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

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1 VOLUME XXL NO. 20. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY/ NOYEMBER 9,1898. PAGES 1 TO' 8. FOSTER M-VOORHBtS WNS, ELECTED GOVERNOR OP NEW JERSEY YESTERDAY. JUonmouth Goes Democratc Wth Tleolore. Aumack Aldad of Hs Tcket The Democratc majorty n the County About 1,200. The; flecton yesterday resulted n general "vctory throughout the country for the'republcans. The swng aganst the party n power n the country, whch always Comes n the mddle of the Presdent's term, was partally neutralzed by the war wth Span, and the effect of the war, n a poltcal sense was heghtened by the determnaton of the, Presdent jto hold on to the Phllpne sland^. '-'The Republcan majorty n the lower house of congress s very much reduced, but t s thought to be suffcently large to gve the Republcans absolute control of natonal legslaton. n New Jersey the Republcans generally won.. 'Poster. Voorhees was elected, governor by a majorty of about 10,000, and the legslature, n both senate and assembly, s strongly Republcan. Ths wll 'ensure a Republcan successor to James Smth, Jr., n the s=enate of the Unted States. Ths new senator wll undoubtedly be John Kean, Jr., of Elzabeth. n. the congressonal fght n New Jersey the Republcans have elected sx out of the eght congressmen. Ths s a Republcan loss of two. The Democrats elected are Joshua Salmon n the Fourth Dstrct, and Wllam F. Daly n the Seventh. The electon n ths congressonal dstrct Was very ckse, but the latest returns, receved at the REGSTER offce at noon to-day ndcated Benjamn.F. Howell's electon over Patrck Convery by about 300. n Monraouth county the Democrats have carred everythng. The three Democratc assemblymen have been elected by majortes rangng from 900 to 1,000, and Theodore Aumack was elected county clerk by a majorty larger than any of the Democratc assemblymen re- 'ceved. The majorty for the Deno-, cratc tcket was less than was predcted by the Democrats, whle the Republcans felt confdent of carryng tho county up to the tme the polls closed. The Democrats expected to have a very large fund of money for buyng votes on electon day, but the Republcans lterally swamped them wth money, n ths part of the county atleast. The electon was generally wthout enthusasm on both sdes untl the last day or two before electon. Nether party had done much prelmnary work, but when the Republcan' money was dstrbuted a day or two before electon, there was an mmedate and a notable ncrease n Republcan actvty. The Republcan workers had generally BeenTnopy, but from noon on Monday to the close of the polls on electon nght there was the utmost energy dsplayed. Shrewsbury townshp was carred for all the Republcan canddates except county clerk. The majortes, however, were very much less than were expected. VoorUees's majorty n the townshp was 144,'<jhlo the Republcan, expectaton was that t would be at lens 250, and from that fgure up. The Republcan assemblymen carred the townshp by an average majorty of about a hundred, whereas more than double that majorty was expected. Theodoro Aumack carred the townshp for county clerk by a majorty of 135, whle the Republcans counted on a majorty of 100. Benjamn F, Howell, tho Republcan canddate for congress carred the townshp by 283. Ths was the hghest majorty receved by any canddate on the Republcan tcket n tho townshp. Tho Republcans n tho townshp had a very large amount of npney for buyng votes, and the Democratc funds wero soon exhausted. Durng the greater part of tho day tho Democrats,had practcally no monoy ut all, and tho Republcans got all tho floatera, except BUC as mght bp porsuudod by tho Democrats to voto ther tcket wthout money. Tho Republcan vote buyers hud realzed tho fnancal condton of ther advcrunrch curly n the day, md when tho polls Closed they were conlldont that they hud carred the townolp by at leant 500. Tho Democrats lkewse beleved that tho Republcan majortes'would reach nearly these fgures. Tho comparatvely ftmull majortes actually receved by tlo Republcan canddato under tho exceptonally favorable, fnancal condtons whch provnlud n tho towmhlp, ndlcatuu that tho topublonn najorltl'h whch ' lmvo boon provnlcntor tlo prnt few ycara can no lonkvr,bu depended on, For tho ltonubloun ucccm n Shrowobury townshp, lmted though t wan, the credt s due more to Wllam H Houston than to any other Republcan. He has been the most actve fgure n campagn all the way through, He has attended most of the meetngs of the county commttee, he has been the-foremost fgure n the prvate consultatons of the party, and whatever prelmnary work n the nature of arrangng fo)y;ettng out the vote was done was due prncpally to hs efforts. Many of the lesser workng Republcans of the Republcan party had pledged ther support to Aumack, and some of them had^even accepted money to help hm n the fght.,when they saw the Republcan money, however, ther promses faded away, and they promptly took all the Republcan money they could get hold of, and became enthusastc supporters of the whole Republcan tcket. Some of those who had prevously been the loudest shouters for Aumack n the townshp became the most earnest vote buyers aganst hm. Wllam H. Houston had charge of the polls for the Republcans n the mddle dstrct, and Mortmer V. Pach was hs assstant there. Mayor O. E. Davs had charge of the western or town hall dstrct. Wth the large amount of Republcan money on hand, a number of the Democratc workers, who had prevously been pad to peddle tckets, were bought off, and they became Republcan workers for the rest of the day. n the town hall dstrct a large number of colored men, perhaps a score n all, were made the workers of the party. Charles Henry vns and James E. Degnan were the leaders of the Democratc forces n the Red Bank pollng places. Charles H. Borden, John Spllaneand E. M. Conk were ther prncpal assstants. Most of the Democratc workers were men who worked wthout pay.' ' ' n the Far Haven dstrct Rufus S. Merrtt was the Republcan leader, and Wllam Curchn and.al. vns were the Democratc representatves). W. Tabor Parker and Jacob C. Shutts locked horns at Shrewsbury, and n the West Red Bank dstrct Ben Lane had charge of the Republcan forces, whle John Sbeehan and James Norman led the Democrats. n the early part of the day, when both partes had money, there was a lttle secrecy about the buyng of votes, and voters were taken n nearby doorways or n neghborng stores when the money was pad over. The entrance to Wllam Mulchow's barber shop was the favo'rte place for takng voters that were bought, when the money was pad them. Toward noon, when the Democratc money was exhausted, the Republcans abandoned all pretence of secrecy, and the-.money was openly pad on the streetsr f the vote buyer and the vote seller were n a crowd, they would turn ther backs to the people who were nearest to them when the money was pad over, but that was as far as any effort was mado to keep the transacton a prvate one. There are a lot of canddates for the Rod Bank postoffce, and Congressman Howell s expected to have the say-so u ths appontment. All the canddates for tle postoffce worked lke nalers for Howell, and each of them s clamng that Howell's bg majorty n the townshp s due to hs'jndvdual efforts. As a matter of fact the majorty Howell receved over the rest of thexjrepublcan tcket was due entrely to the work he ns done for hs dstrct and to the personal frendshps he has made whle lookng after tho welfare of hs dstrct. Ths s the vote of Shrewsbury townahp by dstrcts: FOU OOVKRNOn. Voorheea. Cram. Knstern 140!M!> MlUllo 2U K) Western 801 1(15 Wst Uod Bunk 114 l«buuthoru 174 1M Totals 1,000 8U Voorlces'8 majorty 144 FOl CONOHESB. Howcll. Convn'j/. Euttern b Mlllo!31t» llll) Wmturn Wl 154 W'dsl Hod Unnk 117 1)H [Joutlcn 188 MS TotalH 1,04!) 1)10 HowuU' mnjorlty :»!) KOl COUNTY CLKK. MuDcrmott. Aunnck. Custom 1115 ','M Mlddlo «9 1MB Wctorn ssbh 1KH Wont tud Hunk,,. 1MJ 1117 outlum 117 EJO BOB wn Aumolt'H majorty,. l!!t FOl AHEMH.Y. Vm- Jlulch-WnOlldl.lrom. WlrJtlt, or. lull, llnuer. '.nlcn MS MD»lt KM Mddle M!!H1 H7B 1511 Hll ltll WcnUrn M»l(l SKS Ml 171 1(17 Went Hod lmk. llll ' W lll 1117 Hvutum U7 u7 M7 nu, lot m Totnlf.-;... Ol 1,010 "ow ~MB 15) ~W» Aumack carred Mddlotown townshp by 50 majorty. The Republcans had a majorty on everythng else there. Ths s the vote by dstrct: HOB GOVERNOR. Voorhees. Mlddlctown 193. Port Monmouth... Z24 Atlautlc Hghlands 140 Naveslnk 135 Seasde ; 7D Totals.. ". 773 Voorhees'a majorty, 02' FOE CONGRESS. lowell. Mlddlctown Port Moumouth 258 Atlantc Hghlands 154 Naveslnk 138 Seasde 73 Totals 830 Howell's majorty 105 FOR COUMTY CLERK. JfcDermott. juvuerm Mlddletown 185 Port Monmoutr 207 Atlantc Hghlands. Naveslnk.. 7 ".'.'...'. ]3fl 117 seasde,.; Crane Convery Totals ' Aumack's majorty 60 FOUAS3E11DLY. ' Aumack. 1C Van- Wool- Jletd.Erown.Wckle.Butcler. leu. Beyer. Mlddletown ](B Pt.Monmoutl At.Ufmand3.14O » (1 Navesnk Seasde Totals Eatontown townshp was carred by all thb Democratc canddates. Ths s the vote n detal: FOB GOVERNOR. ' Toorhees. Crane. Eatontown dstrct Ocoanport dstrct Totals ' Crane's majorty. 31 on CONGRESS. Howell. Convery. Eatontown dstrct.'..." !) Oeeanport dstrct ' O Totals Convery's majorty 8 FOR COUNTY CLERK. McDermott. Aumack. Eatontown dstrct Oceanport dstrct Totals.' 223 Aumack's majorty FOU ASSKJBLY... Van ckl.bronn. Wtckle.JlLcher WooUey.nej/er Eatontown.101 1( Oceanport..ll « Tolals., The money condtons whch prevaled n Shrewsbury were the same all over the county. There was no end to the Republcan money anywhere. Ocean townshp gave a lttle-6ver 200 Democratc majorty all through. Ths was a bgger Democratc majorty than the Republcans expected, but t was very much less than Rufus Blodgett had promsed the Democratc managers n the county. n Ocean townshp the respectve sdes were, led by Mr. Blodgett and Wlbur A, Hesley, TJbe UBual Democratc majorty n Ocean s about 275, and whle tle cuttng down of ths majorty a lttle was not much of a vctory for Hesloy, gettng so small a majorty wlen he had promsed so much was a bg defeat for Mr. Blodgett. Neptune-~Kave~a~bg~"mcjorty for the whole Republcan tcket. Ths majorty averages about 700 for the whole tcket, :md s just about what the Republcans of that townshp promsed. Great efforts had been made by the Democrats to capture the colored vote, and almost the whole attenton of the Democrats n thac townshp was devoted to the consderaton of^hs part of the poltcal proramme. Colonel Murrell who for years had been petted and worshpped by the Republcans, was at last found hy them to bo of no value n poltcal campagns and was dscarded, and he then promptly became a Democrat. The result n ths campagn n Neptune shows that he s as worthless to the Democratc party as he has always been to tho Republcan party. Wall townshp was carred by McDerruott for county clerk.jby 25. Crane got 131 majorty n that townshp, and tle rest of the Democratc tcket got about tho same, except that the Democratc assembly canddates ran behnd Crane beeauso of tho popularty of Olver H. Brown. Ths reduced tho majorty of all tho Democratc assemblymen. Howell townshp gave ts usual Democrutc majorty. t guvo 211 for Crane, 184 for Convery, 101 for Aumaok, and about 175 for the Democratc nflsomblyrunn, Joseph L. Butcher, who lves n that towmhp, runnng well ahead of ho other Democratc assemblymen. MllHtono tott-nshp, whoro Peter Foruun was puttng n hs greatest lcks f or tho Republcan party, and CBpcoully aganst Aumack, rewarded hs efforts by gvng about doublo tho usual Donourutlc majorty. Mr. Fornan, lko Colod Murroll, s a weght for any pnrty ;o carry. Tho Democratc) majorty n Mllotono s UHally 40 to 50 j ths year tho majorty rantfod from 07 to 181. Mnnnlapan townshp, whch a a Republcan towmhlp, and n whch town, hp Dr. A, T. Applqguto, ho couuty oolloutor, lvu, gave less than tho uaual.lopubllcun majorty. Ordnarly the townshp s sure for a Republcan majorty of 50. Mr. McDermott has many personal frends n that townshp and he ran a lttle ahead of the rest of hs tcket. Wllam H. Red, one of the Republcan canddates for assembly, s a resdent of the townshp, and he lkewse ran ahead of hs tcket. Voorhees got 8 majorty, Howell 84 and McDermott 35. Tle Republcan majortes on assembly ranged about the same. Upper Freehold gave a Republcan majorty of about 50. Marlboro gave much more than, the U6ual Democratc majorty, Crane got 253 majorty, Convery 203, Aumack 244 and the assembly tcket an-average of 250. Holmdel townshp gave ts usual Dem' ocratc majorty. Crane got 163 majorty, Convery 151, and Aumack 195. The assembly tcket n Holmdel ran remark" ably even. The vote was 241 for Butcher 248 for Woolley, 242 for Heyer, 77 for Red, 78 for Brown, and 76 for Van- Wckle.. Atlantc townshp gave 144 majorty for Crane, 118 for Convery, 84 for Aumack, and an average of 125 for the Democratc assemblymen. Freehold rolled up -the usual Democratc majorty. Crane got 468, Convery 316, Aumack 249 and the Democratc assemblymen about 300. Matawa gave Crane 164 majorty, Convery 123, Aumack'221 and the Democratc assemblymen about 150. Rartan gave Aumack 227 majorty, Howell 27 and Crane 39. The majorty for the Democratc assembly canddates was small, and averaged about 50. fcolored BRETHREN FGHT. Then Get nto a Dapnte Whle Returnng Home From Church. John W. Brown and Frank P. Johnson, both actve members of the colored Methodst church at Hllsde, got n a fght whle comng home from church one nght recently. Durng the scuffle whch followed, Brown receved a long cut n hs leg. Brown had Johnson arrested for cuttng hm wth a razor, but at the hearng whch was held before Justce John Ells on Frday Brown woulfl not swear that Johnson had cut hs leg wth a razor, but sad that he mght have receved the cut on a pece of glass, whle Johnson had hm on the ground poundng hm. Dr. VanMater, who sewed up the wound n Brown's leg, testfed that the cut mght have been made by a glass bottle. Justce Ells fned Brown $1 and Johnson $3 for dsorderly conduct. The costs n the caso amounted to 4.10, and each man pad half. ArWFE BEATES-JN JAL; Wllam T. Wnn Beat Hs Wfe Whle She wan Sck. Wllam T. Wnn of Navesnk s n the county jal awatng the acton of the grand jury charged wth wfe beatng. Wnn has been arrested several tmes for beatng hs wfe, but he has always escaped punshment. Last Saturday nght he came home drunk and began beatng hs wfe. Mrs. Wnn had gven brth to a eon that mornng and she was n a precarous condton. Early next nornng Mrs. Wnn sent for Justce John Ells to come to the house, so that she ould make a complant aganst her husband, as she was unable to leave her bed. Justce Ells went to the houf e, took the voman's complant and ssued a warrant for Wnn's arrest. Wnn was arrested tlo sune day and was commtted to Freehold to awat tho acton of the grand Heart Thn! t Slay Mnterent You. defy competton n my own make of aness. Prce, materal, style and mechansm unsurpassed. All knds of harness and trunk reparng done wth dspatch by tho b>st mechancs n Monmouth county. Moody's Central harness store, 120 West Front street, Red Bunk, N. J. Adv for Sx Cabnet Carboncttct Or $1! for t\velvo Cabnet Crhonettes. Theynre guaranteed to lust as long and juat na good lkeness us f you pad vo dollars. You wll fnd specmens of smno n Duarb & Lelaon's show frameb lt ther door. Adv. Mm. Woatcott wll open a dancng jlrss nt tho town hall. Tuesday evenng, November 15th, at 8 o'clock, TORO deroh of formng a CHH plonno bo prchont, Mrs. E. C. Wettcott, Somervllu, N. J, Adv. tnln-l Mlautt Wanted To llll our ndes' and nnaeu' two clasp dollar kd glovos, one par to jjaoh customer, LlB week for 70 conttf par, all new/froah, cloau ntook, Joseph Salz. Adv. Hand power clppng machne, $10. Blrdmll & Son, Red Dank. Adv. r NEWS FROM M1DDLET0WN, NTERESTNG TEMS PROV BE- YON) THE SHREWSBURY. Oeerfjc JOomlnc: ana Jacob Wurg-.lev Arreatel for Stealng Harness A Drug Store Clanocf* Hands Fancy Chckens Klled by flogs. A short tme ago George Domnck and Jacob Wurzler, both of Atlantc Hghlands, stole a set of buggy harness from Charles Gelhaus. Mr. Gelhaus dscovered the theft and he had the men arrested. The men had a hearng before Justce John Ells last Wednesday and admtted stealng the harness, and told where t could be found. Mr. Gelhaus went to the place and recovered hs property. Both men were held n $100 bal to awat the acton of the grand jury. George B. Tucker became Domnck'a bondsman and Edward Oakes became securty for Wurzler. E. M. Brandt of Atlantc Hghlands has sold hs drug store on Frst avenue at that place to Mr. Matthews, who was formerly employed.as a clerk n the store. The sale was consummated on Frday, and the purchasng prce ncludes the Btock, fxtures and good wll. Mr. Matthews wll take possesson mmedately. Last Wednesday nght dogs got n Stephen W. Sears's chcken yard at Atlantc Hghlands and klled 45 chckens. Mr. Sears s well known as a fancy fowl raser, and the chckens klled by the dogs were nearly all hgh bred stock. The shootng match for $00 a sde, at 26 lve brds, between C. Mel. Johnson of Locust Pont and Barney Creghton of the Hghlands, dd not come off on Saturday. The men were unable to procure enough brds for the match and nether of them was wllng to shoot at a lesser number, so the match was called off. Mr. Johnson wll shoot a match on Saturday for 10 a 6de wth Wlbur A. Conkln of Oceanc. The match wll be held on the Oceanc nn grounds. Henry Newman of Sea Sde ded suddenly on Saturday a week ago. He had taken some medcne the nght before he ded and t was thought that he had been posoned. A postmortem examnaton was held and t was found that hs death was due to alcoholsm. Newman was 38 years old. Mr. and Mrs. Wllam Wyams, who were recently marred at Eltnra, N. Y., arrved at Locust Pont on Saturday and are now keepng house n one of George Davs's houses. On Monday nght the couple were serenaded by the boys of the town. A man named Cohen, who lves at West Port Monmcuth, gave a lttle jollfcaton at hs house last-frday nght. Durng the evenng Mr. Cohen was setupon by three of hs guests, who beat hm. Mr. Cohen wll have the men arrested, Capt. Albert Runyon has gven John Fortland the contract to overhaul hs. Bloop, the Smth V. Rogers, ths wnter. The sloop wll be rebult and Mr. Fortland wll receve $400 for the work. Mrs. Nelson, wlorecently moved from Atlantc Hghlands to Belford, s confned to her bed wth sckness, Mrs. Lohsen, mother oe George Lohson, who has been sck, s slghtly mproved. Rev. Mr, Conover, pastor of the Methodst church at Seasde, and Rev. J. W,' Nckleson, pastor of themethodst church at Naveank, exchanged pulpts last Sunday mornng. John Johnson, Jr., of Belford, wll buld a new house ths wnter. Mr. Johnson s a carpenter and he wll do most of the work. The house when completed wll coat about $1,200. The advertsed letters n the Navesnk postoflce aro for T. N. Daney, John W. Hll, Mss Brdget Carney, Mss Fanno Osborn, Mes Maggo T.hyo and Mrs. H, Green. A bg danco wll be gven at Andrew's hotel at Hllsdo next Tuesday nght. Tho commttee are Charles and Eugeno Conover und Wllam Ralph. Everett Runyot of Belford, has returned homo from Orange, where ho has been vstng hs sster, Mra. Frank Murphy. Capt. and Mrs. Joseph Burr of 'New York wero n Atlantc Hghlands yenterlay lookng over ther nuw JOHO. A gramaphono entertanment wll bo gven n tho Presbyteran ohurch at Atlanto Hghlands to-morrow nght. Mra. Katlcrno Pcrrlnn and Moa Daoy Perrno of Marlboro lavo beon vatng Wllam. Perrno of Kouunburg. Mam 'owcr MOVHO fu>>ern. Tho bent n tho market, f 0.50 at Moody'B Jontrnl hanobh otoro, 120 Went Front Blroot; tho old Tnax stand. Adv. ' ljxtra good oarnmolu nt laug'o. -Adv r, '.. * ", /

2 a Prck and Edaar Brace- Lease flp Sherdan JFTotel. Fred Frck and Edgar Brower have bought the Sherdan hotel from John W 4 Four of These Anmals Klled Wthn the Fast Few Hays. Four foxes have been klled; n Eatontown townshp wthn the past few days. Stout, Jr. They took possesson on Saturday. t s thought that the foxes are anmals The bll of sale ncluded the whch have been lberated at fox chases, fxtures, stock, good wll, and everythng and whch have escaped the hounds. connected wth the hotel. They also One of the foxes was shot by Frank leased the hotel for ten years, the rental beng $1,000 per year. Prevously Fred Frpk and Joseph Lttle of Oceanc had arranged to rent the hotel. Mr. Lttle, however, found opportunty Shults, who lves near Pne Brook. Mr. Shults was just comng home from work when he saw the fox grab a hen n hs poultry yard, slng the hen over hs shoulder, and trot off. Mr. Shults ran to engage n an enterprse n New nto the bouse, got hs gun and klled York, and the agreement was declared off. The Sherdan hotel has been known ever snce t was opened as a resort of the sportng people of the localty, and t s the ntenton of the new propretors to make the sportng features one of the the fox. J mportant factors of the hotel. They have already made arrangements to have forwarded to them the result of the football matches, horse races, baseball matches, and other sportng events of promnence throughout the country, whenever they occur, and Monmouth county sportng events wll bo gven the same promnence. Pctures of fast horses and noted boxers wll be made a feature of the decoratons of the hotel. Another Bowlng Tournament. Another bowlng tournament has been started n the casno at Atlantc Hghlands. There are twenty entres, and each mat wll bowl sx games. The entrance fee was 50 cents. The frst prze s $10, the second prze s 4.50, and the thrd prze s $2. The entres are George Conover, Frank Rue, L. H. Foster, J. B. Stout, George Freeman, Wllam Clark. M. Murray, Wllam Stout, H. Addson, Wllam M. Foster, Wllam Dawson, Prof. Whtney, John Moore;,A. H. Hertage, Charles Samuels, M. E. Curts, P. S. Conover and John Delaney. The tournament started last Saturday nght and wll be fnshed next Saturday nght. A Bowlng Club Organzed. A bowlng club has been organzed among some of the young people of the town. They wll, meet every Tuesday nght at John F. Pope's bowlng alleys,on Monmouth street and bowl a seres of three games. The members of the club are Mss Martha Moffett, Mss Carre Kng, Mss Llan Hawkns, Msses Mary and Sophe Ncholl, Mrs. May N. Fones, Mss Besse Valentne, George Norman, Frank Hawkns, Dr. Elwood Morton, George Sutton, Dr. Rafferty, Wllam Chld and Danel Wlson. Gamng at Far Haven. Crap shootng and ptchng pennes s the chef dverson of the young men of Far Haven at present. Every nght a dozen or so young men of the town congregate under the electrc lght n front of the postoffce, where a game goes on untl late n tho "nght. Almost any afternoon you may see a crowd of youngsters ptchng pennes on the sdewalk n the man part of the town. Drvng Club Offcers. drvng club the followng offcers were elected for tho ensung year : Prenldent Dr. Wm. Gall. Frst vlctf-presldcnt Theodore Boyce. 8o;onl vce-presdent Rchard Ctr. 8oerotary Joslul Cnmnev, Treasurer John H. Rutland-. Executve commttee -Wllam Wntcrton, Elmer TVUett, Charles X. Crawford.. Good Duck Shootng at Belmar. Duck shootng s good off the shore at Belmar. Durug the past week George Heght and Theodore Bennett of Belmar shot ffty ducks and George C. Wlson and A. Sheets of the same place also shot ffty, Wolcott Newman shot 20 ducks on Shark rver. Odds and Ends of Sport. GeorgoC. Ormerod of Asbury Park won a Columba chanless bcycle whch was raffled off at Belmar a fovv nghts ago. He pad 27 cents for hs chance and a few mnutes alter wnnng the wheel, he 6old t for $50., Charles Spauldng of Allentown has returned from a two-weeks' gunnng trp at Warronsvlle, Connectcut. Ho and a frend shot 75 brds, among them beng a number of quals, woodcocks and pheasants. Georgo Herbert of West Long Branch wll go to Lakewood ths week on a gunnng trp. Mrs. Herbert wll vst Mrs. prstopher Grunman whle'her husband s away. A number of foot races and bcycl. races wll, bo held by the young men of Waysde on Thanksgvng day. Wllam Burk and John Smth of Eng. lshtown spent last week on a bcycle trp throgh New York etnle. Wllam Maurer won tho badge at ns Wednesday's mutch of thobayoldo gun club of Keyport.. George Mnugh of North Long Brand started lust week for 11 gunnng trp 11)0 South. Lttle wantj can often bo flled bj advertsng n Tnt RKOSTER'B wun column at a cost of 35 cento. Adv. George Woodward shot two foxes near hs place at Oceanport last week. One of the foxes was very large. ^ Ths fox was klled by Mr. Woodward n the rear of bs house on Frday afternoon. The fox weghed ten pounds. On Saturday Mr. Woodward saw another fox near hs place and tns he also shot. Ths, fox was nearly ah large as the frst one klled by Mr. Woodward, but t was very lean and poor ard weghed only about half s much as the frst. ~ Last Wednesday J. B. Hathaway shot a fox n the rear of the Presbyteran church at Eatontown. Football., The Far Haven football eleven, captaned by Joseph Kennedy, played a game of football on Saturday n Throckmorton's feld at Red Bank wth a scrub team captaned by a boy named Conk. The game was won by the Far Haveners by a score of 10 to5. Kennedy'steam wll play a game on Thanksgvng day wth an eleven from Atlantc Hghlands. A game of football was played at Asbury Park last Saturday between a team from that place, captaned by Roy Marn, and a team from Red Bank oaptaned by James Wse. The Asbury Parkers won the game by a score of 0 to.5. The. Red Bank boys wll play a football club from Atlantc Hghlands next Saturday. Lodge W omen Hold a Unon Meetng. A unon meetng of the Daughters of Lberty was held n Concert hall last Frday nght. Delegates were present from Seabrght, Far Hnven, West Long Branch, Long Branch and Keyport. Speeches were made by several of the state offcers of the order and refreshments were ssrved at the close of the meetng. Brookdale Farm! Wll receve horses for board- < ng. They wll have the use <. of box stalls and paddocks, and they wll receve thorough care and attenton. Best of pasturage and fne water. TERMS: 12 and up per month, *' t Address THOMAS ORGLL, Agent,, Brookdale Farm, Red Bank, New Jersey. Shpments can be made by C. R. R. of N. J., Penn. R. R. and Red Bank boats. Chronc Darrhoea Contracted n tho Army. Whle n the army Mr. Davd Taylor, now propretorof tho Commercal Hotel, Wnd Rdge, Greene Co., Pa., contracted chronc darrhoea. n speakng of t he Bays: "hnvo never found anythng Mnt would gve mo such quck relef as Chnmborlan'e Colc, Cholera and Darrhoea Homedy." For aalo by ChnrlcH A. Mnton & Co., druggsts,'no. 1) Broad street, Rod Bank. A MLLON.,. BOOKS. Rnrc, Curous, Current, N STOCK. ALMOST GVEN AWAY. UlrorluH Huppllod (lraucr tlmn at nny Hook Slon n tho World. JUUAHKH AND OOKH OUOT. MAMMOTH OA TAhOOUB Flll/H. LECGAT BROTHERS, 81 lhaulu'.rh HTUCST. M Dour West of Cltr Hull Park. NK W VOJK (DRESS SKRTS MADE TO ORDER FOR ONE DOLLA"R.) We have antcpated your demands by fllng our department wth whatever s pleasng to good taste and correct n style n Dnner Sets, Luncheon Sets, Cloths, Napkns, Tray and Carvng Cloths, Table Lnen by the yard, etc. There sn't a reasonable Lnen want that we can not supply, and a comparson of lke qualtes wll bng the prce decson n our favor. - FOUR EXTRA SPECALS. Pure Lnen Table Damask, 75c. value. 49c. a yard. J All Lnen Napkns, $1.50 value 98c. per doz; Frnged Table Set, Cloth and Napkns.' $1.98 a set. 3 Yards by 2 Yards Frnged Table Cloth each. BARGAN FRDAY. Specals n every department that must crowd the store. Ths wll be an extraordnary Bargan Frday from the fact that not an artcle advertsed but-that s much less then regular prces-: Large Sze Frnges Towels, 10c. value, Frday. All Lnen Huek Towjels, 15c. " ". 114 WMumsette Blankets, " ". Extra Heavy Comfortables, " Ready Hemmed Bed Sprends, 75c; " A. C.. Feather Tckng, 15c. " 2WYBrdWdoSteettnpr, 18c. " 4-4 Atlantc A Sbeetns, 7c. " Yard Wde Frut or tle Loom, 8c. Fancy Outng Flannel, nc. " Full Sze Hemmed Sheets. 4!»c. " Ready Hemmed Pllow Cases, 10c. " Twlled Towelng, 5c. " Whte H. S. Handkerchefs, 5c. " 25 Chldren's Jackets, S8.OT value, Frday 81 Ladles' Plush Capes, 5 00 " ** ~ Fur Boas, 8 Tals, 3.00 Brown Fox Boas, ' 6.00 Chnchlla Fur Copes, 8.00 mtaton Persan Fur Capes, All Lned Kersey Jackets, Tan Slk Lned Jackets, 7.0 Msses' Reefer Jackets, 6.(10 Chevot Dres.3 Goods, 20c. 3fl nch Dress Plads, 25c. Novelty Dress Goods, 50c.. Mes' Slk Wasts, ' 5.00 Casnmere Gloves, 25c. Frday mornng from 9 to 11 o'clock, Shaker Flannel, regular 6 cent qualty, 10 yards to each 4 customer, for 29 cents.. ' Effcent Aders to Femnne Well-Dressng." TELEPHONE 24 A. Good Creamery Butter per lb.,'23c. 5 pounds Lemon Crackers 25c. Best Elgn Creamery Butter " 25c. 5 " Nc Nacs 25c. Santos Coffee perlb., 15c. 5 " Gnger Snaps 25c. toffee n the bean " -10c. 5 " Oyster Crackers 25c. 2 pounds Arbuckle's Coffee 2. 5c. 5 " Soda Crackers 25c. Maracabo Coffee.per 1b.j 20c. Germea per pkg. 10c. Good Java Coffee " 25c. Pett John's BreakfaBt Food " 9c. Good Green, Black or Mxed Tea, lb. 25c. 2 pounds package Oatmeal 7c. 3 cans Corn 25c. " Peas 25c. " Baked Beans 25c. 10 " Oatmeal 25c. Soused Mackerel per can, 15c. Asparagus Tps " 10c. Sweet Pckles per bottle, 10c. We sell FLOUR CHEAPER than any other store. W. A. TRUEX & SON, p Cor. Broatf and Wallace Sts RED BANK, N. J. GEORGE HANCE PATTERSON, Bcycles DEALER N AND Bcycle Sundres. No. 22 West Front St., Red Bank, N. J. n want of a remedy for any alment of the horse, J! try the best known remedes n the world at a nom- j; nal cost, manufactured by Dr. Danels, and for sale j; by ' L. EL OFFCE : Wharf Avenuo, near Front Streot, RED BANK. %!> DR. F. L, WRGHT, Surgeon Dentst RED BANK, N. J. Broad Street, opposte Bergen's. The Best! None but the best drugs are good enough for prescrptons.. We use'the best and we compound them wth skll; that s why we hold our customers and keep addng to ther number. t costs more money to use the best medcnes, but we don't charge any more on that account. Our prces are reasonable. We wll gve good servce and are anxous for your trade. O Schroeder's Bergen & Morrs, Pharmacy. TELEPHONE S F. Propretors. _ 16 Broad Street, Red Bank, 00 0 Q000 0C 0 Combnng Busness Wth Pleasure <, 1,0 la what the housewfe does when she makes a vst to Applegate's Enterprse Market. t s kept so nce, orderly and clean that she feels no hestaton n donnng her shoppng dress' and gong forth to choose tho chocest n the land for her breakfast or dnner from the temptng roasts, steaks, chops, poultry or stewng morsels from ths market's prmo stock. D. G. Af pkgate, 110 FRONT ST., Cor. Maplo Ave., RED BANK, N. J. SCULLY & RE1LLY, FUNERAL DRECTORS. UPHOLSTERNG. Pctures Framed. Furnture Moved and Stored. 127 Fro «troot,flooonldo«r : (fom pearl ttvoot, H) BANK, N, J. 9 $0

