VOLUME XX NO. 17. RED BANK, N. J,, WEDIpSDAY, OCTOBER PAGES 1 TO 8? A PHILANTflPPIST DEAD.

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1 VOLUME XX NO. 17. RED BANK, N. J,, WEDpSDAY, OCTOBER PAGES 1 TO 8? A BG' TERM OF COURT, A HOST OF NDCTMENTS FOUND BY THE GRAND JURY. Tlev Found One Hundred and ' 8lxtv-Thret ndctments Trals to Benn After - Electon Bg Cost to the County. Ths October term of court wll be) one of the most expansve to the taxpayers of the county of Jlonmoutt that has ever been known. The grand jury found 163 ndctments, and the fees to the offcals, from the p.rosecutar down to' tbe justces and constables together wth the cost of the support of the persons convcted and sent to jal, wll amount'to several thousand dollars. Some of the ndctments were returned nto court about two weeks ago, and a number of the persons ndcted bave been arragned. Several pleaded gulty. From now untl electon day arragnments wll be made daly, the number arragned each day dependng on tbe celerty wth whch the papers are served by the constables., Most of the ndctments are for comparatvely trval offenses. Trflng cases of assault and.battery are large u number. Cases of petty larceny are frequent n tbe lst. The most serous case of all s the ndctment for murder aganst James Roser of Shrewsbury, who shot and klled Davd locker last eprng. A few cvl cases have beon tred, but there were not many of these to come before the court. TENDONS SEVERED. Clarence C. Smock Sleets Wth a. Serous Accdent. Clarence C. Smock, a machnst of Red Bank, met wth a serous accdent whle nuttng up a smoke stack at Swan's mll at Atlantc Hghlands yesterday. The staok had been hosted to an uprght poston on the top of a brck foundaton, preparatory to beng placed n poston. Whle beng lowered to ts restng place Mr. Smock's rght hand got caught under the stack and the tendons n the arm at the wrst were severed. The muscular contracton of the arm caused the ten- "dbntto sjtup the~arm. B\ Hendrckeon of Atlantc Hghlands brought Mr. Smock to Red Bank and took hm to Dr. J. E. Sayre's offce. Dr. W. B. Warner was called n and t was decded to send Mr. Smock to the Long Branch hosptal to be operated upon. The operaton was performed last nght at the hosptal by Dr. Edwn Feld. The operaton s a dffcult and delcate one, and requres more care than an amputaton. A long cut had to be made n the arm n order to reach the tendons, whch had been drawn far-up the arm under the flesh. The tendons were pulled n place and unted. The greatest care s requred n jonng the tendons, n order that the use of the hand may be retaned. The operaton was very successful, but Mr. Smock wll be lad up wth tbe njury for a month or more. Tho Mddletown Report. Tho report of Hon. John S. Applegate and A. C. Hartshorne, tbe commssoners who conducted the nvestgaton nto the affars of Mddletown townshp, was presented to Judge Collns at New Brunswck yesterday. The reporb makes a typo wrtten dooument of about CO pages. Judge Collns las not yet rend tho report, and untl ho does he wll nako no dsposton of t. t s expected that t wll evontually bo fled n the oflco of tho clerk of the supreme court nt Tronton. Untl t s fled or some other publc dsposton s mado of t, tho contonto of tho document wll not bo nrndo publc. Men lluv ther Clothng Wlcro they got honest goods, correct ft, ntylch and worltnfthlp at ho lowest powhlo prcch. AN WO malo most all our clothng t Htandfl to reason tlnt wo can gvo you tlu very bout values. Men'H all wool nobby plad mu, good vnluo at *: 60, for fo.oo; O'B all wool b'avor overooat, *2,(M) value, nt ffh.oo. A. Hals'. & Co., Koyport, N. J, Ado, " tfl mmnfo KwMlfl wwr JM.tH M m'n CnllfHl lmn" W. " Mr n'l '"'' HnlllU'H K-Ht ton!"; Klmkra, l7n. hmk llmnrl H>, 11*11 1 " 1 "' "UN Vermont, lmro mp, ""M> 1()»yrtp, by nuurt or Kullon ; fr'h nlock om locker H H \*y,k<>\v\\ lu'lf-a'luk mokwheat K-lldh) clc, Hup juclf, "l«'. «l<»v«l A 'm- (June, ((lrolle, boa or mult mhl akral deal to a mly' (THH, YOU can K»'l thorn at ft fmll w/l, at, WDJH' mllnery cntalllnlm'l. Wo nto B'HK nx olor llavwuwlkurn for Jjrt ccnln null HV> t'<ll"f{ ntmm, too,.monts 1'ttoh*Hon.~vl('«THREE WLLS PROBATED. Those of Mrs. Jane St. Allen, George. V. Bell and Patrck Oakes. The wlls of the late Mrs. Matlda Allen of AUenwood, George W. Bell of Brdgeport, Conn., formerly of Matawan, and Patrck Oakes of Holmdel townshp, havv been admtted to probate at Freehold. Davd Warner has been apponted admnstrator of tle estate of Alce Butt; Henry Chamberlan of the estate of Moses Hampton; and Wesley W- Van- Hse of the estate of Laura T. Pearce.. Mrs. Allen ordered her personal property to be sold and her debts pad.', She owned a house and lot at Allen wood! and tha s to be sold. Tbe entre proceeds of her estate are to be dvded among her three chldren, Oscar, George and Howard. Mrs. Allen's brother, Joseph A. Morton of Farmngdale, was apponted executor of the wll and guardan of the chldren. George W. Bell, father, of Davd A, Bell, who ded some tme ago, left all hs estate to hs chldren, Mrs. Elvra Ncholson, Amercus Bell and Frankln Bell, and to the chld of Davd. A. Bell. Money whch le had loaned to hs chldren n ther lfetme wll come out of ther shares. Mr. Bell's estate s valued at $12,000 and s all personal property.. Patrck'Oakes left to hs wfe, Brdget Oakes, all of hs personal property and all of hs real estate for lfe. At her death t wll be dvded among hs grandchldren, Mary Oabes and John Oakes, chldren of John Oakes The wll was made on August 9th, 1807, n the presence of Patrck McDonough and Wllam McDonough. The applcaton for probate states that he left personal property worth $700 and real estate worth $000. t s thought that hs estate s worth much more than ths. ' ', TWO PROPERTES SOLD. Georae t. Lamb & Co. Buy the Conover Property on Mechanc Street. George R. Lamb & Co. have"bought the Wm. W. Conoyer property on Mechanc Btreet. The property s 80x150 feet. A dwellng house, blacksmth shop and barn are on the premses, and there s also a small vacant lot-adjonng the Navesnk truck house. Lamb & Co. gave $3,500 for the property. They wll tear down the barn and wll buld a larger barn and an ce house on the property. The dwellng house and blacksmth shop wll reman as they now are. FrancB R. Fthan of Camden has bought the gully west of East Sde Park, and south of the Far Haven road. The property has a frontage of 300 feet on the Far Haven road, and s about 700 feet deep. A good deal of the ground s upland. The land wll be graded and the gully flled n and converted nto buldng lots. The land was owned by Borden Hance. Mr. Fthan pad $2,500 cash for t. Both sales were made by Francs Whte. -y. mprovements at Lttle Slver. An addton s beng bult to the south sde of E. C. Phlbrck's house at Lttle Slver. The present stars are to be taken out and very handsome new open stars of quartered oak wll be. put n. Tho addton wll be an extenson of the hall and wll be carred up three stores nto a tower. To work wll cost about $3,500. The plans for tho mprovements were drawn by R. D. Chandler of Red Bank, and the work wll be done by Arthur E. Smth of Far Haven. Rebuldng at mlaystown. The mluystown hotel, whch was destroyed n a recent flro at that place, s beng rebult. Mr. Wnldon, whoso storo and dwellng house was burned at the mme fre, has receved $1,000 from the Monmouth county mutual flro nsurance company. Mr. Waldon wll sell ha lots to B. P. Malsbury, whoso atoro was also destroyed, nnd ho wll buld a houaoand a Btoro on tho property, (M.,f<> Uottl «f 1'hotoH for thfs.ko. Specnl raton on Mmtcllo photos for a short tme, Because- of a mstake, of our toclc dealer wo nre enabled to offer Mnntello photon for $2.00 per dozen untl tho prehmt lot of rumnlh uro gone. Then tho prce- wll ponltv(.'ly be $11.50 per dozon, m heretol'or 1, Don't wat, \H WO mvo but 600 of tlcno mounlu on bund. Donrt & l/.'lhon, over Curtl' but Htore, Hroad treut, teu Dank. Adv, HnUdlnt 'lot for Half. Tho hcaullfl buhng plot, corner Front, treol md Prapoot, avonte. Tho only comt lot now n lnt market on lrul rumhf; (<» tho lver. AddromJ, (. Warden, Ued lunl, N.,l~Adv. Tlh)JH for tltn Jln( /. We have nl tho llttlo llln(; thatcdut no Jeh for btby' eonfot. Yo'ro nun- to dud lul wlml. you want at a fwoublo )rk> nt Moton &.(Jo.'fl l ttorv Adv, A PHLANTflPPST DEAD. GUSTAV GROSJEAWS QUARTER. CENTDBY O* HELPFULNESS. He Was a Well-Ed«ated Han, Wth Meflned Tastes, ccld He Settled n Macedona n Order to Ad the Colored People. \\ Out n the pnes nea Macedona, some three mles Bouthwes of Tnton Falls, there ded last Thursdy a man who was an oddty n hs way, and yet who had done more actual good n the last quarter of a century than, almost any other halfdozen men n Monmouth county wll do n ther whole lves, even though they should lve to be as old as Metbusela. Ths man"' 1 wfls Gustv Grosjean. He moved to Macedona about 27 years ago. He was fnely educated, and could talk fluently n seven languages; Before he moved to Macedona ho was bookkeeper and casher- n a largo wholesale meat establshment n New York cty. When he went to Macedona.le took wth hm bs lbrary, whch then conssted of several hundred volumes, and he also took several boxes of pctures. He was a very fne Greek and Latn scholar, and many of hs books were prnted n these languages, and n French and German. He w#b"an extremely pous man, and when hs talk turned on relgon, whch t frequently dd n hs conversatons, t was plan to be seen that on ths topc hs mnd was unbalanced. He frequently stated that the Lord had called hm to Macedona n order, that he mght do good there, and ad the poor and-unfortunate of the localty. When he went to Macedona he bought four acres of ground adjonng the schoolhouse for colored chldren. Ths land was bought from Captan Bowles, a retred sea captan, who had been n the coastng busnens all hs lfe, and who settled near Pne Brook to be n a quet neghborhood to end hs days. There was no house on the property and Mr. Grosjean bult a house about twelve feet square. The house contaned one room on the frst floor and one on the second floor. Three sdes of the room on the frst floor were covered wth pctures. Some 6rtfese were rare prnts and Borne were steel engravngs, but most of them were pctures of French and German cathedrals. On the other sde of the room was hs bookcase and hs collecton of books. He was a dlgent reader of the scrptures, and hs readng of the bble and the new testament was confned almost exclusvely to the Greek orgnal. He had an organ when he frst went to Macedona. He was a sklful muscan, and was fond of entertanng vstors wth musc. For the frst' two or three years of hs resdence there he was regarded wth much curosty by the people lvng roundabout, and almost everyone n the localty called upon hm. All hs; vstors were treated wth grave courtesy, although t was evdent that he knew that t was only curosty that brought them to bs door. Mr. Grosjean had no money, and he went n debt for the money to buld hs house. He was very ndustrous and would work for the farmers of the neghborhood whenever opportunty presented. He rased frut and vegetables, whch he sold, but hs greatest ncome was from the sale of chckens and eggs. He was a very successful poultryman, aud kept a consderable number of fowls. Ho dd all hs own work about the house, makng and bakng hs own bread, dong all hs cookng and mendng, nnd also dong all hs own washng and ronng. Hs lnen wns always spotless, no matter what work ho mght bo engaged upon, nnd t had tho appearanco of havng been dono up at a laundry. Ho was passonately fond of flowers, nnd n hs front yard (lowers were n bloom from early sprng to late n tho fall. Many of these were wld'lowora whcl ho hud gathered n tho woods and Holds and trun»plnted to hs garden. These and old-fashoned llowere were bn favor ttu Ho had bult u cellar under prt of bn honso chpecally to keep tho plnnt whch would ho hlled by freezng. GwmmH and smlar llowern wore kept tho homc, whoro bn tkll kept tlon bloom nont of tho wnter. Throe or lour yeurt «?o ho unwed ol wmn of Ht llmlm of t umplo tn'o near (ho OHC nhot twulvo feet from tho ground, ntl on the Htunp of tlrno nwvcd-olt lmbn he mllt a platform for Unworn. Jo nnrl to nay that hl pluu would do hotlur up n lo ar, when) thoy could «ol plonty o MufhlM! md hnc/c, tlmn they would on tlo ground, A ntralght, uprght hulle wan frhtonvtl to tho tree, and regularly tlred Um.' tt day m nct up thn lahjor to tho platform to ourn for bn plvntn. A lnlw platform for llowon, mfcnoullor, was bult on the peak of hs barn, at one end of the structure. About three years ago Mr. Grosjean bult a small addton to hs house. Ths addton he used as a ktchen, the orgnal room on ths floor beng thereafter used as a sttng room or parlor. Over the front door of ths addton he naled, as an ornament, the curved top of the headboard of an old-fashoned bedstead. Ths was of walnut, and t contrasted strangely wth the unparaed exteror of the house. Ths sprng he bult a two-foot addton to the ktchen' and moved the starway, and he was buldng a four-foot addton to the parlor, to serve as a readng room, when he was sezed wth hs fatal llness. Mr. Grosjean was ever dong kndnesses 'or hs neghbors, but t was when anyne n the neghborhood was taken sck that hs goodness waspnost manfest. No matter what he was dong, or where he was employed, he would mmedately leave hs work when he heard of a case of sckness and go to the ad of the afflcted. Although he hmself was the personfcaton of neatness and cleanlness, no place Was so drty, no surroundngs so unpleasant, no squalor so revoltng, as to keep hm away. Wth mnstratons as tender as those of a woman he cared for the sck untl they recovered or ded. Nght after nght he would spend at ther bedsdes, and when death came he would prepare the body for the grave. These servces were gven gratutously. The neghbors say thatdurngthe twentyseven years he lved "at Macedona there was hardly a person for.mles and mles around to whom he had not mnstered n sckness and. hardly a deathbed whch ho had not soothed. Nerer was there a man who took more lterally for hs motto the "nasmuch" of Chrst "n asmuch as ye dd t unto one of the least of these, ye dd t unto me." Several years ago Mr. Grosjean sold hs organ. Hs books became scattered, or be may have sold some of them n New York. The fner pctures of hs collecton were also sold. A smaller bookcase took the place of Jhe one he orgnally had. At hs death hs books numbered less than a hundred, and hs.collecton of pctures hnd been reduced more than one half. Those remanng were of lttle commercal value. Early ths sprng Mr. Grosjean was engaged to work on a brdge on the old Southern ralroad near hs home. The work was exhaustng, and after workng a quarter of a day he qut. The fact that he wa3 losng hs strength and vtalty preyed on hs mnd. He became fearful that he would become dependent on others for hs support. Three or four weeks ago he was strcken wth typhod fever. From the frst he declared that he would not get well, and le seemed to have no, desre to lve. He stated that f he lved he would be so weakened wth the dsease that he would not be. able to support hmself durng the wnter, and that le would rather de than be dependent. He made no fght for lfe, and on Thursday of last week he ded. Durng hs last sckness he receved very lttle ad from those to whom he had devoted the last quarter century of hs lfe. Hs nearest neghbor was' Josepl: Shultz, and Mr. Shultz and hs wfe vsted hm half a dozen or more tmes a day, brngng hm food and comfortng hm as much as lay n ther power. Travs Johnson set up wth hm for eleven consecutve nghts. Mrs. Sopha A. Wllams, a colored woman lvng a quarter of a mle awajr, was wth hm the last few days of bs sckness, but apart from tbeso there were very few to ad hm, Tho old adage, " Eaten bread s soon for gotten," was fully exemplfed n tho crcunbtnncefl of tho death of Gustav Grosjean. Tho funeral was held at tho Kntontown Methodst church on Frlny. ' t WHO attended by about a Rcoroof tho peoplo o. tho localty, -Prcvlotu to ht) death Mr. Grosjent\mado a wll,gvng hs property to tho Eutontow McthodHt church /f tor bn debts were pad. Thodebt aro tr- lr, buhr perhaps $80 n addton t( hd funoral cxpcuch. Kn property con ftn of h hofo nul hnd, whch arc probably worth $1)00. Mr. Clrojcnn wnu about, nxly yearn o A Tlnrlu Tlo mvhtlon (f untlorwenr al. tll umuon n of K Krentefc lupot/w Whether t n cotton, natural wool or th lloece MX 'good, wo rm null; you l'rlccm rko from!5 rmhto f'j.fo. On $1.00 He'C) llnln; Krcut canuf. K (luplk'nt'd ((lcwhcr); for warmth am wearng quallt CM n 'xccllcd. (,'uvt n A H(n, "7 Jlrmul utwt, Kwl flanlt. /l(l«, VVu urn vllltk nt rlmr Hvnn cl^n for lft uonln and n' v ' l» tml'k nkt» u too, Morrs 'nol«hon. Adv. NEWS FROM MlDjLETOWN. THE HGHEST TDE ALONG SHORE KNOWN N YEARS. Seaaders Go About Ther Town n Boats Street lamps for Belford Chckens Klled byjbogs-a Dance at Brevent Park. The tde was hgher at Belford on Mon- Jay than t had been before n several ears. The bulkhead whc^ was bult along the creek last fall to protect the fshng boats that were Btored there for he wnter was badly damaged. At Atantc Hghlands a house boat whchhad evdently broken loose from ts moorngs at-sandy Hook, was blown aganst he per and wrecked. n the streets at Seasde the water was from two to-four feet deep and the resdents went about n boats. Several young women from' Atlantc Hghlands vsted Seasde on c Monday to see how t looked when t was submerged. They hred a man to row. hem about the townn a boat and one >f the young women told a REGSTER oung man yesterday that they had a delghtful tme. Sx of the twenty lamps whch w'ere bought to lght the Btreets of Belford ave been put n place. The lamps were bought last fall from the borough of Atantc Hghlands and were the ones used on the streets at that place before the present electrc lght plant was put n. The lamps cost about $20 and the money was rased by entertanments gven n the Methodst, church. The remanng fourteen lamps wll be put up next week. Eght chckens owned by Wllam Devesty, and three chckens owned by John Wllams, both of Navesnk, were klled by dogs on Sunday mornng. Mr. and Mrs. John Snedeker gave a dance at ther home at Brevent Park last Thursday nght. About forty couples were present. The house was tastefully decorated wth plants and Japanese lanterns, and the lawn was also decorated wth Japanese lanterns. The dancng nded at four o'clock. Supper was served at mdnght. Wllam Dyer of Keansburg was arrested last Saturday on a charge of assaulfc'aha battery. The complanant n the case was Danel Ahern. Both men board at the same house at Keanaburg. On the Thursday nght precedng hs arrest Dyer came home drunk and called verybody n the house names and swore at them. Ahern told hm to shut up hs mouth and go tobed and Dyer slapped hs face. Dyer was arrested last Saturday and on the same day he was gven a hearng before Justce John Ells. Bal was fxed at $100 and J. B. Collns of Keansburg became hs bondsman. A' game of baseball was played at Navesnk last Saturday between Wllam Cole's team and a team from Atlantc Hghlands captaned by Thomas Skdmore. The NaVesnkers won the game by a score of 32 to 10. The lades' ad socety of the Atlantc Hghlands Methodst church gave a supper n a vacant store n the Dolby buldng last Thursday nght, The-affar wafl very well attended ^ ^ cleared. fe $M Douglas Cook of ^ejjjjw^js^ makng '" several mprovements to'hs house'.' M Du t - "* J; ' ng tho tme the mprovements are n progress Mr. Cook's famly wll lve wth Mrs. Cook's father, Wllam Kpp. Wllam B. Parsons and famly, summer resdents of LocuBt Pont, returned to thor homo n Now York to-day. L. G. Red and famly wll return to New York to-morrow, tev. Wllam V. Wlson conducted tho servco n tho New Monmouth Baptst church last Sunday. Next Sunday Rov. Depow Grffths of Bnglmtnton,<T. Y., wll preach. Tho Chrstan Endeavor soooty of tho Central Baptst church at Atlanto Hghlands wll gve an pyster supper n tho bndt'nent of tho churoh noxt Tuesday nght, G«!orgo Clark hn«been awarded tho contract to carry tho nmlu between tho Atlantc HghlandH pontofllco am the llaton. tcnjnlt UnrlKOof OomtPont, who hm boon vltltlnf f'londn u Now York for tho punt two woolen, lrtm returned, homo. Mnn MU((K1> Morfordof Now MonmoutU n vuk '"'< lor, Am. K. M. Front of Monlclnl', Two hundred hlr'ln of Hour am nt lovtfot mlcw. 'llll.ry XXXX, $.) per mrr'l, and ollon' way down. Wo thnk (hl a c;<hk tn<> to lny, W nnl'h uy lm'k f wanted. Hro. Alv. W<" nron'ltlrkx e)«r Hnvatn '%'trr for M c'tl nul KVO tradng l too. Morrlt 1'nol & tk»n,lrf

2 . -. '.. " l '.... ELECTON DAT RACES. xtteo Races to be Meld at Red Bank Next Tuesday. Two races nstead of one wll beheld n Red Bank on electon day. One of the races wll be fve mles and the other twenty-fve mles. The course n the twenty-fve' mle race wll start nt the fountan, thence up Broad street to the Scuflletown road, to the Rumaon road, over one of the cross roads to the Far Haven road, up the Far Haven road and Front street to Washngton street, over Washngton street to Borden, and over Borden to Broad street. Ths course wll be gone over four o fve tmes to make up the twenty-fve mjes.. The. flvtf-mle race "wll be over the same route. Both races wll end at the fountan. The frst prze and tme prze n the 25-mle race wll be a Wolff Amercan bcycle, dpratedry-allstrora & Co. The other przes are sweaters, bcycle shoes, etc., donated by other merchants n the town. The races are opejf to all amateurs. A number of entres have already been receved, and the races are expected to be the most attractve event of the knd ever gven n Red Bank. BCYCLE RACES. Two Mle Races at Atlantc Jllflltlands on Saturday. '' The two bcycle races whch were held on Valley Drve, Atlantc Hghlands, last Saturday afternoon were a success and attracted a large number of people to the town. Thomas J. Emery arranged the races and t was through hs efforts that they were pulled off successfully. AH the przes but one were wpn by Atlantc Hghlands rders. The frst race was a mle handcap n whch there were ffteen entres. Ths race was run n three heats, the frst three rders n each heat startng n the fnal. The race was won by Wllam Dawston. He receved a par of fancy opera glasses as the frst prze. The second prze was a sweater and a par of golf stockngs.,, Tha was won by J. G. Kerns. Fred Voorhees of the Hghlands came n thrd and got a fountan pen. The second race was a free for all contest for a mle, n whch there were seven entres. Ths was won by Peter Perrne. The prze vyas a wllow rockng char. Lous Merrgold came n second and got a par of bcycle shoes. The thrd prze was an umbrella, and was won by George Sherman. Boys Flay Football. An up-town football team played a game of football on Front street a9t Saturday wth the Harvard, Jr., team. The up-towners won theg'ame by a score 28 to 0. Ther players were Wll Ashmore, captan ; George Byron, Joe Clayton, Harry Clayton, Joe Morrs, Andrew Whte, Martn McCue, Samuel Wse and Maurer Worthley. The Harvard, Jr., team was composed of Walter Conk, captan ; Harry Smth, Raymond Conover, Davd Shrver, Alle Robbns, John Case, Vctor Parker, S. Holmes and Joseph Relly Deterch. A Good Duckng Trp. On Monday of last week John D. Combs, Danel Woods, Charles A. Mnton and Capt. Charles E, Throckmorton of Red Bank went on a duckng trp to Barnegat. A Mr. VanWagnon of New York was also n the party. The' party returned home on Frday wth sxty ducks. Most of the ducks were dstrbuted among ther frends. Odds and Ends of Sport. A socal club has been organzed at Asbury Park. John F. Squre has been elected presdent nnd Otto Morrs secretary. The new club wll be known as the Olympc socal club. t wll hold a Hallow'cen dance next Monday nght. Elmer Morrs of Kcyport won a doublebarreled gun whch was chanced off by Alvn Aunuck of that place on Tuesday of last week. The wnnng chance cost 28 cents,, Leon Cubbcrly of Long Branch raffled off n combnaton tandem lnst Wednesday nght. The- wheel wns won by Mr. Smnw, whoso chance oost hm twclvo cents. Wll WattH of Koyport won tho badge and tho lmb pr/.o nt tho match of tho Baysdo gun club lust Wednesday. Ho broke "11 out of 2f hluo roelm. Wllam lyroh of Freehold won tho laht mutch of tho Freehold gun club, Davd llct, Jr., WH econd and Joseph Atkjlo't) W»H thrd. J. N. Durln of Anbury Park lnn roturned homo from» two woolen' huntng nnd lluhug trp n Mane Dr. W. Herbert of Munwnmn went fndng lmt Wednesday md nwplt over ono hundred pluoe. Wllam F. (rnvutt of Mllntono won tbroo jwnlunw on hln tcm of buy larc nt (n' Trenton far. ' ttanlnocn. Domnoed dnrlw my rmnovwl mle nt 7 contnu> $1 Tho 7-omt oncnnro of wood, wth pctured on them, nmlro mom for chldren'*uno than /or actual ply. John U. UAd. Shootng at Blackbrds. Three matches at blackbrds were shot a the Rversde gun club grounds on Frday. All of tbe matches were at ten brdav$2 entrance fee. n the frst match Wllam Merrtt and Mel Cornwell ted wth 8 each, and Ed. Cooper and Fred Beale ted for second place wth 7. Henry C. Whte won the second event "wth a score of 9.' Mel, Cornwell was second wth 8 Merrtt, Ed'Cooper and John B. Bergen scored 7, and Fred Beale klled 0., The thrd event was also won py Henry!. Whte, who agan klled 9. Merrtt, Ed Cooper, Bergen and E. L, Cowart klled 7, Fred Beale 6, and Howard Hance4. '- Offcers of a Game Socety. The annual meetng of the Mddletown game protectve assocaton was held at J. Dey Conover's house at Mddletown last week. The followng offcers were elected : Preesldent-Wllam B. Conovcr. Vce presdent Joseph A. Hendrlckson. Secretary J. Dey Conover..,... Treasurer W. W. Conover, Jr. \ Drectors Wllam B. Conover, Dr. E. P. Taylor, J. Dey Conovcr, Henry Feld, Joseph T. Flold, John 8. Hcndrlokson, Wllam W. Conover, Jr., Robert Hartslone. The assocaton wab organzed among the farmers oje Mddletown townshp to protect ther property from the depredatons of hunters, who tore down fence's", shot chckens and dd much other damage. The Monopole. Ths cgar has a Sumatra wrapper and Havana fller. t's a favorte wth many smokers because of ts superor qualty, ts even burnng, and ts fne aroma. The prce : 1 Monopole Scents. 6 Monopoles 25 cents. Box of 50 Monopoles $1.75. Morrs Pach & Son, Front St.. foot of Broad St., Red Dank. THE GLOBE... Lvery and Boardng Stables. STKYKER & COLYER. We beg to announce that we have a fne selecton of traps, runabouts, surreys, bugges and other comfortable vehcles to select from, and any one who s desrous of hrng a nce turnout, wll fnd t wll pay themjto call on us. Good Rgs and Prces Moderate. /Our Dpartment Of Bakstuffs s suggestve of many changes n ths lne. Next tme you're downtown drop n and look over our cake and pastres. You are sure to Eee somethng you'want. We would lke to serve you regularly wth bread and pastry. J. W. CHLD, BROAD STREET, Honest ron Work.. RED BANK There sn't any work n ordnary ron work that can't do and do well, from makng a harrow tooth to reparng ntrcate farm machnery. The work do s honest work. do t as well as know how how, and that means t s done as well ns t can be done by anybody. DANEL BENNETT, Belford, N.J. ««< > ' <> $ Full Dress Suts, to order, $ $20 and upwards. Prnce Albert Coats and Vests,'$12 to $18. Full Dress Laundered Whte Shrts, $1.25 and $ A. LUDLOW, Broad Street, Keel Bank.? U Went Kront HlrMt. nrar 'mrl, 11ml llnnk.n. J lltwr «t<1 K, * M. Holmfnr'n f Wolnor llmt alwurn on (lruuuht. M.RO HAUTOMMAV OUKH'KH JlKKl N WOTTWB Many Powerful Reasons To draw a crowd of purchasers ths week. Plan bargan facts that argue stronger than a volume of eloquence.. Dress Goods, Cloaks, Blankets, Underwear, Etc., At prces that no economcal woman of Red Bank and for many mles around can afford to overlook. '.. Black Slk WaBts, $5.00 value.. specal $3.98 Lades'Plad Cloth Wasts, $1.00 value " 79c. All-wool Cloth Wasts, $1.50 yalue " 98c. Kersey Jackets, slk lned, $8.00 value.... " ' 4.98 Boucle Jackets, slk lned, $8.00 value.,... " ' 4J98 Sample lot Cloth Capes; $5.00 value... *" Chldren's. Ederdown Cloaks, $2.00 value.. ' " 1.29 Separate Dress Skrts, $2.00 value " 1.68 All-Wool Dress Skrts, $5.00 value. " 2.98 Outng Cloth Wrappers, $1.50 value.. ". 98c. The new Scotch Plad Hose, 50c. value... " 29c. Chldren's Double Knee Hose, 20c. value... " le. A Par of Gray Blankets, 75c. value... " 89c. A par of 10-4 Whte Blankets, 98c. value... " 49c. A par of 114 Whte Blankets, $3.00 value. " 1.48 A par of 10-4 Wool Blankets, $4 value " 2.98 Apar of 11-4Calforna Blankets, $6.00 value!' 4.98 Best whte cotton Qults, $1.50 value. ' 98c. Bleached Table Damask, 40c. value, " ' 29c. Best Qultng Calco, 5c. value " 8 c. Good Shaker Flannel, 5c. value " 8 o. Heavy Canton Flannel,,5c. value... " 3fc. Unbleached Sheetng Musln, 5c. value. " 8jc Brown Twlled Towelng, 5c. value ". 8 c. Barbour's Lnen Thread, 8c. value " 5c. Black and colored Dress Goods, 88c. value..specal 25c- Fancy Plad Dfess Goods, 12Jc. value... " loo. The new Scotch Dress Goods, 15c. value " 12Jc. 40-nch all-wool Dress Goods, 50c. value " 89c. Black slk-fnshed Henretta, 75c. value... " 49c. Storm Serge, 45-nch, all colors, 75c value. " ' 49c. Sngle Dress Patterns, 7 to 8 yards,'$1 value " 68c. Best French Har Cloth, 80c. value " S5c. More Taffeta Rustle Lnng, 10c. value... " 5c. 72-nch Fbre nterlnng, 18c. value " fe. Ready-to-use La Forma nterlnng, 90c. value " 75c. Yard wde Lnng Slk, 50c value " 89c. The new two-clasp Kd Gloves, $1.50, value. " 99c. Hook and Button Kd Gloves, $1.00 value.. " 08o; Blaok Cashmere Gloves. 25c. value " 15c. Lades' woolhose, 25c. value \ " 15c. Swss rbbed vests and Pants, 50c. value... '. 25c. Chldren's gray wool 'Vests and Pants, 25c. value " 18c. Chldren's whte merno Vests and Pants, 20c. value " le. Ease Knt Wasts for chldren, 25c. value.. " 15c. Haut Cure Soap, 14c. value "" 9c. Babeskn Soap and Talcum, 20c. value. " 9o. Royal Tooth and Talcum Powder, 10c. value " 5c. These are but a few of ths week's money savng chances. We have many others/but these should prove suffcent to crowd the store the same as last Saturday, whch was one of the busest days we ever had. ' :.. JOSEPH SALZ, COR. BROAD AND MECHANC STREETS, RED BANK, N. J. at $ bought 50 wheels last week for next sprng's ; trade. They are frst-class wheels. bought them now because beleve they wll cost more next sprng, when the rush for wheels comes on. ; f you want one of these bcycles you can get t for $ George Hance Patterson, Successor to Pope & Patterson, 22 West Front Street, Red Bank, N. J. VTYYYTTYTYYYTYYYYYYYYYTYYYYYYYYVTYYYYVTVTTYTVYYYTTT NEW PRCES. ON Columba Bcycles Columulns. Ho host bcycle mndo, reduced to $ G Colnmblus, second only to 1807 models, reduced to Hurtlords, equal to most bcycles, reduced to Hnvtfords, pattern 2, red need to 45. HartfordR, pattorn 1, reduced to '. 40. Hnrtfords, patterns 5 and 0, reduced to 00. Nothng n' tho market approached the value of those bcycles at tho former prcos; what aro they now? W/A. COLE, Agent, Broad Stroot, Rod Bank, N, J. < <. < > Bowlng, Pool and Bllards.! ^ r luv.' nlltlcd tn) bowllr nlloy n my pluro on Monnouth ntrcct, and W. U pool nnd lllllrl tubl' luvo lcm put ll lno condllon, You wl]l V. Mud t 11 plcrnt plnoo " pond nn (vonlng. ^ j wll rout tho bowlng llcy one nl^lt 11 wrnlt to bowlng dulw, for H p 2 lump por nlglt, tnt [tluyk to \w> oollnncd to H nto an lnur'au uy p 15 )" d'lrod, 2 J O ^ 3T POPE ^Vlonmoutl Street, Red Bonk, N. J. WLLAM O'BREN, Practcal Plumber, STEAM AND GAS FTTER. Hot Water Heatng a Specalty. No. 62 Front Street, RED BANK. Cheaper Lghtng! NEW JERSEY. The rates of electrc lghtng n Eed Bank for the past year have been lower than n any other town along the coast. Be-' gnnng wth the frst of June another reducton has been made. Last year the. rate was three-quarters of a cent per hour for a sxteen-candle power lamp. The prce s now seventenths of a cent per hour. Tls prce s equal to gas at $l.jf per 1,000 feet t s the chenj^est lghtng that can be done. Electrc lght s tho steadest, healthest, whtest lght that can bo had,.» aa well as tho cheapest. Wrte, to us about electrc lghts n your houbo or store. Drop tn n pmtnl 11 ml wo wll call nnd nrra << UrnH, «',. Now rnlw for nlof mnl lnwo lghtng n nn low m Knout $1.40 >or Uufnrt foot. 'UP N. JUCKON, 'nwldout. l'jounr NHA..H, Troamror. SHORE ELECTRC CO., UJ3D BANK, NEW Hntr 1*. (,'undlan, (JtAn.ut n. HAMN (HU t BupertploKJont.

