4
_ _ ... it 1 1 ® COL/T^. - V ol. XIV ASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1889; J A. W. HETRICK, M. D. . Homcoopatblo Physician and Surgeon. Oot. Cookman & Hangs avs., Asbnry Park, N. Hoars: until 10 a. m., and after 4 p. m. J J 6. KINMONTH, M. D., Corner Grand and ABbury Avenuea, " OtflceIloura—7to 0a. in., lto 2 p . m .,0to8p.tn. TXK. BRUCE 8. KEATOR, ^ UomcBOpathlo Physician and Surgoon. Graduate of both sohools. Cor. Asbury avenue and Borgh street Hours—Until 9 a. m ., 7 to 0 p.m . Telephone oonneotlons. F. PAWLEY, i > E a t n e a ? , ; . " * * 61B Bangs ave., ‘ Aabury.Park. N. J. J)R . S. T. SLOCUM, > DENTIST, Offlce—204 Main S t, opposite Railroad Station, Gas administered. -AsburyPark, N. J. A. s. BURTON, O. D. S. I. O. BUBTOK,*D. D. S. A. 8. BUST__________ £$URTON BROTHER8, Bealdent Dentists, . . Donn. Building, 605 Cookman ave.,: Asbury Park. Now Y ork Offlco—C9 W eat 83th st." Gas administered. Appointments made by tele* ,, .phone or by mall. Hours :0 a.m . to 8 p. m. 'W C m ’of. *. ZOZO”—tho new preparation for cleansing aiid preserving the Teeth. — n u n t ntTOAHB. i J. T. HAWKltfS'. .---- fJAWKINS & DURAND, Attorneys-at-Law, Solicitors’ As Masters in Chan .oery, "Mikado Building, Cookman Av.,- \ A s b u r y P a r k , N . «T. J8AAC C. KENNEDY, h Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor, Master ln Chancery v.. and Notary Public. , Spbolal attention given to examination of Titles, &o. , \';i Offloe h fCook's Building, .. -- : Asbnry Park, New Jersey: gttsin m (Saras. ROBERT T. GRAVATT; ’ v" DliUB m Stoves, Heaters, Ranges, TINWARE, Ao. ,1 Cookman av., near Bond st, AHBTJET PABK, N. J. I l l HDOflHi, LMDEM, BBTTERS, M . COPPER, TIN AID SHEET IkOR WORK OF AU CIRDi. |3F“FIret-clas8 work at low ra tchet. LIPPINCOTT, T A I L O R 737 Cookman Ave. Mien’s Furn.ish.ings 0AV1D HABVBY, Jr., A ttom ey-at-L aw , Boll olto r, M aster a n d Examiner in Chanoery, Notary Public. Asbury Park, N. J. Q.EORGK W. BYRAM, * ~ 7 ^ "; : Attorney-at-Law and Solicitor in Chancery, - ■Address P. O. Box 1004, Aabury Park, N. J. HBNBir M. N bvjus, ‘ Counsellor at Law. Enmnrn W ilrok, Attorney at Law. ■VTKV1U8 A WIL80N, Law Offloear^ RED BANK,N.J. JpRANK V. BODINB. A R C H IT E C T , — MIKADO BUILDING. ASBURY PARK, N. J, M RS. ROSALINE V. REPLEY, . 807 Fourth avenue, Asbury Park. 7_ TEACHER OF PIJty lO ;URBAN AND THEORY . . foreign and American Angering. Term&—$15{ot SO lessons, payable at 10th lesson. ------- H. B. JOHNSON, Practical Watchmaker, Dealer In Fine Watches, Jewelry, Spectacles Ao. Watches and Jewelry repaired at City Prioes. Main street, near Oookmah’ avonue, The Old and Reliable Brand. Vane, C M & Co. An Immense M od Hand, All PesiraMB Shafles of Color. N.E. Buchanon & Co. Sole Age&ts for S ta te o f N ew Jersey. tSfpricoa low to painters and Consumers, LVbetal arrangtomenta m a d e w ith ' d ealers. MAIN ST. AND ASBURY AVE. A. Co. —Manufacturer^ of; and wholesale and v ' retail dealers ln j ■■■■■ : FEATHERS, Etc. FACTORY NO. 143 MAIN ST. ? Up Stairs, ; RonovutinpMattressesaSpecialty. ''"Telephone Connection. In all Its branches. Hardwood finishing, Grain- ing, Calolmlnlng, &<s, fistlmatea furnished on application. ' L. Box 2183, Ocean Grove, N. J. H. C. IWIARRYOTT, Contractor and Builder, Estimates furnished for every description of work. Jobbing attended to prdmptly. Residence— • Cornwall Are. and Emory St., Lock Box 716 A S B U R Y P A B K . Iff. J. SANITARYPLUMBING «- c o . ^ , Now occupy the'new brick building Mattison Avenue, near Rond Street, where they are prepared to estimate on all kinds OF FLUUB1N0,BAS AHD5TEAM PITT1HB . They do none other than flret-elwB work, and all plumbing will be done after the most approved sanitary methods. _ Bepnlrlng promptly attended to. COOK HOWLAND, Architect & Builder. Building planuMoCjulod and all work promptly done. Offloo ln Cook’H Building, Mata street and Oookman avonuo. Asbnry Park. FliKD. B. QoWDY. CD AS. H. PITOHER. GOWDY & PITCHER, Carriages, and Manufactu- • ~ rers of*-Harness . ... ' Bepositorlea-Asbnry Park. Rod Bank and Toma River. JOHN HUBBARD, 700 Fifth avenne. ALFRED HART, .405 Sewell avenue. HUBBARD &HART, CONCRETE WALKS, Cellar. Bottoms and Curbing. P. O. Box 678 ANBURY PABK. S. J. ADON LIPPINCOTT, Contractor & Builder .. - m Plans and estimates cheerfully furnished. Jobbing in all branches promptly and carefully attondod to. Residence and Shop, . . • , 007 Main Bt., bot. 1st and gd, Agbury Ptfrk, N. J, A. A. TAYLOR, : Mason and Builder. Bricklaying ahd Plastering InaJJ branches of Masonry workTT Jobbing promptly attended to. P. O. Box 697.. Offlce, .783 Mattison avenue. JACOB DOLL, Jr., P R A C T IC A L Pipir Hisjit ui and gilt wall papers, decorations, shades and (o fixtures ln the county, at lo weat prides. Also WAIL Pictwre\ WooldlnK* and Frames, p ap er lla niter’s Supplies, Etc. Frames made to order at short notice. The best New York'and Philadelphia paper hangers employed. Estimates furnished ftff'papernang* 1ng and balsomlplng. ; 541 Cookman avenue, Adjotntnjc Commorolal pABK>N_ j' !»SS Pills will not ohly give.easo, but permanently cure Indigestion. Dyspopeia, or any Rastrlo trouble. For Sale bv all Druggists. Dyspepsia Advertising is the best Lu- bricant for rusty arid slow m oving business,__J!ry it. GEORGE W. LEE JOBBING HOUSE CARPENTER Hardwood work a specialty: orders promptly attended to and work done in first-class manner. Manufacturer of Storm Doors, Window and Door Screens. Ordera loft at D. H. Wycboff’s paint storo, or received by mail, will be promptly attended to. — -* Shop—N. E. cor. Asbury ave. and Main et. Res idenco—N.W. cor. Cookman ave. and Bond st. P i O. BOX 006, ASBURY PARK, N. J. M ONM OUTH ASBURY PARK, NEW JEE8EY. C apital , $100,000. Authorized by law to act as Exdoutor, Admin* Istfator, Guardian, Trustoe, Assignee, Receiver. Agont, etc., and for the faithful performanoo of on suen duties its capital stook and surplus aro liable ; also to Receive and Exeouto 1111818 of every description, from the Courts; Corporations and individuals. -4 •• •• All Trust Funds and Investments aro inscribed in tho nameaof the owners of the property hold in trust, and are kept separate and apart from tho assets of the Company. Interest Allowed ou DepoMltfl. Bate Deposlt.Vaai|i| in' fire and bare g lu r p ro o x b b l l d l n g , co rn er M attison avonuo and Bond street.'' Willa receipted for and kept without charge. ISAAC C. KENNRDY. President. DR. B. 8. KEATOR, Yloe-Pres’t. H. H. YARD. Secretary. A. C. TWINING. Treasurer. % DIRECTORS : . G. D. W. VROOMt Trenton, N. J. W. J. HARIOtiON. Lakewood, N. J., OLIVER H. BROWN, 8L_. HENRY H. YARD, Ocean »nlO, N iJ, ih, N .J. umiAl u. uvoau uoouu, J. H. BUCHANAN, Spring Lake, N. J. J08E PHMoD ERMOTT, Freehold, N .J. I i v o o r u JBUOMVMWi »i . n. B. PIERSON, Philadelphia, Pa. GEO. F. KROEHL, Arv •> . BRUCE S. KEATOR, M. A. C. TWINING, ISAAC C. KENNEDY. Asbury Park, N. J. M.D., {‘ MOSEY TO 1.0A1S BOND AND MORTGAGE Loans made on improved property'iii sums of $1,000 and upwards. H Good, Safe Loans. Reasonable Charges. To hon-residents’of Asbury Park would refer to First National Bank, Aabury Park—G. F, Kroohl, - president; A. C. Twining, cashier.-' Asbury Park and Ocean Grove Bank—H. C. Win- sor. president, E. E. Dayton, cashier. Monmouth Trust and Safo Deposit Co.—Isaac C. Kennedy, president. James A. Bradley.-Asbury Park, N. J. Whitman & Phelps, Wholosalo Dry Goods, 40-48 Grand st., N.- x. D. E. Converse, presldont Clifton Mills, 8.XV A. J. Milstead, sop’t Tailassoo Falls Mills, Ala. Amos Clatki Globe Mills. Augusta, Ga.. LAURU8 LOOMIS. - caro Monmouth TraBt Co., Asburv Park, N. J. Residence—Head of Grantravo;r Oca 1 UoaohrN.J. $15,000 To Loan on Good Mori, 8 . q , c o ( tT. Freehold.N.J. geat (Bstuti frgtncm . HI B. BEEGLE, (Late H. B. Beegle<& Son) \ li£AT> ESTATE nn«l INSURANCE AGENT, W ia^am w rim a ~ Iyoans Negotiated and Legal Papers Drawn II. B. BEEGLE, Notary jrtibllo and Commissioner of Doods for New Jersoy. Pennsylvania and tho District of Columbia, Atlantlo Highlands. 8700. ---------------------------- dra Long Branch. $160. Miyiot,*w BHt i^oug iIranonr3pa k ------- John Barber, to James u.- LaneMot North REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE & , MORTGAGE LOANS, 708 Cookmrm Ave, SAMUEL W. KIRKBRIDE, CONTRACTOR, Carpenter & Builder. Plans and epeoifioations furnished. Jobbing promptly attended to. Best of reference given. R esidence—F irst av e ., b e t B ond a n d Em ory sta. Shop and Offloe—First ave. and Main St. P. O. Box 748. ABBORY PARK*. T he monhoutit.,trust a^d SAPB B IX at Mattison Ave. and Bond St;, fa com- pleted and ready for tenants. The offices on the second and third floors of the building will bo finished In hard wood, wind owe Of plate gliiss, inside blinds, and Airnlsbed with every modern convenience, Including steam beat. These rooms aro now offered to the publlo FOR RENT, for use EXCLUSIVELY A8 OFFICES, at rents ranplnjrfrom $60 to $150 per annum C’aoh; the rental to include gas, steamheating and reg* JOS. L. DURR AH, P l a s t e r e r , 505 THIRD AVENUE. Jobbing Promptly attended t<r. GEO. C. ORMEROD, CONTRACTORS BfllLMR, ASBURY PARK, W- J. Established 1B73. Jobbing promptly attended to. Best of reference given. Offloe and Residence^ COR. 8EWALL"AVE. AND BOND ST. P Discount on Sewer Bills. has on hand tho largest and finest' UnOfOfvplaln- - During the past year a number of new connec- tions have been made with the sewers. This has to some extent lessened tho percentage of cost' of maintaining the works. As the erection of the Sower Works was not a matter of specula-, tion, ba't beqame a necessity beoanso of the sue- cessfui and rapid grow th o f thelow n,“the owners dealro to ijeep the annnal rent at the lowtost possible point. Notice is hereby given that on all sewer rents for 1668, which will be due January 1st, 1889, for prepayment a deduction of oho percent, a month w ill be allowed.,_After J^nhar'y 1, sewer rents due the following January a deduce tion of two p^r cent, a month will for prepay- ment be allowed On the third yoar, for pre- payment, three per cerrt... a-nionth will allowed; and on the^fourth year, for pre- payment, four per i cent, a month' Will be. allowed. This practloally reduces the sewor rent more than one-third in the last three years. But taking tho fourth year alono, it reduces tho rent fully one*ljalf. It . is of course impos- sible to tell, at the present tlmo, if a still farther discount oan be allowed on tho fifth or sucocodlog years, on acconnt of increased num- ber of oonneotlons, bnt the owners of property whloh Ib connected with the sewer may rvsf. assured tbat they will reap every advantage pos- sible. Owners of the works only desire, after working expenses aro paid, a moderate lnterost on the investment. ' O. T. BAILEY, --*•7* , * Seo’y Sewer Wtoks Asbury Park, May 2ad, 1886. ular dally janitor service. For further particulars apply . ^ COMPANY’S where plans of rooms can he Been. at OFFICE, ASBURY PARK ELECTRIC LIGHT AND--; , ' V »;• ' CO. MAIN STATION: Railroad, nefar First'avenue. Furnishes Eleotrio Aro,^and Incandescent lights a t any location.- V to ep T O ^ ^ ^M im D G? HARRISON, ^ 'Sup^^S^LANE. DEBBOTORSi- Geo. F. Kroehl, Mmiiuuu. nanuua. John C* MaoMurray, > John Rcickafeller, f ' ' ‘flw . A. flmook, Ge6, M, Lane. ‘ Myron 8. Gould, Edmund G. Harrison, George W . Patterson, P. O. Box 178.' ASBUItY PARK, N. J. \ OmpUedfcr (Ae A bbust l*Aak JouawiL; Real Estate conveyances. List of conveyanccfli M om nou^’ County Clerk’s oince, for the week onding Nov. 9, 1889: . ■•,. . ••• -r •' : ASBunr PARK. James A. Bradley to Ann Wyckoff—parts oflota > 868,569, 870. $6,000.1 '-K&dellfl B. Mills rt al., to Lydia M. Morgan dol. —lots 1014,1W5. $1,800. William Mills to Lydia U. Morgan ,rf aL—lot KM4. $1,800. • v -' -. RadclIffB. Mills a al, to P. M. Braun- parts lots 879, 880. $3,800. .. Wm. Mills to Bamo—partagamo property. $2,300. Samuel T. Heudriokson to'EmUy B. Malcomson —lot Asbury Park. 53,200. . . oobam ob 6 vb . . ' ; M, C. Gebhardt to George 0. 'Combrlght—lot 1703. $1,000. - u Geogc M. Carslake to Lydia A. Bundlok-rlot May R. Thornloy. ex'rx, to Victoria R. T. Do- Haven—west half 01 lota 470,471. $7,5260. TOWNBIirP. John F. Hawkins to E, Nelson Turner—lot West Asbury Park. 8660. . Wrn.-A. Harvey, by adm'r, to Samuel V; Morris lot Neptune township. $167.. ’ Robert H. Maple to Monroe Newman—lot Nep- tuno township. • - Moaroo Newman to Florence D. Maple-same -lot :w - on—lot at property. $l. Wm. A. Harvey, by adm’r,ffiT-Wm. F. Hurley— lot Noptune township. Ella h . Dey to Amelia H, Pierson—lot Neptune township. 8390. . . BarzUl&i Grover to AlfredGrover--lot Noptune township. 12 000, * . Lawrence Landeu ‘ to Victoria King—lot West Park. $1., Wm. U. King to Lawrenoe Landlrf—lot Nop-' tune township. $1. " MIBOKLLAjTBOtS ' Wm. B, Randolph to Stephen Vt Stafford' Middletown township. 86, Theo. Field, sheriff, to W. Irving Clark—lot Red Bankr$6,opot ; -------- — r—; John H. Thistle to Henry A. Chlnery—lot at Union. « . Henry A. Chlnery to Margaret A. Thistle—lot at Uiilon. $1. . - ........... John H. Cohover to same—lot Kej Margaret A. Thistle to Thos. Union. $450. ' .. Manuel L. Manhcim to Israel Harris^-lot Key* port. 81.750, - t John II. Conover to John W. BaUey-*lot Key* port: $60.------------ ------------ --------------------------- — ?I.O Bernard Delaney tcrGeorge Koenig, Jr.—2 low oyport. 1800. _ John T. Pettit to Mary R^Sutphln—lot Long Branch. 8350. Rebecca H. Bearmoro- to Samuel Sherman—172- 100 acres Howell township. 840. Henry. Plttlnger to same—5 20 100 acres Howell township. 876. „ •1 .. John Hull McLean et aL to Win. B. Duryee—lot Freehold. $335. ; Alexander Gaston to Mllo H. Crego-Iot 8.021. Ocean Beach. 8776. Lewis C. Plttlnger to Ezekiel. Smith—2. tracts land Freehold towfishlp. $2,800. ‘ Reynard Peyser to He Branchr8om-J----------r~ Gcowo W. Childs d al. to St.' James Chapel—2 lotsEloeron. 81. - - Thos. W.-Cooper to John WJacki d a/.—lot Long Branch. 81. ■>—-- John Wlacki to Thos. W. Cooper—lot Long Branch. 81. * .. Seabury Tredwell, by Ex’r, to John G. Reeser— land at Bhrewsburyi 825 000.......... J. Barlow Moorchead to Barab S. Wdlgamnth— lot Spring Lake. 81,200. _ James H, Bmyth to Caroline G. Reed—24 acres near Chapel Hill, 81. -8agiuclT,JiandrlCk8onc<a/.toBorlha4Wagnep —7S&-100 acres Shrewsbury township. 88.990. Isaac1 A. Wales to Martha Fisher—lacreM iddle- town township. 8500. £ . Theo. Fields, sheriff, to Therese W. Seabrbok— lot Keyport. 81,600. John 8. Hubbard to Georgo W. Davis—part of lot 600, Atlantic Highlands. 82,600. William’ll. Montanye to Lydia A; Rayfleld—lot Uenry Mom— jot at Long 152. sam e place. 83)0. : .John H VanMator to Maralla A. Ward—« lots, Mary potter et al. to Edward Handy—lot Long Branch. $300. Mary n . Smith to Millard F. Trimble—lot Mat- a w a n . $760. John Rvan to Martin Maloney —lot Long Branoh. $5,000. 1 Martin Maloney to KUen Ryan—lot Long Branoh. $3,000. John J. Mount to Ellas Morford—1 11*100 acres, Middletown township. $1. Ellas Morford to Lydia M oant-same property. $1 . ' Ellen Hubbard tt ah to Charles 11. Rook—11 aores, Shrewsbury township. $60. George O. Waterman to John C. Robbins—3 lots, Atlantia Highlands. $1*200. Edward A. Walton et al. to Tho N. J. S, Rail- road Co.—lot Monmouth Beach. 81,000 Same to Cynthia A, Hoyt-lot same plaoe. Harriet M. Borden to Cornel lus'N. B1 Isa—undi- vided Mi of land, Shrewsbury township. 81. . Cornelius N. Bliss to Harriet M. Borden- undi - vided & of land, Shrewsbury towpshlp. $1. Rachel Weeks to Elizabeth Arrowsmith—lot Freehold. $85 - ‘3ames W arner et al. to Rachol BculthoTp—lot P le a s u r e Biw*. $600. Deborah weaver to same -lot same plaoe. $1. George Hance, Jr., to Charles T. Allen—lot Oceanic. $450. M. Howard Maps et al. to Annie Munkendeck et at.—oemetery plot. 850. Christian Grimm to Allen R. Rood—lot Middle* town township- $350. Charles-c.- Bowne by Ex’r, to Annie: M. Zim - merman—lot Manasquan. $370. . David B. H03tetter by E i’ra, to Franols wag- neir lots 1930,1931,1933, Belmar. ' ----- Dealer in Georgia pine Lumber, Telephone and Dies. Oak, Ohasinut and Pii furnished at short notice, all lengths ^hd «•! piling Izefc M. M. CROSBIE, Suooossor to David Cartwright, Plain til Oninitil Mtr. Tar Paper, Sheathing i’apor, Two and Three-ply Roofing Paper. P. O, Box 809. Asbnry Farfc, N. I, A d Opoutnf; ln X>akota. “ Yon Bay you are from Dakota t” he que- ried of the mah in the ulster. “ Tea, Hir, right from Dakota.” ** Plenty of good openings out there Lots o f’em.” •MMan could do well, eh t’> ^ “HB conld.n : „ ... ' :,fCountrygrowing all thd; time, I sup P08et’* - “ Growing all the time.n ......... “ Ton—you have done well f” “ Very .well. Indeed. I wont out there threo years ago without a dollar and had to,go to tho poor house.” “ Yon. did I And how r . i‘ AM’Jh superlntendent_.0 (_l tloii ot $S0Oayear aiid found. *lt you’ve got about a thousand.dollars and lots of git up tb you, there’s an opening for a poor house in the next county which you oan step right into, and 1*11 guarantee every, Inhabitant will be with yon before spring.” ___ The Major’s Grief. -‘-Vlce-PreMident-Morton - haa._ tflken _out_ a license for the sale ot liquor ID hla new hotel at Washington. W hat do thoso RepubUeana say to that, who are always pitching into the Democrats for their alliance with the liquor interest 1 W hat a speotaole ! Tho Vice Pres- ident of the United States engaged tn the sale of liquor l—Motunouth Democrat. ELLERS!^, RHINECLIFF ON-HODaON, November 2: $ay. J ohn B. S haw. Chicago. Dbab Sir—In repk to your letter of Octo- ber 26 addressed to Mr. Morton, I beg to say. that there is no truth in the statement made in'tho telegram to the Daily jVeioa.whlcb you enclose, that tbore is a bar connected with the new building erected and owned by Mr. Mor- ton.; in W ashington, '1The building Is con- ducted as a family apartment house, apart- menttt-belug-leased by- the yeat,-and Mr. Kee - ton has never entertalued tho Idea of perm it ting any part of it tb be used as a bar. / Very reflpocttally, R. Sj.Cni^TON.ljrlvalo secretary. Worse than the Legislature at An army officer in Brooklyn on furlough from a Western camp, says the noises of tbat city and New York IUerally terrify hlm. Jje says a big battle is nothing to the tumult,ot the street. “ Imaglue a man coming right pfiC the plains,” said he, “ and havip^ my expe- rience! of yesterday evening. I was under thp junetlon^f^^elevated roads, and trying to cross tlie street.. Three trains rumbled over my.head and blev^ off steam at the samo time, A hand organ broke loose, aboy yelled pa- pers, horse cars lle.w np Klld'down, and ouo truckman ran hla wheels Into those ol another trpoftT and got into a noisy fight. It was tbo next thing to , Through the Old Dominion. A DATMQI1T BIDB OVEb'tUB DI.UB RIDQe’, AM3& A VISIT TO NATUHAT. BHIDGB—A-MODEJV’BAJL- HOAD, ON WIIIOH PA98BNOBBB TRAVEL IN COHFOHT—BiVALnT OB* o t h b r l i n e s o v e r ITS SUOOE88—THB U F. V. V.” AND ITS SEV- ERAL lUITATpRS, I It was a busy place in>wblch we found our? selves at Newport News; after leaving the steamship. 'At the dock just ahead waa a Boston steamer boing 'Unloaded of her cargo of eboes. There seemed Jo bo boxes by. the thousand, and as time meant a great deal she wav being emptied as fast as fifty colored laborers conld ran in and'out other hold with their bah*owa. We wero on the great piers of th e Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, which has ita teroainas "at!this point. Several tramp steamers were either ,tled up at the dock or anohoted close by. waiting fotcargoes of grain,' cotton) tobacco, oak staves, and other ex- ports, brought to tlde-water by the railway from tbe States of Virginia, .West Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio, ■ahd -tho.'grain-producing see Monaco f tbe great Woat,s Retnrn freight la anpplled by foreign steamers, and steamship Unesfrom Boston, Noy York and Philadelphia Back from the dock Is the grain elevator, whlehhaa a oapaolty of I,G5O,OOO bneh 0la at once. It Is 400 feet in longth, 00 feet iu width and 177 feet high. Two oovered- horizontal conveyors, each 800 feet long; run from tho felevator tojthe water,’ 0 edgo, and are able to fill two Btearners; each holding 100,000 bnahela, with bulk or bag grain in a day ahd a hal f The conveyors have 1,800 feet long on which the' grain Is carried to the bold of the vessels at the pier. Twenty cars can flndvroom for emptying their loads into the hoppers. - The grain is then carried to the upper stories and ..dumped, into over three storage bins. In ton hours 250 ears can bennloadod. -. It requires an engine of 650 bor*e-power to do all the lifting and Wdfng. The^ bnlldlng is constructed of heavy timbers with iron trusses and bracing; and is covered throughout with corrugated iron. The development of Newport News Is to be credited tp the Chesapeake Sc Ohio Railway Company, whose chief support 1s Mr. Collis P. Huntington, president of the 8outhern Paclflo and many other rail way corporations: It was Mr. Huntingtoif s adopted daughter who late 1 y married Prince Hatafeldt in Lon- don, and the wealthy father set aside two millions in caah and securltlesjas her wed- dlng portion. It Is said he owns more thah half of the town, Including the magnificent Hotel Warwick, a popular resort for both winter and summer guests, and throogh tbe varied industries oonnected with tbe railroad, pays ont a good many -thousand dollars a mdhthlu wages to both white and colored employ^. -I. '7-*. , .i.V ’ Newport News (It ia' universally called Nu*pert, with the accent on first syllable) dates its settlement away baetrto 1607, when a certain Capt. Chrlatopber Newport landed there- after being driven by a Btorm into ffiegapeake Bay, and gave the place his name, an ttfmr's ride by steamer are Hampton, Old £o!m Comfort, also named by Capt Newport, Ncrfblk and, Portsmouth, which we bad left that same morning The water route is through Hampton Roads, a aort ot pocket made by the James ahd Elizabeth rivers, and Chesapeake bay. This Is the locality made famous by Capt, ErlcsBon’s Monitor and tho rebel ram McrrinAc In tbe famous fight to a finish during tbe rebellion, In which the Mon* (for put her antagonist to sleep. All around are reminders of tbe late unpleasantness. Tbe Naval Hospital at Portsmouth, the stone dry docks and tbe Gosport Navy Yard at Norfolk, and farther towards the bay . ihe parapets and guns of Fort Monroe, wllh Hampton and its training schools for colored youth and In- dians, and tbe immense Soldiers’ Home and cemetery, where thousand* of heroea He burled, are places at which many, days could be passed. ln interested sight-seeing and ex - ploration, but our time is limited and we take the morning train for scenes farther west through tbe Old Dominion. Three cars were .nearly filled wltfc . ibe Steamer’s passengers, the largest part^cpm- prising thdsgt:who'- had 8 etf6ndfcl 6 e^ tlcketa Iff^ Vho were relegated to the einoker. Among them were the weil dret^ed foreign oonple mentioned ln^tbo preceding letter as traveling in the steamer’s steerage .1 Another car was filled with Sir Knights on their way to the Conclave at Washington. They were representatives ol all the neighboring Com- mkndorlea from Old Point to ’way ^down the blB.mai Swampjpanal. _zA rldetbrpughjBaBtem Virginia along the line orthls ,comparatively hew road is almost as exciting as going through tbe pines of South Jeraey. Tbero Is really nothing of scen^y, very few' bouses more protentlous than a one-story cabin with a log and plaster chimney on the outside, and none orthe slgns of th ^ die and western Virginia It seemed as early breakfast on theBteamer. Intoadollcate cup tho spout bf the pot was tilted and out fibwed a, pale liquid. Perhaps in bis hurry to got away from tho restaurant, on ’the plat-, form bo had grabbed the wrong pot t “ No, sab,” he said, in answer to the ^question whether It wasn’t tea. Three Sugars and' a finger of cream, a . wedge of cake and fifty cents* worth ot sandwiches, and he passed op to serve others, leaving hla cup, saucer and spoon In trust till hia retnrn. A very hlce idea, Indeed, to bnve yonr lunoh brought into the’train In suohi presentable, shape; a -little bettor than running a_block up or down the platform for a cup of coffee and be nabbed 'just aa you start back with it and a demand' mado^for a quarter bn deposit for tbo safe return oi cup and spoon. That was all. The coflfce tjad been too hurriedly made j it lacked eVen tbo flavor of the, genuine borry; the sandwiches were' braced with dry slices of haui and were not buttered; the nioerlooklog cake was “ raised*’ with soda—and plenty of It. We made out with tbe rematnderof a,£ox ot confeotlons and a drink of water and for the noxt hour feasted on the landscape. Wo passed two “ cote house” towns, which had the usual look. Everybody seemed to havo abundance of leisure. There appeared to be none of the hurry arid inad rush to accumulate wealth.that'can be noticed about Point Pleasant or Hoboken. There were sev- eral washouts made" by the great September Btorm which were -undergoing rebuilding. Two big bridges bad been. whlBked away by JhO.ruahlng-SvaterSr-and-thecompanywaa wisely repladlcg with stone. Tho piark of mudreaohed up trefcigunka eight to twelve feet.. Just then the streams~that had been so turbulent were so low that a small drove of thirsty cattle could have drank them dry. In the early afternoon the * train slowed up before entering a rather busy looking town. Along one slde^oOie track were scattered a iber of cabins, and from.nearly every one came a colored auntie bearing either In her hands or on top of her head a tray of eat- ables. By the time the trattt came to a full stop the windows and platforms were be- qlege(L—Those-who-had - traveled that way before were not'stow In throwing- up'.tbe windows or hurrylog outside for a closer Inspection of the home-made blsbulte, fried ehicken, pies, cakes and fruit Two bis- cuits three inches In diameter and a third of a. ohicken ftled in crisp fatter weresold for_a quarter, _w Uh a - p ie - for ten - cents, three immense apples for five cents, and.very good coffee for the Bame. In the Bpace of two minutes these enterprising caterers nearly emptied tnefr trays—Or at least tho hnngry. passengers did—and while some squatted op th^grennOo.coanf_ap.-th«lr^receipt 8r-other8 hurried off home to be ready foi^the next- train, i.There is nothing iffthe way oTeatlng, tbat can go ahead of fried ohloken when it, Is short-jolnta. were unusually tender^ sweet and Juicy. That particular section of the ral Iroad will be rememberedIn'future and patronised again If we though the colored folks were the prinClFal occupants ot iho soli, and it is easy to con- jecture the sort of habitation the majority of them would' be satisfied with-. _A patch ot stunted corn, perhaps a garden where vegeta- bles might have been, a pig and always two or three dogs, describes tho most of tho^'planta tion»V passed ln a three hours’?.?jdo to tbe cgpltal. There were aome feibeptions, U is true,.; ot bouses that were once probably counted grand, but the samo genera) air of Bbfftlessness pervaded them, and all were sadly in need of paint, new fencea. now barns and a general scratcliTng wlth a epllnt broom. Richmond is 74 miles from salt water, but 150 miles if yon sail np tho James River. There are so many twists and turna in it tbat a a taper must travel two or threej times round to como out straight at'the end of the journey. It is- at tho head of navigation of tiie James, and waa tho capital of the Confed- erate States during thelf ,brief existence. It has always been the capital of Virginia, I t Is a city of considerable also, with lots of factor rlep, famous, buildings and beautiful resi- dences. Old St: Joh.n’8 Church stands to-day pretty much aa it did ono hundred years ago, when I t was the fashionable plaoe of worship. It was in tbls church that the. Immortal Pat- rick Henry, in a burst of righteous indigna- tion against English domination exclaimed, “ Give me liberty or give mo death.” ’ Wash- ington once had headquarters at'Rfphmond arid thousands of Northern soldlera . wlll re member another notable im titu tlotfbf the city duritfg the warv-Llbby Prison—whjoh has lately hben removed to ^Chicago and set np as acuriOBity. -, ,, ? During a. wait of half an hour at the station a spruce and polite Colored lad came through the train bearing a tray. On It was a silver outfit commouly used at the end ot a table where the lady of tho house a|to. Undbr snowy napkin that seemed related to his snowy jacket and apron were piles of sand- wiches and wedges of cake. Would wo have cofieeT Certainly. We had hungered and baa . iho appearance of two mountains that rise porpondloularly In Ihe air, and at a height of ovor two hundred feet thb two are joined with an orch that Is a patl of both. On top is a roadway, and ahy one driving or walking over It would coyer suspect the existence of euoh a freak of nature directly beoeath. The sides are rqpgh and unoven rock, of various shades of color, throogb which water drips continually, aa though tho great weight ac tually squeezed it out like julco from an orangp. . 1 . .. The region' about Natural Bridge, it is claimed, was onee surveyed by George Wa 6b- ington. At any rate, bio initials are fou nd in- ,a prominent place on the rooky ejde, and hfa example of leaving a mark behind has been followed by every visitor. Some, initials, a p - pear several feet up tho side, as though lad- ders had been procured;to asslBt In climbing higher than any one else. The walk for a mile up the ravine is at the most romantic de- scription. In places It narrows toil few' feet, and then wldena_Out 'ti> ' a hundred or more. Between the mouhtalns is a shallow stream that flows towards the bridge, now In a thin sheet over smooth‘rook or tumbling among boulders; or over stone dams. It winds in and out among the trees, underneath rustic bridges, and reflects the iraagea-oLrooky pro - jections or giant trees ori ttfe mountain side, Saltpetre Cave and Loat; £lver are’alon^thh pathway., The former Is made'by ah age pro^ jeotlng rock of*ilmeBtoh§ over the side of a email hill,; Tq enter it‘’^60 must flrst go up beforeyoa caa go dow d^ and once under the overhanging cliff there is small spaco jn which to move abont. Fjoip a hole in a rock farther up the ravine there Issues the sound of rush- ing waters. A closer Inspection, at therlsk of mashing Ip the top of your hat, reveals the basin 1njo which water Sows from some un- known source and disappears again, no -one knows where. The water Is olear. and pure, and a drink of it, according to the printed sign, insures the return of the thlrdty tourist. The view of the bridge and Its approaches on tho return brings out other notable points at first unnoticed. Under thb crown of the arcb", outlined In stone of a darker color than the surroondinga, is atalr deelgn- of an eagle with outstretched win^e. Bolne people have thought It was artificial and the keeper of tbe lodge 8 ald*a traveler once took him aside aud asked, him, confldemlal y; Mhow in thunder they got scaffolding up bight enough to paint it.” Ddriug-the summer months, whon the faioteU are orowded. the bridge and the ravine are Illuminated-at night by electricity, fire- works and calcium lights, with a band _of music to make things lively. If the view from below Ib grarid, that -from above is indescrir bable. On PulpitRock, a little distance from theroadway, the full depth of the bridge Ib aoen to ad vantage,as-well - as-the ravine,-foij neqtly half a mllo, A stout fence right upon properly prepared, and. these’drucSBtleka and “tbo^ouier edge of rook enablca you to hold on In nccurhyand look straight to the bottom, between shivers, and graBp the full meaning of a fall of over two hunlred feot, and alaft'to Wheredo thoploigot Eighteenbllllona of them are manufactured every year. Aa tbey . ?. ...^ are never worn out, wbat becomea oj tb « n tf thlreted ever since leaving tho pilot biscuit at height of tho bridge than, cold Bguroa. It sloepera at night, That part of the railroad whtch been traveling on alnce mornlng^?as the main line from Newport News vla*^tcbmohd, at which point a leased line, known as the Rich- mond <fc Alleghany^branch, turns southwest along tho courso of the upper Jamba,River to Lynchburg and hnitea wjtb tbs main stem at Clifton Forgo, a short1 .distance from the West Virginia line. Early, last Spring the C.hesa peake &ObJo road made^ arrangements with connecting lines to reaph Washington, Balti- more, Philadelphia and New York,.-Char - lottesville la tbb junction of tbe Virginia Mid- land, over which, passengers to and from the north must'(ravel, . puly. q n ^ t^ a ea^h^waj^ makea tbo throogb trip from from New York-the “ ^ ^ -yV Xlnulted.’’ Passengers by other trains change cars, unless occupying a Pullman. Half an hour waa consumed at tbls'pretanUoua place in waiting tor tho Washington train, which some put to good u&eln eating dinner In the comfortablo restaurant at the' station. W ith every seat taken, our train' pulled out somewhat late, and began its climb by easy grades np the mountains. At some high points thd v.lew of dlBtant ridges, farms and .valleys was.magnl- Qceht. -The day was clear and bright, and tbo air bracing and cool at that altitude, and the rldo became deeply Interesting by~r«as0n of tbe scenery on either side-ot-the road, Three hours after leaving Charlottesville we reached Clifton Forgo, and there put.up for the night, expecting to go on to White Sulphur Springs in the fhornlng^and have daylight in which to look over this wonderful regionbut jthtl train happened to be late and we altered our program by advice of a gentleman who bad_ but. reoently been^tWte, and found very little to interest him after tho closing of the big hotel. , . .. - . The next Important resort to White Sulphur In that section was the Natural Bridge. It Is reached from Cllfton Porge-atia'the Weat by ' the Richmond & Alleghany branch of thp Chesapeake & Ohlo^andttf thero la another section pT road in thfs courjfry that can equal this In mountain an«T water ecenery, U has never been nfy good fortune to travel oyer It. It follows the windings of the Janies, river through a beautiful valloy with the towi-rlng peaks of the Blge Ridge reachln^above -1ho- ciouda. The rId^of oyer two h^c|tji,waa,jJnfl whloh we-sbail never forgeC At Natural Bridge station we took a stage for Forest Inn, some two or Uireomlles up the sides of the mountains, and had a very jolting ride. The road was bard and rooky and the toam quite frlaky, so that,even the ekillfal colored driver couldhU ’prevent an occasional lurch Into a hole.or h bump against projeciIng atones. At the old-fashioned;luq wood fires were blazing in.huge chimneys, and the chill of tho drive was soon, dispelled.A walk lb: theL bright sunshine restored a healthy circu- lation, ahd gave, at jtbe sarae time a view;of, tho preUy surroUndfnga of the. hotel . To meet she increased patronage of tourists, t wb! oihermotels were constructed and are ustd as annoxeS tb Forest Iun, with the manamrnie'rit and- lining room4 ’at the latter. ‘ They are, per«hed hfgh up oa lhg aldes of« a natural bowl, while at the bottom are walks. leading down Into tho ravine that passes under Nat- ural Bridge. The hotels, and* hundreds of acres of land comprising the property, are owned by Col. Peyton, who has a apendid residence here, and aK> enclosed- by neat fencea and 1al<2 out like a park.; The descent is gradual until the bpd of tbe shallow brook is reached, and then a turn to' the righj; along a smooth foot path brings you faoe tb face with one of the wonders of tho. world, It takes sovoral minutes to properly oomprehend^ the maflslve oharaotor ot the fetraoture “ not mado with hands ” It is 915 foot high, 100 feet wide with an arch 00 feet wide. Guido books Bay tbat Trinity Church, Ip New York, could bo placed undor It, steeple and all; and there would bo rooih to spare. That assertion may give a better notion of the width and happen to travel through-V^irfflnla* -appreciatesomewhat the sensation of being t of the raiiroad~wfrtch we bad) Exposition aud looking upon the 'BighfB spread out beneath. “ Among the returning visitors that day was a gentleman and wife WJjo. ha<i visited other notable localities throughout the country. •Thoy gavjQflt as their opinion thaAhe scenery about Natural Bridge and along the railrqad Been. At A. o'clook wo look the ride down the mountaltf^trthtwere jolted and tumbled abont quite lively. Holding on to the carriage arid bracing the feet to keep pefpendfoular made muscles ache. Clifton Forgo was reached at ;7.S0, after a dollghtful trip oh the r&iiroad, in which the many namml beauties of tho coun- try were Increased by a charming sunset.j Tbe air was keen, and tho soft coal fires in grates and stoves at, the hotel were decidedly cum- tortable. Another late train spoiled the chances of continuing our journey farther south, and aftor a night of sound sleep and a hearty breakfast,' we turned towards tbe Atr lanilo aa passengers on the “ Fast Flying Vir- ginian.” , The morning was wlntJy?, FrpBt covered the ground and honsetops like-snow, and the' vapor and smoke' hid the mountains only a short dlstanoQ away. Bot the sun oarne up bright and warm and soon melted tho frost., Onr journey was as comfortable as tho supe- rior conveniences of the Limited could make It, and It was with regret that we left It at Charlottesville to continue its way by another routo, .while wo changed cars, for Richmond and Old roint; - " -'TSomo knowledge of rallroad traveling con- Brma mo In the belief that next to a private car pn tv fast tram, this Limited affords more conveniences to ordinary passengers than any railroad^ between the East and-the West. The man who planned and carried out iho Idea of giving the patrons ot the road a fast train To a family or party going west or coming eas{, tbo next ttiipgio tbe luxurious sleepers la the day coach on tho F, F. V. On this, aa on all tho other trains of the Chesapeake & Ohio, a colored pyrter^as ch&rgo of the cats and looks closely after their cleanliness. At Intervals be makea tho rounds witb a broom and dustpan, and no bits of papor or other refuse are permitted on floor, seats or win- dow Bills. At stations bo Is equally attentive In assisting passengers into or out of the cars, taking charge of packagoa or satchels, and procuring good seala if there happens to bb a crowd. Conductors and brakemcn are gen-.- ) tlemanly and polite. They answer questions, civllly^frad tre^t passengers af. guests rather ,. , , 7- than Intruders or nuisances,, With, suoh un- usual conyenlencos and accommodatloris, such unselfiBh attention to their patrnng, u >n no wonder that tho C. & O. Is looked at with Jgaloua eyes by other roads, and that dupll-'- catp trains and traveling fabllltl^s are au- nouneed as p ^ ro f the ralI ^echedules of twd ' ^ “ ^ or three competing linos. \ This letter must end with, the close pf our Say’s' ride, which was at Old Point’ and Its great hotel, the Hygeia. A brief stay, and we were off again up tho eastern shore of r Virginia, after crossing Chesapeake bay, ahd * thence into Delaware for a week's rest. March of the Pan-Americans. ^ Half a speoohf half a meal, Half a sleep—onward - j Into more food and talk ‘~— Bode the one hundrod. ' “ Come, Pan-Americana ; • Come, and let’s shake your ban's,” ' . 80. on to stow and shake - . Rode the one hupdred. “ Come, Pan-Americans I” o Did they reject tho plans r ... Not though they all were full -And j heir vesta sundered, * Thelra not to make reply, inelrs not to reason why, . Theirs but to eat and fly. , , Into the natural gas •» Bode the ono hundred.- , . Banquets tb right of thorn, ■ -< _ . ■: 7Banquots to left of them, ....... - ...: Banquets In front of them,- t--- While a world wondered. —« Stormed at with word and wine, ■ - - ._ Bravely thoy strive to shine, ^ But eating shortens breath And men are talked to death— --- , Suffering one hundred." • • - ' ' . ' ' Oo/umbue Despatch. Some Reasonsfor Defeat. . 0 in gnawer to the universally expressed wonder at the _success_of tho Democratic ticket last .week throughout the State, the following extracts from different papera may tbrow Bottle light on the reasons for ft: ;;!l .'_i~ ^ (Newark Evening Newa.y There Is^o need of casting abouf^oFVBry'- oauBe ot tbe.palpablo vlctoir that oamatoih«r^ Democracy. The Stato la-Demooratlov in«irw_l>v' - a TS?;-■',,n.°w aw d bailor which .fc Z swollfldihe Abbett.vote to a positive compli- ........ meui .i 8J Qe Iai'ge,y to the popularity of the • ' candidate, aha. In a measure, to the Issues' involved. The somersault returns from Es- sex, ^Iorrls, Monmouth, the diminishing Ro- publican vote In Middlesex, and tho tremen- douB boom for tho Democratic standard- bearer In Hudson—all districts where popula- tlon is dense and nationality mixed—thn Ba. ^ . 1 . ■' . I • . . iuu., #ui. iiu iuooo, mu.ugui 111 nuw Jersey loading to It Was the grandest they .bad ever, tfonld be lesfi ono aided ond more Interesting Thnu nnnm trt Kn lmna.nlnnn I ______ {State Gazette.), Tbe primary cause of tbe defeat the Repub- licans bavo suffered in tbls State is tbe un- ileasant fact that thero aro from fivo to ton 1bouaand moro Democrat* than Republicans tn New Jersey. If tho leaders could fcy any contrivance, in tho way of mbral suasion, ratsbono, or somo other antidote for Bourbon- lam, get rid of these, tbo.light m Now Jorsey lkr^nl/1 Kn Innb Ahf, .. ... 1 _______ . ____ . I Thoy seem to bo Impervious to moral or any other kind of suasion. They aro stolidly and Immovably unresponsive to tho most seduc- tive arguments, aud stiffen tbelr nooks, llko Pharoah and his host, to tho appeals ot rea- son add tbe warnings of experjonco. (,Monmouth Inquirer.) > Boodle. '(*. ' {Long Mratich'Times.) , ' Hero in Now Jersey there Is reason for tho question to be asked, Is a candidate ever judged by his unsavory political record 1 Aa regards the latb gubernatorial candidates tbe anBwer could be given : No, not If thoealoon element an<2f Hudson county repeaters Count for anything. Unfortunately for New Jersey politics they do counf—every tlmo. (Red B a n k jfcegistcr.) The election takes the temperance question gut of politics entirely. Last year It was -finown that the Democrats would repeal the local option law In case they got In power, JVfany Democrats who said they were In favor of local option professed to believe that their party. It successful, would not repeal the law. The Democrats were successful and tho law was promptly repealed This year the Re- " f mbllcans pledged themselves‘to reenact the ocal option law in case they carried tho leg- islature. They would unquestionably bave '- dono ihis, but the battlo went against them It Is as true oa it ever was that tho poople .of each community should be allowed to govern ^ themselves ap to licensing or exclndlng the .... liquor business. But tho Dqmocrafib patty Ik opposed to this, and the votes have shown that the members of tbelr party, almost with- out exception, are opposed to the local option law. This fact was still farther emphasized by-the vote of Warnm county, which, though It voted for local option a yea* ago, gave an increased majority for the men who bad voted to repeal It. ^ With luxurious coachcs^ and the conveniences of a Pullman, hgda level head He evidently believed that tlie people were entitled to pro- tection and assistance after they bad bought their tickets and ptaceW’memselvea undor the charge of the company by day "and night. The carson this train are the best that Pali man can build. The baggage and smoking car caTrloaacompleteelectrfc-outiit,rwlth-8teana^ engine fed fpHU the locomotive, a dyU'^tUo o f sufficient power to supply Incandescent lamps throughout the train and conu<?oted also with Btorage batteries under,each car. These stor- age batteries hold sufBoieut electricity to sup- ply ion lam p sfo r olghi to u rs without drawing on the dynamo, In case of Ia,ck of steam from the locomotive or accidental delays. Tbe day coach la as long as a sleeping car, with slx- whool trucks, and of extra heavy build for. steadiness and stability. At both ends are convenient toilet rooms and lavatories, with a r«jom^moklpg, apartment tor gentlemen, rendorlwj; It unnecessary for thom to go' Into another |ar. for a whiff of a” pipe or ciiar. Each en4ya sepai?^ted_from the outer vesti- bule by {pjswlnglng door, bo that draughts of cold air no not annoy t^e passengers. B- bind the day fcoabh ia the dining car, a trliftapb ot arUaUc decoration and finish In viyod- work, 4vpholstery and carylnga. The cm pine islp.kbeplng.with the lavish, expendltucl on the interior of tho oar. So popular havo/jbese cara buconje on^t&g^jpute through Virginia that 1 learned it waa a popular; notion v,ith a good many people to board the iralnAand 1 travel to tbe next station fpr the sa^>'of eating a bre^^faat br dinner that does'hot bella the nam ll Sceoery and travpjlng faolli- ties are unexcelled on this road, but the hotels are riot In keepings consequently,, the dining car on the Limited is a great ‘ ipstiiutlori; In addition to the three oars mentlonod, tbore are usually throo. or four sloeplhg oars tbat make up the train. One reason for the Imme- diate success of this new llue‘wasthe removal The Fault Is the People's, tst There aro grounds for the severe crltiolsm which eome of the Republican newspapers are Indulging at the expense ot the Legisla- ture electees on Tuesday. In the main the in- coming body wlirnol’lw an Impro its predecessor, and that organisation' had ihbJ.nnsavbry_Mputation.* of bringing!-New^p 'Jersey into ridicule. In many respebts the . new (ls the counterpart of tbe old assomblage oit law-makors - A hasty judgment would . seem to confirm the impression that in the matter ot intelligence, integrity, legislative ability aud respectability, the incoming body Ib not superior to, if Jt be the poor, of tho oiv ganlzatlon of last year. ' T ‘ - Be this inference correct or falsa the.iW Bpbnalbility for the fact as It may e^ist Is not } to be charged to the men who will sit lu the^ Seriate and HduBe. It m ay; nc^t be pleasant to affirm the truth, but the fact incontesta- ' Mo tbat the public Is entirely responsible for , tho men who are honored with seats in the Uw making body. It la commonly said that tho legislative assemblages—from Congress to towushlp boarde—do not represent tho hvera go. Intelligence of tbo communities t li a r. ‘ rlcct them. In Now Jersey, so common te tbe slander, It would not bo complimentary to claim tbat tho average Integrity, and Irtclli- gerice.la on a dead level witb {be Legislative representations. Yet It will bo a sovero strain to.the sensibilities of tbo super-moral class to Inform them that they and the pooplo of coarser sensibilities aro roHpoualblo tor lbo cbaraoter of tbo administrative bodies of iho State. Thoy are elttior guilty of tbo offeno * of supporting at tho polio candidates whom thoy know aro not op to tho standaftl of in- tulllgijffceand integrity, or by the sin of neg- lect lot events take thoir course without a S rotesfc at the primaries or at the polls. -If liihonest or Incompetent men aro elected-to . office It Is because a mujorlty of tho peoplo. j are so politically twfatcd-.t'hat they cannot be honest WUb' tbelr hotter judgments.-^iViwark News. •• T "Wifo -(to drOnkeiT husband)—I don’t see bow you bad tho. faco tbls morning to say otjtho restriction of additional faroa 8 oxttDtod | that you wero going to a prohibition moeUng v oo othor UmltMl traina. Tb.ro aro no oxfra , ‘o ^ nd_ We„ (h,0) M,t, „ , d|dn,t ohargea except, for moala and berths In the , to tb© meeting i’vo (Wo> been priUlng doWn rum just thb samo. ' v J

