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OCEAN GROVE TIMES. A Valuable Hediurii. For Lncul nnd General A D V liR TISINO. VOL. i. NO. 4°. OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3) 1894. ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR, SANITARY MEASURES. Wau» (or Improving the.Condition o i Wes ley Lake—A Sewage System <or \V«st Park. Tiie question of improving the sanitary condition of Wesley Luke littfl been taken up in a manner that promises some good results: Through tho efforts of Captain Ixs-wia Raineur,'ft joint meeting o f officials of Ocean Grove, Ash (try Park and. tho Township, supplemented.by a number o f prominent citizens, was held in the Bliild- mgantf bum. Association vQonitiin the Post Ofliec building at Asbury I’ark, Saturday, . afternoon of lust week, '.with .Samuel \V. Kirkbride presiding. . ; . A committee consisting of George W. Evans, representing the Ocean Grove Associntitm ; Henry 0. Winsnr, the As- bury Park Borough Council ; S.■VV. Kirk- brine, the Township Committee, and i)r. J. H ; Alday, Dr. Henry Mitchell, L. K. Wateon, Benjamin Albertson and 1J. Daniels -wus appointed, to whom the .question o f a sewage syslem for' West As- bury Park was referred for investigation. Tbe committee was empowered to employ an engineer at nn expense.not to exceed $25, to assist in forimdnt big general plans of improvement upon sanitary matters. -There was also a strong sentiment that, the present method ol‘ emptying the w - ago into the ocean .must he .abolished at an early day but beyond a general ex- pression of opinion that a elmnge wOnlri boon be necessary, no particular- plana were outlined or submitted. . . The question o f improving the condition of Wesley laike was really the important feature of the meeting and' a number of suggestions as to tlie beat and most economical methods to reach the de-' aired end were, offered. Several . of the plans contemplated tilling in tlie head of the lake for a greater or lesr distance from the turnpike with a culvert through the centre, to carry the water down; another proposed the construction of a pipe connecting the. lake with the aca through which the water could be admitted at high and let out at low tide, thus changing tlie contents when deaired; whileanotberproposed to 1j )1 up the lake entirely. One suggestion that met with favor was to carry the ,water dircctly from the the turnpike bridge through a . culvert or aeries of pipes directly into,the ocean without permitting it to flow into the basin'of the lake at all. At the foot of each avenue would be plneed a catch . haain with an opening into the culvert, which would also carry away all surface water from the atreeta during a rain. This plan also contemplated the erection of a pumping station at the foot of the Take with a service pipe running tip to tbe turnpike bridge, through which tliebasin of th is lake would be kept tilled with salt water pumped from the ocean. If do* aired, lateral pipes could be run out into the lake at different pointsand a series of. fountains kept in operation without cost oxcept for the tirat expense o f construct- ing them. This method of emptying the aalt water in the lake at or near its liead by reason of the natural/low toward the aea where it empties, would insure its being kept in good sanitary condition. After some further discussion o f the proponed plans, the meeting adjourned to meet again .Saturday, February 3, at 2 o’clock, to hear the report o f the commit- tee nnd take such further action aa may be necessary or desirable, Executive Committee/leetlng. At tin adjourned session held Friday evening of last week the Executive Com- mittee a^ain took tip, and discussed tho always important tiucslion of an increased water supply and a better system of electric, lighting. Tiie sub-comiiiitto appointed to inves- tigate the propositions submitted by out- side jmrties to supplv the town with tho wiiter needed, had not complcled its ' work, and further time was granted. • It is likely that some recommendations will he submitted at the next meeting of the Executive Committee which hits been called for February 0. . . Mr. Smith of the United Electric Im- provement Company was expected to aitbmit information and an estimate for ‘ changing the present system of electric light, but was nimble to get it ready; and. consequently will report to tbe sub-com- mittee on electrical affairs at a meeting to bo called by.the chairman sonic time this week. Tlie proposition will then be in- vestigated by : the members of the sitb- ‘ committee, and a report made to the Ex- ecutive body on. the sixth. Tha two* questions water and light occupied most o f the time at the session on Monday, although several matters of minor importance, were taken up and atjted upon.' •- , PERSONAL AND pertinent . The Steamer Didn't Work. On Friday o f last week I he.Eagle Hook and Ladder boys took (Im old steam en- f inc from their house and started for letcher l^ike.to