conventon of the State fremen's relef assocaton at Atlantc Cty as delegates from the Oceanc fre company. They wll return home on Frday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry NormaD, who have been spendng the summer at the Pavlon hotel, have returned to New York. Mr. Norman s an actor by professon and he. took part n the "sle of Champagne" at Pleasure Bay.' Capt. Elsha Keach. who was taken suddenly sck about two weeks ago wth bran trouble, and who was recoverng, has had a relapse and*s now n a more dangerous condton that at any tme Bnce he wab strcken. Mss Kate Mahoney, daughter of Patrck Mahoney, s sck wth typhod fever at New York, where she s engaged n the dressmakng busness. Mrs. Mahonev has gone to New York to care for her daughter. Mrs. Eleanor Ttus of Eatontown s spendng ths week at Oceanc. She dvdes her tme between the home of her daughter, Mrs. Harry Harvey, and the home,of.her son, L. B. VanNest, Jr. Mrs. John T. Nagle and her mother, Mrs, E, H. Boarduan,' are spendng ths week at Atlantc Cty. Dr. John T. Nagle s attendng the Democratc state conventon at Saratoga. J.. Glmour's famly, who have been lvng n the Whtmore cottage, have returned to thek home at New York for the wnter and Dr. Whtmore has returned to hs cottage. The nfant son of Mr. and Mrs. saac rvng ded at the Babes' hosptal at East Oceanc on Thursday. T e funeral was held on Saturday and the body was bured at Lncroft. Mss Emly Pearsall has resumed her dutes as teacher at the Waysde publc school and Mss Besse Kuln has returned to Rutherford to teach for another year. Dewtt Scott wll lead the Epworth league meetng at the Methodst church on Sunday nght. The subject wll be "The broud way; the narrow way." Mr. and Mrs. T. L. (Jauer of Brooklyn are vstng Mrs. Camer's mother, Mrs. Kuhu. Mr. Gamer has jst returned from a European trp. Mr. am Mrs. Henry Smmons of Pater son andther daughter Mary are spendng ths week wth Mrs. Smmons's cousn, Mrs. Charles Dxon. Mrs. George Emery and her daughtpr, Mrs. Abrnrn Herbert, who have been vstng at Pont Pleasant, have returned homo. Msa Jesse Harvey lms gone to New York to spend the wnter wth her sster, who s conductng a kndergardun school there. Mss Grnco lassard, who s spendng tljo summer at Sebago Lake, Mane, s expected home to-morrow, George A. Curts, who has been sck th ph week wth nflammaton of the bowels, s mprovng, Mrs. Charles Cameron of Deal Beach and her son Charles spent Frdny wth Mr«. J. UHbertson. Mrs, Rebecca Bennett of Ocean Grovo UH b'on vstng Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jeffrey. Mr. and Mrs. L. B. VanNest, Jr., nnt ther chldren spent Sunday at Eatontown. MH, Duwtt Suott and her son Edwan lmvo h'on vtutng relatves nt Anbury Park. Charles Jeffrey n puttng n now Bhtnglo roof on he house. Mra,.. Stryker s upendng several weeks n the CatHklls. mvo the solo agency for Red Bank for the :.'lobntt(!u Carntare whnkoy, whch experto nay n tho fluent mdo. Frod Prck, Sherdan Hotel. Adv. Tun RKHSTBU prnts more news than nny other Monnouth county paper prfnto t better and prnts moro ncou ra'.aly. Tho paper couta $1.50 u year. EATONTOWN NEWS. 4 Church Clears 88O by a Valr-A, Hat Factory Resumes Work. A far was. held n Crescent hall last Thursday and Frday for the beneft of the Methodbt church, and $33 was cleared. The. hat factory has resumed work after havng "been closed for geveral about here. At ths season the foxes do weeks. Edward Lppncott, who hasnot trouble the farmers much, as they been engneer for the past ten years, s can get rabbts, ^ual, etc., for food; but now the nght watchman at E, C. Hazard's cannng factory' at Shrewsbury. suffer. Two "dogs started a fox early n towardfall the chckens are expected to Mr. Lppncott took the place of Austn Sprngsteen,,who wab promoted<to the place of engneer at the cannng factory. Samuel Aumack has taken Lppncott's place at the hat factory., Charles Breese, who left ths place about four months ago, returned last week and s now employed.by Rulef F. Hooper. Mr. Breese's parents: knew nothng of hs whereabouts whle he was away. He says he has been work ng n llnos, John Johnson,'wHo formerly worked for Mr. Hopper, s now employed pckng tomatoes for Benjamn John Parker of Shrewsbury. The publc school opened on- Monday wth Professor Frank Tlton as prncpal and Mss Mabel Smock and Mss Sarah R. Everett as assstants. Fred and Besse Morrs, George Leukel, Raymond and Walter VanKeuren- and George Denns attend school at Red Bank ths year. Besse Denns attends school at Long Branch *nd Russell VanBuskrk attends school at Bayonne'. Mrs. Vermlye, her son Robert; and Harry HanknBon, who have^a summer home here, have returned from a- two months' tour abroad. They traveled through Scandanava, and also went to Pars, where they attended the exposton. Both young men are students at Prnceton college. Mrs, Robert T. Roche started on Monday for a three weeks'vst at Prnce Edward sland, of whch place Mrs. Roche s a natve. She s accompaned by her son, Rev. H. H. P. Roche, rpctor of St. James's church of Long Branch. Edward Taylor and Albert Phllps, returned last Wednesday from ther bcycle trp. n Phladelpha they vsted the mnt, ndependence hall, Hortcultural and Memoral halls, the zoologcal, garden and Farmount Park.. ;, D. Olver Wolcott, who has been employed as casher on the Octagon hotel's per cafe at Long Branch durng the summer, closed hs engagement last Saturday nght. He s now vstng frends at Bayonne. / Mrs. R. R. Dancey of Houston, who s the guest of her father, Rev. R. T. Roche, was taken sck on Sunday whle s.tng her sster, Mrs. Hncks of Long Branch. She s now much mproved. Albert Reed of, Lakewood s vstng hs father, Charles Reed of Lews street. Mss Fanne Reed of Tottenvelle, who has been vstng her parents, has reurned home, Baptsm' was admnstered at St. James's memoral church on Frday to Wllam Henry and Charles Robert Rosche, sons of Wllam Rosche of Oceanport. Mss AmyCallas, whose home was set on fre last week, and who has been ufferng wth nervous prostraton, has recovered. Walter Tuttle, who has been confned to the house the past 1 sx weeks wth an abscess under hs arm, s able-to be-out. Mas Grace VanBuskrk, has returned to school at Blarstown. Ths s Mss VanBuskrk's second year at that school. Mss Alce Golden and George Golden of Colt's Neck spent Sunday wth ther sster, Mrs. W. E. Morrs of Lews street. Robert S. Clark of New York s spendng a week wth hs parents, Mr. and Mrs, J. R. Clark of Lews street. Mrs. Oscar Barchwtz of Lews street returned on Frday from a vst to her parents at Albany. DeWtt Allgor has gone to Morrs Park, where he wll make specal shoes for the race horses. Walter Haynes of New York spent Sunday wth hs parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwn Haynes. The nghtgown factory s rushed wth orders and all of the grls are workng overtme. Mrs. J. H. VanBuskrk was very sck last week but she s now very much mproved. Mrs.,Elsha Wlson of Lttle Slver spent last Frday- wth her sster, Mrs. A., Phllps. Mrs. Frank Estell of Lews street s recoverng from a severe attack of sckness. George Bennett's house on Broad street has teen repanted. < Many wells on Lews street have gone dry durng the past week. Fred Haynes s employed by the Monmouth ce company, Mrs. Peter Morrell s vstng relatves at Holmdel. Shrewsbury News. Mss Llan " Hurley, daughter of Charles H. Hurley, went to Trenton on Monday, where sho wll enter ths year's classut the normal school. Mss Hurley s a member of the class of 1000 of the Red Bank hgh school. Mrs. A. Holmes Bordcn and her BOH Frank, who have been vstng relatval at Canada, returned homo on Sunday. Frank has been n Canada all summer nnd hs mother has been there about 1 a month. Mxs Cora Jennngs hns resumed her poston as teacher lt the Far Haven school and Man Eva Greon has resumed her poston as teacher n tho Shrewsbury avenue school ut Red Bank. Mss Florence Whte, who attends school at Planlleld, and who has been spendng tho summer hero wth her mother, Mrs. Wllam JolnBon, has returned to Plnnflold. Tlo publc school opened on Monday wth a largo attendance. Georgo 6. < Nelson s prncpal and MBB Bertha M Kng of Lttle Slver o ls assstant. Mrs. Dr. Frankln of Baltmore, Maryland, s the gu«ht of Mr«. Waldr6n P. Brown. Mlsa Ella Vamlorvcor wll not reopen her prvate school owng to her poor health. Mnn Lota Patterson,of Long Branch s vstng MHH BOBBO Hazard. Turn tcabtb $1.00 a year. Adv,. TNTON FALLS NEWS. Blanv Foxes About Robert JDavla's Uottnds-Song Aray to School. A great many foxes are n ths localty. n the fox hunts whch have been held n Monmquth county durng the past few years many foxes/ have escaped. These have made ther lars n tht banks the mornng Vfew days ago, and chased t from Tnton'Falls ^ear to the southern part of the townshp, But wthout catchng: t., - S,. Robert Davs has two very fne hounds; whch are as 1 good huntng dogs as there are n ths part of the county. The dogs have had one season's tranng, andl last year Al.vns and many of the other gunnng experts of Eastern Monmouth had some good shootng behnd them. A mate to one of the dogs was sold, last fall to Howard Rogers of Red Bank,for $15. The dog was then untraned, but the.frst day Mr. Rogers went gunnng the dog dd so well that oneof: the men who was wth Mr. Rogers's party offered hm $30 for the hound. The offer was refused. Ella Murphy, daughter of John Murphy; went to Trenton on Sunday, She wll attend the. state normal school. Kate Murphy, her sster, wll attend school at Long Branch ths year. She graduated from the Tnton Falls school last, year. Blanche Magee, daughter of Eugene Magee, who attended the Long Branch school last year, wll attend there agan ths year. A Long Branch wheelman, who started to vst Edward Obre, Sr., on Sunday, broke one of the pedals short off at Tnton Falls n pushng through the sand. He had to go the rest of the way on fobt, a dstance of about two mles., Mr. Obre took the young man and hs bcycle home n hs wagon. Most of the summer boarders, who have been spendng the summer at Thomas Hnes's, have returned to the cty. Mrs. Reddy and her daughter Florence are theonly two boarders who are Btll at Mr. Hnes's. The farmers are cartng ther tomatoes to the factory, but the crop wll not be very large ths year. Many of the farmers say that they wll not have more than two or three pckngs. About ffty baskets of peaches were stolen from the orchard on th'e Truswell farm a few nghts ago. The peaches were not mssed'untl the owners went to pck them for market. The turnpke road s agan n a verybad condton, owng to the drought. Many people want the county to buy the turnpke, and make a good road-and a- free road of t. Holmes Bennett, son of Pearson Bennett, has been sck wth typhod fever for the past ten days. Mr. Bennett s. marred and makes hs home wth bs parents. Danel Shutts s sellng a great d^al of hs farm truck at Asbury Park. John Robnson and Arthur Shutts, Mr. Shutts's on, take a load down 'nearly every nght. '. ' lohn Whalen s employed at Hazard's factory. He began work there when the cannng sease-m opened and wll reman there tll the season's work s over. John H. Cook Jr.j won a prze of a dollar for solvng ^mathematcal problem, n a recent ssue of the New York Sunday Journal. '. Benjamn F. Grgg3 B gvng hs buldngs a general overhaulng and they are beng put n thorough repar. Mrs. Samuel Bennett has been entertanng a number of frends from New York for the past few weeks. John C. Crawford rased some tall corn ths year. One of the spears was seventeen feet hgh. John VanMater s spendng a couple of weeks wth GeQrge Wlkns, Jr., of Jersey vlle.. Alberta and MaUd Johnson of Eatontown were Sunday guests of Mss Jose Truswell. Davd. Vanderveer, has been makng some repars to hs house. LTTLE SLVER NEWS. Fake Straw-Rde and Some Would-Be Practcal JokerH. A party of Lttle Slver young men told Charles Morrs that they wanted to hre hm to take them out on a strawrdexn Saturday nght. He went to the postbmce n the evenng wth hs wagon and whle^e stopped there someone renoved the burrs from the axles. When he started from the postoffce to go to the place arranged for the meetng one of the wheels came off. The wagon body dropped and Morrs fell out n the road. He was not much hurt and he fxed the wagon.up, but.the boys then kcked on the prce. After a lttle argument he ;came down to ther prce, but Btll they ddn't go. After watng n the vllage about an hour and a half he concluded that the boys had no ntenson of gong on a straw-rde and he went home. Wllam Haslett, who has spent the Bummer hero, returned to hs homo n New York on Monday mornng. Mss Mary Wllams of Planfeld spent Sunday wth Mss Mary Ward of tho Slver Buy house. Howard Ely, Benjamn Slloomakor, Joseph Lano, MyronL. Campbell, George Woolley, Frank Curts and Amos Roborts wont to Conov sland on Sunday.. Mr. nnd Mrs. Wllam H. Pope spent Sunday wth Mrs. Pope's parents, Mr. nnd ' Mrs.-Charles H. Greeno, ^Sr., of Navcalk. Harold and Edward Preaby, HOS of Rev. J. W. Presby, have gono to Dlckn son collego at Carlsle, Pennsylvana. Mrs. Bonjnmn Skldmoro lnn gone to lvo wth hor rmrontb, Mr, and Mrs Charles Allen of Morrflvllo. Mrs, Davd Wallace of Far Have apont last Thursday wth fronda here. Mss Mary Vnnotto of Hackotutown s vstng MBH Madollno Conovor. Vfrclet Jtcluccl to Fve VvntH. All of my 12-cont, H-cent apd 18-cer' puroaleu hnvo hocn reduced to ftvo cents por yard. A. Mumonborg, Broad street Red Bank. Adv. MORBSVLLE NEWS.. '< Teachers and, Students AfKeck and,,, a Sote Lout. Mss Mary E. Bloadgobd has been engaged to teach at Oceanc. She left here on Saturday for her new poston.> Everett Henry of Belford s teacher of the publc school ths year. Mr. Henry boards at Thomas Y. Stout's, Mss Ella Maloney has tefntered the state normal school. She- wll graduate n February of next year". Mss Mary Maloney has returned to- Allendale, where she has been engaged as kndergarden teacher. Mss Amela A. Carton left here on Labor day for Trenton, where she wll take the stenographc course at Rder's busness college. "Mss E. A. Bloodgood, Mss Carlon'B former teacher, accompaned her.,''., * Thomas Cohen; Mss da Mclaughln, Mr. and Mrs. Job Brown, Msa Catherne Ryan,- James Long, Mss Mary Long, Mss Catherne Haley, Mss Sarah Costello' and Mss Emma Varnell are'employed.n the Buckln cannng Jactory at the Phalanx. They have to start about sx o'clock n the mornng and they come back about half-past ss o'clock. They began work last week and wll contnue untl the mddle of October.. Durng the last two Sundays the peace and quetude of Mbrrsvdle have been greatly dsturbed by a number of men who secure rum and beer and take t to James Crawford's woods, where they drnk, and create a.dsturbance. < Fghts, bad language and oaths mark tbe occurrences of the day. MR, and Mrs. Andrew Carton and famly of New York, who are summerng at Asbury Park, spent Sunday wth Mr. Carton's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John ~!arton of that place, Mrs. Charles McGee, Wllam A..'Mo Gee and Mss Emma Hendrckson vsted Danel Rankn and famly of Far Haven on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cummngs of Yonkers, New York, spent Saturday and Sunday wth Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Stlwell. ' '.... ',.'-' Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hendrcksop of Eatontown and ther daughters Alma were Sunday guests of Mrs. Charles Mc- Gee. James Conover of Holmdel s supplyng ths neghborhood wth onons, very few onons are grown here by the farmers. ' Mrs. Howard Jeffrey of Long Branch 1 and her sons Howard and Alfred are spendng a few days wth W. H. Dalton. Andrew Saxon lost a check of $48.50 and a note for $55 last Frday whle, gong from Morrsvlle to Red Bank. Mrs. James Carton, wfe of Lawyer Carton of Asbury Park, s vstng relatves n ths vcnty. r Mrs. Mnor Brown of Holmdel s spendng two weeks wth frends at Brooklyn. Mchael Coleman of tbe Aberdeen nn, Matawan, vsted W. H. Dalton on Thursday. ' Mss Bertha WlleU of Keansburg spent Sunday wth Mss E. A. Bloodpod. Mss Emma Bloodgood and Mss Laura Antondes spent last Thursday at Keyport. Mr. and Mrs. John Conners spent last week vstng frends on Long sland. Fred Ryan of Seabrght spent Sunday wth hs mother, Mrs. Ann Ryan. Mr. and Mrs. G, B. Lttle of Freehold were recent.guests of relatves here: ' Mrs. PojntsetUof Eatontown B stopr png wth Mrs. Wllam Sparlng. D. T. Hendrckson of Mddletown spent Sunday wth relatves here. Mss Catherne Res of Seabrght s vstng Mss Laura Sphnbar. Mr. and Mrs. Wllam Sparlng spent Sunday at Ocean Grove. Far Haven News. Tbe Amercan Mechancs lodge s buldng a fence around ts property on whch stands Monmouth Hall. The members of : the lodge are dong the work, Mrs. John Ryan, who has been sck for the past three months and whose recovery s very slow, has been taken to the home of her parents at Vanderburg. Benjamn Doughty's sloop ran aground at Long pont n the rver on Saturday afternoon. Toward nght.the boat floated off wth the hgh tde. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Newman of Pateraon returned home on Monday after a week's vst to Mrs. Newmans grandfather, Peter Wlson. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Parker moved on Tuesday from Mrs. Cook's house nto Mrs. S. A. Mnton's house. Mrs. Edward Allen, who has been sck wth nervous prostraton, s recoverng. Mss Nelle Newman of Manasquan has been vstng Mrs. W. E. Pettt; Gutrch Bartholmes s vstng frends at New burg. ' MlfcDLETOWlt VLLAGE NEWS On a Trp to Canada-A Sx-Year-.'""-' Old Preachev. Dr. & F. Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Oeborn and ther; chldren, Howard and Edward, left on Saturday for a two wees'trp to Portland and Canada. The campnaeetng whch has been held n Edwara Taylor's grove, closed last Saturday nght. A sx-year-old boy. preacher from Georga wll" preach tonght at the campmeetng at New Monmouth, near Hoppng staton. Rev. and Mrs. P. K. Hagemau, Msses Anne Hankne, Nna Root, Lousa Stark and Nelle Spader, Mrs. Perlee: and Arthur Brokaw are spendng thjs week at Ocean Grove. ' ' r A socable and busness meetng wll be held at the Reformed church parsonage next Tuesday flght by the Chrstan Endeavor sopety. Mr; and Mrs. John P^ase of Keyport and her sons, Lester ard Frank, spent Sunday wth Mr. Pease's parents, Mr. and Mrs,,Cornelus,Pease; -. Danel Wlson, who has been vstng relatves at Annadale, New Jersey, and Easton, Pennsylvana, returned, hope last Thursday. ' Albert E. Schneder, who s employed as a clerk n Lufburrow & Thompson's grocery store, s enjoyng a two weekb 1 vacaton... ; Mss Besse. Goeller and Mss Lzze Dcknson of New York have been vstng-mrs. Rchard Lufburrow. M88.A.nne-.Cole s the guest of 'her grandmother, Mrs. H. H. Cole of New Brghton, Staten sland. Mss Carolne Detz of the Phalanx spent Sunday wth her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gottlob Detz, Sr. Mss Nelle Spader spent last Thursday wth her sster, Mrs. Charles R. Snyder of Atlantc Hghlands. Walter Conroy of New York spent Sunday here wth, hs parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Conroy. Mss Jenne Allen of Newark, who has been vstng the Msses Osborn, has returned home. Mss Mary Brower spent-part of last week wth-mrs. John Crawford of Tnton Falls, Mss Jesse, Bowne left on Monday for Trenton where she wll attend the model school. John Conley of Jersey -Cty spent Monday wth hs sster,- Mrs. Wllam Casey, Sr. - Joseph Mller has moved hs famly from ths place te New Monmouth. Mss Matte L. West spent last week wth relatves at Pont Pleasant; C. VanNote of Long Branch spent last Wednesday wth frends here. W.. W. Wlson of New York spent last Wednesday here. Warren Smth, of Keansburg spent Sunday here. Waysde News The Waysde, Green Grove and Poplar schools opened on Monday. Mss George Vanderveer of Far Haven teaches at Waysde, M3s Emle Pearsall of Oceanc teaches at Green Grove and Mes Ange Allen of Allenwood teaches at Poplar. Mss dala C. West of Asbury Park, who has been spendng two weeks wth her aunt, Mrs, Hannah. M. Woolley,.has returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Edward West vsted Mrs. Woolley on Sunday. MsB Etta Lay ton, who has.been spendng several weeks wth h,e mother at the Hghlands, s now lvng wth her grandmother, Mrs. Wllam VanDyke. Ffty dollars was made at a peach and ce cream festval last week for the beneft of the Methodst church and Sundayschool..Mrs. George McCloskey of Pont Pleasant s vstng her parents, Mr. and MrB. E. L. Havens. Mrs. Horace Mller and her daughter Mldred are vstng Mrs. Jesse Clayton of Lakewood. Mrs. Lyall Jackson s vstng her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Valentne Dangler. Lncroft News. Henry Fenton was kcked n the stomach and knocked down by a horse last Frday. He lay n hs yard some tme before he was able to gvt up, as he could not recover hs wnd. Edward Evans, formerly of Joseph Stankewcz's shop at Atlantc Hghlands, s assstant blacksmth n R. M. Hurley's shop. Mr. Evans lves wth Mr, Hurley.. Wllam Pope's Bartlctt pears are very large. By actual count, for.ty-sx of them flled a peach basket. ' Mr. and Mrs. Henry Smonson of Port. Rchmond are vstng Mr. and Mrs.. J. R. Conover. Openng of trmmed hats nnd furs, Thursday and Frday, September 20th and 2l8t. Mrs. E. Wes. Adv. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAlAAAA MY SHOES WEAR. Men's Sample Shoes. secured yesterday some of the handsomest fne samples of ths season's fall styles on the market, all new and elegant fall shoes. As they are sample shoes,,the only szes are 6%, 7 and *] l /. Any one who wears that sze should see tnem as they are unusually fne and wll be sold at much less than ther value. ' Put on sale to clay. CLARENCE WHTE,

9 BED BANE VOLUME XX. NO; 12. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, PAGES 9 TO 16. TWO MEN KLLED BY CARS. VfM, C. ALEXANDER KNOCKED " FROM A PER. ma Skull Crushed and Hnted a Fete Hours hater-danel Hmfleld nstantly VMled at Bed Bank... '. '..'""'-' ' ;. "-'; ' Wllam G. Alexander, a Navesnk colored man, was struck by a tran last Saturday nght on.the old wagon per at Atlantc Hghlands. He receved njures from whch he &ed[shortly afterward at the Long Branch hosptal. The old wagon per at Atlantc Hghlands s,a favorte- rendezvous, at nght for pedestrans and wheelmen. The per s crossed by a"" y " of the Central.ralroad that runs to the ralroad per/ Alexanderhad rdden out on the per on hs bcycle. He was., returnng when the half^past nne tran from up the shore approached the per crossng. Alexander saw the tran but thought that he could cross the ralroad track n safety. He had got partly' across the.track wtten the engne struck hm and threw hm and hs bcycle nto the bay. Elas Emmons and George Couch saw?the accdent. They jumped nto a row boat that lay near the per and went to Alexander's rescue. They reached hm before he could have suffered to any extent from the effects of the water, but they found hm unconscous, hs skull havng been crushed by the engne. Dr. E. G. Andrew, Jr., was summoned and he recommended that.the njured man. be removed tothe Long Branch hosptal..ths was done but Alexander ded- at the hosptal before mornng.' Alexander was 28 years old and was marred. Hs wfe survves hm, but he 1 leaves no, chldren.. He belonged to the True Reformers' lodge and hs wfe wll receve about $185 from ths order.' He N had been a resdent of Navesnk for many years, but had almost always-been employed" at Atlantc Hghlands. Ths summer he was employed at the-hghland Park golf lnks. n a few weeks he was to have gone to New 1 York to work fop Augustus Balln, a summer resdent of Atlantc Hghlands, Mr. Alexander was a good, ctzen. He.was very ndustrous and bore an excellent reputaton/ On Monday the members of the goltclub made up a puree of $70 and presented t to Mrs. Alexander. Danel W. Dunfeld of Jersey Cty, a.freman on the New-'York and Long Branch ralroad, ;was struck on the head andnstantly klled last Saturday afternoon whle crossng the ralroad brdge over Front street. Dunfeld was drawng a pal of water from the faucet on the engne tender to cool a hot journal bearng. n turnng off the faucet he ; leaned so far out that ha head struck aganst the sde of the brdge. Hs head was crushed and hs neck was broken. The tran went some dstance before t could be stopped. t backed down to the scene of the accdent and the body 'was taken to the ba'ggage room at the Red Bank staton. Coroner Tetley was notfed. He dd not deem an nquest necessary and gave a permt for bural. The body was sent to Jersey Cty on Sunday mornng. Dunfeld was a young-man and had only recently been marred. A Long Branch Property Sold. Nate Saleabury. the owner of Buffalo Bll's Wld WeBt show, has bought the plot of ground on the.ocean front between Nortl Long Branch and Long Branch, whch'was formerly owned by A. G. Greenberg. The plot s a ahort dstance north of where"tle St. Paul grounded some tme ago. Mr. Salsbury wll buld about a dozen houses on the property, and wll so arrange the houses nnd grounds that the place wll resemble a park. _ -_ An Automoble That Wouldn't Work. Jacob Corn well and hs son, Jacob Cornwall, Jr., rode to Hghland Beach a fow lnya ago on Mr. Cornwoll's automoble. When they were ready to start for homo they, found that the machno would not work, somethng havng happened to tho pston rod. n order to got homo they pushed tho' machne awhle, pulled t awhle, And fnally got a tow homo behnd t boer wugon. ', A Dog DCB From Sunstroke. A ponter dog, ownod by Oscar Hesse,,, Jr., of Sprng.strcot, ded a fow days ago of BUHtroke. Tho dog WBN a flno hunter und wab valued at $100, Mr. HCBBO hnd refused an offer of $75 for the dog. Oponntf of trmmed Nats and flm, Thursday and Frdny, Soptombor 20th and Slat, ; Urn, E, toh.-adv. MRS. VALLEAU'S ESTATE. Her Property Goes to an Adopted Son, a Nece and Two Xephews. Mrs. Amela Vartleau, who ded at Atlantc Hghlands on August 35th, was a wdow who left an adopted son, John B, Valleau, wth whom she made her home. She left several neces and nephews. One nece, Lucnda Burdge,,.wfe of Edward Burdge, was left a gold watch and a par of 'gold-spectacles, as keepsakes. The rest of the estate s to be dvded nto four equal parts. Lucnda Burdge s to get one part; the chldren of George W. Smth, a nephew, are to get one part;' John' B. Valleau, the adopted son, s to get one part; and another nephew, Albert Smth, and hs wfe, Edth Smth, are to get the remanng.part. John M. Johnson of Navesnk was made executor of the wll, and he's to erect a sutable tombstone over Mrs. Valleau's grave. The wll was made May 11th; 1896,"wth George H. Sckles and Fred Sckles aa wtnesses. JohnR. Anderson of Freehold left a wdow and two sons. The epns are ra U. and Earl A. Anderson. Mr. Anderson ded August 18th and left a wll. Hs wfe, Sarah E. Anderson, was made executor of the, wll. All the property Mr. Anderson left s to go to hs wfe "for the support and mantenance of the two eons durng ther mnorty, and for her own use, support and mantenance durng her; natural lfe." At Mrs. Anderson's death the two sons, are to dvde equally; between them whatever s left of the estate.'- Peter Forman and L. M. Dangler wtnessed the makng of the wll,: whch was sgned January 27th, Samuel H. Aeay of Neptune townshp, who made hs wll July 10th, 1900, left everythng he possessed to hs wdow, Margaret H. Asay, and. made her the executor of the wll. Claude V. Guern and George W. Patterson wore the wtnesses to the wll. v. Joseph A. Snyder of Wall townshp made a wll somewhat smlar to that of Mr, Asay. He made hs wll August 20fch, 1894, and named Wllam L. Tlton as executor. All Mr. Snyder's property goes to hs wfe, Lousa Snyder. She can sell the real estate and use the money f she wants to; but whatever s left at hor death s to be equally dvded among 'Mr.- Snyder^ chldren. These chldren are 1 Joseph H. Snyder, Danel E. Snyder, Elza C. Coleman, Mary J. Woodward, and Lucy,F. Vannote. A doctor's bll, due or pad to'dr. Herbert, s to be deducted from Elza C. man's share. r <*... A FALL FROM A WAGON. An Aged Man njures Ms Back and Js Taken to the Hosptal. Mchael McGovern, of Oceanport, more famlarly known as " Mke the Tramp," fell whle gettng out of a wagon at that place on Saturday nght and njured bs back. He was comng home from Long.Branch and got a rde part of the way. He got out near, the east brdge and fell just as he got out of. wagon. Hs back was njured and he was unable to move. Persons who saw hm there supposed he was under the nfluence of lquor, and hs actual condton was not dscovered untl Sunday mornng. He was taken to the Long Branch hosptal by W. H, Garrgan. Mchael McGovern s qute an old man and he lves n the old house*just nsde the Monmouth race-course grounds, near the.north brdge. He worked for Rev, Benjamn Franrn of Shrewsbury for over ffteen years. Snce Mr. Frankln's death he has been dong odd jobs on lawns u the vcnty of Oceanport. The Excurson to Coney sland. The excurson to Coney sland, whch went from Long Branch dn Sunday, WOB well patronsed. The excurson was attended by people from- all nlong tho ahoro of Monmouth county, and they saw Coney sland n the heght of ts Hvelneas, on a Sundny aftornoon. Among thoso from Red Bank who went on tho excurson were Frank Applegate, Charles RoborBon, Edward Longstreot, Howard Matthows, Jntnert NelBon, Frank Groon, Arthur Mnttlows, Edward Gbbons, Pryor Lde, Joseph «nne, Looter Pnoh, Harry Longstreot, Herman Shutta, General JohnShcohan, Wllam A. Colo, Jacob Bordcn, Charlca Smook and Clnton Ellott., >, Short n Bs Accounts. \ Harry Wloon, a drver for tho Unted States exprona onnpnny nt Long Brnnbh has boon hold n $200 bull to awat tlq acton of tho grand jury on a ohnrgo of beng short $40 n ln'o accounts, SALE OF CONOVER LANDS. PART OF W. W. CONOVER'S ES- TATE PUT UP AT AUCTON. The Homestead Property at Bed Bank Bd up to $8,800-l<red F. Hope Buys Ptne hands-charles U Last Thursday a number of the propertes of. the late Wllam Wv Conover were sold at aucton at the Globe hotel, When Mr. Con.over.ded he was'probably the largest land owner n the county of Monmouth. He owned, land n every townbhjp and n almost every vllage n the county. Hs largest holdngs were n the eastern part of the county. Some of the land he owned was of lttle value, but other tracts were n the best stuated and most valuable parts of the county. He hmself had no^dea of the. amount of hs holdngs of land, and after hs death, n straghtenng put hs affars, lne entre records of deeds n the county had to be gone over to pck out the lands whch he owned. A search of, ttles was made and an abstract of all lands bought by Mr. Conover was compled. Then another search was made and an al>stract of all lands whch bad been sold by hm was made. Through ths means t was possble to get a lst of the lands owned by Mr. Conover'.,'Even ths lst wda not accurate, for Mr. Conover had bought some lands and had neglected to put the deeds on record,; and the purchasers Of some of the lands whch he had sold had faled to record ther deeds; thus addng to the confuson of ha real estate. The real estate whch he owned at the tme of hs deajth, and the records of whch were straght and unmpeachable, was apprased by the persons who made the nventory at nearly $400^000. The real estate whch he owned, where deeds had not' been recorded, were mostly small tracts of pne lands, the value of whch s probably not above $1,000 or $2,000. :'.. A number of the propertes whch had been advertsed for sale were sold at prvate sale prevous to the aucton. Among these were the Allare house at Red" Bank, whch was bought by Mrs. Harry C.'Badeau ; vyo: houses and lots on Grand,avenue atlopg Branch, whch were bought by Sgmund Esner of Red Bank last Thursday mornng for $3,050; two acres, of land at Far Haven, on the Oceanc road, whch rwere bought by Andrew Gleaaon; several lots n what s known as the sand felds at Far Haven; several tracts of pne. wtwdland; and three acres of land on the east sde of Kemp avenue., at Far Haven, whch were bought by John A. Schumann. There were stll a great many propertes left to be offered at the sale. Jacob C. Shutts was the auctoneer- and the bddng on some of the tracts was brsk. Themnst valuable property put up was the homestead house and lot at Red Bank, on the rver bank. t was announced that there was a mortgage of 1,000 on ths property and that ths mortgage could reman»n the property f the purchaser wshed. f the purchaser dd not desre to have ths mortgage on the property t would be pad off by the executor and the property would be deeded to the buyer free and clear. The property was started at,000 and was run up to $8,800. At ths prce t was knocked down to Wl lana Applegate, Jr., of Red Bank. The lots at Far Haven were sold at prc6s rangng from $100 to $ George W. Brown bought one of these lots at $105 ; John R, Reevey and P. J. Mullgan each got one of the lots for $100; and Charles P. rwn of Red Bank bought one of the two corner lota for $120. The otber corner lot was larger than any of the other lots sold and ths was bought by John Baley of Red Bank for $149,50. LotH n HUB localty bad been sold nt prvate sale for $140 to $1CO W. Tabor Parker, who had the sule of the property n chnrge, stated at the salo tlut whle they would lot lots go at the fgures tloy brought at tho Bale, they would not qell them at prvate sale at these fgures. Thero s a small houso on ono of tho lots n tho Band flud at Far Hnvou and ths was bought by Rev. J.. Chrstmas, pastor of Fsk chnpol, for $100. All of tho lots aro n tho neghborhood of Fslt chupol, nnd are one block noutl of tho Rod Bunk ad Far Havoh road. Nno acres of land nt East Ocounc were bought by J. L. Ecolou, a summer resdent of Oocnnc, who lnn a country scat n that localty, Tho property H on tho north sde of tho roud loadng from Oceana to Scnbrlght, and t s junt emt, of tlo Rvereldo hotel. TK plot has n frontago of 1)90 foot on tlo road nnd n about 700 foot; deep., Mr. Purkor stated that be had had several offers to buy lots on ths tract from varous people, but that t was preferred to close t out n one traot. The bddng began at $50 an acre, and the prce wont slowly'up untl t reached $ per acre, at whch fgure t went to Mr. Eccles. A plot of 10^ acres near Navesnk Park; whch s covered wth a fne second growth of chestnut, was bought by Benjamn John Parker of Shrewsbury at $48 per acre. The property has a frontage of 260 feet on Naveenk Park and t adjons the Hartshorne lands; - John Baley of Red Bank bought the property at Old Woman's Hll. Ths contans fve acres. Ths property s near the same rdge as the Tllotson property. The Tllotson tract s small, but t s drectly back of Atlantc Hghlands, whch adds greatly to ts value. The Tllptsons pad $17,000 for ther plot. There are several fne houses on ths rdge. Old Woman's Hll s at some dstance fjom these fne houses, but the property along the rdge s contnually beng developed and n a few years Old Woman's Hll wll be n demand as a ste for a fne resdence. The property commands a fne vew of the bay, and t s farly well wooded, Mr. Baley got t for $120 an acre, and some of the Mddletown townshp real estate sharps say that the purchase of ths tract was the great bargan of the day. Edmund Wlson of Red Bank bought a lot near the ralroad staton at Long Branch for $180. Ths lot s 26x100 feet. Another lot near by was bought by Wllam Applegate of Red Bank for $200. Ths lot s twce as large as the lot bought by Mr. Wlson. Another lot at Long Branch was bought by Wllam Brown of Keansburg for $ Ths, lot, s on Buttonwood street. Benjamn John Parker of Shrewsbury bought a lot on Jolne avenue for $175. The tracts of woodland went at very low' prces, and any man could have become a land owner at ths sale wthout much money. The tracts of woodland are "n the pnes and are valuable only for the standng tmber and cordwood that s on them. Some of these tracts have been cut over and burned over untl the turf s. entrely burned off and there are no trees and, no wood left. These lands, when the turf has been burned off, soon become a sandy waste, and ths WEB the oondton of some of the tracts offered. Some of the otber tracts contaned good tmber, but the tmber s naccessble, on account of swampy lands, and on others there s a good lot of tmber that can be readly cut and marketed. * The fnest tract of woodland sold was.a pece of thrty acres n Howell townshp. Ths tract s stll a prmeval forest, no tmber to speak of ever hayng been cut off. There are oaks of 200 or 800 years' growth and there are equally bg pnes and whte cedars. Ths pece of woodland was sold n a lump for $200 to W. A. Thompson. Several persons had ntended to go as hgh as $200 for ths tract, but Mr. Thompson was the fortunate man who bd $200 and none of the others would go a cent hgher. Fred W. Hope of Red Bank bought three tracts of pne land, comprsng about 33 acres. He pad $1.50 per acre for 2'3 acres and he pad $3.10 per acre for ten acres. Dnnel H. Cook bought eleven acres for $2 per acre, and Mr. Cook bought several- other tracts of woodland at prvate sale a few days before the aucton. The Couover estate was nterested n three tracts of woodland n company wth other owners. Two of these tracts were wthdrawn at tle solo on account of complcatons that hud arsen. The other tract,.whch comprsed 8D& acres of land n the southern part of tho townshp, was owned jontly by Mr. Conover's estate and by John B. MorrB of Long Branch, euch beng the owner of one-half of tlo tract. The tmber has been cut almost entrely off the tract except n a small part where awanpy lands make t mpossble 1 to get tho tmber out. Mr. Morrs was present at the Buk und ho sad that ho hud owned hs half of tho traot of land for twenty years and had novor neon t, Ho bd $10 for Mr. Conover'a half of tho tract nnd'thon stopped bddng. Tho bddng was kept up by other purleu, moro oa a sort of utnuboment than for any real desre to got the property, and t wne fnally knoolcod down to ChurleB P. rwn of Rod Bank for $87,50. Aftor ho had xnght t Mr. rwn ollored to sell t to Mr, Morrs for $1)0, but Mr. Morrs declned to buy t at tlnt fgure. Mr. rwlu made several other uttompth to sol t for lean than lo pad but ho found no buyor und ho HUH HOB t on hd handu. NEWS FROM MDDLETOWN. NTERESTNG TEMS FROM BE- YOND THE SHREWSBURY. " Baptsms at Belford Beach JPlnmtnna Trps to Sandy Hook A. Horse Des-Several Hovngs A Xew School Jantor. Ernest and Alfred Bshpp, chldren of George Bshop of Port Monmouth, were baptzed n the Pentecostal church at that place on Sunday by Rev. Joseph S. Clark. On Sunday nght, n the Pentecostal church, Mr. Clark commenced a seres of llustrated sermons on " Lost and Found." A ten-day evangelstc servce wll be held at ths church about the. mddle of October.'