Vane, C M & Co. BOND AND MORTGAGE A. Co.Dyspepsia Advertising is the best Lu bricant for rusty arid slow moving business,__J!ry it. GEORGE W. LEE JOBBING HOUSE CARPENTER Hardwood work

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Page 1: Vane, C M & Co. BOND AND MORTGAGE A. Co.Dyspepsia Advertising is the best Lu bricant for rusty arid slow moving business,__J!ry it. GEORGE W. LEE JOBBING HOUSE CARPENTER Hardwood work

_ _ — —. . . it 1 1 ® COL/T .

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Vol. X IV ASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1889;

J A . W . H E T R IC K , M. D. .

H om coopatblo Physic ian a n d S urgeon . O o t. C ookm an & H angs a vs ., A sbnry P a rk , N.

H o a rs : u n ti l 10 a . m ., a n d a f te r 4 p . m .

J J 6 . K INM ONTH, M. D.,

C o rn er G rand a n d ABbury A venuea," O tflce Ilo u ra—7 t o 0 a . in ., l t o 2 p . m . ,0 t o 8 p . tn .

TXK. BRU CE 8 . KEATOR,^ UomcBOpathlo Physic ian a n d S urgoon . G ra d u a te o f b o th sohools.

C or. A sb u ry a v e n u e a n d Borgh s t r e e t H ours—U n til 9 a . m ., 7 to 0 p .m .T e le p h o n e oonneo tlons. ’

F . PA W LEY ,

i > E a t n e a ? , ; . " * *61B B an g s a v e ., ‘ A ab u ry .P ark . N . J .

J ) R . S. T . SLOCUM, > •

D EN T IST ,Offlce—204 M ain S t , o p p o s ite R a ilro a d S ta tio n ,

G as ad m in is te re d . -A sb u ry P a rk , N . J .

A. s . BURTON, O. D. S. I. O. BUBTOK,*D. D. S.A. 8. BUST__________£$U R T O N B RO TH ER8,

B e a l d e n t D e n t i s t s , . .D onn. B u ild ing , 605 C ookm an ave .,: A sbury P a rk .

N ow Y o rk Offlco—C9 W eat 83th st."G a s ad m in is te re d . A p p o in tm en ts m a d e b y tele* ,, .p h o n e o r b y m all. H o u rs : 0 a . m . t o 8 p . m .

'W C m ’o f . *. ZO ZO ” —th o n e w p re p a ra tio n fo r c le an s in g a iid p re se rv in g th e T e e th . —

n u n t ntTOAHB.i ■ J. T. HAWKltfS'. .----f JA W K IN S & DURAND,

A tto rn ey s-a t-L aw , S o lic ito rs’ As M asters in C h an .o e ry , "Mikado B u ild ing , C o o k m a n A v.,-

\ A sb u ry P a rk , N . «T.

J 8 A A C C. K EN N ED Y , h

A tto rn ey -a t-L a w , S o lic ito r, M a s te r ln C hancery v . . a n d N o ta ry P u b lic . ,

S pbo la l a t te n t io n g iv en t o ex a m in a tio n o f T itle s , &o.

, \';i Offloe h f C o o k 's B u ild ing ,.. -- : A sbnry P a rk , N e w Je rsey :

g t t s i n m ( S a r a s .

ROBERT T. GRAVATT;’ v " D l iU B m

Stoves, Heaters, Ranges,T IN W A R E , Ao. ,1

Cookman av., near Bond st, ’ AHBTJET PABK, N. J.

I l l H D O flH i, L M D E M , BBTTERS, M .

COPPER, TIN A ID SHEET IkOR WORK OF A U C IR D i.

|3 F “ FIret-clas8 w o rk a t lo w r a t c h e t .

LIPPINCOTT, T A I L O R

737 Cookman Ave. Mien’s Furn.ish.ings

0 A V 1 D HABVBY, J r . ,

A tto m e y -a t-L a w , Boll ol to r , M a s te r a n d E x a m in e r in C hanoery , N o ta ry P ub lic .

A sb u ry P a rk , N . J .

Q .E O R G K W . BYRAM, * ~ 7 ^ " ;

: A tto rn ey -a t-L a w a n d S o lic ito r in C hancery ,- ■ A ddress P . O. B o x 1004, A abury P a rk , N . J .

HBNBir M. N bvjus, ‘ C ounsello r a t L aw .

E n m n rn W ilrok ,A tto rn e y a t L aw .

■VTKV1U8 A W IL 8 0 N ,L a w O f f lo e a r ^

R E D B A N K ,N .J .

JpR A N K V . BO D IN B.

A R C H I T E C T ,— M IKADO BUILD ING.

■ ASBURY PA RK , N . J ,

M R S . R O S A L I N E V . R E P L E Y ,

. 807 F o u rth av e n u e , A sb u ry P a rk . 7 _ TEACHER OF PIJtylO; URBAN AND THEORY. .

f o r e ig n a n d A m erican A ngering. Term&—$15{ot SO lessons, p ay a b le a t 10 th le sso n . -------

H. B. JOHNSON, Practical Watchmaker,

D e ale r In F in e W atches, J e w e lry , S p ecta c les Ao. W a tch es a n d J e w e lry re p a ire d a t C ity Prioes.

M a in s t r e e t , n e a r O o o k m a h ’ a v o n u e ,

The Old and Reliable Brand.

Vane, C M & Co.An Immense M od Hand,

All PesiraMB Shafles of Color.N .E . Buchanon & Co.

S o l e A g e & ts f o r S t a t e o f N e w J e r s e y .

tS f p r i c o a lo w t o p a in te r s a n d C onsum ers, LVbetal arrangtom enta m a d e w ith ' d e a le rs .

MAIN S T . AND ASBURY AVE.

A. Co. —M an u fac tu re r^ o f; a n d w h o le sa le an d

v ' re ta i l d e a le rs ln

j

■■■■■: FEA TH ERS, Etc. FACTORY NO. 143 MAIN ST.

? U p S ta irs , ■;

Ronovutinp Mattresses a Specialty.' '" T e le p h o n e C onnection .

In a l l I ts b ra n c h e s . H ard w o o d fin ish ing , G rain ­in g , C alo lm lnlng , &<s,

f is tlm a te a fu rn ish e d o n ap p lica tio n . 'L . B ox 2183, O cean G ro v e, N . J .

H. C . IWIARRYOTT,Contractor and Builder,E s tim a te s fu rn ish e d fo r ev e ry d e sc rip tio n o f

w o rk . Jo b b in g a t te n d e d to p rd m p tly . R esidence— •

Cornwall Are. and Emory St.,Lock Box 716 A S B U R Y P A B K . Iff. J .

SANITARYPLUMBING« - c o . ^ ,

Now occupy th e 'n e w b ric k b u ild in g

M a t t i s o n A v e n u e , n e a r R o n d S t r e e t ,

w h e re th ey a re p re p are d to e s tim a te o n a l l k in d s

OF FLUUB1N0,BAS AHD 5TEAM PITT1HB.T hey do no n e o th e r th a n flret-elwB w ork , a n d

a l l p lu m b in g w ill be d o n e a f te r th e m o s t approved s a n ita ry m eth o d s. _ ■ „

Bepnlrlng promptly attended to.

COOK HOWLAND,Architect & Builder.

B uild ing planuM oCjulod a n d a l l w o rk p ro m p tly d o n e .

Offloo ln C ook’H B u ild ing , M ata s t r e e t a n d O ookm an avonuo . A sb n ry P ark .

FliKD . B. Q oW D Y . CD AS. H . PITOHER.

GOW DY & PITCH ER,Carriages, and Manufactu-

• ~ rers of*-Harness. ...'B e p o s i t o r l e a - A s b n r y P a r k . R o d B a n k

a n d T o m a R i v e r .

JO H N HUBBARD, 700 F if th av e n n e .

A LFRED H A RT, .405 Sew ell avenue.

HUBBARD & HART,CONCRETE W A LKS,

Cellar. Bottoms and Curbing.P . O. B ox 678 A N B U R Y P A B K . S . J .

ADON LIPPIN CO TT,Contractor & Builder

• .. - m —P la n s a n d e s tim a te s ch e erfu lly fu rn ish ed .

Jo b b in g in a l l b ra n c h e s p ro m p tly a n d ca re fu lly a t to n d o d to .

R esid en ce a n d S hop, . . • ,007 M ain Bt., bo t. 1 s t a n d gd, A gbury P tfrk, N . J,

A. A. TA YLO R , : Mason and Builder.

B rick lay in g a h d P la s te r in g In a J J b ra n c h e s of M aso n ry workTT

J o b b in g p ro m p tly a t te n d e d to .P . O. B ox 697.. Offlce, .783 M attiso n av e n u e .

JACOB DOLL, Jr.,P R A C T I C A L

Pipir Hisjit u ia n d g il t w a ll p a p e rs , d ec o ra tio n s , sh ad e s a n d

(o fix tu re s ln th e co u n ty , a t lo w eat p rides . A lso W A IL P i c t w r e \ W o o ld ln K * a n d F r a m e s ,

p a p e r l l a n i t e r ’s S u p p l i e s , E t c .F ra m e s m ad e t o o rd e r a t s h o r t n o tic e . T h e

b e s t N ew Y o r k 'a n d P h ila d e lp h ia p a p e r h a n g ers em ployed . E s tim a te s fu rn ish e d ftff 'p ap ern an g * 1ng a n d b a lsom lp lng . ; „

5 4 1 C ookm an av en u e ,A djotntnjc C om m orola l pA B K > N _ j '

!»SS

Pillsw ill n o t o h ly g iv e .e aso , b u t p e rm a n e n tly c u re In d ig es tio n . D yspopeia, o r a n y R astrlo tro u b le .

For Sale bv all Druggists.

D ysp ep sia

Advertising is the best Lu­

bricant for rusty arid slow

m oving business,__J!ry it.

G EO R G E W. L E E JOBBING HOUSE CARPENTER

H ard w o o d w o rk a s p e c ia l ty : o rd e rs p ro m p tly a t te n d e d to a n d w o rk d o n e in firs t-c lass m an n er.

M a n u fa c tu re r o f S to rm D oors, W in d o w an d D o o r S cre en s. O rdera lo f t a t D. H. W ycboff’s p a in t sto ro , o r re ce iv e d by m ail, w ill b e p ro m p tly a t te n d e d to . —-*

S hop—N . E . c o r . A sb u ry a v e . a n d M ain e t . R es idenco—N .W . co r . C o o k m a n a v e . a n d B ond st.

P i O. BOX 006, ASBURY PA R K , N . J .

M O N M O U T H

A S B U R Y P A R K , N E W J E E 8 E Y .

Ca p it a l , $100 ,000 .A u th o rize d b y la w to a c t a s E x d o u to r, Admin*

Is tfa to r , G u a rd ian , T ru s to e , A ssignee , R eceiver. A gont, e tc . , a n d f o r th e fa ith fu l p erfo rm an o o of o n su e n d u tie s i t s c a p ita l s to o k a n d su rp lu s a ro liab le ; a lso t o R ece ive a n d E xeouto 1111818 o f e v e ry desc rip tio n , fro m th e C ourts; C orp o ra tio n s a n d in d iv id u a ls. -4 •• ••

A ll T ru s t F u n d s a n d In v e s tm e n ts aro inscribed in th o n a m e a o f t h e o w n e rs o f th e p ro p e rty hold in tru s t , a n d a r e k e p t se p a ra te a n d a p a r t fro m tho a s se ts o f th e C om pany. •

I n t e r e s t A l l o w e d o u D e p o M ltf l.B a t e D e p o s l t . V a a i | i | in ' f i r e a n d b a r e

g l u r p r o o x b b l l d l n g , c o rn e r M attison avonuo a n d B ond s t r e e t . ' '

W illa re c e ip te d fo r a n d k e p t w ith o u t ch a rg e .ISA A C C. K EN N RD Y . P re s id e n t.D R. B. 8 . KEA TOR, Y loe-Pres’t.H . H . YARD. S ecre ta ry .A . C. TW IN IN G . T re a su re r .

% D IREC TO R S : .G. D . W . VROOMt T re n to n , N . J .W . J . HARIOtiON. L a k e w o o d , N . J . ,O LIV ER H . BRO W N , 8L_. H EN RY H . YARD, O cean

»nlO, N i J ,ih, N .J .u m i A l u . u v o au uoouu,

J . H. BUCHANAN, S pring L ak e , N . J . J 0 8 E PH M oD ERMOTT, F ree h o ld , N . J .I iv o o ru JBUOMVMWi »i .n . B. PIE R SO N , P h ilad elp h ia , Pa.GEO . F. K ROEHL, Arv ”

•>. BRU CE S . KEA TOR, M.A . C. T W IN IN G ,ISAAC C. K EN NEDY.