give it a' test. .1 uat. be- yond Broadway they were intercepted hy Officer Tantuni who directed that it he taken ln\ck to the .house, fearing that until tint boiler was repaired it waa in an 'unsafe condition.. The hoys did 'not appreciate this disposition o f a Ha ini and it required considerable. skill for Mr. Tan tun j to guide.the machine elearOf sidewalks and trees, and when he pulled, in one direction, the.hoys pulled tlie opposite or put on the brakes. After a good dwd o f persuasimi ami innumerable orders, the- engine was finally safely housed. Getting the Cnp Stones Ucady. The work of drilling the cap-stones surmounting the heavy piers on which the great trusses of the new Auditorium will rest, is progressing favombly. The cap-stones are exceedingly hard and only ten or twelve itoJes per day can be com- pleted, even with the use of a steam drill. There are fifty-two of the atonea each to be drilled twice and about half of them are now finished and in position on the piers, ready for . the finisher to dress them. Unclaimed Letters. List of letters remaining in the Ocean , Grovo Post Oflice January ,'11 : • " Conover, Rielmrd, Holmes, J. S. Esq., rjouglus, May, Lundy, S., . lie Camp, Mary, (2) Stone, Annie, ' Fracsch, Geo„, Stockman, Mrs.; Foster, Chas. N., Wi Ison ^ Rebecca. f, GKORQKW. EVANa, l’ 0«trpa«U)r. Pleasant PencJiJnes About the People, Place and Property. . Postmaster Evans made a trip to Phila- delphia Thursday. I). II. Brown and T. J; Preston ^vere in town.on Thursday, Hev: W. II. Ijiwrence, of. Brooklyn, was in-town on Thursday. M rs Susan Stricklin has 'been confined to t Jjc lionse wit h u severe attack o f neu- ralgia. . ' • Isaac. Haboitl ia again at work in the nost-otlice, putting‘ up additional lock- ljoxes. ' . -Ittmea I'. Jtrelsford fell down cellar oh Sunday.last,'but fortunately sustained ho injury" t (ieorgi; Ihiiuear made a flying .visit lo Xew York on Thursday, on Association business.. ijr. Wallace, editor of the Jtovont, will go to Florida some time during the .com- ing week, . : Miss L. \V, Seaman, of Mount Tabor Wav, is visiting friends at Newfotmd- land, N .J. Harry Hummers is the happy father of a bouncing boy. The .youngster arrived on Monday; * Miss Allie l’eegle lias gone on an ex- tcnded visit to friends in Orange und New York City. • . Mrs. Cornelius ^randeville, W ho dtslo- cated her collar hone some weeks ago by a Tali, is improving. W. II. Wythe, a former j>roprietor‘ of the J’itmnn avenue drug store was in town on Saturday:of lost week. Kicburd Rose, one of.the first reaidenta of this vicinity, was made happy by the arrival of a sturdy girl baby on Tuesday last. . . Mrs. W. H, Beegle has so far recovered, from her illness that she was able to go out of doors on Wednesday for the iirst time. Mrs. M, L. Dunnl of Philadelphiaf is at the Grove caring for her aunt, Mrs. B. K. Keeder on- Surf avenue, who is seri- ously ill.. Mrs. M. M. Compton, of the St. Elmo, who has been spending aome mohtbs in Trenton anti Philadelphia, returned to tbe Grove Thursday. ' ; .. . ; ; Airs. Mary A. Pfeffer, of Klizabeth, is visiting her futfier T. 0. Decker, on Clark avenue. She will probably remain three or four weeks. Mias Grace HofTman, tho presiding genius at the stamp window in the poat- ollice, went to Old Bridge on Thursday for a few days1 visit. . Miea Millie Wright has gone to New York and will spend the remainder of the winter in that city and Brooklyn, with friends and relatives. Rev. Frank Moore, son of Presiding Elder Moore, of Trenton, left his charge at Little Silver for a day in order to pay a flying visit to the Grove. . William Pittengei* has sold the property on tlie south side of Corlies avenue, which he purchased a yi.»ar or so ago, to Mr. Hugh Moore. The price paid was $2 ,000. . The serinon at the .“ Little Cliurcli in the W oods,Bradley Beach, on Sunday evening, was preached by the Key. W. P. 0.; StrMfljlaiMl,'Presiding ■ Elder ;of Hlvis district^ '..'y-;;-: ' :>V;; I Dr. K* IL Sh»kes■and Mrs, Stokes, AV- II. Stokes and I)r. J. II. Aldny .and fam- ily started for a southern trip on Monday. They will probably return about the first of April. A. T: Jones, WiUiatri Uirrabee, AYin- field Havens and Alfred • Yarna 11 have returned to their homes in Bradley Beach, after spending the past few months iu Florida. I lev- l>. B. Harris, formerly pastor of St. Paul’H Cl lurch, Ocean Grove, has beeii spending a few ilaya at th« Grove. "H e has been tlie guest of Mr. Elias Clark, o f Mount Tabor Way. . Ernest N. Woolstoh, who for the last two years has been engaged with E. , L. Kent in Orange, haaaccejited a position with W. II. lieegle and will go on dt\ty Monday, February 5. John C. Dunham, Secretary, and Treas- urer of the Bttflalo Wheel Comnahy, paid a.flving visit to the Grove on 'luesdav, to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Dunham, of Heck avenue. The K. H. Stokes rChemical Engine (’empuny will give a musical anti literary entertainment in