.;:",jl.' C. Lbhsen of Belford s takng partes of frends daly on beach plummng trps'to Sandy Hook" n hs naptha launch. Plums are very plentful at Sandy Hook ths year and the Belford people have gathered large quanttes. A horse owned by the Segel-Cooper Co. of New York and drven by Olver C. Ayres on the Locust Pont route, ded on. Wednesday of, last week. The horse had been taken off the route for the summer a few days before ts death. Charles Lsk and famly and Halsey Lsk and famly of Port Monmouth wll move to Ocean Grove ths week for the wnter. Charles and Halsey Lsk have work there at the carpenter trade for the wnter. John Fourt of Forked - Rver has' moved nto Mrs. Josephne Fannng's ; house at Belford. He wll engage n carrage "pantng and bcycle reparng n a buldng to be put up by Joseph S. Clark. - ' Reuben Davs, a former resdent of Navesnk, but who for several years past has been workng at the carpenter trade, at Bernardsvlle, N ; J.jhad engaged n the contractng busness at New York. Frank Despreaux has been apponted jantor of the Navesnk publc school to succeed the late Samuel B. Connor, who had held the poston for several years. Rev. and Mrs. Joseph F. Andrew of Paterson are spendng two weeks at ther house at Navesnk, whch has''recently ^ been overhauled. On Sunday Mr. Andrew preached n the Atlantc Hghlands Methodst church both mornng and nght. ' ' Mss Fanne Dudley of Brooklyn,.who has been spendng ^a month wth her aunt, Mrs. Sarah DeVesty of Navesnk, s spendng a few days wth frends and relatves at her former home at Belford prevous to her departure for home. Msses Matte and Grace Covert of New York have, been vstng Capt. and Mrs. W. H. Seeley of Belford. They are now vstng Mrs. Wllam Covert of New Monmouth. Mr. and Mrs. Ferdnand Brown and ther chldren and Mss Anna Shbla of Asbury Park were guests last week of Mss Sade Despreaux of Locust Pont. Mss Etta Lott of Hghtstown, who has been spendng the past three weeks wth Mss Nna Swan of the Sears road', near Navesnk, has returned home. ^ Mes EdnaMaxson, daughter of Edwn E. Maxson of Locust Pont, resumed her studes at.the state normal school on Monday for the second year. Mss Anne M. Johnson of Naveshk hap returned from a sx weeks' vst to her sster, Mrs. Otto Powell of Rookvlle, Connectcut. \ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Gardner of New York spent Sunday wth Mrs. Gardner's sster, Mss Magge MacDonald of Navesnk. The famly of J. Wesley Davs, who Bpend the summer at Navesnk, have returned to ther home at New York for the wnter.... Gusso Davs of Bernardsvlle, N. J., s spendng two weeks wth hs gmndpurents, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Dava of Navesnk. Maa Lda Bogardus of Jersoy Cty has been spendng a weok wth Mss Lllo Wallng of Hllsde, near Atlantc Hghlands,., Mrs. Amanda VanNoatrand of Jcrchs, Long sland, s vstng her grandmother, Mrs, Mlry J. Carhnrt of Naveanlc. Mrs. Wllam Ludlow of Port Monmoutl has been afllcted wth bok on. her face. Sho s now mprovng. Harold Greene of Now York spent Sunday wth ha grandmother, Ms. Elza Brannrd of Locust Pont. The famly of Olvor.C. Ayrwof Locust Pont have returned to thor homo at Now York for tho summer. Mss Alda Carhnrt, daughter of Cpt. Stephon Curhart of Port Monmouth, la sck wth malaral fovcr. Dr. 13. A. Ardrow of Jorsoy Cty spent Sunday wtl hs brother, Dr. R, G. Androw, Sr., of Nnvoslnk, :

10 f BARNS BUBNED. Tco Urea Laat Week n thevpper Part of the County. The outbuldngs on Wllam D. Pttenger's place at Jerseyvlle caught flre n an unknown manner last Wednesdaynght and were destroyed, together wth a lot of hay, gran and harness. The wagons and lve stock were saved. The buldngs comprsed two barns, one 80x24 feet and the other 15x15 feet; a wagon house 68x18 feet, a stable 86x84 feet and a corncrb. A woodhouse stood near the dwellng house and when ths got afre the safety of the dwellng was threatened. The.woodhouse was carred from ts foundaton.and the dwellng was thus saved. There was an nsurance.of $1,940 on the buldngs, "but none on the contents, Mr. Pttenger has been pecularly unfortunate ths year, hs crops havng been badly damaged by the tornado n the early part of the summer.. ' On the nght of Mr. Pttenger's fre a small barn on the Jeremah Gleason place at Mlhurst, occuped by Patrck Hartaett, was destroyed by flre. The barn was nsured for $100." To Fx Fees for Outsde Pupls. Wesley Mason and Alex McClees have been apponted a commttee of the board of educaton of Holmdel townshp to consult wth other townshp boards n relaton to the fee to be charged the chldren from other townshps who attend school n Holmdel. A scholar lvng n one townshp s enttled to attend school wherever t s most convenent and the scboolq.pf' Holmdel townshp are so stuated as to'be more convenent to some scholars of fve other townshps than are the schools of ther own townshps. Under the law Holmdel townshp s en-, ttled to a fee for every scholar from another townshp that attends ts schools. m» A Second- Elopement. Mrs. Thomas Whte and Danel A. Voorhees dsappeared suddenly from Farmngdale some tme ago and t was supposed that they had gone'away together.', A few weekb afterward Mrs. Whte returned ^home and resumed charge of her household affars as though nothng had happened., Her husband forgave her and a reconclaton was apparently affected.. Last week Mrs. Whte agan left home whle her husband was away. Ths tme she took all her furnture wth her, shppng t by van to TrenJon. t s supposed that she ban joned Voorhees agan and that her only object n comng home was to gst possesson of her furnture. ' m» mlaystown's Students. A number of last year's graduates of the mlaystown publc school wll attend school elsewhere ths year. Mss Sade Dawes wll go to Pedde nsttute, Mss da Hendrckeon and Mss Ella Foster wll attend Rder's busness college, Harry Conover and Augustus HenBnger wll go to Stewart's busness college, Harvey Hendrckson and Neal Prce wll attend the Allentown hgh school and Frankln G. Rue wll take a course of study n Dennson academy at Gran-, vlle, Oho. ^ >» Attacked Wth a Razor.... Mchael Manon, foreman at Avery's. brckyard at Clffwood, was waylad a few nghts ago by James Dawson, who attacked Manon wth a razor. Manon was cut n several places on the back and on the thghs. Dawson had been dscharged from the brckworks a few days before and the attack s supposed to have been made for revenge. Dawson escaped and has not yet been arrested.»» Holmdel's Dog Tax. The dogs n Holmdel townshp number 175 and the dog tax has been fxed at ffty cents. Only one bll was presented to Holmdel townshp ths year for damage done by dogs, and that was for damage to sheep. Ths s the frst tme n years that blls have not been presented to.the townshp for loss of poultry by dogs. o» A Bg Yeld of Potatoes. J. H, Story, who lves on tho A. C. Fsher fnrm near Jersoyvlle, dug 1,005 barrels of potatoes from 28 acres. The potatoos wero dug nnd' delvered u ffteen days. Tho bggest day's shpment was 210 barrels. Mr. Story oxpectb to harvest nbout 1,000 bnrrela of apples ths fall. ouses for a Local Troupe. Charles K, Clmtnplm'n opera company played to crowded OUBCS at Koypor overy nght lnst weolc. Ono of hs plays proved so popular that t was repontcd by specal request. Thn wcuk tho com pany s nt Perth Amboy. Moro Muncpal Works Wanted. A specal electon wll bo hold a Englullown on October OLh to vote on tho queston o( bondng tho town for tn constructon of n nyotoro of wotor work - and tho purclmso of now flro apparatus Burglars at mlaystown. Two burglars entered B. H. Harker's resdence at mlaystown laet week. One entered the bouse by removng the screens' from a downstars wndow and the other clmbed up a porch post and entered a bedroom wndow that was ( open. Mrs. Harker was awakened by the burglars. She gave an alarm and ;he burglars were frghtened away be- 'ore they got any booty. The one that ntered down stars bad unlocked all she doors so as to make hs ext easy n case of dscovery. Suspcon rests on persons who knew that Mr. Harker had money n the house belongng to an mlaystown socety of whch he s treasurer. :' -Sat on a Snake. Mrs. Wllam Reed of Englshtown sat down last week on some dred weeds and brush under an apple..tree.'. After she had sat there awhle the leaves and brush seemed to move and as Mrs. Reed got up to nvestga te a bg snake wrggled away from under the brush on whch she had been sttng. A Fre Company's Quck Tme.. At a recent drll of the Matawan fre ompany.tbe members of the hook and ladder company ran ther machne a dstance of a quarter of a mle, turned two corners, rased a ladder aganst a ldng and had a bucket lne n operaton n three and a half mnutes. Ah Offer to Sell a Turnpke. The stockholders of the Holmdel and Keyport turnpke company met at Keyport last Wednesday and voted to sell the turnpke to the. county for $6,000. Electrcty ~ s^he modern force of to-day, to lght your homes and stores, propel your machnery and cobk your, meals. t s better than all other methods, Because t gves no heat, ashes or smoke and s more economcal n every way. t makes an deal home. Tfe Shore Electrc Co., 25 EAST FRONT STREET, Red Bank, New Jer»ey. Not Sold n Farl. f you.are gong to the World's Far at Pars ths year you should by all means take wth you a bottle of Chamberlan's Colc, Cholera and Darrhoea Remedy. t s not sold n Pars and s almost certan to be needed on the trp. After you have called n a French physcan and pad hm for hs servces and pad for the medcne he prescrbes', you wll realze 1 how much a lttle bottle of ths remedy s worth when you are 8,000 mles or more from home and among strangers.,for sale by Chas. A. Mnton & Co., Druggsts, 3 Broad street WALL PAPERS Tk Dffpulty of Provdng HARRSON'S. 87 Frc^ad 8treel. Bed Bank, N. jr. For the future support and comfort of your famly s easly met by securng a polcy of Lfe nsurance n The Prudental whch assures that protecton, together wth good returns for the nvestment. WKTE FOB PARTCULARS. PRUDENTAL 1150 nsurance Co. of Amerca. JOHN F. DRYDEN, Presdent. EDGAR B. WARD, 2d Vce Presdent and Counsel. LESLE D. WARD, Vce Presdent. FORREST F. DRTDEN, Secretary. P. G. WARNER, Supt., Broad and Wallace Btreeta, Red Bank, N. J. w. H. HOUSTON, General Agent. No. 129 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J.. JOSEPH S. CLARK, DEA1EB N Lumber, Coal, Hay and Feed, Hardware, Pants, Ols, Poultry Wre, &c. BLUE FLAME PURTAN OL STOVE A SPECALTY. AGENT FOR THE BURGESS STEAM WASHER. The moat convenent and the cheapest place for the people of Mddletown townshp to buy the above goods. JOSEPH S. CLARK. BELFORD. N. J. KKWwna LAGER BEER? 4. f you do, you must know that Roches- j A ter " Boheman," bottled by us n green \\ bottles, s the best. Not an artfcal Beer a pure Beer. GEORGE ft. LAMB & CO., 1Wholesale Wne and Malt Lquors, RED BANK, W. J. MwauMKM COAL! My coal yard s handy and the coal you get j: 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. WORTHlEY, Foot of Worthless Hll, RED BANK, N. J. Good Smokng! The man who lkes a delcous smoke for lttle money should try one of my Flor de Cubas or Joel Parker's. The prce s 5 cents and the man gets a ten-cent smoke". Goo<3, fne flavored tobacco, perfectly- cured, made n a clean, well-ven- r tlated workshop, gve a perfect smoke.,.these Cgars have always sold at 10 cents each untl a few months, ago. Then put the prce down to 5 cents, but kept the Cgars at the old hgh standard... ' f you've tred, thes^e Cgars you know how good they are. f you haven't tred them you're ^ mssng the-best thng n Cgars that's to be found a n all ths town of Red Bank yes, or to be found n Monmouth county, ether. * t WLLAM CULLNGTON, 1 THE ART STOEB. g Lessons n Embrodery and Lace. All the latest desgns and -materals for dress >v and hat trmmngs n Duchess Lace... j*j C.. Stephenson, : 50 BROAD STREET, RED BANK N. J. ;^< But the Steel Roof s Stll the Best Roof. % < The ron-and steel trust has rased the prces of $ ron and steel sheets to nearly double the old $ prce. That makes the cost of a steel roof hgher >); than t was before. But the steel roof s the best % roof n the world, regardless of the prce. t wll %'. last longer than any other, and t wll need less ^ repars. ' K : ' gve my 20-year guarantee wth each roof tf put on, as Jave always done n the past. $ f you are thnkng of puttng a new roof on t$ $ your buldngs, wrte to me about a steel (roof. t $ won't cost you anythng to fnd out just what the t* prce would be for the best-roof n the world. $' DANEL H. COOK, The 8tool Roof Man,.'. '. *«. TNTON FALLS, NEW JERSEY. V* f ^

11 . ~ - ).. ' HS LAST RACE. A Fortune lost to a Horse Owner bu0 Refusal to Pay $10., "Talk about kltagb," stt tbe <fld turfman, settlng hmself bacft la hs char and puffng away vgorously at a very bacfc cgar. "Why, remember one that makes mf. t beed spn emery tme thnk of t Let mo see yee, t was back to Just about that tme had arrved ttom the west aad vent n for racng wth both feet A. frend of mne owned a fast 2-yem>-old mald- «n. Tbe bowe- bad a good pedgree and ''was Tell traned, but eomebcw was never n' tbe money. My frend had a great deal of fath n the boreo and backed tbe anmal every tme t ran. He lost, and wten t became monotonous be came to me. "'Jm,' be sad, rather sadly, ''m snearly brokst f keej on droppng.my money as nave done for the past ;two months/1 "don't Unaw what wll become of me. guess wll wnd up n the poorboose.' "'Why, what's tbe matterr sad, dryng to cbeer hm up. Don't be flown-.hearted, oh boy. Wbcn you ore short, you know 700 can always fnd me.' "That's aq rtgbt,v be sad, "but owe you enough money already. 'm gong to mate a bt, and f tbe scheme goes through 'll have all tbe money want. The scheme sn't strctly hon- cst, but that's the only way can get.the con Just now. 've been on the.square long enough.' Sayng ths, he dsappeared, and dd not see or hear from hm for 6 long-tme. "One day bs horse came m. second. was very, moch pleased, and when found Jm extended my hand to congratulate htm. To my surprse, he waved roe asde and hung hs head. could not for the world make out what' was tbe matter. thought perhaps, bs success bad turned bs bead. y "'Jm,' sad, *wbat s the matter "wth, yon? Tm surprsed. You nevee meted lke thlb before. There s somethng certanly the matter: Out wth t, Bay, or etee r-shall never have any- v thng TO do wth yon n the futuref " ' know have not been carryng on rght, Prank,' he sad, "but f you went through what have durng tbe past ten boars yoq' certanly would not "blame me, Frank, cannot look an honest man straght n tbe face after today. stood to wta $50,000, but 'm jennlless now. t's all because was greedy fnd refused to part wth an extra $10. «Aa yon are no doubt aware, my horeo ran second today. He mght have won had used better judgment and dscreton.' "Then be went m and told me the followng story He bad toh all tbe other jockeys rntbe race that be de? 'sred to wn and rarfolded Ms scheme. Seven horses ran, and tbe Jockeys had ther nstructons, -They were to let my frend's borae wn.' Al ot the Jockeys wth tbe excepton of one re- -cered a tcket on tbe prospectve wnner. My frend's horse was quoted at 20 to 1, and tbe sx jockeys bad tckets whch called for $200 to p.0. Somelow or other the Beventh.Jockey got ' -wnd of ths and approached the traln- <er of my freod*a horse about tt The traner told bnn to see Jm, wblch he dd. Jm told bnn to go to tbe devl. He Sad: 'Go away, boy, and don't bother me, Ton haven't got a chance 'to beat my horse, and am not afrad of you anyway. got $10 left, but you.shall not have t' The Jockeyperslatod tha: he could wn f he tred and told Jm that be ought to be let n on the deal, Jtm was obdurate and requested tbe Jockey to go about hta busness. Jtm somehow bad scraped unbeknown to me about $5,000. Hs ^agents backed tbe horse all over the country, and be stood to wn a small.fortune, "'Well, tbe race was «oon off, and bs horse was loadng n tbe stretch by 'fve lengths. He thought t was all over but tbe explanatons. On the run home hs horse was stll ahead by a good margn, and n tbe exctement the seventh jockey, the'"one to whom he bad refused to gve a tcket, was for- ' gotten. But the Jockey had predcted correctly, and wth a burst ot speed that took tbe breath away from tbe spectators the outsder came to the fore and,beat my frend'b torso out at 'the post by a sbort heed. Well, when Mt was all over and tbe numbers hod gone up and my frend's borso had been beaten Jm realzed what a fool he had been. Vm the sake of on extra $10,.whch bo certanly could have spared, be lost tro fortune, Jtm had only played the horse straght, and ths Unto be was clean broke. Jm was^tho sorest man you ever saw and cannot forget that day to ths. And, what's mow, ho has never played or attended a rooeftoce."'