3 PUMPNG OUT COAL. One Wav of Takng Out the Carao of a 'Sunken Vantt Boat, The old way of recoverng coal from a sunken canal-boat was to rase the boat, wth the coal n t, to a pont where the coal could be reached. Chans were worked under the sunken boat from pontoons moored alongsde of t. At low tde, the chans were made fabt on the pontoons, whch, rsng wth the tde, lfted.the sunken boat clear of the bottom. At hgh water t was taken nshore as far as possble, untl t agan grounded; Ths operaton was repeated untl the boat was brought to the surface. The new way, or, rather, the modern way, s to pump the coal up from the boat, wherever t may He, and then rase the boat; f t does not rase tself. By ths method the work s ar done n very much less tme and at very much less expense. ' The Dumfc used has no pump valves. t s a centrfugal pump, the sucton beng produced by means of a dsk, wth wngs attached, turnng at hgh speed wthn the pump shell, a crcular chamber to whch the sucton ppe s attached. An eght-nch pump of ths knd wll pump grate or broken coal easly, and pump up a load of 300 tons n a day. t wll rase coal from a boat sunken at any depth from flvafeet to 200 feet. ---"" The pump and engne are nstalled on a wreckng boat, whch,s moored near the sunken boat. n ths use the pump has a long flexble secton of sucton ppe attached to t, and to, that are attached the varous" addtonal lengths of ppe'that may be requred to reach down to the coal. The ppe s made of wrought ron, and t s made n sectons of dfferent lengths, so that t may be joned to make a ppe of any length desred. At each end of each length of ron ppe s a flange. As lengths of ppe are jonted, the flanges are bolted together, wth a rubber gasket between, to make the jont tght. The flexble sucton ppe s held out over/ the water and over the sunken boat from the wreckng boat by a gaff, and ron ppe 1B added to the needed depth. By means of the gaff the ppe may be rased and lowered as occason may requre, as, for nstance, to rase the lower end of the sucton ppe from one part of the canal-boat up and over a crossbeam connectng the sdes, to be lowered nto the coal n another part of the boat. When the ppe s all joned on t s not at once lowered nto the coal. The pump s frst charged wth water, whch s done n an exceedngly bref tme and n a very smple manner by means of a sphon attached to the shell "of the pump. When t has been charged the pump s started and the lower end of the sucton ppe s then lowered nto the coal, and the coal and water are pumped up together, and thrown out through the pump's dscharge ppe n a contnuous stream. A boat to receve the coal s made fast alongsde the wreckng boat, and the coal from the pump s dscharged upon a screen set at an nclne between the two boats. The water runs through the screen and the coal runs on nto the other boat. The sucton ppe can be handled for the most part from the wreckng-boat. f any handlng-under 1 water s necessary a dver goes down for that purpose, and t may be that the dver brngs wthn the power of the pump's sucton remnants of coal left n nooks and crannes whch t mght otherwse not have reached. When the boat has been empted t f t s not too much damaged or water soaked or too frmly bedded n the mud, t wll float of tself. f sucton holds t to the bottom t wll rse when t has been started clear. Pumps of ths knd are made from two to sxty nches' n dameter. To Fsh la Afrcan Waters. Dr. M. R. Harrngton, fellow n zoology, and Dr. C. F. Hunt, nstructor n physology, have been sent to the Callbar coas» of West Afrca n search of the varous stages n development of several very remarkable flshes to be found only, n those waters. The expedton s one of the greatest mportancoto zoologsts n all parts of the world. Woman Bettor Than Man. f fgures aro needed to convnce any man that woman s better than he s, lere they tro, A statstcal lnqulror uns dscovered that women are less crmnal than mon. n England and Wales only 18 per cent, of convctons aro of women, n Russa 9 per cent., n the Unted States 9 per cent. Othor countres show equally low percentages of fomulo crlmo. Prossuro of Water. Tlero tro npota n tho ocoan whor«tho wator n flvo mllen doop, and f t s true that the prcrhuro of tho water on any body n tlo wntor 1B ono pound to tho, mua.ro nch for ovory two fool of tho depth, anythng ut tho bottom of ono of tho "flvo mllo" holot would have a pronauro about t of 13,200 fool to ovory squaro nch., k Exporlenco lm taught pooplo that THE tmatbtcn 1B tho greatest advertsng panor n ths part oc MomnouM county, Ad RCH GUATEMALA. Vast and Vared Resources of the Small Republc. The resources of Guatemala are vared and abundant. Coffee s tho ohlef staple; and the berry s as good as the best the world provdes. Corn andjeans are the chef food of the. people. Sugar, tobacco and other tropcal'pantb can be rased, to an unlmted etent, on the hot lands along the coast;" whle wheat and other cerealsyeld rch harvests n the hgher and more temperate dstrcts of the nteror. The revocaton by the Unted States of the recprocty treates made under the Harrson admnstraton wth seve'ral-of-the Latln : Amercan republcs was a serous blow to Guatemala, for her government and people had reason to suppose that we were actng n good fath, and desred a free exchange of natural products wth that country. Upon ths assumpton, large sums of money were nvested n the productoa of sugar, for whch the Unted States furnshed the only market. But, wthout notce, or the observance of,the usual dplomatc formaltes, the arrangement was revoked by the enactment of the Wlson-Gorman tarff law, and thednlantatlons and sugar mlls of Guatemala have snce lan dle. Whle the polcy of the Unted States toward ts less populous neghbors has doubtless been nspred by frendly motves, these neghbors have learned, though a somewhat rough experence, that when our nterests conflct wth thers we do not consder the consequences. Guatemala mght easly sustan ten tmes ts present populaton. The sol s rch and easly cultvated, and, unlke the other Central Amercan republcs, there s plenty of labor. Some parts of the country are qute thckly populated; but the others' are covered wth dense forestb and a varety of tmber, whch mght be easly made marketable f means of transportaton were provded. But, although Guatemala s much further advanced than the rest of Central Amerca, her ralway system does not exceed 250'mles; there s no nternal navgaton, and the wagon roads are n a deplorable condton. The mneral wealth of the country s supposed to be large; but t s only Blghtly developed. The mnes are naccessble, and, n the absence of modern machnery, whch at present cannot be conveyed to them, cannot be worked wth proft. The government offers generous nducements to mmgrants. The land laws are lberal; and efforts have been mado from tme to tme to secure the establshment of colones and the pre-empton of publc lands by prvate' settlers. But all the accessble area s at present occuped; and no foregner can expect to prosper n Guatemala unless he has abundant captal whch wll enable hm to purchase at hgh prces plantatons already developed. 'f peace could be assured, f ralway and wagon roads could be extended nto the nteror so that the tmber regons, the mneral deposts, and the wld agrcultural lands could.be reached as convenently as the new portons of our country Guatemala would offer great advantages to the mmgrant, and would enjoy a rapd development. The Shape of the Earth. The shape of the earth was suspected by some phlosophers even n ancent tmes, but the dea that a contnent exsted on the sde opposte Europe does not appear to have entered the mnd of any one prevous to the twelfth,century, when ts possble exstence was alluded to by two or three authors, from whom t s supposed Columbus receved hnts as to the feasblty of salng entrely around the globe. Sr John Mandevllle, who lved nearly two centures before the tme of Columbus, stoutly mantaned that not only was the earth round, but that f he had shps and men courageous enough to undertake a threo years' voyage he would venture to crcumnavgate the globe. Even n the tme of Columbua, however, the prevalent dea among" the people was that tho earth was flat, and ranny beleved t to bo square, from the frequent Bblcal alluson to the four corners of the earth. There 1B nothng n tho hstory of any naton, oven of tho Chneso, who clam to be tho moat ancent, to ndcate a popular belef n the globular shape "of tho earth. Antquty of tho Mrror., An ngonloub archaeologst snys thnt tho oldest ovldonce of cvlzaton la tha mrror. The Japaneso and Coroana dlacovorod tho art of makng ono from ron at least 2,500 yoara ago. Thla long porlod s dwarfod by tho Chlneeo reo ord, whch BOWS that mrrors, largo and small, ma'do of brass, copper or Bllvor, havo boon n uso n that land ovor 4,000 yoars. Do Morgan found a mrror that Boomed to date from tho Bbcod dynasty n Europo about G,000 yearn ago and tho latot nvestgatons n tho clvlllzatlonn of Alclcad and Nppur show that tho bollou of thono lulfforgotton countrloa unod to admlro thonnolvon n glonob of nomo nort or n burnshed motnl at least ffty centuron before tho Chrstan, ora. f you wtnt anythng, try tho want column o/ THE BGHTBU. Adv. UNDERWEAR. '.The largest assortment n the Town and at prces to sut all... SEE MY LNE OF NECK- WEAR BEFORE PURCHASNG ELSEWHERE.. W. A. HOPPNG, Broad Street, Bed Bank. \7OU should use ^ Y,tooth powder that las all the ngredents and" only those necessary for a perfect mxture. Try Parson's Perfect Powder. J. 8. FLTCRQF^, Practcal Plumber, Gas and Steam Ftter^ Offce, 6o Front Street, Red-Bank. SPECAL ATTENTON GVEN TO JOBBNG.... B! N- REPMSEHTS ONE ROD OF 10-BAt FENCE. Tho Perfecton Sprng Lock Wre Fence can be bult any heght up to 8 feet. t never BURS, nor cmses snow to drft o tn; hghways. s bult ol nl heavy steel galvanzed wre. No. ) lne wre and No. 7 uprghts. ts cost per rod s 35 cents up. You can uave a fence feet hrl for 35 cents per rod. also buld several styles of lawn fence from 13 cents to 22ceats pernrntjlng foot. You set the posts <o tle rest. GEORGE N. CONKLN, Nlletovta, Nonmouth County, N. J. SEND FOB CATALOGUE. - PEACH TREES. j * We have a fne lot of Peach Trees, 4 to 5 feet, clean and true X, to name. We wll sell a few thousand at ' PER HUNDRED. Aso a fne lot of Calforna Prvet hedge plants, at Rver Vew Nurseres, >><XKXXX O'HAGAN & KNG, Lttle Slver, N. J. $ Columba Chanless, - - $ Columba Chan Wheel, Hartford, Vdette, $40.00 and Jack and Jll (full sze wheels), H. A. WORTHLEY, 7 Broad Street, Red Bank, N.J. v FAHQ[ 600$ flolg m TttW JDgBf ffhl r,,post OFFCE BLOCK BEGNS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14th. t has been the annual busness polcy here to nau-"" gurate a great " Chrstmas Get Ready Sale." A specal movement of the greatest possble nterest to the entre shoppng publc of the state. Clear the way for Chrstmas! No tents or Branch Stores Anywncrc. Ma! Orders Carefully flled. L. S. PLAUT & CO., Free Delveres. 707 to 721 Broad St. and No. 8 Cedar St. NEWARK, N. J. On everythng n the. grocery lne wll be found at our store. We don't advertse prces, but we do guarantee to gve you better goods for a smaller amount of money than other stores n f town. K A Come n and sec for yourself. Our goods arc relable and always p fresh. W. H. KNAPP, 4 No. 8 Front Street, Red Bank, N.J. POST OFFCE BLOCK, f! A pano sold out of ths store ha8 got to be rght because t s "money back f you want t" guaranteed. The panos here descrbed are rght as to qualty, rght as to prce. The qualty cannot be guaged by the prce. The panos have been rented out for the summer and there are more of them than we want, hence the lttle prces. We descrbe a few to gve you an nklng of value watng you. 1 Kngsley Uprght, Walnut Cnso. - $175 1 Sommer " Antque Oak Case Waverley ^ Mahogany Cose Wegman " Whte Mahg'y Caeo Krakauer " Rosewood Case Broad St., Red Bank, N. J. Telephone Oa. <> Men's Whte Shrts at 29, 39 and 49c. The best values n the whole wde world. For very cold weather Leather and Canvas Coats, Lned wth corduroy, sheep-, skn and dog skn, $4.00 to $6.00. GLOVES, MTS, SWEATERS, :ARDGAN JACKETS, &C, at very low prces. BROAD ST., RED BANK, N. J. f Your T Y t t t X % 1 t ^4 House. Your new house may be a large one or a small one. Whatever the sze or whatever the class of work, would lke to do t. Some of the best-bult) houses at Rumson were bult by me; but because can buld hgh class, expensve houses, do not slght the work n smaller houses. put the same care and the same thoroughness n small work that do n the largest jobs have undertaken. t f f f f f' t \ ^ T V L Smth, FAR HAVEN, N.J. A When You Need a Plumber Call on tn. You wll not rottrot t. Von wll lx) vory flul ol t, Wo do okcellont work, md our clmmoo nw only rrnbonnhln. Wo work on tho prlnolpl) tlmt u mtlnlkxl customer n our tat udvortlsunont. Wo fml/l eaumatog of any knd promptly nnd cheerfully.. SABATH & WHTE. 16 and 18 Front St... Red Bnak. N. J.

4 .THE RED BANK REGSTER JOHN H. COOK. BdUor and Propretor. SUBSCRPTON PRCE : One Year :....; BlxMontna, n TnreeMonthB AbVERTSEHEXTH.. should reach us not later than Wednesday mornng, sample copes of THE BKOSTER and prnted rates of advertsng wll bo sent to nny address on applcaton. Advertsers havo tlo prvlege of changng ther announcements as often as they desre wthout. etra Charge. Beadng notces wll be nserted for 10 cents a lno, each nserton. These notces wll,no placed at tlo bottom of columns and marked Adv. Obtuary notces nnd poetry, lodge resolutons, ct«., wll be nserted for 10 cents per lne. Notces of brths, marrages and deaths publshed free. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 0, The Electon audts Results. One of.the results of the electons throughout tlo country yesterday wll be to make tlo Unted States senate Republcan for the next four years. Even f the Democrats should elect ther Presdental canddate n 1000 they would be unable to control legslaton untl they had secured a majorty n the senate, and ths cannot now he done untl 1903, f t s then. n New Jersey the electon secures to the Republcan party for three years the control of all the gubernatoral appontments. The Republcan party has a majorly n both branches of the legslature, and can thus control legslaton absolutely. The Democrats are not;lkely to get a majorty n the state senate for two years to come, even under favorable condtons,,and thus for two years at least the Republcans can prevent legs-. laton nmcal to the nterest of that party, even f the Democrats should secure control of the assembly next year. n Monmouth county the results of the electon wll be far reachng. The Democrats have shown that n spte of an mmense amount of money spent to defeat them they can stll wn n tho county, ard the defeat of the Republcans n the county yesterday wll dscourage good men from beng canddates next year. Wth the electon yesterday n the county favorable to the Democrats, that party wll feel pretty certan of electng ts canddates for senator and sherff nest year. t s n the matter of appontments that the Republcaus wll fnd ther greatest vctores. The electon of Voorhees makes certan the appontment of a Republcan judge to succeed Judge Conover, and there s lttle doubt that Wlbur A. Hesley wll be tho man apponted to the place. To take that poston he wll have to vacate the offce of prosecutor, and a new man wll have to be apponted there. The new judge and the new prosecutor wll hold offce for fve years, and \l has been stated that Mr. Hesley s to have the namng of the man who s to succeed hm n hs present offce. The passng of the county judgeshp nto the hands of tho Eepublcans, wth the addtonal advantage of a prosecutor of that party.n offce, wll gve the Republcan party a great deal of power and nfluence, especally f the offces are to be used to further party ends, as now seems to be tho programme. On the whole, whle the Republcan party lost the electon n the county, the loss of the" county offces wll be more than made "up by gans whch that party wll make through the gubernatoral appontments of Governor Church News. The Epworth league of the Frst Methodst church of Bed Bank wll celebrate the eghth annversary of ts organzaton to-morrow nght. An experence meetng and a prase servce wll be two of the man features of the programme. All of the young people's relgous organzatons of Red Bank have been nvted to attend the celebraton, A lecture on lfe and customs n Armena wll be gven n the Eatontown Presbyteran church on Frday nght. Tho lecture wll bo llustrated. by, stereoptcon vews: No admsson wll be charged but a collecton wll be taken up. Tho specal meetngs to bo conducted n the Baptst church by Rev. S. Hutwell Pratt and J. A. Brkholz wll begn to-morrow nght, Mr. Pratt wll preach ard Mr. Brkholz wll sng nt both Ber vces n tho church next Sunday. The Guld of tho Golden Rule of Trnty church wll hold a eocablo to-nght at Mrs. Elza Heudrckfon'B on' Front TOWK TALK. : The tran servce between Eed Bank and New York s the poorest Red Bank has had durng the past twelve or ffteen years. The number of trans s omaller and the tmes of leavng led Bank n the mornng s more nconvenent than for many wnters. The wthdrawal of the theater tran s also exctng consderable complant. Another thng whch Red Bankers thnk s unfar and an unjust dscrmnaton aganst Red Bank, s found n the rate of fare. An excurson tcket from Long Branch to New York and return costs $1.50 and an excurson tcket between Red Bank and New York costs the same prce, although the dstance from New York to Red Bank s nearly ten mles less than from New York to Long Branch. The rate of fare to Long Branch should not be ncreased, but the rate from Red Bank should be decreased. f 1.50 s charged for an excurson tcket from Long Branch to New York, a proportonate rate of fare between Red Bank and New York would be about $1.25, and the prce of excurson tckets should be reduced to ths fgure. * ** Ralroads, lke all other busness en terr prses, are run to make money for the owners. But ralroads are gven greater powers, rghtb and prvleges than ordnary enterprses, and n return for these rghts and prvleges granted by the publc, the ralroad s expected, to gve reasonable accommodatons, and to hare a unform rate of fare. Red Bankers feel that n the present arrangement of the tran servce they are gettng very poor accommodatons, and that Red Bank s unjustly dscrmnated aganst n the rate of fare prevalng here. # *» The season for leaves to fall s here. For a week past the town has been flled wth smoke, and wth the unpleasant odor of smoulderng leaves. Burnng the leaveb gets clear of them, but at the expense of the comfort of the publc. MRS. SARAH H. LANE'S WLL. Many Artcles of Jewelry and Keepsakes Gven to Her Relatves. Sarah H. Lane of Long Branch, wfe of Wllam Lane, who ded three weeks ago or so, dsposed of many of her artcles of jewelry, etc., among her relatves. Her house and lot on the south sde of Garfeld avenue at Long Branch, wth all the furnture theren contaned, was left to her husband as long as he should lve, and at hs death t was to go to her eon, Eugene Lester Lane. Another house and lot on the north sde of Franklyn avenue at Long Branch was left to her son Eugene Lester, to go nto hs possesson at once.!". Among the specal bequests of money, keepsakes, etc., left by Mrs. Lane, was $50 to her mother, Mrs. Rebecca Smth of Red Bank ; $50 to her brother Joseph L. Smth of Red Bank ; damond earrngs, damond fnger rng and pearl pn to her nece, Sarah E. Fay of Red Bank; a gold watch, gold flnger rng and nose glasses to her sster, Florence Fay of Red Bank; temple glasses, fur cape and flnger rng wth red stone settng to her sster, Anne C. Vaanote of Manasqunn ; two pars of earrngs, one made of gold dollars and fancy gold par, to her nece, Lzze Vannote of Manasquan ; dressng mrror, and an ol pantng to her nece, Rebecca VanNote ; and all her wearng apparel to her ssters, Florence Fay and Anne C. VanNote, and to her mother, Rebecca Smth, to be equally dvded among them. All the rest of her property was to go to.herson, Eugene Lester Lane. Harry C. Fay was the executor of the wll, wheh.was made December 6th, The wtnesses were Maud A. lorner and Benjamn P. Morrs. Clarkson Woodward of Upper Freehold townshp made hs wll May 14th, He left overythng ho possessed to hs wfe, Lucy Ann Woodward, and mado her the executrx of the wll. Hogs Do of Dstemper..E2 Charles Bowno, Jr., of Waysde, lost a hog last week of dstemper. t weghed 300 pounds and was worth $18. Ths s the second hog whch Mr. Bowno has lost from ths dsease and another one s sck. ' ^^^^ WEDDNGS. Burnt Pullen. ^ Mss Lalage Louse Bunn, daughter of Mrs. Charles Bunn of Shrewsbury, was marred at noon yesterday n the 'Epscopal church at Shrewsbury/to James Henry Pullen of St. Johns, New Brunswck. The church was well flled wth frends and relatves of the happy couple. The decoratons were greens and chrysanthemums. At twelve o'clock the weddng party entered the church to the musc of Mendelssohn's weddng march and at the altar the nuptal knot was ted by Rev. A. C. Kmberof New York. Walter and Charles Bunn of New York, brothers of the brde, acted as ushers. The brde's weddng dress was of "tan broadcloth, trmmed wth turquose velvet, lace and fur. Her travelng dress was a talor made gown of brown cloth, wth hat to match. mmedately after the ceremony a weddng breakfast was served to sxty guests at the home of"the brde's sster, Mrs. A. H. Borden. Mrs. Pullen receved a large number of handsome presents, ncludng' many artcles of cut glass and slverware. The" couple left Shrewsbury on the three 6'clock tran for a short weddng trp. They wll mkae ther home at St. Johns, New Brunswck. Morrs VanGelder. Mss Emly C. Morrs, daughter of Tmbrook Morrs of Long Branch, was marred to George W. VanGelder of the same place last Wednesday afternoon. The marrage was solemnzed at the brde's home, and the couple stood under a floral bell of vy and cosmos whle the ceremony was performed by Rev. W. P. C. Strckland. The- weddng march from Lohengrn was played by Mss Rachel Cole of Brooklyn. The brde wore a whte slk gown, trmmed wth rbbon. Mss Clara VanGelder,sster of the groom, acted as brdesmad, and she was dressed n pnk cotded slk. The flower grl was Mss Margaret Parker, daughter of W. S. B.;, Parker, and she wore a dress of whte satn and lace. The pest man was Wllam Hendrckson, Jr., and the ushers were Charles H. Throckmorton of Long Branch and Henry Morrs of Newark. Mr. and Mrs. VanGelder wll spend ther honey moon at Nagara Falls, and Canada. VanSchock- Butcher. Mss Hatte May VanSchock, daughter of John H. VanSohock, Jr., of Lower Squarkum,;. was marred last Wednesday to Harry Donahay Butcher of Ardena, son of,james H. Butcher, the assessor of Hovvell townshp. The ceremony was performed at the brde's home by Rev. A. E. Weston of Farmngdale, asssted by Rev. Henry Westcott n cash. The names of the drectors who three money members contrbuted $1.75 of Ardena. About tjbree hundred guests furnsh 22 garments (ther own contrbuton of two garments and the contrbu- wtnessed the ceremony. The brde was 'attred n a gown of whte satn. Mss ton of two garments each from ten Jenne Butcher of Ardena, a cousn of members) are publshed n the year book the groom, and Mss Elmer of Seabrght, of the guld. The names of the drectors acted as brdesmads, and the be9t man last year, and the number of garments was Ernest VanSchock, a brotaer of furnshed by each, are as follows : the brde. The brde receved a number Mrs.. H.Adlem...'. 28 of presents, among them beng a check Mrs. JobnS. Applegate for $500 from the groom's father. After the ceremony a recepton was held and the couple left for a weddng trp to) Washngton, D. C. On ther return they wll lve at Ardena. - Lambertno. Mss Esse Wallng, daughter of Wlson B. "Wallng of Keyport, was marred last Wednesday afternoon to Cornelus Lambertson, also of Keyport. The ceremony was performed at St. John's Methodst parsonage by Rev. Rchard T. Leary. The brde wore a travelng dress of brown cloth. After the ceremony the couple left for a tour through New York state. Two Accdents. to have ther contrbutons of garments Belford Robnson of Allentown cut an ready by the tme of the annual meetng artery n hs leg on Monday of last week. next Wednesday. Part of the garments Ho was threshng gran and whle cut ng bands he ran the knfe n hs leg. He became very weak from loss of blood before tho wound could be drebsed. James E. Reed of North Sprng Lake was workng n, a sewer trench last Thursday when the bank caved n and bured hm up to hs shoulders. Hs left arm was broken by tho accdent. gamo at Newark yesterday wth tho rvngton ntletc club of that place. Tho score was 28to0 n favor of tho rvng- tho nova nl tho Hme. Adv Bamboo Rods. TO LET. Bamboo rods for'tho'manufacture ton club. Tho Red Bankers say that the Half of louso to lot, 0 lmms. 17 Sprng street, street. '' of furnture, fshng poles, otc, aro roduced n slzo and.shaped a.a desred by thoy lnow they would bo boatou when BUGGY FOR SALE. reason they lost tho gamo wnu because llellmlt, N, J. Rev. John Hamlton of Wayne, Pa., wll preach on Sunday nght at the Plgrm Baptst church. they dd not tnlto any nterest n tho a now machlno, comuoaod of a taperng they went on tho Hold, and therefore Mado by Aunek uud n,perfect order. metallc dlo hoated to a gray heat, nto flurtlb, Red lluk. whch tho stalks aro forced, tho heat An ontertanment wll be gven n tho moltng tho slllcoous coatng and flbroa game.. STOVE FOR SALE. A luuvor fltovo for Blo, n nood condton. Cal Methodst church ontlurudny nght, December 1st. nto a plastc otato. Tho Lakewood Specal. or uddruuh, 1)2 blrow»l)ry uyouuo. m fc Tho Lakowood Bjocal tran was pu 1 LOST. Mnature Carbonettcs., Fall muscal on yesterday. t leaves Rod Bank nt A bncl of koyt. Fnder wll ho rewarded by re For $1 a dozen ure n great demand at On Frday and Saturday of ths weok turnng tlon lo tlo HKKTKH olllcn. 8:59 A. M. and reaohea Now York at DeHart & Letfson's studo. ' Have you AHatrom & Co. of Broad atrcet wll have scon them? Just stop and hunt them u\ ther full openng ot psnoh, ovgmb, n a O;O5. On returnng t leaven New York HOUSE TO RENT, Wltl nl lmvouul.', from Oclotur l;t, nqulro ll ther BOW framoa. Adv'.x scal and holday goods, Grnphophonc nt 11:40'P. M. and geta to Red Bank nt (>[ t. W. CJMHOU, tul Hunk, N. J, ontortnnmonth n tho l'tornoon and JlortC llltnhfth, lt'hjw, Robes, Jt. d:40 V. M. evenng of each day, Havng' nulo n HEATER FOR SALE. At exceedng low prceb ft Moody'nCen contract for u largo number of craphophones wo wll sell thorn for cnah or on A nalo of dolln, nproh, etc, wll bo (Mlro ut tho Olmnplln loum, Unon utrct. A nol Hate.,K<> foulle U'UUT, n KOO) ordor for nlo. ntrnl lmrreuu store, 120 Went Front street tho oldtrunx tund. Adv. nlllnoth from $10 up. Records und held by tho Guld of the Golden llulo of FARM WAGONS AND 0ART8. other rmpplcs always on hand. Allstrom Trnty church tho luab week n November. Adv. ' ' VnnBcuolok, Monmottl atruut, led Vrm wnnun mll enrtn, umv, fur unl by Hotel Nut Pralnes nt Lnug'n. Adv. & Co.-Adv. -. Dunk. -<>- - - ' Yesterday's Football Game Tho Red Bank football club played a ARMENTS FOR THE?00R, WORK OF THE RED BANK NEE- DLEWORK GULD. Tle Socety Made ana Dstrbuted Three Hundred and Forty-Fve Garments Last T[ear-Offleers of the Guld.,, The Red Bank branch of tbe-.needlework guld of Amerca wll hold ts annual meetng at. the town hall next Wednesday. Two sessons wll be held, one at ten o'clock n the mornng and the other at two o'clock n the afternoon. The needlework guld of Amerca was organzed n ts object was to provde new garments and household lnen to hosptals, homes and other chartes; The rules and regulatons of the socety provde that anyone can become a member by contrbutng a sum of money annually, or by contrbutng two new garments. Each branch socety has a number of drectors, and anyone can become a drector by gettng ten members, each of whom wll gve two new garments or a sum of money every year. The frst year the guld was formed the product of the socety was le'sb than 400 garments, Last year the guld collected and dstrbuted 309,478 garments. The number of local branches of the guld, accordng to last year's report, was Each local branch s vrtually a dstnct organzaton. The garments t collects are dstrbuted n ts own localty, or are sent to any place or any nsttuton ts members may select. The annual, meetng of each branch s n the fall. All the garments aro collected at ths meetng, and they are usually dstrbuted before the begnnng of wpter. As most of'the artcles are for wnter use, the garments usually gven are of warm materals, and. are underwear, n pars of the ' same sze, of merno, unbleached musln or canton flannel; flannel sacks and wrappers for the sc; skrts of heavy flannel, nght shrts, nghtgowns, sheets, towels, shoes, stockngs, socks, jerseys, comforters, mtteds, sha wls, etc. Only new garments are accepted. The Red Bank branch was organzed n The offcers of ths branch are : Presdent Mrs. Harry Fncl). Vce presdents Mrs. J. A. TVorthley, lra. J. T. Burrowes, Mrs. Wllam H, Knapp, Mrs.. H. Adlem. Treasurer Mrs. F. W. Hope. Mrs. George Cooper was elected secretary of the Red Bank, branch last year. She ( ded some tme ago and her place has not get been flled. Ths branch contrbuted 345 garments last year, and Mss U.K. Allen Mss Martha T. Allen s Mrs. J. B. Bergen 22 Mrs. J.T. Burrowes 38 Mrs. Elzabeth Cooper 30 Mrs. George Cooper 24 Mrs. Harry Fnch.' 23 Mrs. F.W.Hope 22 Mrs.w. H. Knapp J 2tt Mrs. S. TV. Hcrford 30 Mrs.B.S. Puyne 25 A drector, name not gven 12 Total '. 315 Of tho garments contrbuted last year 144 were sent to the Long Branch hosptal. The remanng 201 were dstrb uted to poor people n and around Red Bank, most of the work of dstrbuton beng done by the Kng's Daughters. t s expected that ths year's contrbutons wll be as large as last year's. All the members and drectors, are expected contrbuted ths year wll go to the Long Branch hosptal and tho remander wll be dstrbuted among the poor of Red Bank by tho Kng's Daughters. Harness Reparng, Brng your work here f you wbh t done quckly and at far prces. Our large harness trade hns been bult up by the values we gve, and our largo exhbt room contans the best assortment n the county. Brdsall & Son, Red Bank. Ad V.»» o- THE RED BANK REQSTEU prntb all the CAS MACHNE FOR SALE. Bprngflea gas machne n good order for sale. Apply to Wm. E. Stevens, Eatontown, N.J. 53,500 WANTED. $3,600 wanted on bond and mortgage. Frst-class securty. Address Money, Box 2OT, Red BanU. FOR SALE.,., Frewood for sale, a cord; $4.60 delvered, lohn S. Applegate, Rversde avenue, ted Bank. tlme FOR SALE. Oyster shell lme, ln.bmall or large qunnttfds,-fbr sale. ale. nqure at the John H. Putterson farm, Blver- lde Drve. MSS SANFORD, MLLNER,, 89 Broad street. Ladles' own materals used.' new furnshed f desred. Feathers curled, and specal attenton gven mournng orders. "/'"]: FOR SALE CHEAP...,, Two thoroughbred Fox-terrer puppes, handlomely marked; must be seen to be apprecated. nqure at REOSTEK offce. : TO LOAN ON FRST MORTGAGE. have $7,000 to loan on good real estate n sums of S500 and upwards. Tbomas Davs, Jr., Heal EBtatc and nsurance, Red Bank, N.J. WANTED. M v Wll Borne one dve wort to a man wth largof am- Hy to enable hm to keep them together, Address. Hard Worker, Box 21)7, Red Bank, N. J. HORSE CLPPNG. am prepared to clp horses ether at the shop of James Walsh at Mntnn Falls, or at owners' burns. Address D.. Vandeneer, Tlnon Falls, N. J. WANTED..,, Fve good whte crls wanted, three for one' lamlly. One at Lttle Slver, and one at Atluntc abv lands. Apply to John T. Tetlcy, Front street. '. FARM FOR RENT. Farm of 180 acres near Red Bank, nl tllable, for ront. Stream of water through the whole lenath of farm. Apply to George W. Stlwoll, Shrewsbury, Now Jersey. ' FOR SALE. Farm of Mchael Taylor, deceased, Holmdel, Monmouth county, N. J. HOacres, good for produce, or stock rasng. F. V. Many, County Clerk's Offce, Freehold, N.J. FOR SALE. At Tlnton Falls, house. Barn nnd outbuldngs sutable for poultry rasns, nne acres, or excbunre ' ^ l f S 0 " 8 Bran< * propcrty - -Address FOR SALE. * A Jngrer warou for sale, n test condton. Also an oak foldng bed, thoroughly clean. Safety Runrnnteed. Both wll bo sold very cheap., Address Box 8M, Bed Bank, N. J., \. A COZY DWELLNG TO LET. Very convenent, comfortable and complete To a small famly or couplo would take S7.5O monthly ABO Borne verj Dno lorso manure for lawn dresslne lor sale. WBJ.F. Durham, 23 Broad street. TWO POOL TABLES FOR SALE. Sze 4^x0 feet, sx pockets, wth cues, cloths, balls, racks, etc., and all n good condton. Also set of four vory bllard balls cbeup. Apply to A. t. Armstrong, Keyport, N. J. P, O. Box 188. House and Lot for Sale Cheap. Tho handsome cottage belongng to Mrs. Rchard Doughty, contanng sx rooms, attc and cellar, stuate n Far Haven, on south sde of Cluy street for sale on reasonable terms. Apply to C. H. vns ted Bank, N. J., REGSTER buldng. CUNNNG PROHBTED. Wo tho undersgned do hereby prohbt gunnng on any of ourproperty. Eugene Ely. James J. Taylor, J. H. DuBols, Lous UuBols, V. 8. and S. V Bray, Morford Taylor, M. Wallng, Garrett S. "Emmons, Douglas E. Taylor and J.G. Taylor, Holmdel. FOESALE., On Sprng street, Red Bank, lot 40x150 feet. wth barn. Prce,' $400. House of sx rooms, lot 46 feef on Branch avenue, 109 feet deep; also lot runnng to Sprng street, 40x150- feet, prce THOS. DrtVS, Jr., Red Bank, N. J. Red Bank Opera House, C..E. NEMA.N, manager, Tlursday, November 10th v '98. ED. RUSH'S FRENCH FOLLY COMPANY, n tho Laughable Farco Comedy, A JOLLY PAR. PRETTY GRLS. FUNNY COMEDANS. LATE8T SONGS AND DANCES. CATCHY MUSC. Everythng now nnd up-to-date. tst GORGEOUS COSTUMES. Nothng to offend tho most faftldlous. Reserved Seats at Mnton's Drug Stfjr^. Prces : 25, 85, CO and 75 cents. The commssoners '-of appeal of the borough 1 ': of Seabrght wll st at the town hall on Tuesday, November 22d f '98 from 10 A. M. to 5.00 p. M., to consder applcatons^or the reducton of assessments. SDNEY F. ELMER, LEV G. RWN,, ROBERT P. BLAR, ' Commssoners of Appeal?.