Association' Hall,', this (Friday ) evening, at 8 o'clock. Every- body should attend, us the boys lire notetl for the enjoyable rhuracter o f the enter- tain men ts t bey give., M. K. Whipple, who was-formerly in the hlueslone mitI granite huaincss here, . but-now a rent!eiit <»f EJizabethj was lit town this week. His usually broml smile was niore expansive than usual and aii inquiry developed the fact1 that he .had recently become the father of a bouncing hoy. r” ■. f ' .. : A thvee-musted sch<ioner, apparently in a disable Leo million, came to anchor a short distance idi* the Bradley Beach U«h pound:on Monday. .Owing; to the high easterly winds it was at one time thought that nothing could prevent the yessel from being driven ashore, as she seemed to be dragging her anchors anti drifting toward the breakers. However, the wind changed and early. Wednesday morning th» schooner put to sea. The Situation at;Tr'enton. Another week has rolled around nnd. the situation at Trenton, reg*rding tho senatorial muddle lias not materially changed. The Democratic body, contin- ues to meet, anti after calling the roll ad- journ, The Hepubliiun organization has passed some bills sent in from the House affecting Countv Excise questions and raced rack gambling. These 'were re- turned to tlie- Assembly and .will be sent to the Governor for Ids approval.. After these biHa are .tiled it is proposed to have some one make a technical viola- tion of one o f the laws thus created, and in this way bring the matter before the Supreme Court for that body to. deter- mine whether the Iiepublican Senate is a legalJbody. . WHEELMEN’S MEETING. Meeting of Citizens to Consider W a y s and Means to Entertain L. A. W . Members. There were some fifty prominent citi- zens on hand Wednesday evening, at the meeting called to see what encouragement was promised fur the entertainment of the Wheelmen, in case the •committee succeeded in getting Asbury Park named for the 18!M meet of the’U A, W., ,T. 1'rank Appleby was niade Chairman and JJ. B. Ayres, Sccrelarv. ' In his address, stating the -object for wliieb the meeting waa culled, Mr. Ap- pleby gave a general outline of what .was desired. (The League of American Wlteel- men. was an important organization, and large cities were more than .deairous to secure the advantages o f its annual .meet- ing. It would bring into the town at least. 10 ,000'people for n period o f four days, nnd litrge numbers of them would remtlin for a longer -time. As these wheelmen pay their own hotel and other expenses, this would mean bringing into the town from §75,000 to $120 ,000 in cold, cash;’ In order to give these visitors proper attention and a rew.side entertain- ments, the local wheelmen-desiret! some expression from the business men and hotel keepers as to. whether $2,000 could be secured by contribution for that pur- pose. . James. S. Holmes, Jr., Chief Consul of the Xew Jersey Division o f the L. A. W., made an interesting address and urged that Ashurv Park was the place to hold the coining meet. Xew. York and Penn- sylvania were solid in ils favor; but Den- ver aiid Boston were tvorking hard to secure it, ami that matters must be pushed if Asbury Parks carrie the day against them. . Addresses were then made by Messrs. John A. Githcns, (J. II: Z acharias, (»C*orge F. Kroehl, S. \V. Kirkbride, J. K. Burt, Uriah White, Theodore Oves, J: S. Rip- ley, E. G. Hnrrison, Jamea II. Bird, W, M. Pawley, J. S. Ferguson, M. M. Cros- l>ie, N. E. Buchnnon, II. B, Ayres and others, all strongly favoring the idea that the small amount of money required could easily be provided. A motion by Mr. Kroehl, that the League of American Wheelmen be invited to hold its 1894 meet at Asbury Park was carried, anti tho following committees were appointed: E stkktain. msnt ; H. B. Ayres, Dr. Bur- ton, J. S. Holmes, Jr., A. C. Twining, George E. Farmer and S. W .' Kirkbride. AnvEimai.No , J, K Jlurt, C. R. Zaclia- rins, John A. Githens, W. II. Beegle and Charles I^ewis. F inance ; J. S. Ferguson, J. D. Beegle, W. M. Croshie, G. F. Kroehl and J. K. Weir. Joseph McDermott, of Freehold, appointed a delegate to go to.the meeting of the National delegates at Ix^uiaville, Kentucky, February 10, to work in the interest of Asbury Parle. He will be ns- sieted by A. C. Atkina, Vice Consul of the New Jersey Division, H. B..Ayres, State <le!egato, anti A. !