NO. 3. RED BANK, N, J., WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1905. PAGEg. I TO 8

A H©USE ENTERED. pened a saloon in the old Cothren build- T. W. COLYERBANKRUPT. TOWNSHIPTOBE SUED. DEATHS THEPAST WEEK. ig, which is now owned by the Ernest THE RiVERJARNIVAL. 'heBurglar Scared Away Before rote estate. He kept the saloon a short PROCEEDINGS BEGUN AGAINST He Got -ilia Booty. :T OWES BED BANK AND IT HE GRIM REAPER CIAIMS me and ruqved to Cliffwood 23 years THE DATE FIXED FOR THUBS* HIM LAST WEEK. Churles R. Ross's house on Riverside WON'T PAY. MRS. ROBERT W. HANCE. ;o. From Cliff wood he went to Cheese- DAY, AUGUST 10TH. venue was entered by a thief early on 'he Money ia Due for Last Year's She Passed Attati at Her Home on [uake, where he conducted a hotel. The Events Will Comprise, an Anta* Three Creditors Join in Asking That Sunday morning. Entrance was gained "he hotel burned down ten years ago Me be Declared a Bankrupt- o the house through a kitchen window Light Taxes and Franchise Taxes Riverside Avenue on Monday- mobile Parade, Staee on the Hive?f Mufuti SI. Merrltt of Fair Haven —Edmund Wilson Ordered to Be- Death of Miss Adelia Carson at nd since that time Mr. Loeach had run a Right Parade of Illuminated Appointed Receiver. hich had been left open. The thief gin Proceedings. the Long Branch Hospital. small farm. His wife died eight years Boats and Other Features, ntered a room occupied by George Theodore W. Colyer of Red Bank, who Shrewsbury township owes the town Mrs. Elizabeth L. Hance, wife of Rob- go, and he leaves four children besides The Red Bank business men who have Ponter of New York, who was visiting for several years haa conducted a livery f Red Bank a balance of |704 on the ert W. Hance of Riverside avenue, Red he one at whose house he died—Philip the river carnival in charge have fixed stable on Globe court, has been declared Mr. Ross. Mr. Ponter woke up while ight account from the taxes of last year, Bank, died on Monday. She had been )f New York and Henry, Jacob and Mrs. the date for Thursday, August 10th. a bankrupt. The proceedings were be- ;he man was in the room and sat up in he commissioners have requested this failing in health about two years. Last innie Ahearn of Cliffwood. The events will begin with an auto- Jed. The thief, seeing lie was discovered, gun, by Robert Hance of yRed Bank, money on several occasions, but it has svinter she went South for the benefit of The funeral was held at the house on mobile'parade in the afternoon at2:3ff Abbott Worthley of Holtndel, formerly ran down stairs and escaped through not been paid. At the last meeting of ler health. She was somewhat ini- iunday afternoon, the service being in o'clock, in which all the automobile! m of Little Silver ; and the Noyes carriage he kitchen window. He did not take he board Edmund Wilson, the counsel iroved by the trip, but the improvement harge of Rev, Mr. Smith, an Episcopal this part of Monmouth county aro es» nything. : company of Elkhart, Indiana. or the town, was instructed to begin •roved only temporary. Six weeks ago lergyman. The body was buried at pected to take part. Two prizes will bo .Edmund Wilson of Red Bank, acting roceedings at once to collect this money, ihe was Btricken with paralysis and had ,ose Hill cemetery, Matawan, offered—one for the best decorated for these three creditors, had bankl AN ITALIAN HAS FUNMr., Wilson was also instructed to jeen declining rapidly since then. She machine, and the other for the neateafe ruptcy proceedings instituted, and on iroceed against the township to collect was 57 years old. Mrs. Sarah A. Aldrich. machine, without regard to size, coat as Friday the papers were signed by Judge BE SHOOTS FOUR TIMES AT he town's share of the franchise money Mrs. Hance was a daughter of Robert Mrs. Sarah A. Aldrich, widow of decorations. Cross. Rufus S. Merritt of Fair Haven CHARLES WALZ. which was paid last summer by the P. Lovett and was born at Penn's Manor, saiah Aldrich, died on Sunday night at Other features which have not yet was plaoed in charge of the affairs of the orporations doing business in the town Bucks county Pennsylvania. She was he home of her brother, Abijah A. been arranged will follow the automobile concern as receiver, and the place was lie Says He Thought He Was Shoot, f Red Bank and township of Shrews- married to Mr. Hance about 33 years /ompton, of Monmouth street, Red parade, and at four o'clock a race foi? closed, inn Blank Cartridges, but Sir. bury. This year's franchise taxes have igo. For about fifteen years the couple Bank. She came to Red Bank to^visit automobile launches will be held on the Walx Points to Three Bullet Holes not yet been paid, but Mr. Wilson was It is said that two' chattel mortgages lived at Ruinson and then moved Mr, Compton last January. She was not river. A silver cup has been offered by in ilia Wagon Top, nstructed to see that the town's share have recently been placed on Mr. Col. to Red Bank, where the family has since feeling well on her arrival and her sick- je Red Bank bo^ club ag the prise jn. Charles Walz, who is employed by if this money was paid over to the town yer's property. These mortgages will be lived. Besides her hushnnd Mra. Hance less became serious after she had beet) ;his rate. This will be followed by £ Iliarles Hoffman of Red Bank, had a reasurer as soon as the corporations attacked and an effort will be made to is survived by two daughters and four ere but a short time. The cause of her •ace for pleasure boats, in which a num- narrow escape from being shot by Frank made their payments to the township have them set aside in order that the sons. The daughters are Julia D. and leath was cancer of the stomach. Mrs. Petillo, an Italian of River street, on collector. )er of prizes will be given. Both these money they represent will go to the 'ourth of July morning. Walz was de- ladys, both of whom live at home. Udrich was about sixty years old and races will be open to all. creditors. The schedule of assets and ivering bread at Mrs. Delia Comar's The sons are Robert C, Borden L., ler home was at Pottsdam, N. Y. Be- The river carnival will be held at eight liabilities has not yet been made Up, store on River street when Petillo saw THE CIRCUS COMING. Joseph N. and Irving Hance. She des her brother Bhe leaves a sister, Mrs, 'clock at night. The tide is right at! and it is not known what portion of him, The Italian thought he would Sautetle's and Welsh Bros.' Com. leaves also three brothers and a sister. Daniel Perrine of Hightstown. The hat hour, and a large number of illumi- their claims the creditors are likely to have some fun with Walz and scare him blued Show to Visit Red Bank. The brothers are John T, Lovett of Little uneral was held at Mr. Compton's last lated boats are expected in line. Last receive. by shooting blank cartridges at him. Thursday, July 20th—one week from Silver, Benjamin Lovett of Bristol, light and the service was conducted rear's carnival was the greatest event of 'etillorau into the house, where loaded o-morrow—will be circus day in Red Pennsylvania, and H. Thompson Lovett )y Rev. Alfred Wagg, pastor of the First he kind ever held in town, and this UVELY TIMES AT FAIR H&VEN. cartridges and blank cartridges were ly- Bank. Sig. Sautelle and Welsh Bros, of Billings, Montana. The sister is Mrs. Methodist church. A number of Mrs, ear's carnival is expected to surpass ifc Theatrical Folks Have Fun in a ing together on the table. Petillo was combined show will visit here on that Margaret Georgeson of Sitka, Alaska, Idrich's favorite selections were sung n every particular. Lively Manner. in a hurry and did not notice that he day. These two shows, which formerly where Mr. Georgeaon is conducting )y the church choir. The body was Mayor Bonnell will be at the head of " There were lively times at Fair Haven picked up loaded cartridges. oured the country separately, have been agricultural experiments for the govern- aken to Philadelphia this morning for ibe reception committee, and Credo Har- last Saturday night, due to the carrying When Walz drove from Mrs. Comar's consolidated, making practically' two ment. )urial. is, editor of the Standard, will be chair- out of a fun-making plan that bad its itore, the Italian blazed away. He had big shows in one. The show comprises The funeral will be held to-monw Miss Sarah E. Polhcinue. man of the press committee, which origin in the mind of a member of the repeating pistol and shot four times. 200 of the world's champion male and afternoon at two o'clock at the house Miss Sarah E. Polhemus, daughter of ntertaia visiting newspaper theatrical colony which summers there. The first bullet passed over the female equestrians, aerialists, acrobats, and will be conducted by Rev. Robert }yrenius Polhemus of Scobeyville, died iVilliani N. Worthley has been selected Abe Bennett recently discarded an out- horse's back, The next bullet passed ymnasta, equilibrists, animal trainers MacKellar, rector of Trinity church. esterday morning after a weed's sick- is treasurer. The committee in charge building on his place and threw it out in hrough the wagon, close to Walz's head, and clowns in all the marvelous acts for The body will be buried in Fair View ness with fever. She was about forty it present is composed of J. W. J. Bon- a field. This theatrical genius conceived and Walz jumped out of the wagon. which circuses have become noted. The cemetery. years old and waa Mr. Polhemus's oldest 1, O. E. Davis, Charles L. Davia, Dr. the idea that it would make a good jail. P. Rafferty, L. Y. Manning, B. F. The other two bullets passed through show carries a menagerie of elephants, Slief) Adelia M. Carson. daughter. The other daughters are Miss He painted it up, made a barred window he wagon top, The horse did not run :amels, lions, tigers, etc., and there will Bertha C. Polhemus and Mrs. Lillian Wilbur, Joseph Salz, Benjamin H. Ford, in it and painted the word " Jail" across away. The Italian was greatly surprised be a big street parade at ten o'clock on Miss Adelia M. Carson, daughter of McClane. The funeral will be held at Edward S. Allaire, Credo Harris, Robert the late Mary C. and Disbrow A. Carson the top. On Saturday the jail was -set when he learned he had been shooting ;he morning of the show. The circus Hance, Fred Frick, Charles R. D. of Marlboro, died at the Long Branch he house to-morrow afternoon at two up near Abe Bennett's hotel. real bullets and was very sorry. After will be at Keyport next Tuesday and at Foxwell. William Cullington, Fred Cul« hospital last Friday night. She was in 'clock and at the Colt's Neck Reformed That night three theatrical men pa- hearing how the accident happened Long Branch on Wednesday. ington, Harry Curtis, William N, her ,21st year. Miss Carson became an church at half-past two o'clock, Miss raded the streets in policemen's uni Walz decided to let the matter drop and Polhemus was a member of the Colt's Worthiey, Harry Chandler, William H. orphan at the age of ten years and Judge Houston, William A. Hopping, Harry.. forms. Anyone who spoke louder than Petillo was not arrested. SUIT AND COUNTER-SUIT. Neck church and was very active in a whisper was arrested and jailed. Bi Henry M. Nevius of Red Bank, her Worthley, M. F, Comwell, W. A. Cole, uncle, was appointed her guardian church work. cyclists who went through town were ESCORTING THE PRESIDENT. Barry Millman and Jaunt8 Bray George Hance Patterson, William Cof- warned that they must get lamps on Wave Each Other Arrested. Since then she had made her home with William K. Borden. ee. Jack Hoffmire, George Holmes, their wheels. Some wheelmen took the The lied Bank Cavalrymen Go to JameB Bray, who keeps a vegetable Mr. Nevius. She graduated from the William Kenneth, son of Albert E. Harry Hubbard and Clinton Elliott, and threats seriously and pedaled out of the Anbury Park. market on Wharf avenue, was arrested Red Bank high school in the class of Borden of Monmouth street, died on ithera will be added to the committee as village for dear life. After several men The Red Bank cavalry troop went to on Monday on complaint of Harry Mill- 1903 and the following October entered Wednesday afternoon of heart failure, ;he affair progresses. had been put in jail the women folks go Anbury Park last Friday and formed the man, who keeps a restaurant on the 'oleman's business college at Newark following diphtheria. Anti-toxin was together and set the building afire after personal escort of President Boosevelt same street. Millman claimed that Mr. from which she graduated in June of used on the child without effect. The liberating the prisoners. When the fire during his visit there. Franklin Pierce Bray kicked his son and injured him. ast year. She was employed as book- boy was six years old and was a mem- COTTAGERS' GRIEVANCES. was discovered the men got bottles of Stryker and W. A. Shoemaker had the Mr. Bray said the boy was a nuisance keeper by Daly Bros, of Bloomfield until «r of the Baptist Sunday-school. The locust Point People Dissatisfied seltzer from Bennett's hotel and fough places of honer in the escort, and rode about his place of business and he merely aken sick the latter part of May, when funeral was held at the house on Friday With Things. the flames with these, but they could alongside of the President's carriage, drove him away, giving him a little lift she returned home to recuperate. Hasty afternoon, the service being conducted The summer residents of Locust Poiafi not save the building. The President expressed himself as very with his foot. Justice Sickles held Mr. consumption developed and the young by Rev. B. C. Lippincott, Jr., pastor of re talking of organizing an association much gratified at the appearance of the Bray on his own recognizance to await woman waa taken to the Long Branch rrace church, The body was buried at so that concerted action may be taken troop, and from the conduct of the men the action of the grand jury. hospital about three weeks ago. The 'air View". on matters of interest of the locality. A MUSICAL STUDIO. \e thought most of them must have disease took such a hold on her that it Mr. Bray made a counter-coruplaint Daniel Woollev. One of the first things to be demanded E. A, Lambert to Open One at Red served in the regular army. The troop against Mr. Millman for swearing at was apparent from the first that her re- Mrs. Lydia Ann "Woolley, wife of is a new station at Stone Church in place Bank. was very highly complimented by the him. Only one witness corroborated covery was impossible. Toward the last Daniel Woolley of Plainfield, died last f the present platform and shed. Tha E, A. Lambert, who plays the piano, President and several of the troopers Mr, Bray and several others testified she sank very rapidly. riday. She was the daughter of the present shed leaks and the structure ia violin and other musical instruments, came in for personal compliments from that this witness was not present when The funeral was held at Mr. Nevius's late Jacob Brown of Oakhurst and for- ionsidered too small and insignificant for expects to open a studio in Red Bank him. the alleged swearing took place. Mill on Monday afternoon. The class of merly lived at Long Branch. Besides a he locality. The cottagers at Locust for the study of vocal and instrumental man was discharged. 1903 of the high school attended the WIRES TO BE REMOVED. husband she leaves a son and daughter, 'oint and many at Oceanic take the music. Mr. Lambert is spending th service in a body and a large number of he leaves also three brothers and sistera ,rain from that station and they think summer at Fair Haven with his family. other friends and relatives were present. 8 Loose Ends of Telephone Wires A SUDDEN DEATH. They are John Brown of Elberon, Wil- ,he travel warrants a more pretentious He appeared at tho Red Bank opera Sittut be Taken Down, Rev. B. C. Lippincott, Jr., pastor of iam and Thomas Brown, Mrs. Jane itructu're. house in the recent benefit performances For the past year the commissioners Asburu Park Man Strops Dead While race church, conducted the service, mith aud Mrs. Margaret Smith of Oak- The cottagers also think that sewering for the Actors' Home and Fair Haver of Red Bank have been trying to get the Clamming. He eulogized the young woman for her hurst, and Mrs. Mary Poole of West into Claypit creek should be stopped, fire company, at which he made a de- loose telephone wires of the local tele- William Truex, a bathing master at many excellent traits of character, Long Branch. It is claimed that the sewage from 88V« cided hit. He is a graduate of the Con phone company taken from the poles Aslwry Park, died suddenly on Sunday which was demonstrated through the ral large placeB along the creek empties servatoire at Paris, France, and also ol Many of these wires are hanging and it He was out in a boat on Shark river witl large circle of friends who mourned her Borden IS. Hampton. nto the stream and there is talk of tak< Guildhall collegeof music, London, Eng- is feared that they may cross electric two companions, and he got out of the death. He spoke of her faithfulness to Borden H. Hampton of Long Branch ing the matter before tho board of land. He was lately musical director of light or trollay wires and become dan boat to tread for clams. His com her employers and of the energy which died on Sunday after a sickness of only health. the Columbia and Boston opera com gerious. The property of this company panions rowed to the shore. Shortly characterized her endeavors in every two days. He was 54 years old and waa panies. Mr. Lambert bus not yet se waa recently bought by Honry C. Mc afterward they found Mr. Truex lying thing she undertook, A number of ap- carpenter by trade. At one time he ' HURT IN A RUNAWAY. lected a' location for his studio, but il Lean, and ho has been notified to have dead iu tho water. Heart disease was propriate selections wore sung, one ol was connected with the life-saving ser- will probably be in the Second nationa these loosed and dotaehed wires rumovet Mre. John Si. Ecelea Httatttins U the cause of death. Mr. Truex was ai: which was a solo by Mr. Lippincott, vico at Long Branch. Besides a wife {bank building, immediately. Broken Leg. undo of Mra. M. F. Tetley of Red Bank, The floral tributes were elegant and pro- ho leaves a son and daughter. fuBe, one of them being a pillow from Mid. J. H. Ecclo8 of East Oceanic and Bicycle Being Chanced Off. her son were driving at Monmouth Davidson's Midsummer Sale. Homo on a Vacation. her claBsmatos in tho Red Bank school Miua Abbie, Woollev. Llerbort Ouliclc of Monmouth street it Beach on Monday night when the bridle M. M. Davidson of Red Bank udver- Edward Woodward, an inmate at the Tho bearers wero Elmer Pearsall, Ar Miss Abbio Woolley died at Long nick with consumption. A WollT-Amoii tlmr Davia, Forren Blaisdell, Joseph W brofeo and the bit dropped from tho tiaea a big reduction in the prices of hat Ihemeu'y home nt Boonton, is upending Branch last Friday. Her death waB duo cun bicycle worth |50, now on exhibi- Child, Alvin Whiting and Lee Einight, home's mouth. This frightened tho and clothing for his unnual inidauniinci a vacation of two or throo weeks at Red to dropsy. She was eighty years old tion at Storek'H, will bo chanced oil foi The body was buried in tho Brick churcl: horso and it ran awuy. The wagon wns aale. Ho taken a full page in this woek'i Bank. Ho in at present with his brother, and had lived at Long Branch all her his benefit. Mr. Gulick linn boon cemetery. upset on top of tho occupants. Mra. RltOISTEH to tell of the many bargninR Williiim Woodward Qf Ijoightonaveiiuo, life, Lydia and Montillion Woolloy wen member of tho firo department for Eeoles'a left leg was broken abovo tho Straw hats are Helling at ono-third off and beforo ha returns bo expects to vitiil hor parents. number of yoatu and ho wan until re Conrad l.oesch. ankle. After the bone had been net che $3 hat!) going for $2, e(<:. Doyn' was his other brother and bisters, John contly foreman of tho Hhoro clectri Conrad LOUHCII of Choesequuke, a for wan removed to her home. Her aon was suits aro selling nt half-price mid price Woodward at Fair Haven, MM. Jonepli MtdiHctownerei to Organise. company. mor nwident of Hcd Bank, dieil o not hurt. on many other lines of goods mo propor Peirinoand MIH. Oliver (i. Frake. The resident!) of Midtllotown villagi Thursday at tho homo of his (laughter aro uuxiouH thnt the placo shall bo im tionately low. One upccial bargain ia " AUco In Wonderland." Mra. Applogato Kocdlvoo 89,000. Improving Kiveraido Avonuo, Mia. Mary Oaston of Cheeuquako. II proved and they hnvo called u meeting bow for a cent, "Alice in Wonderland" will bo pro Mm. Robocea Applngate, widow of tho Rivoniido nvonuo in to bo gravele wnu 75 years old. Ho had boon aick fo for next Monday afternoon to organi/.o ilucod lit Anbury Purls ciutino pier theutoi lato William Applogate, Jr., has received from Allen plaeo to the railroad track, eiomo time but bin death wim entirely un permanent improvement tjoeiety. Th on Thuioday night and Friday aftornoo a death uenoUt of $2,000 from tho A^ Throo Now Firomon. Tho gravel will ooino from Hiibbiu'd't oxpectod. Ho wont to bed on tho Moi people of that place claim that whil and night of thin wonk for tho bonvilt o oiont Order of United Workmen.tfi Jtai Irving Vine, Michael'Popkin and My pi in in Middletown towtnihip. day night preceding hin death feolin, everybody IH in to routed iu improving th llio city hotipilul. Throo hundred per- Bank. Mr. AppH;alo joinetl.,tnQ lodge ton V. Brown were elected active men no wonie Uinn uouiil, Ilia condition wn villas, and while evuryono workii to will tiilm part in tho production. Muolral MtiHtrtictiou. seventeen yearn ago nnd ninru thnf; time bent of Independent engine company la: Rorioua the next morning and ho fulle wurd that end, very much nioro can Having been requested by iiuveral ol ho hud paid duoii amounting to $981.40. night. Thi! company him decided to ei gradually until tho end came. Hin doiitl bo iiceotnpliahcd by all handii working A. B«1K &CO.'B Summer Salo. tlin leading renidoiiUs of Red Hank an tor tho parade and IIOBO contents at l^on vicinity to open n ntudio for tho iitudy o wnu duo to apoplexy. together than by tho individual Branch on Augunt 9th. A. Mulz & (Jo. of Koyport will Inaugu- piano, violin and voeal mimic, I HIIOUI Mr. Loenoh canio to America fron of each man. Students on rato their annual Hiiuunor itulo next Hat i)o ghul to hoar from pupilti deiiirouu o Germany fi!) years ugo mid nettled i Hovonty Htudontrt who on: titudyfuQ for At »?. Ulauton'ti, UN tlitxiit Htrtiet. urdny. There will be umumiil altrao furthering their nuniicul ntudietj. I Nupuratc Ai'fMdnd tValking Nkirta, Red I tank. For a number of yenm I tho Cutlwlio ministry at Ilclx-skr, Murf" Zest, package, lite.; gran. Hugar, On. tlonti in nil department!). Thorn will be connection with tho above it in my ii also riding Imbitii, iniulo to order ui> Mother!)1 oats, 8c; Ilaker'n coooa, 10c. tontion to add choral find orchestra wait employed an a curmunand ho alii lurid, are at the Catholto homo m muHicul program and rcfrcHhing drinki ward from ono dollar from material! Largo bottle Hluo Label catnup, 10o. claneon. Kindly nddretw E. A. Law worked with tho Inte John ICeough t purchased ut the dry goods store ol port for tho Bummer vacation, i bert, Fuir Haven, N. J,—Ado. Mold Bual (,'reumery butter, 25o.—Adv. will b« nerved 1'reo. tho well digging bimineus. Later Ii Joseph Salz, lied h&nk.—Adv, accompanied by about twenty pri*^ KS.lt* PltEVENTXD GA%JE. BAN AWAY FKOM HOME. •«•«•»»»•#»••••••••»»••••••••§•>•>•»•§•>•§•••»•••<>•••» AlilLETOWN WEDDING Wo Baseball Played at Red Bank Joint Xauifhtoii, Jr., ILeft Home on I At tit Saturday. the Fottrth of July. JUSS ELIZABETH The baseball game whicli waa to have John Naughton, Jr., eon of John ELY 1 Balance of Summer Millinery taken place at Red Ban k on Saturday be- Naughton of Port Monmouth, left home a'fte ttt'lHegrovtn Wili be Mev. Reurv tween the local team and the Xaviers of on the fourth of July and has not re- Will be sold regardless of cost to close out stock. A. sunWoert of Keup&rt-Tlte Nut>-New York, was declared oil on account turned. I The boy is about sixteen years &iala to be Celebrated To.Nialit in old, and is middling tall and stout for the Baptist ehurch. of the rain. To-morrow the fast Trenton team will his age. He has a bear over the right A fushionable wedding will take place play at Red Bank and one of the best eye. He had no trouble with any of the i&t Middletown to-night, when Miss Eliza- family and his father is at a loss to know beth Ely Taylor, daughter of the late games of the season is expected. The last time these two teams played the what caused him to run away. He was C&pt. James G. Taj'lor, will be married traced to New York and from there back THE RED BANK TEMPLE FASHION. to Rev. Henry Salmon vauWoert, pastor score was i! to 0 in favor of Trenton, but the Red Ban It team expects to score to- to Matawan and Holmdel, where he ofthe Keyport Reformed church. ThS tried to get work among the farmers. ©sromony will take place at eight o'clock morrow, even if they do not win. Hal| or Oaroney wiil lie in the box for lied In one place he is said to have given the la the Baptist church, and it is expected name of Patterson. that a large number of people will wit- Bank. ; Mr. Nitughton is very much worried sees the ceremony, as 350 invitations At Atlantic ifti/hhiixlH. ' over the boy's disappearance and has Iiave been issued. The church is deca- The Matawim baseball team played been endeavoring ever since the Fourth Carry an E R nted with flowers and palms. Miss at Atlantic Highlands last Saturday and -OF- to get word to him to induce him to re- Guaranteed to STAY fast • Annie Hankins, organist of the Middle- were defeated by a score of 15 to 3. turn. He lias issued a notice asking for black and rainproof, other- town Reformed church, will play the Rank errors on the. part of Matawan wise your dollar -H>adc information from anyone who may hap- wedding marches. I Washable Shirt Waist Suits, Skirts and Waists. allowed Atlantic Highlands to score pen to know liia whereabouts. The ushers will he John Orsboine, three runs in thu first inning, but after George Heyer and Arthur VanBuskirk that the contest was an even one. Mata- A SAMPLE LOT 200 Pretty Shirt Waist Suits, made of fine Lawn, f a^-m «<-> wan did not score until the ; seventh Chambray and colored Madras Cloths, neatly | T-*.«*O of Keyport and John Luyeter of Middle- No Two Alike, town, There will be four bridesmaids, inning, when two mils were made. The made with pleats and tucks, as good as you've" -{ and •Mies Anna Mount of Chapel Hill, Miss third run was made in the eighth inning. at $1.00 each. . paid from §2.00 to $5.00 for this season; take JElizabeth M, West and Miss. Marie Con- Atlantic Highlands made four two-bnse • your choice at -$M8 and $1.98 over of "Middtetown, and llise Jessie hits and Matawan made three. Matawan Bowne of Port Monmouth. Miss Mabel made six errors and Atlantic Highlands Thlo Guarantee on every JI. B. Umbrella: Lot 1—White Lawn Shirt Waists, were 79c. and 98c. Cioodchiid of Middletown will be maid of made only two. Muire, the Atlantic Sale Price..- .5Qc honor. The flower girls will be Alberta Highlands pitcher, struck out seven Taylor English of Ridgewood and Marion men, ami Kennedy, Matuwan's twirler, Lot 2—White Lawn Shirt Waists, were $1.25 and $1.48. £. Deats of Flemington, both of whom struck out four, Acker's catch of a The B. & Gr. Corset, , Sale Price 98c. Tapering Waist. 55c are nieces of the bride. The bride will long drive to center field was a feature Bathing Suits and many more specials throughout the store. enter the church on the arm of her uncle, of the game. Lewis Perrine of Rutherford. The bridal To-morrow the Freehold team plnys party will bo met by the at Atlantic Highlands. On Saturday I from $3 JO up. \ We have about 25 Taffpta Silk bridegroom, his best man, Jntnes G. Atlantic Highlands will play at Alata- Dresses, worth up to $14.98. Taylor, a brother of the bride, and the Our prices on these Stoves Your choice at $7.98 officiating clergymen. The ceremony are lower than ever. will be performed by Rev. Willnrd D. SPORTS ON THE FOURTH. Brown, pastor of the Middletown Re- ,/\AAAAAAA formed church, and a brother-in-law o* anil Foot Races at Atlantic Mr. vanWoert. He will be assisted by A series of bicycle and foot races were Bev. Horace G. Goodchild, pastor of the HOW ARE THESE FOR held at Atlantic Highlands on the after- Middletown Baptist church. noon of July 4th, The winners and the The bridesmaids, the maid of honor prizes in the different events were : Broad Street, near Front, and flower girls will be dressed in Per- lH-tnllo bicycle nice—First, Joseph Kennedy ot sian lawn. The bridesmaids and flower lied bunk, prize, Kuirlo hlcycle: second, Wllliatp Skidinorc, prize, solid gold signet rinir; third, girls will wear pink ribbon, and the J(ise|ili Ilimton, prize, pair of bicycle tires. Med Bank, H. J. maid of honor will wear white ribbon. gull-yard (lush—Flint. Uuiih Cnrtur, prize, clioco- 25 Inte pot; second, John I'elcrs, prize, silver mounted OF THEM AND ALt OF THEM AND ALL Tho bridesmaids and flower girls will pen. U-irille boys' bicycle ince—First. Itnymond stry- GOOD ONES. GOOD ONES. carry pink sweet peas and the maid of ker. prize, coaster brake; second. Edward Sweeney, Bouquets and "Wreaths a Specialty. honor will carry white sweet peas. The prize, wiilch; third, Arnold Sodtu, prize, bicjele horn. Bedding Plants for Sale. bride will be dressed in white taffeta, 5-tnllo bicycle race—First, George Reed, prize, trimmed with chiffon and pearl trim- (llsrin phonograph: second, Joseph Kennedy,prize, solid sold rlug -, tlilrd, Clim'les Sclmltz, prizo, solid West mings, and she will wear a veil. Her 1110-yimi (IUHII—First, Welling Leoniml, prize only ornament will bo orange blossoms, brass clock; second, John l'eters, prize, fimoliiug, which were worn by her mother at her set; tlilnl, J. Cnrryiill, prize, silver mntcli cuse. Charles % Schneider, !if>C-yiird duiili for Uiyn—First. IVrcy Porter, prize, $8.50 Refrigerator, special 6.48 $17.00 Turkish Couches reduced to..... 11.98 wedding. catcher's glove; second, Wlllliim Frick, prize, ball 50c, Children's Swings 22C $28.00 Handsome Sideboards, at 19.98 nnd but; third, ltuy Matllnnys, prize, lullelder's Landscape Gardener and Florist, • After the ceremony a reception will be glllVB. 40c. Grade Floor Oil Cloth 25C 25c. to 35c. .Framed Pictures, at 10c held at the residence of H. W. Stark, Joseph Kennedy alBO won the time LITTLE SILVER, JSf. J. 40c. to 50c. Japanese-Mattings, at. 25C §2.75 White'fitiamel Beds, at 1.48 the bride's brother-in-law. The couple prize in tho 18-mile race, which was a §1.50 and $2.00 Smyrna Rugs, at./ 1.00 $9.50 Extension Tables, special 6.?5 will go on a tour through New York silver watch. KUMSON ROAD. state, and on their return they will live Tol. GS-n. Little Sliver Station. $1.00 Folding Settees, special..".'. 58C $12^50 Genuine Cotton Felt Mattresses., 9.50 in the Reformed church parsonage at The circulation of THE REGISTER keeps 25c. Grade Table Oil Cloth *.. 12%C ijj3.po Fancy Cotton Hammock 1.98 climbing up. It's now 8,200 copies per Keyport. The bride's traveling dress $3.00 Folding Go-Carts, special 98C $35.00 Verona Parlor Suits , week. Your advertisement carried into Gardens Laid Out nnd Kept in Order. 24.48 •will be gray taffeta and she will wear a 3,200 homes,every.week ought to bring $2.50 Box-seat Dining Chairs, at 1.89 §12.00 Chiffoniers, plate glass, at 8.98 hat to match. results.—Adv. Trees Grown. $2S.oo 3-Piece Roll Top Bedroom Suits.. 19.98 20c. Gilt Wall Papers, at 5c fo.oo Braced Metal Bed Springs 1.98 $1.10 Oak Dining Chairs, at 69c OUTING IN THE HORSESHOE. $35 Extension Tables, slightly imperfect.. 8.98 $6.00 Double Lawn Swings, at -AT- 4.48 Mti>' Haveners Catch M,vts of Fish ami t'laniM. BASEBALL ATLJHTIC HIGHLANDS, A number of Fair Haven summer resi- Great Big Arm Rockers, golden oak finish, special 79C dents, together with a number of per- 200 Enamel Beds, Springs and Mattresses on sale at one-third less than regular prices. manent citizens of that place, went down the river on a fishing and clamming Sole selling Agents for VV. & J. Sloane's Carpets and Ostermoor Mattresses. tiip last Friday. Lou Smith's launch "took the party on the trip and tailing on Freehold vs, Atlantic Highlands The Largest Exclusive Furniture and Carpet House in the County. behind were two rowboats which were to be used ia the work of getting clams. KEYPORT, N. J. Terras Cash. Trolleys Pass Door. 'fhe Horseshoe was the rendezvous of the party. When time for lunch arrived the party went ashore and enjoyed a •"Barnegat hurry-up," which is a stew composed of clams and vegetables. The JM^£^^^ cook who superintended the preparation of tho " hurry-up " got a rousing vote of t thanlis for the splendid stew he made. t After the lunch fishing and clamming t was resumed and the pleasure-seekers T returned home with over throe hundred A New Tobacco! T pounds of ureakfieh and hard clams by t T . the bushel. What fish the men didn't T want they distributed among their I: neighbors. On Saturday morning the I have had made for me, by a first-class manufacturer, a New Smoking Tobacco, which I have T &ir Haven ice man found fish in nearly T every ico-rbox in Fair Haven. Among those who went on the trip t railed t vyeire Frank Jlartineau, Gun Pixley, T Jfrank Evans, John Lafanier, Abo Ben-f t nett, Frank Pierce, Jamos Mack, Charles T Kelson, CharleB Bugbce, Percy Ryan, f T Frank Wesson, Thomas Walteni, Wil- t liam Bennett, Bobby North, Charles Jtonnett, Horace Tbotn, George Leslie, This Tobacco is a mixture, and is made of Turkish, Havana, Perique and Virginia tobacco, in 7 JiMiiffl Borne, James TcnBrooke, Gus Hogan, O. R. Burton, Ed Doughty, f a combination arranged by me. It's a fine, high-class tobacco, and is sellirig fast. f Arthur E. Smith and Thomnu Morriusey, X It is put up in airtight cans. Twenty-five cents buys a can of 3 1-3 ounces. One dollar buys a A Tennis Players* Contest. f George S. Brenglo, champion tenniu full pound can. - 7 player of Ponningtou Berninary, and M ion t T v Francis Atwatorof Muplo avenuo, clmin- Try it It's great. '|,t,<*> tOMiifl player of the state normal f T !, played a eerica of games on thfi ? T iy ncademy groundn on Loroy T place last week. The series wan won by T t Sir. Brengle. The games' wero eliciting WILLIAM CULLINGTON, £j»l wdto vvitnt'imod by a fow frimdn of T the players. ?T T Tfon might lake- ev«k WHERE THE TROLLEY STOPS, RED BANK, N. J. t ^nd you wouldn't ge\ any luoro HOWH of teu\ interest to'Momnouth county p«»plo T U printed each week in '£iHt BKO- i ••••**»^ >•$••*••••••I:• We are a few weeks ahead of time, but since our friends and neighbors are benefited, we'll forget it. It's customary to sell Straw Hats at reduced prices about the middle of August, but we will start right away and give you the benefit while the stock is large. SO HERE GOES: ON L HATS t $3.00 HATS ARE NOW $2.00 2.50 " «* 1.67 2.00 4* 1.33 1.50 .00 it 1.00 66C 50C 33c 25C 17c Plenty of Young's Straws among them and they all share the same fate.