5 : - <.-, PERSONAL. Mrs. Walter Kellogg of Sbamtales, New. York, has been spendng several weeks wth her uncle, 'Wllam A. Cole of Wallace street^ On Monday. Mrs. Cole and Mrs. Kellogg'wert to East Orange, where, they wll spend several days, and aftera- few weeks' vst n New York, Mf^. JS^llogg wll return to her home at Skaratales. Dr. Ella Prentsa Uphan of Park, who has an offce t the REGSTER buldng, and who has been enjoyng a two weeks' vacaton, returned yester day and wll be at her offce hereafter every Tuesday and Frday afternoon Msses Anne and Eunce Lcas, daughters of James T. Lucas of Locust avenue, wto have been spendng the past three months wth relatves at Wllamsburgh,. Vrgna, have.returned home. Bloomfleld Drumtuond of Broad street was'/sezed wth. an" attack of heart falure last Thursday. Mr. Drummond s 81 years old, but be has almost entrely recovered from the attack. Dr. and Mrs. Frank E. Mller of New York were guests of Mrs. Rose M. Eeslar of,$,yersde avenua last Sunday. Dr. Mller s one of the most celebrated throat specalsts of New York. Mrs. Wllam H. Thorpe of Locust avenue and her son Charles, who have been vstng relatves at Phladelpha and at Wlmngton, Delaware, returned home on. Monday. Ethel, the nne-year-old daughter of Henry Whtng of Brdge avenue, who has been dangerously sck wth typhod fever for the past fve weeks, s slowly mprovng. Walter Longstreet and Robert Sckles, who are employed by Sckles & Clay, are enjoyng a two weeks' vacaton. They are spendng several days at Trenton.. Alonzo Longstreet and hs ssters, Mrs. Anna Stlwell and.mss Llle Longstreet, who recently sold ther property on Borden street, have moved to Long Branch. Mss'Angelne Hofftnre of Monmouth street returned home last week from a month's vst to Brooklyn, Mss Hoff mre s now vstng at Orange. Mr. and Mrs.. B. Edwards, who have been lvng at Sprng Lake for several months, have returned to ther home on Front street for the wnter. F.-M. Randall, a summer resdent of Lttle- Slver Pont, has rented Mrs. George Wood's house on Broad street, Red Bank for the wnter, Mr.'and Mrs. Whtall S. Hll of Broad street returned home on Saturday from a month's vst to Mr. ard Mrs. Charles P. Noble of Detrot. Lloyd Eglnton saled for hs home n England last Wednesday. Mr. Eglnton had been a resdent of Red Bank for about ffteen years. Mss Vctora R. Smayer, and Msses Vola andklda Truax of Waysde spent Sunday wth Mrs. ThomaB R. Brown of Red Bank. Mrs. Charles S. Reckless of Maple avenue, who has been vstng relatves n New York and Brooklyn, has returned home. Mss Emlo Campbell of Mnnasquan 'spent l 3t Wednesday and" Thursday wth Mss Martha Moffett of Red Bank. Mss Edna Foster of rvng street returned home on Monday, from a two weeks' vst wth relatves n Brooklyn. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Hll of New York have been vstng Mr, and Mrs. Robert G. Macdonald of Leroy place. Mss Margaret Houlhan of Shrewsbury vewo has returned from a two weeds'vst to Phladelpha. Alonzo Sutphen of New York was the guest of hs mother, Mrs. Sarah Sutphen of Borden street, last week. Mrs. Emelne Burdge of Chestnut street spent last week- wth Mrs. Wlson Havens of Manasquan. John S. Fltcroft of Red Bank, vsted Mr. and Mrs. James Fltcroft of Farmngdale last Wednesday. M& Anna Gram man of Shrewsbury avenue spent Monday wth Mrs. George Dangler of Waysde. Frank Cothren of New York spent Sunday wth hs aunt, Mrs, Alce Coth. on of Broad street. MsB Hannah Keough of Wall street spent Beveral days last week n Now York and Brooklyn. Mss Melssa Thatcher of Jersey Cty s vstng her aunt, Mrs. John T. Totley of Worthley street. Mrs. John -Fourt of Monnjoutb street fell from her etoop last Frday nnd spraned her anklo., (Mnrtln Rordan of Stamford, Connect cut, vstertj hs parents at Shrewsbury last Wednesday.. Mrs. Mchael A, Colomnn of Lncroft, nnd her daughter Nelle have moved to RelWlc. j L. Nver of New York spent Sunday wth frends n Bllddletown townshp. Msa Edna Amy of East Ecd Dank lut/ boon vsang frtomlb n Jeuey Cty and Brooklyn. Mra. Goorgo Bc-doll of Rod 1 flnnlrfpont last wook wth Mra, H. Krokow of Scoboyvllo.' ' ',: Mnlford A. Thorpoof Locust nvonuc s vstng relatves at Frankford, Phla delpha. ' J. Howard Mclntyre spent Frday and Saturday wth hs mother at West Long Branch. Albert McQueen of Shrewsbury arenue has been qute sck durng the past week, y Mss Beatrce Dugan, who a employed on the Standard, s enjoyng a vacaton, Mrs. Theodore Sckles of Mechanc street s vstng relatves at Brooklyn. * Charles A. Crag of Farmngdale vsted relatves n town yesterday. Clarence 51. Johnston of Herbert street spent Sunday at Trenton.,_. v Lester Hughes of Trenton was n town on Monday. OBTUARY. Rev. Benjamn F. frankln. Rev. Benjann F. Frankln, rector of Chrst Epscopal church at Shrewsbury, ded suddenly last Thursday nght. The cause of hs death was acute paralyss of the heart, wth whch he had been a sufferer for several years, Mr. Frankln was n hs usual health on the day of hs death. At ten o'clock that nght he was sezed wth the attack and n less than two hours he ded. Mr. Frankln was born at Provdence, R.., n November, He was educated.at Brown unversty at Provdence, and was a member of the Delta Ph fraternty of the college and of the Ph Beta Kappa, an honorary socety of the same college. He was also a graduate of the General Theologcal semnary of New York. Mr. Frankln's frst parsh was at Havre de Grace, Maryland, where he went n From there he went to St. Paul's church at Trenton, where he remaned sx years., He was afterward rector of St. John's church at Phladelpha for seven years, gong from there to New Castle, Delaware. n 1863 hs health became very poor and for fve years he dd not preach, bu't spent a greater part- of the tme travelng n Europe. n 1868 he was called to Chrst church at ndanapols, where he remaned untl June, For.the next three years he had no parsh. n 1875 he came to Chrst church, Shrewsbury. Mr. Frankln was marred twce. Hs frst wfe ded May 25th, 1884, and two years later he marred Mss Lucy Shff, daughter of Gustave Shff of New York. Besdes hs wdow, four chldren by hs frst wfe survve hm. They are Mrs. F. C. VanVlet and Ms3 Helen Frankln of Shrewsbury, Mss Anne Frankln of New York and Mrs. Alexander Allen of Sprngfeld, Massachusetts. The. funeral was held at Chrst church on Monday afternoon at half-past one o'clock and the servces were conducted by Bshop Scarborough. Many clergymen from neghborng parshes were present at the servces. Theodore Sckles, Wllam R. Stevens, George D. Tallman, Edward C. Fedler, John Davs, Harry Campbell, George Barlow and Benjamn J. Parker were the honorary pall bearers, the..casket beng, carred by professonal pall bearers. The body was bured n the churchyard. Jacob Weeks Cornwell. Jacob Weeks Cornwell of New York, ded on Sunday mornng at nne o'clock. He was the father of M. F. Cornwell of Red Bank, who was Mr. Cornwcll's only lvng chld. Death wus due to Brgbfs dsease, wth whch he had been sck only a short tme. Hs death was rather sudden, but was not unexpected. Mr. Cornwell frst came to Red Bank sxty years ago, and on hs frst trp to ths place he stopped wth Capt. Joseph Parker, father of Wllam B. and the late AsherS. Parker. Mr. Cornwell had been, n the habt of comng to Red Bank to spend hs summers off and on ever snce that tme. He left a very large fortune, pnrt of whch he nherted, but most of whch he had made n transactons n real estate. He was 68 years old. Thefuneral wll bohcld at hs home at Now York tonght at eght o'clock, and the bural wll bo at Woodlawn cemetery to-morrow. Mr, Cornwell had two daughters, both of whom marred and loft chldren, but both of whom nro now dead. Mr. Cornwall was very chartable, and was noted for hs many acts of unostentatous benefcence. He had a largo number of frends, both n Rod Bank and New York, and n tho latter cty he wll bo greatly mflscd by a wde crcle of peoplo whom ho had befrended. Mm. Rachel a. Hutlt. Mra, Enclel G. Hult of Farnngdnlo ded last Thursday, aged 87 yeara. About threo weeks ago Mrs, Hult fell nnd n jurod or leg, Blood posonng nut n nnd thb wan tho- cfufeo of her death. She leaven three Rons. They arc Leonard Hult of.aabury Pork ; Davd H. Hult of Camden nnd John B. Hult of Lower Sqmnkum. Mm, Hult'a huhband ded about fvo yenra ago. Mra. Marparct Mmcr\t. MM. Morgnrofc Emory, wfo of Rov. Robort Emory, u retred Mothodut mnster of Alluto UghludH, ded on Sunday of a complcaton of dlbcnncu. She was 65 years, old and had lved, at Atlantc Hghlands for the past twenty years. Prevous to that tme she had lved at Seabrght. A husband but no chldren survve he?. The funeral was held ths afternoon from the borne of her nephew, Thomas J. Emery, and the servce was conducted by Rev. Percy Pernehef, pastor of the Atlantc Hghland Methodst church.- The body was bured at Bay Vew cemetery. Mrs. Rathertne P. tance. Mrs. Katherne P. Hance, wfe of Frank Hance of Scobeyvlle, ded of pertonts last Thursday. She. was 86 years old and had been sck about a week. She was the daughter of Albert Polhemus of Scobeyvlle. A husband but no chldren survve her. The funeral was held on Sunday at two o'clock.at her late home and the servce was conducted by Rev. Samuel R. Cunnngham, pastor of the Colt's Neck Reformed church, of whch Mrs. Hance was a member. The body was bured at Holmdel.. Erhard Fsher. ' Erhard Fsher of Upper Freehold townshp ded on Sunday, October 23d, aged 73 years. Mr. Fsher was kcked n the breast by a colt and hs death resulted from the njures he receved. He was a natve of Germany and was employed at Allentown n the tannng busness for a number of years. About twenty year3 ago he went n busness for hmself at New Egypt. Mr. Fsher leaveb a wdow, three daughters and fve sons. He also leaves a sster, Mrs. Frederca Sptz of Allentown.. Srs. Mary Satter. Mrs. Mary Salter, wdow of Jacob Salter, ded last Thursday at the home of her nephew, H. E. Nepean of Rod Bank, aged 56 years. Her death was caused by heart dsease and dropsy. Mrs. Salter was the daughter of Elzabeth and Henry Smth and was born at New York. Thefuneral was held on Saturday'. The servces were n charge, of Rev. E. J. Hammett asssted by Rev. J. H. Morgan and Rev. R. R. Young. The bural was at Whte Rdge cemetery. Thomas A. Roberts. Thomas A. Roberts, a«well-known archtect of Asbury Park, ded suddenly of heart dsease last Frday nght. He was n apparently excellent health on the day of hs death, but durng the afternoon he was attacked wth heart dsease, from whch he ded n a few hours. He was 65 years old and had lved at Asbury Park for several years. A wdow and one son survve hm. Edward Berry. Edward Berry ded of consumpton at Long Branch last Wednesday. He was 48 years old and had been sck for a year. For the past sx months he had been unable to work. He was an uncle of Elwood Berry of Red Bank. The funeral watheld on Saturday at eleven o'clock from hs late home and the body was bured at Eatontown. Rev. R. jr. Rev. Robert J. Andrews, formerly of Monmouth county, ded at Jamesburg on Monday of last week, aged 07 years. Mr. Andrews was one of the orgnal members of the Ocean Grove campmeetng assocaton and was for a long tme edtor of tho Ocean Grove Record. He leaves a wdow and one daughter. Coowe' Matthews. Conover Matthews of Jackson's Mlls, near Freehold, ded dn Frday a.week ago, of consumpton. He had been sck eght years. Mr. Matthews was 01 years old. He leaves a wdow, who was Mss Susan Strckland. Two daughters also eurvvo hm. They are Msses Donna and Anne Matthews. Mrs, Rachel Havens. Mrs. Enchel Havens of Farmngdale, wdow of Ezra Havens, ded lust Wednesday. Sho-was G7 years old. Mrs. Havens had been Hck wth eryspelas for several weeks, Her funeral was held on Saturday afternoon at half-prht ono o'clock at the Farmngdalo Metboclst church. Mrs. M. A. Vanderlpe. Mrs. M. A. Vnnderpe, a former resdent of Atamlapan townshp, ded at Rahway on Saturday, October 20th. Sho was 84 years old and was tho wdow of Sdney Vanderpo of Mamlupan, who ded many years ago. Mrs. Rebecca MS. Helm. Ms. Rubecca E. Kom of West Asbury Park ded on Sunday, aged 50 years. Sho had been sck about sx montlm. A hubband and four chldren survve her. SlantUtlon VltlldH. Montll on Clllds of Long Brunch ded of pertonts nt tho Long Brunch hobptnl l«ht Frday, Ho waa 28 years old. A wdow survved hm. Much a'rale Of oloku, mu and fur garmenta na the Hulo now Kong on at tho dry goodu store of Jodunl HalKwan noyor boforo known n led Bank. Adv. ANtt. NAVY SALARES. A Dfference n the Pay of Offcers n the Army and Xavu. The sea pay of naval offcers, as compared wth that of correspondng ranks n the army, s as follows: Vce admral.../...?9,000 Rear admral ;'... 6,000 Commodore 5,000 Captan... 4,500 Commander 3,600 Leut, commander 2,800 Leutenant 2,400 Leutenant (J. G.) 1,800 Ensgn ,200 Leut, general $11,000, Major general 7,500 Brgader general 5,500 Colonel }... 3,500 Leutenant colonel 3,000 Major... 2,500 Captan 1,800 Frst leutenant 1,500 Second leutenant 1,400 There s a decrease of $200 to 51,000 a year n the shore pay of naval offcers, and stll a further decrease when they are*, on watng orders.- n the army mounted offcers receve a lttle more than those who are not mounted. The table shows that all the naval ranks below ; commodore.receve a larger compensaton than the corre-, spondng ranks n the' army. n the cases of naval captans and commanders t s easy to perceve the reason for ths. Captans and commanders are command ranks, and the offcers n these grades are usually placed n postons of the gravest responsblty as commandng offcers of shps. Furthermore, they are compelled to do a consderable amount of entertanng,whch puts them to much expense. Agan, naval offcers when afloat are oblged to mantan separate for ther famles." establshments Where Volns are Made. The only place n the world where voln makng may bo sad to consttute the ndustry, s Markneukrche'n, n Saxony, wth ts numerous surroundng vllages. There are,' altogether, about 15,000 people n ths dstrct engaged exclusvely n the manufacture of volns. Lttle wants can often be flled by advertsng n THE REGSTER'S want column at a cost of 23 cents. Adv. RKtlTUS.jl CALLAHAN. At Shrewsbury, or! Monday, November 7tl^ Mrs. Danel Callalmn, of n son. COGGNS. At Lonu Branch, on Wednesday, November 2d, Sre. Agnes Coggtns of Red Bank, of a dnughter. CARNEY. At Long Branch, on Monday, October 31st, Mrs. John Carney, of a son. DEY. At Long Branch, ou Monday,- October 31st, Mrs. George Dey, ot a son. DCKSON. At Red Bank, on Wednesday, November 2(1. Mrs. Morrs Dlckson, o[ a daughter. EMMONS. At Allentown, on Monday, October 31st, Mrs. Henry Eramons. of a daughter. t?eorg,.-at Branclport. on Monday, October 31st, Mrs. Frank Georgll, ol a daughter. LUTHElt. At Long Branch, on Wednesday, October 2Ctl), Mrs. B. A. Lutler^f v, son. UPPNCOTT.-At Llttlo 9lver,-tm Saturday. October 21M. Mrs. Gt'orue Llpplncott, of a daughter. MAGEE. At Long Branch, on Sunday, October 30th, Mrs. Elmer Mugee of a. son. SUEUMAN.-At led Bunk, on Thursday, November 3d, Mrs. Thomas Sherman, of a son. TLTON. At Red Bank, on Saturdav, November 5th, Mrs. AUrert Tlton, of a son. MARRAGES. BUNN-PULLEN. At Shrewsbury, on Tuesday, November Ft.l. Ly Rev. A. 0. Klmber, LulcgoLouse, daughter of Mrs. Charles lnn of Khewsburr, and James Henry r-ulluu o( St. Johns, New lrunswlck. CHERRY-BLACK. At Bloomfleld, N. J.. on Thursday. November 3d, by lev. Edwn A. Whte Mss Kate H. Cherry and J. Lndsay Blank, Jr both of Anbury Part. ' DOUGHTY HARVEY.-At Tu'd Bank, on Wednesday. November 2d, by lev. E. C. Hancock, Mss Etlle Dnughtv of Far laveu and John W. Harvey of Tnton Falls.. GEORGE-SMTH.-At Keyport, on Snturdny, October 29th, by Rev. Mr. Woot ward. Mss Cl'stlna George of Mala wan and Raymond Smth of Koynort. HULT-LAOOUll.-At Long Branch.on Wednesday, nclobrrar.l. lv Rev.?. H. Stalls, ars. Mnute Hult and Charles rj. Lncour, both ot Long Branch.- LSK CONOVEB. At Mat.nwnn. nn.wednesday November 2d, by ltov. Alex. H. Young, Mrs. Sopha B. Lsk of Matwn nml John W. Conover of Bavonne. MORUS-VAXOELDER. At Long lrcneh, on.wednesday. November M. by Rev. W. 1>. C. Strct land, Mss Emly c. Morrs and George W. Van- Gelder, both of Long Branch. : PECKHAM MOKtORD. At Germantown, Pa., on Wednesday. October 2(ltb. Mss Ella V. reek-ham of Gennantovn and Edward H. Morford of MldUletown lownshp. VANSCHOOK BUTCBER. At Lower Squnnkum. on Wednesday, November 2d. by Eev. A. E. Weston of Farmngdale, Mlsa Hatto May Van- Sclolck of Losver Squankum and Harry Ddnsey Butcher of Ardeca..,... VOORHEES-POLAND.-At Manoscruan. outuesday, November 1st, by Uev. Henry Cross, Mss Mary tosellavoorheesof Asbury Park and Lews Poland of Como. WALLNG-LAMBERT?ON. At Keyport. on Wednesday. November 3d. by Rev. Rchard. T. Lenry, Mss Esse Wallng and Cornela's Lamberts.on, both of Keyport. VEATHS. ANDREWS. At Jamesburg, on Monday, October 31st, Rev. Robert J. Andrews, formerly of Ocean Grove, aged U7 years. HLDS.-nAt Long Branch, on Frday, November 4th, Monttlllon Chllds, aged W years. ERVK. Near Eugllshtown, on Saturday, October. 29th, Edna O., daughter of Etnnn and George 1\ Ervlc, aged 2 months. EMERY.-At Atlantc Hghlands, on Sunday, November 6th, Margaret, wfe of Uev. Robert Emery, aged 05 years. FRANKLN. At Shrewsbury, on Thursday, Novemher 3d, Rev. Benjamn F. Frankltn, aged 70 years. FSHER. At New Egypt, n Upper Freehold townshp, on Sunday, October Sd, Eruurct Fsle,r, aged 72 years. '. HULT. At Farmngdalo, on Thursday, November d, Mrs. Rachel/}, lmt, aged 67 years. HARBN8ON. A t Asbury Part, on Tuesday, November 1st, Henry Harblnson, aged U years. STONEY. At Freehold, on Thursday, October 27th, Otto, son of Elzabeth and Charles W. Stonoy, aged 4 months. HANCE. AtScobeyvlllo.'on Thursday, November 1st, Katherne P., wfe of Frank Hance, aged 3'J ears. HAVENS. At Farmngdale, on Wednesday, November Zd, Ma. Rachel Havens, nged (57 years. KEM. At Weat Aslury Park, on tunday, November 5th, Mrs. Rebecca E. Kem, aged 59 years. MATTHEWS. At Jackson's Mlls, near Freehold, on Frday, Octouer.JStl, Conover Matthews, aged (l years. NEWMAN. At Sea Sde, on Saturday, October 29th, Henry Newman, aged 88 years. ROBERTS.-At Asbnry Park, on Frday, November 4th, Thomas A. Roberts, aged 05 years, SALTER At Red'Bank, on Thursday, November 3d, Mrs. Mary Salter, aced 50 years. SHERMAN. At Hobokon, on Snturday, October. 29th. Thomas E. Sherman, Sr., formerly of Keyport, aged 70 yeare. '.. VANDERPE.-At Rahway, on 8aturdy,.October 20th, Mrs.M. A. Vanderlpe, formerly ot Manalapan townshp, aged &t years. 40 Drops nnnffllfn] WntPP T hreo T ot UUUMllUlUll KVlllu a day, CU1ES. DABETES, GRAVEL, NFLAMMATON OF THE KD- ME'S, lmck DUST DEVOSLT, LVE COMPLANT. - tu not n sprnt Wvtor.. For S.lo by DnKcMB. Bend for Crcular to MORGAN ft ALLEN, 69 John Strot't, ' Now Tork Cty. JACOB C. SHUTTS,' - - AUCTONEER Admnstratrx's Sale OP Personal Property The subscrlbt,admnstratrx of the ostate of Capt. Wllam H. Mount, deceased, wll offer for sale on tho premses ron, on the Stone Road, on 1888, at 10 o'clock, A. M. sharp, Clo followng de-. - scrbed personal. property: Household and Ktchen Furnture, Consstng of Stoves, Carpets, Chars, Desks, Tables Mattresses, Beds and Beddng. ODU Barometer, lot of Stoats, Fowls, Tll ug Posts, Rals, 1 Potato- Boler, Plmetorj, 1 Carrage, 2 Strapsof Bells, Slegh, Fnrn Wagon, Gran Cradle, 2 Chests Carpenter Tools, Block ond Fnll. lot of Roof Pant, Wheelbarrow, Hay Cutler, Mower, Harness Closet, and Farmng utensls. Two Horses, Two Sets of Harness, Wheat, Potatoes, Hn'y, 10 acres of Com n tho shock. Fannng Mll, Straw, Manure, 3 Cows, Vnegar and Smoked Meat. Also 20 Shares n the Long Branch Bankng: Company. TEttMS-All sums under S^0, cash; on all sums, over 810, nlnn mouths' credt wll be gven on note wth approved securty. Elbcron, N. J., September 2Jt!, JHW. MAKT E. HOVXT, Admnstratrx. Thero s nothng that can be compnrv.1 wth tho ChytmnMcmm n decoratvo beauty, t s truly tho beautful nnd popular " Queen of Autumn." Wo nro now otterng tlebo beautful -flowers both cut blooms and potted plants n (lower n vared ansorttncb ut very low prcea. Wo lnvu nleo cut flowers of other kntlw, such m choce RBCB, Carnatons, Volets, etc, to«utlpr wth Pnlmu and amlnr Ornamental Plants of (lltoront flzro. A full lno of Dutoh Rulbs for autumn plantng.. Pllovva, C Wrcatlm' nnd other lornl desgns for funernla quckly and artstcally arranged. Decoratons for WedtlngH, Dnners, Rpceptona, etc. J. T. LOVETT, 4O Broad Street, RED BANK.

6 THREE RUNAWAYS. Warren D. Brand's Horse Gets Frltencd at a Washout. ' Warren Brand and famly of. Oakhuret were drvng homo last Frday ngbt when the horse became frgbtgned at a washout n the road. The boree ran away, upsettng the wagon and- throwng the.ocopants out. Mr. Brand struck ls head aganst a fence and was rendered unconscous by the blow. Hs wfe was also hurt, Slo was taken to the house of Thomas Bagan, where her njures were dressed, and she was afterward removed to her home. The horsn rnn on as far as the West Long Branch Methodst church, where t stopped untl t was caught... A-team of horses belongng to Edwn W. Downc of.waysde were ted to a pout n Red Bank one day last week when.they got frghtened and ran away. The harness and wagon were damaged to the-amount of $10. The horses were caught after runnng a 6hort dstance. Mr. Bowne was feedng apples to hs lorses last week when one 1 of them bt the thumb of hs rght hand very badly. A team belongng to J. Hoppng Dangler, also of Waysde, ran away last week. Mr. Dangler was thrown from the wagon and was badly brused. The horses were caught,! near Mr, Dangler's home by Mchael (Fnley. mprovements. Acton C. Hartshorne of Freehold s buldng a bay wndow to hs house. The nteror of the house s also beng repared and mproved. Enoa Applegate of Long Branch has been awarded the contract to buld a house at Lttle Slver for Dr. J. D. Thomas of Phladelpha, The new-buldng wll cost $2,000. The Msses Whte of East Front Btreet are buldng a new pazza to the rear of ther house. -O-4-O. A Manasquan Church Rebult. The Manasquan Baptst church has been almost entrely rebult;. An addton has been bult to the church and towers have been bult on the two front corners, New memoral wndows have been put n and the nteror of the buldng has been papered and decorated. The cost of tlo mprovement was $5,100. The buldng was re-dedcated on Sunday of last week. Far Haven Propertes Rented. The Charles Parker place on Kemp's road, between Far Haven and the Rumsou road, has been rented to Mr. Rall of Seabrght. Mr, Parker has rented from Francs V^hte the Wood ward place of four acres on the corner of the Hance road and tlo Far Haven road, about* half way between Rod Bank and Far Haven, A Now ce Company. A new'ce-company has been ncorporated under the name of The Seabrght Hygea lee company of Seabrgut, N. J., wth a captal of 30,000. The ncorpoutors nre Charles. Denson, Robert W. Gleason, Perre P. Keller and Joseph H. Keller of Seabrght. The company wll manufacture hygea ce. Accdents. A team, of horses belongng to R, B. Campbell of Manasquan became frghtened on Tuesday of last week and ran away. They collded wth J. G-. Applegate's wagon and Mr. Applegate's wagon was wrecked. Jacob Hurley's horse ran away at Asbury Park on Tuesday of last week and Mr. Hurley was thrown from hs wagon and rendered unconscous. Mr. Hurley s seventy years old. Last Wednesday J. W. Voorhees of Turkey started for the shore wth a load of hay. At Ardena the load upset and Mr, Voorhees fell aud spraned hs ankle." James Longstreet of Red Bank was runnng to catcl a tran at Matawan last Wednesday-when ho caught hs foot n a frog and fell, cuttng hs rght knee. ' Edna, the young daughter of Dr. D. E, Roberts of Key port, fell out of a chld's wagon, on Tuesday of last week and broke her collar bone. Wllam Burr of Shrewsbury avenue cut hs rght hand n some machnery, whle at work n HoflEmre's mll last week.. ', Harry Lausch, a carpenter of Long Branch, mashed the forefnger of hs rght hand whle at work last Frday. W. B. Tuttle of Long Branch was btten by a dog on Monday of last week. He afterward shot the dog. Etntn. Tlton of Allentown ran a large splnter n hs hand one day last week, makng a panful wound. Rev. P. K.- Hageman of Mddletown cut hmself on the wrst wth a hatchet on Tuesday of last week. Johanna Oooley of mlaystown fel from a stepladder and.broke her leg about a week ago. Land for Sale at the Phalanx. " Tbe executors of tno estate of the late Thomas B. Wallng offtr at prvate sale llvo lots of land at te Phalanx, contanng: D all about 37 acres, part of wmcb s cleared laud and part s la Umber of oat, cuestdutaod locust. Anyone wll DB stown the property by callng on W. A. WnlUner, Phalanx. N. J. W. A. WAXNS, T. P. WELCH, Executors. For Sale! The James H. Peters Store, RED BANK, N* J. The buldng and lot known as the Jarrjes H. Peters store, 011 Broad street, Red Bank, s offered for sale at a reasonable prce and on very easy terms, The lot s 40 xl40 feet,-and the buldng s fve- stores, wth basement, and s bult n the nosfc substantal manner on the entre lot. Connected wth the. store are two storehouses and a large plot of ground, separated from the man buldng by an alleyway. The busness has been establshed about half a century, and the sale of the property offers an unusual opportunty for an enterprsng man to make a fortune. For partculars address, THEODORE F. WHTE, Regster Buldng:, Broad St., Red Bank. 1 WHAT WE SAY WE DO, WE DO DO. Truthful Advertsng Always Sells HoneBt Goods. f. Chldren's Outng Flan- 9 nel Dresses, ncely trmo' med, worth 39c, at Q Lades' Outng Flannel Nght Robes, trmmed on collar and sleeves Chldren's All Wool 25c. 50c..Cardgan Toques, all the college colors. 25c. nfants' and Chldren's n plush, slk and Y ederdown, reduced to... 25c. * W. B. Corsets, No. 667, j. lace trmmed top and bot- X torn, new'french shape., 39c. $ Men's Socks, three parts wool, seamless, cheap at ; 19c, here at OC. Q Lades'Vests and Pants, ^ Swss rbbed, heavy.;. weght, the knd sold elsef t where at 39c, hero at... 25c f. Boys' and Grls' Hats and Caps, all the newest styles, sold to close at 25c. to 39c., 19c Men's Fleeced Lned Shrts and Drawers, extra heavy weght,-cheap at... 45C. Lades' Kd Gove>, regular Ht Wth a Saw Horse. John H. Slryker of Keyport was at $1.00 qualty, but got a lttle damped 49C«work gradng the grounds around Horace 0. Blanket?, 11-4 sze, exfust S. Bnrrowes's new lo'use at that place tra heavy qualty, when a saw horse fol from a second color borders...$1.39 story wndow and struck hm oh the Comfortables wth sal e a v y head and shoulders, Ho was knocked teen coverng, senseless and was serously njured, but he wll recover. weght and full sze. 98c. A Specal Electon at Allonhurst. A spednl electon was held at Allenhurst last Frday to vote on the proposton to buy the water and sower plants and all the other property of the Coast water and sewer company, at a cost not exceedng!?00,000. Ffteen votes were caht n favor of the proposton and four persons voted aganst t. A. New HOUBO on Center Street. Jostph T, Burrowea.'Sr,, s buldng a now house on Center street, n the rear of hs Broad street resdence. The house s 2(1x28 feet, wth a ktchem extenson, and wll contan aoveu rooms.- A pazza wll lu bult on two Bdes of the house..the. buldng wll coat about $1,600. Now luldlhgs. Alonzo Brower & Son of Freehold have been awarded (ho contract for remodeln; the Ucfonned ehupel at Marlboro. Mss Mary Martn of Freehold n buldng n Hx room-house at that place. The ^ buldng wll bo 24x38 feet Fol and Brolro Her. Wrst. Srs, Clarlen Fattornon of Freehold fell am broke her wrst whle Rettng Fome coal out of a bn on Tuesday of nut weult. The accdent wan plrljcularly unfortunate, H her mslmnd" 1B dangerouhly nck wth Drght'H deeaho. Frooold Property Bold.. Frank t. Dllla of Freehold lna bought a house on Court Drect at that place. Ho pad #l),f01) for the property, Boys' Outng Flannel Wasts, pleated bacl> and front, sold usually at 25c., 1 now 19C. Lades'All Wool Wasts, all leadng colors, some trmmed wth brad..; % Lades' Heavy Weght f Sateen Underskrts, two ruffles and cordng 98C. Underskrt patterns of heavy flannellette, lght & and dark colors 25C. > Umbrellas, fast color * covers and steel rod, worth. f, 75C-, at...; 49C. & 6-4 Chenlle Table Cov- 6 ers, heavy knotted frnge, worth $1.00, at 75C. Damask Table Coverng, full ' wdth, regular" ' prce 35c, at per yard 25C. Extra Heavy Full Sze Comfortables, soft cotton fllng, specal prce. 79C. Outng Flannel, good heavy qualty, choce of new patterns, per yard... "Jc. W md 0 w Shades of opaque cloth, patent ' sprng rollers, the knd worth 39c, at 25C. Lace Curtans,new Nottngham patterns, regular prce $1.50, at 96C. Percalne Dress Lnng, large assortment of new, strpes, at per yard... OC. ' LADES' SEPARATE DRESS SKRTS of the new Grante Sutngs, warranted all wool, well made, a postve bargan at )3Q Sale prce "f»j LADES' SKRTS OF BRL- LANTNE and ALL WOOL S T 0 RM SERGE, made wth flounce and new back, regular prce $3.98. Sale prce.. LADES' SKRTS of Sctllans, Jacquards, Serges, etc., ncely trmmed wth brad, cordng, etc., regular'prce "$4.95 to $6,50, ~ "" "* Sale prce MSSES' SKRTS n plan colors and noveltes, ncely made and ft guaranteed, sold by others at $2.25, here at Lades'Outng Flannel Wrappers,.well-made and ncely trmmed, fast colors, regular prce $1.25, here at 89C. KlSH CAPES. 1,49 FRANCS WHTE, / Real Estate, Loans and nsurance,; FRONT STREET, RED BANK, N. J. 0 MONEY TO O.4.V-$5,000 ) $3,000, $1,500, $800, and a few small sums. MONEY FANTED One sum of $7J500on two fne propertesroceanc; cost $15,000, wll pay 0 per cent and taxes; beautful property. Also $8,000 on valuable farm and gentleman's place near Eed Bank, worth $22,000. Also $4,000 on place, cost $to,ot)o FOR SALE On Leroy place, tbree houses, all mprovements $4,250, 5,000 and $5,250. Mpnmouth street, two houses, mprovements, one has large barn, $4,000 and $5,000. Lot 84x150, small house, $1,300. Oakland street, pretty corner, barn, $5,000. Fne house and lot. $3,500. Shrewsbury avenue, pretty house and barn, $2,100. Corner house wth lot and barn on Leonard street, $8,400. Double house, rents for $240, $2,400. Lot 75x183, $550. Plot of ground. corner Rver street, 150x492, 4,000, bg speculaton, half cash. House, lot 70x220, barn, $2,700.. Store wth rverfront, $1,800, lttle cash. Fne house, rver front,' $5,500, Rdge Road, 2f acres, beautful plot, $1,800. Prospect avenue, sx lots, $600 each; twenty-eght other lots, ad jonng, $230 to $400. East Front-street, house and barn, mprovements, lttle cash, 75x209, $5,000. House, 12 rooms, lot 100x150," $3,500. Front Btreet, two houses and barns, $4,000 each. One on rver and street, $7,000. Lot, lne lver front, 80x300, $5,500. Corner property, all mprovements, barn, lot 78x182, $8,800, $2,000 cash, house hasseventeen rooms. Sx houses on Broad street, all mprovements, $5,500, $7,000, $0,000, $0,500, 6,000, $4,000. Next'advertsement wll gve you the rver property and some other streets. TO LET. Three houses, all mprovements, $25.00 each; three houses, $10.00 each; three houses. $7.00 each; two, mprovements, $30.00 each ; three hou3es, $12.00 each ; two houseb at $9.00, one at $18.00, and one at $8.00; one on rver,. $600 ; three years' lease, furnshed, $800j tbree stores, $20.00, $30.00, $45.00, S NSURANCE N BEST COMPANES. JPROPEJQTY APPRASED. BANK STOCK WANTED All you have to sell. " Offce of Trenton nvestment Co; Telephone n offce. FRANCS WHTE, Offce on Front street, opposte Globe hotel. Resdence on Rver Bank. The. new thng ths season s blue jj and black Serges and Unfnshed 1 Worsteds for suts, double breasted and slk faced. We have them at 4 ' v, rj. $10.00, $15.00 and $16.00, and you never saw better values. t Lades' Plush Capes, handsomely trmmed wth brad ard jet, furaround collarand bottom, ^ slk lned, regular prce $6, here Jf $3.98. Ladles' and'chldren's Coats and Dross Goods Patterns at Specal Prces for a *ow Dayn, BROAD STREET, RED BANK. Of course you know we sell Men's & Fleeced Shrts and-drawers at 38c, A 5 usually 50c ' t 6 39 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. $ 1 vv And specal prces on them for two weeks, from November tth to 25th., Leggett's Prepared Buckwheat Flour. Sb. pkg. le.., l)>.. 17c# A good " ". " SJb. " 09c. Also Hecker's Prepared Buckwheat, Flap Jack, Flaked Tapco, Aunt Jemma, and to go wth them, Honey, Maple Syrup, Maple Sugar, etc., all new and fresh. Mnce Meat and a full lne of Dred Fruts. Watch ths advertsement for next specals. DOREMUS BROS., SPECAL SALE! For a short tme we,are offerng our most complete stock of Carrages and Harness, comprsng almost every style of carnage and harness made, at greatly reduced j prces n order to make room for a new stock now buldng for sprng trade. Ths s hot an old dead stock, but the goods are all of latest styles and most of : them were fresh stock ths summer, and arc ftted wth all the new devces, such as lon'g dstance axles, quck shftng shaft couplngs, etc. Also a.large varety of gpod second-hand Carrage's, Bugges, Runabouts, Jagger Wagons, etc., at less than cost.,., J. W. MOUNT & BRO., Cor. Mapo Avo. and Whte St., $ 8 RED BANK.