{, Parsons, W . Ii. Stauffer, and C. H. Zacharias constituting a special com/nit tee appointed by the Asbury Park Wheelmen. ; - , Another, meeting will he held at the Commercial Hotel, Wednesday evening, February 7. THE OPPOSITE SHORE. TROUBLE IN RIO HARBOR. THROUGHOUT THE STATE; Government Bonds Floated. '. The issue of fifty millions of Govern- ment bonds, proposed by Secretary Car- lisle in' orrler to • strengthen the • United States Treasury, Will, through the recent action liiid libeml aubscrii)tious o f New York bankers, he floated without diffi- culty. At the meeting held oil Monday, the bankers were dissatisfied with tfie meagre information given otit by the.Sec- retary, and gave him little ciicourage- 'incur that the project would he successful. Further consideration and conference he- tween the leatling financial men of New York, however, led them to tlie conclu- aion that for the sake o f saving Govern- ment credit, the bonds must be floated*; anti the banks and other monied institu- tions of the-city' forwarded applications for about thirty millions of the issue. To this was lidded some eight .millions from a Boston combination, leaving about twelve millions to be placed through other channels. Two New Congressmen Etected. The anxiously awaited'special election i in the two Congressional Districts in j Neiy York City, where vacancies were f caused by the resignation o f Col. John A. i Fellows and Ashhel P. Fitch, was held on *i Tuesday and reaulted in the election of I L. E, Omgg, Republican, in the Four- teenth District and Sidor Stmus, Demo- J cmt, in the* Fifteenth District; Mr. ‘ .Quigg's pJurutity was 'J84 agtiinst a Dem- J eratie plurality of B,825 in . 1802 ; while j the plurality for Mr. Stmtia was reduced to 4,08t) from 1 1,8*3) which was the dem- ocratic .plurality in 1802. This extraordinary change in rates , is taken as an imlication thnt u majority o f the people are opposed to the passage of the \VilsOn Turirt bill ami the results will pnihably have a tlepres«ing effect upon its progress through the House. Notes on Asbury Park’s People and Their. Doings. A ctirnice was blown frotn WarrPs Ho- tel , l>y the bigb winds on Monday.' Airs, L; E. Watson liiia hetui quite serir ously ill, but is on the road to; recovery. Norinan'AV. Pcnfield went to Florida last week to witness tlie Corbett-Mitchell %ht. The law anti order league of Asbury Park has iastied an appeal f«jr money to carry on tlie -work of the league this year. •X Jhirry W.- Townsend; w h tr has .been spending the -.past few. weeks iii Cape May conntjvson111 Jersey? has returned home: •‘ Arthur A. Zimmerinan ;haa leased the. half'uiile tnick at irreeholtly-and .will fit it• up as a race-traek anti ;training quarters,' Do not fail to attcm 1 the E. H. Stokes Cfiemtt-al Engine Company's entertain- ment iu Association Ilall this (Friday) .evening. . Walter Carroll,. of • Aabury Park, has been sentenced to two months in the county jail for stealing eight pigeons from Andrew White, o f Deal i.fcachV. ., . . The pijie or^aii whicii . was formerly ,used in tho Episcopal Chureh, inis Ijcen, purchased’ by - the; congregation . o f the Presbyteriaii Church .of Belmar. ' .A 'ermiin’* Service wi 11 • be held . at. the I.ulhemn Church Sunday niornitig, Eebruiiry *L The Pastor, Hev. D*duglas Sjjaetbj will de)iver the sermon. Henry B. Slmfto has been awarded the contract for paltering the interior of the Hathaway House at Burlington, It will require 1200 rolls, of paper to complete the job. A. Havens Morris, the “ Pioneer PoctM is one of the Striiek Grand Jiirdrs in the contested election «tsc of Peter Forman and Theodore .Aumack, ■ which is to be tried before Justice Beasley February 8 . The Christian Endeavor Society ‘of Westminster.,. Presbyterian Church has issued invitations , to the public gen- erally to attend.the, aerieaof special ineet-' ings to be held in the. church this week. Hon. James A.' Bradley,: is about fin- ishing (ip another lot.of brushes for free distribution at Trenton next week. The brushes will be labeled and varnished, aud each.one will be ornamented with a neat bow of ribbon. Harry Cline, of Asbury Park, who was released from jail on Wednesday, was re- arrested and sent back again on Thurs- day, charged .with stealing an. exeuraion ticket from ' Freehold to Ixmg Branch. For his last offense he was sentenced to thirty days in the county jail. . On February JO, at the Asbury Park Post-Office, will he held the annual civil service examination o f candidates for the positions: o f carriers and clerks during .the summer season. Applications are very slow in coming in, only one having been received so far for the position of carrier and one for clerk: Rev. Dougins Spaeth, of tho Lutheran Reformed Church baa been, suffering for some time from a sore foot. 1 a fit week it became so painful that a physician was. called who lanced the affected- part und by probing discovered a needle which was removed. Mr. Spaeth had no knowl- edge of how or when the needle entered his loot. The colored citizens of West Park have (irganizeri a Property Protection •Associa- tion, for the protection o f their property from' fire. They are. circulating petitions, to solicit subscriptions.for the purpose'’of sinking fire-wells in tlie vicinity of the colored settlement. It is undoubtedly a eoori idcii ami their subscription list •should he mpidlv.fi Iled.. •Mrs. Ellen D. Fleming, wife of F. ,N. . , Fleming, aiid daughter of the late 0. \- 1 lave.ns, ofTrentim, died at one P. :AL, -j Sunday, January 2S, iit tbe Grand Ave- nue Hotel. She leaves