A sbury P a rk , N . J . M .D., {‘ ■

MOSEY TO 1.0A1S

BOND AND MORTGAGEL o an s m a d e on im p ro v ed p ro p e r ty 'i i i sum s o f

$ 1,000 a n d u p w a rd s . HGood, Safe Loans. Reasonable Charges.T o ho n -resid en ts’o f A sbury P a rk w o u ld re fe r to

F irs t N a tio n a l B an k , A abury P ark —G. F , K roohl, - p re sid e n t; A . C. T w ining , cashier.-'A sbury P a rk a n d O cean G rove B ank—H . C. Win-

so r . p re s id e n t, E . E . D a y to n , cash ie r. M onm outh T ru s t a n d S afo D ep o sit Co.—Is a a c C.

K ennedy , p re s id e n t.J a m e s A. B radley .-A sbury P a rk , N. J .W hitm an & Phelps, W holosalo D ry G oods, 40-48

G rand s t ., N.- x .D . E. C onverse , p re s ld o n t C lifton M ills, 8 .XV A. J . M ilstead , so p ’t T ailassoo F a lls M ills, A la. A m os C la tk i G lobe M ills . A u g u sta , G a ..

LAURU8 LOOMIS. -ca ro M onm outh T raB t Co., A sburv P a rk , N. J .

R esidence—H e ad o f G ran trav o ;r Oca 1 U oaohrN .J.

$15,000T o L o an o n G o o d M ori,

8 . q , c o ( tT. F r e e h o ld .N .J .

g e a t (Bstuti f r g t n c m .

HI B. BEEGLE,(L ate H . B . Beegle<& Son) \

l i £ A T > E S T A T E n n « lIN SU RA N CE AGENT,

W i a ^ a m w r i m a ~

Iy o a n s N e g o t i a te d a n d L e g a l P a p e r s D r a w n

II . B. B E EG LE, N o ta ry jrtibllo a n d C om m issioner o f Doods f o r N e w Je rso y . P e n n sy lv a n ia a n d th o D is tr ic t o f C olum bia,

A tlan tlo H igh lands. 8700. ---------------------------- d ra

L o n g B ranch . $160.

M iyiot,*w BHt i^oug iIranonr3pa —k -------Jo h n B arb e r, to J a m e s u.- L a n e M o t N o r th

REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE &

, M O R T G A G E L O A N S ,

708 C o o k m rm Ave,

SAMUEL W. KIRKBRIDE, CONTRACTOR,

Carpenter & Builder.P la n s a n d epeoifioations fu rn ish e d . Jo b b in g

p ro m p tly a tte n d e d to . B est o f re fe re n c e g iven . R esidence—F ir s t a v e . , b e t B o n d a n d E m o ry sta .

S h o p a n d Offloe—F irs t av e . a n d M ain St. P . O. B ox 748. ABBORY PARK*.

Th e m o n h o u t i t . , t r u s t a ^ dSAPB

B I Xa t M a t t i s o n A v e . a n d B o n d S t ; , f a c o m ­

p l e t e d a n d r e a d y f o r t e n a n t s .

T h e offices o n th e sec o n d a n d th i rd floors o f th e b u ild in g w ill bo finished In h a rd w ood, w in d owe Of p la te gliiss, in side b lin d s, a n d A irnlsbed w ith ev e ry m o d ern conven ience , In c lu d in g s team b ea t. T h ese room s a ro n o w offered to th e pub llo F O R R E N T , fo r u se EXCLUSIVELY A 8 O FFICE S, a t r e n ts ra n p ln jr f ro m $60 to $150 p e r an n u m C’a o h ; th e re n ta l to in c lu d e gas , s te a m h e a tin g a n d reg*

JOS. L. DURR AH,P l a s t e r e r ,

5 0 5 TH IRD A V E N U E .Jo b b in g P ro m p tly a t te n d e d t<r.

G EO . C . ORM EROD,CONTRACTORS BfllLMR,

A S B U R Y P A R K , W- J .E s ta b lish e d 1B73. Jo b b in g p ro m p tly a t te n d e d

to . B est o f re fe re n c e g iven .Offloe a n d R esid en c e^

COR. 8EW A LL"AVE. A N D BOND ST.

P

Discount on Sewer Bills.h a s on h a n d th o la rg e s t a n d finest' UnOfOfvplaln- - D u rin g th e p a s t y e a r a n u m b e r o f n e w co n n e c­

tio n s h av e b ee n m a d e w ith th e sew ers . T h is h a s to som e e x te n t le ssen e d th o p e rc e n ta g e o f c o s t ' o f m a in ta in in g th e w o rk s. A s th e e rec tio n of th e Sow er W o rk s w a s n o t a m a t t e r o f specula-, t io n , ba 't beq am e a n e c e ss ity beoanso o f t h e sue- cessf u i a n d ra p id g ro w th o f th e lo w n ,“th e ow n e rs dealro t o ijeep th e a n n n a l r e n t a t th e lowtost possib le po in t.

N o tice is h e reb y g iv en t h a t o n a l l s e w e r re n ts f o r 1668, w h ich w ill b e d u e J a n u a ry 1st, 1889, fo r p re p a y m e n t a d ed u c tio n o f oho p e r c e n t , a m o n th w ill b e a l lo w e d .,_A f te r J^ n h ar 'y 1, s e w e r r e n ts d u e th e fo llow ing J a n u a ry a d e d u c e t io n o f tw o p ^ r c e n t, a m o n th w ill fo r p re p ay ­m e n t b e a llo w ed On th e th i rd y o ar , fo r p re ­p a y m e n t, th re e p e r ce rrt... a - n io n th w ill a l lo w e d ; a n d o n th e ^ fo u r th yea r, fo r p re ­p a y m e n t, fo u r p e r i c e n t, a m onth ' Will be. a llo w e d . T h is p ra c tlo a lly re d u ces th e sew or r e n t m ore th a n o n e-th ird in th e la s t th re e years. B u t ta k in g th o fo u r th y e a r a lono , i t re d u ces tho r e n t fu lly one*ljalf. I t . is o f c o u r s e im pos­s ib le to te ll, a t th e p re se n t tlm o, if a s till f a r th e r d isc o u n t o a n be a llo w e d o n th o fifth o r sucocodlog y e a rs , o n a c c o n n t o f in c re a se d n u m ­b e r o f oonneo tlons, b n t th e o w n e rs o f p ro p e rty w h loh Ib c o n n e c te d w ith th e se w e r m a y rvsf. a ssu red t b a t th e y w ill r e a p ev e ry ad v a n ta g e pos­sib le . O w ners o f th e w o rk s o n ly d esire , a f te r w o rk in g expenses a ro p a id , a m o d e ra te ln te ro s t o n th e in v es tm en t. ' O. T . BA ILEY , - - * • 7 * , * Seo’y S e w e r W to k sA sbury P a rk , M ay 2ad, 1886.

u la r da lly j a n i to r serv ice.F o r fu r th e r p a r tic u la rs apply

. ^ COMPANY’S w h e re p la n s o f ro o m s c a n h e Been.

a tO FFIC E ,

ASBURY PARK

E L E C T R I C L I G H T A N D - - ;

, ' V »;• '

C O .

M AIN STA TIO N :

Railroad, nefar First'avenue.

F u rn ish e s E leo trio A ro ,^a n d In c a n d e sc e n tlig h ts a t a n y location .-

V t o e p T O ^ ^ ^ M im D G? HA RRIS ON,

^ ' S u p ^ ^ S ^ L A N E .

D EBBOTORSi-

Geo. F. Kroehl, M m iiu u u . n a n u u a . John C* MaoMurray, > John Rcickafeller, f ' ' ‘f lw . A. flmook,

G e6, M, L ane . ‘

M yron 8. G ould , E d m und G. H arrison ,

George W. Patterson,

P . O. B ox 178.' ASBUItY PA RK , N . J .

\ O m p U e d fc r (Ae A b b u s t l*Aak J o u a w iL ;

R e a l E s t a t e c o n v e y a n c e s .L i s t o f co n v e y an c cfli M o m n o u ^ ’ C o u n ty

C le rk ’s o in c e , fo r t h e w e e k o n d in g N ov . 9 , 1 8 8 9 : . ■•,. . ••• -r • ' :

A S B u n r PARK.Jam es A. B rad ley to A n n Wyckoff—p a r ts o f lo ta >

868,569, 870. $6,000.1 •'-K & dellfl B. M ills rt al., to L yd ia M. M organ d o l . —lots 1014,1W5. $1,800. •

W illiam M ills t o L y d ia U . M organ ,rf aL—lo t KM4. $1,800. • v -' -.

R adclIffB . M ills a a l , to P. M. B raun-p a r ts lo ts 879, 880. $3,800. ‘ ..

W m . M ills to Bamo—partagam o p roperty . $2,300.Sam uel T . H eudriokson to 'Em U y B. M alcom son

—lo t A sbury P a rk . 53,200. . . •oobam o b 6 v b . . ' ; •

M, C. G e b h ard t to George 0 . 'C o m b rlg h t—lo t 1703. $1,000. -u G e o g c M. C arslake to L ydia A . B u n d lo k -rlo t

M ay R. T hornloy . e x 'r x , to V ic to ria R . T . Do- H aven—w est h a lf 01 lota 470,471. $7,5260. TOWNBIirP.

J o h n F. H aw kins to E , N elson T u rn er—lo t W est A sbury P ark . 8660.. Wrn.-A. H arvey , by a d m 'r , to S am uel V; M orris

lot Neptune township. $167.. ’R obert H . M aple to M onroe N ew m an—lo t Nep-

tu n o tow n sh ip . • -M oaroo N ew m an to F lo rence D . M a p le -sa m e

- lo t

:w -on—lot a t

property . $ l.Wm. A. H arvey , by a d m ’r,ffiT-Wm. F . H urley—

lo t N optune tow nship . ‘E lla h . D ey to A m elia H , P ie rso n —lo t N eptune

tow nship . 8390. . .BarzUl&i G rover to A lfre d G ro v e r-- lo t N optune

tow nship . 12 000, *. L aw rence L an d e u ‘ to V icto ria K ing—lo t W est P a rk . $ 1 .,

W m. U . K in g to Law renoe Landlrf—lo t Nop-' tu n e tow nship . $1. "

MIBOKLLAjTBOtS 'W m . B, R an d o lp h to S tephen V t S tafford'

M iddletow n tow nship . 86,T heo. F ield, sheriff, to W . Irv in g Clark—lo t Red

B a n k r$ 6 ,o p o t ■ ; -------- — r —;Jo h n H . T h istle to H enry A. C h lnery—lo t a t

U nion. « .H enry A. C hlnery to M argare t A . T h is tle—lo t a t

U iilon. $1. . - ...........J o h n H. C ohover to sam e—lo t Kej M argare t A. T h is tle to Thos.

Union. $450. ' ..M anuel L. M anhcim to Is ra e l H arris^ -lo t Key*

port. 81.750, - tJ o h n II . Conover to J o h n W . B aU ey-*lot Key*

p ort: $60.------------ -------------------‘--------------------— ?I.OB ernard D elaney tcrG eorge K oenig, J r.—2 low oyport. 1800. _Jo h n T. P e t t it to M ary R ^ S u tp h ln —lo t L ong

B ranch . 8350. •R ebecca H . Bearmoro- to Sam uel Sherm an—172-

100 ac res H ow ell tow nship . 840.H enry. P lttln g er to sam e—5 20 100 ac res Howell

tow nship . 876. „ •1 ..Jo h n H u ll M cLean et aL to W in. B. D uryee—lot

F reehold . $335. ;A lex a n d er Gaston to M llo H . C re g o -Io t 8.021.

O cean B each . 8776.L ew is C. P lttln g e r to Ezekiel. S m ith —2. trac ts

lan d F reeho ld tow fishlp. $2,800.‘ R eynard P eyser to HeB ra n c h r8 o m -J----------r ~

G cow o W. C hilds d al. to S t. ' Jam es C hapel—2 lo tsE lo e ro n . 81. -- T hos. W.-Cooper to Jo h n W Jacki d a /.—lo t Long B ranch . 81. ■>—--

Jo h n W lacki to Thos. W. Cooper—lo t Long B ranch . 81. *.. Seabury T redw ell, by E x ’r, to Jo h n G. Reeser—lan d a t Bhrew sburyi 825 000..........

J . B arlow M oorchead to B arab S. W dlgam nth— lo t S p ring Lake. 81,200. _

Jam es H , Bmyth to C aroline G. R eed—24 ac res n e a r C hapel H ill, 81.-8 a g iu c lT ,J ia n d rlC k 8 o n c < a /.to B o rlh a 4 W a g n e p —7S&-100 ac re s S hrew sbury tow nship . 88.990.

Isaac1 A. W ales to M artha F isher—la c re M id d le - tow n tow nship . 8500. £ .

T heo. F ie lds, sheriff, to T herese W. S eabrbok— lo t K eyport. 81,600.

Jo h n 8 . H u b b a rd to G eorgo W . D avis—p a r t of lo t 600, A tla n tic H ighlands. 82,600.

W illiam ’l l . M on tanye to L y d ia A ; R ayfle ld—lo t

Uenry Mom—jo t a t Long

152. sa m e p lac e . 83)0. :.Jo h n H VanM ator to M aralla A. W ard—« lo ts,

M ary p o t te r e t al. to E d w a rd H andy—lo t L ong B ran ch . $300.

M ary n . S m ith to M illard F. T rim b le—lo t M at­a w a n . $760.

J o h n R v an to M artin M aloney — lo t L ong B ranoh . $5,000. 1

M artin M aloney to KUen R yan—lo t L ong B ranoh . $3,000.

J o h n J . M ount to E lla s M orfo rd—1 11*100 a c re s , M iddle tow n to w n sh ip . $1.

E llas M orford t o L y d ia M o a n t- s a m e property . $1. '

E llen H u b b a rd t t ah to C harles 11. Rook—11 ao res , S h rew sb u ry to w n sh ip . $60.

G eorge O. W a te rm an to J o h n C. R obbins—3 lo ts , A tlan tia H ighlands. $1*200.

E d w a rd A . W alto n et al. to T ho N. J . S , R a il­ro a d Co.—lo t M onm outh B each. 81,000

S am e to C y n th ia A , H o y t - lo t sam e p laoe.

H a rrie t M. B o rd en to Cornel lu s 'N . B1 Isa—undi­v id ed Mi o f la n d , S h rew sb u ry to w n sh ip . 81. .

C ornelius N. B liss to H a rrie t M. B o rd e n - u n d i­v id ed & o f la n d , S h rew sbury to w p sh lp . $1.

R ache l W eeks t o E lizab e th A rrow sm ith—lo t F reeh o ld . $85- ‘3am es W a rn e r et al. t o R ach o l BculthoTp—lo t P le a su re Biw*. $600.

D eborah w e a v e r to sam e - l o t sam e p laoe . $1.G eorge H an ce, J r . , to C harles T . A llen—lo t

O ceanic. $450.M. H ow ard M aps e t a l. to A nnie M unkendeck

e t a t.—o em e te ry p lo t. 850.C hristian G rim m to A llen R . Rood—lo t Middle*

to w n tow nship- $350.C h arles-c .- B ow ne by E x ’r, to A nnie: M . Z im ­

m erm a n —lo t M anasquan . $370.. D avid B. H 03te t t e r by E i ’ra, to F rano ls w a g - n eir lo ts 1930,1931,1933, B elm ar. ' -----

Dealer in G eorgia p ine Lumber, Telephone and Dies. Oak, Ohasinut and Pii

fu rn ish e d a t s h o r t n o tic e , a ll len g th s h d «•!p ilin g

Izefc

M. M. CROSBIE,S uooossor to D avid C a rtw r ig h t,

Plain til Oninitil Mtr.T a r P a p e r , S h e a th in g i ’ap o r , T w o a n d

T h re e-p ly R oofing P a p e r .P. O, Box 809. Asbnry Farfc, N. I,

A d Opoutnf; ln X>akota.“ Yon Bay you a re from D ako ta t ” he que­

ried of the m ah in the ulster.“ Tea, Hir, righ t from D ako ta .”** P len ty o f good openings o u t there “ L ots o f ’em .”•M M an could do well, eh t ’> ^“HB conld.n : „ ... ': ,fC o u n try g ro w in g a ll th d ; tim e, I su p

P 08et’* - •“ G row ing a ll th e tim e.n .........“ T o n —you h av e done well f ”“ V ery .well. Indeed. I wont o u t there threo

y ea rs ago w ithout a d o lla r an d had to ,go to tho p o o r house.”

“ Yon. did I A nd how r . i ‘AM’Jh superlntendent_.0 (_ l

tlo ii ot $S0O a y e a r a iid found. *lt you’ve got ab o u t a thousand.dollars an d lots o f g i t u p tb you, there’s a n opening for a p o o r house in the n e x t coun ty which you oan s te p r igh t in to , and 1*11 g u aran tee every, Inhab itan t will be w ith yon before sp ring .” ___

The Major’s Grief.-‘-Vlce-PreMident-Morton - haa._ tflken _out_ a

license fo r the sale o t liquor ID hla new hotel a t W ashington. W h a t d o thoso RepubUeana say to th a t, who a re alw ays p itch ing in to the D em ocrats for th eir a lliance with th e liquor in te rest 1 W hat a speotaole ! Tho Vice P res­id en t o f the U nited S ta tes engaged tn the sale o f l iquor l—Motunouth Democrat.

ELLERS!^, RHINECLIFF ON-HODaON, Novem ber 2:

$ a y . J ohn B. S haw. Chicago.D bab S i r —In r e p k to your le tte r o f O cto­

b e r 26 addressed to Mr. M orton, I beg to say. t h a t th ere i s n o tru th in the s ta tem en t m ade in 'th o telegram to the Daily jVeioa.whlcb you enclose, th a t tbore is a b a r connected with the new building erected an d owned by Mr. M or­ton.; in W a sh in g to n , '1 The build ing Is con- d u c ted a s a fam ily ap a rtm en t house, ap art- menttt-belug-leased by- th e yea t,-and M r. K ee­to n has never en te rta lu ed tho Idea o f p e rm it t in g any p a rt o f it tb be used as a bar.

/ • V ery reflpocttally,R. Sj.Cni^TON .ljrlvalo secretary .

W orse th an the Legislature a t

A n arm y officer in Brooklyn on furlough from a W estern cam p, says the noises o f tb a t c ity an d New Y ork IUerally terrify hlm . J je says a big b a ttle is noth ing to the tum u lt,o t the street. “ Im ag lue a m an com ing r ig h t pfiC th e p la in s ,” sa id he, “ an d hav ip ^ m y expe­rience! o f yesterday evening. I was u n d e r thp j u n e t l o n ^ f ^ ^ e le v a t e d roads, an d t ry in g to c ro ss tlie s t r e e t . . Three tra in s rum bled over m y.head a n d blev^ off s team a t the sam o tim e, A h an d o rg an b roke loose, a b o y yelled pa­pers, horse c a rs lle.w np K lld 'dow n, a n d ouo truckm an ran hla wheels In to those o l ano ther trpoftT a n d g o t in to a noisy fight. I t was tbo n ex t th ing to

, T hrough th e Old Dominion.A DATMQI1T BIDB OVEb'tUB DI.UB RIDQe’, AM3&

A VISIT TO NATUHAT. BHIDGB—A-MODEJV’BAJL- HOAD, ON WIIIOH PA98BNOBBB TRAVEL IN COHFOHT—BiVALnT OB* o t h b r l in e s o v e r ITS SUOOE88—THB U F. V. V.” AND ITS SEV­ERAL lUITATpRS,

I I t w as a b u sy p lace in>wblch we found our? selves a t N ew port News; a fte r leaving the steam ship . 'A t the dock ju s t ahead w aa a Boston s team er boing 'Unloaded of h e r cargo o f eboes. There seem ed Jo bo boxes by. the thousand, a n d as tim e m ean t a g rea t deal she wav being em ptied a s fas t as fifty colored laborers con ld ra n in a n d 'o u t o th e r hold with th eir bah*owa. W e wero on the g re a t p iers o f th e C hesapeake & Ohio Railway, which h as ita teroainas " a t ! this point. Several tram p s team ers w ere e ither ,tled u p a t th e dock or anoho ted close by. w aiting fo tca rg o es of grain,' cotton) tobacco, oak staves, and o th er ex­p o rts , b rough t to tlde-w ater by the railw ay from tbe S ta te s o f V irginia, .W est Virginia, K entucky, Ohio, ■ahd -tho .'g rain-producing see Monaco f tb e g rea t W oat,s R etn rn fre ight la anpplled by foreign steam ers, and steam ship U nesfrom Boston, N o y York and Philadelphia

Back from th e dock Is the grain elevator, w h leh h aa a oapaolty of I,G5O,OOO bneh0la a t once. I t Is 400 feet in longth, 00 feet iu w idth and 177 feet high. Tw o oovered- horizontal conveyors, each 800 feet long; ru n from tho felevator to jthe water,’0 edgo, a n d a re ab le to fill tw o Bt earners; each hold ing 100,000 bnahela, w ith bulk o r bag grain in a day ahd a hal f The conveyors have 1,800 feet long on which th e ' g rain Is carried to the bold o f the vessels a t th e pier. Tw enty cars can flndvroom for em ptying their loads in to the hoppers. - T he grain is then carried to th e u p p e r stories and ..dumped, in to over th ree sto rage b ins. In ton hours 250ears c an b enn loadod . -. I t requires a n engine o f 650 bor*e-pow er to do all the lifting and W d fn g . The^ bnlld lng is constructed of heavy tim bers w ith iron trusses an d bracing; a n d is covered th roughout w ith co rrugated iron.

T he d evelopm ent of N ew port N ew s Is to be credited tp the C hesapeake Sc Ohio Railway C om pany, w hose ch ief su p p o rt 1s Mr. Collis P . H un tin g to n , president o f the 8outhern Paclflo a n d m any o th e r rail way corporations: I t was Mr. H u n tin g to if s adop ted daugh ter who late 1 y m arried P rince H atafeld t in Lon­don, and the w ealthy fa th er se t aside tw o m illions in caah an d secu rltle sja s her wed- d lng portion . I t Is sa id h e ow ns m ore thah h a lf o f th e tow n, Including the m agnificent Hotel W arw ick, a p o p u lar reso rt for both w inter a n d sum m er guests, and th roogh tbe varied industries oonnected with tb e railro ad , pays o n t a good m any -thousand do lla rs am d h th lu w ages to both white and colored e m p lo y ^ . -I. '7-*. , . i .V ’

N ew port New s (It i a ' un iversally called Nu*pert, w ith th e accen t o n first syllable) dates its se ttlem en t aw ay b a e tr to 1607, when a c erta in C apt. Chrlatopber N ew port landed there- a f te r being driven by a Btorm in to

f f i egapeake Bay, and gave the place h is nam e, a n ttfm r's ride b y steam er a r e H am pton, Old £o!m C om fort, a lso nam ed by C a p t N ew port, N crfblk a n d , Portsm outh , which we bad left th a t sam e m orning T he w ater ro u te is th rough H am pton Roads, a a o rt o t pocket m ade by the Jam es ahd E lizabeth rivers, and Chesapeake bay. T his Is the locality m ade fam ous by C apt, ErlcsBon’s Monitor a n d tho rebel ram McrrinAc In tbe fam ous fight to a finish d uring tbe rebellion, In which the Mon* (for p u t h e r an tag o n is t to sleep. All aro u n d a re rem in d ers o f tbe late unpleasantness. Tbe N aval H ospital a t Portsm outh , the s tone d ry docks an d tb e G osport N avy Y ard a t N orfolk, an d fa rth er to w ard s th e bay . ih e p a rap e ts a n d guns o f F o r t M onroe, w llh H am pton and its tra in in g schools for colored youth a n d In ­d ians, an d tb e im m ense Soldiers’ Hom e and cem etery, w here thousand* of heroea He burled , a re places a t which many, days could be p a s se d . ln in terested sight-seeing a n d ex ­p loration , b u t o u r tim e is lim ited an d w e tak e th e m orning tra in fo r scenes fa r th e r west th rough tb e O ld Dom inion.

T h ree ca rs w ere .nearly filled wltfc . ibe Steam er’s passengers, the largest part^cpm - p rising thdsgt:who'- h ad 8etf6ndfcl6e ^ tlcketa

I f f ^ V ho w ere relegated to the einoker. Am ong th em w ere th e weil dret^ed foreign oonple m entioned ln^tbo preceding letter as traveling in the s team er’s steerage .1 A nother c a r was filled w ith Sir K n igh ts o n th e ir way to the Conclave a t W ashington. They were rep resen tatives o l a ll th e neighboring Com- m kndorlea from Old P o in t to ’way ^down the blB.mai Sw am pjpanal. _zA rldetbrpughjBaBtem V irginia a long the line o r th l s ,com paratively hew ro ad is alm ost as exciting as going th rough tb e p in es o f South Jeraey . Tbero Is really noth ing of s c e n ^ y , v e ry few' bouses m ore pro ten tlous than a one-story cabin with a log an d p las te r chim ney on the outside, and none o r th e slg n s o f t h ^ d ie an d w estern V irg in ia I t seem ed as

early b reakfast o n theB team er. In to a d o llc a te cup tho sp o u t b f th e p o t w as tilted a n d o u t fibwed a, p a le liqu id . P e rh ap s in b is hu rry to got away from tho r e s ta u ra n t , on ’the plat-, form bo h ad g rabbed th e w rong pot t “ No, sab ,” he said , in answ er to the ^question w hether I t w asn’t tea. Three Sugars a n d ' a finger of cream , a . wedge of cake and fifty cents* w orth ot sandw iches, a n d h e passed op to serve o th ers , leaving hla c u p , saucer and spoon In tru s t t i l l hia re tn rn . A very hlce idea, Indeed, to bnve y o n r lunoh b ro u g h t in to the’tra in In suohi p resen tab le , sh a p e ; a - little betto r th an ru n n in g a_block u p o r dow n the platform for a c u p o f coffee a n d b e nabbed 'ju s t aa you s ta r t back w ith i t an d a dem and' mado^for a q u a rte r bn deposit fo r tbo sa fe return o i cup an d spoon. T h a t w as all. The coflfce tjad been too hurried ly m ade j i t lacked eVen tbo flavor of the, genuine b o r ry ; the sandw iches w ere ' b raced w ith d ry slices o f haui an d w ere n o t b u tte re d ; th e nioerlooklog cake w as “ raised*’ with soda—a n d p lenty o f It. W e m ade o u t w ith tb e rem a tn d e ro f a ,£ o x o t confeotlons an d a d rink of w ater an d fo r the noxt h o u r feasted on the landscape.

Wo passed tw o “ co te house” tow ns, which had th e usual look. Everybody seem ed to havo abundance o f leisure. T here appeared to be none o f th e h u rry arid inad ru sh to accum ulate w ea lth .th a t'c an be no ticed a b o u t Poin t P leasan t o r Hoboken. T here were sev­eral w ashou ts made" by the g rea t Septem ber Btorm which were -undergo ing rebuilding. Tw o b ig bridges bad been. whlBked aw ay by

J h O .ru a h ln g -S v a te rS r-a n d -th e c o m p a n y w a a wisely rep lad lcg with stone. Tho p ia rk of m u d reao h ed up trefcigunka e ig h t to twelve feet.. J u s t then the stream s~ that had been so tu rb u len t w ere so low th a t a s mall d rove of th irs ty ca ttle could have d ran k them dry.

I n th e early afternoon the * tra in slowed up before en te rin g a ra th e r busy looking town. Along o n e s ld e ^ o O ie track were sca tte red a

iber o f cabins, and from .nearly every one cam e a co lored au n tie bearing e ither In her h an d s o r o n top o f her h ead a tra y o f eat­ables. By the tim e the tra t tt cam e to a full s to p the w indow s an d p latfo rm s were be- qlege(L—T h o se -w h o -h ad - traveled th a t way before w ere n o t 's to w In throw ing- u p '.tb e windows o r hurry log outside for a closer Inspection of th e hom e-m ade b lsbulte , fried ehicken, p ie s , cakes and f ru i t Tw o bis­c u its th re e inches In d iam eter an d a third o f a. ohicken f tle d in c risp f a t t e r w ereso ld fo r_ a q u a rte r, _w Uh a - p i e - fo r ten - cents, th ree im m ense apples fo r five cen ts, and.very good coffee fo r the Bame. In th e Bpace of tw o m inutes these en terp rising ca te rers nearly em ptied tnefr tray s—Or a t lea s t th o hnngry. passengers d id —and while som e sq u a tted op th ^g ren n O o .co an f_ ap .- th « lr^ rece ip t8r-other8 h urried off hom e to be ready fo i^ th e n e x t- t ra in , i.There is noth ing i f f th e way oT eatlng , tb a t can go ahead of fried ohloken w hen it, Is

short-jo ln ta. were unusually tender^ sweet an d Juicy. T h a t p a rticu la r section o f th e ra l I road will be rem e m b e re d In 'fu tu re and pa tronisedag ain If we

though th e colored folks w ere the prinClFal occu p an ts o t iho soli, an d i t is easy to con­jec tu re the so rt o f h ab ita tion th e m ajority o f them would' be satisfied w ith -. _A p a tch o t s tu n ted co rn , perhaps a garden where vegeta­b les m igh t have been, a p ig an d alw ays tw o or th ree dogs, describes tho m o st of th o ^ 'p lan ta tion»V passed ln a three hours’?.?jdo to tbe cgplta l. T here were aom e feibeptions, U istrue,.; o t bouses th a t were once probablycounted g rand , b u t th e sam o genera) a ir o f Bbfftlessness pervaded them , and all were sadly in n eed of pa in t, new fencea. now b arn s and a general scratcliTng w lth a ep lln t broom.

Richm ond is 74 miles from sa lt water, b u t 150 m iles if yon sail n p tho Jam es River. There a re so m any tw ists an d tu rna in i t tb a t a a t a p e r m ust travel tw o o r th ree j tim es round to como o u t s tra ig h t a t ' t h e end o f the journey. I t is- a t tho head o f navigation of tiie Jam es, an d waa tho cap ita l of the Confed­era te S tates d u rin g th elf , b rie f existence. I t h a s alw ays been the capita l of V irginia, I t Is a c ity of considerable also, with lots o f factor rlep, fam ous, bu ild ings an d beautifu l resi­dences. Old St: Joh.n’8 C hurch s ta n d s to-day p retty m uch aa i t d id ono h u n d red years ago, w hen I t was th e fashionable plaoe of worship. I t w as in tb ls church th a t the. Im m ortal P a t ­r ick H enry , in a b u rst of righ teous indigna­tion ag a in st English dom ination exclaim ed, “ G ive m e liberty o r give m o d ea th .” ’ W ash­ing ton once had head q u arters at'R fphm ond arid th ousands o f N orthern soldlera . wlll re m em ber an o th e r notable im titu tlo tfb f th e c ity duritfg t h e w arv-Llbby Prison—whjoh has lately hben rem oved to Chicago and se t n p a s acuriOBity. -, ,, ?

D uring a . w ait of half an h o u r a t th e s ta tio n a sp ruce an d polite Colored lad cam e through th e tra in bearing a tray . O n It was a silver outfit com m ouly used a t the en d o t a table w here the lady of tho house a|to. U ndbr snow y n ap k in th a t seem ed rela ted to his snow y ja c k e t an d ap ron w ere piles of sa n d ­wiches a n d wedges of cake. W ould wo have cofieeT C ertainly. W e had hungered an d

baa . iho appearance of two m ountains th a t rise porpondloularly In Ihe air, and a t a height of ovor two hundred feet thb tw o are joined with an orch th a t Is a patl o f both. On top is a roadw ay, an d a h y one d riv ing o r walking o ver It would coyer suspect the ex istence of euoh a freak o f na tu re directly beoeath. The sides a re rqpgh and unoven rock, o f various shades of color, th roogb which w ater drips con tinually , aa though tho g rea t w eight ac tually squeezed it o u t like ju lco from an orangp. . 1. ..

