ANK VOLUME XXII. NO. RED BANK, N. ^WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1900. PAGES 1 TO 8. ago and had lived ever since, in the house in which he died. He leaves a It is to be Completed tti Time for wife and one daughter, Miss Effel AusSummer Service. ••'•' SEVERAL BED BANKERS DIE tin, who lives at borne. One eon, James, THAT AMOUNTWIM. BE SPENT MEN WHO WILL TRY BULLOCK died twelve years ago. .'.'.. Seabright is to liave a new railroad IN MIDDLETOWN THIS TEAR. DURING THE PAST WEEK. DBAWN YESTERDAY. station this summer. The residents of The Road Overseers.Appointed ana WtlpurA, Xletaiev, the Sew Judge, the place have been trying for several Mi us Am tie Woods Dies from CanJohn Mlanhinnun. the. Road Moneu Apportioned cer—Sudden Death p/ Thomas Did not Sit on the Bench Becati^ years to get the railroad company to John Hankinson died suddenly in LastSaturdap—VeryFetv Change* Cumberton—Richard Austin Dies Texas a few days ago. aged about 52 lie Hat} Been Prosecutor in the mild a new station there and at last they of Dropsu-OtherDeaths, years. He was the son of the late Theoin the Overseers, : •' ". • B u l l o c k T r i a l s . . . , . ' • • - . . - v ^ iave succeeded. "The old station has been sold to George B. Sand"-, who is Miss Annie' M. Woods of Monmouth dore Hankinson and was born atManala- The township committee of MiddleTh« petty jury for the May term of moving it to the Octagon hotel, where died lastf Thursday, aged 47 years, pan. He was a member of the firm of town township met; a t Luke Melee's court was drawn at Freehold yeaterday. will be converted into quarters for the street Death caused by cancer, with which ackson & Co., of Union Square, New hotel a t Port Monmouth last Saturday Judge. John Eel 1stab of Mercer county it employed in the hotel. Mr. she hadwas suffered several years. She had York, and was well known at Shrews- and appointed the road overseers and was on the bench. Judge Wilbur A. servants Sandt paid f 300 for the building. been under treatment for the disease bury and Freehold. He was always apportioned the road money. Com* Heisley was sworn in office on Monday but he did not take his place on the The new station will be very similar to about a year but she kept up until a few ery active in church work and waa a mitteerrian D. W. VanNote of Belford that at Red Bank. It will contain a days before her death. On the morning deacon in Dr. Kittridge's .church at New was sick with the grip and unnble to a t - ' • bench, as he was the prosecutor in the Bullock murder case, and Bullock will large waiting room, and at one end will of her death she realized that the endYork.' He went to Texas two months tend the meeting. There are twenty be located the ticket office and express was near and she called the family to ago for the benefit of bis health, be tried by a jury drawn from the jurors districts In the township thisyear, which, selected yesterday. Judge Eellstab di- office. The new station will be about her and bade them good bye. In the Mr. Hankinson leaves a widow and is two less than there -were last year. ten feet further from the track than the afternoon, while' sitting in her cbair, she wo children. • The children are Harry One district cut out was that of Joel rected the sheriff to put 120 Dames in the jury box and to draw out sixty of old station. This change is made in or- died. Her death was very peaceful and Hankinson, who attends) Princeton col- Brown of Seaside, his district being der to provide greater security to travelshe died without a struggle.. them. These are the- men who will lege, and Kenneth Hankinson, aged ten within the proposed borough of Seaside. serve as jurymen during the May term ers who may be on the BtatioD platform Miss Woods wafr the daughter of Mary •ears. Two sisters and a brother also The other district cut out was Seventh when the express trains go tbroubg. of court: and George Woods, both of whom are survive him. They are Mrs. Vanderveer avenue, near Atlantic Highlands, which The street crossings at Seabright, living. 8he was born at Red Bank and VanDorn of Red Bank, Miss Hannah L. was added to George H. Sickles's district Atlantic—Henry fjchanolt, Thomas Wolcott, Frank where so many lives have been lost dur- had always lived here. At the age of Hankinson of Eatontown and William at Navesink, The total number of miles Wyckofl. " Eatontown—winiam H. Heed, Nicholas White: • ing the past few years, are to be guarded seventeen she learned the dressmaking A. Hankinson of New York. . of roads in the township this year is 00, Freehold—Michael Ford, John Connura, Frank J. hereafter with gates and flagmen. trade and she-had been in the business and the money was apportioned a t $73 Queenoy. John T. MoChesnev, Lewis 8. Packard, There are six crossings in the -village of since that time. She had excellent taste, William F . Barkalow, Hugh Barkalow, Charles H. per mile. This uses up $7,008 of tho Charles £,. Ulatre. Seabright and the railroad company and her-work had a high reputation. Cottrell. road appropriation, the balance of $093 Charles L. Maire of Manasquan died Hclmdcl—Garrett Longstreet, Alex. L. McClees, wants to make such changes in the roads being reserved for special work. Miss Woodsleaves tnree brothers and on Tuesdayof last week of heart tr6uble, Elwood Magee. of the place that there will be only four a sister. They are George, Frank, Joseph Very few changes were made among Howell—Joseph L. Butcher, Cornelius Messier, ged 78 years.^, He was born at Lorraine, Charles H.-Matthews, Henry Williams, Henry Matz. crossings hereafter. They want to con- and Miss Mary Wpoda. Two nephews France, and bad lived at Manasquan 25 the overseers this year, Richard CrawMillstone—Thomas T. Patterson, Edward Martin, solidate what is known as the Center and a niece also survive her. The niece years. He conducted a barber shop the ford, one of the overseers in the Niifc Ferrlne Dey, John chamberlain. street and South crossings, and also two Maoalapan—George Stlllwell, Isaac B. Davlson, of the other crossings. The officials is Mrs. Albert C. Harrison, Jr., and the first eleven years that he was at Mana- Swamp district, was unable to take the Frank Laird. . ' nephewe are Frank and George Woods, quan, but was obliged tq.give up business position on account of sickness, and his of the town are said to be willing to children of George Woods, Jr. Marlboro—WlnBelil Stryker. : on account of poor health. He served in brother, J. F. Crawford, was appointed Middletown-Edward T. Burdire. have this done, as property in the neighThe funeral was held on Monday at both the Mexican and civil wars. He in his place. Thomas Henry Grant was Neptune—George E. Hullck, John L. Shrove, Carl borhood of the closed crossings wilt not Hoffman, Henry Gravatt, Jacob T. Johnson, J. be injured thereby. A public meeting half-past nine o'clock at the house and was wounded in the right leg at the bat- appointed overseer of the road from Red Stanley Ferguson. tle of Pine Knob in the civil war and had Bank to Morrisville, in placo of William Ocean—John Milan, Charles A. Reed Samuel W. will be held to discuss this matter on at ten o'clock at St. James's church. of Hendrlckson. Abratn Brown, Harry P. Bennett, Friday night, and the general sentiment The sermon was preached by Rev. James o have his leg amputated. He was a Warden, who had become a resident William E. Cline. A. Reynolds. The floral pieces were member of the Grand Army Post and the Shrewsbury township. A petition1 waa Raritan-GoorRO M. Tilton, Charles H. Clarendon. seems to be entirely in favor of the very numerous and beautiful. Among Odd Fellows lodge of Manasquan. A wife presented to the township committee to _ ' ^] Shrewsbury—Harry H. Stryter, William Button, change. them was a "Gates Ajar" from .Miss and two grown-up children survive him. make Joseph Brown overseer of a mile Josepu Rlley, Thomas J. Norman, William B. Mills, Woods's parents, brothers and sister. It Walter B. ParaonB. in A. P. Applegate's district at MorrisDpper.FreehoId—Harry Ballck, Elmer Polhemus, bore the words " Sister and Daughter." SOLD GOVERNMENT JUNK. ville. Mr. Brown was not appointed. Maud Crawford. Albert Nelson. Another piece was a pillow from the Maud Crawford, the only daughter of Under the new township* law road Wall—William G.Bchanck, Henry Shuraard. John S. White, Joseph B. C. Cramer, Joseph Cramer, Thomas Jefferson Errickson Held niece and nephews of Miss Woods; Asher Crawfordof Colt's Neck, died last overseers must take an oath of office Henry is. Howland, Robert M. Marks. This bore the word "Auntie." The Thursday af cernoon of a complication of within ten days after their appointment - •. in $5,000 Bail. was buried in Mount Olivet cemeor. their office will be declared vacant. Thomas Jefferson Errickson, who is body tery at Headden's Corner. The pall diseases. She was fifteen years old the The road overseers appointed, tho numwellrknown in railroad circles as "Jeff" bearers were John Sheehan, George day beforb her death. She had been INSURANCE CLAIMS PAID. Errickeon, has-been arrested and held in Steele, Dr. P. P. Rafferty, Thomas Nor- ailing for some time and last Wednesday ber of miles in each district and the her mother took her to Matawah to con- amount of money each overseer will Tlic Largest Claim Paid Was TItat $5,000 bail on a charge cf having sold man, John Carney and Joseph Reilly. steel rails, old cannon, etc., from the sult with Dr. Jackson as to her condition. have to spend, are as follows; of a Red Bank Man. Shortly after returning home 6he became Beadden'a Corner, G. E. Tllton, 4 miles.. .8 202 06 The Prudential life insurance com- Sandy Hook proving grounds that beRiverside avenue,CbarIesAllen.Jr.,4miles 202 00 Thomas Camber sou. unconscious and so remained until her Navrstnk, pany-paid out about $3,000 in this insur- longed to the government. A labor George H. Sickles. 3 miles 219 09 ance district during the month of March. foreman at Sandy Hook is also held on Thomas Cumberson of Red B p k died death the following day. The funeral NewMonmoutn, John T. Hopping. H M m . 821 25 The largest olaim paid was that of Abra- the same charge, he and Errickson, it is on Monday of valvular heart disease at was held at the house on Sunday after- FottMonmoutb, Benjamin GriRgs, 17)£ <*>• 1>2SB 2 s Holland, W. J . Btilwell, 5 ^ miles. 401 CO ham L. Bodine of Red Bank, who died alleged, having operated together. Er- the home of his sisters at Brooklyn. He noon and the body was buried at Free- Morrisville, A. P. Applegate, 1% miles 474 60 March 6th. His family received $856.78 riokson has been running the engine for went to Brooklyn some time ago andhold. lincrolt, J. W. Thompson, 3 miles SIB 00 •. the government between Sandy Hook while there he was taken sick. He was Ltacroft, James-Bray, Jr., 8M miles 255 GO from the insurance company. The . Mrs. Marv B. Leonard. Riverside avenue. Andrew winter. 0 miles 438 09 smallest claim paid was $34 and was on and Highland Beach. He was formerly 55 years old. The funeral will be held Stone church, A. R. Reed, 294 miles 200 75 Mrs. Mary B. Leonard of Englishtown, Middletown, Henry C. Taylor, 4 miles the life of Ella Maloney of Middletown. engineer on the Central railroad and to-morrow morning at eleven o'clock at widow 202 00 of John Leonard, died of pneulived at Atlantic Highlands. The maNutswampi J . F : Crawford.2 m i l e s . . . . . . . ' HQ 00 the First Methodist church. The service The full list of claims paid is as follows: monia on Friday, March 28d, aged 87 Niitswatnp,Thomas B. Grant. Smiles . . . . 219 00 Ella Maloney. Middletown $8100 terial that he is acoused of having sold will be conducted by Rev. E. C. Hancock. years. Sho was the daughter of George Leonnrdvllle, Theodore Burdge, 8 miles.... 684 00 Mr. Gumberson was born tit Richmond, Emily M. Fuller, TOBB River 89 00 wiiB material that had been consigned1 to Locust Point. Joseph Lulburrow, 2J4 miles 164 25 Mary Hughes, Long Branch^ 2.M Oi the government "burying ground,' a Virginia, October 25tl), 1845L H^carne Brown and leaves five children. They Chapel Hill, Michael Callabpn, m !Plle«. • • 401 60 liydfaA.0. Brand, Lomr Branch .......134-83 place where cusl-off oaiitiousrruilH, etc;," are~MfsrJoseph Herbert of Freehold and HtebianflsTrtobert iiartsbonie, t'billS"".".. .' r 73 0U to Red Bank in May.rlWii, and started a Mrs. Michael Ervin, Charles Leonard, Hilton Sarah Lyons. Lonit Branch. 77 80 Park. William Thome. V& miles... "109 SO are thrown. The plea offered by Errickplumbing business with James White. .•William Kellor. Toms River... 245 M Morrisville,Frank Haley.2miles,.. 140 00 JuluFll. Easter. Freehold 145 03 son when arrested was that he thought They carried on. the business together Peter Leonard and George Leonard of Englishtown. John Kllford, Munalapan 03 15 the material was of no consequence to $7,008 00 suntil 1897, when Mr. Cumberson bought' Abraham L. Bodine, Red Bank ' 850 78 Joseph Hurley, Shrewsbury. 51 00 the government. A carload and a boat- out Mr. White's interest and continued Samuel Larkin. Sadie Scbralder, Asbury Park 1M 20 load of the material has been traced and the business alone. Last January a year Red Bankers a t Law. Samuel Larkin, who was employed as Helen Maoson, Soabright ..' 80 00 Henry Goodman of Bed Bank got Oeo.W. Glltord, Bradley Beach ; I'M IB these two shipments sold fcr over $1,000. ago, on account of failing health, Mr. a farmhand by Charles Cook, who lived Clark8on8mttl),Oceanic... Bl 00 ErricltBon got $100 a month salary from Cumberson sold the business to Cook & near Freehold on the Colt's Neck turn- drunk last Saturday and created a disElizabeth Clinton, Long Branch 8i U0 the government and house rent free. Oakley. pike, died Inst Wednesday, aged sixty turbance at Mrs. Ella Coy's house in Chas. W. Grulco, Lakewood.-. IBrt 83 His wife took boarders on Sandy Hook Mr. Cumberson had been a member of years. Death was caused by lockjaw. Conover row. Frank Smith boards at Eugene Schenck, Belford 72 80. Mrs. Coy's and he. ordered Goodman off Jane Cllnson, Lowj Branch 17< 88 and they were making money. He will the Masonic lodge for thirty years. He Patrick Keatiog, Long Branch 180 15 lose his position, no matter what may was also a member of the Knights of the premises. Daniel W. Bunch was DIED IN A HOSPITAL. • » • »• .:. ' bet the outcome of the charge against Pythias and Red Men's lodges of Red with Goodman and both of them swore him. Bank and was a charter member of at Smith and called him names. Smith A SUIT FOB WAGES. — < i » Navesink Hook & Ladder company. He A Former Belford Resident Dies had both men arrested. At a hearing A Public School Buya a Library, leaves a wife and three children. His Among Strangers. before Justice James H. Sickles yesterJoseph Mitchell of Oceanic Gets At the sale last Thursday of the per- wife is the daughter of Joseph H. Dennis Mrs. Caroline Davis, a sister of Mrs. day afternoon it was proved that Bunch ' What is Due Him, sonal property of the late Mrs. Emma Hat- of Red Bank. The children are Nellie, Mary Halsey of Belford and a former once and' he was fined 60 cents • ' Joseph Mitchell of Oceanic won a suit fioldof Atlantic Highlands thelibrary that Mary and Charles Cumberson, all of resident of that place, died recently in a swore and costs, amounting to $5.05. It was for wages last week against' Charles Mrs. Hatfield once gave in trust to the whom live at home. hospital at Brooklyn under distressing proved that Goodman swore twice and Rowler of Newark. Last spring Rowler town, but which failed of public support, circumstances; Mrs. Davis lived at he was fined $1 and costs, amounting in bought the house of John L. Eccles of was sold to the Atlantic Highlands board Brooklyn and was on the way to a all to $0,05. Mrs. Goodman has now Mitts Jane Rons. Oceanic. Mitchell had been working as of education for $210. The library will be friend's house when sha became uncon- had Smith arrested on a charge of unMiss Jane Ross of Freehold died last gardener for Mr. Eccles and he wns re- placed in the school building there and scious on the street. A policeman put lawfully living with Mrs. Coy. A heartained by Mr. Rowler. Mr, Mitchell the public will have access to it. The Wednesday, aged 78 yearti. She had a her in an ambulance and took her to a ing in this case will be held before Jusfall last November and injured her hip. worked for Mr, Rowler three months library contains over a thousand volumes hospital. A week later she died in the and,Jtbe house was then rented to a New and cost when new nearly $1,000. The Since that time she had been in failing hospital without regaining conscious- tice Sickles to-night. York party. Mitchell kept on working Atlantic Highlands public school now health and gradually grew weaker until ness. A card in Mrs. Davis's pocketshe died. She was the daughter of JarW for the party who rented the house. has a library of over 1,500 volumes. Town Improvements. ' . and John Ross and was born at London- book contained her address but her They paid him for the time he was in friends were not communicated with S. Eisner of Wallace street hue graded derry, Ireland. She cam.9 to this countheir employ but Mr. Rowler did not the vacant lot adjoining his residence try at the age of seventeen years and until after she wns dead. Stepped on b y a Horse. pay him for tho three months that he Mrs; Davis fell some time ago and was employed by him. The wages for Owen Meehan of Atlantic Highlands made her home with her brother, who struck her head. The doctor at the hos- and haB taken down the fence in front of that period amounted to $180. Some was at Belford with a horse and wagon lived at Philadelphia. She lived at pital said that her death was due to a his property. Walks and roads have time ago Mr. Mitohell gave the bill to last Thursday when he tried to turn Philadelphia only a short time and then clot of bloed that had formed oh thebeen laid out on the property and Justice Levi B. VanNest, Jr., to collect. around on the road between the Port moved to Trenton, and about 1852 she brain. Mrs. Halsey had her sister's body graveled and the newly graded lot ia to be seeded down. Mr. Rowlpr paid Mr. Van Nest $70 onMonmouth steamboat dock and the Bel- moved to Freehold, where sho had since buried in Cypress Hill cemetery. Orrin Curry of "Wallace street ia enaccount, but that was all that Mr. Van- ford hotel, Tho road is built up several lived. For a number of years Miss Rosa Mrs. Davis was the daughter of the Nest could get out of him. Lost weak feet above the meadows. Mr. Median's was in the millinery business at Freehold late Catherine and Henry Covert of Bel- larging the. front pinzza of his residence Mr. VanNest sued Rowler in the first horse got backing and backed the wagon with Miss Eliza Throckmorton. Miss ford. She lived at Belford until fifteen and is extending a front bay window up district court of Newark for the balance off the bank, Mr. Meehan fell out of the Ross was a member of the Freehold years ago, when she married Prank to the second story of the house. of $60. Judgment was given in favor wagon and the horse stepped on himPresbyterian church and for many Davis and moved to Brooklyn,. Mrs. Amos Bordon'u house on Wallace of Mitchell and Rowler squared up in several times. He was injured inter- years she taught a class in the church. Halsey of- Belford is now the only mem- street is being repainted. Her brother, Andrew Ross of Freehold, •court. nally. John Bennett took him home. died about nine years ago. Miss Ross ber left of a large family, Arrested for Cutting Down Trees. •» • • » leaves several uieces and nephews. Two Men Fined $ 1 0 Each. A Pool Tournament. DIED ON THE TRAIN. William B. Willis of Keansburg has Edward Duffy and Vincent Havens, William Kelly, proprietor of tho New had Wilson D, Seeley of the same place ' Mrs. Delia Ann Doughty. Matatvan's Fire Chief Meets With arrested,oh a charge of cutting thirtywho halve been working near MorriBvillo, AmBtordam hotel nt Locust Point, is ara Sudden Death. drove to Little Silver on Saturday. They ranging for a handicap pool tournament Mrs, Delia Ann Doughty, widow of six trees out of his orchard, Thirty of Christopher Doughty, died on Monday at bad a mulo which they were abusing for the championship of Monmouth Edwin H. Lambert, chief of Mata- the trees wore plum trees and six were the home of her grandaughter, Mrs, and John O'Hagan of Little Silver, who county. The ontronco fee will be $5 and wan's fire department and for many apple trees. Most of the trees are young saw them, told thorn they ought not to $100 in prizes will bo divided among the Matthew Reilly of Fair Haven, aged 87 years a resident of that place, died of trees. Mr. Seeley will have a hearing vears. Death was due to a general treat tho mulo that way. Thoy " ousaed winners. The loader in the tournament heart disease on the trnin last Saturday before Justico Sickles tins afternoon. out" Mr, O'Httgan, and when hodrove.in will get a gold mednl in addition to the breaking up of her health. She hadwhile on the 'way from Jersey City to been sick about five weeks. Tho funoi al his yard thoy followed him and started to money prizo, The tournament will beMntawnn. He was employed in DunA Blcyclo BuBinoss Moved. assault him. Mr. O'Hagan's employees gin an soon ao a sufficient number of en- was held this afternoon nt bnlf-past two lap's hat establishment in New York o'clock at tlio IIOUBO and was conducted went to, his aid and tho mon left. A tries ate received. and traveled daily between Now York Georgo Honce Patterson has moved by Rev. W. E. Pettit, chargo wns mndo against thorn for being and Matawan. Ho was taken oiok just his bioyole and sporting goods business Mrs. 'Doughty waa tho daughter of after tho train left Jersey City and be- from Front street to the Child building drunk and disorderly and for swearing A Local Minstrel Show. and thoy were arrested on Sunday. They Tho Monmouth boat club will givo a David Herbert and wna born near the foro the trnin reached Matawan he was on Brond utreet. Mr. Pattoraon hoa John JlcClnno place in Middletown town- dead. added cigaro to his Rtock find will also wero eaoh fined $10 by Juatlco Child. 'They apologized to Mr. O'Hagan, saying minstrel performance at tho Rod Bank ship. When sho was sixteen years old Mr. Lambert wns 00 years old. Ho carry a lino of stationery. Tho ntoro ia opera house on Friday night, April 37th. sho nnnrried Chriaoplipr Doughty and leaves a wife and one married son, Wil- being pnperod and othor Improvements that, they wore no drunk that they die not know what thoy woro doing, and Among tho Red Bank pooplo who will had sinoo lived at Fair Haven. Tbrco liam Lambert of Matawan. Ho wnsare being made. Mr. O'Hagan decided not to make a take part are Miss Nollio Kulil, Walter ohildron survlvo her. Thoy aro James O chief of Matawan's flro department at -•» * , B. ParsonB, Whltal 8. and Charles S. Doughty of Red Bank, Charles Doughty chargo of assault against them. the time of bia death and ho had pro Brothers' Names Mixed. Hill, Fred Frlok, Georgo Cooper, Frank of Fair Ha von and Mrs, Hamuol Coreo of viounly held othor official positions in Wellor, Alfred Bottioher and Georgo R, Now York. __, It is Illohnrd Wyokoff Oceanic who Matawan borouKb. Ho was also a mem- in fining from a dlvorcooffrom An Ens tor Monday Ball. Lamb. hlu wlfo ber of tho Red Men's lodgo of Mutawan James Austin. iiiBtoad of John Wyokoff, nn ha» boon St. James's club of Red Bank will give stated. Richard ana John Wyokoff nro Jmt What to Wear James Austin of Broad street died on a'ball in tho olubhouoo on Enntor MonA Ropublionn P r i m a r y . brothornund their names havo beoomu •duyplghl. William 0 . Howoll. Daniel For Banter may bo a problem. Thin will Monday of dropsy, agod 70 yearn. Ho i MoCarfcy and Daniel Eyan will hnvo bo easy of solution if wo aro the reclp- had been fulling in health about a year, A Kopuplican primary for the olootlon mixtd. ohargo of the aflnirinnd thoro will bo i lohln of your order for a now ofcyle box but had been confined to tho bed only of flvo dclogatoH to the state convention reception committee of twelve. back walking nkirt, whioh wo malto to ono week. Tho funoral will bo hold to- and ilvo delegates to tho oongrooaionul Thursday and Friday, April 5th and order for ono dollar. > Jonoph Salz, Bod morrow at two o'olook at tho houao and oonvontlon will bo held next Wednesday Oth, wo, will mil boy's' oai>n nt 10 cents caoli, worth 25GunU). Davidson's,—Adv. Don't Foriftit the Data, • will bo conduotcd by Rev. E. O. Han night at tho town hall. Bank.—Adv. • • ' cook, Tho body, will bo buried in Fal Monmouth bout club minstrels at Ret Eonter millinery at WOIB'B Rod Batik Easlor millinery nt WOIB'H Bed Dank Thuwday and Friday, April 5th am Viow comotory. i Dank opera IIOUHO on Friday evening Apiil OTth, by local and Now York inl Oth, via will soil boyn' cannjat 10 cento Mr. Auotln wan born at Now York, Tomplo of FrmMon. Hfttu to fit ovory templo of Fnohlon. Hatd to fit ovary* body a hond nnd pur»e.~-yldv. cacti, worthSOocnte, DftYld»on'fl.~-A(to He oatno to Rod Bank olghtcon, years body's licnd and p u r a c 4 / onfc.—Adv.' THE PETTY JURY DRAWN. SEABRIGHT'S HEW STATION. \ THE REOTD OF DEATHS, $73 PER MILE J M ROADS. Freddie Johnson Surprised.' Freddie Johnson, son. of Frank JohnA Party Sear Ktyport and Another son of Atlantio Highlands, received a Sear maaietoun. surprise visit on Monday night from a Mr. and Mrs, Thomas W. Aumack, Jr., company of young friends. The evenwho live near Keyport, entertained a ing was spent in playing games and at number of friends at a dance last Friday nine o'clock refreshments of sandwiches, night. Because of the storm the guests cake, lemonade, fruit, confectionery and did not depart for their bpmes until six ce cream were served. Those present o'clock the next morniog. Those present were Hattie and Raymond Byron, Beawere Mr. and Mrs. William Aumack, Al- trice Perrine, Maud Powell, Loula Mae vin Aumack, Mrs, J. Parker, Mr. and Hart, Hannah May Mooney, Bay and Mrs. George Chisman and Miss Alta Chis- Harold Matthews, Raymond' Taylor, man of Lorillard; Stanley Henry, Roscoe Frank Mooney, Ray Sweeney, Willie Painter, William and Samuel Tanner, Henry, -Chester and William Wilson, Skidmore and Eddie Powell. First-Class Repairing. DANCES. - ' ^ • » —— • . ——' • * •» FOR IK OCEAN COUNTY. A Former Red Banker Puts In a Pleasant Winter, Harry Vanderveer, who lived at Red Bank some years ago, and who now lives at Bayville, Ocean county, has had a great deal of sport and has made quite a hunch of money during the past winter catching wild animals for their fur. Reuben and Calvin Potter, two.young men of Bayville, in connection with Mr. Vanderveer> formed a trappers' trio. None of them was particularly busy during the winter, and they bought traps and looked after them carefully. Their success went far beyond their expectations. They caught 121 skunks, 35 minks, 89 muskrats, 27 raccoons, 26 opossums and 6 foxes. They got a great deal of out-door life and their health has become robust, because of their exercise, combined with pleasureable excitement. They sold, the fur to dealers and the net profits of their winter's trapping is over $350.' SHAD AT BEDFORD. _The_girst^Pq±ph of the Season Made Last Thursday. . The first shad caught at Belford this year were taken in the nets of Charles Davis laBt Thursday. That morning on raising his nets he found he had four shad, a lot of extra fine herring and a quantity of flatfish. Lewis H. White, who keeps the Belf ord hotel, bought one pair of the shad as soon as Mr. Davis brought them ashore. This pair of shad were the first served in Belf ord this year that had been caught in local waters. On Monday Mr. DaviB caught sixteen more shad in his nets. Joseph Hopkins Changes His Mind. Joseph Hopkins of Headden's Corner started to move on Monday into Mrs. McCormack's house at Oceanic, vacated'by Albert BloodgooU. After he got one load of furniture in me bouse he made up his mind that the house did not suit him and he loaded his furniture and moved baok to Headden's Corner. Later in the week he changed his mind again and moved into the McCormaok house for good. Mr. Hopkins will be employed by Edward D. Adams on the Ridge road. A. Christening P a r t y . Mr. and Mrs. Luther Sohanck of Brookdale farm gave a christening party last Wednesday in honor of their infant daughter, Elizabeth Green. Schanok. The rite ,of baptism was performed by Rev. Garrett Wyckofl, pastor of the Hoimdel Reformed church, The guests present included the relatives and friends of Mr, and Mrs. Sohanck and Mr. Wyckoff's family. A fine repast was served at a seasonable hour. An Alumni Sociable. The alumni association of the Oceanic public school will hold a necktie Bociabli in the lycoum on Friday night, April Oth. Eaoh woman attending will liavo to take two nooktiea or pay an admission of ton cento. One necktie will be kept by tho woman bringing it and tho othoi one will bo sold. Tho young mon wh buy neckticn will find tho young women wearing mates to them and will escort them to supper. A Domino Contont Ended. / Tbo domino content which has been in program all winter botwoon playcra froi Mntawon and Marlboro came to an on last week. A total of 1,008 games won played and tho Marlboro players cam oat flvo ahead, «i» •—i All the snorting oventfl in the county Are chronicled in TilB RitaiSTMt.--.dctv. Best White feak Leather. Lowest Price": DOMINIC A. MAZZA. The demand for Peach Trees is so great, and1 our own stock having run low, we have now bought a carload of choice trees of the standard varieties which we will sell at low prices as long as they last. Also ABUNDANCE and BURBANK PLUM at very low prices. Apple, Pear and other fruit trees. . ; Sadie Wilson, Jessie Brennan, Daniel Frank Thomas's Trotter. Seely, Mr. Land .Mrs. James Seely and Frank Thomas of Harmony has bought Mr. and Mrs, Frank Seely of Eeansburg; Lulu Holtson, Mabel Young, Alida Au- a new trotting horse that has a record of mack, Sarah VanSchoick and Martin 'Hoffman-'of Keyport; Mrs. C. V. E. THBREaiSTERis$1.50ayear.