-'" '\ ~'~ Openng He Addross. The fashon of tellng the hstory of a thng, whether or not th,o occason re- ' qures ts tellng, 1B a very common one *wttu orators and wrters who do not know exactly how elso to spn tholr yarns. A certan worthy merchant was once qute unexpectedly called upon to presldo at a banquet Ho wanted to say somethng n openng too "postprandal cxcrclaoa", whch would bo graceful and sound wou, and no bo began n the followng words: "Gentlomea Tn practce of eatng meals, alwml. an wo lavo reason to bollovo,' dates back ooboomo tbe.most rtmoto antquty!" ft pays to ndhrortlso n THE BALBOAD WREC Thomas A. Seott Usea \<> Handle, Them -Wthout Globes, "When that wonderful ralwd genus, the late Thomas A. Scott, was balhttng.up the Pennsylvana system, tbe wotfk he Old WM superhuman, the reeults le accomplshed marvelous," Bad an old ralroad man. HStoott was ensentlally a man of acton. Tor example, at one tme there occurred on tbe lne a freght wreck that pled Up scores of cars la a confused heap n a cuttng, thus completely barrng the man lne. "The local authortes were besde themselves, for they could not fgure out how the wreck could be cleared away and the lne reopened n less than two weeks. At ths juncture Scott arrved on tbe scene and after a survey of the wreck sent for a great quantty of coal ol, wth whch he had the ple thoroughly drenched. t waa then touched off, and the god of fre soon removed all trace of t, and traffc was resumed on the lne n SM hours. "A brdge fell, and t was feared a long delay must ensue, but Scott put more than 2,000 men to work on that one structure and thus elmnated the queston of delay. Those were the days when such-thngs counted and were not only possble, but necessary) Today ralroadng s reduced to such a fne pont that the need for them no longer exsts.; The,reads are too safeguarded for that - ' "The last nstance' remember of' such ralroad work as that was at the Johnstown flood n 1889,1 thnk t was. Frank Thomson, by; great work and the use of sde ltaes was one of the frst to arrve upon, the scena Once there, he took, full control, the dvson superntendents from all over the lne were summoned, and a partcular task was gven to each.one to do-nstantly. They "one and.all responded as. besjt they could to the spur, and the lne waa reopened wth ^ncredble swftness. There were one or two falures, however, and those men, whle they were kept on as superntendents of unmportant mountan, dvsons, were never agan - promoted-"-. Bow He Knew,., A ragman wno was gntnertng tp wornout clothng n the country purchased a par of dscarded trousers at a farmhouse and remarked to the man of the house es be pad for the stuff he had bought: '...'''". ", see, sr, that yap are about to lose your land on a mortgage.", "Guess you are rght," sad the dscouraged lookng farmer, "but wll you tell me bow the Sam Hll you found that out?" "Easy enough," sad the cheerful ragman as he settled back, on the seat of he peddlng wagon. " notce that these old pants are completely played out so far as the part of 'em you sat down on s concerned, but they show mghty lttle wear anywhere : else,'*' THE REGSTER does all knds'of prntng and dres' t quck and good. The prce s low for the grade of work done. ZT Mercantle Co-operatve Bauk Buldng. 4, nterest PAD BY THE Mercantle Co-operatve Bank Of New Jersey ON ALL SUMS OF >.oo OK MORE. nterest begns from the frst of each month. UK. J. K. BAYHB. Presdent,, JOHN KNO, Onahlor. WM,, HENPUOKBON, AnatalArt Oosllor. RED BANK. ortant to farmers. S ter, Walter A. Wood Mowers, Reapers and Repars, Hay Rakes and Fxtures, Planet, Jr.j Rdng Cultvators and smaller Fxtures, Buckeye Rdng Cultvators and Repars, South Bend Plows and Repars and a full lne of Farmers' Tools. Don't buy tll you call and see for yourself. AlotafWetdtraOheap. THOMAS P. BROWN, 24 WHARF AVENUE. Red Banks 1 TELEPHONE 27. New Jersey. t J lttle leak y f T f t *» n a f acet or ppe s! *$* often thought to be of *$* ^ no consequence. But let ^ «> that lttle leak run for!. V three nonths -and you'll V V ±- * & see a bg. ncrease n & «* your water bjl.'~ Often-^* V tmes 25 cents' worth of. V & repars wll stop a leak & A* whch would cost a dol- V % ar, or maybe ten dol- J A lars, n waste of water. & & Cook & Oakley, % 18 Front Street, % X»»»»»»» Whatlslt? ' Y > RED BANK, NEW JERSEY.! : LVA * * A^A *^r*. kta A^A J^r,± A^T* J^A 4TA A^F* ATA.T. Dorsett, Edward < - s t a new house '< '> you want? or s t ;; repars to your ;; present house? ', Send for me to J', gve you fgures. < ;> <, < > A. L SMTH,! FAR HAVEy, N. J. >»»» Weddng Plate Paper AT 2Oe. per Box. nm Bellng a box of very fne Weddng Plate Paper at 20 conte. t s of extra good qualty, and s worth fully 25 conta. ^lmvo a box, very superor qualty, 'at 25 cents, worth 85 conta. Front St., JJolnlg the PoHtollco, RED BANK, N. J. ~W~. R. D, EECTRCAN. Wlrlna for Rlootro.UKlta. lnttorjr, Murnuto und l'noumntlc Bult. Telohoon n-bpoomlty. aaa nromt st M ' u»a n«nk, N. 3. '-,, p.o.bonse. (n Kdlmntoj for Cotraola on AppllotHon. EC- E. 13 FRONT STREET, BED BANK. Headquarters for Prme Beef, Choce Lamb, Selected Veal, Fowls, &c, &c. Farmers' Trade Solcted. o± SALE OF LANDS FOR Notce s hereby grea that by vrtue of a warrant ssued by H. J. Obld, a polce Justce- of tbe town of Bed Bank, at the nstance ot tbe Board ot Commssoners ot the town of Bed Bank, n tbe Townshp of Shrewsbury, County ol Uonmontb and State of New Jersey, to make tbe unpato taxes assessed on lands, tenements, and heredtaments snd real estate n tbe sad town of Bed Bank for tbe year one thousand eght hundred and nnety-nne, the subscrber, marshal ot tbe Town ot Red Bank aforesad, to wbom sad warrant s drected, wll on ' r - ' FRDAY. OCTOBER 5th, 1900, between tbe hours of twelve tfcloclt. noon, and fve o'clock (to wt, at two o'clock), n the afternoon of ttatdav.attbe«? 0B HOTEL OX FBOXT STREET, n the TOWX OF BED BASK, n te Townshp ot Shrewsbury, County of Uonmouth and Slate ot New Jersey, sell the sad lands, tenements, heredtaments and real estate hcreunder descrbed, at publc vendue, for the shortest term not exceedng thrty rears for wblch ady person or persons wll agree to take the same and pay such taxes wth nterest thereon trom the twenteth day of Docemoer..eghteen hundred and nnety-nne, togetler wth all costs, fees, charges and expenses. The persons whose property s to be sold, tbe locaton of the several propertes, and the amounts due' are as follows:. Anderson, 'Wllam' Lot on Beach street...,...:... % 60 Adcock, W. H. Bjldlnff and lot on West Front street 3.00 BussQll, Elzabeth (estate) '. House and lot on Bverslde avenue 6000 Brown, Magge. House end lot on the west sde ot South street 1?CO Barden, Mary.. ' House and lot on the south sde of Wallace street and house ad lot on the west sde of West street..,..':...' 8 60 Bennett, Amos House and lot on Stout street 360 Brown.'M. Lous '. House and lot on north sde of Stout street 4 80' Carhart, Mrs. Theo. House and lot on tbe west sde of Brdge avenue 6 00 Cootept, Mrs. Mllor.. ' One Bbareot Frst Natonal bank stock Coach.Danel... House and lot on the east sde ot Central avenue 3 00 Chandler, Sarah ' House and lot on the west sde of Sprng street Carson, Luoy (estate) House andlot on Morford place 1 20 ' Store and loton the south sde otmonmouth street 1800 Davs, W. H ' House and lot on the west sde of Pearl street, 80 Dwyer, Dela - o ' House and lot on Rver street, ^80' Egan, Patrck - -, '... : '._ - House and lot on the corner ot Brdge avenue and Chestnut street and one lot on tho south sde ot Chestnut street....- flflo FlemmlEH, Mchael (estate) One lot on the east sde of Pearl street 180, Fnkle. Sarah E. Bous) and lot on the southsde of Beach street FGrrfl, Mary, ' > ^ One lot on the corner of Locust and Lelghtou avenues and one lot on BhroWBbury avonuo Flannlgan, Uarcella * One lot on Catherne street SO Green, W. H. :.' House and lot on the east sde of Brdge avenue 800- GramtnaD, Mrs. George House and lot on the west sde of Shrewsbury avenue. 180 Gowdy, F. B. Stock n busness GOO flealy, Thomas ' * " House and lot on the north sde of Bank street ' 420 Hartgan, Anne House and lot on the east slda of West street 300 Holmes, Joseph House and lot on the west Bde of Central avenue ' 300 Hawkns, Ella. Bouse and loton th» south sde of Beach street 000 Hawkns. Patrck House and ldt on the north sde of Stout street; house andlot on the south sde of East ' Front street and house and lot on the north sde of Borden street 1200 Hurley, A. C. House and lot at the corner ot Brdge avenue and Herbert street '.,..: Holms. Melvlle E. - -, House and lot on the north sde of Stout street,., 1 20 Johnson, Sarah A. House and lot on the south sde of Chestnut street 120 Jackson. Elzabeth A. One share of Frst Natonal bank stock go Johnson, Ezekel Landon Beaohstreet 00 Johnson, Matthew,, One lot on the south sde of Beach Btreet... oo Johnson, Rebecca ' ' One lot on the south sde of Beach street 13 Keeler, Albert House and lot on the north sde of Bank street 3 00 Lnen, Alce M. Houso and lot on the west Bde of Broad street, 2400 Leonard. Joseph Property on Beach street ~ \ 20 Low, John G. Bouse and lot on the south elde ot East Front street Levalley, Martn Lot on tb8 south Bde ol Bank street...,; 30 Marsden, sabella Bouse and lot on the north sde of West Front street Meglll, J. H. Lot and barn on the corner of West and Oakland streets 3 00 Morford, Zelpba Three shares of Frst Natonal bank Btock Manbelmer, Mr. Three lota on the cornel ot Beach am Pearl streets ' 00 Matthews, Ambrose (estate) House and lot on the north sde of Blout street,,,, 8 00 McKcusoy, George Tbroo ota n West Red Bank 1 so Parker, Anne 0. Two lots on tho east sde ot Broad street ;, Pttenger, W.. ' One lot on Catherne street,...,., 120 Parker, Mary.., House and lot on the south sdo of Beach street r <jg Rogers, Mrs. Lawrence Ono lot on the oast sde of Branch avenuo, j 50 Rosobo, Obarlos Two lou on the south sldo of Boutl Ffth avenue, 8 <o. Doves, Augustus Ono loton Herbert street Sesta, Joseph House and lot on Brdge avonuo, 510 BlloldB, Wllam. " Housu und lot on ho south sde ol tlvor street Smltb.JohnJ. Houso and lot on thdsouth sde ot Beach street :', 4 so Ters, A. J. A. Houso and lot on tbo westbldoof BrancHavcnuo,...,.. S 00 Thompson, nchard 1) Stock n busnos 50 Vohablc, Margaret A., House and lot at No. 83 Pearl Btroot, 540 Wortbloj, Harry ''< Slock n busness, 4 80 Wlllot, T. J. 4 Houso and lot at No. 01 Wallace Blroot Worthloy. Tuns, HoBoanlotonLolgltonavonu,.,'.. no Klmnorman, Albert Manson housn property on Loeusl avmuo ;, f tho tl, ntoront and coots aro pad before tho (bovt day of «alo, tho costs n oaol case wll le»«.02, md ntorot wll bo wldod at tho rate ot twolve per centum por annum from tlw twenteth day of, Dw'lMT, ol«btmn hundred and nlncty-nlno. r the tux, ntorost and coab are nol pad uuttl nftor tho boro-montlonod day of nale, adlltloual COUH wll bo a<ld«l. Pajmcnt of tho te, nterest and ttonta mny \x> mado at any tme prevous to tho s»lo to Tboodoro F, W1U1, TrwBuror ot tho»sld Town of Rod Bank, who s tuthortod to rooout for tho same, Wton UnsalctokmplnTO, pafmont of All tajtoo, ewtto awl nterow, must bo mado by tho purchaser botoro tho conolulon of t* Mlo, otbprwlso tho property wll bo mruodlatoly roww. WuoM mjr hand tal twotlota day of Auguat, n tbo yoar of our Lord ono thousand nlno hundred... r. P. STRYKEB, 1 so

12 SCABED, BY A TROLLEY OAR. JSr. ana Mrs. saac B.' Whte ' Jltrown.From Thelt" Carrage. Mr. and Mrs. saac B. Whte of Oakhurst drove to Red Bank on Saturday n a two-seated carrage.- At tbo corner of Broad and Monmouth streets the horse got scared at a trolley cur and ran away. The horse turned down Wallace street and ran on the Bdewalk to avod a wagon n whch were the Msses Cono* ver of Jed Bank. The wagon collded wth a tree and Mr. and Mrs, Whte were thrown out. A wheel of the wagon was wrecked by the collson, and the horse contnued down Wallace street to Esner's factory, where t brought up aganst another tree and was caught. The top was torn from the carrage and t was otherwse damaged. ' Mr. and Mrs. Whte escaped serous njury. Mfc, Whte receved a Bcratoh on the sde of hs face and several scratches on the back of he hand that brought blood. Mrs. Whte suffered consderably fronr shock, but was not njured. She was taken to Dr. Sayre's offce.' Both Mr. and Mrs. Whte are well advanced n years. Mr. Whte s a local preacher and superntendent of the Waysde Methodst Sunday-school. Mr. and Mrs. Whte drove home wtb,a borrowed wagon.. KNOCKED DOWN AND RUN OVER. An Accdent On the Ven Stone Road at Atlantc Hghlands. A group of men and boys were watchng the steam roller at work on the new stone road at Atlantc Hghlands on Saturday. They were standng behnd the roller and were hdden from the vew of persons comng from the opposte drecton wth wagons. Albert Foster, who drves John Snedoker's express, pulled out for the steam roller and as he pulled n. behnd t he gave hs horse a cut wth a whp. Thehorse jumpednto the crowd of men and boys. Wllam Mount, son of Wllam F. Mount, was holdng hs bcycle. He was knocked down and the horse and wagon passed over hm. He' escaped njury but the bcycle was wrecked. Edgar H. Cook was struck on the shoulder, but was only slghtly njured.. - -» m A Hstorcal Socety Meetng. The Monmouth county Hstorcal socety held ts annual meetng a week ago last Thursday at Mrs. Wllam-W. Shppen's at Seabrght. The report of the trusteesshovved that seventeen neto- members had been elected snce ther last reporfl, these new members beng Rev. Wllam 1 B. Matteson, George "V. Sneden, Mrs. Ella C. Sneden, Harry Edwards, Mrs, Anne, H. Edwards, Jame ^!ooper, ""JfTTEnoch L. Cowart, Mss Eleanor Arrowsmth, Rufus Ogden, Mrs, Mnne Brown, A. A. Robnson, Charles Hutch- nson, Mrs. Mary E. Atwood, Mrs. Anne p. H. Ogden, Charles E. Snyder, Mss da Johnson and Mss Norma L. Swan! Contrbutons to the lbrary were announced from Edward S. Atwood, Derrck G. Campbell of New Monmouth and James Cooper, Jr., of Red Bank. Rev. John C. Lord read a hstory of Chrst church at Shrewsbury ard Capt. Charles B. Parsons of Red Bank read a paper on " The Spout," at the Hghlands, a noted sprng where n old tmes vessels would get ther water supply before startng on a voyage. Ths was before modern arrangements,had been made for supplyng vessels wth water, and Capt. Parsons, who s a seafarng man hmself, sad that he'had seen as many BB seventy vessels.at ono tme n Sandy Hook bay, watng ther turns to get water at " The Spout." EdwardS. Atwood read an artcle on the death of Vce Presdent Garrett A. Hobart, who was a natve of Monmouth county and member of the hstorcal assocaton.., The electon of offcers resulted as follows: Presdent Mrs. Carolne Q. need. Vco presdent Rev, John C. Lord. Correspondng secretary Mss Edth M. Johnson, Hecordlntf secretary Mss Edth M. Johnsou. Treasurer-Stephen V. Arrowsmltn. The usual commttees were apponted, there beng very lttle change from the membershp of the commttees of last Fell Down Stars. Mrs. J. R. Conover of mlaystown went to her son's room a few nghts ago to put down a wndow. Whlo returnng to her own room n the dark she stepped off the stars landng and fell down the entre flght. She struck aganst the door at tljo bottom of tho stars wth such force that neghbors lvng across tho road were awukonod from ther Bleop by the fall. No boneb wore broken, but Mrs. Conovor was badly brused and Bhkon up, ; ' Allortown's Cannng Factory. Two thousand cans of corn and four tloueapd cans of tomatoes wero put up r one day last week at tho Allontown co-operatve cannng factory. The faotory has ft capacty of!o,o0o cans a dny nnd t n oxpcotou.lafc ths lmt wll bo reached durng tho season.. '»«', Tnfl EKOSTBU to ft.00u your. Adv. Mnor Accdents.' George W. Wallng of. Keyport was standng n the door of Elmer E. Morrs's bottlng establshment at that place last week when a bottle of soda burst and a pece of the flyng glass made a gash under hs'chn. Mrs. Thomas Southard of Turkey was run nto by a bcyclst last week whle walkng along the road. She.escaped serous njury but was badly shaken up. - Wllam Todd of Turkey was usng a' grubbng hoe last week when the hoe slpped and made a cut on hs shn that lad hm up for several days.. * ' *' Caught n a Cog Wheel. G. R. Baley was workng n McChesney's ce cream factory at Freehold last week-when hs' shrt bosom caught n the cogs of the machnery and the shrt, was torn completely, off. r AN AUTUMN OUTNG. Gettysburg, Lardy, Natural Brdget Rchmond, Old Pont Comfort, and Washngton. " A nne-daypersonally-conducted tour of the Pennsylvana.ralroad company to the Battlefeld.'of Gettysburg, Luray Caverns, Na,tural*Brtdge, Rchmond,' Old Pont Comfort and Washngton wll leave New York and'phladelpha n a specal tran of Pullman parlor cars on Tuesday,,. Obtober 9th. The party wll be n-charge of a tourst agent and an experenced chaperon. A whole day wll be spent on the Battlefeld of Gettysburg, a carrage drve wth'lectures by an able gude beng ncluded n the tcket. Ample tme wll be allowed at Luray and Natural Brdge to vew the wondrous natural formatons. Sunday, October 14th, wll be spent at Old Pont Comfort. At Rchmond and Washngton opportuntes wll be presented to vst all the ponts of nterest under ntellgent gudance. The round-trp rate, ncludng all necessary expenses, s $65 from New York, $68 from Phladelpha, and proportonate rates from other ponts. For, detaled tnerary apply to tcket agents; to Toursb Agent, 1196 Broadway, New York;' 4 Court street, or Pennsylvana annex, foot Fulton street, Brooklyn; 789 Broad street, Newark, N. J.; or address George W. Boyd, Assstant General Passenger Agent, Broad Street Staton, Phladelpha. A Beal Pleasure. " t s a pleasure to sell Ch&mberlan's Colc, Cholera and Darrhoea Remedy,' wrtes the Harmon Drug Co., of Mound Cty, Mo., "because t always gves our trade complete satsfacton." t s our leader for bowel complants." Ths s the only remedy that never fals and that s pleasant and safe to take. When reduced wth water and sweetened, chldren lke t. For sale by Chas. A.. Mnon & Co., Druggsts, 3 Broad street. * THE GERMAN!A HOTEL, 16 and 18 FRONT STREET, RED BANK. N. J. / ' THE GERMANA, formerly conducted by J. Degenrng, s well equpped wth all the essentals and ^ccesspres of a frst-class hotel, and ts well-establshed reputaton wll be fully sustaned ^ by ts new propretor. New "features have been added, ncludng LUNCH AND CGAR COUNTERS, FOOL AND BLLARD TABLES, AND A READNG ROOM The bar wll be suppled wth frst-class LQUORS, WNES, BEERS and CGARS. Frst-class accommodatons are furnshed for permnaent and transent guests., Specal attenton pad to gettng up dnners.. ;,.. ; ;.; y.\ :, ';,'- ". ;' y'-.-^f"'"'...,,'..'.j. EBCfAB BBOWER, Propretor. Competton s pretty ferce nowadays;.. ; Keeps everybody hustlng to get; busness. Most everybody has to advertse, or the bth^r fellows wll coax, the publc ther way. ; - " " l ' Advertsng means prntng, -j Good advertsng means good prntng. Good envelopes, good. letter-heads, good cards,.'good crculars,, good booklets, good catalogues. And the prce must'not.be too hgh, ether., There's one prntng offce n Red Bank where prntng s done: good, and where prces are not hgh. -. v? That's-THE REGSTER prntng offce, 42 Broad street. Telephone number s 13. Do you need any prntng? Call tn us when you do. ' ^ RED BANK REGSTER. Every convenence and every necesstyforsummer Hausekeepng s found at our '4 store. HENDRCKSON & 4 1 POST-OFFCE BLOCK, RED BANK, N. J. ^ <! 1 f > %%%%%m%%mm:

13 SAVED BY BEARS. Thev Routefl Bevenue Men Who Were Buntng WMqku. 1 "We'd bn makln moonshne whsfcy over n the bg ravne, tur about three weeks," eald the old possum hunter of Tennessee, "when a ttrumpln bg b'ar cum down out of the thcket one day and acted n a mghty cnr*us way. t.was n' the summer, and he was sheddln hs fur, and, though.. had my rfle handy, ddn't beer to shoot hm. Xhat b'ar smelt the whsky, and' he snffed and snuffed and seemed to want a.taste.. hollered at hm and drlv hm off two, or three tmes, but he kept comln back. My ole woman had come over wth-my supper, and arter watchln the b'ar fur awhle she sad:. -'." 'Zeb, thaf b'ar wants a drnk of co'n juce suah's yo'r bo'n, and 'm fur gvn t to hm.' " laughed at tha dea, but as he contnued to hang around-the place the old woman poured about a pnt of' the stuff nto a pan and set t on a stone.80 rods away. She had skassly turned her back befp' - the b'ar was lappln t up, and he smacked hs lps over t Jest lke a man. n a leetle whle he walked off, and later on we heard ech a row down around the bend that we crept down to see what \ t was. t was our b'ar and hs mate. That pnt of whsky had made our b'ar feel mghty jolly, and he was lnslstln that the other b'ar dance around and roll over wth hm. One was drunk and jolly and the other sober and mad, and- the way they.carred on was as good, as a crcus. Next day both b'arb showed up fur whsky and went off as jolly as you please, and half an hour later walked rght-up to them aa they slept and snored. wasn't fur glvln away, any mo' Hcker, but the ole woman thnks t over and says: ' " 'Zeb, the tur of them b'ars won't be wuth shucks fur three months, but what's 'the matter wth shettln the varmnts up n our outdoor cellar fur the rest of the summer? reckon we kn manage to feed 'em, and each hde wll fetch $15 as soon as the fur s prme.' ' ' - " decded that t was a good dea, and we put out a hull quart of whsky fur 'em, but fur some reason~they had left the nayburhood. 'The old woman reckoned they'd got ashamed of themselves and gone off to avod temptashun, and knder flggered that they was off spreadln the news and lnvtln other b'ars to" come along and sheer a good thng. We'd about gven up seeln 'em ag'ln when they showed up. was all alone at the stll that day, but 1 had ropes at hand to te 'em up n case our plan worked, and poured. two full quarts of whsky nto the pan and set t out n the old place. Them b'ars had bn roamn around and keep-' n sober fur so long that they was dyn fur a spree, and they lapped up every drop of that llcker and lcked ther chops fur mo'. They: ddn't gt jolly, as looked fur.. On the contrary, they snarled and growled and wanted to pck a fuss wth each other. Mebbe a b'ar, s lke a man about drnkn. Let hm gt too much, and he's ugly nstead of jolly. -wated awhle and then; tollered 'em, hopln to fnd 'em asleep, and that's how cum to see a sght to make my ha'r stand up. "Down around the bend n the ravne was a grassy spot, and what saw was them b'ars rolln four men over the ground. t wasn't a mlnlt befo' knowed who them men was. They was revenoo fellers who hed got news of my stll and was sneakln up the ravne to ketch' me red handed. The b'ars had met 'em and' ptched rght n. reckon the fellers was too surprsed to fre a shot, though all had pstols, and the way them b'ars dd slam 'em around was a cauton. Two of the fellers broke away as Boon as got thar, but the other two was so badly clawed that arter the b'ars left 'em they could skasbly crawl, and 'm suah they lad out n the woods all nght was much obfeeged to the varmnts, as yo' may reckon, as. they hed saved me from a surprse, and n my grattood sad to tho ole woman: 6 '" an't gwne to play no trlcka on a'tarmlnt what has saved mo from run, and shan't try to captur* 'em. 'Deed, but 'll furnsh 'em wth free co'n juce and let 'em hev a good tme.' "They was back next day fur ther drnk, and, remembern how a quart had made 'cm ugly drunk, only sot out a pnt, They lapped t up and' looked fur mo', and,when no mo' was fo'thcomln they gn us a surprse party. Xhar was fo' men of us at the stll that day, and arter growlln around fur awhle them b'ars cum chargln down upon us. Wo had to scatter mghty. sudden, and they kept us dway fur an hcwr. Thar was no whsky to be got at, and they tore dovfa our shanty, clawed our blankets nto strps and went off growlln at each other. We ddn't seo 'urn ag'ln.fur a month. Then one day as was carryn a keg of the stuff on my shoulder along a mountan path ruu full tlt nto the two of 'cm, knowed 'em n a mlnlt, and jest counted on hovln.a fuss wth 'om. t was no UBO tryln to gt away, and put down tho keg and stood back to gn 'em a chance at t. But they ddn't taka t They walked up and snffed about, and ab soon as thoy recognsed tho Btnell.thoy aortor shook ther heads and walked oft' and gn mo a^styttv'jtoad.' M -'nggorcd t.'thorn b'ara had tred whsky' ShcTfounc that t brung nuthln- but; headaches and flghtn and hard'knocks. They'd jest made up ther mnds that t' was bad stuff and hed gone back on t, and that keg was no temptasbun. Yes, sun, they walked off and let me pass on, and never shall hear the.last of t from the ole woman./1 never hev taken a np of co'n juce snce then that she wasa't ready to epeak. out: "'Thar yo' go ag'to Zeb.Whte! Law me, but f yo' only bed the brans of a b'ar,: what a happy womaa 'd. :b'" x ; - r v_ THE ST^FP 6P LFE.,. Breaa Seems to be Falng n Favor as an Artcle of Det. " look upon bread as an artcle of food destned to be completely abolshed before many-: years,"' sad a New York doctor,' "for the number of rpersons who are wllngly gvng up the use of t ncreases every year. The majorty of them do ths on the advce of ther physcans, who fnd more ground for recommendng abstnence from bread us they see the results that such a course of treatment has on ther patents. /' '. "For nearly all forms of dyspepsa,^ gout; rheumatsm and kndred alments the patent s frst told to shun bread unless t be submtted to certan preparaton and be taken only forcer-, tan forms. The great ncrease n the number of hygenc foods that have been, put upon the market and the almost nvarable success of any of these manufactures' whch prove an acceptable substtute for bread and other starchy foods are other ndcatons n the change of the publc feelng toward bread as a smple food whch could be taken under all crcumstances. "Some years ago a man wrote a boob devoted-chefly to exposng to the world the.harmful qualtes of bread. Persons at that tme thought he was, a crank, and lttle attenton was pad to hs very sound utterances on the subject But hs opnons are now re-echoed by most physcans, am the great army of abstaners from bread gathers recruts every, day. The revolt aganst such a well establshed nsttuton s naturally a lttle bt slow. But bread s destned to be ultmately shunned even more -than t s today, and ths destructon of a tradton that has lasted centures s already well under Way. Most of ts force comes from the complete satsfacton of the persons who do gve up bread entrely. They are always the most enthusastc advocates of the new theory on the subject." HE TESTED HS SKLL. The Resutt Moved the Phlosopher to a Dscourse on Success. "Dd you ever realze that the SJMcess that one really-enjoys comes onlythrough hard work?" asked the phlosopher. " know the average mortal.would prefer to gan hs ends wthout hard tol, but few do, and doubt f those few gan any pleasure from havlng-the plum drop n ther laps wthout any effort on ther part. " had that fact mpressed upon me only the other day. chanced durng an dle moment to pck up an empty nk bottle, and somethng started my thoughts back to my boyhood days when an, empty bottle furnshed an deal mark >to throw stones at. Smlng to myself at the chldshness of t, set the bottle on a htchng post, and after carefully selectng a number of atones stood off about 30 feet and prepared to make a test of my skll. The very frst stone that threw caught the bottle farly n the center and shattered t nto a hundred peces. threw away the stones that had so carefully gathered n dsgust. had accomplshed what bad set out to do on my frst throw, but fully realzed that t was only a fluke and that mght throw 50 more stones and not come anywhere near the mark. "Now, f, on the contrary, had mssed, would have carefully noted where the fault lay and tred to" have corrected t on my next throw. The throws that Went too low and too hgh, as' well as too much to one sde, would have all been valuable lessons to me, and n the end would have succeeded n placng a stone where wanted t. That would have, been success ganed by workng for t. The very few people who gan Buccess on ther frst throw have my sympathy."- Marrage Was a Success. "s marrage a falure?" " should say not!" remarked an Oregon farmer. "Why, there's Luclndy gts, up n tho mornn, mlks sx cows, gts breakfast, starts four chldren to Bkewl, looks ar-, ter the other three, feeds the hens, lkewse the hogs, lkewse some motherless sheep, skms 20 pans of mlk, washes tho clothes, gts dnner, et cetcry, ot cetcry! Thnk could hre anybody to do t for what she gts? Not mucll Marrage, sr, s a success a great successl" NordlcA's Kocpo For Succewt. "t s work, work, work, that makes success," oho once exclamed. "Work' 11 vo mnutes, and you vrlll succeed lve mnutes' worth, but work fve hours, and you wll succeed flvo hours'worth." "But" Bald, "rotnembor your natural gfts," "Plenty have natural voces equal to mne," sho answered,.'"plenty have- talent equal to mne, but nave- worked," A FCKLE MMGRANT; Her Experence Wth Two Lovers. "at Uncte> 'Sam's large Offce*. "There seem to be manfold opportuntes among the mmgrants comng to Amerca on shpboard for fallng n love, partcularly on the slower steamers,, when people are thrown together for a perod of from, 12 to 18 days," saye John Gllmcr. Speed n Alnslee's. "n ths case a worthy young Russan was cheated out of a very "pretty brde by a lkely talan fellow traveler of the' maden. Strangely enough,' Bhe kneftmot one word of talan nor be a word of Russan, "yet the brbe's countryman was Jlted, and the pantomme lovers were marred and set forth gayly and confdently to' learn each other and the great new world they had entered at one and the same tme.';.' : --. : ''.' " " ;: ~ '';.' >.. y : "Another case was equally ludcrous. A Swedsh maded of somewhat fckle mnd fell n love wth a fellow voyager wthout apprsng hm of the fact that she was.betrothed to another man whom she was to \meet at the barge offce and marry. ; t was her.ntenton to hurry ashore wth her new lover and,outwt the former by a pror ceremony but the red tape of, the offce prevented that and the frst lover came to welcome hs brde. -She then as promptly fell n love wth No. 1. But when No. 2 pleaded and threatened, she could not decde whch one she loved the better, so she was detaned whle the.two men haunted the'barge offce, glarng at each other "When the detenton tme had elapsed, the brde, Stll not knowng her mnd, was sent unceremonously back on the same steamer that brought her over, both Jlted lovers abandonng the feld n despar. But on arrvng- on her natve sol once more the maden dared not face her people, so back she came, havng Just money enough to pay her passage, aad sent for lover No. 1, declarng that she loved hm the better. He repled that he was very much oblged, but as he had already marred a handsomer grl n the nterval he was compelled to declne to come for her. The maden then sent word to No. 2 to lke effect, but he declared that he had had enough of the fckle femnne, and thus n defeat the maden was transported back agan to face the leers and Jeers of her natve hamlet." \ Earnng Ther Board. > "'One' of the om tme Adrondack gudes'was Eljah Cowles of Lake Pleasant, n Hamlton county. Cowles stood 8 feet 7 n he stockngs and was of powerful buld. When he was not moose huntng or bear huntng or gudng, he was keeper of the county Jal at Lake Pleasant and the comty allowed hm 50 cents a week board for each man." Ths ment feareful'.plan-', nng and not extrenlely luxurous lvng at the best. -So Cowles, beng a fellow of resource, used to take hs prsoners off moose huntng, that they mght earn then* board. t s related of one vctm that after havng been out for ten days on the tral wth the strappng gude-he begged ptteously to be allowed to go-back to jal, but the nexorable Cowles compelled hm to "keep up wth the processon" untl the venson had been captured.- ~ Thrve Wthout Meat. t s the relgon of nearly all Asatcs to abstan from eatng flesh, fsh or fowl, because t s a sn to kll for food anythng that has nstnct "lest t be hndered on ts upward way." Besdes, accordng to the' doctrne of transmgraton of souls, one mght kll and eat one's grandmother. But, asde from that, vegetable food,.t s clamed, makes better muscle and bone than" meat. Anyway, t s well known that the stevedores of Constantnople and other eastern ports never eat meat, and that, as a class, they have no superors anywhere n the world n physcal strength. Saved by Seaweed.!' was once saved by seaweed," sad an old sea captan'; "down n the Falkland slands. We were beng washed on a lee shore when the skpper, an old fellow from Nova Scota, pcked up a vne that was floatng on the water and hauled t n untl t got pretty near as bg as a man's body; then he made t fast;' and we swung by t, as good a cabloas you would want to see and one of the curlousest thngs.", m t m,' Sundered. O love, tnco you and 1 must walk tpart, Sparc mo one lttle comor ol your he«rt^- A shrno ' That (hall bo wholly mlnol Others may clam, and rghtfully, tho rest; f there know am not dlspoeocokxl, ' All blss, eager, shall not rala*. And f-so bo you Bonwttmcfl offer there, Though but n thought, tho'fragment ol prayer, No more Can, oka, mplore! Dut that s much and shall, forsooth, aval To mnko my footntcpa flter not nor fall, Though lor Our patlwnya nndcrod aro. Then, love, anoo you mm! 1 mutt walk aput, Bparo mo one lttle conur ol your heart A hrne. That «ballj>o wholljrmlnal _ 1 ' m»'... "" Tll! REOBTtn prnts more nown than any other Jlonmouth county paper; prnts t better and prnts t more acourataly. The paper cental f 1,60 a year, Leutenant Jones' Nerve. "The nervest act know of," sad a Kansas man whle dscussng the world's bravo deeds, "was performed by Leutenant Jones of the company of marnes that took John Brown at Harper's Perry.. Robert B. Lee had advanced hs 00 marnes n a semcbcle about the armory n whch Brown and hs men hod token refuge. Then Leutenant Jones stepped out and commenced to read the rot act to the men behnd -the armory wallb, and, though they ^kept shootng at hm, hs voce never; wavered, nor dd be Bhcrw any other sgn of trepdaton. was n that company of' marnes!"- '-, Sleepless. Blobbs Why.don't you consult a doctor about your nsomna? Slobbs What! ' And run up more blls? Why, t'b because of what owe hm now that can't sleep. r.',-... How He Broke t. An lrascldle'old gentleman had met n early lfe wth ah accdent whch left hm wth a broken nose, a deformty about whch he was known to be a lttle senstve.-; -']':/ " One day a new nqurer propounded the old q teston, "How dd you manage to break your nose?". The old gentleman answered solemnly, "To tell,the truth, my frtaevthe accdent was caused-by. my pokng t nto other people's busness."-; ~ f HOWARD FREY, MONMOUTH ST., P radcal lumber. TltMSD BASK,. SEW JERSEY. ' ESTMATES CHEEBFUJLLY TJNSHDD..:''. CONTRACTS TAKEN. 1 JOBBNG PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. ; ALL WORK GUARANTEED.. ',. ' '.. '. ' ' ' carry constantly on band all the latest santary applances, and bence am prepared > to do wort wthout delay. # STANDABO LVERY STABLE. rat es Saddle Horses a Specalty. Competent drvers sent wth partes day or ng h. HOB8E8 BOARDED and rlfs kept n Al condton at low rates. THE STANDARD LVERY STABLE, : D.B.HOFF. Manager. NOW READY. 83 abd 85 Watte Street, Bed Bank, N. J. Longdstance telephone, 82a. Local telephone, No. fral Suts, Fall Overcoats, Fall Hats, j \ --- s p For Gentlemen, Boys and Chldren. \ M.M. DAVDSON, RED BANK, N. J. J Brother Jonathan Has receved most of < the medals at the Pars ; Exposton. Speakng of medals, \ we would be covered ; wth them f they were < awarded for carryng the \ \ best meats and groceres. : PEACH BASKETS, $3.50 PER 100. DOREVUS BROS., Frst Class Meats and Groceres, $ AT THE CTY MARKET. \\ and 13 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. 0»»»»»»»»»»»j MENNEN'S Borated Talcum Powder, 13 GENTS A BOTTLE. 2 FOR Jl Any purchaser can buy as many bottles aa he wants at ths fgure, but these fgures last only for two weeks. JAMES COOPER, Jr., Cor. BrOfd ancj Whte St.s., Red Bank, N. J./j?»