Last week we purchased 65 RUSSIAN BLOUSE SUITS, the surplus stock of a prominent manu- facturer, made of Brilliantine, in navy and white, brown and white, plain grey and green. Every suit made l to sell at $5.00. Our Price is $1-98. Sizes 2 /2 to 6 years. This price is less than the cloth cost, and we advise an early inspection. 50 Boys' all wool Crash Suits, 10 to 16 years, made to sell at $4, at ^

Mothers1 Friend Waists and Blouses, some sold as high as 50c, your choice now at 19c. 500 Princely Shirts go. at 39c9 50c. quality.: Some odd lots of. Monarch and Columbia Shirts, regular $1.00 quality, go at 73c. . Men's and Boys' Night Shirts, with and without collars, 50c* and 69c. qualities, go at 39e.

Boys'Play Suits, 29c Boys'Tennis Pants, 17c Boys' White Pack Caps, 9c each. 5,000 Lawn Shield and Band Bows, Manufacturer's some plain, some embroidered, values up to. 25c»p EJCH* These goods are ridiculously low in price, being much below anything/we have ever before offered at this season pf the year. The goods are right in season, just when you want them. There are a lot of other things, not mentioned in this advertisement for want of room, which go at proportionately low prices. All these goods will go very quickly. Some of the smaller lots may not last more than a day or twU If you are interested, better visit the store soon. ' M. M. DAVIDSON, The tore, .1-,,. ADR right, but that it ia hard to get up an in- WEDDINGS. A FESSMEN'S TAIK, Almost a HORSE WANTED. The woman entered ti»e car and A good working boree wanted : not too large. terest in theaters when the mercury is McCheutey—Betgelt. It Will be Hel&hy Union Hose Com- Address Mrs. J. K. Walling, Near MonmoliU), H. j. gallivanting around the century mark. sank moaning Into the seat. Her face . Bdtt» ail Pra»*l«ar. Miss Frances Elizabeth McChesney, pany of Ue<2 Bank. eft* 'l < was tia$gn'rOSITIO*N WAWTEO. daughter of Mrs. Louisa McChesney of Union hose company of Red Bank A young girl wishes a position nt upstairs wort or *t lass pHtofflos at Bed Bank, N. J.. as Red Bank ought to have a good the- herewith de§f);anxiety. Freehold, was married on the Fourth of will hold a fair at the hose liouse and Suddenly she extracted a tiny vial light housework. Addrtes liirl, Box 197, Bed Bant. d U matter. ater, not so much as a money-making in- July to William George Betschof Brook- rounds on Shrewsbury avenue on Wed- from ber handbag, pulled a piece of stitution as a town institution. A good 8VB8CBIPTION PXMCJB: lyn. The ceremony took place at the nesday, Thursday and Friday nights, cotton out of the month of the bottle or 10 room house in good bcutioa and urn dollars AM par J1.BO theater is a good thing for the town and weekly in excbaDge for bourd of tuiee persons liaiBSDUia 75 Freehold Presbyterian church and was August 16th, 17th and 18th. A platform and was putting It to ber lips when a Address Peinmnent, Box 1KT, Red BaDls. 7 it would add to the attractiveness of the StXM iuoatlu ; 40 performed by Rev. Herman C. Foxwil. l be built on the grounds for dancing young man opposite sprang to his feet town as a place of residence. It would and this will be a feature each night. and dashed It from her hand. HOUSE WANTED. About 500 guests were present. The A gentle borse wanted immediately, suitable for WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1905. probably make a little money for the "Good gracious, mudamr he exclaim- W0 a d al8 tt good drlrer AdiJre bride was given away by her brother, There will be contests for a gold watch &•!'£, J? V ° ' s» H. men who owned it. ed hoarsely. "Just in timer Charles H. McCnesney. Miss Frances and other articles and there will also be Barker, Kingeknowe, New Montuoutb, i\. J. » * « The woman's escort sprang up fierce- TOWN TALK. F. Green was maid of honor. Theguessing and voting contests. LAWN SOCIABLE. Bed Bank for years has tried to get ly, and the two men gripped. 8 iaMewl be lK](i bridesmaids were Miss Anna C. Wehm- M™ '"-1 f " «the residence of The Bpastn of virtue which swept over factories to locate here, that would em- "Confound your roared the lady's Mrs. L. s. Juckson, Thursday eveniuif. july lath hoefer of Brooklyn, Miss Marion Lock- Bunk Mnellt °'lbe stormed church of West tted its© Highlands and which stopped the ploy a great deal of help. These efforts Freehold Couple Elope. companion. "Can't my wife uae her wood of Englishtown and Miss Bertie Suaday selling of liquor at the hotels have not been successful. What factor- Mies Marguerite Curr, daughter of toothache medicine without having ev- Blum of Nutley. Frederick Bauer of Mrs. M.trg E&IPLOYMErct BUREAU. keepers have squared themselves with number of men of this class without lands, Montreal, Quebec, Niagara Falls ent that he would like an associate In ,i cS"lc? Hi BaiIey's employment agency at Atlan- the conduct of the case.^He was asked tic: Highlands furnishes chefs, waiters, porters, use- fcbe authorities and that they have been any effort on the part of the town, and and points of interest in Canada. Upon THE REGISTER is $1.50 a year.— Adv. IUI men, farm bands, gardeuers, nurses, cbamber- promised protection for the rest of this without anything except the natural their return they will live at Brooklyn. whom he would suggest, and he said maida and all classes of help at a few hours' nolice. eoason at least. Indeed, the very fact attractions of the town to induce them he thought Mr. Evarts would be the FOR SALE OR best man owing to his superior knowl- CEfJTLE COB FOR SALE. that the hotels there have opened for to locate here. A little work along the Tiltoti-Smith. bouse at Little Silver. Apply to A. M. Hoberts, _ Been used by a lady in Lakewood, now in Europe edge of the law and his great reputa- Little Silver, V. J. Sunday liquor selling after the authori- line of making tlie place tjtill more at- Miss Carrie A. Tilton, daughter of Will- Blocky. younirand not afraid of unylblng. Horses tion as ah advocate. The client agreed, hoarded summer and winter. Howard T Ely ties made them close up once, indicates tractive as a residence town would bring iam A, Tilton of Keyport. and Frank A, PLUMBER WANTED. ~5°fV14 t)0"/liInK stab|es, Holmdel, N. J. Tel. and Mr. Butler was Instructed to see Plumber wanted. Must be sober and industrious thatthe hotel keepers feel that they will them here in very much greater num- Smith, son of Assessor W. Con. Smith of If Mr. Evarts would come Into the Apply to H. Frey, ned Bank. get real, genuine protection for the rest of bers. the same place, were married last ease. STEER FOR SALE. MOMEY TO LOAPJ. A steer, red nnd white, lms been pasturing with this season. After having had to close (Town Talk continued on page 12.) Wednesday afternoon. The ceremony Accordingly Mr. .Butler wrote to Mr. $30,000 to loan in amounts from $1,000 815,000. my cattle eight weeks. The owner cun Save tame S. C. Cowart, Freehold, N. J. 'in [.nying for bis keep, anil for this advertisement tip for several Sundays, the mere fact took place at the bride's home and was. Evarts and invited him to be associat- Jtherwlse it will be sold for its keep. ie • • that they are now selling on Sunday performed by Rev. 6. S. Lawrence, p gate, Red Bank. A BICYCLE STOLEN. ed in the case and name his retaining OPERATORS WANTED. again ia of itself sufficient proof of this. tor of Calvary Methodist church of Key- fee. In due time he received a reply, Girti to sew on machines, also handsewers. Ap- ply at factoty, Sigmund Eisner. RAN AWAY FRORfl HOME. * * # Tiro Men hit lie County Jail Lhnrffeil port, The bride was dressed in a cos- which he saw at a glance was In the My son. John Maugliton, Jr., Hi years old left With the Tim ft. tume of white Paris muslin, trimmed affirmative and, without stopping to SV3OEJEY WANTED. home July 4th. I would be glad to receive any in- It is said to be a very open season all $3,000 or Sil.OOO wanted on real estate at Oceanic. formation as to his whereabouts, aud would be A bicycle was stolen from the rear with valenciennes lace. She carried a read It further, slipped It into another 1 m Juhn Nh the way along the coast—as open a sea- envelope and mailed It to his client. Address P. O. Box 28, Oceanic,K. J. '^ ™! son for Sunday selling as Monmouth porch of the home of John H. Cook, Jr., shower bouquet of Bride roses and of Tinton Falls last Wednesday morn- maiden hair fern. Miss Alice R, Whar In a day or two he received a call from MILK AMDCREAIVi. county has ever seen, Down at Asbury Mr. Evarts, who Inquired what sort of Bottled milk, cream, buttermilk and pot cheese a FARMERS. ing. Mr. Cook is a milkman and goes to ton sang " O Promise Me." The wed- specialty. A. Grover, Shrewsbury. loTnrt VJJTR?1?,11? Bros" comm'S3lon merchants, Park a numher of unfortunates who do a mnn his brother lawyer's client was. JS and 123 \\ allabout market, Brooklyn. N. Y witn a little illegal liquor Belling have been Long Branch early every morning on his ding march was played by Mrs. Edwin "Didn't you hear from him after I n shipment of asparagus. Highest market prices anfl milk route, HiB wife saw the thief just H. W barton. Mr, and Mrs. Smith left COW FOR SALE. 1 Cr8te S aPto J gathered in by the strong arm of the sent your letter to him?" queried Mr. An extra fresh cow for sale. Inquire ot William ffi ™ * " " -Jaw, and have been indicted for selling as he was going out of the yard with the for a short wedding trip. Upon their Butler: Otterson, 310 Broad street, Red Baas, N. J. wheel and thought she recognized him as return they will make their home with BOAT BARGAINS. liquor illegally, as they unquestionably "Yes," replted Mr. Evarts, "but he ROWBOAT TO LET. All kinds of pleasure craft bouirut, sold and ex- ought to be. But why don't the county John Burke of Tintou Falls. the bride's parents. The bride's travel- sent me a check for $25,000, and I only A sixteen-feet batteau to let by day or week; changed at Langley's boat house. Little Silver asked him for $2,500." comfortable aad safe. P. J. McClees, Red Bunk, Poini. sixteen to so-foot catboats to rent by month authorities manifest the same vigor The matter was reported to County ing dress was a dark blue taffeta suit N. J. l or season: also a number of second-hand boats for against the big places which sell liquor Detective Strong, and a few clays later with coat and hat to match. The bride It was apparent that Mr. Evarts' sale. J. H. Langloy, Little Silver Point, N. J chirograph? misled the client. This Is illegally as they do against the little fel- the wheel was recovered at the Scobey received many handsome presebts. LAUNCH FOR HIRE. the story as told by a lawyer who was Launch Sheridan for charter by hour or day. Or- 0F SETTLEMENT. lows? The big hotels at Asbury Park ville store, William J. Wines had been ders may be left at the Sheridan hotel. Fred Fries, i ESTATE OF JAMES H. PETERS, deceased. familiar with the facts, but It Is notproprietor. (Seventh Account.) probably sell more liquor illegally in a seen with the wheel the day before and Heeler— VanXote. known whether Mr.Evarts returned the Notice is hereby given thnt the accounts of tho after the wheel wns recovered he said subscriber, executor of said deccasi-d, will be .day than the little fellows do in a year; Miss Matilda Keeler, daughter of Al difference of $22,800 or whether he FOR SALE. audited, and stated by the Surrogate, nod reported Pony, cittLaml harness. Pony a good saddler and for settlement to the Orphaus Court of the County but the little fellows are mercilessly col- the wheel had been given to him by a varado Keeler of Bank street, and Wes- worked It out' sootl drlv eor e ^Sfcfei K A. Moody, 48 Broad street, I U AY E SEVENTH lared by the detectives and officials, drunken tuaii who askud him to leave it ley VanNote of River street, son of Alex. ° fT^M 2§P ™ while the big places run along just as at the Scobeyvillestore. His description Original Natural History, Dated July lltti, 1905. VanNote of Shrewsbury, were married RL WANTED. CHARLES H. IVINS. of the man who had given him theon Sunday night at the home of Rev. The Rev. Samuel Peters wns the man 'or general housework. Apply to wheel tallied with that of John Burke. Robert MacKellur, rector of Trinity who made Connecticut's blue laws fa- i, Rlverton cottaue, 84 Front street, It Used to be said that the hotel people Both Wines and Burke were placed under Episcopal church. Mr. VanNote is em- mous by their publication in his his arreBt by Detective Strong anil were tory of that s^ate. In that Interesting O8ITION WANTED. . and drug store people at ABbury Park ployed in George Hance Patterson's au- lshes place at general housework. Can would not tolerate any interference with sent to the county jail to awnit the tomobile repairing shop. Mr. and Mrs. volume the following original bit x of references. Address Miss Olive Bar- action of tlio grand jury. VanNote are keeping house on Leighton natural history is to be found: "In the ed Bank. the illegal liquor business by nnyone Connecticut river, 200 miles from Long outside of their own coterie, and that avenue. Island sound, is a narrow of five yards RUNABOUTS FOR SALE. One low-wheel and two high-wheel rubber tire A meeting of the residents of Jthey kicked up the fuss from time to Four New Church Members. only formed by two shelving moun- runabouts, almost new, left at Colyer's stable, Red time which resulted in the roundup of Four persons joined the First Metho- tains of solid l'ock whose tops Inter- Bank, to be sold. Miss Fidelia Ely, daughter of Joseph Middletown Tillage and vicinity the smaller violators of the law. Thedist church last Sunday morning. Mrs. cept the clouds. Through this chasm BOY WANTED. public has no certain way 6f knowing Joseph Millward of Red Bank and W. Ely of Entontown, and George K. are compelled to pass all the waters Boy wanted in architect's oDlce. Call or address Magee, proprietor of the Columbia hotel •which in the time of floods bury the W. A. Shoemaker, corner Broad ami Monmcutb will be held at Temperance Hall, iiow much truth there is in this state 'Thomas and Hugh Rockhill were received streets, Red Bank. saent, but everybody knows that if i from probation and Mrs. Judson Patter- of that place, were married on Sunday northern country. Here water Is con- night at the bride'^^^fg^jjajo cere- solidated without frost, by pressure, by on Monday, July 17th, at 8 snaa belongs to n certain class in Asbury son joined by letter from the Eatontown 01 SMALL STORE FOR RENT. Park he can sell liquor illegally day in Mothodist church. At the service in the mony was P^f ^^^'j• A. swiftness, between the pinching sturdy Small store on Front street in Stout block, (or rocks to such a degree of Induration rent. Apply to Theodore F. White, REOISTER o'clock p. M., for the purpose and day out and year in and yeur out church at night the preacher wns Rev. Black, pastor of the Kafturftfli Baptist building. Red Bank. church. MissClnra Ely, the bride's sis- that an Iron crow floats smoothly down sad it is all right BO far as the county of Mr. Burnett of Dexter, Iowa, who with its current. Here Iron, lead and cork EMOPJEY TO LOAfJ. of organizing a permanent so- $cinl8 are concerned. These men arehis wifo ia visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. B.ter, and Frank B. Woods of Red Bank bavo one common weight; here, steady Money to loan In sums to suit borrowers on first Btooci up with the couple. Mr. and Mrs. bond imd mortgage. A. L. Ivins, REGISTER build' sever interfered with, But let an ignor Pliaro of Center street, as time and harder than marble, the ing, lied Bank, N. J. ciety for the protection and pro- jant foreigner or a poor native undertake Aiagee were serenaded on Monday night stream passes Irresistible If not swift by the Oceanport drum corps, to do the same and the county autliori Horse Falls on Rider. na lightning." FOR RENT. motion of the interests of the Barber shop for rent at East Oceanic. Horse nnil .tlca let him know in short order that ho Joseph MolFett, who is employed in T. two carrlagea for tenm for salo. Address William community. ., cannot transgress the mighty mandates J. Sweeney's bliickHmitli shop at Sea- A MUSICAL OPENING. When Hate Were Unknown. Meara, Seabright, N. J. M the law. He gets it in the neck good briglit, was riding it liorso on Monday In ancient days hats were unknown, HORSES FOR SALE. SI. A. Gnyon to Celebrate the Open Tenm of bay cobs for salo. Goodjworkors and JAMES A. STOOTHOFF, plenty. when tlio animal reared up and throw hia of Slid Xeiv Store. men having hoods attached to their outer garments, which they wore or good drivers, l'rico $175. Will sell separate. Bert him. Tho animal lost its Imlunce nnd II. A. Quyon, who recently moved in Motion, Highlands, N. J. t What ia the underlying reimon for tins discarded nt pleasure. Stow, the old Chairman of Committee. fell upon Moflott. MoiTctt's back wru) to the George Uanco Patterson building FOR RENT FOR SUMMER. i. (difference in the treatment of the same historian, says that nobody wore any- Btiained and ho wna bndly l>ruiscd. on Broad strcut, will celebrate tho open thing else except tlio lord mayor of A farmhouso ami outbuildings for rent for th« s.-ifia of criminal? One would think, numiuor, with or without land. Apply 10 Henry (j. Miiklletown, N. J., July 11, 1905. ing of hia nowiitoro noxt Saturday aftor- London, who sometimes donned a hat Taylor, Middletown, N. J. v?io had not learned differently by ex- Now Electric I.if'ht Manager. noon mill night. Thoro will be instru- on state occasions. In tlio reign of , ••rience, that tlio poor and unfortunate, HORSE FOR SALE. Harry Chandlur, who linn been in mental niuuio by E. A. Lambert nnc Klnjf Henry VII., ho saya, the citizens Practically Hound and suitable for driving to • ••'Wildbe the ones who would be nhown charge of the Bhoro Electric company others, uolnotionfl on tho Mctrostylo begun to wear "flat caps knit of wool- business wagon. Fair roudur. Apply at Henry CLEARING SALE Jc-siiency, if lenioncy was to be nhown at en yarn, black, but so light that they Wllucr'H, Tinton fulls, N. J. of Ited Hank for several yearn, resigned pianola and vocal numbers. Tho after- of ' 5.51; and that the man who deliborately hint woolc, ThomaB Davis, Jr., has boon noon entertainment will begin nt twowere obliged to tlo them under their WOMAN WANTED. --•.'•Vitod tlio law yenr after year and chins, for else the wind would bo mus- Woman wanted to aanist in cooking, washing and WALL PAPEK appointed IMIHIIICUH nianagor for Red o'clock and lant until ii:!10. Tho enter- ter over them. Ironing. Cull or nddresa nt once Vantlnl'ti cottage, vi't> did it knowing that ho WHS violating Bank in liix place, Mr. Daviu begun liin tainment at night will begin nt uovcu 40 Worthloy otrent, Hed Hunk. from Be. a double roll up, at 'J'S taw, would bo tho' mnn who would now duties tliiti morning. o'clock and end nt nine Sou venire con Only a. Baby. GROCERY STORE TO LET, *<, A the weighty hand of tho law. But uintiug of inuoio and llowoni will he given corner Front and Maplo avenue, now occupied In ; Something to live for came to tho place, Juulila Clayton. Pooacssion glvon April Int. 100B :. 5 n't so. Tho deliberate, cold-blooded Oceanic "Man In Jail. BomothlnK to dlo for, maybo; Apply to J. T. Allnn, 1*. O. Box 1!MI. \jn.-wsgreraorof tho law is protected year Robert Emory of Oceimio wnti ar- Vandcrbnrg News. Something to fflve oven uorrow a KTOCO— DOLL'S, fr'r1!? i *.ycnr—or it lonat ho is novor inter- roiiU'il nt that plnoo on iSiitnrdity night And yet It wn3 only a baby. ENGINE FOR SALE. Tho lolephoni) lino through tliinncctipn Ilider EiTlcori hot nil engine for ni!i\ in good SO White Street, f :W d with ; but tho littlo fellow who for being drunk and diuonli>rly. On htm been completed and ti'lephonen hnvo Coolnff and laughter and gu mid condition; will pump 11(10 gallomi per hour. Acl- Hoar IJrosid Street. '• ."''li'WB in tlio enino path muut watch out Monthly morning Juntico Hidden iifint been inntallcd nt J. II. .Tonoo's utoro crleri, (lrc.su Henry Dommort, Locust Point. Abbott Worthlcy'u and Morford Tuy- Dlmplofl for tendomnt klnncn; • i JSIU gobble-uns 'ill Bit him, him to tint county jail for ten dnyn anil IOI'H. GluioB of hopea and raptures and O CHURCH SEATS FOR SALE. # * » until tliii linn mill contn urn norvod out,. Miwi Mary Conover npont part of Itwt Chaos of fears and of bllancs. Forty church nciitfl, avonigo twnlvii feel lu IOIIKIII. f Il« will bo in jail thirteen dayii. hair hlnIfcd CUHIIIOIIH tntl bnckii, for mile. Apply t« >. -i -!i})|jotso orery man in tho county him week with Minn M. A. MoClviiii of llolrn- Lust year, lllto nil y«ar», the roao anil tho Itnv. Henry H. tiunctiynu, llolfortl, N. .1. Dissolution of Partnership. ',£•?;" 'rlvata opinion no to why thingu tiro d«l. Minn (jonovcr in now viniliiu; at C'olt'iiNi'ck, thorn; FOR SALE. Nollcti In buroby (iiveii that HID imitlicralilii lutcly This ypnr a wIMorniws, muybo, f;ut»iMliifct between Uundolph llordi'ii and AHUM {"'.•'JmteA in thin wny. Stricken With Paralysis. Tho tifi|inrftf;iiii iioaiion in ovor and the 75 tiiiin of lictil ryo straw and grulii ol thin ntinndii' But hotfvon ntoopnd tmdor tho roof on tlio on farm or tlcllvoroil. Ltxiuo »r inonwd. 11. II' W. llonlmi, of Hhnm'Hhiiry, Moiiiiinutli roimly. Now o-o-o — Wliilo working in hhi ntnblo last fiuiumii an» now hmvpuling their liay. morn Archibald, MlildlotuW", N. ,1. Ciiro uf Uoldim fiunr .Icrwiy, under (ho Ilim IIIIIIID and ittyliHif It. A A. W. Wt'i'lneiidiiy, (JhurlcH V. Hope wan utriclt- Th« hay crop in unimunlly good huro. That tt brought thorn only ft baby. IKnilcii. win dlKiuilvcd on Hie Unit d|iy of July, 1W1T), I *.••", fi-m for l>i)il(iis>K a theater in >>y mutual nniiccit. AH dubtn (nvln|; In Hid tail) 4 011 with pitralytilu, Ho in Uiinjj attcmlt'il All'. 1111(1 Mill. ()|'1II|MI ][|IKhl'!IHl)i!l|t (III POSTS FOR SALE. imrtneiiiblii nro to 1K> Kvolvid by tlio nnlil Anhtidl Vi J " s> h iwciiw to hAvo l>eon bit by tlio 500 fond) posU for milo; rhctjlnut, whlto codriratnl by Dr. Young oC Red llnnlc mid in rocov- You haven't rond nil tho IIOWH of the W. llordcn, and all deiimiiilsoii dm nald •"it-.'ilnt. Tl>o jiiojcctors of tho Knurtli at HliUiin Itiland. county until you hnvo read TilK Bico IIM'IINI. at 10 to ;.'« C4)uu cui'l], Bulhiblii tor I'lcknt, urn lo Ut< iirewiitcd to him for payauint. oriug. wlro or olut fonoo. Dunliil II. Hook, Tinton Falls, HANDOl.l'H IKUtnEN, "-" '•• f IBTKK.—Adv. N. J. It payH to ndvDitiiie in Tint KKUJHTICK. ABHIia W. 1IOKDKK. PEKSONAJL. The Sea Captain. wduUThave leftTFTxTher. it?s mlhe- BIRTHS. I am In love with the sea, but I *X~X-<~>«X«:^ where he will represent the Equitable AN ALIEN HEIR. "How I wish it were morning that I dead, yetspeaketb." might go to her," he said aloud. FLOIiENCE A. MOUNT, life insurance company. , Secretary. Throwing a fresh stick on toe fire, He smited, and yet a heaviness lay F. E. d'Humy, district electrician of Dick Vauce gazed approvingly about on his heart. The sad face of the •wo- Positively the Only Big Circus the Postal telegraph company, was in him. Tlie room which the dancing man whose birthright he had stolen COMMENCING- town yesterday superintending the fit- flames lighted up had a cozy, homelike seemed to stare at his reproachfully Coming this Way this Year tiDg up of the local office in H. A. air delightfully In contrast with his from the corners of the room. It even Guyon's store. cheerless lodgings In Paris. At lust he framed itself in the smoldering logs »B THE GREAT Miss Louise Kerrigan of Brooklyn has had one little spot within four walla they Mazed up, fitfully and fell apart. that he could call his own. been visiting Mies Kittie Owen of Worth- The doorbell rang again. After a ZIMMERMAM OPERA COMPANY As he stretched his legs comfortably ley street. long delay the door opened to admit WITH to the blaae he was still tingling with Mrs. Burke, the old housekeeper. She Adrien Moiaean of Wallace street the thrill of amazement he had felt was pale with suppressed emotion, spent Sunday with friends at the High- when Informed by the village Lawyer "Another visitor?" he exclaimed with and sax exceptionally strong company presenting lands. during their brief Interview that after- annoyance. "Who is it?" Joseph Cherer of Chatham spent Sun- noon that_he was Robert Chllton's heir. "Mr. Chllton's granddaughter, sir," day with liia sister, Mrs. CharleB HofP The efitate consists of this old house, was the startling response. man of Front street. which has been in the Chilton family Dick sprang to his feet. Miss Lillian Hayes of New York spent for a hundred years, and $50,000 In "The poor child did not learn of her SATURDAY NIGHT BENEFIT MONMOUTH MEMORIAL the Fouith with her sister, Miss Ellinor stocks and bonds," Mr. BlackBtone had grandfather's death until today, sir. HOSPITAL. Hayes of Shrewsbury avenue. said. The storm delayed the mails. She came Seats reserved by Telephone 147-j, Long Branch.' "And It's mine, really mine, to do at once—and alone, because her mother Mrs. William H. Martin of Rector what I please with?" Dick asked eager- Is ill." 8EATS-25, 50, 15, $1.00. place has returned from a two weeks' ly- 'What does she want?" His voice •visit at AtlantioCity and Vinelnnd. 1 "Nobody can dispute your legal right had a strangely harsh, unnatural Mr. and Mrs. Gottlob Dietz of Bank to It," was the stiff response. "Chilton sound. street spent Sunday with Mrs. John took care to make a will that would 'She hoped to be in time for the fu- Kubler of the Phalanx. Misses May me neral, but her tram was stalled. She hold. The Justice of the bequeat Is •r i' and Julia Zeller of Brooklyn have been quite another thing." is going right away again. I thought, 11 visiting Mrs. Dietz. Although three hours had gone by sir," hesitatingly, "you might like to (i Joseph Edgar, Sr,, of Rector place, i6 since then, Dick still almost doubted see her first." «) See her! Dick felt a sick shrinking Blank Books, Baseball Goods, Tennis, Croquet, 11 spending a week at Penmar and Phila- his great fortune. How often he had < i < gone with empty pockets and nothing through all his being. Of course It was Flags, Japanese Umbrellas, Lanterns, 11 delphia. a game to wheedle some concession < i Miss Mabel Wolcott of Monmouth to eat! (i One blissful thought made his heart from him. But it would be churn, to Colored Fire, Sailboats. < i street left this morning for Hensonville 11 leap. He could marry Alice Dale! refuse. SOUVENIR POSTAL CARDS OF RED BANK. in the Catskills, where she will spent the They had waited two years because of 'Where is she?" rest of the summer. their poverty. There was now no occa- 'In the kitchen. She would come no ; THE LATEST IN BOOKS AND MAGAZINES Michael Hulett of Branch avenue and sion for delay. farther." P , Miss Matilda Hulett, spent The wind whistled around the house, As Dick started In that direction Mrs. Daily and Sunday Papers Delivered. Thursday at Asbury Park, driving great gusts of snow against Burke laid h«r hand upon His arm. Mrs. Nellie Heisley ahd Miss Lulu the windows. Dick laughed at Its fu- "One moment, sir. I'd like to teU you something. The girl tovea a Hubbard of Washington street left to- tile rage find stirred the fire afresh. F. W. MOSELLE, In fancy lie saw Alice sitting on the worthy man as poor as herself. They day for a visit at Meriden, Connecticut. can never marry now. I'm sorry lor Miss Irene VanPelt of New York is other side of the hearth, one pretty 34 BROAD ST., 34 pink cheek In her palm. How gra- them both." •visiting her sister, Mrs. George Rap- She turned half fiercely, but before RED BANK, N. J, ciously she would rule over the house! Largest, Grandest and Best Truly pleyea of Mechanic street. He would hasten to her the first thing he could speak his anger was swallow- ed up in i>4ty. The case appealed to American Circus. Miss AnnisPhelan of Monmouth street on the morrow with the wonderful 200 of the World's Champion Male has returned from a visit of Bevernl days news.' him strongly. "Was the structure of his and Female Equestrians. Aerialists, \ at Jersey City. The -doorlteH rang. Mr. Robbing, the happiness to be built upon the ruin of Acrobats, Gymnasts, Equilibrists, gray hatred minister who had officiated two lives? If he robbed this girl of Athletes, Animal Trainers. Riders, Mrs. George P. Bartle and Miss Minnie her inheritance what was left to iert at Robert Chilton's funeral that day, Drivers and Clowns, in 100 Marvel- Boydof Bed Bank are camping at Silver With these thoughts whirling Jn bis ous, Imperial Acts, on the Ground, " [ P you are trying to find a MEAT MARKET where Lake, near Holderness, New Hampshire. was ushered In. 