—Adv. Clark, Susie, Emma and James Chirk, Lulu Ivin8, Joseph Webster and AMn Walling of Hazlet; George and Lemuel Sutphen of Hoimdel; Grace, Mary and Mabel Thompson of Manchester; Lester Smith of Harmony, and George Alley, Harry T. Seely and Daniel T. Hendriokson of Middletown.. A dance was held at Harry T. Seely's near Middletown last Wednesday night. About one hundred gueBts were present from Keyport, Hazlet, Hoimdel, Middletown, Keansburg, Harmony, Bed Bank, Chapel Hill and Atlantio Highlands. PEACH TREES! BAY VIEW NURSERIES, Atlantic Highlands, N. J. 81 White Street! one door born Maple BED BANE,for N. J. i n Hontil medicine La Grippe. George W. Waitt, of SouA Gardiner, Me:, says: " I have had the woftt cough, cold chills and grip and have taken lots of trash of no account but profit to the vendor. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is; the only thing that has done any good whatever. I have used one bottle of it and the chilbycold and grip have all left me. I congratulate the manufacturers of an honest medicine." For sale by Charles A. Minon, Druggist, 8 Broad street. N. J. WILSON, DEALER IN ••»»•••»•»•••»•••«»•»» Ready for Easter DRY GOODS, < • The'great Festival of Spring. | | i', Choosing proper wearing ap- <» < > parel becomes the matter of T J | the hour. I < > Throughout the store we of- < • J [ fer Exceptional Values and <' < > largeohoice. . . . • . . . <> 11 Come and see how reasonably ', \ <. you can buy the most stylish . > HOSIERY, &o. BROAD STREET, Tttttie Store I Specials. 4 i Dress Goods, Silks and £ Trimmings. •»»»»»»«»»••••»»•»•»»»»•• Easter coming late this year has kept manufacturers from disposing of many goods that would otherwise have long ago been sold. Hence the reason we have bought a large stock of Ready-to-Wear Garments for ladies and misses at great reductions, enabling us to offer wo. i . •;« 100 Dozen Fine blown turn- $ Were with your initial beanti- $ fully engraved upon each glass. At Sale price.*. .Be. ••• '" Cloaks, Capes, Suits and Skirts, ^ | Silk Waists. | • WINDOW8HADES. Best spring & roller, fixtures, and all complete. Sale price 18Hc i g \ \ We also promise unequalled , , values in high class SILK < > WAISTS, among which we ' ' mention a special purchase of , , alot of Silk Sample Waists, ' > all finely tucked, back and ;; front, in white, black, violet, , , bluette, oerise,' Tale, etc., < • made to sell for $5.00. Our ' [special price while they last ,! iofaos ; ' LADIES'MM FOR I EASTER. Special offering of several! ' dozen of desirable neck > • dressings, consisting of Point ] ; Esprit, Brussels, Alencon', , Nets, Cfiiffon, Liberty, etc., < > with Jubby, Renaissance [ [ Lace, Braid and Ribbon,, Trimmings, all of the latest < J styles. ] "Our Pride" and "Our | Famos" Kid Gloves In all the new Pastel shades for ladies., misses and children; just through the cue-' torn house. The new threeolasp, button and Foster Lacing Easter Kid Gloves at 08c. a pair. . . . . . . ." . || 4c. each. ^ No. 3. % »»»•»»•*»•••»••»•»»»»•»••• . Wo. 8. The stook of Tablets bought from Vj the Richardson wholesale stook. ^ All fine goods. Sale p r i c e . . . . . £< ! '> Comprising Venetians, Broadcloths, Homespuns, Oxfords, Cheviots and Serges—black, ]I colored and mixtures. Eaton, fly-front or fitted, all silk-lined Jackets, finely tailored, per' > fectly fitted, braid or appliqued trimmed, all of the most up-to-date designs. . . ." . . <' RED BANK, N. J . No. 4 . FLOOR OILCLOTH. A quality not to be compared with W the light stuff sold as bargains J% elsewhere.! O u r price, y a r d : 8 S p e r £< II Don't f Put It Off. $1 t T t •J* Don't put off that lit- •T > *•* tie job of iepairs about *S your plumbing. A lit- ^ tie delay sometimes ref sults in a big loss of T botn money and health. ^^ f Have the work done « • t ^ right away—and send •*<• .1. for us to do i t T T T T RED BANK, N.J. Y •? ••••••••»»••••••»••• V Joseph Salz, 4 Cook & Oakley, t 18 Front Street, T •!• 4 V KED BANK, NEW,JERSEY. •!• V , «• y^ A^A J&^ A^» AT* *y* J ^ t AT* J&A. ATA J&± J&*. J&± NOW READY FOR EASTER! A FULL LINE OF Spring Clothing, Hats and Furnishings, TO SELECT FROM FOE MEN, BOYS AND CHILDREN. , Better goods and lower prices than ever at J. KRIDFI ,'ST Clothier, Hatter and Furnisher, No. 6 Broad Street, Red Bank, N, J. . . A POSTOFFICE TROUBLE. Jt, 8. Sni/der Meets With «* Series of Difficulties, R. 8. Snyder, the newly appointed postmaster at Atlantic Highlands, met with a series of difficulties in taking charge of the office. He-expected to take charge of the office on Saturday, but bis commission did not arrive. He had a telegram from the fourth assistant postmaster-general, notifying him of his appointment and telling him to assume charge of the office, but Postmaster D. Lane Conoyer refused to vacate the office on the authority of a telegram. Monday morning the commission arrived and Mr. Snyder at once took possession of the office. Charles DeVesty was assistant; postmaster under Mr. Conover, and George Conover, the postmaster's son, was a «Ierk in the office. Mr. Snyder hired Charles A. Fort as bis assistant. • He expected to retain George Conover as clerk and he also expected that Mr. DeVesty would remain in the office'a few weeks •until the new force got the run of things. When Mr. Snyder took possession of the office Monday morning Mr. DeVesty and Mr. Conover informed him that they would not stay and give any information unless Mr. Snyder would sign a con** tract to employ them for a year. This Mr. Snyder refused to do and he sent for Postmaster Webster Swan of Nayesink .. to help him out of his difficulty. Mr. Swan spent Monday forenoon at the office instructing Mr. Fort in the duties of his new'position. George Conover changed his mind about leaving and decided to remain for a few days at least; Another difficulty that Mr. Snyder experienced was in regard to postofflce fixtures. The cases, tables, desks, safe, etc., all belong to Mr. Conoyer, the retiring postmaster, and Mr. Snyder took possession of the postofflce without previously consulting Mr. Conover as to the use or purchase of these fixtures. Mr. Conover gave Mr. Snyder a price on the office outfit Monday morning and told / h i m that unless his terms were, agreed to within a specified time the fixtures would be removed. Mr. Snyder thought that the price was too high, but a satisfactory agreement was reached and the postofflce tangle was straightened out. Changes of Employment. Otto wl Seelye, who has been employed in the electrioal department of the Consolidated gas company at Long Branch,' now has a position with the Westinghouse electrical company at Pittsburg, Pa. C. J, Schlintz of Denver, Col., who until a year ago was employed in H. F. Weeks's carriage factory, at Freehold, will return to Freehold and accept a position with the Freehold carriage company. William VanCulin has given up his position as driver of the Adams express wagon at Manasquan to accept a poBition in a hotel at Bernardsville, N. J. Gone t o Mexico* W. C. Wilson, son of Thomas Wilson of Port Monmouth, has been engaged by a Perth Amboy firm and has gone to the city of Mexico as an expert kiln and ohimney builder. The Perth Amboy concern has invested half a miljion dollars in the enterprise. •• • •' — ^ i » — . • « | SPRING CLOTHING j For Men, Boys and Children. LARGE STOCKS. LATEST STYLES AND LOW PRICES. J Splendid assortment of Trousers for Dress. A. LUDLOW, LUDLOW HALL, , i THE HEW SHOE FOR WOMEN. Our annual spring showing of Shoes is now in full blast. From the best shoe centers are gathered the latesFand best~in~ Shoes and Oxfords. Our large store is almost .filled to overr flowing. Shoe daintiness and Shoe sturdiness rub elbows, so to speak. The Shoe wants of women, men and their children have been thoughtfully and carefully provided for. Because we buy large quantities, be buy cheap. Because we buy cheap we sell cheap. Our low prices, our immense stock and our universal variety have made this business what it is to-day. For these same reasons it will continue to grow. To-day it's better than it was last year. Next year it will be better than this. ' No radical changes in style have taken place in the past year. Some makers go in for extreme bull dog toes, but none for extreme narrow toes. Oxford Ties for women will retain their popularity of past years, but for men they will be more popular than ever. i J A BIO YIELD.OF EGGS. David Schenck of Xtolmdel Sold . Over One Thousand During Starch. David Schenck of Holmdel is not engaged in egg producing as a business, but be always has more success with his chickens from a laying standpoint than tin/of hia neighbors.5 Mr. Schehobhas about 125 chickens. During the past winter, while many of Mr. Scbenck's neighbors have not been getting enough «ggs from as many chickens for their use, he has been selling upwards of six hundred every month to John W. Hance, one of Holmdel'a grocers. During the month of March he took one thousand and nineteen eggsN to Mr. Hance's Btore. For some of the eggs he got as high as thirty cents a dozen and some he has Bold as low as fifteen cents a dozen. These sales of eggs were in addition to those used by his own family. Mr. Schenck does not feed his chickens any of the numerous chicken foods specially designed to produce good laying, but he gives his ohickens better attention than is given to poultry by the average farmer. Mr. Schenck keeps his chickens in clean and healthy surroundings, keeps them warmly housed in cold weather, and sees to it personally that they are regularly fed. His experience 'shows what a profitable source of income chickens can be made on a farm without «xtra expense, besides having all the fowls and eggs needed for household use Boards of Education Organise. The Bed Bank board of education organized last week. The old officers were refileoted, Charles D. Warner being chosen president and James Cooper, Jr., secretary. The salary of the seoretnry remains at $200, the same as for several years past. - The board of education of Batontown township organized last Wednesday night by electing W. E. Morris president, Benjamin Eldridgo vice president, and Monroe V. Poolo secretory. Prof. P. E. Tilton, Miss Sarah It. Everett, Miss Mabel Smock and Stephen Higglneon were reengaged as teachers for next year. The Middletown township board of education organized last Friday. Thomaa Wilson of Port Monmoutli was reflected president of tho board and Henry C. Taylor of Mlddlotown was roGleoted secretary. At Atlantic Highlands 110 old ofllocrs of the board of education woro also'roelected. Thoso officers were Charles VanMatcr, prcsldont; and Willittm F. "lilounteocrotttry.^ . In Holmdel township Wcsloy Maaon ,';•'' was eieotod pros Wont of the. board of * cduoatlon and Alex. L. McOleoi was oleotod Bocrptnrv. Doth theso offlccra I pontons last; year. . REP BANK, N.'J. ; You keep up to the times if you read THE REOISTHB.—Adv. Hats, Caps and Furnishings. | $ Y Women's Oxford Ties—The Duchess. J^ ^ Four styles, patent leather tip or kid tip, welted sole rtjft C A or flexible sole, black or tan ipfaiu U " For Hisses and Children. # We have had made to order several new styles in patent tip, kid tip, cloth top,-kid top and'allfljl CA patent leather. (The misses'size sell at ••tPllvU Children!is sizes, 8 % to i i . . . . $1.35 " 6to8.. *1.00 Women's "Helen" Oxford Tie. New opera shape, cloth top, four styles as above, A to E width, all sizes, tan (PQ ftf) or black CpCiUU Nobby Shoes For Boys. Made of the same style as their fathers, tan or black, sizes 8 to 13^,. The W. L. Douglas Shoes for Men. i I For $3.00 and $3.50 these Shoes represent the highest value in Men's Shoes. They are made in the latest styles, of the best grade of leathers, carefully and conscientiously put together, and wear as well as Shoes costing a dollar more a pair. Patent Leather, Vici Kid and New Russia Calf, in three colors to choose from. Your mpney cheerfully refunded on any purchase made at this store that is, not what we claim it to be. THREE STYLES OF DOUGLAS SHOES. FORD & MILLER, I Broad Street, Red Bank, N. I I •> BOARD WANTED. Sunday business no man should do what the taxes of the'war, and from whose A gentleman desires good plain board with pri-.» he believes to' be wrong, but apart from ranks were .taken those who laid down vate family, on or quite near river, either side, K, The seine bjlJVhich jvould prevent <. • heir liveB in the struggle between this' D., Box M. Bed Bant. JOHN H. COOtt. Editor and proprietor the use of'allvffets in A?"Shrewsbury that I see no reason why bis freedom of action should ,be ^restricted on that day country and Spain and between this . FOR SALE. $ver except scapoets for catching;hard more than on other days. country and the Filipinos, are entitled Seven-year-old mule ana road mare.. Good workWEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1000. crabs and soft crabs, passed the bQU6e of ers, singleor double. Apply at New Amsterdamo whatever benefits may be derived assembly on the Jpfctday of'the legisla- The laws of {his state are such from the commerce between the coun- betel, Locust Point, N, J. Municipal Ownership.,.; , tive Beasion, It tfad' pT&sed-Jittf)! senate GIRLS WANTED. THE REGISTER is glad to eeo that the previously. It'did not become a law, that I do not believe there is an indi- tries. The people of Porto Rico, who Twenty girls wanted for band sewing and examlnlnir clothing. Apply at factory ot 8. Eisner, vidual in the state of New Jersey who aided so far as was in their power the people of Aabury Park have decided to however* • • ' does not habitually break the Sunday American army when it took possession No.'56 Wallace street, Ited Dank. buy the beach front at Asbury Park and * • • CIRL WANTED. also the sewer system of that town. The bill was one of the .crudest pieces laws. Even in the strictest of Puritani- of that country, are entitled to the bene- White, girl wanted for general housework. Must. The beach and the sewers are owned by f legislation that could possibly, have cal times the people did not live as fits of free trade between their island be a good cook tfnd laundress. Apply at No. 90 and the states of the Union. To impose Shrewsbury avenue. Red Bank, N . J . strict lives as is imposed on people of James A. Bradley, who is to receive ieen devised, unlesa its object was to the present day by the laws of this state. a tax in order-that the trusts may in$150,000 for the properties. WACON8 FOR SALE. harass unoffending persons and to enable. These laws are universally disobeyed. crease their profits, is unfair to the people Six new twoihorse form' wagons, one new three- • The price is considered high in some fish wardens, to make money through grocery wagon and a secondhand buggy for of Porto R»co, unjust to the people of Bprlng sale. O. H. Hurley, Bbrewsburj, N. J. • quarters and low in others, but it is prob- the imposition of fines. Iftbat was its Everyone recognizes these laws as ut.this country; and a direct subversion of ably a fair figure. . THE REGISTER ia jbject it was beautifully drawn and it terly unfit to govern human life, and COTTAGE TO RENT. the public welfare to private interests. glad because it believes that every public would have served its purpose perfectly. accordingly everyone ignores the laws. Cottage with all improvements to rent.. Six rooms,with batb. Only. $10 to good party, inquireThese laws are never enforced except franchise should be owned by the public. Under the provisions of this bill shrimp GrUpel. «9 Washington street, Red Bank.'. . , It is wrong to permit an individual or a and killies for bait- could not have been when a spasm of hypocrisy strikes a It ia.not likely that anything that the town, as is happening just now at FreeRepublicans will flb'in congress, how;••,.. ,-.-. FOUND. corporation to monopolize that which aught, the ten-foot crab seines now in A bird dog last week, owner can have same byshould be held for the benefit and advan- ise would have had to be cast aside, and hold ; or when a mnn wishes to punish ever unjust or however mercenary, will Identifying nnd paying expenses. Inquire of Ei tage of the entire community. The the immense number of herring which a neighbor for a private grudge through change the result of the'November elec von Eattengell, across Hubbnrd's bridge. beach at Asbury Park and at every other run up the river every spring and which the medium of these laws, as has hap- tions. McKinley.will be re-nominated TWO FARMS TO LET. and reflected, for'no one who remem- The Taylor homestead farm (125 acres) and the resort, the streets and all that is on them, furnish many a table with excellent food, pened several times in' Red Bank. Shepherd farm (60 acres) at Mtddletown, to.lease or bers, the disastrous administration of let on shares. Apply to Henry, 0. Taylor. under them or above them, the river vpuld have been no longer available as front and beach front of streets, all food supply. The law contained such These laws should be swept from the Grover Cleveland hankers for any more, SEED POTATOES FOR SALE. should, be owned and held by the public •rovisions that it would have created a statute books. . They serve no good pur- goverment of that kind, Bat the course Green' Mountains, grown from northern seed last of the Republican.party in congress is year. 81.75 per barrel. Bugh. Brien, Woodvlew, for the benefit of the public; harvest for the fish and game wardens, pose whatever. They simply furnish far from meeting with general approval Freenold, N. J. (Formerly T. W. ByaU farm). Asbury Park should not have parted whose chief aim is to.make money malicious individuals with, a weapon from the members of that party. RepubNOTICE. with Its beach front, nor should it have ;hrough the imposition of fines, and not whereby they can strike at persons A barn on Cedar avenue for rent; also a carryall whom they dislike; and any laws which lican state legislatures which are not wdgon In good condition, tor sale cheap.. Apply to allowed its'sewer system to get in pri- o protect fish and game. permit the power of the state to be used controlled by trusts have passed resola Mrs, Margaret Smith, Uedar avenue, Red Banff. vate hands. iBut having made the origitions denouncing the purpose of the Renal mistake it was the part of wisdom to The crudities, the absurdities, the in- to advance the ends of malice are bad COOK WANTED. publican party in placing a tariff barrier A good cook wanted. One that thoroughly underl a w s . ' • . • ' . ' get the property back in public possession justice and the harmfulness of the law her business. High wages'to right party. between this country and Porto Rico; Ftands Apply to Mrs. J. B . Garrison, W Broad street, Red on the best terms possible, and it proba- were brought to the attention of Govand one hears everywhere, from the Bunk. . •. . • bly made better terms with Mr. Bradley ernor Voorhees. GovernorVoorhees has The Tintern water company is said to atanchest supporters of the Republican COLLIE OR SHEPHERD PUPPIES. than it could have done with an ordinary in previous cases arrayed himself'against have bought land in Red Bank for a party, the strongest disapproval of this I have a fine Utter of thoroughbred collie or shepowner or corporation. With the beach the rapaciousness of fish wardens and pumping station, and it is also said that puppies for sale, five males and two females, latest government effort to aid.the trusts herd the company will soon begin the laying six weeks eld. Apply to Jonathan H. Jones, Vanand sewers in its possession the town ihe greed of idle sportsmen. He did derburg, M. J. ' . in their schemes of plunder. will derive therefrom an income which ;he same in this instance and the seine of water pipes through the streets of the FOR SALE. in a comparatively few years will pay ill, although it had been passed by both town. As yet the company has received Northern seed potatoes. No. 1, No. 2, Green Mounback the entire cost of the property. louses of the legislature, was killed by no franchise from' the commissioners tains, Hcbrons and Giants, (raised In Jersey), delivA FIREMEN'S FAIR. permitting it to occupy the public streets. ered at your nearest station at gi.OO. Howard T. Asbury Park iB to be congratulated on lim. The Red Bank commissioners have so The Firemen Expect to Clear About Ely, Holmdel, N. J. * #* acquiring this property, partly because far refused to be a party to any of the POSITION WANTED, "$5OO From the Undertaking. it ia. a good financial investment, but It has been stated that every man but schemes of this concern, and'the same The fair which is being held by Inde- Fosttion wanted by young colored man as coachman and man in private family; flrst-class chiefly because it restores to the people wo along the Shrewsbury river was in regard for the rights and interests of the pendent and Liberty hoBe companies in reference useful from former employee. Address Charles. ; 'avor of the passage of the bill. Whether people of the town will no doubt charac- their new fire house on "White street will A. Reed, Naveslnk, N, J. of the town their natural rights. close to-morrow night. The fair has that is true or not I do not know, and it terize their future conduct. CARPET WEAVING.. been a Buccesa both financially and soJohn Splllane has moved his carpet weaving shop cially.. It is thought that the companies from Church News. '.._.__.._. is of little consequence whether it is true James Walsh's on Mechanlo street to Westr • Rev. Samuel D. Price will preach at omotr." Theriverdoesnot~belongwholly Various papers throughout the state of will clear about $50 each. The money will street, ne^ir Monmouth street. All kinds of weaving on single and doable warp.. to the people who are fortunate enough be used to furnish the new fire house. .the Shrewsbury Presbyterian church next Sunday morning on " Palm of Vic- to own property an, its banks. It be- New Jersey, principally run by men who The fair is held in the roomsjtlownBtairs SITUATION WANTED. tory. Pride of Crescent conncil of the longs to every citizen of the state of hold office under McKinley'or who hope and the rooms upstairs are, reserved for A position wanted as a coach n. an and gardener Daughters of Liberty will attend the Sew Jersey, and the persons living in to, are talking about the patriotism and dancing. There are several booths'for by a BOber and Industrious- mon. Con fumlsn best the sale of candy; fruit, groceries, fancy of references. Apply to J. T. Tetley & Son, No. i service at Eatontown at night in a body, nobility of the national legislators who goods, etc. Tho grocery booth is deco- East Front street. Bed Bank. and an appropriate sermon will -be ;he back streets of Red Bank have just preached. Other councils of Daughters as much right to the enjoyment of the are trying to impose a tariff on Porto rated with lavender and yellow chrysanWEDDINC AND VISITING CARDS of Liberty |and Junior American Me- river and its privileges as has the man Rico, and of the general sentiment in themums, and is in charge of Mrs. Frank Engraved at Everdell's. Finest work, reduced chanics have been invited to attend the whose wealth enables him to own a favor of this tariff: I have failed to dis- H. Hodges, Mrs. Fowler, Mrs. Frank prices, also seals, note paper monograms, rubber • Longstreet and Mrs; L. de la Reussille. stamps, Btencels, and plates ot every description. meeting. cover such a sentiment, anywhere. Al- The fruit table is in charge of Mrs. Susan 29 Riverside avenue, Red Bank. Rev. S. H. Thompson of Philadelphia iome on its banks. most every on 3 whom I have heard speak Bennett. The fancy tables are in charge * *» will preach in the Red Bank Presbyterian FOR RENT. church next Sunday. The only good feature of the bill was of the matter, including the strongest of Miss Emma Elliott, Miss Anna Stout Tbe npper floor of the building on Mechanic T,he special meetings which have been that under its operation the catching of Republicans I ever knew, think the im- and Mrs. VanNess Watts. The candy street, which has been occupied by Liberty hose com* booth is decorated with green and white, pany, is for rent. Apply to Mrs. Alice Hendrlckson, held at the Baptist church have been weakfish at wholesale with long seines position of a tariff on any part of our the colors of the class of 1900 of the Red Mechanic street. Red Bank, N. J. well attended. Rev. "Walter J. Swaffield country or on our new possessions is an Bank public school, and is in charge of will preach to-night and to-morrow would have been stopped. Had the bill SWITCHES MADE. night and probably on Friday night. A aimed simply to stop this destruction of unjust proceeding!!i. It is particularly un-r Mrs. Charles Irwin. Aprons are sold by Miss lona Brand, former hairdresser for Mrs. E. special meeting for children-will be held fish there could ha vebeen no just objec" just and unfair swfar as Porto Rico is Mrs. Samuel G. Woolley. The notion Wels, would like orders for switches, combings, etc.,. to make up at borne. Address, Miss I. Brand, 117 at four o'clock 'on Saturday afternoon tlou to it. But thin goud feature of the .concerned,-because, that country, in bur table is in charge of Mrs, John Johnson .West FrouUtreet, Bed BaukiN,;J..-.'.:' ' "• ^ Many, and lemonade is served by Misses and will be conducted by Charles B. war with Spain, welcomed the American ParaonB. The pastor, Rev. W. B. Mat- measure was far outweighed by the troops and showed as much enthusiasm Evie and Eva Longstreet. Miss Maggie HOUSE FOR SALE OR RENT. Riddle attends to the wants of the ice Situated on Spring street, near Tower Hill avenue, teson,. will preach on Sunday. The evils and injustice that -would have folmeetings will be continued next week lowed its passage. It is a cause for con- and as great a lore for the American cream eaters and she is assisted by a containing eight rooms and an «ut kitchen. Barn, houses, hen bouses, sheds, etc., on tbe propand Rev. Samuel McBride of Brooklyn gratulation that the governor declined army as the peoplo^of any state of the number of pretty waitresses. Miss wagon ; also fruit trees. Lot 10-2 feet front by 870 foet Fannie Antonides predicts the future for erty is expected to assist with them. A spedeep.' J. Edgar Brower, Box 654, Red Bank, or call Union could do* 'those anxious to know what their mission on tbe premises. ' cial meeting of the dencons of the church to permit a measure to become a law in life will be and Miss Evie Wolt Bells • * * will be held to-night to receive new that would have confined the enjoyWALL PAPER. church members. ments of tlie river to a select few, and President McKinley himself, when he' dolls. v . YanDonU having ngenoy of Alfred Peats' prize The sociable which was to have been •would have robbed the great majority of made his first declarations concerning A cakewalk was held last night and wall decorations, solicits the privilcge-of showing the cake was won by Miss Evie Wolt you samples for any rooms you have to paper. Albeen held at the Christian Association people of their national rights. Porto Rico, stated that it was the plain and Charles Bennett. An exhibition fred Peats and Co.'s 1900 wall papers are newer in chapel on Friday night has been indefiand lower in price than any other.' Address duty of the United States to abolish all cakewalk was given by Herbert Wiggins style nitely postponed, * ** V; VanDorn, Red Bank. Pryor Lee. To-night a supper will Some of the people of Freehold are tariff duties between our country and and be held. A. Pastor's Reception. apparently afraid that great harm will Porto Rico. The general idea of the Several articles have already been PLACE FOR 8ALE OR RENT. Place ot six or seven acres on tbe mad leading A reception" was tendered to Rev. be done to the morals of that town by public, when the country took charge of chanced off. A dresB suit case was won from Marlboro to Freehold, for tale or rent. House, containing seven rooms on tbe place, good cellar; Clarence M. Johnston by the members persons selling fruit, or candy, or soda our new island possessions, was that by Mortimer Woolley of Little Silver, a barn, wagon house and corn crib, all in good of the Fort Hancock Methodist church water on Sunday. They were so much they would be incorporated into the Un- renaissance center piece was won by also condition. Apply to John Stateslr, Colt's Neck, or last Saturday night. The affair was a George Kubl, a bag of potatoes was won Vanderveer VanDoru, Red Bank, N. J. complete surprise to the new pastor. afraid that the sin of selling on Sunday ion, and that, while being held as terri- Walter Sherman, a sofa pillow was won COOK'S RESTAURANTS. tories for a time, and until they should would corrupt the town that they hired Mr. Johnston was invited to attend choir by J. Everett Clayton, and several jars to announce that I have taken charge 6f rehearsal and on arriving at the church a detective to work on Sunday and get be ready for statehood, they were event- of fruit were won by Fred Gill. There thoI desire restaurant in the opera house block at Red Bank.. he found the members of the congrega- evidence against people who sold goods ually to become states of the Union, and are man* other articles to be chanced The restaurant will be open seven days In a week.\ Steaks, chops, oysters, clams, and everything usually ' tion there. The church was decorated off which have been donated by Red found in a first-class restaurant will be served. with the national colors and with the on Sunday. The detective did his work a part of our general country. Bank's business men. My restaurant on Front street, near tbe foot of *..