14 ..<;! / '..» ' Borrowng the Baby. Good morota. Mr «*»» To tst you hew you va; An hope you're well. You tomr 't b Th' vtf gbe tlhu does. Uy nu, she **, you're stnngen But then Aa knd o< thought Sbe"d lke to bony th 1 btbjr 'At JPOU fouaw '13 gat. Vy tnt sets by th' wnder An w&tcbn you D hm An knd o< snoee an oka to wunat, 'OLUK be* lke baby Jm. Wbo'sJUnf Ho was our h«ljr. We named hm after pa. Sty, c'n we bony your beby A lttle wtllc (CT mtf My ma, she ee she wouldn't Blnd 11 your baby cred. Ebc eez 't 'd bo Hko nraslc, Snce lttle Jm tts ded. She Bex she'll M good to bn. An she'd lke a whole lot t we c'n borry the baby 'At you folksea 'us got. THE RUSSAN CGARETTES. (From London T ' The vst of Prnce Serglra Mendele- Jeff to England s 6*111 a matter of recent hstory to most people but a proofr of the safety enjoyed by all natlons, wthout dscrmnaton, under the shadow of the Brtsh flag; to myself nod a few others an anxtons nghtmare n whch we prevented as f by mracle the attacks of toe nqtlltsts on the august person of hs mperal hghness..' On the afternoon of Aprl 251 sat n my chambers puttng the fnal touches to a draft of the route whch wastobe taken by the royal vstor. The prnce was to arrve at Portsmouth n bs yacht la the early mornng of the 26th, to loud ncognto and to entran at once n the "Bpecal" that would be awatng to convey hm to London. On the Journey the tran was to hou at Grayford, a small rural staton, for an hour whle the' prnce breakfasted la the open ar, ths beng hs usual custom whle travelng n Russa. He was. then to proceed to Waterloo, beng met there by several members of the Englsh royal famly. Such woe the programme arranged by the foregn offce, and was the offcal ntrusted wth the 'supervson of th«arrangements and held responsble for Prnce Sergus'. safety, a post that promsed to be lttle of a snecure. had fnshed annotatng the draft and was stretchng out my hand for a cgarette when, the page entered and sad that a lady woe watng below and nssted on seeng me. n my capacty of chef n the secret servce.have many unconventonal vstors, but on ths occason felt some annoyance, for was very busy. "Can she call agan?" began when the lady herself appeared n the doorway and dsspated the text of my remonstrance. '. ' She was a stylsh, well dressed grl. of 19,' wth clusterng curls of dork brown har'peepng out from beneath her pcture hat and radant volet eyes, whch looked pleadngly toward me. My chagrn vanshed wth the pathetc lttle smle on her face, and found myself shuttng the door and placng a char for the far stronger. She sat down and played nervously wth her gold muff chan whle masterng up courage to speak. "You wll forgve me for nterruptng you, sr, when tell you that my errand s very "closely connected wth the safety of hs mperal hghness Prnce Sergrao Mendetejeff," Bhe«ad after a few mnutes had elapsed. "ndeed. 1 " remarked, "My name s Murel Clough. You know Captan Clough, suppose," sho contnued, "the offcer who has been apponted to the prnce's sut durng hs vst to England?' slgulflod my assent.. -"He s my stepbrother. t s for hs Bake that have come here today for hs Bake and that of the famly honor. know nothng defnte, you understand, but fear the danger all the " more for ts obscurty. "He has fallen under the spell of Prncess Olga Skobensky, a nhlst refugeo n London, Who s as beautful as she s cruel and unscrupulous. My brother ltj merely wax. n her bands,. and from certan hnts that be has let, fall feel convnced that she s urgng lu to attempt, or, at all events, connve at,- tho murder erf Prnce Serglus durng hs vst to England, a crme for whch hs appontment offers such fn tal facltes. Oh, sr" She rose from her char and stretched out her hands appeallngly. " beseech you to frustrate tho prln. teas' schemes and to save Rupert from the consequences o hs fatal fascnaton." "You may rest assured that shal' xlo my best, Mss Clough, both for the prnce's sake and your own," 1 repled. "t would bo dangerous to bnve your brother removed from the poston to Whch he was gazetted last nght. Such A step would probably precptate somo horrble outrage on tho part of tho 'nhlsts. thnk may promse, tbougl, wthout boastng, that Captan Clougl wll have Uttlo opportunty fo, njurng ljs royal hlghneea wth tn crcumspect watch thnt tho detectve and wll keep over hm." "Thank you; thank j'ou, a thousatk tlncb," Bho sad gratefully. "That l Just what wautcll" "The oblgaton s ou our ade,", answered, mullng, ao ushered her to the door. stood watchng her drlvo off la he: smart llttla vctora, and then began t lnugh'at myself for tho Bcntmputal y n s that, were weavng n my matter of fact bran. Bat tho laugh ded oat on my lps as consdered the serous news that Mss Clough bad brought me. Her mpresson! of Prncess Olga Skobensky closely talled wth my awn ezpenence, as knew that for years the prncess had been the terror and bug' bear of the Btushn polce. knew the prncess n socety, and a sudden dea came nto my mnd tha would call oa her and see as much as ossble how the land. lay. found her n her blue and slver xmdor smokng Russan cgarettes. he was surprsed and fanced for a moment alarmed at my entrance. "Ths s an.unexpected pleasure, Sr Georgv," she sad, smlng. "Tpu have ot been to see rot* for ages.", "Busness, my dear prncess; busness," responded, takng the cup of offee that she had poured out for me. am worked to death on account of your compatrot's.vst. only hope hat you ottusts wfll refran from troublng the poor chap whle he s over here.". > ' The,prncess arched her dark eyew 8 n well affected surprse. "Nlhnstr she repeated. "Oh, am only a nlhnet so fa ae t furnshes a ashonable excuse for lvng n Bogand. You know qute \(vll that would not hart afly,much tees a prnce f my own noton." thought ths pretty good from a woman who had stabbed wth her own and the chef of the Nnth secton n her palace at Bfc Petersburg. However, only smled and took out my cgarette case.- "Won't yon try some of these? got them from Moscow ths mornng," nterrupted the prncess, handng me her own case. - took a gold tpped cgarette and lghted t t proved a delcous smoke. You. lte them," sad she, watchng me ntently. They areftfor the gods, prncess." HQve me your case, and wll fll t '.at you". banded over my slver case and submtted myself to her generosty. "Where s your gold case," she asked when the other was flled "the one you keep for grand occasons?' "No, no, prncess, you have been qute lberal enough," repled. "Not at an," she sad. "You. may have the chance of presentng t to,the prnce, and am sure he would apprecate these cgarettes." And whle drank some more coffee she fded the gold case also. We chatted on ndfferent topcs, for some tme, and then took, my learve, havng Just sad enough to Prncess Olga to show that was on my guard aganst hen. After leavng Prncess Olga's boose had Joet tme for dnner and. to take a hansom to Waterloo. Here Joned the company who were to proceed by specal tran to meet Prnce Sergtos. They ncluded tb? Bussten embassador, wth several of MB attaches, 15 detectves and offcals of the secret servce, and several Englsh offcers, among wtom was Captan Rupert Clough. Durng our journey down took an opportunty of rallyng Ctoogh on hs evdently low sprts. "My word, Fraser," he repled btterly, " have enough to make me mserable. see no alternatve between crme and dshonor and Mowng my brans out. The latter appears the more envable course to pursue." ' He gave a hotow laugh and stated moodly out of the wndow'of the saloon. Come, come," sad, "don't let yourself get nto ths morbd state of mnd. f you tell me your troubles, perhaps can see a way out of them." But be only shook hs bead, so smoked on n Bfleooe untl our arrval nt Portsmouth. Prnce SurgluB Mendeejeff landed at the per ntfr:30on the followng mornng, wtoere we were watng to receve t.jm., Hs mperal hghness la of mddle heght, dark complexlooed, wth clear, well cut features and a heavy black beard and mustache. On ths occason he wore a blue undress unform and seemed much pleased wth hs nformal recepton. waa tocrodod n the presentatons that were made to hm and bad the honor of loadng the wuy to the 'specal," whch began to roovo from the platform RS soon as the last of the party had entered the tran. The ralway arrangementfl were perfectly carred out, and we reached our one stoppng place wthout a btch. Grayford s TCBy pcturesque. The lttle platform, wth ts wooden abed, s one of tho most unaaoumlng of rural statons, and tho stold vllagers betrayed no nqustve nterest n tho arrval of tho roynl tran. Lord Selven's part to Just opposte tbo ralway staton. Honyndor tbo spreadng oak trees, hs lordshp's Rcrvanta bod prepared a sumptuous breakfast for tho proco and company, to whch #t> all dfl Justce, wth appotltes wbotted by tho front mornng ar. When tho prnce had fnshed eatng, the company roeo and, dspersng nto groups, strolled about on the grocn sward chattng gnyly. was uponklng to Cnptaln Clough wlken Ptlnca Berglun, accompaned by the Husson GnbanMdor, approached us. "Talk wthout smoke, gentlemen s llce a servce wthout utwc unsatsfactory/' ho remarked. "Wll, you have a clrurettot" hl corn).to.hand tjo mo and then burst out, laughng. t waa empty. " could have sworn Paul flled t for me ths mornng. However, must be abstemous for a lttle," he sad. mmedately' the embassador and presented our cases. Hs mperal hghness chose a cgarette from each. " wll smoke the embaesudo's frst and then yours, Sr George." And, noddng hs thanks, he sauntered off wth MB companon. "Have a-cgarette sad act up to the prnce's maxm," sad Clough. helped myself from bs case and redpror. eated by gvng hm one from the gold ease that Prncess Olga bad flled Cor me. We walked along n slence for a few mnutes, when Clough suddenly surprsed me by sayng: '1 have notced, t^ careful wateh that yw and the detectves have kept on my movements ever snce the prnce landed and have drawn my own conclusons as to what you know or guess. You need not be afrad of me, though, Fraser. told Olga yesterday that refused to be a party to assassnaton. She wanted me to offer cgarettes contanng a powerful explosve to the prnce." Fortunately a.small stream runs through Lord Selven's grounds. Wthout stoppng to explan, snatched the half smoked cgarette from dough's mouth and flung t nto the water; then tore off to where nod left the prnce, cursng my folly as jran. Untl enough's.speech the bare possblty of such an atrocous and cowardly method of assassnaton had never occurred to me. Now dd not doubt that the cgarettes n my gold case (as was afterward proved) contaned an explosve substance calculated to catse nstant death to the smoker as soon as the burnng ash touched t. Prncess Oho's cunnng n placng termless cgarettes n my slver case, well knowng that would smote these frst; had duped me' completely, and her plot would have been only too successful f Captan Clough had not been nduced to CTofesB to me the secret under ch be labored. Stall never forget that two mn-. utes" race along the turf of Setven park. Tle lfe of Prnce Sergus and the honor of Great Brtan depended on my ppeed, whle a sckenng horror clutched at my heart, tellng me that perhaps was already too tote. At that moment the prnce mght be lyng dead under the oak trees, klled, unwttngly, by the hand of hm Who had been apponted bs guardan, and protector. How that fend of a woman must have chuckled when she made me the unconscous nstrument of her wcked desgn. These thoughts lent wngs to my feet, and arrved, pantng and breathless, before he mperal hghness Just as he was. puttng a match to the paper tube of death. "Stop, your hghness, stopp' cred, and releved at the preventon of the catastrophe, stammered out an explanaton of my seemng mpertnence.. "You came Just n tme, Sr George," remarked Prnce' Sergus, pattng me affectonately on the back as concluded. "Another three mnutes and should hare smoked PemceBS Olga's cgarette. * * Both the Russan and the Englsh secret servce authortes' mantan a dscreet slence as to the wbereaboota of the beautful Olga Skobensky. have heard of a story whch tells of a nhlst prmcesa beng mmured at Cronstadt, who was made every day to smoke from a box contanng 90 ordnary -cgarettes and one that she had placed, on a former occason, n my gold case. A day came on whch she chose ths partcular cgarette, and the memory of the ehtef ad the Nnth secton was avenged. nstead of beng blamed for my mprudence, was rewarded for beyond my deserts. Prnce Sergus gtw» me the Order of St. Andrew and Captan OTough a greater gft stlll For hs sster Murel, after thankng me for rescung her brother, ahe consented t» be my wfe. Need say more to tell you of my happness?- Wllng- to Qut Some convcts were pulverzng stone at the tme of the ofllolal vst and the governor of th* prson was nspectng the work. After contemplatng the proceedngs a taw mnutes the governor remarked, "Hero, my man, you are not pulverlz-' ng that stone fne enough; that sort of tlng wll never da." Tho convct enlmly rested hs arms and Md: "Ouv'nor, 'm wllng to be turned 6ff and dtschanged f my work doesn't sut. never rpplled for ths job or the stuaton, and f my work an't satsfactory 'm wllng to go."- A Prehstorc Fsh. n tho blue shales of a valley a few mles from Moutclalr, N. J., nro found fofoll (lull of a ctnd whch la almost OK- Uuct, only throo BpoclmonB now Burvlv ng. Tboy belong to tho order of ganods, whch pohocflbed no Ulteror bony skeleton, but only an outsdo coverng of bony or cnruloglnoub plates. They wore tho carllent known vertebrates. A number of excellent epeclwenb show dstnctly tho Blnkng, bony Bcaloo of tula pecular BPCCOB of fleh, whch, accordng to geologsts, roust have exst ed ngm He Qualed. "There a nothng,**""be'sad, as he held the beautful grl n hs strong embrace, "that ' woum not dare for you There s no danger that would not wllngly face for your dear sabe; 00 deed would be too hazardous for me to undertake %rtth you to urge mo on. When loot nto your «yw, Genevteve, my heart leaps and becomes the heart'of a Houj my whole beng s thrlled; seem to be mbued w*th the sprt, of a knght of old. Ah, darlng, 1 can well understand bow the nobles who met n the lsts long, long ago were bllng'to rsk ther lves when the colors of those they loved were fastened to ther shelds., too, could be a Lancelot wth youj-my Genevteve, to urge me on. Oh, f mght but have an opportunty to prove" Harkl" she. nterrupted. " hear, papa comng n. Why not ask hm for me nowt You wll never have a better chance. ll go and meet hm n tbo hall and send hm n, and you can" "No, nof he hoarsely whsjjered. "For heaven's Bafce, don't do that! t's 30 feet from the flat to the sdewalk. When menton tbe^matter to your father, want to do t somevaese on.the ground floor." ~ "*"" A Weapon of Defence.. '. AH vstors are requred to surrender ther, guns upon enterng Yellowstone park, and attempts to conceal frearms from the.polce are severely punahed. The other day an om frontersman drove n behnd a lean par of mules that hauled a dlapdated old prare schoonee. Under ts tattered canvas were a hungry lookng women and three chldren, the eldest beng a boy about 14 years old. He got oat of hs wagon at the guardhouse to regster hs name and address, accordng to the regulatons, and when questoned by the Bergeant n charge producedaaotd smoothbore, muzzle loadng gun, the lke of whch has.not been seen n ths localty for at teast.half a century. ' When questoned, the farmer sold be was no sportsman, nor was hjs' wfe or chldren. The gnn was brought for defensve purposes onto aad' to allay the fears of hs wfe, who had been told that the woods were full of bears and was anxous" for th* safety of the chldren. 1 ddn't calculate to pesterate the rs" sad the old gentleman^"but ddn't calculate to let the b'ara'peeterate me."-'"' _.^e "... - Faled n Hs Purpose.. Perhaps the Btrangest attempt ever seen at creatng a naton by mmgraton was that begun by the Amercan Colonzaton socety n Havtag secured a terrtory on the west coast of Afrca, these phlanthropc people, wth the famous Henry Clay at ther bead, began offerng free-passages, to all freed negro slaves. Some,20,000 of these were carred back to tber natve contnent, and the state o Lbera became an establshed fact. But, well meant though t was, the experment proved a falure.- % " When You Need a Plumber Call on us. You wll not regret t. You wll be very glad of t. We do excellent work, and our charges are only reason able. We work on the prncple that a satsfed customer s our best advertsement. We furnsh estmates of any knd promptly and cheerfully. SABATH& WHTE, 10 and 18 Front St., Red Bank, N. J. ABERDEEN Matawan, N. J. NN, MCHAEL COLEMAN. Propretor. The Aberdeen nn a convenent to the Matawan ralroad staton and s equpped wth BAR, DNNG ROOM AND LUNCH COUNTER. The bar s suppled wth frst-class Lquors, Wnes, "Beers and Cgars.. Frst - class accommoda- tons for permanent and transent guests. n fact all the t accommodatons.of a frst-class hotel.. :,. JOSEPH C. ESCHELBACH. COLUMBA HOTEL, 12S West Front Street, near Pourl, Red Ban]:, N. J. Krmger'8 Beer and F. 4 H. Schafer's celebrated Welner Beer.always on djraught. ALSO BARTHO-OMAY R00HE8TEB BEER!N. BOTTfES. DAaYAND SUNDAY NEWSPAPERS,! BOOKS, MAGAZNES, PERODCALS, AND A FDLL LNE OF. PAPETERES ' " AT* F. W. MOSELLE'S, 28 BROAD ST., RED BANE. eaoaeooaoooecsoooopoooeoso THE BALANCE OF 0UE COLORED STRAW HATS At Half Prce. ALL NEW SHAPES AND COLORS, AT - Mss A. L Morrs's, MLLNERY, COR. BROAD AND FRONT STREETS, BED BANK, N. J. BRDSALL SON. 1 * Mdsummer Styles of Carrages, j Largest assortment n Eastern New Jersey. STYLE OB 1, HARNESS, HORSE-CLOTHNG AND STABLE GOODS. Adjonng: Town Hall, Monmouth Street, RED BANK, NEW JERSEY. ««v,«