'Shaking the snow in the Air,- on the Barebaoks of from his' great coat, he sat down heav- brain he started on again, with heavy, PRIME MEATS and FEESH POULTRY are They will remain in camp until early in shuffling steps. The girl sat before the horses, in One Double Hippodrome ily before the fire, his face wearing a ARENA, and on the Elevated Stages. the fall. stern expression. kitchen flre, her face in her hands. sold at strictly city market prices, shop this week Dick saw the drooping figure as ' Andrew J, Hollywood, formerly of •'Mr. Vnnce, hoar long had you through ja red mist. He began speak 25 CLOWNS 25 with us. Special for Saturday we offer: Red Bank, and the organist and choir known the deceased?" he abruptly In- Ing rapidly, inn tense voice, aa If half master of St. James'a church of Newark, quired. nfnild to trust himself. "About sl$ months, sir." Colossal Complete Double sailed for Europe yesterday. He will I'm a selfish brute. At first I .didn't 1 spend the greater part of Iiis time in "You'met abroad?" "Yes, sir-In Paris. Mr. Chilton fell realize the injustice of accepting a MENAGERIE. London and Paris, and expects to return legacy that means everything to yovt'~ Plate Beef 5c seriously 111 Rt one of the hotels. He Herd of Elephants, Drove of Camels, Cross Rib Roast 12C At his first word a tremor bad shaken home about the middle of September, was ulone, and I took care of him. IIi Lions, Tigers, Etc. baby Elephant the bowed figure. She lifted her head and Baby Sacred White Camel. Corned Beef 5C Reg. Hams 12^C was pleased to think that my nursing suddenly with a startled exclamation. Church News. snved his life." "Dick! Dick!" Cal. Hams 8J^C Top Sirloin I4c "You traveled with him afterward?" See the Big Free Street A lawn and ice cream sociable will be He stood staring. All at once the given at Mrs. Louisa Jackson's on Mon "I did. I was a poor medical stu- Chuck Pot Roast IOC Loins Pork 14C dent. I lmd Just taken my degree. I mist seemed shot through with a daa- mouth 'Street to-morrow night by the zling light. He leaned nearer, like oue :P_A.:R.A.D:E could net as courier and also keep choir and Christian Endeavor society of hnlf bllndwl, and brushed hla hand At 10 a. m. Daily. Rib Roast \\ 10c Velal Roast... 14c careful wntch over his bodily healtl*." the ReforniPed church, Red Bank. across his eyes. Contains more Elephants, Camels, Open Dick smiled pleasantly, but the cler- Dens of Wild Beasts. People, Horsps, Corned Rump IOC Jersey Salt Pork 12© A lawn sociable and entertainment gyman's face grew harder than before. "Alice! It Is Alice!" he said Incredu- lously. Tableaux, Clowns and Novelties will be held at Trinity church rectory on "Did he ever speak to you of hla than any similar pageant. Maple avenue next Tuesday night. family?" She, the quicker to grasp the situa- tion, looked up at him with n happy Doors Opeu.l and 7 p. m. Noxt Sunday mornirig at Shrewsbury "Only once—Just before he died. He laugh. Performances, 2 and 8 p. m. Rev. S. D. Price will preach on " Three sald'they had betrayed; forsaken him; that he -was woreeSthun alone In the "Dick! Oh, Dtok! Nobody told me Gardens." At night at Eaton town liis the name of the roan who had robbed world. He mnde me promise to bury This Big Circus will be in Keyport, subject will be "In peace will I both lay me of my birthright. I never dreamed him from his old home, never Inti- Tuesday, July 18; Freehold, Wednes- me down and sleep." It was you. I thought It was some ad- day, July 10, and Long Brunch, Friday, Kridel & Co., mating thnt I was to be his heir. That venturer. Thnt Is why I meant—to go came as n complete surprise. Oh, sir," July 21. Tramps Sent to Jail. away—without seeing you"— Dick added, with kindling eyes, "this ' The wosda died In an Inarticulate Four tramps wero picked up about legacy means everything to me—suc- Wharf Ave. and Front St., Red Bank. town by the officers on Saturday night, murmur. Her blushing face was press- BIDS FOR COAL. cess, happiness, a prosperous career." ed against hu< heart. On Monday morning Justice Sickles sent Looking at the young man over his them to the county jail for eixty days, spectacles, >Ir. Robblns snid gravely: Notice is h'ereby given that the Board "Then you are not awnre that Mr. He told them if they caruo before Death by Lottery. of Education of Shrewsbury Township him again ho would send them up for Chilton left n daughter and a grand- child?" Among other complications of Chi- ninety days. nese law ami Its execution 1B a unique will receive sealed bids) for 170 tons of John Welah, who garo his residence Dick turned pale, and all nt once there was a curious pounding in his and rathe? racy method of dcalli^f with Big Kediiction to New Oxfords9 an Joriiey City, but who in supposed to be prlncnera by lottery. Once li year the coul, more or leas, for the- schools of tlio ears. I have cut the price on a great many of this Season's a tramp, was arrcBtcd for drunkunneBH "No! It simply enn't be! He would vermilion pencil of Imperial authority township. Quality to be Upper Lehigli by Policeman Lmvia on Wednesday. bnve told me"— Is waved over a chart on which the Oxfords 5Oc. to $1.0© a pair. They are all new names of coavicted criminals aro writ- Red Ash. Coal to be delivered at the vari- Justice Sickles sent him to the- county "It HMJIDH Hint he did not. His daugh- high grade Oxfords. Lounsbury and other well-known jail for twenty daya. ten, und tbo»e which 4t Includes in a ter married agalnnt IIIH wishes and he ouu Hchoola of the township in amounts ue-vor foi'Kuve lu;r. Suo In now a widow, huplinznrd sweep are executed forth- makes, regular sizes. AA to D widths. If you now with. Tba tttft ifcro either reprieved al- Train Ban in Open Switch. a confirmed Invalid, ami very poor designated by tho Hoard of Education. need or will need Shoes, here's a chance to fit yourself Hor child, n girl of twenty, 1B working together or th«lr executions aro post- A Contral railroad train ran into an poned for another year. at a big saving with the latest style Oxford. opon nwitch at Matawan on Monday, do- beyond her Htrcngtli for the bare ne- Tho Board reserves the right to rejec ct'HBltleH of life. I Bent word to thorn railing tlui engine and the combination but It iip|>eitrn tlu>y did not receive It In " Porovor." any or all bids. omoking and Imggitgo car. Mrs. A. H time to come." I hod not known before Bids must bo handed in to the neeretar VanBiiflkirk wuu hurt by boing throw! There wan a Hllenco which neither of "Voroytv" w(U! HO long B. Bargain Time for- All Now. Tho Slow »trnh«B of th« clock of *lmo ai;ninst tho nido of a car, but hor injurioH thu two Hetuucd dlHpoMiMl to break. by AuguBt 2d, 11)05, at 0:00 v. M. I now begin to reduce stock and will give you a lot arc not soriouii. No ono olno wan injured Dlok'fi forehead gHiilened with pcnipl I had not hnuril. ration. He nwcpt a ithnliliijj hum "Via hard to leiirn no Into; II. A. KKTTEL, of good things in Shoes and Oxfords. Police to bo PnW Twlco a Month ncroNH It. It oosnm no uiul heart rtalljr learnn, But }ft®2>«M und triutta ami d&taMa und The polico foroo of lied Hunk wil "Of Connie I lmdoriitnnd why you tell Kccrotary of tho ltoarn forgotfuln*'* - tnbloto. l''or nalo by C. A. Minion &O braid apd cake »nlo hunt Saturday. wnutul hlH daughter t<> have It, li I iiavu n»t hoard. Ho. 5 Droad Htieet.'ltel Bank. IS.I X2GHTS AT TENTON FA1XS. This Refrigerator is For this handsome Go- made of hard wopft, gold- Cart, 98.00; worth Township €oiM«»4«ec I'/accs en oak finish, double Grand Rapids Furniture. S*JB Street Lights at That Place. every penny of $11.48. walls and charcoal fill- We offer exactly 25 per The township committee of Shrews- ing. Charcoal filling cent off them (without bury townahip visited Tinton Fulls on ha& been universally parasol) at this price Friday afternoon at the invitation of adopted as the most'prac- while they last. They some of the residents of that place, with tical way of effecting ate made of full reed the view of placing street lights on the saving in the ice ex- body, green enamel, all- highways in the village. After going pense. Shelves are re- steel gearing, reclining over the roads of the village the com- movable, castors and - is the time to buy. back and foot dash; auto- mittee decided to place one street light pipes greatly improved ; matic rubber tires, pat- at the main crossing near Bennett's locks and hinges of J". HVL &EEEWBEEG-, ent wheels and brakes, Btore, another in front of Capt. David A. feronze. 87.60. 51 Broad Street, RED PANE. $9.98. Waiting's house, and a third in front of Dentil's hotel. These last two are on the Colt's Neck road. Another light Will DEATH CLAIMS PAID. &e placed in front of the church on thePolicies Paid by the Prudential in load to Eatontown, and two will be lo- this Dintrtct. cated on the road to Shrewsbury. This Twenty-tire death claims'were paid in will give the village sis street lights. the Red Bant district by the Prudential ANOTHER BIG EYENT. The lights will be like those now on theinsurance company last month. Two of Burnson road and will be furnished by them were for Red Bank persons, Lillian the Construction and Supply company Holmes and Mary Armstrong, the of New Jersey. This is the Eed Bank amount of their claims being respectively This Saturday, July 15th, we inaugurate v .". - ••• concern which furnished the|Janips for $129.20 and $220.00. The other claims the Rumson road. paid were as follows: Dennis Gorman. Long Branch ®1 4J *JS Susan Johnson. Hlirhlands 45 89 TWO HOUSES SOLD. Phoebe Van Brunt, Oceanic 50 00 Jnnu&l Summer Sales •. .** Mary M. Brooks, Eatontown 115 36 located at HlUeide, Xear William Howlaud, LOOK Branch 241 27 William Brlstey. Lond Branch 161 60 Atlantic Highlands, Kate Goodwlrf; Lorn? Branch 16134 A. Wells, Loni? Branch 363 28 The residence property of Frank J. CornellUB Taylor. Asbury Part 118 79 Unusual attractions and values will amply repay your attendance. Davis at "Hillside, near Atlantic High- Sallle Mannes, Bradley Beach... 78 78 Emma Kenny, ABbury Park 28 00 lands, has been sold to B. Alexander Hannah Lane, Asbury Park 18 00 George W. Penn, Waretown 10 60 Music and Refreshing Drinks free. * Baach of Brooklyn. Mr, Basch bought George W. LamberusoD. Matawan 243 58 the house furnished and be took possess- Clifford Truex, Keansburg 122 67 Lydla Downs, Bolmar 44 50 ion of it to-day. Mr. Davis has fitted up Mary Klckley. Manasquan 10 00 hia carpenter shop for temporary oc- Charles McBrlde. EnRllshtown 213 00 William Ploth, Hlllsdale 112 0ft cupancy and his family will live there A.H. Lome, Asbury Park 94 DO Winnie VanNoto, Elberon 187 07 ' during the summer. In the fall they Hannah EnRard, Asbury Park 280 00 will go to California, where Mr, Davia Eliza A. Cottrell, Keyport 89 16 expects to locate. Mr. Davis received «^~»-e- about $4,000 for the property. ADELPHIA STORE BOBBED. Mrs. Margaret Stout's houae at^Hillside, A TLot of Jewelry, Shoes and Soft formerly the Zebley property, has been Drinks Stolen. sold to Peter A. Walsh of New York, Robert Morris's store at Adelphia was .who has taken possession. This prop- robbed on Monday night. Entrance was /TEYPORT. Mi/. erty is just across the road from the gained by breaking a net out of a rear Davis house and is one of the finest, ^ • • • cellar window. The thieves got ten properties at Hillside. The sale'' was i • watches, ranging in value from $4.50 to made by William M. Foster & Co, The $15 ; a watch chain valued at .$5, several price paid was about $4,000. THE BEST PLACE TO pairs of shoes and a lot of soft drinks, '^^t^f. • ' . valued altogether at about $80. Am- CONTRACT FOB NEW HOUSE. brose Brown and James Daley of Jersey- - BUY. A BEAUTIFUL MONUMENT It Will be Built (it XewMoumouth ville were arrested the next morning on . AND GET FIRST-CLASS MECHANICAL WORK IS AT by William McCormiclt. suspicion of having committed the Wiiliam McConnick has given out arobbery. The only evidence against T. MANS0N & SON'S, RED BANK, N. J., them was that they were seen passing the contract for a new house at New Mon- NEAR TOWN HALL. inouth. Scott & Scott of Red Bank will store after it had been closed for the : do the carpenter work and William night and they were discharged. The One of the Largest and Best Equipped Plants in New Jersey. robbery is now believed to have been the* Wells of Atlantic fllgfilauds will do the % Bargains Throughout the Store* We carry a larpe stock of Monuments to select from. All work finished by mason work. The house will cost about work of tramps. • Pneumatic tools. We deliver and set Monuments in all parts of New Jersey. No $8,000. It will be located on part of the extra charge for distance. Call and see our new SlateBurial Vault. Joseph Walliug farm, along the trolley Sick Only Six Hours. ® These are lots to close out quickly at ver^y low prices. road, Mr. MeCorruick having recently Mis. Amelia Thompson of Long Branch >•••••• - bought half of the farm from the Wall- died on Sunday after a sickness of only •> Dressing Sacques and Kimonas, choice of pretty designs ing hens. Mrs. McCormiek is a daugh- six hours. She was apparently in the*| and all are well made, regular price 50c, to close ~ ~ ter, of Joseph Walling and was one of best of health until five o'clock Sunday © out the heirs to the property.. Mr. Mc-morning, when she was stricken with * Cormick is connected with Bradstreet's neuralgia around the heart. She died ® Corset Covers, with pretty lace insertion, well made, Geo. Ehret's Extra and Franciskaner Beer. agency at New York and will commute about eleven o'clock. Mrs. Thompson © size 32 to 44, a 50c. kind, at was 75 years old. Her husband died 32 Men's and Women's.Monogram Handkerchiefs, hemstitched, FINE CIGARS. QUICK LUNCH. daily between New Momntmth and the l city. years ago, Her ouly child is MM. W.© a rare bargain, worth 15c. each, our price 50c. /2 dozen, I ft^ AT THE OLD STAND, M. Slocum of Long Brauch, with whom ^ or one I Uu MB. MEAD TO SPEAK. she lived. 0 Summer Corsets, made of good quality net, short 3f|« styles, the kind always sold at 50c, our price fJiJu The Germania Hotel, He Will be the Orator «t the X. lit. Deeds Recorded. & 18 West Front Street, Near Broad Street, Red Bank. V. A. Dedication. The following real estate transfers Women's Shirt Waist Suits and House Dresses, made of Rev. Charles L. Mead, pastor of thehave been recorded in the offlco of the, good cambric, trimmed waist and pleated skirt, regular I 1 f| ••••••••••••••••••••••••t»«*«' •Centenary Methodist church of Newark, county clerk at Freehold for the week price $1,98. For three days laid ending July 8th, 1905 : will be the speaker at the dedicatory Women's and Children's Swiss Ribbed Vests, ribbon in ©J service at the young men's Christian as- 8HREWSBURV TOWHSUJJF. neck and armholes, sold always at 1234c. For three days.. OL9 William F. Huvetneyer to Hail 11. McCarter. sociation building on Sunday afternoon, Land at Rumson, $1. July 23d. The service will be held in Mary J. Wllaon to Cliarles Baskervlllo. Land Silk and Leather Belts, odd styles to close out, sold I P?M near Fair Haven, $500. at^c. and 50c. For three days 1 Qy the gymnasium. Mr. Mead will speak Hulua 8. Merrllt ami others to Melissa Little. Piece of property, $30O. at Ocean Grove the night before, and ef- Stephen Wilson to Alex. Iff. Martliens. Piece of Women's Suits, made of Chambray and Percales, Linen and THE SHOE MEN forts are being made to have him preach property, 81,000. Plain Black, in the lot also fancy designs, worth $2.98. 1 fl®. James E. Deunan. ex'r, to James Enrlght, Jr. in one of the local churches on the fol-Piece of property. $m.50. For three days -. | iyQ lowing Sunday morning. He is one of Mary 8. IV llsun to Mabel Cunningham. Piece of property, $1. Women's Lisle Thread Hose, in black, tan and white, they the leading pulpit orators in this country MIIIDLETOWN TOWNSHIP. have slight, imperfections, therefore the low price. For I jE-j and was one of the principal speakers at Margaret Buclitcon to Marcella ISiieliannii. Land at Hifflilumln. SI. three days | y\j i the recent international Epworth league O. C. Bosiunius. slieriff, to Miles Ciearon. Piece of property, Sl.l.oiK). Pretty White Cottage Curtains, with gathered ruffle, Q|J« Oxfords I convention at Denver. James E. Di'tinun, eje'r, to Charles A. Willis. 2l/2 yards long, good material, worth 59c. For three days. Oyb Piece of property, Jl. Hot weather is here | HOUSE WILL COST $16,000. ATLANTIC HIGHI.AXM. Women's Drawers, made of good muslin, hemstitched ruffle, Martha Collliu t.j Charles 11. Bailey. Piece of % property. $100. French band and felled seams, regular price 29c. For for good. From now f, It Will be Built Thin fall Htilrevent Henry J Ely to K'icanl Y.. Mngovern. Piece of three days t Parli. l>ro|>erty. SI. * Mrs. Emily Lappreque, a Rummer IIATDSTUW.V TOWNSHIP. All Silk Taffeta Ribbon, from 3 to 5 inches wide, full on it will be an Oxford | Harry McMcrrl^l u to Maiy K. Danuli-'r. Piece rJf resident of Brevent park, adjoining At- property. $1 «• assortment of colors, worth 18c. per yard. For three days U--.VH M. HV,!;.-j-; Wiuum h, Ruliiuson. Piece rush. They are the | lantic Highlands, will builil anew house til pr'<[«rrtT. 51. this fall at a cost of $15,000. Carpenter* JIUMI' I'jW.v^lllP. Awl'l.y k H',,i c,. :„ };. (,. !!. Miilao. Piece of most stylish and com- § are figuring on the job, but the contract l>ni;>»Tty. 301. has not yet been given out. The houae fortable Shoes for Sum- f would have built last fall except for the F. . Hju.m I'iutzlk. Piece of * 9. death of Mr. Lapprequo. The house litnmn Plutzlic to Jicri>:i i'hua;M Maltliow>. mer wear. <| will be built practically as he hadl'lect: of propvriy. Jl. planned it. MATV.'.A.V TO We have everything | J. 8. f). lli'ille, iniil'-", t Ki«ma I.. Hllhviigon. loco o( propeilv. 3W.I1. JIISCDII |). Italic, utiiti-o, l'i f 'OTKl: Wl'ber. l-linil Firecracker Sots Roof Afire. itt MuUnvun, 315". in Men's, Women's, § Jjkhii It. bickles'H hoime at Shrewsbury Klnkle Mrinzen In. tn (Jco e J. CralKcn and (ithi'm. I'ltci'of priiprity. $1. Schroeder's Hair Tonic kills dandruff, keeps the hair caught fire on the morning of the Fourth Jullu F. Sullivan In Mury Skipper. Piece of Boys' and Girls' Oxfords at prices ranging from | frotn a iirecracker thrown on the roof. |m>|M'ity, SWI. The fire was put out by men employed from falling out and makes the scalp healthy. That's QUKIUFru SALK.—l)y virtue of a writ 75c. to #4.00. I at Hazard's factory before much damage O (if H. fit. ID nut (Hri'iMi'il.lsHucil mil u( tlm miproini) had been done. ruttil »(ilii' Muli' o| New Jcimy, will Im DXIHMDII tu enough for it to do. At Schroeder's Pharmacy. Ml" nl IIIIWII- vrmliii-. on l-'ltlDAY, THE Tan and Black, Vici Kid, Patent Coltskin, KI.KVFN'I'll I>AV OF .UKillST, 1IW5, hi'.lwooii tlm Fainted and Fell on a Stove. hiiiiiM nl VI i/rliH'k uii'l 5o'clui'k (ut it o'cliidt) In IIH' IllKMIHMIIKir Klllll llliy. U! till) (illll)l) Illlllll. Urii White Canvas, Military, French and Common Hunk. In Hi" lwn-lil|> lit HIirottHliiiiy, county of Mrs. Robert Schuster of Long lSinnch, MlillNlilNIll, Nl'W Jl-IM'V. while cooking last Saturday, became All ilcffti'lunt'ii rlKlit, Mile nnil Inlnrnst ill mill to LUMBER AND HARDWARE. Sense heels. all Ibal iJ-imiii Bin I uf Innil unit iireinlscii nlMiato, faint from tho heat and foil on theiitove. lylnu nnd MBII m iln: Kivtnslilp of MlUillolnwn, rounty ii\ Moiimouiti IIII'I Klulc i»f Now J(^riii)y, nimr Paints, Oils and Varnishes. Her left hand was burned to the bone to tin; vllluu"" of Nine-Ink on Imtli tlili-M or tln> and «he received a number of other liiihllc lilifhwoy li'sillnu fiom Niivt-alnk to III'OWH'H I)iii'k. udJiiliiliiK laniin o! Jnhii I. I!li:kli-H on inn MIX1C» PAINTS. buniB. vinlli, lamliiof llii'i-nluliuir (iMtrffo H111III1. ilori>iiHoil, nilVOIC'N Uoady mixed Oloum a»olut» tow Floors ( will dry over night. lanilit nf csUUi of knuiUlli .IcnliiiiB.flciviiiiMl, lundn auiPHKimiB Fi.0011 VAHNISH; quick dtyUm. A New Boarding; House. of I'ntoU' of WIIIIuiu l»uvl». ilwruted, and Intuls of Hnatly Mlxod Ornphlte Pnlnts f#r Tin Kooln | will oura a leaky roof. 'riKMHlnii! K11 v la on 1 In' nnnli MK anil tlm nubile FORD <& MILLER J$FB. J. Simmons, proprietor of tlm liljj I] vvny fiuin Nnvwlnk to i'lm|i"l HIM. II.IIIK llm OAKiVAniaSBO rOVLTUV NBTTINM. honii^U'itil fin 111 nf tin! liiut (jiiirco II, HlcklVa, vegetable supplied by the dia. Totems are also common among fruit, Sl.UIX). 5-acre farm, 2 irood bouses, oiie rents for 510, near taiga school, pil< e $4,000; terms fiancee's last gift, a miniature of her-' The graEs 1 saw from far away looked all garden. Cooked whole they also fur- the Sainoans. ' - ensy. tilt feiauf river properly, §1,000 feet deep, price 815,000; will sell nuy part of it; easy terms. so smooth and fair, self, richly framed, flung it down as If Lots on Head] street, $210 each; S-5 casli. Balance monthly, $5 or SlOeacb luontli. EUIBSUD, Oceaaic nish a palatable side dish. The nu- Broadly the totem is the badge of a I find It's jest as short and thin as all to grind It with his heel, but after a and Fair Uuveu property. trient properties of okra are very high, clan or tribe, but it signifies a great the rest or wuss— minute raised it and set It in place, TO LET FURNISHED. And that's the way the things of earth and it has the additional advantage of deal more than mere political or social with the faoo to tlie wall. Houses on river and in town. 2-story cottage orfriyer, furnished, S200; gas and wuter. keep on a-foolin' us! being an exceedingly wholesome arti- alliance. It is not only a tribal em- Five years after his wedding day he Insurance In reliable companies. pel. G2-5I, cle of food. It is erroneously called blem, but also a family sign; not mere- " 'Bout every day you'l! hear some man recalled the moment, the trivial action, Monmouth and Broad Streets, FRANCIS WHITBt eomplainin' of his lot gumbo in liiiiny cook books aud even ly a symbol of nationality, but also with a mad longing to treat the origi- And tellln', If he'd had a chance like other in some encyclopedias. The name of nn expression of religion; not simply people, what nal as then he had been tempted to the plant and its fruit is okra. Gumbo a bond of union among primitive peo- PRESGRIPT10MS He might have been! He'd like to know treat tlie portrait. He had indeed how ho can ever win is a general term for various kinds of ples, but also a regulator of the mar- found himself milking between tho "When all the grass that cornea his way soup made of It. Okra, in fact, is an riage laws and of other social Institu- household parrot nnd lapdog, albeit he THE SMITHSONIAN TRUSS. Is all so short and thin. excellent food much neglected. tions. A totem lias been defined as "a But over in the neighbors' fields, why, he had the freest possible hand at the class of material objects which a sav- Scientific in' construction; the master effort of a man can plainly see Grey money. That was his oul,y free- whose life has been spent in the study of rupture; light That they're in clover plumb knee deep A very important consideration from age regards with superstitious respect, and easy; complete cure effected and improvement and sweet as sweet can be! dom. Mrs. Merton laid claim to the believing that there exists between tlie alimentary point of view is the un- 1 speedy and certain; every truss sold under the best At times It's hard to tell If things are greater'part of his waking hours. She usually high percentage of digestible him and every member of the class an guarantee. For sale at the made of Bold or brass; was a shallow,creature, kindly enough, intimate and special relation." Some men can't see them distant fields are matter. That fact had been establish- full of 'yender but forever craving change, amuse- ed by common experience long before Among the Ojibway Indians there ment, the diversion of new faces, new any analysis - of the pod had: been are no fewer than twenty-three;, differ- "I've learned one thing In makln' hay, scenes. To her way of thinking the Corner Broad and Monmouth Sts., Red Bank, N. J. and that's to 1111 my mow thought of, for wherever the vegeta- ent totems. Nine of these are quadru- "With any grass that I can get to harvest end and the aim of manhood was ei- ble is in use it is well known that the peds, marking out the wolf, the bear, Telephone—125. here and now. ther to rnako money or, having it ready soup is highly beneficial to persons the beaver and other clans, eight are The 'yender grass''that way ahead is made; to spend it. with weak stomachs. Often it will be birds, five are fishes and one is the wavin' in its pride "I won't have you bother me with I find ain't very flllin' by tha time it's cut retained when nothing else can be tak- snake. and dried. politics—only low people go into it." en, and it has.in many cases restored Some extraordinary superstitions re- Hope springs eternal, so they say, within she had said airily before the honey- tone to digestive organs that seemed gurding totems prevail in Samoa. Thus the human breast; moon was out. Even tho prospect of It is believed that if a turtle man eats Man never is, the sayin' goes, but always hopelessly disordered. It is a partic- t to bo blest. being some day Mrs. Ambassador had ularly beneficial food in cases of dys- of a turtle he will grow very 111, and So my advice Is, Don't you let your pres- not lnudc her change. "I want to have entery and chronic indigestion. tho voice of the turtle will be heard In ent chances pass good times now—not wait for them The dried seeds, parched and ground, his inside saying: "He ate me. I am A-thinkin' by and by you'll reap your fill till I'm old and haggard," she had killing him." If a banana man uses a of 'vender crass.' " aro said to make an acceptable sub- said. It was the same with his pro-stitute for coffee. A substitute for ar- banana leaf f or n cap he becomes bald. fession or mij- business venture. "1 If a butterfly man catches a butterfly MERTON'S AMBITION. rowroot can be made from the roots. IUU business enough for you," his wife The leaves, green or dry, are used, de- it strikes him dead. If a fowl man eats a fowl delirium and death results, "So it's a ease of the law or tho protested, adding in the next breath. cocted, for their demulcent properties. "Besides, what other business would Tin) inner b;irk, soft and white, eon- and so on, all going to show that the • lady," Bemis said, chuckling html. "I totem has something of the quality of bring you a million dollars beftfre you tains a strong fiber resembling flax. should have no doubt as to which nave one gray hair?" a fetich as well ns the significanee of would 'win if I didn't feuow about the The outer bark Is also fibrous and, to- a family emblem. Outwardly an enviable mortal, he gether with the woody part of the other lady," was sick and tired of everything—most plant, furnishes excellent paper stock. Regarding totemlsm, It is to be noted Merton flushed angrily nnd frowned. of all himself. Now aud again he sigh- As okra is easily raised, it can be cul- tlint the relation of mutual help and "You know nothing of the sort There ed for the stings, the limitations of tivated with lirottt. protection includes also the totem it- Isn't any 'other lady' "— . the old time, and caught himself won- For table use the pods must be cut self—that is to say, If a man takes care of his totem he expects the to- "Which, her name It is Henrietta— dering how it would seem to be free. while tender, generally -when about Henrietta Bruce," Bemis interrupted, He knew nothing of Henrietta. There tem to return the compliment. If the three inches long. They grow rapidly totem Is a dangerous animal It must still chuckling, but growing grave as was an agreement' Between him aud nud soon become woody. Tho plant is he added, "And if you let yourself his wife upon one point if no other. not hurt his clansmen. The scorpion very prolific, and it will continue to men of Senogambla declare that the leave her in the lurch, Jack, you're a She was linn that they would neither bear until touched by frost. A small ask nor hear anything of his old most deadly scorpions will run over cad of the first water," patch will more than meet the require- their bodies without hurting them. N. J. "There is no question of taking or friends, bis native place. So was Mer-ments of nn ordinary family, and the ton—albeit dtiwn in "his heart of hearts There is a snake clan in Australia leaving," Mertou began, trying to brave surplus may be preserved for winter which holds to a similar belief. Among he was hungry for tidings. He won- 68 Broad Street, Red Bank. it out, but at tlie cud dropping his head use by two convenient methods. The the crocodile clan of the Bec-huanas if and half whispering; dered sometimes how Beiuis had fared. Easier is by drying. Slice the pod, a man is bitten by a crocodile or even Telephone 31-A. "You—you are right, Ned, Etta loves He wondered still 'more if Etta were crosswnys, into sections a quarter of has water splashed on him by onejhe is me, and I love her, better than all the married. Thought of her did not give an inch thick, spread thin on large expelled from the clan as one esteemed LIGHT FASTER THAN SOUND. world, except my ambition. I want to him a heartache, but rather a shamed dishes or trays, and expose to the sun unworthy by the totem- "" be somebody—somebody worth while. self contempt. He tried hard to dead- from day to day until thoroughly dried. Everi/iiaii Incidents That Go The way is open—if only I marry Mrs. en all feeling. Apathy was the best Put in jars or close cans and keep to Prove Thin Fact. 4 Grey. She has virtually told me that shield against the evils he endured. free from moisture. The other method Why Prussia is so Called, (Vrum SI. MclinlM.) as her husband lier whole million will But sometimes when ho saw other men of preservation is by canning, which The modern name of Prussia Is de- About a thousand yards from the be at my command. If I don't marry in the full tide of manly activity his will be explained later on. The plant rived from Borussl, or Porussi, who Window where I sit is a factory which her, what chance have I? The ten heart rose up hotly against the woman Is foliiicioiKs and ornamental enough conquered the country about 320 B. C. blows Its whistle every noon. The years I imist starve to make myself a who bad bought him to be tlie slave for the flower garden. The leaves are Little Is known concerning Prussia and steam always "comes from the whistle leading lawyer will put me hopelessly of her caprice. large and p«lmatiseetetl,.and the blos- its people till the tenth century except Borne little time before the sound is that that portion of the Baltic shore out of the nice. Now I cau win almost She was forever taking up things and soms, whicluin form resemble those of heard. Yesterday I counted three sec- Don't miss all your fun be- onr In as storm."- ' tlie shingles flew from a patch of roof He found hltneelf catching his lileath on a barn near by. It had been struck much 'boiling water as the dish will ns he looked at her. She was less fresh by lightning'aM was soon In flames.— hold; bake long enough to cook;-serve Defective ejcslgbl fa gen- than of old, but BO wonderfully^ spir- A Soul's Victory. erally llib causo. t'crfeci hot. itually beautlfftl, with the beauty of Too'long ho strove to parley with tho too; the ejpsiBht by prlmees. nmi mother love, moth'er happlnesa. Okra also, makes a palatable vegeta- Each morrow brought the shadowy lo- Some Superstitions. tlie liinilm-ho [si a tlitug ct ble dish, but In this form it Is not al- "I needn't nsk you how you are, glonu back, If you want a cat to stay at your ways acceptable on first acquaintance. Each Betting: sun belvekl his. force laid Ettn," nald Mrs-. Morton. "No> wonder home, rub Its paw on- tlie «tove. Freo consultation, oiasata If nccdeJ nt niod.-rato Itfl substance is viscous, aud for that lpw. prloca. you're happy, though, with ^two chil- Borno down by their eo.nfo S &*.$$. Into finding hla tongue. nerve hot. Cooked In thltj, way, treated AM, iia tlm veiwl on the open BOOB A family must never move except In IXMIJHI to tho gtite that round Jior aeotlicu tho ll«ht or increase* of tlie moon. This At Postofflce Morton wincea as he Iieitrd the prat- with good vinegar and served cold, it and H]n(?**r tling voice. The old love was dead, luukt'i) a got; If desired, add Htmlnwl afresh— the noap will spoil In the nuikliiK. mlKhthavc innde a great innn of you; Tjove without hint and beauty without a man. t'onmtoi'!) and boll until tlxt okra In Looking at a new'moon for the flrnt nt any rate nh<» would lyivo inade^ou stitln. thoroughly eoolu'il, but bo careful In And, lo, thS. n num. Thlu other onp will make you either CUHO to- omit unit; put up hi Jnro flesh n trwtop, foretollH mlHforttme (luring nn nrtlcloof 'bigotry and virtue,' tioiue- the. lieneon Why lay slUint lu tho dnrknnnti, crushed mul All tht) court newti of tli« county, al nn above, lly • following ;thtn method thut moon. To H«O It over tho I'lRht tliliiK dwitw Ilifln her parrot, n little okra jioup may bo had throughout (he nhilii. ithouWcr mill lu JJ, clear spaoo brlngu at Door E-rswy better limit her lnpdof?, You'll have* n (lu» refll entate n«WHof the county, nil tho IJlro I'hiirnoli'il houlu uiibn tlio Ilpd n«n miabnps in tho county, nil tho deallui in WlntWf Hlioni, Komi luck. a,nd AH#JP»®»»» • .-_ lajKloK wine, but you won't lit the po tho county ttnd i»ll tho weddings in titin In the wmlli (lie (note for okra ]« mil , And. lillt own iioul wow hla forevormnro. .<©-., .^— Mil Ion, You're too big and hulking; 13i>nil word If yf>t» would His© WB wj> comity nro printed onoh vvnek in THE VMWll, poMlbly iin Inheritance. JQIHO You havon't road all tho HOWH of tho mndn too much like n man"— ItKOifmcft, bculdcu all the local news where It miiy, like that for the olive, j know it payo to iidverlfcie county until you hnvu read TilE Rita- sorve .voih- , ^ • "Rtopt I wou't lieurvthnt even Adv. haVo to he cultivated. '' in TJIW }lmmm}i.ir-,Adv. umm.—Adv. -OF- My New aper Stored