* # colors of the young people's society and all right and the people who committed Broad street, will be open six days a week, from halt-past six to eleven o'clock, on tbe samo plan m the Sunday-school. Potted plants were the offense of selling on Sunday were It was this idea of an enlarged counheretofore. Good service at both places and at reaBOY WANTED. arranged about the pulpit aud over the sonable priced. Meals any hour. try, of the ultimate increase in the numarrested. Eov wanted. W to ID yeare old, In office. Address pulpit wus a large Christian Endeavor • CHARLES L. COOK. ber of states, and of the extension of the H., Box 207, Red Bank. • *» emblem, draped with white and gold FERTILIZERS, A bow of ribbon, the colors of the ChriS' To my mind the people who hired the flag, the constitution and the power of FOR SALE. Farmors, gardeners, superintendents of country tian Endeavor society arid Sunday- detective and got him to work on Sun- the United States to the ends of the Cedar posts, rails, bean poles and flag poles fo seats, and others in need of Fertilizers or Insectisale. H. J. Bosevelt, Little Silver, N. J. Bohool, was presented to each one prescides, aro hereby notified that we, tbe only resident ent. Addresses of welcome were made day to get evidence against their neigh earth, which gave to the war with Spain manufacturers of Uie above articles in the county of FOR SALE. Monmouth, aro ready to supply them with any of by Mrs. Bessie Sawvel, Mrs. L. C. Carey bbrs, are very much worse people from its greatest glory in the minds of Ameri- Horse forHORSE sale cheap: must bo sold at once. Ad> such goods in large or small quantities. Orders for and Samuel Phillips, and the pastor re- a moral, religious and business standpoint can citizens. If that is not to be the re- dress" Horso," Box m, Red Bank, N. J. Special Fertilizers aro also solicited. Ground bone, sponded with fitting remarks. After a |han are the men who sold the goods on sult, if the people of our island possessbone phosphate, complete corn or potato manure, tankage, nitrate of soda, sulpbnteof ammonia, sulshort musioal and literary Entertainment, Sunday,. From a moral and religious MAN WANTED. ions are not to be considered citizens of Married man refreshments of cake, lemonade am Wanted to wort oa J a m ; housofur phate and muriate of potash, odorless lawn dressing, and Paris green aro kept constantly on band. point of view, and probably from a legal the country, but are to be treated as nlshed. Apply to T. H. Grant, Red Bank. fruit were served. Telepnono direct to works from all parts, standpoint also, the man who buys slaves or serfs, to be taxed for the bene JONEB'B 8OAP AND FERTILIZER WORKS, HORSE WANTED. BED BANK, N . J . things on Sunday is quite as bad as the Good, sound, heavy built borao wanted. Address B e d Bankers Win a t Basket Ball manwho sells things. I fail to see any fit of the trusts, there are many persons Hong Kong Tea company. Ked Bank, N. J. , ' FOR SALE OR RENT. The second basket boll team of tin harm'in buying or soiling fruit, or candy, whose interest in our new possessions FOR SALE. will rapidly wane. The spending of Tho wheelwright and blacksmith shop at LlnOreos club of A&bury Park and tho sectonBOl nice hay. $10 PWton. Cal croft formorly conducted by tho late Arthur L. Conoand team of St. James's club of Red or soda water or any refreshments of hundreds of millions of treasure and the onTwonty-flvo or address John 8. Holmes, Holmdel, N. J. vor. Also for aalo throo now farm wagons, and Bank played a game of baskot ball at St. that sore on Sunday, and many states laying down of tens of thousands of HORSE FOR 8ALE. about 2,000 feet of cholcootk plank. Apply to James s club house last Thursday night. havo recognized sales of goods of this American lives to (join possession of Good BorvlccabRr ifrork horso for solo. No cash Tho gamo resulted in a tie. The tio was kind as necessary Sunday business. J, It. CONOVER, Lincroft, N. J. offer refused, h. B. Brown, M Wharl avonuo. these islands), and then to impose taxes played off and the Red Bankers won. FINEST LAUNDRY WORK * ## Another gamo of basket ball was played on them for tho enrichment of the trusts COLORED HELP. At City Btoam nnd Hand Laundry, last night by the first teams of the two The peoplo who are at the bottom of will go a great way toward weakening First-class colored holn from North Carolina can BED BANK, N. J. bo had by calling at 41W Sixth nvonuo, Now York 83 MONMOUTH STREET; clubs. Tho Rod Bankers beat tho Asbury this detective business nt Freoholdl retho enthusiasm which American citizen's City. L. J. FELTMAN, Manager. Parkers by a score of nine to four. Tho Try our Colobratcd Domestlo Finish. hall was crowded with spectators and gard as much worso citlzonB thnnthomdn fool over tho expansion of tho country. WANTED. Laundry will bo rocoived at Frank H. Woller'a, tho gamo was vory exciting. Tho play who buya or sells goods. Whilo thoBP # ## A stronir. octlvo boy to be useful In store Satur 10 Broad Btrcot, Red Bank. ore on tho Rod Bank loam were James goody-goody people pretend to think it That tho trusts would gain control of days. Address, giving ago, "Grocer." Box m ltbd Bank. B. Dognan, Joseph Ryan, Harry Haw- wrong to do business of any kind on Drop us'poBtol arid wo will coll. > the chief industries 6t tho islands, oven kins, Cbarlcn Johnston and Harry Lcddy. NOTIOE. Sunday, they themselves hiro a detective as they havo gained possession of tho Second-hand furniture bouRhtand Bold nt Bluliop' Jurrott A. Morford wnn referee and John Holinn was scoror and time keeper. Th to work on that day, and induco him to chief industries of our own country nuotlon and commission liouso. Hunt Front street, gamo last night was tho last gumo of th buy goods, a proceeding which they do* and would exploit our now poaseBfliona d B k season. claro to be wrong. When their noigL to their own enrichment, was generally LIME FOR 8ALE. • . ••-.-»bors aro arrested nnd fined for doing believed ; but that .tho government of Ovstor Bholl Ilmo, In «niall or largo quantltlos, for Officers of a Church Society. sale. Inquire nt tho,John II. l'atu>rwm farm, nivor- •" Mjr wife iitflereil for many y « m from Nerwhat thoy hnd paid a mnn to induco KIU» Dynpepala, Hick Hcadnclie, BleeplenitieM Tho ladies' nld tmoioty of tiro Flrnl them to do, thoy probably walked about this country would aid trusts by imposing Bldo Drlvo. N Dbilit" it J h Kelloen a tariff between this country and tin Mothodiut church held itn numml mootFOR SALE. ing In tho loeture room of tho church oi with a littlo more sanctimonious do islands was doomed no improlmblo tha OhCBtnut plank, locust and ohmtnat posto for nail Mftmlny afternoon. TIIUBO officers wen moiinor than usual, thanking God that it rocoived no consideration whatever. nt L. 1". Conklln's mill, near railroad <1<>pot, Hot •U boxen, and the results fur p u r p w u ) Ql'rcxelected; ' Dank, N. thoy wcro not as other men., pectattona. Slid now Hits nnd'(il«f>*-well. Is Tho changed uttit,\ulo of tho n<lminlntruK»lulnK In fle«li, i\nillwrp)la,f,wlil<;b*iid.|gotto I'roDldflnt—Mrs. Jamca K. Unlock. KEYPORT'S RESTAURANT. Co yellow nnd sickly, i» ljow-tm/frtiOi ns when # • t tion nnd tho demand of Republican Vice prcnMont-Mrn. Wlllliim 1'. Oorllutt. Whon you am in Koyport, go to Ynnooy Amlnraon'B ire wcto f)r«t mnrrfell, fiftd H«H htt «lint JohnSo far ao morality 1B concerned, I fail officials for a tariff, shows that tho trusts restaurant for your irioate. Ontoror tor woaillngs tda't Vytpepsln Cute lm» made tier Uu yciri Bncniiiiry—Mrs. ,laiiion II. Blcklon. jounjter," • , •/.• '•!' ' Trwuurcr—Mrs. E. J. Cumbvniou. ' to BOO any.ovil in doing nnything one aro determined to lono no opportunity nnd parties. „.. BOXi6cSENfst(flBTABHt ptoiUHwon Sunday, BO long aatlio cqua •IN IT BY M A a r o n n v t H-OIMT I K M N , • ORNAMENTAL TREKS WANTED, to incroaao tliolr wealth. • \ prominent; fouturo of TUB IrcamTKi THB JOHNSON UDORATOniEB, Ina., Pmu. Wii will M Y OMII 'or n n ( 1 mniovo largo, woll islto uowa of tho churchew in thia pur! rights and privileges of otliora MO not » ' w» » Jr., •••'; aiispod ornimnntal ahado trcus. Wrlto or r«l| o .Jamw Cooper, C J Unuitd B d undl Whlto Whltofltroour. Ht of the c o u n t y . 4 t o onorouoliud upon. I bolluvo that In thin Tho peoplo of tho country, who p»: AiinhutNunjoiiM M. L. Hollywood A (Jo., ltui Monraoutli utteot. TOWN TALK. . THE KED BMK REGISTER, 1 . • • . . « * # • • • # # * • • » • • • ' • • . • . - . . v . • • » • » . DYSPEPSIA PERSONAL. C. H. Vanderhoof of Hobojjen is spend' ing a week at Mrs. Blackman'p ,on Maple avenue. - Mr. Vanderhoof is employed by the Hoboken ferry company. About tbree menths ago he was' struck by a heavy truck while at work and MB leg was broken. He was confined to hia bed about two months but ho is now able to get about with the>aid of a cane. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Biver, who have been spending the winter in Germany, have returned ; to Red Bank and were guests laat week of Erne«t Gfote of Front street. Mr. and Mrs. Biver will live on afarm a t Swimming River this JUARBIAGE8. DENNI8-F0LHEMUS - A t West Anbury Part, on Sunday. April 1st, by Uer. 0 . E. Hancock, .Miss Nellie Dennis ol Tinton Falls and Edwiird Polhemus of Middletown. AUSTIN.-At Tied Bank, on Monday, April 2d, Jijmes Austin, aged 75 years. -' . OUMBEE80N.-At Brooklyn, on Monday. April 2d. Tbomu Oamberson of Red Bank, aged 55 years. • CRAWFORD.—At Colt's Neek. on Ttursilay, March 29th, Maud, daughter, of Asher Crawford, aged IS years. DOUQBTY.—At Fair Haven, on Monday, April summer. :•.' , •... .'. . , ; , . -".•• *• • 2d, Delia Ann, widow of Christopher Doughty, aged Thomas Maloney Boss of Herbert 87 years. •. • . . • ':•• street, "who has been employed as a civil • LARKIN.—Near Freehold, on Wednesday, March engineer by George Cooper of Hed 28tb, Sanrael Lartln, aged 60 years., LEONARD.—At Engltphtown. on Friday, March Bank, has left hia employ and is now 28d, Mrs. Mary B. Leonard, aged 67 years. • employed as a carp&nter by Theodore EOOME.'-At Freehold, on Thursday, March 29th, Eleanor Smock Iloomo, aged 1 year, 6 months and Brown. .-'-'•" .' days. . • - •• ' Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Naser of Chest- 16ROSS.—At Freehold, on Wednesday, March 28th, nut street and their children, Edna and Miss Jane Ross, aged 79 years. • Emily, spent Sunday-with Mr. and Mrs. WOODS.-At Red Bank, on Thursday, March 20th, Annie M., daughter of Mary and George Woods, William Casey of Middletqwn, who are aged 47 years. 6 months and 82 days. Mrs. Naser's parents. ' ' . Miss Gertrude Smith of Red Bank has secured, through W.-<L. Howland, a position with the Aarons' opera company and she is now with the company in Boston. • -...."•. ;•'.-- John Mertz of Lincrof t has moved to rooms over the Paul T. .Norton com. pony's store on Front street. Mr; Mertz is employed by the Paul T. Norton com•pany. • . . • WATERS & OSBORN, MANUFACTURERS p F ' Sash, Blinds, Doors, Mouldings, Brackets, etc. OF Spring Millinery, LIVE STOCK, &c. The sabscribur will sell at public sale on Friday, April 6,1900 at one o'clocB,,ftthis blacksmith shop at HEADDEN'S CORNER, N. J., The following deaorlhed goods: . Three horses, one baynoree, good worker every way; one bay colt, 6 fears old, broke double and single, good stocK; one gray colt, 7 years old in June, good stock, well broke'; Cow and Calf. Surrey, nearly new; Buggy, Jagger* 2-horse Farm Wagon, 1-horse Farm Wagon, lanoy 2-seat Sleigh, set new Buggy Wheels, steel tires: 2 South Bend Flows, % Boss Plows, Cultivator, k- Barrow, 2 Asparngnsi Cans. Asparagus Rldger, 50. Asparagus Boxes, 2 Bunchers.6 KD1VCS,2 PoleB andWhlffletrees, pair long VVhiffletrees, a long Neckyokes, new short Neckyoke, lot Clevises, set double light Harness, set Plow Harness wita collars, 2 eets single Harness. 75 bushelH of Corn on the ear, 160 sheaves of Stalks, ton of Hay, lot of Forks, Hoes. Snoyels and many other articles too numerous to mention. '• i j TEBMS-Under 810, cash; over 810, three months' note with approved security. PETER VASKIRK. JACOB C. 8HUTTS To Our Friends And Patrons. East Oceanic. \ \ • Dennis—Folhemus. Miss. Nellie Dennis, daughter of Mre. Elizabeth Dennis of Tinton Falls, was married on Sunday to Edward Polhemus, THE RVNSOX GIIOCEB. 3 proprietor of the Village inn at Middletown. The ceremony took place at the home of the groom's brother, William Polhemus of West Asbury Park, and was performed by Rev. G. E. Hancock, astor of the West Afibury Park MethoiBb church. The bride's wedding dress was a light gray tailor-made suit/ Miss BOOKS. Susie Hendriokson of Fair Haven, a cousin of the bride, was bridesmaid and Rare, Curious, Current, IN STOCK Arthur Bennett of Tinton Falls was ALMOST GIVEN AWAY. groomsman, After the ceremony a re' Libraries Supplied Cheaper than at any BooK Store ception was held. Mr. and Mrs. Polin tho world. hemus have begun housekeeping at the LIBRARIES AND BOOKS BOUGHT. "Village Inn at Middletown, JOHN H/NTLEMANN, I A MILLION S Mammoth Catalogue Free. -OF-0 FARM STOCK -AND- A Dog Poisoner a t Bolford. A watoh dog owned by Capfc. W, H. Seoloy of Bolford..was poisoned lost Wednesday, Mr. •Seele'y let tho dog out of the doghouse on Wednesday morning Tho dog left tho plnio anU returned a short time later, when it orawlodinto the doghouse and died. Sovoral other dogs have boen poisoned at Bolford rocontly, supposedly by strychnine, • ;,' ,,A SllgW'Stroko of Paralysis. °'%r(t. Jplin Sohpficjdof Nayenlnk had a Blight Bttoko nof rlpdirolyflla on Sunday. Bho was vinltini? her Bister, MIBB Mag«lo MaoDonnld. Whonaho etarted to go Homo aha fell twico and had to bo helped homo. Her outlro left nido is oliglitly nffooted. , i .•••.;'•;., GREEN & BORDEN, Shrewsbury, ' $ ' • } : ' ' : • ' • • ' ' f I \ I t ADLEM&CO•9 t l ONE TEAM OF BAT HORSES, •;• t T T f N. J. f t Spring Footwear. You are about to pufchase spring shoes. You want them to appear well but above all they must wear well. As all-my. shoes are made to order for me, even 'the lower grades,.! know what is put in them and know they will wear. I care not who it is, no one can give you a better shoe for the money than I, and very few will be satisfied with the small margin of profit that I ask. My store "is full to overflowing with the swellest spring shoes and ties which can be bought, at prices which draw business to me. ~A During this season of the Ladies' Shoes and Ties Men's Shoes , Boys' Shoes Children's Shoes 4 year your compfexion needs 5 a face lotion to heal up that, 4 chap. S t Gream of 4 Almonds $1.00 to $4.00 1.00 to 6.00 1.00 to** 3.00 BOc. to 2.00 I have a few cases more than necessary of Foer(VICl\!'i .^erer's Vici Polish. 0 a fair lady a fairer complex- To sell quickly, The 10c. size reduced to The 25c. Bize reduced to It heals 4 5 chaps and thereby wins many B 6c. ISc. A CLARENCE WHITE, It's a trustworthy auxil- g 4 iary to the toilet. f T SEE MY WINDOW DISPLAY. . 5 ion. Red Bank, Broad Street, 1 MY SHOES WEAR. J: w. IVINS. K Is quite the caper. f t sound and kind; 1 Good Family Horse, 1 Team of Mules, 31 Cows, 3 Heifers, 1 Bull, 15 Shoats, 5 Sows, coming in prodt; 75 Hens, 3 2-horee Farm Wagons, one nearly new, built by 0. H.'.Hurley; 1 1-horae Farm Wagon, 1 Dump Cart, good as new; 2 Gravel Bodies, 1 Road Cart, 1 Bnggy, 1 2-seat Carriage, pole and shafts; 1 Bob Sled, 1 Hay Press, 2 Adrinnce Buckeye Mowing Machines, 1 Wood's Reaper and Binder, nearly new; 2 Hay Rakes, 3 Hay Tedders, 1 Grass Seed Sower, a South-Bend Plows, 2 Boss Plows, 8 Cultivators, 1 Buckeye Riding Cultivator, 2 Elggs Plows, 1 Furrowing Bled, 2 Bay Shelviogs, 2 HarroWB, 1 Grindstone. 1 Calf Hack, 1 Hog Rack, 2 Cross-cut Saws, 1 Buck; Saw,, Harness, Shovels, Forks and nom.. AIno COO bnshslj el Corn, Fi tons o Rye Straw, Nqw Model Seed I(rill.. ' . TERMS—Under $10, ,00511; pver Sip, six months' note with approved security. ' ''" 4 X And what woman ever on r^t E a s t e r morning \I 1 0 V v 3 without a new pair of gloves? Our Easter glove sale is the most important sale of its kind that takes place in this store in a twelve month. Loaded for it again. ON THE RUMSON ROAD T • ' • - • \f A IllU AT TEN O'CLOCK, A.M., the following described goods: • New Jersey. Easter a n dth°usht °f §°ing°ut The subscriber will sell at public auction on Opposite tho Runison Inn, ' - -; • •. •r farming implements TTT T f fhursdajj, $pril 5th, 1900, T T T 25 cents 4 g the bottle. 9 BROAD STREET, g fehroeden Pharmacy^ RED BANK, N. J. '.JV^*^*^*^*^^ Berg«n & Morris, Proprietors, BROAD STREET, LECCAT BROTHERS. A Horse's Foot in a Buggy Wheel. Lewis, Smith, Jr., of Fair Haven, drove to Red Bank laBt Thursday. His wife and niece were in the wagon with him, In front: of the town hail there was a crush of travel and Mr. Smith brought liia horse to a sudden stop. A, L. Edwards of Locust Point was driving behind Mr. Smith with a team and he could not pull out in time to avoid a collision. One of Mr. Edwards's horses stepped its foot in the hind wheel of Mr, Smith's buggy and wrecked it. Mr. Smith borrowed another.buggy to get home. No one was hurt. .AUCTIONEER PUBLIC" SALE Miss A. I . Morris, MILLINERY, And think' of buying your farm machinery before Seeing our stock* - We sell Oliver, Boufli Bend and Boss Plows, Osborne's PiBC and Peg-Tooth Harrows, Furrowing Sleds, Asparagus Ridgera, Iron Ago and Pennsylvania Riding Cultivators^ Robbins'a Potato Planters, Hallock Wecders, Land Rollers, Fertilizer Drills, Osborne Binders and Mowers, Hay Rakes and Tedders, Machine. Oil, Etc. FARMIHG IMPLEMENTS, • Miss Anna. Graman, daughter of George Graman of Shrewsbury avenue, GLAZIXO A SPECIALTY. has been visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Graman of WayJobbing of all kinds done at short notice. side. • : . Stair Building, Mantles. Store Fronts, Scroll Sawing, Miss M. C. Hendrickson of Broad and Hard Wood Wort la all its branches. street, who has been confined to the house for the past two weeks with an MECHANIC ST., BED BANE, N. J. . attack of the grip, is able to be out. Albert Phillips of Eatontown lias ac- . If Ydc Have Not Yet Called cepted a position as bookkeeper for Sabto Inspect Our New ath &,"White. Mr. Phillips was formerly employed by Henry VonGlahn. William S. Dean, who has been employed by Dr. A. G, Brown, has left Dr. Brown's employ and is working for Daniel Wilson of Middletown. Wesley Crawford of Freehold was the It will pay you to do so, as we have a guest of Mrs.'G. Henry Lewis of Bridge choice line of all the new avenue on Friday. Mr. Lewis spent Sunday at New York. Miss Elda Hinchcliffe of Newark has Hats, Flowers, Moussebeen visiting her cousin, Miss Alice E. Clayton, daughter of Robert Clayton of lines. Taffetas, Etc. Bridge avenue. _ .._..... Town Clerk Albert C. Harrison, who has been seriously sick with appendicitis, is able to be out, although he is still very weak. Miss Susie White of Long Branch has been visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Edmund T. Woolley of Oakland •street. • William W. Letson, of the firm of De- COB. BROAD AND FRONT STREETS, Hart & Letson, spent Sunday with his RED BANE. N. J . parents at New Brunswick. Mrs. Joseph Mertz of Lincroft visited her daughter, Mrs. ^ohn G. Mausser of Herbert street, On Sunday. Mrs. Elizabeth Clayton of Bridge avenue is visiting her sister, Mrs. Louise Marcellua of Brooklyn. i Mrs. W. A. Sweeney of Wallace street returned yesterday from a visit to her parents at Navesink. ••-. We are happy to announce % Mies-Lilian ApplegatfJ, of .Maple avethat we have opened our new g nue visited Miss Beta Patterson of Long Branoh on Sunday. store in • ^ Richard Hopson of Middletown and his son Osborn visited at Red Bank on Sunday. . Miss Sarah C. Clayton of Bridge avenue visited friends at New Brunswick on We most cordially invite you $ Sunday. , ••. • to call and inspect our goods. \ * Harry, son of James Longstreet of Mount street, is sick with pneumonia. Our stock of Garden Tools, •$ John G. Mausser of Herbert street is Lawn Mowers, Seed Drills, 4 successfully learning to ride a wheel. Richard Thompson of Herbert street etc., is very fine, and we beg £ spent part of last week at New York. to call your especial attention >\< Ernest Grote of Front street has been laid up with the grip. to it, as well as to our Garden «< | Mrs. Theodore F. Sniffen of Herbert Seed and Lawn Grass. «•?' street has been sick. Yours to please, % Don't Lose Your Head PUBLIC SALE BIRTHS. ERT.—At .AlIentoWD. on Friday, March a.Mia. William Herbert, cfason. PBOBA8C0.—At AUentowD, on Bands?; March atb, Mrs. ]. {I. Probasco, of a son. RED BANK. 4. TclcphonoKf. 81 CHAMBERS STREET, 3d Door Woat of City Hal! Park. NEW YORK. I Easter Hats For men, youths and boys; The season's proper stylea and colors in Derbys and Alpines, and noveltiea in Golf Hats and Caps. Easter Neckwear. Our exclusive line embraces all that is new and a range of patterns -which for richness of color, effect and quality cannot be duplicated. At 25 and 50 cents we offer you elegant neokwear. H. H. CURTIS & SON, 17 BEOAD STBEIST, EED BANK, N. J. I1 1 Red Bank Temple ofFashion I I i Our display this season surpasses any thing ever before shown in eastern New Jer- $ sey. We have Trimmed Hats to suit every- p4 body's head and purse; also a tremendous | stock of Untrimmed Millinery at less than New York prices'. • ' .» i I MRS. E. WEIS: &!?3X£*&?<^^^ 1 1 ;. Two Houses Sold. • Improvements tt««^e««*«m«*«4#9«««<*iW^9$j^ S. S. Free of Fair Haven is making ,The William Megronigle property at a number tit improvements to his house. Atlantic Highlands, which was bought A omHStoiy extension a t the north'end at foreclosure 6ala_some time ago by of U» .fee«86 h»$ been raised to twoChrist church of Middletown, was sold k Etur*w«iient8 are being last week by William M. Foster & Co. to Ladies' Separate Dress Skirts of all wool materials in plaids h Benjamin franklin Leiber of New York. te Hftw kitefetn in the rear. The and black and navy serges, some trimmed with braid, The house contains about eight rooms also Storm Skirts, plaid back cheviots, all good' $3.00 d» I A l l fA fcte CwttUf* and around the north and the lot is 60x150'feet. Mr. Leiber values, at. the appear- paid $2,800 for the property. He also bought from the Montanye estate for " ' •" • Ladies' Separate Dress Skirts, handsome plaids, crepons and of New York spent $700 a Vacant lot adjoining, this lot is :., cheviots, with silk appliqued gores, a quality worth $5. 80x150 feet. Fftiat looking after g ^ build a fence be- James Enrigbt, Jr., of Oceanic, has . Ladies' separate Dress Skirts of black cloth with drop skirt tcmmh yift ixaufi t&itft- teatte to hi3 property sold the house at that place which he Snd flounce of accordian pleated taffeta silk, a regular that bought some time ago from Zachary J$i?,oo quality, at Alas to Michael Gaynor, The house iftsHlft t4)j)ijugl)i tslkfcBegjareaitt estate. If«ma: 8>. ©&««*(?£ Imlajstown is put- contains four rooms and the lot is 50x150 istugu#i* l)UfM£ogrto accommodate two feet. Mr. Bnright recently made some N o t i c e . WTDress Skirts to ordtr for one dollar. Will deliver •yiheigur generators,' to meet the improvements to the property. g Separate Dress Skirts! • • , • • ' • < \ * 3.98 8.98 oiaadj for hia products. Deeds Recorded. > BtettfiSft Utap&y of Ooeanio is repairing bus house. JohnYoumans The following real estate transfers iij. doing the carpenter work and David have been recorded in the office of the county clerk at Freehold" for the week Haxvey is doing the painting. ending March 81t, 1900: Alfred IX YanDoren has bought a lot SHREWSBURY TOWNSHIP. from the church of Our Lady Star of Robert E.DrummoQd and otherslo Ella B.Wcrtbiey. Lot at Bed Bank, $«X). the Sea of Long Branch for $300. He Caroline F. Lawrence and husband to Obadlah E. . will build a house ou the lot. , Davis, l o t at Bed Bank. $!. . HIDDLKTOWN TOWNSHIP. Pritchard & Williams of Oceanic have Bosun Wlllett and others to Cora Kraft. Piece of the contract to build an addition to Wil- roperty, 870(1. liam E. Strong's bouse near Seabright Amelia Volleau to Ella Johnson. Piece of propObadlah E. Davis, sheriff, to William a . Wood at a cost of about $5,000. your Skirt {fit guaranteed) three days after you leave your measure. Two Percale Wrapper Items. Ladies' Percale Wrappers, of a fast^ color material, choice of beautiful patterns in stripes and figures, full 3 ^ yard skirt, trimmed yoke and sleeves, a quality worth $1.00, here at M and others. Piece'of property, 81,000. ' Wrappers of fine quality percale in a large variety of designs and styles, each one perfect fitting and extra well made, yoke and French back style, and some with wide full flounce, these wrappers are worth $1.39, but sold here as a special at ' ATUMTIO HIGHLANDS. .' Ernest Ehrmann and others to Mary A. Caflrey A Residence Sold. Lot 822,82.CO0. ATLANTIC TOWNSHIP. The William Hills place, on the MarlBlcbord Lawrence and others to John H. Lawboro road, near Freehold, which waa to rence. Piece of property, .$'285. ; have been offered at public sale on BAR1TAN TOWNSHIP. Wednesday of last week, was sold be- Bamuel Harris to Francisco Mlnzlato. piece of property, 81.COO. fore the auction at private sale to Charles RufusOgden to Anna 8. Barnes. Lot at Keyport, • ' • L. Downes, the advertising manager of m OCEAN TOWNSHIP. the Jersey City Journal. Mr. Dovraes Jobn 7 . Koch to Paul W. Latham. Lot at Long SHOO. will make the place his permanent home. Branch. Jane Blscoz to Maiy A. Emmons. 2 lots at Long Mr. Hills bought the property from Mrs. Branch. $3,600. Isabella Wllklus to George WUklns. Lot at Long Reeves about six years ago. He paid Branch, $1. Annie S. Patten to 'William Curr. Lot at LoDg $5,000 for it and he sold it to Mr. Downes Branca, $800. Jessie Meyer and husband to George Moore. 2 for about what it had cost him. lots at Long Branch, $5,000. The property is one of the finest Jessie Meyer and husband to Hamilton B. Salmon. at Long Branch, ? l . country residences in the vicinity of LotConrad N. Jordan to Hamilton H. Salmon. Lot at Long Branch, 8 ' . Freehold. There is 23 acres of land.and Oliver Ollsson to Asbury Park Building and Loan a well shaded lawn surrounds the house. association. LotatLoDgBranob,$l;-~ - — - r Kate IV. Winthrop to Frank W. Savin. Lots at On the place are 600 pear trees, 200 peach Loon Branch. $47,500. trees, 100 apple trees and a large aspara- George L. PrUnross to Clarence 8. Steiner. Lot at Loch Arbor, 82.100. gus bed. The house has eleven rooms. NEPTUNE TOWNSHIP. It is fitted with baths and steam' heat Baron Bennett and husband to George F . Keer. and has large open fire places. A barn Williams. Gabagan to Harry Warden. Lot at Ason the place contains nine stalls and bury Park, $8,600. Obadlah E. Davis, sheriff, to John F. Hawkins. room for several carriages. Lot at Asbury Park, $1,600, ' 98c. Two Big Bargains in Embroideries. Embroideries on Swiss cambric and nainsook, choice designs, from 3 to 8 inches wide, a lot of short lengths, worth from 15 to 20c. per yard, at Elegant Embroideries from 6 to 18 inches wide, handsome designs, fine work, qualities never sold less than 25c. .to 35c, here while they last at 15c. We have an elegant assortment of Tucking, Shirred and Lace All Overs and All Over Embroi• deries, at lowest prices.' Kid Gloves. We have the best dollar Kid Gloves sold anywhere ; guaranteed perfect fingers, and warranted perfect fitting. We have all the newest and most wanted shades in high colors and staples. Honrv Stelnbach to Harold W. Cornell. Property at Asburj Park, 83.285. r Rebecca 9. Woolston to John M. 0. Carhart. 2 lots at Ocean Grove, $5,600. ,? James A. Bradley to Charles M. Baker. Lot at West Asbury Park, $700. • James A. Bradley to Asbury Park Building Supply company. Lot at West Anbury Park. 81,350. Alice M. DuBola to Thomas F. Somers. 8 lots at Bradley Beacb, $1. Changes la a Telephone Office. LADIt The central office of the New York and New Jersey telephone company at Freehold has been located in part of a building occupied by the operator, Mrs. WAU TOWNSHIP. Huldah Qravatt as living apartments. John It. Gravatt to Annie Andrews. Piece of property. $1. Mrs. Gravatt has given up her position James J. Barkalow to William V. Brewer. Piece and removed to other quarters, and the of property, S4P". , _ _._ apartments formerly occupied by her ouston Melds, late sheriff, to John E. Montgomery. Lots at Key East, $735. will be used for the telephone busiFREEHOLD TOWNSHIP. ROAD STREET. ness. Fred Conovor, who now works Rebecca H. Beannore to itouben B . Wogner. Piece of property. 8T60. for the telephone company at Long Obadlab E. Davis, sheriff, to William H. VredenBranch, will be night operator at thepnwh. Land at Freehold, 80,200. " William 11. Vredenbursh and others to Joseph A. central office at Freehold and Mias May Yard and others. Lot at Freehold. 81.000. sy^yyyyyyyyyyyywyysyyyyy**'M»><&><"tt^ William IT. Vrcdenburgh to Charles J . Wright. Lane will be day operator. Land at Freehold, $7,0W). Peter Fonnan, ox'r, to Garret Hartmao. Lot at Freehold. S-'.OOo. Garret Hnrtman to Anna Gravatt. Lot at Freehold, $2,500. MA.ni.Bono TOWNsnip. Charles Snydor to William P. Snyder. Piece of property, 81. Church Trustees Elected. A congregational meeting was held at the Shrewsbury Presbyterian church on Monday night for the election of three 1IIILSTONK TOWNBHIP. trustees. The old trustees were re- Mary E. Parker to William Parker. Piece of property, SI. elected. They are Benjamin Frank William Parker and otters to John 0. Clevenger. of property, $300. Wikoff of Tinton Falls, A. Holruea Bor- Pleco Hury H. Bue to Alfred E. Edd. Piece of prop* den of Shrewsbury and J. Frank Giffing erty. 83,600. William 8. Crawford to William R. Condver. of Eatontown. They have already Land In Millstone and Manalapan township, $4,750. MAJfJUAPAN TOWKSUir. served one year. Their election on MonFreehold Ban'ulna company to Richard Carr. day was for a three-year term. Piece of property. $0,760. § GLOVE; RED BANK. N.J. I Robert Hance & Sons. J THE PETERS STORE. SPRING OPENING. Full Line of Goods. •i SPECIAL MENTION. Charles H. Clayton to Sarah C. Fox. Land at M1Uhurst, $760. A Butcher Shop Closed. William Penn, who has been in the MISS SOPHIE WALLING, butcher business at Belford about a Dressmaker. year, has closed his shop on account of a lack of trade and has moved to Lake- HI Broad Street, BED BASK, X. J . hurst, where he has a position. Tailor-Made Suits a Specialty. FRANCIS WHITE, Real Estate, Loans and Insurance, Front Street, Red Bank, N. J. MONEY TO LOAN. Parties wishing to build in town can have the money to do BO if they own the ground and Ire industrious nnd lioneBt. If you have good, first-class mortgages you wish to soil I will buy thorn, or raako straight loans. Suma at present range from $500 to $1,700. TO KENT. Two houses on Chestnut street, 0 rooma each, rent $12. Ono on Irving Btreot, $28. Riverside avenue and rivor, $80. Rector Plnco, large houso on river, $25. A few others at $20, $115 and $10. FUKNI8UED HOUSES. Ono in town, fully furnished, piano, all the year, $825 to good party. About 40 others, rout from $200 to $3,000 for soason. INSURANCE ' In tho oldest and host companion, SPECIAL BA11GAIN8 In town and on rivor, •' Conic in tho old ouleo oppoaito tliu Qlobo Hotel, lot us know what you want; novor mind how small tho buelncttH la, wo want to BOO nnd talk to you. After 0 I*, M., cotno down to my houoo, talk business, and look nt tho boiuitlful rivor. Office opposite Olobo Hotel, Front utrcot, FRANCIS WHITE. At $4.00 per roll, 40 yards; also at $6.50, $9.00, $10.00 and up to $18.00. Our matting at $6.50, $8.50 and $9.00 per roll is as good value as any in the United States. • At 50 cents, 58 cents, and 65 cents per yard. Theae are Tapestry Brussels, new goods; it will pay you to look them over before buying. Also a line of Velvets and Body Brussels that are great values. iP^RLOIR STTITS, In three and five-piece sets. A three-piece suit, mahogany finish, inlaid mother of pearl moquetry in back of chair, and tete upholstered in silk plush at $24.50. A three-piece suit, mahogany finish, upholstered in velour, fancy pattern, $17.50. A five-piece suite, mahoguny finish, upholstered in figured /velour, at $22.00. Others at $24.50 and $27.00. Baby Carriages and Go-Carts. New spring line of Baby Carnages at $5.50, $6.50, $7.75, $8.00, $10.00 and as high as $15.00. :. ,y Go-Carts at $7.50, $9.00, $10.00 and as high, as $18.00. All Go-Oarts and Carriages are fitted.! with rubber tires and patent detachable wheels. ' . . A GOLDEN OAK ROOKEF, finished with a saddle, cobbler, or upholstered seat, finely polished, for $2.50. - '' , A small Cane Seat llocker, a useful chair almost anywhere, at 75 cents. Robert Hance & Sons. THE PETERS STORE. 