15 GUARDNG A BANK. Bota ana Bars ana JBaertvtt Walls Are Sot Enough* "Modem bonks ace relyng more and more upon men nstead of metal for ther protecton," remarked an offcal n one of the bg ftnandal nsfttaoons of New Orleans. "n former days," he contnued, "they depended almost altogether upon massve walls, ehormoos doors and ponderous locks. t s true there was always a BO called *nlgtt watchman,' bat n nne cases oat of ten ho was some superannuated employee, half blnd and deaf, wbo was gven the job n leu of a penson and who slept placdly from dark to dawn n the easest offce char he could fnd. "t seems ncredble, but a lttle over a Quarter of a century ago that was the only knd of guard employed by the majorty of the bggest and best banks n the Unted States. The vault was everythng then, and drectors went on the theory 1 that the way to wep burglors from gettng ther money was to surround t by mmense masses of cold, '"' " ' ' : ' ' "Needless to Bay," the banker went on, smlng, "they were dlsutasloned pretty frequently. There s an axom that whatever one man can make another man can break, and the burglars proved t over and over agan.' t wae always the same Btory--the dodderng old watchman found bound and gagged, the 'burglar proof' door wde open and the safe empty. That gradually brought about an entre change n method and" led to the development at." the Amercan multple watchman.system, whch s undoubtedly the most perfect on earth.,."';. brefly explaned, rfs a Bystem at guards, watchng the bank andwotch- ng each other, and leavng a eontauaj record of ther movements on tme detectors' that can't be tampered wth. Ther rounds are BO arranged that no man s ever free from survellance for more than 10 or 16 mnutes at a stretch, so f be was held up or klled or fell asleep or dropped dead or anythng else happened to put hm out of acton, the fact would be known before any serous consequences could ensue. "The day has gone by when a gang of crooks can crack a watchman over the head and then take ther tme aboot forcng the vault "The modern system of watchng and auxlary watchng has put an end to great bank robberes,", added the., fnancer. "The only haula now made by crookb n that lne of busness are n country towns and remote rural dstrcts, where old methods stll preval. Tlat sn't because they are any less cunnng or desperate than they used to be, but smply because they recognze..the., folly of attemptng to break through the cordon of open human" eyes. ** ; ' / ' "t s an nterestng fact, by the way, that Uncle Sam was the poneer n that system of protecton^ and the. banks mght well have taken a leaf out of hs book years ago. The treasury vaults at Washngton are a good Joke as far as ntrnsc securty s concerned. They are bult lke forts, and the ^massve masonry of ther walls s full of cannon balls, whch ore supposed to t be able to turn a drll, but as a matter of fact, any expert cracksman could 'go through them lke a mouse tunnelng a Stlton cheese. "Yet no attempt has ever been made on the untold mllons of cold cash behnd the rckety old doors, and the establshment s really one of the safest n tje world, for the smple reason that t s never left unguarded. Ples of. solders, frequently changed,' patrol all the corrdors and approaches, and t would be physcally mpossble for robbers to make a descent wthout gettng caught. The Bank of England sub- merges ts vaults under sx feet of water every day after busness hours, yet consder t a good deal less secure than our own antquated treasure house. "You%ust not (&fer from anythng have sad'that up to date Amercan banks have abandoned bolts and bars. On the contrary, the modern vault s a wonderful pece of mechansm and s as nearly perfect as human ngenuty can make t but the chef relance s pnned to the lvng guard, who beats jold steel all to peces. admt that,the system looks on the surface llko a reversal to prmtve prncples, but really t s only an appllcatjonof common sense."--' ~~ " Eve's Orgn. One of many legends that have offset the parsmony of Eve s BlblleaJ hstory represents her as tho end of man's creaton n a qutte lteral fashon made out of hs tal! Strangely enough, tho, legend antcpated scence to ts vew of the prtmltvo man's termnal facltes. Another legend gves a dozen reasons why Svo was not made from ths, that or tle other part of Adam, but from the rb only, and then says that suo'had all the faults and fallngs whch Yahwoh bad endeavored to uvpld. Clearly tho legend of Bvo, f not tho Geness narraton. s domnated by a sprt of hostlty to womanknd. Sho s another wth Potpbar'B wfe, and tho wcked Jezebel, and tho rebellons Vnshtl, and tho trcksy Dcttlab. Sho s typcal of the wotnqn who gc* men nto ttxntblo and who gtvo covofa> tho story that when tlcro was mschef,n Persa tlo kng's frst queston always Carl Sunder** Phlosophy. Some people" vhas born~dot7way"nnd can't help t. Last week my brudderln-law goes oudt n der woods to kll a rabbt He doan' fnd no rabbts, but he klls a fox und den comes home und kcks about hs bard luck. n my tme baf caught some fsh dot weghed 20 pounds apece, but dot an'^ satsfy me. vhas always mournng after dose fsh wh'lch weghed 22 pounds apece und got avhay from me, haf hod men pck my pockets, und haf had frends borrow my money, und can't qute fgure out why der pckpocket should be sent to jal und der odder party go free.' t vhas all der same to,mo got nothng back. f a man comes to me und doan' say nottlngs, mebbe he gets foefty cents, but f a man comes to me und says he vhas a squar", man und can't sleep nghts f he doan' pay hs debts shust walk'off und leave hm to talk mlt der gatepost. Der man who calls me oop at mdnght to tell me dot my henhouse door vhas open thnks to do me a favor, But f he vhas a phlosopher he would see dot f der door y las open some thef must haf taken der fowls, und of what use to break oop my sleep? t vhas better for all of us dot we stop a leetle...., You vhlll always fnd men who vhas n troubles because of not knowng a good thng when t vhas put at dem. 1 once offered a thef $2 n cash to keep avhay; from my. chckens, but one nght he goes to steal an old rooster worth feefty cents und vhas lamed for lfe mlt a charge of buckshot. Nopody can depend upon der pooblc. Vhen vhas an honest aldermans, eaferybody beleves vhas dshonest und make ten tfousand dollars out of some shoos. Then goes by der legslature und mafces.$ n one day, der people hurrahed' for me und called me "Dot Honest Dootchmons." One nght Mrs. Dunder wakes me oop and says a burglar vhas n der h o u s e. '. ' ' "VheU? how. vhas t?' says. "You must drve hm out"' "Dot vhas no polcy. f drve hm out, he comes back some other nght. f let hm look aroundt und fnd nottngs to steal, he not only' walkb avhay by hmself, but he feels t vhas no use to come agan." \ Vhen vhas gong home n a crowded street car der odder earnngs, gf oop my seat to a,fat man. ( "How < vhas dot?" sad one of my frends. "Haf you got some pty for dot man?" "Not a bt," says. " smply gf oop my seat to revenge on my fellow men. Doan' yon see dot he takes oop, twce my room und squeezes twce as many folks togetherr. -r~r-"'''... m > m Bult on a Wreck.'.. (SYoro tu New York Journal.) f shps had ghosts, one offce down on Frtot street would be haunted. Years ago a bg shp ran ashore Just where ths offce now. stands. The cty dd not extend as far out nto the rver as t does now, and Front street dd not' exst The wreck remaned where t was. am the sand drfted around t When the Cty moved put toward the rver, no effort was,made to remove ths wreck. t was bured By the ret use^ood. drt dumped on t. When the offce boldng was erected, the wreck was so far below the surface that t dd not tntecfere wth the foundatons, an* theeo rt to to tots day. The man wbo OWDB tms bondng says that t s tho only one m ths cty whch s bult over the wreck of a snp, and apparently the old boat s. stanch enough to stand the burdwv A Calamty. A 8Dall grl of S years suddenly burst out cryng at the dnner table. "Wbj, Ethel," sad her mother, "what fa ttve matterr "Oh,* wboed Ethel, "my teeth stepped on my tongue." N EW YORK AND LONG BRANCH " ' RAtBOAD., Statons n New York: Central B. B. of New Jersey, toot of Lberty Street, and foot of Whtehall Street (South Ferry Termnal); Pennsylvana R. R., 'oot of Cortlandt Street. Desbrosses street and West 83d Street. On and after June 30th, 1800, TRANS LEAVE BED BANE. For Elzabeth, Newark and New York. <8tO (Mondays only), a 4fl.?«. *7 43 (Newark and New York only), '801 (Newark and Elzabeth only), *811,*828<New York only), 881, O58.'118O a. m.:12 86,163,8 45. *3 06. H 05, 4 &5, 610, ,0 63 p. m. Sundays, 8 03, 9 43 a. m.; 50, 0 06,833, 963p.tt). For Long Branch, Ocean Orove and ntermedate statons to Pont Pleasant, f23,6 25, JOOO, 1024 nsa, a. m. 160, {205, 2 30 Saturdays only), , 426, 433, 615,5 28, 53;,545,;6 21, 0 68,7 50,8 29 (Saturdays only 9 20}, p. m. "Sundays. 9 63,10 41,1120 a. tn.: 2 67,5 27, D 47 p.m. Sunday trans do not stop at Ocean Grove and Asbury Park. FOR FREEHOLD VA MATAWAN. LeaveEed Bank (Sundays excepted), 8 3), 1180a.m.; 136, p.m. TRANS LEAVE FREEHOLD FOB RED BANE. Va Matawan (Sundays excepted), 8 20, a.m.; 810,420,605 p. m. TEANS LEAVE NEW TOBK FOR BED BANK. Foot of Lberty, street, 30, K a. m.\ noo (Saturdays only), 180. S16, *S 80, , * 4S, 5 38, 623, (8 00 p. m. Saturdays only.) Sundays, 015 a. tn.j-1 80, 4 00 p.m. - Foot of Whtehall street (South Fen? termnal), 825, 9 55 a. m.; *12 55 (Saturdays only), 125, 210, 3 25,3 35, 29, *4 35,6 25,810, 740 (Saturdays' only) p.m. Sundays, 865a. uv, 125,855 p. m. Foot of West Twenty-thrd street, 8 55 a. m.; 1210, 110 (Saturdays obly), 225, *2.65, H10, * 55, 655p.m. Sundays,765,925a.m.;455p.m. Foot of Cortlandt street, 830, 9 00 a. m.: 1820, (1.80 Saturdays only). 280, *31O, *420,*510, 700 p. m; Sundays, 816, 945, n.m; 510p.m. Foot of Desbrosses street, 880, 900 a. m.: 3220, 120 (Saturdays only) 280. *3o, Hffl.+eO, 7 00 p. rff: Sundays, 8.16,9 45 a m.; 615 p. m. For furtner partculars see tme tables at statons. Denotes express trans. J. R. WOOD, Sen'l Pass. Agent, Peon. B. t.' H. P. BALDWN, Gen'l Pass. Agent, central B. B. o f N. J. ' '.'. BUFPS BLODGETT, Superntendent N, Y. and L. B. B.B. Notce To Bcyclers! The ordnance prohbtng the rdng of bcycleb on the sdewalks wthn the lmts of the Town of EedsBank wll be strctly enforced. All peraons rdng on the sdewalks, all persons rdng wthout lghted lamps at nght, and all persons rdng faster than sx mles an hour, wthn the corporate lmts of the Town of Red Bank, wll be arresed and fned. F. P. STRYKER, Chef of Polo* P ENNSYLVANA RALROAD COM- ' :. : P A N T.. On and after June 30tn, TRANS WLL LEAVE RED BANK For New York. 7«, 8U 953 a. m.;153, , 610, 963, p. m., weot days. Sundays, 0 43 a. m; p.m. Newark, 7 «, 8 11, 9 58 a. m.; , 4 05, 610,9 63 p. m, wees days. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; p.m, Elzabeth, 811,9 63. a. m.; 1 53, 8 0M , 963 p. m., week days.. Sundays, 0 43a. m.; 606,963p.m. '.'. Rahway,953a. a.; 153, 610, 953 p. m., week days, Sundays, o 43 a. na.; 8 06,8 63 p. m. Woodbrldge, 9 53 a. m.; 153, 810, 88 p. m., week days. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; 6 00,9 63 p. m. Perta Amboy, ,9 58 p. m., week days. Sundays, 9 43 a. m : 6 08,9 53 p. m. South Amboy, 968 am.; 153, 810,953 p. m., week days. SundayB, 9 43 a. m.; 606,9 63 p. m. Matawan, 9 53 a. tn.; 163, 3 05, 010,9 63 p. m.. week days. Sundays, 943, a. m.; 606, 953 Mldtletown,053 o. m.; 153, 010, 953, p.m., week days. Sundays a.ra.;6 06,9 53 p. m, Trenton and Phladelpha, connectng at Runway. 9 53, a. m.; p. m. Sundays, 9 48 a. m.; 6 06 p. m. Lontf Brancn, Pont Pleasant and ntermedate statons, 522, 1024 a. m.; 150,8 80,350,4%. 5 82,6 21,8 29 p. n., week days. Sundays, 9 53, 1120 a. m.; 6 47 p. m. Do not stop at Asbury Park or Ocean Grove on Sundays. Toms Rver, Bay bead and ntermmedlate statons, 522, 10 24, a.m.; 150, 532p.m.,week days.. Trans leave.phladelpha, Broad Street, (ra Banway) for Red Bank, at 6 60 a. m.; 140, 402 p.m., week days. Sundays, 4 02 p.m. Trans leave New York tor Red Bank, rom West 23d street staton a. n.; 1210, (110 Saturdays only). 225, 265, 410, 4 55, 655 p.m. Sundays,755, 925am.; 455p.m. From Desbfosses and Cortlandt streets, 3 30, 0 00 a m.; 12 20, (120 Saturdays only), , 1 20,510,7 00) p. m., week days. Sundays, 815, 945 a.m.; 815 p.m. ; B. HUTCHNSON, J. B. WOOD, General Man»Q;er. Gen. Passenger Agent. N- CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY. To Esther A. Wheaton and Jobn Wheaton ler. husband: By vrtue of an order of the court ot chancery made on the dar of,the date hereof. n a cause wheren John Forsythe, admnstrator, eto., of Mary 0. Forajthe, deceased, s complanant, and vou and others are defendants, you are requred to appear, plead, answer or demur to tbe bll ot sad complaluant, on or before tbe slxtee&th day of October next or tbe sad bll wll be taken as confessed aganst you., The sad bll s fled to foreclose a mortgage gven by Wllam Bogus and Elzabeth L, Boggs to Mary C. Forsytce, dated December fourteenth, eghteen hundred and nnety-four, on lands n the town or Red Bant, County of' Monmoutb and state of New Jersey: And you Esther A. Wheaton are made defendant because you own sad landt: And you Jobn Wceaton ore made defendant because t s lleged you are tbe husband of sad Esther A. Wbeaton and by vrtue thereof clam to nave some rght, ttle or nterest n sad mortgaged premses... EDMUND WLSON. Solctor of Complanant. Red Bank, Moomoutb county, Kew Jersey. Dated August 15tu "VTOTCE OF SETTLEMENT. JL^ ESTATE OF S. ELY CONOVER. Deceased. Notce s hereby gven that the accounts of the subscrber, admnstrator of sad deceased, wll be audted and stated by the surrogate, and reported for settlement to tbe Orphans Court of the County of MoDmouth, on THURSDAY, THE FOURTH DAY OF OCTOBER net. Dated August 31st, 19W. J. HOLMES COSOVER. TN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY. To Deborah L. stlllwell, John W.Stlllwel), her husband and Mary Shelds. By vrtue of an order of the Court of Chancery of New Jersey, made on the day of the date hereof, n a causa wheren Anna M. Conover s complanant, and you and others are defendants, you are requred to appear, plead, answer or demur to the sad bll of complanant, on or before the second day of November, next, or tbe sad bll wll be taken as confessed aganst you. The sad 1)111 s tled to. foreclose a mortgage Rven by Deborah L. Stllwell and John W. stllvrell, her husband, to Anna M. Conover, dated January tenth, eghteen'hundred and nnety-sx, on lands n tbo townshp of Howell, county of Monraouth and utato of New Jersey; and you, Deborah L. stllwell, are made defendant because you own sad lands; and you, Jobn W. Stlllwell, are made defendant because you are toe husband of Deborah L. Stlllwcll, and by vrtue thereof clam to have some rght, ttle or nterest n sad mortgaged premses; ana you, Mary Shelds, aro made defendant because you hold an encumbrance by way of Judgment upon sad lands. EDMUND WLSON, Solctor of complanant, Red Bank, Monmouth County, New Jersey. Dated September 1st, 100O. The Town Hall OAN BE HAD FOR Dances, Partes, etc. For terras and partcultra call on address JOHN T. TETLEY, CCBTOMAN, BED DANK, - flew JERSEY SEPTEMBER, Merchants' Stenmboat Co.'s Lne. Telephone Call, t A, Bed Bank. 8hrtpabury,Hohlanda, Hghland Btach Oeeante, Zoeutt pont, Sar Haven, Bed Bank, Long Branch anl Atbury Park, The strong and commodous steamboat, ALBERTNA, CAPT. L. PBCE, Wll leave Bed Bank and Per 24, foot of Frankln street. New York, as follows: Ztaee Bed Sank. : Ltavt SOD York. 8at'day,lBt 7.00A.M. Sat'day.l6t...l.O0p.M. Tuesday,4th ', Tuesday, 4th " Wedn'day, 5th Thursday. 6th Frday, 7tb 6.80 Baturday, 8th Mo njay, 10th Tuesday, lltb Wedn'day, 12th.7.00 Thursday, 18th Frday. 14th Saturday. 15th Monday, 17th... 10,00 Tuesday, 16th Wedn'dfty,l»tlJ Thursday, 20th.,.6.00A.M. TbuKday.SOtb,3.00 Frday, 81st Saturday, 2Sd Monday, 2tth.' Tuesday, 25th Wed'day, 26th Tnu'day.27th Frday, 28th Saturday, 29th Wll leave Eed Bank and Per 24, foot p Frankln street, New York, as lollows: Leave Hew York. Leave Bed Sank. Sat'day, 1st P.M. Sunday, 2d 2.00 " Monday, 8d 2.80 " Tuesday, 4th Wed'day, 6th... 3.S0 Thu'day. 6th...4.(0 Frday, 7th 3.30 Saturday, Sth..,8,S0 Sunday, 9th Wedn'day.5th,.3.80 ' Thursday, 6tn " Frday.7th " Saturday, 8th " Monday, 10th ' Tuesday, 11th " Wed'day, lztb.l.ooa.m. Thursday, 18th.ll.00 " Frday, Mth " Saturday, 15tb,12.80 p. t. Monday, 17th ' Tuesday, 18th " Wedn'day, 19th.4.0O " Frday,Hst " Saturday. 22d ' Monday, 24th " Tuesday, 26th " Wed'day, 28th " Thu'day, 27(n.l030 A. M< Frday. 28th '/ Saturday, 29th M. ^"Connects wth trolley.cars at Red Bank for Shrewsbury, Eatentown, Long Branch and Asbury Park... ' ' HAKVEY LTTLE, Messenger. Sherman's express connects wth these boats. Frut and confectonery on board. N. B.-AH frelgbt ntended for ths boat must be on tbe wharf a suffcent length of tme to handle, as sbe wll postvely leave promptly on her advertsed tme... Tbs boat's tme-table s advertsed n TBS BED BANE REGSTER. New Jersey Standard; also n the Countng House Montor, Mapkey's Steamboat Gude Bulllnger's Qulde, New York World, New York Journal and Brooklyn Eagle. Tme-tables may be obtaned at Bortfen'a prntng offce, Broad street, near Front. Excurson Tckets Oc SEPTEMBER, Merchants' Steamboat Co's Lne. "Telephone Call 14 A, Bed Bank. Shrewsbury fbghlans, Hghland Beach, Oceanc, locust Pont, lar Haven, Sed Bank, 'Long Branch and AsburyPark. The strong and commodous steamboat, SEA BRD, Capt. C. E. THBOCKMOBTON, ; Sat'day, 1st... 8,00 A.M. Bundav, M 9,00." Monday, 3d 9.00 " Tuesday.4th ' Wed'day,5th..H50 " Thu'day, 6th..12,00 M.- Frdav,7th 7.00 A.M. Saturday.8th " Sunday, 9th 8,00 " Monday, lotb...8,30 " Tuesday, llth...9,00 Wed'day. 12th Thursday, 18th Frday,»th Sat'day, 16th., Sunday, 16th Monday,17th Tuesday, l8tb..u.oo wed'day, 19tb..l2.00 Thu'day, 20th Frday,28th Saturday; 29th Monday, 10th Tuesday, 11th.'.4.80 " Wed'day, 12tb.U.CO A. M. Ttureday.13thJJ.00 Frday, 14th Sat'day, 16th..D8.8Op.. Sunday, 16th...S.(O" Monday,. 