Concert from 2:00 to 3:30 and from 7:00 to 9:00 will be given. The celebrated pianist, E. A. Lambert, assisted by singers and violinists will be present, and THE PIANOLA will be a feature of the occasion. Souvenirs will be given the ladies attending. I wish to call your particular attention to THE LAU.TER piano which will be used on this occasion. I think you will agree with me and all others who have heard them that it is the best piano on the market. You and your friends are cordially invited. . H. A. GUYON, 62 Broad St.,.opposite postoffice, R€dr~Bank. Phone 2O8-i*. The afternoon concert will be over in time to go to the ball game.

EATONTOWN NEWS. OCEANPOBT STEWS. EVERETT NEWS. FAIR HAVEN NEWS. OCEANIC NEWS. MIDDLETOWN VILLAGE WEWS. Union Servtcea to Begin on Sunday, An Automobile Ditched Near the Crawford's New Mouse "She Wire- Company and Two Lodges Xetr Officers of Bed Men's Zodge Train Schedule Clmnaeti to Accoin- July 23d. Bridge Jhaat Week, Nearly Completed, Meet Officers. Installed. modate Comntuters. Union services will begin here on Sun- Samuel Smock is building a new barn. James Crawford's new house is rapidly The annual election of the fire com- The new officers of the Red Men's A number of residents of the village, day, July 23d. The first of the union John Sniffen is doing the^work. earing completion. The carpenter work pany took place on Monday night. These lodge were installed last night by most of whom are commuters between services will be hold in the Baptist finished and most of the mason work )fficers were elected : District Deputy Walling of Keyport. here and New York, held a sort of Mrs. Matthew Feakes and two child- done. church and the preacher will be Rev. S. ren are spending the summer at Beemers- President—Elwood Smith. Refreshments were served after the in- indignation meeting at the hotel last D. Price. The services will continue for ville. Mrs. Sarah P. Smock of New York Vice president-Ttiomiis P. Morrissey. stallation. The new officers are: "riday night to protest against the six weeks and each pastor will preach as moved into the house of her son-in- Secretary—H. Edgar Smitb. J action of the railroad officials in not Mrs. C, E. VanMater of Long Island law, John Delmarter of Brooklyn. The Financial secretary—C. P. Wortblajr. Prophet—Henry Hlntelmann. twice out of his own pulpit. and her aon are visiting at W. 8. Robin- Treasurer—John R. Scott. •'S Sacbem—John H. McPeak. having the afternoon train stop at ouse was formerly occupied by David SeBior Sagamore- Hal G. Netoon. P. F. Collit. won three prizes at the n's. Chiol-Frank Mulvihlll. Middletown. This train reaches Middle- cuenck but has been unoccupied for Rlrat assistant caier—John V. Woodward. Junior sagamore—Samuel Brill. recent Rumson horse show, Three of Among the boarders at William H. Trustee-John Glensmaon. own at 5:33 in the afternoon and had his horses were entered in a jumping ome time. Mr. Delmarter bought the SecoDd assibtnnt chiel—Harry Denuis. been a convenient train for the com- Garrigan'a are Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mc- •lace from John B. St6ry last winter. Trustee—Jolin J. Headricksoa. Miss Mamie Evans of the Witherspoon contest and they got all three ribbons in Glinchy, Miss Ella Blemby, A. Berwin, The new officers of the Junior Ameri- training school for nurses at Philadel- muters from New York. The succeed- tho contest. rs. Delmarter is visiting Mrs, Smock. ng train from New York does not get John Lake, George Winze], Mr. and Miss Elizabeth Murphy of Asbury ;an Mechanics lodge were installed hia is spending a two weeks' vacation Mrs. J. C. Rush and her daughter Mrs. G. R- Janson and S. R. Janson. ast Thursday night. After the installa- at her home here. here until 6:59. The result of the meet- Jessie left this morning for a visit to 'ark has been spending several days with ng was the drafting of a petition, which The boarders at Mrs. T. S. Woodward's er brother, John Murphy. tion Rufus S. Merritt invited the lodge Mrs. William Tierney of Denver, Colo- relatives at Eastbn and Phillipsburg. are Miss Josephine Shea, Miss Mary men to Chandler's ice cream parlor and rado, has been spending a month with was sent to the railroad officials, asking They will be away from home about Bernard Hickey of Asbury Park spent for an afternoon train between five and Spillane, Mrs. Alice Gisch and daughter, lie Fourth with his mother, Mrs. treated them to ice cream. The officers her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John T. two weeks. Luke G. Lynch and family, Miss E. F. nstalled were: Brady. half-past five o'clock. On Monday the Rev, Herbert J. Belting, pastor of the Catherine Hickey. officials complied with the request by Ryan, F. J. Cuneen and Mrs. Orin Davi- Misses Mamie Carton, Beatrice Costallo, Past councilor—5. F. Thompson. Mrs. Newton Goltra of Jersey City, Mothodisc church, ia spending this week son of Brooklyn, Edward S. Price of Councilor-W. B. Little. daughter of tho late George B, Snyder having a train stop here from New York at Asbury Park. Flatbush and Misses Daisie and Jessie !tta Daly and Margaret Kelly and Wil- Vice councilor—William H. Bennett. if Fair Haven, is visiting Mrs. Charles at 5:27. This train will probably remain Miss Libbie Black and Mrs. E. M. iam A. Magee spent the Fourth at Key- Secretary—H. Edgar Smitb. on all Bummer. Runcy of New York. ort. Financial secretary—C. D. Chandler. T. Allen. Stratton of Brooklyn were gjueats of Rev. The Methodist Sunday-school will go Treasurer—G. W. Smith. Miss Teresa Wermes and Miss Manny Miss Katherine Taylor on Monday and Mrs. J. A. Black last week. on a picnic to Aabury Park next Wednes- Mrs. Benjamin Hankinson has been, Conductor—Harvey Little. jf New York are visiting Miss WermeB's went to Wilmington, Delaware, where Matt. Byrnes, Jr.. dislocated one of isiting at Long Branch. Warden—J. P. Smith. she will spend several weeks. day, Miss Sarah Kelly, who is employed as Inside sentinel—William Hulse. sister, Mrs. Logan Roberts. the lingers of his right hand while play- John T. Welch of Brooklyn spent the Outside sentinel—Frank Covert. Misses Amy and Lenore Hutchinson of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Taylor of El- ing ball on Friday. The finger was stenographer at Philadelphia, is spend- Trustee—Rutua 8. Merritt. wood, Indiana, arrived here on Satur- Fourth with his brother, E. T. Welch, Sr. ng a vacation at her home here. ew York ars guests at the Harvey cot- pulled in place by Dr. H. T. Pavtree. Mrs. Susie Withers, the Misses DuBois, The new officers of the Daughters of age. day. They will stay here the rest of the Stanley VanBrunt visited his aunt at Mrs. Elian Toomey has recovered summer. They are stopping with Mr. Mrs. Lottie Martin, Mrs, Junius Walling, rom a serious sickness. liberty lodge were installed last night. Leighton Knipe of Jersey City spent Seabright on Friday, Miss Elizabeth Welch and Mr. and Mrs. The officers are: Sundav with her parents, Rev, and Mrs. Taylor's father, Henry C. Taylor. The Locust Grove and Wayside base- Henry Joline attended a meeting of the' Councilor—lira. James Chadwick. S.W. Knipe. Marguerite, the two-year-old child of ball nines played a game at Wayside on Long Branch Daughters of Liberty on TINTON FALLS NEWS. Associate councilor—Mrs. Wllliiim DeWolf. Ralph Longstreec of Brooklyn spent Maggie and Benjamin Allen, died on Sunday afternoon. The Locust Grovers Monday night. Vice councilor—Mra. Albert Hawkins. Sunday at his home here. Saturday afternoon of cholera infantum. won by the score of li> to 7. Matt. Associate vico councilor—Mrs. Nelson Little. Mrs. Sarah Sanford is spending a mvroving a Howie-Hurt While Assistant recordlnu secretary—Mrs. Duvid Minton. Miss Daisy Forcanser of Toms River The funeral was held at the house on Byrnea, Jr., aud Peter Dugan were the month at the C .tskill mountains. 1'laylng Baseball. Guide—Mi's. Annie McGee. ipent Thurday with Miss Chrissie Bogle. Monday afternoon and the body was battery for the winners and Joe Win Miss Carrie Bergen of Sheepahead Bay Inside protector—Mrs. Albert Bell. buried at.Keyport. ning and Charles Roberts were the bat- The roof of Augustus Morris's house is Outside protector-C. P. Worthloy. Miss Rena Allen and Miss Mildred En- is a guest of Miss Elizabeth Welch. ight, who graduated from the public Mrs. Richard Lufburrow led the Cbris- tery for the Wnysidere. leing reshingled and the house is being Clarence Smock has awarded a con.- tain Endeavor meeting at the Baptist Miss Lena Stout of Jersey City is visit- nclosed with shingles. G. E. Woolley tract to George W. Smith for a new school this year, will enter the state Miss Gertrude VanDine of Ooeanport ing her uucle, John VanMater. normal school in the fall. church on Sunday night. The topic was •" united with tho Baptist church last Sun- if Little Silver has charge of the work. house on the Merritt-Smock tract, ad- The indwelling Christ." An automobile from Long Branch ran Jr. Morris will build an addition to his joining the new house of Jacob Ellen- Harvey Bruce of Rutgers college is day night by baptism. She will receive into tho ditch near the bridge on Tues- home for the summer vacation. Ho has The Essex troop of Newark went the hand of fellowship next Sunday at ouse next fall. burg. Th£ house will be 25 x 28 feet through Middletown on Saturday after- day of lost week. Five persons were in Fred Tilton was playing baseball at and will cost $2,309, Mr. Smock will been visiting at Philadelphia since the the communion service, which takes the automobile and they were thrown ollege closed. noon on their way to the state camp at place at the close of the morning service. Eatontown on the Fourth of July when occupy the house when completed. Sea Girt. The cavalrymen came from out. One of the women was cut and he ball struck him in the eye. His eye A number of the women of the village Mra.jiEtta Smith is going to White The subject of Rev. J. A. Black's morn- Bruised on the face but none of ^ ..ake, New York, to spend two months Newark to Port Monmouth on the Ing discourse will be " God's lovingkind- was badly swollen and bruised. are arranging for a fair for the benefit steamer William• V. Wilson. On Satur- others was hurt. Nathan Sample ot A daughter was born to Mrs. Henry of the fire company. The fair will be with her sister, Mrs. Edwin Lloyd. ne9B." Eatontown pulled the automobile out of ' The Christian Endeavor praise service day night they camped at Colt's Neck ohnson, wife of the Highlands Metho- held on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, and proceeded to Sea Girt the next the ditch with his team of horBes and dist minister, on Sunday. Mrs. Johnson August 3d, 4th and 5th. will take the place of the preaching SHREWSBURY NEWS. the party went home without' further was formerly Miss May Bennett of this service at night at the Presbyterian morning. mishap. Miss Nellie Flannery of New York, Wlllittin 1. Green Hurt While 1- place and is the daughter of Mrs. Hester who has been visking Mrs. Frank Spitz, hnrcli during July and August. Bennett. Edward and Percy Stuart of Brooklyn MARLBORO NEWS. ting a UTortietilioe. LITTLE SILVER NEWS. has gone to Canada to remain a month. A new barn and wagon house has Miss Gcorgie Walling visited at Asbury Mr. and Mrs. William Huff and fam- are spending two weeks with Mrs. Mary Thorne?* lioxiae Broken been built on James Lo-eb's pluce aud 'ark on Friday. ly of Jersey City have been visiting Stuart. Into and Clothing Stolen: "arcnts' Si^rst llntt to Son in Thir- John Tompkins of Jersey City is visit fiome improvements have been made to teen i'eartt. Mrs. Charles Dennis. Thieven broko into William Thome's ng friends here. Herbert Snyder has moved from the LINCROFT NEWS. the outbuildings. Mr. and Mrs. John Bowman of house last Tuesday night and stole some The lot on the road to Tinton Falls Mary Lewis of Freehold is a guest of Snyder homestead, which was recently clothing and other articles. iVobonaie, Kansas, are visiting their son Mrs. Harry Colcman. bought by Lewis Lewis, to Terrence For>ntin Parker laid Sip a i'ew flays owned by A. W. and Randolph Borden Edward Bowman, This is Mr. and Mrs Miss Addie Gnrber of Philadelphia has been divided aud tho barn on the Capt. David A. Walling had a fine Mulligan's new house. by a fall itt.a Ham. iowman's first visit East in thirteen spliiy of fireworks on Fourth of July was the guest of Miss Rilla Gordon last lot is being moved from the center of Frank Doughty and his sister Lydia Formau Parker wus helping Benjamin week. ears and they have not seen their soi night. One of the lighted skyrockets of Cape May county ale visiting reliv Bennett of 'Elnton Falls harvest lna hay tho lot to the east aide. The wist side is n that time. Mrs, Elizabeth Russell visited friends- owned by Randolph Borden. Tho prop- landed on the roof of Albert Dennis's lives here. on Tuesday of last week and waa stand Harold Ogborn of Cranbury is visiting barn, but the barn was not set on tiro. Mrs. Thomas Miaton is visiting her ing on a beam in the bnrn when he at Perth Amboy last week. George erty was formerly occupied by Benjamin Frank Parker of Silver Bay avenue. He IIUBBOII, Jr., spent Thursday at Long C. Parker. Tho bouse burned down brother, William Doughty of Brooklyn, slipped and fell. He landed on n wngon is a son of Rev. WillardOgdon', who died Rov. J, P. Turkleson" of Como, a wheel and wus badly bruised and shaken Branch. many years ago. while pastor of the Methodist churcl; KEAN8BURG NEWS. Mra. Charles M. Patterson, who bun former pastor of tho Methodist church up. He was laid up a few duys. Miss Bertha Bloodgood of South Am- liero. here, is visiting George J. Hendrickaon. Willium WcKnight spent the Fourth boy hns beon visiting her aunt, Mrs. been visiting in Massachusetts, has re- Miss Edna Frazer of Burlington, who .flitin Madeline, Conipton to Teach at turned borne. at Koyport. Munsilcld Barber. might in the public school hero liiat year lleyitort Next Vear. Misaeos COBBIO Hayword and Laura Mia. C. II. Hurley and Miss Emma n visiting Mr. and Mrs. William C. Madeline Conipton, who hue been HOLMDEL NEWS. Mro. Charley Mnusser of the Phalanx Hurley naw the president ut Asbury gavo birth to a aon on Thursday. VanDoru spent part of last week at Lippmcott. the primary toucher in tho public nchool Mamaroneck, Now York. Park on Friday. Mr, and Mra. Harry Miss Grace Carhnrt made a minster here, bun accepted a position au teacher William IE. Taylor Leaven the llon- Mrs. Joseph Tomlinson and Mrs. Eliza- Taberof Loifg Branch opouL Sunday with pttal. beth Woolley went to Anbury Pnrk on Tho Reformed Sunday-achool will not from u porch a few diiysngoand sprained at Key port. The vacancy hero has not hold any Bervico during the month of Mr. Hurley, her ankle. She ia laid up. yet been tilled. William W. Taylor, who has been un- Friday to BOO President Roosovolt. Frank Lawe»hangiven up hit* position Mrs. Linda Bnssctt, who has beer Mr. and Mrs. Howard lily of Red flank Minn Graco Williams of Navesink has der treatment nt tho Long Branch hos- ; in Hazard's factory and is now employed uml their two KOIIS and Mrs. Ely' beon spending a week with her aunt, pital, in upending two weeks at Asbnry vioiting Mra. Mary Taylor of Fair Haven Miso Hoftton of Brooklyn waa the in » grocery store- at Belmiir. Harold mother, Mrn. Way of West Grove Mrs. 11. M. Smith. Park. Mr. Taylor ban almost entirely ban returned home. gueut of MiMB Maud Smith last week. Jolinton, son of William II. Johnson, i: Pennsylvania, wero Sunday guests o Mra. James Dodd and children ol recovered from bin nick ness. Rev. Mr. Lconliart of Now York is i Mian Floronce Sohonok of Brooklyn is aliso employed in a Behnnr grocery George M. Quackenbuoh, Brooklyn nro visiting Mrn. Dodd't Mr. and Mrn. William C. Ely npont gueut of Guutav Loronzen. visiting Minn Nellie Bchonck. Storo. Mr. and Mrs. Humphrey Millor ur mother, Mrs. Martha Collins, Sunday at Anbury Park. Mro. (J. 1$. Cunningham of Brooklyr MIB. Lydiu Conover waa a recent Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sleeper, who entertaining Mr, Millor'ti mother urn Miwi Wenltha Palmer ia upending a John L. Ely and a party of friendt wan (i recout gueut of Mrn. Alphn visitor at Aabury Park. «»ont their honeymoon with Mr. Sleep oiittor from WoHteheflter, Pennnyrvaniu. few wooltH with relative!) at AHlmryPark flailing in Ruritnn bay a few dftyc Cunningham. John Tjierimn attended the teachers' (si-'ri grandmother, Mro. Abbio Sleeper Stephen Millairand family have move Edward Broander of Now York ia ngo. Tho party caught forty weaklliih. Mta Catherino Hurvoy of Jeraey City convention ut Anbury Park on Friday. lmvo returned to Denver, Colorado. into Mrn, William Fowler's huuuo for tin spending bin vacation with lu« father John W. Kly, who in employed by a formerly of Tinton Falln, in viiiiting hor Junto) Wollii of New York is visiting Orovor of Lakowootl upon Bummer. They occupied the Lowi John Hronndcr. cominifision linn at New York, ia homo aunt, MrH. Richard Connors. Mre. Con-hin fatlior, Seoloy Wolln, y with bin brother, Alfred Smith house Inut iiutnnier. Mr. and Mrn. William P. Dodd or on a vacation. noni mid family upent tho Fourth a William Dugan, with Lin mother and drover, Mr. and Mrs. Sanniol Grove Kov. and Mrn. It. T. Lwiry had Mr, Brooklyn Hpont Sunday with Mra. Dodd Seven yearling'! wero received at K Pleasure Bay. son Loo, in visiting at Brooklyn. of U'ik(Hvoo(i spent the Fourth with Mr. y'w HiBter OH iheir giimil liwt wtvt)ls. father, J. 1). Mo»kill. R. Thonuin'ii Htock farm last Wednesday Mr. and Mrn. Chailon Reid, who Hv< Mrn. Catherine Penine in visiting hor Mim* Mary Lovett returned on Hntu (loorgo Vincent and family of Nownrli Tho ofllcom of tho American Median on the road to LIIWOH'M bridge, upent tho daughter, Mm. limno Hmlth of Wicka- A fair for the bouoflt of Christ churv day from a two week's vinitut Silver liny huvo moved here for tho iiummor. ICH lodge wero installed lual night. Fourth with their (ion, Melviii Reid. tunic. will lie held at Mtea Addio Whitn'n to Laitu George. Mm. Howard Smith, who in in tin; Minn Margaret Koniuiy of Pliiliululpliiii MJHH rcttu Murnult of Urooklyn in upend Mr. and Mrn. Clmrlcu Wyekoff spent ntonow uftrriiuoii. John Flannignn hitn moved from Mr stnto himpitul nt Trenton, in improving. and Mian Catherine Kelly of Allontown ing tho numiiii-r with Mia. (1. W. Burm Sunday at Lakewood. William I. Grcon, tho .blnckmnith, wan Mary Bennett's house to LOIIM Brown' About $,')() was cleared by tho Motho have boon viititing their brother, Victor Ilowlitt Gonover mid Frank Fonton .fitting a howonhoo on Monday morning llOUHC. (lint Imrvcm home, held on the night ol Donn Konnoy. Hporit Friday at Afibury Park. You can tnko but ous nowiipaper and wliou a pii'co of iron flow off and titruck the I'ourtli. Mi» Nellit! Story in mopping for tvv yet keep fwlly informed on nil the news Mm on Uwwrtat. 1MB wrint was If you 8(>o it in '1'tiK RKOISTKR it di< John Gihnriimi. who butt boon threat- An ndvertlHomont in THIS KlMlIHTl'.u ii woobu with Miu Charles llowo of Lou, of Monmouth county—provided that ono tuid ho was In id up for a time. happen.—Adv. ened with typhoid fever, i« improving, nuro to bring IVHIIIIH.—Adv, Branch. paper is THIS lltawmn—Adv, VOLUME XXVIIL FO83. RED, BANK, K J., -WEDNESDAY. JULY 12, 1905. PAGES 9 TO:Ml ELECTRIC LIGHT WIRE CUT. A BIG REALTYCOMPANV. NDIAN FIGHTER DEAD. STONE ASSESSMENT. THE. BOSSWRTT" HOUSE. Transparency at Meanshura Township Pays the County $1,105.27. B0ABD OF HEALTH AT WORK Without lAghlu. :T IS BEING FORMED AT AT- kN OLD RESIDENT OP BED BANK WO BICYCLES STOLEN The township committee of Shrews- AT LITTLE SILVER. The management of the auditorium at LANTIC HIGHLANDS. GONE. ' PORT MONMOUra, Keansburg recently put np a trans- ury township last week paid its assess- ffliev Believe. A. SI. Moberta'a House parency on the road leading from the The Object of the Company is to Wenry Everding $aw Active Service ment for the construction of the stone The Bioyclea Belonged to Take Over All the Steal fSetate of Against the Mtedeklns on the William B. Seeley and IW ia the Filthiest in the Whole trolley to the auditorium. To light the oad from Oceanic to Strong's Corner, State-Three. Deaths From Con- Tliotnao MM. Leonard, Aggregating American Frontier—Mle Was Also Walling-Self ord Wotnmn's transparency it was necessary to run an $101,000 in Value. a Veteran of the Civil War. tear Seabright. The total cost of this Visit to Sew York. gumption There. one road was $11,052.78. The assess- electric light wire from the trolley wire A realty company is being formed to Henry Everding of Red Bank died last At the last meeting of the township ment levied on Shrewsbury township Two bicycles were stolen some over the tracks of the Central railroad. ake over all the real estate of Thomas hurlday at his home on East Front committee a complaint was made by a ten per cent of the total coat and etween Saturday night and f The wire was high above the tracks, H. Leonard of Atlantic Highlands. Mr. streejt. He was 76 years old. His death very large number of the citizens of mounts to $1,165.87. The township morning from a storehouse connects^ where it could not possibly interfere Leonard is thelargest land owner at At- was flue to Bright's disease, with which Little Silver of the condition of the iaid the assessment last week. The with Captain "William M. Seeley's store with railroad work. As soon as the rail, antic Highlands and one of the largeBt he h|d been sick about three months. premises of A. M. Roberts of that place. ounty will Hereafter take control of t Port Monmontb. One of the bicyolaf road people- learned that the wire had in Monmouth county. His property is MR Everding was born at Buercke- •The complaint also asked tbat an in- Ilis road and the township will be re- belonged to Mr. Seeley and the other tn» been swung they sent a gang of men to iurg» Germany. He came to this country vestigation of the premisea be made. alued at $101,000 and it is proposed to ieved from all expense for its mainten- onged to Waiter Walling, who is eas« Keansburg and cut it down. The wire it the age of eighteen and went to Brook- Mr, RobertB's house is located on the ssue stock to that amount in shares of nce. loyed in the store. The storehouse is main street of the-village, nearQuacken- has not been replaced and the trans- yn to live. During one of the Indian :ept locked, but the thief had a key tbat 1 bush's store. For years it has had the parency is without lights. In the prospectus that has been issued iprisings on the American frontier itted the lock. Mr. Walling found lbs reputation of being an extremely dirty egarding the formation of the company young Everding joined the United States MIDEDJVITH A MULE. 