RED BANK TEE Issuri W«eklr, Inttrnl u SMOWI-CIMS Mstttr «t th« Fort- $1.50 Per Year, PAGES 1 TO 8. ^VOLUME XLI. NO. 23. offlc. at Bad Bank, N. J.. undu th* Act el March Id, lilt. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1918. me beforo this drive thut my physical ing together. We have just had sup-only two weeks. His company was . MATT GREIG TO WED. flOW OUR BOYS FOUGHT. condition could have withstood the per wid I wonder if you people like surrounded by the German? in theBIG EVERETT FARM SOLD. HENRY A. HOYTC WILL. midships we have been through I und apprappreciate te coffee as mumuchh as we Argonne w6ods. The Germans asked Former Superintendent of Eisner Factory to Wed Brooklyn Girl. LETTERS DESCRIBE WAR EXPER- would have said he was crazy. But dod . We d drindik ksome , washh mess kkits the Americans to surrender but Ma- RED BANK MAN LEAVES ES- under the stimulus of excitement one with it and wheh n it is necessary andd jor Whittesley, who commanded the HE VA.N CLEAF FARM BOUGHT Announcement has bt-e/i /mule ot IENCES IN FRANCE. can endure almost any amount of suf- there is a yhole lot of it we shave "lost battalion," told the Germans to LAST WEEK FOR $3S,000. the engagement of Miss Beatrice TATE TO HIS WIDOW. Tw Letters from Dr. William D. fering. Your letter came almost as with it. go where everybody would like to see The Farm Contains About 200 Acres Marion Worth of Brooklyn and Matt Miss Cornelia S. Hendrickson of Fair Sayre TTel l of LasL t BigB Battle of thq [i message from heaven, as in tho Well, I guess that this will finish tho kaiser go. Whittesley has been and It .Will be Converted Into a (ireig, wlio was formerly superinten- Haven Divides Eitate Between Hei1 War—Abe Kridel Gassed but is despondency of coming out of battle for today. Hopinung :you are well and promoted to colonel. He has been Farm for Growing Wheat—Two dent of Eisner's factory at Red Bank. Sister and Her Brothej—Other and Beeing BO many of your compan- with best love tco. all, nicknumed "Go-to-hell" Whittesley Miss Worth studied for the stage and Wills Admitted to Probate. Now All Right Again. ions missing forever it giveB one a Your lovinr mg son, , because of his reply to the Germans. Canadian Farmers Are the Buyers. appeared in two plays with Leo Diet- Sergeant Joseph L. Curtis of Little new lease of life to hear from your , ' • Private Jesse Sabath. Mrs. C. Emma VanCleuf of Free- richtstein. She gave up her stage . Henry A. Hoyt of Ked Bank, who Silver, who was severely wounded on 'riehds. Sergeant Ward Vandervecr of Red mld has sold her farm near Everett work U> assist the Ked Cross and jdied a short time .'igo, made hi3 will September 28th while serving with "I believe the war will soon bo George White of Little Silver Bank, who is attached to a motor to A. T. Dwight and H. P. llomum, other war work. Mr.1 (ireig m now •"-™Decembe1""r "31stJ;"-. , '•>'•>;1U1-J. nAl" l •"»his perl>"-- the 303d Engineers in tho buttle of over, and I certainly hope so, as such wrote to his friend William Boteler truck company in France, has sent who have been farming the Dr. Henry with the supply and equipment divi-! ™nal P™P?rty w»« le,ifc to. h,is widow, Argonne Forest, writes to his parents sorrow and suffering as it has caused from a French, hospital under date the following letter to Conrtland place at Everett. Mr. Dwight and Mr. sion of the quartermaster's depart- M".r>' W. Iloyt. He directed that the from a hospital in Southern France of October 30th. White was sent to White of West Front street: rlomans have had experience in farm- over hore cannot be pictured. I can ment. Both he and Miss Worth will | residuv h se of the estate be held m trust asfollows: write but few letteri. ' W is the hospital to receive treatment for "I have learned the secret of how ing in Canada and they had a big- take part in entertainments for the i >- , .' executors and the income paid "Hotel de la Paix, so occupied. We will nui go back to rheumatism. Before going to theto be the first one in mess line. Youfarm at Edmunton, in Alberta, in that soldiers at various camps. to his wife as long as she lives. After ' Clermont, France, the front line for a month as it will hospital he had been in some of themight think