7 WAYSDE NEWS. JUuch Vsjtna?(!/ the People of the Localty. Wllam. Brewer has moved from the Conover house at Green Gjfove to Francs Wyle's farm at the Pnes. Wllam Wlson Kng, who leased the Conover property last year, wll occupy the house vacated by Mr. Brewer, Mrs Wllam W. Bo vne and her daughter Nelle spent part of last week wth Wllam Carey of Long Branch. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Trax have returned home from a vst tosyljam Conk of Long Branch Cty. ~ Mrs. Rchard Connors of Tnton Falls and her son Harold have been vstng Mrs. Valentne Dangler. Chrstan Fessler of Long Branch Cty spent Sunday wth hs brother-n-law, Chrstopher Grammar). At the pastor's donaton, whch was held at Mchael Fary's'last Wednesday nght, $13 was cleared. Msses Ada and 0. Frances Truax and Mrs. Jesse Clayton entertaned a number of frends last week., Mrs. Catherne Davs of New Bedford, Massachusetts, s vstng frends and relatves here. Asher Hall's hound, has strayed from home or been stolen. The dog was worth fve dollars. Mrs. Lyda Jackson of Manasquan has been vstng Mrs.-Anthony Jeffreys of Poplar. An entertanment wll be held n the Waysde Sunday-school on Thanksgvng day." Mr. Luther of Long Branch Cty has been vstng F. Wllam Gramman. Mrs. Edwn L. Havens has been vstng relatves at Manasquan. John Gorman of Whtesvlle has been vstng at Green Grove. Thomas Robbns has been vstng at Long Branch Cty. Mrs. Wllam Covert has been sck wth a com. Harry Wlson s employed at the Phalanx. o»-o OCEANPOBT NEWS. The Socal Club Gves a Dance An Electon Bet. The Oceanport Bocal club gave a dance last Thursday nght at Mrs. George Woodward's, About forty couples were present. Dancng started at nne o'clock and contnued untl early the next mornng, wth an ntermsson at mdnght for refreshments. J. Edward Corles and Charles H. Borden of Red Bank bet a box of cgats on Monday on the result of electon n New York. Mr. Borden s a Democrat and bet on VanWyck, whle Mr. Corles bet on Roosevelt. Very few bets have been made here on ths electon. Harry Blackmur, who owns the Monmouth Park stock farm, has returned to New York for the wnter. Wllam E.'Smth wll move to Mr. Blackmur's place, and enre for t untl Mr. Blackmur's return next sprng. Mss Ella Rosvell, who hns been confned to the house wth sckness, s recoverng. Robert Blar has hauled hs sloop, the John Hancock, out of the water for the wnter. ~ An addton s beng bult to the fre house. MORRSVLLE NEWS. A Bg Confrmaton Class Receves ts Frst Communon. On Sunday St. Catherne's churoh was prettly decorated wth palms, potted plants and cut flowers. The work was done by Mrs. Roe and several assstants. A class of eghteen receved ther frst communon. The grls were costumed n ther confrmaton gowns. Ths class and a number from Hllsdale wll bo confrmed at the Hllsdale church at an early date. The followng- pupls were not absent durng the second month of the school year: Cecl Jones, John Kolly, Nello Kelly, Jane Repphnrrt, Nelle Rcppbard, Mary RodRes, Thomas Rod- Rors, Wllam Rodgers, Davd Sclmnck, Lowls SchancU anl Ella VanNoto. Mrs. Albert Hart entertaned a number of frenda from Shrewsbury on Hallowe'en nght. The usual Sports were enjoyed. The Thanksgvng exercses of the publc school wll be held on Frday nght, ' November 18th. Mrs. George Schanck entertaned a few frends at tea on Monday nght, *-»- -, Colt's Neck News The pubjc school, whch has been closed for some tme on account of the sckness of the prncpal, was refpened last Thursday. John Conover s buldng a new stoop to hs house. A few other mprovements are also beng made to the place. The marrage of Mss Mngge Carney of ths place and Patrck Coyne of Senbrght has been announced. Mss Nette Heyer of Fnr Haven spent Sunday wth her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Heyer. James T. Kelsey burat a blood vessel lnat Wednesday and has snco been unable to work. Wllam Mller of Marlboro spent Sun-,- day wth hs couan, Howard Matthews. * Mr. and Mrs. Judson Francs spent Sunday wth frends at Holmdel. The new brdge over Heyer's brook wns " opened to traffc on Saturday.... ' ' Joseph Danger las teen conflnsd to the houso wth a lame bnck. Wllam Meyers and Frank Matthovva spont Sunday at Tennent. MflB Hulda Sckles s rocoverhfj from an attack of pneumona. " - Lous Mntthows wll ruflo off ahorse on Saturday nght. Frod Luther has put a lght fa front of hs hotel., ' Scoboyvlllo Novvo.'Chrstopher Mnolt Rathorod 1(50bushels of corn on tho farm of Uordan Broa. ono'duy last week. Mr. and Mrs. Mchael Kelsey of Bunt Freehold spent Sunday wth John lordtn. Mra. Wllam. Thompson of Long Brnnoh a vlatlng Mra. Wllam ; Foster,. A horao belongng to Albert Wcderholt ded of oollu UBL wuult.. A S00 CARRAGE HOUSE. Contans Stall for One Horse and s JBoomu and Well Bult. One of the most emnent wrters, tht late Vlollet-Leduc, sad of hmself that nfter -ho had spent tea years n the study ot archtecture he could not desgn a doghouse. n vew of ths judgment beng corrcot, and undoubtedly t may besoconjrerod, how many years' study wll t ako to desgn a hundred dollar barn and do t to tho best advantage, gvng room for one horse, two darragos and ample Btorago room for all needs, and yet make awurm, comfortable buldng,-wth some character and n lttle bt of artstc feellug, enablng t to keep company wth a modern cottagof The problem s'a very smple one on ts faoe, but to tho arohteot of modern sky PERSPECTVE VEW. 6crapers and classc followng t would bo appallng and would be swept asde wth a wavo of tho hnnd and dolegatod to tho ordnary jaok plnno carpenter ns tho only man to solvo t. And wthout doubt the. modern orpcnter, who s mbued wth practcal common sonso, would n every wny boat tho artlstlo, experenced archtect, becauso the one s tranod to accomplsh gvon results n small thngs wthn n gven cost, and the othor knows nothng of the general detal of cost, but can plan bg thngs for bg clents and oan count tho cost only when he gets through, and tho bgger ho can count t the better t suts hm, as the laoro t costa tho more ho wll got for hs troublo. t. am sorry to say ths stato of thngs n tho archtectural professon s the rule and not tho excepton, and thousands of people nro wastng mllons of dollars yearly by ths method. Tho man who can bo trusted n small thngs oan also bo trust- FRAMNG PLAN, cd n largo onos, and many are learnng ths sad lesson by oxperlonce, whloh s tho only way to have t tako proper root. Tho stnblo buldng horo shown las boon bult twoo wthn a month for tho fgure named and s no expormont. t s 16 by 18 foot n slzo, tho frst story 8 foot 6 nches and tho atto 7 foot hgh to rdge n contor. Tho foundaton s nne stono pors put down olonr of frost and throe 4 by 6 nch slls lad thereon to carry tho 8 by 0 lnoh tloor beams, whch aro 3 lnoh centers. Ths done, tho floor of matohotl plank s lad, and the studdng rests upon ths, BO that when tho sdng s Eofc n plaoe t olosos up nnd makos a tght job at tho bnso. A.floor s lad on the second story ovor 2 by jost, 2 nch contora, and tho roof put on ths. The sdes aro nclosed wth novelty elddg cornor boards and casngs planted on top, Tho roof s shnglod on 1 by 2 noh strps wth cedar shngles, and tho gables aro rough boarded nnd ehnglod. Tho doors aro battonod and hung wth strap FLOOR PLAN. hlngos, and tho largo door has a 3 by 8 strp boltod ol one door nnd a hook on tho othor for t to turn ntb to soouro tho samo, nnd a lock, etc, pln'ood on tho small door. Tho stall loor s ptohed two lnohea to a gutter n roar and thon strlppod wth peces of hard wood sot a half lnoh apart to allow dranage. A headlght's eob ovor tho small door, fabtonod wth n transom llftor. Ths s good for vontllatlon. Tho othor sashps nro onglq, of 0 nohoa each, 10 v by 14, and arranged to Blldo up. Tho coat lrns follows: ]?or lumber, nals and ono barrel cement for pers, $00; for hnges and hardware,?4; for carpenter labor and SHOH, $a3,r>0; for mason work on plora, etu., 56 j for pantng, $7.60; total, S100. Any ono oan buld t at ths prlqo f ho goes about t n n practcal qgd bmnobslkoway. * nteror Shaclon. Colors aro dvded nto warm and o»ol flmlot. TH 1H not due to moro noton, as can le readly tostod. f on a wnter's tfny a hlnu cloth and a rcdj»l((:h nro phcod top of u HMOU drft, t }vlll bo found that tho red muul muro tjulokly moltt ts way down boomno tho rol nbsorbf tho numb hunt from tho BU'H ryn. llluo and Rruon aro cool, wlllo vlolot, rod nnd jollow nro warm. All tho tnts and tono of cool HMOH nro donlrnblo n roojh of Kouthnrn oxpuhuro or n rnnmn nnnd lofmy D unnor, On tl)u othor hand, tho north rootnn nlould lavt wvn tnts nnd HMOB. Dark ronnh should lavo fow tonm, HH tho Unlt) warm tlntfl Wll n a nnmmro nnlto up lm luuu of mnnllno. '» \ A Chance for Young Men! A^FNE NYESTMENT N KEAL ESTATE AT : V A SMALL CASH OUTLAY:, 25 CHOCE LOTS AT.EAST SDE PARK! ONLY $10 CASH REQURED! Here s a chance for young men to get a lot for a home, on easer terms than was ever before offered n.red Bank. have 25 choce lots n East Sde Park whch wll sell on the followng condtons : Ten dollars n cash, and one dollar per week untl $25 s pad., wll then gve the deed for the lot.'....' The prces of these lots are from $200 to $250 each. After payng $25 and gettng the deed, you may pay the balance at your convenence. wll gve each purchaser of a lot all the shade trees he may desre to "put on hs lot, as have plenty on hand. The trolley road through the property s assured, and the lots wll double n prce n a very short tme. Come early to my offce, rooms 1 and 2,,REGSTEH Buldng, and pck out your lot. A complete lne for fall. Every make worth havng s to be found here: W. B., C. B., R. C, Warner's, Thompson's, etc. We have also a superor lne of Lades' and Msses' Wasts, n Ferrs Good Sense. Stockng Supporters, Steels, Shelds, and every artcle that goes wth a well kept corset department. ADLEM & COLE, BROAD ST., RED BANK, N. J... To sell the BEST GOODS for the' least money. 20 lbs. or over Granulated Sugar at 5c. lb. 10 lbs. Good Oat Meal for.. 25c. 7 lbs. Best Oat Meal for c. 7 lbs. Best Laundry Starch 25c. 6 lbs. Corn Starch 25c. 7 Cans Good Sardnes...; 25c. 3 Cans New Tomatoes 25c. 3 CanB New Corn. 25c. 3 Cans New Peas 25c. 3 Cans New Succotash 25c. 3 Cans New Lma Beans 25c. Calforna Canned Peaches, Pears, Aprcots nnd Plums, n heavy syrup, per can 15c. NEW GOODS. Evaporated Apples, Evaporated Peaches, Evaporated Aprcots, New Prunes, New Rasns, New Currants, New Ctron, New Lemon Peel, New Orange Peel, Sweet Cder,. Table Syrup, Mnce Meat. A bg name and brght colors don't make qualtes n canned goods. We see that the qualty s all rght before sellng them. fl o e w ^»/ u fl Monmouth Street, Red Bank, N. J. NEAR R. R. STATON. TRANSFER TCKETS ON THE TROLLEY DOWN-TOWN O. TolopUono Call 10B,. THOMAS CUMBERSON: Plumber. HOUSE LGHTNG AND 0 HEATNG. ALL SANTARY APPLANCES. VRONT STKEET, fted BANC, NEW JERSEY. THE MATCHLESS tt LGHT... S ELEOTEO OF 0OUESE. DO YOU USE T? All modern houses aro wred for oloctrc lghts. Wo do wrng at actual cost to us. nformaton gladly furnshed. The Shore Electrc Co., Red Bank, 25 EAST FRONT STREET, New Jersey. - AT S Rockers. We have just receved a large and elegant assortment of Rockers comprsng oak, golden oak, mahogany, cobbler seat, saddle sea ad reed n new and latest desgns. A very large hgh back wood seat Rocker of quartered oak at $1.33. Wndow Shades. A large lne of Wndow Shades; have some^as low as oc.- each.' Mantel Mrrors. Large Oak Mantel Mrrors wth fnely carved oak frame, two large mrrors, very ornamental, at $7.50. We have a very large assortment of Mantel Mrrors and Cabnets rangng n prce from $1.50 up: Bedroom Sutes. Sold oak three pece Bedroom Sute, swngng mrror n dresser, splasher back washstand, at $ Sdeboards. Beautful Oak Sdeboards, one large drawer and cupboards, beveled plate mrror, at $8.00. Couches. Fne Couches upholstered n velour and corduroy from 6.50 up. Lounges upholstered n velvet and Brussels from 3.50 up. -3 Desks. Roll Top Offce Desks, fnely fnshed, fve large and two small drawers at $ Lades' Wrtng Desks n oak and mahogany from $3.75 up. Magnfcent combnaton Book Cases and Desks n mahogany and quartered oak, hghly polshed, artstc fnsh, fne brass trmmngs, bevel plate mrror from $22.80 up. ron Beds. Whte enameled ron Beds, one nch post, all szes, frqm $2.50 up. Mattresses. Genune South Amercan Har Mattresses, forty lbs. at $ Extraordnary Values n Bed Blankets. ' 10-4 Whte. Bed Blankets from 35C par Whte Bed Blankets from 68c. par Whte Bed Blankets from $1.25 par. Chna Closets. Handsome Chna Closets, neatly carved, excellent fnsh at $ Parlor Tables. Hghly polshed Parlor Tables n golden, oak, oak and mahogany, from $1.85 up. Guns and Ammunton. Guns of the very best make at reduced prces. Loaded and empty Shells and Ammunton of all knds. Flower Pots. A large quantty of Flower Pots at the very lowest prces. Furnture, Hardware and louno Furnshng 'Goods of Every Doncrpton. Everythng Delvered Prca wthn Eo mlatof led Dane. \ T

8 OCEANC NEWS. ' SHBEWSBUBY NEWS. mprovements to A. C.CottreU's andoffcers Elected lm»t Weeh by the Mchael Uallanan's Propertes.. A. C. Oottrells maknksonemprovements to hs store. Mclmel Hallanan, who recently bought the Howard property on the corner of Man and- Brdge streets, s makng extensve mprovements to the House on le property. The house wll be remodeled and a toy wndow addton wll be bult on the south sde. The cost of the mprovement wll bo about $1,500. Wllam A. JT'rey' s dong the work. The women of the Presbyteran church wll gve ther anmal supper n Lyceum hall'on Thursday of next wrek. Ths supper a held every year to rase money for the church Chrstmas tree. The Chrstan Endeavoraocety of the church wll hold a socable to-morrosv nght at Mrs. H. H. StrykerV ' H. E Meeker and famly returned to New 'York'yesterday..To-morrow J. V/.. Parmenter and famly, who have been occupyng Frank. O'Bren's house on the rver bank, wll return to New York for the wnter. The Chrstan Endeavor socety of the Presbyteran church held a meetng on Sunday afternoon at Mrs. George Long- Btreet's. Tle meetng was led by Mrs. H. H. Stryker. Dr. Eluck Parmley s makng a trp through the West. He wll vst relatves n Oho and Chcago and he wll also vst thp -Omaha exposton before hs return. Mss Alce Carey Douner of Jersey Cty and Walter A. Brngs of ths place wll be marred at the brde's home at Jersey Cty on Tuesday. November 22d. Dr. and Mrs. S. L. Ford of Hensonvlle, N. Y., who have been vstng Mrs. Ford's mother, Mrs. J. C. Brll, have returned home.,mrs. O. H. Lloyd of New York has been spendng a few days wth her mother-n-law, Mrs. O. H. Lloyd. To-morrow nght'the Pastme club wll hold an orange socable n the Lyceum. Mss Emma Barton of New York s vstng Mss Jenne Brll. ' Mss Mame O'Bren spent last week at New York wth frends. Henry Hutelmanu spent part of last week at New York. FA K HAVEN NEWS. A Brthday Celebraton at Mrs. Georc Vlx's. & Mrs. George Vx, Sr.. nvted about two score of her frends to her house last Wednesday nglt to celebrate the annversary of her brthday. Tle house was decorated wth greens, and all the male guests wore chrysanthemum boutoneres. The guests spent the evenng n dancng. Thosa present were Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Wlber, Mr. and Mrs. John Bennett, Mr. and Mrs. Wllam Arras, Msses Adde Curchn. Adde nnd Elzabeth Ellenberg, Suse Martn, Nette Chandler, Blanche Lttle, Cora Parker, Suse and May Heudrckson, Stella Van- Brunt, Etta Lttle, Anne Vx, Lulu Post, Clara Mutou and Flora Bennett, Wl lara Curchn, Hue;o Bartholones. Jessa Bennett, John Martn, Edgar Chandler Leon Lttle, Raymond Doughty, Theodore Parker, Hurry Mnton, George Vx, Edward Lttle, Joseph Shay, Davd Bennett and Wllam Arras, Jr., Alce Worthley, who lves wth her.brother, C. P. Worthley, fell from her bcycle on Saturday. She was- brused nnd her wheel was broken. Tle advertsed letters n the postoffce.are for Harry Semtnper, Mrs. O. Hcks and Mrs. G, R. Lawrence. Wllam J. Parker las moved from Joseph Duvs's house to Mrs. Thorn's Vmlnam Chandler s now employed by Cha'rk'slWlHou, the panter, at'nave Bnkl r"~ r/ EATONTOWN NEWS. One Convert tfatle at the Revval the Methodnt Church. Revval servces are Btll held n the Methodst church. Mnsters from the surroundng towns are present every nght and conduct the servces. One converslbn hts been made. On Sunday nght the Junor Epworth league of the Methodst church celebrated the frst annversary of ts organzaton. The church wss decorated wth greens anc chrysanthemums. MssLeona Denns s presdent of the socety, and she had charge of the servce, whch conssted of a revew of the year's work. H. Albert Phllps has resgned as secretary and treasurer of the Vve camera club. D, 0. Wolcott has been elected to Tll the vacancy. The Baptst parsonage s beng re pared and repanted. One of the bg wllow trees whch stood n front of the house las been cut dotv],,. A grnuaplohe entertanment w ns gven n the schoolhosc? last Wednesday nght for the beneft of the school lbrary About 5 was cleared SamuL'l Johnson, the staton agent has had hs uun! pped for gas. Ueorgc Morrs s confned to hs bed Wth Bcllll'KS. ' Nulson Smock s havng ls houso repnut'd. Holmdol News. The, advertsed leuem n the postoflc are for Robert Fsher, l.udwku Fszk'r Nles Ycll'orson, Mrs. Sjusmn Smoclt, Mrs, J, Stner, MHS. 15. lakuv and Mrs George Robtfon. Lous DuboK who WHH severely njured about B'X w(k'lth ago by 'allnj: from v t«'t>, n rapdly recoverng although be srlll unabl to walk, Jouatlum llohnch anl 'H nhter Ncll have returned from an extended tr through tle Went. They vsltd th Omnl expobton durng tho trp. Axurlod of howh owned by Wlllm C. Ely nnved here on Monday from th Wet. Tho OBCH worn shpped fron Bulflo ld lndnapolh. Frank Brnscl, wlofnrh the Atnbrora. Cook place, wll movo to Rod Bun nbout thu frst; of March. P«ter Morrcll, Br., hm moved to tn FergUBDn frn at Occntjwrl, WHTO n wllbeomployod. Dalul ocluelc n confned to tb hobo wth Hlckneos. J. Alex Guy hm hal bn tvluphom plncod n a booll Readng Club. The Shrewsbury readng club-held a meetng last week at Mss Allen's and elected offcers for the ensung year. The offcers elected were : Presdent Mrs: A. B. Natew. Vce-presdent Mrs. J. E. Duvla.. Recordng secretary Mrs. A. v. Jetnlors.. Correspond!^' secretary Mss M. J. Conn'ally. Treasurer Mrs. A. H. Borctea. The subject of Rev. Samuel D, Prce's Bernon n the Prosbyteran church next Sunday mornng wll be ' Law vs.' trace." At nght he wll preach at latotown on " How our Bble s made." To-morrow nght the members of the 'resbytern church-wll hold a socable t the" parsonage. Benjamn Vanderveer has bera\ conned totte.huu.se wth a severe attack of ckness.... : Ar. and Mrs. J. V. Holmes are makng vst to Phladelpha. Mss Jenne Bell s confned to the ouse wth sckness. West Long Branch News. Bert Woolley, who has been vstng lends at Bath Beach, has returned ome. George F. Palmer of New York spent unday wth hs lather, Edward Palmer. Mrs. Charles.E. Mtcboll las been vstng her husband, at Washngton, D. C, Mr. and Mrs. James D. Maps of Asbury Park are vstng A. F. Goldpn. Wllam M. Golden has sold hs coon og to Mr. Scott of Oceanc. John Dangler gave a Uuskng-bee on donday. Ernest Holmes has bought a new bcyle. ^ Q «l Tred to Poson Horses. Wllam Burke of Wndsor wae found gulty of attemptng to poson three horses and a muje belongng to hs wother-n-law, Hamlton Schanck of "'errnevlle. On July 21st, Burke was t Perrhevllo drunk and he got mad at 3chanc): because he would not let hm 3tay n hs house. He went to tle baru and scattered pars green over the hay and fodder and n the waterng trough nd he nearly klled all the lve stock. Colt's Neck's Champon Husker. Howard Matthews and B. Van DuBos of Colt's neck had a huskng match on Tuesday of last week. Each man lrasked ten rows of standng corn and Matthews won the match. He husked the ten ows thrty mnutes anctdubos fnshed fve mnutes later. Daughters of Lberty Gve a. Flag. Prde of the Park councl of Daughters of Lberty gave a flag to tle Neptune townshp hgh school Lst 'Thursday. The flag s 8x12 feet n sze and s made of slk, wth glt stars. A pennant was also gven, n addton to the fagr. A Horse Mackerel Caught. A large horse mackerel was caught ly'ltennessey Brothers of North Long Branch last Wednesday The fsh W seven feet long and.weghed fve hundred pounds. Experence has taught vop'e that THE REGSTER s the greatest advertsng paper n ths part; of Monnonth county, -Adv. "QUEEN QUALTY" THE FAMOUS SHOE FOR WOMEN uncqualel n retanng shape, wear p and lustre. FaBlouablo for strcct ( drc33, home, or outnff. AllfeetMAfenelMfttod ntoo8,loola,nndl 0 tttuorb. mn TV ( Btyl0 ' Bble Assocaton Offcers. At the 8Jat annual meetng of the Mou'tnouth county bble socety 'whch was held at Long Branchlast Thursday, the followng offcers/were elected ; ~ Presdent -HOT. A. H. Younpr of Matawnn, Secretary John Stateslr of colt's Necfc. Treasurer-Charles Hall ol Freehold. Executve commttee Kev.. P. Brokaw, Rev.. P. McOouley and Joan H. Bawden of Freehold ; tov. J^epl) G. Reed of Ocoau Grove, Kev. F. B. Synmes of Teunent: v THE EEQSTER e the brghtest and best t newspaper on earth. Adv. Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards tle food aganst alum. Alum bakng powders arc the greatest menacers to health of the present day. ROVAl BAKNO POWOER CO., HEW TOOK. CPECAL MASTER'S SA.LE of Farm, O Tmber Land and Cedar Swamp. By vrtue of a tlecre) made bv the Court of Chancery, bearng date on the twenty-eghth day of October, A. D. 1808, n a cause pondng n sad court, wheren Charles Moore and others are complanants and Thoms onkerson and others, are defendants, the undctsknel wll expose to sale at publc venaue, onthuksday. DECEMBEtlSlh, 180S, between the hours of twelve and Qve o'clock, to wt, at two o'clock P. M.. on the premses lerelnaf tor desgnated No. 1, and known as He Onkcrson furn, all tho followng descrbed two tracts or parcels of land and premses, vz: No. 1. All that farm anl plantaton known ns HP Barzllnl Oakerson furn, stuate n the townshp of Plumsted, n the county of CTcean,' state of Ne«T Jersey, on both sdes of the road lendng from Hornerstown to Manchester (formerly tfedral or Cover Furnace), about two rollfs [rom Hornerslown. adjolnns lunds of Georjo W. Hopkns and others, contanng: 121,% acres bolns; the Slao premses of whch tn) sad Barzlla Oakerson became sezed by vrtue of three several deeds of conveyance, vz : (1) a deed made \>y Charles Stewart'md Ann, hs wfe, daled Aprl lllth, 18n, and recorded n Book B 4 of Deeds, folo 23, Ac n the Clerk's ofllce of Monmouth county, ut Freehold: 0 adeel made by Glberts. Lawrle, Charles Holmes mll Georco Sykes, executors ot vvlllam Lawrle, deceased, <lvt«j December d. 1844, nnd recotled n Book 22 of Deeds, folo 289, &c., n the Clerk's offce of Oeean county at Toms Rver: (3) a deed mado by George. Boker, nnd Jula"M., hs wfe, and Charles S. Boker. dated Nov. 2"tl), f5», and recorded n Book 19 of Deeds, page 31, c.,.ln the Clerk's offce of Ocean county aforesad. No. 2. AH that tract of ccdar swamp stuate n the tou'dshp of Shrewsbury, n tho county of MODnouth and state of New Jesey, part of the swamp known ns "'Morna Paqua," butted and Hounded as follows, vz; Beslnulnt; nt a stake corner to Samuel Warden's lot. thence (1) north r>!l west 3 chans to T!on)\s Eraley's corner stake thence (2) alonpr sall Thomos Enley's lno south 31 west 0 chans to another corner stake; thenoo (3) south 57 east 0 cluns to n enrner slake to sad Samuel Warden's lot; thraco H north Sl enstlong sad Warden's lne 8 chfn.f to the place of befrnnldk: contalnn; about one nnd elj.'t-lenths acres. About 111 acres of sad farm (tract No. 1 above) sr's well woortel wth ol nnu pne, sutable for lor/rltf? and Dm wood, an'd'u'll be sold n parcels of nbo'.tt lv; acres each, tho sol and tmber of each pt'rel huus sold tokctlkm'' The r^untter of tract No. 1, comprsng about 8 mn's, wtl the mprovements tle'mn. conslstlnf of a fran dwelllnsr hous and sutable outbuldngs, wh'thsnkl tokctht us ong parcel. ('ondltodsrandckuownatsuev ' MARK t. S0OY, Specal Master. ] CAB.'3 K. CHAMRKns, Solctor. MEN AND BOYS. My specals ths week are Men's and Boys' Boots and Shoes at < prces whch wll surprse you. Here are the prces : Men's, $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50. ' /.:. Boys',.-85.C., $1.00 and $ Men's Frst Class Boots, $2.00 and $2.50. Boys' " " " $ '-.-;. Also a bg lne of Rubbers at the lowest prces n town,.} FROaT STREET, Opposte Postoffce, BED <> 1 ~»-, 1 > LAAAAAAA Rght Prces! Good Servce! Honest Goods'!' ALL THESE WE GUARANTEE EVERY CUSTOMER. Trmmed Hats. There s a certan satsfacton to every lady who purchases a a hat from us to know that she s wearng a style that cannot be duplcated elsewhere. Our styles are exclusve and at prces that are extremely moderate. OUR CUSTOMERS GO AWAY PLEASED. Thfl)llnt of oxcolonco lor UUHL, J lt am comfort, <j.n n n COUNTS 1'" ««U n thobo on tlulu hlo BluM a ybuh yudy to nnbh. "FOERDERER'S"VC UD usod oxcluolvoly. Xrndo-marlK on ovory par. Fur Garments. We sell Fne low prces. Our satsfed customers [are the best reference we can gve you.. e. wes, Call and examne our stock and compare qualty and prces wth others. We also remodel Furs. RED BANK TEMPLE OF FASHON. The Celebrated Lonnsbury & Mattkewson Shoes, whch Jt lke a glove md wear lke ron, and the.beautful- Queen Qualty Shoes. These two are undoubtedly the lnes n ths country to-day. All szes and wdths n stock. Prce,.$8.00 to $4.00. Broad Street, Red Bank.