The reg io n ' abou t N atu ra l Bridge, it is c laim ed, was onee surveyed b y George W a6b- ington . A t any ra te , bio in itia ls a re fou nd in- ,a prom inent place on the rooky ejde, an d hfa exam ple o f leaving a m ark behind has been followed by every visitor. Some, initials, a p ­p e a r several feet u p tho side, a s though lad ­d e rs h ad been p ro cu re d ;to asslBt In clim bing higher th an any one else. T he walk fo r a m ile u p the rav ine is a t the m ost rom an tic d e­scrip tion . In p laces I t narrow s t o i l few' feet, a n d th en wldena_Out 'ti> ' a hundred or more. Betw een the m ouhtalns is a shallow stream th a t flows tow ards the b ridge, now In a th in sh eet over sm o o th ‘rook o r tum bling am ong boulders; o r over stone dams. I t winds in a n d o u t am ong th e trees, underneath ru stic bridges, and reflects the iraagea-oLrooky p ro ­jec tio n s or g ian t trees ori ttfe m ountain side, S altpetre Cave an d Loat; £ lv e r a re ’a lo n ^ th h pa th w ay ., The form er Is m ad e 'b y a h age pro^ jeo tlng ro ck of*ilmeBtoh§ over the side of a em ail h i l l , ; Tq en te r i t ‘’ 60 m u s t flrst go up b e fo rey o a c aa go dow d an d once u n d e r the overhanging cliff there is sm all spaco jn which to move abon t. F jo ip a hole in a rock farther u p the rav ine there Issues the sound of rush­in g w aters. A closer Inspection, a t th e r lsk o f m ashing Ip the to p of y o u r ha t, reveals the b asin 1n jo which w ater Sows from som e u n ­know n source a n d d isappears a g a in , n o -one knows where. The w ater Is olear. and pure, and a d rink of it, according to the prin ted sign, insures the re tu rn o f the thlrdty tourist.

T h e view o f the b rid g e an d Its approaches on tho r e tu rn b rin g s o u t o th er no tab le po in ts a t first unnoticed . U nder thb crow n o f the arcb", outlined In stone of a d a rk e r color than th e su rroondinga, is a t a l r deelgn- of an eagle with ou tstretched win^e. Bolne people have th o u g h t I t w as a rtific ia l and th e keeper of tbe lodge 8ald*a traveler once took h im aside aud asked, him , confldem lal y; M how in thunder they g o t scaffolding up b ight enough to p a in t i t.” D d riu g -th e sum m er m onths, whon the faioteU a re orowded. the bridge an d the rav ine a re Illu m in a ted -a t night by electricity, fire­works an d calcium lights, with a b an d _of m usic to m ake th in g s lively. I f the view from below Ib grarid, th a t -from above is in d escrir bable. On P u lp itR o c k , a lit tle d istance from th ero ad w ay , the fu ll dep th o f the bridge Ib aoen to a d v an tag e ,as-w e ll - a s -th e ravine,-foij neqtly half a mllo, A s to u t fence rig h t upon

properly p repared , and. th ese’drucSBtleka a n d “tbo^ouier edge o f rook enablca you to h o ld onIn n ccu rh y an d look stra ig h t to the bottom, between shivers, and graBp the full m eaning of a fall o f over tw o h u n lre d feot, an d alaft'to

W h e re d o th o p lo ig o t E ighteenbllllona ofthem a re m an u fac tu red every year. Aa tbey — . ? . . . . ^a re never w orn ou t, w b a t becomea o j t b « n t f th lre ted e v e r since leaving tho p ilo t b iscuit a t height of tho bridge th a n , cold Bguroa. I t sloepera a t night,

T h a t p a r t o f th e ra ilro a d w htch been traveling on alnce m ornlng^?as th e m ain line from N ew port News v la* ^ tcb m o h d , at which p o in t a leased line, k n o w n as the Rich­m ond <fc A lleghany^branch, tu rn s southw est a long tho courso o f the u p p e r Jam b a ,R iv e r to L ynchburg and hnitea wjtb tb s m ain stem a t C lifton Forgo, a short1.d istance from the W est V irg in ia line. Early, las t Spring the C.hesa peake & O bJo ro ad made^ arrangem ents with connecting lines t o reaph W ashington, Balti­m ore, P h iladelph ia an d New Y o rk ,.-C h ar­lottesville la tbb junction o f tbe V irg in ia M id­land , over which, passengers to a n d from the n o r th m ust'(ravel, . puly. q n ^ t ^ a ea^h^waj^ m akea tbo th roogb trip from from New Y o r k - th e “ ^ ^ -yV Xlnulted.’’ Passengers by o th er tra in s change cars, unless occupying a Pullm an. H alf a n h o u r waa consum ed a t tb ls 'p retanU oua p lace in w aiting to r tho W ashington tra in , which som e p u t to good u&eln eating d inner In the comfortablo res tau ran t a t the' sta tion . W ith every sea t taken , our train' pulled o u t som ew hat late, and began its clim b by easy g rades n p the m ountains. A t som e high p o in ts thd v.lew of dlBtant ridges, farm s an d .valleys w as.magnl- Qceht. -The day w as c lear an d bright, a n d tbo a ir b rac in g an d cool a t th a t a ltitu d e , an d the rldo becam e deeply In teresting by~r«as0n of tbe scenery on either side-ot-the road, Three hours a fte r leav ing Charlottesville we reached C lifton Forgo, an d there p u t.u p for the night, ex p ectin g to g o o n to W hite S ulphur Springs in th e fh o rn ln g ^an d have daylight in which t o look over th is wonderful r e g i o n b u t jthtl tra in happened to be la te a n d w e alte red o u r p rogram by advice o f a gentlem an who bad_ but. reoently been^tW te, and found very little to in te res t him a fte r tho closing of the big hotel. • , . .. - .

The n e x t Im portan t resort to W hite Sulphur In th a t section was the N atu ra l B ridge. I t Is reached from C llfton Porge- a t ia 'th e W eat by ' the Richm ond & Alleghany b ran ch o f thp Chesapeake & O h lo ^ a n d ttf thero la another section pT ro ad in thfs courjfry th a t can equal th is In m ountain an«T w ater ecenery, U has nev e r been nfy good fo rtune to trave l o yer It. I t follows the windings of th e Ja n ie s , river th rough a b eau tifu l valloy with th e towi-rlng p eaks o f the Blge Ridge rea c h ln ^ a b o v e -1ho- ciouda. The r Id ^ o f o y er tw o h^c|tji,waa,jJnfl whloh w e-sbail never forgeC A t N atural Bridge sta tio n we took a stag e for Forest In n , som e tw o o r U ireom lles u p the sides of th e m ountains, and had a very jo ltin g ride. T he ro ad w as b a rd and rooky a n d th e toam q u ite frlaky, so that,even the ekillfa l colored d river couldhU ’p reven t an occasional lurch Into a h o le .o r h bum p a g a in st projeciIng atones. A t the o ld -fash ioned;luq wood fires were blazing in .h u g e chim neys, an d the chill o f tho drive was soon, d i s p e l le d .A walk lb: theL b righ t sun sh in e restored a healthy circu­lation , ahd gave, a t jtbe sa rae tim e a view;of, tho preUy surroUndfnga o f th e . ho tel . To m eet she increased p a tro n ag e o f tourists, t wb! o iherm ote ls were construc ted and a re u s td as annoxeS tb F orest Iun , w ith th e manamrnie'rit a n d - l in in g room 4 ’a t th e la tte r . ‘ T hey are, per«hed hfgh up o a lhg aldes of« a n a tu ra l bowl, while a t the bottom a re w alks. leading dow n Into tho rav in e th a t p asses u n d e r N at­u ra l Bridge. The hotels, a n d * h undreds of acres o f land com prising th e property, are owned by Col. P ey ton , w ho h a s a apendid residence here , and aK> enclosed- by n e a t fencea a n d 1al<2 o u t like a park.; The descent is g radual u n til t h e bpd o f tb e shallow brook is reached, an d then a tu rn to ' th e righj; along a sm ooth foot p a th brings you faoe tb face w ith one o f th e w onders o f t h o . world, I t tak es sovoral m inutes to p roperly oomprehend^ the maflslve oharaotor o t the fetraoture “ not m ado w ith hands ” I t is 915 foot high, 100 feet w ide w ith an arch 00 feet wide. Guido books Bay tb a t T rin ity C hurch, Ip New York, could bo p laced undor It, s teeple and a ll; and there w ould bo rooih to spare . T h a t assertion m ay give a b e tte r notion o f the w idth and

happen to t ravel t hrough-V^irfflnla* -ap p rec ia te som ew hat the sensation o f being t o f th e raiiroad~w frtch w e b a d ) E x position a u d looking u p o n th e 'BighfB

spread o u t beneath. “Am ong the re tu rn in g v isitors t h a t day was

a gentlem an an d wife WJjo. ha<i visited o th er notable localities th roughou t th e coun try . •Thoy gavjQflt a s th e ir opinion th a A h e scenery abou t N atu ra l Bridge an d along the railrqad

Been.A t A. o 'clook wo lo o k the ride down the

m ountaltf^trthtw ere jo lted an d tum bled abon t quite lively. Holding on to the carriage arid bracing the feet to keep pefpendfoular m ade m uscles ache. C lifton Forgo w as reached a t

;7.S0, a fte r a dollghtful trip oh th e r&iiroad, in which th e m any n am m l beauties o f tho coun­try w ere Increased by a charm ing sunset.j Tbe a ir was keen, and tho soft coal fires in g rates an d stoves a t, the hotel were decidedly cum- to rtab le . A nother late tra in spoiled the chances of con tinu ing o u r jou rney farth er south , a n d a fto r a n ig h t o f sound sleep and a hearty breakfast,' w e tu rn ed tow ards tbe A tr lanilo aa passengers on the “ F a s t F lying V ir­g in ian .” ,

T he m orning was wlntJy?, FrpBt covered th e ground an d honsetops like-snow , and the' v apor a n d sm oke ' hid the m ountains only a sho rt dlstanoQ aw ay. B o t the su n oarne u p b righ t and warm and soon m elted tho frost., O nr jou rney was a s com fortable a s tho su p e ­rio r conveniences of the L im ited could m ake It, an d It was w ith regret th a t we left It a t C harlottesville to continue its way by another routo, .while wo changed cars, for Richmondand Old ro in t ; - "-'TSomo know ledge o f rallroad traveling con- Brma mo In th e belief th a t n ex t to a private c a r p n tv fas t tram , th is L im ited affords m ore conveniences to o rd inary passengers th an any railroad^ betw een the E ast and-the W est. The m an who planned and carried o u t iho Idea o f giv ing th e p atrons o t the road a fast tra in

To a fam ily or p arty going w est or com ing eas{, tbo n ex t t ti ip g io tbe luxurious sleepers la the day coach on tho F, F . V. On this, aa on all tho other tra ins of the Chesapeake &Ohio, a colored p y r te r^ a s ch&rgo o f the ca ts and looks closely afte r th e ir cleanliness. A t Intervals be m akea tho rounds w itb a broom and d u stpan , and n o b its of papor o r o th er refuse a re perm itted on floor, seats o r win­dow Bills. A t s ta tions bo Is equally a tten tiv e In assisting passengers in to o r o u t of the cars, tak in g charge o f packagoa o r satchels, and p rocuring good se a la if th ere h a p p e n s to bb a crow d. Conductors and brakem cn a re gen-.- ) tlem anly and polite. They answ er questions, civllly^frad tre ^ t passengers af. g uests ra th e r , . , ,7- th an In tru d e rs o r n u isa n c e s ,, W ith, suoh un­usual conyenlencos a n d accom m odatloris, such unselfiBh a tten tio n to th e ir patrnng, u >nno wonder th a t tho C. & O. Is looked a t w ith Jgaloua eyes by o th er roads, an d th a t dupll-'- ca tp tra in s a n d traveling fabllltl^s a re au- nouneed a s p ^ r o f the ralI ^echedules of tw d ' ^ “ ^or th ree com peting linos. \

T his letter m u st end w ith, th e c lose p f o u r S ay’s ' ride, which was a t Old P o in t’ an d Its g rea t hotel, the H ygeia. A b r ie f stay , and we were off again u p tho easte rn shore o f rV irginia, a fte r crossing C hesapeake bay, ah d * thence in to Delaw are fo r a w eek 's rest.

M arch o f th e Pan-A m ericans. ^Half a speoohf half a meal,Half a sleep—onward -

j Into m ore food and ta lk • ‘~—Bode the one hundrod. '

“ Com e, Pan-A m ericana ;• C om e, a n d le t ’s sh a k e y o u r b a n 's ,” ' .

8 0 . o n to s to w a n d sh a k e -. R o d e th e o n e h u p d re d .

“ Com e, P an-A m ericans I” oD id th e y r e je c t th o p la n s r

... N o t th o u g h th e y a ll w e re fu ll -And j h e ir v esta sundered , *

T h elra n o t to m a k e re p ly , i n e l r s n o t to re aso n w h y , .T h e ir s b u t to e a t a n d fly.

, , In to th e n a tu ra l gas •»Bode the ono hundred.- ,

. B an q u e ts tb right of thorn, ■-< _ . ■:7B anquo ts to l e f t o f th em , ....... - ...:B an q u e ts In f r o n t o f them ,- t - - - •

W hile a w o rld w o n d e red . —«S to rm ed a t w ith w o rd a n d w in e , ■ - -

._ B rave ly th o y s tr iv e t o sh ine, ^B u t e a tin g sh o rten s b re a th A n d m en a r e ta lk e d to d e a th — ---

, S uffering o n e h u n d re d ." • • -' ' . ' ' Oo/umbue Despatch.

Some R easonsfor Defeat.. 0i n gnawer to the universally expressed

w onder a t the _ success_of tho D em ocratic tick e t la s t .week th ro u g h o u t the State, the following e x tra c ts from different papera m ay tbrow Bottle light on the reasons for f t : ; ; ! l .'_i~

^ (Newark Evening Newa.yT here I s ^ o need of casting a b o u f^ o F V B ry '-

oauBe o t tbe.palpablo v lc to ir th a t o am a to ih « r^ Dem ocracy. T he S tato la-D em o o ra tlo vin«irw_l>v'

- aTS?;-■',,n.°w aw d b a i l o r which . f c Zs w o ll f ld ih e A b b e tt .v o te t o a p o s itiv e c o m p li- ........meui . i 8J Qe Iai 'ge,y to the p o pu larity of the • 'candidate, ah a . In a m easure, to the Issues' involved. T he som ersault re tu rn s from E s­sex, ^ Iorrls, M onmouth, the d im inishing Ro- publican vote In M iddlesex, an d tho trem en- douB boom fo r tho D em ocratic standard - bearer In H udson—all d istric ts w here popula- tlon is dense an d na tiona lity m ixed —thn Ba . ^

— . 1 . ■' . I • . . iuu., #ui. iiu iuooo, m u.ugui 111 nuw Jerseyloading to It Was the grandest they .bad ever, tfonld be lesfi ono a ided ond m ore Interesting

T h n u n n n m t r t K n l m n a . n l n n n I ______

{State Gazette. ) ,T be p rim ary cause o f tb e d efea t the R epub­

licans bavo suffered in tbls S tate is tbe un- ileasan t fac t th a t thero aro from fivo to ton

1 bouaand moro Dem ocrat* than Republicans tn New Jersey. I f tho leaders could fcy any contrivance, in tho way o f m b ra l suasion, ratsbono, o r somo o th er a n tido te fo r Bourbon- lam, get rid of these, tbo.light m Now Jorseylkr^nl/1 Kn Innb Ahf, .. .. .1 _______ . ____ . IThoy seem to bo Im pervious to m oral o r any o th er kind of suasion. They aro stolidly and Immovably unresponsive to tho m ost seduc­tive argum ents, aud stiffen tbelr nooks, llko Pharoah and his host, to tho appeals o t re a ­son add tbe warnings of experjonco.

(,Monmouth Inquirer.) >Boodle. '(* .

' {Long Mratich'Times.) , 'Hero in Now Jersey there Is reason fo r tho

question to be asked, I s a cand ida te ever judged by h is unsavory political record 1 Aa regards the latb gubernatoria l cand idates tbe anBwer could be given : No, n o t If thoealoon elem ent an<2f Hudson county repeaters Count for an y th ing . U nfortunately for New Jersey politics they d o counf—every tlmo.

(Red Bank jfcegistcr.)T he election takes the tem perance question

g u t of politics entirely. L ast year I t was -finown th a t the D em ocrats would repeal the lo c a l option law In case they g o t In power, JVfany D em ocrats who said they w ere In favor o f local option professed to believe th a t their p arty . I t successful, would not repeal the law. The D em ocrats were successful and tho law was prom ptly repealed This y e a r the Re- "

fm bllcans pledged them selves‘to reenac t the ocal option law in case they carried tho leg ­

islature. T hey w ould unquestionably bave '- dono ihis, b u t the battlo went ag a in st them I t Is as tru e oa i t ever was th a t tho poople .of each com m unity should be allowed to govern ^them selves ap to licensing o r exclndlng the ....liquor business. B ut tho Dqmocrafib p a tty Ik opposed to this, a n d the votes have shown th a t the m em bers o f tb e lr party , a lm ost w ith­o u t exception, a re opposed to the local option law. This fac t was still fa rth er emphasized by-the vote o f W arnm county, which, though It voted for local option a yea* ago, gave an increased m ajo rity fo r the m en who bad voted to repeal It. ^

With luxurious coachcs^ an d the conveniences of a Pullm an, h g d a level head H e evidently believed th a t tlie people were en titled to p ro ­tec tion and assistance a fte r they bad bought their ticke ts and ptaceW’m em selvea undor the charge o f the com pany by day "an d n igh t. The c a rso n th is tra in a re the best th a t P ali m an can bu ild . T he baggage an d sm oking c a r ca T rlo aaco m p le tee lec trfc -o u tiit,rwlth-8teana^ engine fed fpHU the locom otive, a dyU'^tUo o f sufficient pow er to supply Incandescent lam ps throughout th e tra in and conu<?oted also with Btorage b a tteries under,each car. These s to r­age b a tte ries hold sufBoieut electricity to su p ­ply io n la m p s fo r olghi t o u r s w ithout draw ing on the dynam o, In case of Ia,ck of steam from th e locom otive o r accidental delays. Tbe day coach la a s long as a sleeping car, with slx- whool trucks, and o f e x tra heavy bu ild for. steadiness an d stab ility . A t bo th ends a re convenient to ile t room s and lavatories, with a r« jo m ^m o k lp g , ap a rtm en t to r gentlem en, rendorlwj; It u nnecessary fo r thom to go' Into ano ther | a r . fo r a w hiff o f a ” pipe o r c iia r . Each en4ya sepai?^ted_ from th e o u ter vesti­bule by {pjswlnglng door, bo th a t d rau g h ts o f cold a ir no n o t annoy t^e passengers. B- bind th e d ay fcoabh ia th e d in ing ca r, a trliftapb o t arUaUc decoration an d finish In viyod- work ,4vpholstery an d carylnga. T h e cm pine islp .k b ep ln g .w ith the lavish, ex pend ltuc l on th e in te rio r o f tho oar. So popu lar havo/jbese cara buconje on^t&g^ jp u te through V irginia th a t 1 learned i t waa a popular; notion v,ith a good m any people to board the ira lnA and1 trav e l to tbe n ex t sta tion fp r the sa^> 'o f ea tin g a b re^^ faa t b r d inner th a t d o e s 'h o t bella the n a m ll Sceoery and travpjlng faolli- ties are unexcelled o n th is ro ad , b u t the hotels a re riot In keepings consequently,, the d in in g car o n th e L im ited is a g rea t ‘ ipstiiutlori; I n add ition to the three oars m entlonod, tbore a r e u sually throo. o r four sloeplhg oars tb a t m ake u p the tra in . One reason fo r the Imm e­d iate success o f th is new llue‘w asthe rem oval

The F au lt Is the People's, tstThere aro grounds for the severe crltiolsm

which eom e o f the R epublican new spapers are Indulging a t the expense o t th e Legisla­tu re electees on Tuesday. In the m ain the in ­com ing body w lirn o l’lw a n Impro its predecessor, an d th a t o rg an isa tio n ' had ihbJ.nnsavbry_M putation.* o f b rin g in g ! -New^p 'Jersey in to ridicule. In m any respebts th e . new (ls the c o u n te rp a rt o f tbe o ld assom blage oit law-m akors - A h a s ty ju d g m e n t would . seem to confirm the im pression th a t in the m atter o t intelligence, in teg rity , leg isla tive ab ility a u d respectability , th e incom ing body Ib n o t superior to, if J t be the poor, of tho oiv ganlzatlon of las t year. ' T ‘ -

Be th is inference co rrec t or falsa t h e . i W Bpbnalbility fo r the fac t a s It m ay e^ist Is not} to b e charged to th e m en who will s it lu th e ^ Seriate an d HduBe. I t m a y ; nc^t be pleasant to affirm th e t ru th , b u t the fac t incontesta- ' Mo tb a t the public Is entirely responsible for , tho men who a re honored w ith seats in the Uw m aking body. I t la com m only said th at tho legislative assem blages—from Congress to tow ushlp boarde—do not rep resen t tho hvera go. Intelligence o f tbo com m unities t li a r. ‘ r lc c t them . In Now Jersey , so com m on te tbe slander, It would not bo com plim entary to claim tb a t tho average Integrity, and Irtclli- gerice.la on a dead level w itb {be Legislative representations. Yet It will bo a sovero stra in to .the sensibilities of tbo super-m oral class to Inform them th a t they an d the pooplo of coarser sensibilities aro roHpoualblo to r lbo cbaraoter o f tbo adm inistrative bodies of iho State. Thoy a re elttior gu ilty o f tbo offeno * of supporting a t tho polio candidates whom thoy know aro not op to tho s tandaftl of in- tulllgijffceand integrity, o r by the sin of neg­lect lot even ts take thoir course w ithout a

Srotesfc a t th e prim aries or a t the polls. - I f liihonest o r Incom petent men aro e lected-to . office It Is because a m ujorlty o f tho peoplo. j

a re so politically twfatcd-.t'hat they canno t be honest WUb' tbelr ho tter judgm ents.-^iV iw ark News. ’ •• T

"W ifo -(to drOnkeiT husb an d )—I do n ’t see bow you bad th o . faco tb ls m orning to say

o tjth o restric tion of additional faroa8 oxttDtod | th a t you wero going to a prohibition moeUng v oo othor UmltMl traina. T b .ro aro no oxfra , ‘o ^ nd_ We„ (h,0) M,t , „ , d |d n ,t ohargea excep t, for moala an d berth s In th e , to tb© m eeting i ’vo (Wo> been priU lng doWn

ru m ju s t thb sam o. ' v

J

Page 2: Vane, C M & Co. BOND AND MORTGAGE A. Co.Dyspepsia Advertising is the best Lu bricant for rusty arid slow moving business,__J!ry it. GEORGE W. LEE JOBBING HOUSE CARPENTER Hardwood work

ASBURY PARK JOURNAL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16,v 1889.

AND M ON M O UTH REPU B LIC A N .

JOHN K. WALLACE; Editor aho P ro p rito a . . W. ?. L*nOY, Ami bt an t Editor.

«l»U»K*0 WMXIY ATT H E A8 BURY PARK PR IN TIN G H O U SE ,

718 MATTISON AVENUE,

' E n te r e d as second-class m a tter a t the A sb u ry P a r i ,_2 « Post-O ffice, F ebruary 7 i iB88.

-.11 W . . 75;. 40a

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION* ■„ • - • . . .

1 y e a r , I n a d v a n c e , ...........«' m o u th s , in ad v an ce ,..........8 m o n th s . In a d v a n c e ,. , ...........................s in g le c o p ie s ,.. .

10E0BRW 0IIDIMW e s h a l l b o g la d to re c e iv e t f e tn a o f n o w s a n d

• co m m u n ica tio n s on au b jo o ts /o f In te re s t t o th is

: °°IU I t l n g a r tic le s I n t e n d fo r - o a r fr ie n d s w ill p lo aso “b e a r In m in d t h a t a Bheet w r it te n o n b o th Bldoa.haa t o b e co p ie d b e fo re go-

th e fall- n a m e a n d ' a d d re sa o f th a w riter ,- n o t n o o e se a rily fo r p u b lica tio n b n t a s a K n a ra n te o o r g o o d 'fa ltn . A nonym ous l e t t e r s w ill n o t b e n o tic e d . - • . . . .

W e c a n n o t r e tu r n r e J e c t e ^ .Q e ^ ^ ? ^ 0^ 10.11 b n t w ill h o ld th e m fo r a l im ite d t lm e i f re q u e s te d

WA11 le tto ra In ten d e d f o r t h e e d ito r ia l o r n ew s d e p a r tm e n t sh o u ld b e a d d ressed to th e

B d lto r o f Tin* J ournal a n d R etubluia* , •* . A sb u ry P a rk . N e w Je rsey .^

Topics o f th e T rade Meeting. 1 Progressive F inancial Institu -t l o n .

9 A T U B D A T , N O V E M B E R 1 6 ,1 8 8 9 .

A fair num ber, considering tho condition o f th e w eather, m et 'a t tbo Board of T rade room s on W ednesday evening. I t waa ra th e r a u Inform al g a th e rin g -io a tin in la te our c iti­zens to a .m crt ac tive co-operation In th tyvorkof tbo Board. .* . --------- - — -

P rostdent H arrison occupied th e chair. A fte^ tb e read ing o f tbo form er m inutes two com m unications w ere read from the Pennsyl­v an ia R ailroad w ith reference to the discrim ­in a tin g fares betw een J?hlladelpbla an d AS- b u ry Parts, which a re decidedly agalnat the n o rth coast jea o r ta an d in favor o f thoee In tho sou thern p a r t o f th e S tate .,

J h e m atte r was d iscussed a t eomo leng th , and It w as th e expressed op in ion tb a t It was an In justice a n d w onid w ork h arm to A sbury P a rk , it^was s ta te d th a t m any Philadelphia people a re b a rred from com ing here .with th e ir fam ilies because o t th e excessive rates.

I t appeared to b e tho prevailing sen tim en t th a t unless th e ra ilro ad com pany m akes con­cessions by g ran t ln g ao m e m odification o f Its tarifT ,'there should be a u n ited p ro te s t from a \\ res id en ts a n d 'p ro p e r ty ow ners a long the M onm onth co ast a g a in s t the un fair d iscrim in­ation . D r. H enry M ltcholl, Jcfbn W lnans, J a m e s H . B lrd t C ap t, -M inot an d o th e r s p a t ' tlc lpated In th o dlsonsstou,

M r. J o h n ^Vlnans, fo r .‘the good o f the. Board, moved th a t a conffailttee o f th irteen be appoin ted to consider _and rep o rt eonfe p lan fo r th e .increase o t ; the m em bership, a n d tb. prom ote i ts a c t lv l t jP d advancing the b est In terests o f th e com m unity. _ T he following Were n o m in ated a n d e le c te d : J o h n W lnans, A. C. Atkins, D r. 'H«■ M Itchell.'G eo• W. T reat, M. U Bam naan,, H enry S telnbaoh, J,. J3. i i i p*- ley^ Capt. J . M inot, H enry G.. W ln so ^ .J^ S . F erguson, C. T . Balley, Theo, O vea,- Geo. F._ Kroehl, w 1th th e p ^ ld & ttP H U d "secretary ex- qffMo m em bers.«Tip h e o b ject I vo w ork o f t his com m ltte a fri ll he to induce alt o u r c itizens to becom e asao-

i o a u s e i t w a a b e l i e v e d b e ' c o u l d d o m o r e f o r t h a . c a u s e t h a n h iB o p p o n e n t . .

* B nfc t h e f o l ly , o f e x p e c t i n g a D e m o c r a t

t o d o o t h e r t h a n t h e b i d d i n g o f t h e b o s s e s w a a m a d e c o n s p i c u o u s i n t h e c a s e o f M r .

r T B S I te r r w h o n o t o n l y f a i l e d t o m a k e g o o d h i s p r o m i s e s b u t a c t u a l l y a d v a n c e d t h e W e r t z r e p e a l e r . — H i s d e f e a t - a t t h e l a t e e l e c t i o n i s t h e r e f o r e a s i g n a l a n d d e s e r v e d r e b u k e . H i s r e t i r e m e n t r e v e r s e s t h e

c o m p le x io n o f t h o S e n a t e .

A D e s e r v e d R e b u k e .

T h r e e y e a rs a g o H o n ; P h i l i p P . B a k e r w a s e n d o rs e d b y t h e te m p e ra n o e p e o p le o f O u in b e r la n d c o u n ty t o r e p r e s e n t th e m i n t h e S ta te S e n a te . H e w a s e le v a te d to t h a t p la c e in-a^- R e p u b l ic a n oounty-»bo%* -c Ja :ed in tb e -w o rk -o f- tb o B o a rd r in farthor-

^ — 1 anoe^pf any m a tte r th a t m ay be deemed d e ­sirab le o r to im prove th e condition of the com m unity.

T b e sob jeo t o f ro ad s was tak en up , w ith reference to th e recen t surveys o r th e road to Shark River. Mr. H arrison s ta ted th e s u r veys have been com pleted , a n d th e surveyors - rw b o w ere ap p o in ted by the C ourt from su rro u n d in g tow nships—will m eet a t th e Col- lector’s office^ S a tu rd ay m orning , Nov. 18, an d it Is desired th a t o u r cltlzefis-w tjl p e e t With them a n d give each suggestions a s m ay, determ ine th em In m ak in g tb elr r ep o rt to th e C o u rt C oncern ing th e w idth, change o f lines, w idening, e to ., o f th e Shark R iver road .

Tbls 1s a very im p o rtan t m atte r an d should call u p considerable in te res t especially am ong o u r business m en, a s good ro ad s have m uch Influence In b ring ing tra d e to a p la c o —-tnfcro than m any a re a w are — —— —^

M r. H enry .Steinbach rev iv ed th e W orld 's F a ir p ro ject, a n d believed the B o a rd 'o f T rad e should ta k e som e ac tiv e p&Tt in .it. A fter a short discussion on th e su b je c t th e m eeting was ad journed .

T h e i r B a c k - S e t B e g u n /

E f f e c t f o l lo w s c a u s e , j u s t a s s u r e l y a s t h e s u n b r i n g s r e t u r n i n g d a y a n d t h a t e t e r n a l l a w s a r e s u p r e m e . j P r o h i b i t i o n - i s t e , o r t h o s e w h o p e r s i s t i n a n i n d e p e n d ­e n t l i n o ' o f a o t i o n , m a y f o l lo w t h e i r b l i n d a n d f a t u o u s p o l i c y u n d e r a m i s ­g u i d e d z e a l a n d f a l s e i d e a s o f p r i n c i p l e ,

b u t n o n e t h e l e s s t h e e f f e c t o f t h e i r p a a t p o l i c y h a s d o o m e d t h e c a u s e o f t e m p e r - a r io e t o t h e w o r s t b a c k - s e t i t h a s k n o w n

i n a h a l f c e n t u r y ,A l r e a d y t h e d i s i n t e g r a t i n g w o r k i s b e ­

g u n , j u s t a s t h e c o n s e r v a t i v e t e m p e r a n c e J p e o p l e f o r o s a w a n d p r e d i c t e d . T E Y e n t h o

o n e f y e a r l a s t p a s t h a s p ro v je n c o n o lu / s i v e l y t h a t t h e p e o p l e a r e . n o t r e a d y f o r

e x t r e m e m e a s u r e s . T h e r e p e a l o f p r o h i ­b i t i o n i n B h o d e - I s l a n d : ; - t h e r e f u s a l ' t o a U o w ~ la ^ o o n f l t i tu t i o p a l a m e n d m e n t i n

^ _ J ^ n n s y L v a n i a 4 _ t h e - i n e r e a 8 e d :jv o t e - i n “i : h e '

p a r t y o p p o s e d t o ' a l l s u m p t u a r y ' l a w s in N e w ' ‘Y o r k . N e w J e r s e y a n d O h i o ; t h e

. t e n d e n c y i n t h e s a m e d i r e c t i o n i n I o w a , a l l s h o w t h a t t h e b a c k - s e t h a s iM g rn i , a n d y e a r s , t h e r e i s n o t a f o o t o f t e r r i t o r y i n t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s c o v e r e d b y a n y p r o h i ­b i t i o n law .