'oor open when he went to work Mo»» place. The property was formerly Hr. Leonard puts a valuation upon each army, and saw active service in the ay morning and this was the firgfc battles against the redskins. In one en- owned by Mr. Roberta's wife, who died eparate tract of land which he owns. HOW JOHN POIXISH HAD THREE nowledge he had of the robbery. There* DEATH CAMEJUDDENLY. gagement he was one of seven survivors of consumption about three years ago. His largest single tract of land is what BIBS BROKEN. is no cliie to the thief. Mr, Seeley's M of his company, all the rest being mas- About a year ago Mr. Robarts's, only JT GAVE NO WARNING TO PAT- as formerly the Stilwell farm, located yele was a Barnes and cost $75 wbea acred by the Indians. Mr. Everding Me Was Clipping the Mule, When It son died of consumption. This left two RICK CONIFP. ear Chapel Hill, and termed " Bay ew. It had been used but littls. Mr* as severely wounded in this battle, and Began Playing Tag With Mini and daughters living at home and on Thurs- iew Heights" on account of the fine falling's wheel was an old one and mt Bradevelt Man Stricken With Paral.. ie carried the marks of the Indian arro w- Kicked Him to the Other End of morning of last week the oldest of these I/sis Alotig the Hoadaml Bled Five iew of the bay which it commands- the Stable. ery valuable, although he would bs Minutes Afterward — Neighbors his farm contains 120 acres aria1 the leads in his body the rest of his days, ;lad to have it back. girls died. The other daughter is about it the outbreak of the Civil war he en- John Pollish, who works at Brookdale Sate Him Fall. aluation placed upon it is $230 an acre, Harry Branson and family of Belforrl ten years old. iated in the 14th New York volunteers arm, and a mule which he was clipping, Patrick Coniff of Bradevelt died sud- r a total of $27,600. The next largest ipent part of last week with Mr. and The complaint of the citizens was nd. served throughout the war. ad a collision a few days ago. Pollish denly of paralysis on Friday morning. act of land isatBreventPark, adjoining ilrs. Henry Bade of Hoboken. This-was ; hid before the township board of health, Mr. Everding was engaged in the as the only one injured by the collision, Tbat morning he went to visit John Atlantic Highlands on the west. This Urs. Branson's first trip to New York, and it was stated by members of that holesale wine business in Brooklyn for 'he clipping process was under way in Fitzpatrick, a near neighbor. He had act contains forty acres and is closs lthough she has lived at Port Mon. body that an investigation of the house number of years. Ten years ago he me of the stables when the accident oc- not been at Mr. Fitzpatrick's long when o improved property. The valuation mouth and Belford all her life. Lad already been made, and that it had •tired after buying a farm at North- urred. It is said that the mule was a he complained of feeling bad and said >ut on thia property is $600 an acre, or a been found in a very filthy condition. iorfc, Long Island. About eight years oung one and that, this was the first The Essex troop of Newark, bound for he would go right home and get to bed. otal of $24,000 for the forty acres. Some of the members of the board stated go he came to Red Bank to spend part me it had ever felt the cold steel of a he state camp at Sea Girt, came to Port He had gone but a short distance down that it was doubtful if another house Another large tract ia at Hillside, >f the summer, and while here became iair of clippers on its hide. When Poll. Monmouth on the steamboat Wilson oa the road when he was Btricken and fell. could be found in the state of New nown as the " Hilbide Park " property, cqUainted with Mrs. Caroline Russ, l\ started to do the clipping the mule iaturday. From Port Monmouth the Jersey as filthy as that one. A number of neighbors saw him fall and 'his tract contains twenty acres and has vidow of John Rues, whom he married loked around sideways to see what was roopers went to Colt's Neck, where thef Mrs. Roberts and the two children hastened to his assistance. Restoratives ilways been considered an ideal park year later. Four years ago Mr. Ever- oing on. It didn't seem to mind it camped for the night, continuing their having died of consumption, the houBe were administered, but they were of-no ite. Tke recent lake scheme at Atlan- ling sold his farm at Northport and much at first, but as the work proceeded ourney to Sed. Girt on Sunday. i3 believed to be filled with the germs of avail and he died five minutes after he ic Highlands contemplated buying this noved to Red Bank, where he had since nd the mule discovered it was losing oil Rev. Archibald Sutphen, pastor of the this disease and unfit for human habita- fell. Mr. Coniff had a stroke of paralysis iroperty and converting it into a public ived. Mrs. Russ was his third wife, and s hair, it concluded it was about time New Monmouth Baptist church, is hav- >ark'. A valuation of $500 an acre, or a tion. The board of health will give the about four months ago and he never this was also Mrs, Russ's third marriage. o kick. Pollish was walking behind ng a two weeks' vacation,'which he is otal of $10,C00, is put upon this prop- house a thorough cleaning, and will fully recovered from its effects. Besides his wife he leaves six children he mule to begin operations on the othe spending at Holmdel and Freehold, irty. r burn all furniture, bedding, etc., which Mr. Coniff waB 65 years old apd was iy his former marriages. Two children ide when the mule suddenly let fly Services are held ia the church during are likely to contain germs of the dis- twice married. His first wife died a All the rest of Mr. Leonard's property re Sisters of Charity. 30th of its hind feet. Both feet struck his absence, but there is no preachisg ease. Then the inside of the house will number of years ago, and although his s in the borough of Atlantic Highlands. Mr. Everding was at one time more or 'ollish in the chest and the man was service. ' • • be thoroughly washed with germ-killing second wife is still alive he. has been One tract uis on Bay View avenue, op- less actively engaged in politics in mocked clear to tb.9 other end of the Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ludlow, wli& chemicals, and a,fter tbat the house will living alone for some time. For a num- osite the site of the Portland hotel, Brooklyn, and was very prominent in itable. He was almost unconscious on were married last winter, have begsm be disinfected. This, it is believed, will ber of years he lived at Vanderburg, which was burned down a few years Masonic circles in that city. The funeral iccount of the loss of wind, but he housekeeping in the Thomas Castlgr but the greater part of his life had been put the premises in a state fit for human go. This is about the onlya unim- was held at the house on Saturday, the luickly revived and was taken to the house at Port Monmouth, Mrs. Ludlow occupancy, though some of the persons spent at Bradevelt. He leaves a brother. roved tract of land in that vicinity. service being conducted by Rev. Robert ffice of Dr. Frank M. Wood at Holmdel waa formerly Miss Hejenof Belford. who were present at the hearing gave The tract contains seventeen lots and the MacKellar, rector of Trinity church" 'he doctor found that Pollish had three Mrs. William Ent and her daughter J it as their opinion that tho only sure FAREWELL TO A PASTOR. valuation put upon it is f 350 a lot, or The body was buried at Fair View cemej roken ribs, which were reset. The Mrs. Gordon Smith, both of Philadel- if tery with Masonic honors. (!• phia, are visiting Mrs, William O. Ha« - method of cleaning the house would be A Reception Tendered to Hev. Mob- '15,950 for the entire tract. patient is rapidly recovering. Another to burn it down. This, however, the ert B. Fisher. Four of the tracts of land are on First man finished clipping the mule, whioh vene of Belford, who ia also a daughter board of health has no authority to do. avenue, in the business part of the town. was so satisfied with its work of putting of Mrs. Ent. Rev. Robert B. Fisher, who recently A 3OUENEY ON A HOUSE-BOAT. The ten-year-old daughter has been resigned as pastor of the Holmdel Bap One tract adjoins William H. Posten's >ne man out of business that it was as ' The Belford Methodists are holdins 4 taken from the house and ia now living tist church to accept a call to Methuen, store and another is just across the road, Senator LaRoche Makes a Trip lip docile as a lamb and allowed the new services in Johnson's ball at tbat plats? J with Mrs. Summers on Maple avenue, Massachusetts, was tendered a farewell between Ira Antonides's new store and the Shrewsbury. Upper to perform his duties without while the church is undergoing improve" Red Bank. Before being taken from reception last Friday night. The recep- Dharles R. Snyder's office. Another William H. English of Brooklyn, who making a single kick, i ments. The church will be re-opefieti Little Silver the girl was thoroughly tion was held in the chapel and about ract is at the cornier of First and Bay iB summering in David McClure's house August 23d. washed and scrubbed by some of the 200 persons were present. Addresses View avenues, upon which two stores are on the river bank, entertained Senator CLEARING ROADSIDES. Rev. and Mrs. William V. Wilson of J neighbors. Her hair was in such a were made by Rev. Archibald Sutphen located. The fourth tract is the lumber William J. LaRoche of Brooklyn part of New Monmouth returned on Saturds^-| matted condition that it could not be of New Monmoufoi, Rev. Samuel Bowers ard property occupied by Hopping & last week. Senator LaRoche is a mem- Property Ownera Muat Cut Weeds, from a visit to Mrs. Wilson's niece, Bfe»..| MirufiU and Briers. combed and it had to be cut off. Suit- of Matawan, Rev. John R. Humphreys Ely. The riparian right in front of the ber of the Brooklyn yacht club and he William West of Brooklyn. able clothing was furnished by the neigh- of Marlboro, Rev. Garrett Wyckoff of Central railroad's hotel is included in made his journey up the Shrewsbury in Under the law, all owners of prop Mr. and Mrs. Percy Francis of Neir~ A. 8. Hullo. A larg© Wclw® entire run. A great many Rod Uaukorn him. Becrtilury—William F. nurhnrn. by a blank cartridge pintol on the Fourth Church Struck by Lightning. Treasurer—Wllllnm 0. Voutlioea. Ono of tho lnrgeat picture hunf*<~ attondod tho performance on Monday Il« w&8 holding tho muzzle of tho pinto! l>'latfiil®t\<> Walks. J Tho north aide of the bolfry of th made in Red Bank to on exhibit! wr night. against tho palm of lihi hand when it wn Having just returned from nn ex- Central Stlve.ru Ntablon Holmdel Reformed church wan ntrucl tended tour through tho ((Hurries) of Now Dicltopf'ii BliowjWindow. It \. • w (Uncharged. Albert Worden, non of Al at Maplo avonuo and Monmouth Htroot We. Want !'©««»• Trade. by lightning during the fitoriu on Satur- York mid Pennsylvania, whoio wt After 28 yonnt' MiieoiMiifiil buBincuu, wi by Mr. Dickopf and in five f«e'- ^'Ai boit Worden, Sr., of River Htrotit, vvm bought ton carloadi) of the very boi Wo want your trade and wo ought U day .afternoon. Homo of tho nhingloi continue at tho naino old prieosi ftith ni nix foot threo inohes long. T>-~ fi="£ Kdt it if «(>()(! meat and good service will hurt in the iiamo way. curbing wid Hugging, wo aro prepare ttdvanoo. Those (ttul)lon are BO woll oa wan ordered by Arrowumlth > v» ;^ woro torn loose and two uiniill hole to fill ordoiB at short notico. Alno lot u brlrifr, it. Wo ninko it our biiflincnn ti M» • m tablinhod and HO woll known that it noodi contains tho pictures of a Hiitaii'. .^ "•? wore made. tthow you our lino of nioiiunaonls am ploitHo our cuutomoni and aro natiiiflw Accordion, niilo pleating und pinking no "hot air" to induce old cuotomoifi, pant commandem'df the post, i' «'• hcailHloiiuB. Thorium ManHOU & Hon. woll us now, to patronize them. only when wo il<» thin. tloiii) at ohort notice. Art Store, 5i Adv, put in tho post roaaa, , Market.—Ah). Broad Htroot.—li It payu to advertise in THIS 1U:UIUTIUI Kotoluuii.—Adv. THEEW BOTXMS AT BA8T. ED Wi TRAIN. Freehold Infant Injured by En- New Livery Stele N Maple Ave , raged Man. We,beg to inform the public that we MEETS John Kelwin of Freehold visited at the have opened a Livery Stable on Maple DE&TO. Avenue, Red Bank; in the tear of tbe ,ome of Mrs. Annie Pewlis of that place Interest to Carriage Buyers. Central Hotel, and that we are prepared - SSv HN&g BtrmtU $»y u Train at the i few days ago. He made hia presence to turn out any sort of an up-to-date rig WteiUrsmM Crowtiw at m-eneau on f >bjectionable and Mrs. Pewlis ordered you may wish. r mlw -£Sh Gnii Mem in Matf an iim away. He became angry and pick- Hoping to be favored with an order s$&ur~W&& Fourteen years old. from you when jn need of a first-class ing up a bottle threw it at Mrs. Pewlis's rig, we remain, •7oUu B. Millspaugh, aged fourteen infant child. The bottle broke and the . The Red Bank Carriage Company is still doing business at the old stand. We are'just f*fa, son of Charles H. Millepaugh of Yours for business, : baby was badly cut by the pieces of now prepared to offer carriage buyers the greatest bargains ever heard of. The season is ad- i. *uoklyn, formerly of Wickatunk, was glass. Kerwin escaped and has not since E. H. CONK & SON. vancing so rapidly that fall with its frosts will soon be here, and we've got to make room for «iUed by s.i train at the railroad crossing been seen, although officers have been Telephone 106-R. •A Freneau, near Matawan, on Fourth searching for him. the fine assortment of carriages ordered for the fall trade. Here, then, is your opportunity to hi July morning. The boy was spending the summer secure a carriage at a price so low that it almost touches the cost figure. 1383 1005 with hig brother, Fay Millspaugh of HREE YEARSjN PRISON. We find that among the bargains we have to offer are two 2-seat Basket Cabriolets, with '"'sisesequake, On Fourth of July morn English canopy top—the very finest, coolest and most comfortable summer conveyances ever Established 22 tars *"j be rode his bicycle to Freneau to A BLABBER GETS A LONG SEN- visit TenEyck and J. Don Conover, manufactured. It's # pleasure to ride in these carriages, and for style they can't be beat. We and still doing business at the TENCE. old stand. About half-past nine o'clock he started have also two single-seat Basket Wagons which will be sold very cheap. •. •o? Matawan to attend the ball game, Henry Taylor of lied Bank Sent l/#> fj^cuel Rosenbaum, a student at Glen- for Vuttlna Benjamin. Hopnln In fact, we have bargains all along the line If you want a Runabout, Buggy or any other With a Razor-Other Offenders kind of a carriage, it's here. We are confident we can suit both your taste and your pocket- NEW STOCK OF "Pcod institute, accompanied him. When Sentenced at Freehold. IL'sy approached the Freneau railroad Henry Taylor of Red Bank, who was book. What more can we do? messing young MillBpaugh was riding jon.victed of assault and battery on Ben- dhead of his companion and was going ainin Hoppin and of carrying concealed Sit a fast pace. Rosenbaum saw the weapons, was sentenced by Judge Fos- *i'iin approaching from Freehold and er last Thursday to three years in state shouted a warning to Millspaugli, but the prison. Taylor had used a razor on 'taming was not heard or else not ank Carriage Co., Hoppin and Judge Foster said he pro- deeded. osed to deal severely with this class of \ 1% is thought that Millepaugh ex- iffenders. $fected the train to stop at the Btation, but Call and examine our different James Acker, who ran amuck in the ' 'Front Street, Red, Bank. 'h-.t train was an express. Millspaugh grades and get prices. itreets of Freehold several weeks ago nu into the engine and was hurled about I still have some very fine old ind assaulted Christopher Heiser, was i-#eaty feet to the side of the track. His apple vinegar, of our own curing. :onvicted last Thursday. He claimed to AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA "Lull was fractured, several ribs were Quantity to suit purchasers. je crazy but turned out to be only drunk, broken and his left leg was broken. He fudge Foster fined him $25 and said he *iiwl 5n about half an hour. No one in Andrew C.Cottrell,; ould suspend further sentence during 'iha engine knew anything of the acci- Oceanic and Fair Haven. •J3iit and the train ran on to Matawan is good behavior, but if he should come before it stopped. aefore him again he would punish him 'urther on this charge. ^The funeral was held on Thursday at Louis Robbins, who pleaded guilty to Ambler's Healing Powder. iho borne of the Conover brothers at Carstairs Ryes issault and battery on Frank D. Thpmp- jreneau. The body was buried in the at Englishtown,-was sentenced to 1 Jiticir church cemetery at Bradevelt. months in the. county jail. . are the best that money can buy. - SELtEBS HOUNDED UP. A Suit for Damages. Asbttry Parkers and One Dr. Reginald 8. Bennett of Asbury Sold only at the Matateaner Rndicted. 'ark has brought suit for $20,000 dam- WARRANTED to CURE Hmelve Asbury Parkers and one man iges against Alfred Buscb, a summer OLD SORES, (BALLS, SCRATCHES, •from Matawan were arraigned in court esident of that place. Buscb, with his ' MANGE, ETC. lint Thursday on a charge of illegal lutomobile, ran down the doctor while 3iquor Belling. Indictments had been Easily npplled For sale at all druggists' or sen I le was out driving with his wife and postpaid. Price 50 cents. •found against them by the recent grand ihild. Dr. Bennett was badly bruised SHERIDAN HOTEL, *Eiy. The Asbury Parkers indicted and the child was slightly injured. Dr_ R. E. BATES & CO., i7£re Benjamin Barlow, James Bett, Bennett is a son of Samuel J. Bennett of Postofflce Box 43. -; Red Bank, N. J." Joan Condon, Frank Maranda, Mary A, inton Falls. ' Slelntyre, Sarah Miller, William Maddox, <9-«-» ' FRED FRICR, Proprietor. "Mary Rosa, Joseph Spena, Augusta Hotel Waiter Drowned. SCHROEOER BROS., £psna, John H, Thomas and Samuel John Hendricks, a waiter at the Nor- JBiOTOX. The Matawan man indicted mandie hotel, was drowned on Wednes- was John Dellett. Two indictments day while in bathing in the surf, a short AND GENERAL CONTRACTORS. Viore found against some of them. listance above the hotel. Several com- J. Pome pleaded guilty to one indictment janions were with him, but he was Bulldltips of nil sizes moved or raised. We also h. icd not guilty to another, while most move Safes, Boilers or heavy mucbintry ol any de- :aught in the current and carried be- The Finest Rigs scription. fA them pleaded not guilty at all. yond their reach. His body was found Smokestacks or Flag roles raised ami placed IB position. 'iboso who pleaded not guilty will be tried in Thursday morning. Get our estimate before irtvinR out your work as ."July 20th and those who pleaded guilty Cnatomers' Properties Adverllaed TTlironsltom the Wnlted States.. we are well equipped will) the necessary ripping and years of liard earned experience, whirl) enables "iTill be sentenced the same day. They It pays to advertise in THE REGISTER. us to do good work at a reasonable figure. •^vere all releaBed in $300 bail each, at the Livery, Boarding and Sales Mo. 49 Broad Street, Red Bank, W. J. CHOLERA Address, 152 Leighton Avc, Red Bank Stables of :hild Not Expected to Lire from One For Telephone, call Matthews Co., 60-1. SET ASIDE. Hoar to Another, but Cared by I CbaiUborlsin'B Colic, Cholera and _ Parker Gets JVett Trial on Diarrhoea ISeniedy. Frank P* Stryker, Builders' Supplies. Account of Juror's Aetion. Euth, the little daughter of E. N. Monmouth Street, Tbe verdict of guilty against Walter Dewey of Agnewville, Va., was seriously 1 have tho ajrency and carrv In stock the ill of cholera infantum last summer. near Railroad Depot, "'fedlBon " Portland cement, the celebrated Fletcher, an Asbury Park policeman 1 We gave her up and did not expect "West Stockbrldge " lime and Hie well- iyho was charged with assault and bat ler to live from one hour to another," known " Adament" wall plaster; also scry on Je3se Clayton, has been set aside he says. " I happened to think of RED BANK, N. J. means something more than brick, lath, due linings, etc. *y Judge Fosterand a new trial ordered Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Dia- I have a full line of painting- supplies, Tliia is the trial in which John D. Ivins, rrhoea Remedy and pot a bottle of it such 88 brashes, ladders, ready mixed from the store. In five hours I saw a paints, white lead, oils of all kinds, etc. *>SS of the jurors, said that although he No worn-out horses, no old car- the selection of an Umbrella. change for the better. We kept on giv- riages, but everything the finest— I keep a good gtade of carpenters' tools, •foted guilty he believed the man inno ing it and before she had taken tbe half stylish in every respect. I have hardware, glass, cordage nails, sheathing Mat. Judge Foster stated that Ivins if ono small bottle she was well." This You can satisfy your own ideas papers, tar rouflng, (travel asphalt roofing, 1tld him he voted guilty with the rest ol remedy is for Rale by C. A. Minton & just added a new lot of closed car- cte. the jurors in order to catch a train home ~!o., No. 5 Broad streot, Red Bank, riages to my business and am pre- I buy for cash and soil at a close margin. pared to fill all orders for wed- Out of town orders dollvered promptly. Judge Foster stated that he did not see of style and cost if you buy dings, funerals, etc. * jjijw a person could tbuBviolatehisoatb W. W. LEONARD, your parasol here. Store Cor. 1st Ave. & Valley Drive, Good Plumbing | Boarding Horses a Specialty. An Unnecessary Alarm of Flro. Atlantic Highlands. ; The Freehold fire department wa No plumbing Job Is loo large for me to undertake; no Job Is too small tor mo to Telephone 18-R. My Tel. Call is 20-f. -called out about eleven o'clock last glvoiittentlon to.. Tbe sninll Job gets the snmo attention as sl-'Jfhursday night by an unnecessary tbe t)lg one—they' both get the best. '-.fc'arm. John Simmons, who lives on j outskirts of town, had chosen tha ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED. JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. of night to burn his bedding, afe SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. ^ghb wlio saw the flames turned I curry constantly on hnml all (lie Intest wJi an alarm. Simmons said he burned sanitary upiillnnoea, enubllng me to do Adlem ^ Co•9 w !ii-.o mattress because it was full of bed- work withuut delay. Deposit Vaults Broad Street, jT.fmp Explosion Causes Fire. Why risk your own and the A l,!mp which had been left burnin securities of others when v> M John Brown's houuo at Lon you can protect both for Red BanR. a-.-h a few nights ago exploded an MONMOUTH ST., the small sum of $5.00 per iite to the furniture. Neighbor © KEI> ItANK, NEAV J11SBEY iif."'e into the house and beat out tin annum ? Usn . with ruga and carpets. The dan ,u;niiaunted to about f 100. 'i'hoio \vi J. F. CONOVER, > ifijurance. Vaults of tho Second Na- Successor to The Town Hall ABBOTT WORTHLEY. Little Silver, N. J. tional Bank of Rod Bank. Hoof of Barn on Flro. CAN BE HAD 1OII A. morn on H. C. Thome's L-rty at Freehold got afire a fo Coal, Wood, pine and hard, by the There is fork for tiio Plumber sigo, prcHuiuably from tho spark Dances, , the <>ngino of tho mill. Tho too cord ; Wheat Bran, Buckwheat Bran, Flour, In your place and it should ho nttccded v liarn wa» partly burned awnj AM) nKTA)I,~I>KAI,EU IN to nt OMCO. Sickness in frequently catBfd jsJuir.-of wag to liavo been replaced not by clogKod drains. CoHtn too mucli, you Parties, etc. Lumber, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Oats, Corn, Oyster Shells, il. O. Poultry «ay i1 Not at all. My charges for high \."'.U :i now one, BO tho duuiugo wan u< chum and Buildot-ci' Hardware. Food ior little Chicks, Hay, Straw, and all Plumbing, Gas Fitting or Stoaia For torinfl and particulars call on or Off the Trucfa. addreim RED BANK, N. J. Hunting Work Bun): trolley car, bound kinds of Pratt's and International Foods for are quite nioderuto. I uno (jood mnto- g Bntuuh, ran off tho track nt Tu Yurd at corner of Went 11 ml rialu nnd exorciuo grout Hkill and miro in Sfifl laffc Wodnceday aftcrnoo THEODORE F. SNIFFEN, Cattle ancl Chickens, at regular prices. all operation!!. 1 KuurnnUto perfect f: wao delayed nlwut two hour Htrootn, near railroad. work. _ _ waa i'rowded with pawengei JANI'IOK, BRANCH YAItDB: Bi>rbiK I.nko and Anburj Tat* WILLIAM O'BRIEN. RED BANK, NEW JE11SEY. FACTORY: I>I;MKHIK. N. Y. YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED. ?0 WEST FRONT BTKKET, ttKD DA NK, N. J <>Bfc protest of the bar association of New of Liberty, the Narrows themselves, and Jersey, wbiclialoiost to a man opposed bis perceive the wooded shore of Staten Is- WHAT THE PAPERS SAY. appointment. The leading argument, of land running off mistily towards New AND course, is that he is ft>o closely identified Jersey. On the other side the lights of JOHN V. ROCKEFELLER with the huge corporations and trusts. ~toney Island sink in distance, and prea- HIS MONEY. He is called the "father of the trust laws ently we are inside the long bar of Sandy of $ew Jersey," having written practi- Hook. What in the world could be Summer Comforts. Clturchea and Charitable Inatitu- cally every line of the famous measure more refreshipg than this splendid sail tionu Should Be/me Moiieti Made which has caused the state across the at the beginning and end of a summer Through Mvll Metltoda — Some fludson to become tbe charter home of day. Our store is now as it has been for years the best place in the ! '\ Scriptural Quotation*. every great trust and corporation in this From Atlantic Highlands the innumer- county to get those things in the house-keeping line which render the (From the San Francisco Argonaut.) country. able attractions of the coast from Holl- We suppose that Albei't Shaw, editor Mr. Dill has drafted wholly or in part and Beach to Point Pleasant are with- sultry weather of this season less oppressive and less discomforting. Suit- of the Review of Reviews, is a nice man. the charters of 700 corporations, and is a in easy reach, and surroundings may be Wo know his readers piously believe so. director in fifty or mofe. No other man found to suit eVery taste. The express able things in these lines will make the housework lighter, and will re- We are convinced that he thinbs so him- has been so closely identified with the train service embraces Navesink, Nor- self. But if Mr. Shaw continues to print growth of the trusts in this country, and mandie, Seabright, Monmouth Beach, move many of the irritations and annoyances of the weather. ~" in his magazine such saccharine, sanc- no man in such close touch with the West End, Long Branch, Elberon, Deal, timonious articles advising the Christian great masters of these trusts as to cause Allenhurst, Ashury Park, Ocean Grove, Window aad door screens perhaps church and all charitable institutions to the lawyers of the bar association of Avon, Belmai, Spring Lake, Manaequaa, accept all of Mr. Rockefeller's money New Jersey to doubt the advisability of Point Pleasant, Bed Bank, Matawan, stand first in-the line of hot weather they can get hold of we shall be obliged placing him upon the bench of the court Freehold, and other resorts boasting well comforts. They keep out flies, mos- to eliminate the name of Shaw from our of errors and appeals, It is also known kept hotels. The coast is justly famous liet of straight-thinking men. Such ar- that he is the chief owner of a regis- for its facilities, for yacbtiDg, driving, quitoes and bugs, and yet allow a per- ticles made a man sick. Consider for a tration company for corporations in New automobiling and both salt and fresh fect circulation of air and breeze through moment this siDgle sentence: York. water bathing. Besides the Sandy Hook If aome part ot their wealth came to them through In Wall street the news was received route the New Jersey Central has an all the rooms. We have screens to fit all, defects in our present economic sjntom, or through late yesterday afternoon with gasps ot rail route with stations at the foot of regular sized doors, and with very slight business methods that ought uot to be employed, West 23d Street, N. R., and at the foot there may be the more reason why wealth thus ac- astonishment, quired should be given by its possessors. 