9 VOLUME. XXL. NO. 20/. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9,1898., PAGES 9 TO J 6. A SCRMMAGE AT A RACE. ELMER WHXETT BADLY HURT AT KEYPORT. Hs Head and fact} Terrbly Cut The Trouble Occurred at Keyport Last Saturday at the Races of the Keuport Drvng Club. Last Saturday a race was held at Sage's track at Keyport whch ended n a scrmmage n whch Elmer Wllett of Port Mbnmouth was nearly klled. The race was a match race between Abram Morrs's horse and a horse owned by W. H, Palmer of Keansburg. Mr. Palmer had recently bought asorrel farm horse n New York, whch turned out to be very speedy. Abram Morrs has a sorrel mare whch s qute a trotter, and Mr. Morrs had bancered Mr,. Palmer to a race to be held at Sage's track for $25 a sde. Mr. Palmer was reluctant to enter nto a race wth a horse whch had so hgh a reputaton for speed as Mr. Morrs's, but he fnally consented, and the race was arranged for last Saturday. n order to make the occason more of a sportng event than a sngle race would be, the board of drectors of the Keyport drvng club, whch has charge of Sage's track, arranged for a race for horses n the 2:40 class for the same afternoon. The match race was for the best three n fve beats, and the scrmtnage n whch Mr. Wllett was hurt occurred drectly after the frst heat. Ths heat was won by Palmer n 2:39J, and Mr. Wllett, who s one of the drectors.of the track, went to the stables at the track to call out the horses for the 2:40 race. After havng called the horses out f oftlerst heat n ths race, Mr. Wllett started to return to the judges' stand. As he was on hs way he was asked a queston about the races by a bystander. Accordng to hs story he paused a moment to reply, and then some one called out : " Here he comes 1" Mr. Wllett turned around and saw Elmer Morrs of Keyport approachng. Charle Brown of Port Monmouth had told Mr. Wllett before the' frst heat n the match race that Elmer Morrs wanted to see hm, and when Mr. Wllett saw hm comng he sad : "Hello, Elmer; hear that you want tosee me." " VVho told you so?" asked Morrs. "A man from Port Monmouth," sad Mr. Wllett. " You're a lar," sad Morrs wth an angry oath. Mr, Wllett turned to leave hm and Mr. Morrs agan called hm a lar and added a vle epthet. Morrs shook hs. fnger under Wllett's nose, and ht hm on hs nose wth hs fnger nal, makng a slght cut. Wllett thrust out hs hand to push Morrs away, and ht Morrs n the. face. Morrs pulled hs left hnnd from hs pocket and struck Mr. Wllett over tho rght eye, makng a cut about an nch and a half long. Ench man ht the other two or three tmes, and then Morrs clenched Wllett. Whle the two men were clmched someone pulled Wllett's rght leg from under m, and he fell over backward. Wllett's 1 arm was nround Morrs's neck when he fell over backward,and he carred Morrs down wth hm, He retaned hs grasp around Morrs's neck when he fell, but a man n the crowd loosed hs grasp and Morrs partly got up. As Wllett lay on tho ground he was struck n the face four or fve tmes by Morrs, and ho was also kcked about the head. Wllett rased hmself up on hs elbow, and was strugglng tohs feet, when hs arm was kcked from under hm and be fell back agan to the ground. Mr. Wllett says tuapb was Abram Morrs, Sr., Elmer Morrs's father, who kcked hs nrm from under hm, and Mr. Wllett also says that tho elder Morrs stood on hs', hand, and. arm \y-hlo hs son agan punmelod hm fn the face. Mr. Wllett cred out not to ht hm any, more, t hat ho was beng klled ; but tho poundng was kept up untl the bystanders pulled Morrs off. Tho whole scrlmnngo had occuped only a very 'ew mnutes, and tho bystanders nterfered as BOOH as they realzed vvhut was gong on. Mr. Wllott was terrbly battered about tho head and face. Hs head was cut, md hs fnco wns covered wth.bruses. Ht) wounds were dressed and bandngod by Dr. Hobcrls of Keyport, and ho hna snce been under tl'o caro of Dr. Budlong of U'lford. Doforo tho race began Mr. Wllott mot Abram Morrs, Jr., tho man wth whom tho rnco wan made by Mr. Palmer, Morrlfl naked Wllott how ho folt, und Wllott flud ho folt pretty good. Morra told hm twlco that f ho wnan't careful he would get lcked before he got away, but Wllett thought he spoke n a' joke. After the scrmmage, whle the blood and drt was beng.washed from Wllett's face, Abram Morrs came up. " What's the matter?" be asked. "Don't you see what's the matter?" repled Wllett., " thought 'd have the pleasure of dong that, nstead of my brother,"-sad Morrs, as he went away., Wllett has had warrants ssued for the arrest of Abram'. Morrs, Sr.,! Elmer Morrs, Harry Hopkns, Samuel Stryker and Cornelus Brtton. No day for the hearng has yet been set. "After the scrmmage the races were resumed, although a large number of the spectators had left the grounds. n the match race between Palmer's and Morrs's horses, the second heat was won by Palmer's'horse. n the thrd heat one round of the track was made wth Palmer's horse fve or, sx lengths n the lead. On the frst turn of the second round of the track Morrs's mare made three or four lunges and then began to kck. t ran out nto the feld, and Palmer's horse was an easy wnner. The race n the 2:40 class was won by Josah Crammer of Keyport, wth Al. Denns of-tnton Falls second. Many of the members of the Keyport drvng club are resdents of Atlantc Hghlands, Keansburg and Port Monmouth. They say that they wll resgn from the club. JOHN BENNETT'S PG. t Was the Runt of the Ltter and t Won't Grow. John Bennett of Far Haven has a pg that won't grow." Mr. Bennett bought the* pg last June. t was the runt of the ltter and t was very small. Mr. Bennett ntended to fatten the pg and kll t at Chrstmas, but the,.pg had deas of ts own on the growng queston, and t would not grow an nch. The fact that the pg dd not grow dd not affect ts appette, for t ate more than a couple of ordnary pgs. The Far Haven people say that Mr. Bennett's neghbors, who do not want hm to keep a pg; have been gvng the pg large doses of ant-fat. The pg s growng smaller, and t actually woghs less than t dd when Mr. Bennett bought t. # Pgologsts at Far Haven say that the only way to make a runt grow s to cut off ts tal. They say that f Mr. Bennett does ths, all the ant-fat n the world wll hot stop the pg from growng and gettng fat. *o~»-o- The Farmers' nsttute. A"farmcrs' nsttute s beng held n Keough's hall at Keyport to-day and tomorrow. The meetngs are held under the drecton of tho state board of agrculture and the Monuoulb county frut growers' assocaton.,the mornng sesson to-morrow wll begn at ten o'clock and papers wll be read by H. W.- Collngwood, edtorof thoruralnew Yorker; und T. B. Terry of Oho. The afternoon sesson wll begn at two o'clock. James E. Rce of New York, Danel. Stlwell, W, S. Conkln, Edwn Beekuan und D. D. Dense wll make addresses and F. E. Dawley of New York wll delver an llustrated lecture. Patents at the Hosptal. Mrs. Agnes Coggns of Red Bank, Jula Hapton of Atlantc Hghlands, Nlfs Johnson of Seabrght and John Hogan of Asbury Park were admtted to the Long Branch hosptal last week. On Wednesday nght a daughter was born to Mrs. Coggns. There are eghteen patents at the hosptal. A Street Car Lno Bold. The Rtreet enr lno between Matnwan and Key pert has been sold to John Korr, to whom an electrc franchse was recently granted at Keyport and Matnwan, The prce agreed upon s $10,000, half of whch s to bo pad n cash and half n bonds of tho new company. Eatontown'e Lterary Socety. Tho Eatontown lterary socety met at James Steen'a on Frday nght, and elected theao offcers: 'rrallont Jnmca Stcon. Vco-prrBlrlnnl-U. (). Wolcott. Buoretury llolcn 0. lenmtl. Trcufuror Mrnnret Wolcott. Mlomcs and Mules have just arrved homo from the West wth u carload of hontcsmd mules. Sovoral sngle drvers, matched pnru and two good pacore nrc n tho lot, togothor wth,eght good mulct). can ault you wth'homes and julca ntyour own prot. Wllam O. Ely. Holmdcl, N.J.-/ldt>. / Dolclous pecan nut burn at Lnug'fl.- Adv. WNNNG EUCHRE PRZES, A "HANDKERCHEF CLUB" OR- GANZES.. ThaClub Gves nandkerchefs, Pad for by Members' Dues, as Prmes A Euchre Party on Jttonmouth Street Last Thursday, A seres of " handkerchef euchre partes "'has been naugurated n Red Bank, wth Mrs. George Barlow of Shrewsbury as presdent. Meetngs are held at the homes of the members every two weeks'. The dues of the members are so arranged that they amount to $4 every two weeks, and theduesareexpendedn the purchase of four handkerchefs. One of the hand kerchefs costs. $1.50, another $1.25, the thrd 75 cents; and the fourth half a dollar. These handkerchefs are the przes at the euchre partes. n order that there shall be no lavsh' dsplay n the matter of refreshments, 'and also n order that those of lmted!means mght not feel compelled to compete wth the wealthy, n the matter of fjrnshng refreshments at the partes, one of the rules of the organzaton provdes that the only refreshments served'at the partes shall be lemonade and fancy crackers. The partes are held oa Frdays. The frst of these meetngs was held at Mrs. Baley's on Maple avenue and the second at Mrs, Danel H. Applegate's on Lsroy place. The next meetng wll be held on Frday of next week-at Mrs. Fred W. Hope's on Broad street. The hostesses at ths party wll be Mrs. Bosche, Mrs. Hope's sster, and Mss Anna Garrson., An afternoon euchre party was gven by Mrs. George Brower and Mra. Frank L. Wrght last Thursday afternoon. The party was held at Mrs. George Brower's on Monmouth; street. There were ten tables and about ffty persons were present. The house was decorated wth chrysanthemums and evergreens. The frst prze, a cut glass berry dsh, was won by Mss Anna Garrson. Mrs. Harry Payne won the second prze. Ths prze wan a large plate'wth an Empre green border, and wth a mnature of Mare Louse n the center. Mrs. H. A. Curts won a cut glass flower vase, and Mrs, Joseph Burrofres, Jr.. won a fancy plate. A water color pantng was the consolaton prze and was won by Srs.' George Hance Patterson. ; The guests, n addton to the prze wnners, were Mrs. George t. Lamb, Mrs. Harret Conover, Mrs. Samuel W. Morford,M's. Charles Kngnan, Mrs. E. E. Morrs, Mrs, Bosche, Mrs. Charles Hope, Mrs. James Degnan, Mrs, Thomas A. Curts, Mrs. Harry D. Curts, Mrs. H. H. Curts, Mrs. Harry Worthley, Mrs. Georgo O. Waterman, Mrs. Walter Kellogg, Mrs. John Garrson, Mrs. Elza Hetdrckson, Mrs. Walter Cannon, Mrs. George Battle, Mrs. Harry Edwards. Mrs. Wllam A. Hoppng, Mrs. Glbert Reckless, Mrs. Edwn Feld, Mrs. Robert MacKellar, Mrs. Emle French, Mrs. John B. Bergen, Mrs. Charles S. Hll, Mss Emma Gouover, Mss Anne Burd, Msses Tlle nnd Florence Rue, Mss Ada Burrowea, Mss Llan Smock, Mss Anna Morford of Red Bank, Mrs. Robert Barrows of Long Branch, Mrs. Charles H. Bergen of Brooklyn, Mrs. John A. Ely of Orange and Srs. Charles Lttlefeld of Eatontown, A euchre club has been formed at Lttle Slver whch wll'hold meetngs every two weeks. The frst meetng was held at the homo of Tmothy Whte, Sr., at Lttle Slver, on Saturday a week ago and the przes were won by Mrs. W. Tabor Parker, Mrs. F. M. Randall, Mrs, Frank Holmes, Frank M. Randall, Rchard Borden and T. F. Chevaler. Plays at tbo Opera House. Tho Red Bank opera house wns crowded last Wednesday nght when "Shore Acres" wus played. Tho play wns presented by ono of tho best companes that hns ever vsted Red Bank and the actng was fully apprecated by tho large audence present. To-morrow-nght tho French Folly company wll be seen n tho fareo comedy "A Jolly 'dr." Tle company conssts of funny comedans nnd protty grls n pretty drosses, and durng the porfonnntco all tho latest medloyo, catchy mjo and cake wnlka wll bo ntroducod, Weddng gftn n out glass should bear tho " Dorlnger" trademark n order to (rtvo greatest wtsfcton to Urn brdo,,c. Dorllngt'r&tJonB,0115 Broadway, near Slot street, and 80 Murray street, Now York. Adv. Jones's fertlzer worlb nro very busty, supplyng orduru for wnter gran plantng, Also recevng a grout many OBCB from tho surroundng country. Ono dollar a head ounl n pad for nnltual). Adv. Fno Buttoroupo at Lnug's. Adv, THS YEAR'S TAX BLLS. temzng the Taxes s Pusaslna Some of the Taxpayers. The tax blls of Shrewsbury townshp are made out ths year n a manner dfferent from those of any former year. The blls are mystfyng to. some of the taxpayers of the townshp, who have become accustomed to havng ther tax blls made out n a lump sum. The form for the tax blls ths year was arranged by Applegate & Hope, the counsel for Shrewsbury townshp, and t ncludes a separate tem for the amount of tax to be padfor each ard every purpose..' The most puzzlng feature of the taxblls ths year to some of the taxpayers are the two tems of school tax, and many persons thnk that because of the two tefs of school tax on the blls, there are two accounts of specal school tax. Ths s not the case. The state school tax s apportoned among the countes by the state board of educaton, and ths tax s leved by the county. Usually t s ncluded n the county tax, and n the past n Shrewsbury townshp t has always been lumped wth the townshp, county and state school tax. Ths year, n order that the taxpayers mght know for what purpose every dollar of tax was to be spent, the tax blls specfy each tem. Each tax bll shows the~amo3nt of that man's tax for the support of the schools of tre state ; for the specal school tax to be used n school dstrcts where the taxpayer lves or where the property s stuated; for the county tax, to be used n pay' ng county expenses; for the varous tems of poor tax, road tax, and tax for general townshp purposes ; and the poll tax and dog tax. Ths s the frst tme that tax blls n ths townshp have been made out n ths manner. The work nvolved s fve or sx tmes as much, as was requred n makng the blls out by the old method, but wth the tax blls made out as they are tls year, each taxpayer can tell for what purpose every cent of hs taxes s to be used. ATTACKED A CLERGYMAN. George Derby Convcted of llttlnn Slcv. Joseph l\ Shaw. n George Derby of Asbury Park was con. vcted last week of attackng Rev. Joseph F. Shaw of Long Branch last August. Mr. Shaw and Rev. W. R. Wedderspoon were at Asbury Park and they saw Derby poundng on a door and threatenng mschef to an old woman who was n the house, holdng the door shut aganst hm. Mr. Shaw remonstrated wth Derby, who pad no attenton to the mnsters,but contnued hammerng and pressng forward on the door. He had nearly succeeded n gettng n the house when Mr. Shaw grabbed hm and pulled hm back, Derby thereupon ptched nto Mr. Shaw and after httng hm dragged hm about, all the whle swearng at hm. Mr. Wedderspoon n the meantme had gone for an offcer, and on hs return Derby was arrested, At the tral at Freehold the evdence was conclusve, and the jury brought n a verdct of assault. Long Branch's Now Bank, A new bank was organzed at Long Branch last Thursday nght under the name, of the Ctzens'bank. Rufus Blodgett, H. B. Sherman, Whtney Conant, Stewart Cook, W. E. Jeffrey, Dr. James J. Reed, John T. Brtton, B. P. Morrs, John W. Woolley, P. J...Casey, J, Addson Woolley, E. T. Welch, Jr., Charles A. Poole, Jacob Stenbach and John Guro were elected drectors. Tho bank s organzed under state laws and has a captal stock of 50,000. Pluns for tho new bank buldng have been prepared. t wll be two etoros hgh, 81 feet frshf ard sxty feet deep. There wll be eght offces on the second floor. To Go to Chna. Thomas. Croft and famly of Eatontown wll Jeavo that place on January 1st for Chna, where Mr. Croft wll bo employed by an Amercan syndcato whch las contracts to buld ralroads there. Mr. Croft wll sell ha household effects nt aucton next Monday. Helpng Solders' Famles. Tho soldero' relef fund socety of Freehold hm collected $ and lnn pad out $ for thcrellof of soldore' famles ut that place. John P. Wnllcer s tho tremurer of tho uooety. Horse f Fur and p'««" robeo, horno bootfl, nnd ovorythnr needed for horuo comfort or tnblo UHo.at correct prced. Brdnall & Son, Bed Bank, N. J.~Adv. WORKNG FOR THE CHURCH ANNUAL MEETNG OF/THE LA- DES' VESTRY SOCETY. Ths Socety teas Organsed Among the Women of Trnty Parsh by Rev. Charles N. Tlbbnls Eghteen Vears ago-ts Ams and Dttes. The annual meetng of the lades' vestry socety of Trnty church was held at the rectory on Maple avenue last Thursday nght. Rev. Robert MacKellar presded at the meetng. All the old offcers of the socety were reflected for the comng year, These offcers are : ' Presdent Mrs. Harry Ffnch. Vce-presdent-Mrs. tohert MacKellar. Secretary - Mrs. Theodore Sckles. Treasurer-Mrs. Wllam A. Cole. The vstng commttee and the sewng commttee of the socety were reapponted. Durng the evenng Mrs. Fnch, n behalf of the members of the socety, gave a purse of money to Mrs. MacKellar. At eleyen o'clock refreshments were served, and the guests were also entertaned wth sngng. The socety has twenty members, of whom, all but sx were present at the annual meetng. The lades' vestry socety of Trnty church was organzed eghteen years ago by Rev. Charles N. Tbbals, who was then the rector of the parsh. Ever snce that tme t. has beep an mportant factor of the church. t has conssted of the actve workers among the women, who have undertaken varous works connected wth the church. Orgnally the dutes of the socety conssted of takng care of the church vestments, and' of dong smlar work. n more recent years the socety has undertaken other dutes, and has even aded n payng the church expenses. Among other thngs undertaken by the socety was the payment of the rent of the rectory. Tho purchase of a rectory has been the dream of the women of the vestry socety for many years, and the recent purchase of the Charles S. Hll house On Maple avenue was due prncpally to ther efforts. Durng the year just ended thencome of the socety from dues, entertanments, suppers, etc., and from the Guld of the Golden Rule, a socety connected wth the church", was The expendtures amounted to $ These expendtures ncluded the payment of the rsctory rent up to the' tme the Hll house was bought as a rectory, and the payment of the nterest on the mortgage restng on the property. When the refetory was bought the women of the socety agreed to pay the nterest on tha debt, and they have also pad some of tho expenses connected wth the rectory mprovements, ncludng the bll for the changes n the plumbng of the bouse. The socety at the begnnng of the current year has $31.88 n the. treasury, as aganst 5.72 at the begnnng of lasc year. The socety has not lost any members durng the past year and has ganed two new members. The new members are Mrs. Fred B. Gowdy and Mrs. Henry Hoyt. The other members of the socety are Mrs Harry Fnch,'Mrs. Robert MacKellar, v Mrs. Theodore Sckles, Mrs. Wn, A. Cole, Mrs. Wllam T. Corles, Mrs. Samuel Cullngton, Mrs. Sarah Sutphn, Mrs. T. A. Curts, Mrs. Mllspaugh VanBrackle, Mrs. Elza Herdrckson, Mss L, E. Everdell, Mrs. Horaco B. VaD- Dorn/Mrs. John Garrson, Mrs. Helen E. Dr'ohan, Mrs. Charles Reckless, Mrs. Frank Earle, Mrs. Wllam Taylor and Mss Mara Grapel. Troopers Vst Rod Bank. Harry F. and Frank L. Brown of Denver, Colorado, members of Troop A, Second regment of Unted States cavalry, have been honorably dscharged from servce and are vstng ther uncles, Lews and Theodore Brown of Red Bank. They were members of Torrey's rough rders and were statoned at Jacksonvlle, Florda. Ths s tho frst tmo that the young men have soon the relatves whom they aro vstng. They wll reman hero untl the holdays, when they wll roturn to ther homo at Denver. Strclton wth Heart Falure. Wllam W. Whto and JameB Stratton of North Long Branch wont duck ulootng n tho ocean lnst Wednesday and whlo at sea Mr. Whto WB strcken wth heart falure. Ho was brought whoro by Mr. Stratton and soon recovered, Florda OrattgvH. 1 lmvo Homu very lno oranges at 25 cunts per do/.on, and Homo t'lordas at t() cents. Louf Proto, Broad street, Rod Bank, Adv.»», Peanut and walnut brttle nt Laud's. Adv.

10 EARLY DUTCH SETTLERS. THE STORY OF AN ATTACK ON THE MDDLETOWN COURTS. 27»e Court Records of 1100'Wrtten to Serve a Malcous Purpose Testmony from Other Sources About the Case. Jacob VanDorn, as the name s now spelled, wth ls brother-n-law, Are (Adran) Bennett, moved from what s now a part of Brooklyn, then known as Gownnus, to Monmouth county n the year 1697 or 98, just two centures ago. About 1891 he marred Marytje, (Mara or Mary) a daughter of Aran Wllutase Bennett and Anjenetje VanDyko, hs wfe, who then lved at Gowanus. Jacob VanDorn became a communcant n the Dutch church of Brooklyn n The records n the Hontnouth county clerk's offce show that John Red, a Scotchman, who wafe qmto promnent n publc affars of ths county between 1090 and 1729, and who was a fathful agent for some of tle Scotch propretors, eoll to Rchard Salter on December 23d, 1089, part of hs land called Hortenca, lyng prncpally n what s now Marlboro townshp and lkely runnng over nto what s now Holmdel townshp; for Freehold townshp n.1089 had not been set off from Mjldletown townbhp. n ths deed t s stated that the lands conveyed begn where ' West Branch comes nto Hop brook at a place called Pronontora." John Red, who was an ntellgent and prudent man, had doubtless satsfed the ndana and also procured a legal ttle from the propretors of East Jersey for thjs tract of land pror to hs transfer to Salter. Under date of Aprl 2d, 1697, Salter assgned ths deed to " Adran Bennett and Jacob YanDorn of Gowanus, Kngs county, sland of Nassau," (Long sland). Ths assgnment was a very sngular method to convoy real estate. The number of acres s not stated. t appears that Bennett, VanDorn and Salter were thrown together by ths busness transacton and that Salter must have ganed the good wll and frendshp of those two men by hs far and' knd treatment of them ; for only a year or two later we fnd Bennett and VanDorn resstng the sherff of the county, John Stewart, and preventng hm. from arrestng Salter. The court records show that for ther acton n ths matter they brought upon themselves the vengeance of the notorous Lews Morrs of "Tntern Manor,'' as he or hs uncle, the frst Lews Morrs, had named t. Ths place s now known as Tnton Falls, n Monmouth oounty. The mnutes of the courts of Monmouth county for the year 1700 Bhows the followng record entered at tho nstance of, and no doubt dctated by Lews Morrs hmself; for a new clerk,,drummonl, also a- Scotchman, had just been apponted and he had no experence n makng up the court records. The followng s a correct copy of ths record. A court of nqury teld nt Shrewsbury for the connsy of Monmoutl, tlo 27th day of August, Lews Morrs, presdent. Samuel Leonard, ] Jedolnl Allen,»-.._.. _ Samuel Denns, f Justces. Anthony Plntard, J Tho grand Jury for present servce were those: John Held (a Scotchman), Jeremah SJtlllwell, Alexander Adams, Joln Slocum, Thomas Weuley,. Thomas Hetvett, 1'atrlck-dnnon.* Abat Edwnrds, Jnos Mulvln.* John West, rotor llmbley,* Jolm Leonnrd,. Smucl loppen^c, Wllam Lajton,. \ Wllam Hojrc Thoso marked wth (*J lre Scotchmen. After takng the oath Lews Morrs charged them. Wo have no record of what he sad, but judgng by hs other wrtngs, when angered, t must have been a volent harangue for the jury to ndct Jacob VanDorn, Aro Bennett and,tho other persons who had ressted hs pet sherff,.john Stewart, also a Scotchman. The jury, outsdo of John Red, the foreman, and tho other Scotchmen,, was mado up almost entrely of Lews's retaners and henchmen n Shrewsbury townshp. The justces, who set wth hm,hftdalso all been lately apponted at hs suggeston by tho Scotch governor, Andrew Hamlton. n plan words ths jury was packed by Lows Morrs for the express purpose of ndctng Jacob Van- Dorn, Adran (Are) Bennett anl others of the Mddletown people. The jury soon returned tho followng ndctment whch had probably boon drawn up by Lews Morrs hmself and gven to some of la agents on ths grand jury. Th followng o a truo copy of J,hs ndctment : R yn 27th, 17X).-\V\ Jurors, present Ulch nrd BnlUT. John Dray, James Htout, DnvM Wont lcnj. B tout, ComclMl.'onptun, Wn. llowne.tlnmm UoDklnKon, Jncob VnDdrn, Arlun llcmtlt, Thomu- Sharp, lt'). OooK, llolert Jnen, Tlnnw KH.111 md Hnnuvl," wrvmt of Hullcr, for rotously «bllnkon tlo 17th of July md multtk John Slew llt, llltfl HcrllT, anl Henry Leonard, n (lt* put near ltuho of Alexander Almns nml bout nn] (jru vounly woundcl thwn K pnnuw, took llul ewonlh from (lcm.crlcd tl'm uwyuut kept tlw to the Vlun <f llvo ptumlh, ufnuy of tbln mvlncu n breach cjf tlu pwco and terror of the (K'H lra pooplo. BKHK n helalf of the rent ly JOHN UHlDJ "Wo lnvo nn account wrtten by two o tho moat respected and honvnl ctw'th o Mddletown townwlp nt tlo lno of th oocurenco whch throwh a dfferent lgl on thu subject. Vloro n nothng n on earlyrecords to throw the fhtmnrclnlp ' on'tho characters of Andruw Howno nn Rchard lnrtelorno, They werotmgh forward, honest men, who tred to d ther duty n a plan, unostentatous manner. They commanded the respect of all the people of Mddletown. Even Lews Morrs, wth, hs abusve tongue and malcous heart, could say nothng worse of them then that one was an Anabaptst and the other a Quaker, and that they had defeated a bll to tax the people for the mantanance of the Epscopal prests; and prelates, as n England. The followng s a true copy of the accoan of ths trouble by Andrew Bowne and Rchard Hartshorne, as gven n Vol. of New Jersey Arcngs : "Eust Jersey, Mddletown yo 23d July, 170(1, &c Yours o (tl of Aprl last come to our tads, t bens tlo frst «o receved from you, for whch we apk you; but could Dave wshed you hud sent us more certan nccount of the settlement of the vernment, whch, never so much as now. wants be settled. Snce tlo departure of Mr. Slater, Col. laullton [the usurpng Governor at that tlatol lotl ut Mr. Morrs llowls Morrs of Tnton rals] nto ornmsslon of hs councl and justce, belevng hm he the only nun that can muke tlo nrovlnco sub- t to hm as governor, vvtuout tha kng's nrobnon. and n order o effect t they turned out an ngllslnu who was sherff anl put n a Scotclmn [John Stewurt, who resded n what s now ntontown townshpl, whothcy thouclt would obey Bn wthout reserve. And t s sad Morrs has lven out Unt he wll curry us pont u mklug the eople submt to Col. laulton or ho wll omtruo B provnce n blood. n order to whch they lzed upon several persons ntendng, to force them gve securty for ther Rood betmvur, whch one hwn refused to do. nnd so contnued n the lerr's custody. Ths the people took grleveously,.beng harvest tme, nnd they had glvcm out warmts to selzo Rchard Salter and others. And tle lerllt [John Ktevrurt wltl warrant ssued by Lews [orrs, Justce-! had lke to have taken hm. Whch lne of hs neghbors understandng went and met o sherllf-uon Stewurt wth hs deputy. Henry,eonard], bunged hm. broke lb head nnd sent hm nckng, upon whch, as we are nformed, the people esolved to meet on Frday, tle Hltl day of July, n rder to go nnd fetch home hm thut wns n the lerlff's lunds; upon whch Morrs nntl Leonard Lews Morrs nnd Smuel Leonard!, dspatched nn spress [man on lorsetmck to rhle fust] [orgovernor nmllton [he then resded nt Burlngton Cty] who ramedlately come to them [at Tnton Falls]. They nessed about ffty men [Morrs's henchmen n hrewsbury townshp nnd hs Scotch contngent rouncl freehold, lkely] and came on 19th of July only two days after Sherff John Stewart nnd Henry jonun had been thrusled] n arms Lwlth Runs and ther weapons] o Mlddlelown Ltho vllage] nnd sne to the ordnary [the tavern or publc house, vhlch then stood where George lowno's dwellng low, 1W8, stands] nnd there nqured for sold Suter,nd one trny [John Bray]. Then they nnrchecl off went buck to Tnton Falls], The people of Mddleown [townshp] were assembled to the number of [bout 100 [another account says nboutlkj men.] but rthout ams, only stcks Lnlld term for clubs] yet nd t nut been for tle persuason of some much n le publc favor there would have been broken heads 1 not further mschef, the sad justces havng peruatled the person n the sherff's hands to pve setrty for hs good behavor the day before ths ucetlng. n ths poston thlnrsstnultllscounty ld we beleve that throughout the provnce, n- tdlog the Scotch, there s sx to one uguust ownng Col. Hamlton Governor, md almost all btterly just Morrs, \fhom they look upon as tlo mat uu [as ndeed le wus] Mnt opposed government. ANDREW BOWNK, 1UCHAK!) UMS110RNK. One of yo Councl." Some Newark hstorans have n ther >ne-sded efforts to eulogze Lews Jorrs poken n a slghtng way of Captan Anlew Bowne. There s no evdenqe to ustfy ths n otr early records. \ He as a plan, outspoken, sncere man who ways stood fof square n hs tracks. He could not cajole or flatter lke Lews Morrs when he wanted favors, nor could he abuse n btter fashon hs op ponents, lke Morrs. He had no sucl command of vtuperatve language, bu whathesadhe meant, and he was always consstent. Those who knew hm best hs neghbors of Monmouth county) respected hm, whle Lews Morrs was detested for hs arbtrary and unscrupulous efforts to further hs own nterests ven when he sat as judge of the county courts. He was constantly n law suts durng the years runnng from 1692 to 098, anctes"nfluence and that of ls cousn, Lews Morrs, of Passage Pont who was also a justce, gave hm a de cded advantage over the people he sued The attempt of Governor Hamlton and Lews Morrs to overawe and ntmdate he people of Mddletown by an armed body of men faled. t ought to have been evdent to them that the people o Mddletown would not submt. Thej were dstnctly nformed'to ths effect and had warnng of what would happen and what dd happen at Mddletown vllage on the 25th of March, <-4 Ths record of that court as t stand m tle mnutes n the clerk's offce was vdently entered at the dctaton o Lews Morrs, who was then the presdng ^ftldge of tho county courts. Ths record represents the people of Mddletown as breakng up ths court and tak ng Governor Hamlton and the county ofllcnla prsoners, out of sympathy wth a self confessed prate, who had served uncler tho notorous Capt, Kdd, and n order to reseuo ths prate from tho offcers of the law. Ths was a grave and serous charge nntl one very lkely to b notced and punshed by tho Englsh government. Prncy 1 ", however,jfrns ar offenso outsdo of the jursdcton of th Monmouth courtn, as t occurs on th hgh seas, and t s cognzable only Admralty courts. So Lows Morrs faled to brng upon the peoplo of Md dletown tho vengenuce of tle lom< government. He, however, Bent a cer tlled copy of tlo court record to tn tho Englsh government, bneked up b; a long (jommuronton. Ho also wrot about the H.'mo tuo to the Bshop 6 London, Hayng that tlo people of Md dletown wero the ' moot gnorant an wcked people on earth nnd that tloj havo no such thng H a church or re lfon nong thorn," o nlm>, abhor tmo after bn captvty at Mddlelow wont to England, n onlor to accomplln] llu vndctve or nnhtouu de.s Jacob VnDorn and Aro Bonnctt, nl though ndcted and hunwed for Horn tme by tho ofllcoru, wero nover brough to tral, for the propretors of Now Je noy Hurrenderal tho next your, n 1703 thur rght of government to tho E rown. " Lord Cornbury and other new fflcah came nto power, who gnored ntrely all the'old dsputes and quarrels. Ths old record, whle unexplaned, brows a dark shadow on the characters )f Jacob VanDorn and Are (Adran) Jernett, but when the real facts are understood, t appears that they stood up manfully wthout regard to consequences to protect ther frend, Rchard Salter, nd to resst the tyranncal and llegal cts of a usurpng governor and hs pretended offcers of the law. t speaks svell for ther resoluton, courage and n- ;ellgence. Cr. C. B. WALL PAPERS AT HARRSON'S. 3T Proad Street, Rod Kan t, N. J. BROWN & WARWCK, Slate and Tn Roofers, EOT MU HEATNG, LEAKY WNDOWS, CHM- NEYS AND JOBBNG A SPECALTY. f you desro to nave your cottage heated don't (all 0 Rve us n cull. WR aro agents for ono of the best, ldest nnd most relable lumnco companes n New fork cty the Boynton Furnace Company. Tlelr furnaces are reasonable n prlco and the most relaulo and powerful heaters on tle market o-dny. The lnn s responsble and they guaranee lelr furnaces to us. and tlrokh us to you. tememler, slato rooflng s us cleap. f notoneap' T. than sungleb or any other roof, and more duralo than'all. Slato Hoofs put over old shngles. BROWN & WARWCK, Cor. Monmoutft St. and Brdge Ac, Red Bank. Wear ROYAL WORCESTER CORSETS. Perfect Fttng. FOR 8ALE BY LEADNG DEALERS. >: m m Smokng Tobacco. The smokng tobacco sell as Cullngtpn's Clppngs s made from the cuttngs and clppngs of the cgars make, put none of the clppngs n cgars, but make my cgars of perfect stock. Cullngton's clppngs s made of the parts of tobacco leaves whch are cut away n makng cgars. These fragments of leaves are cut small and then granulated, t's the most popular smokng tobacco handle. - sell a quarter-pound box for ten cents, three boxes for a quarter. ' ' WLLAM CULLNGTON, Front St., foot of Broad St., Red Bank, N. J. OLD AND PURE WHSKES, J. J". CAN BE FOUND AT'THE STORE OF SOUTH SlbE OF FRONT STRET, NEAE BROAD STREET. m ffl You wll be satsfed wth the qualty and prce. A full assortment of Old Whskes and Brandes, and the best mported and Domestc Wnes, Ales, Porters, &c, &c, Extract of Malt, 1.50 per dozen pnts. make a specalty of Chamberlan's Old Cabnet Rye, aged 10 years.. Gallon, $4.75 ; full quart, Wholesale prces of coal are much lower than usual. lad n a large supply when prces were low, and wll sell as follows untl further notce: Nut Coal, $4.80 Per Ton. Egg Coal, $4.85 Per Ton;.. Stove Coal, $4.90 Per Ton. These prces are for fve tons an4 over and nclude delvery wthout extra charge, The above coal s the best qualty and s screened clean. Every partcle of drt s removed by elevated pocket screens n loadng..,:. Whle these prces preval t wll be to your nterest tn place your orders. Wholesale prces generally advance from now on. Mal orders promptly attended to. ' FOOT OF WORTHLEY'S HLL, Durng fall and wnter months at reasonable prces.! New Wor& at Cost Prces. wsh, to reduce my stock for wnter and wll. gve my customers the advantage of au overstock. The goods consst of -Surres, Bugges, Traps, Runabouts, Speedng Wagons, Jumpseats, Busness and Express Wagons, Spndles, &c. Also full lne of Harness. At Your Own Prce. A-mmber of second-bandwagons. Among them are Bugges, Surres, Cabrolets, Runa-' bouts, &c. GOWDY, Nearly Opposte Globe Hotel, :: FRONT STREET, RED BANK, N. J. " t RED BANK, N. J. Many women consder Schroeder's Har Tonc as a necessary part of ther tolet equpment. They know t keeps the scalp healthy and makes the har grow. 50 cents a bottle at Schroeder's Pharmacy. COAL AND WOOD. W. B. LAWRENCE, Dener n Coul nnd Wood. ALSO FKED, CORN, OATS, HAY AND 8TUW Upor Lohlffh nml all tlo Flrat-Cuu Conla nt lowest Prces. W1011 coal 1B jrchnbed by tlo cnrlond tlo bonodt of OK tons,,'m) oundh, sfjlven. YAM):'Cor. Front anl West 8tn., Ued Bmk,N. J. D. W. SMTH, Practcal Horseshoer. BRCK SHOP OH MECHANC STREET, Red Bank. New Jersey. HlHclulOH forjnrurcm^k, t(>(lor-foo(!l nnrt nterforlnr lorson. Ktru nttuntlon to trottum und roulbtoru. >. W. SMTH.