I am going through a lot :ountry. They came to New Jersey the death of Mrs. Hoyt the remainder October 24, 1918.take that time to recuperate the divi- hardest fighting of tho war, but heof hardships since I landed on this last yeur and they rented the Dr. of the estate is to be divided between Pear Mother and Father; sion. Remember me to all the boys said in his, letter he would not say side. Well, to tell the truth I have flenry place. They will take posses- theftVhirdren, Florence H. Wendell "I have lots to tell you in this and tell them I often think of them." mu"eh about the fighting for he want- gone through a lot of stuff I never iion of the farm they have just WANT STREET NAME KEPT. and Henry Norman Hoyt. letter. One night at 12:00 o'clock ed to forget some of tho things he went through before but it is not as lought on February 1st. The farm Miss Cornelia S. Hendrickson of we were loaded in a Red Gross train saw on the front. He said that dur- one might suspect. At present I am las been worked the past two years Fair Haven-divided her estute.be- and we rode for two days and two Abe Kridel, son of Jacob Kridel, ing the heavy fighting ho y/ent sleeping in a wooden bunk with a >y Charles B. Roe, who had a five- PARK PLACE RESIDENTS DONT .tween ihcr sister, Margaret E. Sands, nights, when we landed at the above hns written to his mother from a through he was on ihe same front as straw mattress and I have a fire about year lease on the place. Mr, Roe con- WANT NAME CHANGED. and herlbMther, George J. Hendrick- hotel, which is located in Southern French hospital, where he was sent the Ked Bank ambulance company ten feet from me. 1 have three sented to the cancellation of the lease son, in a'wilr'she executed in 18!)!). Prance. It is a fine place, I didn't after being gassed. Mr. Kridel isbut he had notat that time seen any blankets and an overcoat to throw when he learned thut the new owners They Send a Protest ho the Town • Mrs. Elizabeth A. Sanford of Deal wont to go at first, because the other attached to a machine gun company. of the l\ed Bankers. over me at night so I manage to keep wanted to run the place themselves. Commissioners Against Changing left her entire, estate to her adopted two fellows from my company did not He Bays in part: "I suppose you will warm. I have traveled 500 miles the Name of Their Street to thedaughter, Mary A. Lee, in-a will she be worried when you read this letter Prices for food and such delicacies Mr. Dwight and Mr. Homans paid Harding Road—Laid-Over. go with me, but now I am glad I as could be bought in the small towns since I luWe been in this country and 135,000 for the farm. It contains made two years ago. came as we certainly have fine cats tolling you that" I had a slight touch were very high, Mr. White said. Forhave seen quite a little of France. I The residents and property own- Alexander Morris, a farmer of of gas on October 28th and am now 200 acres, of which about 25 acres is ers on Park place sent a protest to the and beds. We were brought here irti a small cake of chocolate 25 cents consider it a beautiful country. 1 in woodland. The soil is excellent Neptune township, made his will six- a Red Cross train which was fitted in a bnBe hospital in a place called was churged; crackers similar to Na-have traveled a good deal by Pull- town commissioners on Monday teen years ago. All his personal Chatel-Guyon, which is located in for growing potatoes and wheat-. Six» night, against changing the name of up as fine as a hotel, and you would bicos cost twenty cents for five, undman, a la box car, in this country and ty acres of the farm were in potatoes property, and'the money he hud in tho never know you were on a train. Southern France. It is a beautiful grapes brought twenty cents a quar- I found it very classy. We had two that street to the Harding road. -J. bank was left to his widow,. Elizabeth... summer resort. I am getting: along this year. Ten acres were planted in Horace Harding of Rumson built a "I am in one of the finest hotels in ter of a pound. A small variety of kinds of water, clean and dirty, be- wheat and the yield was 410 bushels Morris.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages18 Page
-
File Size-