■ W hy? B e c a u s e t h e m a t t e r h a s b e e n f o r c e d ' u n w iB e ly a n d u n d u l y . I n o t h e r w o r d s , p r o h i b i t i o n i s t s c h o s e t o p u t t h e

' c a r t b e f o r e t h e h o r s e ; w e r e o l i m b i n g t h e

l a d d e r f r o m t h e t o p in s tS & d b f ’‘f r o f i T t f i e b o t t o m , a n d w e r e f a y in g t o e d u c a t e t h e p e o p l e i n L a t i n a n d g e o m e t r y b e f o r e t h e y

. u n d e r s t o o d t h e f i r s t e le m e n ts ."M o r a l q u e s t i o n s c a n ^ i je v e r b e f o r c e d

o n a p e o p l e . ' S o o n o e v e r a t t e m p t e d t o o o e r c e a p e r s o n i n t o ' k l i n e o f C h r i s t i a n l i v in g . I n h o m e l y p h r a s e , “ y o u m a y l e a d a h o r s e t o t h e w a te r i n g t r o u g h b u t y o u c a n n o t c o m p e l h i m t o d r i n k . ”

S in e n t e r e d t h e w o r ld t h o u s a n d s ^ y e a r s a g o , a n d w i t h a l l i t s e n c o u n t e r s h a s n e v e r b e e n l e g i s l a t e d o u t o f e x i s t ­e n c e ; i n d e e d , n e v e r c a n b e . I g n o r a n c e a n d v i c e h a v e p r e v a i l e d a n d w i l l c o n t i n u e u n t i l t h e p e o p l e a r e e d u c a t e d a n d t a u g h t t o l e a d b e t t e r l i v e s .

T h e s a m e a n a l o g ie s r a n g e o n t h e l i n e

o f t e m p e r a n c e r e f o r m . S a f e g u a r d s , a n d r e s t r i c t i o n s , a n d p e n a l t i e s h a v e b e e n p l a c e d o n o u r s t a t u t e b o o k s t o l e s s e n t h e e f f e c t s o f t h e t r a f f i c i n a l l p a r t s o f o u r

l a n d . I n s o m e l o c a l i t i e s p r o h i b i t i o n h a s

M a i n e H aa h a d t h e l o n g e s t t e s t , a n d e v e n N e a l D o w , t h e f a t h e r o f t h e l a w , p r o ­c l a im e d i t a f a i l u r e . V i n e l a n d a n d A s ­b u r y Jp a rk , w h i o h h a v e h a d c h a r t e r p r i v ­

i l e g e s a g a i n s t t h e s a l e o f i n t o x i c a n t s , b o t h s h o w t h e im p o s s i b i l i t y o f m a i n t a i n i n g a s t r i c t l y p r o h i b i t o r y l a w .

T h e S t a t e p l a t f o r m o f t h e R e p u b l i c a n p a r t y , a n j l i t s c a n d i d a t e f o r G o v e r n o r , e a o h t o o k t b e n g h f c g r o u n d , - th a t leg a l en ­actment o n temperance should advance only 'Oi publio opinion toould tupport and enforce, T h e iP r o h ib i t i d n i a t s , o n t h e o t h e r h a n d , ’ ■w ould o o e r c e t h e , m a j o r i t y i n s u b m i t t i n g fcd“ lttW s s u i t in g " t h e m iu o r i ty ^ T h i s i s '

d e c i d e d l y u n - A m e r i c a n a n d a n t i - B e p u b - 11 c a n . T h e [ f u n d a m e n ta l l a w d o m in a t e s . T h e g r e a t e r n u m b e r m u B t c o n t r o l . , .

T h i s i s w h e r e t h e T h i r d p a r t y m a d e i t e s p ir fo n a m i s t a k e * a n d *hfls 'd o n e in o a l-

,0 t f l a b l e h a r m t o t h e c a u s e i t ’p r o f e s s e s t o h a v e s o m u c h a t h e a r t , a n d y e t w o n ld

t a k e n o a d v i c & t h a t m i g h t b r i n g s u r e a n d l a s t i n g b e n e f i t s . I t h a s s o w n t h e w i n d . a n d w i l l n o w r e a p t h e w h i r lw in d . T h i r d p a r t y a d ^ ^ c a t e s a n d a b e t t o i s m u s t a n s w e r f o r j t^* , |^ n 8 f lq u e n o c S .

Asbury JT i f .k Oonds All ~A decisipnfcjts ju s t been filed by the 8a*

prenie C ourtM r th is S ta te declaring th a t seaii aide boro n g h ||!u co rp o ra ted u nder the law. o t 1878 a rc n o t mmstttut^pnailj^ organized. Un- leas the C buri|'tof A ppeals se ts aside or re -4 verses th is doCj^loo, som e ten o r tw olve'of o a r seaside resor: 9 a ro w ithout a legal govern­m ent, an d tho bo* d a they m ay have Issued a rc vcrtd aQd ihe b«;.'^ers aro w lthont redress.

Sea Isio City, Co^. May P o lu t, Ocoan City, A oglesea, Holly Btac.'t, L avale tte City, P o in t P leasan t nnd A tlan tic H ighlands aro sa id to bp am ong the boroughs incorporated under the ac t of 1878? Tho banks o f A sbury P a rk have rccdlved inquiries concern ing Aebury P ark bonds, and they bave lho sa tisfac tion ofj replying tb a tth o y aro good beyond any^donbt.

Tho nn(on Thanksgiv ing aorvlco, aooording to th e n^oal routine, will be held In F irs t M . E. Churoh, a t 10.00 Av m., Thursday , Nov. 88. % v . Dr. K. 0. S cudder. 6t tho Reform ed Church, will doll ver the efrraop . V

T h e W . C . T . D e c r e a s i n g ,

T he rep o rt given on S a tu rd ay in oue o f th e sessions ®! th e N ationa l W om en’s C hristian Tem perance U nion show s a largejjecreaBQ-In the; nu m bstj?l_btanobefl J n m e m b e ra h i p a o d fin an ces.— •. ' — “—

Last year, a t New Yorlc, the report show ed 10,000 b ranches an d a . m em bership in round num bera of 200,000, an d a snrp lu s o f recelp ts o f "about f7;006: T h is y e a r th e receip ts a re $4,667 less tb a n th e e x p e n d itu re s ; - 3,000 branches andW ,837m em bers have withdrawn^ m ainly because o f the s tan d tak en last year lu-New Y ork in B uppoW of the T b ird p a rtJ 'T

T he Cleveland U n io n i the m oat w ealthy and Influential o f th e b ranches, with m any in M in n eso ta .. I o w a ^ P en n a ilv ap la a n d o th e r Union.

Costly Houses a t In terlaken .M essrs. T. A. R oberts & Son have com

pleted deaigna a n d p lan s fo r tw o very expen­sive dw ellings a t In te rlak en . 'M r. Thom as M. M ontgom ery, o f Ph iladelph ia , has purchased tbe en tire tria n g u la r .b lock fron ting on the n o rth a rm of Deal Lake. T he house is pecu­lia rly orn&UT'in ou tw a rd lines , and the in te ­rior, from Its g ran d an d heavlly wooded hall to the m inu test d eta il o f com pleted room s. Is arranged ' 'fo r ‘ th e gc'featest convenience au d c o m f o r t .T h e room s a re a ll large a n d have Dne view s from nearly a ft th e windows. The' to ta l cost, Including carriag e house, will be # 12,000 o r m ore. . < .

M r. J o h n L . H am ilton , o f N ew Y ork , h as purchased the a d jo in ln g block o f e leven lo ts, an d tbe M essrs. R oberts have prepared elabor­a te dealgua-for a larg e house of b eau tifu l p ro ­po rtio n s fo r his. use. B o th Ihese im prove­m en ts will be finished fo r w in te r occnpatioo, w ith h ea te rs a n d a i l m odern conveniences. M r. H am ilto n ' will a lso build a num ber bf sm alle r co ttag es n e x t season.

D edicating th e ir New Jttoom.The W om an’s C h ristian T em perance U nion

o f A sbury P a rk in fo rm a lly / ded icated their new room,. No. 607 C ookm an avenue, on elec­tion day, Nov. 5, b y a n all-day m eeting of prayer, p raise an d addresses. T he m eeting

— — ----------- - w as largely a tten d ed . A n um ber o f m inistersp re v a i le d ' i n th e o r y .b u t_ n e y G r- in - fa o k ^ -w ere-p reseD t-an d -ad d ed -m aeh ^o -tb e-g en er^ -^u en tly n rx o n B p lcu o u s ad v an tag e to h is fel-

— ' In te rest by sh o rt b o t telling addresses. T he *m eeting w as c o nducted b y M rs. Belting, Mrs.C rane au d o th er lad ies o f bo th U nions tak in g part. A t 1180 Mrs. C rane conducted a brief dedicatory serv ice b y read in g th e p ray er o f Solom on an d a se lection ’Hjrom H eb. 10 rlO-28,

T he New Officers.T b e Toung-.M en's Republican A ssociation

held tb elr a n n u a l m eeting a t th e C lnh Rooms, T uesday evening . T h e * e lection fo r officers resu lted ! h th e selection o f »he following fo rth e ensu ing ye a r . _________ • ....“ P re s ld o n t— F re d A . L e g g e tt.

1 s t Y lc e -p re s ld e n t—^ . ' W . K lrk b r id e . * '2d V lce p resldent-—H. D. Colem an. ~F inancial 8e c re I ary— H -L eR o V7 r “R ecord ing Secretary*—A. C. A tkins; T reasu rer—Jo h n H ubbard .A u diting C om m ittee—M . ,D. LeRoy, 8 , W .

K lrkbride, C harles Prldfaam.M em beiahlp C om m ittee—Chas. A. A tkins,-

L. E W atson, David Taylor.T ru n e ea —A. C . A tkins, Lewis Hal near, E.

•feflt.ajTnrtf, .W;'*W.'D6r»Ptt, L B..W o*fon.

Ju n io r O. TJ. A. BI.M embers o f A sbury pounoil. No. 33, a r t re*

queated to m eet a t their, room S unday, Nov,. 17, a t '6.46 p^.u., sh a rp , th a t they m ay a tte n d div ing service a t F irs t M. B. Church, co rner F irs t au d Q raud a.vehuea. - 1 *

■ _ ___ _ ■ H e n u y R tm o, Councilor. 3. Louden8La.gsb, Secretary. ‘ ; -; t ,

JHesignsHls Charge. ;VRev. R . C. H atlock, o f th e T e n n e n t P resby­

terian C hurch , resigned his pasto ra te ou Sun­day last, a n d announced b is acceptance of a call to a cbuTch on L o n g Island . T h e an ­nouncem ent was a su rp rise to /post o f his c o n g re g a tio n .. I t Is understood, howover, th a t he has- {leen con tem p la iln g a change. T ennen t Includes m any outly ing sta tions, and It is ra th e r /ry ln g upon tbo h ea lth and strength" o f pasto rs. M r. H allook has boen active and 6norgetlo an d will, bo missed by h is m any frleuda iu a n d o u t o f th e churoh.

\L o y a l Jbeglou.T b e W om an’sC h ria tian T em perance U nion

Invite? tbe young, people and children to m eet a t tbeir room, 607 Cookm an'avonue, o n Satnr- d a y i ’Nov.116, a t 2.80 p . u . , w i th ,a vlo^r to )rganislog a Loyal Legion of Tem perance. Soys and g irls o f a ll ages, above flvo years,

a re oordlalllally Invited to co{n6 and help Jin o rg an is in g tbe Legion.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANE; DOUBLES ITS CAPI­TAL AND STlKBS OUT FOB OUEATBR ODBINESS ARD.COMMEBCIAL SUCCESS. ' .

T he B oard o f D irectors o f tbo F irs t N a ­tiona l B ank of A sbury P a rk hold a raeetlog on W ednesday o f tb ls weok an d resolved to increase tbo bank)s oap lta l stock from $50,000 to |I0 P ,000, In accordance w ith a vote o f tho stockholders—the new s tock to b e valued h t th e p rice Which tb e p renent atook lH show n to be w orth, by add ing to I ts p a r value th e sum of und iv ided su rp lu tm nd profits to which each a b a te o f the o riginal s to ck la en titled , nam ely , 0168.

T he F irs t N ational B ank o f A sbury P ark , the first financial In stitu tion estab lished In N ep tune tow nehip, opened Its doors fo r busl uesB leaa th an fo u r y e a rs ago. I t has since th a t tim e averaged fo r Its stockholders profit o f 20 per cen t, p e r an n u m , „and ita o nt Its p resen t Ust o f m ore th an a th o u san d depositors, which is s tead ily increasing, show s th a t It h a s th e coijfidenoe o f tbe com m unity.

R eaders o f the JouitNA.L Who rem em ber how a p tly M r/ B rad lc^^cafa i^ed to m atte rs o f finance In h is speech on th e ooccaalbn o f the opening o t the M onm outh r T ru st C om pany 's adm irab le now flre proof baildIng, can under- a taud how rem atkab le , even to th e founder o f A sbury P a rk , Is th e g ro w th Cf th e. p lace and its institu tions.

By t£e estab lish m en t 9^ .th e F lra t N ational B ank tbW com m unity w as released from Its dependence u p o n 'b a n k s located In ' o th er places. T he n earest b a n k ' -then to A sbury P a r t waa s ix m iles d is ta n t an d q u ite Incou ven len t o f access. B usiness m en w ho . w ere In.the-SUmmer season un ab le to sp a re tim e to go each d ay to tb e lr b a n k s, a n d found I t fn- conveniontuto sp a rk an em ploy^ to d o so , re­ta in ed tb e services b f m essengers to tra n sa c t th e ir b a n k business* O ne y oung lady w ho w as th u s « B ^ ® ea_ frequBQtifToaffled a t eb e tim e funds aggrega ting In valne from $80,000 to $50,000. 'H e r t r ip s wero m ade w ithou t tb e g u a rd which to -d ay a lw ays accom panies m es­sengers o f the F irs t N ationa l B an k w hen fu n d s o f consfderable 'value a re n o t tran sp o rted by a n express com pany, which w onld bo liable in c ase o f a IbBS.

T he F irs t N ational was1 v irtua lly established a t th e Suggestion o f P h ilip D u n n , president o f th e F irs t N ationa l B ank, of T ren to n . Mr. D u n n Is n o ted fo l h is findncial acum en, and seeing the oppottnnU y, suggested to 'a friend who cam e to him fo r advice, to tako advatf^ tag e o f it. Aw are o f th e r ig id business t ra in ­in g h la . friend h ad u ndergone in carefully m anaged flnanolal Institu tions, M r. D unn offered to tak e s tock bim aolf in a N ational B ank In A abury P ark .

T he am all ouo-atory b rick bu ild ing erected fo u r y e a rs -a g c , expressly fo r th e F i r s t N a­tio n a l B ank, no longer s ta n d s an isolated office upo n ab lo ck , w here th e lots, n o t vacant, were occupied by Almple co ttage, struo tu res. T hese a re replaced by su b stan tia ) brlok build­ings and tbe brown-otone blook o f th e M on­m o u th T ru s t Com pany, now. used by th a t Institu tio n an d the F irs t N ational Bank con­jo in tly . B esides these changes, s tr ic te r b u si­ness h ab its have grow n u p in th e com m unity, to accord with, th e m ethods o f tho^ bank, Which from its oo tae i w aa bonducted in con­form ity w ith the best princip les o f.b an k in g ru les and law s, an d th u s u has been unex-

■ T he grow th o f A sbury "Park has been , fre- q u e n tly c h a ra c te r le e d ' a a pbenom edal. ^The' t ransa c tions o f the F irs t N atio n a l B ank since Ita-doors w ere opened fo r business. F e 6. 10, 1 8 ^ , leas th an fo u r y ea rs ago, m ay b e like- -wlAO-refeiTdd-tOr—OQ4be-d*y-of-opening410, 000 w ere received on deposit an d m ore than

'th ir ty a cco u n ts opened. W ith in a m onth $66, 000 w ere o n deposit, whloh is rem arkable to o k oosm ess ts rrafisacw a, a n a m crcnatfis an d o thers w ere u nder o b liga tions for accom . m odatlon from banks w ltb which they for- m erly d ea lt.

Before the sp rin g business h ad fairly opened 41100,000 were on deposit. I t Is n o tab le th a t church societies were am ong thoe« w ho first ava iled them selves o f th e new convenience; T h e h ighest, po in t reached by deposits d u rin g the first y ea r was( $255,718.82, an d th is am o u n t h as each y ea r s tead ily Increased, u n til w ith p resen t facilities, and b a n k in g ropm s u n su r­passed by “an y In theiS tate , the F irs t N ational Babk has a t& sln eas wbloh Institu tio n s long eatabUaheiTJu tow ns m any years o lder th an Aabury Prirk do p o t tran sact.

b ep o s lto rs com e from tow ns as d istan t a s Lakewood, and F arm ln g d a le ,L o n g B ran ch au d Spring Lake, besides those o f m ore a d ja c e n t localities, a re added to those In th is immodl a te vicinity. Tho m ethods o f tra n sa c tin g business a t th is bank n ave proved so sa tisfac ­tory tb custom ers th a t som e deposits a re son t from poin ta a t a considerable d latance.

T he officers an d d irecto rs bave w ith o u t ex- cep tlon 'w on fo r them selves rep u ta tio n s fo r finaooial ab ility an d p ro b ity which com m ands and re ta in s th e resp ec t of th e com m unity o f which, as id e from tb e ir re la tio n s aa b ank offi­cials, they a re . ac tiv e p a rtic ip an ts In any m ovem ent likely to ad v an ce th e w elfare of this localUy. T he p resident, M r. G eorge F. K roehl, has been w arm ly sup p o rted b y all classes fo r a s e a t am ong q u r B orough Cam< m issioners, w here his flnanolal ab ility Is fre-

tlow citizens.I t Is understood th a t th e Inorease o f the

cap ita l b f th e b a n k la m ain ly In deference to th e w ishes of M r. K roehl, w ho s ta te s tb a t tbe m ain ob jec t in view la t o ad d to tbe effiolenoy o f tbe b an k In m eeting tho Increased business o f the com m uuity since Its es tab lishm ent:> I t •mayjbe.added th a t the p res id en t's views h ave the u n ah lm ous su p p o rt o f h is fellow officials. Cashier A. C. Tw ining, an d M r.Isa ^ c C. K en­nedy, who a re p rom inen t In th e B oard of D irectors, express alm ftar views, ad d in g to tbeii^statem ent a belief th a t a c ap ita l o f $100,- 000, an d su rp lu s a cco u n t o f $68,000, w ill in­crease tbe p resen t ad v an tag es o f tho bank to a n ex te n t w htcb will b e apprec iab le to stock-

)lders as well a s to custom ers. ■C harles A. A tk ins, o f tbo d irecto ry , an d one

o f th e proprie tors < f the Ocean H otel, s a y s th a t i t is s im ply a s te p / forw ard whloh has a lread y been too long delayed to be In h a r ­m ony with the views o f those who a te fully conversan t with tbe progress of seashore In­teres ts and business. j

M. L. Bara m an, a lso a d irecto r, an d a b u si­ness m an whose In terests a re en tire ly in th is vicin ity , th in k s th a t business m en will a p p re ­c ia te equally tbe wisdOm an d ad v an tag e o f a s te p which has n o t been tak en w ith o u t first considering ail the con^lllo n j^ jsh lo li could possibly h a v e a bearing u p d n 4 b M ^ je c t^ ■’

A gentlem Bp occupyJng a J e a d ln g - p b s it lW In tbia section , b u t whoso nam o in deference to bis wish will h o t .be m entioned; believes even ts wlU prove conclusively tho Correct jud g m en t o f those u nder whose m anagem ent th e F irs t N ational Bank has"w bn so enviable, a rep u ta tio n an d position am o n g financial cor­respondents an d citizens w ho have had occa- alohTto tra n sa c t business w ith thom.

Tbo C hristm as (Decem ber) n u m b er of H a r ­per’« A/agtt^itu will con ta in s ix com ploto s to ­ries, all b u t one o f which a re illustra ted . Tw o are by rep resen tative Non England w riters, M ary E . Wjlklns. and .S ara O rne J e w e t t ; two by representative ^ou thorn writer®. Mi E . M. Davis au d R u th M qEnery S tu a r t ; one by <\ leading English w riter, T hom as H ardy, and ono by the a rt is t author^ F . D. M illet, whom H enry Jam es considers ‘'a r tis tic a lly in terest- 1 Ing—highly so .” All th e a rtis ts who Illustra te theso stories are. Am ericana, w ith tho excep­tion of A lfred P arsons. Tbe o thers ' a ro C. S. R einhart, A. B. F rost, C. D. W eldon a n d H , W, MoVlojmr.

A nother B ridal Event.On T uesday Mr. F ran k W. S im m ons, of

Birm ingham , C onn., en te red tho dom ain of ono o f o u r Asbury P a rk fam ilies ond w ith tho a ssis tan ce ot Rov. O eo. C. M addook, of tho F irs t M. E. Churob, boro aw ay a favorite d au g h te r to tils own homo in Taokoo-land.

T h e fa ir bride w as Mies E d n a E . Beger. d au g h te r o f Mr. T hom as E. flcgor, ro s ld lu g a t 500 Bommerfield avenuo. A bou t s ix ty o f tbo Im m ediate fam ily an d frionds wcnj-welcomod b y th e ’pollte ushers, M essrs. W m. Simm ons, th o groom ’b b ro ther, an d F ra n k G ilbert, of B irm in g h am ; F ran k B eardsley^ o f Nowt Brunaw lck, an d Noll Rogers, of A sbury P a rk .

Tho bridal pair wore u n a tten d ed by b est m an o r m aid of honor. M iss Seger w as a t­tired In a n e leg an t' costum e of w hite faille, pearl trim m ed, w ith d iam ond ornam entp, whilo tbe groom wore th e costum e t h a t fash ­io n dlotatos fo r a daylight w edd ing .« ^ .

The cerem ony, whioh was in P as to r M ad d o ck ’s usual felloitons m anner, a n d c o n g ra tu ­la tio n s over, a genorouB w edding d lty ie r.w aa 6«?ryo<3. These, w ere amonpt the guests w ho p a rto o k o f I t: ' . .

M ra C h iids,'o f B irm in g h am ; M r. a n d M rs. F . C; B orden, Mrs. A. R . •A lbertsoq a n d Mr. J o h n W* Fielder*3 J r . , ol',-Princeton 5 M r. and M rs. J o s . F ishor apd M rs. Jo h n W. Fielder, o f New B ru n sw ick ; M rs. R. M. Valontine, of W oodbrldge; Mrs* C arrin g to n a n d daughter,* o f Brooklyn {'Miss N ettle D uncan, o f New­a r k ; Mr. A. L . Green and fam ily, of^Ocean Beach 5 M r - and.M rs! W m . G lover, o f HMsel- ton , Pa.J M rs, R ichards and fam ily, Mr. and M rs. Geo. ‘ W, M oKenale, M r. a n d M w .; j . W ittenberg , M rs. I . Gifford an d fam ily,. Mr. a n d Mrs^ Chas. E . Borden, Mr. ;a ^ d Mrs. Hi cfc Je lllff, Mrs; F . ' A. W isem an, M ra.;E , Ross a n d d augh ter, Mr. Edw ard .Lockwood an d fam ily, Mr. W. L . A tkinson an d dau g h ­te r , M r. t S. Green and ; fam ily , M rt“J^S." Soger a n d family^ o f A abury P ark . ~ v. -f- ■

- A n u p p e r-ro o m w as d evo ted to th e .pres- on ta> ap p ro p ria te ,-u aefu fan d elegant. Am ong these w as a large g roup o f R ogers ■ s ta tu a ry , fro m I . S. G reen a n d w lfo ; beadtifu l. p lush rocker^ from M r. an d M rs. J . W . F ie ld er | m arble clock, F . C. B om en an d wife { an tiq u e tab le , H . J . Rogers ; p ian o lam p, M rs. V alen­tine, a n d nearly a h u n d red Other artloles tp silver, c h in a a n d g lass, cu tlery and fancy a rtic les ..- f ■ - •

Tbo.bridal trip was eastw ard to B oston, and on th e ir retu rn .th e y will se ttle In B irm ing­ham , Conn. . * ‘ ' r \ . I

_,Q uarter Sessions Cases.^ -

; G eorge S tanhope, the y ou th fu l te r ro f o f W est P ark , w as tried again fo r a s sa q ltln ^ bis. s is te r w ith a Chair. J u s tic e ' Lawrehoe! a p ­peared J n . h la behalf, and by telling th e ju r y t h a t G eorge h ad a step-m other who w as "a g in ’ h im ” an d a n x io u s to have him p u t Out o f tbe way, so worked on th e ir sym path ies th a t they p rom ptly a cq u itted him.

T h e case a g a in st Wr C. W eeden, b ro u g h t by res id en ts beyond th e Borough l lm lts w h o com plained ag a in st the sm ell from th e ferti User facto ry , w as p u t off fo r th e t e rm .. f ‘

T h e libel su it o f .C .; W-. T a y leu re / of,, th e L ong B ranch Ifltos, was s la te ^ fo r i r ia l n ex t M onday, -i—--

G eorgs Rothwell, indicted for keeping a - disorderly house 00 b r a n d a v en u e, A sbury P a rk , la s t sum m er, di<J 'n o t a p p e a r when h is case w as called for. tria l an d h is b a ll w as d e ­clared forfeited. ‘ R othw ell r a n a reg u la r beer tunnel, and ob tained hla supplies m ostly from Ja m e s 0_’I?aft&n, who w en t h is security, w h en a rre a te d r^T b e C ohrt will endeavor to co llect $500 from M r. O’H agan. •

Io the case o f P a t M cTsgue,A nother alleged disorderly , th e C ourt allow ed a ndleprosequi.

R e t u r n p a y .

OFFICIAL FIOtJRES OF TUB LATE ELECTION AS CERTIFIED TO DT THE OODNTT CANVASSERS.

W hole n u m b e r o f n am es on tb e p o ll books. .14,149Ballots re je c te d . ............................ 87F o r Leon A bbett. fo r G o v e rn o r .................... 7,620F o r E . B urd G rubb . .................r ..T . ..'.Vi 6,046F o r George LaM onte, ** KMF or A aron E. Jo hnston , Assem bly, 1st D ls t.. 2,184 F or Wm: L .C onover. '• " . . . v 1,084For F ran c is A . F ie ld e r, •* •• IMF or W m . D .C am p b ell, •* .- 2d D lst.. 8,870 F or D avid P. V anD eventer " " 2,660F o rW m M. P aw loy , *1 " » t . 868F o r C harles H . Ivlns» • 8d D ls t:. 2,286F o r J o h n S. B p iC u l,. ' •* . " . . 1,958F o r J o h n 9 . C arte r, " . . . - .98

Co. A Inspection.Follow ing thA^lnBpection of Co. G, a t Key­

p o rt, o n Tuesday, opening, an d Co. B a t Long. B ranch, W ednesday evening, Col. D . B. M urphy, Inspec to r o f th e Second Brigade, cam o to Aebury P a rk T hursday n igh t, accom ­panied by L ieut, Col. B. A. Leo, M ajo r B. P< H olm es and Judge-A dvocate J.-V .» A lstroip, o f tb e .Third Regim ent. -

Co. A assem blbd In tb e ir a rm o ry a n d , e s ­co rted by N eptuno C o rn e t Band, proceeded to Oi& tral H all, w here tho Inspection toojc place. T he com pany waa p u t- th ro u g h the m anual and drill, undor th e d irection o f the Inspeoting officer.

A t th e conclusion ho com plim ented th e com pany on their neat appearance a n d the ex cellen t condition o f th e ir a rm s. W ith b u t a s lig h t exception he cou ld m ake o u t a lm ost a p e rfec t report to hia superior. ‘ v- Col. Lee congra tn la ted tb e officers and m en o u th e ir im provem ent. - 'M ajo r Holm es, who usually indulges in a grow ), bad b u t o ne th in g to nnd fau lt w lth r- th e lr app lause for tbe speakers; “ Soldiers a t res t,” he sa id , “ should bq, l ik e . s ta tu es.” M ajor A llstrom epokC w ords o f encouragem ent andi p ra ised - thb com pany on Its Im provem ent. . -

way. I n a rre s tin g a d ru n k ^ tu L d la o rd e rly c h a rac te r la s t sp ring h ^ w a s com pelled tb use hla c lub , an d som e o f the v ictim ’s alleged fo> iiftghraBSabif. •

Roll o f Honor.- ^ T h e follow ing p u p ils have n o t been absen t o r tard y d u r in g th e m onth en d ingN ov . 8, ’89:

• ' ■' APBUfAEY. f-J a m e s A pplegate, Bessie King) .B ern ice B atem an , - A n n a Powers,. . . . A gnes R om aln , ,

A r th u r Bchwager,A ddle S o lllv aa ,F an n y V an Rensselaer, Rob’t Van Rensselaer, • M and T a n B runt,H ow ard W allace,M abel-Low R.

b p r i h a b y . .- - G eorge P ettin g lll, ■

J o h n P e tU n g lll, .R obb ie Parram ore, W alte r R usbton,B ertie Kom aln,P e te r TenB roeck ,Charlie VanWlckle, Charlie VanCleaf,Em m a Clayton,G eorge H u n t,A lm ira Bobbins.

0 p r i m a r y . I 1

A rth u r C ottrell, B rnce Conover, H o w ard O liver, L ily C asner, P em b erto n Dudley, l i l y Doll,L o ttie G reneU e, L o ck iln H e tr ic k ,

B essie B ird,G race Boyce; A r th u r Broom e, E m m a C ady, H o w a rd Crow ell, A lv in C llver, George E m m ons, T ham ah F ryer, H o w ard K roeh l. J a c k M onroe,John Matthews,

G ussle A pgar. Jam es B ennett, A lice H u n t.

T hom aa H erbert, S id n e y L ash, B lrd le Lloyd,

Mertlo VanBrunt,

Quail on Toast.A q u a rte tte o f local sportsm en , consisting

qf'G&Orge W. P a tte rso n , R. B . CuBack, Jo h n H am pton an d Charles Brower, arm ed with b reech lo ad e rs , pen e tra ted the wilds a d jacen t to F arm ln g d ale an d succeeded in bagging 27 quail, 14 rab b its an d tw o fu lly developed pheasan ts. G am e Is scarce :ln. th la locality , b u t n o t so fa r a p a r t a s to escape th e ’tram p ­in g q ualities of the above nam ed gentlem an. T roph ies o f the h u n t. In the shape o f ^co u p le brace o f fo t qua il, w ere sen t to th e J ournal on F rid ay m orning . T he donor la heldi-in kindly rem em brance.