1 V I I % I I MU>DLETOWN Several Movtngs in the Village— . Death of an Old Dog. Charles E. Crawford moved on Tuesday to Cap t. George A. Bowne's house at Bed Hill. Ross Hibbitts has moved to Oakburst. David H. Wyckoff has moved from W, S. Heyer's farm to Henry 0. Tavlor's farm. Samuel Ueaihling's dog died last Thursday. The dog was eighteen years old and had been in Mr, Hemblicg'a poaBession since its birth. Mr. and Mrs, E. A. Slote moved last Wednesday from tbe Christ oKurch property to Mrs. Mary C. Blanck'a house for the Bummer. The rectory has been rented for the summer by E.- A. Merdjan of New York, A team of horses owned by David H. WyokofE and driven by Edward Jones ran away yesterday morning. They ran about half a mile and then stopped. No damage was done. '• • * Gottliob Dietz, Sr.,and his, daughter Caroline, spent Saturday at the Phalanx. Augustus Colemoigen of Long Branch spent Sunday with Mr. Dietz, Gottliob Dietz, Sr., raises chickens for market, This week he had a good hatching of chickens; Hegotl29chiekr ens from 150 eggs. Mies Katie Dietz, who has been spending a month with her aunt, Mrs. John Kubler of the -Phalanx, returned home r Saturday. \ . Samuel Lee of Jersey City, who has been visiting his sister, Mrs. Walter Hi Merritt, returned borne on Saturday. Tbe Christian Endeavor meeting at the Reformed church will be led on Sunday night by John P. Luyster. Mr. and Mrs. William M. Thompson and LeRoy Lufburrow spent • last Wednesday at New York. Gottliob Dietz, Jr., has bought a new cow and a new calf from Patrick Flannigan of Hazlet. ... ' Mr. Bray, tbe blacksmith here, is sick and the blacksmith shop is closed until he recovers. • , Miss Delia Orokue of New York is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Thomas Meehan; • ' Henry Penterman of Hoboken spent Monday with his brother, Fred Penterr man. J, F. Swackhamer has bought a team of horses from William T. Hendrickson. James Carter of Kej/pOrt spent Sunday with bis sister, Mrs. David Morris. Mrs, Emeline Schanck, who lived near Middletown, has moved to Qceanio. Mrs. James Taylor has bought a horse from John F. Swackhamer. J. C. Guliok has bought a new horse from Benjamin Hillyer. C. G. Bennett of New York has moved here for the summer. Mrs. James A. Stoothoff spent last Thursday at New York. John Crawford of Tinton Falls visited hero on Thursday. » XINCROFT MEWS. Sir. ani Sirs. Aaron Suphen Give An Ouster Supper. Mr. and Mrs, Aaron,Sutphen entertained a combany of friends, at an oyster supper last Thursday night, After anpp?r_ cards and other games were played until midnight. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Edward FentoD, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Patterson, Mr. and Mrs. Abrain Sanborn, and Bessie, Josie and Henry Fenton. A new milk wagon is being built at Abram Sanbora's blacksmith shop for James A. Sanborn. The woodwork is being done by Edward Soden and Abram Sanborn is doing the icon work, The wagon will cost about (60. Mr. Sanborn has recently added an equipment to bis blacksmith shop that enables him to turn out woodwork for wagons, harrows, etc. , , John Noone, who lives between Lincroft and Morrisville, has been spending a week with bis brother at Boston. James G. Presthas a sick horse, caused by being overheated. Dr. William H. Lawes treated the horse last week, Edward Fenton has a thoroughbred fox-terrier dog that was given to him by James By ram, the horse trainer. Benjamin BadcliQe of Newark spent part of last week with bis step-daughter, Mre. James Totnlinson. Mrs. Mary J. Clayton has moved to George Colmorgen'a house at the Pba• West Long Branch New*. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Schmidt of Cologne, Germany, Miss Hannah Atcheson, Frank Dilts and Lambert Wardell of New York visited Miss Selina Atcheson on Sunday. • . ' Miss Marion P. Taylor of Asbury Park, who has been spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Taylor, has returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Ruther of New York and their daughter Gussie spent part of last week with Mr. and Mrs. James Pritohard, i Mm Smith of Absecon, who has been visiting Miss Ray Morris, is now visiting friends at Jersey City. Miss Ethel Wilson of Oceanic spent port of last week with Mrs, Catherine Tallmnn of Oakhurst. Miss Viotoria Golden of New York spont Sunday with her father, William M, Golden. J. W. Jones is building a windmill on the Locuat avenue property of H, H. Brockway. . Misa Jeanetto Lench of Now York epont Sunday with her sister, Miss J. Ida Loach. Frank Vanderofl has moved from Mrs. Glfford'a house to ono owned by Mrs. JobnBon. Miss Pella Golden is visiting her cousin, Miss Oora Dangler of Entontown. Goorgo Hopper and William Bonnott have bought now Eldrldge bloyoles. Abram M. Hopper of Newark has boon •visiting his father, Egbert Hoppor. J, Woiiloy Sutphln has moved from laalah Lono f nrua to Farmingdalo. Charles Palmer la otok with pneumonia. '-"', - | ,. THK REomxren ia growing all the tlmo —more buolncsa, moro employees, moro typo and raoro niftohlnery. Folks' business jtrowa when they uao Tan REGISTER to tell about tholr buslnoBs.—ddv, A SUMMER COTTAGE PLAN. WAYSMMB NEWS. NEWS. .• •..-. •' • • • • • - . " ¥ - ' • • • > • . ,• .•..• ... hair adds Mich to good looks. [Copfrig'lit.lMO, bjr Ocoige Hltchlngs, architect,' 1090 Flatbush avenue, Brooklyn.] The moral of this is to This is a summer cottage, though its at S4.65 a Barrel. % plan is very well adapted to year round use Scroeder's H air use. l o u will finqj a great number of ' '. •••< ':'• ' >Jl, just such houses at any summer resort along the seashore. The general layout Tonic; fifty c©nts a of the plan is very convenient. It has a |AW)ottWortM^,| bottle .at Schroeder's Phafmacy. Little Silver Station, If. J. Dance on FriAau flight-Visitors Suitable Also, £"or a Sesldence Throughout the leaf. in the Vfhaae. Mr. and Mrs. Edward West and their son Paul, Mr. and Mrs. Byron VanBenechoten and their daughter and son. Miss Kitty I. VanBensohoten and James VanBenscboteri, all of Asbiiry Park, spent Sunday with Mm, Catherine Fary. ' William Asber Ball is sick with quinsy sore, throat. Valentine and Sansbury Dangler and E. L. Havens.have been sick. Gtover C. [Dangler is sick with measles. Mies Amelia "White has been sick with a cold. 9 A dance was tolbavebeen held at Mrs. Derenda Dangler's last, Friday night. Mrs. Dangler keeps the poorhouse at this place and one or the inmatfs died, 90 the dance was held at Mrs. Henry Gianaan's. ' ,. j , • *>>I*I<^^^ T H E O D O R E F. W H I T E , Real Estate, Insurance and Loans, •. • • • , . : ' Miss M, C. Woplley was surprised on Tuesday night of last week by a viBit from a number of friends. The guests were entertained pith music and games. Mrs. Frederick Finch .of New York spent a few days last week with her mother, Mrs. Lydia A. Dangler. Mrs. Dangler is now visiting Mrs. Finch. . Mr. and .Mrs. Qeorg^e Herbert of West Long Branch and their son, Oliver Stuart Herbert, were guests on Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Q raman. Mrs. Rachel Dewitt of New York and her daughter Mildred, who have been visiting relatives here, have returned home. / Mrs. Susie Tru ix will soon have a sale of farming ute sils. Mrs. Truax has Tented her place to Mrs. Phillips. Mrs. Charles Bowne, Jr., has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. William Crfey of Long Branch City. Robert Mooney of Asbury Park has been visiting his cousins, Mary Bendy and Minnie Fary. -Mrs. Charles Brand is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Walter Worles of West Long Branch. ] Mrs. John Bendy spent part of last week with her father, Henry Fary of Oakhurst.. Mis9 Matilda Gardner spent a few days last week at New York. E. L. Woolley bas bought a new horse. ' •'.'••• R E D BANK, N E W J E R S E Y . JJIONEY TO LOAN IN AMOUNTS OF $500 TO $6,000 OK i RED BANK PROPERTY. ''. FBOJIT EUTVATIOM. wide hall with an ornamental open staircase, parlor, dining room and kitchen on the first floor and four chambers and a bathroom on the second floor. The exterior is made quite attractive by. the f ron,t and rear, gables, covered with pine ehin1gles stained moss green. The spruce shingles on the roof are stained red and the siding on the first floor yellow, with white trimming. The foundation Is of Jersey hard burned brick carefully pointed up with Portland cement. This house has been built several times In various parts of the country and has The James H. Peters and H. C. J. Schfoeder estates houses will be offered for sale at very reasonable figures. Each house will be on a lot too feet wide. They are wellbuilt, large, handsome, modern houses with all improvements and are well suited for fine country residences. FURNISHED HOUSES TO LET, I have a great many furnished houses to let in Red Bank, on both sides of the Shrewsbury river^ at Fair Haven and Oceanic, on the Rumson road and at Little Silver. Prices from $ioo to $1,500 for season. Houses and lots for sale on every street in town. INSURANCE. OLD AND PURE WHISKIES^>"f The test in Bed Bank can be found at tbe store ol &. J . ^L3STTOisri3DBS, . South Side of Front.Street, Kear Broad Street. Ton will be satlsfled with tbe qnallty and price. A full assortment ot Old TVWBVUB and Bitn!I< t ,an the best Imported and Domestic TYkea, Ales Porters, A c , Sc. Extractor Malt, $1.60 per dozen pints. • . • . I mafce a specially of Chamberlain's Old, Cabinet Bye, aged 10 yean. Gallon, 84.75: fall quart, 81.25. Oats and Corn Arc important crops; but unless the best seed is obtained much of the labor and expense of raising the crop is wasted. HEAVY WEIGHT CHAMPION OATS FIBBT VLOOB PLA5. varied in price from $1,500 to $2,000, according to the location. These prices include heating, plumbing and mantels. It must be understood that in general the cost given does not include papering and frescoing, as the walls are usually left white for a term of six or eight months until they are thoroughly dry. Tho rooms on the first floor are so, arranged that they may readily be thrown together HOLMDEL NEWS. when desired. The dining room has an elaborate oak mantel with bevel plate <T. Alexander Guv Takes JPossesston mirror, a tile hearth and a summer piece of the Posto/flce. The postoffice was moved last Saturday afternoon from A. L. McClees's to the grocery iitore of J. Alexander Guy, the newly appointed postmaster at Holmdel. Mr. Quy bought tbe letter case used by Mr. McClees. The infant son of Joseph C Heyer, -who has been dangerously sick with pneumonia, is recovering. Dr. Thompson is attending the child. William E. Crawford moved on Saturday from tlje Holmes Wyckoff place at Pleasant "Valley to the Koert Heyer farm at thisjplace. Miss Margaret Beers, teacher of the public schooj, has changed her boarding place'from Mrs. James Taylor's to Mrs. William Tilfon's. Charles Gjailor, who works for Henry Holmes, hai moved from the Sutphen house to tbi Mary Taylor house. Mrs. William C. Ely, who has been sick with tlve grip, k improving. John L. Ely has started a milk route through th village. Cult's Nock News. William Honry Foster was the firefc person in t ;e township to plant potatoes. He planteq them the first of last week. Alfred F ancis is recovering from an attack of Scarlet fever. Joseph Kingston's familyiB-aick with measles. Miss Daily Cunningham has returned from the Dwight L. Moody school, which she as been attending. SECOND FLOOn PJLAJT. Mias Nettio Snyder of Ocoanfo spent complete. Tho kitchen,has all the mod' Friday with Mm. Frank E. Hoyer. cm Improvements—Boapstone tubi, gal Charles jMatthows and Louis Soffol, vanlzcd Iron atak and bollpr end 0 PerJr., spent Monday nt Now York. fect range.. ' Charles Campbell has bought a pneu The dimensions are 20 foot wide and matin-tired runabout. 82 fact deep. Tho parlor Is 18 feot wldo Peter Hfigorman has moved to the and 15 feet 0 laches deep; dining room, Kolsoypnporty. 11 feet wide, 14 feet 0 Inches deop; kitch George )ansor and Jnmea Covert aro on, 7 feot 0 Inches wide, 11 feet 0 Inches Bickwith (rip. deep, with a large dish cloaot Mrs. Safoh Johnson 1B visiting frlondu atMariala an. JOSEPH 0. ESGIICLB/ICII, Miss Ne tio Hoycr is vlolting nt MorCOLUMBIA HOTEL, gnnvlllo. | - Thomas Enrlght has a now horso. 120 West Front street, near Poari, Itod Bank, N, J m 1 o FINE PROPERTIES FOR SALE CHEAP. Insurance placed in good companies, that pay lbsses'promptly, at; lowest insurance rates. A School Teacher Entertains Her Graduating Class. ' A prom nontfoaturo of Tim REOIBMitt Jolts nowii of tho churches in this part rrf the county.—A$> 1 Rooms i and 2, Register Building, MORRISVILLE NEWS. Miss Emma Bloodgood, the teacher of the public school, entertained her graduating class last Wednesday night. After pupper the scholais were entertained with games. Tlisae present were Amelia, Andrew and Hugb Carton, Sadie and John Kelly, Fannie AntonideB and Harry Stout. There are other scholars in the graduating.class, but they were unable to be present, j Joseph Carton, who has been spending the winter with his brother, James D. Carton of Anbury Park, has returned to take charge of his farthers farm for the season. I Michael Coleman has put an Independent telephone in his hotel. The telephone is located in a hallway which gives it all the advantages of a booth. Cornelius Toomey, who works at Brookdale farm, has been made superintendent of the roads throughout Brookdale and of Bi'oobdaielawn. Mrs. Ellen Costello and her daughter Sarah and Mrs. Patrick Daley and her daughter Lizzie spent part of last week et New York J William Welch and family of Seabright spent Sunday of last week with Mrs. Welch's mother, Mrs. John Myree. Philip Scbinbar is having his house painted, Lemuel Soden is doing the work. I Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Hankinsnn spent last Thursday at Long Branch. James T. Soden of Nut Swamp h»B moved on John Repphard'a place. Miss Laura Schenck of Belford is visiting her uncle, Harry Dean. I Gold Medal Fldur I KwugorYBow wi4 f. t U. BohUW"* oolettntod Wulnot Hour alwaj» on draught, 4X80 DARTH0L0MAT ROOItCSTIB tiCKB IN l)OTTI.r.H. Produce 102 bushels per acre and weigh 42 pounds per bushel; and the straw is so stiff it never falls or lodges, even on heavy land. Price $1.00 per bushel; 5 bushels or more, 90 cents per bushel. PEDRICK PERFECT GOLDEN BEAUTY CORN Is a] New Jersey variety and the best and most profitable variety of corn for the state ever produced. It is not only a heavy cropper, but a sure cropper as well, and the grain is very superior both in appearance and quality. New Jersey grown ears can be seen at my store. Selected seed of this best and most profitable variety of corn costs only 40 cents per acre more than the commonest kind; and the yield will be more than double in dollars and cents. Learning Improved Dent and White Cob Yellow Dent are two other very valuable varieties of seed com. SEED POTATOES. Don't forget I am headquarters in Monmouth county for Northern Grown Seed Potatoes. Seed is of best quality of Maine grown stock, and prices 25 cents to 50 cents per barrel less than others are selling seed of inferior merit. Seeds of all kinds—Garden, Flower and Field. CATALOGUE FREE FOB THIS SJPJtING. J. T.LOVETT, 40 BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J. LITTLE SILVER NEWS. A Reception Jbr a Pastor—A dub's Meeting -Postponed. Frank Sherwood, who works in the postofflce here, is riding a new Pierce bicycle. William Parker King, son of Dr. Bwijninin F . King, haa bought o new Cleveland bicycle, Linden Shoemaker has t\ new Quaker bicycle. V7 A reception will be held at the Methodist parsonage to-morrow night for the minister, Rev. J. W. Presby. Mr, Presby'B married arid has three children, t w o boys and a girl. The meeting of the Midwinter cltib, which wa3 to have been held at Miss Sylvia de Fabry's to morrow night, has been postponed until Thursday night"of next week, • •' . • Benjamin Allen Shoemaker has bought a new runabout ond a new set of harness, Mr. Shoemaker spent Sunday with Miss Sadie Applegate of lliddletown township. Sirs. B»njntninF. King was suddenly stricken with an attack of acute indigestion on Saturday. -She is now much improved a n i is able to be about. Lawreuce Fowler of Englewood, who has been visiting his parpnts, Mr. and Mrs. William Fowler, for the past week, has returned homo. ' Rev. J . William Lee left on Tuesday • of last week for New Brunswick. On Friday he went to his new charge at Blaok.wood.-~' HarmoD Corney, who has been employed in the postoffice, has left and Miss Lottie Quackenbush is employed in his place. Leander B. Campbell has moved from the Dr. Walter VanFleet property to L. Ayres's property near the station. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Kayijor of New York are visiting Mrs. Raynor's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hobroiigti..'" Mrs. Charles Berlin of Long Branch was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Walling on Sunday. ' •\ • Walter Sherwood of Freehold has bedn visiting bis parents, i l r . and Mrs. Anson L. Sherwood. Joseph' Woolley has moved from the Patterson farm at Shrewsbury to J . "W, Ivins's place. Reuben Errickson of Englishtown was the guest of George "Quackenbush on Sunday, George Ft. Lippincott is re-grading and re-graveling the Little Silver Point road. Miss Laura Sherman of Marlboro is' visiting her cousin, Miss Grace White. William Frost of New York visited friends here on Sunday. Miss Bertha Walling is visiting relaJ i v e s at New York, Fletcher Pope is visiting friends at New York. FAIR HAVEN NEWS. Atlantic Highlands News, HOWARD FREY, P ractical lumber. C. H. HURLEY, il SEED POTATOES. STAHDARD LIVERY STABLE. JOHN BAILEY. Red Bank's Sporting Goods Store TiNTON FALLS NEWS. Several Blovings in This Neighborhood This Tear. For man Parker of 'Swimming river has moved to Oceanport. Mr. Harrison of Orange will move on the farm vacated by Mr. Parker, Frank Lawes has moved EATONTOWN NEWS. from this -place to Lincroft. Rusael H. JUovingso/the Week—A Barber Shop Youman has moved from the Miller Cloned. farm to Allenhurst. The shirt factory will be moved this Violn, Matthew and John'Covert of week from the Hunt building on Broad Pine Brook are sick with measles. Mr. street to J. W. Johnston's building'on and Mrs. Thomas Hines and Mr. and Main street. Ten machines will be Mrs. Martin Cavanaugh are sick with the added, and this will increase the number grip. George Wemple is building a ;new of operatives and the output. Mrs. Pointset has moved from J. W. "ence in front of his place. He is wing Johnston's house on Main street to his jhestnut posts and chestnut slats. Benjamin P. Morris and Jacob Hicks house on Railroad avenue. Joel Clayton has moved from Mr. Johnston's house of Long Branch caught forty trout in on ltailroad avenue to the "Hollow" Pine Brook on Monday. Miss Susie Hendrickson of Fair Haven tenement. Mr. and Mrs. William Thompson, who spent Sunday and Monday with relatives have Been playing in the " Devils's lere. . W. H. Beaver of Germany has moved Island " theatrical company, have moved iito the Edwards house on Railroad ave- nto his house at Swimminfr River. James Walsh is building a new feed nue. Harry Worthley has discontinued his afton for Samuel J. Bennett. barber business here and has moved to Robert Davis has planted his early peas. Oakhuint, where he will open a barber shop. Shrewsbury News. Perr^ CooU, George Meyers, Edward Taylor and Afbitt Phillips have bought Charles Patterson and family, who have been spending the'winter at New new bicycles from Frank Breese. Mrs Thomas Enfferty of Lakewood is York, have returned to their home at visiting her mother, Mrs. Theodore Ar- this place for the summer, The prayer meeting at the Presbyterian rance of Railroad avenue. R. S. Clark, who is employed bv the ihuren to-night will be a missionary Bell telephone company in New York, service. Stereopticon views of Siam will be gnen. spent Sunday in town. Mrs," Martha Berlin has moved from Mr. and Mrs. I. P. McCurdy of HarLewis street to the rooms over Tuttle's mony Grove, "Virginia, spent part of last week with Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Bormeat market, • . . Mrs. H. H. Hagerman, who has been den. sick, his improved during the past week, Benjamin John Parker and Charles Frank Dennis of North Long Branch '. Hope spent Sunday with Miss Anna i, FitzRandolpli of East Freehold. visited friends here on Saturdny. James Wolcott, who attends Pratt in- Rev. William Bailey, rectory of the piscopal church, will sail in a few stitute, spent last week herp. Miss Hattio Aumurk of High street is weeks for a trip to Europe. Miss Nellie Sutphen and Miss Eva Valsuffering with malaria. James Hyslop is now employed by the ntine, who have been sick with colds, ire now able to be out. • Monmouth hunt club. Mrs. Hattip Leach of Brooklyn spent A sociable will be held at the parsmige. of the Presbyterian church to-morFriday in town. Josie Truswell of Lewis street is sick. row night. Miss Ella Vanderveer hns been suffering with neuralgia, caused by a diseased OCEANIC NEWS. . ;ootli. Miss Belle DeVausney; of Newark is Giving Vi> Keeping Hoariiers-f'tstt- isiting her sister, Mrs. Stimuel D, Price. ino His Xew J'arliihioners. Miss Morse of Long Branch was.; the Mrs. Percy GarreiHon, who has been guest of Miaa Annie Stilwell on Sunday. keeping boarders in the Holland houeo Miss Libbio Hurley, daughter of Weson Ocean avenue, has given up the ley Hurley, is sick with the grip. boarding houso business and has moved William I. Green is having his house to the Edwards house on theliiilgo road. ainted. Rev. J. W. Niokelaon of Naveaink, m. m the now pastor of the Oceanic Methodiut Cuapol Hill Nowa. church, waB in town yesterday getting Mr. nnd Mrs, Richard Applegnte have | acquainted with his church people. moved from Mrs. Elizabeth Tracey's Lei;?liton Knipc of Lafayette college, into a part of tho IIOUHO with EaBton, Pa., who hats bet-n spending a houso Roed. Mrs. Trncey hns moved vacation of ton days with his parents, CharlesKoyport into her own houso at Kev., and Mrs. H, W. Kuipe, lias re- from this place. turned' to college) Rev. John Parmley will supply tho Mr. nnd Mrs. Butcher of Farmingdalo boon visiting Mrs. Butcher's grundpulpit of the Scabright Methodist church huvo for two mnnthfl while tho pastor, Rev. pnTonts, Mr, nnd Mrs. P. 8. Conover, Mr. nnd Mrs. David 0. Bennett visited 8. M. VunSant, is away on a vacation. Albert Uloodgood lino move 1 from Mr. Bcnnott's sistor, Mrs. William.Irwin Mrs. Bridget McCortnick's IIOUHO to Mrs of Atlantic Highlands, on Bunduy. • MIBB Frances Garvoy visited her Buatccd's house on Lafayette avenue. Miss Bello Garveyof Nuvoaink, Miss Jcssio Harvey iu very aiclc witl cousin, pleurisy. On Tuesday there was a allgl on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Dnniol Irwin visited improvement In her condition. rolntives ut New York on Saturday and . Mrs, Honry Wyckolt linn, moved from Sunday. tho Nelson house to the.McGlyrm honsi Mrs. F. L. Brown epont Saturday and on Binghain avonuo. John JoiTroy, who tins beon danger- Sunday with relatives at Englinlttown. Miiis Maud Champlin of Bedford ban ously sick tho pnxt month with tho grip been visiting Mru. John Mtvxaon. it) improving, Mr», Jolm T, Nnfilo of Now York A Vroivtttit Paper. vioitcd hor summer rcHldcnoo hero on Tuiifldny. ' THIS HIUUBTIUI is Krowing all the tlrno Richard MncDonnld of Now York —more lmiilneiiB, more omploycCB, more •pent Sunday with IIIH oiHt,or, Mrs. J, 13, type and more machinery. Folks' bunlPnrinley. M:H« growa when they u$o Tun RitoiBTKn Ufirry Harvoy to laid up with tho grip to toll about UiL'lr 1)UBIUCHB,~(1CIU, ••-•-•• Farm Machinery. Jane Kent Auchincloss, daughter Sale of the Bennett Stage Route of Miss William 8. Auchincloss of Overbrook, - Property yesterdayPa., for several years a summer resident At the Bale of A, L. Bennett's horses of this place, will be married on WednesMONMOUTH ST., " and wugous on Tuesday one stage was day,'April 18th, to Henry Adams Trus-' bought by Michael MUlvihill for $90 and low. { I have on hand a full stock, con- ' ,BED BASK, another was bought by Charles Williams Prof. William T. Whitney, principal for $40. Mr. Mulvihill, who has been of the public school, is laid up with the sisting of Oliver, S.outh Bend, Sydriving a stage for A. L. Bennett, will grip. Jonathan T. Stout, who has been' racuse, Bissel and Wiard Plows, continue a stage route between fair dangerously sick with the grip, is im- Disc Harrows, Steel Harrows, F-ur r Haven and Red Bank. All the horses proving. were bought in by A, L, Bennett. John E, Foster has given up his law rowing Sleds, Gang Plows, AsparRobert Beatty, who is gardener on the office in New York, being unable to at- agus Ridgers, Iron Age Riding and Loeb place, has rented Mrs. Abram Ben- tend to it on.' account of his increased r-horse Cultivators, Aspinwall Ponett's house. T J i e house ,is to be.re- duties as prosecutor. tatooPlanter, Weeders, Shares for sbingled. Benjamin Bowman has The orgaft recital and musicale given all .make's of plows, McCormick ESTIMATES CHEEttFULLY FtBNISHED. moved from the Alclntyre house to Frank in the Methodist church last Thursday CONTttACTS TAKEN. Binders and ;Mowers, Tiger Hay By ram's house near Bed Bank. night netted $26. • .,- ••'.'• JOBDING PaOMPTLT ATTENDED TO. ' ' B. N. Barnet's bouse has been rented Capt. Joseph Barre^of New York has Rakes and Tedders, Oil, Twine, ALL WOKK GUAUANTEED. by Mis. Harry Blockson, an actress, who moved to his house here for the summer. etc., etc. is better known by her Btage name of Cap.t, Charles P.' Johnson is dangerAnnie Hart, Mr. and Mrs. BlockBon ously sick with Bright's diseased • • I carry constantly on band all the latest, i i i sanitary appliances, nnd bonco am prepared i boaided at Mrs, Dennison's last season. ' < • to do work without delay.' • William L. Chadwick, 'ttfhtt; recently1 Between Ourselves; there is much recovered from alongsickness, waStaljen SHREWSBURY, N. J. with dizziness on Sunday and beis agaun. of solemn nonsense talked and written confined to the house. Mr. Chadwiclcjis about baking powder. Some honest souls about eighty'years old. \ .'.„,. imagine that cream of tartar remains »»•»••»•»•»•»•»»•»•»•»••••»<>•••»»•••»»»•••»»•••••»••• unchanged in baking. In fact, the beat The infant child of Mrs. Lizzie War-; changes it into Rocbelle salts. In the ren, who died last week at the home of [ best hotels restaurants EGO BAKING her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Smith,! POWDER iB and used because it contains no ;s dangerously sick with dysentery., cream of tartar, because it is economiMr, and Mrs. John C. Schenck of Colt's cal, adds nutriment to the*food, and is Neck apent Saturday and Sunday with free from after-taste, Mrs. Sohenck's. parents, Mr. and Mrs, William. Curcbin. V The Sewing circle of the Methodist Protestant church held a bread and cake I have a carload of very choice Early Houlton Rose Potasale at E. H. Wilber's last Saturday and cleared $4. toes and a carload of very choice Blush Potatoes. Mrs, C. P. Worthley and Miss' Maria tbe finest rigs In town at tbo most reasonable rates. Doughty are visiting their brother, John These Potatoes are aU» Maine grown, and are eelected Saddle Horses a Specialty. Doughty of Eunington, L. I, ' ~ ,•', ,, Competent drivers sent with parties (Jay or nigbt. stock. • / ' • . . . ' • • ;,..