3 A QUEfeR CYCE PATH. Hoc the Hayes Boys learned to " Bde n the Whte Mouse. The famous east room of the Whte House has been used for many odd purposes durng the 100 years of ts exstence, bnt t wll surprse most people to learn that t was once used as a bcysle court. Nearly 80 years ago the flayes boys, who then lved wth ther, father and mother at the exeontve manson, were taken wth the boyole fever. The boycles n use at that tme were the old fashoned ones, wth front wheels about fve feet n dameter, and t.was upon those awkward maohnes that the Hayes boys tred ther skll. Before acqurng mastery of ther wheels the youngsters wero too proud to be see"n n publc, as ther falls were many and ludcrous. Then they conceved the dea of practcng u the east room, but n order to,carry out ths plan had to take some of the Whte House employees nto ther confdonco. Everythng was - arranged to ther satsfacton; and at aght, when Presdent Hayes and hs good wfo were asleep,.the boys and Dh'er confederates repared to the east room and had a good tme rdng ther whoels up and down the great apartment. One of- the Whte House employees who aded the youngsters u ths escapade s stll employed at the executve manson, and the bcycle tradton s one of the brghtest of hsrecol- Jectonsof the Hayes regme. "t was a ' fne place to learn to rde a wheel," he says, "for the carpet was thck and soft and we could not hurt ourselves f we tred, but we were so afrad of the presdont and Mrs. Hayes that wo had a sentry posted to gve us the aanu u uase danger* threatened." BKE BELL RNGERS. A. Xovel Organsaton of Cyclsts That Has Mmc Wherever t Goes. Twenty-four young lades and gentlemen of Galveston aro responsble for a most unque dea of bcyclng. The company s termed the "bke bell rngers," and t sprang nto exstenco after the passage of tho ordftanoo requrng (vheelors to carry lamps and to rng bells at all street crossngs. These bkers have ftted ther wheels wth lamps of dfferent hues and wth bells of dfferent tones. Tho object of the law betng to have wheelmen,,gve notco of ther conng, that object wll certawy~\ be attaned n tho case of tho "bko Ml rngers," for ther approach s made known by the rngng out of sweet musc. A reporter -who had occason to go to tho western part of the cty was fortu-.nato enough to meet the "bke bell rngers" on dress parade. Afar down the road came tho slent steeds wth ever changng lghts. Frst a group of rod lghts headed tho processon, then came a group of red, whte and blue, then a group of greeu lghts, flunked by rod and bluo. And so the wheels and lghts wero constantly changng, makng beautful effects. As the wheels drew nearer tho chmng of the bolls could bo heard.- Frst a few bars wero played from "Tho Chmes of Normandy," then cano "Anno Laure," the "Tnkle, Tnkle, Bells" song from "Olvette," and as tho bkers passed on and wero lost n tho dstanco tho notes of "Home, Sweet Homo," wero heard. Damages for a Cyclst.. (From the Cncnnat Commercal.) - A case of nterest to. oycle rders was decded recently by-squro Bloom n a way that satsfes the rdors. The justce holds that tho cty 1B responsble for holes n the streets when these result n damage to rders. The case was that of Mss Jesse M. Olver, who sued tho cty for $800 damages. Sho was rdng on Woodburn nvo-. nue and ran nto a hole n tho street on a recent evenng. ^Thero was no lght or sgnal of any knd to gvo warnng of danger, and she had her wheel broken, hor olothng torn and rocoved physcal njures horself. A, numbe* of poreons. testfed as to tho plantff's njures and tho danger of'tho unguarded street holo. Tho oty had a polceman to testfy for t, and what ho had to say dd not rolovo tho authortes from tho ohargo of ncgloct, and tho judgment of tho court was as stated.-- """ ' ' ~ Anothor Pont of Vew. <'Thoro'snltogothor too much lborty allowed n ths country. Look at our publo HtrcotH. Thoro's no oafoty thoro for mmor beast." '" thought tho BtrootH woro full of nataton. But wlmt'h tho mutter now?" "Onr pot dog wont out on tho roadway, whoro ho bun n porfoct rght to bo, md, junt bocauno ho wouldn't got out of tlm way quck enough to oblge v (lonporalo wlolnu, lo WB nn over md hvd lhtul mmmtntod. t'unn outrnf(> md mmolody wll havo to pty for t." "What mo you K""K t ( d<> nbout t?" "'m {o { '<> Hm tl" follow who ran over hm." ** "Whoro n KV" "JJ' tlj u H" lohtlul." Russa PrnFora Amercan WOOM. n UuHla jrufnruuo 1M KVO to Amercan wlxol 1" oomflfumoo of thnlr flnh, ll ;ll.nnf u«l lumlk am VK MMHMW. ''h lmt Amercan WUOH wll rwdljy wth HM 'Hunyan rlof.-- Tm Hcumtr.t N ho l»rl tl(<'tuul bout ort fm»nh,"vt<jv. ; Bref Cyclng Not&U ' t s not generally known that the bcycle rdden by the lttle Welsh wonder, Mchael, has a 26, nch front wheel and a 38 nch rear wheel, K Wth proper pacng^ f t can be secured, Frank Waller beleves that he can put the Amercan 24 hour record at 660 mles and wll make the effort late ths season on one of the ndoor tracks. Accordng to manufacturers of _ boycles, the demand for brakes last year far exceeded that of any prevous season, and t s freely predcted that n 1898 brakes wll be more popular than ever before. The best and cheapest olcanng cloth s lnt. Half a yard s suffcent, and t vcv can be obtaned of any druggst for a few cents. t s soft, lght and absorbent and partcularly useful for brghtenng plated parts.!. n New York the messenger boy who rdes a wheel reserves a commsson of per cent of what ho earns for tho company whch employs hm. Boys earn on an average $10 a week, whle the ordnary messenger boy gets but $4 to $7 a week. Each applcant for a job must provde hs own wheel. Nno tmes out of ten tho woman cyclst n dsmountng wll jump down from her bcycle n much tho same marner as she would leap from a dogcart. A method far more gracefulcs to allow the wheel to come to a porfcct stop, steppng from the pedal at ts lowest pont, makng an easy and dgnfed dsmount. Tho mana of bcycle hatred manfests tself n queer ways. A man n Bloomfeld; N. J., has delberately cut trenches ten feet apar,t and sx nches* deep across hs Edewalk. Theso he uncovers on Sundays, when there s a great flockng of- cyclers to the country, and every one of the rders s oblged to dsmount upon reachng the trenches.. Coombes and Hs Ptchfork. Mr. Coombos of Woodhaven, N. Y., rgged a ptchfork n front of hs handle bars, wth tho dea of transfxng the frst footpad he mght, meet and forkng hm off to the coroneks nquest, and whle rdng one nght wthout a lght a colored scorcher, head down, bucked nto t full tlt, smashed hs ptchfork aud wheel and butted hm n- ""to a comatose condton and got away, Coombes escapng arrest for carryng ) concealed weapons by re»=nn "f hs n- The Evoluton of the Wheel. pa tbe dark horse we make our largest wnnngs, And great results acoruo from small.begnnngs.' r - Then mock not. hm who o'er eone strange dea, : Doth ponder long, doth dream and scratch hs The weakest sde hath many a battle \ton, And what the future holds s known to none. THE HOBBY HORSE. Heave HeaTcl What screeches and squeals Proceed from the hubs of the old wooden wleelsl..' Let us srr to the prase Of the hobby horse days, Whel our grandfathers' craze Was to rde the hghways On a clckety-claokety, groanng and rackety Sort of a ral on ellptcal reels. TBB man WTEEL. Bump! Bump! ""Twos crudely desgnod, And to pedal t far was a horrhlo grnd. h Hero's a jnglng rhyme Of the bone shaker tme, When, wth courago sublme, Our fathers dd clmb To tho top of a lubbory, tred wth hard rubbery, '. Cast ron wheel, wth ts young one behnd, *T0B WBEEL.OF TODAY. Z-z-z-zpl Whz-zl t hasn't a peer! What joy more entrancng? What moton s freer?. To the safety wo sng, Of all cycles the kng, As we rapdly swng, Lke a brd on tho wng, j - Wth a moton ecstato, on trea pnoumato, Of a hgh' 1 grade and up to date eghty-four Mss Helen Gladstone. Mss Helen Gladstone, who s now an expert cyclst and wao long a wholesome example to all her grl students at Newnham college, of whch she was tll recently vce prncpal, admts that wheelng and hgher mathematcs go admrably together. Mss Gladstone's sster, Mrs. Drew, s also a sklled wheelwoman, and tho two go rdng about Hawarden together, enjoyng the outdoor lfe and the charmng lanes and roads. At tmes Mr. Drew and the lttle Dorothy accompany the ssters, and a very happy famly party t s, Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone watchng the start from tho castle wth eager nterest, as f t were always somethng new. Mss Gladstone sts- erect when sho rdes and s very fearless. She has great endur anco and can take long rdes wthout fatgue.»»» A Roadbulder. The bcycle s a good thng n tser, but a stll better thng u that t tends to mprovement of the roads n all parts of thecjlnntry.- '" ' " ' Cowng a Bully. (New York Prm.) ; saw a bg, straght chap on a bcycle n Eastern parkway, Brooklyn, on Sunday whom should lke to know. He was rdng carefully wth the regard of a gentleman for those around hm. A red faced fellow n a lght wagon turned sharply nto the road, crowded and frghtened a group of women on wheels and drove on, grnnng. My man "awoke, made hs wheel jump and caught the red faced man after a sharp chase. The drver blustered and threatened. The bcycle rder dropped from hs wheel and sad somethng quetly about a thrashng. The 'blusterer weakened, and the wheelman held hs horse's head tll the women came up. The drver unwllngly took ol hs hat and apologzed, and the quet man rode away lesurely wthout another look at the drver or the women. ~ Our Prces AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA #3.50 Worth of Photos.for $2.50. Specal rater on Mantello Photos for a short tme. Because of a mstake of our stock dealer we are enabled to offer Mantello Photos for $2.50 per dozen untl the present lot of mounts are gone. Then the prce wll postvely be.$3.60 per dozen as heretofore. Don't wat, as we have but 500 of tbese mounts on' hand. DEHART & LETSON, Over Curts's Hat Store, 27 Broad St., Red Bank. VYYYVVYTYYYTVYTVYyYTYYVY Are too low to gve yof;anythng for'your money but good goods. Here^e prces on a few artcles that cannot be natched/ : for; tje qualty of the goods: Pllsbury Plour, per barrel $G.5O Our Famous Flour, per barrel Whte Rose Flour, per barrel Pancake Flour, package 10c. Prepared Buckwheat 10c. 3-pound Box of Starch 12c. 3-pound Box Hgh Grade. Homny. 8c. 2-pound Box Star Oat Meal 8c. 5 pounds Soda Crackers 25c. 4 pounds Gnger Snaps 25c. 4 pounds Lemon Crackers 25c. 4 pounds NcNacs..' 25c. 3 pounds Mxed Cake 25c. 13 Cakes Blzzard Soap 25c. 8 Bars Soap, same sze as Babbtt's 25c. All other Soaps 6 for 25c. NEW GOODS. 3 Cans Early June Peas for 25c. 3 Cans Fancy Green Corn 25c, 3 Cans Good Squash...'...,... 25c. 3 Cans Good Pumpkn. 25c. 2 Cans Best Pumpkn. 25c. 3 Cans Lma Beans 25c. 5 Cans Strng'Beans 25c. Fnest Star Lobster 25c. Good Salmon ;..-..' 10c. Flat Cans Salmon..; 12c, and 15c. 3 pounds Best Prunes 25c. 2 pounds Best Aprcots. 25c. Large Hams, per pound 10c. Small Hams, per pound 12c. Calforna Hams 8Jc. Fancy Shoulders 7Ac. Pure Lard \. 7^c. Hew Maple Syrup, Sugar Syrup and Sweet Cder. E 1. B 1. STXPP, ON THE LNE OF THE TEOLLEY. Monmouth St., near Ralroad Staton, Red Bank, N. J. We have just receved out fall stock of Horse Blankets, and a fner, larger, or cheaper stock was never seen n Monmouth county, although the new tarff has ncreased the prce of everythng made of wool. These goods were ordered before the new tarff law was enacted, and we are thus able to sell not only as low as. last year, but n some grades even lower, owng to the fact that the factores were runnng on short tme and were anxous for busness at the tme our stock of blankets for ths season's trade was ordered.. The stock gves a great range of prces. About the cheapest horse blanket we have that we can guarantee to gve good servce s a Vctor. Ths blanket wll ft any average szed horse and s 38 nches deep. t s cut to the shape of.**% the horse and costs only 90 cents,. We have a few blankets cheaper than ths, but we do not recommend them. A wonderfully good horse blanket s the Nutwood, whch costs $2.25. Ths blanket s of strong double warp, and weghs»9 ' pounds. t s a square : blanket, 84x90 nches. t wll gve good wear, and s well worth the prce. The Yellow Fawn s a blanket of the well-known Burlngton shape, wth surcngles. t costs $2.50, and s the cheapest blanket, prce and qualty consdered, that s n our store to-day. _>.. ' Among the other varetes of horse blankets n stock are a ten-pound blanket, 90x90 nches, at $3.48, Another s a seven-pound blanket, 84x90 nches, at $2. CO. One of the odd thngs (and good -thngs) n our stock, s an all wool blanket, 84x90 nches, weghng seven pounds. Ths blanket s reversble that s, t has a dfferent pattern and dfferent fgure on each sde. Ths blanket costs $3.98. A square blanket for a dollar s another blanket of more than ordnary value for the money. BED BLANKETS. Our bod blankets were ordered at the same tme as our horse blankets, and under the same condtons. We have one lot of ten-quarter bed blankets at 48 cents a par. They are not heavyweght, and they are not all wool. We have other grades at?5 cents, $1.00, $1.35, $2.00, $2.50, and so on up to $5.50 per par. t s doubtful f blankets anywhere near approachng theso n qualty can be bought anywhere else at anywhere near these prces. Tho tme of buyng and tho condtons then prevalng, aro what mako tho prces so low. COMFORTABLES. We aro solng comfortables as low as 00 cents, and from that prco up to $3.00, wth a dozen or more ntonnodato grades. They aro good, warm comfortables, n desrable colors, and aro woll qulted. Tho prco s govornod by tho qualty of cover and grade of fllng. THE GUNNNG SEASON. Tho gunnng HoaHon a at; hand. Wo havo brooch-loadng shotguns at all prcon from $0.08 to $:u.()0. Wo also koop loaded nholls, powder u CH and OOHO powder, nhot, wads, and ovorynooded for gunnng oxoopt gunnng tmts and dogn. HENDRCKSON & APPLEGATE, m E/VST FRONT STREET, aojonnjr the Post-Offce, RED BANK, N. J. >

4 1 THE RED BAM REGSTER JOHN a. COOK. Edtor and 1'roprletor. ADrERTSEMEXTS should reach us not later than Wednesday mornng, sample copes of THE RKGBTKR and prnted rates of advertsng wll be sent to eny address on applcaton. Advertsers nave the prvlege ot changng tholr announcements as often as they desre wthbut " extra charge. Readng notces wll be nserted for 10 cents a lne, each nserton. These notces wll be placed at the bottom of columns and marked Adv. Obtuary notces and poetry, lodge resolutons, etc, wll be nserted for 10 cents per lne. Notces of brths, marrages and deaths publshed free. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 27, Maltng Vagrants Work. The presentment whch the grand jury made to the court regardng the supportng of vagrants from' the publc funds s tmely. The number of lazy tramps and.dlers s ncreasng who regard the county jal as a place where they are warmed and fed wthout havng to work. Compellng them to work would be the quckest aud most satsv factory method of dealng, wth the prob 1 ;jkold Commssoner Brady that he was lem. njurng the busness of the telegraph The cost of mantanng the prsoners company by adng the town to get sewers, n the county jal last month reached and he ntmated that he would try nearly the sum of two thousand dollars, t s doubly unjust for persons who have already preyed on the publc, and who chave been confned n the jal n consequence, to be permtted to agan nflct njury on the publc by obtanng support from publc funds. The county jal should not be converted nto a benevolent nsttuton, where those who dslke work wll be cared for at publc epepense. Persons confned n the jal should be compelled to support themselves. They should be made to earn ther lvng whle servng out ther sentences, or the people of the county, who have once been harmed' by *fher volatons of law, wll be agan harmed, by them; and the njury caused by ths secon'd nvason of publc rght may be greater than the frst. To the greater number of these people a term n jal s no stgma and no reproach. mprsonment to them s not a punshment whch wll take years to lve down, as would be the case wth decent members of socety. Tue only way n whch ther punshment can be made effectve s to made them work whle they are servng ther term. Ths would be benefcal n two ways: t would releve the county of the coatof ther support, and t would quckly rd thff county of that class of vagrants and tranps who now fnd the county jal a place of hosptable refuge. "The Burglar." "The Burglar" s a four act drama whch wll be'gven n the Red Bank opera house next Monday nght. The play s founded on Mrs. Burnett's story of " Edtha's Burglar," but the story n the play vares consderably from the story n the book. n the play the happness of a home s marred by the fact that the husband and father turns out to be a burglar, who escapes arrest by compromse, and goes away. He s captured, and n escapng H supposed to be shot, and s reported dead. The wfe marres agan. The burglar vsts the, home of, hb wfe, not knowng t s such, and s dscovered by hs lttle daughter. He s afterward Bhot and tlo play concludes as happly as the crcumstances wll permt. _ Plate Glass Wndows Smashed. Thomas Ross and Mart Havland were skylarkng n Pope's bowlng alley on Honmouth street on Monday, when Ross ht a plate glass n the door wth a bcycle pump whch ho had n hs hand. The glass was smashed. Fenwck Cooper, a nephew of George HanceTattcrsou, slammed tho door n Mr, Patterson's bcycle store on Thursday, and the plate glass n tho door was smashed to flnders, Commssoner Froy Resgns. W, P. Frey, one of tho commssoners Of led Bank, Hunt ls resgnaton to Clork A. C. Harrson last nght. A meetng of the conmwsonerb was to hnve been held last nght, but a quorum wns not presont md tho ragnaton won therefore not aclod upon. Almost Blnd From Cataracts. Cpt. TQMH Carter of Port Monmouth, who UH boon lvng wth hs HOD, CharlcH Carter of Far Hvun, for BOO tme, n mll'clj; from cntau't on both cyt'. Mr. Curler n ulnot entrely blnd. An Electrc Motor for a Bateau. Clnton Hladol of Alloona, Pa., n vlllng l aunt, Mm, ('harlcn Hlrnnn of Ocvuc. Mr. Hhudcl n m 'lcctroan, md wllh hero wll buld a nmll motor or Mr. Hlrrnan ltcuu. Wantctl Mourn. You wuto your momty f you puy more for your ncut hm what 1 olu>;r. 1 nol tho brut meat md nol t nl. lower jrlctv lmn nny other, butcher. 1 do n nt on fl, but Hnt n the vunon why 'Ul nd'ml l<>n'llntu lower >rl(!(>, Jomph Jtynt, tlm ctul butcher, Jlroml treet. TOWN TALK. There s some m6re opposton to the constructon of sewers n Red Bank. Mss Ella Tredwell of West Prospect street has engaged James E. Degnan to oppose them. The whole matter of the sewer busness and the consttonalty of the sewer act tself s to be taken nto court. * * * Blss Tredwell, t s hardly necessary to state, s, lke Thomas Henry Grant, Samuel Morford and a few others, enthusastcally n favor of sewers. These people sgn all the 'protests aganst sewers,! sgn papers declarng that sewers are unnecessary, and mmedately go around town declarng that they want sewers that they are frm belevers n sewers /and n all other mprovements. Mss Tredwell's brother, S. Lenox Tredwell, s the person who recently wrote tp Peter T. Brady, one of the commssoners of Red Bank and also the manager of the Western Unon telegraph company^rln hs letter Mr. Tredwell to get Mr. Brady dscharged fror hs place the frst tme that he saw some of the offcals of the telegraph company. have no doubt that S. Lenox Tredwell, lke hs sster, Mss Ella Tredwell; and lke those- two publc-sprted ctzens, Samuel Morford and hs nephew, Thomas Henry Grant, s a sold belever n sewers. have no doubt but he thnks the town ought to have them, and f anyone should speak to hm about t have no doubt that he would say so wthout any hestaton whatever. * * * All the same, hope Mss Tredwell wll be succc ssf ull hope that Ms3 Tred well and her lawyer wll knock the sewer law under whch Red Bank s now operatng hgher than Glderoy's famous kte. The sewer law was forced onto the town by people who wanted to beneft the town but who ddn't know how. The evls whch could planly be foreseen under that law they declared to be only magnary. When THE REGSTER showed the defcences of the law, and showed that under ts provsons a few bg land owners and tax shrkers could stop the mprovement, these men declared that no one would want to stop the constructon of sewers, and that even f they dd want to they couldn't do t anyway. * # #.The law was passed, and when the opposton that was foreseen was actually encountered, the men who had beennstrumental n gettng the law adopted^ by the town stepped asde. f the men who were so clamorous for the adopton of the sewer law have done anythng toward defeatng the opposton to the sewers, haven't heard of t. The burden of makng the fght for a sewer system was left to those who realzed the mperfectons of the specal sewer law, and who fought aganst ts adopton ; but who, as soon as t was adopted, took up the fght for sewers under the new condtons. * *» f the law s now declared unconsttutonal, or f tho law s declared not bndng on the town, the commssoners wll be able to proceed under the general laws, of the state for the constructon of sewers. Under these laws there wll be no need of gettng the consent of a majorty of property owners before a sewer can be put down. t wll orly be necessary for the commssoners to decde that a sewer s needed n a certan street, and the sewer wll be put down there. For years the puttng down of flagstone sdewulls n town was prevented because a claubo of the charter of the town requred tho consent of a majorty of property owners before the work could bo done.. A few years ago tho commssoners proceeded under a general state law, whch dd not requre consents of property owners, and wthn two years nearly fve mles of flagstone wnlkb wcro lad an mprovement whch has been worth to tho town ten lmes tho cost of tho sdowalks. 1 * *# beleve that f tho Bewer law n now declared to bo nvald that tho HUHO benefcal results wll onmo. AH matters now Btnnd the town uuat proceed under tho Bewer law or- not proceed at all, Wth thlh faulty nw out of the way, und wth only tho general lawn of tho Htuto to ho cormderel, tho opposton of tax Mhlrkert, of holdon of non-mproved UHH, and of people who now lavo prvate ewert mutng to the rver, would prove of no aval. Thoy could howl, but ther howllng) would bo of no more 'llcct than the 1OW1J;H of ellned dug, They mght prove annoyng, but othorwlo they they would be luruleml, An mld ulovo, ncerely hope that Mlm Trclwcll wll'nccoplh her end, anl that the mpreno court, wll declare tln newer nw nvlll nn to lln operaton n Ued Hank, or un-olltulloml,» Tledmlh of (lntavoronjen' of Mnoodoul brlng! to nu und a llfo spent. Herte Was a man of remarkable educaton and of refned taste's settlng n a communty of poor colored people wth the avowed purpose of devotng hmself to ther Welfare. He was not obtrusve n hs methods.. There was no effort to convert others to hs relgon, He forced ha opnons on no one. He labored hard to make a scant lvng, although hs abltes would have earned hm a competence n other localtes wth a much smaller effort. Wherever there was sckness, or sufferng, or death, there was Gustav Grosjea. He mns-] tered to the sck, he soothed the agones of the dyng, he prepared the dead for bural, and he comforted the mourners. There are few whose record of good deeds done n ths wprld^ wll equal that of Gustav Grosjean.' ' ' * # * understand }hat the Republcans are gong to send qute a bunch of ther campagn money nto Shrewsbury townshp to buy votes., Any money ether party sends nto ths townshp for that purpose wll be absolutely thrown away, but t wll be especal folly for the Republcans to do t. Tho Democrats know they wll have no money, and they decded at a recent meetng to put two or three watchers on the tral of every man who s suspected of havng money to buy votes, and to dog hm all day. n addton to ths, the best workers n the Republcan party n Shrewsbury townshp are too much occuped ths year tendng to ther busness to work at the polls on electon day.. * * '* f the Republcan managers want to put money n Shrewsbury townshp, though, they wll have no dffculty n fndng men to take t, But the money won't do anybody any good but the worker who gets t. When t once gets n the worker's pocket t wll stay there. And there's where all the money put up for buyng votes ought to stay. OBTUARY. Mrs. Anna Elxabeth Boeekel. Mrs. Anna Elzabeth Boeckel ded last Saturday mornng of paralyss of the bowels, after a sckness of fve months. She was 83 years old. She was born at Nut Swamp, her maden name beng Morrs. She leaves sx chldren. They are Frederck N. Boeckel of Locust Pont; Mrs. Wllam Davs of Eatontoven j^wllam W. Boeckel of Leonardvlle ; and Mrs. Charles H. Borden and Msses Lyda and Magge Boeckel of Red Bank. She also^ leaves one brother, Elsha J. Morrs of Asbury Park." The funeral was held yesterday afternoon at the Red Bank Baptst church and the bural was at Far Vew cemetry. Mrs. Edgar Vanderveer. \< Mrs. Jenne L. Vanderveer, wfe of Edgar Vanderveer of Freehold, ded of a cancer n a Brooklyn hosptal on Tuesday of last week. Mrs. Vanderveer had been sck for nearly a year, and fq^ several months she had been undergong treatment n Brooklyn. She was about ffty years old and had lved at Freehold for thrty years. Her husband and fve chldren survve her. The chldren are Mrs. Wllam D., Thompson, Mrs. Wllam Statesr, Msses Clara and Augusta Vanderveer and Edgar M. Vanderveer, all of whom lve at Freehold. John Hall. John Hall, a farmer of Turkey, ded of parnlyss on Tuesday of last week, aged 72 years. Hs wdow, who was Mss Sarah June Cowdrck, survves hm. He also leaves three chldren, Samuel Hall of Turkey, Mrs. Frank Butcher of Asbury Park, and Ste'adman Hall of Ocean Grove. \Thoman Bryan. Thomas Bryan of Belmar ded last Thursday of a complcaton of dseases. Ho had boon sck for the past month. Mr. Bryan had lved at Belmar seventeen years and was engaged n tho plumbng busness. Ho wasgo years old. A wdow and seven chldren survvo hm. 31m. John MleulUt. Mrs. John leulltt of Belmar ded lust Thursday mornng. Sho had beon an nvald for Homo tlrno, Sho leaves a lunbard and two chldren, Georgo Heultt and Mm. Edward tlley of Dolmnr. Sower GoumlBBonora. ml week tho oomnblonon to HMW ho bcnclllh and lmntfw euwod by tho oontnclon of wwcn n Red Hank wen to havo lcd apponted by JudKoOollnn. Jatnc 10, Dcgnn, u<t coumcl for Mlm Kln Trclwdll, oppou'd tlm appontment of commlonor. The protoul nknwt ho appontment of tho commlmm'rr wll nlu a lmrlnf nwuury, nnd Julf;n (J)llln llxed ThurtHlny, Novmnbor llth, m ho du wtm lo would henr objoctlotn to tlm ppolthvut <f llt 1 comllnnct', --«- - Vou Hnu rtntt.lt Dllllnlllo K"l to our wmppvf d'pnrtnort to-morrow ; tlm r'tmrnm you'll llml n our dlnlny nlvottlnonmnl on pn^!), Junoplt Huh,, ltd l\nnk,~-a<lv. CHURCH NEWS. A Recognton Servce at the Bed Bank Baptut Church. Recognton servce to -the new pastor of the Baptst' church wll be held on Thursday nght at half-past seven o'clock. The sermon wll be by Rev. Wayland Hoyt of Phladelpha. Specal nvtatons have been gven to the congregatons of the other churches of the town to be p r e s e n t.. '. A rally to rase money for current expenses wll be held n Calvary Baptst church on Sunday.. Re-v. D. D. Hall of Keyport wll preach n the mornng, and Rev. Mr. Mason of Eatontown wll preach n the afternoon. Mr. Mason's chor wll furnsh the muscs At nght Rev. Wllam Hll, the "Black Moody," wll preach. ' Re,v. R. G. Davey wll preadh n the Presbyteran church on Sunday mornng on " Worthy Aspratons." At nghtthe subject wll be " Luther and hs Work." The sermon at nght s expected to be of specal nterest to the German socetes and ther frends. Rev. W. B. Matteson' wll preach n the Baptst church next Sunday mornng on " The Defect of a Great Vrtue." At nght he wll gve the last of hs serps of specal sermons. The subject wll be, "Danel; or, the Herosm of Fath." The subject of the mornng dscourse n Grace church next Sunday wll be "The Character of the Rghteous." At nght the pastor wll preach on -< For-, sakng God." The drectors of the needlework guld wll hold a meetng n the town hall on Frday afternoon at three o'clock. Forty Hours' Devoton at Seabrght,. At Holy Cross church at Seabrght on Sunday was begun a forty hours' devoton. Hgh mass was sung at 10:80 o'clock by Father McCoskey, followed by a processon of the blessed sacrament, n whch the school chldren, both boys and grls, partcpated. On Sunday nght, a very approprate sermon was delvered by Father Ryan of Perth Amboy. On Monday nght a lengthy dscourse on the sacrament of penance was delvered by Father McCullough of Manchester. Among those who asssted Father Mc- Coskey n the forty hours' devoton were Fathers Reynolds of Red Bank, Crean of Elberon, Norrs of Sprng Lake, Roche of Atlantc Hghlands, O'Connor of New Monmouth and O'Donnell of Keyport. A New Busness Started. Mss Evelyn Whte of East Front street has engaged n a new busness, that of dong shoppng n New York for people who have not the tme or the nclnaton to do t themselves. She buys theater tckets, and takes mscellaneous orders of all knds. She makes trps to N<*w York each Monday, Wednesday and Frday, and s at Whte & Knapp's shoe store on the other afternoons of the week. A Back njured. Whle Frank Holmes of Colt's Neck was lftng a barrel of turnps last week he wrenched hs back and has been lam up from actve work snce. t's Just Ths Way. Ths column s for you and for everybody else. t s a place where buyers and sellers, employers and employees, losers and fnders, can come together and meet wthout seeng each other. t s a place where thngs can be sad to 10,500 people wthout any talkng at all. You oan Bay your say to the amount of thrty words for25centbca8h. s there anythng you want? POSTON WANTED. A wdow would llko a poston as louxokccpur. Address Box 10, Atlantc Hghlands, N. J. ROOMS AND BOARD. FurnlBhcd rooms to let, wth or wthout board. Apply to Mrs. ngnlls, 24 Wnllaco street, tcd Bank. FOR SALE CHEAP. Ono uprght nml OH square pano and an extra tm lno foldng bed, all n good ordor Mount A Hon. RENT FREE. An nroenwo Mll famly r.nn huvo 'nt fmo to nbout May noxt; flvu mnutes from depot. AddrcsH ])ox UH1, tcd llnnk. TO LET. Tm nrao corner ntoro, corner of Momnotl rnet nml Mnlt tvcmo. Would nko n Una l'nmclh Wllt, KH Hunk. LOAN WANTED. $1,(11X1 wnntal for ft your.' (lood norlktku for ulout 8!5,MX) nn collalcnl. llroknrk nllowcd. Lqudaton, ran KKUHTK. FARM LAND TO LEASE. At out llly crn "f fnnn ml lo l'mc. n whlr or n nrt, for n term of yours, Awty U> Mm. M'trl, BlrnvHlmry. nr to 1'. VV, llopo. l-l luftlt. LOST. On W'lncmlny. KMOHT J.O. Mm Mllllnlnvn tnt]>kn, t, t, nrmy llnnkol, rnlr wll pl' nlurl HM " Lmt, lould or Jlc Dlnylnn, Kvl Hunk. HALL FOJ RENT. Mlllnnnll Hull, S!Sx7B fret, nlllnllk ln town hull,, wll trt rented r t (or f dnurfl,, nln,, nlo, Tornn, crn llelucl men fur mom Mum lne nlkl. John RO YOU KNOW? Tm r«rf<«-tl> HrlK l^>rk wlm f'rn cn bo lulll nny lelult; «mln lorn llnl vtmhtm fnun*; wll not cnmf no ntucl mor on dm Multvnyn, t'n ndmlnwl ly nl, r*jtn(mt tjr mmc '1'lwy nl nr ll'r«tlm WBt on tln nokol, m n ywlmn n Hulltnoutl ohunty "'H 'Ut t up. U<t(rK*< N. Onlkllll, HMlntuwn.N, J. TO LET. Doable house on Brdge avenue, near Eeclor place. Sx rooms on each sde. Nce cellar and attc, Town water. Apply to J. DegenrnR. Gcrmanlahortl ' WANTED. A young lady who has some knowledge of book-»eepng, wrtes a good hand and 1B correct at fgures. Address n own hand wrtng, "Honest," care of CARPETS CLEANED AND LAD. want your carpets nh rc! taken up, cleaned and law, call on G. H. Bhomo, practcal upholsterer and HedB k 6r ^lurnlture «P^«' - - P-O-Box5&, BREEDNG FOWLS FOR SALE. SLl? 1 1 ':. Wyandottes.' Plymouth Kocks,. «ff? d Wmte P'ymouth Rocks, young Ue SUvr N 3 Wm - Wl 81llm P an». "f- TO LET. TRUCK FARM TO LET. To LeUlop per year. Splendd 12 acre Staten sland. Deep fertle sol; lanm. c barn; broad frontage on deep water. street. WELL-ROTTED MANURE. Havng been apponted a Reneral agent for the sale of horse manure by the New York Horse Manure company, wll be pleased to qolo prces, by mall or personally, to partes desrng to purchase woll-rotted or "short new manure; at Red Bank. MlddletowD. Hnzlet. Mtawan, and ClHTwood. per ton n car lots; or at Port Moomouth and Ke^yport per ton by boat loads, Charles Tlndall, Now lonmouth. New Jersey. 1 MAKE Suts to Order for $14 to $28. also do Cleanng, Reparng and Dyeng.. " JOSEPH BALEY, Honmouth Street, near Maple Avenue, - RED BANK..N. J. FURS A SPECALTF. : Shoppng n New York. t A3 there are many people who frequently need artcles from New York, nnd who and t nconvenent to make the trp, or wbo may wsh to be releved of the task of shoppng, have armnred to go to New York each Monday, Wednesday nnd Frday (oftener f necessary). wll purchase poods, match samples, secure theater tlckeu, accompany on shoppng excursons those unacquanted wth the cty, nnd execute commssons entrusted to me. The charge wll be a commsson of ten per cent on purchases, but no charge wll be less than ten cents. wll be at Whte & Knapp's shoe store, on Broad street, Bed Bank, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday afternoon, from three to lve o'clock. Cash for purchases must accompany all orders. Mal lordcrs should gve very complete detals to.prevent mstakes. EVELYN WHTE, P. 0. Box 247. Red Bank, N. J. Notce to Gunrters! The Mddletown Game Protectve Assocaton hereby gves notce that all persons trespassng on ther premses WTH DOG OR GUN Wll be prosecuted accordng to law. J. DEY CONOVEE, Secretary. Red Bank Opera WM. B. CONOVER, Presdents C. E. NEMAN, Manager. Monday, Nov. 1st. A FAMOUS PLAY, - The Burglar. 100 Nghts n New York Cty at the Madson Square Theater. MR. AUGUSTUS THOMAS' Four Act Comedy Drama from the story. - of EDTHA'S BURGLAR, By Mrs. FranceB Hodgson Burnett. Drecton of A. Q. Scant mon. ltonorvod Scats nt Mlnton's DnR Store. Prlces-afl., ao,, Ql)c, and 75c. Returnng From The Seashore* Why not contnue tho Balu^ tnry effcota of sut water bath' ng? Or. f From ^The Mountans. Why not Hupplouont tho braon'p t'lfcctfl of thn, dry nr wth tho JnvKomtKlnlluonco of noa bathng. Thn wll equp you, for tho rgor of a Wnter at Home And may bo uouplhcd by l) nto n your hath of our Pure Sea Salt, Wlloh wo mll n mg tt!3f ccln, tlm ((utty H'K HHtlml for lve KOO nult wnlttr lntln. Schroedcr's Pharmacy, HEKCEN & MORWS, Proprlcloru. (' 10 Wrqnd Street, Hcd Bunk.