'What is Dill up to now?" was the of Liberty Street, N. R. All trains are work they can be made to fit any door. Now, mark you, just what it is, shorn amazed query of all on learning of his equipped with the latest designed Pull- Our window screens are adjustable and of the verbiage, that Shaw says: The appointment. man parlor cars- and coaches. Upon money of an unrepentant thief who The appointment was inadeby Gover- application to C. M, Burt, general pass- will thus fit any window of any size. keeps right on with his business i.B more nor Stokes after a conference with Chief nger agent, Central Railroad of New A Lawn Swing gives happiness to acceptable to charity, and therefore to Justice Gummere late yeBterday after- Jersey, New York City, a hotel book God, in whose name these labor, than noon. It fills the vacancy created by and Sea Shore time-table will be sent children all summer long, and it gives the money of an honest man 1 Ye goda ! the resignation of Peter Van Voorhees you; they are free for the asking. comfort to the older people in the even- —will Mr. Shaw do us the kindness to of Camden. get down his Bible from the shelf and James B. Dill was born at Spencerport, A Faeuoua Mountain Itesort. ings. Hammocks fill much the same turn to the twelfth chapter of St. Mark Newport, July 25th, 1854, and wa3 the Mauch Chunk, within easy excursion and read it, and when he comes to verses son of a Congregational minister. He distance~of New York, is one ot the need and afford pleasure day and even- 42 and 43 will he not pause for a little graduated from Yale in 1876 and' from most strikingly picturesque resorts in ing. We have lawn swings that will and ponder them— the Law School of the University of New the country. Lying among the hills York in 1878. He began to make a last a lifetime, and we have hammocks And there camo a certain poor widow, and she twelve miles within the Lebigh Gap, it throw in two mites wbicb make a faitnlnB. Ana specialty of corporation law in 1885 and appears to be so- completely walled in in all sizes and prices. ne called unto blm bis disciples, and salta unto soon become the leading corporation ex- that it is only when the traveler has them. Verily I say unto you. That this poor widow pert and trust architect of this country. attained one of the commanding sum- hath caat more In than all they which hare cast in- to the treasury. In 1900 he established the high water mits, and descried the wonderful horse- mark for legal fees in this country, re- shoe bend of the narrow valley, that he HAMMOCKS. Nothing there, Mr. Shaw, about rich ceiving $1,000,000 for adjusting the dif- can conceive how such a cul de sac can m»n's money, gained by "business ferences between Andrew Carnegie and be approached from any direction by a methods that ought not to be employed Henry C. Frick. On another occasion railroad. The houses rise above each (by which Mr. Shaw, always gentle with be received a fee of $5,000 for uttering other as they back up against the rising the millionaire, really means robbery by one word in making a decision on an im- hillside. On the opposite side of the craft) being better for giviug than that portant case in Pittsburg. river the precipitous bluffs of Bear of the poor but honest. When the sociological student of a Mountain, from the Indian of which the But we regret to say that Mr. Shaw IB couple of centuries in the future delves town derives its name, form the front not alone in finding excuses for the into the strange upgrowth and develope- ef the horseshoe round which the current church for its acceptance of the tainted tnent of the gigantic trusts that came sweeps. money of Rockefeller and men of his into existencejluring the closing years Trout fishing may be indulged in at type. Rev. Dr. Broadus, as we read in of the nineteenth century and the open- the preserve of the Penn Forest Brook the Raleigh Biblical Recorder, is of the ing years of the century that followed Trout Company which comprises about opinion that Rockefeller's "simple piety he will find traces of James B. Dill all sixty-five ponds and dams aud is fed by- and humility are as marvelous as his along the line. four mountain streams. Nearer at band, great prosperity," and hiB money ought It was Dill who framed the corpora- however, are the great scenic attractions not to be refnsed by the church. Rev. tion registration law of New Jersey in of the resort. • A trolley line attains the J. Wesley Sullivan, of Philadelphia, 1892 that made Trenton the putative "Flag Staff" on the mountain at the sweetly says that " Mr. Rockefeller has home of trusts, whose aggregate billions southern end of the city, and westward Other hot weather comforts are refrigerators and ice chests, porch screens, porch lived too close to his religion to, have ob- of capital would overtop the wealth of lies the old Switch-back or Gravity Rail- tained money in any sinister way. It is the national treasuries of the world. settees and rockers, fly nets and similar goods. We carry a full stock of garden tools and sadly unjust even to pause before ac- road which historically and physically cepting these church gifts." Rev. A. N. As a judge of the court of errors and is of the most unique interest. lawn'mowers. . Wheeler recently introduced a resolution appeals, Mr. Dill will be called upon to On Mount Pisgah, behind the site of before the Northern Indiana Baptist as- decide questions arising with regard to the town, coal was discovered by a sociation affirmirjg that Rockefeller was charters he has written and to decide hunter in 179t. The earliest anthracite never " either directly or indirectly con- points of the corporation laws he has mines of the country were opened in nected with conduct that is out of line framed. It is likely that every trust this vicinity, and the Gravity Railroad Hendriekson or corporation appellant who comes be- was constructed to bring the' output with the highest morality !" fore him will have been at some time down to the river. The length of the What a vast impassable gulf is there one of his clients. line was nine miles, and it waa con- East Front Street, ked Rank, ffl. J. between such views as these of " Christi- structed at an even grade for the whole ' anity" and those upon righteousness of distance. Mules were used for years to Him who scourged the money-changer! Hoard of Freeholders Too Unwieldy. haul the empty cars back to the mines. from the temple and set the gift of the (From the Freehold Transcript.) These sagacious beasts were wont to toil widow's mite above all that were cast Reference was made in these columns patiently up the long road, but they re- into the treasury, albeit '• many that recently to the fact that owing to a fused flatly to be driven down having were rich cast in much ?'•' What church- proposed division of one of the wards in once become accustomed to the exhilara- ly avarice is it that blinds these min- the city of Long Branch, that place tion of coasting with the coal and en- isters of God to the fact (which every would secure an additional representa- joying the beauties of the natural candid reader of Miss Tarbell's arraign- tive in the county board of freeholders, scenery. In 1844 a return track was1 ment of Rockefeller in McClure's Maga- even though it already has six useless laid. Machinery was installed to draw zine must admit) that he is a sancti- members, not including the representa- the cars up Mount Pisgah and Sharp monious hypocrite, a crafty lawbreaker, tive from Ocean township, for whom Mountain, but the cars ran the remainder the very type of man of whom the alone there is any real excuse or warrant. of the way by their own gravity. Of L. L BROWN, Scripture speaks as"devourers of wid- Just how long this condition of affairs is late years the railroad has been used ows' houses," and who, "for a pretence to be tolerated remains to be seen. The exclusively for recreation. make long prayers?" "These," says taxpayers of the county must, it seems, As we ascend Mount Pisgah the earth Scripture, "shall receive the greatest sooner or later awake to the fact that seems to sink away from us, and the damnation." But to-day the church county expenditures have increased vast amphitheatre of the hills falls into crawls servilely upon its knees before enormously in the past decade and that perspective. It is a thrilling sight. The Hay, Straw, Grain, Coal, Wood, •' • them, shamefully begging alms, and every addition to the county board is not summit reached, we slowlycrossa trestle calling them "Christian!" "Things in the line of economy but the reverse, over a wild ravine. To the north lies have changed," says an interior journal, It will, moreover, sooner or later be Broad Mountain, and we catch a glimpse " since Christ scourged the money-chang- realized that a necessary and judicious of Glen Onoko through a distant ravine. Fertilizers, Plows, Paris Green, ers from the temple, and today there is paring of the expenditures of the board so little difference between the church must be made, and that one of the lines Behind us the Lehigb Gap is outlined in and the world that to whip the money- of attack must perforce be the reduction blue. The river winds below like a sil- changer out would be to destroy mod- in the membership. The suggestion ver serpent, banded by a bridge where it ern religion." is crossed by the Central railroad of New Land Plaster. - - - - - . made some time ago that if tbe present Jersey. The towns cuddled in.the valley Is it true ? Has the church, then, sold rate of increase is maintained, the body sides look like toy houses frotn'a Noah's , itself utterly to mammon? Are the wouftl become so unwieldy as to dem- ark. Now we gather speed as we roll scribes and Pharisees in its high places? onstrate by its own conduct its in- along ; on the right rises a ridge buried We have some slight respect for a efficiency seems not to have been taken in forest, and below, on the other hand, plain, ordinary highwayman whofranbly seriously, but by and by when Asbury we pass the old tunnel and hamlet of • robs, but uone at all for those sancti- Park and other towns secure through Hackelbernie. From Bloomingdale val- monious rascals who try to bribe their increase in population additional rep- ley the second ascent is made, this time way into heaven with paltry fractions of resentation, the suggestion will be a to a slightly higher altitude, and again 24 WHARF AVE., RED BANK. the money they have stolen. Like Dr. demonstrable fact. The candidates for we scan a wide panorunia bounded by Patton of Princeton wo " hate to seo a the legislature who have the courage to mountain ranges. From here we scarcely cold-blooded right-living rascal who has pledge thetnelves to work, if elected, to travel a mile before we couie to the his $400,000,000 and can teach Sunday- secure the enactment of a law to cut out turning point, the quaint old mining vil- TELEPHONE 27. school regularly and drive his hard bar- this' nonsensical representation ought lage of Summit Hill. Here there is gain every ueelr, always keeping just to receive widespread popular support in much of interest to be seen. Tho mines within range of the law," and like Dr. the county. The matter is important may be visited, and the burning mine, a Patton, also, we think Rockefeller and is entitled to popular consideration. win which has been smouldering since " lucky not to be in jail." And as for Here is an issue which one or the other 1832 and iB now on lire at a great depth, the argument of many stately clergymen of the political parties in the county should be seen. Tlie return ride over that the thing to do is to take Rocke- would conserve, the public interest by the nine miles of continuous descending feller's money but preach against him— taking up. grade is perhaps the pleaaantest part of it is an infamous suggestion. Take the * tho trip, Starting gradually as before, gift with one hand and strike the give* great speed is soon attained, and we with the other ?—could baseness further Corporations in Control. whistle through the greenwood on the go than thnt? (From the Newark Call.) wings of tho wind. Tender the shadow Let the clerical waverere of this taint- Tho alliance between tho Republican of great crags, through forests of rhodo- ed-money question ponder this passage party in this state and the corporations dendron and laurel, by purling moun- from the Gospel according to St. Mat-is demonstrated bayond question by the tain fiti'wimtj, and out again across open thew : appointment of Jnmps B. Dill as judgo pasture land tho cm- leaps like a tiling Then Judna. which had tiotmyed him, whim ho of the court of appeals. Heretofore, tho alive. Finally we deecry the roofs and «aw that he was condemned, rcpnntfxl himself, am' machine haH not tampered directly with spires of Mauch Chunk, and nil too brouuht ngnln ttiu thirty plecca o! allvor to tlio chief the courts, but thin open preference for quickly the ride comos to an end. Who- Grass Seeo priests anil cWet-n, aiiylmr, I huvo ttlnnmt In that I have betrayed the Innocent blood. And thoy said, one WIIOBO wholo life hafl been dovotod ever is thrilled by tho acenio railways in- What is that to us V Seo tliou to that. Anil ho caiU to corporate acheming removes tho last doors at Coney Island, should try this in- down the pieces of silver In tlio tomplo. and do- lingering doubt of tlio purponjj^f tho describable count of eightoeu tnilea partod, and wont ami ImtiKed lilmsolf, And the corporations to control every branch of chief priests louu Urn Hllver plocon, and nalil. It, in around tho everlasting hills, Is now in season for the harvest sowing, not lawful tt> ))U« thrm in the treamtry, became it our state govornmont. Tho New Joraoy Central runs fort- U the price (>/ Wood. nightly excursions to Mauch Chunk at The money of John D. Rockefeller ii popular prices, and if you aro interested and I invite the inspection of my seed to pur- Stained black with blood and runted rod Scarcely are the gung-*attn*r <>/ TrtiBtit" Matte a .Itutfie in Htoro to thrill tho man who him not MiT without (llncoinfort or lnUinuiitlou. Our cor* (From the New York Journal.) neon tlio " ulcy-HOraporfi," ntmuling to luir building In o|«>n on all nliles, cool, oleim und B. Dill, ono of the fathom of gollior like n band of ginnlti ut a hunting Inviting. forty-third nnaiml outulojfuo upon re- can be obtained in this vicinity. So say my , td mi thoy tranuound tho purple vaporn of the IIURO modern trtifltn, vvnn yoHtwdny ovnning, und ontch OH thoir highor por- appointed to tlio vnoanoy on the honcii tions tho rosy light from tlio Hotting nun. I COLLEGE prior patrons. of the court of erroni and appedlti in Now Then, an ovon moro Htondily than tho Corner /Uadcny and Halscj Streets, Jeraey, tlio homo und breeding plnoo of Ancient Mariner, wo drop "bulow tin (Ouo block wont of l'wtonioti), tlio trufltn. kirk, bolow tho hill, below the U^hl- Newark, IK. J. This ruinaroblo appointment WUH niado IIOUBO top," wo Imvo passed the Statuo by Governor Stota, in npito of iho euru- J, KtruLfSK, Jit,,I'rln litical hopes and aspirations support the Jersey. When the editors who helped to HE RED BANK REGISTER Democratic ticket at all ? * bring about this condition of affaire be- gin to whine and snuffle over this act of 'B.-COOK. Mttor aati gragrletw. » # # To be 'Sure, this is the Democratic Governed Stokes, they are simply mak- it the postofflce at lied Bank. N. J.. party's own funeral. If this nort of a ing jackasses of themselves. Governor second cliss matter. TweSife-Aore campaign committee suits the party and Stokes is doing just what he was elected Or SCBSCBiPTMOlf PRICE: suits the men who contemplate being to do when he appoints corporation 8 Store boated Tiian in New iueye&r • candidates next fall, no outsider haa any lawyers as judges of the highest court •"s*»tte nonaa cause for complaint. But to those who| in the state. in the Heart of have looked on campaigns with more or 0-0-0 Broad, New and Halsey Streets, NewarL WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1905. less of interest in Monmouth county for What's the matter with Keyport? N. J. as Oreat. a quarter of a century or more, it seems When the census of 1000 wa6 taken it TOWN TALK. , - as though the limit of folly in the was found that the town of Keyport had Democratic party was nearly reached. gained only 8 in population during the (Continued from page h.) previous ten years. The census of.lCey- T. Con Morford of Long Branch, who Dr. Bogardus was elected sheriff of port for 1005 has been completed and /.elped to organize a labor ticket three Monmouth county three years ago be-turned in to the state officials, and it is Daily, Except Saturday, 2 to 4s30 O'clock. Saturday, 10 to 12 A. M. yiars ago in order to try and beat the cause he stood for certain definite prin- found that Keyport now has 28 less in- \ • DgasoRratic candidate for sheriff, and ciples. Tbeso certain principled were habitants than it had in l'JOO. Some- v/honowisoneof the Democratic county opposed by T. Con. Morford, by thething must be the matter when a town •vouirnitteemen of Jloninouth county, de- liquor dealers of the county, and bylocated as nicely as Keyport keeps drop The idvantage of Shopping in this Store Over iny lew fork Store. • 'ares that be is glad of what lie did various other cliques nnd organizations. ping back in population. It is perfectly lighted and ventilated and the Coolest Store in the *,hree years ago, and adds : Many people predicted absolute defeat fur •:t * * For tlie Interest we took in the inception nnd him because of the opposition of these The only 'other municipality in Mon- United States in Summer'; the warmest in Winter. i-.i:c«mi) of that woiSftnsimin'sconvi'niUm we lmvc mouth county where the census has ••n apologies to iiCer nur complaints lu makB Icii' tilt! people, but Dr. Bogardus nover loKt faith - -JUlts obtained by the movement. We are certain in himself, never lost faith in the people, been completed and turned over to the It has broad aisles, broader than those of any store in New York, JiiMitsctlhe political wiseacres ot lxitu parties In Visomo thinking and compelled them to call ujiun neverlost faith in his principles. He made stiite oliicials is Neptune City,. This 'iteir reserve forces and to expend a liberally pru- shows a loss of 201 inhabitants since 1900; thereby making shopping a pleasure rather than a task. '•Uofl campaign iund. his fight on u platform oh which he # * # never wavered from the beginning to the but this is due to the fact that a slice of NOTE—The arrangement of the departments in relative sequence to It i3 generally understood that the end of the campaign, and he won be-its territory has been cut off since 1900. each other, is a charming feature of the store. One can conveniently pur- fialy object of a guerilla political cam- cause the people believed in him and in osign is to nlalse the candidates " expend the principles he professed. The opposi- The Freehold Transcript again pro- chase every needed supply for self or home without leaving the place. '. liberal campaign fund," and so I have tion of T. (Jon. Morford, of Mr. Morford's tested last week against the expense •Z0 doubt that Mr. Morford stales the labor ticket, and of Mr. Morford's allies, caused to the taxpayers of the county by The display of goods is ever a study, and always a success in an ar- v * osaet truth when he tells the object of the liouor dealers, was lost in the shuffle. reason of the large number of useless : tistic sense, by which selection is made easy to the purchaser. j !;j3 labor ticket three years ago. When Mr. Morford and his fellows may have members of the board of freeholders. |!' sa'also states that ho has " no complaints taken some votes from Dr. Bogardus, The Transcript is particularly opposed In variety and assortment, no New York store presents a wider range. |i io snake for the results obtained," it is but so many decent people of the county to the present foolish plan, whereby If a price here is a little higher than in the metropolis, the article is better; ff* 5ls6 evident that so far as Mr. Morford voted for Dr, Bogardus because of the each ward in the shore cities has a free- ••3 personally concerned he thinks his character of the opposition to him, that holder. One freeholder used to do all otherwise our prices are lower, always. iabor ticket was a great success. Mr. Morford and his allies were simply the work in Ocean township where there « 4t tt engulfed in the Bogardus wave. nre seven freeholders now, and the ex- Usually men who engage in a political * *„* pense to the taxpayers is just seven time's warfare to compel the expenditure " of If the Democrats win anything the as much as it used to be, with no added a liberal campaign fund," do not boast of coming fall they have got to win it in benefit—except to the freeholders. their mercenary prowess. They prefer the same manner in which Dr. Bogardus # # # won his fight three years ago. They By reason of its wide range of choice wedded to low prices, a condi- 10 have folks think they are patriots, The Transcript thinks the law which have got to stand for certain principle* •.7S10 are wording for the public good, provides for these extra freeholders and have got to convince the people that tion vastly different to the vaunted summer furniture sales of New York. ..'atber than to come-out openly and ought to be repealed, and it says that they mean to atand by those principles iKiastof the iboney they made the can- " the candidates for the legislature who Almost every department in our twelve-acre store contributes to the if they get elected. They can't win on a didates spend. However, there's ho ac- have the courage to pledge themselves to counting for taBtes, and if Mr. Morford party organization issue with such men Great July Bargain feast of severe price reductions. work, if elected, to secure the enactment Coasts of this, why, it doesn't seem to me as T. Con Morford in the forefront of the of a law to cut out this nonsensical rep- Come in and look around, for you are sure to see many things you Jfcat there is anything more needed to line of battle, and who boast, as a resentation ought to receive widespread i-omplete Mr. Morford's moral and polit- special distinction, that they forced the popular support in the county." That's desire and at the price you want to pay. ical biography. | '•! expenditure of a lot more corruption a nice sentiment, but I don't take any »'*•« money in previous years than would stock in it. So far as getting popular othewise have been Bpont, and who fur" Dr. Bogardus, itjwill he remembered, support through the advocacy of a re- ther personally boast that they have SUMMER CLOSING-Opeo Friday Evenings* Closed •^nan't defeated for sheriff, for all of Mr. duction of taxation is concerned, Mon " no complaints to make for the results iiorford's boasted work in this direction, mouth county has shown that it is bad obtained." Saturday Afternoons aid Evenings Until September. 3r, Bogardus got a rousing majority in politics to take up that side of a. question. "lbs county, The Democratic senator, * * * 1 Mr. Morford supported for reasons Governor Stokes has just made James Neither party is likely to make a cam known to himself while opposing B. Dill a judge of the court of errors paign in favor of a reduction in county the Democratic candidate for sheriff, and appeals, wliich is the highest court expenses, for a number of years to come %$t a very satisfactory licking. Now, in the state of New Jersey. Mr. Dill is at least. The people don't care any that the chief Democratic known as the "father of trusts." He is thing about that issue. If ever such a hese declarations. An occasional man candidate whom Mr. Morford opposed said to have done more to incorporate issue was tried out before the people of like O. C. Bogardus and Charles F. Mac- §ot elected and that the chief Deino- the giant trusts and to have received Monmouth county, that issue was tried Donald, may honestly favor this reform, candidate whom he supported got greator fees from the trusts than any out last fall. Two men were nominated tit the principle finds no favor among he party politicians, big or little, on and then, listening to Mr, Mor.other man in the country. for county clerk, each fully competent to ford'e tale that his work made the politi- fill the place, one of whom had consist either side. cians spend a big lot of extra money, It had been known for some time that ently fought for putting county offices * * * eombioed with the additional statement Governor Stokes contemplated making on a salary basis and the turning of the And as for the people who pay the are forty per cent less •••fesfc Mr. Morford personally has "nothis appointment. Many of the papers immense fees now received into the ;axes, they don't care. They would fomplaints to make for the results ob of the state, notably a number of the county treasury, and the other of whom •ather see taxes high and see their own Ssiaed," inclines me to believe that many Republican papers, lyive been urging had just as consistently opposed it. arty in power, than to have taxes low , now in American cities , persons will gather the idea that the him not to make such a great corpora- This measure, if it had been carried into and have the opposition party in power. successor defeat of the candidates Mr. tion lawyer a member of the highest effect, would have saved the taxpayers This sentiment exactly suits the poli- than they were when Morford supported was of trifling con- judicial body of the state. It seems to of Monmouth county at least $30,000 icians of both parties. The only possible ;arn to him BO long as the '' money got mo that under nil the conditions at pres- per year. What was the result ? Why,chance for a reform in the matter of Industrial Insurance pat out." ent existing, Mr. Dill is the one manthe man who had fought for a decrease county expenditures lies in giving the * * * who is entitled to the place. The fight of taxation hardly ran even with his people a chance to vote on the question was started, in 1875, by But what will bo the effect on thein New Jersey last fall was between the party ticket. He got only a very few entirely apart from party politics. That democratic voters of the county when people and the corporations. The cor-votes from the opposition party on ac- an only be done by getting a vote on The Prudential. L ttssy see this same T. Con. Morford sit- porations won, and in the contest they count of his stand on this question, and the county commission act the coming ing in the front seat of the Democratic were helped by very mauy of the papers be got soaked by lots of men in his own all. ftsad wagon helping to run the machine ? —«o-»-O- . which are now attacking the governor party who hoped to get a crack at these WHITE FOR INFORMATION OF PO&IVIES. Bow much faith are they going to havo Building a New Barn, for appointing Mr. Dill. The corpora- rich offices themselves some day. . Jsi the party with such men as leaders r Mra, Gloria St. Clair is building a new tions having won tho light, they were much of the independent vote of barn on her property at Atlantic High- entitled to everything coming along the Sis! county are they going to get for The only way to deal with this matter ands. The barn will be 20x24 feet and line, and this includes corporation con- (':.''ir ticket this fall under such condi- of the increase in the number of free- will cost $1,800. John Wells will do What hopes will the voters have trol of tho courts along with the rest holders in Monmouth county and thethe mason work, George Walling the Insurance Co. of America. Home oracc, Newark, N. J. of the spoils, winning when they realize that the consequent increase of expense to the carpenter work and Conover White the Incorporated as a stock company t>; the State of New Jersey, rty is being run by a man who * * • taxpayers, is to put the question squarely plumbing work JOHN JT. DRYDEN, President. Governor Stokes did perfectly right in LESLIE D. WARD. Vice President. KDtUR B. WAHD. 2d Vice President. opposition ticket three years up to the people without regard to FOIIRE9T F. DliYDEN.M Vice Pjrea't. WILBUR 8. JOHNSON, OH11C tho INmtoflU-.o. lj *. letratd U>t opposing tho party tickot, forum that they fuvor reduction of toxn 33'and 35 Monmouth St., Red Bank, N. J. publk'itu pnrly and of I ho ntnte of New t'-V should «nf young man who hno po- tion, they rvnlly don't mean anything l>

(\ • i SEWING ClRCLElAiR PISK CHAPEL OF FAIB HAVEN CLEARS 888. 4- prixeti Given to Those-Selling the Greatest Number of Wickets —A Patchwork Quilt Won by an Oce- anic i'Ouuff Man. SALE The Twentieth Century sewing circle f Fisk chapel of Fair Haven held a very (TERMINATES JULY 29th.) juccessful fair last week. It began on Monday and closed on Friday night, fhe fair was held a"t the chapel and the Ittendance-was large each night of the of in the prices of Veek. Several prizes were offered during the ,ir. Two prizes were offered to those ho sold the greatest number of tickets, hese prizes were silver bracelets, and ere won by Maggie Wall and Lala evey. A toilet set waa offered to the irson bringing in the largest amount if money on books issued by the sewing ircle.and this toilet set was won by plrs. Mary Fisher, wife of the pastor of e church, A patchwork quilt of log |ibin pattern, which had been made by e members of the society, waschanced by Mrs. Harriet Vaughn. The so- iety made $11,50 from this quilt, and it A big lot of Children's Double-Breasted Suits at one-half price, most as won by a young man from Oceanic. ['he winner is a single man. He says he 'of them suitable for Fall use. j /ill keep it until he is married, arid that is the rim of his housekeeping out- 50 Khaki Coats at 50c; cheap as a jumper. . ; t. The society cleared |88 by the fair, Inch will go in the trustees' and stew- ds' fund. The tables at the fair and Khaki Trousers, all sizes, at $1.QQ, e persons in charge of them were as Hows : Crash. Pants, 50c*, 75c. and $100 per, pair. |Fancy table—Mrs. Emma nicks. Miss Nana Irown. fObinn table—Miss Emma Tyler. Serge, Alpaca and other thin Coats for Summer use, very low priced. I Refreshment (able—Mrs. A. J. Lyons, Mrs. Jennie Sylvester. IDry goods table-Mrs. Annie Frosl, Miss Halvina lalfleld. Men's $2.50 Rubber Coats at $1.75. I Tin table-Mrs. Louisa Hicks. Mrs. Etta Purker. lice cream taole—Mrs. Harriet Vaugbn, Miss pie Williams. Men's 3.50 Rubber Coats at 2.50. ' . • 7OMEN CHARGED WITH ARSON Boys' 2.00 Rubber Coats at 1.00. ' -' 'Irs. Katie Hoehl and Mrs. Teresa 9 : Cooper in the County Jail. i s 5.00 Mackintoshes at - 3.00. - '. ' j Mrs. Katie Hoehl and Mrs. Teresa f fooper of Long Branch have been sentto i s 3.00 Mackintoshes at 2.OO. tie county jail to await the action of the frand jury on a charge of setting fire to Extra Large Sizes for Big Men in Trousers, Overalls, Shirts arid Under- house which they occupied at that A llace. The house belonged to John /illiams. When the firemen reached 4 be house they found it on fire in a num- er of places. In a closet upstairs plaster Hand Bags, Telescopes, Dress Suit Cases and Trunks at less than lad been torn from the' wall and news- 4 apers stuffed between the lath and set department store prices. 1 fire. The two women told conflicting lories and their arreet followed. It is Extra Heavy Trunk Straps, 5c." per foot.

laimed that both women had recently i |ad their furniture insured for more Knee Pants, Blouses, Shirt Waists and Overalls for Little Children. ian it was worth, Trolley Uniforms, $& and #11 per Suit, including buttons. i IARIWE GRAVEYARD ON FIRE. i fohn II. fire now of Perth Ambon Hats, Caps and Men's Furnishings at Has a Big Fire Loss. I About a dozen boats at John H. I Gregory's marine graveyard at Perth Imboy were destroyed by fire on the i light of the Fourth. The fire is sup- iosed to have been caused from fire- Trackers. Tlje loss is about $30,000, fith insurance of only about 11,000. Ihe fire was plainly visible from Red Hall lank and many people thought that i teyport was burning down. Mr. Greg- iry formerly lived at Red Bank. Hit , N. J. Business is buying abandoned or con- temned steamboats and dismantling liem for the material in them.