Dissolution, ‘T h e firm of W ainrigh t & E rrickson ia. .to

bo dissolved, an d all goods In th e ir m am m oth sto re on M ain s tree t will be sold a t auction , com m encing W ednesday n e x t a t 10 a. lit. See no tic e .• " ■■ ■-'- -

M r. R . F . Parieen ls bu ild ing a h ex tension to h la co ttag e on BbUd atreet.; .

T h e -S o n 8- o f - V eteran 8~ h 0ld theIr an n u a l Cathp-ftre o n T hursday ovonlng, In . M anning H all. , ^ . . 4 ;... .

T he s ix th anh lv ersary o f C oast C ity Conn ell. Royal Arcanum,- -will b e ce leb rated with, an e n te tta in m ed t a t tbe Council .Cham ber, Thursday, eveniug n o x u Several of the G rand officers will b e present. , ’

A m o tto o h the Wall ot th e Arm ory in Chi­cago where t ho i'N ational W» 0 . T .U . was bold, read . th u s : “ G od’s C urse upon . H igh L icense.” - W hy shou ld they n o t have classed- low license In the sam e irreveren t ob ju rga tion ' —j u s t as if th e G rea t G od w ould particu larize betw een th em j ' , ' 1

* ~ — r r ^ --------—M iss K ate D rexel, d au g h te r o f tbe lato F, A#-

D rexcl, th e n o ted banker, who Is heiress to $5,000,000, h a s tak o u o ih e first s tep s tow ard becom ing a hun. H er o b jec t fa n o t to become an o rd in ary n u n fo r oonvent life, b u t e h e tex­p e c ts to g o o u tran d labor fo r the education of In d ia n an d colored g ir ls . , ' j . .

A large aud ience aaaemblod a t E ducational H all T hu rsd ay evening to b e a r Col. Bain In h is amuBlng and Instructive lecture , M G irls' a n d Boys—N ice au d N aughty .” T b e jp e a k - o r I6d his au d ien ce a t will, from pa tb e tio to h nm orous, a t t im e s 's ta r t in g tbe unbidden tear, an d a'galn tbo m ost hilarious laughter.

N Tbo JVawfrrs’ Ready Inference Quids (Tbo Rod Guido)* lsv o u t for N ovom ber w ith the latest fall tim e-tables. Tbls &uide I a issued from tho office of tho Official Guide, o f 'whleb lt Isp rao tlcally a pocket edition, fo r tho ,E ast- e rh , C ontral ond S outhern Slates, and tbo In­fo rm atio n published is therefore reliable. In ' tho la s t num bor the index ^f sta tio n s h as $ e n m oved tp the f ro n t o f the book for g rea te r convenience of reference;

B elm w B tts.• I t Is rep o rted th a t Mr." H f~H . Y ard ' baB b ough t th e p lo t o f g ro u n d 'b e tw een F s tree t and the depo t, u sed fo r bail p lay in g d u rin g th e sum m er. I t Is hoped (h a t Mr. H. will m ove the old ohureh from S ix teenth avenue an d p tlt i t on th la jo t fo r a to w n ball.

Esquire. Crego . baa purchased am i m oved In to th e b u ild ing on JT streo t form erly occu­p ied by D r . D nnbarr w here bo will hold co u rt fo r th e tria l o f sm all causes.

O u r C ity F a th ers fiavei dlapensed w ltb th e serv ice o f .Policem an ftobiqsou, and now B elm ar’s doors a re w ide open to m idnight p row lers, tram ps, a n d all o th er in trep id law b rea k e rs ..

C on trac to r C raig, o f T renton , Is a g a ln a t w ork try in g to finish th e sewers th a t were to b e com pleted la s t Ju ly . They d ragged th e ir slow length d u rin g the whole sum m er, kep t o u r s tre e ts d u g u p an d . sew er p ipes fro t^ ' one en d to the o th er, a n d T b s e n d la n o t yet; - % Is ho p ed th a t they will begin In tbe fall o r early

-sp ring If th ey p ro p o se to lay any m ore soon.Dr, C. H . Thom paoa is off o u h is annual

vacation seeking m uch needed reat. Tbia tim e b e oarries a rheum atic shoulder.- O a r c a n d y =eatabU sbm entJa In fjilt b last,

-while th e s tre e t urchins look in ftt the“wlmiowa ^wlth a d esire fo r a thousand tongues an d a chance a t th e sw eets,^The-w id.ow 'of o u r deceased .barber has se­

cu red tbo S erilces o f h e r b ro th er and in tends to run the shop through tbo w in ter a n d offer

J t for_sale.next.j»prlng... Tbe residents..* !li do.a kindneBS in patrbnlzlog Mrs. Malr

B ird Shot B rough t Him to Term sW m .rN eav es; J r . r is a reald en t pf-TOcBau*

P a rk , .living w ith h is father, and Is a tough of th e f irs t-w a te^ Ho c a n n o t ex is t over one m oon w ith o u t g e ttin g In to som e rum pus, o r m o le s tin g B<»roebod y . 1 _ _ _m an P en n \la s t sum m er a y ea r ago; an d was gu ilty o f variouf^bther m isdeeds fo r w hich he' haa b e eu jfiu ed fan d Im prisoned, while olhor w a rran t^ W e re aa jp e n d ed o v e r his head , like

Tbo ewoM jof Dam ocles, ready to d ro p on him qpoq^ihe slig h te s t p rovdbatlon,

Ono o f fheso w aa for d isorderly co n d u ct an d th re a ts tow ard G ordon D rum m ond an d wife. Officer Hullok w as charged with th e service, a n d o n M onday visited the home o f tbe Neavea fam ily. T he officer waa de ta ined in tb e f ro n t o f the house fb r a sh o rt tim e by tbe d a u g h te r going off in to a convenient fit, while th e y oung c u lp rit was m aking hla e sca p e from a r e a r w indow. Huliok q u ick ly "d ro p p ed ” to th e schem e, and aa quiokly pushed aside the g irl, wbo was clinging, to b im in lov ing em ­braces . :

N eaves, by th is tim e, was m aking lively tra c k s fo r Sylvan Lake, which he forded In W ater o p to h is elbow s. O n through Key E ast he w ent, th e officer following, a n d firing a p ocket p isto l w ithout effect. 8b ark RlvCr was reached an d Neavea had crossed the first channel an d w as pick ing his way - ov^r the m iddle flat, w ben the officer reached the bank . Tw o g u n n ers w ere n ea r by an d Huliok ordered them to fire off tho ir guns, hav ing ordered N eaves to s to p . The flrst g u n bad no effeot. T he second one, loaded w ith fine b ird shot, was b rough t c i l t t l e too close for com fort, a n d tw o o ! t h e ^ o t burrow ed In tho face of the foo lhardy Neavea. .

F in d in g lt4 waft g o lfing a littYertoo warnr, he ag reed to c o m e b a c k -a n d ,waa m ade a p ris­oner. H e was taken to P a rk Hall an d Ju stice B orden g ave him a bearing. Tbo fine was fixed a t |1 5 ft^d coats, o r 75 d ays lu j a i l . . Ho w aa tak e n to Freehold T uesday m orning.

Mrs. Po llard has her' Vsual Luck.M rs. M arl (^A ntoinette P o lla rd m u st be of a

litig ious n a tu re . T hree years ago she lived Inf A sbury P a rk an d was In con tinual turm oil, fibe k ep t a b oard ing house p a rt of the tim e an d ap p eared to be al ways in trouble. H ard­ly a w eek passed th a t she d id n o t have somo c sq ip la la t m ade a g a in st h er, o r else had com ­p la in ts to' m ake before the Com missioners,

’Jg o ard jjJtH ealth^and^P oIlce-Justlcea a g a in s to thers. H e r o th er occupation was as a lec­tu re r on v a rio u s top ics th a t never drew the. peopleO q b ea r hfir.s

A fter h e r uheucccssful te rH in A sbnry P a rk Bho rem oved to New Y ork c ity an d boarded w ith a fam ily on Tw enty-th ird s tre e t In A pril las t. Tbe fam ily w as dispossessed fo r n o t pay ing th eir rent-, a n d w hen they so u g h t to rem ove th eir fu rn itu re from Mrs. P ollard’s room she i^ Ia sed to open tb e door, cla im ing th a t sh e waa unw ell. The fu rn itu re waa' finally secured , and ln o rd er to d e a r the room a. tru n k belonging to 'M rs , P o lla rd w as se n t to q s to rag e house an d sho w m . notified th a t I t w o u ld be delivered to her on. paym ent of—the—balanoe-she- ow ed ' th o dispossessed ' fam ily for h e r ren t.

Mrs^ P o lla rd h a d the m an and his w |fe i n ­d icted fo r ro b b e ry ' tnv th e first degree," b u t when th e case cam o to tria l o n M onday the J u d g e o rdared th eir ftcqu ltla li' I t appeared lu evidence for tbo defence th a t they bod used

.n o violence In g e ttin g possession o f their p ro ­perty , a n d th a t 90 tb e s treo g tb o f a w arran t they bad a r ig h t to ejeo t Mra, Pollard when she refused tb leave'peacoably.

A Voice from North' Asbury.7b the Editor q f the Journal

T ho artloio In your recen t Isauo co n ctrn ing school ch ildren au d others, som etim es accom - ponlcd by dogs, m ak in g a com m on highway o r 'ro m p in g g ro n n d ovor law on au d through p riv a te properties of sum m or residents who bave left, waft not on ly tim ely, b u t tho ib lng shou ld be stoppod. I t Ib certa in ly a m isde­m eanor o f the w orst kind. Proporty owners frequen tly oxpend m oney liberally to adorn an d beautify tb e ir grounds w ith a ttrac tiv e sod, vlnes;and som otlm os fiowfers, only to find th em u p o n thoir r e tu rn ru thlossly to ru a w a y ,- a n d th e law ns In jured because they havo boon m ado a tram p in g ground.

" / ' " 7 A MAiL »QX WANTED.On S ix th avenue thoro is not left a single

ono. On Seventh av 6h uo th ere m ay b e found three. : N ot less than e ig h t Inhabited dw elling houses c an bo still fo u n d o n S ix th avenue. W hy shou ld n o t theso c itizens have a t least m e m ail box, say a t tho c o rn e r o f G ra n d ave-. n u e o r Pack ard s tree t, a n d n o t su b je c t them to the inconvenience,, dom etlm eir a fte r n igh t, o f walking tw o o r throe blocks to malT a let­te r . T here can certa in ly b e n o . good-reaaou- given w 6y F ifth an d S eventh avenues should havo s o largo a share o f le tte r b o x e r an d Sixth Rveue none.

TBE TOTAL EOLIPflB-AT MlDNtoHT.W hy Bhould the eleotrlo ligb ta b e ex tln -

gnlflbed a t ‘m idnight ? D oubtless the ready an sw er wonld be, ow ing to th e expense. Arcr the tax es collected luaufficteut t B e tte r th e n . add a littlo , and have the Illum ination. Sbould a n emerffbnoy arise for ono to ge t u p and-go fo r a physlclan. a fle r i a .o ’clook a t n igh t, how exceedingly dreary, If n o t d angerous 'the way, th ro u g h an indesoribable dafknoss. Independ­e n t of this, i t seem s: t d 't h e w r i te r a- p 6nhy 'saving m ethod, w eltaalcu latod to give encour­agem ent to th e .wicked devices o f law less' w retches to burg lar f ie , rob , a a sa u lta n d com ­m it a rson. Should tb e Intones dark n ess some tim e reveal th is so rt o f p ro ceed in g s then per­h ap s-th o Com m issioners will say—light up L et th e e leo trio jlghts bu rn u n til 4 o r 6 o’clock A. m. I f o ne opens' h is eyes th e bu rn in g lights w ill m ake i t cheerful. = I t w ill a lso serve to q u ie t th e u lg h t owls .aud mea&ufably ln iim i .date w orthless atid designing tram p s, b e­cau se “ they love d arkness ra th e r th an lig h t.” !

Tn AT p 'r ETTY STATION HOUSE.I allude to tbe a ttrac tiv e , un ique, a rchitec­

tu ra l a n d conveolent railw ay sta tio n house, located a t S ixth avenue. I s i t to be dispensed w ith ? C urren t reports h ave ao affirmed. B u t tb a t c an scarcely bo possible, fo r one cogent reason, via : t b i t doubtless very m any o f the presen t ownera o f ■properties on -all th e av e­nues ru n n in g OJist at*d. w est from F o u rth to E lg fith , aVonues* r urcbased- their respective properties w ltb • tho unders tan d in g th a t the railw ay alaOon a t Blxth avenue was au e s ta b ­lished s to p p in g plac<>.

W hat.lB wanted bndly. an d indeed w hat the handsom e im provem ents of N o rth Aabury d em and, 1s* th e e rection o f a handsom e, cap a ­c ious a n d m odern b tation honse w ith the lateat conveniences.

Thero can be n o posalble ob jection fo r- th e N ew Y ork &- Long B ran ch . R ailroad to e re c t o ther s ta tio n liousea a t ' new aeaside resorts, for th la la their o p tio n ; b n t th ere c a n b e rea sonable objections ren d ered a n d p o ten t a rg u ­m ents g iven why such a a ta tlo n a t S ix th ave­nue, w ith so g roat a n am o u n t o f pa tronage an d incom e to the com pany, shou ld n o t b e taken aw ay.

L et i t a lso b«i noted , aa a reliable f ac t, th a t s ta tio n bousee, e ither fo r flag o r regu lar stops, oan be fonud along th e line o f both tbe P en n ­sy lvan ia and Rt*»ding Hal roudain PenneyIva- nia, a d jacen t to Philadelphia,- a t sh o rt dig. tances, from an eighth to a q u a rte r o r a th ird of a mile resp ec tiv e ly ; a n d It la very largely those faollttles which h as tended to g ive these

jJo p u la tU n e a tb e-im m en se passenger travel, and correspondingly the well earned profits which c row n the m anagem ent of t>»‘fle cou>- panioa w lth such success. Arous.

Collector Wm. T. Hopper.T be P residen t ^ asa p p o lo te d a s Colleotor o f

Cnatom s a t tbo p ort of P e rth Am boy, Mr. W m . T . H opper, a residen t of E a tontow n, In tb ls county. Mr. H opper was_ form erly I n ­spector, an d la a b a rd w orking Republican. H is prom otion to Ib e C oliectorsblp Is in tbe -lino o f prac tica l civil servlco, and wo tru s t bo will m ako a n effiolont and valuablo ofilcer. I t waa hard ly exported tb a t tbo appo in tm en t w ould como to aM o n m o n th county m an, aud w e 'congratu la te th e now C olleotor on ble sac- cesa. "■ •

’ ' r A B c n d l y C o n f l i c t .

A personal difficulty betw een Col. A . M. Swope a n d Col. W ..JJ. Goodloe, in the post office a t X exjngton , Ky.,.on Friday , resu lted iri a deadly conflict—One b e in g arm ed w ith a'pla- to l, thp o th er w ith a claap-kulfe—in which fiw ope w as killed o u trig h t an d GoodJoo has Binee d ied from th e effect of a . pisto l ball. Both m en s to o d h igh in the.com m unity. -The tragedy caused a g rea t sensation and-tbo per eonal friends w ere g reatly ahockod over the sad outcom e o f a pol itical estrangom en t.

N o t f o r C e n t r a l P a r k .

T h e S ite Commltteo, o f tbe New York W orld ’s F a ir have relinquished all glatm s to 4'ny p a r t o f C en tra l P a rk fb r Ita uso. lu tho language o f H on. R. P . F low er, It wa8 only h e ld to b reak tho back of som e rea l eatate sharks, who w ished to fa tten on the rich pick­ings around ,tho proposed site. Now lo tu s see t t the g rum blers will pull u p o n th e $5,000. 000 gu a ran tee fund." .

D uring the fierce blizzard w bloh visited p a r ts o f New Mexico an d ’ T exas' la s t week, f ive" Am erican an d tw o M exican cowboya w ere frozen to death. The'' Bnow waa nearly

'tw o feet o n a level,-and. in sosqe placca bad d r if te d . s ix to eight feet d e e p .. Tbe loaa In c a tt le will;.be Imm ense.- •

^ - r7 , 1 “

J p E N I Y B V L V A N I A R A I L R O A D , .

O n a n d a f te r N o v e m b e r 11,1889, ra A ia a tE A va ASBtrar p a r k “ -

F o r N e w Y ork,- N e w a rk , E liz a b e th , itah w a y , : R ed B a n k , L o n e B ran c h a n d in te rm e d ia te

s ta t io n s , 6.50,9.15 a . m M 1.16. 6 85 p . tn.F o r M ataw an , 6.B0,0.15 a 1, m ., -1.15,6.85 p . m .F o r L o n g B ran ch , 6.60, 9.15,11.15 a . m .. 1.15, 2.S0,

5.86. {£65 p . m .F o r P h ila d e lp h ia , (B ro a d S t.,) a n d T re n to n , a t

8 00 a . m .,' 12.25, 4.20 p . *n.F o r C am d en , B u rlin g to n , a n d B o rd e n to w n , (via.

T re n to n ,) 8.00 a. m .. 12.25, 4.20 p . m.F o r T om tf R iv e r, Is la n d H e ig h ts , a n d In te rm ed i­

a t e s ta t io n s , a t 11.05 a m ., 5.25 p . m .F o r P o in t P le a s a n t, a n d in te rm e d ia te s ta t io n s , a t

11.05 a . m ., 2.00, -6.25, 7.05 p . m . ro A iv e leave » aw y o r e (v ia . O oabrosaea and

C o r tla n d t S ts . fe rrlea ) f o b asbuby pa r e A t 9.IO. a . m ., 12.00 no 0 n , 8.40 (express), 5.10 p . m.

TEAOta Lea ve p b il a d sl f h ia (B road S t.) r o a- ABBUBT PARK

A t 830 , U .15 a . m ., 4.00 p . m . 5.00 p . m ;, lo r S e a G ir t on ly . M a rk e t 8 t. via. C am den and T re n to n —7.20, 10.80 a . m . 4.80 p. m ., fo r 8 ea‘ G ir t o n ly . ;

- J . R. W OOD, G m 'l P o t t . A g i, CHAB. R. PUGH.G'awM M anaaer.

, l.C

C hurch Services.1METHODIST.,

P re a c h iu g a i F irs t M. E. C hurch a t 10.80 a , m ., by the p a s to r A t 7.80 p. m ., o n luvlta-

Jq p io r O rd er o f U n lted A m erican M echanlca. Y oung m en especially invited.

PBESBYTERIAN OnUROU. ,Rev. D r. C handler wtii p reach aa usual both

m orn ing and evening. Sunday-school a t 0.80. Y oung People’s m eeting a t 6 45 p. u .

„ . WESTMINSTER.T h e pu lp it o t \$ ta tm fn e te r C hurch w ill be

filled on 8 u n d a y u y t h e p asto r. Rev. S'. Ed, Y oung, m orning and'even*ng,

.BAPTIST.The pastor, Rev. F . C . Colby, will p reach

a t 10.80 A;*ir. an d 7.80 p. m . Sunday-flchool a t 2.80 p. i t,

. RBPOltUED.Bor v ices on S unday a t 10.80 a . m. a n d 7.1

p m, Sunday-school a t 2.80 p . . m. P rayer- tneetlng on Fjrlday eVehlng a t 7,80. All a re cord ially invited . S ea ts free.

OATHOtlO.— . ^., C hurch o f the H oly S p irit, Second avenue a n d B ond s tree t. M ass a t 10,80. Sunday- achool a t 3.80, Benediction a t 8.80.

M lnisters in Social Converse.The p reacbera m et in th e p a rlo r o f S t.

P au l’s on M oudayrN ov. 4, a t . 10 A. M , Rev. J . M ason in th e cba lr. A fter p ray er by Rev. Mr. Com pton an d b earin g th e m inu tes o f thb la s t m eeting, an d tra n sa c tin g som e business of m inor im portance, Rov. H enry B elting read’ from th e Zfomitetio Review av p ap e r en titled “ T em p ta tio n s Peculiar t o th e M inistry .”

O n M onday, Nov. 11, Rev. J , M ason again occupied th e ohalr. ' The d ev o tio n s were con­ducted by Rev. J . R. ThompBon. M inutes of laa t m eeting were read a n d somo ro u tin e bus- lno8a a tten d ed tot- Tho p reach e rs p resen t g ave a n acco u n t o t th eir ia b o ra ^ o a tn e pre- vions S abbath . > j ’;

Mr. B elting rep o rted th a t S t. P a u l’a h ad a largo congregation a t io.80 a . m ., a n d tho Sabbath-aohool waa atten d ed b y 65 boys and 60 girls.

M r. F laher said th a t W est G rove Is progress lug finely ; had th e larg est co ngrega tions d u r­ing bla p as to ra te on the prbvibua d a y . - ........

Special rev ival services a re being h e ld a t Ocoan P a rk , Rev. Mr. Davis, p a s to r ; d u r in g the past week th ere h ad beoQ a dozen conver-

HonaTA t i l a . m. tbo o rd er o f th e ,day w as takyn

pp.. •Subject—“ P asto ra l y is itln g i” Rev. A. S, C om pton, a n aged an d successfu l p a s to r in thebO unds of the N ew ark C onference, p re­sented th e iu b je c t , basing h is rem a rk s o n tha discip linary Instructions a n d ob ligations, giv­in g m any Illustra tions from b is lo n g . expe­rience in the w ork.bf a pastor.

The d laoussioh 'tba t followed was an im ated an d Instructive, Tbe s u b je c t w as con tinued for dl&euBftioa n e x t Monday, from 10 to 11 m., w hen R ev, H* B. Beegle will read a p ap e r o n >>8erm ohizihg;” ^wbfcb will be difioussod un til 12 m,» th e h o u r fo r ad jo u rn m en t. Twelve m inistere e.lgq«d th e co n stltu tio n a i th la m ee t^in g a n d g rea tly inoreased the m em berablp of tho Aa8qoiatlon. Rov. G eorge C larke, o f the New Y o rk Conference, was In troduced to the

T e Bridge too Short.The new bridge a t Oceanilo whloh the Free-

h o ld ra g a v e o n t a t ^ o n trao t aomo tim o Blnoo, laoka 188 feet of reaohlng the bauk, an d an- o'ther c o n trac t will now be m ade to com pleto the-w ork. ___ ' . - ^

' Afore Florida Tourists.In a week o r so Mr. I*. F . LeOhovaller ao d

a p arly o f e ight o r ten will loavo for a w in ter residence In F lo rida. Among!-them . w ill be^ M?. Wm.- O rr and fam ily o f the U n ited S tates. H otel, arid Mrs. F. Gaul, C bariea J . ’ H ill a lso c o n tem p la tes a S ou thern tr ip , •

- D iscounted. .The Prohtbitlorii8ta b lasphem oualj^ deolare

th a t P rovidence la on th eir side, anyhow . If th la be tru e , th e re tu rn a in the la te election show th a t he IS no m atch for L eon A bbett and Iho brew ers.—State Gazette.

Beginning w ith"Jan. 1 next, Rov. T . DeW llt Talmago, D .D ., will become one o f the editors o f tho Ladies1 Home Journalr vt. P h ilad e lp h ia T h e fam o u s p reacher w ill hUve a regular de­p a rtm en t eaoh m onth, w ritten by himself, wltbctb e title u U nder My Study L am p .” . His first co n trib u tio n ,will a p p e ar In tb e J a o a a ry n u m b er o f Ibe Journal. (Dr. T alm age’s sa lary is sa id to b e one of the largest ever paid for odltorlal work.

Tbo Y oung P eop le’a U nion o f F lra t Presby­terian Cbujob had a p leasan t sociable a t . th e

i Belvedere ou W ednesday-evening, - "

H|BWTOBR A LONG BBANVH K. IT im e T a b le , In e f fe o t N o v em b er 10,1888.

S ta t io n s In N e w Y o rk —C e n tra l R. R . o f N ow J e r ­sey , fo o t o f L ib e r ty S t r e e t ; P . R . R.,* fo o t of C o r tla n d t an d D e sb ro sses S tre e ts ; N. J . South- e rn R a ilw a y , fo o t o f R e c to r 8 t .

LEAVE NEW T O M FOB ABBUBY PaSE ,C e n tra l R . R .o f N . J -—1.80,8.16, *11.164.

4.00. *4.20, *4.45, 0.-10 p . m . ____ ■ -P e n n sy iv a n ia —*9.10 a . m .. 12.00 m i, *3.40, 5.10

p . m . — :L ea v e N e w a rk , B ro a d S t. S ta t io n , f o r A sbnry

Park .& o.—8-25,11.25R. m ., 1.10, 4.03, 4r68. 0.25 p, tn . M ark e t S t. S ta tio n —0^86 a . m ., i2.2(J,4 04,5.86 p. m . , ■ ■ . . r -

A 9B uar pA H K roii m r o P K , A o.C en tra l RT R. o^ N . _ 0.50, *7.55, 11.1

a . m ., 2 20, 4.15, 6.46 p . ~ ‘ ~P en isy lvau la^-6 .50 , 9;15 - a . m .t 1.15, 6.W p . m . F o r P bU ade lph ia a n d T re n to n , v ja. B o u n d BrooA.. • R o u te -6 1 5 , 6.66 a . m .. 2.J», 4.15 p . m

F o r O oean B each , S p rin g L a k o a n d u e a O lrt— _^4'J)5iS8.0tV i0J20, 11.06 a m ., 1 2 i» , 1.06, 2.00,

2.68,4.20, 5.25, 5.57,6.28, 7.05, 8 10 p . ra .F o r M anasquan a n d P o in t P le a sa n t—7 05,10.20,

11.00a , rn ., 1.05, 2.00, 2.58, 6.25, 5.57, 6.28, 7.05, F o r l^ lla i ie lp h r a , 'v ia . 8e% Glft-^8.00 a ra,^.12.25, .. 4.80 p . m -F o r T om s R iv e r—11.05 a . m ., S'.Vft’p . m. jPVjr C am den an d In te rm ed ia te s t a t i o n s - 2 00 p.m

M ondays a n d S a tu rd ay s only.• —E xpress . RU FU S BLODQETT, JSitpt.H . P . B A LD W IN , W. P . A . O. i l . It. o / N . J.

J .-R . W OOD. Gen'I Pa*. A qL P .:U .S .

A Word about Shoes.I *

" • • v ' * ■ -I t i s now nearly .4 years since w e

began catorlug for tho Shoe trade- of th is oityr How1 well we h ave suo-

/^ o e d c d 1a easily seen by, th e b u sin ess now done by u s ., Each year.w e have boon compelled, to en large Our s to re • u n til now we have one b f the

Largest Shoe Storesoutaidb o l New York City.

O ur honest, f a ir dealings to all has . , .. been th o m eaua o f th is Bucceaa. W e T

aim to aell a shoe upon Its m erits,. arid g uaran tee a resu ll tbe b u ^ r g en ­erally looks for. I f , by chance, thb * -

• shoo tu rn s o u t otherw ise th an ex - ; pepted w o alw ays s ta n d ready to rec-, tify a n y errors o f the m anofactuer. Y our fu rth e r p a tro n ag e is solicited^ ...

H . & W . Naftaljv ■

S t a r S h o e S t o r e ,

147 and 149 Main St.

O H E K I F F ’S S A L E . — B y v i r t u e o f a O w r i t o f fl. fa . to m e d ire c te d , issued o u t o f , Ihe C o a r t o f C hancery o f th e S ta te Of N ew J e r ­sey , w ill bo e x p o se d to Bale a t pu b lio v en d u e , o n T u e s d a y , t h e 2 6 t h d a y o f N o v e m b e r , 1 8 8 9 , be tw een th e h o u rs o f 12 an d 6 o 'c lo c k (a t 2 o ’olock), in th o a f te rn o o n o f sa id d a y , a t P a rk H all, In tb e b o ro u g h o f ABbury P a rk , to w n sh ip of N ep tuno , co u n ty o f M onm outh a n d Q tate o f N ew Je r se , a l l t h a t c e r ta in lo t, . t r a c t o r paftsel o f la n d a n d p re m ise s h e re in a f te r p a r tic u la r ly d e ­scribed , s i tu a te , ly lnp a n d bolng In th o bo ro u g h o f A sb u ry P a rk , in tho co u n ty of M onm outh a u d S ta to o f N ew Je rse y , bec io n in g a t a p o in t in th e

'so u th e rly line of S ovonth av en u n , d is ta n t seven-

o f Arsbury P a rk , fn t ________ ____________________S ta to o f N ew Je rse y , bec io n in g a t a p o in t in th e

ty-flve (75) fo e t an d one a n d one h s l | . (1W) Inches ea s te rly fro m tb e B outheast c o rn e r o f S ev ep th av en u e a n d W ebb s t r e e t a s now lp c a te d *, th e n c e so u th e rly , p a ra lle l w ith W ebb s t r e e t , o n e h u n ­d re d a n d fo rty -fo u r (144) fe e t a n d six ty -fou r (04-100) h u n d re d th s o f a fo o t to th o m id d le i ln e o f th e b lo c k ; th e n c e e a s te r ly a lo n g th o m id d le line o f th e block,, a t T l«ht an g le s w ith th e la s t m en­tioned courso fifty (50) f e e t ; th o n ce n o rth e r ly ag a in p a ra lle l w ith W ebb s t re o t , o n e h u n d re d an d fo rty -one (141) fo e t a n d s e r e n (07-100) h un­d re d th s o f a fo o t to tbo so u th e rly lino o f S ev en th avenuo ;• th e n c e w e s te rly a lo n g th fr so u th e rly line o f S ev en th av e n u e fifty (50) re e t a n d o n e ( l j Inch to th e plao«* o f beginn ing . B eing tb e sam e

Rrem ises conveyed by Ja m e s A. B rad ley an d e le n St., his w ife , to th o sa id A n n a D ebow , w ife

o f G iles M. D ebow , by d eed b ea rin g d a te N ovem ­b er 14,1883.

B elied a s th e p roporty o f A n n a D ebow et ol., ta k e n In oxeoutfon a t th o su it o f J a m e s A . B ra d ­ley, a n d to bo so ld by ,

T pkO D O R E FIELD S, Sheriff.Isaaci C. Ke n n e d y , So l’r. D atod-O et. JMt.18T [P r’a fe e , $7.20.]

[ N O H A N Q E E Y O P N E W J E B S E Y .

p R E E H O I . D A » U « * ! W V O B K ««. f t

In e f fe c t Nov. 1 0 ,18S9.

TRAINS WILL LBAVB ‘POH FRBJSHOLD AS FOLLOWS,L eave ABbury P a rk -7 .5 5 , 11.00-a. m ., 1.16, 4.15,

a 5,85 p . m . .L eavo L ong B ranoh—8,10, 11.16 a . m ., l.SO ,^.*),

5.60r>,m.L eave B rau o h p o rt—8.13, 11,18.a . m ., 1.88, 4.83,

5.58 p . tn .L ea v e L it tle S ilver—8.18, 11.23 p . ih ., 1,88, 4.8

6.68 p . m . „L eave R ed B au k —8.26, 11.86 a . m ., J..43 ,4.45,0,04

p .fh . •• .... ' LL e a v e M idd le tow n—8.82, 11.42 a . m ., 1 Bo. 4.62i

6.12 p. m . , ....LEAVE 'MATAWAN FOR TBEXnOLD,

6.80,8.87,9.80 a, m ., 12.20,2.11, 5.46,7.28 p . m ., LEAVE VBBSHOLD POR T H I SUOEB.

8.10,11.20 a . m .x 1,85,4.80,6.80 p . m .J . B. R A L PH , S u p ’t.