11 TOLD BY THE CRCUS MAN. The Bg Graffe Carred a Tor eh for the'^calote Player. "n all nght parades," sad the old crcus man, "we used to have a bg eghteen-foot graffe carry a torch, and there -wasn't anythng n the whole processon that attracted more attenton. We had a torcb made specally for hm, wth an extra long handle wth a grp pece about mdway of ts length whch the graffe held n hs nouth. The handle rose sx or eght feet above the graffe's head, so that he carred the bg torch about twenty-fve feet above the ground. The lower endof the handle was steaded by means of a strap made fast to t and buckledaround the graffe's neck. "We had at that tme a steam callope, one of the frst ever carred n a crcus, don't know but wlat t was the very frst, and we used to have the graffe, carryng the torch, march besde the callope. You've seen men and boys marchng alongsde the band at nght carryng torches for the muscans to see ther notes by? Well, we had the graffe march- besde the cal-, Hope to lght the musc for the callope player. n Qrder tq make the callope outft ft the graffe we had a wagon bult wth a broad wheel base, BO that we could safely carry the platform that the callope stood on up hgh; but t looked as though we had the graffe carry the torch for the player because that was the only way we could get the lght up to hm... "You know, the callope n those days used to get the people tremendous; the callope tself was a great card; but when you come to see the professor sttng up there on the platform playng away on' the keyboard, wth hs gaze fxed on the musc n front of hm and every now and then turnng over a leaf and then pouncng down on the keys agan so as not to lose the tme, whle all the whle the graffe was marchng solemnly alongsde holdng, the torch as near as he could so that the professor could see the musc! Urn m. Well! The people used to just go wld over t, and 'm not so certan myself but what t was the greatest thng we ever taught the graffe to do." Decayng Teeth. People who are the vctms of senstve teeth, that crumble and acqure cavtes readly, may do much towards checkng ths dental decay by the use of a smple remedy. A bottle of mlk of magnesa should be kept on the >washstand, and each nght, after brushng the teeth just before retrng, some of t should be held n the mouth for a mnute, that t may reach each sde of every tooth. By ths process, a coatng of the magnesa s formed over the senstve enamel, whch s thus protected from the acton of the acds that form n tlo mouth durng sleep. The magnesa wll reman on the teeth for three or four hours. Washng the :mouth wth a soluton of b-carbonate of soda after eatng sour fruts or salads s also recpmmendel'by dentsts, as the soda, lke the m.guesla, counteracts the njurous effect of the acd' upon the enamel. - A Novelty n Bells. HerFKppunn of "Hanau 'hastnvented a hell of a now shape, Whch s sad to have a very deep tone and to be as powerful as consderably heaver bells of the form at present n vogue. The shape s pecular, beng hemsphercal, whle the metal s unform n thckness except near the "sound bow" (or the thckened tp whch the clapper strkes). From the edge to some lttle dstance above the sound bow the metal s very thck, and then alters suddenly to the unform thckness whch t has for the rest of the bell. Hand Kssng n Europe. t has htherto beer, the custom ol the chldren, attendng the publc schools n Austra and Hungary to kss the hands of ther teathera on a'rrval and departure. Ths has now been forbdden by a ukase ssued by the m- Modern Cookng Schools. Mr. Grlggs. "t seems to mo, Hattlo, ths bread s not qulto as lght as t ought to bo. You should bo a good broadmnuor. thnk you sad you (ml boon to cookng school." lvju Qrlgge. "Yes, Mr. Grlggs, lnvo been to cookng school; but you don't MppupaO hopo, that n a cook- ng school worthy of tho, numb they ever bother themnelvcb about cooklng tlngs that common people can afford to oat."» Dvorces n Canrula. n Canada tho man or woman who wants to novor the bonds of matrmony nnt fo beforo tho Domnon Parlament when tho commttee on dvorce n tho Sonato taken up tho cnao and tocn over tho dotalln very thoroughly, and f, n tho opnon of tho commltto», tho toatlmony warranta tho grnntnk of n dlvorfce tho report to that offeot s tnmlo, and both OMOB concur n a bll gvng tho roqulrod rollof. WATER FROM ROCK. Bored 85 Yards and Found a Very Fne Supply. Moses has a rval n Sweden. He s Baron Nordenskjold. The dffculty 3f obtanng good drnkng water for lea rock lghthouses and plot statons Df the>coast of-sweden suggested to Nordenskjold the dea of obtanng t from the rocks themselves.' Hs father had been a mnng engneer, and from hm he had learned that fresh water drpped from the rocks of mnes,, whch extended far out under the sea. By studyng the dp of rocks he arrved at the concluson that ages and ages of temperature effects produced n rocks alternate Seatng and coolln&and nternal holes and assures, by reachng whch -.water mght he obtaned. Tho experment was fnally made at the plot staton on the sland of Arkoe. The result was most favorable, for tfter borng thrty-fve yards through Bold rock a fne supply of fresh water was reached. Nordenskjold beleves that many portons of the earth, whch &re now avoded by people on account of lack of water supply, can be redeemed from howlng wldernesses to the uses of cvlzaton by borng for water nto the rocks whch abound n Buch places. Ths rock water when frst struck has a somewhat clayey appearance.^but soon clears off' and s cold and sparklng. Drove Oxen After He Was Paralyzed Charles J. Joyner, durng hs lfetme, lved near the head of Crooked Fork valley, n Morgan county, Tenn. He was a man of powerful physcal development, bravo, fearless and of wonderful endurance, he fought on the Unon sde durng the cvl strfe, and then after the contenton was over he marred and went to farmng. n some way when a boy the ttle of "Duke" was gven to hm, whch ever after he was known by. _"Duke" Joyner was a hard, worker and a good farmer. One day whle buldng an underdrawn, asssted 'by two small sons, he had a stroke of paralyss and was unable to move, but could talk. "Duke" concluded that he would superntend the- operaton of takng hs half-dead body home. He had the two boys put a log chan around hs body. Then he had them put down a couple of planks. Next they htched the chan to the ox chan and tho oxen drew hs body up on the wagon. Whle lyng n the wagon "Duke," by the use of hs voce, drove the oxen to hs house. He survved and lved a number of years after. The Court Advsed a Week's Drunk. James A. Hll, father of Phlp Hll, who was to have been hanged, rep.ently, was arragned before Judge Bernard Mcfcehna at Central Staton:; Pttsburg, on a charge of drunkenness? Polceman James Lowre found.hm lyng on Chatham street, about an hour after the executon was apponted to have taken place. Ho was paralyzed drunk. "Hll, what have you to say for yourself?" asked Judge McKeuna. " was glad that my son wasn't hung yesterday," sad the prsoner. "You had j. propjer excuse Jqr gettng drunk," remarked the Judged "and would advse you to go on another toot to-day agan." "'m not a drnkng man, but when word arrved that my son was not to bo hung just went andflled up." "f 1 were you would go on a drunk for a whole week." "Thanks, your Honor, wll," and Hll slammed hs hat on hs head and started at a 2:20 gat for the nearest saloon. All tho polcemen were told to let hm jublate. Fond of Eggs.. Among he anmals held sacred by the ancent Egyptans was the chneumon, or mongoos, whch, because of ts fondness for the eggs of crocodles and pnakes, proved valuable n keoplng those obnoxous anmals from mult- peral Board of Educaton, whch bases plyng tpo fast. Rev. Chauncy Maples, ts decson on a declaraton of the p. mssonary to Bast Afrca, descrbes Santary Councl to tha effect that kssng s a dangerous proceedng, and the way n whch ths pecular anmal, phlch n sze and gonoral appearance should not bo practlaad whoa not absolutely pomewhat resembles the cat, dsposes necessary. pf ts favorte artcle of det. The mongoos, on recevng an egg, mmedately goes to a wall, and turn- ng ts back to t, takes thu egg n ts fore paws and throws t backward botwoon ts lega aganst tho wall so as to break t. t thon sucks tho shell dry. The funny thng s that whatever wo glvo t that looks lke an egg nay an pld bone or a stone t evdently mstakes for an ORE, n-nd treats t accordngly. t s vory rdculous to noo t, for hourn together,'tryng to break a round stono or a bono by throwng t aganst a wall. Woman Suffrage t 1B sad on authorty that parlamentary suffrago for womou n Bnglaml B only a quoatlon of tlmo. A promnent atatcsnan lvng n London euyo Hnt tho women havo only to brng n a bll ntoadlly ganng adhoronta ovory tlmo t s votod upon, nn han boon tlo CMC horotoforo, and no clvllzod government can dsregard t. f you want anythng, try tho want culurrm of THE BBCHSTM.--.M>., -.ft FAVORTE OLD POEMS. ' Pyramus and Thsbe. Ths tragcal talc, wboh, they say. s a true one, B old, but.the manner s wholly a new one. One Ovd, a wrter of some reputaton. Has told t before n a tedous narraton: n a stylo, to be sure, of remarkable fullness. But whch nobody reads on account of ts dulness. Youn? Peter Pyramus call hm Peter,, Not for the sake of tho rhyme or-he meter, But merely to make the name conpletcr For Peter lved n the olden tmes, " And n one. of tho worst of Pucran clmes Tlat noursh now n classcal fame. Long before Elher noblrf or boor Had such a thng as a Chrstan name Young Peter then vvus'a nce youns beau Ad any young ludy would wsh to know; n years, wceu, Ho was rather green, That s to say, he was Just eghteen A trfle too short, and a shovng too lean,, But "a nce young man " as ever was seen. And ft to danco wth a May-day queen! Now Potor ovea n beautful trl: As ever ensnared the heart of an'earl n the magcal trap of an auburn curl. A lttle- Mss Thlsbe who lved next door, (They slept, n fact, on the very sano lloor,, Wth a wall between them and nothng more, Those double dwellngs were common of yore), And they loved each other, lho legends say, n that very beautful, bountlul way. That every young mad, 'Abel every young blade. Are wont to do beforo they grow stad. And learn to love by the laws of trade. But alack-a-day for the grl and boy, A lttle mpedment checked ther Joy, And gavo them, a whle, the deepest annoy. For some good reason, whch hstory cloaks, The match ddn't happen to please tne old folks! So Thsbe'B father and Peter's mother Began tho youdg couple to worry and bother. And tred ther nnocent passons to smother By keepng the Overe from seeng each other But who ever heard Of a marrage deterred, Or even deferred. By any contrvance so very absurd Aa scoldng tho boy, ard cagng hs brd? Now Peter, who wasn't dscouraged at all By obstacles such as the tmd appall, Contrved to dscover a hole n the wall. Whch wasn't so thck But removng a brck Made a passage though rather provokngly small. Through ths lttle chnk the lover could greet her. And secrecy made ther courtng the sweeter. Whle Peter kssed Thsbe, and Thsbe kssed Peter, For ksses, lke folks wth dmnutve souls, Wll manage to creep through thu smallest of holes 1 'Twas here that the lovers, ntent upon love, Lad a nce lttle plot To meet at a spot Near a mulberry-tree n a neghborng grovo; For the plan was all lad By the youth and the mad, (Whose hearts, t would seem,. svero uncommonly bold ones,). To run off and get marred n spte of the old ones. n the shadows of evenng as stll as a mouse. The beautful maden slpped out of the house, The mulberry-tree mpatent to fnd, Whle Peter, the vglant matrons to blnd. Strolled lesurely out some mnutes behnd. Whle watng alone by the trystlng tree, A terrble lon As e'er you set eye on Came roarng along qut* horrd to see, And caused tho young maden jmerror to flee, And losng her vel as she ran from thu wood, The monster bedabbled t over wth blood. Now Peter arrvng, and seeng the vel All covered o'er And reekng wth gore. Turned nl of a sudden exceedngly pale, «^ And sat hmself down to weep and \vall - For. soon as he saw the garment, Door Peter Made up hs mnd n very short meter. That Thsbe was dead, and the lon had eat her! So breathng a prayer, Ho determned lo share The fate of bs darlng, " the loved and lho lost" Aud fell on hs dagger, and gave up the ghost! Now Thsbe, returnng, and vewng!:er beau, Lyng dead by tho vel (whch she happened to know), Sho guessed n a moment the cause of hs errng. And sezng the knfe Whch had taken hs lfe, n less than u jlfly was dead us a herrng! MORAL. Young gentlemen! pray recollect, f you Dlease, Not to make assgnatons near mulberry-trees; Should your mstress be mssng. t shows a weak head To be stubbng yourself tll you know she s dead. Young ndes! you shouldn't go s'rolllng about Wleu your anxous mammas don't know YOU are out, And remember that accdents often befall From kssng young fellows through holes n the wall! _^ John G. Saxc. t pays to advertse n the REGSTER. Art Store s now ready to syp- M ply the demand for >J< cross sttch pllow $ covers. 6 C.. Stephenson, 50 Broad Street, Red Bank, S. J. School Pads and Pencls BG VALUE FOR LTTLE MON^Y N BOX PAPERS AND ALL KNDS OF STATONERY. Newspapers, Magaznes, k F. W. Moselle & Co. f tlm tux, nterest nnd costs tro not lnld untl nttor tho tuovo-tmtloned day ol nnle, ndlltlotml coots RED DANK, 28 BROAD ST., NEW JERSEY, AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Vehcles of all styles. Famed over the Unted States for the best value n lght, wagons. They are superor to all other makes, because they are ftted wth the Babcock patent self olng and dust excludng axles. Bradley shaft couplng the only practcal one. 3 Baley 5th wheel best n the market. 4 Baley body hanger lght, neat and strong. 5 Elegant sprng cushons not har flled. We am to keep a good assortment' f you ntend buyng a vehcle of any knd be sure to see "BRDSALL & SON, Monmouth Street, RED BANK. YYVVVYYVYYVVVVYVYVTVTVVVYYYYVYYVVVYYVVYVYVVYYYYVVTV $15 and upward. Also Cleanng and Reparng promptly attended to. CQRES, The Merchant Talor and Clother, BROAD STREET, RED BANK, X. J. TOWN OF RED-BANK. SALE OF LANDS FOR Notce s hereby (rven by vrtue of a warrant tssucmjy H. J. Chld, a polce justce of tho Town ol Re -llak, at tlo nstance ot the Board ot Commssoners of tho Town of led Bnnk, n tbo Townshp of Shrewsbury, County of Moumoth and State of New Jersey, to make the unpad taxes assessed on lands, tenements^ heredtaments aud real estate n the sad Town of Hed Bunk for tlo year one thousand eght hundred and nnety-seven, the subscrber, marshal of the Town of Red Bank aforesad, to whom Bald warrant s drected, wll on Thursday, November 10th, 1898, between the hours of twelve o'clock, noon, and flvo o'clock n the afternoon (ot (wo o'clock n tlo nfternoonlof that day. at the GAUtE HOTEL, OF DASlEh W. WHTE, ON FMOXT STKEET, n the TOU'X OF KEt taxl, u the Townshp of Shrewsbury, County of Monmouth and State of New Jersey, sol the sad lands, tenements, heredtaments and real estate hpreunder descrbed at publc vendue, for the shortest term not exceedng thrty years, for whch any person or persons wll auree to take the same and pay such taxes wth nterest thereon, at the rnto of twelve per centum per annum rom the twenteth day of December, ono thousand eght hundred and nlnety-suven, together wtb all costs, fees, churces and expenses. The persons whose property s to Us sold, tho locaton of the sad (property and the amounts due, are r.s follows:... Anderson, Mrs. Davs House and lot on. East Front street Anderson. Wllam One lot on Ueach street 55 Anderson, Mary Property on Bench street 1.10 gs. Wllam House and lot nn tho west sde of Rector place, anl ono lot on the east sde of" Rector placo Bnssell, Elzabeth, (estate) House and lot on lllverslde avenue.,, Beltlo, Jenne House and lot on Central avenue 2 20 HdyuT.Jnm'L's~(retnta Property on West street.~v l"40" Can-ol, Sarah House and lot on tlo corner of Rver street and Leguton avenue 4 40 Coach, Danel House and lot on the east sde of Central avenue 2 20 Chndwrt. Scroll House and lot No. 15 on west sde of Sprng street & 50 Chandler. Sarah House and lot ou the west sldo of Sprng street 3 30 Dorsett, G Stores and lot on corner ot Maple avenue and Monmouth street Doy, Ella House and lot on tho west sde of Brdge avenue 4 40 Ferro, Catherne U. House and lot on tho west sde of Kversdo avenue Flanna?an, Murcelln Ono lot on Catherne street 1 05 Holmes. Joseph HOUSH and lot on tholnorth ade of Bench street 2 75 nrdlne, Albert House and lot on the south sde of Beach street.' * 0 CO Hurley, A. C. House and lot on corner of Brldgo avenue and Herbert street 8 25 nolmes, Melvlllo K. House nnd lot on tho north sde ot Stout street 1 05 Johnson. Karalr House nnd lot on tholsoutl sde ot Chestnut street 2 20 Lufburrow. Margaret Honso and lot No, 43, north sde of Monmouth street 8 25 Longstmt, T. B. (estate) Houso and lot No. 60, south sldu of Borden street, and ono lot on south Bde of Eorden street 8 25 Leddy Bros. House and lot on east sldo of Prospect avenue 8 80 Lane, Ben amln ft Oneloton Mvcrstreet." 65 Leonard, Joseph Property on Beach street 1 C5 Marsden, sabolla House and lot on tho north sde of Vest Front street Malson, Lews Double louso nnd lot, Nos. 101 and 103, north Bde of Onklnnd stroot McCnulley, Syuollu llomouhl lot on west sde of Broad street Mnthnr, Thomas House md lot No. 135 on west sllo of Shrewsbury nvenuo 0 CO O'Hun, Bulllu Hons and lot on north sldo of Herbert street ' 2 75 Purlell, Andruw Hotel am lot on tbmolh sldo of Motnnouth street lt 75 'atteron, John L. cstnte) House nnd lot on tho north slde-nf llcacl street, and one lot on north sldo ot Beach street... l 8f) u. AuuKtUH Ono lot on Herbert street 55 Huvll, M's. * LBO Leonard street...' Knytor, Wllllum p. One lot on tln south sde»f Klfth avvnu '.' 1 1( Thompson, Thnxloo Homo am lot on tho north ulloot Ulvor street 2 75 Ters, A..1. A. llosn nnd lot on tho west nldo of Branch uvcnuo 10 2fS Now York ml Nmv Jersey Tolophono Company. ' Property n town 8 25 Whte, Audrow llous nnd lot on south Hldo of Qolrt stroot \ 2 76 VVoulUy, KHzabth OHO mll lot coner of Uxmard ulruot und llrldko nvenuo 0 00 Woodward, Mnry (!. OHO md lot No. 151, went sldo of Lelprtto nvenuo.. ".' 8 67 Worthly, TunlH llouk md lot on Loluhto uvomo,, J!l) f tln tax. nterest nnd 'onl nrfl pad mfnro tlm nlovn Htlcl day of H. tho COHH n (nch rad wll bo t'.wl. nnd ntorot wll lo added at tho rnloof twnlvo per contan per umm frotutho twenteth duyot llt'c'mber, one thonnntl nght hundred nnd lmtv-mvo. wll bo ldded. 'nvnwnt of tnt tnx, nuront nnd contn mny tn malo ntnnytlmo (rovlom to tbo anlo lo Theodora t. Whlto, Tronsurrr of tn) nutl town of tod Hunk, who 1H uutlorlh.l to ncolt tor tho muno. Whm tlulo tnken nlnco, luymontof all tuxra. oottx nnd nuront must bo nndo by tlo nurchnmf ro tho conolmlon of tho mu\ olhrwlno tln urouflrty wll M lnnwllntly raoll. WltuMM my ltuul thn twouty-buvonll day ol PopUmbor, n tho yoorot our J/ml ono thousand eltfht hmlrol nnd ulnoty-uldlt. JAMES WAS, Marshal. '

12 COSTLY DOGS. Tny Terrers lrlnn as lfr/h an $S,00O Each-Other t Even Dearer, Wrtng of tbn London dog show the St James Gazette says: The Grffons Bruxellos are very acute lttle anmals, nn<j the Mexcan harless dogs, wth ther strange spotted skns very quant and curous. Paderewskl, Junor s a rather uncanny lookng autlthess to hs namesake; and the one boat gans the prze has a spray of gray hars on hs forehead that gves -Mm a very werd look. The Samoyed sledge dogs employed on the Jackson-Hamsworth expedton are shown; and also Scandnavan, Esqumau, Great Danes and other northern breeds. Very touchng s the ladles' corner, where spanels, toy terrlors and pugs are housed. Fond mstresses st on stools besde the cages consolng ther pets; and one fathful lady sat and slept wth her head aganst the cage wheren ber pet slept also.. These-favored pets had frlled cushons to sleep on, and looked out on the world from between frnged curtans. One, lttle treasure had danty bouquets of roses and madenhar fern pnned round ts cage. The prces of some of these dogs are enormous. Three tny toy terrers are valued at $5,000 each; $500 s qute a common prce, and some Grffons Bruxellos are marked at $2,500. An Old Englsh sheep dog reaches a stll hgher fgure and s marked at?10,000; and as for colles, $7,500, $10,000, $25,- 000 and 100,000 are among the prces clamed for them. The Prnce of Wales exhbts a. fne basket hound; and the Prnces.s of'wales a borzos, two basset hounds and a pug. The Duchess of Newcastle and Prncess Soplle Dhuleep Sngh are also exhbtors; The Lades' Kennel Club takes a keen nterest n the show and offers many przes. «- ' A Two-Headcyl Sparrow. A very curous ornthologcal freak has been dscovered n Columbua, Oho, by Olver P. Daves, a well-known ornthologst and the author of a book on the subject. Some tme ago, Mr. Daves' attenton was attracted by the apparent possesson of two heads by a lttle Englsh sparrow. The brd seemed especally ta.me, and after several futle attempts to catch t, a boy n,-lr. Daves's employ fnally managed to kll t. One of the hftads Was set on as usual n the brd lne, whle the other the captal of Peru, approach nearest seems to have a wndppe runnng to perfecton n beauty. They are through the neck down to the lungs, straght and wllowy, have soft, round, but to have no other arrangement for beautful faces, wth luxurant black eatng or drnkng. Mr. Daves has. har combed up from ther foreheads. come to the concluson that the brd.ther eyes are extraordnarly brllant. They all dress n black when whstled wth one head and ate wth the other. He ha» mounted t. Electrc Engravng. n a new German method of engravng on metals for the purpose of makng con des, a cast of the con s taken n plaster of parls on the end of a cylndrcal block of ths materal, and the block placed n an electrolyte eo that the lower part s mmersed n the lqud, whle the upper part, contanng the relef of the con, s not. The pece, of steel to be engraved s lad on the upper part of the* cast and conneoted to' the postve pole, the negatve pole beng connected to an electrode n the lqud. The current dssolves the metal wherever t \% n contact -wth the most enst, the nretal snkng lower as t dssolves, unt! all portons of t are n contact, the engravng beng then fnshed. for a mnoral clam. A word to tho wlso s aufllcont and orter work on fools." ^ t m An Old Unversty. The oldost unversty n tho world la at Pokng. t s culled the "School for tho Sons of tho Empre." ts antquty s vory great, and a grnnlto- regster, consstng of stono columns, H20 n numbor, contans tho names of CO.0O0 graduates., Barrngs Not n Favor.. Among tho Phoencans tho woarlnu of earrngb wan a budgo of oorvltudo tho samo custom obtanng' wth- th«hebrowb. The lattor pooplo Bald when Evo wna cxpollod from pnrndno. hot oars wore borod an a Bl«n of slavory. t pays to. ntlvertgo n the RtaSTEt. AMERCAN LANTERNS. Then are Carred Wherever Lanterns are Used all Over the World, Amercan lanterns are exported tc all the countres of the world where lanterns are^used. Many are- sent to South Afrca and to South Amerca, to Australa and New Zealand, and sorne are sold n Asa..Few, proportonately, are sent to Europe. Kerosene ol s now commonly burned n lanterns all over the world. There are no lanterns made nowadays for candles only, but there are exported to South Amerca some lanterns made so that ether candles or ol may'be burned n them. These are provded wth a candle socket, whch may be set down nto the ol reservor, the wck holder havng been.removed. By removng the candle socket and screwng n the wck holder.the lantern,s mado ready to burn ol. Exceptng ralroad and other lanterns for specal uses, substantally all the lanterns made nowadays are of the knd known as tubular, frst ntroduced about thrty years ago, and now- made n varous modfcatons as to detal, the tubular part of the lantern beng desgned wth a vew to.producng better combuston and a brghter lght. The lanterns made for ordnary uses are produced n about forty styles. The Amercan an-terns are the lghtest, the slghtlest n appearance and the best adapted to ther.se, and they are sold cheaper than lanterns of equal qualty produced elsewhere. There are large establshments n ths.country makng lanterns only. t s probablg that more lanterns are now exported from ths country than from ether England or Germany, and the exports of Amercan lanterns are ncreasng.»» Whstles for the Army. The war department has contracted for the purchase of 2,000 whstles for the army. Ths acton was decded on after some controversy among army offcers as to the utlty of whstles for solders, and after experments whch have covered a long perod. The whstles wll be dstrbuted among the several army corps for the use of scoutng partes anjl skrmshers n gvng sgnals to each other and to the man body of the army. Peruvan Beautes. t s sad the young women of Lma, they appear on the street and are very demure, though n ther homes they are vvacous and dress n gay colors. o c» An Alarm Thermometer. To gve an alarm when any predetermned temperature s reached a new thermometer has wres nserted n the sde of the tube to complete an electrc crcut as soon as the mercury rses, the wres beng led to a swtchboard, whch s set at any desred temperature.» m... Far Safer. Mrs. Johnson An't t terrble, de sckness dat's gon' around nowadays! Mrs. Jackson Yas, ndeed! wuz Jess tellng my husband dat a pusson wuz safer off dead dan alve. N. J. WLSON, Has Woven 150 Mles of Carpot. After weavng carpet, for rr.ore than DEALER N seventy years, Dantal Fnk, sr., of Allentown, Penn., las retred from actve busness. 1$n last pece of carpet on hs loom wan made for one of hs sons, Hram Knk. Mr. Fnk learned the trade of carpet weavng n Ducks county. The loom whch he used when he frst HOSERY, &C. started n busness s stll n use by hm. t s estmated that Mr. Fnk BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J. has woven durng ths tme more than 150 mllea of carpot. Chronc Darrhoea Contracted n tho Army. Everybody Warned. Whle n the army Mr. Davd Taylor, An Arzona rancher has posted the now propretor of the Commercal Hotel, followng notce on a cottonwood treo Wnd Rdge,Greene Co., Fa,,contracted near hs place; "My wfe Snrrah has chronc darrhoea. n speakng of t he loft my ranch when ddn't Dop n. flays: " have never found anythng Thng Too her and want t dlstlnkly that would gve me such quck relef as understood that any Mnn aa takes her Chamberlan's Colc, Cholera and Darrhoea Remedy." For sale by Charles A. n and Koors for hor on my account Wll get hmself Pumped so Full of Led Mnton & Co., druggsts, No. 3 Broad that some tenderfoot wll locato hm street, Red Bank, Publc Benefactor. Tho MprcnntlufCo-nporatlvn ]unl 1H H'nmlK mom and more popln' ovary <luy, twrns 1 t n n publc jonufcur. v'vhuv Hyt t B Jnntwlmt Momoull County hm nmletf fur tho punt wnty ywrn. 4 pur cunt lnuwnt pnlrt on loxmllh, ttnnnonclrk f'«m tlm Unt of (cl month. Mercantle Co-operatve Bank, RED BANK, N. J. )t. J. K. HAYHK, PntHldnnt. JOHN KNU, Cnrtlcr. - ' Vj~ 'Qt- WM.. KNDROKBON, Jll., Aw't Ctallor. F. D. WKOFF, Manager. s worth to us as much as the rch man's, and. therefore.our prce: for hs sngle ton of COAL s as low as s charged for a quantty. Ths seems a new method here, but we thnk that the consumers, whether rch or poor, wll apprecate ts farness..''.'- : THE NORTON vwwww Havana Fller. Sumatra 5 CERTS $1.50 A BOX."... fcflfe thnk ths s the very fnest Gtfgap at the Prce we have evep handled. Opposte Broad St., Bank, R J. have just got a contract to put a steel roof on the old Red Bank Forum, whch s now owned by T. Wllams Throckmorton, and whch s located on. the Throckmorton tract n the eastern part of Red^Bank. Ths Forum s a relc of the early days of Red Bank, when t served as the only, church n the place, as the only hall or forum for publc meetngs, and as a : schoplhouse. The preservaton of ths buldng, whch s assocated wth the early.hstory of Red Bank, should be a matter of nterest to every Red Banker, and to every loyal Monmouth county man who seeks to keep alve the old tradtons of the county, and to preserve ts relcs. Some people have thought that puttng such a modern nventon as a steel roof on a hstorc buldng lke the old Red Bank Forum, was out of place, and some have consdered t almost a sacrlege. But those people should remember thatr-, no roof can. preserve a buldng lke a frst-class galvanzed steel roof, put ' on by a man who known how a steel roof should be put on. \ propose to put on the Forum the very best roof possble to be put on a buldng; not only because. my agreement wth Mr. Throckmorton calls for a-frst-class steel roof, but also because thnk such a hstorc buldng as the\forum should be preserved. Ordnarly gve a twenty-year guar- antee wth each steel roof put on; though a perfect steel roof, put on n the way put on all my roofs, ought to Jast longer than that. Wth the' Forum, however, wll gve a guarantee to keep that roof n perfect order as long as the buldng stands. ' DANEL H. COOK, the Steel Roof ^an, TNTON FALLS, NEW JERSEY. Wall Paper. CAUt AT TM! Central Wall Pater Store, Cor. Front nul.penrl StrootB,, 'or your Wnll 'npor, 'nlnln, Knnnob nnl Wndow ClllHH. Alo a full lno of l'npor HntKom* Xooln. Paper luuun' 'nsta by tho pull or mrrol. Kkmlno, Putty, YVhlto Umd, Ols, Turpontllo, Han (Mll, Vmll MNl Drvem. A complau) lno of. W,.loltm'H Hnmjy Mxed l'nlntn. KnlHomlno llrmlo md Whltawnsl Hnmhca. KnMnnUt olwrfully.arnllnu. Mull Ollum promptly utumlcd to. O, W. MVMfON, loxorfl, Uotlllak, N. J..' - ', Our Bakery s clean, tdy and well ventlated. The bread, cake and pastry that come from ts ovens are the handwork of sklled bakers, and are made of the best flour and other materals possble to be found. j. W. CHLD, BROAD STREET,, RED BANK. :\B R. HANCE,'.,; Wlolonalo and Rotnll Donlor n HAY P STRAW, GRAN. FLOUR, FEED, POULTRY SUPPLES, ETC. Wo nro handlng a largo quantty of Marlboro and Holmdel Hay of tho very bent.qualty.,, MONMOUTH STREET, Adjonng Town Hall, Red Bank, N. 3.