••'••/• ' Miss Georgia Allen has been on ri'ien days' trip to Niagara Falls in company HORSESBOARDED The Potatoes can be seen at my store on Wharf avenue, with New York friends. imd rigs kept {a Al condition at low rates. Benjamin L. Browp, who has been near Front street, opposite the post office, Red Bank, N. J. laid up with the grip, is again able to attend to business. ,\, THE STANDARD LIVERY STABLE, Mrs, Walter Parker has been spending D. B.,BUFF, Manager., i few days with her sister, Mrs. Banta 33 add 36 White Street, Red Bank, N. J. if New York. Edward Myers of New York, a sum- Long distance telephone, !Ka. Local telephone, No. 1 mer resident here, was in town'yester, day. • Jesse Bennett, who has been sick with appendicitis, is again able to be out. John Martin, Jr., has a position asbar;ender in A. L. Bennett's hotel. Mrs. Edgar Smith is laid up with the ,'. I have moved to my new store in the Child Building on Broad Street. The new store is- on the main business street of the town, and it is very qoriveniedt for everyone who comes to Red Bank. The store is large and light, and gives rau ample room for handling Bicycles and also for my new lines of Sporting Goods. • •..'' •. The line of Bicycles I 3hall handle the present^ season will be larger than I have ever carried before. I doubt if any bicycle house in Monmouth county will be so well prepared to suit every taste and whim in Bicycles. The line will include every style of Bicycle, from the finest chainless to the cheapest of chain wheels. The prices and .terms will be such that no one who wants a Bicycle of any kind can •afford to go anywhere else. . . . . . . . . -.' . . . My plan of carrying everything in the line of Bicycle Supplies will be .continued in my new store, and the additional room and additional conveniences in my new quarters will enable me to make this department of my business more complete tlian ever. Customers can be certain of getting without delay any part or equipmpnt needed for any sort of a Bicyclo, and getting it at a satisfactory price., . . . . ,,,' My stock of: general Bpo.rtinff.GoQdSj which I first began tocarry last fall,f will be increased: Anything desired in that line, from a dog collar to a complete golf outfit, can be had. Special goods can be made up to order .when desired. . . My repair shop in my new premises will exceed anything ever before attempted in this part of the county. Every appliance for the repair of Bicycles has been in my workshop for a long time ; but I have now added machinery and appliances for repairing all kinds of Sporting Goods. Skilled mechanics will be employed and general repairing of light" machinery of all kinds will also be done. . . . . . . ; As there are few sporting men who do not smoke, I have laid in a stock of good cigars, and intend to make this a permanent branch of my business. . . I would like all my old friends to call and see me in my new place of business. It isn't necessaiy that they should buy anything, though of course I'd like to sell them whatever they w a i t in Bicycles or Sporting Goods. But come in and see me, anyway, whether you want anything or not. . . . r My Stationery Stock is coming and will be the finest in town. George Hance Patterson, No. 7 BROAD ST., RED BANK, N. J. EASTER CLOTHES. •••••••••••••••••••••••• Men's Spring Overcoats, all the proper shapes in Cambridge and Oxford grays, some silk-faced to the edge, $7,00, I i $10.00 and $15,00. Covert Top Coats, all the new shades, $4.00, $5.00, $6.45, $7.50, $.10:00, $12.00, $15.00 and $18.00. Boys' Top Coats, with and without velvet collars, $3.50, $4.00 and $5,00. New Suits, Hats, Shirts, Gloves and Neckwear. M. M. DAVIDSON, . BROAD STREET, i ^ ^ : A ' ! .'(•• . 1 VOLUME XXII.; NO. M ENDING HIS.TERM AS JUDGE REDBACK, N.J., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1900. TELEPHONE IMPROVEMENTS. r A LOSS oA $16,500 BY FIRE. HOLMDEL FARMERS' CROPS. PAGES 9 TO 16. M W S FROM MIDDLETOWN; Setting Out Asparagus—Planting Bank to Have Two Direct Early Potatoes, -• ' INTERESTING ITEMS FROM BETrunk Wires to Jfetv Vork, • • THE ALPINE HOUSE AT ATLAWYOND THE 8HKE WSBURT.. Asparagus was such a good-paying The New York and New Jersey tele- TIC HIGHLANDS DESTROYED. Bed • J , CLARENCE CONOVER RETIRED .«•-.'.• TO PRIVATE I I F E . phone company is making some exten- crop last year that the farmers in Holm- Many People'in the Township Sick '• A Sauce Waa Given in the House Leniency manifested in Many Cases sive improvements to its office at Sea- on Saturday Night, and the Fire del township who have been growing it With the Grip and Other nisLast JJiursdav- Harry, Jones for years are increasing; their average bright, which will result in great.imcases Incident to the Season-is Thought to Have Started From Sent to State Prison for Two Fires in Ojten Fireplaces. and others who have not raifted it in the Sunday 'Visitors at locust Point. provements in the Monmouth county ..' Years. ' •' \ ••-•,.' . • ' service. At present Long Branch is the The Alpine house, one of the first past are setting out bed-). Morrisville Mrs. Elizabeth Yetman of Navesink, Judge Conover held his last session of main central station in the county, and boarding nouses built at Atlantic High- farmers have put out thousands of- new who has been sick for some time with court last week." He cleaned up all the all the New York telephone business lands, owned by Mrs. J. C. Mitchell, was plants-this spring and during theipast consumption, is now confined to her bed odds and ends of criminal business on week farmers at Holmdel have branched and is rapidly growing worse. Mrs. Thursday, and on Friday he closed up m^ this part of the county- and all destroyed by .fire early Sunday morning. out in asparagus growing on a,larger Jane Burdge of Navesink", who lives • long distance telephone business has to The fire was discovered between.five and the civil business of the court. with Mrs. Henry Becker, and who has He characterized his last session of the go through that office. This makes a six o'clock by a workman employed by scale. considerable delay at Himes when the been sick for some time, is daily failing Henry L. Holmes of Holmdel has Thomas Dowd. The Alpine house was criminal court by leniency in many cases. -In nearly a dozen instances sen- wires from Long Branch happen to be located on Circle avenue, in the extreme never grown asparagus, but during the in health and her condition is such; that • . ' , • ' eastern part of- the; town, while Mr. past week he has set out eleven acres. watchers have to be at her bedside at tences were indefinitely suspended. busy. ' • • . • • . ' . . - " . ' . , ' ' - - . I ' -. This means that these persons, who had Changes are now being made to theDowd lives in the, western part of the James G. Crawford^ who already has night. pleaded guilty to charges against them, telephone exchange at Seabright which town. Most of the houses near the Al- twelve acres in asparagus, is setting out Mrs. Mary Minor, who has-'been sick or who had been tried and found guilty, will greatly facilitate the telephone busi- pine are owned by New York people and five acres more. Lafayette Schenck is for ^several weeks at the home of net V will have no more trouble over the cases ness in this part of the county. Two are unoccupied during the whiter. Mr. one of the biggest asparagus growers in sister, Miss Maggie MacDohald of Nave- < against them unless they should again additional rooms in the Packer building, Dowd gave the alarm and the three fire the vicinity of Holmdel. He has thirty sink, returned to her home at Pateraoa ;\ be brought before the court on some where the Seabright central office is companies of the town responded. The acres now in asparagus and thia spring on Monday. < Miss MacDonald, who has stationed, are being converted to tele- fire was then so far advanced that noth- he has set out twelve acres more. also been sick, has so far recovered as to : other'charge, ; phone use, and five new copper, trunk ing could be done to save the building. Thomas Ellis, who has three acres in as- be able to resume work, at the dress- :" The cases in which sentences were suswires to New York are being put in. A house owned by Joseph Edwards ad- paragus, has set out four acres morel . making business at Yonkere. pended were these: George Belaer bt Marlboro, charped'with nemos: a New switchboards and new appliances joined the Alpine and this the firemen About the first farmer in Monmouth Capt. John H. Skidmore of Navesinkj borse to Harvey Hartwlck for $70, claiming that the are being put in and there will be twosaved from tfttal destruction. One side county to plant potatoes this year is who has been sick with the grip, is able iorsa was his own when it belonged to bis wlle.FredertcU Stryker. a'Keyport boy. chanted with day operators and two night operators. of this house was so badly burned that it Joseph E. Miller, who farms John G; to be out. ' Mrs. Bkidmore, who has been wounding a dog belonfjlnR to Cornelius Brltton and When the changes are completed Sea- will have to be rebuilt and the house was Schenck's place near Marlboro. He sick with..the grip at the home of ,her killing another do* belonging to W. Conover Smith. KBto Galler of Holmdel, charged with assaulting bright will be made practically the cen- considerably damaged by water. The planted several acres in potatoes over daughter, Mrs. George Walling, has re- ' Carrie Johnson, a neighbor, last October. '' • • •:'•'. Stout P. Hendrlckson of Ely, in Mlllstpno town- tral station for the nortwestern part of loss op this house is about §lyspo and is two weeks ago and the potatoes are turned home. ship, charged with assaulting Arthur H.Tliomasr . Monmouth county, and this will relieve covered by insurance. • sprouting nicely. Theodore Stilwell of Capt/ John Seeley of Belford, who has Eddie Jones, a Uttlo boy HVIDR in Wall township, chanted with malicious mischief in destroying a the pressure on Long Branch during the The Alpine house contained 31 rooms Morrisville planted three acres in pota- been sick with the grip, was out Monday fish not belonging to Frank White and others. and waa handsomely furnished through- toes on Monday. From now on, if the for the first time in a month. William Naslorand Harry Hoyers, two Wall town- busy season. ship boys, charged with stealiUK some trlffles. Of the new copper trunk' wires which out. Nothing was saved and the loss is weather remains favorable, potato plant- Abram Morris, the keeper of the Lewis Savldge of Upper Freehold township, charged with lying to Andrew Plttenger In a horse are being put in at Seabright, two arefully $15,000. The house and furniture ing will become general, but these are Keansburg lighthouse, is daugerously ; trade and getting the best otPittenger under [also pretences. Saviuge had squared np tho matter and intended for Red Bank service, and will were heavily mortgaged. Outside of among the earliest planters this spring. sick with pneumonia. had paid Plttongcr the full amount he claimed he connect with the present wires between policies, covering the mortgages there Daniel Lewis, one of the oldest colored • OU A FAMILY GATHERING. Louls°™orceieln and Howard "Evcrlnffham, two Red Bink and Seabright. Tlio use of was no insurance on the property. The residents of Navesink, is dangerously small'boys of Long Branch, charged with staling these wires will give Red Bank a direct property was transferred a short time sick with thegrip. j a tent nnd a weather vane from Munroe vunnpte. JDI1. and Sirs. Benjamin F. King Charles Boeckel of Locust Point, who In the cases of all the boys where sen. service to New York, and will relieve ago to Edward Bradbury, Mrs. Mitchell's Have a Weddintl Celebration. tence was suspended, Judge Conover the necessity of calling up Long Branch nephew. The sale was not a boria fide Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. King of has been laid up with the grip, is reone, however, and th'e loss will fall on '• .•••'.•'•• gave them a good talking to before he when New York messages are sent; Little Silver held a family gathering covering. Mrs. Mitchell. The Alpine was rented sent them home. • last Friday night in celebration of the Thomas Reddington and wife of Port "Harry Jones, who got money frdm A HORSE JUMPS FROM A BRIDGE only a few weeks ago to Mrs. Robbins of thirtieth anniversary of their marriage. Monmouth are both sick with the grip. the Second national bank of Red Bonk The Horse Was Scratched but the Orange for three years. Site was to pay The evening was spent in a general so- Mrs. Frank Little of Fair Haven and $1,000 a year for the first year and §1,100 on a forged check, nnd who afterward cial way and at an appropiiate hour a Mrs. Minnie Post of Jersey City, who is Waaon Was not Jtamaged. forged the name of Harry Edwards, the Garry Morford, son of S. W. Morford a year for the succeeding two years. supper was served. Dr. and Mrs. King visiting Mrs. Little, spent Sunday with assistant cashier of. the bank, to a certifi- cf Morford place, was out riding on There is no likelihood of the hotel being are noted for their hospitality and theMrs. George Brower of Locust Point. cation to a check, did not fare so well. Sunday afternoon. He had his father's rebuilt. celebration on Friday night was a very Other Sunday visitors at Locust Point were Mr. and Mrs. Wolcott Bennett of The young people of Atlantic HighJones committed these crime3 several horse and a runabout. Tbe horse was enjoyable one. New Bedford and their daughter, Rena, years ago, and he was not captured until a new one. Late in the afternoon lands gave a dance at the Alpine house Mr. and Mrs. King were married at recently. He was caught in New York Mr. Morford stopped at Mrs. M. E. on Saturday night. The party broke up the Little Silver Methodist church on who visited Mrs. Bennett's sister, Mrs. and waa taken to Freehold, where he Allaire's on Broad street. He tied the before midnight'.' Fires jivere built in March 80th, 1870, by Rev. W. T. Abbott. Michael Despreaux; J . Frank Eagles of "pleaded guilty and threw himself on thehorsp in front of the house, and when ho the open fireplaces in the house.and Mrs! King's maiden name was Elizabeth Newark, who visited Howard Gibson; . mercy-otihe court._ . When lie.eameup got ready to go home he unbladketed thuse Ores were burniu'gf »vliwi the gueala Par&r. ~She is t h r daughter of Lydia and James A, Barry of New;York,~who for sentence last Thursday his lawyer the horse and untied it. The lines were departed. Screens were placed in front, Chadwick and William Parker, who are spent the day with his family, ' made a plea for him on the, ground that on the side of the wagon opposite to him. of the fireplaces Mo protect, the floors both dead. Mr. King is the son of Otto Schultz has moved from Joseph he was a cripple and was the only sup- Just before getting in the wagon he from flying sparks, but it is supposed Joseph W. King and the late Anna Carhart's house on Mill street at Nave-, port of a widowed mother. His lawyer struck a match. This frightened the that a burning log rolled out of the Martha Worthley. Those present at the sink to Joseph Luf burrow's house at the " stated that Jones had the money to horse and it started on a run down grate and set fire to the woodwork near celebration ou Friday night were Mr. same place, formerly occupied by Joseph make restitution for the amount which Broad street, leaving Mr. Morford be- the fireplace. M. E. Curtis loaned the and Mrs. Richard Parker and their chil- Green. William Cottrell has moved young people a banquet lamp and a fire dren, Bessie, Mary, William and Frank; from the Bloomer house to the house vathe bank had lost through his forgeries. hind. ' A ' . Judge Conover said that he would take The horse ran down Broad to Front screen, S. T. Champion loaned them a Mr. and Mrs. W. Tabor Parker and their cated by Mr. Schultz. Mrs. Ada Smith of Brooklyn spent into consideration the fact that Jones street and up to Morford place. The piano and W. H. Posten loaned them children, Susie, Sadie and Fannie; Mr. was a cripple and was the support of his animal tried to get in the barn but the cups and saucers with which to serve and Mrs. William King, Miss Marianna Sunday with her aunt, Mrs. William' mother, but he added that in forgery door was closed and \t turned and ran coffee. These were all destroyed. The King and Miss Cclia King of Little Sil- Bennett of Navesink. Mrs. Smith spent . cases he did not think that a fine or a to the Southern railroad bridge. It ran dance was given by the fashionable folk ver ; and Mr. and Mrs, John King of part of last week with her uncle, Wilsentence of confinement in the county about fifteen feet on the bridge and then of Atlantic Highlands and Mrs. Mitchell, Bed Bank and their daughter, Miss liam Kelly of Eatontown. jail would meet the ends of justice. He jumped off. The shore extends but quite the owner of the house, was one of the larrie T. King. On oceounp of the bad Miss Myra Sickles, who works in accordingly sentenced Jones to state a distance at this place and the horse patronesses. weather Mr, King's father, Joseph W, Goldstein's store at Long Branch, is prison for a term of two years. King, was unable to attend the celebra- spending a two weeks' vacation with landed in the soft earth below. The BOATMEN'S MISHAPS. her paronts, Mr. and Mrs. John I. Sicktion. Annie Gretz of Long Branch was animal was badly scratched and bruised .O-t-O les of Navesink. . fined $15 for assaulting Eebecca Felt- but was not otherwise hurt. The wagon Charles Rutt's Boat CapstmesPoultry Cases Ended. Ernest Bailey, the station agent at man, and she will remain in jail until went oft the bridge with the horse but it STenrti True'x STnrts His Hand. The suit of Matilda Sickles against Belford, moved on Monday from part of: the fine iB paid. was not damaged, Charles Rutt of Belford, who clams Mary Mack and the suit of Mary Mack iapt. Hiram S.eeley'B bouse to the brick Mrs. Alvilda Acker of Asbury Park, with the mud rake boat Betsy, was com- against Matilda Sickles, have come to house across the railroad track from the who was convicted of keeping a disChristian Endeavor Officers. ing in from the clnrnming grounds on an end, both cases having been decided Belford station. orderly house, wsa fined $50 and costs. The Christian Endeavor society of the Monday afternoon when a gust of wind by the Freehold courts on appeal last Henry Applegate, who began houseWilbur A. Helsley, the new judge, Middletown Reformed church held a struck bis boat and capsized it. Rutt week. Both women live at Colt's Neck keeping a short time ago in one of hia was sworn in office on Monday morning. meeting on Tuesday night of last week clung to his upturned boat until ho was and the trouble arose over the loss of m •m • and elected these officers:' picked up by another boat of the Belford some poultry, each woman claiming father's houses at Belford, has given u p License Transfers. clamming fleet. His strength had al-that the other was responsible for herhousekeeping and has gone to live with • PresUlcnt-Unrry Gulick. Vice president—Miss Lottie Stout. The hotel license of Jacob Degenring Secretary most given <iut when he was rescued. loss. In the suit in the justice's court his parents. -Miss Mario Conovur. of Hed Bank has been transferred'to J. Treasurer—Cecil Conover. His gold watch was lost overboard and Mrs. Sickles got a judgment of $32 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Edson of PhilaPrayer meeting committee—Mrs. Hoot, Miss Stark, Edgar Brower, the leasee of the hotel; Raymond he also lost his day's catch of clams, against Mrs. Mack. In the upper court delphia spent Monday at their summer tiutlck. Lookout coiinnltU'o—Miss Ida Dean, Hiss Emma the license of Edward Throckmorton of His boat was towed ashore by the boat this judgment was cut down to $8. In residence a t Navesink, making arrangeHombllntr, Harrv Gulick. ments for an early occupanoy of the Eatontown haft been transferred to Social rammiltec— Mrs. Hagcman, John P. l u y -that came to his rescue. Mrs. Mack's suit against Mrs. Sickles, place. Cecil Couovcr. George K. Magee, Mio recently bought ster, Henry Truex of Belford was driving tho judgment in the justice's court was Flower commltujo-Mlss Stark, Miss Caroline The sloop Alesina Davison, owned by the property; and the license of Louis Dletz, Miss Mary Conover. Missionary committee-*'Mrs. Hcskoth, Burrowea pound poles last Friday when ono of tho in favor of Mrs. Mack, but this judgment William Dennis of Port Monmouth,' ia • '. Steinberg of Long Branch; who moves UijEter, Chnrles Hoot. poles slipped as it was being lifted from Music oommfttco-Cari Dletz, Alfred Luystcr, Miss ngaged in carrying clams between Port to the Union hotel at Rod Bank, hns Annlo the boat and fell on his hand. His hand was roversod by Judge Conover. HanklnB. '«» • » • Monmouth and'New York. . been transferred to Edward T. Vanwas so badly bruised that he was unable Stricken With Paralysis. A Minister Sick. Harold Greene, who is in the insurance Dyke. L to work for several days and ho Btill John Hartigan of Morrisville was business in New York, spent Sunday Rev. J. Ward Clark of Belford was carries his hand in a bandage. stricken with paralysis last Thursday. with his grandmother, Mrs. Eliza Brain.Taben Sick While Visiting. flick with the grip last week and for two Mrs. Hartigaii was cut doors at the time ard of Locust Point. .•' Timothy MoLnughlln, who is em- nighta wna unable to conduct tho service A Turf R o a d . and when she returned to tho house she William Simpson, who is a membor of ployed as conductor on a trolloy car in of prayer held in the. Methodist church. Hominy hill in Atlantic township has found her husband unconscious. Mr. the Sandy Hook lile saving station, i Now York, went to Belford about two His son,. Stanley Clarlt, conducted tho a road running up its aido which is very Hartigan was tohavo gono to work at Bpont Monday at Belford, looking after weolts ngo to spend a day or two with service Thursday night and on Friday difficult to keep in order on account of Brookdale farm on' Saturday. Ho is his property. hia parents, Mv. and Mrs. Michael Mc- night Robert Seoley had chargo of the its steepness, combined with tho sandy Latighlin. He was taken sick with tlio servico. woll advanced in years, but it ia thought Capt. Fred Johnson moved on Monday character of tho rorid way. John Sta pie' grip while homo and ho lias not yet been that he will soon recover,,sufficiently to from Btowart Mitchell's house at Belford ton, tlio oversrur of tho road in that tlia A Mock Trlnl. ublo to resume work. to Joseph' Walling's house at tho samo bo ablo to t k h i p o s l t l f e ^ Rov. James D, Corrotliei'B and L, 0 . triot, has hit on a plan this year to koop placo. Suramersott of Red Bnnk took part in a tho road from washing out. , Ho has out Now Sunday-Bcliool Tonchora. A Collarbone Broken. MisBea Mario nnd Kittio Riddlo of a quantity of turf and this has boon Tho classes in tho Navesink SundayFrank Casoy of Middletown waa horse, mock trial for breach of prorniso in Zion Oceanic spout last Thursday with Miss placed four thick on tho roadway. I t school were reorganized last Sunday" Hartsanna Pulhomiis of Kaveaink. bitok riding ono dny last week when ono church a t Lukowood. lust Friday night. has effeotually stopped waahoutfl nnd it morning and two now touchers wcro of tho Btirrupa broko. Ho was riding Mr. Corrothera acted as presiding judgo makes a hotter road than lias ovor been eleoted. Tho now teachers aro Mlas Vincont II. LaMarcho of Now York quito fast and the stirrup broke BO Bud- and Mr. Surnmorsott as counsel for tho Bpont a dny last woek at hia summer on the hill before. • Mamio Mount and Mrs. Lou Card. Rev. residence at Locust Point. • dorily that he wa» thrown from tho plaintiff. Mr. SuramorBett's client won J. W. Nickolson was olootod peoretnry of ' horse's buck. Hie collurbono won broken. tho.caeo. Josoph E. Johnson of Navoslnk spent I'rlmo Jltb Jloaata, tho yuiidny-iichool in plitcu of Miss Dolla lust WodnoBduy ut New'York. I am dclHiie primo rib rousts, from Thursday and Friday, April Bill and Port Monraouth'a DocUnmaior. Oth, wo will sell boy*)' cap* ut 10 cents uolootud boor, nt 15 contB por pound DoVcsty, who resigned. Oi'itamcnfdl Trees Wanted. John Roddington will be dookmuator eaoh, worth 25 cents. DavldBon's. — Adv, Thoao roiiRty aro tho best t!>at can bo obIf oio to ficlt Things, tained anywhere, being from fu cattlo, Wo will pay cash for nnd remove at tho Port Monmouth fitcambont dock Try Tun KROIBTEU'S want columns.' lnrgo, woll-shapcd ornamental shade Eaatormillinery a t WOIB'B Rod Bank and in tho beat) of condition. Frank this Bonaou in placo of Charles Mohr- Templo of Fashion. HatB to fli ovcry- Dried, Drond street,' adjoining Bioklcs & An ndvortlBomont of thirty, words ooBta trees, Wrltoor ciillon Allonhurst Nur- ' i.—Adv, ' • only 2Q conta.—Adv. Clay's.—Adv, bodyfs head and puree.,uiann, who rooonlly dlnnppnureil. A "HOODOO" BAG. PEOFESSIONAL MEN'S SUITS. JtenttatH ana lawyers Get Their A Kevport Man Charged a minister Money When They Sue for it. • With Carrying One. One of the unusual cases tried on ap- Charles Jenkins, a member of the Secpeal at Freehold laet week was that of )nd BaptiBt church of Keyport, circuGeorge F. Ward of Freehold against lated a story to the effect that Rev. Mary Featherstone. Mr. Ward is a law- David D. Hall, the pastor of the church, yer of Freehold. Ho drew a deed con- carried a "Hoodooj' bag around with veying ' property from Ellen Conk to lim. Colored people are very, auperMary Featherstone and also made the ac- ititious and Jenkins's story spread conknowledgement to the deed. He charged terrmtion among Mr. Hall's flock. JenHorses at Private Sale. Mary Featherstone §2.62 for his services, rins was called before the officials of Horses at Auction. Bull's Head Commission Stable, which she refused to pay. Then he sued he church to prove biB .charge. In 405-497Broad Street, , NEWARK, N. J. her for the money before a justice of the lome unaccountable manner Jenkins got The largest sale Btable in the (state. We have 160 to 200aeadof norseslorow . '• peace and got a judgment for the wsBession of the bag that he thought Tuesday's and Friday's Sale. amount of the bill. She still insisted as "hoodooed" and he produced;it at Bale commences each day at 10 o'clock, A. u . We generally have about 100 head of cheap second that .she ought not to pay the bill for lis hearing before, the officials. When' hand horses tfnlcb cave been used around the city drawing and acknowledging the. deed, ;he bag was opened it was found to con- and are suitable for farm use. This Is the cheapest place In tbe east to buy a hone of any kind by 20 to and she carried the case up on appeal. ain a piece of tin foil from a. paper of iS5 per cent. Call and look our stock over and be convinced. All horses are sold on a two days' guarJudge Conover last week- depided that iobacco. The church officials did not antee and If not as represented purchase money she must pay the lawyer and she will hink that this -was enough of a hoodoo cheerfully refunded. HOY & FOX, Proprietors. have to pay the $2.62 which he charged, substantiate Jenkins's charge, and Jos. 8. HOT, Auctioneer. Telephone 68i-778. interest on this amount from October hey gave him the choice of apologizing to 26th, 1899, $3.80 for coats in the justice's he minister or. being fired out of the DAILY AND SUNDAY court, and also the costs of appealing :hurch. He apologized to the minister the case. . . ind the affairs of the church are again " Another professional lawsuit which lerene. NEWSPAPER, •was decided last week was for dental Changes la a Postoflflce Force. work. Dr. William M. Thompson, a dentiBt of Freehold, will get $12 from James W. Danser, the new postmaster BOOKS, Miss Mary E. Pittenger for a set of false if Freehold, took possession of the office teeth, but he had had two lawsuits over on Saturday night. Louis Heckman MAGAZINES, the matter. Dr. Thompson made a set and Miss Vanderveer, two of the postof false teeth for MiBS Pittenger some office clerks, will leave. William F. months ago. They did not suit her ex- .Inpps, -who has helped in the office PERIODICALS, aotly,and some changes were made in hen the heaviest mails arrive each day, them without cost to Miss Pittenger. will also leave. Thomas M. ChamberAfterward Miss Pittenger refused to pay lain will be chief clerk in the office unAND A FULL LINE OF for them on the ground that the plate did der Mr.- Danaer and Clarence Wilbur not fit and made her mouth sore. Dr. will be another new clerk. Miss Hester Thompson sued her and got judgment 31ark, one of the clerks under Mr. JohnPAPETERIES for $12, which was the amount of his ion, the former postmaster, will remain bill for the teeth. Then Miss Pittenger .n the office. carried the case to the. Freehold court AT A Hospital Endowment. on appeal, and this court has also deMrs. L. Qt. Woodhouse, daughter of cided in favor of the dentist. the late Dr.' J. E. Arrowsmith of KeyF. W. MOSELLE S, ort, has endowed a bed in the Long OCEAN'S OFFICIALS ORGANIZED. branch hospital as a memorial to her 28 BROAD ST., RED BANK. Hie Towiisliip Treasurer to Get A 'ather. Mrs. Wood house ^ i d $5,000 Salary of $000 a Year. :ash for the endowment, and the bed is The township committee of Ocean ;o be free, to patients from Keyport so township has organized with James, Wt :ong as the hospital exists. Conover of Oakhurst'' as chairman. Keyport's Thread Mill Trouble. Thomas E, Wooliey was elected treasurer at a salary of $600 a year. The salary The thread mill of Edward Currie of of the township treasurer was previously Keyport was damaged recently by un$100, but the new township law has in- known parties and Mr. Currie has asked creased the duties of the treasurer and he town commissioners to reimburse the township committee raised the ealary iim for his loss. The commissioners accordingly. Township Collector Wil- lave not yet paid him, but theyjvill liam R. Joline was a candidate for treas- wobably offer a reward for the arrest of urer, but was defeated. John W. Slo- ;he guilty parties.' cum was reappointed township counsel Sentenced to Jail. at a salary of $800. For this amount he Hot Water Heating a Specialty. is to give all legal opinions, draw- William A. Reynolds of Asbury Park, ordinances and all legal papers, and at- who was convicted of embezzling $46.90 from the. American wringer company, tend every meeting of the committee. jy whom he was employed, was sen enced to three months in the county Trouble Over a Ditch. No. 26 Front St., jail. He will carry the case to the James M."Butler of Keyport recently dug a ditch along the curb line of a igher courts on appeal. RED BANK, NEW JER§ET. street at that placd in front of his property.' Mr, Butler said that the street Sick With Typhoid Fever at London. had been so graded as to turn the water Mrs. Frederick D. Bennett of Freehold, on his property and that the ditch was who is on a trip to Europe, has been necessary to keep his lands from being stricken with typhoid fever at London. overflowed. The commissioners thought Mr. Bennett was notified by cablegram A large photograph inthat Mr. Butler should dig the ditch on last week and he sailed for London at stead of that tiny one you his property and they served notice on mce. him to stop work on the ditch and to have ? Figs Killed by Dogs. close up that part already opened. Mr. DeHart & Letson are Butler has stopped, work oiy the ditch, Two pigs belonging to J. B. Schooley if Allentown were killed by dogs last very successful in enlargbut he has refused to close jay the ditch already opened. The case will be taken week and four others were wounded. ing from'small negatives into court to test the rights of the parties Dogs also killed a pig belonging to N. W. and films. A dollar is Bird of Allentown and wounded another. in the matter. WILLIAM O'BRIEN, Practical Plumber, STEAM AND GAS FITTER. • , * » » Do You Want * the average price. 