5 Hon. Wllam H. Grant of Nut Swamp s very low. He has been n poof health ' for a year or more, but wthn a short tme hs condton has become very much worse. Hs recovery s doubtful. Mr. Grant has always been a very hard worker, and hs sckness s due to general deblty., " ' Mt. and Mrs. Claud B. Deaver of Asbury Park vsted Mrs. Deaver's sster, Mrs. Harry D, Wlson of Shrewsbjur,y avenue, on'tber return from ther.weddng trp. They arrved n Red Bank on Sunday and spent a couple of days here. Mrs. Carolne RUBS of East Front street has (returned home from her trp to Germany. She was away about three months. She had a very pleasant trp, although her health was not very good durng part of the tme". Wllam and Joseph T. VanMater of Keyport are makng a tour through North Carolna and Vrgna. They wll stop at Old Pont Comfort, Fortress Monroe and Washngton, D. C Mss Jula E. Sheehan of Shrewsbury avenue chaneed-off her wheel on Saturday nght. t was won by Mrs. E. W. Knght of Oakland street. Her chance cost her 19 cents. Judge and Mrs. Henry M. Nevus wll leave Red Bank on Saturday for the wnter. They wll lve at Newark wth ther daughter, Mrs.' John A. Ely, untl sprng..'"' ' Mrs. M. F..W. Brsted and her son, Charles J. M. Smth, of Broad street, spent last week at Valley Stream, L.., wth Mrs. Brsted's brother, B. B. Mo Clane. Mr. and Mrs. George M. S. Goff have returned from ther weddng tour. They are now lvng wth Mrs. GofPs mother, Mrs. E. F. Ackerman of Washngton street. : Msa Anna Mahoney and Denns Martn, botf of East Oceanc, wll be marred to-morrow mornng at the Holy Cross Catholc church at Seabrght. Paul F. Doty and F. B. Wheeler of Long Branch attended the annual conventon of the Gaslght assocaton at Old Pont Comfort, Va., last week, Msa Cornela Fuller, who las been vstng her sster, Mrs. M. C. Emery of Wallace street, returned to her home at Lowell, Mass., on Frday. Ovd Tuzenew of Headden's Corner brought a box of rpe blackberres to ths offce last Frday, whch le had pcked from hs vnes. " Alfred Pannac of Seabrght has returned from a trp to Calforna. He ntended to reman away a year, but came back owng to sckness. ' Mss Kennedy, formerly housekeeper at the Flower hosptal, New York, has accepted a smlar poston at the Long Branch hosptal. Msa Mnne Burges3 of the Hghlands wll be marred to Vanderveer Crawford of Atlantc Hfghlands on Wednesday, November 24th. Mss Sade L. Wllams of Shrewsbury avenue wll go to Brooklyn ths week, where she wll study typewrtng and stenography.. Glbert T. VanMater, who graduated ths yearfrom the Keyport publc school, has entered Colemau's busness college at Newark. Mss Ella Hunt of Hannsquan, who Ml down a well some tme' ago, wll go to a Brooklyn hosptal next week for treatment. Wllam Ryan of New York, who las been spendng the summer wth relatves at Rumson, has returned home. Danel A. Wlson of Red Bank went to. Somervlle last Thursday to attend the feld day of the Thrd regment. Mrs. Amanda Wolcott of Bordentown woo t^o guest of Mrs. Wllam J.'Sckles of Monmouth street labt week. Mrs. H. T. Caullett of Tronton has been vstng her brother, Rev. James A. Reynolds, of Broad streot. Walter H. Cady has moved hs famly from tho Hanco property on Oakland street to Phladelpha. J. Alex Edgar of Red Bank wll bo marred to-morrow to Msa Bertha Hoffman of Clnton, N. J. Mrs, Wllam H. McQueen of Hobokcn, has been vstng Mrs. L. L. McQueon of Shrewsbury avenue, HarvoySlocun of Long Brunch s now employed nt tho Hngor sowng nachnq w,orkn ut Elzbuth. Wllun L. Sncde, Mod Bank's town surveyor, n qute Hck at hln homo on ttlvorado'vcnuo. Edmund Wfcon of tod Unnk ntnrtcd on Monday for a weck' MHWH trp to Cleveland, Oho..7,0. Muum-r of Horbort treot uptmt Sunday wth llft fuw-ln-lnw, J<m>>l Mortr. of Lncroft. 1 Jutlvu Clmrlo Cotlmsn wm mddonly thkor nck ye/uudny, fnd n now con- lnhl to ln bod. Mlw KllKubeth Fontnr of Dorehwtw, Marw., n VHMK Mm. ltlolmrd V. torlou at lrod struct. MW M«ta Cowurt of tnmd troot njot pnrt of thw wwk n Now York Wth frlundfl, ' s ' Ttfnl 'attrtmoa of LOK Jlnnch opont Sunday wth Theodore F. Snflen of Herbert street. ' ' Mrs. John 0. Parker of Broad street s confned to her bed wth sckness. Mrs. D. P. YanDeverter of Matawan wll spend the wnter n New York. Mss Eula Scotfc of Long Branch spent Last Tlursdayafternooj Mss Gertrude Hopper W* of Mortenous Wallng. Taylor, son of the Me; Saturday wth relatves n town. * both of Holmdel, were Harry Weber of Morratown s employed by Sabath & Whte. Eoberfc B. Fsher. Bo> people are very popu Edward Clark of Long Branch has' frends and the groom :"*J gone on a Western tour. tenous Heyer's farm, were present at the we] Mss Esmerelda Cornwell s vstng frends n Jersey Cty. The brdal party ente,'mss Deborah Cullngton s vstng of the house to ther frends n Brooklyn. sohn's weddng marc ~ Mrs. Mar/Hennessey of Long Branch Robert B. Fsher, and s serously 6ck. performed beneath an and ferns. Msa Halt; Fned for Cruelty. of, the groom, and Ma Augustne' Reevey was convcted of sster of the brde, a cruelty to hs horse before Justce Sckles honor. The former wo last Thursday mornng'and was fned swss over pnk, anc 1 one dollar and costs. 'Reevey's horse had dressed n whte. The y». been suspended by the socety for the of whte organde, /trqmed preventon of cruelty to anmals because and satn rbbon. She also carred a, t was lame, poor and badly galled, and bouquet of brdal roses. leevey had promsed he would not use mmedately after the ceremony a recepton was served n the dnng room, the anmal Untl Dr. McCaffrey pronounced t n ft condton to be used.' and at sx o'clock the young couple came Reevey dd not keep hs promse, bato Red Bank and started for Washng- worked the,horse at nght for some tme before the socety dscovered t. He was then arrested and the horse condemned. Fell From the Roof of a Car. Owen McAvey of Branchport, a brakeman on the New York and Long Branch ralroad, receved a very severe njury of the spne early ths mornng by fallng from the.top of a freght car and strkng on a ral 1, across the small of hs back. The tran was ascendng a grade north of Mddletown and McAvey was crossng from one car to another when the tran suddenly parted, whch threw hm to the ground. He was pcked up and placed n a bunk of the caboose and brought to Red Bank, where he was attended by Dr. A. G. Brown. Btten by a Bulldog. A bulldog owned by Wllam Pntard of Oceanc bt Samuel Wall of Far Haven last Thursday: Wall s employed as a drver on a coal wagon by Benjamn Brown. Wall and another man on the wagon were sltylarkng when. Wall lost hs balance and fell from the wagon. Pntard's dog saw the man fall and ran up to hm and bt hm on the wrst several tmes before he could be pulled off. Dr. A. A. Armstrong attended to Wall"s njures. f _^. njured n a Sham Battle. Durng the sham battle of the Second Troop of cavalry of Red Bank, whch was held at Mddletovn lost Wednesday, Arche G. Hall of Atlantc Hghlands receved a sabre cut across the face whch wll dsfgure hm. The troop was dvded so that the Red Bank and Long Branch members were opposed to the Mddletown and Atlantc Hghlands members, and the former won. Seven Changes n a Mal Route. The mal route between Colt's Neck and Keyport has agan changed hands. Franklyn S. Weeks s the contractor ths tme. Mr Weeks has turned the management of the route over to Robert Johnson who formerly ran the route. Mr. Weeks s the seventh man to take the route ths fall. A Trolley Company Settles. Neptune townshp's clam for aganst tho Asbury Park and Belmar street ralway company has been settled by tho payment to the townshp of $000. The trolley company owed the money on ts franchse for operatng the road^ through the streets of tho townshp for Asbury Parte Buys Proporty. ' Fourteen propertes wero sold for nonpaymont of street mprovement assessmonte at Asbury Pnrk last week. There were no bdders and tho borough bought tho property. To redeem the property tho owners must pay the orgnal nssebsncnts, wtl tho costs of tho salo added, A Franchlso Granted. Tho townshp commtteo of Wall townshp hna granted n f ranohao to tho Count company to buld an electrc and telephono lne n the towtutlp. A franchse was alao granted gvng the company tho rght to furnl.'l) tho nhabtants of tho townshp wth water. A Scloonor Afhoro. The two-matt'd twlflou.'r Hartford went uhhorc at Sprng Lkn lutt Wednesday nght, Tho crow of four mw wore rcomul from llo boat durng thn nlglt by ll lft! avon. Tm veuol wan loaded wth wft (;oul. t, n not thought Unt t otm ho fjufcrlurfor wvwnu nrtuml. Homon ullo md uwfljlcom n a wru r» {) of [rloo'. O. DorllKr & Hom, lr, Hronlwvy,cur>3lHt otrtot, am ) Murray ntroot, Now York. A<lv, A box of 4H nlcflln of pnpw, unruled, u»l 40 (Kjuro nnvolotva, for!)7 cuttn, nt John. (/ook'n. /lav. ton. The brde receved a large number of handsome and useful presents. Among the gfts to the happy couple was a purse of suffcent amount.to defray the expense of the weddng trp. On ther return they wll begn housekeepng on the Heyer farm. Herbert Tlton, Mss Florence rene Herbert, daughter of Wllam D. 1 Herbert, who lves near Englshtown, was marred last Wednesday to Charles Edward Tlton of Marlboro.' The ceremony was performed at the brde's borne n the presence of about seventy guests. The brde entered the parlor leanng on the arm of the groom. They were preceded by a flower grl, who was Perss Ffe of Brooklyn. She was dressed n pnk slk and carred a basket of whte roses. The brde's gown was whte mull and she carred a bouquet of whte carnatons.. Rev. N. J.Sproul performed the ceremony, after whch the brde and groom left for a" short tour. The brde's travelng dress was of brown cloth wth a hatto match. Mloulthan Stjnax., Mss Ella,T. Houlhan and James C. Stymax, both of Long Branch, were marred last Wednesday n the Star of the Sea church at that place by Rev. Wllam P. Cantwell. The brde wore a blue travelng costume, wth a hat to match. The brdesmad was Mss Kate McManus of New York.,.Followng the ceremony a recepton was held at the new home of the. brde aud groom, whch bad been prepared for ther occupancy. Mr. and Mrs. Stvmnx went on a short tour to Boston. llne. Mss Mnne. Page, daughter of H W. Page of Long Branch, and Walter G. Clne of Greenwch, N. J., were marred last Wednesday noon by Rev. W. P. C. Strckland, Tle brde brde wore a green cloth travelng costume, trmmed wth fur, and a hat to match. mmedately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs, Clne went on a weddng tour, whch wll nclude Phladelpha, Washngton and Nagara Falls. On ther return they wll commence housekeepng at Greenwch. Wanl-Long. Msa Jenne Agnes Ward of Red Bank and John A. Long of Morrsvlle were marred at St. James's rectory on Sunday by Rev, James A. Reynolds. The brdo s a tall and pretty brunette and she was becomngly attred n brovn slk, wth hat nnd gloves to match. The brdesmad was Jlsg Katharne Ward, a sster of the brde; and James Long, the groom's brother, was best man. H-tV Drlen. Edward O'Bren of Oceanc was marred to Mss Anne Lyons of Washngton, D. C, last Thursday n the ol urch of the Holy Cross at Sebrght by Rev. Father McCoskey. Tho brdesmad was tho sster of tho groom, Maa Anne O'Bren. The best man ws Edward Burns. The brdal party started on tho 4:15 tran for Nagara Fulls, where they wll spend ther honeymoon. A Ravng Manac. A ravng nmnlaoof unknown dentty won rounntly lruuult to tho npno nyln of J)>(]>>»t., n Hungary. < \ w jumr wrntcl mnklmu lhnsoll to bo JVBUH 'J'otcflt ))a luontn) fnouuks tho py put nono nrltlnnouonl qucn tlon, only tc o drfotchnl nt tlo m tlunt'n rtuullu'h tml proolalon n onnwerlk lum. At hnt tho OBO jlynloltn put tll lrolltm to tho >lohomonou, "f n,- 000 wnvpb of red color oovor n lne of ono (jontlmlor mll H^lt tnkun ono nvaoml to trnvorm 411,01)0 nllon, how lmny nurtl wnvmrenjl tlo tyo n ononooonu" "Four hundred nnd ffty bllons," vrnn tha mnudlnlunlswr, A plotngrnph of tlojn; wld n all utlor renpeotfl jrovxl to tn ntn no, WM mnt to tln oltoo of Vlnun, nnd llrotgh tml- runrohob d \VHH Olmovond tlnt tlm nk tn wn wn no otlnr tlnn MdrUn Krnnk, tlm foun lkl llljtlollu. ' for Tnt Uwtwmn,~A<lv. Electon Day. Come see the racng and whle here save some money shoppng. n our store are dsplayed Boots and Shoes so cheap that one wonders how they can be made for the prce. Men's Shoes, several styles, all szes,95 Women's Shoes^ several styles, all szes $1.00 Chldren's Sold Button Shoe's, 8 to Msses'Sold Button Shoes Uev. James A. Reynolds, Mss Nelle Fay of teduank and James Moran of Manchester, N. J. FTZGERALD-DANELSON. At Asbury Parf, on Wednesday, October 20tb, by Justce J. Wesley Cross, Mss Laura VV. Ftzgerald of Asbury Park and Joseph Danlelson of Hamlton. HOUUHAN-STY.MAX.-At Lonft Branch,' on' Wednesday, October 20th, by Rev. W. P. Cantwell, Mss Ella T. Houlhan and James G. Stymax, both Long Branch. HERBERT-TLTON.-At Englshtown, on Wednesday, October 2tlth, by Rev. N. J. Sproul, Mss Florence rene Herbert of Englshtown and Charles Edward Tlton of Marlboro. KEARNEY KUHN.~At Long Branch, on Tuesday, October 10th, by Rev. W. P. Cantwoll, Mss Lydla Kearney of LoDKBraccl and Antlooy Kuan of Trenton. L0NGWTZ-SCHANCK.-At BrooklyD. on Wednesday. October 20th, by Rov. Thomas Gallauflet, Mss Lena Lungwltz of Brooklyn and Henry Bclanck of Turkey. LYONS-O'BREN.-At Seabrlgbt, on Thursday, October 22d. by Rev. Father McCoskey, Mss Anne Lyons of Washngton, D. C, and Edward O'Bren of Oceanc. O'NELL-BALEY.-At Red Bank, on Tuesday, October 20th,-by Bey. J. A. Reynolds, Mss Mary O'Nell of Red Bank and Danel Baley of Holmdel. PAGE CUNE. At Lons Branch, on Wednesday, October 20th, by Rev. W. P. C. Strckland, Mss Mnne. Pago of Long Branch and Walter G. ClnB of Greenwch, N. J. PATTERS0N-RAW80N.-At Asbnry Park, on Tuesday, October 19th, by Rev. Calvn E. Lusher, Mss Margaret A. Patterson and Pery B. Rawson, both of Asbury Park. WARD LONG. At Red Bank, on Sunday, October 24th, by Rev. James A. Reynolds, Mss Jenne AgneB Ward of Red Bank and John A. Long of Morrsvlle. DEATHS. ADAMS. At West Freehold, on Sunday, October 17th, Margaret, wle of Davd Adams, aged 32 years. BRYAN. At Belmar, on Thursday, October 21st, Thomas Bryan, aged 54 years. BOE0KEL. At Red Bank, on Saturday, October 23d, Mrs. Anna Elzabeth Boeckel, aged 83 years aud '& months. DONAHUE. At Freehold, on Thursday, October 21st, Perre Dounhue, aged 19 years. EVANS. At Asbury Park, on Vednesdny, October 20th, Mrs. Margaret Evans, aged 76 years. GFFORD. At Long Branch, on Sunday, October 17tb, Ensley GCtord, nged l years. HALL. At Turkey, on Tuesday, October John Hall, aged 72 years. 19th, HEULTT.-At Belmar, on Wednesday, October 20th, Ella, wfe of John Heulltt, aged 50 years. HOBART. At Orange, on Wednesday, October 13th, Mrs. Alberta Hobart of Marlboro. 8LOANE. At West End, Long Branch.on Frday, October 15th, John Sloane, aged 69 years. VANNOTE. At West Asbury Park, on Thursday, October 21st, Abble, wfe of George VanNoto, aged 40 years. VANDERVEER. At Brooklyn, on Tuesday, October 10th, Jenne L., wfe of Edgar Vanderveer, aged 60 years.. GOOD GUNNNG..'V,,,,.11- JOSEPH SALZ, W, Broad and Mechanc Bte., Red Bank. '& MVW».. n V. * V Four Lots For Sale. have four lots for sale n West.Bed Bank. The lots run through from Locust avenue to Herbert street. The Locust avenue lots are 37^x140 feet. The lots on Herbert street are 37^x120 - t,.feet. Prces are reasonable and terms wll be made easy. Apply to THOMAS DAVS, JR. Coal'.and.Wood. WM. N. W0RTHLEY, SUCCESSOR TO J. A. WORTHLEY, Wholesale and Retal Dealer n Scranton, Lcllgl, WHRcsbarro and Cumberland Coal. When Coal s purchased by the carload the beoest oflong tons, 2,210 pounds, s gven. Best qualty of Hckory, Oak and Pne Wood at moderate prces. LUDLAM'S AND CROCKER'S FERTLZERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND. Yard at WorthOJT'B Dock, Bed Bank. Branch Yard at Seabrght, N. J. N RULE TO BAR CREDTORS. O EXECUTOR'S NOTtCE. George B. Snyder, executor of Mara Schneder, deceased, by order of the surrogate of the county of Monmouth, hereby gves notce to the credtors of the sad deceased to brng n tbelr debts, demands and clams aganst the estate of sad deceased, under oath or affrmaton, wthn nne months from Woodwld hotel. Whtngs, Ocean county, N. J.; mdst the heavy pnes and cedara; good shootng, the TWENTY-FRST DAY OF OCTOBER, 1897, or qual, rabbt, wld geese, duck. Pennsylvana or they wll be forever barred ot any acton therefor Central ralroad; 12per week. A J. Larkn, propretor. OEORGKB. aganst the sad executor. SNYDER. 4 Mllnery and Fur Talk. When we say these are the greatest bargans we have ever offered we do not exaggerate. For nstance: Leather Trmmed Alpnes, 59 cents, all colors. n Trmmed Hats we are offerng a choce lne of ths soason's up-to-date styles from $1.50 to $ Fur Collarettes and Capes from 2.40 to All Avell made and the latest styles. ' l. "WES, RED BANK TEMPLE OF FASHON. Knapp's Grocery Calforna Hams, THS WEEK: Pure Coffee, n the bean, - Sweet Cder, 15c. 15c. per pound. gallon. WE GVE TRADNG STAMPS. W. H. KNAPF No. 8 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. > v V V 8 8 V V

6 THE RED BANK REGSTER JOHN H. (JOOl EdHor and Vtovletot. ADVERTSEMENTS should reach us not later man Wednesday mornng, tample copes of THE REGSTER ana prnted rates of advertsng wll be sent to any address on applcaton, Advertsers have the prvlege of changng tbolr announcements as often as they desre wthout extra charge. Beadng notces wll be nserted for 10 tents a lno, each nserton. These notces wll bo placed at the bottom of columns and matted Adv. Obtuary notces and poetry, lodge resolutons, etc., wlu be nserted for 10 cents per lne. Notces of brths, marrages and deaths publhhed tree. TOWN TALK. spent. Here \Va educaton and c e had." There s some more oppo ppston to then a communty constructon tt of f sewers eers.t) Red Bank. wth the avow Mss Ella Tredwell of 'W stl.prospect hmself to ther street has engaged James E. Degnan to oppose them, the whole matter of the Bewer busness and the consttonalty of the sewer act tself s to be taken nto c o u r t - *>*. Jlss Tredwell, t s hardly necessary to state, s, lke Thomas Henry Grant, Samuel Morford and a few others, enthusastcally n favor of sewers. These people sgn all the protests aganst sew- WEDNESDAY, OCTOBE& 27, 1897^ ers, sgn papers declarng that sewers are unnecessary, and mmedately go Makng Vagrants Work. around town declarng that they want The presentment whch the grand sewers (hat they are frm belevers n jury made to the court regardng the sewers 'and n all other mprovements. supportng of vagrants from the publc funds s tmely. The number of lazy MssTredwells brother, S. Lenox Tredwell, s the person who recently wrote.-, dlers s ncreasng: who h remodeled lodeled 'attf >H*t uafe; af tt^.,/(j Bwfo. the comms F. S. Woohvorth of New York has bought a plot of land at Deal, on whch he wll buld a summer home. He pad $20,000 for the property. Capt. Maron Osbbrn of Keyport has bought the house of Thomas H. Roberts at that place, and wll move nto t ths week. Buldng Contracts. The followng buldng contracts have been fled n the offce of the county clerk at Freehold for the week endng October 28d, 1807: Board of Educaton of Neptune townshp wth Phlp Anns. Crpenter work ou school buldng at Ocean Grove, S!!l,l!(l. Hoard of Educaton of Neptuno townshp wtl Albert A. Taylor. Brck and mason work on school buldng at Ocean Grove, 10,705. (crtrud'! Moore wth N. E. Allen. Buldng at Allenlunt. $:),075. James lowerswlth Peer S Vreelnd. Buldng at Deal Beach, 81,520. ' K. HrtzlK wth Rchard [. Uughcs. Buldng at Long llrancl. 82,15(1. Wllam A. Burkulow wth A. Brower & Son. Buldng ut Freehold, SS.210.K. Charles. Lovett wth John. Wells. Mason work ut Atlantc Hghlands, $217. Deeds Recorded. Tlo followng real estate transfers have been led n the offce of the county clerk at Freehold for the week endng October 33d, 1897: BtlRKWSBURY TOWNSHP. AuKbtlne L. leovey to Mary E. Thompson. Land at led Bunk, Edwn Se'knnn, adm'r, to Wn. AppleKato, Jr. Land at Red Bank, S- ' Knte 8. Mcrrls and husband to Mary A. Bshop. Land at led Bank, SM0O. Addle Smth and husband to Esther D. Denns. Land at Full' Haven, S. Barry W. Denns to Addle Smth. Land at Far Haven, S. / Wn. L. tftthhun to J. Frederck Wherry. Land at Lttle Slver, S. J. Frederck Wherry to Mary Helen tathbuu. Lund at Uttlo Slver, S. James Enrluht, Jr., to Denus Martn. Lot ut Rumson Neck, 8500, M10DLKT0WM TOWNSHP. Thomas J. Kustraond to Alfred Wallng, Jr. Pece of property, 81. Alfred Wllng, Jr., to Thomas J. Eastmond. Pece of property, gl. Edwn lleeknan to Mchael Rowland. Pece of property, 81. Kate A. Denns and husband to Slas E. Shepherd Pece of property, S. Duncan D. Pnrmlyto Randolph Famly. Peco of property. 810,0(10. Wm. M. Thompson to Margaret Balls. Peco of property Margaret Sntnon and others, hers, to John J, Murphy. Murpl) Lots 2, ), 4, 5, l and 7 ou Eustnond tract. S785. Houston Folds, sherllt, to Produce Fxcla'nge nth. assocaton. Lots 2 and 4, Block B, Water'Wtcl Park, $2,10). Houston Felds, slorlff, to Margaret E. DuBols Land at Bay Vow Heghts, 85,(1011. Mary L. HenUrlckson to suluh Grant. Port Monmouth.Sl. Jonn E. Wllams to Eugena Carhart. Wllams estate ut Nuveslnk, 82U0. EATONTOWN TOWNSHP. Houston Felds, shorlff, to Edmund A Pece of property, 84,000. Land Lot 2 on Harvey. tautan T0WKS1P. Charles T. Clayton to Wm. H. Chorry. Lot a 1 Keyport, $80. Fred C. Mursh, specal master, to Francs W. Tl ton. Land ut Keyport, STOU. Oreen Grove cemetery company to Peter Btout, Jr. Lot 41)8, S30. MATAWAN TOWNSHP. Wllam 11. Sutpln to Anna Pearsall. Pece o: property, 5?f)0. OCKAS TOWNHP. tlubltnmh of Ocean townshp to James Edwart Borden. Pece of property, $ J.05. John. Murrls to Destcnzlo A. Sacco. Land a Lornr llranr.l, S. Wllam L. Dowllng md others to Jesse Hazoll, Lnnd nt Lmj Hrancl, S. JUHU' E. Unon to ltay W. Cox. Land at Long Branch, $1. Houston Felds. HherllT, to Thomns Hanlon an otlnrs, 'X'm. Land nt /Hpr Bmnch, Tlomnst Hnnlun and others, ox'rs, to Frederck M Hamlton. Lot at /mtr lrancl, $3K. 1 John Mnny to Robert Leo McQulro. Lot North.OK llrancl, S1.4UO.. TlonOH Burnun to Mchael llurke. Land nea: Long Dranel (ty, SBf.n. Mchael Collopy to Doll Town. Land nt Lon Branch Olty.$l. John Prnkoulnluur to Llna Aalel. Lund nt E 'rulk Hlom lt Mmu Wye.lmlT. 'km pf lllmlllld.nllll julll.llll Mulrrtll Uv, 'lvnf wlvfk. J, l/uo'' Mn''llM to Wllllnn N. ''llmp 1/tnt l'rn<lt, 67/1. jlmvu.townnr. /ln '. ('nvlm to Dvll, ('lytl. 'T l >!!(' 15c. knd good Dress^Can 1 ""* ' vas, per yard OC. 39c. knd Ederdown, all the best colors, long nap, per yard 25e. 98c. whte Bed Spreads, extra sze, Marsalles. pattern, for 69C. 5c. qualty cambrc Dress Lnng n all colors %C. 50c. grade whte heavy fleeced Blankets, for one week 39c. $1.50 knd extra heavy blankets, full 11-4 sze, very cheap at 98c. 6c. qualty unbleached musln, a good, heavy knd, per yard 50c. knd Skrt Patterns, fancy colored borders,. each 35<5. 19c. grade of fancy novelty and plad Dress Goods, double wdth, per yard ; 12C.. qualty extra heavy lnen Towelng, good wdth, per yard Sc. Outng Flannel, nce assortment of lght and dark patterns, per yard obtrusve n hs11 effort to convert ol He forced taa opl pt labored hard to mbank, N. J. although hs abltes hm a competence \ wth a much stnalle: ams there was sckness, there was Gustav tered to the sck, he? of the dyng, he pre; bural, and he comfjproes TALK There are few whosej done n ths world Gustav Grosjean. jutcura To- understand fha^better togong to send w"" e > P er cake 'oc." qualty Royal Talcum 8C. 79c. knd chenlle Table Covers, good heavy grade 49c Powder^ at the low prce per box grade latest style 4c. $1.00 two-clasp Kd Gloves, all latest colors, per par 79c. 39c. grade Lades' Swss Rbbed Vests and Pants, fleece lhed.pergarment 25c. 75c. knd Lades' Comb-, naton Suts, the newest, style, at. 49c. 39c. style Men's Outng Shrts, lght and dark colors, well made, each. 25c. 25c. Lades' Fleeced Lned Fast Black Hose, seamless foot, per par 15C. 19c. qualty Men's Wool ". Half Hose, full regular made, per par -FOR- $1.00 qualty Lades' Wasts, n latest styles, n plads, etc., to close.. 69c. 39c. nfants' Caps, all slk wth full-nchng, a bargan 25c. )4c. knd chldren's Fne Rbbed Hosery,-seamless foot, per par 9c. 2)4c. knd Dress Trm-, mng, all colors, the lateststyles,to close, per yard.,... 6C. $1.00 qualty all wool Men's Shrts and Drawers, all szes, per gar- 'ment 75c. Do not fal to vst our Cloak and Dress Goods Departments, as you wll postvely fnd our styles the latest, our prces the lowest quoted anywhere on good relable merchandse, FRANCS WHTE, Real Estate, Loans and nsurance, FRONT STREET, RED BANK; N. J. MONEY WANTED. $4,000 on fne house and 16 acres, worth $12,000. $3,000 on 13 lota, worth $500 each. $3,000 on large house and 8 acres of rver property. $1,200 on town proprty, worth $2,400..$0,000 on store property. $1,500 on $3,000 town property. MONEY TO LOAN. $500, $700 and $400. -,. FOB SALE. One lot, 75x800; near East Sde Park, $150. Fnest property on rver, near Superntendent Byrnes's place, $55,000, $30,000 place, near my place, $27,000. Beautful place on Rversde avenue, $15,000 ; one $0,500 and one $7,000. Property on Front street wth rver front, one 70x400, cost $10,000, wll sell for $7,000, $1,000 down, balance can reman; splendd loc, 80x300, $0,000, easy terms. House on Stout street, lot 50x100, $1,200, $200 cash. Very valuable lots on Parker farm, 50x200, $900, terms easy. House and two acres at Far Haven, $2,000, trolley wll pass t, n whch case t wll be worth double. havo several propertes on Mnp'le avenue from $5,000 to $18,000, one n partcular for $0,750, barn, lot 75x800, that s a bargan. A 13-acre rver property, worth $2,000 per acre, wll sell for $18,000. Broad street property, house- all mprovements, barn, lot 69x416, houso has steam heat, plenty of frut, wll sell for $7,000. Lot 75x150, busness center on Broad street, $20,000. TO LET. Rversde avenue, large house, mprovements, barn and access to rver, $30 per month. Houso ou Monmouth street, 0 rooms, $18. Queon Anno house. Rver street, $12. Houao on Shrewsbury avenue, $10. Schroedor property, $50 per month. Beautful place, largo lawn, fno vlla and outbuldng!), at Bluowsbury, $50 a month. Houso on Broad street, $20. Ono on Oakland street, $10. SPECAL HAtGANS. j Como and see mo about them, and make- monuy, Remember that you wll re" Joln Fnnkwl'lnor lo 'roncln Tcchlelmo Laud at KTO, $,',4C. Atlantc Coast t-lly rcnpny to Wllam lnthn wny. Molsnt Deul, KMU). Allnll: Const t'ultv rrenny to (loorgc V Thnnp«>n. 4 l»t» nt ]>u:l, SH,4H). Frank MuMhon lo H-H Mrtln. Lota ra nl 74, m Hlro { tract, our Henprlght, %'M. - NKl'TNNK T0WNH11N". Frank 1* MuD''nott, mwter.ac., tohldney Com ver. ['luce of pr» Hrty, {11.5)10, WHllKtun Whllo to Jmle Whte. Puco umkrty. jam. Jnes A tu Fanny 1). llller. Lnnd Afllmry Pnk, S:,l«K). Myum H. (lull 10.lcob (rd'hmn. L11111 Anlury Pnrk. $7,5011. Hurry W. Hnmt n llmry H. Mcoro, Lot Anbury Park, W.WK, Wlllln Dozrll n Uall 1,, TlumHon. Lot W'»t A«l>urv Park, P»). t Henry Trmx n Alvnh Trmx. S lot«lt We A glt-edge, evon thoumnd dollar ml Anbrv Park, S. Alvah Trmx ml nhlnnd lo l'umal A. Trm " " promnent Hlrowuhury 2 nl* lt Went Admry 'nrk, $1, Wn, ltrl'lr t) M f the Mercful Htvln Lot lt Avon, S. Kdwnrd (/'. llrlmlr lo Homo of llm Mcrclf Hnvlur.!!Mmt Avon, $1. nlnlllnlof Onnluwmlluto K/.01 lol 0. Alle l/l at KlK'c, &.M. (llrlr '. Puller n AllKUntn H UA le townnhp properly ; four ycm lo run can b) bought to nut pnlaor tlo ubovo return, H nn undvded ntercut nccd r.l, llnr, SM. Mlo HlnkcH n Jnlm Mcl'lcm. l/tnl llnn 81,l»m. MnyC. Wlnnrml HMT lo.lenln K, KO: Addrcm "U,» ll< <l lul, N..1. Llt llrnllry rh, Jl-^l. Cnrcof Cnlru, Mm rhu>u!ll'l >l»l'.. (, WlNor ml nll' n.lln N. '.. t ut trndlny 'uk, g;l6.<h, KK.U TW.NlU'. cevc H much attenton und euro wth a $10 transacton as you vvll wth a $10,000 one. Just sold the 71st peco of property, and four others on tay. BANK STOCK FOB SALE. Fve HlaroH of stock of tlo Frst Ntomvl Hank of led Dank for wlu. Sx Per Gent Free of Taxes. "W. 33., ELECTRCAN. W111H fur Rlnclrlo l.lull/, llntlwr, Mnurlo md 'lmnnll) Mr, 'r'lr hnl'k n Hpc lty, 'r.vl llroml Nt,, llod thk, N. J, ", (1, tnx HM. nt«n fur A The Smplest Sort of nnlnk, tw'lv't from w n" nll'll llll-nllul nn dm mun lllllrlt'lm nf vurk. Wt wll ntmhl nn plclly for n tllllm nnk nn f wn tnnw ven w 't nllyor wnl'tm''vlwwtnfcrl W cn mlt yuu kxp mlnrlft nwny f you mjnd tor nn n Hm'. S/VU/VT & WHTE, lu ntd l ront Nt., KcJ llnnk, M, J. Farmers All use lght carryalls and they are the handest thng n a place. We have put up some of these ' vvth doors n the.sde. Good rubber duck curtans, and a frst-class wagon n" every way.. These we sell for $100, and they wll outwear half a dozen of the cheap factory nd. Have also bg lne new Bugges for $45.00 up. Several good secondhand Carrages, Bugges, Runabouts, &c, closng out cheap. J. W. MOUNT'& BRO.. Red Bank, New Jersey. Repostory and Factory, Corner Maple Avenue and Whte'.Street. TOWNSHP OF SHREWSBURY. Notce s hereby (rven Hnt by vrtue of a warrant ssued by the Townshp Commttee of the Townf shp of Shrewsbury, County or Monmouth nnd Stnto of New Jersey, lo make the unpad taxes assessed on lands, tenements and heredtaments and real estate n Jle sad townshp for the year one thousand eght hundred and nnety-sx, tho subscrber, collector of taxes for tbo sad Townshp ol Shrewsbury, n the County of Uonmoth and State of Now Jersoy, lo whom sad warrant s drected, wl on. Frday, November 12th, 1897, between tle hours of twelve o'clock, noon, nmlnvoo'clock n tle nlta-noon of llmtday, attho GLOBE HOTEL OF DANEL W, W1TJE, on FRONT STREET, n the TOWN OF RED AXH. n sad Townshp of Shrewsbury, County of Slonmouth and Stole of New Jersoy, sell the sad lunds, tenements, heredtaments and real tstates hereunder descrbed, at publc venduo, for the shortest term not exceedng tllny years for whch any person or personsuvll agree to take tlo same nnd pay such taxes wth nterest thereon from the twenteth day of December eghteen hundred and nnetysx, tota-ther wth all costs, fees, charges and expenses. The p-rsons whose property s to bo sold, the locaton of the several propertes, and (he amounts due ore as follows: Bennett, Amos House and lot on south sldo of Stout street. Red Bunk s 8 05 Beldo. Jenne House nnd lot on west sldo of Central nvenue. Kcd Bauk * 705 Bennett, wllnm (estate) House and furm property on west sldo ' of ltrnnch avenue, Hed Bunk Bell, Albert Houso and lot on north sde of ;wllow streut. Far Haven ) Clayton, Rebecca Houso and lot on west sdo of Shrewsbury avenue, Red Bank 018 Carhnrt, Mrs. Theodore Houso nnd lot on west sde of Brdge nvenuo, led Bank Carson CUarles (estate) Houso and lot on west sde of Ralroad avenue, Red Dank ' 812 Cochran, Mr. Two lots on south Bde of Cntlmrlnc street, Kcd Bank 7 05 Coacl, Danel House and lot on cast Bde of Central nvenue, Red Bank 8 12 Carroll, John House add lot on south sldo of tver street, Red lunk.' 0 83 Chandler. Sarah Houso and lot on west sldo of Sprng street. Red Bank: " Casey, Adela Property n sand feld at Far Haven Conkllu, Warren House and lands n sand feld at Far Haven Clark, Tbomaa Lot at East Oceanc Court, Mrs. John Lot on Hnnce property, Oceanc Denns, Wllam Houso and lot on Herbert street, Red Bank Dey, Ella E House and lot on Brdge nvonue, Red Bank 705 Wllam, Property nt Waysldo 2 80 Devlno, James n. Lot next to Naughton's lot on tho west sldo of tho Oceanc road, EastOceanlc Denns, Harry HouBeond lot on the north sldo of tho ranln rondntfar Havon B 20 Klls, Amolla (estate) Ono-lmlf of fnnn nt WcBt tcd Bank , Robert Lots nt East Ocennlc 8 41) Flemng, Mchael (CBtatfl) Property on east sde of Pearl street, llednank 50 Freer, Mary Houso and lot on tlo west sde of Thrd strcot, Oceanc 2100 Grmm, Chrstan (estate) HOUBO anl lot on Central nvenue, Rod Hunk 7 B Hoton Busu lcnho nnd lot on tho north sde At Stout street, 10 1)0 11 olnfa, Melvlllo OHO and lot north xlde of Stout strcot, Red Hunk lnloy, TlomH Houso und lot ou north sde of Hunk street. Red Hunk Holmes, Ama PrnjxTty nt Kulr nvm) Johnxon, Hnl -, Houso and lotfl on noutl eldn of Chest' nut stnwt, l-l llnnk Johnmn, Kzcklol low and lot on tlo south nldo of Bench Htrcct, llvd Hank Joyce. Hnlo Houno anl lot (n tho BD nldo nf Wnllc ntrcoto pr(nrty),hod Hank.,. JDKW,.llffll'ph ('llllllll) l'ro Hrly ou WOH ntrcot, tod Dunk J)TrlcH,C()rdon W. OHO und lotou llm outl ld(f llcrl nln-dl, tcl Hank 00.luhnw, junl A, HH) and lot nt 'nlr llvnn Kelly, lol lllmm) lltld dtoh lllokotllll HlllO Of Dlltllclnrl. llnl Hunk tl''llt. DllVll. Two nllj«" mll p( Hrty (n tnnn mn,, Kun, Mm. t'al rk lot nn llm lul nllhf Nnth lc-rl, MK-:, llouno md tutu tn dm UMU ftldn nc Uor. lnl nn''l, ml lul. l.ycl, Jl rn "'ly m lln lmt at Or'nln JPV, M, l/lnmmnl ummf 'lldnlw>l,<h'wtn (Ml uandln, Davd LotatTnton Falls nrsden, Mrs. Georgo F. House nnd lot on north sldo of Front 2 10 street, Red Bunk u"nssn, W. A. Houso and lots ou west sldo of Bngham avenue, Ocoanlc.; Murray, Susan Mller furm at Tnton Falls urtell, Andrew,. ~ House at Lttle Slver 'atton, Thomas (New York nnd Long Branch Steamboat Company), Lttle Slver Dock *avatt, Wllam Lot on Leonard street, Red Bank 3 39 lley, George Houso nnd lot on eust sde of Wllow street, Red Bank 8 85 Havntt, Mrs. Lot on Leonard street, Red Bank 3C(! Jall, P. T. Rutherford house andlot on bluff, near.scab-rght, on tho west edo of Wurd nvenuo ftoberge, Frankln P. Furm at Swmmng Rver loblnson, Arthur House and lot n sand ueld nt Far Haven tovey, John 5 20 Houso and lot n sand feld. Far Haven, Revey, J. B Housonndlot nearwajedo Robnson, Mrs. J. L Tho Alce WbtonrmnearTlnton Falls, Bouth sldo of Eatontown nnd Tnton 0CO Falls turnpke Rchardson, Charles M., Property.at Pne Brook 5 20 Revey, lllclard R. Property at Pne Brook " Ofl py Revey, O, H. Prt Property at Pno Brook 240 B GC 13 l) 70J H K m 13 H «'', 7 t Rchardson, James Property at Pno Brook 0 00 Rchardson, Hannah L. Property at Pno Brook, 2 00 Rchardson, Robert L. PlopelyatPluoUrook Rovey, Thomas (estate) Property at Pne Brook Smth, Mary J. Lots on Herbert Btreet, Red Bank Smock, Mrs. R. ' Property on Herbert street, Ked Bank.. 0 CO sm Scott. W. C. HOUBO and lot cast sldo of Pearl street, Far Haven Slocum, Danel > House nnd lot at Far Haven 5 20 Slocum, Mrs. Thomns Houso nnd lot at Far Haven Tllton, Mrs. Harry Property on Herbert street, llod Bank.. Tllton, James 2 80 Loton Lclghton avenue. Red Bank... Thompson, Mrs. Mary 8 82 Property on tlo north Bldo of Monmoutb Htrcot, Red Dank» Ters. Mrs. A. J. Property on tho west sldo cf Branch nvonn). ted Hank Tyson, VV, L. (eslato) ProportyonNnveslnkrond, near Black- Pont Van Keuren, Wllam Property on Umy vluce, Hod Bank vallcnu, John lmmnnd lot on thn cunt nldo of Proapoet nvnnfl, Hod Hank B ]2 Vnrn«y, Mrs. Clnrlon Proterty new Lttle Slver 28 0(1 VanNoUt, (mrgu Prnportynt()(o«nlo Wood, J. t. (cntnt<-) Property uu Lotmt avonuo. llml llnnk.. Worrell, Murlu llnuh nnd lot'on tho corner of Front ntnx't nmt tlvdflllo vn", ml Hunk, Wnrtllcjr. TunlH xt on l/?luhlon nvnuo, KM llnnk Wuollnj. KllznWl llcmd lot on tlm cunt llo of lrllko nvnn. tmlllmk. Wnvor, Kll'hnnl ' OK nnd lot on thn emt xldd <f JKton v-n', UH llnnk U'llllKnn, Humnl l'n md four lulu on llnucl nthct, tod llnk WKO. WcnldY llmnondlnto lraclnlrwjt,tcd llnnk Wlll., Kllml'th lnd lot m llm lul H of llm Unn mn, 1,111 nhllv'- l, <*hn1t>n. (cnlnll l nt l nl MUHVH (NrnT, nr rulr lluv', W. 'mhu-tv nl. (Jrm (V curjo nt (ran (nvn DO 00 f MM lm,' hmvflt md rmtrt mopnll llm y, HM lny nf ml", tlu cunlr cnrl cnm vlll l» f;!. f,', ml ll'rnl wll n mllol nl llm rlnf H«H, ' '«M*r H m frn llm tvvntldll ltty nf )M nl.r, OKW «nnd lln-ly elx. "10»») B «<l 7 Wl H 1(1 Wl Wl 7 )K> f llm n*, tnlnnvl, nnd rnnt» nm lnt «ll nlll uflor llm nlhvn-nnnuonnl dny nf lull", lllllllnal wll tn UUH. Wld llm ml" tlm n«, nym<tl nf nl mm, rmls nml rt^rnl tn'nt M Hndu ly thn Mwlnwr o llm 'cl ( nf h nnl, numrwlan llm>n «(r wll m ln«l»l"lr rc«oll. WtUTO my lul lll«hntny of Hnllwr p l<oh<t'p't uml (PJT-H'VP. J. 'AUKUR. of Tnxo fop Bluowntm'y Townblp. 7 X)