a -husband, two sons anti two daughters, o f whom one. is the wife of Judge Beasley, - of Trenton, and the other, Misa Kllen, is at the <»mnd Aveniie Hotel with her father. In a suit, before Justice Borden oh Monday, Myron D. Gould was complain- ant and Joseph Jackson, defendant It appears thnt sometime .last April, Jack- son secured, half a ton ’ of fertilizer from Gould, saying that his father had ordered the same. When tin; bill was presented to Curtis Jackson, Joseph's father,* be. emphatically denied having ordered it. Joseph.1was then brought before the Jus- tice anti in a trial with a jury he was found truilty of false representation . and' comnellcri to pay § l“i, the. price of the fertilizer, and costs of tlie suit. WEST GROVE ITEMS. An American GunbnntfHred Upon by the Innut. gent Admiral's Flagship. Advices received at Washington on Monday froin Rear Admiral Benham: in command of the American fleet in Bra- zilian . waters, Convey©d .'the startling intelligence that one of his’ cruisers, the Detroit, lmd been lired upon by Admiral De Gainii while protecting American ves- sels in the landing of their cargoes. Tlie engagement Justed but a few momenta and only about a dozen shots hud been exchanged when Admiral He Gama railed for quarter. The .difficulty is supposed to have arisen upon un attempt made by the' Insurgent Commander to prevent qui* 'trading; vessels' from innding their cargoes, Ad[mim lBcitlmht. ;■ -.eontendetl Uiat tlieir' rigl 11 to trade iu a f r iett( 1 1y port | w i 11 lout liindriince; was absolute, anti he sliould protod them. When the Ameri- can war. vessels were got ten tinker way to escort tinymen*hantinen to the docks, the Aquidihan, Dt» (lama’s ilagship, sig- nailed them not Io paVs.n given point, and no notice having been paid to the signal, he opened lire upcn the cruiser Detroit,-which was at fhe: bead o f the iine.: The fire wiiareturned/by the Airier-: ican.Vessei'Soproiuptly^antlwithstich good, effect.‘ that Admiral .De (iamii promptl y iisket I f< >r quartt* i\ and the Ii ri ng: Roused. ■ Tliis prompt act ion on the purt o f Admiral Borilmm will suppress a great tleal of annoyance to which American Shipping in I<io Harbor has been subject for some time. Lower Telephone Rates Probable. The imients covering the receiver of| the Bell telejdione.; expired 'January ,*10; Ot her parts o f theJn^trunient such as the tnmsmitter and battery are still protected but it is evident that there will be a material reduction in rates. Companies are being formed with the itlea of. wrest- ing business jrom the oltl corporations that have bled the people for ao many years. A gigantic combination of ull the existing telephone companies is talked of,, the power thus acquired to be used in controlling all new concerns. It is doubt- ful if euch a combination could be held together, aa the authorities o f the smaller cities or towns would orobably favor local enterprises over outsitie corporation*. Patterson-Hcath. One of Aahurv Park's most' prominent lawyers, Samuel A. Patterson, was mar- rieilon Thurstlay afternoon, January 23, to Misa Inez I. Heath, at* the ‘home of her parents in Ashlnna, Ni! H; After u tri p to . 'Vashingtoh, 1>. C. i and other cities J-hey 'will return to‘ Asbury Park and will reside in the handsome residence Mr. Patterson is building on Emory Btrt|«t, near First-avenue.; Hr. Kroehl Receives a “ Welcome Home." . Surprise parties appear to he the order o f the day m this Vicinity, and Thursday evening the promoters of this pleasant character of entertainment turned their attention to Mr. George F. Kroehl, the popular President of the First National Bank o f Asbury. Park. After filling, an engagement, Mr. KroeliI, returned to find his parlors in full possession o f a inerry band of friends who .proceeded to give him a cordial reception and welcome to his own domicile;; Appreciating, tho eifc- uation, as well.as the kindly feeling that prompted the visit, the invndera were ,re- tiueated to make . themselves at home; which they proceeded to do and a very enjoyable time ensiled. Mr.Halsey Wil- cox, as .-master of ceremonies, not only kept the dancers in an exciting whirl, but bis boundless good humor, and ready w it also afforded rich entertainment- for the remainder of the company.. The party waa gotten up at almrt notice and a large number who wished to attend, were unable to do so on account o f previous engagements. Among those present were Air. Kroehl; Mrs.. East wood, Mr. and Mrs. A. CV ^wining, Mr.; and Mrs. S. W» Kirkbride, Mr.; and Mrs. Milan Ross, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Grehelle', Mr. and;; Mrsi E. H. Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. J, H. Bird, Mr. and Mrs. D. C.: Covertj Mr. and Mrs.' A. L. Seighortner, Miss Cornelia and Masters George and Howard Kroehl and Messrs. S. A. Da vie, H . B, Johnson, T- J. W in k 1 er, W , H. Beegl e, W. C. Bnrronglis, and \V, S. CJ a began. > Miss Lyon presided at the piano, ac- companied by Air. Underwood-with the violin. Refresh incuts were served during tlie evening anti at a late hour the party dis- banded, in the hope o f being participants in many like enjoyable txrnsions. A Sad Railroad Accident. Austin Newman, « brakt*nian bn a Central freight tmin, running . between Poiiit Pleasant aud Jersey City,* was run over uud killed at Red Bank’ Thiirsday inorning. Xew man was walking back- ward, signalling the engineer, when his foot caught in a switch and before he could extricate )»inls\Mf tin; wheels o f one o f t lie cars \tassed «»ver (i is 111 igIi, se ver- ing it from tlie bodv. lit* was picked up unconscious ami.11ied short ly nfier. This ’ made the fourth, accident Newman has 1 met with during his servict; on the road : mid he hatl just gone to work -after hav- ing recovcrctlfrtan his last mishaji. lie leaves a Wife ami an infant baby, only a few weeks old. v Preacher’s fleeting. TJie Bowery Gun Club hatl a shooting match Wednesday afternoon. ,. C. C. Parker, of Vanhiaeville, is paying a visit to bia son Henry Gravatt, on Cor- lies avenue. * . El wood Stevenson, colorcd, of West Park, was convicted at. Freehold on Tues- day, of assault ami battery, on ‘Sidney Mcl'ielland .and was fined $50 and. the trosta o f suit. . . • . '. It is understood that J. !>.. Woodward, the grocer, will discontinue business at the Corlies avenue store. April first. James Thompson, o f (ilenriolu, has been negotiating for the place aiid -wiU ■open tip in the grocery ;line as soon as Mr.- Woodward vacatcis.. ■ . ... The revivaV seryieea at the Methodist Church, miner tho auspices of Rev. W. 11. Ben ford are still in progress and good work is being accomplished. .Mr. Ben- ford makes a most acceptable pastor and is highly esteemed by his parishioners and tlunpeople in.general. Misa Liz/.ie Gmvatt, the charming daughter of Mrs. A. Gmvatt, gave a whist parly at their residence at the corner of Corhes avenue und Main street, Thursday evening of tbia week. A large circle of young friends from West Grove; Ocean Grove and vicinity had been invited and the occasion waa one of great enjoyment to all: Maritime Rumor says that the renowned scientific, boxers, Meesrtf. Dumfrey and White, expect to give ,au exhibition of their prowess and skill with the gloves ,on Thursday, February 8 , at Johijsoii Ttjylor’a barn. This may be rumor onlyj or it may be facts, but in case of the lat- ter no serious results are expected to follow the friendly contest; The Now Brunswick District Preacher’s i Meeting was.held in St. ^Paul’s- Church on Momlay. Presiding Flrier-Strickland occu]>ied the chjpr a rid' Rev. .Milfon ; Rel -i yetti J; G. Eilwards, .L li, Thotnpson, Walter.Thompson, William 1. Gill, Dr. Russell, J. W. Ijeeaml M. (hitiin bartici- patetl in the bx'ercises of. the day. An interesting paper Was read by Hev. Wal- ter -Thompson, entitled ."How far is a man responsible for-his.beliefs?"- Topic for the next session' "Docs (he doctrine of Chriatian perfection as held by the M. E. Church, tend-to lower the Chnstian con- ception of spiritual life?’ - 1 deader,: Dr. Wilson. - . .’ . Improvements at Mr. Watnright's Store. Since selling out the grocery depart-.; ment, of his business, Mr. Wainrigbt has. been making n eci wary trimmres lo enable him to entry on his extensive house fur- nishing trade as a separate. thqiartuicnt, and a force o f men is now engaged in putting the neivssary sUelvitig tuwi coun- ters in Hit* wcst .rooin o f the l»ritrk Imild- ing on Olin street. The ‘whole, front of this sttke.>nom will b^ehtingetl and imr. proved;: bulk wiiidowa ami • snsh .tloors put in, aiid every.thing pqfc.: in shape to display'gootls and-conduct"the buainesa to advantage. . . . Died From the Effects of Strong Drink. Abraham Bullock, an employee of Wil- liam FI aveil, waa found dead on Sunday, in a house near Drummond's brick-yard, where he lived. Death was caused by alcoholism. James H. Sexton took charge of the hotly. It is stated that Bullock was drinking on a wager, and after drink- ing nearly a quart, of the poison, died from its effects. Rublna Hutchins, Misa Rubinn Hutchins, an aunt of Misa Carrie n. Thain, died lit her reaidence on Wealey 'Lake, at half past eleven o’clock Thursday mprriing; at theage of 84 years, The funeral aervicea will he held at the house at four. P. M,, to-day, (Friday) and- tlie remaina will be-;taken to Evergreen cemetery, Brooklyn, on Saturday for in- terment. ' Electric lights have been put in the I^i-hnar poat-otfice. Mumps are epidemic among the school children o f Eatontown.. Atlajitie Highlands has an organization known a* the- Lightning Rod Social Club. The fish pound at Manasquan was aold .r to Howard Osborn of.thnt place for $280. Andrew Richardson of Red Bank,has b«*i*n arrested for threatening to kill his wife. .' .. ’ A hell tower thirty-five feet high waa recently erected at Jielmar, and a lire-bell : hung at the top of it. ■ . * Frank Oetsinxrer, o f Spring I-ake, haa ' been