DIED OF LOCKJAW. CENSUS TAKER'S TROUBLES. THREATENED HIS WIFE. SHERIFF WINS SUIT. pistol Wound Causes Death of Stan He Had a Bard Time of it in Sep. Jame» Daaoert, While Drtintt, Judge Foster Gives a Uectnion in asquan Boy. tune's Italian Quarters. Causes a Itistttrbance. His Faror. J Joseph Miller, aged thirteen years, son James Vanderveer, who took the James Daggert, a colored man em- Judge Foster has given a decision in |f J. Howard Miller of Manasquan, died census in the West Park district of Nep- ployed by Dr. James J. Reed of Sea- favor of Sheriff Bogardus in the suit If lockjaw last Wednesday night. On tune township, had a hard time of it, bright, got drunk on July 4th and went brought against him by George D. Ber- jhe Monday week previous he was shoot according to his own story. West Park to Dr. Reed's house in that manner. gen of Cranbury. Bergen claimed that .j blank cartridges into which he had is inhabited by a great many Italians and The doctor upbraided him for his con. he had authorized the sheriff to levy on lut some shot. One of the cartridges ex- other foreigners and there is consider- duct and this made Daggert mad. Go- the goods of E, P. Doty of Asbury Park It will do more work for you than Bloded while he was putting it in the re able illegal liquor selling there. Mr. ing into tho kitchen, where Mrs. Dag. to eatisfy a judgment and that thesheriff solver and two shot entered one of hi two hired men Vanderveer says that he was mistaken gert waa working, ho flourished a re- failed to make the levy. Mr. Bergen lagers. The wound was dressed by c fora tax collector, license collector and volver and threatened to Bhoot her. An sought to have Mr. Bogardus pay the Ihyeician and it was not thought to b( officer was summoned and Daggert was judgment. Sheriff Bogardus said that It will save wear and tear on your Jerious. On the morning of July 4tl spotter" for the prosecutor's office, and that finally tho Italians thought he was arrested. The next morning he was ho found the goods in tho hands of T>. feck jaw?, developed and the next nigl given a hearing, but the only charge E. Doty instead of E. P. Doty, as men- horses ^ind wagons Tie boyjdied in great agony. trying to Becure evidence against two of thoir race who recently committed made against him was for being drunk tioned in the execution, and ho had been murder at that place. and disorderly. Ho was fined {10. Dr. told by Mr. Bergen's counsel not to ad- It will save your own time by mak- AGED MAN HURT. Reed kept him in his employ upon his vertiso tho goods unless tho oxpenses BOYS STEAL LEAD. promise not to get drunk again. were prepaid. For these two reasons ho ing unnecessary many of your trips Fourth of July Accident at fllaiia did not tuako tho levy. Judge Foster The, M.eail Wan Worth $30, tint it anid that the sheriff had acted clearly William Fields of Mnnasquan, nged G( Waa tlolil for Eight Centa. FREEHOLD BOYS IN CAMP. to town wilhi'i his right?. fears, waa sitting in a chair in front o Leo Bonoforto and Fred Wilson, two The Vamp is Alona a Lake in Korth. lie Osborn houtio at that place on Fourt Long Branch boys, have been held to ci'n Xetr Jersey, Kicked by a. Morse. if July night whon HOMO " Smart Alec await tho action of tho grand jury on n A number of Freohold boys uro in S. Bon for to, a fruit denier at Long Jtole upbohind him and put a giant lire chnrgo of oUialhig lend from tho new camp at Wawayanda lake, in the north- Branch, was driving on bia routo a few iracker under his chair. The explonio Stoinbnch building at that place. Tho ern pnrt of tbo Btnto. Tho camp '8 dayB ago when his liorso got noiued and proa hole in Mr. Fk'ldH,'(mhoonndntoek lead belonged to W. Cur & Company, maintained by tho boys' branch of tbo kicked over the dashboard. Mr. Bon- ng and mado a bud wound in hia anklo who havo charge- of tho plumbing of tho young moh'f) Christian association tif tho forto waa struck by the horau'u hoof on Je woa taken to tho Long Brunch hoi building. It wan valued at |80 and tho state. An officer of tho Btnto association the right leg below tho kneo. Tbo flesh litiil for treatment. Tho accident wi boyii sold it to a junkman for eight cents. is in chnrgo of tho camp. Thfl'lalio to was lacerated and tho bono wna splint' Jrobably leave him a cripple for life. ubout two miles long and half a mile The New York and New Jersey Telephone Former Freehold Boy Abroad. ered. wide. There in flno swimming in the ItftMe Burned at Monmoutb IJoacli William O. Ruiguol of Malvorn, I'onn- hike and good boiitinif upon its wirfaco Tliroo Now IMiynlcliuirf. Tho Diablo o( JOHUO I'. Monahan tiylvanin, a former Freehold boy, 1MH A daily program in followed out. Home Tho utiito medical board mot nt Long Company, llonniouth Deach wan burned down 01 jjono abroad to bo absent llvo montliH, time in devoted to calisthenics and bible Brunch on Wednesday and itimied licunnen fuesday afternoon of last wok. Th Ho reoontly won a prizo of .$500 at th« otudy, but most of tho timo to given uj to tin no who hud panned tbo ntiitfl iu Biippod(»t to h,avo boon canned b AtiK'iican miadprny of lino nrtHiit 1'liila" to piny, except on Bumlayn, when ro medical examination. Among thono 164 Broadway, Long Branch, N. J. patkfl from a pueuing train. A team dolphin, whom ho studied nrchitvcliiro, ligioim norvici'H aro held. Tho l>oyn arc liconiicd wore JUIIHMI Hro»lln anil Jowpl anies wcro iu tho barn when tho fir and with thin nioiuty h« will |ivnniio hin nllowud to go in iiwimming on Sunday ZiinmonnnnMcDcrmolt of I'Vccbold and Telephone B199. Irofcc out, but they wero HludioH abroiid. ll« will vimt liuglaiul, morning. Frederick Bnydcr Hammond of Atlantic Frati<;e and Italy. HighlunilH. An advert Uieinont in THE RiMiumsit -»...«»- Ifjyou 8W> it In THK UKOIHTKU it ltlookod Because I see you brlffht and brave Suddenly he reached and drew out the , like a dls- ies in Caldwell by sending the thing bronze, which the old fellow lovingly paper. He cried out and tore at It and cise. Hava I say. to my despondent heart: spread R open. "Up, loiterer! Put off this guise ack to him? displayed to him, vouching for Its an- iieaitli € Of gloom and play the sturdier part!" tiquity and showing him tho hollow In It was We old declaration of love. - abont ten There was one other tiling she could Ho grazed at it for a moment; then says and have lave given back to Caldwell. ' the base. It seemed that a great chance eruefied it to his heart. Tt dandruff on any Three things are given man to do— V'irt of my scalp. To dare, to labor. ,ajid,to grow. Hartley felt in his pocket and took opened to him. Mrs. Dale's treatment Had 8ho never found It—never guessed g with tk® mmhy JIalrtsdarkerauil Not otherwise front'turth''we came ut a paper folded and refolded till It of him In the cathedral told him that at It? Boo It some dlstretslng cSln affection T No ' ncajthlcr Nor otherwise our way we go. seed of It. Hosts ot lisppj mothers dally: use her daughter would see him no more Danlfls, U3 Three things are given man to bo- alone. Ellse had besought him to Hendrlut.. Cheerful, undoubtins and humane, send her no- moro letters, which her In baby's bath. Ellis Blsoaso parasltco. Surviving through the direst fray, mother insisted upon opening. 'Hurt- Speedily allaya Irritation of ccnlp and ekln. *HAIRHL- 'Preserving the untarnished, strain. Induces restful sleep. Keeps baby sweet and ley had arrived and been welcomed by healthy. For rashes, chafing, eczema, scrofula. Positively removes dandruff, stops Itching, all ekln soroncsn, BABFINA SOAP ialr falling, brines back youthful color to gray Three things are given man to know- Mrs. Dale. He bought the Jar and In la truly wonderful. What It does for baby It hair. Aided by HARFINA SOAP, heals, Beauty and truth and honor. Theeo the hollow wedged his letter of adora- will do for you. Itis the- most soothing and etopa Itching, promotes too hair growth, large Are the nine virtues at the soul, eattefrlng of toilet, bath and nursery eoapo. BOc. bottles, drngglets'. Take nothing without tion, fearful, yet hopeful. He sent I No animal fats, Medicated, Antleoptlc, Bo- Phllo Hay Oo. signature. Cut out and sign tnlB. Her mystic powers and ecstasies. the bronze to Ellse, was assured that odorlzlug, Befcoeblng, Healing, Fragrant. ~ Good for 25c. Cake And when I see you bravely tread it was placed In her band and never "A BrcatEi of Plac Balsam ia Every Cake." p s That difficult and doubtful way, heard a word from her. The next Try It. Ton'Il bo convinced! large 25e.calics. Tako to any of following druggists iind got "Up, waverer; wilt thou foreako Boi, 3 cakes, (!3c. Druggists'. Bofuse eubatl- BOc. bottle Halrbealth and 25c. case Harflna month she was married to Hartley. tutea. No soap Is medicated llko Harflna. Soap, both for BOc.; or sent by Phllo Hay Thy comrade?" to my heart I say. Manufactured by PHILO HAY SPECIAL Oo., Newark, N. J., prepaid, for COc. and this So Eliee would have him receive Ms TIES 00.. NEWARK, N. J. Jato nothing ady. Free soap not given by druggists with- Then bitterness and sullen fear, I offered without thlo slgnatGra out this eatlro adv. and BOc. tor Hntrhealth. Mistrust and anger are no moro. gift bacfe? That told Mm weu at this £% en ctleldo" Name ....,..,.. That quick, gay step Is In the hall, late day how little she had evw cared Aildrcas... That rallying voice is at the door. for him, how false she had been from the first. She hod ktspt Jho jot, Trode- MINTON-VANDEBTEEB-COOPEK MINTON-VANDEBVEEB-COOPI ;THE BORGIA BRONZE. slrous of holding arty communication with him by sending tt back to Mm, HE week before starting for his and Hartley knew of tho tttfng and usual Mediterranean sail Hart- would return It now. Cowe tfce manf ley took from the ltttle gold in- Ho should have nothing that heal once T laid desk In his wife's boudoir been his. He wwjld go ta ttoe tosvnae. the letter of Instructions. There had Ho would go at once. been a look of haunting sorrow In In half an hcear he ms on t&s way Ellse's face the day she gave him the to EHse's tormsr home. Hartley roog9r«fi letter, and, as though reproaching her- him In tho library*. self for something, she urged his head Caldwell's head waa high, hie bloodshot down to her pillow and let his cheek eyes like those' it an animal at bay. Ho noted Harfl^M tacit of funereal garb ead reat close to hers for a moment before thought how lHtio the man had cared fosr The Second National Bank dismissing him. his wife, for' ho looked well,' positively When he left the room, her mother calm and easy, and she 'had not boen followed him. dead a month. opened for business in their HBflED HIS HEAD DOWN. There were few words between them. "Ellse has such 6trong individuality," "I owed It to the nature of your note," was "BuTanlnxiu square. He fitted It @ald Mrs, Dale. "Her wishing to re- Caldwell isald, "to answer It at onoe and •speoious weeltbi her tnotber was anxtoua Broad Street Building on turn to the original donors the pretty n toe compartment In the base of tha In this way." for the match, .Eliso bad thought she was things she hns had given her from time ronze. It wedged in like a part of the He know his speech was weak and that tho sport of tho poorer man—ehe had to time 1B just like her; It Is the some He had found it In a locket It so impressed the othor. treasured thlji JHtW bianse, the one gilt Hartley nodded and pointed to the ltttle ha had evof otCefed her. She naver taew; Monday, June 19th. . . . . as telling her friends that their gifts 'frOm his wife's neck when Jar on the table. At that moment ho she hod lovna bim, ehe bad loved him. were precious to her and thot it would dead, a simple piece of jew- could have struck the man down, tho And, oh, to reclc^U bftn&lf ftxp etike of seem almost sacrilegious for any one father had given ner as a child marks of dissipation on him were such a ber {uvo and tri^! &cr she loved him, she ©toe to enjoy them after she Is gone." ind which she always wore in remem- blur on EUso's mempry. Call that krreT krved bttn, dfa lovsd Mm! Lovo should ennoble, not debase. And ho, tod, iimimured her name: Hartley knew that the lady desired rance of him, for she had loved him. Yet Ellse might save this man. He •THsaf him to think that his wife put no In- He had opened It and found the paper owed It to the love he boro the memory tentional slight upon him In sending ressed ovef the portrait of her father. of his wife that CahJwell should not He took the paper from the bronza blame her further. away from him her prized possessions. "That Is yours, I believe," ha saM, Wki You Need But he had known the truth all along, ar. Ought it to have been burled with again Indicating the bronze. Caldwell was ever since the day Ellse accepted him, her, ae was done with the locket? No; searching In his mind for words for the he had been his wife, and this was a widower. and he came upon her an hour after "You have," he said Btlrtedly, "sustain- >••••••••••••••••«•»««••»•••«••«••••«•••»! her word had been given him with an love letter from another man. ed a great loss." old bronze jar and Caldwell's letter in Rather bad she been cruel or kind to Hartley's face reddened, but, "Loss Is Call on us. You will not her lap. She was very white as she Caldwell or himself in showing tha common," he said quietly enough. "Yes," quickly followed up Caldwell, regret it. You will be very glad handed him the sheet, whereon he read etter that time to her affianced hus- " 'ne,ver morning wore to evening but the aspiring words of his rival. He band, though could she have done oth- somo heart did break,' tbc poet says." of it. We do excellent work, gave her back the letter, looking into erwise wben tbat accepted husband It pleased him to be vulgarly flippant, and our charges are only reason Offices for Rent. her eyes, and she threw It away from chanced upon her with the letter not to make tho cold man In front of htm wince. able. We work on the princi- her, laughing lightly. Then he held ,et bidden from him? And was he do- "It takes a good deal to break a beorV-' out to her the case of shining adorn- ing a loyal or kind thing to her In read- returned Hartley, and Caldwell smiled at ple that a satisfied customer ie ments which he had been collecting for Ing it a second time? There were hard the stab, as he though* tt the day when she should have promised ines about his mouth as his eyes scan- "Your wife," he said, "suffered tittle, I our best advertisement. We hope." • • • . *\y to be his wife, for ho had never doubt ned%tho hastily scrawled words: "I am "Her physicians so assured mo," an-furnish estimates of any kind Three offices in Register building, second flooi ed that she would be his. A month later poms but you, too, are poor. Why must swered Hartley. she married him. wealth be such, a power and love be A little silence ensued, which neither promptly and cheerfully. can be had singly or in suite. Hardwood floors,dec ] He looked down at the letter of In- so defenseless? I love you as no man seemed willing to break. At length CftM- well spoke. structions spread out upon her dainty ever loved before. I will work for you, "Shall ytm take your yacht across this desk. slave for you"— summer?" he asked. orated steel ceilings, quartered oak trim, runninj "The jewels my husband gave me," He foMed it again. Why had Ellse "J. do so every year," was the reapons». kept ft? And wliat a crazy idiot Cald- "I fancied," Caldwell said, "that the SABATH& WHITE. he read, "are to revert to him." loss you have had"— water in each office, steam heat, window screens, toile He smiled. Yesterday he had handed w«41 must be to take a jilting as he "Might change my plans?" Interrupted 16 and 18 Front St.. Red Bank. N. J the baubles to her sister and been ef- had done, and scarcely a jilting either, Hartley. "I sail next weeh. And now£ accommodations.. fusively thanked. for Ellee hed answered him not a word shall thank you for coming In person In "So like you," Mrs, Dalo said, "to he would swear to that, for he knew response to my note concerning Mrs. *wlsh Marguerite to have them. You EMse's honor), only accepting another Hartley's letter of instructions. Shall 1 aend the bronze to youS" know how dearly Ellse appreciated man who spoke first. And Caldwell "On second thought," said Caldwell, '1 Rent of offices, $100 per year each. them and how sweet It was of her to hod gone down. What a wreck the believe I will ijot take It. I oare very •wtoh you to have them again. They man was, avoided by one time Inti- little for It, and—that Is, you may malsa were too valuable for her to dispose of mates, debasing his talents, welcom- whatever disposition of it you please." APPLY AT REGISTER OFFICE. The wretchednoss of the speech strocSt Still at the Old Stand •otherwise. Besides, she loved you so." ng the maddest excitement at no mat- Hartley. Had the man eared anything The letter of Instructions went on ter" what cost to fame and conscience! for Elise. after all? If he had not, then mentioning article after article, each Ami yet one friend remained to him, not for the world should ho have the | 23 WEST FRONT STREET | to go back to the presenter of It, her old Senator Nicholson, the friend of bronae. But Cnldwell's eyes were on tho little wedding gifts and all, nothing to como the president, tbo early chum of his Jar. His mind swung back to tho odd£oJ&&fl, Let it bo QUALITY in price you are looking for. We can give you nounced the gaining of a consulship i'l gained a faithfulness up to the value and ID that aperture ho had crushed hta the best for tho money to bo found anywhere in carriages and harness. I placed upon It, and she honored the by Nicholson for Caldwell, wliich might wild declaration of love. name I gave her. There Is nothing to yet stive htm and re-establish him In "No," he said;" "I will take tt," and We have a Btock that cannot be equaled elsewhere. Our stock is the placed his hand on It. y Hollywood Rye and Cham- •«,< largest to aelect from. Note the range of prices: complain about." And Culdwell's umno the (pxxl opinion of the world. And But Hartley's hand cJoeod over- his hot- was not arnom^ the others. How well lmd Ixwieted at the club that ly. For a moment tho mon toolted fiercely berlain's Old Cabinet Now Buggies from $40.00 to $250.00. she had guarded her poor secret, oven ignored the appointment. Could Into each othor's eyes. New Runabouts from 35.00 to 225.00. speaking of the innn as he forfeited the love do HO much to detxwe a rnnn? 'Eliso!" Hartley's lips murmured mtrto- are my favorites. New. Surreys " 00.00 to 300.00. ly; "Ellse!" And his flngcra rohuued. respect of his friends with a sort of Caldwell hud liven loved by Kline. Caldwell caug-lit \w the brmiW). Farm wagons and farm harness, both for one and two horses, at special pitying contempt which she must have The limn liful been weak enough to let "I hope," no uaiil, "your usual trip low prices for best quality of work. Sucond-haud carriages taken in ex- tried to make believe was genuine. himself sink becaimo ho thought his abroad will hold lta usual distractions. change and closing out at cost. feeling hod not been reciprocated by And ho wan cone, ICMWIHB Hartley hi hta .No, Caldwdl'H name was not 'men- chair, hi!) uaaii fastened on tho spot Who»o tioned In the letter of Instructions, and her. the bronco had rested. Oil for Floors. Runabout, almost new $30.00 But am I strong enough to let an-, Light family carriage, cost now $225, now 85.00 yet Caldwell had once given her a pres Illafaco wan wlilto and drown. Tho beat thing in tho world for wood Good fiecond-hand extension top surrey... 05.00 ent. other man know how littlo I was fingers tightly clutched tho arms of the chair. floors. Guaranteod to keep tho dust Rubber tiro surroys. 45.00 He left the desk and, going to a cab- pri/xiT? And yet"— down. Two good wiro wheel runabouts 45.00 If Cnldwoll were set on hiH fent again "Ellne!" he murmured; "EllsoT" inet In a corner, brought forth a low Caldwcll went along tin) ntreetii In wIM- 60 cento a gallon in single gallon lota. One bueinesH wagon 20.00 squat vase of bronze. and acceirtod (1H> coiiHulshlp! cnt humor. Ho had boon to tho mtn Etleto One light order wagon, good as now, coat .$175, now 8B.00 50 conts a gallon.in five gallon lots. Elifio had told him the history of tin "Hut Kline floes not mention bin name luvd choflon In hlii otiMid. Ho hiwl hiij rovonKo. EltKo'H huBiMind had nover cured Wo have also a crndo oil, which w Good carriages of every description at low prices. bronze. It wan culled a poison Jar In the letter of inntruetlonn. Did not for her, and iilio hod betm a woman who Caldwell bad given It to her In Home her ftwIluK for him wear away when craved lovo. sell for 20 conta a gallon. It was Bald to have come from n Hoi she discovered how weak ho was? Still Ho tornied tho bronso from hand to hand Bho Uept liin letter, IIIK! It 1H the prov- Iln would further humillsito her roetnoiV gla collection, probably had bcci Ho would Klvd tho Billy Jftr to some bo- known to Lucrezla of that remurknbl ince of a woninn to oJevntn what nho nottod pasHerby, nomo humbto, povwrty house. Iowa Wimt HIHJ loves!" fitrlokon BOUI who would at onco dlfiporto NEWSBEALEBS, Cor. White Street and Maple Avenue, Red Bank, It Hartley lingered tho dull, Htnlnte Suddenly ho wtiw-lwl towaWl the gold of tho thlnK for a ftiw eonta with which to buy liquid warmth and wealth. But 10 llrontl Stroot, ICod Bank, N. J looking thing, whose green mid blue Inlaid deuk and let down the lid. He ho reached tho club Ixiforu doing no. Ila blotches, etched l»y time, hud engine could wrt writo the letter at ISllnu'it got Into an untaiiMitctl uloovo In thfl rend- tho encomluiiiH of urtlsttw whom ICIIH deok. ing room and net tho Jar Iniforo him oa Hi) took th(> bronze jar and left tlio (ho tublo.' Only a llttlo whilo n«ro! And I hod to IJw house. Ho turned It upuUt thin wn« tlio* endl Oh, thom dny» li f Anything Wrong down and manipulated the haito, llghtl; nwy room, lock IIIK the door behind him, 1 tomn! Thono days In Homol running bis I1UK« 1 wlllflicltrorvflu mill Hx It quick. Ho will Out of (JhlB compartment KIIBO hm a few llneti to Cnhlwell. ""[Mm In oommoti, " lm luagtifld. '"Hnv- not "lily Hi It quick, hut ho will III It Cnldwoll WUH at Iho club when (ho or mornlna wort! to avanltiK but some i rlfiht, nud tho I'IUHK.I will l>" only what abstracted CnMwell's letter of nodi wan handed to him. Ho wan ut htmrt did bronli.' " you woiilil ?_ PV>'»lb|o tho uld IJTHE APPOINTING FOWEE. T?XECUTOE'S SALE. PENNSYLVANIA RAILEOAD COM- OHN 8. APPLEQATE& SON, hi • - • —- JL PANY. Jftl COUH8ELLOK8 AT LAW j-u tf&tetiOtnt Grant ana an In Use matter of the estata of JOMPD s. EkhanSson, OB and after July »th, 1805, Offlees corner Broad end Front Streets deciiiad, alleged Co b-s iagolvant. BED BASK, N. J. ' Obstinate Sttbmrdittute. By virtue of a certain order In the above stated TRAINS WILL LEAVE BED BANK ifeeseral Grant's generosity to his cause. In the Orphan's Court of tbe County of Mon- For New York and Newark, 7 09. 7 43. T 50, 9 53 ENEY M. NEVTOST inoutli, made on the first day ot June, A. D., nine- a. in.; 151, 3 05, 4 05, 6 07, 953, 1088 p. m. COUNSELLOR AT LAW |JH9, tils many private and official kind- teen hundred and five, the subscriber, executor of Notice is hereby given that the Sundays, 9 48 a. m.; 6 03. 9 63 p. in. Hendrlctson Block, Front street' rases to the widows "and orphans of the last will and testament of Joseph 8. Richardson, For Elizabeth,709, 750,953 a.m.; 151, 305,405, Ited Bank, N. J. deceased, will e2po.se for sale at public vendue, at law requiring the removal of briers, 6 07 p. m. Sundays, 9 43 a. m.; 6 03. 9 53 p. m. rrntderate soldiers, is an old tale, the Globe hotel, Is the Towa of Red Bank, Hoa- For lliddletown. Soutb Atnboy, Perth Am boy. Wood- FREDERICK W. HOPE, §|t It bears repetition in the form of mouth county, New Jersey, on TUESDAY, .THE bridge and Itahway. 9 53 a. in.: 1 51. 6 07, 8 53, J- COUNSELLOR AT LAWI.* , Property owners and others FIRST DAF OF AUGUST A. D., nineteen hundred weeds and brush from the high- p. m. HunUavs, « 43 a. m.; 6 03, 9 53 p. m. Offices corner Broad and "ront Streets , Incident which Helen D. Longstreet and five, between the hours of twelve o'clock noon ForMatawan, 9 53 a.m.: 151. 3 05, «07,853 p. m. RED BANK, N. j. ' jves in "Lee and Longstreet at High and five o'clock In tbe afternoon, that Is to tay, at ways in front of property will be Sundays, fl 43 a. in.; 6 03, 9 63 p. m. IHARLES H. IVINS, two o'clock In the afternoon of that day, all that For Lonir Branch, Point Pleasant and Intermediate 1 Me." certain tract or parcel of lend and premises, herein- stations, 5 Hi, 9 18,10 23 a. m.; 1 52,2 40 (Satur- C COUNSELLOR AlAT LAW, ving along the county roads after particularly described, situate, lying and being enforced in Shrewsbury township. Rooms 3 and 4, Register Building •{Die widow of a Confederate officer days only). 3 49.4 26. 5 88. 8 20 p. in. Sundays, Bitoxn STREET. in the Township of Shrewsbury, In the County of The law governing this matter is 8 3!),« 54,10 54 a. m.; 6 41 p. m. RED BARK, H. 1 Implied to the postoffice department to Monmouth and State of New Jersey, at Fair Haven, 8top at North Asbury Park for Asbury Park and DMUND WILSON, |1 appointed postmistress In a small Beginning at a stake standing In the centre of Ocean Grove on Sundays. j E COUNSELLOCOUNHRLLflRR Ai T LAW, .re kindly asked not to throw Flsk avenue, distant eixty-two feet northwesterly as follows : Trains leave New York for Red Bank from West Jiithern town. As she heard nothing from the centre of Bethel avenue; thence (1) south 2M street station. 7 40. Si 55 a. in;: 12 25. 1 25, Offices: E I' her application, she went to Waeh- flfty-nlne degrees and forty-five minutes west one The owner or occupant of land abut- 2 25, 2 55. i 25. 4 55 p. m. Sundays, 0 55, 8 25, hundred and Blxty-slx Inches to a stake distant ting on any highway in any township in 9sJ5a. in.: 4 55 p. HI. fAMES E. DEGNAN7 "" igton to press It. She was unable to sixty-two feet northwesterly from the centre of From Desbrosses and Coitlandt streets, 330, 7 50, ' COUNSELLOR AT LAW, veeds or trash of any descrip- Bethel avenue; thence (S) nortb thirty-two degrees |>pve the authorities at the postoffice this state shall, during the month of Sep- 9 00 a. m.; 13 30, 180'(Saturdays only). 2 30. I fjiwun STREET. RED BANK, N J. west one hundred feet to a stake; thence (3) nortb 310, 4 30, 5 IU p. m. Sundays, 7 00, 8 30, S) 30 jjpartrjfent and was about to go home * fltty-nlDe degress forty-five minutes east one hun- tember of each year, cut and remove all a. m.: 5(1(1 p. m. LSTON BEEKMAN, Mespalr when a friend suggested that dred and Bl.xiy-sls feet six inches to tbe centre of VY. W. ATTERBUHY. J. K. WOOD, A ATTORNEY AT LAW. SOLICITOR said Flsk avenue; thence (4) south thirty-two de- brush, briers and weeds growing in or B bltuoK 1 might be worth while for her to see grees eust one hundred feet along the centre of said General Manager, Puss'r Trafllc Mgr. CUANCERY. NOTARY PUBLIC. " Flsk avenue to the place of beginning. Being a upon such portion of such highway as GEO. W. BOYD, Gen. Puss'r Agent. 