7 OCEANC NEWS. A Weddng To-Morrow-A Buldng Bght Vp to All Modern Needs and Frm Dssolve* Partnershp. Requrements. < Mss Anne Mahoney, daughter of Patrck Maboney, wll be marred n the a beautful ste overlookng the Hudson Ths bouse was bult a few years ago on rver and la one of the roomest and most Catholc church at Seabrght at ten comfortable homes ever creoted n that o'clock to-morrow mornng to Denns grand secton, havng nl the advantages Martn, also of ths place. of hll and dale, extended, land and water Rev. Mr. Wllamson of Delaware vews, fne trees and natural surroundngs. t stands as a monument to the good taste Water Gap conducted the servce n the dsplayed at the thno of lta constructon Presbyteran church, last Sunday mornng. On account of the storm no serv- and 1B an example that muoh oun be ces were held n the church on Sunday nght. Walter K. Brggs and James Emery, of the frm of Brggs & Emery, contractors and bulders, have dssolved partnershp. The busness wll be carred on by Mr. Brggs. A. number of the young people of ths place rode on ther wheels to Atlantc Hghlands on Saturday to wtness the bcycle races Held on Valley drve. Charles Wlson, who has been employed as a bartender n Joseph Lttle's place, has returned to hs home at Baybnne. Mr. and Mrs.T. G. Pntard and chl- * dren are vstng Mrs. Pntard's mother, Mrs. H. Edwards of Freeport, L.. Rev. John E. Parmley conducted the servce n the Methodst church last Sunday mornng. Dr. John B. Shawl, of Delaware Water Gap s Vstng Eev. S. W. Knpe. James R. Emery spent part of last week n New York wth frends. HarleyPeppt joned the -Red Men's lodge at the meetng last nght. The hgh tde on Monday carred away part of Joseph! Lttle's dock. Mss Mame Duke of New York s vstng Mrs. Davd Kenney. Capt. Elsla Eeach has put hs boats on shore for the wnter. Mrs. H. H. Stryker s vstng relatves n Brooklyn. ' m >» EATONTOWN NEWS. James ffteen Elected Presdent of the Aterary Socety. The Eatontown lterary socety held a meetng at Mrs. A. Lee Soobey's.last Frday. James Steen was elected presdent of the socety n the place of Eev. Albert Baldwn, who had resgned. The socety wll hold ts next meetng at Mrs. VanBuskrk's, on the Tnlon Falls road, on Frday nght of next week. The employees of the hat factory went on a strke last Thursday. The cause of the strke was a dsagreement between the manager and the employees n regard to the arrangements of the buldng. The matter was satsfactorly settled durng the day and the men returned to work. Bernard F. Muttery of ths place has been apponted general.agent for the New York lfe nsurance company. He receved hs commsson on Saturday. Benjamn F. Coller of New York, a summer resdent of ths place, has sent two of hs horses to Chcago to enter them n the horse show at that place. George Francher, who s employed by the trolley company,, has moved from Lews Btreet to the house on Broadway formerly occuped by C. 0. Heath. Wllam Loveless, formerly of Red Bank, s now employed by Stanley Clark. Lttle Slver News. Mr. and Mrs. Olman Brower and Mr. and Mrs. Wllam C. Lppncott, Jr., have returned home from ther weddng trps. Mr. and Mrs. Lppncott wll gve a recepton to-morrow at the home of the groom's parents. C. W, ford was dong some work around hs house last Sunday wth a knfe. The knfe slpped and cut two of Mr. ford's fngers to the bone. ' George Quackenbush, who has been vstng relatves n the upper part of the county for the past week, has returned homo. Malcolm Lovettof Brstol, Pa., s vbtng hs uncle, John T. Lovett. Edward Renter s vstng relatves n Rochcstor,N. Y. Chapol Hll News. purely utllltnrlun, t n no longor nn art, Chnrlcs M. Blls of Now York and hsbut a bhncfm or n Holonao consttutng a mother, Mrs. Peter Blls of Asbury Park, spoonl branob of engneerng, Thoro s epont Sunday wth Mr. and Mrs. sraol 1 ronlly no fumlnmontnl dlfforonoo of knd botwoon tho docorntlvo art, whloh mnkos a Smth of ths place. cabnot or adrennor nto n thng of bonuty, Mm. Georgo Davdson of Harlem vsted her mother, Mrs. Mara Crawford and tlmt whch doon tho muno wth a dwellng, a fluto onptol or n ohuroh. Thorn N tho Krentont ponalllo dlltaronou of of ths place, n part of last week. dogrco, of dotnll, of dwlaulty, betwoun tjo Fred Bennett and Joseph Hagermnn two rtn. Ono n lootparably Hporlor of Long Brunch vsted Thcron Butphn to tho other n n opportunltlun for dcoorntlvo effect, and n tho dgnty and pornrnanpu of tn produollon, t n nlno of thn placo on Buuluy. ClmrlcM W. Woodward m now em-moro oompjox nul oxolln; n t.' rofnlro- ployed H u (rpwtor lt Mutuwnn by Mr. BUlwKon. John BHhm md famly vlntcd relutvoh at Morrlvlllu on Suturdny and Sunday. Jamc VVolh ln/ bought 11 ton n of hornol. A Foot njurod. AKmt Chandler of Long Branch jumped from tlm frolkhlhtuon plnlform nt Unt plnco lank Thurmly and (tnnppod a tondem n ln loft foot. Mr. Ohnrdlur hw boon uompollcd lo u»o orutohcn slnco tht 1 aooldunt. Advortlfo n, TUB UnsawTtur-ydu. JACOBEAN STYLE BOUSE: PERSPECTVE VEW. learned'from by those n whom the comforts and delghts of home regn supreme. The style may bo termed Jacobean, or, rather, s a most excellent; example of that style n wood, the old Jacobean houses of Europe beng largely of brck, wth tle hangngs, whle here the; are of frame, wth clapboard and shngle fnsh. The front porte coohere and porch gve access to a large man hall about 15 feet square. Ths hall commnontes wth all the rest of the hquse. Wth ts openflreplaoo and lght obtaned from staned glass wndows over tbo man stara t consttutes a very desrable recepton room, and the vstas of the adjonng rooms form an mpresson upon a vstor not easly forgotten., All the rooms and the hall openng together, the man floor s vrtually one large room. The dnng room s on the eastern sde, and tho conservatory opens from t on the south, thus gettng the full beneft of famfpatta... «en FRST STORY PLAN. the mornng sun. Tho nteror fnsh s n keepng wth tho stylo, and the trm and tba decoratons nre n harmony throughout. There are flvo fnshed rooms n the ntto, three of whch aro reached from rear stars for servants' uso. Tho plan Bhows a frame resdence 57 feet front and 80 feet deop; heght of stores, stone collar, 8 feet; frst story, 10K feet; seoond story, 9 feet 6 nches; thrd story, 8 foot 6 nohes; foundaton walls of stone; cellar cemented; walls of house 1 hard fnshed; frame sheathed, papered and olopboarded; tower, gables and roofs shngled; open freplaces n hall, parlor, sttng room, dnng room and four chambers, wth neat mantels to oaoh; tank n attlo; bathroom and bowl on second floor; boler and snk n ktohon; snk n butler's pantry; basn n tolet room on frst floor; water closet and wash tubs n collar; brck sob range; houso s heated by attorn, hav- ". SECOND STORY PLAN. ng both drect and ndrect radaton; staned glass n nl tower wndows, n ono n parlor, n wndow n sdeboard, dnng room, conservatory, balcones on second floor, bnlcony over pnrlor on thrd floor, porto coohere; nteror fnsh, stars of whtowool; frst door of whltowood, staned;"rest of bonsn pno, flllod DD(3 vnrnsbed; exteror panted threo coats throughout; wntr, gas and sower oonnootlons. Cost to buld, $10,000, fnshed m abovo. Tho Am of tho Archtect.: Archtecture 1H a decoratve art. t s nono tho less HO booaso t D also n useful art, a solonoo and n professon. Tuko from t ts doconulvo, ntent, compel t to bo nontt, lnt tho fnrnnontnl problom of tho nrahuuol n, llko Unt of tho onhlnot mlker, to l)ltt mutlfully n noful ntruoturo tlmt n, to mtldfy ly wn and tlu untl!) denl^n tbo (lonuml nllkn of uno and bounty. Ulovoln playng 'Hdn, 10 ccnt/ v nnok nt John. Coolc\t.~-/1(/\ LEARN TELEGRAPHY AM pprortnujr tat yottna m.n, «<xx1k«l«ry oorwl. Alnmw. <«Mnon ( 'CJUUU. Bcycle Races Here Electon Day. WALKER Come see the racng and whle here save some money shoppng. n our store are dsplayed Boots and Shoes so cheap that one wonders how they can be made for the prce. Men's Shoes, several styles, all szes..95 Women's Shoes, several styles, all szes $1.00 ' Chldren's Sold Button Shoes, 8} to 10J ' Msses'Sold Button Shoes 1.00 f you come that day go rght up n our watng room, where you wll fnd rest and can see all that s gong on. 12 BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J.: We.have just receved the new Grddle Cake Flours, such as Hecker's Grddle Cake, Old Homestead, Hecker's Prepared Buckwheat, etc., all new goods; also new honey. We have a Soap manufactured by Colgate that we sell by the box of oo cakes for $2. Ths s a bargan. We also have everythng for house-cleanng Scourng Soaps, Scrubbng Brushes, Washng Powders, etc., all at lowest prces. SBCKLES 32 Broad Street, Red Bank, RS. J. For Fall and Wnter Wear HAVE THE BEST LNE OF CLOTHNG, Hats and Furnshng Goods FOR LESS MONEY Than ever had. Come n and see me before you purchase. t wll cost you nothng to look. t may cost you somethng not to look. Everythng sell guarantee to be rght. f the goods you purchase at my store arc not as represent them, your money back f you want t. J. KRDEL, Clother, Hatter and Furnsher, 6 BROAD ST.^ RED BANK, N. J. BROWN & WARWCK, Slate and Tn Roofers. HPKCJAT- ATTENTON TO Leaky Chmneys and Jobbng. Corner Monmoulh St. and Brdge Avc D. W. SMTH, Practcal Horseshoer. BRCK SHOP ON MXHflNK) STRCT, Red Bank, New Jersey. ll ««lal nhk«for (nnrtrcntnk, tnmlnr-doth And lfnk mmy. Rlrk otunllun n tmtlflrt mll 10. W. BltllTU. There s no grease n* Schroeder's Har Tonc. t keeps the roots of the har alve and healthy. 50 cents a bottle at Schroeder's Pharmacy., flter tho Urc Acd and posons out of tho By stum., -. _ J{ they aro nctln g rpl 11. f not, tho results aro Backache, Urpht'a Dsenso, Khoumatlfn, Nouralpa, Uladdcr Trouble, Rropsy, Dabetes, Nervousness, Blood Dsorders, etc. All tlo.so dseases can bo CURED You enn't mnwlvo whut plnumm t HVC nn m wrllo nml Kll wlml ur'ut thn your H nr»kh Kldnov rllhlmvxlonnfornn. mltnnxl from UhcnlnttH, Jlnckaotn mul Khlnny Wrakncfn frnv'nl V<^ra. Kvcry HHH- look mu'mxl to nko my robln mom Kmro-notllnu lulpwl m». Thu lwv Ufn dd nl llmv eoulrt. lut wlthut nuc-h. lcnnl o( your UH (hrokh t frloml, but wltlmut conll- Uonrnlnllum. r full tlmt ought not (u 'nlxt tnklnv nnyttlnr tlmt nlult n'llnvo my mlnh. lkn«l;t ft 1K>X nl N.. utfortl'd dng Hlrc To my tnnt Bunrlw) nml lnytlm Hnt tmv UOCH nvnmo nomtt nllcf, nml hy tho Mum 1 MK tlm lull M clt llko nnntlmr womnn. 1 mvo had n all tlnm MH, nml now fxl rvrfct'llycurcl, trunt nnny otlura nnllolml nn wun wll x nd-ol lotry )r. llollm l) >nnfl KllHyl'llln. Mn. OAM'KM,, ll:: N, AOunn nt,, >V'llnl;tm, lnl. HO BBS Sparagus Kdney Plls. llollm URMBDY OO., >«ornurrom», Oltuoo. UrJoblM 1MU p (.rh»lo n MHO ANR, N, J,. 6/ JAMKHOOOCK JK,, whol««kl«*nd Vt) UrHttl.l. (Jur. Un.nl mll WhltflllU.

8 ' * ' FAR HAVEN NEWS. Wllam Flood's Hand njured. Home From a Hosptal. Wllam Flood of; ths place," who s employed at Sandy Hook, got caught n some of the machnery whle at work recently, and hs arm was badly njured. A game of football was played n Hendrckson's feld on Saturday between two local scrub teams. One of the teams was -captaned by Abe Bennett, and the other team by Wllam Chandler. Chandler's team won the game by a score of 12 to 8. The players were as follows: Bennett') team. ' Chandler's team. lobumlea Edward Lttle 8. A. Jlnton ' "...Wllam Onrchln, Jr. Allort VunBrunt Mchael Connors Wllam ldlon...tom Mnton Edward Flood* Edgar Chandler TUornos Cart«r. Haymond Bennett Cnarlcs Carter...',...,...flarry Mnton Ralph Mulforl.... X /.George Vlx Rogers Grover and Abe Bennett played a 100-pont game of pool n F. A. Lttle's place.qn Saturday nght for $5 asde. The game was won easly by Grover by a ecorp' of 100 to 03. Thu Daughters of Lberty gave a dance n Lberty hall lust Wednesday nght. On account of the bad weather there was a very poor attendance., Phlp Schneder, who was successfully operated upon for appendcts n a New York hosptal, has returned to ha home at ths place. Mss SarahMnton, who has been vstng her grandparents at Glen Cove, L. '., for the past four months, has returned home. Harold Chatfeld, a student at Prnceton, spent Saturday and Sunday wth hs parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Chatfeld. Wllam Hulse went to New York last week and had sxteen teeth extracted.. Samuel Trafford spent part of last week n New York wth frends. OCEANFORT JSEWS..Mrs. Wlnfleld S. Prce Surprsed bu a Party on Her Brthday. Mss Nelle Prce gave a surprse patty last Wednesday nght for hertnother; Mrs. Wnfleld 8. Prce. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Haynes, Mr. and Mrs. J. Edward Corles, Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Edwards, Mrs. Arthur Southerland, Mrs. Lous Prce, Mm John Layton, Crawford Haynes, Msses Adde Prce, "Valenah Crater, Harret Haynea, Kathene Corles, Maud Bldrdge, Nelle Prce, Mary Wllams, Lella Prce and Harret Drummond. The occason was Mrs. Prce's brthday. The evenng was spent n dancng, playng socal games, sngng, etc. Refreshments were served at eleven o'clock and at mdght the guests departed. The Junors, captaned by DormanMe Faddon, went to Eatontownon Saturday to play a game of football wth tbeeatontowners, but the game dd not come off. The Eatontown boys sad that the.oceanport boys were too bg to play football wth tjhen, The Senors wll play a game of foot bull at Red Bank on electon day. They are also makng arrangements to gve a supper on Saturday. The steamboat Lttle Slver dd not make her regular trp on Monday on account of the storm. Mrs. Wllam Borden of Lttle Slver spent Frday wth Mrs. J. E. Corles. Alex Sweeney wll open a; dancng ' school n Oskaletahall ths wnter. Mss Llan Regan of New York s vstng Mrs. G. W. Koswell. COLT'S NECK NEWS. Blood Posonng Feared From Pav. tuff a Corn. Tho recent parftg of v corn haa occasoned George Cross, Sr., a great deal of trouble. The foot has swelled up very much and t s feared blood posonng wll set n. Prayer meetng servces wll bu held every Wednesday nght at tho schoolhouse under the drecton of S. E. Cunnngham. A meetng of the Wllng Workers' socety wll le held nt the resdence of S t. Cunlglmn on Tlu'rulay nght. Everett Smth of Far Haven m upend ng a week wth hs Hst'r, Mrs. Lonsn Sollel, Jr., of HUH plncc. Mmes Honrotl Nolloon and Jnlr Hampton wore Sunday gphtb of Mr. am Mu Stewart Mattloww, Mnnow Emly and Maro Uurko H >U Sunday wth Mnn Kln McCornok of 'Holnnlc-1. Tltomm FltWy of Mddlctown n th' Ku-'Kt of Mm. John Norman. NOWB. Tlm (Jltlu Knhvor nocol.y 01 lo rtml>ylctlu elmrd lcll a noclnhl lt Joeph HOMK-'H 1 'rd ay n ;l About <).l momlxt worn {rctctt and n enjoyable tme wall lur n plnynjjumc uml n nocll 'lul, (l'uxu Donnelly w novrl hln famly from lhll" Hlvor lootmf A. \V. llor- O'M KU' at H n lcc. tov, Mr, Julon of 'lylvnl prr<:h<>l n tn- 1''lyl lnn -lucl an HKlty A Kood MKT or lnyldok, lotml, Unt olmj t>u)'r, 400 cml,»t John. CWlt'.~vMt'. ( WAYSDE NEWS. An, Ensjnettent Announced Two ' Brthday' Partes. Wllam Graraman s now employed at Darlngton. Mr. Grampan's engagement to Mss Mary Vanderveer of Long'Branch Cty s announced. They wll be marred next sprng. Last Saturday nght a famly, gatherng was held at Mrs, Garrett Whte's n jelebratoh of Layton Dangler's 79th jrthday. Eghty-fve of hs relatves nd frends were present. Mr. Dangler eceved a number of useful presents nd everybody had a pleasant tme; On Monday of last week Mrs. Charles Brand was ffty years old. That nght she was surprsed by a number of her relatves who came to celebrate the event. An enjoyable evenng was spent. Mrs. Chrstopher Gramman gave a jultng bee last weejr. Those n the arty were Mra. John Green, Mrs. Edwn J. Havens, Mrs. Goodenough Jackson, Mrs. Charles Truax, Mrs.' Derenda Dangler, Mrs. Valentne Dangler, Mrs. Henry Sramman, Mrs. J. Hoppng Dangler, Mrs. Everett Mller, Mra. George Dangle) 1, Mra. Joseph C. Truax and.mrs. George Herbert. Three qults were completed, and a pleasant socal tme was enjoyed. A ': ragged masquerade " wll be held at Wllam Wlson's at.green Grove tomorrow nght. Msses Tesse Truax and Ktte Wlsou wll have charge of the affar. James A. Duncan has returned home from a vst to frends n New York cty nd Red Bank. John Felds and hs son Howard spent Saturday n New York John Baptst Bellssen s buldng a lew wagon-house. *. Mss Etrma^Bendy has a new bcycle. Mrs. Bennett of Poplar s very sck. WEST LONG BRANCH NEWS. A. Tea-Bevryna Party Norwood] Park Closed /or the Wnter. A party of young people went teaberryng on Saturday. They were Msses race Clayton, May Golden, Lzze Woolley and Berte Smth, Garfleld Chamberan and Wll Sherman. Mrs. Norman L. Munro and famly went to New York last week, where they wll spend the wnter. Norwood Park has been closed for the season, the drveways beng fenced n, preventng all drvng there. Mr. and Mrs. George A. Parker have been entertanng durt^jf the past week Mrs. Charles A, Parker and son of New York, Mss Sade "Johnson of Farmngdale and Mss Walter Throckmorton of Long Branch.. Mrs. John H. Parker and Mss Anna Parsley of New York vsted ther summer home at ths place last week. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wer and John Herbert of Asbury Park were the Sunday guests of Charles E. Harvey. Rev. Wlls Reeves of South Araboy wll occupy the pulpt of the Methodst church next Sunday. John McLarde of Dayton, Oho, has been vstng Mr. and Mrs. saah S. Lane. Frank Korp of New York spent Sunday wth hs mother, Mrs. F. Korn. Harry Harvey' has bought an Elgn bcycle from Wm. M. Golden. Mrs. Harry T. Hopper has been very sck durng the past week. Clarence Taylor spent. Sunday wth relatves at South Amboy. Mss J. da Leach spent Sunday wth frends at Eatontown. Mrs. Rhbda Covert, who has been very sck, s better. «. Mlddlotown Vllage News. No church servce was'held n the Baptst church on Sunday nght an account of tho ran. Rov, Mr. Crumley of Keyport wll preach n the church next Sunday. Rev. J. P. Taylor, rector of the Epecopal church; exchanged pulpts ou Sunday wth Rev, Mr. Lancaster of Perth Amboy, Mss Martha Oshorn has pcked Hovera bunches of Htrawhurres from her hll at ths place. "*"' Tho barn /mdout-lmldngsan the fnrn occuped by J, 0. Gulck arc beng ro panted. Mm. June lcuuloreon hm returned from an extended vst to frvnrt n Now York. Mm. JUUVH M. Bota of l'ulhuk-lph hm heo vstng frendx n tlm vllage, Krnot lnlley of Kuyport Rpunt one day lut wctk wth frleuln n town. Tnt loll- ;nto on tho Mddlolown am Key port turnpke lum bton panted. ldwduuldk of Now York htut bce vltnf; hlf brother, J. (!. (<llct. Mn l.ydn lowu) lmn relumed fron ) vlt, to frvml ll Nowurk, J. 1 '. HvvL()khn(<r >l Monday wll frlend n Now York cty. l''<l\vrd Ortbon, HOD of l''nnk Olmrn n very nck. Mnn tellk.'nne.' vlltl ; 'lntlveu llrooklyt. Tlcodon Morln lnn loul two O^ chlcr. Advortdoln Tl's Rversde Drve News. Charles Allen, Jr., pcked several babkets of strawberres last week. The berres were of medum sze and good flavor. P. J. McClees and famly have moved from ther summer cottage and are now occupyng ther wnter home. W. Strutlers Jonea has planted a prvet hedge along both sdes of hs drve and also along part of hs property on Rversde drve. John H. Patterson has had one of hs pazzas enclosed wth glass. Rversde drve s beng regraveled where t s needed. CHNESE DOCTORS. The Medcnes That Arc tfsef. by the Celestal Medcne Dlen. The way8 of the Cbu^e medcal man nre certanly, lke those of the heathen Chneo, pecular. ChmSo medcne s chefly based an plants, and s taught n booj;s whch aro often very ancent. n hs practce the doctor > strctly follows tho methods of tho master -by whom he has been taught. Ho s above all thngs conscrvntve Wth a vory grave fuco, hs eyes protected by largo spectacles of thck glass, tho physcan feels the pulsp of tho patont.and never fals to nako hm show hs tongue. Next he examnes hs eyes and asks a seres of questons, the answers to -whch wll help hm out n hs dagnoss. Then he wrtes hs prescrpton on a pocoof rce paper and handb t to hs pupl, who.proceeds to compound t. t should bo observed that Chneso doctorb both prescrbe and sell ther remedes, enerally tha prescrpton s mndo from tho drectons n some book, whch aro smply referred to by namo or number. The pupl goes to the book for drectons. The seeds,.herbs, leaves and stems, tho ssonces of whch are to bo combned to form tho remedy, nre generally weghed out or measured and gven to the patents wth drectons to bol them at home wth a prescrbed quantty of drnkng water to a measure whch s exactly ndcated. Put all these plants nto an earthenware pot wth a largo glass of water and bol them over a brght flro down to a teacupful. Then strajn carefully and drnk hot." The remedes aro all taken n bed, and rest or sleep, f possble, s.recommended. The potons as admnstered havo vory powerful effects. Chnese doctors have varous devces to make ther products attractve. Thoy have luxurous ehop9 und modfy wth lquorce and other substances ther vlely tastng plls. These plls are nclosed n capsules of wax as large as pgeons' eggs, whch preserve the compound from compact wth the ar, and *aro broken when- tho remedy s. taken. One of ther remedes s the dau-nhu-y,» medcnal ol whch pro ducea excellent effects n headache and generally n cases of bran wearness of every knd. t s rubbed on tho temples and s nhaled by strong breathng after havng been rubbed upon the nostrls. The bass of the preparaton s camphor. Herosm of the Polce. Hon. Theodore Roosovclt wrtes an artcle on "Tho Boll of Hono* of the New York Polco'.',, for The Century. Mr Roosevelt says: ' doubt f tho average ctzen, especally the average stay at home ctzen, realzes how often the man of the nght stck s called upon to dsplay qualtes whchtvn a solder would be called heroc. Hs feats n savng lfo or n arrestng dangerous crmnns, alono and at nght, attract no specal attenton when mentoned n the.newspapers, but thoy often mply just much courage as those of.the man who captures an enemy's flag n battlo or plants hs own flag on a hostlo parapet. The men of the Now York polce force represent all the dfferent creeds and dfferent race orgns that go to tho make up of our stock, but thoy all become good Amor cans who'pny no heed to dfferences of creed and nce, for otherwse they woult bo useless. Thn polco occupy postons ot great mportance. They not merely pro servo' order, the frst essental of both lb erty and cvlzaton, but to a lnrgu porton of our populaton they stand as tho embodment as well as the representatve of tho law of the land. To the average dwellor n a tenoment OUKO dstrct, espo cally f born abroad, the polceman a n hs own person all that there s of govern mont. Ho s judge, executve and legsla ture, consttuton and town meetng. la power and nluonco aro grent, For any vco or shortcomng ho should bo sternly punshed, but for gallantry and good con duct ho should rccovo prompt am gonor ous recognton Heredty of Characterstcs. (/<Vom the Forum.) 1 lav«lnmr n my Hfudy of camels, however, un c: ample norlmntt mll more cu-loun and,n;,'lllcant t. t! known Unt, wth tho 'xcv >tlm of HH Htaturo, tho cnno N nlsnluloly a llama, th blood globuln bdk ulllpltrw'vl,' tt teoth reptlan l form, UH nullnentry thrd and llfth too pernmuml t poswfbm, further, tlm nymt'rlnk pouch of tho Btomnoh for tn Btorano of lluldb, tlto wmoklndof eallosltj on br-wt bom and kcoh, acqured by llu enol through kmollng to rocolvo loads Hut tlo vmud (TWB strkngly from tn llanft n (hut t pokoh.wb tho hump, tlm fatty nhh, wth a HHMltl development o <)f tll) «)llul procchholl. l'v>p tl Jollf tmo 1 could not (ucylnln thn hump. Ou dny, however, a poor porter havng conplalnt n hln clentcnn to commt m and ou examnaton 1 found, half wnj down hln bud;, pvololy whwo lo wn wont to rent hl burdmn, ' tumor lnr [< than a an' Hot,, rnrul almol, wholly' nllpmn tlmo. t nmllonly (OUTO t HD tlmt thn lump whch nol (nly wtuu hn or1cr K lcovlomdn, but VM al<l rd hm n bn work mlxht pn'lmn m n olnvv (» my yhtury of thn <' lnn.» mcrlrd n nxnnlll 70 prl'n of vurl cmpntltn, nml, l-< my tr'l, Joy, wm ullo to llnd four mor 4Mu >lm of Un fatly tumor. What wm of oven ntntt«r vnlm n <u l'ulry WF Dm fnoo Hnt M poroontnf th HrlnrH)ulc(l,all.lo {h m)lcl,ll luvlk nl W llup, u, yvl ycl pr.mtlfl pn.ntlf HU mnwdl protllbnr noo (f () ll lllllll A Barn Burned at Colt's Neck. A barn on the property of Mrs. Anne!elsey was burned down on Saturday fterooon. The barn wae full of hay lelongng to Peter "Hagerman and th was also destroyed. The orgn of the fre s unknown. Royal makes tbe food pure, wholesome nnd delcous. Absolutely Pur ROVAL BAKNO POWDER CO., NEW YOHK. THE Shrewsbury Academy; A School for Both Sexes, WLL OPEN SEPTEMBER 20th. Prmary, Englsh and Classcal Courses. Complet preparaton for college. ' ' Leroy Place. Red Bank, N. J. H.C.TALMAGE.A.M.. PrnelDul. ' Our Store, Though not the largest Dry Goods Store n ths town, s flled wth brght, clean attractve stock. _ New Goods at old prces. Our lne of Hosery and Underwear cannot be surpassed n prce and qualty. Our locaton on Broad Street s convenent to all. Come n, and our goods and prces wll do the rest. N. J. WLSON, BKOAD STREET. 1ED BANK. N. J. A DJOURNED SHERFF SALE. The safe of the property of Andrew D. Purtell, et. nl., at the sut of Emma B. Hendrlckson, stands ad- Journed to WEDNESDAY, THE T WENTY-FOURTH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1897, at the Globe hotel at Bed Bank, n the townshp of Shrewsbury, at 3 HOUSTON FELDS, Sherff.', Dated October 25h, Lve n Comfort J Wear Shoes That Ft! \ Use Toe Ease, 15c. ME. J. W. BUCK of Belmar, N, J., wrtes fs : " Enclosed fnd ffteen cents for whch please mal me one box TOE EASE. t s the best corn cure ever used. t cured a corn of two years standng after all.others had faled." '. Lqud or Dry, 15c. \ JAMES COOPER, JR, PRESCRPTON DRUGGST, Broad and Whte Sts., Red Bank. Aunt Mary's Cough Syrup, 25c.\ THE RED BANK BOOK STORE. NEWSPAPERS, BOOKS, TOYS, MAGAZNES, : STATONERY! Call and Seethe New Game of "KLONDKE." Daly and Sunday Delvered. Papers F.WJoselle&Go. 31 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA4AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Shoes for Men at $3.50. Among the new arrvals at ourstore ths week were three styles of the new wnter shoes for men. These shoes were made to our order. We wll stand sponserfor the makng. One style s lght tan, the other a medurn tan. Both are of the "Englsh Bulldog" shape the' lght shade to an extreme, the medum not so much so. Both are waterproof and have extended soles of good strong leather three thcknesses of t. '., The other style s black calf wth medum "Bulldog" toe, made smlar to the tans. Prce of any style, %^>.$o. Szes 53^ to 10. Wdths, B, C.DandE. Shoes for Women at $1,95. Two styles are here descrbed that ought to brng the women n throngs to our store ths week. Prce, #1.95. Brght Dongola, patent leather tp, button, medum round too. Value far exceeds prco, ft'l.df. Box call! ehooh, lace, wth heavy HOO. BOX' calf makes the deal walkng HOO Hoffc and cany on tho foot and turns water. Proo, %\.\%, Szou 2J to 7. WdlhB, B to M. Rubber boots, rubber women and chldren. overshoes for men, FORD & MLLER, Next to Navcsnlt Nalooal Bank, Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. /