1084 iU*IOSTPEOPLE' Understand the purpose, the need and the value of Life Insurance. The only real question is as to the form of policy best adopted to your circumstances. We will assist you to a choice if you will'allow us. WRITE FOR PARTICULARS. Home Office, r i i r D D11R t M TI fl I Insurance Co. Newark, N.J. i fill rllUIIIIll 11 H i of America. JOHN F. DRYDEN, President. LESLIE D. WARD, Vice President FORREST F. DUYDEN, Secretary. EDQAR B. WARD.Sd Vice President and Counsel. P. 6 . WARNER, Supt,, Broad and Wallace Streets, Red Bank, N. J. W. H. HOUSTON, General Agent, No. 129 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. Good Smoking! The man who likes a delicious smoke for little moneyi should try one of my Fldr de Cubas or Joel Parker's. The price is 5:cents and the man gets a ten-cent smoke, Good, fine flavored tobacco, perfectly cured, made in a clean, well-ventilated workshop, give a perfect smoke. These Cigars have always sold at 10 cents each until a few months ago. Then I put the price down to 5 cents, but kept the Cigars at the old high standard. If you've tried these Cigars you know how good they are. If you haven't tried them you're missing the best thing in Cigars that's to be found in all this town of Red Bank—yes, or to be found in Monmouth county, either. WILLIAM CULLINGTON, Red Bank, N. J. Front Street, near Broad, JOSEPH S. CLARK, DEALEB IN Lumber, Coal, Hay and Feed, Hardware, Paints, Oils, Poultry Wire, &c. A Law Firm Dissolves. "W. iR. The law firm of Heisley& Morris of ELECTRICIAN. Long Branch, composed of Wilbur A. Wiring for Electric Lights. Battery, Magneto and Heisley and Benjamin P. Morris, has Pneumatic Bolls. Telephones a Specialty. been dissolved. Mr. Heisley has recently 232 Broad St., Bed BnnU, N. J. RED BANK, N. J. BLUE FLAME PURITAN OIL STOVE A SPECIALTY. been appointed judge of the Monmouth P. O. Box 818. V county courts and the law prohibits the tST Estimates for Contracts on Application. partner of a judge from practioing be- •»»••»••»»•»•»»»•»•»••••••••»»•»»••••»•••»•••••»•»• AGENT FOR THE BURGESS STEAM WASHER. fore him. The dissolution was made so ' that Mr. HeiBley's appointment as judge The most convenient and the oheapest place for the people of Middletown would not bar Mr. Morris from practictownship to buy the above goods. ing in the county courts. Both members of the firm will continue the practice o: JOSEPH S. CLARK. BEL^ORD, N. J. law as individuals in the same building in which they have been located as a ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••I firm. I DEHART & LETSON, River Property •• • « . Shot a t Chicken Thieves. The hennery of George Kempf of Long Branch has been visited by thieves BQVerol times lately. Early one morning last week Mr. Kempf heard noises in his chicken house that sounded as though thieves,were trying to mnko off with his chlckenu. Ho went outof doors wit li a double-barreled shotgun and fired bot barrels in tho direction of tho chloke house. Tho chlokori thiovos got awa; unhurt, but no chickens wero atolo that trip. - ( *»-•-•« • Carpots Stolen From a Barn. Mrs. E. C. Errlckson of Mannsqua: cleaned. house last wook. Sho took uj the oarpeta in two rooms and after giving tho oarpots a boating she put them in tho barn while, tho rooms woro being cleaned. Whon BIIO wont to got tin carpoto thoy woro gono and nothing hai since beon learned of thorn. Try Tim BnaroTnu's want coltimm An ndvortlnoinont of thirty wordo cos only SO cohtB,-~Adv. FOR SALE! The magnificent property known at the Scott estate, situated on the ! j North Shrewsbury River, \ AT • FAIR HAVEN, N. J., Containing about seven acres, will be sold as a whole or in lota to suit purchasers. • This most desirable property has a frontage of 520 feet on the river, and is one of the very few remaining pieces of river property now on the market. For maps, terms, etc., apply to R. S. MERRITT. Owner. I Or R. D. CHANDLER, Agent, PAIR HAVEN, N. J . COAL! Fair Haven. N. J . My coal yard is handy and the coal you get from it is good coal, well screened, and thevbest the market affords. / We deliver our coal promptly, and the prices are.as low as the market will allow. WM. N. WORTHLEY, : Foot of Worthley's Hill, , W , N. J . : : .»»•••»••»•»•»»•»»»»»»»»»» OUR HABITS OF LIFE. They Tend to Transform Men Into JBere Automatons. A man with, a habit pf life whose parts are made up of repetitions of acts day by day and year by year may In time become almost automatic. He who so'.lives may have some powers of adaptation to new, ch'aeges or may not, but in either case the habit of life which cramps his thoughts, restricts his.narrow field of action to, certain places and acts through an Indefinite time and engenders prejudices.against all else that Is different, comes from living In a groove instead o£ living In the world. All men are more or less subject to the dominion of habit, but there is a wide, difference between the habits,of thought and action which give men greater breadth of view mentally with greater usefulness in the material affairs of life and those which reduce men to a life within a horizon limited by their homes and their business interests. In an environment of life made up of repetitions of dally acts which are unchangeable, a man will necessarily become more or less automatic In thought and action. His standards of measurements and values are all within his own narrow world. Things outside bis little horizon are seen through glasses which distort The sailor, long a t sea, has a supreme contempt for the landsman, and the older the sailor and the more he Is at sea the more firmly is he convinced that the landsman is an inferior creature, worthy of nothing but contempt. The environment of the sailor has so engrossed his mind and his attention, and he has come to know his trade so well, with the Immense benefits and value of ships constantly to his mind's «ye, that the rest of the world suffers by the comparison as he views It. On the other hand, the landsmen consider with amusement the whims of the Bailor, though they may have equally ridiculous ideas concerning each other. The fanner may believe that the dwellers In cities are effeminate and given to certain financial jugglfngs which are unjust to him. If he lives in a rut, he will grow to believe that his prejudices are facts as immutable as the laws of matter. Habit may become so strong after, a time ,that It is beyond the power of the man to break it. He thinks in certain lines as he has been habituated to think, reasons after a certain habitual fashion and reaches conclusions he has already established and believed from habit. Nothing Is more conducive to life In a rut than living In the same way day by day without change. A man rises, j e a t s ^ works, returns Jbtome, sleeps, meets? the same peopUTand" heafsTtlriT same things said in the same way day after day1 till there is no stimulus to thought or action. There is no novelty because there is no change. There is no great breadth of mental horizon needed to the man who lives in a rut. He may be prejudiced In favor of so living because the rut is in evidence before him, while all other ruts must necessarily be worse because he does not use them and cannot see them. Sections drift Into a rut as men do. The west may, by self communing, exalt Itself above the east The east may by like process consider that elsewhere all else Is lacking In the essentials of civilization. The south may look upon the north as a section filled with men who swap jackknlves and whittle out glmcracks, while the north, on the other hand, may be snre that the chief Industry of the south is the making of mint juleps and the oppression of the bumble black nian. The man In a rut and the section In a rut are lifted out of their narrowness by change of environment. Railroads and steamboats are breaking up the ruts of sectionalism and Individualism. People go east and south and north and west and flud there is no ground for prejudice and that there was much that was misunderstood and much more to admire. The growth of sport has In like manner served the purpose of broadening views, destroying prejudices, correctIng opinions and cultivating a greater charity, for men and women whot journey to waters where fish are caught or cruise in yachts or penetrate Into the wild haunts of game break away from the narrow Hues which mature into narrow lives and thus avoid the dwarfed life of him whoso horizon never changes and which bounds his owu house and his own Interests. All that Is to be said of travpl as an agency of enlightenment, broadening and cultivation of tolerance may bo said of tho sports of rod and gun and more. For tho eportsm'nn tourist gets closer to tho heart of tho stranger community Into which ho penetrates In bis expeditions than does tho. ordinary traveler, whether on business or pleasure bent, and this • lntlmncy glvea a sympathetic Insight Into tho UVCB and charactera of thoRo with whom ho mingles, Tho friendships which hold botweon visiting Hportsuian and host may appear Individually of slight Importanco In tlifa respect, but collectively they uovo a trouiendous liiflucnco which 1B for good-- ' ^ Tun RnaiHTKK is growing nil tho timo —moro bunlnoBS, moro omployoeH, mare typo and moro mnohlnory. Folltft' bu«inos9 grows when they uso Turn ItmwTOtt to tell about their business.—Adv. A Brilliant Fire. People who live on the New England coast like to use ocean driftwood as fuel in open fireplaces.- It is impregnated with copper and ocean salts and when burned gives out the most brilliant colored flames. It is asserted that a New Bedford dealer has orders for "the wood from all parts of the country, and even from Europe, and ships hundreds of barrels of it yearly. Various attempts have been made to Imitate this wood by artificial process, but without success. Long submersion In the sea' water is necessary to produce the brilliant flamed . '" j. Many New and Original Styles for 1900. j WE PUT ON SOLID RUBBER TIRES. BICYCLE CABRIOLETS, ., BICYCLE SURREYS, BICYCLE BUGGIES, BICYCLE RUNABOUTS, BICYCLE SULKEYS, TRAPETTES, COVERTS, GOLF CARTS, FANCY 1900 TRAPS, ( STANHOPES, BREAKING CARTS. BREAKS, EXTENSION TOP SURREYS, CANOPY TOP SURREYS, PH2ETONS, & BUGGIES, RUNABOUTS* CARRYALLS, Bare Books In tho Vatican. The oldest library now in existence Is that of the Vatican, and it probably contains more.literary treasures than any other. It belongs always to the reigning pope, and only' he can give permission to enter. Though there are only 225,000 volumes, they-are the rarest in the world. The Vatican library has the only known copy of the New Testament written before the end of the fourth century; the original Dante, the oldest existing copy of-Virgil and a Terence which goes back to the fourtB century.' ••»••••»•»•»•»»•»•»»»••»< j What Is It? j Is it anew house ;; you want ? or is it <; I HARNESS.. • Our large show room of Harness is filled with ail grades of BUGGY, SURREY, BROUGHAM, COUPE, and every other weight. Also LIGHT DOUBLE, HACK and COACH, adapted to every style of carriage used in this vicinity. We have a large line of HORSE CLOTHING and everything used in the stable. • T ' repairs to your 'V, 1 present house? SPINDLES, GLASS WAGONETTES, CURTAIN WAGONETTES, ROCSAWAYS, DEPOTS, CABRIOLETS, BEACH WAGONS,SPEED CARTS, JUMPSEATS, GROCER WAGONS, LAUNDRY WAGONS, LIGHT PLATFORM DELIVERIES, MILK WAGONS, JAGGER WAGONS, FARM WAGONS, SINGLE AND DOUBLE, DELIVERY WAGONS, . MARKET WAGONS, EXPRESS WAGONS, &c, &c. ••••;; BIRDSALL & SON, Send for me -to \; give you figures. < I 1 Adjoining Town Hall, Monmoutli Street, f A. E.SMITH, 1 I FAIR HAVEN, N. J. <! A New Series of Shares RED BANK Building and Loan Association will be opened at tbelr rooms In tbo building of tho NATESINK HOOK AND LADDER CO., MECHANIC ST., RED BANK, RED BANK, N. J. K»K<<K<VH<«<KKK<KK<*;K«<^ Beauty and Profit \ , In Hazel Nut Bushes! I I Shrubbery does much to beautify a yard. When shrub- x bery can be made to 'afford a profit as well as beauty it becomes | doubly desirable. That's why those Hazel* Nut Bushes_which | I am selling will prove such an attraction to a yard. They have beautiful foliagE~lmd they wil 1 bear~abundant crops of Hazel Nuts, a single bush, when full grown, often yielding a bushel or more of nuts. The bushes are now of bearing age. They may bear a few nuts this year, but next year they ought to bear heavily. | ON Tuesday, April 10th, 1900, The price is $o cents each, delivered at my seed store at 40 Broad street, Red Bank. | at 7:30 o'cloot, P. M. Shaies In this series may be subscribed lor at this meeting; or at the oDBce ot tbe secretary any time between now nnd .April 10th, 1900. * XHOS. DAVIS, Jr., Secretary. JOHN T. LOVETTY ' 40 Broad Street, ' • 1 • ' • • • Red Bank, N. J. \ Who shall get your work—a printer whom you hope will,do the printing well, or a printer whom you know will do it well ? - Shall it be guesswork or certainty? THE RED BANK REGISTER printing office. conducts a "know" When you leave an order with us, >® there are two things you can depend upon implicitly: FIRST THING—The SECOND THING—It printing will be first class. will be done the minute it is promised. . •* •" Goodness, and promptness are worth thinking about. . THE RED BANK REGISTER. TELEPHONE 13. '^m^ik&u % A .Collarbone Dislocated. Last week Miss Abbie Woolley of Boiling J?at Seta Fire to the PavlU Blatauan Township Does not Pay Long Branch visited Mrs. H. B, SherVerv High Wages, • ion Hotel at Mievpori. ' • man of that place. The back porch of A quantity of fat was left on the Dr. Cyrus D. Knecht has been reap the Sherman residence is enclosed with kitchen range over night in the Pavilion pointed township physician of Matawan glass. In the floor of the stoop is a hotel at Keyport last week and a lot of township at a salary of $35 a year. John email trap door that is usually left open, green wood was left in the oven to dry.E, Kuhns, Jr., has been appointed townso that the heat from, the furnace in the ..During the night the-fat boiled over and ship treasurer at a salary of ¥30 a year. cellar may warm the enclosed stoop, . set fire to the wood that was in the oven. The salary of W. H. Coward, the over-, Mies Woolley stepped one foot in thec The fire spread to the woodwork near seer of the poor, and the salary of Wiltrap door and fell to the floor, dislocating the stove and burned through the parti- liam B.Dolan, the township clerk, have her collarbone. Miss Woolley is over tion to. a hall leading upstairs. Mr. e.ach been fixed at'|75 a year. Watson seventy, years old and the fall was a Chapey, the proprietor of the hotel, was Sfcilwagon, who was elected a surveyor severe shock to her, outside of the inawakened by the smoke and he gave an of the higflway in Matawan township jury received. '•' • i alarm. All the fire companies in the this Bpring, failed to qualify and John D, town responded and the fire was soon Ivins was appointed in his place. ' A Finger Cut Off, put out. The loss was about $100 and is . While on a-trip South after plant covered by insurance. The hotel adHew Church Officers. oysters, Capt. William Ellsworth of Keyjoins a lot of frame buildings and had Thomas Campbell, W. G. Conover, D. port caught the first finger of his riglit the fire gGt beyond the firemen's control S. Aumack, C. F. MacDonald, W. E. hand in the cogs of some of the machina big loss of property would have reMount, Dr. A. T. Applegate, Harvey ery on hia boat and the finger was so sulted*. . Vanderveer, Samuel Burke and Howard badly mangled that it had to be taken — • I o— • Bergen have been elected trustees of the off at. the second joint. The amputation An Alligator a s a Gift. Samuel Ship way of Bailey's Corner, in EngliBhtown Presbyterian church. Gar- was made at the Soldiers' Home at rett B. Conover has been elected church Hampton, Virginia. Capt. Ellsworth Wall township, has received a baby allitreasurer, Cyrenius Aumack and George brought 1,053 bushels of plant oysters gator from Capt. Samuel Ludlow of Prest have been elected ushers and Miss home with him. Como, who is spending the winter in Ella Conoveo^ has been elected church Florida. Mr. Shipway will try to raise A Broom Splint in Her Throat. organist.. •_ ^ the alligator. ; .._ _ _ Bessie Chinery, daughter of Bichard A Drug Store Sold. G. Chinery of Keyport, swallowed a, Discharged from Bankruptcy. Michael Garland of Seabright has re- Charles Pittenger, formerly of the broom splint last week two inches long. ceived a disoharge from bankruptcy, drug firm of Bacon & Pittenger of Free- The splint lodged in the eirl's throat just which enables him to resume business, hold, has bought the drag business of A. behind the palate and she had to.go to a E. Garamidge of Englishtown. . doctor to have it removed. free from all debts. A FIRE IN A HOTEL. OFFICIAL SALARIES. ® Have you tried the new Peach and Honey Syrup? v It's delicious. Just the thing to top off the pancake season with.. (I W. H. KNAPP, FRONT ST., Post Office Block, RED BANK. I •> THIRD ANNUAL SPRING OPENING OF 7tll 3 Our Great Spring Opening of Men's and Boys' Fine Clothing, Furnishings and Hats marks another epoch in our successful career. No matter what our past great successes have been, we could not sto£ and rest. The spirit of this store would not permit it. " Better than Ever'.' are the pass-words, and all previous efforts must be surpassed." Never have we shown a stronger, more complete or original line of Clothing, Furnishings and Hats. Never have we made our prices so low, considering the high standard of our offerings.. High Standard Fabrics, High Standard Tailoring, and particularly the Highest Standard in Style and Fit, is the character of our entire clothing line. Positively nothing will be found wanting, Every idea that is newest and best, nothing that the " swell" merchant tailor may suggest that • > we cannot duplicate equally as good and for much,less money. O U R P R I C E S A L W A Y S T H E L O W E S T . Yoil will find onr Spring Offerings just right for hearty business. The very people who have the least money to spend are the ones to whom these opportunities mean the most. BPRING TOP COATSl SPRING TOP COATS! Men's High Grade Spring Top Coats, sdm'e of the choicest styles of this season's make in fine English whipcords and extra fine Imported covert cloth, satin lined and guaranteed, silk sleeve lining made in the best of shape, worth $r2.oo, here only t Men's Spring Overcoats of fine grade coveijt cloth in the latest light colorin stylishly decigned and neatly """ " ~~ made, worth $6.50, here only.. Men's all wool Oxford Cheviot Spring Overcoats, full back, lined with farmers' satin,elegantlymade arid trim- " med, worth $10.00, here only. Men's Highest Grade, Spring Top Coats of the finest imported double cord coatings in light shades, as well-as the best quality, of French and Belgian, Oxford and Cambridge Vicuna clbths.lined throughout with the best grade of silk,cut and tailored to a high degree of perfection, no tailor can turn out better or more stylish garments for rtj I ft A f l $25.00, our price only W* UlUU I MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S SUITS Bought with confidence, t o w e a r satisfactory, t h a t ' s t h e record of every suit in our N e w Spring Stock. Remember, we offer y o u t h e suit t h a t l a s t s , t h e suit t h a t fits, t h e suit t h a t holdsjthe g r e a t e s t v a l u e for y o u r money. . • • • Men'B fine fancy worsted and Men's all wool Scotch mix-, serge Suits, splendidly made, Men's good every day busiMen's all woolfancycassimere One lot of Men's fancy cheviot ness Suits in Scotch mixture ture Suits as well as all wool in all the latest shades, only TrouserB, 20 patterns to select atid fancy cheviot, strongly and cheviot Suits, stylishly casaimere, in very neat this $5.98 from, at and nicely trimmed, only made and neatly trimmed, only season's latest shades, war$1.50 ranted to wear good, only Men's highest grade Suits, the $4.25 $3.79 best in the market, strictly all wool fancy worsteds in the very $5.00 Men'B strong wool Trousers at latest designs. Highest grade $1.00 black worsted in all styles, also Men's, fine fancy worsted Men's high-grade fancy wors- the. best blue serge manufacEqual to any $2.00 Trousers on Suits in all the latest checks Men's imported all wool black ted Suits in all the latest stripes, tured, cut and made in a firstthe market. and stripes, also strictly all worsted Suits in Sacks, Cut- checks and Scotch plaids, siDgle class thorough manner, stylish, wool blue Berge in single or aways and Double iBreastcd, or double breasted, veBfc hand- nobby and strictly high-grade, Best Never Rip Trousers, every double breasted, elegantly tail- made and trimmed in the best somely tailored. and stylishly equal id every respect to the pair warranted, at ored and handsomely trimmed, of shape, sold all over for $15.00, cut, ft large variety to select made to order garment, qualities that no other clothing house our price worth $13.00, only 69c. is selling for less than $20.00, from, only our price only $9.00 $7.98 $10.50 All Wool Kneo P a n t s , 3 9 c . TROUSERS. $12.00 TROUSERS. Men's high grade Trousers, imported worsted in various stripes and Bhades, very dressy, best workmanship, $3.98 I Men's dress Trousers, worth $5.00, for this sale •:• $2.50 Men's fine Trousers in neat designs and patterns. A bargain at $4.00, will go at $1.98 * A Strong Knee Pants, 19c. "• Seeing is free, it won't cost you a penny to look through our stock and see how much you can get for so little money. You will not be urged to ' buy, your judgment will tell you. . ' ,. ' • •> * MEN'S ANDBOYS9 HATS. FURNISHINGS. We havo the newest styles in Derbys, Fedoras and Alpines in the moat effective colors and Variety of assortment means much or little, according to the scope displayed. Our new shapes. YOUMAN'S, YOUNG'S, DUNLAP'S BLOCKS. stock of Gents' Furnishings waB selected with a view to cover the field fully, and that is why a 98c, $1.25. $1.48, $1,75 and $1.98. cubtomer can como hero with a certainty of securing what he is looking for. We have not only tho variety, but tho assortment is larger. A lino of goods with us means a perfect line, with all Sole Agents for Young's Hats. . minor grades represented. You have tho pick, preference and scope at this storo as at few other Leading Brands of Highest Grade SHIRTS AND NECKWEAR.Jgjj places, and ^om such a wido range you aro suro to bo suited and satisfied. [ ADLER GLOVES. . The finest line of imported CAMBRIC SHIRTS for summer wear, the real thing in fancy J ^ s t r i p e s , from • • ./ . ° The regular $1.50 Adler Glove in all the lateBt Spring Shades'will go at thiB Bnlo for m •I* 49c. to 98o. MEW'S AND BOYS" CAPS. 95c. YOUNG MEN'S SUITS. I I OUR CHILDREN'S LINE. Children's Clothing line ia complete in its evory dotail. Wo hnvo a largo variety of tho nobbiest Young Men's Suits AgesOur Tho largest assortment of Mon'n and Boys' Summer Capa in from 8 to 10 yoara. Prices ranging from 98c. t o $4.08. ovor shown in this town, at tho lowest possible prices imaginable tho most effective colors and the latest styles that over WBB Wo invlto mothers to look over our stock before going else' seon horo before, prices from You aro cordially invited to look us over and wo will leave tho whero. Nevor havo wo shown suoh a mngniflcont lino boforo. AH the latest novoltioB in Vestco Suits will bo shown horc at rest to you. A nobby Suit for prices lo wor than elsewhere. 'Wido-nwako mothers will do well 15c. to 49c. $3.98 to oall early and got your piok of the best patterns. We deserve your valuable patronage because we protect your interests by Riving- you butter goods than any other store for less money, and are most careful that in every detail in our goods is absolutely correct before we permit it to leave our store. We give you the benefit of every mercantile force and power that we control and sell only the best for the least money. A cull from you, whether you buy or not will be appreciated. Every »Hi£le in our store is guaranteed as represented. If for any rcuson you arc not satisfied with your purchase, we cheerfully take back our goods land refund the money* ?R$mcmbcr the date pf tji<!'opening : ' * •I* EAGLE CLOTHING COMPANY, 7 Broad Street, RED BANK, N. J. , • -y ACCIDENTS WITH HORSES. 1 ' TiUientotheAsylum. " -A. SCHMIDT. D. Conover Vender veer of Freehold, who lived on his farm at Pleasant Valley until a few years ago, was taken to the asylum at Trenton on Saturday,'suffer50a Broad Street, ing with a deranged mind.. Mr. .Conover's son-Charles died several years ago RED BANK, NEW JERSEY. at the age of 21 years. The young man had "bright prospects in life and his father was greatly distressed over his Parlor Sets, Draperies, Cushions and death. His mind has been gradually - .. Mattresses made to order and . ,, made over.' . failing ever since, due to brooding over the loss of his son. • SHADES AND AWNINGS A SPECIALTY Bttnatcavs, Upsets and Vaviou ^ / Jf- Other Mishaps. Sell Insurance and Real Charles Bullock of Allentown was Estate, and Effect Loans. backing his Jiorse out of the sheds last . week when the horse got scared at a fallRepresent Home Insuring board and struck Mr. Bullock with its front feet. He received Beveralin% •j dries. ance Company of New . Howard Height of Manasquan was out driving last week when one of the York, and other Leading wheels of his buggy ran up on the flower Telephone 32B. mound at the Sea Girt station and the Companies. buggy upset. The horse broke loose All kinds repairing at reasonable prices. Keyport's New Saloon, frOm the wagon, but ran only a shor Wheri the present term of court opened distance before it was caught Th< New Jersey, Sea Shore and Monmouth County, in January Joseph Harris of. Keyport buggy was,broken. applied for a saloon license. The matThe horse of George Heuser of MataReal Estate for sale, and Choice Furnished wan got scared at a train at Cliff wood ter dragged along until last Thursday, I have bouses to rent, furnished or unfurnished, last week and turned short, upsetting when the license was granted by Judge in all parts of tbe town. Rent from SB a month to Cottages for rent, season of year. the wagon. Mr. Heuser was thrown Conover, whV stated that a numerously any price you wish to pay. Honey to loan in sums from $600 to $4,500. out but was not injured. The horse signed petition had been received from I am representtosr the United States Casualty broke loose from the wagon and ran to property owners in the neighborhood of Company, which insures you. for $5,000 afjalnst acthe proposed saloon' asking that the cidents for 85 a year. , . Keyport, taking the railroad track » license be granted. • . part of the way.' The horse of John Butler of Keyport W. A. HOPPING, RED BANK, . RUMSON ROAD, MONMOUTH BEACH, . was standing in front of the post office at Vredeaburgh Rifles Incorporate. Real Estate, Xnieas Ilulldino. that place last week with Mr. Butler in The Vredenburgh Rifles of Freehold SEABRIGHT, ' HIGHLANDS OF NAVESINK,RED BANK, N. J. the wagon when a stage team with bells has been incorporated so as to take title on passed it. The horse got scared at to the property which they recently A. Communication. the bells and reared and plunged until it bought for the erection of an armory, LITTLE SILVER POINT AND SHREWSBURY RIVERS, MR. EDITOR—Allow me to speak a few broke loose from the wagon. When the The incorporators are Joseph A. Yard, horse was grit under control it had John A. D.eRoche, J. Edward Soden, words in favor of Chamberlain's Cough : ESTABLISHED 1873. . • turned around completely in the shafts, Joseph S. Thompson and J. W. Roome. Remedy. I suffered, for'three years with the bronchitis and could not sleep its head being where its tail ought to be. An E a r Cut b y a Fall. ' at nights. I tried several doctors and The only damage done to the buggy was Benjamin Higgins, son of Dr. A. S. various patent medicines, but could get AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA a torn curtain, but the harness was badly Higgins of Manasquan, fell against the nothing to give me any relief until my broken. bannisters while playing at his homelast wife got a bottle of this valuable mediEdward Soden of Freehold left his •' No one can say of our statehorse standing untied' last week. I t got week. His head struck the bannisters cine, which has completely relieved and one ear was so badly cut that' sev- me.