Church and Lodge Directory.• K - t ■ -

F in s r M . pRXTROH, • c o m e r o t F lr s i an d G ra n d a v e s ., R ev . O. M addook , p a s to r . P re a c h ­in g e v e ry S a b b a th a t 10.80 a . m . a n d 7.80 p . m . C la ss m ee tin g S a b b a th m o rn in g a t 0.80. Sab- b a th -sch o o l a t 2.80 p . m . y o u n g P eo p le ’a M ee t­in g S a b b a th e v e n in g a t 6.80. P ra y e r m oo ting on F rid a y .e v e n in g a t 7.80. C o m pinn lop o n tho f irs t S ab b a th m o rn in g o f ea c h m o n th .

T a iN in r p . B C nur.cn , G ran d a n d A sb u ry avo n u e s . Rev. J . D. Skono, ro o to r. T h e h o ly com ­m u n io n e v e ry L o rd ’s D ay a t 7.00 a , m . (oxcept f irs t S u n d ay in e v e ry m o n th a t 10.80 a . m .) 8tm- dayfl, 20.80 a . m . a n d 7.80 p. m . S a in ts ’ d a y s a t 0 a . m ., a n d F rid a y s a t 7.30 p. - m . - C h ild ren ’s o h o r 1 serv ice sec o n d S u n d ay fn evory m o n th a t 2.80 p . m . S unday-schoo l a t 3.00 p . m T '-T h e ch u ro h Is f r e e a n d n il a r e co rd ia lly lq v ite d . r

pBEsaTTBJUAN CjxchCii^ c o rn e r o r Seoond a n a G ran d av e n u es , R ev . F ra n k C hand ler, D .D ., pas­to r . S erv ices a t 10.80 a u d 7.80; Sabbath -eohoo l a t2 .8 0 . P ra y e r m eo tin g F r id a y evenlnOr-

R e fo rm e d C n u n c u , c o rn e r o f Q ra n a a u d Sevr- a l l av e s ., Rov. E . C. S cudder, I ) . D., p as to r. Ser­v ices a t 10.80 a n d 9.80; S abbath -sonoo l a t 2.80.- P ra y e rm e e tln g F rid a y even ing .

B ta s r Ba p t is t C n rn c ij , co rn o r o f M ain s tre e t a n d B an g s a v e n u e . Rov. F . c. C olby , p asto r. P re a c h in g serv ices a t 10,80 a n d ’7.80: S ab b ath - so h o o l a t •8.80. P ra y e r * m ee tin g F rid ay eve-' R ing a t 7,80. S e a ts fr e e . C ord ia l w e lcom e t o all.

WXSTEtNSTRU PUEHUTtKBIfcH CUUUCU, ROV 8, E d , Y oung , p a s to r , S ew all ave. n o a r G ran d ,. S e r­v ices a t 10.80 a n d 7.80; S a b b a th -s o h o o r a t 2.30. P ra y o r m ee tin g F rid a y evening .

C nu itc tt o f t u b Ho l t Sp ir it , (C athollo ,) c o rn er o f S eco n d a v e n u e a n d B ond s t r e e t , R ev. M. L.

_Glenn~du,_pa8tor.— —-------- — — ---------- —A . M . B Z ion Chu rch , B pringw ood av e n u e ,

W est P a rk , R ey. W. T. B iddle , p a s to r . Ser- v lceg S u n d ay a t i l a . m . a n d 8 p . m . Sunday- so h o o l a t 2.80. P ra y e r m e e tin g e v e ry W ednes­d a y ev e n in g . •

A fr ic a n M, K. C atm on , c o rn e r o f M ain s tre e t a n d S eco n d a v e n u e , R ev , L ittle to n S turges, p a s to r. S erv ices a t 10 .80 'a n d 7,80; S ab b ath - schoo l a t 2.80,/ P ra y o r m ee tin g W ed n esd ay eve- u ln g . . .- .

Second B a pt ist C n n u o n , .'(oolorod,) serv ices

TO Jpl>n M uzzlo an ti i j e r l P o g g i M u zz io : KfejUrtu* o f a n o rd e r o f th e C o u rt o f C hancory ,

m a d e on th o d a y o f th e d a te h ereo f, in a c a u se W herein A ntonio! M assoni is com plainan t# an d y o u 'a ro 'd o fe n d a n ts , yo'u a re re q u ired to a p p e a r , p lead , a n sw e r o r d e m u r to th e b ill o f s a la o o m -:

Ela ln an t, on .o r befdro th e th i r ty firs t d a y o f tocem ber n e x t , o r t h e Bald b ill w ill b e ta k e n as

confessed ag a in s t you.T h e sa id b ill is filed to fo rec lo se a m o rtg a g e

o f J a n u a ry , A. D . 1889, q n th e un d iv id ed one-half In te res t o f la n d In th e b o ro u g h o f A sbury P a rk , M onm outh coun ty , N ew Je r so y ; a n d y o n , J o h n M uzzio, a r e m ad e a d e fo n d a n t because yo u are th e o w n e r o f said, u n div ided ione-haif in te re s t in sa id la n d a n d ex e c u te d th o m o rtg ag o ab o v e m en­tio n ed th ereo n . * n d you , M erl P oggi Muzzio, a re m ad o a d e fe n d a n t beoau*e y ou a r e Ih e w ife o f th e paid Jo h n M uzzio, a n d o laim to h av e au In c h o ate r ig h t o f d o w e r lu sa id m o rtg a g e a b re m ^ iBeB. D A V ID H A ItV fiY , J r . ,

S o lic ito r o f C om plainan t, „ P o s t Offlee a d d re ss , ABbury P a rk , N ew Jersey . D a te d O c tober 80,1889, , (P r’s fee. W.30.]

S L j c a J E s t a t e .

Furnished Cottage,8 room s, c o rn e r o f A nbury .a v e n u e an d K m ory s tre o t , a t .reaso n ab le r e n t u n t i l M ay 1 .1889.

I n q u ire o f L. SILL, G ta n d A v e . H otel,

$300—For Sale;A fo u r-ro o m h o u se n e a r L ak e Com o. W ill t a k e - h o rse a n d b u ggy a s p a r t p a y m e n t

A ddresa 8TB PIIB N N . HURLEY , Q lendola , M onm outh co u n ty , N ew Je rsey ,

, Cottage for Sale.N o. 706 F ir s t A yo., A ebury P a r k . •-

10 room s, u n fu rn ish e d , goo d co n d itio n ; .w ith la rg e btfxn ; -Jot- 50x150. V ery a c co m m o d atin g te rm s to p u rc h a se r . A ddress

“ Tis, F . H U T CHINSON, W indsor, N . J .

T O E X C H A N Q E .A v e ry d e s ira b le '

8-room Queen Anne Cottage,w ith th re e lo ts 85x100, afr>Arlington; N . J . , fo r O cean G rove o r A sb u ry P a rk p ro p e rty . •

A ddress F rA ;M A C K IS , A rlin g to n , N . J .

L O T S F O R S A L E In West As&ury Park, N r ir

T erm s easy, build on lots.

- j - - I — — ---- — ----- j , aviviucDh e ld In bu ild in g o n 'S p rin g w o o d a v e n u e n e a r th era ilro ad -------- " -----if. San p a s to r .

r .m g w ora ilro a d , ev e ry S u n d ay a t 10.80

S u n d ay sc h o o l a t ---------- ii . a n d 7.80 p.

30 p. k . R oy. R , A . B olen ,

Y . M.‘-C . A . Servloefi—R oom o v e r th e P o s t Office. E v e ry S unday , co n e o o ra tlo n m ee tin g , 9 to 10 a; h .; P ub lic m eeting , i to fi r . m . T hursday , even ing , w o rk ers ’ tra in in g o lass a n d B lb lo s tu d y . 8 to 9 o ’c lock . S a tu rd a y ev en ing , f o r y o u n g m en o n ly , 8 to 9 o ’o lock .

ABBUBy-LoDoB.-No. 142, F.-''XNn A : M.," m ee ts ’ firs t a n d th i rd T u e sd a y e v e n in g s lu e a o h m o h th , C ook 's B uild ing , M ain s t r e e t a n d C ookm an aye- n u e . -A mos L ip p in co tt, W . M „ F . A . W isem an, S eo 'y , ’ ■

Cobbon C o h e a n d e r t , N o. 15, K . T .. m ee ts fleo. o n d T h u rsd a y pvefdng in e a o h m o n th In C ook’s B u ild ing . Low is R a in e a r , E|. C „ J o h n D. Bepglo, R eco rd er, ... • *

Coast C it t Council , N o. 813, R oYa l Arcanum , m e e ts in K. P . H a ll f irs t a n d th i r d T h u rsd a y

(even ings in th e m o n th . R an d o lp h R oss, R e g e n t ; 'W m , IL M iles, S ec re ta ry .

F ir e sid e Council , N o. 171, Ou d br o r U nited rien ds , m eo ts second a n d fo u r th T h u rsd a y cvo-

ulng8 In ea c h m o n th , }n l£.,P. H a ll. M rt.'W . H. M iles, C hief C o u n o ilo r t 0 . 11. T om pkins, R oco’r.

C. K. H all P ost 41, Q. A. R.',”ttfee ts In M anning H all, M aiu s tre e t , n e x t to th e postofilce, o n . tho flrs t a n d th i rd W ednesday ov ’n g s in eaoh m o n th .

Monhoutu Lod oe , N o. 107. K. -o r P ., m ee ts F rid ay even in g s, in K. P ^ ila l l . 'U S M ain stroo t.

. E . C lay ton , C. C .; W , ^ F a r r f , K. o f R. o nd S. N e p tu n e Ik jdqb , No. 8 4 ,1 .0 /6 . F „ m o o ts W ed­

n esday even ings a t M anning I l a l l . M ain Btreot. D aniel B rew er, N. O .: M ilo C .^ rlff lp , 11. 8^

A t l a n t i c ENoAarMBNT, N o 22, I. O. O. F ., m o eta In M anning H all on second a n d fo u r th T u e sd a y In ea ch m o n th a t 7.80 p . in . W m . II. iMJloa, C hief E afrlaro b . R. H u lsa r t, 8orlbo.

TEcuMSBii.TaiBE, No. CO.-jMraovEii Oi io e r o f R ed Men . m eo ts T uesday ev en in g s a t 7.80 In : M ann ing I la ll. E . A. Pago, S a o h e m ; l la r r y C arson . C hief o f R ecords. ,

P a r e I /m a o , No. 88. A. O .H . W ., m o o ts lu K . P . H all, Bocond an d fo a r th M ondays a t 8 r * v . Wm. H. Miles, M aster W o rk m a n ; S am u el A. Cll­ver, R ecorder, *

N o m o n ey -required If p a r tie s A ddressA L PR E D CUBBBRLBY^,

P . O.j H a m ilto n S q u are , N . J .

FOR S A LE-C H E A P ,t. T H E S T . L A P B E N T ,

Seventh ave . a n d P a c k a rd s t . , A sbury P a rk ,N . J . • C o n ta in s 21 room s fu lly fu rn ish e d .

Also a c o rn e r lo t o u Sev en th av e n u e .Also fo u r lo ts a t N o r ,b S p rin g L ak e , N. J , , one

b lo ck fro m ooean. A ddresaFU A N K M C L L e r ,

125 M eroer 8t., Je rse y C ity , N . 3.

FOR S A L E OR RENT, FURNI8HED OR UNFURNISHED, v

The c o tta g e , to g e th e r w ith c o t ta g e In r e a r , s i tu ­a te o n th e N . E . C o r. G rau d a n d Spwfill avenues. Im m ed ia te possession ' g iven . F 6 r te rm s,

-- .-A p p ly t o GBORGE A LLA RD ,—-—F lf t | i avo ,, th i rd houso w e s t o f ra ilro a d .

O r ad d ress P. O . Box 64, A sbury P a rk ,

Cottage for SaleN ow cottage* w ith 'g a s , w a te r , h e a te r , a l l I n .

ad m ira b le o rder. G ood lo c a tio n . ' W lH 'b e s o ld ‘ .o r re aso n ab le to n u s ,

A ddrebs “ COTTAGE,1’ , i-C are J o u rn a l oflloe, A sb n ry Payk. -

FARM AND LOTS , F O R S A L E .

C all on o r addresB W A S lU o g lo n W h f t « .*• ~ a t - hl^' F ru it B lore, 141 M ain S t.,

ASBURY PA RK . N . J .F a rm s , S to res a n d ICO B uild ing L o ta f o r sa lo on\>

easy te rm s . L and f o r . re n t. Long-. lea se g iv en fo r.huslness sites, --. ■

A T R U C K F A R M For Sale or Exchange.

T he su b sc r ib e r offers fo r sa le o r ex en an g o f o r A sbury P a rk o r O oean d ro v e p ro p e rty , a goo d T ruck Far»r», w ith Im provoTionts, eo o d d w o llin g lun-Ho, b a m a n d o th o r build ings. Y oung o rohuru p f various fru its lu goo d boarlug.- G ood so il a n d lo ca tio n 1 m ile fro m M anasquan . T erm s m o st l ib era l. A pply to JO H N W . BORDEN,

D oalor In R eal E s ta to , M anasquan , N. J

P o r S e u l e , ’v Farm, 8Q Acres, at Deal Beach, H. J.

(Kennedy Homestead) 10 mThutes from — — . S i l t Btation.

4 0 0 0 P E A C H T R J E E Sm to llb e a r lm f . OooilI b u ttd lm n . lA n d an ltoblo ro r trn o k a n d frardeo fa rm in g . P rloo m o d o ra to . 'r e n n s c w y u

f o r to r rn o f y e a rs to good te n a n t a t m o d e ra te re n t. A ddress

ISAAC O. KBNNEDY, ABbury Park, N ,J f

Page 3: Vane, C M & Co. BOND AND MORTGAGE A. Co.Dyspepsia Advertising is the best Lu bricant for rusty arid slow moving business,__J!ry it. GEORGE W. LEE JOBBING HOUSE CARPENTER Hardwood work

ASBURY PAREi JOURNAL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1889

O p d y k e & C o . a n n o u n c e tb a t t h e N eto Jersey T ribune w ill a p p e a r n e x t w eek la an Im p ro v e d jfo rm . . J

C a p t. R a ln o a r bas a d d e d o p e m o re R e p u b . l lc a n to h is ra n k s , b a t b is v o te w on’t c o u n t bo fo ro 1910.

M rs . M . E , B a lla h g e e I s b n i ld lp g a la rg eo o ttag o o n F o a r tb a v e n u e , n e x t t o t b e W e s t"m inster. •_____ ' * - ; ,*— .

- M r. T b o s .T . G r a v a t t bos p u rc h a s e d th e r e a r o f t b e P a r k e r lo t, a d jo in in g b is B ond s t r e e t b ak o ry , a n d h n s m oved b is b a r n b a c k fro m tbo s tre o t . '

M r. A . H. D o H a v en , o n e o f t h e b a n k in g Orm of D p J |a y e n A B r o . , o f P h ila d e lp h ia a n £ N ew Y o rk , h a s b o u g h t th e T h o rn te y C o tta g e on .O ocon P a th w a y , fo r $7,250. ..

. L a a t S a tu rd a y 's s to rm In te r fe r e d w i l b t h e a t te n d a n c e a t th e O c ean 'P a la o e sa le . T r y It a g a in i b i s w eek . T h e sa m e p r ic e s p re v a il , a n d tho s to o k o f b a rg a in s Is e j e n la rg e r .

A r o b lto c t T. A . R o b e rts Is a t w o rk o n d e ­s ig n s fo r a m is s iv e o a k e n h a ll a n d s ta i r c a s e fo r tho re s id e n c e o f a g e n tle m a n in S o m e rse t o o a n ty . T h e c o s t o f t h e - t r io w ill b e a b o u t $8,000. • ' .

M ra. M. F . W o o d h u ll h a s s e c u re d tb e W e s t­m in s te r , o n F o u r th a v e n n e , fo r a .te rm o t yo ars . S h e w a s d o w n o n T h u rs d a y ,' m a k in g

kso m e n ew a r ra n g e m e n ts w h ich w ill b en e fit h er g u e s ts .

P ro f . I r e la n d a n d E d i to r F r a n k M . T a y lo r , J r , o f th e L o n g B ra n c h R ecord, a r e a t N im ­rod H a ll, V s . , “ e ig h t m ile s fro m an y w h ere ,* 1

.b g t fiopposcd to be lo ca fe il n o ar H o t S p r in g s . I t i s h o p e d th e P ro fe s so r’s h e a lth m a y bo ra p id ly im p ro v e d .

J u d g e S c u d d e r o n T u e sd a y g ra n te d tb e . p e t i t io n o f J o h n H. C o n g o r, R e p u b lic a n o a u r d ld a to fo r C lork o f M id d le sex o o u n ty , fo r a n in v e s tig a tio n in to th e f r a u d s b y w h ich bo c la im s to h a v e boon c h e a te d o u t o f t h e e le c ­t io n a n d a m a jo r i ty g iv en to b is D e m o c ra tio o p p o n e n t. .

Tlie Sale will be Repeated*O w in g t o th e s to rm laa t S a tu rd a y m a n y

w ere p re v e n te d fro m a t te n d in g o u r sp e c ia l sa le of O v e rc o a ts , C loakB a n d S h o es, a n d I t will be re p e a te d th is S a tn rd a y . E v e ry o n e sh o u ld ta k e a d v a n ta g e o f - t h e n ew l in e o f . O v e rc o a ts a n d C lo a k s t h a t b as b e e n re ce iv e d tb ls w eek. T h e y w ill b e s o ld a t a s to n is h in g ly low fig u res . T h e o v e rc o a ts w e re b o n g b t a t a b fg sa le a n d m u c h u n d e r re g u la r v a lu e .

H e n ry S te ln b a c h ’s O c o an P a la c e , C o o k m a n a v . a n d M a ln s L ^ A s b u ry P a rk .- /4 d » .

T h e h o lid a y s a re a p p ro a c h in g . K e ep o n b a n d a b o x o rB o u rn o ’a D y p p e p s la P il ls . T h e y a id d ig e s tio n a o d re lie v e th e w o rst fo r m s o td y s p e p s i a — A d v . :

O n e or m y sp e c ia ltie s to r y e a rs , h a s been a flno g ra d e o f la w n g ra s s heed . M y su c c e sso r , M r J . C o y te , w ill c o n t in u e to k ee p tb e sa m e g ra d ? , a n d m y fo rm e r p a tro n s o a n d e p e n d o n g e t t in g th e b ea t {here la: ,

», H . D . COLBMAN.— A d v.

T he Cloak D epartm enta t S te ln b a o h B ro s . Is o n e ' o f th e le a d in g feat-* 'u r^S % T th e t o w n . G re a t a d d i t io n s a ro b o ln g

i flDd o n t vo ryq u ic k ly w horo to g e t b ea t g o o d s a t low p ric e s .— A d v . ' ____

M o re b a r g S l tn ra t th e % $ s ln P a la c e o n S a t­u rd a y .— ^ ■ '

For L o w i p r l c e f e

an d b a rg a in s , d o n 't , fa ll t o .g o . to ,S te in b a c h B ro s., aa th e y h a v e re d o o e d p r ic e s a n d w ill c o n t in u e to o ffer b a r g a in s u n t i l C h r is tm a s .—Adv.

F in e fn r n ltu re in a n tiq u e o a k a n d c h e r ry a tScbnolder^s.'—A d v . *........... ............

T ho L ad lea’ A id S o c ie ty o f t h e . R e fo rm e d C h u rc h w ill b o ld a s o c ia b le ou W e d n o ad a y ev e n in g , N ov. 20, a t th e p a r s o n a g e . A ll a re nvLXed.—

In d ig e s tio n Is re lie v e d a t o n c e by u s in g B o u rn e ’s E n g lish T o n ic P ills . D roggists.-.rld 'p .

DiBpcpata bas No Terrors,N o th in g b e t te r k n o w n to m a teria m edico fo r

In d ig es tio n In a n y of I ts p h a se s th a n B o c b n e ’s E n o l ib h T d h io D tb p e p s ia P i l l s , t f l i l c u re h o ad a cb o in s ta n t ly . B risc o e & S ta o k b o u se , agent.", 582 A rch S t., P h ila d e lp h ia .— A d v . ’

T h e p a t e n t to n e “ m u ffle r” lsr o n ly o n e o f th e a d v a n ta g e s c h a ra c te r is t ic o f t h e *‘ O p e ra ” P la n o . . P e e k «& C u r tis , A g e n tI ,

R ed B a n k , N . J — A d v.

Dress Goods.T h e sa le s o f D ress G o o d s a t S t j ln b a c h B ros,

la s t w eek b e a t a l l fo r m e r r e c o rd s , b u t s t il l tb e^ h a v e a la rg e line w h ich m u s t b e re d u c e d b e fo re th e h p lld a y s , a n d th e re fo re th e y h a v e m a d e a g r e a t re d u c tio n in p r lo e s .—A d v .

Spectacles.I h a v e ft flnp,-ti88ortms^xk^of S p o o ta c lea a n d

E y eg la sse s , w h ich w erd n o H n e lu d e d In m y s to re s to c k la te ly so ld to M r. C o y te . P a t t te s w a n tlu g a n y th in g in th i s lin e w ill find m e a t th e h o u se a d jo in in g s to re fo r a s h o r t t im e . I h av e a ls o a s to c k o f . la d d e rs , flag po les, a n d o th e r a r t i c le s to d is p o s e of.,

• ’ f l ; D> C o le m a n .— A d v .*v I 1

N e w p a t te r n s ln B ru sse ls . V e lv o ts . W llto n s a n d A x ra ln s te rs , a t S c b n o ld e r 's .— A d v . _ TIT

Comfortable Roomsfo r w in te r o r s p rin g . L o o k ail th e s u i te o f 7 , n ew ly p a in te d a n d p a p e re d — u n fu r n is h e d —a t 408 M ain s t re e t . F u rn n c e h e a t in h a llw a y . S o u th e rn e x p o su re . L 'g h t a n d c h e e r f u l . L arg e y a rd ~A dt> . -

M en ’s a n d B o y s’ fine F re n c h C alfsk lri Shqep , w o rth t7 , re d n c e d $4 90,- a t M c N a lly ’s .— A d v. .

E lectric Bells ;F o r p r iv a te d w e llin g s o r h o te la . M e d ic a l .b a tte r ie s re p a ire d . C . R . Z a c iia b ia s ,— A d v . 712 C o o k m a n a y e n n e .

— ^ f f v e y o u r w o s h ln f f a tB ^ e d e k e r ’s ^ a t l o n e r r s to r e , n e x t to p o s t o frfce .--A dv.__

A t'C o s a o k ’fl F h a rm a o y ,-716 S a t t l s o n a v e : u s e , n o a r th e p o s t office, y o u Can o b ta in th e c h o lc e a t/a f tt tfy rem edies; a n d y o u r p h y s ic ia n s ’ p re s c r lp lib n s toill be p re p a re d by e x p e r ie n c e d o b e m is ts .— A d v. '

Two Force Pumps.G ood a s n ew , fo r Bale c h e a p . A d d re ss

*• P u m p s ,” oar® J o u r n a l office.— A d v .

J, ROCKAFELLEB.DEAfT BE0DLATIH0 DEVICE.* ^ § o ? c e s s f i i l u s e ' ACME

Sate Ripltte, l f a t .O o L .S 9 ,i« u .......

Per Staten, hmm , la- asiaien, k,

Tbo Aomo R eg u la to r ao ta d lreo tly from th o h e a t o f th e furnaoo. and Is o p e ra te d on th e welW kntiwn p rlnolp lo o f ex p a n sio n of a i r w h o n w a rm a n d Its co n tra c tio n w h o n bool. I t req u ires no eleo trio b a tte ry , olook o r o th o r oornplloated m ach in ery to o p era to It. I f tho te m p e ra tu re rises abovo th e desired d ep ro o th o re g u la ­t o r im m odla to ly opons tho oheok dam p e r In th o Btnoko- p lpo an d oloeoa th e d ra f ts o f tho furnaco . If tho te m p e ra ­tu re d rops below th e do<*Ired d egree, tho re g u la to r closes tho chook dam p e r a n d o p en s th e d ra fts o f tho futtnSoo. W ith th is re g u la to r i t ts Im ­possible to dam ago a fu rnaoo by o v erh eatin g , o r so t firo to a d jo in in g w o o dw ork . I t Is th e ch e ap e st a n d b es t re g u la ­to r . on th e m ark o t, a n a w ill s av e Ita cost In coal a lo n e In one w in te r. ,

F o r fu r th e r p a rtic u la rs .

A ddress,

'JdKa Rookafellar, .PA T E N T E E , %

A a b u r y P a r k , JI.

. A B C H I T E I C T ,ROOMS 14 AN D IB,

F i r a t N a t i o n a l B a n k D n U d t n g *ASBURY PA RK , N. J .

Patented Oct. 29,18B9.iAND MONMOUTH REPUBLICAN,

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10,1889.

B a l e s o f A d v e r t i s i n g .p ro p o sa ls f r im a re sp o n sib le person t o lea se

g ro u n d w ith b a th in g p riv ileges, an d eroot a p av ilion a n d b a th in g bousos th o reo n , o n t h e Leaoh botw oon T e n th a n d E lev e n th avonues, a t B o lm ar (fo rm erly Oqoan BeaobV N. J .

A ddross W ILLIAM 8 . YARD, P resid en t o f tho Ooean B oach A saoola tlon ,

T re n to n , N . J .

M o n th s .W b b k ?.

FRED . J . I.ONG, 8ola Loasoo a n d M anager.-, . JU S T O NE NIGHT,

T u e s d d y , N o v e m b e r 2 1 , * 8 9 .T h e B rig h tes t an d F u n n ie s t Comedy over

w ritten ,

MUGG’S LANDING,T he p lay th a t baa m ade a ll A m orloa

1 . laugh.B eau tifu l M uslo. C harm ing D ances , R efined fcpe-

o la ltles, H andsom e C o /tum ea, P re t ty QIris. T h re e H ours of Solid F u n . .

You L augh , You R o ar, Y on Scream . PJUCES, 23,85, 60 a n d 7g Cents.

Seata on salo a t R ln m o n th ’s d ru g a to re .

FOR SALE

CHAS. E. BORDEN,ABBDKT PARK, N . J .

1 8 9 0 .

Harper’s Weekly,I L L U S T R A T E D .

H a b p eb 's W b s k l t h as a w oll-estab llahed plaoo aa tho lead ing Illu s tra ted n e w sp a p e r In Am orloa. T h e fa irness o f Ita e d ito ria l com m ents o n c u rre n t polltloa haa e a rn oU ,for It th e re s pool a n d co n ­fidence o f all im p artia l re ad ers , a n d th e v a rie ty a n d exoellonoe o f Ita lite ra ry oon tonta, w h loh In- oludo se ria l vand sh o r t 8 to r i os b y th o bea t an d m o s t po p u la r w rite rs , fit I t fo r th e p e ru sa l o f peo ­p le o f th e w id est ranno o f ta s te s an d p u rsu its . T h e W bbkly su p p lem en ts aro o f re m a rk a b le v a rie ty , in te re st, a n d v alue . No e x p e n se Is sp a re d to b rin g tho h ig h es t o rd e r o f a r tt i t to abll* Ity to b e a r u pon tho Illu s tra tion o f tho changefu l

ftnasos o f tho hom o an d foreign h is to ry . A Mox- oan rom ance, from tho pen of T h o m as A. J a n ­

v ier, w ill a p p o a r l? th e W e e k ly in 1090.

9MtX«tc*tL e g a l N o t l « e i .

O u r fr ie n d s w ill ploaso b o a r In m in d th a tT n * JonnHAL la a legal n e w sp a p e r ; a n d aa snch, la th e p ro p o r m od lum fd r a ll leg a l n o tices . Som o ad-^ v o rtlso m o n ts bo long to u s by law , w h ile w ith m an y o th e rs It Is o p tio n a l w ith, tb o p a r ty in te r ­e s te d a s to w h a t p a p e r Bhould publlSn th em .

Time-Tried Furnaces and Stoves.F r i e n d s a n d C u s to m e r s ;

W e In v ite y o u r sp e c ia l u ttc n tlo n to o u r new s to c k o f Stoves, H e a te rs , e tc . , 'f o r F a l l t ra d e , p re p a ra tio n lo r w b ic h h aa b e e n g o ­in g On a ll th ro u g h fbe bu sy S u m m e r m o n th s . O u r a s so r tm e n t w ill be l a rg e r an d In c lu d e ev en f in e r g oods th a n h ^ v e e v e r b e fo re b een d isp la y e d In t h is se c tio n . I n s h o rt, w e p ro p o se to “e x ceed o tfreelves” I tf su s ta in in g o u r r e p u ta tio n as th e le a d in g stovo d e a le rs o f tiik N ew J e r s e y C oast.

O u r now g oods in C arp e ts an d H u g s, O il C lo th , L am p s, C ro ck e ry , e tc ., w ill a lso be Well w o rth y o u r In sp ec tio n , in fa c t , th e re is n o th in g In th e l in e o f H oubo F u r n is h ­in g s—E x cep t fu rn i tu re — b u t w h a t w o c a n s u p p ly Im m e d ia te ly fro m o u r s to c k a t lo w e s t p o ssib le p rices .

A n im p o r ta n t nnd sp e c ia l fe a tu re w ith u s la o u r F u rn a c e B u s in ess , to w h ic h w e h ave d e v o te d ' g re a t cn re an d c lo ;e a t te n ­tio n , an d o u r u n p a ra l le le d success o f th e p as t In th is p a r t ic u la r l in e is e v id e n c e o f th e fa c t t h a t w e bqyeocaFefttlly s tu d ie d th e d e p a r tm e n t an d c o rre c tly d iv in e d I ts needs.

C o rrec t F u rn a c o H e a tin g , th o u g h s im ­p le e n o u g h in p r in c ip le , (s a n art> th e p ro p e r k n o w le d g e o f w h ic h In n o t I n th e possession o f e v e ry , ev en s k il le d , m e­c h a n ic in th e tra d e , b u t w ith o u r o w n p rac tic a l e x p e rie n c e , o u r s k il le d w o rk ­m en in c h a rg e o f a c o m p e te n t fo re m an , and u n d e r p e rso n a l s u p e rv is io n a n d In ­s tru c tio n , a n d a l in e o f timetried Furnacesx th e s u p e r io r m eth o d s o f w h ich a re u n q u e s ­tio n e d , we can a s su re o u r c u s to m e rs th a t w e a re In a p o sitio n to s u p p ly t h e i r w an ts In th is l in e to th e g re a te s t d e g re e o f s a tis ­

f a c t io n , as o u r n u m e ro u s te s t im o n ia ls w ill c e rt ify .

W e in v ite a c o m p a rie o n o f o u r g o o d s and p rices , and h o p e tb b e favored w ith y o u r p a tro n a g e .

“ Y ^urp v e ry re sp e c tfu l ly ,

W . M . P A W L E Y & C O .,

160108 M ain 8t% 'A'SfttfiiY P a h k , N . J , -

P erfec t syBtom o f d ra in a g e . P u re A r­tesian w ater. B team h e a t. E leotrio

lig h ts . Sun p arlo r . f

c h a s . J . h u n t , p ro p r ie to rH o t e l s , . v c

‘ ‘ F r e e N o t i c e * . ”By m u tu a l a g re e m e n t, a n d by reoom m onda-

t lo n of th e N ow J e r s e y E d ito ria l A ssocia tion , t h o now snapors o f A sbury P a rk h a v e dooldod to a b o lish th e u n fa ir a n d u n w a rra n te d oustom of g iv in g free lo ca l n o tlo es to o n to rta ln ro e n ta of a n y h in d w hloh havo as th o lr o b jo o t tbo ra is in g o f m o n ey ^ fo r tho b en e fit o f soclo tles o r In d i­v iduals. D o ro a f te r w o sh a ll m ako a c h a rg e o f flvo oonta por lino td rosldon ta a n d te n c e n ts p e r l in o to tra v e lin g o r o u ts id e oom panloa o r persona

Steinbach Bros.I . . . .