9 VOLUME XX. NO.17. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER PAGES 9 TO 16. FGURNG ON THE RESULT, CLOSNG THE CAMPAGN WORK N MONMOUTH COUNTY.' Very Lttle Work Done by Ether Sde and Much Apathy n the Hanks of Both Partes-E. W. Avrowmnth'sEHtmatcof the Result. The work of the campagn wll be practcally closed ths week. MoBt of t has been completed now and the rest of ths week wll be devoted to pckng up the loose ends of the campagn work and gettng thngs n shape for the battle of next Tuesday. The ndcatons pont to the electon of Davd S. Crater. All over the county theres evdence of a very large RepublcanVote for Mr. Crater..Most Republcans thnk that Mr. Crater wll carry twelve of the sxteen townshps of the county. Some Democrats thnk that he wll carry them all but one, the excepton beng Neptune townshp. '' The Republcan organzaton clams that Mr. Ogden wll carry seven townshps Rartan, Mddletown, Eatontown, Shrewsbury, Neptune, Manalapan and Upper freehold. These townshps are ^generally classed as Republcan townshps, but the majortes most of them gve a«e small. Upper Freehold s generally consdered Republcan.by about 75, Manalapan by 40, Eatontown by 75, Rartan by 50, Mddletown by any fgure ether way whch Capt. Ben Grggs s"ays and Neptune by 000 to,750. "There are several townshps n the county n any one of whch the Democratc majorltys suffcent to overcome the Republcan majorty n four of, the above-named townshps.. Mr. Crater wll run far ahead of the rest of hs tcket. A great many Republcans wll vote for hm who wll vote for no other man on the Democratc tcket. The feelng n the Republcan party n favor of Mr. Crater wll hurt the Re- Other Republcans who are just as famlar wth county poltcs Bay that t s soaked away n a few townshps hought that the boy wll recover. grand juror, as was also the other, whch where good poll workers can be got, who was 1 much longer and whch embraced Brown wll get 500 more votes than Red wll use the money to buy votes and not Hogs De of Cholera. several matters. Ths second presentment mentoned no names, but was amed publcan assemblymen some, for many ths year. They attrbute the great dfference between the vote of the cand- put t n ther pockets' and let t stay Several of the farmers of Monmouth Republcans who would-vote for Mr. there., county take ther hogs to West-Asbury rncpally at certan justces of the peace Park durng the summer months, where Crater and the Republcan assemblymen dates ths year to tho fact that ths s an and constables. t Bet forth that a large The Democrats have not receved any they are fed on the refuse from the f they went to the polls,'beleve that off year, and they Bay that voters wll be number of complants were made for,mone^ from" outsde the county and do hotels. Many of the hogs whch were Mr. Crater's electon s certan and therefore may. not bother to go to the polls at year than n a presdental year. An Heyer nre poor men, and can make only more apt to cut ther tckets,, n an off not expect any. Mr. Butcher and Mr. olatons of law whch could not be sus-.. boarded out n ths manner durng the :aned by the evdence, and whch were past summer have snce ded from hog all; whle others who vote for Mr. Crater examnaton of the vote of the county small contrbutons to a campagn fund. )f a frvolous charact;er»and not wthn cholera. Charles C. Croxson of Freehold, w!ho bad seventeen hogs at West may not bother to cut ther tckets at for the past cen years, however, does Mr. Woolley s rch, aud, t s sad wll the plan meanng and ntent of the. all..» not bear out ths declaraton. contrbute f 2,000 to the fund. He s more penal statutes; that n some cases constables aud-jmsu&esdjad--afluecel.per.-, r -Asbury Pnrl^ has lost fourteen of them. There s n very general' feelng that lkely^to contrbute half that amount, Ocean townshp Democrats admt that Fve shoats belongng to Charles S: Sckes of Colt's Neck have also ded. Farm- the Republcan assemblymen wll wn, and he s even more lkely to contrbute sons to make these complants; that, Bloomfeld Drummond Woolley's name though fgures are not gven to sustan only $500, whch s the amount of the many people had been confned n the wll be cut off of a good many tckets ers at Afdena, who kept ther hogs at the belef. Members of the assembly salary he wll receve, f elected. Mr. jal on these trflng complants, both as on account of hs vote'for McKnley last West Asbury Park, have also been heavy who have served one year have behnd Crater has no money, and cannot make prncpals and wtnesses, where they had osers fjom hog cholora. them the sentment whch prevals n much of a contrbuton, Small as the to be supported by the county. both partes, that an offcal s enttled to Republcan fund wll be, the Democratc The presentment also set forth that two terms. Ths sentment has always fund wll be even smaller. Some per- fnes collected by justces of the peace were not turned nto the county treas- been a factor n reelectng assemblymen, and t s as strong to-day as ever. Last year Olver H. Brown receved the hghest vote among the assemblymen. He got 107 more votes than D. E. VanWckle, and 217 more than Wllam H.Red. Ths year t look B as though Mr. VanWckle would be hgh man. among the assemblymen. Tle hook and lne fshermen along the coast arcs aganst Brown, am they may cast votes enough to dethrone hm from frst place n the race. Tho manner n whch the Republcan conventon last year was conducted s havng consderable effect on tho campagn ths year. A number of Republcans who last year would not splt ther tcket for fear of hurtng the nomnees for presdent and congress, wll ths year ether stay nt home or vote for part of tho Democratc tcket. The antagonsm s not BO great n Shrewsbury townshp as t wns last year, but t extends over a gronter part of tho county than t dd.n '00. The carryng of the amendment aganst thcrneo tracks wll aloe huvo a had effect on the Republcan party all along the shore. lolmdel, Atlantc, Mddletown, Enlontown, Ocean and prtu of Shrewsbury were nlfrolud by tho amendment, md u cohldcrablo number of votes wll ho cunt nknnt tho Republcan party h cohcquenw of t. Ocenn'n great ma jorty n'nst tho ancmlncnt n cted H m ndcaton of what Unt townshp wll d( n flc electon next week, Katontown Mld Khrcwnblry both voted n^nt, (n uedenl, mll there n oonldernhh feelng nom.; the H to'l ; Hcpllcn gntm, tn' lvpmlenn ptrly m lmvle, been ntuncnll n CDMK the nce ll'lclll. Freehold n m d to be nl OK; wny Mr. <Vnle'n frlcnl now olnln ln le wll KC over 000 majorty there They mld lnt ncvcnl Kcpubllcanur Jmrd nt. work fur Mr. Oaler, am they count. a lmdtl {«!ll>llnu vol.cn Whch J (mllon Flnlln dd nol \ty nn yenr, but whlu.l hoy my Mr. (/'ruler wll (!«t thn yenr, llottm 'lollt got fltr. ' lustyour, nnd f t more Republcans vote for Mr., Crater waverng Republcans n lne, or to pre- warransent a sold front to the Democrats on caton. E. W. Arrowsmth, who has hm n gvng fgures for pub- than voted for Hduston Felds, Mr. Crater's majorty n that townshp wll be electon day. t s too, late n the campagn for any effectve work to be done [eta Us of the Democratc campagn, fur- lad practcal charge of jnuch of the AMES A. BRADLEY SCORED BY, about ' THE GRAND JURY. Joseph L. Butcher s expected to runnow, even f men could be found to do' nshed THE REGSTER wth the followng ahead on the Democratc assembly tcket, t, and barrels of money were rolled nto table, showng the majorty he expected te Ocean Grove Assocaton Also wth Joseph p^ Heyer of Holmdel close the townshp to do t wth. Very few to be gven on surrogate n each townhp:. Presented Setvage n Wesley behnd hm. Mr. Butcher wll get Republcan help n Howell, Wall and Mders wll be at the polls on electon day, Crater. Ogden. f any of the old-tme Republcan fght- Ltlantlc dletown. Mr. Heyer ran for the asse mbly ndany money whch s put n the townshp by the Republcan party to buy Jatontown 60 last year, and'was hgh man on hs tcket. freehold lolmdel... v. 150 Hs personal frends clam that he wll votes wll "be absolutely thrown away. Howell Manalapan p 25 be hgh man ths year. He wll get some?he prospects are that Mr. Crater wll Republcan help n Holmdel, Mddletown arry the townshp. The Republcan and Ocean. assembly tcket s lkely to pull through n the townshp wth a far majorty, Bloomfeld Drummond Woolley wll though ths s by no means certan. run consderably behnd the rest of hs tcket, unless present appearances are The Shrewsbury Democrats are n almost as bad a condton as the Republ- decevng. He wll lose tle votes of a number of slver men, who say that Mr. cans. The Democratc club has held a lot of meetngs, but t has not done much Woolley voted for McKjnley last year. t s estmated that there are from 450 to 500 Democratc votes whch Mr. Woolley wll lose on ths account. Republcans expect to see Mr. Crater run about a thousand to ffteen hundred votes ahead of hs tcket. Democrats say he wll not run that much ahead, as a good many Republcans who vote for hm wll vote the whole Democratc tcket. A 1 few Democrats expect to see the entre Democratc tcket elected. There s a curous dfference of opnon among men who ought to be equally well posted as to the runnng of the Republcan canddates for assembly. Republcans who have been h poltcs n ;he courfty for thrty years say that there..wll not be 150 votes dfference between he hghest and lowest assemblyman on that tcket. They say that the vote.8 whch Olver H. Brown wll get on account of'hs personal popularty wll be to $3,000 more s expected to be contrbuted by the canddates and ther frends. offset by the opposton of the hook and Ths s not much of a campagn fund, lne fshermen throughout the county. but t wll prove of consderable effect f fall. They estnato the number at not above 300. They say that the slver men whocross hm off ther tcket wll not vote for any Republcan n hs place, because to vote for any Republcan mght gve that Republcan enough votes to beat Butcher or Heyer, whch the Democrats who are aganst Woolley do not want to do. Crossng Mr. Woolley's name off of 30.0 tckets, and rot votng for any Republcan,- would put Woolley 300 votes behnd hs tcket, and would leave Butch ; Both sdes are very apathetc, and eacl er and Heyer as good a chance to wn assde clams that the apathy wll help though the tckets were voted straght. ther party. The exctement of a presdental campagn s usually, followed by Ocean townshp Democrats further clam that such a strong fght wll be put upa year of low poltcal actvty, but ths for Woolley n bs own townshp that at year the nterest s at the lowest poltca least 200 Republcan votes wll bo ganed ebb that has been known for years. for hm there, and that whle ths wll not brng hs vote up to tho vote tho other.denocratc canddates wll receve n tho county, t wll nearly neutralze the loss of the votes of slver Democrats. A REGSTER reporter, who has been gong about the county for tho pnst week, HB found n #every. townshp vsted a number of Republcans who would vote for Crater. Ths was notably the caao n Holmdel, Atlantc, Howell and Eaton town, Most of theso RupublcuB wero outhpokonntho.rbtmtnenth. n ttontown and Mddlclown a few Democrats were found who wll voto for Ogdon. Tho Republcan party n Shrewsbury towlwhp FocrnH to bo badly broken up, Uoually a nubherpto«n of tuvoral bun dred dollarn k taken up mmedately after tho county conventon n held, am un accurate cmvunx of the towmh n made. Tm weak pontn of the Re.pub lcan campagn urn dnclohcl by uch canvnuh, and they aro ntrcklhened whle preparatonn nre nndo to nllucl the wenk jolntn n the DHnourt! lne A ctvuu of thn knd wnn nmlc nn yenr, la npte of tlm trenttnent the town MJ receved at 1 ho Uo ubllenn eouve lon, and tbo Kc >lllrn O;U UO; fear of hnp lll ; the nallna Uelcel, w^ nollly nto lne lor h full lolet. Tho cttllk on tho county tcket n Hh'wbl v townnll hnt yen w done almond entrely by tepuhllcnl volcn whowenolllde horknnlsut on. ''l'ycur ml, a cent hm been eotrlh ted D O Republcan ran lj( am! no a lrokt! of work lnn n-e done,n< nltort wlnttover lnu been Hndu to work. Accordng to some of the members a good deal of the tme at the meetngs has been taken up by the members wth sayng thngs about each other, or lse tellng each other what great men they are. There are half a dozen young fellows n the club who are ardent worker but the Democrats of the townshp have always reled on buyng votes as the chef campagn method, and no one n the party has had much experence n egtmate campagn -work. Wth nothng beng donetoy the Republcans, even the unsystematc and desultory work of the Democrats must have some effect. Nether party has much money ths year. The Republcans are sad to have reecved $1,500 from outsde the county, and a REGSTER young man was told that $500 more was expected. From $1,500 sonal contrbutons are sad to have been made toward Mr. Crater's campagn by Republcans n Neptune, Ocean, Shrewsbury, Mddletovvn, Freehold pnd Upper Freehold townshps, but these contrbutons are trllng, and wll not amount n the aggregate tba thousand dollars. Both partes clam the electon of the full tcket. Republcans expect Mr. Og den to just about pull through, and they thnk tho Republcan assemblymen wl get 1,200 to 1,500 nnjorty n the county Democrats clam 'anywhere from 1,000 to 2,500 for Mr. Crater. Thoso who clan 2,500 majorty clam tho electon of tho tbreo Democratc canddates by majortes of 1,200 to 1,500. Tables of fgures gvng estmates o the result of the electon nre not of grcn nterest, unless they aro accompncd bj tho nuno of tl o p'-tun makng tho cnt mate. t s very raro that a porno makng an OHtmalo a wllng to lmv< bn nnu publshed n' connecton wth tho fgurem, and mlesh tho ohtlnmtor'u Hno n known, one man H glchu n gven but HUlo more weght than nnotnvr'n THE RCUHTKU H receved a nunb of culmlc, fn both Replbleuu nn Democrat!!, m to thcremlt, n llq county tnt majortes! ben ; (;von by tow!h» Mont nf the t'mhllcn %uro out, urn CC fur the Keplhllen tcket, tbo ',l evcnl of the Ucphllcau CMUC r,v< Mr. Urntcr a nnjoly. Tho Democrat! clt.nmtc nlow n majorty for the Den oerlje Uclel, but lcvernl of tlce elec Mr. llnnvnor Mr. VanWokln lntcnd n M', Wdllcy. " every enne (le pcrmm dl not wnt lc' mut' plll'hcl ',M r the cnllltl 1 '!. '.1, \V. Dnncr, " chnlr of the l.' publlcm mnfy commttee, nlntcl tnt ll'.hl Hnt He tcpllct) cx'cmv 'Dllltlllllce llld lnt H'lll (V M'rllnjr flllc hn luy of " c'lvotln, nnd Unt n 'llllvlml lllll H lludc l,llnroll r enoll J Marlboro 150 Matawan 100 Mtddletown..-. Mllstone 60 eptune. '. )cean... ; 209 BarltonV 8hrewbury 150 Upper Freehold ; al..:.u» 100 ' _ r W Crater's, net majorty Mr. Arrowsmth stated that ths was a r ery conservatve estmate, and that n ls judgment Mr. Crater would do better n every townshp than hs estmate howed. He sad whe"re he had been n ny doubt he had gven the beneft of the oubt to Mr. dgden. < > A; FATAL ACCDENT. Wllam tovce of Keuport Shoots Hmself Wth a Revolver. Wlbur Bo^ce, an eleven-year-old boy of Keyport, accdentally shot hmself wth a 22-.calber revolver on Tuesday of last week. The boy was gong out to shoot brds and he carred a dog under hs left arm. He had the revolver n hs rght hand and attempted to cock the weapon by pressng t aganst hs body. The hammer.slpped from hs fnger and the bullet entered hs abdomen, The boy was taken to the Long Branch hosptal' where an operaton was performed, but the bullet was not found. t s not Patrck Gallagher's Wll. The wll of the late Patrck Gallagher of Keyport has b.een admtted to probate After drectng that all hs just debts and funeral expenses be pad, Mr. Gallagher bequeathed 5,000 to hs nece, Llaa Grace Cotton, To hs wfe, Alda A Gallagher, he left the sum of $10,000 and all hs real estate. Elzabeth Galla gher, hs favorte nece, s to receve $60,000, The rest of hs estato s to bo dvded between bs neces, Joso and Llan Cotton! The wll was made September 29th, 1807, nnd the executors aro tvmazah L. Ashman and Wllanl J, Fannng of Now York.»..» Rartan Democrats Organze. The Rartan townshp Democratc 'ecutvo conmtteo wns organzed last week and the followng offcers wer elected: Chnlrmn Joln (.'HT. Tmsrer Jmra M. llutlcr. Heerotnry Fred F. Annstronr.', Kx'utlvn fo^lloo. O. Jlnuor, Joln. KHz rujd, John L'urr. CllluK'n Hmt dstrct: Junra H, Walllpr, John Flyn; wcond dstrct, Wlllm 11. Unvs, Churles,1. Hmltl, Sr.j thrd dstrct, lldmrd Cnrr, 'l ll Jotttos to bo Bult at Bolraar.. At n specal dfeclon whch wns hell at lk'lmnr on Tuesday of lnot week, l wan voted to erect jettes to protect th ocean fronh- t ntonded to buld a leant ton j;ttlon, each of thorn to cxten OH lmndrwl and llfty feet nto the ocean Atlvanclfj Mtllc.. An nlhyttown frner receved won 'lo an Anbury 'uu mlk dealer tha he uunl'l Sndy'n mlk mpply nllppc tt hm ou Hfrny n;hl. The fnnn reflled Unt he would do no, trov(ltj the cown would mlvnnee the nlllc.. vnl' no'/. lk qmlu Our $1,110 lc'ly lnn t m ll'n a n flnt cnln lo the thrfty, 1 nlotlc ; n n lt Hnd' hll ol' 'lc'lc nllc lnnl ''l llnlln;, Vcr y K'u.'el'l the new nln c for full, t'olrn brown nnd Kccl, \Vn ', ll ce, K Orl (V. Hun, ~7 llrond llnnl, /l/c No dcnlllct n x'lter lln Dr. lln (len'n fdettl, 1'V'W nr<< no (jool, '< nte by \\, 'n'onn. At nl ctn, vl/n, WOPRESENTJENTSMADE, Lalte the Cause of the Presentment-Hlakng Vagrants Work, The grand jury fnshed ts work on 'rday. They examned about 500 cases, 'hey found 163 ndctments, whch was much larger number.than usual, even or an October term of court. n addon to the ndctments two presentments were found. ' A complant had been made about the unsantary condton of Wesley lake, on account of a great deal )f sewage flowng nto t from the houses n Asbury Park and Ocean Grove. The lake s prvate property, and s owned by James A. Bradley and the Ocean Grove assocaton. They get an ncome from the lake by lcensng boats to row on t, md by chargng 1 toll to people who cross ;he brdges over t, The grand jury ;ook these matters nto consderaton n presentng the case to the court, and askng that those who "were njured by the ' nusance mght be releved. The prelentment s as follows: To thcjuoacsof the court of over ad ter'mner and general Jal delvery of the county of Monjncrat/; n consderaton o( the varous matters of publo nterest that have come to the attenton ol the grand ury, the present condtons of Wesley lake, lyng beween tbe populous towns of Ocean Grove atd Anbury Park, s a matter of puve consderaton, nasmuch as the accumulaton of sewage of a largo number of people s run nto sad lake. The ownershp of sad lake beng exclusvely la James A. Bradley and the Ocean Grove camp meet- ng assocaton, and from whlcn sad owners derve consderable sum n money aunually n boat lcensea and brdge tolls, the conauted local auhorltles as board of health, etc., feel that ther ursdlctloa s voded...' Therefore those who are affected most have no edress. W& therefore present ths subject to the lonorablo court as of vtal mportance and ask that otne acton may be taken for relef. Ths presentment was sgned by every ury, as requred by law, but were wrongfully wthheld; and tbe grand jury recommended the county collector to begn sut aganst the justces to recover the. amount of the fnes mposed... The presentment closed by statng that many persons were confned n jal as vagrants, at great cost to the county for ther support, and t was recommended hat some arrangement bo made whereby he vagrants could be employed on publc work of somo knd, both as a publc beneft and because of the salutary effect t would have on those confned, and on others who looked on the county jal at present as a cozy wnter retreat. A Narrow Escape from Death. Thomas Eustmond of Port Monmoutl was drvng across the ralroad track at that place last Wednesday mornng, when hs wagon was struck by a locomotve. Tho horso balked ond t dragged Mr. Eastnond from tho wagon just as t was struck. Tho wagon was completely demolshed, but tho horse escaped entrely. Mr. EHtnond wan slghtly brused and Hcratclcd. * Fol From a Stono Wall. lane.' Murray of West End, Long Branch, fell from a Htoro wall on the Hollywood properly lut Thursday. Murray wm out huntng and ho stepped up on the wall, whch n about two feet ;h on one ddo and ton font on tho other. Ho lonl ln hlanco and fell on lh head on the ) onl(< Hde (f tln wall. He wnn rendered uncomcoh for about twenty utcn am bo receved noveral hruk'h. l(««( and l,4tt /' «fll) fcd H'nlt, rent, of one-lmlf wll nny ntercut on whole of purclnc, prce, Only a nll payment requred, (lood o porlultv n r.cl. a home, Addrenn '. O. llox "H/l, ltd llatlc, N,.].- Alv. f/ «t Str. Tle M lr nle ol' CH'M we nold lanl, Hut un lay for 'locenln. We've ufrcth lot for to-morrow.,lnnc]> Hal/;, Kctl lml.- /lfe lovole. plnylmk cnnl, loc'ntnn jtuak, Jufu. (ykl'), Adv.

10 FORFETED TO THE STATE, CUROUS DOCUMENTS OF THE REVOLUTONARY PEROD. A Lst of One Hundred and Ten Persona Whose lands Were Confscated for Adherence to the Brtsh Cause, One of the pecular hstorc d documents of Monmouth county,whch has just been brought to lght n the archves of the county clerk's offce at Freehold s a lst of executons ssued durng the Revolutonary War aganst persons who favored the Brtsh cause. The book was unearthed by a correspondent of the Freehold nqurer:. The book n whch these executons are recorded s book A of executons of Monmouth county. At the tme of the Revolutonary War Monmouth county was much larger than t s no^v, other countes havng snce been set off from t. The frst part of the book contans executons ssued by the court of common pleas n varous cvl ca3ea. About : two-thrds of the book s taken up wth these cases, The remander of the book s flled wth executons aganst the estates of persona who had joned the Brtsh army, or vfho had aded the Brtsh cause. An act had been passed provdng for the forfeture and confscaton of the lands and property of such persons, the amount receved from the sale of such property to go to the state of New Jersey. John Anderson was the judge of the court at that tme, and some other man named Anderson was clerk, and the executons were sgned by each. One hundred and ten executons were ssued and are recorded n the book of executons. Some of the names occur, more than once. t may be that they were the names of dfferent persons, or t may be that the lands were n dfferent locatons and separate executons were needed for each pece of property. The record does not state whch was the case. The executon n each nstance declares that the "real estate, of what nature or knd soever, wthn the sad county of Monmouth, belongng to" the person mentoned n the executon, has been. forfeted to the state of New Jersey on account of sad person havng joned the army of the Kng of Great Brtan, and havng otherwse offended aganst the form of hs allegance to sad state of. New Jersey. From ths t would appear that where the same name appears twce, t was the name of dfferent persons. The frst executon was aganst George Taylor, son of Edward Taylor, of the townshp of Mddletown. The full form of the executon was as follows: Mvnmouth County, to wt : Tlo State ol New Jersey to Joseph Lavrencc, Samuel Forman, Konneth Flunklnson and Jacob Wlckolt, Esq's., Commssoners, duly apponted for the sad County on tle part unt behalf ot ho sad State to tako and dlbposo uf, for the use and beneft of the same, the estates of curtan fugtves and offenders n snll County, or to any two or more of Gtl y, thorn, GrooK: ' Wleruaa lately, that s to say of the Terra of October n the year ot Our Lord ono thousand seven hundred and soventy-elght. n tho Court Qf Common Pleas held at Freehold n and for the sad County of Monmouth, before tho Judges of the same Court, fnal judgment was had and nterest n favor of tbo sad Htato of New Jersey, pursuant to law aganst George Tnylor (son of Edward), lato of tbo Townshp of Mddletown, on the nquston found aganst the sad George Taylor for Jonng tho anny of the Kng of Great Brtan and otherwse offendng aganst tbo form of hs allegance to sad State, Ac, and returned to the sad Court us may fully appear of record, you aro therefore commanded am enjoned to sell and UKKBC of nl the estate, real of Wmt nature or knd soover belongng to or lately belongng to the sad Georgo Taylor, wthn the sad County ol Monmouth, accordng to tho drectons of an act for forfetng to and vestng n the state of New Jorsoy, tho real estate of certan fugtves and offenders, madu mll passed the eleventh day of Deccmbor, n tbe year of Our Lord ono thousand seven hundred aud seventy-eght. Wllness, John Anderson, Esq., Judge of the sad Court at Freehold (he twenty-sxth dny of January n tho year of Our Lord ono thousand seven hundred and seventy-nne. By tho Court, ANDKRSOM, Clerk. Recorded tho Hth day of May, 1771). The full lst of persons aganst whom executons were ssued s as follows: Vncent l'tce Ashflelcl, Essex. Joseph Allcny. Dover. John lownc, Mldlletown. Joseph navloy, Mlddlutown. Joseph Draws. KhrewHlury. Thomas HH, Shrewsbury. John llonln. Shrewsbury. Otmdll lmvt). MlllKown. John llonlc). Shrewsbury. Andruw towmt, MlddleUnvn. Alexander Clark, YJSKX. TUOUUB Crowoll, Mldlletown. Josnpl Clayt, Freehold. Samuel Cook, Shrewsbury. HH' Chandler, Upper Freehold,.lolm Colt'l, Mldllcunv, Samuel Coltrel, HntWHbry. JamesCOOMT, MldlleUM), Anthony Denns, HnwHUry. Olver Deluney, Mlldlslown. Olver Delnuey, Mlddltwtx. OllfllH'rt (lexon, Upper Freehold. llur/lll drover, Upper Freehold. Jom'pl draw, Upper 'lvhok. ('nnl HmlrlcKH, MlldleUwn, (>l»n lllrkh, SlcwHly. leue/ar lllnekhn. Freelmll. Jolu llamplon, MlruwHtryV / John lm'lm. HlumvHlmry. John llorner, wheelwrght, Upper Fwloll. Jont 'OK, Dover. Kulx 11.lameH. 'reelull. Jnncn KK, nllm M lnnll, Hhcwfllury. Jme KK, H Mplu'K, Hlnnvbry, Mlclm'l Kclllcy. Mllllrm'K. nlllpk'tny, Mddlesex. FrllclH KnNMy, Mlhllrnn. J xhkhlr'l. Jr., 'lrehuld. 'rnh l/'onnrl, l'rh'l(l),.lolll ^Hll,! >"T Krelold. Jolt juv'e,do'lr, llphr 'neloll, KMn fjwene', llper Kwlull, Kltlel jrteltrn, Hhewnluy. Joteph l^vnanl, Mlllrtvv, J l<«nnl, Mldllelw. JCP h'lnul, Mlllllmn, Kolntrt Mdrlft, Hlrewpmry,.ln n Mount. HrnwHlry., J Morrln, Mlnnnfllnnv. John Mount, xnlmn, MllllHm, <)(r"llun MeU, Mllllelnvu. Hnnel Outturn, Kntelll, Mleln'l 1'rlo. Hdrmvnlmrv, tum* ''M, M<l11<l(Hl, John rnlnd, lllrmnlrr. John 1'Tllnn, DpHr 'l'chom. Wllam 'crrlrf, V\w<t rwhoht. JmnrK 'rl, Hrnwul'y. j h 'M, Ml nt Wllllnu, (llrnwttrjr. r l ol Juarplt Hlrontnrjr. Nathanel Park, Shrewsbury. Nathanel Parker. Shrewsbury. Tobas Bker, Shrewsbury. ' Henry Better, Mddletown, ' George Rapelya, Mtddletown. Wllam Rose. Mddletown. Peter Stout, Mlddlotown. Jamea Stllwell, Mddletown. Wllam Smth, Woodbrldge. Mddlesex. Jonathan Stout. Mddletown. Samuel Smth. Mddletown. Samuel Stlwell. Upper Freehold. Robert Stout, Shrewsbury. John Smth. Mddletown..,. Samuel Stevenson. Mddletown. Wllam Stevenson, Mddletown. * Shore Stevenson, Mddletown. Abram Stout, Mddletown. ' Wllam Stout, Mddletown. James Stevenson, Mddletown, Davd Stout. Mddletown. John Throckraorlon, Freehold. Chrstopher Taltnan. Shrewsbury. Thomas Thorn, Mddletown. Ezekel Tlton, Mddletown. John Tlton, Mddletown. Clayton Tllton, Shrewsbury. Morford Taylor, Shrewsbury. John Taylor, contan. Shrewsbury. Oleonjalman, Shrewsbury. Samuel Thorn, Mddletown. Danel Van-Mater, Freehold. HendrckB VanMater, Freehold. Poter VanNote, Shrewsbury. Curlneyonce VanMater, Mlddletowm Denlse VanDorn, Mddletown. Chrlneyonce VanMater, Mddletown. Wllam Walton. Shrewsbury. John Wllams, Shrewsbury. John Warden. Shrewsbury. John Wllams, Shrewsbury. Ebenezar WardellShrewsbury. Benjamn Woolley, Shrewsbury. Brlttaln Whte, Shrewsbury. Thomas Hke Wlllet, Mddletown. Anthony Woodward, son of Anthony, Upper Freehold. Wllam Wnrdoll, Shrewsbury. Obadah Wllams, Shrewsbury. Joseph Wllams, Shrewsbury. Someof the persons mentoned n the lst, aganst whom executons were ssued, were afterward found to have been nnocent of the charges aganst them, and ther lands were restored to.them. A MlLLON BOOKS. Rare, Curous, Current, N STOCK. ALMO8T GVEN AWAY. Lbrares Suppled Cheaper than at any Book Store n the World. LBRARES AND BOOKS BOUGHT. MAMMOTB CA TALOOUE FREE. LEGCAT BROTHERS, 81 CHAMBERS STREET. 3d Door West of Cty Hall Park. NEW YORK. We Am To brng our goods wthn easy reach of every purchaser. Wth that object n vew we have establshed Fve New Jersey Stores, each of whch handles the same goods and at the same prce. Try the store nearest to you and see f a wholesale house operatng ts own purchasng offces and elevators has any advantage over the 1 local store whch depends on the promses. SOMEBVLLE. of others. We Sell t f f t Everythng for Horses, Cattle and Poultry, and some pretty good, thngs besdes.- Three Panos. '. School Statonery, School Supples, ^ Box Paper, Newspapers, '\ Perodcals, AT TETLEY- 4 SON'S, Front Street; Red Bank, 1 R. HANCE Wholesale and Retal Dealer n HAY, STRAW, GRAN. FLOUR, FEED, POULTRY SUPPLES, ETC. We are handlng a large quantty of Marlboro and Holmdel Hay of the very best qualty. MONMOUTH STREET, Adjonng Town Hall Red Bank Townshp Commttee Meetngs. The Board df Townshp Commttee ol Shrewsburf townshp wll hold regular meetngs at Town Hall, on Monmoutn street. Bed Bank, N. J., on the Ural and thrd Saturdays of each month, from 4 to 5 p.h A. C. HARBSON, Totvnahlp Clerk. WHEELWBGHT SHOP. The frends ot 'Squre T. F. 8nlfr>n wll tod hm at hs old buslne&s n Walsh's buldng on mechanc Street, Bed Bank. N. jr.. where he does all Mnds of Wagon Work! New Farm Waeons, Harrows, Carls, Wheelbarrows, 4c., made to order, and Jobbng of all knds neatly JAMES WALSH, Propretor.' The Paul T- Norton Co. ELZABETH, ELZABETHPORT, RED BANK, PLANFELD, Panos rented out for the summer are beng returned now. Many of them have only had one season's use. To look at them you would lot thnk they had been used at all. But what a dfference t makes n the prce to you Three panos as examples : KDRsbury, new nst sprlnr, ebony case, prettly carved, regular prce $250, now...$100 Kngsbry, mahogany cabe, wthout a scratch or blemsh, lno full tone, was S2T5, now '..,,. 200 W'Kmn, llrlt wood, n very flno nstrument, been used bs BunYnYcVonly, re'truar prlco 8350,now 290 Every ono of theso Btramonta aro backed by our " money back " guarantee, So that t leaves no rbk for you. The Ma Who Runs Ahead t f f T f T f T ± 27 BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J, f r^-> Of n movng trnl n n no noro clungcr lmn ho who trlof to kcoj) ahead n tlo nmd rul of lfd, (lop'klug endruly on B own le Hl'uln han (Hd norvom nul ntrongth ngun and n^n coh nlrnlt CVK hm C ublo to t'o[w wth tho dlllcduc of lfc, Old Hpanul ]'ort Wlno n a too whch wll kcop HtroK any num. t cnllc fn nck man to work whle ml(nc hm well, t. -wll bo found tn nvnlnal td n all nncn of wonltmrnn or oonvk'km'o, Tho jlco n f, 1 por quart hero, lolmnvhcro you wll )my noro for t, f you Don't forget llm't wo luvvo n nloclc nl l'dlk UK of VV nk leu, Km, (Jnn, llrnll'm, md everythng lt to drnk. J. J. ANTQNDES, 20 Front Hlroot,... N«nr lrowl Street,. «K> BANK, N. J. Alaska! Klondke! No need to go there for GOLD DUST when you can get t at any grocer's. t Makes the Drt Fly MADS ON.Y BV THEN. K. FARBANKCOMPANY, X" Chcago. Bt LonlB. New York. Boston. Phladelpha. There was a clergyman n a Long sland vllage who suffered from dyspepsa to such an extent that t postvely seemed sometmes as though hs doctrne was not sound. t was, however, only a stomach trouble^ and had nothng to do wth the mnd. Beng convnced of ths, one of hs parshoners, a lady, presented hm wth a small quantty of Rpans Tabules and the relef he experenced was such that all the congregaton notced an mprovement, and now, although hs salary s small, ths clergyman and hs wfe devote a porton of t to keepng the medcne closet stocked wth a sutable supply of Rpans Tabules. Doubtless there are many"eases where what has been thought heresy was n fact nothng more nor less than dyspepsa, and Rpans Tabules cure dyspepsa. One gves relef. 4 «W STTLS PAOKKT COHTANKO TEN TABULES K A PAPEB CRTON (WTHOUT OLAU) S NOW rob SALE AT SOUS DUUO BTOF.ES FOB ntb CXHTS. DR. F. L. WRGHT, Surgeon Dentst, RED BANK, N. J. Broad Street, opposte Bergen's. LUMBER AND HARDWARE. PANTS AND OLS AT WHOLESALE AND RETAL. Carrage Goods, Rms, Spokes) Hubs and Wheels. Also Wre Rope, Boat Nals, Rvets, Copper NalB, Blocks, Pulleys, Anchors and Pure Manlla Rggng. Preston's Fertlzers (odorless) for Lawns. ' Also Bone Phos2>hate ana <k Fsh Guano. J. TRAFFORD ALLEN, FBONT STREET, Cor. Maple Avenue, BED BANK, X. J, FREE EYE DSPENSARY. Dseases of tho eye treated and examnn tons for glabsea wthout charge. LONG BRANCH Surgcal Santarum Consultaton Room, Broad Street, CHLD BULDNG, Red Bunk, N..J. Momlayfl, Wcdnowlnys Jnd Snturdnyu, from!) to 0 v. M. COAL AND WOOD, W. B. LAWRENCE, TUmlor n (,'onl md WMM, Ar.H() HT,K>, (JOHN, OATH, HAY AND (TAW. ) «>r,( l h nml nl l Klmt-Clm (,'nnln nl ^wrt Prlcxw. Wl' nml n ntlnd ly tln carloul (lo Htdl >[ lmt lmn, ",'M [Hnln, n ulvc. YAU: t)«r. fxmt nml Wont, lltn., Hurt lnnk, N. J WALL PAPERS 87 AT HARRSON'S. Perfecton Sprng Lock Wre Fence B tlo ono that s fast growng n reputaton nl ovor tho country. Ths fenco enn bo bult Just ns tho purchnbcrdoslros, usng os mnny wres nml spacln«them accord K to stock comng n contact wth t. Kncl wlro s nut up sopnratcly untl tho desred ntmbtr. Tlnn tho Btnys aro put n four n tho nxl hy «HH tool nndo (»- p<!cllly for tlth mlncbs. You set tho poate, do tho rent, nnd Kuamntco BatlHfnctlun. GEORGE N. CONKLN, A(KNT VOR MONMOUTH COUNTY, Mddletown, New JerBey. MN) FOt OATA.OOUK. Have You Notced Tha velvet and ostrch feathers are to be used extensvely n the fall and wnter mllnery? We have a very choce lne n these goods at prces that are rght, and the goods we can recommend. Aluo wng!!, cojuc plumes, brds and htts of every varety used at Mss A. L. Morrs's COlt. 11UOA) AM) JfttQNT