9 Broad street, near Front street la president.' ion upon said roads as it isportion of land contained in the third description In, his or her lands abut upon ; and in case RED BANK, N. J. KVlth much effort she summoned and conveyed by a deed of Cbarles Allen, sheriff of Monmouth county, to said William W. Conover, such owner or occupant shall fail to per- SEASON OF 1905. iR, A. G. BROWN, I'urage and appeared' at the White bearing date September 18th, A. D., 1880, and re- form the duty imposed hereby, the D EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT SPECIALIST Erase. The president received her in corded In Book 829, page 280,- in the office of the Merchants' Steamboat Go.'s Line. Residence 130 Broad Street, Red Bank N J iolating the law, and very ob- Clerk of Monmoutb County and part of the same township committee of the township in Office hours, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday aft8r. piost friendly manner and after henr- land described in and conveyed by a deed of Aslier Telephone Call, 170-1 Franklin, New York. noons. Hanceand wife and Benjamin B. Hance and wife which^such lands abut as aforesaid shall Telephone Call 14 A, Red Bank. Teleplmoe 133-A, Red Bank. |j her story took her application and ectionable. to said William W. Conover to complete title to said f'ote a strong but brief indorsement premises, bearing date October 15th. 1880. recorded cause 4uch work to be done and theShrewsbury, IHghlands,B{ghland Beach, 1 R. HERBERT E. WILLIAMST ' the back of It. She hurried In tri- in Book 331, page 301 of deeds, in the office of tbe owner of such landa shall pay the ex Oceanic, Locust Point, fair Haven, SURGEON DENTIST. Clerk of Monmoulh County. Graduate University of Peuubylvaula |jpbrto the postoffice department. pense thereof, with costs, to be recovered Bed Hank, Zong Branch H. W. BUCK, This being Intended as tbe same landand premises Office Days In Red Bank: Mondays, Wednesdays iphe official to -whom she presented described in deed made by the said William W. in an action upon contract before any and Asbury PaWc. and Saturdays; Tuesday evenings from 7:30 to 8-K) |J application frowned and pondered Conover and Angeilne Conover, his wife, to Joseph justice of the peace of the county at the TO TAKE EFFECT MAT 14th. Register Building, 48 Broad Street, Ked Bank N J County Road Superintendent. Richardson; dated January Hth, 1882, and re- _j Rooms 10 and 11. ier It for some tiftie and then wrote corded In the Monmouth County Clerk's office In suit of such township committee. Tbe strong and commodious steamboat book 347, jage 109, 4c. R. R. F. BORDEN; Ider the president's indorsement,' D SURGEON DENTIST. j being a fourth class office, the Also that certain lot of land situate In the Town- The township committee of MUSIC HALL BUILDING, RED BANK' N j NOTICE, ship of Shrewsbury, county and state aforesaid, Particular attention glyen to the administration ol ssident does not have the appointing lying near the Port Washington road. Anaesthetics. Iwer." Beginning at a stake at the northwest corner of a Shrewsbury townshiplsuggests that SEA BIRD hangein Boundaries of Election lot of land which Margaret Coy purchased of R. W. M. THOMPSON, application was handed back to Robert W. Cbadwlck; thence along said line south this work of removirfg the brush, CAPT. C. E. THROCKMORTON, Districts in Shrewsbury thlrty-flve degrees east two chains aril twenty-nine Will leave Red Bank and Pier 24, foot of Franklin D DENTAL HIIRftKriK |r?, and she went away In deep dis- links to Naveslnk avenue; tbence south tlfty-jix briers and weeds from the t6wn- Street, New York, as follows: Over Postofflce, Red Bank, N.'J. and was again preparing to re- Township. ' degrees west seventy-six links to lands of Robert Hours 8-5. W. Chadwlck; thence north thirty-five degrees home wl*?n another friend told Notice is hereby given, that by resolu- Leave New York daily at 9:00 R. FRANK ^ west two chains and twenty-nine links to lands of ship highways be done in the SURGEON DENTIST. : by all means to take the paper back ion of the Township Committee of theWilliam B. Little; thence north fifty-six degrees A. M. D east seventy-six links to the place of beginning. months of July and August if pos- Formerly of Bordeu & Lee. jjthe president, so that he might see ownship of Shrewsbury, County of Containing seventeen one-bundredtbs of an acre. Leave Red Bank daily at 3:00Comer Broad and Monmouth Sts., opposite postofflce tfontnouth, N. J., the boundaries of the his Indorsement had been re- This being Intended as tbe same land and sible, in order that the township <>p. M. ived. When the president read It lection districts of the said Township of premlseu described In deed made by Robert W. R. J. D. THROCKMORTON, Shrewsbury have been changed in order Cbadwlck and Francis, bis wife, to Joseph Richard- highways may be free from such (Sundays included.) D DENTAL SDRGEON. I wrote under the last Indorsement, hat the election districts of the Town of son, bearing date April twenty-Otto, eighteen hun- (Subject to change without notice.) OFFICE: dred and fifty-seven, and recorded in the Monmouth No. 5 Broad Street, Red Bant, H.J. the president does not have the ted Bank shall be separate and distinct County Clerk's office In book T-6. page 248,4o. encroachments during the remain- olntlng power in this office, be has rom the election districts of the Town- Dated Red Bank, N. J., June 37th, 1805. HARVEY LITTLE, MESSENGER. R. FRANK L. MANNING, WILLIAM H. RICHARDSON, Executor. der of the season, and also in or- D SURGEON DENTIST. ) appointment of the postmaster gen- ihip of Shrewsbury, outside of the town Fruit and Confectionery on Uonrd, ii," and, summoning his secretary, if Red Bank, and also in order that the Successor to Dr. F. L. Wright. HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a der that the weeds, etc., be pre- Broad Street, opposite Ford & Miller's. • • • sldent Grant directed him to ao- election districts shall each contain the writ of Q. fa. to me directed, issued outol tbe 1 S5i" Connects with trolley cars at Red Bank for npany the lady to the department lame number of registered voters, as SCourt of Chancery of the Stale of New Jersey, will vented from going to seed. Should Shrewsbury, Eatontown, Long Branch and ABbury C. HURLEY, In person deliver her application early sa may be. The boundaries of the be exposed to sale at public vendue, on TUESDAY, Pork. „._,A e . SURVEYOR AAND CONVEYANCER, laid election districts for the coming elec- THE 18th DAY OF JULY, 1005. between the hours the brush, briers, weeds, etc., not 115 Bridge Avenue. RED BANK. N. A postmaster general, of 12 o'clock and 5 o'clock, (at 2 o'clock), in the N. B.—All freight Intended for this boat must be With George Cooper for fifteen yfears lion in November, and for all other elec- afternoon of Bald day, at the Globe Hotel, Red Bank, on the wharf a sufficient length of time to handle, received the commission before iona until the boundaries are again in the township of Shrewsbury, county -of Mon- be removed during the time set as she will positively leave promptly on her adver- R. B. F. KING, ' left the office. shunged by resolution of the Township, mouth, New Jersey. tised time. D VETERINARY Sill All those certain tracts or parcels of land and forth by law, the same will be done This boat's time-table is advertised In the RED Committee of the Township of Shrews- premises, situate, lying and being in tbe town of BANK REGISTER, Red Bank Standard, also in the Horses boarded winWr andd susummem r and 'treated bury, are as follows : Red nank, in tbe county of Monmouth and State of by the township committee and the Counting House Monltof.Maekey's Steamboat Guide, free of chargecharge. BroaWng it Gently. Bullinger's Guide, New York World, New York EASTERN ELECTION DISTRICT. New Jersey. FIR8T LOT OR TRACT.—Bonnded as follows: expense thereof collected from the Journal, New York Tribune, Brooklyn Eagle, and R. WJI. H. LA WES, JR. " |The greatest error that a lather can Beginning at the shore of the North Shrewsbury Beginning at a post standing In the northwesterly Demoorat. Hoboken, N. J. D liver at tho eastern boundary line ol the Town of VETERINARY SURGEON. is to omit to note the year that corner ot William T. Corlles' lot; tbence running Time-tables may be obtained at THE REGISTER Graduate of American Veterinary College, N Y. led Bank; thence southwardly and southwest- southerly along said Corlles' land one hundred and property owners according to law.office, Broad street. Red Bank. [ at the top of the current almanac vardly along tbe arc of a true circle which forma Residence: Monraouth Street, ninety-eight feet to land of Charles Lelghton; Between Broad street and kaple avenue, Red BanS to forget that his sons grow older be eastern anil part of tbe southeastern boundary thence westerly by said Leighton's line thlrty-flve GEORGE WOODS, Excursion Tickets, 50 Cents. Inn of the said Town of Red Bank to tbe center of and a half feet to land of Thomas A. McGlade, Jr.. EO. D. COOPER, £h year. The father who thinks his be Hldge Road; tbence eustwardly along tbe center to a post in tbe southeasterly corner of said Mc- Supervisor of Roads. G CIVIL ENGINEER. beteen-year-old son Is still a child Is ine of tbe said Bldge Road to the center of Hone Glade's lot; thence northerly by said McGlade's lot SEASON Of 1905. Successor to Geo. Cooper, C. E. Avenue; thence southwardly along the center line one hundred and ninety-eight feet on a lino parallel Post Office Building, RED BANK, N. J. ble to get a shock. f toe said Hone Avenue to tbe center of tbe Rumson with iho lint aforesaid line to the south side of EW YORK AND LONG BRANCH Merchants' Steamboat Co.'s Line. |"Beg pardon, fathejj," says the ladload; tbence wesiwardly along the center line of Catherine street; tbence easterly along the south N RAILROAD. ACOB C. SHUTTS, be said Rumson Road to tbe center of Oakea's side of Catherine street thirty-live and n half feet Stations in New York: Central R. R. of New Jer- Telephone Call, 1704 Franklin, New York. J AUCTIONEERAUCTIONE . wishes to break the news gently, Lane; tbence southwardly along tbe center line of to tbe place of beginning. Containing seven thou- sey, foot Liberty Street and West 23d Street; Penn- Telephone Call 14 A. Red Bank. Special attention given to sales of farm BtoeSt tut do you mind if I bring a-friend In tbe said Oakes's Lane to tbe Soutb Shrewsbury sand and twenty-nine square feet of land. Being sylvania Railroad, foot of Cortlandt Street, Des- farm implements and other personal property. River; thence eastwardly, northwardly and weat- intended to be the same land and premises con- brosses Street and West 23d Street. Shrewsbury,Highlands, Highland Beach, P. O. Address. 191 Broad street. Red Bank. •supper this evening?" dly along tbe shore of the said Soutb Shrewsbury veyed to said Francis E. Cooper by deed of James F. Oceanic Locust Point, Fair Haven, 1*1*11 think It oreif, my boy." River UDd along the shore o! the saldl North Shrews- Earle and Deborah Ann, his wife, bearing date tbe On and alter June 25th, 1905, M. CONK; •• bury River to the eastern boundary line of tbe said 24th day of January, A. D., 1872. and recorded in TRAINS WILL LEAVE RED BANK. Bed Bank, Long Branch E J'For a little music." 'uwu ot Bed Bank, tbe same being tbe point or place the office of the Clerk of the County of Monmoutb, For New York, 6 00, *6 40 (Mondays only). 6 45. and Asbury fork. • AUCTIONEFR jf beginning; all territory wltbln tbe said described at Freehold, in BOOK 252 of deeds, on page 288, etc. *7 09, *7 27. *7 43. *T 50, *8 25, 8 33, 9 26, fl 53. of Household Goods and Store Goods. iDoea your friend sing?" raundarles to comprise and constitute the Eastern and from which last aforesaid deed tbe foregoing *10 30, 11 30, 11 38 a. m.: 12 35. 1 51, *2 54. The strong and commodious steamboat Apply at Conk's livery stable, Maple avenue. Red iHas a beautiful Tolce.'^says the lad "lection District ot tbe said Township of Sbrews- description was taken. '3 05, »4 05, *i 20, 4 35, 6 07. *7 31. 7 38, 9 08, TJENRY OSTENDORFF. jthuslastleally; "like a nightingale." ury. SECOND LOT Ott TRACT.-Bounded as follows: (Saturdays only). 9 53,10 ,10, 10 38 (Saturdays SOUTHERN ELECTION DISTRICT. Beginning at a post standing In tbe southeast cor- only) p. m. Sundays, 8 03, 9 43 a..in.; 4 50, i!" with incredulity. "What age?" 6 03, *6 52, *8 45, 0 08. 9 53 p. m. ' Tuner and Repairer of Pianos and Beginning at the intersection of the boundary ner of a lot conveyed to Shepard Kollock by the CAPT. L. PRICE, lAbout my own nge, father." line of tbe Town of Red Bank and tbe center line belrsof Catherine Tllton. deceased; thence running For Perth Amboy. Elizabeth and Newark, 0 00,6 45. Organs. northerly along the line of S. Kollock's lot one hun- 7 09 (except Perth Amboy). 7 43 (Newark only), Office, de li Reussllle's Jewelry store. Broad St., |Well, you can "bring your friend; jf tbe Ridge Road; tiience eastwardly along the dred and ninety-eight feet to a post at the soutb Will lenve Red Bank and Pier 24. foot of Franklin enter lino of the said Ridge Road to the center of 7 50 (except Perth AmboyJ, 8 00 (except Perth Street, New York, as follows: Red Bank, N. J mind, it's not to be made a prece- Hone Avenue; thence southwardly along tbe side of Catherine street; thence easterly forty-one Amboy). 8 83, It2(1 (except Perth Amboy), 9 53, and a half feet along the south side of Catherine 1130,11 38 a. m.; 12 35. 151, a 54 (except Perth iTM. H. SEELEY, pt. I don't want the house overrun enter line of tbe said Hone Avenue to tbe center street to a post; theuce southerly by land of Deborah line of tbe Rumaon Road; tbence westwardly along Amboy). 3 05 (except Perth Amboy), 4 05 (ex- Leave Red Bank daily at 7:00V» PORT MONMOUTH, NEW JEnSEY. feh them. And no staying late." Ann Earle. on a line parallel witb tbe drat aforesaid cept Perth Amboy). 4 35.0 07, 7 33 (except Perth Commissioner of Deeds. Notary Public. :he center line of tbe said Iturusou Itood to tbeline one hundred and ninety-eight feet to a post A. II. fshe'll go back to her mother's at 10." :enterot Oakes's Lane; thence soutbwardly along Amboy), 738, 9 08 (Saturdays only). 9 53. 10 30 Soldiers' Vouchers Preiwred. Bills of Sale for standing in the line of Cbarles Leinhton; thence (except Newark). 10 38 p. m. (Saturdays only, Vessels. She!" be center line of tbe said Oakes's Lane to the shore westcly forty-one and a half feet by C. I30 8. Any and every nuisance ns above defined is lloginnlng lit the Hhoro of the North Shrewsbury Allco C. Strong, Fr/ink K. Hturala and William II. 4 % p. in. Wed'day, iath.10 (Kl " Thursday. l.'ltli.iKK) Tlnirsdny. lath.4IIII " hereby prohibited and forbidden within the town- ood deal, drecilbed what evidence: Illver at tliu center llixu of the New Jersuy Southern rjnadby, oxecutore of William E. Stronit. (U'conacd, Km Atlantic Highlands 11 88 u. m.; 4 35 p.m. Friday, i4th... 7 WI Friday, Uth....li;iO " ship of Shrewsbury, uiul tiny IHTSDII niiililiig.cront- Hallway ; thonce southwardly along the cuntorlltio by order of tho 8iirn",f;ato (if the dimity (if Miin- For Lakowdod, I.aKelmrst (Manchester). Ac., lit (147, affection are prized by men i Sunday, ini.ti.'. ..5 011 Siitunlay. IStli.^dOp. >i. lnir, causing, maintaining- or pennltllng nnyof said of tho said Now Jersey BouD'cm Railway to thoniDuth, hereby ^Ive notice In the creditors "I Uic 10 43 a. in.; 1103, 4 41, 531 p. in. Sundays, H32. Imen Iu different countries. In Jo Monday, l"th...7:w Monday, 17th..8 00 A. M. nuisances shall forfeit and pay a lieualty (if twenty- liouthoru boundary line ol tlie Town of Red Banli; .said deceased to lirlntr in tholr debts, demands and 10 13 u. m. Tuesday, 18th..7 30 live dollars. thunco wostwardly and nortli-weatwnrdly along claims against tho estate of «nld dceensoil, under Tuesdny, lHth..8(KI " jjaiem flhe once met a young Arn For Atlantic ('lly 10 43 a. in.; 303, 4 41 p. in. Sun- Wed'dny, 1UIII..7 3O Wud'day,llHli..8 0O " Tliu above Is an extract Troiii the ordinance.i of tho the uro of a true circle which forms thettoutiiwurdly ontb or nlllrinatlun. within nlnu iiiuntba fnnn the days. 1(143 a. in. Thursday.2<>ili..7 M •man who bud not n tooth left in hei *and tiiiulhwdatvvardly boundary linn of tho said SECOND DAY OF JUNE, 1IHKS. nr they will tic f»r- Tbiiralny.ailli.llOH " board of health of SKowsluuy township, and tl)9 For Philadelphia, Vlncliiiiil, Ifridgetou, Ac, 0 47 Friday. 21m mm (•'rlilny, Slut. ...IMK) " ."lime will bo thoroughly oulorewl. jul. Mine. Harry's native nervairl Town of Rod Ilank to the North Shrewsbury river cverlmneil of any nclloii tlierefor oaldust, tlie ?nld a. m.: 3 03 |i. in. at tho center of Bonch utrool: thonco northwardly excciitom. iiuiidiiy, 23d... 1 (10 Siiturilny, "S.'d.UU(l " AI.HKIIT L. IVINS, For Toms Hlvor mid llarncgntat 047, 10 43 a. in.: Moinli\y,24tli..*3 00 Monday, 24tb..l)0() " Preside! t nf the lloiml of Health. id: "Jf^ieUy woman! Her husbuut and northeastwardly along the abort) of tho wild ALICE C. STllON(i. 1103, 5 34 p. in. Sundays, H IB a. m. North Shrewsbury Hlvor to tho center lino of the IBANK K. BTUIKilH. Tiiewlny, 2.1lh..3 30 Tuoailay, !!l*itli..tl 311, Friday,SBtli...•0 31) in tbe said rtoacrlbcd boundaries to comprise and lit Law, Itvil llnnk, N. J. Friday, SKtli .. 1(100 " ] was told that thero a husband w»« I'5 38, Jfl 80, Mfl 45.12 01 p. m. Sundays, J" (X), Hnniliiy,!ti)tli .MB Hiiturdfty, atth.SdUi'. M. constitute tho Wont Ueil UKIIIC Kluctlou Dlntrlot of W15, $« 40 a. in.; •! 110, *4 (10, in 3U p. m. believed to love his wife properl Monday,Mist...7IHl Monduy, illst ,.«l!0 A.M. Th« riijrular mcetlngn ol the Red Iliink Iloanlof tho said Township of Shrowabury. DJOURNED S[IHUIFF',S HALIO. LuttVii EilzutKilli. 4 05, 8 43. 11 211 a. m.; 1 411, 3 85, Jtl ho bnd niiulo a preaeut to her o: A. C. HARBISON, 4 18, 4 40, 518, ft 52. 0 62, 1155 p. in. HuniliiM *I)eiiuU'S falling lido niul bout will leavo nlmrp on Health will bo bold on tliu llrxt Friday of each Township Olork, A « Mi it. iu.; 4 OX. 8 37 i> in. time. moi'lb, at 8.00 P.M., nt thuTuwn Hall, on Moa- loflln. Iu Gnllcla, nmoiiR tho finct c Tlie nalo of the iiropertT »f lloiirlcttu M. Iijidin, VA It B. montb stroi.it. pBochlfits, a'initii values) blfi wlfo'fl n: 1 ot nl, attlio milt of Jiilin It. Connvnr. stands nd- Leave Nownrk, 8 35. 11 IBs. m.; 11«), 2 40, 3 35, IVITIOIIH tmvlng iHnn|ilnln'.s to nuiko will prcseiil N CIIANCKRY OL NKW JEHSKY. Joumeil M EBIIHAY, THRTWENTV-FUWTDAV 4 !)T>, f>»8, (118, 11 50 p. in. Similuyii II05 u. in.; Tirlwt, liOt: Hii-iii lo tliu :,nTiilary lit willlni;. ion by thc.degrc'o of niiftwliiK whlcl I OF JULY, 1WW. nl (Jlolxi lloU'I. Ited llnnN.ln tho 8 66. MO p. m. Nhtuh: Tiekftn, IIOv. CIIAIU-R8 T>. WARNKit, VrealdoBt. To John W. Hiirvoy : towiniblp of Hhrewsliiiry, nt'.'. o'clonk, r. M. * Mondays (inly. TelophdiKi- 3-H, Port Monniouth. cituiieii him to endure. Miue. Ilarr. lly virtue nf nn order of lhu Court of Clinlicory 0. 0. lloiiAltbtiH, HborilT. + Now York (inly. JAMB) II. RicKl.ltH. Htwrctury. (if Now Jorauy, nuiilti on lli« nlimtoonth diiy (if DalodJuiiuakl, KOfi. r<) onco lu'urd a betrothed youth MII; X W. '5kl ntrodl 10 minutes curlier. N RUI.IO TO BAH ORKDlTOltH. I his iifllmieod bride, "If you reall Jttnit, InMniit, in a oniiHii wlmrulu KflWi M. llamiy O W. S!M Htroat 9 WI p. in. in <:i)inpl»liinnt mid you urn ilifi ndum. you aro in- N RULE TO BAR (IREDITORS. W W. Kkl utreot 4 WI p. in. O KXF.CirroitH' NO'l'HiK, OTIOK OF 8KT1T.KMENT. quired in appear, jilnnd. nnnwer or iltmiur to tho . Appliifnlo and Kdinnnd Wilson, Kxec- HKTATKdr CIIAUI.KH II. BEUOBN,doottUMuL |«d"ino you, would eminent*to bin* KXEOUTOH'H NOTIOE. P W. Kid Htroot 5 SO p. in. N hill (if tmld ciimpliiliiniit (in or before tlm KINK- O M \Y.KMntrcrt«d for «ottl««li*iii ; love bor fioiilfully. matrimony. mid iiliiliiin OK»ln'it Hit! cnlatoof HIIII) IIOCUIIMOII, IIIHIIT HAIR WORK.. within Minn months fnim T1IK KIXTII HAY or Ui IIHI Oiphaut' Uourt of tliu ooiuity uf MonmotiU), (JKOltdli E. JF.NKINHON.Jr., oath or ninrm.nUni, wltliln nlno moiitliti frmn tlm I am prcpard! lo AY Or Hiillcllur of 1 ril mt II t. TWKNTIKTU DAY OF JUNK, 1WI5. or Uxiy will Im up HwlU'hww, ,cdmlilnurs . and all kind!) (if hair workr.. a ^tloitl i tbtborotot r H iistt tthho pulill KxmmtoniKt . JULY, iiiiiL tdvvrtiflwi know it. pnyH to ndvortli Atlulltk: Ultfliluliilu, N. i. fonivor barrod ol nny ncUoii Hiorcfor iiuiilimt tlm AddressAdd 'Ai, 'Ai W Westt KKruntt «tnno Dollar Saved Represents Ten the other characteristics of thoroughly good instruments. You per- collar and some lace handkerchiefs on Dollars Earned. the line to dry a few days a«o. A bird The average man does not save to ex- came along, took the collar and handker- ceed ten per cent of his earnings. He haps know that these three makes are Behning, Empire? and Estey. chiefs in its claws, and earned them must spend nine dollars in living ex- away to its nest. Miss Tilton's brother penses for every dollar saved. That be- They are sold by Storck, which in itself is a guarantee of their ex- founji the articles later in a tree and re- ng the case he can not be too careful covered them. ibout unnecessary expenses. Very often cellence. These pianos are not cheap, ordinary instruments which Big travel Over Beabrlght BrMoe. few cents properly invested, like buy- The bridgetender at the Seabrigut ing seeds for his garden, will save sev- drawbridge kept tab on the vehicles and eral dollars outlay later on. It is the lose their tone at every change of weather, but are first-class pianos nedestrains that passed over the bridge lame in buying Chamberlain's Colic, July 4th and 6ih. The automobiles and 3holera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It made by first-class firms, whose reputation will not permit them to carriages numbered 3,80? and the pedes- :o8ta but a few cents, and a bottle of it n the house often eaves a doctor's bill trians numbered 5,283. f several dollars. For sale by C. A. turn out any but high-grade instruments. Mr. Storck or any of A CSiange of Position. Minton & Co., No. 5 Broad street, Red H. C. Winant, who has been employed Bank. by the New Jersey bridge company at his men will be glad to give you any other information concerning Manaequan, has taken a position with a cooperage company at New York. . .He COLUMBIA HOTEL, these pianos. Aunt JaUC* with Bailed last week for Europe in the.25 West Front Street, Dear Pearl, Red Bank. N. J interest of the firm. rcuger's Beer and F. & M. Schafer's celebrated i &n a Trip Abroad. Weiuer Beor always on draught. William and Frank McDermott, sons of Frank P. McDermott of Elizabeth, LSO BARTHOLOMAY ROCHESTER BEER IN formerly of Freehold, sailed last week for BOTTLES. Germany. They will spend six weeks Joseph G. Eschelbach. there and will visit the principal places of interest. Hurt by Fall from a Tree. Samuel Lafetra of Allenwood fell from a tree last week and sustained seri- als injuries. The accident happened just as he was getting around after hav- ing been laid up a long time with rheu- Manufacturers of their PATENT PAR- matism. LOR GEM SMALL GRAND PIANO and We have taken,..-ifp the agency A Sletv Stone Church. their PATENT DUPLEX SOUNDING The members of St. James's Episcopal BOARD (cannot crack). for a number of the best makes of church of Long Branch are planning to UPRIGHT PIANOS in various beautiful natural woods. American and Foreign Automo- build a new stone edifice at a cost of Most refined, pure, long, round sinR- about $30,000. The present frame struct- inir lone. biles, and are prepared to fill orders ure will be utilized tor chapel purposes. Action of tho greatest elasticity. promptly. We can especially rec- Mending Circle's A'c«e OJS?CCIS. Component parts, WorkmanBhip' and The Parlor reading circle of Keyport Durability unoxcelled. ommend the Cadillac Model F. car has elected Mrs. L. Brower Walling presi- Prices ranste from $250 to $850. dent, Mrs. Harvey Bronner vice presi- Before deciding bo sure to examine for a light, reliable, well-made car, dent, Mrs. Mary Armstrong secretary our various LATEST ARTISTIC and Mrs. Ptielps Cherry treasurer. STYLES. > and sells for A Suit Settled. Our M. AS. SMALL UPRIGHTS for The suit of the overseer of the poor of limited space are extremely popular. Kiuitau township against Daniel W. Mason, on complaint of Beulah Thistle, THE ©FERA PIAMO has been settled by the payment of a . with an envlablo record and many PATRONS and FRIENDS in this SECTION, you will We have this car in stock and sum of money by Mr. Mason. also find well represented here in our Salesrooms. These celebrated PEEK & SON Uprights would be pleased to show it to you. Sew Uniform* for Firemen. Justly deserve the best comments, owins to their excellent tone and lastingqualittes, which The members of the Atlantic engine stamp them as an art product and place them rat above tno plane of tbo Commercial fire company at Long Branch are to Pianos. To make room we have decided to close out the HARNESS end of our business. We shall have new uniforms. They are to wear BARGAINS IN USED VFBIGBT PIANOS FROM ijl 190upwards. dispose of entire stock at a sweeping reduction. Here are great values and at prices never before them for the first time in the parade at A SQUARE PIANO or an ORGAN In serviceable condition, from $10 to $75, would equalled., that place on August 9th. meanwhile cheer your home, educate the young, and can, later on, be exchanged with us BUGGY HARNESS. DOUBLE CARRIAGE HARNESS. Union Church Services. towards a Moacrn Pinno. During this month and August, the Eaor monthly orweeUly payments—your own convenience. Light buggy harness, nickel and brass, Fine full nickel plate with collars, worth $12.00, now $7.50 .0.00, now. .!'. Methodist, Presbyterian and Baptist Pianos and Organs takon in oxenango at fair valuation. worth 28.50 churches of Matawan will hold union Catalogues and Bargain 'Circulars mailed upon request. Genuine rubber buggy harness, worth Sunday night services. The pastors will Tuning and Repairing by Factory Experts. $20.00, now 13.50 . FARM DOUBLE HARNESS. alternate in preaching. FACTORY SALESROOMS Engineer's Arm Broken. (moved upstairs to acconnnodato the Second National Bank.) Light buggy harness, Kay saddle, gilt The best made, worth $28.00, now (with Laroy Pearee, son of John Pearce of and rubber trim, worth $25.00, now 16.5© collars) , 22.00 Manasquan, was starling an engine in a ROOMS SO and 31, P. O. Building, RED BANK, N. J. boat last week when the wheel flew SURREY HARNESS. backwards and struck him on the arm. Nickel and brass surrey harness, worth The arm was broken, $25.00, now 18.0© SUMMER BLANKETS, SHEETS, &c, at a &n appendicitis Patient. Heavy surrey and runabout harness,v reduction of 25 per cent, and less than same goods Alamanzo. Perry of Keyport was worth $35.00, now ." 22.5© can be bought at wholesale to-day. operated on at the Long Branch hospital .0 last Thursday for appendicitis. The SINGLE EXPRESS and GROCERY HARNESS, Fine Cooling Blankets, 84x90 inches 90C. operation was successful and ho is re- Sheets, Lap Robes, &c. covering. worth $25.00, now 18.O© Mail Carrier Xow a Butcher. have a large quantity of material suitable for wagon making. Don't fail to take advantage of thiB Special Offer: John U. Conover, who until recently It includes: had been driver of the Colt's Neck mail route for a number of years, is now em- ployed at George Pease's meat market at r UK J We have a number of good second-hand carriages we are closing out at almost give-away Keyport. Jersey .White Pine, well seasoned, 1] inches thick, 10 to prices. Amongsthem : fire in a l.ttmiilry. 1 Rubber-tired Trap, almost new. 1 Glass Front and Door Depot Wagon with rubber tires. A fire broke out in McGuire'a laundry 8 inches wide, 8 to 12 feet long, dressed both sides, at 2 Steel-tired Traps. 2 Curtain Wagonettes. at North Long Branch a few daj'H ago 1 Extension Top Surrey, light for one horse. 1 Browster Buggy. and damage to the amount of about$200 5 cents per f©@t 1 Glass Depot Wagon, has rubber tires. Runabouts, Business Wagons, Jagger Wagons. was done. It is not kuown how tho lire started. Gone next to Stay. Bolsters, dressed four sides; Wagon Tongues, WhiffletreeB George U. ISailey of Freehold, who rt- and Wagon Standards. .cently returned from Phoenix, Arizona, Factory and Repository: MAPLE AVENUE AND WHITE STREET, RED BANK, N. J. where be uphill the winter for his lieallh, has returned there to remain porma- Small lot of first-class Hickory Plank. nenlty. Motttlt'ti Record tit lloiipttai. Ono hundred patients were admitted to the Long Brancli hospital during A Great Remed) June. This in forty more than were ad- mitted during the same month last year. for Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, Falls, N. J. FARMS WANTED. &nd the Groat Nerve Tonic. Sembrlght Councilman Heslgna. J. A. Huwliuid liaHi'^wigned an council- When tliero Is no doslro for lood, or tlicro man at Scabright. lie says he cauno la Boronosi In tltn pit ot tho Htoinacli; or • properly care for his own business aw There is a great demand for farms of all descrip- tho food comes up in tho throat, your that of thii borough at the samo time. Htotnach Is out of order and the Idler, : Painting and Paper Hanging tions in this vicinity. I have more applications than MlldneuOf Nerveti att