appointed deputy keeper of tha State prison at- Trenton. . Monmouth County bna a acbool fimd of $T|7,407.01 and the county is free from bonded indebtedness.. Walter Taylor..associate editor Of that Long Branch Jitrord has been appointed Street Commissioner of thutipliice. ■ ... Mia's Lizzie Forman, daughier of Hub-’ Imfd Forman o f Manaaqnan; at Her home on Sunday o f consumption. Tlie Central Railroad will require all thoir employees to produce a pass while . travelling oh the road, when off duty. Tlie revival aervicea recently held in ■ the North 1/mg Branch >1. £ Church resulted.in the conversion of 115 persons. Farmers o f Cumberland County predict an early spring and have already begun ploughing ground for their spring sowing. : One. of the largest electric search lights . in the world is to be placed at Sandy Hook. It will cost between $0,000 and ? 10 ,000. Last week John Enright, principal of Freehold public school, was appointed temporary County Superintendent of pub- lic schools. Numeroua cases of destitution hsv# been dUcovered at Freehold by the com- mittee appointed to lopk after this part o f the town’s affairs. . Six youmr ladiea of Bridgeton, N. J., recently engaged.in a wood-aawmg con- test. The show was given in the opera, house at that place. - Lew is Snyder, agetl about 70, a farmer ■; residing at I^imbertviHe, N. J., waa thrown from a load of Jiay on Friday laat, and instantly killed. Frank Brighton, of Spring I^ke, put a bullet through the forefinger of nia left hand last week, by the accitlental dia- charge of a revolver. James Conine, a respected citizen of Howell, N. J.;. committed suicide early Monday morning by shooting himself in the head with a pistol. •Congressman Geissenlminer is endeav- oring to get an appropriation. of $20,000 from Congress for the improvement of* the Shrewsbury River. . 1 The* rt'ceipts of the Belmur freight sta- . tioti fluring tlie month of December was : $ 1,02:1,20.. This is ^OO more than, they were in December a year ago. A nurse of sfi102 was made up by the peoiile of Freehold and given to Mrs. William Jhtinear,-who lont.nll her house- holi I goods at the recent fire, at Unit place i The Republicans of Wall Township, have elected a Township Committee aa follows James K, Cook; Howell Miller,' William S. Jaeksoii ami A. I>. Sexsmilh. Joseph l'arrv, . who was indicted for . setting lire to a barn at Scobtsyville on • November 5, has htreti sentenced to seven Veal's hard labor in Stattt's1 prison. Comluctor Lewi* Hunt .ami Kngineor . Jolin Cline, who had cluirge of the train • out of Point Pleasant, on the morning of the aeeident near Briello, have betni tHs- fharged. ; Armohr Co. are reported to liav# purchnsed IWOO acresdf laml oh the Hack-. ’ ensa«*k meatlows; for the purpose o f erect- ing extensive atock yards and slaughter llOUB«B. : ; ' . . I^ist week someone made an attempt to change the course of. Shark Hiver; Aa this property belongs to private parties, the miscreants, were warned not to repeat tiie.oifeiiee. . The imunbertt o f' Ihe .Presbyterinu eliureli of Maiius.qimmcontempjnte build- ing .11 stone.chinch. The. Baptist congre- gation also intend remodeling their place of worship. . • ' J The county bridge at. Osborn’s Mills, in Wall Township,, built o f iron by -Dean iJc Westbrook four years ago, was wrecked last .week hy the breaking away . of the liiifi pond. * Food and clothing are distributed every Tuesday at id Thursday afternoon to .'the poor people of Freehold.. This is a move 111 the right direction anti certainly one that is appreciated. Dr; JSdward biwrence, a wealthy Phil- adelphia physician committed suicide.on Monday of Inst week, by jumping over- board from hia yacht at Atlantic City, He had been ill with tha grip for some time. ; William R. Boroughs, a carpenter-.of Treiium, while walking along f lie milntvl track receiitlv* caught his foot in. a frog, in .the mils, and before lie eoiild extricute Jiinistflf a train c;imo. along nnd he was killed. . Cant. A. W. Bradshaw, of. tiie l>ako- wood Tiun'n iiiiii 'Jouniitl, general innmigcr of the Ijikewootl Ijintl nnd lm ^ provemtjnt Company, was stricken with paralysis 011 Tuesday. He is reported to , be in a critical condition. William Robinaon, formerly an em- ployee of the New Jersey Central Rail- road, has brought suit against the company to recover $20,000 damages for tho loss of a bund, which injury he iut- tained while in their employ. It seems a settled fact that the camp . ground at Sea.Girt is to be ornamented with a handsome building to be."used by the New Jersey Rifle Association aa a. club house; It is expected that the erec- tion of the structure will be commenced in the near future. . , At a fair recently held by the Navesink Hook and Ladder Company, Daniel Yet- man won a ton of coal.. As Yetman owed the company for aome brick which he had purchased, it ofTeet its claim by refusing to give up the coal, arid Yetman brought suit to recover his prise *nd was nou-iuited.