11 N THE WLDERNESS. A Solder's Ghastly Recollecton* of '<. an Ate fll Battlefeld, " have no tme to bury my dead and lan gve you none," was Grant's famous reply to Lee, when, under a flag of truce, a cessaton of hostltes was requested long enough to bury the.dead. Thus 6Bb great and awful feature of the battle of the Wlderness was the unbure dead, that lay for days and weeks all over that bloodstaned feld, one of the most horrble anrghastly sghts ever exposed to human vson.. Probably no battlefeld of the cvl war afforded such an opportunty for nspecton as ths. Ordnarly, after a fght, buryng partes were detaled, and tho ons', deeg trench, a common (?rave, was dug, and the doad were' at least covered; but not so here. Qrant could not stop, and tho long stretch of country, overrun wth Mosby's guerrllas, that ntervened between the Eappahannock rver and tho nearest Unon lnes prevented ad from that drecton n. buryng the thousands that wore slan n the Wlderness and n the fght at Spott'sylvanla Court House. sat on my horso lookng over the porton of the feld where the ferce and deadly fghtng of May 4 and 5,1804, occurred.. t was four or fve days after thp fght, about the Oth or 10th of May. A small detachment of our regment had been sent as an escort to a tran of ambulances to gather n the wounded who were beng temporarly cared for n barns and farmhouses near the battlefeld, and thus had on opportunty to vew ths hlstoro scene. Durng the years snce t has been an open queston whether to be glad or sorry that vsted that battlefeld. t could not be more vvdly mpressed upon me had Been t yesterday. t has been a nghtmare and a horrd day dream all these years. Often have prayed that vsons of those upturned faces, blackened and dstorted, of the starng, glazed eyeballs, of. the stffened, outstretched, hands, seemngly stll graspng for support, those rgd forms wrapped n bluo and gray, that hod fought ther last battle and now lay sde by sde n that great charnel feld, mght bo blotted forever from my recollecton. Then, agan, 1 havo been glad that 1 knew BO well how that battlefeld appeared, and how barbarous, brutal and nhuman t. made war seem; glad that knew how 10,000 dead heroes looked, who hod faced and met death amd tho wld, frenzed scenes of one of the greatest battles n tho hstory of tho world. One of tho most strkng features to us that day and tho ono most thoroughly fxed n our memores was that all over that battlefeld, or at least that pan* we vsted, there lay three boys n blue to ono n gray. t wll bo remembered that all through the Wlderness fght tho rebols were protected by a system of earthworks and hastly constructed fortfcatons and abatses, whle tho Unon troops wcro compelled to fght largely n tho open and assal tho Confederates n ther strongholds. From these t was utterly mpossblo to dslodgo tho enemy except by tho masterly seres of Bank movoments so successfully planned by General Grant At ths pont tho Unon dead lay thckest. 1 beleve could havo dsmounted and walked a dstance as great as two ordnary cty blooks and nover onco havo stepped upon tho ground walkng on dead bodes all tho way. ndeed had undertaken tho ghastly journey would have been compelled n somo places to clmb over heaps of tho dead. There was a slght growth of underbrush at ths pont, wth a few trees remanng. made a careful examnaton andcould not see a lmb or a twg or a bush but was marked by a bullet, and somo of them n several places. Tho wonder seemed not that there were so many dead, but that any lved. Offcers and prvates all made a common cause hero and rank was forever oblterated, for among the dead wo notced tho shnng shoulder straps of commssoned offcers mngled wth tho ordnary bluo unform of tho common solder. Tho trees were torn and shattered, tho fearful work of shot and shell beng shown on overy sdo. Mus kets, canteons, huversacks, knapsacks lr fact, nearly all that makes up the accouterments of tho soldor wero scattered n all drectons. None of us felt llko performng nny act of ghoulsh vandalsm; though, as saw a letter extendng from tho pocket of a doad Confederate 6oldler, 1 dsmounted, and somo of tho boys gnthorlng around, wo looked t over. t was torn and partly 11 legble, but wo mado out that t was from tho town of Hamlet, n tho state of North Carolna. t was n a lady's handwrtng, and tho porton that wo wore ablo to road was as followsv MY DEA.UOK-WO hopo Hnt you can soon return and lolp us wth tho tobneco crop, bu f not wo do hopo nnd pny to God that ou dear Juclc wll not bu harmed by thoao torrbl Ynnltcoa. As wo looked nt tho letter and thon a tho upturned face of poor Jaok, turnng black from exposure to thu BU, nnd the thought of that poor wlfo or mother o Blsta 1 who was watng and watchng fo tho return of tho deul and mangled noldl<y lt our f'st, md of the other'10,000 home from whch dear ones hud gono out wh< were now among that host of dead around \H, we legan to comprehend somethng ol tho brutal, larlnroh nature ofwar.- To Tost Truo Worth. TWO guy youk Kl'lH wero lmvlk - llfthly olll'ylk (V) convurmtlcm on a Wa nut 11111K unllo ear tho other day. Ono mld: "Wlcn feel that, amn Hbecomng lllothted n nn to tho cxohmlon of oth lrln, 1 nt mce put hm to n tout "Of com. you know wlml onorn mn uro, nnd how they nro on dtt's pnnul wln' tho glrlt ant nlout, Wcll, my tew h thn: malm nl rkkotmnl wth hll to «(> off mnewh'o nt 8 o'olouk n H mnlk- Nlu men mt >f ten wll n nto. TH majorty <( eo >lo foul (lull m not) ut nl altlt ut mrh m early hour, lovm lln rovd'hutn wll l»> M'UK l> Nmrkln. f ynu wmt to nk behnd tn ween of n nmu'meov'hollly, (llt M to Mln lent., f h» eou' llmlkh umln favorable lltlon, le wll nnk u g.m llnlnml," 1 um olllk a eluokjr box md molf Kttno xmnl, wlll u full wt of >»"< for 7 omtt nml a blw"' bmrd md mo for 10 WH. John Jl. Cmh.U #*#*#*#*#< > > $ t ; ; ; ; f. Box Letter Fles.You ought to have one of these Letter Fles whch am sellng at 17 cents. They are as handy for farmers, mechancs and women, as they are for busness, men. A letter or a recept fled away under the proper ndex letter n ths flng case can be found n a few seconds when t s wanted, One of these fles wll last an ordnary household a year or longer. When the fle wll hold no.more letters or recepts, t can be stored away wth the full knowledge that> the moment a letter or a recept s wanted t can be found. Tlere s safety n one of these letter fles, and fndng a sngle recept when t s.needed wll save a dozen or a hundred tmes the cost% the fle. Games. have a number of sets of Checkers, Domnoes, Dce Cups, Backgammon Boards, Cards, Poker Chps, etc., whch am sellng at remarkably low prces. have Box Checker Boards ard Backgammon Boards combned, wth full sets of men, for 7 cents, and larger Box Checker Boards and men for 19 cents. Fnely fnshed Checker Men are sold at 19 cents per set. Domnoes sell for 7 cents to $1.00 per set, accordng to qualty; and Cards are from 8 cents to 23 cents per pack. Poker Chps'are 19 cents per box. Box Paper. The Boxes of ruled Medea Paper at 14 cents are all gone. boxes at the same prce. Front Street, Adjonng the Post Offce, New } Fall Styles of Shoes -AT- BERGENS. The Wndow Dsplay Represents tm Shoes n Stock n all Szes and Wdths. g 21 BROAD ST., RED BANK. '$ w >;< w u www w w A Vstor There s stll some of unruled Only about a dozen boxes of the Dana, at 11 cents, reman, and about the same amount of the Juno at 7 cents. Each of these boxes contans 24 sheets of paper and 24 envelopes. Ffty-three of the double boxes of paper and envelopes are stll on the shelves. They cost 27 cents and contan 48 sheets of paper and 48 envelopes. greatest bargan n paper am' offerng. Qualty consdered, they are about the have some order books for grocers, butchers, etc, sze usually sold at 10 cents, for 4 cents. Other books, same sze, better qualty, at 7 cents. Some double slates are gong at 39 cents, arfd some book slates at 12 and 24 cents. Paper for pantry shelves at 38 cents per box of 12 ten-yard rolls, s havng a brsk sale, but there's nearly two score boxes left. Whatever you need n the statonery lne can be bought here, prevous to my removal, at very much less than ordnary prces and much cheaper than goods of equal qualty are lkely to be ever sold for agan. " '...,. JOHN H. COOK, Red Bank, N. J. To our store comes agan becasc he gets what le buys, He also gets what he wants, as not another so full and vared stock exsts wthn a week's drve, Don't smle, madam, and say yofhave to send away for the favorate brand, because these country stores don't have anylhlg. Ths one las t- and delvers t to you at as lttle or less prce than elsewhere. Yes, ths s an exceptonal establshment, Rookwood Rye -good ryo S a full quart. W. A. FRENCH & CO., PURE WNES AND LQUORS, HKOM) STUKKT, RK) HANK, N, J, t '4 * t 1! ; t 18 1 www S w

12 TRADNG STAMPS. A Companu Starts a Store n Bed Bank. The "Tradrjg Stamp" company opened ts store n James B, Weaver's buldng on Saturday. The busness of the concern s conducted n a marner dfferent from that of most busnesses, and the scheme has proven very proftable lo the company. The object of le company s not to sell goods at all, but to gve premums to persons who buy j^oods from certan merchants. The merchants who go nto the scheme buy " tradng stamps " from the tradng stamp company, whch are redeemed at the company's stores for premums of varous knds. The scheme s Bmply an elaboraton of the plan of gvng premums for purchases made at stores. Many merchants gve premums of furnture, slverware, or rebate checks good for goods, to cash customers, and the tradng stamp company s an enlargement of the scheme. n the case of the tradng stamp com- ~ pany merchants gve stamps lo cash customers, and these stamps, whch are all alke, and whch are gven by from ffty to fve hundred merchants of a town, tre redeemable at the company's store, no matter at what store the stamps may have been gven out. The bass of redempton s about the same as the rebate usually gven by stores whch gve premums or rebates. Merchants buy the stamps at fve per cent of ther face value, and gve cash customers stamps to tho full amount of the purchase. Each customer receves a book contanng blanks for stamps to the amount of $09. When the book s flled the stamps wll bo redeemed for ptemutns of varous knds at the company's store. Stamps are gven only to those who ask for them. Were they gven to all cash customers t would taks from the merchant fve per cent of hs gross sales. The gross proft on goods averages from \ twenty to twenty-fve per cent. Out of ' ths gross proft must be pad the rent, heat, lght, clerk hre and ncdental expenses. Fve per cent of the sales gven out n tradng stamps means a reducton of about one-quarter n the gross profts, and a reducton of nearly one-half n the net profts of a busness. The tradng stamp company say that the amount lost n buyng stamps s much more than made up n ncreased busness. The runnng expenses of a store reman nearly the same, whether much or lttle busness s done, and hence the gross profts of an ncrease n busness are almost entrely net profts, svce rent, heat, lght, clerk hre, etc., reman about the same. The tradng stamp company does a lot of advertsng for the'merchants who buy tradng stamps, and they say that tlo extra busness nduced thereby much more than makes up for the cost of the stamps. The tradng stamp dea was orgnated about four years ago, and t was frst tred n. Jackson and Battle Creek, Mchgan. t proved so successful that t was extended to other towns, and at present the company has branches n 07 towns and ctes of the country. The system s beng extended to other towns as fast as practcable. Red Bank s the latest town the company has operated n, and from Bed Bank the company wll go to Long Branch and Asbury Park. The company has spent over $200,000 thua far ths year n advertsng ts methods n tho towns and ctes where t was operatng. Mr. Hutchson, ono of the propretors of the company and the orgnator of the scheme, sad n a recent ntervew that the company would probably spend $100,000 more ths year, and that next year the advertsng appropraton would be nearly half a mllon dollars. ACCDENTS. HOBO. "Wllam V. Megll of FarnKdulo orml'd three of hn lngorn wth u door whel mddmly dom-d on them. The HCH wa bully lnrcrntol mll ml open, U> He lumen, Hon. Henry H. Utthxf Ml.awu wut thrown from H homo at Tcnton on Monday of lmt week. Tm hom>hu: ) MM oo Mr. llulo' rltflt hand, njurng l lovcroly. Wllll Hnln (f 'Vcclold ww mv voroly jkmrl wlllpolon vy lnlw>l, n ftcn md mmln wcrr mdly wollrn, Mm. All(!<> lmnmn of 'Volold, wn, n ocly 0" yrjnl old, fell n ln>r mow hrolo on of l'r rll>n, T. (tohvrr Hl >lln >r T'nl fol from n load o( llmv whle ll>rnl>l//ml. uprnlkml llnllc,, Mm. Mnlth'W Wnllhtfuf Koypol M l nn<! hrouf her mm wljj<>«mj>vhkn of! <<">^^ *.. ". ' THOMAS P. BROWN, ft J * 1 ^ EED BANK, N. J., DEALER N Coal and Wood. Persons buyng 1 cool n carload lots wll get long tons, or 2,240 pounds to tho ton. Also Fertlzers, Chemcals, Phosphates, Wood Ashes, Lme, Horse Jtanure, Pars Green, Land Plaster, Blue Stone, Red Shale, Gravel, Pants, Brck, Plows, Harrows, &c. General Freghtng Promptly Attended to. CONTRACTS AND BDS SOLCTED. Offce: Wharf Avenue. Coal Yard nnd Storehouses: Foot of Wharf Ave Hats and Caps, am showng somethng entrely new n Hats and Caps. t wll pay you to gve me a call. am sellng caps as low OC. and 15c. a pece. HOPPNG, lttten by a JJfooHou.l.1 Out Through the Xote.!j?red Wooda of Mnnnequnn was badly btten on tho leg by a bloodhound a few Hatter and Furnsher, days ago. Mr. Woods was unable to walk for Hovernl days, Tl dog was shot. BROAD ST., RED BANK. Frank T. Allare of Farmngdalo was struck n tho faco wth a Htuk whch was thrown by a chld. Tho ponted end of ANEMA tho Btclt nndu a cut entrely through ln Ol lmmenlchs OP r.oo>. Tl ll 111 ml cry (-011(11111)11 of tlo blood saled Ancl whch n HKW by pule 'ln'rkf, lldlc' ll['( and dull even, cm he nul n cured h om-on11h llhllrytme,.v/lukl); tlo mltrnl no-lnlnlh ; ron or ll"n),','l)lln of < ';jm 11 )<><M. Thn ron n xlrn'l'l from lullnclv llond, U ullcr rol nuu'l'h nr mlo wth trn.jf rcll. l)r, <'u l'll'n Hll HT mld l>y nl nlln; ln ' :'uln lt llccln rr lur/(c xm, nx mxr lor $'2,Ml or 'lt dlr''l. ly Tlc C nlll <'<. 111 j> 1111 y, )'uvlnr llullllf!, KM M Mma, Now d'lrl Clly. Wngs" of tlo Board of Health. Nullcn n lnrnly KT«tlnl rrutlnn^curkm of tlm OAU.) OK KA1.T OK HHUUWH 1HJKY TOWNHHP Wll l«11.1 on llm Hnt nnd tllnl Hntnlny (t nrh tuntl, nl CHUHM'MHTV Hull, tral llnlk, N.J., nl ouruvlhh, r. M. A. <t. H/lltllnon, N GREEN BOTTLES. Betz's Celebrated Phladelpha Ale and 4. Porter and Rpchester "Boheman" f Lager Beer. 4 f j BE SUEE OUR NAME S ON THE BOTTLE. 2 GEORCE R. LACV3B & CO., r ' RED BANK, N. J. f f 25 and 27 Bast Front Street, $ Folesale and Betal Lquor Dealers, f The Greatest Bargan! HORSE H. N. Babcock's No. 20 Buggy for $150. Keduced from $185. BLANKETS. We bought ours before the tarff took effect, and wll stll sell at low fgures. Compare our prces wth others. BRDSALL & SON, Near Town Hall, Red Bank, N. J. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA'AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA, ; Fne Mantels ~ at Low Prces. f you're buldng, why not put n a handsome mantel, wth an open frcphcc, n the lbrary and parlor? A cheerful open frc^s the greatest attracton a home can possess. The prces are low, comparatvely. We can gve you an oak mantel, wth carvngs, as low as $15, and an open freplace can be put n at a cost of only a few dollars more. ARNOLD & WLSON, Hr\mtot\t\ 43 EAST 55>T STHKET. NEW YORK CTY. \ZJ~SJ~S-J~\-l Vu'O ll'fro /'CPC n 11 KHM fnnco. D frn tlm x-nt nlml wn) (f xwlly Mm pntwr wcl«lt! ndnm twlf '> n"trtnknw "t fnl nr w.m, <» «nll(c nul rotnotlm, to Uku u> nl nhek. m U\ W rchnt Mgl. K<KH* ol"<lnl»/nlwk n or wt. tnlfor fw'lwokohjmot buldng.. UA.Kt:8 O. CJONOVEK, Afont for MonmoutU County, Holmdel, N. J.. 1 Post Offce Block. NEWARK, N. J. ^A 0111 'nrnlf; ('n - MGHTY- One Week Shoe Event. Our lnes are now complete, and foot fttngs to surpass them, as far as Qualty and, prce aro concerned, cannot be found. Everythng depends on the start, and f that s rght success follows as naturally as does ' ' nght the day. As a means of properly plnc» '' tag our shoe stocks before economcal peo- ' pe n and about ths cty, we have planned < ' a ONE WEEK MON3TEH 8ALE, durng whch tme specal and very low prces wll preval. Chldren's Sboes, button nnd lace. One dongola, lgbt or heavy weghts, wde round toes, patent leather or solar tps, sprng heels, szes 6 to 10, regular «Bc., at D9O< Boys' and Youths' Shoos, lace only, flno satn calf, London toes wth tps, sold extenson soles, szes 2> to 5kg, regular Sl.W, at Tho same, szes 11 to 2, regular $1.2!)., < at, 08c. 1 < Msses' and Chldren's Hgh Cut Button Boots, lno brght dongola, round tocs.tlps of patent leathor.bprlng heels,,, Blzes 11 to 2, regular at./ 81. BO ;. Thosamo,slzes7tolO^,rcguar.S1.41l,,, at; $1.26,. Ladles' Laco Shoes, flno soft vlo kd, now opera toes, latest stylo patent leather tps, vunp and heel foxed, (loumo sttched, nlno box calf, wth dull dongola lops, heavy soles, regular 81.08, at?.!...;...$1.78 Ladles' Walkng Shoes, flno brght { < dongola, bull dog toes wth patent '' calf tps, also box calf wth dull dongola tops, bull dog toes, straght tps of same, heavy soled, laced or button, regular 82.45, nt $2.10 \' Mon'n Calf Laco Bhoes, bull dog toed, Htrafght tps, hoavy Hcotch wtao well*, band sttched, our regular f.lr, and easly worth S,CO. Hpeclu for tlo week at $2.00 <. A combnaton lot of l'lnu Hlwn, Lntllst' Cloth Top Hhoe», button and luce, lnn grul kd foxng, l'hlladnlnphl ponted anl con tw, kd and pl'nt lntlhr tps; Lnllefl' Kd HKCH, llm dokoln, KM athtm t<k«, tl «f best plont rller, hnnlhnn well", nl HZCH, Hnd) to nol lt 811.5" t<> dj. o, prce d close,..,.,....ss.80, fjll'/' r«t<'rt rvlflblo ()ork Hold HKCH. DO not mvd thd clmmy tptonrncddf tl( old ntylocurknolklnl, ndof lno brght T ' ' ' nnllkr tl m, h'l wvrd W(ll/, Uo vgulnr prlco %Wt» P«l r. f»r '""' _L " " week $8.00 T No At'cnts. fo llnnch Stores. Mull Orders tlled. rcc Delveres: k L. S. PLAUT & CO., ;; 70/ UronSt. nnd No H, Cclnr St y \ \ ;,N. j. «. t

13 *LmLAmLAMk.Amj»jjmtA&k^m.j>*Mmk^m.A^j>*mLA **#$$#$# $#$$ > RED BARK, R J, " ANNOUNCE THE Front Street, Opposte Broad. MAGNFCENT PREMUMS WHCH ARE TO BE, GVEN AWAY ABSOLUTELY FREE / -... ' All merchants mentoned n the followng drectory wll gve Tradng Stamps wth every purchase made at ther stores on sales of ten cents or over one stamp rjeng gven for each ten cents represented n the purchase. Over 25 young women are now callng at the homes of the ctzens of Red Bank, leavng at each house a book for the recepton of these stamps. t s not necessary to carry these books wth you when shoppng smply ask for the stamps on every purchase ; made of the merchants mentoned below, carry them home wth you and paste them n the books accordng to drectons. When the books are flled brng them to our store, where they wll be exchanged for your choce of any of the beautful premums there dsplayed ABSOLUTELY FREE. Our store wll be open every day from 8 A. M. to 8 p. M., and Saturdays and Mondays untl 10 p. M., where the books for the recepton of the stamps can be had and a thorough explanaton of our dea cheerfully gven. Remember, the merchants wll make no advance n ther prces, but, on the contrary, ther ncreased busness wll enable them to sell cheaper than ever before. BUY OF OUR SYNDCATE. Collect the stamps and furnsh your homes absolutely free from the magnfcent assortment of hgh-grade artcles carred n our store, a few of whch are here mentoned: Cameras, Furnture, Etchngs, Rockng Chars, Opera Glasses, Oynx Tables, Clocks, Pantngs, Jardneres, Rochester Lamps, Carpet Sweepers, Sewng Machnes, Slverware, MuscarT^struments, Brass Art Goods, Lades' and Gentlemen's. Hgh-Grade Bcycles, Rogers' Knves and Chna, &c, &c. DEEOTOET OF LEADNG ENTERPRSNG MERCHANTS WHO GVE TRADNG STAMPS. BAKERY. D. C. "Wells, Shrewsbury avenue and Herbert street. BCYCLES AND BCYCLE SUNDRES. ' Allstrom & Co., Broad streot, corner Whte. H. A. Worthley, 7 Broad Btreet. BOOKS AND STATONERY. H. A. Worther, 7 Broad street. BOOTS AND SHOES. : ' Whte & Knapp, 13 Broad street. BUTTER AND EGGS. Wlson's Dary, 81 Broad etreot. CGARS AND TOBACCO. Morrs Pach & Son, 10 Front street. «CLOAKS AND CAPES. Adlqn & Cole, 05 Broad otcct. CLOTHNG. M. M. DavldHon, 110 Sroud Btreet. COAL AND WOOD. TJoH P. Urow, Wlmrf avemo and Front atrcct. CONFECTONERY..loHjtl Orovor, 117 Broad afreet. DRY GOODS., Adlon & Colo, HtS Broad utrcet,»!! DRUGGSTS. '\ James Cooper, Jr., Corner Broad and Whto streets. M. L. Hollywood & Co., 107 llonmoutl street. FSH AND OYSTERS. Henry Wood, Front street. FLOUR AND FEED. McColgan & Atknson, Shrewsbury avenue. FRUTS AND VEGETABLES.» Lous Prate, 24 Broml street. W. H.'Konpp, 8 Front street. McColgan & Atknson, Shrewsbury avenue. GENTLEMEN'S FURNSHNGS. M, M. Davdson,!W Broml street. Adlom «Colo, :15 Broad ntreot. 1 GROCERES AND PROVSONS. W. f. ftmpp, 8 Front wtreot. McColgan & Atknon, SlrowBbury avomu. Jacob Bchopor, Front nt.n'et and Mplo nvontu. 1. HOSERY, Adlom & Colo, 115 lroul utreet. HATS AND CAPS. M. M. Duvldon, ) llrod ulroct. KD GLOVES. Adlem & Cole, 85 Broad street. MEATS AND VEGETABLES.. H, Sherman & Co., Front street. Harry Robnson, Front street, opposte Central hotel. / E. Scott, Shrewsbmy avenue. MUSCAL NSTRUMENTS. Allstrom & Co, Broad and Whto streets. NOTONS. Adlom & Cole, 85 Broad treet PHOTOGRAPHER. A, t. Coloman, 81 Broad Htreot. MUSC., AllHlrom & Co., Broad and Whle Htreoln. TEAS AND COFFEES. WHHO'H Dary, ll Broad wred. W. A. Kmpp H Front utreet. Mc(;ol(,n & Alllno, Shrcwnhry vonuc. Jacob Hehopor, Knmt trccl and Maplo yvnno. WNES AND (]('(>. t..unb «% ()>., Kront lroet..ncob Koltprr, Front nlr't and Mu THE TRADNG STAMP CO. ^«t* &A*A*A*!«vw^wv «vwvw ;! 4 4.!<A ^ *fe*a& f ' & '4 f fs f fs f ft