13 HARP AND BANJO STRNGS. The Best and. Fnest Grades are All Made n taly. "t has always been beleved that voln, harp and banjo' strngs' "were made out of.the Ylacera of the cat." The gut of a cat s no more sutable for such use than that of -«a mouse, and as far as my nvestgaton goes has never been so used. Voln strngs are made of many knds of skns, but prncpally out of sheep skns. The secret s' n curng the skns, whch has always been kept n taly, where all the fner and better grade of strngs are made. There are, however, several concerns' n ths country whch turn out muscal strngs, and they make a ver'y.good grade, though they do not compare as yet wth the talan strngs., "All the poets who have sung of the nuscal nsdes of the cat were wrong, Evefy Shakespeare, who was phenomenally correct generally n. hs produc- ' tonsj> fell nto the prevalng error, prqjjfbly because he dd not take the trob2e to look nto the matter and accepted the general opnon. The varous metallc or wre strngs are mprovng constantly and are used n very large quanttes and by the best muscans. They have one advantage over, the skn strngs when used out of doq j> n that they are not affected by the?tveather. n damp weather_.skn or gut strngs; as they are generally named, are affected very much, and, notwthstandng all Jhe tghtenng, they.are very frequafflftjtulat n tone. The.wre strng escapes- that nfluence, though therens a certan effect, a tmbre, techncally speakng, that can be got out 'of a skn strng that no wre jstrlng yet made wll gve you." The Brd's Balance of Power. n a recent lecture Professor Wlmer Stone of Phladelpha cted many facts,.to show that brds are nature's, great checc on the excess of nsects, and that they keep the balance between plants and nsect lfe.. Ten thousand caterpllars, t has been estmated, could destroy every blade of grass on an acre of cultvated ground. n thrty days from the tme t s hatphed an ordnary caterpllar ncreases 10,000 tmes n bulk, and the food t lves and grows on s vegetable. The nsect populaton of- a sngle cherry tree nfested wth aphbes was calculated by a promnent entomologst at no less than 12,000,000. The brd populaton of cultvated country dstrcts has been estmated at from 700 to 1,000 per square mle. Ths s small compared wth the number of nsects, yet as each brd con- Bume3 hundreds of nsects every day the'latter are prevented from becomng the scourge they would be but for ther feathered enemes. A Pecular ndustry. n one of the streets n the neghborhood of the famous London Brdge j there has for some tme been carred! on an ndustry pecular even to that cty of curous and crowded occupatons, namely, an eel-skn leather factory. Here are prepared and manufactured an nterestng varety of artcles from the skn of the common eel. by means of numerous complcated processes the skns n queston are manpulated untl they resemble and would be easly taken for leather, al- 1 though of a more glutnous and plable nature. n one specalty ths strange substance s cut ntd. long, thn strps and plated very closnly together for whplashes and to cove\nortons of the handles of more expensve whps. Certan knds of ashe3 and harness ace3 are also made from such skns, combnng flexblty and toughness. "TJurnod Down" by Kng Solomon. "Wouldn't Wur Majesty lke to take out sorao lfe nsurance?" respectfully ask'cd tho agent, on bong admtted to tho royal presence " can't afford t," repled Kng Solomon. "t's about nl can do to look after my famly wb.lo 'm allvo." Wavng hla hand to algnlfy that tho ntorvlow was ondcj le, turnod to tho enoaklng tubo and ordorod hla steward to provldo 300 portorhouno stoakn and 700 voal cutota breaded, wth tomato sauco, for the famly dlnnor. Lquoflod Ar. t s not fn uncommon Bght n tlaboratory whoro oxporlnonta wth lquoflod ar aro lnng conducted, to HOC dropa of ar fallng on n lecture tablo nnd runnng about, exactly llko drops of wator on a hot fltovo. n fnct tho table may bo rormlod an "rod hot" n compnrlno'n wth tho tomporulurft of tho lquoflod oxygen and nltrogou of tho lropa CUUHH. Lghtnng Ransacked a Bouse, Durng a severe storm the home of Mr, 0. H. Redlge, n Calforna, WJcomco, County, Md., was struck by lghtnng. The bolt struck a bg locust tree n the yard, jumped from that to, the peak of the house and burned or melted some nals n the wood. From there t went down the attc wndow post, whch was splntered, went through the plasterng n fve small holes; t looked as jthough the holes were made by a gun. t set the laca curtans on fre and partly burned a feather bed. The bolt seemed to part here, part gong out front and part go- ng back. T/he part gong front damaged the. shutters,, rpped off the plasterng, followed'some nals over the doorhead and melted, the wre on a screen door and went nto the ground under the front steps. The part that went the back way doubled agan before t entered the ground, owe part takng one Bde, tearng put a wndow frame, followng, a tn valley down a doorway, pws 8f)B[ pre Szpssea #6 Sujddfj then nto the ground. The part that took the other sde ran along a partton, rppng off laths and plasterng down the back starway and through a tn safe or cupboard. n ths cupboard was a glass spoon vase, wth Bllver spoons n t. The spoons were blackened and some of them Were melted when they touched each other. n the same cupboard were knves and forks. These were melted and stuck vhen they came n contact wth each other. From the cupboard t went through the corner of the house, tear- ng off plasterng and weather board- ng and rppng open the corner posts. The famly, strange to say, were not hurt n the least, nor dd any one feel " uy shock. An Anmated Paper Cutter. Ths s a pretty story of an ntellgently traned elephant. Such a paper cutter must, however, be an expensve adjunct to the lbrary. An elephant cannot be boarded for less than?3 a day. When Lord Dufferln was Vceroy of nda, he was vsted by the Rajah of Holkar, who saw the Vceroy take up some llustrated London papers whch had just arrved by mal and cut them wth an vory paper knfe. t was the frst tme the ndan Prnce had seen. such an nstrument used, "Make me a present of that," he sad to the Vceroy, "and wll gve you another." Lord Duffern hastened to comply wth ths modest request, and the young Rajah returned tp hs country. Not long after he returned to Calcutta, brngng wth hm a young elephant, whose tusks had been carved n the most artstc manner n the shape of a paper knfe. Ths he brought as a present to the Vceroy. A table bearng some llustrated papers was brought by a servant before ths ntellgent beast, who mmedately sezed them wth hs trunk, cut them most deftly wth hs tusks and then handed them to the Vceroy. A Mexcan's dea of Busness. "Whle travelng n Mexco a few years ago had a funny experence Wth a Mexcan vender whch goes to show what lttle busness ablty the lower classes have," sad B. F. Gughon of St. Lous. " was en route to look at some mnes away up n the mountans At the- staton where we left the tran to take the stage saw an old woman sellng some honey. She dd not have more than ten pounds of t all together, and as t looked so good wanted to buy t all to take along wth us. asked our nterpreter to buy t. Much to my surprse the old woman would sell hm but two boxes, clamng that f she sold t all to hm she would have nothng to sell ' To Preserve Wood. to other people, nether would she A new method of preservng wood have anythng else to do durng the. from decay, known as the Haskn process, s beng tred on a large scale n remander of the day!"»» England. nstead of wthdrawng the Stoppng a Bullet. sap and njectng creosote or some other antseptc substance, as s UBually done,'mr; Haskn submts the wood woman's lfe was saved by a corset " see," sad Mrs. Parker, "that a to (Superheated ar, under a pressure o the other day. A man shot at her, fourteen atmospheres. By ths process, and the bullet lodged among the stays. t s averred, the sap s chemcally Now wll you men stop talkng about changed nto a powerfully antseptc the corset beng dangerous?" mxture, whch, by consoldatng wth "Oh, pshaw," repled Mr. Parker, tho fbre, strengthens as well as preserves the wood. hoard of a woman whose corset "that's only one enso n ton thousand. stopped a bullet a few days ago, but t ddn't savo her lfe, just the same." "John!" exclamed Mrs.- Parker, "don't fb, just to carry your pont. How could such a thng be possble?" "Why, easy enough. The trouble was thnt the corset stopped tho bullot on the wrong sldo of tho woman." Food Valuu of MlUr. Whle mlk s a. porfect food, thoro nro yet muny who cunnot uso t wthout dolotorlous results f talcon alone. Mlllc, however, f oaten wth ahrodded whole wheat bscut, has all harmful tcndonclos counteracted by tho bscut. atcjd ol a bowl of broad and mlk, try a bawl of uhreddod whoat bscut nnd mlk. Plls for Plants. Tho ndmlnlotrfttlon of "food to planta by muuna of plls n a now doa. Tho oxnet knd of nourlnhwont requred n oully nhcnrtalnnd, t.lo nocohbary nnlta arc nclobod n u nropnrod CBO nnd brlfd mutnr tho ronta. e«h«k»k.<«h«^^^ When the prce of Coal was down to the lowest notch ths year. bought a, vejy large quantty. The Coal s Hard Whte Ash, and s really the best coal mned., t burns freely and does not clnker up. Before t leaves the yard t s screeled and every partcle of drt s removed. Untl further notce wll quote the followng reduced prces on from 5 to 10 tons, delvered n Red Bank and near vcnty wthout extra charge. Nut Goal, $4.80 per ton. Egg Coal, $4.85 per ton. Stove Coa(, $4.90 per ton. Remember ths s frst qualty Coal, and that t does not cost you one penny for cartage. Pla'ce your orders at once n order to. take advantage of ths money-savng opportunty. ". Your mal orders wll be promptly attended to, or you can telephone call 27. SEED WHEAT AT $OO A BUSHEL. have, sxty bushels of nce seed wheat whch wll sell at $1 a bushel. Wharf Avenue and Unon Street, Red Bank, N. J. The gunnng- season opens to-morfbw. We keep everythng needed by gunners, ncludng guns, powder, shot, shells, wads, loadng applances, etc.., ;. Everythng we sell for gunners' use s of the hghest qualty. The powder s strong and clean; the shot s the best chlled; the shells are those of standard manufacture; the guns are all breach-loaders. The good qualty of the ammunton s frequently one of the chef reasons why hunters brng home good bags of game. get here s. the best., Front Street, Adjonng the Postoffce, ' What you RED BANK, - NEW JERSEY. H We have a good Western Flour called "Western Ho," whch we sell at $4.25 per barrel. We do not clam t s the best flour, but t s the best value for the money n Monmouth county. NEW BUCKWHEAT! NEW MNCE MEAT! PCKLED^LAMBS' TONGUES. PCKLED PGS' FEET. 32 Broad street, Red Bank, U. J. ;

14 n the Darkness. As one who from the house aoor goes at nght A stormy nght, when clouds drve early; And, ere he goes, puts put the only lght ' ' '. That, glmmerng through darkness on hs sght, Perchance a welcome homeward gude mght be; ' ' ' ' So from the warmth,-'the shelter and the love,. - Whch the home, more than walls pr acres moka Turned away,»tar that gleams above- No gudance sucl as awkward lea the dove ' Can pont me back doomed ever more to roam, '. ' ' Mad wth the awful blackness of th8 nght, ' Mad that my ruthless hand put out the lght..»»» ; THE SLANDS OF THE BLEST.. have heard t sad of her that she 'made up for an excessve sense of her 6w sex by beng true to all her ndscretons. f she had heard ths she would have sad: "Any lttle thng lke that" a dersve phrase she appled equally to a paradox or a powderpuff, accompanyng the remark, wth a glntng smle, the ngredents of whch have puzzled even scentsts. studed that smle long and earnestly, wth a vew of mtaton; but was fan n the end to confess t too subtle for me, There was a whte gltter 'of teeth, a delcous curlng of the lps, a swsh ofl the eyelashes, and your heart was gone from you; she has mne yet. beleve am the only woman that ever loved, 1 her perhaps because t was gven only] to me to see that other sde of her stray whch Brownng says we all possess; met her frst on board the Scot, when we were both on our way to our Mashonaland homes she to jon her lus* band n Salsbury, and to spend a lone season of tme wth my twq brothers n the same town. She had a mancure box, wth danty slver nstruments nestlng n soft sky velvet, and the fnger nals of those few upon whom Bhe bestowed her frendshp ehe would pnken and beautfy, Bttng on the deck 'neathja glory o whte canvas, wth.the sunlght dancng n her har and rompng wth the rngs on her lngers, whle the other woman sat alone and made audble and nsolent remarks about people who performed ther tolet n publc. Mrs. Knven Kallendor would pay them back n fne. "Captan Dean," she would call out n her sweet, shrll voce. "Captan Dean, cone and have your nals done. They look as though they haven't been touched snce your nfancy as do many others on ths boat," she would add wth acd emphass. She always wore ravshng frocks, was never sea sck, and looked at the women through her eyelashes n a pecularly aggravatng way whch commended tself to- me. r.thoy hated her, hut t welded as ''ndssoluble- bond between us. She had cultvated what De Quncy called the luxury of contempt, and could curl a woman up wth one eye and wth the corner of her mouth make a man wsh he had never been Slfe was not popular n Salsbury,.. chefy because she hurt a lamp wth a red shade n her drawng room where she held court. t cast a rosy glow over all thngs, anrt had been the m- ' dong of many men. Under ts glowng shadows confdences were poured out lke water, and the secvets of Salsbury, prvate and offcal, wore n Dorotljy Kallender's keepng. She knew whch men would frst gan promoton n the polce, what cases wore to be called n the courts, and more of the great rad than Exota' Hall knows to ths day, wlth-other secrets-the-brcathmg-of whch would lmve lowered great heads n the dust. "Ths lamp, Peter," she was used to. sny to me, whom she s dubbed, "has ' helped to lead many a lost soul to hgher and better thngs; also knowledge s power;" and she would stroke t wth her hand, and nl her rngs would smle n the lght. She dd not, lke so many retred actresses, make a parade of her mmense nnd ntense respectbllty; but sho kopt certan moods for certan people. For the starched wlven of cvc magnates and such she tcft a droop of the lower lp and a lmpd, nqurng eye, answerng all remarks wth un dotc but per-, fectly well-bred "Oh, yea," or rather, "Oh, 'as," gvng the mpresson that she had been born dull,.whch wns exactly what t wns meant to do. Thon she complaned to mo afterwards that they had but laughed n her face. "You are the only woman n Msahonalnnd wth any BOBO of humor, Peter," sho would sny, "and 1 bollevo, you nro a boy." For tbo frlbky, horney woman vstor who goes to make up tho queer mxtures called noddy n that far country, she had the mme nqurng jjnze, b but her Bpced wm omlolllnr..u wth n llfjp. "Yea. wo jnvo \vatn dwodful," bo;\rl ho' replyng to n nrty of ths descrpton who wan complanng n n ntlrdent volco of tho rnt and mce nrlearco, nnd nho twddled nor handu ral twtched Jjor toes llko a shy baby. But enter one of tlo clrdo of mon BO wan plonocd to call hor frlondu, and n whch wan nlso ncluded, and aho mmodlntely btenmo moat ''awoot and suffcent" a ylvlrl ana orgnal personalty. She lectured everybody n ther love affars, begnnng wth me, who had. none. "You expect too much of lfe, Peter," she would say, though have never complaned. "Look at Knv and me for nstance? we ht t off splenddly. There s not another ms n the world who would sut me so -fell, or for whom would eschmge hm. Yet we both, admt that we have never been passonately n love wth each other, though we are devoted n our bwn way. do always as lke, and he n turn s free to 'come and go and' fll n hs tme as ho pleases, and we are splendd chums. But you, you are such a romantc person, and take lfe so serously that am always" afrad of you losng your heart to someone and layng up a store of msery for yourself." When she talked lke ths t comforted me, to whom she appeared a rare stray soul gong to and fro' wthout a mate; and had a strange forebodng that n some of her wanderngs she would fnd hm for such women as she must love sometme and-''she led when she spoke of her happy relatons wth her husband. t pleased her to deceve people, but knew the tragedy of her lfe. TCnWe'n Kallender's "broad, sweet smle, that made hm so popular n tho world of men, and the suave courtesy of hs manners to women, had never taken me n. had seen the bg black bruses dsfgurng the whte flesh of Dorothy's body, and had wept over her when she had lan n whte pan utterly unable to rse from her bed. The secret of t was that he was an ntermttent drunkard, and cruel and uncontrollable n hs drunkenness. No one ever suspected ths; they were looked upon as a model couple by men, and the women sad that he was far too good for her. So, where would have left hm, careless of the world, she stayed on, too proud to publsh her shame, hdng her hurts and the hollowness of her lfe u frendshps and flrtatons, The tale pf these was endless, and so darng n ther nnocence that. came to understand how a woman mght lose her reputaton wthout losng her honor. Her safety lay n that ehe could never see a man daly for a week wthout gf owng* bored, and the momeat a man put hs passon nto words, or attempted to do so, he was dsmssed from her presence and "The Red Ranch" knew hm no more. " suppose have no soul, Peter, dear," she would say n her exaggerated way, "or else am ncapable of a grand passon. Any woman who comes along can have a slce of my affecton for awhle but soon get bored." Men grew nfatuated-and mad over her, but she kept them n order n her cool, despotc lttle way. Understandng of ther madness came to me one nght, t was at a dance, and came nto the dressng room just as she was unwndng the wraps from her sweet body, comng out of them lke a pale green star, damonds gleamng and movng on her bosom'. thnk there must be somethng of a man n me, for suffered a leapng of the heart at the sght of that revealed and suggested beauty. t lured my lps to her, and stoopng kssed her where the curvng outlne of her cheek melted nto the lpa. The blood flowed crmson to the spot where my lps had been and spread all over her neck and face. "You slly kddle," she sad, "Peter, beleve you are a boy."- She was brllant that nght, and the women hated her more than ever; one especally, a woman wth red har and envous eyes. She always dressed well and that nght she wore the lovelest of Parsan gowns,, but even that could not. make her look- anythng but a bespangled tger cat. knew by the yellow spteful lght n her eye that she Dorothy. Later n the evenng heard a man say to Dorothy, "f you could have Mrs, Lovell's frock' would you have her face?" " would rather play Godlva to the end of my days," was the answer, and felt she was avenged. \ Her adorers came and wtfjft n batches, accordng to the tme txook for her to grow tred, but they adored always. n tme grew so used to tho cold sweet short frendshps and tho face that camo and went, that ceased to fear for her, and antcpated tho comng of her soul's counterpart, whom holevel to be seekng her, Onco ndeed, when Desborough, a groat lmbed'lawyer, wth urond, determned hands, an n, close mouth, shadowed tho house, grow fearful for hor. Ho would st fo hou'b un.spoakng n a cornel 1 of th drawng room, whllo she poured te for her vstors, 'dscoursed lteratm and abused nnd mtated hor nolghbpr. and acquantances never hor frlenda and ho would lnuxh momllly some tmes lt hor llmcus md trlvohto OH ono day, when asked f he kne 1 much of Byron, she answered": "N only ono lno: 'Tho phantom frolc t her Grace Fltzfulke.'" Sho redo a lt tlo old ony hur lntnbunl had gve her, whch rnroly f over wont out of flnt walk, whch jut mltod, Dorothy whom no amount of vkllnt; would a good rder, though olo looked woll 01 howolmck. Tlo pony wan amde wth a wot HOBO, and Dorothy won! clmb down many tlmou and wlpo gontly wth tho lttle lneo mg she call hor handkcrchlof. Dcaborough would uccomnny lor o hese excursons, cornng "back mooder tll, and wth a devourng passon tarng n hs eyea. But one day when hey returned hla face was old and lalld, and there was a.lttle hardness bout her mouth, that knew he had ;-o:on, and she, as usual, had been crcless. He left England the next y, though all hs nterests were n!;<! -country. When Lews Lyndhurst walked nto he sr.de o her red lamp was so busy ytfg my fears of Desborough that t!y notced hm, so he and Dorothy red the old path unrestrcted by my ardng eye, and he drank deep of the up of Crce. Ah! and she put her lps o t, too, and so was tlje tragedy,of Trstram and seult ence more to tell. t camo upon ms very suddenly, as sttng by he as she lay among' he purple slk cslons Of her dran wth her hands under her her,d among her glmmerng har. She was wearng what called her "tragc" gown,, a loose tea gown of emerald ;reen Batln, wth golden dragons vomtng scarlet poppes all over t, and she ;ossped casually whle stroked the ;lossy dragons. "Peter," she sad suddenly, "a certan lerson s begnnng «to occupy my noughts more than s qute cool or lomfortable.''* "Dorothy, don't talk rot," sad wth jhastly juntlness. "You're only tryng o make me mserable." "He wears red tes, dear, and says: An't you comng? What? How can me help carng?" For a moment my fears -were soothed. Then the doorbell rang and Lyndhurst was shown n. wonder f a man wll ever look at me as he looked at her? t would be somethng worth vng and dyng for, thnk. turned to her, and the lght behnd her eyea as they rested on hm shrveled my soul wthn me. Soon "the begnnng came of the mdng." One mornng as sat at )reakfast wth my brothers, came a lttle note to me addressed smply to 'Peter," as was her quant fashon. 'Come to me," was all t sad. flew, nd comng found her on her dvan. She was clad n her tragc gown, and her face was heaven-lt lke a lustrous sunset, and happer than had ever een t. knew at once what was to face. knelt down and kssed her and kssed her agan; and then, beng a weak fool, cred all over her face and her lovely gown. "We are gong to-nght, Peter," she roned n a golden voce. "No, no, Dorothy, darlng never, never! You shall not go." "We are gong to-nght, dear," and she stroked my har; "gong together to fnd those slands o the Blest." "No, Dorothy, no!" moaned. "Mayn't have a lttle happness?" she asked fercely. "What has my lfe been, Peter?" Then, relapsng nto an nfnte tenderness! "You see, Peter, he cannot do wthout me we cannot do wthout.each other." Later, when was stonly calm, she ;bld me ther plans. They were gong to take horses that nght and rde for Umtal, gettng fresh horses there and a cart to take them to Bera and then straght home. Once out of the country they were safe. 'Gut Knven?" asked. "He wll folow you, and you are not a good rder, "0, wll rde 'll rde lke the devl," wth a lttle laugh. "And shall be wth hm, Peter. Knven wll be away at a bllard match, and we shall get a good start and he may not follow us." thought knew hm better. n the twlght saw them off She went n her rdng habt, takng nothng wth her, and for the last tme straghtened her skrt for her and gave her the rens. Then took Lyndhurst "bytnttands/antlookng nto, hs eyea cred hm to be good to her, to love her all hs lfe, never to let her regret, and he promsed wth a voce deep wth love. They say dark men are as true as men can be. Then when had kssed her lttle stocknged ankles, and she had sad, "Bless you, lttle Peter, f a wcked woman's blessng can do any good, and good-bye," they rode away nto tho nlgt, and lay down on my face n the grass wth my heart full of the tragedes of lfe. After a whllo stumbled blndly homewards, a wld wsh strugglng wthn mo that someone would como and take mo away too, and that we four Dorothy, Lews, the other nnd mght all go together and fnd tho slands of tho Blest. As nearcd tho house a man came nto vlow under a lamp somo few yards off. Ho had a whto fury-lhblcd faco, wth a mouth set hard and cruel. Then fanted. H'was'only lorao aganst horso, nnd wo camo upon them at a farmhouse boforo they had even got half-way. rodo out wth my brothorr, who lul loved her too, and tho elorgymnn who burled them. When had hdden thu ugly murk on hor forhoad wth flowora thoro vvn nothng to rovolt n,'tho HWOOL culm of hor faco; but wo covored bn fnco tll over wth thorn, And bollovo they nro forclvon nnd have found la "tltnlu of thu Bloat." vv f t t tt T The Mghtest Wrters SMTH PREMER TYPEWRTER. Are those who do the actual work n the vast correspondence of a naton. n ths work one s equal to scores of pens. The Pen has ven place to the Modern Wrter, The Jmth Premer, tre machne typcal of progress, the acknowledged LEAnF.R N Send {or Calalcgue. The Smth Premer Typewrter Co. 337 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Wth a full lne of Fall and Wnter Clothng, Suts, Overcoats, Fall and g Wnter Hats, Caps, Underwear, & Shrts, Neckwear and Gloves.... % Relable Goods at Popular Prces. 6 BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J. w. THE HGHEST EVDENCE of a man's affecton for hs famly s the polcy of Lfe nsurance n TKE PRUDENTAL whch he has secured to stand between them and future adversty. Wrte. Home Offce, ' Newark, 1 1 John F. Dryden, Presdent. nsurance, Co. of Amerca. Lesle D. Ward, V. Pres't. m m H. KOLBENSPLAY, Sup't, Box 116, Broad and Wallace Sts., Red Bank, N. J. W» Delwood "Old Reserve" Pure Rye. We don't.say t s the best n the world; but we do clam t s as good as the best.. Try t. $1.25 full quart. GEO,, R. LAMB & CO., Tclophono 15). FRONT ST., RED BANK, N. J. ELECTRCAN l'rtntcd :veto}><-h for PM Thn to one of tfr> burgum* n prntng WlrlHH for Kluotrlo Mffht. hattfttjr. MnRnco nhd h 'uoumutlo lclln. VoloplonosaBpoolnUy. thut Tnt RMHHTBU prlntlnr olllco H TorlK nt the prcnont tme. Plr«t olnnn 233 llfond St., nod Dank, N. Jr. n'b, and n mddlng good onvolojo P. 0. n«x 818. Adv. for Uontracta 011 Applcaton. Adjonng tlo Poslo/llco. 1 1 m!» TT! Meetngs of thojoard of Health. Notlco n horobjr glvon tlmtrcrulnrmottlnjrsof tlo BOARD OF HEALTH OF SHREWS- BURY: TOWNSHP Wll bo hold on tlo flrdt and Ultra Saturdays ot each nontl, nt OommlMlODora' Hull, Hod Dnnt, N.J., at four o'clock, p. u., A. «. AtnfON, B««ret«rr.