—W. S. BROOKJIAN, Bagnell, Mo. frightened and ran away but was caught ments that they are all wind or eral stitches were necessary to close up This remedy is for sale by Charles A before any damage was done. ;he wound. ' Minton, Druggist, 8 Broad street. that any part of them is wind. A team driven by William Humphreys, a coachman for M. H/Houghton of Mon We have too much at stake to mouth Beach, ran away last week, Mr. care to blow bubbles about our Humphreys was thrown out of the wagon and two of his ribs were broken. Upholsterer and Paper Hanger ALLAIRE&SON, 20 Broad Street, RED BANK, N; Houses to Rent, • • • • • • • • ( • . • • . All Wind. Swallowed Wire With a Cracker, Miss Christine Curtis of Manasquan bought a quantity of soda crackers at that place last week and while eating one something lodged in her throat. Dr. A. 8. Higgins was called in but he was unable to remove the obstruction and Miss Curtis was taken to the Long Branch hospital. There the obstruction was removed and it proved to be a piece of wire. Miss Curtis is recovering. Why Not Save Money? MERCANTILE CO-OPERATIVE BANK • > i RED BANK, N E W J E R S E Y . . An Additional Teacher a t Keyport. The first grade in the Keyport publio school has so increased in number that an extra teacher has been engaged for the remaining two months of the school year. The new teacher is Miss Florence Jennings of Keyport. She will receive ' a salary of $i!0 a month. ,, long experience. , _• fit up their new home proportionate to their means. Families who have been keeping house always find that ^something is needed from time to time, and our great variety of goods and the low prices make our store as attractive a place for them as for thosei.who . are making their first essay at housekeeping. For farmers the same conditions exist. The new things which are desirable are found hire as fast as they come out. The old standard goods in tools and farm; equipment, in hardware, for fencing, in .field and,,garden seeds, etc., are here. Farmers, no less than housekeepers, like our methods of doing business. • TllU RicaiHTlcn (loos all kinds of printing <vu4 <1OOB it <[uio!t and good. Tho price Iff Iow4or tho grado of work done. ' The young couple who are just beginning housekeeping find our store a'place where they can Manasquan's Night Marshal. Robert T, Blain bna boon appointed a night marshal at Manasquan at a snlary of $100 a year. He will be on duty from seven o'clock till ten o'clock at night and on Saturday nights from so von o'clook till midnight. , A Dig Salo of Capons. ! ElmorPolhomunof AHontown rooontly Bold 900 cnpono that averaged 8J pounds each. Mr. PoIlioinuB hna'sold^ovnor elx hundred dollars' worth of poultry during tho past year., ^ 1 . .... on modern methods, with attentive clerks, and our goods are selected with a knowledge born of The Cow Was a Wedding Gift. Charles Kipp of Tennent lost a valuable cow last week. The cow was specially prized by both Mr. and Mrs. Kipp becnuse it was a wedding gift from Mrs. Kipp's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Quackenbush. »• . f 1 and 13 Broad Street* Red Bank, N. J. our ^methods, our clerks, and our goods. We keep a store that is up to the times, we conduct it • i • •»' AT THE CITV WARHET, • • , Our friends are the housekeepers and the farmers of Monmouth county. They like our store, Empty Buildings Burned. • An ice house at Spring Lake and a large barn adjoining, owned by the Spring Lake ice company, were burned down last week. The buildings were both empty. It is not known how the fire started. , • ' • DOREMUS BROS., First Class Meat and Groceries ! Things for Housekeeping. Things for Farmers. Trouble From a Former Accident. Austin Wilson of Holnidel fell on the crusted snow several weeks ago and struok on his left shoulder. At first ho felt no bad effects from the fall, but a few days afterward his left arm became very stiff and the injury still causes him trouble, , Closed on Account of SlcUncss Tho blacksmith sliop of W. 0. and H. M. Broyvor of Turlioy has boon closed on account of oicknesa from grip of thopropriotora. Every momber of both families nro also sick with tlio grip. You'll find it so in case of our Teas, of which qualities and prices are not touched elsewhere. It can be done without incommoding yonrself if you will be,, systematic and economical, but little can be accomplished in this world in any line without system. First make a start by opening an ' account with the A Hothouse Burned Down. A hothouse on the Loda Lohsen place OF NEW JERSEY. f near Keyport caught fire last week Then promise yourself that you will lay by something each week, even if it is only while the family was at dinner and the a few cents, and whenever you have One Dollar or more, depogil it. In this way fire was so far advanced before it was .IV: "ou will be surprised to see how fast it will accumulate. '' ^ discovered that nothing could- be done Four per cent interest paid commencing the first'of^achjnoj to save the building. All the plants in the hothouse were destroyed. The fire Safe Deposit Boxes to rent, broke out in the opposite end of the hot$3.00 per year and upwards. '. house from where the stove is located |R. J . E. 8AYKE, President. JOHN KING, Cashier. WM. H. HENDRICKSON, Asa't Cnsbler. and what caused the fire is not known. , business. You can always depend on what, we say being true. During the present year our store will be a better place to deal than ever before; for we are ! never willing to stand still, but are always trying to do just a little better than ever before. i M i , t' HENDRICKSON & APPLEGATE, POST-OFFICE BLOCK, RED BANK, N. J. lappened 1o be'dolnglihe" same found watch".' I "must get'ft out flfsVlhlng on )f Switzerland as they for a month be Monday morning." The urchin; grasping the situation, ras .. their almost dally companion. With the' frankness of American .wo- ran away, grinning. On Sunday Hamlyn again bethought, men, they accepted his .attentions graciously, and, finding him a pleasant himself of the watch. H "I had better study the ticket," he ittendant, enrolled bim In their servsaid, "and see what I shall have to ces without further ado. Miss Safford generally accompnnled pay.".. Mice wherever she went and showed He fumbled in his waistcoat pocket. mite as much eagerness to "do" every It was not there! He tried the others, ilace thoroughly as her niece. It was with the same result. j'WIth growing >nly on rare occasions, when the elder uneasiness he searched In every pocket ady was obliged to admit that she of the clothes he had worn oh the Satwas "too tired for anything," that urday, but the pawn ticket was not to Hamlyn had a chance of taking Miss be found.. Valentine out alone. "I must have left it at my chambers," The constant companionship, how- he decided at last "It ls'very careless iver,' had brought about the usual re- of me. I hope my.clerk won't find it." sult Hamlyn was not an inflammable On' Monday morning he got up earliman. He had reached the mature age er than usual and drove down to the 30—not unsought iafter—without Temple in a hansom. His clerk bad laving succumbed to feminine charms. already arrived. Hamlyn searched all But there was something about the over the table carefully, then in all the fair American which fascinated him drawers, but could not find the ticket. in spite of. himself. Finally he summoned the clerk. Today, as she came into his room, a "Have'3you. moved any papers?" he, iDrfect vision of freshness and loveli- asked ratber irritably. ness in the gloomy atmosphere of the "No, sir; I haven't touched" a thing." A PAWN. MATED Temple, Hamlyn was conscious of the "You haven't by any chance found a When a man Is about to entertain a certain shyness and reserve In her ticket, I Blippoae?" pursued Hamlyn. "No, sir. What kind of a ticket have very charming girl whom he Is anxious manner that be bad not noticed before. "I don't believe,! ought to come here you lost?" to Impress and suddenly finds" that, "It doesn't matter," he replied Impawith the exception of a lew coppers, iy myself," she liaid as she closed the he has no money in his pocket, he may ioor. "I wonder what Aunt Catherine tiently. "It's of no importance.". Putting on bfs hat, Hamlyn hurried surely be forgiven the use of a few vould say to it." "You are late," said Hamlyn. "I Into Fleet street to the pawnshop. strong ejaculations. Sucli was the plight' of Bverard Hamlyn at 10 min- lave been waiting impatiently for "I want to" redeem the watch I left liere on Saturday," he announced. utes to 1 on a certain Saturday after- oil." "Am I, really?" replied Alice. "What/ "Where is your ticket, sir?" said the noon, He had been so absorbed 111 - man. reading the brief of an Important case a the- time, then?" , which was to be heard in the courts He pulled at his •watch chain me- "I have mislaid It," replied Hamlyn. on Monday that he had forgotten the ihanlcally, forgetful of his escapade, "But It's all right) You remember me, emptiness of .his pocket. At 1 o'clock .nd disclosed'the bare swivel. He'col- T expect. The watch belongs to me, Alice Valentine, an American girl with ored slightly as he realized his mis- and I want it now." whom he had formed a deep friend- take, and felt her eyes upon him, but "I am very sorry, sir, but you can't ship, was coming to see what a bar- answered lightly: have.it without the ticket." rister's chambers in the Temple looked Ilamlyn muttered an exclamation of "About 20 minutes past 1,1 fancy." like, and she was also to be taken out She was walking round the room, impatience. to lunch. lancing at the ponderous looking 'But suppose I have lost-Mt What >oolcs and the papers tied with pink then?" . • The worst was that there were only ape, getting, as she expressed It, the "I will give you a form of declaraten minutes to rectify the mistake. He 'atmosphere" of the place. tion to be made before a magistrate." wrote out a check hurriedly and then "It must be just lovely to work "Is there no other way?" said Hamremembered that time would not per- ere," she said. "Everything seems so lyn, realizing the trouble and annoy' mlt him to go to the bank to cash it. Id and historic. I believe I should ance this would cause. His clerk was gone, and the Temple nly have to sit here a few hours a "No, sir," said the pawnbroker. "I was wrapped in Its usual Saturday ay and I should become a lawyer by am afraid there is not." afternoon peacefulness. ireathing the air." There was no time to waste. • He had Without a hat he rushed over to 'Which reminds me," said Hamlyn, to be in court early, as his case was Harcourt buildings to see if his friend 'that I have been breathing air quite among the first on the lists. It was no Anderson was In the chambers. He ong enough and want^lunch. Where use stopping to argue the matter. He could rely upon him for a couple of •nail ire go?" must go before a magistrate and sign pounds. Alice Valentine hesitated. the declaration as soon as possible. But the fates were against Hamlyn. "Look here," she said at last. "I want Returning to his chambers, he put on Anderson was out and the doors were o say something to you. You have his robes and was soon lost in contemlocked. >een taking me about such a lot, and I plation of the business in handRealizing that there was nothing for have done nothing for you. I feel real About an hour after his visit to the It but to go to the bank, he hurried mean. I want you to let me stand you pawnbroker's shop. Alice Valentine along 'up the court into Fleet street, lunch today." drove up in a cab to the same door. meaning to hall a hansom. But as he He shook his head laughingly. "You She haq found the pawn ticket lying arrived there the clock struck 1, and forget," he said, "that you are my on Hamlyn's table on the Saturday he knew that he could not get to the guest. But I want you to say where afternoon and ' had appropriated It, bank and back under 20 mluutes. Alice you would llko to go." meaning to redeem the watch and send would never forgive him if he were not it back to him as soon as possible. She He namesl a well known restaurant at his rooms to receive her. .n Piccadilly, where she knew the was rather nervous at going into the Suddenly his eye was caught by the prices were ruinous. shop, but she was not the kind of girl thfee brass balls hanging over a shop "No," she said; "don't let us go to allow her own feelings to stand ID almost opposite. The sight suggested here. Will you take me to one of the way of any project she wished to a new idea to his mind, and he prompt; those little Bohemian places you told carry through; so, putting.on an air of ly acted upon It. In another moment me of. where you get a table d'hote unusual haughtiness, she entered the he rushed across the road and, enter- lunch for 18 pence? I should love to little compartment and handed In the Ing the shop, handed his 80 guinea ;o. It would be a new experience." ticket. hunter over the counter. "You look too smart," he replied, "I want the watch, please," Bhe said. "How much?" said the clerk, eying •lancing at her admiringly, "but I tell the hatless and breathless Harulyn you what I will do—we will split the. The pawnbroker's assistant looked her up and down carefully. When he somewhat suspiciously. difference and go to a kind of semi- had, as It were, sized her completely, "Oh, I only wauted a fiver," replied fashionable place where you shall Bee he inquired dryly, "Where did you get Everard hurriedly. all sorts and conditions of people and this?" "Have you got n card on you?" asked hear a band." ' Alice flared up Indignantly. "That the clerk,- thinking that he was on the Once or twice during lunch, when Is no business of yours. Tell me what track of a swell mobsinan. conversation flagged, Hamlyn noticed Unversed iu the ways of pawnbro again the thoughtful expression on her I have to pay and give me the watch." 'Not so fast," said the young man. lters, Hamlyn pulled out his case and face. At last he took' the matter up. "You must answer one or two queshanded him a card. "Tell me," lie said, "what you are tions first." "All right, sir," said the clork, seeing thlnlihii; of." He went away and after a whispered the name and address and noticing the "I wfiii thinking," sbe replied slowly, confabulation returned with a gray . name corresponded with the Initials on the watch. "I beg your pardon, sir,"and "of how Icould help some one who has bearded old man, who was polite, but firm. he hastily Dlled up a ticket aud count- boon very'good to iuc." "Not a. difficult matter, surely, for "I am sorry, madam, but I cannot aled out £5. "Have you a penny for the you." low you to redeem this pledge until ticket, please?" "It is very difficult," she said, "un- you inform me how this ticket came InHnmlyu impatiently threw down a copper and fairly, bolted out of the der the circumstances. The person I to your possession." "Mound it," said Alice, shop. The people in Fleet street stared want to help is poor and, I think, very "Allow jmc to Inform you, then," said at him with amazement, and a gutter proud." She was looking down at the table- tho pawnbroker sternly, "that you are nrab with whom he had collided shouted, "Who are yer shovin oC?" as he cloth aud Htudiously avoiding his eye,*.' committing a very grave offense. By "Can I be of any assistance?" "he attempting to obtain the watch you lay crossed the road. yourself open to criminal proceedings." Now, It happened that Alice Valen- wld. "Yo-.i? W h y " - She laughed. "Yes, "But," said Alice, "I am a friend of tine was just nt that moment passing , down Fleet street on her way to the perhnpH you can. I will think about it the gentleman to whom the watch belongs." Temple. She had arrived somewhat and let you know." There was a new sympathy in her earlier tbnn she had Intended, for she "Come, come," replied the man; "that upheld the traditions of womanhood voice and nianuor, and Ilamlyn felt a won't do nt all. A gentleman who mad dealre to take her there and then called himself Mr. Hamlyn was here with regard to unpunctuallty. "It would never do," Bho said to her In his arms and cover her face with about an hour ago endeavoring to got the watch himself." self, "to be qu^o punctual. He would kisses. But thero was no opportunity then to think I was too Impatient." "Mr. Ilamlyn been hero this mornSo, tlininfe herself to arrive at the tell her of his love. Immediately alter Ing!" cried Alice. She had never susTomplo about ,1:15 o'clock, sho was lunch they were obliged to hurry off to pected that ho would be able to redeem strolling leisurely along when Bin meet Miss SalTord at a matinee, and his watcli so soon. caught sight of Hamlyn rushing wild Hamlyn had no further chance of a "lMtev send for a policeman,* sugly out of a pawnbroker^ shop. For a tete-a-tete with Alice, but he arranged gested the assistant. , moment the ludicrous side of the sit satisfactorily a meeting for Monday "Hold your tongue!" sold his master. uation struck her very forcibly, nn< afternoon, when ho determined to put Then, turning to Allco Valentine, ho she laughed softly to herself. Bu bin fato to the teBt. said:. "I do not wish to bo hard upon gradually, ns she realized the full sig"You wiM not forget," ho said nt you, but I Insist on an explanation. I nificance; of Jho action, her nmusemoii parting, "to lot mo help you In tho mat- will Bend over to tho address on tho gave place to pity, ter you mentioned?" ticket, and If your story is truo Mr. "Poor boy!" ohe'murmured. "I ba "No," she replied, with a singular Hninlyn will corroborate it. Harvey, not tho faintest idea he wan hard up look on her face; "I will not forget." Bend tho boy qvor tp Queen's Bench Aud to think that I have let Mm epci AB Everard walked homo ho recalled walk mid ask Mr. Hamlyn to como Bueh a lot of money In taking her tones,' her tnc.c, tho fair, unfilled here Immediately," about. I must get even with him some cheeks; sweet mouth, earnest brows, "Mr. Hamlyn coming lioro!" cried hQW." , ., and eyes of softest (Ire. Thero wna that Allco unguardedly. "Oh, I must go i t Thero was a very tender spot In lie in hor lodk which Hiitlnllcd him, onccl" heart for tho tnjl, clover young barrio • Ho WIIH awakened from his rovcrlo "I cannot allow It," Bold the pnwuter, wbo had shown HO plainly his pro by nn urchin Inquiring what o'elocic it brokor. ,"You must wait. If you ro eronco for her above nil other wotnon was. For tho second time that dny bo fiiMo, I lmvo no option but to call a pomechanically tugged nt his wntcl llcemnu." • Allco Valentino and her aunt,, tyll Safford, wore making a tour of ffiurop< chain. It looks could kill, tho pawnbroker aud lmd met Hamlyn lint,of nil at "Confound HI" ho exclaimed an ho would lmro died on tho npnt an Allco, hotel In Gonovn, Ho had rondoret ronlltsod liln loon. "I nevtir know tlia with the nlr of n-trngnfly uueon, flubtlicinji .number ofjilvllUloa find.118 '" lt_wn} eiich a milnniico to bo wlthout-i mitted to _H«o_jmilBulty_o£ bolnjr. on- Recompense. What ta the price of manhood J What sale does honor. Bringt Does pure, untarnished character Count naught in lifettae'B ringf Do bauble scions rulo usf Does riot,, ruin reign, The purest soul to trample -down. To crush, dertroy, rend twain? Is there no truth or honor To COUBC mankind to stay The all consuming thirst for lust That lurcB them far away? Does honest labor cheapen The mold whsrein we're cast? \'fr Is black, corrupt impurity •'::• The .flag flung from life's tnastf ..;*& Forget not One is watching .'•;£• Our, actions day by day, • . ;'i And riches gained at such a cost He surely will repay; v For though mankind is Judging Appearances, poor art, • Tho God, the just, the righteous Judge, In6pcd8 our fnmost heart. • Condemn not, then, I pray thec, • For thou, thyself, come day May seek for mercy .from thy Judge, Wliosa verdict none can sway. And temper all thy judgments With love and common sense. The end well merits all 'twill bringj It Berves full recompense. Art Store. vey kept watch and ward over A quarter of an hour later Everard Hamlyn jumped but of a hansom and hurried Into the shop. He was an Impetuous person, and be had not waited to change his robes, but had come straight away, in wig and gown from the law courts. He was met in the passage by Harvey, who had been A splendid showing of the awaiting his arrival with keen Interest "There's a woman in here," he said, new embroidered couch pointing to the parlor, "who says she's a friend of yours and has found your pillows this week. pawn ticket, but I suspect"— "Out of the way!" cried • Hamlyn, thrusting the officious young man on one side and rushing Into the room. ! "Alice, by all that's wonderful!", he exclaimed, and then, seeing that her bosom was heaving convulsively, ho put,'his arm around her and inquired tenderly what had happened. BED BANK. "They have been so rude and Insult- 5 0 BROAD ST., ing," she sobbed. Hamlyn waited for no further exDoes It Pay to Make planation, but, seizing Harvey, by the * throat, shook him until the unfortunate Yoar Own Bread? ., youth had not a breath in his body. A number of families that used Then, turning to the older man, be to make all their own bread .have cried sternly, "What do you mean by given it up during the last few insulting this lady?" months, and now buy of us. The pawnbroker, discovering his misOur bread is always light; it's always fresh; it's always sweet. take, was all apologies, but Hamlyn's You can get our bread from imper was still up. your grocer oi? we will deliver it, Nothing could Justify rudeness to a lady, be said, and he insisted on an abCHILD'S BAKERY, ject apology from the crestfallen assistBROAD STREET, RED BANK, N.J. ant. . Then he took Alice back to his rooms In the Temple. When they were alone, he put his arm around her and said impulsively: "Oh, my darling, how sweet of you to try to get my watch back for me. Did you do it because you care? Tell me, darling—I love you!" ...:... ; . Call on us. You will not "It was very silly of me, I know,'1 she said softly and shyly, "but I thought you were poor, and—oh, I' regret it. You will be very glad wanted to help you." of it. We do excellent work, "I am not poor," he said smilingly; "at least not very poor. I have a thou- and our charges are only reason sand a year, and we might manage, on able. We work on the princithat" " * He took out. the watch and held it ple that a satisfied customer is before her eyes. our best advertisement. We "I shall never look at It," he said, 'without thinking that I won you furnish estimates of any kind through it."- •" ' "~ . Miss C. I. Stephenson, When You Need a Plumber promptly and cheerfully. THE REGISTER print's more news than any other Monmouth county paper ; prints it better and prints il more accurately. The paper costs $l;50 a year. 16 and 18 Front St., Red Bank, N. J. SABATH.-& WHITE, Letter Files at 20Cents. Wd have a first-class letter file, which we have been selling for 25 cents. Handy, durable, and well worth the money. But we need the room for other goods, and so will sell them for a time at 20 cents. TETLEY & SON, NEXT TO POSTOFFICE, RED BANK. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • »••••••••••••••»••••••••••••»•••••••••••••••••»•••••» Fine Carriages! At my carnage store, nearly opposite the Globe hotel, Red Bank, will be found a complete line of Carriages and Wagons of all kinds, including . RUNABOUTS,' SURRIES, BUGGIES, TRAPS, SPEEDING WAGONS, BUSINESS WAGONS, SPINDLE WAGONS, JUMPSEATS, ETC. *** These wagons are the new styles, well V. built, very desirable in every way, and very .'.;; reasonable in price. *• T. B.GOWDY, Nearly Opposite Globe Hotel, :: FRONT STREET, RED BANK, N. J. CBEREFFS SALE.—By virtue of a FAMOUS DUELING GROUND. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COM. \ i PPLEGATE &H9PE, O writ of fl. fa. Ib me directed. Issued out ot the : '..' • . P A N Y . : • : • • ••'••. ..• . ' • : : • • • Court of Chancery ol One State of New Jersey, will On and after November 19th, 1899, ; •.. Picturesque Portion of the Xete Orbe exposed to sale »t public yendue on HONDA?, TRAINS WILL LEAVE BED BANK . HE 83d DAY Of APRIL, 10OU. between the hours leans Park Known <tb the Oaks. of 12 o'clock anil 5 o'clock (at a o'clock,) In tbe or New York, 7 37.0 23 a. nt.; 2 68. 6 08 p. in., RED BANK, One of. the most picturesque and afternoon of said day, at tbe Court House at Free. week days. Sundays, 9 48 a. m.; 6 06 p. m. bold, ID the townsbip of Freehold, county of Mon- " Newark. 7 87.0 23 a. m.; 2 68,, 6 08 p. m., week MONMODTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY. beautiful spots In Hew Orleans and re-, moutb, New Jersey. days. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.;-6 03 p.m. plete withhistorical incidents is the FRED W. HOPE. All tract or parcel of lands and premises, situate, " Elizabeth, 9 23 a. m.; 2 58, 0 08 p. m., week OUN S. APPLEGATE. lying and being In tbe Township of Atlantic, In tbe 11" Sundays, 0 4ia. m.r 6 06 p m. Oaks, the Ghenes d'Allard, as they pHARLEB H. IVINSj County of Monmouth and State of New Jersey. Rariway. 9 28 a. m.: 2 68. 6 08 p m., week \J COUNSELLOR AT LAW, were called, of old. They are now a Now is the time to have all the fences fixed before Described on the Map of tbe Domain of the North days. SundayB, 9 13 a. m.i fl 06 p. m . . . snows and freezing ground sot In. Delays are American Phalanx, as Lots No. s!9 and No. 80 made Rooms 8 and 4, Register Building, Woodbridfje. 8 23 a. tn.; 2 68, 6 08 p. m., week BROAD STREET, part of the City.park and a favorite tbe dangerous. Let me put you up some of the Perfeo September,'1855, by Alfred walling, ana intended " days. nun HANK, N. J. Sundays 0 43 a. m.; Q 06 p. m. resort for the. children of the Creole tion Spring Lock Win Ftwx and all the trouble of to be Hied us ol record In tbe office of tbe clerk of " Perth Amboy. 0 23 a. m.; 2 58, 6 08 p. m.; week DMUND WILSON,mending fences Is past for tbe next twenty years. the County of Monmouth; lot No. 29, beginning at • days.' Sundays, 9 48 a. m.: 6 00 p. m. quarterB, dozens of swings being at- I can build them any height, as many wires and a point IB Hie centre or Junction Road at tbo s w COUNSELLOR AT I.AW, South Amboy, 9 23a. m.;2 58,fl08 p. m,; week (Successor to NevlUB 4 Wilson). tached to the massive live oaks, which stays as you want, and furthermore every wire Is corner of Lot No. 80; thence running (1) along the " days. Sundays, 9 43 a.m.: 6 06 n. m. RED BANK, N.J, tbe best heavy galvanized steel wire thnt can be centre ot that road n 62 degs 22 ms e 18 ens 5 Iks to shade several acres of ground. Offices: POST-OFFICE BUILDING. made. Send'and get circulars and prices and learn a point in tbe centre of same road; thence (2) along " Matawan, 9 23 a. m.; 2 68, 6 08 p. m., week days. Sundays. 9 is a. in.; 8 08 p.m. 1 The land was formerly the plantation more of the best feneoof the nineteenth century. tbe same road B 71 degs 5 ms e 9 chn (I- Iks to a point " Middletown.fl 23a. m.; 2 68,0 (fe p.m.. week TOHN S, APPLEGATE, JR. Estimates cheerfully given on either form or lawn in the center of the same rood at the n wcornerof days. Sundays, 9 43 n. m.; 6 00 p. m. V SOLICITOR AND MASTER IN CHANCERY. of Louis Allard, a very learned French- 'enclng. ". • wood lot No. 3 ; thence (3) along tbe west bound " Trenton and Philadelphia, connecting at EahIn offices of Applegate & Hope, Bed Bank, y . J . man of early New Orleans.. It was wood lot No. 3ssi7 degrs 38 HIS e 2J clip 92 Iks to the way, 9 23, a.m.; 0 08 p. m, Sundays, 9 43 . GEORGE N.CONKLlJf, middle of Yellow Brook, to a point opposite a cedar R. ELLA PRENTISS UPHAM. n. tn.; 6 1)6 p. m. bought by the great philanthropist, stake on tho a bant of that Brook; thence (i) up that Lona Branch, Point PleaBant and Intermediate John McDonough, and finally passed- Agent for Monmouth Co. Middletown N. J . Brook the several courses thereof to a point In tbe " stations, 10 80 a. m.; 2 20. i 54.6 25 p. m., week DISEASES OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN. "> some at tbe s e corner of lot No. 28, and opposite a days Sundays, 11 23 a. m.; 0 60 p. m. Do not , ELECTRICITY. "» ilnto the hands of the city and was cedar stake on the n bank ot Yellow Brook; thence stop at Asbury Park or Ocean Grove on Sundays. [lOOMfl. REQI8TKE BOILDING, RED BANK, N, J. (5) along tbe eastern boundary of lot No. 28, n 27 dedicated a's a park. Its most eventful 1 dews 88 ms w 33 cbs 75 Iks to tbe beginning. Con- " Toms Klvert Bay Head and intermediate sta- t Red Bank Office Tuesday and Friday afternoons. history was in advance of its park tions, 10 80 a. m.; week daya. taining 79 1-10 acres. R. R. J . BORDEN, " Trains leave Philadelphia, Broad Street, (via Rundays, when it was practically -waste SURGEON DENTIST. way) for Bed Bank, at B 50,1110 a. m,.; 8 20 Also lot No. 80, Beginning at a point In the County MUSIC HALL BUILDING, , RED BANK, N . J . land. Lying as it did on the shell road p.m.weekdays. Sundays,i02p.m. Road at then e corner ot lot No. 28: thence running (1) along that toad n !9 degb 83 ms o 8 chs.21 Iks: Trains leave New York for Red Bank, from West 'articular attention given to the administration o( to Bayou St. John and Lake Pontchar23d.Btreet station, 8 55 a. m.; 12 40, 8 25, 4 65 Anaesthetics. . Will save money by ex- Ibetce («) along that road n 64 degs e 7 cbs 18 Iks; p. m; Sundays. 9 25 a. m.; 4 55 p. m. train, within easy distance of the city, !bence (3) along that road a 75 degs 30 ms e i cbB; R. J. D. THROCKMORTON, From Debrosses street, 0 00 a. m.; 12 50, 3 40 Jbence (4) along that road n 0i degs 30 ma e 2 chs, 31 aming my stock of plows, yet deserted ana uninhabited, It affordDENTAL SURGEON. 5 10 p. in., week days. Sundays, 9 45' a. m.; lbs to the middle of tbeoond ot tbe bridge over Hop OFFICE: ed the very spot- for the duels so freBrook; thence |6) along that road n 65 (legs 15 ms e harrows and cultivators 5 15 p. m. SSchaSOlks; thence (0) along that road nW degs 51 No. 5 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J. From Cortlandt street, 0 00 a. m.; 12 50,8 40, quent among the fiery Creoles and no ms e 11 chs 32 Its, to a hickory tree on tbe side ol a before buying elsewhere. 