14 The Pcture. There BB pcture n ny room No stranger oyea shall ever see, Ft food for mrth to them perhaps, A holy thng to me. She labored n a barren land, Barren of hlls or rver shore, Barren of woods or prare Bweep, Small thngs about her door. Her face was l>rown.,wth sun and toll. Her eyes woro truthful, steady gray. Her bonds were frm and fxed to work Through all the changeless day. Between the tasks she panted t A chld's cheap pant box all sho had The drawng, color, yon would say, Absurdly, wholly bad. But eho who held tho wrotched brush n hands but used to wold u broom Put all her starvng soul n ths, Hor love of brd and bloom. 8he B»W n fant gold, subot slcy That glorfed tho broodng hlla. She saw the rver stll wth lght Lke a soul God 'p presonce flls.. Sho saw tho brds flt slently Homeward aganst that tender lght. Sho felt the fragrance of tho roso Before tho dew of nght. Doop feelngs mado hor heart grow great- Grow great wthn her aa eho wrought. ffljt f tho hand that hold the'brush Was rgd and untaught? Tho poor, pathetc, faded daub, ' Wth tho ohcap tnts and shaky lnes, Growa glorous as a masterpece When once tho eye dvnes., who have tred'ln haltng rhyme To tell tho thngs ny soul would see, Hang t awny fron scornful eyos, A holy thng to mo. A SOCAL FALURE. She was poor, she was ugly, trndtvvns her frst party. n thoso few words was wrtten tho hstory of her llttlo tragedy and of tho countless llttlo tragedes that go to make up tho great undercurrent of socety, whle ts surface s over of the same heartless brllancy. Wo beg for "woman's rghts, "yok t seems to mo that they, lko charty, should begn at homo or n tho homos of her frends, where often, nvted as an honored guest, sho s tfo vorlest slave to conventonalty. f t rnghb only, bo that a young grl at socal functons could have all the lndopondonco that she demands elsewhere. As t now s, eho must rely upon threo thngs her wt, a man and a ohaporon. Tho frst fallng, the second s very apt to, whlo tho thrd procmms an gnomonlous retreat. Woro hor prvleges tho same as thoso of tho moro fortunate man, sho would bo freo from all embarrassment.' Were t no moro caueofor remark to fnd a woman "stagglng t" or standng alone at a ball than t s to seo a man smokng on tho pazza or loanng n a blase atttude n tho doorway how much happer she would bo. t would do away wth all that vulgar tnlk about bong"stuck wth a grl," when eho s far tho more mserable of tho two, real lzng her abject dopondenco on ths stck of humanty who has not enough tact to hde from her tho fatal fact that ho cmnot got away. You may argue that oven were theso prvleges granted that a man when sought by a maden mght bow hmself away wthout any compuncton and sho would stll bo whoro sho s now. But no, thocr oumstanco surroundng her socal faluro would bo entrely dfferent. t would not be BO much notced, and there would nl- " ways bo a certan amount of conjecture concernng t. At nny rato, tho world oould not say tho next day: "Poor Arabella, sho camo to the ball lust nght wthout a claporon and spout tho whole oven- ng wth ono man! supposo tho noxt thng wo shall hear wll bo that sho doesn't oaro for soacty and s gong to becomo a traned nurse." Why does tho world always mako thoso ronm'ks wth' a pecular smlo of amuseont, us though such thngs vcro very ; trvnl and ts only rel nterest was centered n tho tactful, beautful woman, who, to bo sure, wns all tho moro glory under tho present reglmu? Hut, tlu>u, old wojd, you only laugh wth us." You were nover known to condole. So suppose you wll 11 ml nothng to attract your attenton n tho ncdent, whch am ntol to relate regardng tho grl who was poor, who was ugly and who wont to her frst party. A cousn under oblgatons to her mother had be«n asked to take hor. A heavy snow had fallen, whch, though tho dlstanco was not great, ncesslated n carrage, n fact not addng to the cousn's good humor. No Unworn mvd bo nont, however, NO there wan some consolaton n that. When they hud llttctl through the!6ng awnng lke hurryng phantoms of tho nght, a great wave of lght from the openng door had engulfed them. They found tlensolvtm homo resstlessly along wth tho crowd mrrng up tho lruul H arway and dropped fnally nto tholr vnpeotlvo dressng ranu tho ono all full of eager, cltu'rlng voces, soft, Huffy wraps, Cur llct ulots, etc., tl>ol.m<rktud, HOXT study n bnds am whte, blurrud by much Hoka Arabella, for tlmt was lnt 1 nmc, quckly freed hcwlf nf tho old made over clonk n order to dsplay the dnlnly, luuu dmmed nuhll wll'lnhmvwl unotlor'h deft. tcmchoh. Tl't H\ wmfc to t.ho l'- nl 1, wlern all tlm otlerh wont, hut, (le cotrul bel.ween bet'own homely face and tlm happy, pvtly ut'rt that pmped over her HKHMH D (;>1 v lunt (ll u of von- OUUMnn, wan loo ({rent.. So lu turned away wth a llttln ljjl, joned le' (KtKlll, wht walled outm p, and went mlllllly down ho wlrtt lnln. An lmy nulo tn) VH turn u vlxlm no wonderful lprond tt'lr bouw that lu mplhlvly Knupwl her <!< mlo'nr>, cxcllnttk, "Ol, how lumlu'l!" w'llln ln, to wvor hlulrnyaeo, all la (llnnly: "Hut you ltthtap H<r very uncl n Hull. You H, not let oyery ouu Umw tlmt H n your Unt jmrty," fn nle cmrdlngly be'uo very lrl, hlt nllt) (lould nol mlp llnulr; tlmt, tho tony; mpawn) of POBH llxr u po\r'd tn lo puyh r, "Como, (luelk dvl, 'm wat- MK, mll mtk '<> "' ""'""l ly thouft, Ucl of downy ullrlu," Mnt, tlm nmn<lv< clmnlollmh ntulelcd out l'lr ann n nl lent brolk'llo ovtu 1 tlm fnlrrn-nn, whch (fn lrrol'rt lv'r WMM of v ntll (, J'hon tlm lnng, «rvouln»ly llnutllvo. Would my nun lnk wr t<> UHW lrf \V>M sparkled, but they were not pretty eyed. So nobody notced them. At ths moment a tall blond n pnk gauzo Bwept by, but turned n affected surprse to the cousn, holdng out her hand and makng that tme worn remark: "Why, dd not recognze you at frst. How charmed 1 am to sea you!" Thepousln seemed equally charmed, and they entered nto a most anmated conversaton, untl fnally, recollectng the stuaton, tho necessary ntrdductona wero mode, and tho cousn, wth tho tall woman n pnk gauzo, strolled unconcernedly away,' leavng tho poor, ugly lttle grl standng appalled before a great hulkng fellow, wth glasses whch so exaggerated hs eyes that they Bcemod startng from ha head la wonder. Thoy stood for somo moments starng nt each other. He then asked hor to dance, na a duty to bo got through wth as quckly ns possble, and sho found herself beng whrled rapdly through the rooms, but somehow tho pleasure had gone out of t all. Her young bran was on flro wth the thought that sho was wth a strange man, who dd not seem n the least nterested n her, and that sho knew of nc way to releve hm or herself. What could tho evenng Jnve n storo for her? Sho knew her coualn well ^nough to-oxpeot lttle from hm. Ths man woulcrscarcely take upon hmself tho trouble df ntroducng her, and, of course, tho hands of the hostess wero full. ptable Truly the stuaton was Thoy had stopped dancng and wero walkng about lko two shpwrecked salors on a desert sland, he lookng anxously for'somo sgn of rescue, she wth tho settled despar of ono who knows that none can come. And so thoy walked and walked. Dances began and ended, the musc floatng mookngly out to them, but.stll they walked on, ther conversaton, f one may dgnfy t by that name, consstng of spasmodc attempts at lttle speeches prompted by common polteness. Fnally n desperaton ho sought a secluded seat whero she would not bo seen at all, but whoro hla oye could command a vjow of tho entranco to tho supper room. Hero ho placed hmself lko a cat watng to pounce upon ts elusve prey, whlo she, poor llttlo thng, was tryng so bravely to repress tho hard sobs that roso, n her throat and to keep tho horrble"" slmca from settlng down upon them, us t threatened to do. So eagerly was hs eye fastened ou tho door.wy that, lortuutuy ho dd not lool; at her. else he would have seen a fnco almost tragc n ts msery tlmt would have stnpcd tslf r.d'luy 11; m hs mnd. Jut. then; lu ; uld nut :,r.v that ths was the party nf whch ;!:-hud dreamed nnd talked, for whch"sl: lud actually lved t.lh'fc nnny ';ys past H' could not knmv v.l'.:;t t!..< luru ncnnt. to her, nmvlow muy brp'.l swuut huj's t swept r.vy uuvof her lfe. l!e. could not know lmv, as she Juk'd ahead, he days stretched themselves out n endless grayness, md t.luro seemed nothng, nothng worth lv::;; for., Oh, she. d:dtl her cold lttle hands and determned on unc more effort to rodcem herself n ths stranger's eyes. "1 am very sorry, Mr. Hlake," she sad quto calmly, "that have LT'H SO thrust upon you, and 1 know have made your evenng a terrble bore. also realzo now that oven had 1 known every ono hero t would havo mado n6 dfference. Thero nro somo unfortunately of whch ths may bo sad, but whnt can a woman do n such a postonp want, howovcr, to thank you" "Oh, please don't talk Hko that," ho n tcrrnptcd quckly, stll wthout losng sght of the door, "you know goto so many affars" But ho nover fnshed what ho ntended to say, for, suddenly boundng from hs seat, ho exclamed n tho forgetfulncrs of tho moment, "By Jovo, thero s your cousn ntlastl" Ho started forward wth a gleam n hs exaggerated eyea whch seemed to say, "Ah, you shall not escapo mo now!" Sho followed hm quckly, and they joned the cousn, happy n tho possesson of another blond n brllant red* Mr. Blake grasped tho hand of tho latter lke a drownng man clutches tho proverbal straw, thus gvng Arabella an opportunty of sayng n an undertone to her cousn, " should lko to go homo f you please." "What, so early! Why, we havo not had slpper yotl" he cred n astonshment. "You must tako mo " sho jdemnnded stonly, and hn saw n certan detormnaton tn her plan features tlvt mado hm turn and say: "t s too bad that cannot havo tho ploasuro of beng lt supper wth you, but Arabella s not fcolng well, and lmht.take her home. shall leave you to my frend, Mr. Blake. Good nght!" t was quck work gettng nto tho nad over cloak, for t dd not mako any dffer MCO now about "mussng" tho dress, md J they were sunn rollng through tho whte,, snowy street, away from all tho lght,' warmth, \wfun\o, (lowers, musc, beauty and and mpplnesm (?). At nlne! Dear old homol Had t over enel so shelterng lrfonl She hurt smrrly (lrel t rust, herself to Rpek durng tho drve., but when they reached tho front ddr K held out her lnd, Hjng wth a Htrange, lmrsl llttlo laugh: " WHH not. a l'lllat success:, WH, cousn) 1 Cloodly," Tho door closed quckly behnd hm, am sl hurredly turned out the hull lght, knowng her 'lnllcr would ho wal, K fur her Somehow, vs HO quckly groped lur way up the Ktnlrn n tlm (lurknew, the ttuuttnn Hcennl jmpletloof her whole 'utur llr, am nh' whspered (< herself host) touchng words whch,lae Lane Allen puts hlolln mouth of Mx Falconer, "1 H fo mftly nl my lnyn." Tho yea'tl rolled away over tlm head o tlm ]O11' llltln, ((ly <l,mh they wll ml over Mm healhof all of un, untl lu l now a wom of lll>. Kln hm ben trm (. her word.,slo lnn ((ono oflly Ml lr (lll)'h, llll, t llllll lellll tll) lloft tl'l'llllllf ( l'ul'l m'n n tlm ldkroou, when) lln lnn fnd that lw)> l(»u wllol tppll md fllut llm nllllln { old world. V'e lmn,ln )vel now, whm thn bravn, KDX wom len lunn m hnr llttlo wlll rnn NM to n \v> l nel'llel n Mmn, wlen l'ul of llulu n llldm l'llol H HKC, llm >nt leu, ll rrl., md 111 rlllle ;lve fur llm nl (tl, hnr plllnv n wet. wth Dl mll r u n of >,M<rv< ll thn r.nll,ll) (f llm lrnl, ullll only p 1 of le' ll \. A box (f 'lmlnrn pupcr, "pl llc'l n «'' mll " onv'lo n, W' 'f cc V««lH ectl.nl, John ll.c'm DEER Utey Were Deltahted Wth a Home -. n a Caeffl^Mt Shell. n St. Ncholas Q/Kafael O'Relly tells of a couple of queer pets that,he caught n the woods. The wrter says: Whle ramblng ono evenng n tho woods sat down on a rock close by a shaded bank all overgrown wth soft green moss and feathery ferns. Not far away there was an ancent tree stump, wth a holo runnng n underneath t, and what should seo peepng ont from the hole, but the head of a llttlo reddsh brown anmal.' At frst eght! took"t to bo a chpmunk. ts largo, black eyes seemed full of apprehenson, and as moved t draw book out of sght. On rollng over tho stump, dscovered jeneath t some wthered grass carefully oled nto a globular nest. Cautously drawng my handkerchef around ths, led t up, wth whatever t contaned, and lurred homeward wth my treasure. On emptyng thq handkerchef nto aboxcovred wth wre gauzo, found that. had :aptured two beautfully delcate and'elegant creatures, somewhat -larger than nce. Ther fur was thck and soft, a rch velvet of reddsh brown on tho back and snowy whte beneath. Ther feet also wero whte. But thor chef beauty lay n tholr eyes great, black, lqud orbs, half protrudng from tho head. No gazelle evor had eyes half so lovely. They soon became qute tame, and wthout showng any fear would allow me to put my hand nto ther cngo to gve them fruts and berres. Thoy carred ther nest nto a corner of tho cage and reconstructed t thero.. ' After about two weeks procured a largo coconnut, sawed t n two, and takng one-half of t, lundo n t a lttle doorway. When put ths nto tholr cage, turned mouth down, they seemed to go wld wth tho exctement of dolght. n and out they ran through tho llttlo doorway a hundred tmes n successon. Sometmes they would jump up on top of the cocoarut and survey t all over, and then, after "washng thor faces" wth thor del : cato whte paws, jump down and agan run nsde. Soon they mado up tholr mnds to tako possesson of t as ther home. Ther nest n tho corner thoy pulled to peces and carred t off mouthful by mouthful nto tho lttlo cocoanut hut. Thero they have lved over snce. Durng tho daytmo thoy sleep, but when evenng comes on they busy them selves runnng and jumpng about the cage, nnd thoy havo never onco n three ears tred to gnaw ther way out. The Crater of Klauea. You step out on "the crust of tho rollng sea of rounded and hardened lava bllows besde your path, and tho surfaco crackles under your feot lko the snow crust on a crsp wnter mornng. ts' gltterng, r descent colors please the eye and tempt you :o carry away n. vortablo load of the sparklng, glassy poces. Hero and thero, even at a dstance from tho edge, tho fern spores have takon root and relevo tho eye vth thor graceful wavng. fronds and ths on a sol lko glass and formed no ono knows how long ago, though ts surface appears as fresh as f lr d down yesterday. On you go, punchng the crust n front of you vgorously wth a staff to dctormno whether t s safo or not, untl fnally, after-about 200 yards of such materal has been crossed, you renoh tho rounded edgo of tho caldron tself, perhaps after some slght senros and probably gettng your staff on lre onco or twco. Hero you pause for a momont to pck out a way up tho Bde, whch vares n heght from 10 to 80 feot, and s composed of masses of sng of nl szes, joned together by lava whch has forced ts way out between tho blocks. Hero and there you notce that through somo of tho larger oponngs tho w.hte hot flud s runnng out upon tho floor and often n quanttes whch would make an ordnary blast fur nace blush wth shwne. study on n small scnlo all tho phonomenn of a lava flow tho formaton of tho crust tho fssures and many other phenomena. At length you pass, by a few stops, to tho rm, and there beforoyou s tho sea of lava n all ts terrble' brllancy.- ' A Roquost. OU naru Scarcely spokon to mo at al ths evenng," sho sad n tones of re proach. " beg your pardon," her husbaml returned apologetcally. '1 was just try ng to thnk nf somethng to say." "s there anythng on your mnd?" "Yes; to tell ym tho truth, thero s." "Can't, help you n somo wuyf" "You mght f could suggest t wth out your becomng angry."- "Toll mo all about t. t s my duty tt sympathze wth you, you know." "On my bn nlay nnnvorsary you gav' mo a fountan JJO." "Y'K. And now you oro gong to saj that t mucs v lorrd muss and that you don't want, tn wrto wth t." "'m not gong to nay anythng of tn knd," ho r-llt'l stoutly. " nn gong to wrte wth Hnt pen ovory day of ny lfe, but UHTO s one llttlo favor that would lke to auk." "What s tr "'HKO mlu mo amtof ovornllu to g' wth t." Notce to Delnquents. Noton n horoby gvon to tl dolqrmt luxpnyorb of th (,ownnh > of HhrowHlury tha nder no <:v,unm;au;<)b wll th jmymont of Uo oohtn and n tnro'h An dolnqon. taxom l> waved or ultau'd, but doln qunnl,n wll bn roqurod to p n full n nl canon. By ordnrof tlotowrl ) com mtten, A'JO. TAUKBON, Wmhp Ulorlc ' ESTABLSHED \THOMAS GUMBERSOll SUCCESSOB TO $ - CUMBERSON & WHTE, Scentfc and SaMtaryPlambep, FRONT ST., RED BANK. J S2T 1 Famous Canopy and Apollo Ranges, Your neghbor has on& Hepalrs for any stove. J Ask our prces for tho best Cylnder stove on the market; slde grate and all lmproye- merts.., J Have your Radators bronzed and your Steam Boler and Hot Ar Furnace denned. Frst-Class Whte Laundered Shrt, >;< Full Length, For 50 Cents. * 8 Ths s the Bestjjj Bargan n the f Shrt lne have $ ever offered. % Corles, The Clother, H ', $ BROAD STREET, >J " ' : ' " a BED BANE, -NEW JERSEY. M TOWN OF RED BANK. SALE OF LANDS -FOR T-A-XJES, Notce s hereby gven by vrtue ot a warrant ssued by H. J. Chld, a polce Justce of the Town of fled Bank, at the nstance of tle Board of Commssoners ot the Town ol Bed Bank, n tbe Townshp of Shrewsbury, County of Momnouth and State of New Jersey, to make the unpad (axes assessed, on lands, tenements, heredtaments and real estate n the sad Town of Red Bunk for thojear one thousand eght hundred and nnety-sx, the subscrber, marshal of the Town ol Red Bank aforesad, to whom sad warrat 19 drected, wll on Thursday, November 11th, 1897, STltJBSET, ln'th'e TOWN OF REV SANK, n the Townshp of Shrewsbury, County of MonmouU and state of New Jersey, sell the sad lands, tenements, heredtaments nnd real estate hererader descrbedatpubllovendue,for the shortest term not exceedng thrty years, for whch any person or wreons wll agree to take the same and pay such taxes wth nterest thereon, nt the rate of twelve per entum per anuum from tbe twenteth day of December, one thousand eght hundred and nnety-sx, tojetner wth all costs, fees, charges and expenses...., _. The persons whose property s to be sold, the locuton of the sad property and tbo amounts due, are as follows: Asay, Mrs. Danel House and lot on tbe south sde of Catherne street 3 75 msrlcan Manufacturng Company House and lot on tbe soutb sde of Front street 5 H Applewte.SuBan Bouse and lot on Whte street... 9 CO Anderson, Mary Property on Beacb street 110 Bennett, Amos House and lot on tbe south sde 'of Stout street 440 Bussell, Elzabeth (estate) Property on the east sde of Rversde avenue..' Beldp, Jenute Property on Central avenuo 2 75 Burdge, Wllam Lot on the north sdeof Beach street Clayton, Rebecca House and lot on tho west sde ol Shrewsbury avenue "380 Carson, Charles (estate). ' House and lot on tbe west sldt of Ralroadavenue 2 20 Cocran, Mr. ',, *» Two lots on the south sde of Catberlno street Carney, Samuel Property on Central avenuo : 2 75 Coach. Danel House and lot on the east sde of Central avenuo 4 40 Carroll, John House and lot on the south sde of Rver street 3 Chandler, Sarah House and lot on tho west sde of Sprng street 3 Dorsett, E. M. Stores and buldngs on the south sde of Monmouth street Davdson, Margaret Property : 4 40 Decker, Wllam Lot on Lelghton avenue 83 Denns, Elzabeth House and lot on Rver street 4 40 Dey, Ella E. House and lot on Brldgeavenuo 2 75 Davdson. Hutchlnson Hero you can HousunndlotonPearlstreet.A Eustls, Mry E. House nnd lot on the north sldo of Bordonstrept Ferguson, L. nnd S. House and lot on tho west sde of Broad street Fourt, Srs. John H. House nnd lot on tho north Ddo ol Monmouth street....; ' Flemnlng, Mchael (estate) Propertyon the enstsldoof Pearlstrcet Cordon, Joseph (estate) llouso and lot on tho west sldo of Maple avenue 1100 Grovor. J. C Property on the corner of Locust and Lelghton avenues 138 flrlmn, m, Chrstan Chrlstln (ea) (esnto) House and lot on Central avenuo 8 75 flreen. Denns House nnd lot on Bench street 5 50 Hnd, Mry E. Property on Brnncl avenuo 4 40 HolTmlro. (. 8. Property 2 75 Hurley, Azurlal Homo and lot on Brldgo avenuo 5 50 lonlrckson, Meta Houso and lot on Pearl streot 1 88 loles,.to»t"ph Houso and lot on west Hde of Central uveuo 2 75 Hurtlng. Albert property m Bench street 2 76 llnyond. t.,. Property on Locmt nvenue ) 30 llcly.''tomuh Homo nnl lot on llm north Hde c f Dunk ntumt \ 4 40 Hnllll'H, Nllw HoHK mll ;>t on central nvemu! 2 S) UOCH, MKWU 'mcrty on north Hldo of Hlout stltol Hnckfltt, Putrl* Property on lvnrl ft.nwt 2 20 Hckntt, MorrH 1'rolHH'ty on Pml Hlvnt Jhmon. Hrl llpum) unt lot m the H ll" of Clcnttlllt HllTCt Jolmon, Anlnvv mll lot on M oth Hllo ot nry nvnn l, llou anl lot on llkoullnllut lleurl ntrnt 11(1 )o)m>,.lm' )l ('ltjlo > llom unt lot on WontHrel JnlTrey,,lolll llonn md lt m Uo cant M nf M 'l ut'l a 75 lcluhll..llllll Krl'n nnd lthm tlu north Hlleof Wall tlrt 1125 lellv,.hn.-, H) anl lot on Mm notl Rllo of 'll'. <lnn»'".' H lel'mr. Ml:l..nllll HMml lut m llhrmvlnv HVCK,., OCO ufburrow, John House and lot on the north sde of Wallace street Leddy. Thomas (agent) Houso and lot on the east sde of Prospectavenue 8 80'. Manson, Lews - Bouse and lot on the north sde of Oakland street 560 Marsdon, Mrs. George F. House and lot on the north sde of Front street Mullgan, Jula (estate) Property on Wall street 3 CO Hanson, Frank Property on the south sde of Oakland street : 220 Morrs, Jula 1 Property on Central avenue 1 05 Mytzongen. F. B. Property on Locust avenue 4 40 Morgan, George * Propertyon the south sde of Front street ' Malancey, Margaret E. Property on Herbert street 275 McClaskej, Ogden McDernott.'Mrs. John Property Houso and on lot Lepnard on Blverstreet McQueen, A. L. and Lyda. Property on the west sde of Shrewsbury avenuo 275 McMahon, Mory A. Brck bulldngon the south sde of Front street McHenry.J. Property on tlver street 4 40 Nepean, Henry Property OD Cedar street 2 75 Patterson, Catherne PropertyonBrdgeavenuo...'!> C 60 Pearaall, John Lot on Cotherlno street 1 10 Red. Thomas lestatc). House and lot on tbo south sde ojmonmoutl street... ' 1100 Ross. Wllam B. Property on Leonnrd street 4 40 Relly, Joseph Lot on Shrewsbury avenuo t. 138 Rolly, Ms. George House nnd lot en the east sde of Wllow street 275 Ross, Thomas Pronerty on tbe north sde of Herbert street 4 40 Revey, Susan Georgo Ray property on Central nvenuo 2 20 ttuvatt, VVllnm Lot en Leonard street Shcehan. Jula House nnd lot on tho nortl sldo of Oakland street 0BO Sabath, Amelln Two lots on tho cornor of Pearl and Beach streets..'., 105 Bcott, Kbenozer Property on Locust avenuo chultz, Frank Houso and lot on tho east sldo of South street 1100 Smth. Mary J. Lots on Herbert street Smth, Aneata House nnd lot on Herbort streot 3 85 Sclmnck. Emma Homo.nnd Property on lot Lolghton on tho south nvonuo sde of Chestnut Mrs. Btreet Harvy : 5 50» 30 Tllton, Lot on LclKlton nvanua Tllton. Harry Ht Tllton, Jnncs L. Lot at tho corner (f CntlcrlnoHtreet and Lelghton uvenuo 1!)" Tlero, Mm, A.J. Howe nnd properly on tlm west Hllo ot trohlvonuo Thompson, J. P. (eatat<?) HoHond lot on tho went Mlln uf Ontnl WOB '. ll) Van Wnkle, Mrs. Htuphen Property on llranch nvonuo 4 40 Yll't, John S SO OUK) nnd lot on the. cunt nldu ot Proa- Vnntanw, VVn " 2(1 l'ronwty on llrhlgn nvomo 440 Sloek, lmlrey 2 7/1 Pn M'rty 'rty nn JO n vcn nvc Vnlldvec', ll Mr«. J. V. n 7r> ll B) Hlot rumrty t nn tlm HOU H of Went r> 5 'nmt Hlnet, Whle, AP. HOM md lot on llm Houtl nllo of (lold Htrmt,, 276 Wolrotl, Hnml llohunnl lot m ll nul, H of llrnel vn H9 Wlhur, Arn«l l'n Hrly, 15 8(1 vvnv. KtaM't, nnl lot m llrl1(n v'o 00 HllllH llllll llt ( llllmkhllrllltl! ll llnl'm Hlvnt, 5 Ml VVthlKt, Wenl'v Hull,n mll nt on llomlll nll" nf llwll W't '' Tt> f ln lux, nl'nt ll'l 'lnln ml m bfrn " llmvn nlnlnl lnynf mll', H" cunln n null cnfuvlll wfl.:;.n,'. mll lnl«r'nl wll lhnll<lttle, nlof welvo p<rrmlun p'mlllu fru llntw'lhllltny Of llrr'mller. nl" llllllflll l>l llt llllllllnl mll lllll'ly-hll, T llm lux, nlcr'nt unt rmlfl nn not >«ll untl rm 1 llm nlmn> M'lln'l lny nf nln, lullllll nmlfl wll H tnl., Kh»Z' h vm nl ul llm lux, nlm't pnt con n nv l» nll nt nny lmn n.vlun n llm p;l" n 'l/entnn,' Wlll', Tr'mer of 111" mld nwl f t't llk, who n H l/>«l n nrotpt. for H" lnn. / When tlm wnnkn plnrn,»]r<tf nl lnm>n, nmtn Hnt nlnm nlnt m unt ly ll nlf < mtnn llm 'omlnnl nf llm wld. nllm'whn llm rn nrly wlll.ln llnty nrnll, (Vtln-nn my hnl (tlnnnv<'l! <l»y (>f H' >lt<l<)l>»t'> n ""' Jru'f /r l^ll vm tln'ul 0 )ll nlul nm ln'y-m'v 1!), JAMUS.WAT.HH, Mnr«lm,