L E A D I N G

HARPER’S PERIODICALS.T H E I M P E R I A L Hk nry 0. W ikbor, P realdont. Geo. W. E vanh, V ico-President. Edmond E , D ayton , CaahierP e r T e a r i

HA RPER’S W EEKLY *.................................... *1,00HA RPER 'S MAGAZINE.......................................... 4 00H A R PER 'S BAZAR............................................ 4 00HA RPER 'S YOUNG P E O P L E .................... . . 2 00

Postage Free to oil eubtcritef* (n the United Stales; Canada, o r Mexico.

T h e VoiumfeB of th o WfeEuur' beg in w ith \h e first N um ber for Jan u a ry o f ea ch yoar. W hon no tlm o Is specified, subscrip tions w ill begin w U b lh p ,, N um ber c u rre n t a t tim e o f re ce ip t o f orde?. -

B ound V olum es o f H a rper’s W ekxly for th re e years baok, In n ea t c lo th b in d in g , w ill be sen t by m ail, postage paid , o r bv express, free ot expenso (provided th e fre ig h t a pea n o t exceed one d o llar per v o lu x e ) , for $7.00 p e r volum e,• C lo th C ases fo r eaoh volum e, s u ita b le fo r bind-, log , will bo 8ont by m all, p ost-paid , on re c e ip t of % 1.00 eaoh.

R em ittances should be m ado by PoeVofflee U onoy O rder o r D raft, to avoid chance o f loss.

Newspapers arc not to copy this advertisement with* out the expra t order H a rp b b & B bo thbbs. Address . H A R PER & BROTHERS, New York,

G rand a n d Sum m orfiold av e n u es, o p e n a l l tbo y e a r . W arm room s a n d a p le a sa n t hom o.

H . A . KINGSLEY.

COR. MATTISON AVE. AND MAIN ST., ASBURY PARK.- __ * Oboanizbd January, 1889.

C A P I T A L , 8 6 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 . B U R P L U B , 9 2 ,6 0 0 .0T ransacts a g en e ra l B an k in g Business, to n e s Foreign a h d D om estic Drafts.

P ro m p t a tte n tio n glvon to a ll m attora en tru s te d t o us.C O L L E T T I O S N ^ A D K A N D P R O M P T L Y ^ C H N O W L B D O R D .

D I R E C T O R S :N. E . BUCHANON. J . S. FERODSON. GEO. W. EVANS.C. C. CLAYTON. GEO. W. TREAT. .T. A . W A INRIGH T.DR. J .X T W . HETRICK. . JOHN HUBBARD. HENRY C. WINSOR.

YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED.

84 a n d 84.B0 po r.w eo k .S ix o r e ig h t gon tlom on oan secu ro goo d b o a rd

a t 607 BOND ST ,, A sb u ry P a rk .A a b u ry L o d g e m e e ts o n T u e sd a y e v e n in g .

P a rk H a ll’s s te a m - b e a t in g a p p a r a tu s Is w o r k in g n ice ly .

A fow .fish e rm e n y e t l in g e r o n th o P ie r in tb o h o p e of lu r in g a n u n w a ry baas.

G ro u n d wbb b ro k e n th i s w eek f o r C ash lo r T w ln ln g ’s n ew c o tta g e o n F o u r th a v e n u e .

T b e c i r c u la r to b o R g a n y e t s ta n d s In I t s u n ­f in ish ed g lo ry , a t T h ird a n d O c ean a v e n u e s .

M r. W . P. D n n o k lo e b a a re o p e n e d h is m e a t m a rk o t o n B o n d s t r e e t n e a r S u m m e rflo ld ave- n u e . 1_ y

T h e c o m p a n y p la y in g In “ M u g g ’s L a n d ­ing^ Is a a ld to bo th o b e s t o v o r s e e n In th o

T H E O R A N G ELOCATED ON GRAND A V E.,

i s O p e n f o r t h e w i n t e r .G ood w arm ro o m s a n d oxoe 11 ont tab le .

T erm s m o d era te .. __________________ M. J .G E N U N G .

G r a n d A v e n u e H o te lth e la rg e s t h o te l open all th e y e a r . '

C om plete In a ll m o d e rn app llancea fo r th e h e a lth a n d oom fort o f w in te r guests,

A r te s ia n w a te r . P e rfe o t sew era g e . S team h e a t a ll th ro u g h .

_____________ LYBRAN D SILL, P ro p ’r.

C o m m e r c i a l H o te l ,C en tra lly lo ca te d In

ASBURY PARK, N EW JER SEY .Open s i l^ th e year.

H e ad q u arte rs fo r oom m ercla l m en.JA S . H . ROM AIN . P ro p rie to r .

NEW JERSEYIN V IT E AN IN SPECTIO N OF T H E IR RECENT

SELECTIONS FOR

F o rty -s ix p e r so n s w ero a d m i t te d to fu ll m e m b e rs h ip a t S t. P a n l ’a C h u rc b . o n S u n d a y , N o v ; 8. '

T u o sd a y w as a b e a u tifu l d a y a n d m a n y v is ite d th o b oach fo r a p ro m e n a d e a lo n g th o ocopn . . .

T h e p r in t in g d e p a r tm e n t o f T ite J o u r n a l offlco h a s n e v e r a tU h l s t im e o f y e a r b e e n so p re s se d w ith o rd e rs .

-------------pT-*-*------------~~T h e h o n se re c e n t ly m o v e d t o M u n ro e a v e ­

n u e by M r. F ra n k F aw lo y , h a s b e e n a o ld to M r. I r v in g 8. H u to h ln so n .

G r a n d a v e u u e , a b o v e F ir s t , is g re a tly c b a u g e d w lth ^ T ts n ew ’b u i ld in g s . M ost o f th e n e w o n e* a re to o e x te n s iv e to bo ca lle d c o t­ta g e s^ M ore p ro p e rly th e y a r e m an s io n s .

- I t c cm cod ad t h a t b n t fo r th o red i« t#Jo tlngo f tbo B ta te th o R e p u b lic a n s w o u ld h av e bad A m a jo r i ty In th o A sse m b ly a s well a s lu tb e S e n a te . • *

J b a t th e w ill o f th e g r e a t la w y e r, S a m u e l J . •XJldoo, s h o u ld be fo u n d d e fe c tiv e , i s a n a d ;,m iss io n th a t la w y e rs , lik e d o c to rs , som etim es* .d is a g re e . • ' _ •

T h e fu n n y p la y , “ M oK g’a L a n d in g ,’* w ill ib e p ro d u c e d a t th e O p e ra H o u se n e x t T h u rs - .d a y ev e n in g ; N ov . 21, S e c u r e y o u r Beats a t&Kln m o n th 's ,

(Im p ro v e m e n ts a t tbo H o te l B ru n a w lc k a re w e ll .u h d e r w ay . T h o fo u n d a tio n ^ are ’b p f o r t h e m a in p a r t , a n d a th re e s to ry e le v a tio n b aa b e e n b u i l t o v e r th e k itc h e n .

A 15,000 g re e n b a c k a n d o n e o f $10,000, w as re c e iv e d a t tb e * F lrs t N a tio n a l B a n k o n W e d -

‘■neaday; ~ I t Is very se ld o m t h a t b il ls o f so la rg e a d e n o m in a tio n g e t in c irc u la tio n .

• J e r r y M o A u ley ’s . M ission In W a te r s t re e t , N e w Y o rk , h a s b e e n o p e n s e v e n te e n y e a rs , T h e a n n iv e r s a ry will b e c e le b ra te d S u n d a y e v e n in g w hen se v e ra l d is tin g u is h e d pertfons w ill sp e a k . ' ' •

M r. G e o rg e L. H a w k in s a n d fa m ily , w hoa r e a m o n g th e la te s t o f o u r S o m m e r re s id e n ts

i t o t a k e th e i r flig h t t o w in te r q u a r te r s , l e f t ou ’ \W ed n esd ay V fo r th e ir b o rne o n n p p e r B ro ad -

vway, New"‘T o r k . . ...

“■ "'.T he M ik a d o B a z a a r , a f te r b e in g c lo sed s e v ­e r a l w eeks, w a s o p e p e d .aga in on T h u rs d a y la n d will re m a in o p e n U fttiL aU er t h e h o l i d a y ,

very f in e s lo o k ’y e t re m a in s f ro m w tilob to iBelect h o l id a y p re se n ts .

T h e P e n n s y lv a n ia R a ilro a d C o m p a n y p r o ­p o se s t o ra is e th e t r a c k s o f th e i r ro a d a b o v e g ra d e th ro u g h E lis a b e th . I t w ill b o a so lid e m b a n k m e n t en c lo se d In w a l l s / T h e C e n tra l R a i l ro a d will re m a in a t g ra d e .

T h e s te a m e r E W eron h a s c c a s e d bcr t r ip s f ro m B ru n ch p o r t a f te r a very su c c e s s fu l t e a s o n . M an y o f tho h o rse s an il c a r r ia g e s w b ich c o m e fro m N ew Y o rk to A sb u ry P ^ rk a re

•b ro u g h t d o w n by th la s te a m e r . 1 1

M rs . C o rllo s a n d d a u g h te r B orthajW h o b a v o b e e n s p e n d in g so v e ra l 'm o n tl is in A sb u ry P a rk , r e tn r n e d - w ftb M r. -C orlles,- a-S p e o ia l-P o n slo n - E x a n ilb e i ', o n T u e sd a y , to tb e l r . h o m e l04 M an sfie ld , (Jh lo . T h e y w ere v e ry muph* p le a se d w jtb th o P a rk a n d s o o re s o f fr ie n d s h u p o th e y n ia y -re tu ru n e x t soation . ,

Every D epartm ent SuperblyEquipped w ith New Goods*

O. F . K r o e h l , . P ru o e S. K e a to r , M ilan Ross,

Is a a c C . K ennedy , H e n ry H . Y ard . Chas. A . A tk ins.

W R I Q H T H O U S E80S b ew ail a v e n u e , A8BUKY F A «K .

T h e lad les fo rm e rly of “ T he O aks,” h a v e rem oved to th e ab o v e houso, w h e re th ey w ill be p leased to ro ^ lV e g u ests fo r th e day , w eek or season.. H ouse w a rm ed th ro u g h o u t by fu rn ao eu T erm s W to I a S pecia l ra te* to fa m ilies . T ab le b o ard j i p e r w eek.___________ - _____________

N o n o b u t firs t o lads c o m p a n ie s r e p re s e n te d —c o m p a n ie s t b a t p a y t b e l r . lo sse s p ro m p tly .B r i g h a m C o t t a g e ,

. 014 COORMAN A V E N U E .. ’ ASBURY PA RK , NEW JERSEY .

Opon Por th e w in te r. W arm ed th ro u g h o u t w ith h e a te r . T eram m odera te* T a b le B oard S4.

MRS. E . G . BRIGHAM.

R E A L E S T A T EH0U3EFURNISHIN6A n u m b e r o f .8 p le n d Id e b a t e j s t o b u y lo ta— im p ro v e d o r u n im p ro v e d

p ro p e rtie s .

H Y G E I A H O T E L T. FRANK APPLEBY,7 0 6 Cookman Ave., Asbury .Park.

6 5 Main St., Ocean Grove,

C en tra l avenue, P itm a n to ^ IcC lIo to ck , OCEAN*QROV£,*'N. J . ,

O pen a ll th e y e a r f o f p e rm a n en t o r t r a n s ie n t guests. S team b e a t, co m fo r ta b le ro o m s, e x c e l­le n t ta b le . V ery re a so n a b le te rm s . 1

— O F— ‘

F in e O v e r c o a ts a n d S u it sf o r b o th L ad les a n d G en tlem en , a t

P E T E R S O N ’S >Old-Established Auction House

6 2 0 C o o k m a n a v e n u e .

T he^e a r e fo rfo lte d p ledges, a n d m u s t b e sold. DIAMONDS AND JEW ELRY . F IN E !

W ATCHES,

T h e F in e s t S tock o f

HoasefflrDisbing Goodst o b e found on th e N ew Je rsey Coast.

Newest OesigHs in Furniture.A N T IQ U E O A K

in Badroea Salts, Sido Bairds, G itlrt, Ti Mm , Etc.

T h e O l d - E s t a b l i s h e d M a r k e t

G R EA T REDUCTIO N IN P R IC E S A T

B. HEYMAN’3F I B D T - C L & B 8

M a t s H t g s i s l U t ,NQS. 7(4 AHD 716 BOOKMAN AVE., ,

N e x t to W estern U nion T e le g rap h Office,. ASBURY- PA R K , N . J .

In o rd e r to s t ir u p business a n d g iv e tb e house-- k ee p ers o f A sbury P a rk an d v ic in ity an o p p o r­tu n ity t o supp ly th e ir w a n ts In MEATS a n d VEG ETABLES a t g ro a tly re d n ced prices, I w ill below qu o te p rices of

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, th o m o s t e v e n tfu l a h d h is to r ic c h a ra c te r ;B u t, con f in in g o u rso lv e s to m o d e rn tim e s,

w e ( la d n u m e ro u s in s ta n c e s i n w h ic h th e se h o n o re d fa b r ic s , a p a r t f r o m t h e i r d o m e s tic use, a s a f fo rd iu g re p o se t o th o w e a ry , h av o been o n ly to o f r e q u e n t ly a s so c ia te d w i th sa d m em o ries , a n d beon th e sc e n e o f m a n y o n u n ­ra v e le d m y s te ry . T h u s , cases l ik e th o m u rd e r o f th o y o u n g p r in c e s i n t h e T o w e r, a t o n ce o c c u r to u s ; a n d S h a k e s p e a re 's t r a g i c scene, w h e re O th e llo s m o th e rs D esd em o n a, is to o w ell k n o w n to n e e d c o m m e n t.

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kfxsasr *2* & ;h a v o h a d v is io n s re v e a le d to th o m o f w o n ­d ro u s u n e a r th ly jo y B in t h e la n d o f d re am s.

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se rv e d th e b s d s te a d o cc u p ied b y Q u e en Eliza* b e th -o n h e r v is i ts , t o t^ o l o r d . t r e a s u r e r , B u r ­le igh . I t - s f a n d s in a r o o m m t h e w e s te rn firs t floor o f th e m a n s io n , k n o w n a s Q ueen E liz a b e th ’s b e d ro o m , a n d is d is tin g u is h e d by i ts g re e n v e lv e t h a n g in g s . P a u l H e n tz n e r , in h is v is i t t o W in d so r iu th e y e a r 1598, no-

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s h e d , In w h ic h , t r o d i t io u in fo rm s u s , t h e pro* t e n d e r w a s b o rn .— L o n d o n S ta n d a rd .

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C orresp o n d en ce Soliolted. A la rg o n u m b o r of B o ard in g H ouses a n d C o t­ta g e s fo r Ile n t fo r tho Season o f 1889.

- < 3-eo ,. “W . 'T i r d - e t a : , - Licensed Auctioneer,

$ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 t o L o a n 0 1 1 1 s t M o r t g a g e .

REAL ESTA TE AHD INSURANCE AGENT210 M a in S t . , A s b u r y P a r k . N . J .

S . H E M M E N W A Y ,615 Cookman ave., - Asbury Park, N. J.*

B ranoh o f 00 S o u th S t., Novf Y ork C ity . It &— —-M A N U FA CTU nER OF——

F L A G S an B U R G E E Sfo r H o te ls a n d Buslnoss p u rposes , a t v e ry lo w la to a : a n d b Ibo J \

T E N T S o f a ll k in d s . . ’ 4 \ ‘. A w nings fo r s to re s a n d p riv a te dwolllngH. W agon C overs an d \ vC anvass G oods o r a ll k in d s m ado to ordor. \

F e ltin g fo r s team nipos a n d ^ p f le rs . A w ning G oods an d C o tto n D uok o f a l l w id th s f o r salo A ll o rd e rs p ro m p tly a t te e d n a to ; B . B J A C O B N , S D p e r t n t e s d e n u

FOURTH

WM. L. COWARD. MORRIS L IP P M A NKU. • 'i MO

C O W A R D & L I P P M A N

Successors to 6 . D. Coward.

jL iv e r s r a,iid. 33ba,xd.IrLgf Sta /b le s S e w a ll ave., bet. E m o ry* s i r ami G ran tf a f e., Asbury Park, N .J .

. H orses a n d C arria g es a lw a y s on c a ll. . H orses B o ard e d by th e D ay, W eok o r M onth ,T olophono Call, IDA.

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Exorclilng; the Devil In India, t■A s t r a n g e c a a g q f s u p e r s t i t io n w a s re c e u t ly

In v e s tig a te d Btffftre'iijB c o r o n e r o f 'B o m b a y . A H in d o o m ill h a n d , n a m e d B a m j i D a ji, h a d f o r som o t im e b e e n s u ff e r in g f r o m swoU*. « a Im M jo in t* n n d pains, i n v a r io u s 1 p a r t s o i th o b o d y .. H o w e n t to tb o m ill t o g e t Some w a g e s d u e to h im , a n d on h is r e tu r n w a s ta k e n i l l o n th o ro a d . H o w a s b r o u g h t ho m e o n th e b a c k o f a f r ie n d in a n a lm o s t u n c o n ­sc io u s s ta te , a n d w a s p la c e d in a s i t t i n g pos­tu r e , b e in g h e ld u p b y h is f a th e r . A m a n n a m e d D eo, w h o w a s p re s e n t , s u g g e s te d t h a t ho w a s possessed o f a d e v i l , in o r d e r t o ex p e l w h ic h D eo sw a y e d h im se lf a b o u t in f r o n t o f , t h e s ic k m a n , selzod h o ld o f b is h a i r , a n d do* m a n d e d o f th o d e v i l w h o b e w a s . N o t r e ­c e iv in g a r e p ly h e s t r u c k th e d ec ea so d v io- J e n tly wteto a r a t t a n , w h e n th e l a t t e r fe ll b a c k i a a d y in g c o n d i t i o n ; ,b u t b e f o r e h i s d e a th a n o th e r f r io n d to o k th o r a t t a n a n d b e a t th o deceased ,' b o th m e n s w a y in g th e i r b o d ies to a u d f r o a n d p ro fe s s in g to bo p o s­sessed w i th th o s p i r i t o f a god . T h o flo g g in g •was in te n d e d to d r iv o o u t t h e d e v i l . D a ji d ie d a lm o s t im m e d ia te ly w i th o u t a c o m ­p la in t . T h o w id o w n a r r a t e d , a l l th e s e fa c ts to t h e C b ro n er, a n d d e sc rib e d b o th f lo g g in g s a s b e in g v e r y v i o l e n t T h e m e d ic a l e v id e n c e sh o w e d t h a t t h e r e w e re S ev era l b ru is e s on

^ t b e b a c k a n d a n a b r a s io n o n t h e r i g h t h ip , b u t t h a t t h e ca u se o f d e a th w a s h e m o rr h a g e

- f ro m r u p t u r e o f th o sp le e n , W liich -was p ro b ­a b ly n o t d u e to t h e flo g g in g . T h e j u r y fo u n d a v e r d ic t a c c o rd in g ly , a d d in g t h a t t h e r e w a s n o o f id e p c e t o sh o w h o w , th o sp leen b ec am e r t ip tu re d .- ^ L o n d o n T im es, j

629 Cookm an Ave., A shary Park .

? F E R G U S O N ’ S Coal, Wool 1 Harcoal

„ BRUSH MANUFACTURERS,251 Pearl Street, near Fulton Street, New York,

H av e o cc u p ied th e sa m e b u ild in g m o re th a n a q u a r te r o f a ce n tu ry . T h o lr goodB a r e sh ip p ed to a ll p a r ts o f th e U n ite d S ta te s .

G E O . E . F A R M E R , P r o p r i e t o r ,

W h o l e s a l e a n d R e t a i l .A ll m y S to c k Is o f th e boat q u a li ty In tb e m a rk e t, a n d Is ho w

k o p t c o n s ta n tly d ry u n d e r co m p le te cover. *

I w a r r a n t e v e ry th in g I se ll. I f n o t as re p re se n te d th e m oney will b e re fu n d ed . „

Yo u r p a t r o n a g e s o l i c i t e d .F O R S A L E . J A M E S n . b l i A l U J N

Choice P M M CABINET MAKER AID IB E R T A K E RN o r t h S p r in g l a k e

Yard and Office," 51 South Main Street,O pposite O oean G rov^ M ain E n tra n c e .

BRANCH O FFIC E S—B am m an ’s G ro cery B tore in th e P a rk .- -W a in rlg h t A E rrlo k so n ’s S to re tn th e G rove.

O rd ers b y m a il p ro m p tly re ceiv e d a n d d eliv ered . C o m p le te T elep h o n e C onnection . —

R F .A D O F W E S L E Y L A K E , M A I N S T R E E T ,

(K now n as^L o ts^fos. 20;and.21,)

S u cce sso r tor GRAVA TT A TAY LOR, w h o lesa le a n d r e ta i l d e a le r in 'S itu a te d w ith in 150 fe e t o f O cean a v e n u e a n d w ith in 100 y a rd s o f th b s u r f . .

T h e p lo t h a s a fro n ta g e o f 109 fe e t on B rig h to n T tvenuo a n d th e e a s t line Is 284 fe e t In d e p th . O n tb e b lock a d jo in in g th e la rg e H o te l W u b hrton . J u s t th e p lao e fo r a fine su m m e r re s id e n ce , w ith p le n ty o f ro o m fo r s ta b le a n d c a rr ia g e house .

A n ti-liq u o r a n d an tl-n u lsan c e c la u se s In a l l ^ g e d s in ih e neighborhood*. •

The Foreat* of CUUfornia.T h o e v e rg re e n re d w o o d r is e s s t r a i g h t a s

a n a r r o w to a h e ig h t o f f r o m 200 to 800 fe e t. T h e ro a r o w holo t r ib e s o f th o c o n ifo rm , d o z­en s o f sp ec im e n s o f c y p ro ss a n d c o d a r , a v a r i-

_ e ty a n d r e la t io n s h i p o f t h e o a k s t h a t d r iv e s th o b o ta n is t w ild , ra v in o s filled w i th th e flo w e rin g d o g w o o d , ' sw e ep s . o f g l is te n in g m a n z a n i ta , B jia ttc red p a tc h e s o f t b o red - /je r r io d b u c k th o rn , r i f t s o f th o p in k p e ta le d rh o d o d e n d ro n , s a n g u in a r y p a tc h e s w h e re s t a n d th o J u d a s treo . I n th i s fa v o re d c o u n ­t r y a lso b loom a n d b o a r tb o p o m e g ra n a te , flg , o livo , a lm o n d , a p r ic o t , lo m o n , o ra n g e a n d th e n e c t a r i n e . . T h o c a m o lia is a tre e , th o h o lio tro p e a s to u t B h ru b ; g e r a n iu m s a ro u se d fo r s c a r le t h o d g es ; th o c a l la lU y 1s a w eed . A n d to ro u n d o u t th i s r i o t o f lu x u r i - a n c o —th is s a tu r n a l ia o f fo lla g o , f r u i t a n d flo w e r— n a tu r e so w s e v e r y s p r in g , in a n d th r o u g h I t a l l , a c r o p o f w ild o a t^ s u c h a s w a s nevei^ d re a m e d o f b y th e ^ o r lg ln a l p ro d i- i g a l l o n .—-H a rp e r’s M a g a z in e . ^

U p h o l s t e r i n g i a ^ iO l i t s b r a n c h e s c a r r i e d o n , a l s o a f u l l l i n e o f P i c t u r e F r a m e s a n d M o u l d in g s k e p t c o n s t a n t l y o n h a n d . W i n d o w O o m io e s o f a l l d e s c r i p t i o n s .

9 A nd a l l k in d s o f

c h a r c o a l , — . MoM’Jalerials,S . a t th e old es tab lish ed y a rd •

I N R E A R O K L A K E V I E W H O U B K .A fu l l S took o f th o ab o v o a r tlo le s w ill bo k e p t c o n s ta n tly on h a n d a n d sa tis fa c tio n g u a ra n te e d .

B ran o h offices a t B eam os’ G ro cery , A sbury P a rk , an d M atth ew s A B a lla rd 's G rooery , O cean G rove. / - - T ELEPH O N E.

yoara^oxperleTTD fflnthe u n d o rta k ln g business ln-A sbury-Parfc-end vlo ln ltv- j sa tis fa o tlo n to a ll w h o m a y fa v o r m o w ith th e ir p a tro n a g e .EOTION8 w ith p rin c ip a l h o te ls a n d s to re s in P a rk a n d Grove.

Teel o o m p e te n t t o r iv e T E L E PH O N E CONNKt

T h e p lo t w ill b e so ld a t a re a so n a b le figu re , as th e o w n e rs’ re s id e n ce a n d In te res ts a r e else-, w here.

In q u ire o f

O. H. Brown or W. H. Potter;' SPR IN G LA K E PO ST O FFICE ,

E. Wright, Asbury Park,OR A T T H B JO U R N A L O FFICE.

Offloo o p en d a y a n d n ig h t.

O ne o f th e b e s t p laoes to flnd a n •asso rtm en t o f FIRST-CLA 8S BUILD ING M A TERIA L, Is a t th e o ld es tab lish ed business placo o f '

N. E. BUCHANON & CO.S o u th w es t c o rn e r o f M ain s t r e e t and 'Asbury avenue, •

A s b n i r ^ P a r k . T S e w J c r a e y . .•

T h o u sa n d s o f cu s to m ers w h o h a v e p a tro n iz e d th is h ouse , ca n te s tify t h a t th e ro la no b e t te r p lace to Dorohase ev e ry th in g w h loh e n te rs In to th e c o n s tru c tio n of a co tta g o o r a pa la ce . Come alo n g w ith .y o u r o rd e rs f o r . - . . •

'■ { L U M B E R , L I N E , L A T H , H A R B W M E ,P L A N T B B , C E M E N T , H A I B . V A R N I S H ;O I L , T U R P E N T I N E , P A I N T , E T C . , E T € ,

A nd ev e ry th in g to co m p le te y o u r house . Satisfao tlon g u a ra n te e d to a ll cu stom ers.

.G u lls a n d T h e i r Young*E v e r y b ird w a tc h e s o v e r a n d c a re s f o r h e r

o w n n p s t, th o u g h th e n u m b e rs a r e so g r e a t , a n d tb e tu m u lt bo ex c ess iv e t l i a t I t is d if f ic u lt to co n c e iv e h o w e a c h g u l l c a n .d is tin g u ish h e r o w n s p o t te d eggs, p la c e d in th o m id s t o f so m a n y o th e rs , e x a c t ly s im ila r in s ize , sh ap e a n d c o lo r ; a n d w h e n a t le n g th th o y o u n g a r o h a tc h e d a n d a r o sw im m in g a b o u t o n th o lo ch o r c r o w d e d to g e th e r o n so m e g ra s s y p o in t , th o o ld b ird s , a s th o y com o hom o f r o m a d i s ­t a n c e w ith food , fly r a p id ly a m id th o u sa n d s o f y o u n g o n e s e x a c t ly s im ila r to th o i r o w n , w i th o u t <^veu lo o k in g a t th e m , u n t i l th e y flnd t h e i r o w n o ff s p r in g , w h ic h re c o g n iz in g th e i r p a r e n t^ a m o n g a ll th o o th e r b ird s , re co iv o th o m o rse l w i th o u t a n y o f th o h u n g r y l i t t lo c r e a ­tu r e s a r o u n d a t te m p t in g t o d is p u te t h e p rizo , o ach w a i t in g p a t ie n t ly f o r i t s o w n p a r e n t , in p e r f e c t co n fid e n ce t h a t i t a t u r u w ill co m e in d u o sea so n .— N ow O rltta n s P lc ay u n o . ■

C r a w f o r d ’s P a l a c e o f M u s ic ,th o le a d in g m oslo s to re o f th o A tlan tlo co a s t.

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MAIN ST.L arg e o lo o k in

f r o n t of tb o sto re‘d i a m o n d s .

\ . W A TCH ES an d j ' JEW EL RY .

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b a v o b e e n a n d s t il l a r e - b u r m o s t p o w e rfu l m a g n e ts . T h e m e d ic a l , p ro fess io n a r q on r e c o r d in t h i s c o u n t r y a n d E u ro p e a s t o th o th e a l in g q u a l i t ie s "of s o f t s o u th e rn b reezes w h e n b lo w n th r o u g h fo r e s ts o f p ines. C a tc h ­in g a n d beam ing o u th e i r w in g s , a s th o y do , th e r ic h u r o c h a o f th e * ) p in es , th e y h r in g baclt th e flush o f " i^ tialtb ^ w a s t e d clloeks a u d k in ­d le th e t*yo A ga in h o p e .—T h o u ia sv illo (Q a.) T im es. j u

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(J U ta ite i Oct. 10. 1&30 ) l —i -m ade by S T A U F F E lt , q f Cookm an A re .,' A nbury l h r k t fo r M O d o z e n . t a b l n c tPhoto, at id 130 cts, i n cash a n d receive a do2en * ‘ Unique*. ’ * a m i Cabinet returned . N o Utatnpe.

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jooilEwoo^ Ql

ROBERT PETERSON,

Auction and Commission House(WO C o ok m an aven u e.'

Oogular Solo Evory Saturday Evening

i l » . i y c o ,. P ra c tic a l a n d Ilo llab lo M ak e r o f

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' 3 L » . S O M E R S ,A s b u r y A v © . a n t i M a t s * § l t . . A s b u r y P a r k ^ l N . J T .BRANCH O FFICE S—M ilan I io s s i ih a ) C ookm an avonuo, Asbury P ark , a n d G. W . M artin 's , P ilg rim

P athw ay , Oooan Grovo. w horo a ll o rde rs re ce iv e d w ill h e p ro m p tly filled. . :

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w i th it , o r u p o n w h lo h I ts u so h a s n o t c o s t le s s th a n I f o th e r p a in ts h a d b e e n u se d , w i l l b e r e p n l n t * chI n t o n r e x p e n s e .

FO R SA LE BY W . X u S O N

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E stab lished 1864) A sburv P a rk , N . J .

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3 0 0 - p a g e b o o k .

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■Special B a les o f F i n a Q o ld a n d S i lv e r W a tch e s

b o th la d le s ' arid g en tlem e n ’a ; | jw -* je w e lry , C hains. K ings, &o., T h i s F r i d a y n iM B a t a r . U<»y cv c n lu fip B . L adles Inv ited . E very ar tlo lo w a rra n te d aa re p rese n te d o r th e m oney re tu rn ed . T hose goods m a y bo p u rc h ased a t p r iv a te s a le a t an y tlm o. .T h is la y o u r oh an 00 fo r b argains ,.

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J U L T X .C o r o n e r ’s N o t i c e .

T his is to glvff n o tlo o t h a t l liav o au tn o rtz e d Ja m o s 11. S ox ton to ta k o ch arg o o r a ll bodies so u th o f E lheron a n d in m y d ls tr io t w hon I am n o t p e rso n a lly p re so n t, an d t h a t m ay re q u ire tbo serv ices o f a eoH>iiGV, ‘.BtUd Ja m e s II . S ex ton to tak o ch arg o u n ti l I a rn v o .

• FRED . M. V A N D ERV EER, Coroner, L ong B ranch , N , J , ‘ , ‘ . * ' . .

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t n O o w f r s m M , S a a b * } 1! ! ) i a d » . D o o r s , M o u l d i n g s , B n e k e t a s n d C a r v « d W o r k H a r d a n d B o l t w < w d M a n t e l s . T a r n I n k a n d S c r o l l S a w i n g a B p s*

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M a k e | i t L i v e l y b y A d v e r t l s l u f f .