6 10, p. m., week dnjs. Sundays, 0 45 a. m.; R. F. L. WRIGHT, bank; tbence fl) down tbe bank to tbe foot thereof less fiery Americans of New Orleans 5 15p.m. SURGEON DENTIST, n 8(1 degs e 97 Iks s thence (8) along tbo foot of tbat •••••'. I keep in stock. H, J. B. HUTCHINSON, . J. E . WOOD, in antebellum days. Here, under the N. S. bank n 84 d e p e 8 chs'87 Iks; thence (9) along the General Manager. Gen. Pusseneer Agent. Broad Etreet, opposite Bergen's. RED BANE, ' shade of a primeval forest of giganjlc Baker Bros.' .and Bow- foot of tbat bank n 71 degs e 2 chs 48 Iks; tbence (10) along the foot of tbe bank o 16 dees e a chains, oaks, either with pistol or rapier, more EW YORK AND LONG BRANCH HTHOMAS DAYIS, JR., thence (11) along the toot of tbe bank n 87 clegs e 3 ker's fertilizers. These RAILROAD. • -I- IN8URAN0E AND REAL ESTATE AQEBT. cbs 27 Iks; thence (12) along the foot of the bank s especially the latter, the difficulties be(P. O. Box 21.) Stations in New York: Central R. R. of Now Jer- FRONT ST., RED BANK, N. J. 79 (legs e 2 cbs IS Iks; thence- (18) along the foot of are always reliable and tween "gentlemen" were fought out the bank stlTdegs e 2 cbs24 Iks; tbence(14) along sey, foot of Liberty Street, and foot of Whitehall Insurance placed In the best companies on moat reasonable terms. tbe root of the bank s 55(]eff3e~ d i s l i k e ; thence 6treet (South FerryTerminal); Pennsylvania R. R., will please all buyers. • under the strictest! rules of the code of (15) alone tbe root of the bank s 20 decs o one cb 80 foot of Cortlandt Street, Desbrosses Streetand West R. W1I. H. LAWES, JR. honor. , Iks; thence (16) along tbe foot of tbe bank » 31 degs 23d Street. Fine ground bone in, VETERINARY SURGEON. e 1 ch 71 Iks; tbence (17) along tbe foot of the bank On and after November 10th. 1899, At these times New Orleans, alGraduate of American Veterinary College, N. Y. s 7 degs w 2 cbs 17 Iks, thence (18) along the toot of small or large lots. TRAINS LEAVE BED BANK. r Residence: Monmoutb Btreet, the bank s 12 degs w 8 chs 27 Its'; thence (IV) along For New York, Newark and Elizabeth, 6 48, »7 87 though to a large degree, cosmopolitan, [be foot of the bank s 17 degs w 1 ch 78 Iks ; thence I am still in t h e coal (Newark and New Yort onlv), 745, *805 (New Between Broad street and Maple avenue. Red Bank was essentially a creole city and bound •<u) along the foot of tbe bank s 30 degs w 8 chs 55 York only), *829,9 23, *U 30 a. m.; 12 45, *2 44 ks, to the middle of Bop Brook; thence (21) down • by the creole habits.and ideas, and one and wood business at t h e that (New York only), 2 58,4 85,6 08,7 08 p. m. Sun- TAS. s. MCCAFFREY, D. V. S. brook the several courses thereof, to a point In U VETERINARY S0RGEON. days, 8 03,048 a. m.; 450. a 00.7 GO p. m. of these ideas was that a slight or afthe comer of wood lot No. I, and opposite an oak lot Long Branch, Ocean Grove, Asbury Park and . old stand, Graduate of American Veterinary College, N. Y. tree In the s bank ot Bop Brook at the mouth of a front could be wiped out only by blood Intermediate stations to Point Pleasant, 0 25, Residence, Irving Street between Broad Street and water run and ravine; thence (32) along the n w Maple Avenue, Red Bank, N. J. 957,10 30a.m., 12 51. 220, 154, 547, 825, 750 ahed In a duel. The result was to proboundary of that wood lot No. 1. s 73 degs 30 ms w 8 2 4 WHARF AVENUE. p. m. Sundays, 10 80,1122 a. m.; 6 80,6 60 p. m. EO. D. COOPER, cbs 60 Iks, to tbe center ot Junction road: thence duce the greatest punctilio among men. Sunday trains do not stop at Ocean Grove and CIVIL ENGINEER. 23) along thnt road n 71 degs 5 ma w 11 chs 30 Iks; Asbury Park. Successor to Geo. Cooper, C. E. A blow was strictly forbidden and sufTELEPHONE 27. whence (44) along that road being the northern Post Office Building, RED BANK, N. J. FOR FREEHOLD VIA MATAWAN. boundary of lot No. 29. s 62 dgs 22 ms w 18 cbB 5 Iks, ficient to debar the striker from the to a point in the above road at the n w corner of lot Leave Red Bank (Sundays eicepted), 8 29,1130 a.m.; C. HURLEY, privileges of the duello. A gentleman No. 29, In the e line of lot No. s&; tbence (~i) along 485,6C8p.m. • SURVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER. tho o boundary of lot No. 28, n 58 degs w II) chs TRAINS LEAVE NEW YORK FOR RED BANK. who would so far forget himself as to 40 Iks, to a cedar stake on the s w corner of tho Foot ot Liberty street, 480, 560,830, *9 30, 11 30 IIS Bridge Avenue. RED BANK, N. 3 Bed Bant, N. J. strike another was exposed to the igbarn; tbence (26) along the e boundary of lot No. 28 a. m.:*145, "410. 4 80, 023 p. m. Sundays, ' With George Cooper fur fifteen years, n 10 degs 15 ms w 6 chs 96 Iks, to tbe place of begin900,1015a. m.; 400p.m. nominy of being refused a meeting on ning and containing 70 acres. Foot of Whitehall street (South Ferry terminal), 825, JACOB C. 8HUTT8, the field of honor. *9.20,1180 a. m.; *140, 855, 425, 810 p . m . V AUCTIONEER. Sundays, 8 55.9 55 a. m.: 8 55 p. m. Also that certaiu other piece or parcel of lands Special attention given to sales of farm stocl, Most of the duels had their origin in West Twenty-third street, 8 55 a. m.; 12 40, *3 25, farm and premises, Beginning af the n w corner of the implements and other personal property. the ballroom, where to brush rudely 4 55 p. m. Sundays, 9 25 a. m.; 4 55 p. m. farm heretofore conveyed by Marcus Spring to P. O. Address, SHREWSBURY, N. J. Thomas B. Walling beginning nt the middle of Foot of Desbrosses street, 0 00 a. m.; 12fiO,*3 40, against a man was of ten deemed sufflENRY OSTENDORFF, the public highway leading from Leedsville to •510 p.m. Sundays, 945 a.m.; 5 IS p.m. . clent cause for exchanging cards. Some TUNER AND REPAIRER OF PIAN08 AND North American Phalanx; tbence from said Foot ot Cortlandt Btreet, 900 a.m.; 1260, *338, Is the modern force of to-day, tbe ORGANS. beginning (1) s 10 degs 15 ms e 5 cbs 00 Iks. along •510 p. m. Sundays. 9 45 a. m.; 515p.m. were political, some the result of to light your homes and stores, tho boundary line ol tbe aforesaid farm to a stake TRAINS Office at Wortbley's Stationery Store, LEA7E.FREEH0LD FOR RED BANE. breaches of "politeness or etiquette. Telephone Call 18li. BROAD ST.. REP BANK, N. J. standing westward of tbe s w corner of the barn on Via Matawan (Sundays excepted), 810, 1116 propel your machinery and said farm; thence from tbe last aforesaid stake a. m.: 215,4 20, 6 05 p. m. Chevalier Tomasi fought a duel with a 'M. H. SEELEY, running (2) s 29 degs e 2 chs 11 Iks along boundary For further particulars seQ time tables at stations. cook your meals. PORT MONMOUTH, NEW JERSEY. native creole over the proposition that line ot tbe aforesaid farm to a slake; tbence n 57 * DenoteB express trains. Ndtary Public. Soldiers' Vouchers Prepared d e g s w l cb 65 Iks to a stake; thence n 11 deijs 30 J. R. WOOD, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Fenn. R. It. there were larger rivers in Europe Bills of Sale tor Vessels. ms w 6 chs 89 Iks, to a stake in tbo middle of the H. P. BALDWIN, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Central R. R. than the Mississippi, each man being aforesaid public road; tbence along the middle of of N . J . • • tbe aforesaid public road n 79 degs 35 ms e 15 Iks, to RUFTJS BLODGETT, Superintendent N. Y. and L. HOME INSURANCE COMPANY willing to risk his life for his home the aforesaid beginning. Containing 32-100 of an OF NEW YORK. B.R. R. acre and a fraction af a hundreths of an acre reriver. Several duels are reported from Office: No. U9 Broadway. Ninety-First Semiserving to tbe public nsc the roads described on Annual Statement, January, 1899. mere excess of splNt, because the night map aforesaid with the exception (bat whereas tbe CASH ASSETS ...$12,161,164. Because it gives no heat, ashes Junction road was formerly laid down on the eastwas so good for an assaut d'armes. In ALLAIRE & SON. AGENTS. erly sldo of this described parcel of land it shall or smoke and is more economthe winter of 1857-8 the opera pro187a ical in every way. It makes now run on its westerly and southerly boundary. Merchants' Steamboat Co.'s ,Line. B e d B a n k RESTABLISHED duced an epidemic of duels. The two eal Estate and Insurance Seized as the property ot William A. Walling and Agency, 21 Broad. Street, Red Bank. Risks placed an ideal home. prima donnas then in vogue had each others, taken in execution at the suit of James A. Telephone Call, H A, Red Bank. in the Home and other first-class companies at LowWalling and others, ana to be sold by her army of supporters, and to hiss his P. O. BOX 177. ALLAIRE & SON. Shrewsbury,Highlands, Highland Btach est Rates. O. E. DAVIS, Sheriff. favorite was supposed to justify any Wu. W. WELCH, Sol'r. Oceanic, loeust Point, Fair Haven, Dated March 12tb, M O O . $14.40 creole in handing his card to the ofBed Bank, Zong Branch and COUNSELLORS AT LAW, E D Farmers and Truckers D D D N D G A THOMAS P. BROWN, Electricity H W It is better than l other methods, APRIL, 1900. The Shore Electric Co., special Notice fender and demand a meeting at the HERIFFS SALE.-By virtue of a 35 EAST FRONT STREET, Oaks. writ ol fl. fa. to me directed. Issued out of tbe The strong and commodious steamboat, Court of Chancery ot the state of New Jersey, will Most of these meetings were secret, R,ed Banh, be exposed to sale at public rendue, on MONDAY, IN THE NeW JT«r«ey; TI1E «3rd DAY OF Al'HIL. I9U0, rjelwcon the hours known only to the friends of the prinot 12o'clock and 5 o'clock (at 2 o'clock),in theaftercipals. „ I t was only when some one nooa of 6aid day, at tbe Court House at Freehold, in CAPT. L. PRICE, the township of Freehold, county of Monmouth was killed or seriously hurt—and not New Jersey. " Nuisances within the township of Shrewsbury are Will leave Red Bank, and Pier 24, foot of Franklin always then—that the facts of the duel hereby defined and declared to be, and they shall All tbat tract or parcel of land and premises, street. New York, as follows: Include and embrace: hereinafter particularly described, situate, lying, . became known. The duello continued Leave Set Sank. leava New York, 1. The placing or depositing in or upon any street and being tn tbe township ot Shrewsbury, In tbe Monday.Sd 8.00A.M. Tuesday, 8d....9.00A.u in Louisiana as more or less a custom or alley, or In or urion any public or private properly county of Monmoutb, and State of New Jersey. Wed'day, 4th.. 10.00 " Thursday, 5tbJ1.00 " in this township, any dead animal or any part of the Beginning at tbe northeastwardly corner of Jacob Friday, flth 1W0 a. of the country until about 20 years 8aturday,7th....l.fJ0p.M same, or any dead list! or any part of lliesaitJe, or lot at a stake on tbe south' sldo of the highago. An occasional meeting is held from privies or cesspools or catch basins, or .Notice is hereby given that Conross way leartlns Irom Shrewsbury town to Rumson; S~M tbe expiration of tills time table the filth rubbish ot any kind or description, or any bouse or thence alons said Conross land south one degree even today, but they are growing kitchen slops or garbage, manure or sweepings (pro- • and thirty minutes west two chains and soventy-Ovo boats will run at regular boars.; scarcer, for the police now interfere vlded tbat stable manure and other manure may bo links to o stone; thence (S) south, flve degrees west, S e u r o l l e j c i a s aTRedBanlrfor used as a fertilizer), or any foul or offensive orob-' nnd arrest duelists, whereas of old the property of all delinquent eleven chains and seventy-live links to a stone; Shrewsbury, Eatontown, Long Branch and Asbury noxious matter or substance whatever. thence (8) south, twenty-four degrees east, eighteen Park. they kept out of the way. The oaks chains'and thirty-seven links W Shrewsbury, South 2. Any full or leaky privy vault, cesspool or other tbence aloDg said river eastwardly the differreceptacle for filth. HARVEY LITTLE, Messenger. ore among the. finest In the United taxpayers in the town of RedElver, ent courses thereof to a small run of water and line 3. Allowing or permitting any night soil, garbage Fruit aad confectionery on board. States, some of them shading nearly of Benjamin W. Parker, (formorly); thence along or other offensive or decomposing solid orfluidmatsold run of water and Parker's lino to a ditch bank ter or substance to leak or oosie from any cart or an acre of ground, and each oak has and fence thereon; tbence along said ditch bank the N. B.—All- freight Intended for this boat must bo or vessel In which the same may be conveyed a dozen traditions or stories of the Bank, whose taxes are not paid different courses thereof until It intersects tbe on tho wharf a sufficient length of time to handle, as wagon or carried. Parker line; thence along tbe Parker line (formerly) she will positively leave promptly on her advertised 4. The carrying or conveylBg through any street duello attached to It, romantic and eighty-eight degrees and thirty minutes east time. any substance which has been removed from any bloody,- ' within the time required by north live chains and sixty links to a stake; thence along Tbls boat's tlme-toble Is advertised In TEK RED privy vault or cesspool, unless the same shall be In- RELATING TO S ALBERTINA, Township of Shrewsbury. Notice to Delinquents. the line ef tho aforesaid Parker land ond line ol formerly Wllllnm Plntard north, ten decrees and thirty nilnuteswest, eighteen cbalns and eighty-four links to tbe aforsaid Itutnsun road or highway; tbence along said highway south, seventy-four degrees west, six chains and thirty-seven links to the beginning, containing twenty-one acres be the same more or less. BANK RKGISTEK. New Jersey Standard; also In the Counting House Monitor, Mackey's Steamboat Guide Bulliogcr's Guide, New York World, New York Journal and Brooklyn Eagle. Time-tables may be obtained at Borden's priming office, Broad Btreet, near Front. closed in air-tlgbt barrels, or In a perfectly tight and properly covered wagon. 5. All carting of garbage through the streets) Cities Built on Islands. law, will be advertised and tbe township except between tbe hours of sunset The Belgian city of Ghent Is built on. and six A. SI. 6. The burning of any matter or substance which 26 islands, most of which are bordered sold, in accordance with the Excursion Tickets, . . . 5 0 c shall emit, or cause, or produce, or cast on any foul by magnificent quays. The lslanda-are or obnoxious, er offensive, or hurtful, or annoying C O M M O N P L E A S gas, smoke, steam or odor. Also all that lot of land situated In said town of connected by 80 bridges, having as 7. The casting or discharging Into the Shrewsbury Shrewsbury, lying on South River. Beginning at a COURT. ' many canals or waterways as streets. provisions of the statute gov Btono in tho lino of formerly William Llppincotfs In tho matter of the partition of Abigail;Sleeper for or Naveslnk, or South Shrewsbury rivers, or into any stream in this township, or on (be boundary line land at tbe foot of tbo bank; thence along said LipGhent is the capital of Bast Flanders, the partition of lands In Hhrewsbury township. of this township, any substance which baa been replncott's land formerly north etghty-nlno degrees NOTICE. lies on the Scheldt and the Ley, or Lys, erning such cases. east, oce cbaln and fltiy-Iour links to a stone; Tho subscribers appointed on tho application of moved from any vault, cesspool or siuk, or any offnj or other refuse, liquids or solids, by any pipes CT thence (3) south, fifteen degrees nod thirty minutes as well as on the insignificant Lleve Abigail Sleeper to dlvldo certain tracts of land situeast, nine chains nni! thirty-six links to tbo aforesaid ate In ti e townsblD of Shrewsbury in the county ot otherwise. and Moere, which flow through the city South River; (8) thonco westwardly ond north- Monmouth and state of New Jersey, particularly deB. Any and every nuisance as above defined is along the river and creek and brook at the scribed as follows: hereby prohibited and forbidden witaln the townTHEODORE F. WHITE, wardly in numerous arms. foot of tbe aforesaid bank tho different courses FIRST TRACT-Bounded on tbo north by lands of ship of Shrewsbury, and any person making.crcatThe Italian city of Venice is built on thorcof to the beginning. Containing soventy-ttvo M. E. Johnson and Martin Carney; on tbe east by lng, causing, maintaining or permitting any of said hundredtbs of an acre more or less, The above lands of Benjamin J. Parker and Randolph Bordcn; nuisances shall forfeit and pay a penalty of twentya still more numerous cluster of small Town Treasurer named premises are Intended to bo tho same as (!(;• on tho soutb by other lauds of Randolph Borden and OVe dollars. islands, numbering between 70 and 75, scribed in a deed made by Robert D. White and R. 4 A. W. Bordeb, and on tho west by tbo pubtio Tho above Is BD extract from the ordinances of the wlfetoCatnerlno 8. carvlllo, recorded In Book180 highway lending from Shrewsbury to Red Bank, board of health of Shrewsbury township, and tb« in the northwest portion of the Adrio( deeds, pago lCi'. SECOND TRACT—Bounded on the north by lands Fame will bo thoroughly enforced. atic. Owing to the lowness of the isJ. 0. RU8H, M. DAlso all that certain lot of land situate in said ot Michael Itiordan; on (be cast by the. public highPresident of the Beard of Heal th lands the city seems to float upon the township of Shrewsbury- Beginning at a locust way aforesaid; on the south by lands of William I A. C. HAMireoN. Secretary. Post standing1 In the southeast corner of land Green; and on tho west by lands of John E. Davis, fiea. ' . ..,,,., .' CAN BE HAD FOR formerly Carville; thence south, ten degrees and Into four equal shares or parts, hereby elve notice thirty minutes oast, eight chains and fifty links that they havo divided Bald lands Into four equal Amsterdam is divided by the Amstel to tho South River; thence (•:) south, forty deshares and havo numbered the same and made a and numerous canals into 100 small Isgrees west one chain and forty-four links along field book and man thortof, pursuant to tho statute said rlvor; thence (U) south, soventy-four degreea in Buchcnse made and provided, nnd further that lands, connected by more than 300 and forty-avo minutes west, soventy-tbreo linki on the twi'nty-elght day of April, A. D., nineteen bridges. Almost the whole city, Which along said river; theuco (4) north, soventy-threc hundred, nt tlio hour of ten o'clock in tbe forenoon, dogreea and thirty minutes west, otu chain fifty- attendance will bo given at tbo law oDlco of Edextends In the shape of a crescent, is ono links to formorly tbo Carvlllo lino; ttionco mund Wilson, situate in tho posteffleo building In founded on piles driven 40 or 50 feet (S) north, fifteen dega'cs west, nine chains and the town of Red Bank, Moamoutli county, and an forty-six links to a cherry tree; tbonco (0) norib, allotment by ballot take place of tho several pans or through soft peat and sand to a firm elgnly-nlno degrees nnd thirty minutes eant, four shares of tlio tracts aforesaid, to tho original tenant v substratum of clay.chains and three links to the place of beginning. In common thereof, their noire or assigns. For terras and particulnre call on er Containing thrco acres and tblrty-tlirco I: Bated Morcli 2Ctb, 1900. address The ordinance prohibiting dredtha ol an ncru noro or less. Being si H. CAMPBELL. 'He Wasn't a Peddler. WM. It. STEVENS, Promises convoyed to tho said William 11. Morton BENJ. J.PARKER. In bis ltfotlmo by deed of W. Irving; Bnydor nni the riding of bicycles on the They tell a story in Chicago about Thaddeus Wilson, m oxecutore of Richard Simpson, deceased, Bald ctaid Ixilnk' datod April 8d, 1895, am an advance agent for tho Thomas orONMOUTH COMMON P L E A S recorded ID tho oflloo of the clork of Monmoutl CB8TODIAN, sidewalks within the limits of chestra who went to New Orleans to COURT. County, H. J., April 18tli, lEUS, in Book S51 ot Deeds JOHN n. BATES VB. BELLE R book dates for concerts. Ho was told, RED BANK, NEW JERSEY page B17. the Town of Red Bank will be ATTACHMENT NOTICE. Bolzod os tho property of Ellinbcth P. Munroc however, that It would bo well for him fs ticroby jrlvon tliatn writ of atlaclitnon N RULE TO BAn CREDITORS. ot oln. taken In execution at tbo suit of Lolo It, ntNotice tlio euit of John II. nates agnlnst tho rights and first to talk tho matter over -with a EXECUTOR'S HO'HOE. All persons credits, mimojfl and effect!!, goodu and chattels, strictly enforced. _.E. DAVI8, Buorlff. woalthy woman who is a leader In tho IlUloon B. Bnydcr, executor of Elizabeth O. Hoop FRANK P. MCDKHMOTT, Bol'r. landu and tcimumatu of Hollo Itldor, nun ronldonl deceased, by order of tho surroitato ot tho count; o debtor, for tho Bum of ono liumlrod nnusovonty-flvc riding on the sidewalks, all permusical circles of the city. So ho call- Monmouth, horcby glvos notion to thu crcdltoni of Dated March II), 1900. [$14,04] doliuro,' Issued out of tlio Court of Common Pleas oi ed at her residence, a groat, old fash- said aocwiBod to bring In tholr dotitn, demands nnd tho County of Monmouth. on tho twelftb dav of claims ounlmt (ho cntalo ot Bald uccenBod, under JJOTICB OTICB OF SETTLEMENT. SETTL February. nlnoh«n hundred, returnable and re- sons riding without lighted ioned brick mansion surrounded by a oath or affirmation, within nlno ninntliB from thr turned Into court duly oxcoutvd by tbo sheriff of tho hlgli brick \v«U. Tho gato was locked, TWENrV.EIQUIH DAY Ol' MAU0H, MOO, o K8TATE OF HANNAH C. TU0MA8, DoocuflOd. County of Monmouth on tbo twonty-slxtli duy of will bo forever barred of any action thereto: lamps at night, and all persons Notlco Is lioroby ofvcn that tho aocounta of the February, nlnoUxm hundred. and a ring brought out an old negro, tho; oBalnst tho «at<l oxecutor. subscriber, administrator of Bald UooMBed will be JOSEPH M0DERMOTT, Clork. who toolc tho cnllor'B card, on which IUIT8EN 8. HNYDER audited and ntnUxl by llio Surrogate, ana ronorUx DntedMiufflhRth, NN0, / riding faster than six miles an tor Doulomont to the-Orptmni Court of thodounti CHAm.KH II. IVINH, was printed tho legond, "Koprcaontlug ' , • of Monmouth, on THUtlHDAY, TUE TWELlfT Attornoy for PInlnllff. OF. SETTLEMENT. the Thomas Orchestra.1,' DATOrAl'ltlLnoxt. hour, within the corporate lim« JOHN KINO. Presently a young woman enmo to ESTATE OP HENRY O.J.BOllltOUDER, DowmWl. Datca MtiroU W, 1000. T W T OF SETTLEMENT, Notion U lifirflby trlvcn that tlio account or tho tho door, holding tho card In Her hand. HUbsorlbors, its of tne Town of Red Bank, oiwutom ot said docoiwwl, will ,bo EBTATE OP JAMffl II, PETERS. DOMasod. Bho did not ueom to understand tho ob- audited nnd it&tal by tho BurrogMo, and reported WALL PAPERS Notlcu IH liarohy tflvoii tliot tho nccounw of tin forMttlOMonnothoOrplmnii Court of M m county Rtilmcrllxir, Axnoii(orof«iil(ldoc«n»ml.wUI bo auillteil will be arrested n#d fined. ject of tho cull. Tho agent attempted ot Monmouth, on T U U I & D A Y , T U B TUIHD i u AT and BinU'd by tho Hurrogntfl, nnd roportcnl for aottle to explain, but wno cut short by tho OV V MAY MAYnoxt, noxt, to tlio Oinhnnii (fourt of llioCountr of MonMurcUWm. 1000. mouth. on THURSDAY, TUB NINBTKKNT1I DAY young woman, who Bald, "I flou't tlilnk Dated MurcU HARRISON'S. O•nont /iNTIIONY I). BOlinOEDKn, * Al KAAIIl 't ll tl il m lt K wo w^iut any murjlc today." ' HBUINBI* doOOKUOYA. BT Vroril 8>re«tvn«4 Dank, n . jr. DatOd March .t)tb, 1000. CIIAUI.Ea II, 1VIN9. The Town Hall Notice ( To Bicyclers! Dances, Parties, etc. JOHN T. TETLEY, M O •,'iili.* F. P. STRYKEJV Ohief of •Police. I,, • •>/ - IN AND OUT OP TOWN. Short ana Interestlna Items From •All Over the CotintU' Miss Blanche ThOrne, daughter of I. H. Thorns of Harmony, will be married on Wednesday, April 18th, to Harry P. Curtis of j Keyport. .The ceremony -will take place at the bride's home.' Miss Rachel Probaeco of Manalapan received a surprise visit last week and a purse' waa given to: her in appreciation of her services as orgauist in the Manalapan Methodist church., William A. Morton has dissolved part* nership with David A.' Morton in the blaciismithing business at Manasquan and has gone in business for himself at the oame place. D. V. Perrine, the proprietor of "The Big Red Store" at Freehold j has discontinued the cigar and tobacco feature of his business and has sold his stock to Lee Deedmeyer. Mr. and Mrs. J. Finch, who formerly conducted the Commercial restaurant at Long Branch, have gone to London, England, where they will live permanently. Edwin H. Bugbee of Tennent, who has been attending a business college at Trenton,"has a position as bookkeeper in; William E, Mount's. store a t Englishtown. . ..,.. : J. H, Becker of Morganville, who grows vegetables in hothouses, ie shipping between sixty and seventy barrels of lettuceaday to the New York markets. It is reported that the Keyport steamboat company has bought the steamboat Eagle to put on the route between Keyport and Wallabout market, Brooklyn, Work has been fpermanently abandoned in the marl pits at Squankum and the railroad track leading to the pits lias been taken up. • C. Appleby, Sr., of Imlayatown, cut himself recently with a razor while shaving and a bad case of erysipelas has • resulted from the cut. • Daniel W. Walling and James T. Walling of Keyporthave formed a partnership in the ice business under the firm name of Walling Bros. James Woolley, whose grocery store at the Highlands was destroyed by fire some time ago, has opened a grocery store at Shark River. Job E. Emm'ons, who moved some tinie ago from Turkey to Lima, New York, will move back to his farm at , Turkey this spring. Miss Orah M. Cook of Long Branch received a surprise visit from her Sunday-school class last week in celebration of her birthday. G. Denise Conover has moved from the W. A, Thompson farm near Freehold to-tlio J. H.Polhomua farm noar Imlaystown. Watson Stilwagon of Cliffwood has a contract to supply twenty thousand tons of top Roil for George Gould's place at Lakewopd. • Joseph R. Walling of Keyport will engage in the commission business at Wallabout Market, Brooklyn, the coming season. Robert Sherman has resigned as a member of the Manasquan life saving crew and will resume his occupation as a painter. Joseph Brakely, the Freehold canning man, is preparing his farms in the vicinity of Freehold for planting early . peas. Miss Annie Arrowsmith has rented her house at Keyport and will spend the summer at East Hampton, Long Island. Leonard D. Roberts is chairman of the township committee of Raritan township 1 and John S. Hendrickson is treasurer. Andrew Patterson, who bought the " littlo restaurant ''atFreeholdsometime ago, has closed the establishment. Edgar E. Schnell of Hiphtstown has moved to Freehold, where he is ployed in the rug factory. Cornelius Carhart of Koyport is learning the drug business in W. E. Warn's chug store at that place. Miss Hannah Cross and Dr. Herbert E. W'ViNjis of Manasquan were married ut no&\^o-day. Michael Cri>« has moved from Morgnnville to the Lu\iel H. VanMater farm near Mnrlboro. \ , Mr. and Mrs. AshlOn Bodine' of Long Branch are on a tri^j to Gettysburg and • Washington. / John A. Lor^fltroet has been elected president of Volunteer engine company of Mnnnfiqunn: The annual harvest homo of Old Ten nqnt church will bo held on Wednesday August 8tn. Thomuu HiivvkliiH of Marlboro hamoved 'to Toms River, where- ho hns position. Orsomua Cottroll of Koyport hnsha a Blight atroko of paralysis. Charlea WilBon him Btarted a photo graph gallery at Marlboro. The flromnn'B relief nuBOclation of Key port is worth $7,189.20. , Mrs. Richard G. Taylor of Koyport hoe .moved to Freehold, , W. H. Bohanok has opened a grocer; etoro nt Freehold. Qeorgo Hall of OlIflEwood Imn a poultio at Long Branch. BY STORCK. Just at this time of the year, when the piano business is quiet, my increasing bicycle business requires considerable room. So far I havehadonly samples of all my lines, but now my stock; orders come in, and as there^area goddly number of pianos on the floor, I fear they may become scratched and marred. To avoid this and to make more room, I will make special inducements to buyers at the present time, either cash or time payments. Among the newstock there are at present ESTEY, McPHABL, PACKHARD, BES-miNG, CAPEST and other high-grade makes. As I. make a specialty of high-grade goods, built for wear and use, my stock is devoid of .the cheap piano, known as jfcfre ''just as good" kind, and^ou make no mistake when you invest in the above makes, even if they cost a few dollars more than the trashy goods. , , PIANOS, ORGANS, BICYCLES AND AUTOMOBILES, Corner Broad and White Streets, Red Bank, N. J. < SPRING AND SUMMER About Good Whiskey. "es Hand-made sour mash, copper distilled whiskey is most expensive to make and far better. Tnat's agreed by all, excepting sellers of cheaper. . . . . GREAT WESTERN RYE is well known to be of g We have ready a complete stock of Summer Carriages of ft g almost every known style. By buying our stock right we are 1 able to offer these as low, or in some cases lower^than formerly, this high character. Ip riage line. Though but $1.25 it ranks with although there has been an advance in everything in the car• . •' many brands at $1.50 and a few at $2.00. Testing will prove this. Testing costs nothing. . . . . . K NEW BUGGIES FOR $50.00 AND UP. Thirty-two other brands delivered by your grocer or ^ NEW RUNABOUTS, $45.00 AND UP. by u s .•:•. .-. ',' - A ' i -.'.-.•; . . . w. A. rRENCrj"|j:p,,' Pure Wines and Liquors. PNEUMATIC RUNABOUTS, $90.00 AND UP. Surries and Family Carriages, Depot Wagons, Etc, Business Wagons, with and without tops. ,„ SECOND HAISTD. We have a number of good secondhand Carriages and Wagons, taken in trade, that we are closing out at low prices. . J. W. MOUNT & BRO., WATCH THE Factory and Repository Maple Avenue and White Street, New York Sample Shoe Store! RED BANK, NEW JERSEY. I Good Old Toe Ease j SPRING STYLES IN SHOES. I have in stock a full line of men's, women's and children's shoes of the latest styles, which I am able to sell at very low prices. My stock includes all shapes and sizes in black and russet goods, vici kid, etc. work, at prices lower than they can be bought for elsewhere. It will pay you to give me a call and inspect my stock before , V 8 PRICE, 15 CENTS. V V V JAMES COOPER, Jr., | I Cor. Broad and White Sts., Red Bank, N. J. | . si PRINCE; Front Street, opp. Sherman's Market, Red Bank. Announcement. Call and examine our new line of Spring Samples, comprising all the latest styles and colorings. SUITS AND OVERCOATS TO ORDER FROM $16.00 UP» TROUSERS FROM $4.00 UP. a Fit and Workmanship Guaranteed., No Trouble to Show Goods at COULIES'S, ! PROAD STREET, I I also have a line of boots and shoes that are specially adapted for farmers and others engaged in heavy going elsewhere. CURES CORNS. Every Article is Worth the Price. Your Money Backdf not Satisfied. 1 Kit No. 2. Mackerel f o r . . . . . . . . . . OBo. 1 Kit White Fish for. 7Co. 10 lbs. Beat Hominy for 2Cc. 10 lbs. Ontmeal for 25c. 1 Pint Jar of Honey for 25o. 8 Cans Tomatoes for 2Bo. 8 Cans Corn for • 2Bo. 8 lbs. Minco Meat for SBO. 1 lb. Beet Cocoanut for 20c. 1 lb. Good Coffco for 20c. Honey, per Pound.......' 1 8-lb. Paokago Buckwheat for 1 Pint Jar Tablo Syrup for. 1 lb. Can Baking Powder for l'Paokage Staedded Codfish for.... 1 Dozen Piokles for Prunes, per Pound Barloy, " " Baking Soda, per Pound 10c^. 10c: 10c. Go. Bo. Bo. Co. 8c. 80. Peerless Baking Powder, I lb. carl for I Oo. A spoon goes with cvory can. While thoflpoonmay holp to sell it, the Powdor is guaranteed puro. Wo have sold ovor a thousand cans without a complaint, F.F.SUPP, 166 Monmouth Street. Red Bank, N. J. RED BANK, N. J. •'•..',.'•'• NEAR R. B. STATION.
© Copyright 2024