15 PULLEY BLOCKS. Zots of Them Used on Land Xoca- days as Well as on the Ocean. PvjS?? blocks wsrs formerly made wth a rope etrup placed around the block on the outsde. Now, n wooden blocks, the strap s made of ron, and s placed nsde the shell. Many very largo blocks and great numbers of very Emal ones are now mode entrely of ron. There are fewer deep water shps than there were, ther place havng been taken largely by steam vessels and therefore fewer blocks are re- 1 qured to supply the demand, but great numbers nre requred for! the coastng fleets and yachts. Wthn comparatvely recent years the use of pulley blocks on land has ncreased enormously, so that the aggregate consumpton of blocks contnues very large. ' Wooden blocks ore made most commonly wth an ash shell and lgnum vtre. ^ sheaves; n 6naller and medum szed blocks the shell also s sometmes made of lgnum vto. The use of wre rope n derrcks s famlar. ' Wre halyards aro now used to eone extent on yachts, as well as wre standng rggng, and whore such halyards aro used metal sheaves are substtuted for those of wood. The blocks of a bg, heavly sparred steam yacht, say barkentne rgged, mght cost $1,600. On the great number of salboats and small yachts there aro used many lttle blocks of galvanzed ron. < On shore there are now used n ctes mmense numbers of lttle blocks for pulley lnes for dryng, clothes. Such blocks ore made of ron and of wood n varous styles. n a olty lke New York hundreds of thousands of such blocks are n use The demand for the very largest of blocks for land use hab also grown wthn very recent years, such blooks beng now used very extensvely on the heavy derrcks employed, n the constructon of the tall modern buldngs. Bg blocks used on derrcks wth manlla rope are made wth wooden Bhells and ron sheaves. Blocks used wth wre rope are all ron. The uso of ron blocks s ncreasng. The great wooden blocks aro made up to 10 nches n length. ron blocks are mode up to 17 nches and sometmes to order stll larger»*-» ' TERRERS HARD TO DOSE. Doctor Would Rather Tree dog ttan One of T/^ "Gve'me any dog to treat but W $ terrer," sad Dr. Rudolph B. Plagcffan, the canno specalst, the other day. "They not only aro gettng nto trouble all the tme, but they aro harder to got out of t than all the other dogs combned. They are BO quck and wry and nervous that t s almost mpossble to perform any surgcal operaton on thorn, and even when you. thnk you have got them where they can do no harm they wll wrggle and squrm around untl, tho frst thng you know, they have your hand or arm between ther teeth and before they let go you know that they have been there. had rather set a broken leg for a buudog or a mastff than treat one of those terrers for ndgeston, a complant, by the way/ whch seldom troubles them. "Tho best dogs to treat n sckness or for an accdent aro the French poodles. They aro w$er n the frst placo than most men, and they havo both the sand and tho senso to submt to treatment wthout makng a row about t. "Not to tho poodle, consder tho rsh terrlor tho most tractable Ho s, to bo sure,, of much tho sano temperament as tho fox terrer, but ho s moro kndly dsposed and s not'contlnually lookng upon you as nn enemy. "Speakng of fox terrers, t s a ourloua thng how tho styles n them havo changed n tho lost few years. t s not so long ago that tho flat, broad skull, wth tho ears lyng closoly aganst t, was tho only permssble thng. Now a prze wnner has a skull round and narrow, wth ears droopng down to the sde of t. And tho coat s all dfferent.now. nstead of beng comparatvely thn and soft, tho am la tomnko t as thlok as possble. f they keep on, they wll ovolvo tho torrler nto a Btaghound." Nervous Chldren. Nervous ohlldren wll not bear very nmot oold bathng. Thoy havo not got heat enough n ther bodes to renct aganst t. Do not demand too much oxorcso from them. Do not lot thom study too much or go to school too early. Of courso ther mnds must bo pleasantly employed, and tho kndergarten may bo avallablo after thoy aro 8 yunru old. Cultvate n thom a love of naturo and outdoor llfo, especally n pleasant weather. Ths 1B tho truo, grand kndergarten. Do not forgot thoy need companonshp. Qvo thom u good, oomfortablo bed, whoro tho ar H pure, and do nl you can to promote healthful slcop. A llttlo easly dgested food buforo bedtme often helps thom to sleep noro soundly than thoy otherwse* would. ' - - Hs Causo for Rcgrot An old Scotchman who luul boon a long tno n tho COOOH pad a vst to ln "nntlvo «'«'»>" am, mootng nn old, sohoolfullow, thuy Rat down to havo a clmt about old tlm and acquantance!). n tho UOU'HOofoonvcwtlon tho Hlrmgor hppuncl to lnk nlout a certan Guordlo Mo- Kay. "HO'H (le.'l loff jro," nn 111 llfl frlod, "and 'll nvrr cuato rogrulnjj hm OH OUK H. llvo." "l)cn'r mol Hud you nuoh n rfpoot for hm an Mnt?" "N ml t vvhm 1 ony rnupcot"! wwl f( r H', l t 1 mr'lcl lla wdow." An UMlorntandln; Roaohod. "lllfc our ttrntkl wul," mtltv thn nlmdor you>({ man from tho unlt, an ho jmltuol for umonl. n hll KK><K to allow tl«fro/m drophf ('r ln»tl(n to r/tllo nk) l,lm<lntn, "c;:)nnk'hkvu of our nlur, tlml, nn fur (n Mm work (f. (llkklk ur WNK out H K»ld WU wnwrnwl, oold tnlm ny clul'"." "Yw v lw," mld Klonlll" Kt, w hn Moopor n mhlfnl of rtkkort trom lo pun, " wllj'f (Kuld l«ho yur pnk." AboxHl«rlllo. n vtry hmly tontrlvfteo for llltur blllr), lotlor, *(o,, 17 oonta, at John l{, Cool't. Tlm nnmn He wth ftnlrortgw mlojt, 8D con\».-~ady. DVSON OF THE HULL. The Earlv Vse of Water Tloht BllheadH n Stlps. The dvson of a hull of a vessel nto compartments s of a more dstant perod than s generally supposed. As early as the begnnng of the nneteenth century the Ohnesedvlded tho holds of ther tradng vessels ntended, for dstant waters nto a number of smaller holds or spaces. Those compartments were separated by parttons, or bulkhpads, made of' three nch planks and calked wth a gum that was mxed wth lme and threads of bam- "boo-r-a composton that readly hardened when brought nto contact wth Water; The number of compartments depended upon the number of owners n the vessel. Ta largo vessel there were sometmes as many as 100, each partner shppng hs goods n hs own berth, whch he ftted up to sut hmself, and ether^went n person pr sent one of hs famly to take charge of hs property. At just'what tme ths dvson of the hull was frst adopted doeb not appear to have been recorded. ; t may have, been very old at the perod named. Tho compartments, t wll be seen, wero made for commercal economy rather than for the safety of the vessel " Use of bulkheads for safety purposes was probably frst made n the western rvers of.tho Unted States. As early as 1820, not ten years after tho ntroducton of steam navgaton on the Msssspp and- Oho rvers by Robert Fulton, the hull of the steamboat Columbus, runnng between New ADrleanB and Shppngport, Ky., was torn open by a snag, but the.vessel was "saved from snkng by havng a snagroom, whch apartment alone was fllle wth water." The Caledona, runnng on tho Msssspp rver n 1824, also had a snagroom. Pror to the year 1849, of 786 vessels lost from all causes on tho western Amercan rvers 419 were lost from snngs and other obstructons n tho rvers. No doubt the danger n navgatng these rvers s what brought the snagroom or chamber nto use, though f they were as rudely and cheaply constructed as many of these vessels themsolves were at ths early perod, they could hardly be reled on n many cases, and ths may account for the fact that they dd not come nto more general OPE READ'S MENTALTY. la nformaton Covers an Astonshng Range of Subjects. Wllam Lghtfoot Vlsscher has an nterestng artcle about Opo Bead, the novelst, n The Woman's Homo Companon, n tho course of whch ho says: "Those who read Oplo Bead's books may thnk they have some dea of the man's mentalty, but t cannot bo obtant n that way. One must bo personally fccquanted wth hm. Ho s one of tho most nterestng conversatonalsts to be met n a lfetme. Assocaton wth hm s a lterary school, and yet ho does not 'talk sljpp.' He seems to have read everythng and romem bored t. Ho shows ths n hs everyday conversaton and wthout the slghtest pedantry or affectaton. No matter what tho subject under consderaton, ho talks of t, glbly and wlsoly, from tho.standpont of those who have made t a study, seasoned wth common senso and logo. He s not a poltcan, on the contrary, rntherdlslkes poltcal affars, but ho talks of such matters wth a clearness, strength and sprt that would lead you to beleve ho had mode a specal study of partos, ther mon and measures of centures and that he was altogether a past master of poltcal economy. t s a part of tho man's wdo currculum. He s entrely at homo n what s best for ono to eat and s versed n hygene, but he suffers from ndgeston. Ho s nformed upon the conventonaltes of hgh llfo and yet avods conventonal socety. He gves strong reasons for pessmsm, and yet ho s a practcal optmst. Ho loves lterature, but would not allow tho greatest author n the world to read a manusorpt to hm. He s actually more fond of muso than any other man ever Baw and knows not a note of t, though ho wll catch an ar tho frst tme he hears t Ho loves art, especally n pantng, but ho doesn't even wrte a good hand. Ho s an ardent ndmlrer of women, but does not dance attendance upon them; Wthal he la great n body, mnd and soul." Face Treatment. ^ Hero aro drectons for a good face baw, or "shampoo," tho offect on tho skn beng most grutfylng, t 1B sad: Rub pure, fne soap on a sponge, addng soveral drops of bost tolet glycern. Prevously dp tho Bpongo n hot wator. Rub tho face and nock softly wth tho spongo untl tho skn s covered wth tho soothng lather. Thon tako almond meal and rub t n untl fnco and nock nro perfectly dry. Wnsh oft nt oco n hot water that has hal a toaspoonfnl of powdered borax dssolved n t. Noxt batho or spray wth cold water untl tho flesh fools cold and frm, dually dryng by buryng tho face n n soft (lamsl; towul. A tvwpoonful of good cologne Rhould bo n thu cold spray. Vapors From Metals.,f( Hoojtfop (fj,kk!]jq<lu\ prj. u,\\ot5 H.n.vo n j 5" un uolo op U m u t] RU>3OH?» 1 P ) ( m H.)»ut o pm n o oonp -OJl () (Mlt]1M)(llln AU) ft* OAO 40(1 VA jjo o\ H,\\ onyx, %\\\% \t\\m n\ j H j»h» OM! dn n A*m o «uflnoq 'nxuu.t upp.» (u]j «)) u n tth O Ol.tt \lj AtllMK 01(1 <r\ lh>aft< (top ( H MOllMA jj<> AV(M ' '" H )l)t1ll (JUUJ, An mpatent Guont. At old of tho Mcllnnn hntnls, loved by H rr<u twnf>r t Hoclntlon), n plto of lux um {()nt, u new K-nt (lonad- M n lall. "My denr nlr,'" mld tlu propretor, "unt your wo RW lavo Uyo of tho fluent mll HW n ul H<l MthrootM on,h» Mlnl." "Hut,," oljrotwl thu (fml, " want n lnt.l thn year," ' " ' nl durng my rtnovul nlc nt 7 ront.f ((>$( Thn T-o'toncnntof wood, wth plouro on tlon, nmnr) moro for (hlllr<!'n unn tlmu for nrlml ply. John. (hok.-mv. Notce Notce s hereby gven that uu electon wll be held under the laws of ths state for Surrogate anfl three Assemblymen on Tuesday, November 2d; 1891; Polls wll Open at 6 A. M. and Close at 7 P.M. The places of holdng the electon n the varous dstrcts n Shrewsbury townshp nre: EASEBr DSTllTCX, Francs A.^ Lttle's, Far Haven. MDDE VSTJtZCT, Naveslnk Hook and Ladder Company's Buldng on Mechanc Street, Red Hank.... WESTERN JDSTXCT, TownBhlp Hall, on Monmouth Street, at Red Bank. WEST JEJ> BANK DSTJCT, Unon Hose Company's Buldng on Shrewsbury Avenue. S DSBCT, Charles B. Hurley's Shop nt Shrewsbury. * A.C.HARRSON, Townshp Clerk. TN CHANCERY OF NEW JEESEY. A NOTCE TO ABSENT DEFENDANTS. To Hulett Robnson atad Adde Robnson, hls'wlfe; Jeremah Robnson ana Agnes Robnson, hs wfe, Wlllett Robluson and Augusta Robnson*, bs wle, Fanne Raynor and Morrson J. Unvnor, her husband. Ella Smth and George Smth, her husband, Frank Hubet Bose and Llle Rose, hs wfe, and srael M. R.n<se. By vrtue of an order of the Court of Chancery of New Jersey, mode on the day of the date hereof, n a cause wheren Eunce C. llurekley s complanant and you and others are defendants, you are requred to appear.'plead, answer or demur to the bll of sad complant, on or before the SEVENTH DAY OF DE- OEMBER next, or the sad bll wll be taken as confessed aganst you. The sad Bll 1B Bled to foreclose a mortgage gven by Ellen S. SanboruandAblsha A.sanborn, her husband, to John J. Tyler, bearng date Aprl nneteenth, eghteen hundred and blxty-nlne, on lands on the townshp of Mddletown, Monmouth county, Now Jersey, at Llncrott. And you, Hulett Robnson, Jeremah Robnson, and Wlllett Robnson, are made defendants because t s alleged n sad bll that you are brothers of Ellen S. Sanborn, deceased, who ded sezed of sad lands, and are enttled to an undvded nterest n the same. And you, Fanne Ravnor, are made a defendant because t.ls alleged n sad bll that you are aslsler of Ellen S. Sanborn, deceased, who ded sezed of sad lands, add ore enttled to an undvded nterest n the same. And you, Ella Smth and and Frank Hubert Rose are made defendants because t s alleged n sad bll that you are the chldren of Elzabeth Rose, deceased, who was a sster of Ellen S. Sanborn, deceased, whn ded sezed of the sad lands, and that you are enttled to an undvded nterest D the same. And you, Addle Robnson, are made a defendant because tls alleged n sad bll that you are the wfe of Hulett Robnson; and yon. Agnes Robnson, are made a defendant because t s alleged n sad bll that you are the wfe of Jeremah Robnson; and you, Augusta Robnson, are made a defendant because t s alleged n salrl bll that you are the wfe of Wllett Robnson; and you, Llle Rose, are made a defendant because.t s alleged n sad bll that you ate the wfe of Frank Hubert Rose, and are enttled to nchoate rghts of dower n sad lands. And you, Morrson J. Raynor. are made a defendant because t s alleged n sad bll that you are the husband of Fanne Raynor; and you, George Smth, aro mado a defendant because t s alleged n sad bll that you are tho husband of Ella Smth, and clam an nterest n sad lands by the courtesy ntate; and you, srael M. Rose, are made a defendaut because t s alleged n sad bll that you were the husband of Elzabeth Rose, deceased, and hy vrtue thereof may clam some nterest n sad lands. CHARLES H. VN8, Solctur of Complanant, Posoulce address, Red Bank, N. J. Dated October 8th, S PECAL. MASTER'S SALE. By vrtue ol a decree of tho Court of Chancery of Now Jersey, maoe on the second day of March. A. D. eghteen hundred and nnety-seven. n a certan cause theren dependng, wheren Thomas M. Stnt ' s complanant and Dela A. Smth and others ar defendants, the subscrber, one ot the specal mas-' ters of sad Court, wll expose to sale at publc ven due, to the hghest bkler.on THURSDAY, OCTO BER 28TH, A. D , letween the bours of 12 o'clock noon and S o'clock n the afternoon, to wt, at 2 o'clock la the.afternoon' of sad day, on the premses herenafter frst descrbed. n the townshp ot Manalapan, County of Monmouth and State of New Jersey, all the followng descrbed lands and premses, to wt: All that certan farm, tract or parcel of land and premses, stuate, lyng and beng n the Townshp of Mnnalopan, n the County of Monmouth and State ot New Jesey, lyng on the notb and south sdes of the Turnpke road leadng from Freehold to Mannla'pan, and bounded on the north by lands of J. 13. treld and Mnrgnrct Sherman, on the south by ladds ol Dr. A. P. Fnrdon, on the east by lands of Dr. A. P. Fnrdon and Mnrgare Sherman, and on the west by lands of Wllam Adamst and others, contanng one hundred null sxty acres, more or less... Also a certan tract of woodland, stunto. Jysfr and beng n the Townshp of Mllstone, n the County of Monmouth nml State of New Jersoy, adjonng lands of Pdcr Formnn and others, contanng about twenty-four acres. Together wth all n) sngular tho heredtaments and appurtenances to llu> sad premses belongng or n anywse appertanng. Condtons made known on day of sale. FRANK P. McDEKMOTT, Specal Master n Cbanoory. J08BM MCDERMOTT, Sol'r, [gu.30] OPECAL MASTE'S SALE OF REAL O ESTATE. By vrtue of a decree or the Court of Chancery of Now Jersey, made on tlu sxth day ot October, A. D. elrhtron hundred nnl nlnoty-soveh. n a certan cause theren dependng, wheren Andrew C. Cottroll n complanant, ml 'ntlcnco A. Cotlrall, Mnry A, Coltroll and others nro Mondante. tho subscrber, ono of tho Specal Musters of sad court, wll cxposo to mlo at publc venlnc. to tho hghest bdder, on MONDAY, THE TWKNTY-8ECOND DAY OF NO- VEMUKK. A. ). 1H>r. between tho hours of S o'clock noon and r> o'clock n tho afternoon, lo wt, at a o'clock nllu'fl'nooof sad tny, at. tn Ulolo hotel, n the tnvu of t'd luk, n the Town fllp of Mrowslury. county of Monnnull, mll (lo of N«w Jetwv, nl HD follovlns (hwrler nntls nml premses, " wt: Tho lmmesu'ul lvn nf James. Cotlroll. de- COUH', slumu n tlu tmvnwlll) of Marlboro, n tlm 'o.umy ot Mnnnnll ""' HtaU of New Jersey; xltlcl Hrthwrd y nnl of vvllnn Morgnn formerly, now Mlclmcl 1'fl, no culled, nnl of UnvlK (nntn; suuhwml by land of John 1). locn; wuawnnl by nml >f Slncy *. COOVT anl ty a publc nml rnnmnly culled thu plunk mn cllmlu Mlwn nml Kcvnnrt, c ntnlnlng nl l Aha u dwellng OUHC amlhtom l l l f aftnfunnrodlm g OUHC amlhtom nnl lot of nnl H' DTno lmall Cnnly of Mdoth. nml mulrl m'thwtnl by the puhllo nml cmlhur from Or'nln vlllnm tl led llnnk: (Htmrd by Hecmllr't m wll-l; Bonllwurd by uotler lot f lmlof wll JCH. Cotlt'll; nml w-slwmlby lot. <>r nml <>r Jenln, Coltroll; nml K-DK lrty-slx rcl wllnfnmtol tlu Octnlo lonl. md lno b'l nml ll'ly (>'et»lx ncl'n lon'n Hc'nl mrccl. Am ltm Unt lolnf nml Hlltnt) n nconl: afnrcml, hnld mllwrl y Urn nfonwll lot n( ntnl. anl by ht of.nk, (Vlt'll. nml by lot ol Wlllln. lwle w cllml. cnntwnl bv Kocdrul HtrtMt m cll'l; -unt'.v<l by lunl of (llbnon m cnll l; nml h'lnr Hv [ent wlln on tho mld Hr.nd nlrulurn) ODD lundu'd mll lxlv-'vn (not lonu nr d'c, l'lnllk Uu' 'Mnt anl nlnr nt n WT of tlm l'f'lnnl, 'nll' A. Cttr'll wllow), ol (n' mll Ju'. 'lllr'h, l»t«rl, n nl fn)d K nml mll nlnlr; nml hu nclullnu thn lrhnl llkht of luw' of l'f'llnnt, Mllvln Cotlnll. wlfnor (ltrr'ltcltnll l-nln; ml HO ncl'lu/f tlm 'lol) ll/ll of dower of mll.lemln Colt'll lrrlu; (tg'llcr wlllmll nml nlnnulnr l' h'mllln'ln md )l''n('n n tlm untl nuln mll r'ullu KU or n wy wlno ll nc. C<nlltl(r«nuln knwn 'll ltr nt wle. (AH.F.H 11. VN, H n>«lnl MaaUr (l t. ArfJHl 1 EW YORK AND LONG BRANCH l BALBOAD. Statons n New York: Central B. E. of New J«r sey, foot of Lberty Street, and foot of Whtehall Street (South Ferry Termnal); Pennsylvana R. R., foot of Cortlandt Street, Desbrosses Street, and West 23d Street Staton. On and after October 9th, 1897, TRANS LEAVE BED BANK. For New York. Newark and Elzabeth, *7 08, *718, *819 (except Newark and Elzabeth). *8 28, 8 43», 9 43, *1180, 1140 a. m.; 143, 215,435, 6 03, 7 (18 p. m. Sundays, 803, a.m.;415, 6 00 and»7 60 p. m. For Long Branch, Ocean Grove, Anbury Park and ntermedate statons to Pont PeaBant, 1JJO, 0 25, 0&1, 10 88, a.m.;. 1247, 140, 257, , 0 S, 7 07,.7 40 p.m. Sundays, 10 3«, 1120 'a.m.; 5 27,6 47 p.m. Sunday trans do not stop at Ocean Grove and Asbury Park. FOR FREEHOLD VA MATAWAN. Leave Red Bank (Sundays excepted), 8 28,1140a.m.; 143, 135. «03p.m. TRANS LEAVE NEW YORK. Foot of Lberty street, 130, 8 80,11 HOa.'m.; 130, 145*,415,440*,538,015p.m. Sundays, 900, 1015 a. m.: 4 00 p. n. Foot of Whtehall street (South Ferry termnal),' 8 25, 1125 a. n.; " ,»25, 525, 555p.m. Sundays, 8 55, *9 55 u. m.; 3 55 p. m. Foot of Desbrosses and Cortlandt streets, 010 a. m.: 1210, 3 40*, 510*, 1150 p.m. Sundays, 015 a.m.: 515 p.m.. - West Twenty-thrd Btreet staton, 865,1155 a.m.; 316*,455*, 1125 p. m. Sundays, 0 25 a. m.; 455p.m. TRANS LEAVE FREEHOLD. (Sundays excepted), 815,1115 a.m.; 21)0, , p.m. For further partculars see tme tables at statons. Denotes express trans. J. t. WOOD, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Penn. R. B. H. P. BALDWN, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Central t. R. of N. J. RUFUS BLODGETT, Superntendent, N. Y. and L. B. R. R. PENNSYLVANA RALROAD COM- L PANY. Qqynd after October 5th. 1897, TRANS WLL LEAVE RED BANK For New York, 7 08,8 43,9 43 a. m.; 143,0 03 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; U 06 p. m. " Newark, 708, 843, 943 a. m.; 113, 803 p.m. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; 6 00 p. m. " Elzabeth, 708, 8 43, 9 43 a. m.; 143,0 03 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.: 6 06 p. m " Kahway. 7 08, 0 43 a. m.; 143, 6 03 p. m. Sundays, 0 43 a. m.; 6 06 p. n. " Woodbrdge, 9 43 a. m.; 143,8 03 p. m. Sundays, a. m.; 0 06 p. m. " Perth Amboy, 143, B 03 p. m. Sundays, 8 43 a, m.: OOOp. m. " South Amboy, B 43 a.m.; 143, 6 03 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; 6 OS p. m. " Matawan, 7 08,9 43 a. m.; 143, 6 03 p.m. Sundavs. 943 a.m.; 606p. m. " Mddletown, 9 43 a.m.; 143,6 03 p.m. Sundays, 913 a.m.; 6 OS p.m. " Phladelpha a d Trenton, connectng at Kahway, 7 B, 943a. m.; 143,003p.m. Sundays, 943a.m.; 608p.m. " Long Branch, Pont Pleasant and ntermedate statons, f 05, 907,1038, U 20 a. m.; 140, p. m, Sundays, 1120 a. m.; 6 47 p.m. (Do not stop at Asbury Park or ocean Grove on Sundays.) " Toms Rver, Bay Head and ntermedate statons, 110 p.m. (week days). Trans leave Phladelpha. Broad street (va Eah- ' way), for Red Bank, at 6 50,883 a.m., 4 00 and 1100 p.m., week days. TRANS LEAVE NEW YORK, For Red Bank from West Twenty-thrd street staton, 855, 1155 a.m.; 316, 455, 1125 p.m. Sundays 9 25 a. m.; 4 55 p.m. Desbrosses and Cortlandt street ferres. For Red Bank, fl 10 a. m.; 1210, 3 40, 510,1150 p. m Ṡundays, 9 45 a. m.; 515 p. m. J. B. HUTCHNSON, J. B. WOOD, General Manager. Gen. Passenger Agent. October and November, Merchants' Steamloat Copj's Lne. Shrewsbury, Hghlands,.'Hghland Beach, Oceanc, Locust Pont, Brown's Dock, Far Haven and BED The strong and commodous steamboat. Capt. J. P. CH/VDWCK, r 24, foot of Frankln Street, New, and led Bank, as follows: Leave Red Bank daly at 7:00 A. 3. (Sundays excepted.) Wll leave New York daly at 2:00 P.M., (Sundays excepted). Connects wth Trolley Cas at ted Bank for Shrewsbury, Eatonown. Long Branch and Belford. EDGAR BROWER, Messenger, N. B. All frelrht ntended lor ths boat must be on the wharf a suffcent length of tme to handle, as she wll postvely leavo promptly on her advertsed tme. Ths boat's tme-table s advertsed n THK Run DANK REGSTER, New Jersey Standard, n\m n the Comlfl HVM Montlor, New York.Sun, Afa<ftc /'n Stcflnbonf Gude and Btllnffcr's GuMe. Tme-tables may bo obblnedat Borden 4 Lonretreet's Prntng Otllce, Red Bank. Excurson Tckets, 50c. SHERFF'S SALE. By vrtue of a O wrt of f. fa. to me drected, ssued out of. tho Crcut Court of the county of Monmouth and State of Now Jersey wll bocxposed to sad at publc vendc, on MONDAY, THE 1st DAY OF NOVEMBER. 18W, between tho hours ot 13 and 5 o'clock (at 2 o'clock), n tho afternoon of sad tny, ut tho Court House, at Freehold, n tho townshp of Freehold, county of'monmoul, New Jersoy.nl tho defendant's rght, ttlo and nterest n and to all that certan tract or parcel of, land and premses herenafter partcularly descrbed, stuate. f lug anl bolng n the townshp ot Shrewsbury, n tho county ot Monmouth and Stato of Now Jersey, at Rd Hunk, Hounded on tlo north by landsof, now or formerly. ). Frances Chlwck, on tho east by Urond Btreet. on th' smth by llrucl street and on the went y H of HO, Allcm. Holzel us the property of John B. Leonard, taken n nx'ctlm at the sut of Th'uloru Klcklcs, md lo besoll by HOUSTON FELDS, Shcrllt.. M. NKVDH, Att'y. Dutcd Scptoler ahh, [Sll.OO] N JOTCE OK SETTLEMENT. ot John 0.1'nrkT, CCCBS. (' u-rant.) Nntlr.> n lcrrlv (lvcn Hnt l; u'cnl.s of the subscrlb'h, ox'cutor nf *nll lcccnsnl, wll m ullld ml Muted by tnt Hnrwl 1, anl r' olcl forn'ltl'n'ltt llkorplulh emlut He rounly uf MnnMth, on ''llllthday, THK H-CON HAY Ob' UKcr.MHKt noxt. KOlll'.tT T. 'AHKKt, AR..H. VrW, H7. TOTTUN OF 8UTTLKMKNT. J r.hlnl'nf Vncent Alleu.dee'M'l. 'Nollcl lenly H'VO Hnt the n''olkof hn mlwrllber, executor of nnll VWH', wll lo dltel nml stnlel by lleflmrodlml r'm'tel lor ftcktellk'ht to tllct l7>lfn»l (lolllt «>f ho Collllyof MnM. on TUKDAY, Tll! K.[()tT:.N'll DAY (K NOVKMKtn't, Hlled HctcnlHT bt, W. r.mn; >. K'll,. "MOT10M Ol' 1 HKTT.KMHNT. KnlnU of llolert Oo, lorunnod. (tnulvunt Ktln.l Nollcn n hereby KVC Mnt dm necoulof lu nulwrllhr, mnlnlnrnlrl of mll lwcnu'l. wll m nllll'lnnl ntntl by tbolllnku, nml KHK'HH lor mttlnet to bn (rpllm o( tlm (Vmtr o( Mmwll, ol TJHMY, Tlllt KUTKCNrl )n uu. 7U, VW. *l\k t). OAUON. APPLEGATE&HCPE, \- COUNSELLOlS AT V LAW, BED BANK, MONMOUTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.' JOHN 8. APPLEGATE. FRED TV. HOPE. E DMUND WLSON, COUNSELLOR AT LAW, (Successor to Nevus & Wlson). RED BANK, N.J. Offces: POST-OFFCE JDLDNO. TmLLAMPNTARD, COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Over Button's Stove Store. RED BANK, N. J. J AMES STEEN, COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Notary Publc and Commssoner of Deeds for New York. EATONTOWN, N. J. "TAC0B SHUTTS, tl AUCTONEER.." Specal attenton gven to sales of farm stock, farm mplements and other personal property. P. O. Address, 8HEEWSBUBY, N. J. ~. TAMES WALSH, O STEAM SAW AND MOLDNG MLL, Manufacturer of Sash and Blnds, MECHANC STREET, RED BANK, N. J. T*HE0. F. WHTE, X REAL ESTATE AND NSURANCE. JUSTCE OF THE PEACE. Hendrckson Block, BED BANE, N. J. Collecton of Blls a specalty. ' D R. R. F. BORDEN, 6DRGEON'DENT8T. MUSC HAL BULDNG, RED BANK, N. J. Partcular attenton gven to the odmlnstratlon of, AMesthetlcs. D R. J. D. THROCKMORTON, DENTAL SURGEON. OFFCE: No. S Broad Street, ' Red Bank, N. J. D R. WM. H. LA WES, JR. VETERNARY SURGEON. Graduate of Amercan Veternary College, N.Y. Resdence: LeroyPlace, Between Broad street and Maple avenue, Bed Bank. D. CHANDLER, ARCHTECT. Stout's Bullrllngr, Opposte Globe Hotel, RKD BANK, NEW JERSEY. nphomas DAVS, JR., JL NSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. FRONT ST., BED BANK, N. J.. (P. O. Box 21.) nsurance placed n the best companes on most reasonable terms. R S. SNYDER. Establshed 1873.' > REAL ESTATE, GENERAL NSURANCE 4 LOAN6 Commssoner of Deeds and Surveyor. Also nsurance Broker for Now York and Vcnty. ATLANTC HGHLANDS, N. J. W U. KURTZ, M. D., C. M., PHYSCAN 1 AND SURGEON, EATONTOWN, N. J. Offce on Broad street, north sde, frst door nest of post-oflce. OFFCE Hocus: 9 to 11 A. M.; 1 to 3,6 to 8p.t, D R. G. F. MARSDEN, HOM(EOPATH0 PHYSCAN AND SURGEON, FRONT STREET, RED BANK, N.J J A8. S. MCCAFFREY, D. V. S. VETERNARY SURGEON. Graduate of Amercan Veternary College. N.Y. Resdence, rvng Street between Broad Street and Maple Avenue, Red Bank, N.J. w M. H. SEELEY, PORT MONMOUTH, NEW JER8EY. Notary Publc. Solders' Vouchers Prepared Blls of Sale for Vessels. A C, HURLEY, SURVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER, 115 Brdge Avenue. ' RED BANK, N. J Wth George Cooper for flftecn years. TtfNGRAVED JD7 WEDDNG NVTATONS AND VSTNG Cards gven specal attenton and executed n th Qrst style of the art. Metal Badg(S and Plates of every descrpton. Stencl Plates, Burnng Brands, Rubber Stamps, Steel Stamps and Seals, Stencl and ndelble nks and Brushes. Des eneraved nod paper stamped plan and n colors. Slverware, Jewelry, vory and Cellulod artcles handsomely engraved. CHARLES EVERDELL, 32 Rlrerslde Avenue, Red Bank, N. J, HOME NSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. Offce: No. 110 Broadway. Eghty-Seventh Semf- Annual Statement,.'apuary, CASH ASSETS '.:! $10,802, ALLARE & SON. AGENTS.^ ESTABLSHED Bed Bonk Beat Eatnle and nanraucfl Agency. 21 Broad Street, Red Bank. Rsks placed n the Home and other frst-class companes at Lowest Rates. P. O. Box 177. ALLARE & SON. specal Notce RELATNG TO USANCES N THE Townshp of Shrewsbury. Nusances wthn tho townshp of Shrewsbury are hereby dellned and declared to be, and they shall nclude and embrace: 1. Tho placng or depostng n or upon any street or alley, or n or upon any publc or prvate property n ths townshp, nny lend nnlmnl or aby purl of De same, or any (lead Ash or any part of the sume, or flth from prves or cesspools or catch basns, or rubbsh of any knd or descrpton, or any louso'or ktchen slops or garbage, nunurnor sweepngs (pro vlded thut stable nmnn unl oler manure mny be used us n fertlzer), or any foul or offensve or obnoxous matter or substance whatever. 2. /ny full or leaky prvy vault, censpool or other receptado for mtl. ;,. AlloHng or penult!n/? nny nhht nol, /rerba(?e or other offensve or decomposng sold or llull mntter or Bbstm'' to leak or mzo from any cart or wnron or vessel n whch the sumo nuy bo convoyed or carred, ' (. Tlo rnrrylfc or rnuwylnpr tlmwl any street any nbslunco whll lnn nvn removed from any prvy vnltorvsspool, unlw tlm mum; slull tn nclosed n ulr-tluhtbt'lh.or u xfectly tlrlt and pmhtly cuvcvl untn. B. All cnrtnk of rurbflko lnmrl ho stvers of the tnvnsblp except lehvcon llu> lohot mnsct ml HX A. M. (. Tm lrnlk of nyllcnrrultlunpo whch slull emt, or cuusn, «r pnlr, nr cum olt any foul, orobmxlos, or olfrthlve. ur hurtful, or tnoyllk KH. fnokn, Kt'm or ulu. 7. Tl''hlltMnllKdrrlnK nto tlm Hhrcwabury or Nnvcnlk, or Snll Hbuwslmry rlvcm, or nto nny Hlrcn n tllnlwnsllp, or (n the bnundnry llr.o H towmll, lny Mlwnco wllcl hm TU renovrl from any vnull, CCNMUO] or Hlnk, or my oftl or nllrr relhe, UH or mlltn, by nny l 'H ur olhenvl'.. Any t ltd nvey mlmou H HVC l-llncd n hereby pollbltml nml rmllll u wthn tlm town- Hll > of SluwHbry, and nny ernon Vlf.rn l- ln(. rumlht, nlnlllnr or Hnnltthx mv o( mld C'K fn'ltl puy n p'ulty ol twmtyllvn lnllnr. Tho nlovo n nnxlmc from HMrlluccHf K 'oulf hrlll of KlrmvHluy tnwnhl, nml (ho nu wll m l'rnlly furced. W. H, WHTMllltl. 'rellnt of HD llol of Hrlll. \.(). HAKHON, H'''lry. O N HULK TO MAR O^KDTOUH. KXKCTOUH 1 NO'l'K':, Athuny llnmml llrluoel'r nml llcl'n., ln Oonlovn, tlm M K n'nldp of Henry (. J.Hrlrovdur, lnnnrl, y drlor (f (n? lrn/ntu ot llm Conty of MnmnHll, ln''uy clvt nolln lo tlm cr'dltorn nf tlm mll lcrmvl n lulftun (mlr lnblfl, lnnnmln nml tn hm n«nlbt tlm ratulo nf unlt d<nonml, m >r <tut)> nr nnnmllut, wthn lm montln [mm hn K.V K.NTCKN 'll DAY OK HEl'- THMlKt, W7, or lmy wll m (TOVT \mm\ (f nny nrllno tlmntfur nfrnltt tbn unlt nrllnut PTUtorn ANTHONY».fl< H>KlUCl, MK.r.NR, >m C'OUDOVA, 't

16 N AND OUT OF TOWN. Short and nterestng tems From all Over the County. Rev. James C. Ellott, formerly pastor of the Keyport Presbyteran churcb, has decded to become an Epscopalan. He wll receve deacon's orders n December and wll be placed n charge of a m6aon church. Bshop Scarborough has apponted Rev. Regnald Woodward to take chargeof St. Mary's Epscopal church at Keyport, n place of Rev. Hanson Bean, who recently resgned., ' *. Mrs. Ella M. Chrste has been elected counclor of Star of Tennent councl of Daughters of Lberty of Englshtown, and Luther V, Dey has been elected secretary. Bartne Newman of Asbury Park has sued John M. Allen of Manasquan for damages resultng from a collson between the wagons of both partes. An exempt frmen's assocaton has been formed at Asbury Park wth seventeen charter members. Halsey E. Wlcox hs been elected presdent. lra. Rachel Gallagher of Asbury Park has been arrested for stealng household lnen from her employer, Mrs Mary J. Parker of the same place. Mara Campbell of Long Branch was arrested last Wednesday for beng drunk and dsorderly and, was sent to the county jal for thrty days. A surprse party was gven to Mss Tlle Marks of Long Branch by about thrty of her frends on Monday nght of last week. Thomas T. W, Hacktuan has been ap ponted a member of the Long Branch fre polce n the place of George M. Chattle. The colored voters of Neptune townshp have formed a non-partsan club to protect ther nterests at comng electons. A surprse party was gven to Mrs, Abraham Huylar of Key port last Wednesday nght, the occason beng her brthday. Norman H. Carley, son of Almon Carley of Long Branch, celebrated hs eghth brthday wth a party one day last week. Durng the month endng October 15th there were eghteen brths, fve deaths and one marrage n Rartan townshp. Charles Bennett of Old Brdge jumped from a movng tran at Matawan a few days ago and was crushed to death. The next meetng of the Classs of Monmouth wll ba held at Keyport on the second Tuesday n Aprl, Mrs. M. H. Jordan of Ocean Grove s serously tck wth congeston of the bran and nervous prostraton. Rev. Robert M. Blackburn wll be n-qualtstalled as pastor of the Long Branch chased by the carload, 2,240 pounds s gven and weght guaranteed. When coal s pur- for a ton. Presbyteran church to-nght. Offce and Yard on Burrowes Street, Edwn L Reed of Branchport has near Central Ralroad Staflou. joned the Long Branch lodge of the Knghts of the Golden Eagle. Charles Patterson of Freehold has a Keffer pear' tree whch s flled wth frut anl s n full blossom. Kate Sassano, who left her home at Long Branch on September 17th, has not snce been heard from. Wllam Tuttle of'long Branch wll go to New York next week, where he has seemed employment. A slght fre occurred n Robert Carsley's house at Keyport last week. But lttlo damage was done. Hew H. H. P. 'Roche of Long Branch s enjoyng u vacaton at Charlottetown, Prnce Edward's sland. A horse belongng to Albert Thompson of MJlBtono townshp broke ts leg and had to be klled. A muscal socety has been organzed at Freehold under the nnum of the Freehold Choral socety. George Murray of Koyport has gone to Gocknway to work nt the oyster busness for the wnter. Lyulo E. Morrs of Freehold s now employed n a. lurgu jewelry storo a Phladelpha. Ma. Mury June, who moved fon Keyport to Flonngton, lst moved bacl to Key port. Edward utclno of Anbury Park dangerously nck and bn recovery doubtful. Tlt 1 re<:.' >ln of llu Long Crunch pout olllco for tlo pt three ollm wen fj>-1,wu.v). M'H. Hnh A. Lme of Freehold, wdov of Stephen Lane, lnn 1 XM- grunted Jcol Uclcley of Mmm< Um pelte rpe HlruvvlerrCH from lw pntel H we-u, Tloum *. Mclvcmof LO; llruncl hllm op'led u law ofllec nl, l,d(o\vood, Tm ('nveent (rnnllc c:lnl> n n ne\ orjrm/.llo n Mlllln townhp, (Jlllllel S. lelll nh novel h; famly from Keyporl, to Kll/.bell,.lohll (llr'o ml fmly of rnnj; (dle lnve moved to lsrnu'll ;. MH Mary Kelelmn of Knnnrjll llfl moved n O'rn drove, Wllam Deloll of Mnqu lu moved to Urndley lleel. \ Unty l.rtvnee of MtHu< M m tov'j n /Ulelnnl. Ulllunvy Jm nl Wll wll reuml oj'll nl wnter, Anythng Electrcal, f you want your store or your bouse wred for electrc lghts. f you want electrc bells put n or electrc bols put n workng order, let me tell you my prce for dong the work. do all sorts of electrcal work and 1 do t quckly, cheaply and well. F. WEBERLNG, 9 Front street. Adjonng Throckmorton's Lumber Yard. RED BANK, N.J. YES, THERE ARE OTHERS, BUT TRY US ON MLLNERY. YOU WLL BE PLEASED WTH THE RESULT. C.. STEPHENSON, 17 BroadStreet, Red Bank, N. J. YES We solct your patronage and wll cater to your w ANTS SHES H1MS. Red Bank Steam Laundry. FRANK C. CRANDALL, New SUCCESSOR TO M. 8. WOODtYAnD, Coal and Wood far! RED, PNK AND WHTE ASH COAL. Branch Offce, Wharf Avenue, opposte Post Offce P. 0. Box 77D, Bed Bank, N. J. HFe J (jst Receved A carload of Furnture from the Luce Manufacturng. Company. Ths s, admttedly one of the best factores n the country. Even the lowest prced peces are put together wth the same care as the fnest.. Suts Range From #11.80 to # A Splendd Assortment of New Carpets. Lowell ngrans, 58c. per Yard. Ssal Lath Yarn, 4 Cents a Pound. Strctly Pure Lnseed OH, 45 Cents a Gallon. 6 Col Xots, 3? Cents a Pound. Atlantc Whte Lead, $5.60 a Hundred. Ev.erythDg Delvered Free Wthn 50 Mles of Red Bank. J.H.PETERS, Red Bank, N. J. TBLEPHO3STB CALL, 5A. My Growng.Busness- n Steel Roofs and Steel Celngs. Durng the past two weeks got two contracts for steel celngs and three contracts for steel roofs. One contract was for a man for whom had done some work n the past. Two of the others were from men to whom had been recommended by men for whom have done work. The.other two came drect from my advertsements n THE REGSTER. Snce the frst of August ths year haye booked more orders than took n durng the entre frst three years was n the steel roofng and celng busness. Each year has been a lttle better than the year whch preceded t, but ths year has been far ahead of any other. attrbute my contnued and ncreasng success to the good work? do, and to the good materals use. have been n the busness long enough to know good roofng sheets and good- celng' plates from poor ones, though to anyone not an expert the good and the poor look alke. add addtonal securty to my personal Jknowl'edge by buyng only from the frms makng the very best materals n the country. f you want a roof that won't leak durng your lfetme, or f you want a steel celng for your house or store, wrte to me. ". DANEL EL COOK, TNTON FALLS,»»»»»»»»»»»»»» Salt Hay. have about 70 tons of choce qualty of Salt Hay and j; Black Grass for- sale that purchased at sherff's sale. <', Wll sell one or more tons at a bargan and wll gve sx J; months'tme on t.< Also a lot of fresh hay purchased the <> same way and wll sell on same condtons. ( - E. BEO"W"1T. OFFCE: Wharf Avenue, neartront Street, RED BANK, NEW JERSEY, "jj»»»»»» )-'';'' t:'! s M 1!K:'<'H*< 1 1 f l :>?' '' C 1.?:'. Fall Goods at Adlem & Cole's. Novelty dress goods stll reman popular, the most desrable colors beng green and brown. We lave goods n all thej varous shades of these colors at prces rangng from 12 cents to a dollar a yard. Taffetas (plan and brocado) for wasts, trmmng, etc., and everythng now n black and plad goods wll bo found here. Never before have wo shown so great a varety or such handsome goods n Cloaks, Capes, Jackets and. Separate Skrts as we are showng Uts Reason, The completeness of our Block guarantees everybody perfect, satsfacton. Wo are glad to show these latest stylos of,goods and garments, and wo do' not want you to feel that n lookng over our stock you thereby are under any oblgaton to buy. Wo lke to do busns, but we want to cell goods only when the buyer feels that she n gettng tlu utmost possble value for her money, ADLEM & COLE, Strout, ' Rod 13ank. r! The Steel Roof Man, x NEW JERSEY. Personal Supervson' of Buldng Work. have now four buldngs n course of constructon. spend part of each day at each buldng, n order that may know exactly the character of the work that s beng done. " When take a contract to buld a house spend enough tme at the buldng to' know that the work s beng done n the very best possble way. There are no " afterclaps " for the owner after he takes possesson. When the work s completed the owner gets a thoroughly well bult structure, whch wll last hm "tll the cows coue home," aa the boys say, when they want to empharze an especally long tme. 'd lke to get some more work, for these four buldngs wll keep me busy only a very few weeks longer. No matter how small the job s, don't' be afrad to ask me to do t; and don't want you to ha afrad to ask m'e when you have a bg job, ether ARTHUR E. SMTH, Far Haven, TloruHlly hmlnl nmln hnfn- ltr hull-n 111" 1 UMllKn fur mlnll. nl llmn nl dm (ndo fnu n MlVlMmn tmv»ahl>. W. ) % New Jersey. JS.Rver Cottage To-Le )( t Collude ol (lo rver, lnn rnum he- Mldelmtl; modern lprovenenl; ;ool wndy nlorc; lne rver vew; trolley cmn ner pronlen. Apply to,.1. TUl'KOK A..KN, Uol Hunk, N. 4, ' 1 0, ta lt)7.

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