15 MAKNG HARNESS RENS, ' They are manufactured From the :. Strongest Leather. " '. The rens of a set of sngle'harness are each about thrteen feet n length; those of a double harness about ffteen feet. For busness, harnesb rens "are made of leather, tanned black; the rens of carrage harness are made of russet-colored leather.. Rens requre to be very stout, and. they are almost always made of steer hde, the leather of wch traces are made, these, however, beng of more than one thckness, Occasonally lnes for lght or for cheap harness are made of cowhde, but not often; as a rule the,best of leather s used for the rens, even n cheap harness. There can be obtaned from the hdes of leather sutable for 1 rens strps from seven to nne feet n length, so that rens are always o\ necessty made n two peces.. The loops, or. handholds, often seen on the rens of track or road horses are commonly made of lghter leather, sttched together and then sometmes sttched to the rens, but more often secured to them n such a manner that they can be shfted on the Vens to But the convenence of the drver. The three-loop hold, whch s called the Boston handhold, s commonly used for track drvng; the sngle loop s the one used by most drvers on the road. There are patent handholds made of metal. The wooden buttons sometmes seen on rens, used as handholds, are made n pars, one button of each par havng a stem wth a thread cut on t whch goes through the ren and s screwed nto the other button of the par on the opposte sde. When the Sultan Goes to Fray. When the Sultan of Turkey attends the Frday mdday prayer at the mosque, n Constantnople, the garrson "of 30,000 men are statoned along the foute so that he shall be safely guarded from--the moment he leaves hla palace untl he s on hs carpet n the Bacred edfce. He often rdes n a closed carrage, surrounded by a body guard. He makes these weekly journeys n fear of hs lfe, and he nssts upon every precauton beng taken. Thousands of people gather to see the Ruler of the Fathful, but the best way to see hm s to get the ear of the Chamberlan or Grand Vzer, who, by Judcous brbery, may be prevaled upon to admt you to the strangers' box of the mosque, where prests and poltcans, solders, salors and cvlans Jostle one another n ther desre f) Obtan a glmpse of Abd-ul-Hamld ftt vray«r. _ ; _, «^, The Country Postmaster. A new postoflce was establshed n a small vllage away out West, and a natve of the sol was apponted postmaster. After a whle complants were made that no malbwas sent out from tho new offce, and an nspector was sent to nqure nto the matter. He called upon the postmaster, and statng the cause of hs vst, asked why no mal had been sent out. The postmaster ponted to a bg and nearly empty mal bag hangng up n a corner and sad: "Well, an't sent t out 'cause the bag an't nowhere ngh full yet." ' '' _. ^ To Darken Yellow Leather. A correspondent wshes to know how jhe may successfully darken the leathsr of a portmanteau whch s dsagreeably brght n hue. The process s lmple, only demandng that strong loda water be appled hot to the eather.as though t wero beng washed. Two or three applcatons mght be necessary before the requste shade were obtaned, but t must bo noted that each washng should be allowed -to-dry-before another--b-addodv-yellofrshoes and gaters mght be darkened ta. the same manner. Sze of the Brtsh Empre. At the present moment the Brtsh empre la flfty-thrce tmes the BZO of France, flfty-two tmes that of Germany, three and a half tmes that of the Unted States of Amerca, thrce the sze of Europe, wth treblo tho populaton of all tho Russla3. t extends over 11,000,000 square mles, occupes ono-flfth of the globe contanng one-flfth of tun human race, or 350,000,000 people, embraces four contnents, 10,000 slands, E00 promonotorles and 2,000 rlvors. Grace Duly Sad. TUo llttlo 4-yoar-olfc daughter of a mnster was vstng and at dnner found tho curvng wnj, about to begn wthout tho customarj grnco. Cnlllng out loudly, "Wnlt n mluuto," oho folded her handa and, bowng her head, repeated "Now lay mo." etc., all tho wny through. Ths dona slo rased nor hoad and, wavng hw /mud to thq car 7 vor, sad: "Now you t let hor go." Has ft Cowboy Band on la Farm. G. G. Glllott, tho cattle cng of Dcknson county, KunmH, lnn the only cowboy band on earth. On bn bg ranch nonr Woodblno ho employs twenty-fve cowboyn and they lavo boon furnshed by Mr. Cllllott wth a comploto not of (lno nstruments. Young folks como from mlloj nround to danco and enjoy bund concol o. A POSTMAN ON. STLTS. 3 ~ Ovcrcomltn the Underbrush on a Plan n JPVoraee. Between Bordeaux and Bayonne les' that stretch' of open country known as the Landes. A great part of ths tract, whch was formerly waste land, has now been partally reclamed and planted wth pne trees, whch are cultvated for the sake of 'the resn that s extracted from them. The.rest of t, however, remans wld and covered wth gorse and broom. The vllages and groops of dwellngs n the Lande3 are very scattered, and, n order to traverse the wde extent of tho plans wth ease, the nhabtants use stlts, whch are ted to ther legs. Mounted on these,' the shepherds' watch ther flocks n the brushwood and can cross pools, marshes anl peat wthout dffculty. They carry wth them a long pole, whch serves as a support when restng. The postmen, too, employ ths means of gettng about. n wntertme, when the Landes are covered wth snow, gettng about on stlts s,.of course, dffcult, and, n order to obvate the nconvenence and to enable hm to get over the ground wthout loss of tme, the postman has lately taken to fttng to hs stlts a knd of thn, wooden skate, whch enables hm to walk on the top of the snow wthout snkng n.. The postman s clad n a whted cloak called a "capot," lned wth sheepskn, and provded wth a hood. Hs legs aro also covered wth sheepskn. n the dmes tho postal servce s carred on by the shepherds on horseback, for t would be mpossble to traverse the sandy tracts on stlts. Why Doctors Commt Sucde. Statstcs show that the medcal professon s more prone to sucde than any other. "Durnghe last three years the number of sucdes occurng among physcans n the Unted Kngdom has been, respectvely, 45, 40 and 47 per..annum, an average of nearly one to 2.0U0, or, as the death rate among physcans, s about 2"> to 1,000, nearly, one-ffteth of all tho deatlb n the professon have tfecn by sucde. t has been suggested that an explantaton of ths tendency may be found n the development of morbd fances n the mnd of a doctor, on account of hs constant assocaton wth the sck and dyng, or because he has the requste knowledge of how to de panlessly and convenently. A medcal journal dessents from all these vews, and holds that the leadng factor n the accessblty of tne poson drugs, whch are almost nvarably used. Sucde s largely a matter of nsane mpulse. magne a man fatgued n body and depressed n sprts as-a doctor often s swayed by an overwhelmng convcton of the utter wearness of lfe to the mpulse of sucde. f he had' but to put on hla hat and walk to the chemst's and tax hs ngenuty for a le wth whch to oxplaln hs desre for poson, he mght postpone the fatal act from mere nerta, or may meet a frend or have hs nterest n lfe aroused by one of a multtude ot everyday occurances, or physcal exercse may brng hm to Us senses. f, however, as s the case wth almost any doctor, he has smply to fesl n hs pockets, or walk across hs room to get a deadly poson, the mpulse may be carred nto executon before anythng can happen to supplant t n the bran. o -» Lockwood's Clent. When the emnent Englsh advocate, Sr Frank Lockwood, was a young man, he was retaned to defend a ruffan accused of a desperate crme. There seemed lttle hope of savng the prsoner, and Lockwood sad to hm: J^Take^y advce and plead jujltyjmd_ save the old man trouble. t's your only chance of gettng a., lght rentece." The prsoner looked hm up and down, and leanng over the bar of the dock, sad: "You fuzzle-headed beggar, what do you suppose pay you for? For mo to do your work that you can't do? Go back to your seat and do what you're pad for!" Lockwood wont back and got tho man acqulttad; Spoke for Twenty-SxlHours. Tho longest speech on record was mndo by Mr. da Cosmos n the legslature of Brtsh Columba when a measure- was pondng to confscate tho lands of settlers. Ho waa n a hopeless mnorty, and tho enemy expected to rush the bll through at the end of tho sesson. t was 10 n tho mornng; at noon the next day, f no acton wo.ro taken, tho act of confscaton would fall. Do Coamos aroso, spoko for twenty-sx houra contnuously, nnd thon wth bnked lps, bloodshot eyes, md nlmoat dead wth fatgue, ho won the vctory that nourly cost hm hs lfe. > Formaton of Character. Chnractor takos ahapo by a vory Blow prol-oas. No ono becomes at a bound Hnt nto whch ho fully matures. Slently, and n a nantmro mperceptbly nluo, wo tond n thn dlrootlon or that. Thon comoh nomo specal contngency or combnaton of crcumstanced, and lol t n dhuload what mnnncr of men or women wo tro, uprght or fnlao, manly or crluclng, true or Hablo to equvocate, ntrog or woalc. Lobsters Cause a Panc. The wfe at a. Pttrtrarg real estate agent had expressed a desre for lobster. Not the common canned stuff, but lve lobster/the real thng. The vender of town lots remembered tha and before startng for home bought two of the fnest, wde-spreadng crustaceans that ever came out of the Atlantc. To nsure ther arrval n good condton he had them put up n a large market basket half-flled wth ce and covered them wth a-pece of paper'. As soon as he got on a fjth avenue car the trouble began. Those lpbsters grew tred of ther secluson and began to get n touch wth ther.surroundngs. The car was crowded and ther owner had to stand, Suddenly a sharp-faced spnster startled the car wth screams of "Help! Pckpockets! Polce!" at the same tme clutchng the real-estate. man's arm. "Conductor, have ths man arrested!" she exclamed. Everybody looked at the supposed culprt and then those nearest the par burst nto laughter. One of the lobsters was stll taggng at the lady's dress. ;. o m ^ A Teacher's Gum Chewng Cure One of the teachers n thepleasanton, (Kan.) school has found a cure for the gum-chewn? habt. She suppled herself wth Qunne one mornng recently, and w'lev. the pupls assembled several of them were workng ther jaws at h good gat. The teacher compelled them to dsgorge ther quds and a'lberal coatng of qunne was sprnkhd over the same, and the chewer was requred to resume the process of "chawn 1," but the gum had lost all t» flavor and n ts place was a btter dose of qunne. We do not know whether the pupls abstan whle out of nchool, but t s a fact that the practce of chewng n school has been completely broken. AU About Genus. The three frst questons of genus an eye to see nature, a heart to feel t, and a resoluton.that dares to follow t. " ' The three thngs ndspensable to genus understandng, medtaton and perseverance. The three thngs that ennoble genus vgor, dscreton and knowledge. The ± ll three tokens of genus extraorrry understandng, extraordnary lhyrr conduct and extraordnary exertons, The three thngs that mprove genus proper exerton, frequent exerton aud successful exerton. The three thng that support genus prosperty, socal qualfcatons and applause. Damonds All Colors But Volet* Damonds may be black as well as whte, and some are blue, red, brown yellow, green,, pnk and orange, but there s no volet dl.mond, although, n addton to amefhjst, there are sap-' phres, rubles and garnets of that color. Careful Transportaton. A crockery dealer shpped 325 dshes from Lansng, Mch., to a mssonary at Teheran, Persa. The goods were seven months n transt, and were carred 800 mles by caravan, but only one dsh n the lot was broken. S hours of S o'clock nnd 5 o'clock (nt 3o'clock), n the afternoon of snd day, at tleulobe Hotel, nt Red Rank, n the townshp of Shrewsbury, county of lonmouth, New Jersey. All that tract or pnreol of land nnd premses, herenafter partcularly (lewrbed,etuute, lylutr uml belnu; n the vllage of led Hank, of the townshp of Shrewsbury, n (le county of Monmouth nnd state of Now Jersey, Hetrnnp: nt n stake standng n the north sde of Wnll street two hundred nnl fourteen feet wcstvanlly from the pont wn-re tho west pldq of Pearl street meets the north sde of -Wnll street ;-th> nee- from Nld-bcpnnlnstako runnng norlhwnrdly on u lne parallel wlh the west sde of Pearl street one Hundred feet to n stake; thence westward!)' on a lne parallel wth the uortl sde of Va]) street nne!}' leet to a stake; thence southwardly on a lne pnrullcl wth the west sde of Went street one hundred feet; thence, enslwnlly along the north slle (f Wall streel thrty feet to the hc(nnlnk,nnd beng nt'etl ns tho snno premses nnd real estate conveyed to sad John Kcotg by Mchael Wlnlcn and wfe by deed dated December Kth, A. ) Alsonll that tract nnd pnrcpl of land nnd premses, sltmto n tho townshp of Shrewsbury, emny of Monmcuth nnd state of New Jersey, nt Red Hunk and on he north sde of. n street called Wnll street. Begnnng n the north edge of the aforesad sred atn stake standng elchty feet eastward olont tho north Hde of tho nfort'sld street from (le southeast corner of FzokM Johnson lot: thence northwardly on n lno pnrnllel wth the cant sde of sad Johnmu sad lot one hundred f;'t to a Mnh; tlcnco n t lne, parallel wth tho nolh sldu of the nforowld street'thrty feet eastward from tho lust nlnresnld atnko to another stake slndtugln tho northeast corner of the lot hereby conveyed; thence srlhwroly on n lne pnmllol wth tho east sde ot enld Johnson's untl lot, ono hundred feet from the hst aforesad stnko to tn! north sde of the, lnst nforcsnld street, beng to n stnfco standng n the north Bde, ol tle foesad street; thence wostwnrdly along tlo north sde of the aforesad Rtcel nnd from the. last ntonwld nlnko thrty feet to tn 1 wfflnnlnr. Sezed us the property of John Kcough, taken n executon at the sut of Nuveslnk Lodge. No. lt),. O. O. '., (body corporate) nnd to bo sold by HOUSTON C1KLDU, Sherff.. Al.l.RN,,ln>. Rol'r. Dated Nov.!!, 18W. N OTCE OF SETTLEMENT. 1CHTATE 01' MA t!a HdllNKDKR, Deceased. Notce n lerehy gven Unt the accomla of tn* Hulscrlucr, executor of untl deceased, wll ht audted and ptatcl l>y the HTOKnto, nnl reported for scltlonnnt to tlo Onlm Court of the County nf Monmolh, on TllmSDAY, Tll! KK11T1 JAY Ol'DMKMr.llnexl. hfaflhent'lljm" Mlth, 1W8. OKOKGE ). HNVDKH. Townshp Commttee footngs. The llonrd of Tmvnnhl >(,'onmlttce ofhhror/nbnrj townshp wll hold regular ncotlngn nttown Hull on Monoutl Hred, led jsnnk, N. J., on the lra nnl thrd HalarduyH of each month, from 4 to ft r.u, X. «). HAUHNON, Thl Olork. EW YORK AND LONG BRANCH N RALBOAD. Statons n New York: Central t. R. of New Jer sey, foot of Lberty Street, nnd foot of Whtehall Street (South Ferry Termnal); Pennsylvana R. R., foot of Cortlandt Street, Desbrosses Street, and West 23d Street. On nnd after October 41b,1808, TRANS LEAVE BED BANK. For New York. Newark and Elzabeth, <?7 40, Newark nnd New York.only), T 65, (*819, New- York onlyl.*8 27, U13,»1130 a. m.: 1243,3 08, 4 85, 61«, 7 C»p. m. Sundays, 803,. 043 a. m.; 50, C 00, *" 50 p.m.-. For Long Brnncl, Ocean Grove, Asbury Park and ntermedate statons to pont Pleasant, 6 25, 7 a (to Sea Grt), 05a, luu a.m.; 12 47, 3 20, * p. m. Sundays, (1 a.m.; 527, ft 47 p.m. Sunday trans do not stop at Ocean Grovo and Asbury Part. FOR FREEHOLD VU MATAWAN. Leave Bed Hank (Sundays execpted), 8 27,1130n.m.; UOUp. n. ' TRANS LEAVE NEW YORK. Eoot of Lberty street, 430, 550, 830, 1130 a.m.: 145,415; *4 40. (115 p. m. Sundays, 9 00, "1015a.m.: 400 p.m. loot of Whtehall streetlsouth Ferry termnal), 8 25, a.m.; 1-S5, 355, 435,«10 p.m. Sunduys, 8 55,10 0(1 a. n.; 355 p. m. ' Foot of Desbrosses and Cortlandt streets, 910 a.m.; ; 1850, 34(1,»510'p.n. Sundays, 045 a.m.; 5 16 p.n. West Twenty-thrd street staton, 850, a.m.; 12,20, 320,*4M)p.m. Sundays,920a.m.; 450p.m. TllANS LEAVE FREEHOLD. (Sundays exceptcd), 815,1115 a. m.; 215, 20.0 C5 p. m. For further partculars see tmes tables at staton?. * Denotes express trans. J. t. WOOD, Gen'! Pass. ARont, Penn. E. R. H. P. BALDWN, Geu'l Pass. Agent, Ceutml H. R. ofn.j. RUFUS BLODGETT, Superntendent, N. T. and L. B. t. R. ' PENNSYLVANA lalroad J- PANY. On nnd after October 4tt, 1838, TRANS WLL LEAVE RED BANK Tor New York, 740,8 43 a.m.; 3(l8,0 03p.m,.'Sundays, 0 43 a. m.; ( 0(1 p. m. " Newark. 740,9 43 a. m.; 3 08, 0 03 p. m. Sundays, 0 43 a. n.; 0 00 p. n. " Elzabeth, 0 43 n. ra.; 3 03,0 03 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a. n.; t 00 p. m " Rahway, t 43 a. m.; 3 08, 0 03 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a.m.; 6(18 p. m. " Woodhrldge, 9 43 a. m.; 3 08, 6 03p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; 0 00 p. m. " Perth Amboy, 308, B 03 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a. n.: 6 Ol p.m. 0 " South Amboy,!43 a.m.; 308, 803 p. n. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; U Ot p. n. " Matawan, 9 43 a. m.; 3 08, 6 03 p.m. Sundays, 943 a.m.'; 008p. m. " Mddletown, B 43 a.m.; 3 08,1) 03 p.m. Sundays, 9 43 a.m.; 0 00 p.m. " Phladelpha a d Trenton, conecllnj; at Ralway, 9 43 a. n.; 0 03 p. m. Sundays, 0 43 a. n.; 0 (H p. m. " Lon^ Branch, Pont Pleasant nnd ntermedate statons, 10 31) a. n.: 2 2(1, 4 50 nnd 022 p.m. Sundays, 1120 a. m;; 0 47 p n. (Do not stop at Asbury Park o ocean Grove on Sundays.) " Toms TUvnr, Bay Head and ntermedate statons, a, m.- Trans leave Phladelpha. Broad street (va Rahway), for Ucd lsanb, at l 50, 1114 n. m.; 4 02 p. m. Sundays, 8 20 a. n.; 4 02 p. n. THANS LEAVE'NEW YOUK, For Red Bank from West Twentv-tllrd street staton, 8 50 a. m.; 12 20,3 20, 4 50 p. n. Sundays 9 20a.m.; 4 5(1 p.m. Desbrosses and t'ortlnndtstreet,) Wn.tn.; 1250, (1 p. n. Sundays, 9 45 a. m.; 515 p. m. J. B. HUTCHNSON, J. R. WOOD, General Manaeer. Gen. Passenger Acent, NOVEMBER, Merclants' Stenmboat Co.'s Lne. Telephone Call, 14A, Red Bank. Shrewsbury,H(/7l(tnlSt Hghland Heach, Oceanc, Locust Pol?f, Jtrown's Dock, Far Haven, Red lanl, lelford, Zong Branch and Asbury Park: The Strong and Commodous Steamboat, ALBERTNA, CAPT. L. PRCE, Wll leave Per 24, foot of Frankln Street, New- York, and Red Bank, as follows; Leave Ucd Bank. Leave New York. Tuesday, 1st a. m. Tuesday, 1st m. \Yed'sd'ay.a..7D0 '* Wed'sdny, 2(..12OO " Thursday,3d " Thursday,3d...,100p.m. -Frday, 4th " Frday,4th 100 " Saturday. 5th..800 " Saturday, 5th " Monday,7th " Monday,7th 200 " Tuesday,8th " Tuesday,8th " \Ved'sduy,m..700 " Wed'sday,!)th...2(O " Thursday, 10th.7 0(1 " Thursday. 10th.. 2 U0 " Frday, 11th...701) " Frlday > 'llth...2oo " Saturday, 12th.700 " Saturday, 12th " Monday. 14th..700 " Monday, 14th " Tuesday. 15tl..700 " ' Tuesday, 15th..12(X) m. Wed'sd,vy,l(lth.700 " Wer3dny,Mb.l2(X) " Thursday. 17th.7 00 "' Thursday, 17th..l 00 p. m. Frday. 18th 700 -" Frday, 18th 2P0 ' Saturday, l'jtl.700 " Saturday, 10th...2CO " Monday,2lst " Monday,21st...2CO " Tuesday,23d...7(H " Tuesday.22d...2CO " Wcd'sday,23d..7t0 " Wcd'Mluy.23d..2CO " HERFF'S SALE.-By vrtue of a Thursday, 24th. Thursday. 24th, wrt or n. Jn. to me drected.'ssued out of tho (Thanksgvng.) TlankSElvnjr) Court ot Chancery of the state of New.lesey, wll Frlday,25th...7CO " Frday, 2Sth...2(0 " be. exposed to sale nt publc vmuue, nj FRDAY, Saturday, 20tl.7X) " Saturday,2(th..2(0 " THE 9th DAY OF DECEMSEt, 1S08, bctweeu tho Monday,2Mh..7fO " Monday, 2Ml..,2 0U" " Tuesday. 211th " Tuesday, 2Mb...12 (10 m. Wcd'sday, BCtl."HO ' Wed'sdy, SUth " Subject to Change Wthout Notce.' J2-'*'OoMeets wth trolley em's nt Red Bunk for Shrewsbury, Katontown, Belford, LOHK Branch and Asbury Fur*. HARVEY LTTLE,' Jlessent'er. Frut and Confectonery on Board. N. B. All frc-lplt ntended for ths lmt must bo onho wlnrf nallllclpt'lcnfrtrn tlmctohdlc.ns she wll postvely leave promptly on her advertsed tme. Ths boat's tlme-tnhle s mlvertlsed n TK RKD BANK RK(!STKH, New Jersey Stmthml; uholn tlo Coutlne House Montor, Mnckcy's Steamboat GuMb nnd Bulllnger's Guld. Tlnr-tnbles my bo obtaned at tho led Bmk Prntng House, Ludlow hull, rond street. Excurson Tckets to Rcl Dank, " " Long Branch, " " Asbury Park, O 50c. 75c. $1.00. N RULE TO BAE CREDTORS. EXECUTOR'S NOTCE. r John.1. Huffy, executor ot Anne Jr. D^ffey, decensed, by order of the Rrroprale of tlo county of Monnoth, lerehy rlves notce to the credtors ot he snld deceased to trng n ther delts, demands am clams aganst the ctato of nnl decrnsel, under oath or nlllrnnllon, wthn nne months from tho THRTEKNTH DAY OF SKTHMBKH, or they wll bo forever barred of any uctlon therefor aganst the sad executor. JOHN J. DDFFET. CunHa H. VNS. Attorney. Notce s hereby gven to tho delnquent taxpayers of the townshp of Shrewsbury tha under no crcumstances wll tho payment of tho costs and nterest on delnquent taxes bo waved or abated, but delnquents wll bo requred to pay n full n all cases. Byordorof tho townshp commttee. A.O. HARBSON, Townshp Clerk. A PPLEGATE&HOPE, E COUNSELLORS'AT LAW, RED BANK, MONMOUTH COUNTY, NEV/ JEKSEY. JOHN 8. APPLEGATJ. FBED.W. HOPE. pharles H. VNS, \J COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Rooms» and. Regster Buldng, BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J DMUND WLSON, COUNSELLOR AT LAW, (Successor to Nevus & Wlson). RED BANK, N.J. Offces: FOST-OFFCEBULDMG.. ' WLLAM PNTARD, COUNSELLOR AT'LAW, Over Button's Stove Stof. RED BANK, H.3 TAMES STEEN, tl COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Notary Pahlc and Commssoner of Deeds for New York. EATONTO.WN, N. 3. JACOB SHUTTS, O AUCTONEER. Specal attenton gven to.sales of tnrn stock farm mplements and other personal property. P. O. Address, SHREWSBURY, N. J. TAMES WALSH, STEAM SAAV ANDMOLDNG MLL, Mnntfcturer of Sush and Blnds. MECHANC! STREE';,. RED BANK, N.J. HEO. F. WHTE, T HEAL ESTATE AND NSURANCE. > JUSTCE Of THE PEACE. Regster Bulldntr, '" RED BANK, N. J. Collecton of Blls a specalty. R. R. F. BORDEN, D SURGEON DENTST. MUSC HALL BULDNG, RED BANK, N. J. Partcular attenton gven to the admnstraton of Anesthetcs. R. J. D. THROCKMORTOK, D DENTAL SURGEON. OFFCE: No. 5 Broad Street,. Red BnnH, N. J. D R. WM. H. LAWES, JR. VETERNARY SURGEON. Graduate of Amercan Veternary College, N. Y. Resdence: Monraouth Street, Between Broad street and Maple avenue, Red Bunk R T D. CHANDLER, ARCHTECT. Stout's Bulldltf?, Opposte Globe Hotel, RKD BANK, NEW JERSEY. ' HOMAS DAVS, JR., NSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. FRONT ST., RED BANK, N. J. (P. O, Box 21.) nsurance placed n the best companes on most reasonable terms. T>. S. SNTDER. JLVb Establshed 11)78. REAL ESTATE, GENERAL NSURANCE S LOANS Commssoner of Deeds and Surveyor. Also nsurance Broke- for New York and Vcnty.. ATLANTC HGHLANDS, N. J. W U. KURTZ, M. D., O. M., PHYSCAN AND SUEGEON, EATO.NTOWN, N. J. Offce on Broad street, north sde, Ore*, door west of poskfllce. OFFCE HOURS : 9 to 11 A. M.; 1 to" 3,6 to 8 p. M. TJE. ELLA PRENT1SS UPHAM.. DSEASES OF WOMEN AND CHLDREN. ' ELECTRCTY. ROOM 0, REGSTER BULDNG, R ED BANK, N. J. At Red Bank Offlco Tuesday and Frday alternbons D J E. G. F. MAESDEN,. HOMEOPATHC PHYSCAN AND SURGEON, FRONT STREET, RED BANK, N. J AS. S. McCAFFEEY, 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. C. HURLEY, A SURVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER, 115 Brdge Avenue. RED BANK, N. 3 Wll) George Cooper for ffteen years. G EO. D. COOPER. CVL ENGNEER. Successor to Geo. Cooper, C. E. Offce: 7 Rector Plnce, RED BANK, N. J. ENRY OSTENDORFF, H TUNER AND REPAER OF PANOS AND O1GANS. Ofllco at Worthley's Statonery Store. Telephone Call 18n. BtOAD ST., RED BANK, N. J HOME NSURANCE: COMPANY OF NEW YORK. Offce: No. 11!) Brnadwny. Eghty-Seventh Scml- Amnnl Statement, Janunrv, 181)7. CASH ASSETS '.. $111,302, ALLARE & SON. AGKNTS. ESTABLSHED tvtl Bnnl tcnl Kttate nnd nsurance Agency. 21 Broad Strnut, Red Bank. Rsks plnced n tn; Home and other hst-cf luss companes " nt Lov- - est Unt's. >. O. Box 177. ALLARE & SON. specal Notce RELATNG TO N THE Townshp of Shrewsbury. Nusances wthn the townshp of Shrewsbury are hereby defned nnd declned to be, and they shall nclude md embrace: 1. The pludnr or depostng n or upon any street or alley, or n or upon nny publc or prvate property n ths townshp, nnv dead anluul or any pnt of thn same, or any deud lsh or any pnt (jf the sumc, or lltl from prves or cc-po's or cntcl bslns, or rulhsl of nn'y knd of descrpton, or nny house or ktchen slops or cartuge, mmure or tuveeplntrs (pro vldcd thntstnhle nnnure and oler nnue may n used as u fertlzer)', or any foul or ollublvu orohnoxo* nrtlt(. r,! pr snhstnce wlmuvtr, ~'. Any full onlcuky prvy vmlt, cesspool or other receptacle for lltl. *. Allowlnr or pennlttlntrnny nlplt. sol, frarltro or other oltemlve or d< composlntt sdlld or luld matter or, futwtancc to leak <r ouzo from nny carl or WRO or vessel n whch the sumo may bo conveyed or carred.. Tlo carryng or 'nnvoylnr through nny street any Htstuneo whch hns leen removed from any prvy vnlt.nr creunl, unlora tlo sumo olall he nrldwd n ulr-twluanels.o'lna perfectly tght and properly covered Wlson. S, All rurtlnrdf KurbHu throu.l the streets of the to\vh,hlp except helween the houbof nunset and KX A. M. 0. Tm burnng of- nny nultcr or mtmnnro whch slnll omt, or cause, or M'oduce, or enw ol' uny foul o'otnoxloh. or offesfve, or hurtful, or MuylK KHH, mnok), nt tn or olor, 7. Tlo rustng ordtselnrrlnn nto tho Shrewtthry or Nuvwluk, or South HlncHnhry rlvera, or nto any rtvam n thn townshp, or m tho boundary lne ofthlh towkhlp, uymhstnco whch H leen removed from nny vault, cesspool or nlnl, or any offl or otle'.'l'efuse HuUto or KOUS, ty any plpcu or otlorwlso. 8. Any and every mlwtro H nlove dvned 1H hereby pnlllllcd md forhhlln wthn tho townchp of Hl'WBlurv, nnd nny pereon Umj.ccntllt, cnuxlnk, lulalulnf or pernlttlng any of wld nuxunrch nlnll frfull and pay u uunnlty oftwontyllvo dollnrt. Tm nlovo n an oxnut from thn ordlnnncnof llm hoard ot hnnltl of HhruwHhy towmhlp, and tlo FMno wll hu thorcukhly cutotcd, W. 8, W11TMOE, M. D., 'lvhld't ot tlw Hoard of Health laullon, Huorutury.

16 rf. N A1TD OUT OF TOWN. Short and nterestng tems Front All Over the County? A barn on the Murphy farm at Deal was burned on Tuesday o laat week. The barn was opcuped by G. T. Robbns and hs stock of hay and farmk mplements was destroyed. The loss on tle buldugandcontentsamounted to $1,000. An opossum got nto the hen coop of W. H. Stener o Asbury Park one nght last week and klled one of the chckens. Four others were BO badly btten that they bad to be klled, George Vanderbeck, presdent of tle Fanners' natonal bank of Allentown, s sck. Ths s the frst tme n hb lfe that he has been confned to hs bed by 6ckness. George W. Byran* formerly presdent of the Asbury Park natonal bank, has been arrested at East Orange, charged wth forgng checks to the. amount of $15,000.. A NEGRO FOUND GULTY. Wllam Jackson Convcted of an nfamous Crme On a Lttle Grl. Last Thursday Wllam Jackson, colored, was tred and convcted of attemptng a crmnal assault on eght-year-old Grace Flock, and commttng an assault and battery upon sx-year-old Mary Flock, both daughters of Mrs. Ehoda Boce, who lves near Etra. The crmes were commtted on August 18tb, last., The evdence showed that the negro had actually commtted a crmnal assault upon G-raco and that he beat Mary wth hs band and wth a stck because she threatened to tell her mother of the occurrence. The whole case was of a most revoltng nature. t was brought out that Jackson bad served a two-year sentence n state prson for commttng a smlar offense near Smthburg, t appears that on AuguBt 18th Mrs. Flock went tohghtstown, leavng a young whte womtn named Jary Robbns n charge of the chldren. Jacob and Samuel Rosenfeld of Bel-Thermar have fled an applcaton to the Jackson, Alas Robbna and the chldren. was no one about the farm except llonmouth county court of common The negro entced the chld Grace nto pleas to be made ctzens of the Unted J the woods, and; after accomplshng bs States. purpose, contnued about the farm. The The tre on a bcycle.belongng to Mss defense tred to prove that Jackson bad Nelle Arrbwsmth of Keyport; was cut been accused through Mss Robbns be wth a knfe one day last week whle cause she ha a spte aganst hm. Ths the wheel was standng n front of a house. * Mrs. Emma Hbbetts of Long Branch, who was shot and klled last week by Harry Brooks, was nsured for $400 n the Prudental nsurance company. A horse owned by James Young of Allentown ded a few days ago of old Sckles hjfe Davson n the face. Da-vBon age. The anmal was 41 years old and was rendered unconscous by the blow. had always worked untl ths year. He remaned unconscous for an hour The offcal board of the North Long after the accdent and was n that condton at ntervals durng the day. Branch Methodst church has requested the return of Rev, W. R. Wedderspoon to that church for another year. A New Brdge n Mllstone* Rev. A. J. Mllor, rector of Trnty A new brdge over Mllstone creek, on Epscopal church at Aabury Park, has the road leadng from Sweetnan's Lane returned home from a month's vacaton, to Clarksburg, has just been completed. whch he spent n the South. The new brdge replaces one whch had Rev. B. C. Lppncott, Jr., of Laker tood for forty years and Whch had become dangerous. wood', who was formerly pastor of the Belford Methodst church, has resgned from the mnstry. Mllnery. A new ppe organ has been placed n the Matawan Methodst church and last week an organ rectal was held, at whch 110 was cleared. Over $40 was cleared at an organ rectal We shall contnue to add every whch was held at Calvary Methodst week any new novelty that appears church at Keyport on Tuesday nght of last'week. n Felt or Fancy Hats, Pheasants Wllam Emmons of Farmngdale, who fell and broke hd leg several months Breasts, Fa.ncy Qulls, Ostrch ago, s able to walk wth the ad of crutches. The Manasquan muscal and lterary assocaton wll gve a seres of sx entertanment at Manasquan durng the wnter. Mr. and Mrs. George B. Hopper of Asbry Park celebrated the second annversary of ther marrge last Wednesday nght. Mss Mary L. Brown of Manasquan, who has been \stug her brother n Mexco for the past year, has returned home. Leutenant Smeon P. Dey o Company G, who s statoned at Pompton Lakes, las suspended hs cgar busness at Keypovt. Theves entered Charles H. Errckson's cellar at mlaystown a few nghts ago and stole v quantty of wnter provsonsr A court of Foresters has been organzed at Asbury Park. The now organzaton wll bo known asllonmouth ccmrt. Tho Pastme socal club of Keyport wll gve a mnstrel show n the armory there on Monday, November 21st. Fve Asbury Park boys, were arrested rastlvedesday"for playng shnny on tho streets tt that place. A course of seven entertanments wll be gven at Asbury Park by tle Asbury Park hgh school club. Mrs, Tmothy Hurley of Sprng Lake has gone to Freehold, where slo wll Bpcml tho wnter. John Estell of Farmngdale had a ctron 'vne ths year from whch ho pcked 48 cton. Wllam B. French of Allentown s confmud to the house wll) nn attack of rheumatsm. A BlK>>lml dog belongng to Tlonns Crevy of Marlboro was stolon ono nght last week. Tho women of the Freehold Baptst church cleared $04»t a fuppur one nght last weuk. Wllam Conover, tsou oc J, S. Conover of Marlboro, ha been Hck wth dphthera., Company O of.keyport wll hold a ball n tho armory on Tlunkbgvltg nght. Extra meetngs urn bdng-jeld n tho Freehold Pmbyl-ran clnrclub week John B. Hlernnn and falnly have moved from Mnntmqun) to Long Brnnoh J, Frank Worrull of Mtnwnn vvl open a rchtttuant at Perth Amboy. BOXOH of paper, 24 Hheet of paper and 84 envelopes, from 10 cetfh to 50 ccnta por box, at THS KCHTEH odlce, All of tht'ao aro oxtu value for the rmncy, -Adv. plea was found to be wthout foundaton, and the jury brought n a verdct of gulty n both charges. Freehold Schoolboys Fght. Frank Davson of Englshtown and Abram Sckles of Freehold got n a lght on the school grounds at Freehold ard oods, Fancy Velvets and Slks makng our stock up to date n all partculars. Mss A. L Morrs, X)R. BROAD AND FRONTSTREETS RED BANK, N. J. and Statonery. A bg assortment of Blank Books, sutable for all busness purposes. Mlkmen's Books, Tme Books and Pass Books of all knds. All the daly papers and magaznes. Tetley & Son9 Front St., next to Postoffce Boar Ths n Mnd. There s no opum or other hnrmfu subgtnnce n Chamberlan's Cough Ren edy. There s not tho least danger gvng t to chldren. t s pleasant to take, too, and, what s more, has an establshed reputaton of twenty-fve years aa the most successful medcne n uso for coughs, colds, croop and whoopng cough. t always cures. Try t. Fo sale'by Charles A. Mnton & Co., druggsts, No. 3 Broad street, Red Bank. WLLAM O'BREN, Practcal Plumber, STEAM AND 6A3'FTTER. Hot Water Heatng a Specalty No. 26 Front Street, RED BANK. NEW JU218W Shoes for small folks must be stout and strong'to.'wthstand "the kcks ' and scuffs of the lvely wearers-. They must ft well, as youngsters. must not be expected to go through the agony of breakng them n. And then they must look well to please the chldren's mothers.,. xwe have two lnes, of shoes.that possess all" these necessary, vrtues, "THE RED STAR" and "THE SHELD." [ -\ Made strong where" the most stran comes, m^de to ft the feet, and made to look well wthout sacrfcng ether strength or shape. The prces are nterestng to economcal mothers. % Sheld Lne. Szes 5 to 8 %.p " '8 to 11..., 1.00 ". H to " The Sheld " Shoes are sold only by us. "The Red Star" Shoes are sold only by us. Successors to J. B. BERGEN, Bed Star Lne. Szes 5 to 8... $.85 " Sftoll 1.00 to Broad Street, Red Bank, K. J. Why? Because you get what s advertsed. nvestgate! Shop around! f you do that ntellgently you- wll buy here; you wll fnd better values here; you wll fnd lower prces here. A vst to our slore wll convnce the most sceptcal that we sell Clothng and Gents- Fum shngsr qualty -for qualty,lower than any other store n ths county. Our prces lower than ever! Our motto : " Quck sales and small profts." Money refunded on all goods not satsfactory. rw\ Cheapest Clothers n the World! 27 FRONT ST., RED BAN* 8A3H AND DOORS. Tlu umloralknod lnn bmrlt the) mt am lllnl lunlnomof Jnmoo Walnt on Moclmnlo ntroet, md n ropawd to do nl clnnnoor work n tln lnn of Muds, Kut, doom, ncroll euwlnu nnl glum work. Gnrpontor wotk uud Koueml ]ol)wnn wll ntno bo (lom. ' WALACU UHNNBYV. OPP. THROOKMORTON'S LUMBER YARD. WHEELWRGHT SHOP. Tho frlondn of <nqulra '«'. ', Nnlron wll fnd Hm nt lln old lmlcnn n WtlHh'x lllllthtr an TKolmllfl Ntrcnl, led Hunk, N. J., wloro h» lcen nl klnln nf WBKO Work. Now Jffrm Wttonn, UTOWH, Ortn. WlmlbarrowB. Ac, nnd u> (lor, md Jolblnjj ot nl klndn nvutl; uu promptly lom>. JAH1CN WA.M, >roprl«(or. JOSJ'JJ «. ENCHELUAC, Wont 'ront Struct, nnar rmrl, ltud HnU, N.O. Krowor' JJ^r and F. A M.flolafor'nM Wlnur toor nlwayh on draught. BM(TnOU)HAT 11001K8TKB BEKU N,:' BOTTJ4KH.

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