17th,.8.00 " Tuesday, 18th : "~ Wed'day, 19th..4.0O " Thu'day. 20th..4,00 " Thuday,auth.!J.«) Thu'oay. zutn..4,w Frday, 21st A.M. Frday, 21flt at'dny,22a 7.00" --- -» «~- 8unday,83(l 8.00 Monday, 24th Tuesday. 25th., 8.S0 Wed'day, 26th Thu'day, 27th Saturday, 22d..A00 Sunday, 23d Monday, 24th Tuesday, 25th Wed'day, 26tb Thu'day, 27h A.M. Frday, 28tb " Saturday, 29th u. B^~ Connects wth trolley csrs at Bed Bank lor Shrewsbury, Eatontown, Long Branch and Asbury Park. ; HARVEY TTLE, Messenger. Bberman's Express connects wth these boats. Frut and confectonery on board. N. B. All freffbt ntended for ths'boat must be on the wharf a suffcent length ot tme to handle, as she wll postvely leave promptly on her advertsed tme. Ths boat's tme-table s advertsed n tbe BED BANK BZOBTKH, New Jersey Standard, also n the Countng House Montor, Mackoy's BteamboatGulde Bullnger's Gude, New York World. New York Journal and Brooklyn Eagle. Tme-tables may be obtaned at Borden'a prntng offce, Broad street, near Front. Excurson Tcket*, 50 Cents, SEPTEMBER, The large and commodous steamer, WM. V.WLSON, CAPT. BENJAMN GllQGS, Wll run between Port Monmouth and New York (Foot of Lttle 12th street, WeBt Washngton Market), as follows: Leave Port lonmouth, Saturday, p. M Monday, " - " " 6.., Tuesday, Wed'day, Thursday, Frday, Saturday, Monday, Tuesday", Wod'day, OO Thursday, Frday, Saturday, Monday, Tuesday, Wod'day, 19...B.0O Thursday, Frday, Saturday, 23..,7.00 Monday, S O Tuesday, Wed'day, S6...fl.0O Thursday, Frday, ^...fl.oo Sat'day, OO Cp A.U JOHN S. APPLEGATE. pharles H. f \J COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Rooms 3 and 4, Regster Bftldtng, BROAD STBEKT. RED BANK, N. J. E DMUND WLSON, COUNBELLOB AT LAW, (Successor to Nevus & Wlson), BED BANK, N.J. Offces: Posr-OmcEBULDNG; D E. WM. H. LA WES, JR. VETEBNABY 8UB.GEON. Graduate of Amercan Veternary College, N.TT. Besdence: Moomouth Street, Between Broad street and Maple avenue. Red Bank J AS. s. MCCAFFREY, D. V. S. VETERNARY SURGEON. Graduate of Amercan Veternary College, N. T. Resdence, rvng Btreet. between Broad Street ana Maple Avenue, Red Bant, N. J. G EO. D. COOPER, WVO- ENGNEER. Successor to Geo. Cooper, C. E. 'ost Offce Buldng. RED BANE, N. J. A C. HURLEY, SURVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER, 115 Brdge Avenue. RED BANK, N. Wth George Cooper for ffteen years. H ENRY OSTENDQRFF, TTJNER AND REPARER OF PANOS AND ORGANS. Offce nt 1. de la ReuBSlll's Jewelry Store. Telephone Call 18B. NO. SH Broad St., Red Bank, leace A'no Yort. Saturday, r. M. Monday, A.M. Tuesday, Wed'day, S ' Thursday, B " Frday, " Saturday, p.w. Monday, A.M. Tuesday, " Wed'day, " Thursday, " Frday, " Saturday, u. Monday, COA. M. Tuesday, B Wed'day Thursday, SO...ff.OO Frday, 21. """ Saturday, 22. Monday, 94. Tuesday, 25. Wed'day, Thursday, Frday, ,00 Bnt'day, All back freght must bo pad before delvery. Ths boat's tmo-table s advertsed n Tm RED BANK UMSTKR and Movmmth Vrcm\ also n EulllDKvr'a and McKay's Steamboat OuldosA Tme-tables may bo obtaned at M. O'Bren & Son's. 218 WashlBt<n strcot and A. Morrs A Co. corner 14lh street and Nnth avenuo. Sngle TlcUct», 30 CnU. lcturn Tcket*, 50 Cent* Frooht receved on Now York per untl 7.00 v. M ovory aoy. A MLLON BOOKS. Rare, Curous, Current, N STOCK ALMOST OVEN AWAY. Lbrares Ruppllod Cheaper than at»ny nook Bloro. n the world, MDUARBS ADD BOOKS DODO11V MnmmotUCaUlogo Frw. LECCAT BROTHERS.. s oatnmn srrnrr, 8d Door ff«t ot Cltr Hll Park. NEW YORK A PPLEGATE & HOPE,, COUNSELLORS AT LAW, RED BANK,' MONMOUTH COCNTY. NEW JERSEY.. FRED W. HOPE. JOHN S. APPLEGATE, JR. O SOLCTOR AND MASTER N CHANCERY. n offces of Applegata & Hope, Red Bank, N.. D R. ELLA PRENTSS TJPHAM. DSEASES OF WOMEN AND CHLDREN. ELECTRCTY. ROOMO, REQSTER BCLDNO. RED BAKE, N.J At Red Bank Offce Tuesday and Frday afternoons D R. R. F. BORDEN, 8URGEO.V DENTST. M0SO HALL BULDNG, BED BANK, N. J. Partcular attenton gven to tbe admnstraton of AuKstbetcs. D R. J. D. THROCKMORTON, N DENAL SURGEON. -. OFFCE: No. 5 Broad Street. Red Bank, N, J. T\R. F.L.WRGHT, SURQEON DENTST,.. RED BANK, N.J. Broad street, opposte Bergen's. rphomas DAVS, JR., J. NSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. FRONT ST., RED BANK; N. J. (P. O. Box 21.) nsurance placed n the best companes on most reasonable terras. TACOB C. SHUTTS, & V AUCTONEER. Specal.attenton gven to sales of farm stock, 'arm mplements and other persona) property. P, O. Address, SHREWSBURY, N. J. W M. H. 8EELEY, PORT MONMOUTH, NEW JERSEY. Notary Publc. Solders' Vouchers Prepared Blls of Sale for Vessels. specal Notce RELATNG TO N THE Townshp of Shrewsbur v. Nusances wthn the townshp of Shrewsbury are hereby denned and declared to be, and they shall nclude and embrace: 1. The placng or depostng n or upon any street allo^jor n or upon any publc, or prvate property n ths townshp, any dead anmal or any part of the same, or any dead fsh or any part of hesante, or nlth from prves or cesspoolb or catch basns or rubblbh of any knd or'descrpton, or any house or ktchen slops or garbage, manure or sweepng! (provded that stable manure and other manure may be used as a fertlzer), or any foul or offensve or obnoxous matter or substance whatever. 2. Any full or leaky prvy vault, cesspool or other receptacle for fllth. 3. Allowng or permttng any nght sol, garbage or other offensve or decomposng sold orflud matter or substance to leak or ooze from any cart or. wagon or vessel n whch the same may be conveyed or carred. 4. Tbo carryng or conveyng through any street any substance whch'has been removed from an; prvy vaultor cesspool, unless tbe same shall be nclosed n ar-tght barrels, or n a perfectly tght and properly covered wagon. 5. All cartng of garbage through the streets) the townshp except between the hours of sunset and st A. L. 6. The burnng of any matter or substance whch shall emt, or cause, or produce, or cast oft any foul' or obnoxous, or offensve, or hurtful, or nnnoyng gas, smoke, steam or odor.' : : - 7. Tbe castng ordbchargng nto the Shrewsbury or Naveslnk, or South Shrewsbury rvers, or nto any stream n ths townshp, or on tbe boundary lce of ths townshp, any substance whch has been removed from any vault, cesspool or snk, or any oflal or other refuse, lquds or solds, by any ppes or otherwse. 8. Any and every nusance eg above defned» hereby prohbted and forbdden wthn tbe townshp of Shrewsbury, and any person matng, creatng, causng, mantanng or permttng any of sad; nusances shall forfet and pay a penalty of twenty- Ore dollars. The above s an extract from tbe ordnances of theboardof health of Shrewsbury townshp, and t&«"me wll be thoroughly enforced. W. C. ARMSTRONG, M. D., Presdent of the Board of Health. 4. C. HARRSON. Secretary.. N OTCE OF SETTLEMENT., Estate of John T. Bendrlckcon. deceased. Notce s hereby gven that the accounts of thesubscrber, admnstrator of sad deceased, wll bo audted and stated by the Surrogate, end reported, for settlement to the Orphans' Court of the County o Uonmolth, on THURSDAY, THE TWENTY- SEVENTH DAY OF SEPTEMBER next. Dated August 21, JAMES C. HENDR0K8ON. NOTCE TO DOB OWNERS. The followng ordnance wll herealter be strlly enforced:. AN ORDNANCE CONCERNN0 DOQB. Bx T ORDANED by tto board of commssoners of tho town ot Red Bank aa follows: SECTON 1. No dog shall bo suffered to go at large n the town of Red Bank from Juno 21 to Hep-' K'mber 21, except such as shall bo properly muzzled wth a wre muzzlo about tho nose,.securely fattened. Bte. 2..And bo U further ordaned, That one or moro porsooh shall be apponted by tho board of commssoners, wose duty t shall le to cnusu all dofta runnng at large, unmuzzled, contrarytothu provsons of secton one, to bo tnkm up nnl mpounded for the space of twenty-lour hours: and the person so takng or mpoundng n dog shall glvo mmedate notce thereof to the owuer, known nnd curtly found; and tha owner ol tuch dog shall bo permtted to redeem tbo sano any tme mum\ tho explrutlon of tad twenty-tour hours, upon tho payment of ono dollar to tho ptraon takng or mpoundng such dog «nd f such dog la not ro~ deemed as aforesad. t nball be tho duty of tho person so takng or mpoundng to kll and bury Mch dog; and tor hl tenlct' he shall bv enttled to rflcolve the sum of ono dollar; and tho oonmtaloht s hereby authorlux) to draw ht warrant for tho samo upon tbo town treuuror., S«O. t. Any peron apponted by tho board ct, oommlulonon to tak«unt mpound dona a afore* lad, may pound them lt bn own lot, ford or other enclosure, untl redmmed na afo«ld, C.' Bo. 4. Any pcrun who hll bnder or tnolnl nnjr penoo ebgagod n oarrnr nto <>ffch tho pro* " Vltonnof ths ordnance *h*ubo punlbudby anno not decodng ten dolws, or by mbrlaunuontnot wwwlnff ton dftju. Approved M»y 18,1871. A. 0. HARBSON, TOW C rrk.

16 N AND OUT OF TOWK. ' Short and nterestng tems From All Over the Countv. MrB. Truex, wdow of Wllam Truea of Manasquan, has receved $2,000 from the endowment rank of the Knghts o Pythas lodge of that place, the amoun of lfe nsurance carred by her husband n the order. Mrs. Truex has presented a lfe-sze crayon portrat of her husband, to the lodge. Wlbur H. Young of Keyport, aasst ant electrcal engneer for the Pullman ' palace ca,r company, was sent n charge f a tran to Chcago on Labor drfy. He heard both Bryan and Roosevelt speak,- and the former left Chcago on the same tran wth hm. - Thomas T. Fallon of Freehold s attendrjg a reunon ths week of the Medal of Honor legon at Brooklyn. He was ' sergeant of company H of thgjmjth. New Jersey nfantry durng the cvl war and receved p, medal for bravery dsplayed n battle. Joseph G. Cooper, who 1 lves near Farmngdale, has a pumpkn vne on hs farm that has reached a growth of forty feet, Tho leaf sterna are ffteen nches long and the largest leaves are eghteen nches n dameter. : The Keyport ce dealers have combned and rased tbe prce of ce to 25 cents a hundred pounds at wholesale and 40 - cents a hundred pounds to famles, The former prces were 15 and 25 cents a hundred pounds.. The burnng out of a dynamo last weekn the power house of the Atlantc - cpaut electrc ralway caused a suspenson of travel for four hours on the trolley road between Long Branch and Asbury Park. Arthur H. Hope'of Asbury Park has been elected grand chef of the Knghts of tbe Golden Eagle of New Jersey. J. B., "Wanwrght of Manasquan has been elected grand hgh prest of the order. The'Long Branoh branch of the New Jersey buldng loan and nvestment company of Trenton has elected E. B. Blasdell presdent and W.fl.-B. Parker secretary and treasurer. The farmers n the vcnty of Turkey, whose potato vnes were damaged by the bal storm that vsted that secton, fnd the yeld of potatoes much larger than was expected. R. H. Woodward, K. H. Curts and E. Randolph SlooUra have boon apponted commssoners to assess the cost of curbng and layng sdpwalks ontbree streets at Long Branch. _ Mrs. Garrett B. Conover of Englshtown, who lves wth her aon, Garrett B, Conover, Jr., was nnety years old ths week, She s rapdly falng n health. Hardy Acker of Farmngdale went n bathng at Brelle on Labor day whle n a hejted condton. He was taken wth cramps and came near drownng. Howard Smth has moved from the Prce farm at Allentown to- the Tuns ' house at the same place. W. H. Bennett of Sloatu wll occupy the Prce farm. Wllam B. Oakersor has gven up hs poston n Mulford & Debert's store at Mannequan to accept a poston n a wholesale grocery house at Trenton. A gasolne stove n the ktchen of St. John's parsonage at Keyport caught fre last week but t wa& carred out doors before much damage was done. The Keyport Enterprse completes ts 21st year of publcaton wth ths week's ssue. The Freehold Transcrpt was thrteen years old last Frday. - Edward E. Lacour, bookkeeper for Chandler AJlaps of Long Branch, has been spendng a vaoaton at Washngton, Baltmore and Phladelpha, The Long Branch shrt factory, whcl has been dle for several months, has resumed operatons under the j management of C. J. Stenor. ' Samuel and Walter Rue, sons of Charles P. Rue of Allentown, have engaged n the furnture and upholsterng busness at New York. * The Norwood Park horse show, whcl: was to have been held hnt Saturday was declared off on account.of a lack of nterest n the affar. Joseph T. Anderson, James McCallon and Thomas Johnson of Long Brand have each been fned $25 for conductng v poolrooms there. The Sunday-schools of St. JohnVand Calvary churches of Keyport each cleared $415 on ther combned excurso) to Ocean Grovo. ClarloH Kononcrans, muungcr of Pleasure Bay Park, receved n gft of a gold wfltch lust wock from the'employee!) of tho assocaton. ' A louse lt Long.Branch occuped by Samuel Knopf was entnrod by theves laht week nnd a lot of ul'verwaro was tttolon. Fred B. lalsluul of Koyport UB ncp-, aratcl from bs wfe nnd hm gven no. tc* aganst trustng hnr on hs account, Mrs. Frank Cultrell of Koyport entertaned the mombo-b of her Sundayochool olfw at a lawn parly lunt week. An assocaton of yetoruhnof tho Spansh war llts been l'ormod at Freehold Joseph A. Yard a presdent, Jnuus E floder (B VJOO presdent, Joseph S, AT J. KRDELS.»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»» Now rea^dy, our lne of Fall Derbys and Alpnes. Prces $.oo, $1.59 and J2)oa Also good Clothng and. Furnshngs at low prces. Thompson s, secretary and treasurer and Wllam T. Buck e regstrar., Davd C. Wallng, Jr., of Keyport, has gone to Portland,. Mane, wth Captan George Tltop on hs schooner. Wllam L. Allare of Farmngdale entertaned a company of frends last week n celebraton of hs brthday. Prncpal J. T. Schock of the Keyport graded school entertaned the teachers at hs home a few nghts ago. The Epworth league of the Keansburg Methodst churoh cleared $85 at a recent bazar and entertanment. E.. Ptcher has been elected truant offcer at Long Branch to Bttcceed the late George W. Palmer. - The Bteamboat Magenta of Keyport took 459 passengers on an excurson to Coney sland last week. St. Mary's church of Keyport gave an entertanment n-the armory last week and $85 was cleared. Mss Edna Bowman of West Long Branch celebrated her brthday labt week wth a party. " Harry Bozarth, who s employed'by W. A. Taylor of Allentown, s lad up wth rheumatsm. W, H. H. Parent of mlaystown has a poston as mller for Reuben Hendrckson at that place. Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Truex of Freehold have returned from, a coachng trp to New Hampshre. Wllam Huylarof Key port has moved to a farm near Metuchen Tvhch he recently bought. The. polce pay roll at Long Branch durng the summer has amounted to $963 a month. Wllam Yetman of Turkey has had to gve up work for awhle on account of a lame wrst. Charles Tltooof Port Monmouth, who was lad up last week wth sckness, s recoverng. There are 820 dogs n Rartan townshp ths year, an ncrease of eghteen snce last year..frank Smth of Kayport has closed up hs meat market and has gone out of busness. The Central ralroad's annual excurson up tbe Hudson wll come off next Tuesday. The Keyport graded school had an enrollment of B26 on the openng day. Rchard Carr of Keaneburg has moved to hs new farm at Freehold. James McChesney has moved from Freehold to Bradley Beach. Mrs. M. M. Fnch of New Monmouth s sck wth hay fever. Boot and Sloe Clothen Hatter and Furnsher* 6 BROADLSTREET, RED BANK. Maker. Rubber Heels, men's sze, 40 cents to 50 cents per par; Lades' sze, 35 cents tdj40 cents. Frst Class Reparng at Lowest Possble Prces. DOMNC A. MAZZA, 81 WHTE 8TBEET, One door from Maple Avenue, ' KED BANK, N. J. ;; Dd Company Come? Send rght down to «! Chld's Bakery and get j; a loaf of cake. t's del- j cous you could not < L tell t from the very j j best home-made. CHLD'S BAKERY SCHMDT & HENNG, ] j EOTKRKNCKD sterers and Cabnet Makers, 50-a Broad St., Red Bank, N.J., - *"»* Parlor. Sete, Cushons and Har Mattresses' Made to Order and Made Over, Mattngs and Cjarpets;Ftted andxad, Furnture' ' Reparng and' Polshng, Shades, Awnngs.and Wall Hangngs. Best Work at Seasonable Prces. Hotce te Delnquents. Notce s hereby gven that the property of all delnquent taxpayers n the town of Red Bank, whose taxes are not pad wthn the tme requred by 'aw, wll be advertsed and lold, n accordance wth the provsons of the statute governng such cases. THEODORE F. WHTE, Town Treasurer CLOTHS FOR Agan wll the TA1L0R. MADE "talor : nmde" n SUTS. women's suts bo the favorte.- Some new styles, weaves and colorngs to show you n plan and fancy fabrcs. You'll fnd them properly prced. ADLEM & CO., Red Bank. -SPRNG AND SUMMER and Harness. We have ready a complete stock of Summer Carrages of almost every known style. By buyng our stock rght we are able to offer these as low, or n some cases lower, than formerly, although there has been an advance n everythng n the carrage lne., NEW BUGGES FOR $50.00 AND UP. NEW RUNABOUTS, $45.00 AND UP. PNEUMATC RUNABOUTS, $90.00 ANDJJP. Surres and Famly Carrages. Depot Wagons, Etc, Busness Wagons, wth and wthout tops. SECOND HAND. We have a number of good secondhand Carrages and Wagons, taken n tradej that we are closng out at low prces.. J. W. MOUNT & BRO'., Factory and Repostory Maple Avenue and Whte Street, RED BANK NEW JERSEY. ROCKY HLL Stone Storage Company, Rocky Hll, New Jersey.. **) Crushed trap rock of all szes kept constantly on hand. Carload lots and upwards can be loaded on demand and shpped to all ponts on the New York and Long Branch ralroad. Also foundaton or cellar stone.,»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»» Danty Meals Are a necessty for those wth poor appettes. To prepare a meal of ths knd our stock of ; GROCERES Should be drawn on. Each department contans a large assortment of" the fnest goods and each artcle wll be found the purest of ts knd. PEACHES. We are headquarters for Peaches. Just come around the corner and look them over before purchasng. Yv^H. KNAPP, Post Offce BlocK, :: Front Street, Red Bank, N.J. 'J

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