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Page 1: pe r tin e n t · 2014-04-01 · Executive Committee which hits been ... PERSONAL AND pe r tin e n t. The Steamer Didn't Work. On Friday of last week I he.Eagle Hook and Ladder boys

OCEAN GROVE TIMES. A Valuable H ed iu r ii.

For Lncul nnd General

A D V liR T IS IN O .

VOL. i . NO. 4°. OCEAN GROVE, N E W JE R SE Y , SATURDAY, FEBR U A R Y 3) 1894. ONE DOLLAR PE R YEAR,

S A N IT A R Y M E A S U R E S .

Wau» (or Improving the.Condition o i Wes ley Lake—A Sewage System <or \V«st Park.

T iie question o f im proving the sanitary condition o f Wesley Luke littfl been taken up in a manner that promises some good results: Through tho efforts o f Captain Ixs-wia Raineur,'ft jo in t meeting o f officials o f Ocean Grove, Ash (try Park and. tho Township, supplemented.by a number o f prominent citizens, was held in the Bliild- mgantf bum. Association vQonitiin the Post Ofliec building at Asbury I ’ark, Saturday,

. afternoon o f lust week, '.with .Samuel \V. K irkbride presiding. . ; .

A committee consisting o f George W . Evans, representing the O c e a n Grove Associntitm ; Henry 0. Winsnr, the As- bury Park Borough Council ; S.■ VV. K irk- brine, the Township Committee, and i)r. J. H ; A lday, Dr. Henry Mitchell, L. K. Wateon, Benjamin Albertson and 1J. Daniels -wus appointed, to whom the

. question o f a sewage syslem for' West As­bury Park was referred for investigation. T b e committee was empowered to employ an engineer at nn expense.not to exceed $25, to assist in forimdnt big general plans o f improvement upon sanitary matters.

-There was also a strong sentiment that, the present method ol‘ em ptying the w - ago into the ocean .must he .abolished at an early day but beyond a general ex ­pression o f opinion that a elmnge wOnlri bo on be necessary, no particular- plana were outlined or submitted. . .

The question o f im proving the condition o f Wesley laike was really the important feature o f the meeting and' a number o f suggestions as to tlie beat and most economical methods to reach the de-' aired end were, offered. Several . o f the plans contemplated tilling in tlie head o f the lake for a greater or lesr distance from the turnpike with a culvert through the centre, to carry the water down; another proposed the construction o f a pipe connecting the. lake w ith the aca through which the water could be admitted at high and let out at low tide, thus changing tlie contents when deaired; w hileanotberproposed to 1j)1 up the lake entirely. One suggestion that met with favor was to ca r ry the ,water dircctly from the the turnpike bridge through a

. cu lvert or aeries o f pipes directly into,the ocean without perm itting it to flow into the basin 'of the lake at all. A t the foot o f each avenue would be plneed a catch

. haain with an opening into the culvert, which would also carry away all surface water from the atreeta during a rain. This plan also contemplated the erection o f a pumping station a t the foot o f the Take with a service pipe running tip to tbe turnpike bridge, through which tliebasin o f th is lake would be kept tilled w ith salt water pumped from the ocean. I f do* aired, lateral pipes could be run out into the lake at different pointsand a series o f . fountains kept in operation without cost oxcept for the tirat expense o f construct­ing them. This method o f em ptying the aalt water in the lake at o r near its liead by reason o f the natural/low toward the aea where it empties, would insure its being kept in good sanitary condition.

A fter some further discussion o f the proponed plans, the meeting adjourned to meet again .Saturday, February 3, a t 2 o ’clock, to hear the report o f the commit­tee nnd take such further action aa may be necessary or desirable,

Executive Com m ittee/leetlng.

A t tin adjourned session held Friday evening o f last week the Executive Com­m ittee a^ain took tip, and discussed tho always important tiucslion o f an increased water supply and a better system o f electric, lighting.

T iie sub-comiiiitto appointed to inves­tigate the propositions submitted by out­side jmrties to supplv the town with tho wiiter needed, had not complcled its

' work, and further time was granted. • I t is likely that some recommendations will he submitted at the next meeting o f the Executive Committee which hits been called for February 0. .. Mr. Smith o f the United Electric Im ­provement Company was expected to aitbmit information and an estimate for

‘ changing the present system o f electric light, but was nimble to ge t it ready; and. consequently w ill report to tbe sub-com- mittee on electrical affairs at a meeting to bo called by.the chairman sonic tim e this week. T lie proposition will then be in­vestigated by : the members o f the sitb-

‘ committee, and a report made to the E x­ecutive body on. the sixth.

Tha two* questions water and ligh t occupied most o f the tim e at the session on Monday, although several matters o f m inor importance, were taken up and atjted upon.' •- ,

P E R S O N A L A N D p e r t i n e n t .

The Steam er Didn't W ork.

On Friday o f last week I he.Eagle Hook and Ladder boys took (Im old steam en-

finc from their house and started for letcher l^ike.to g ive it a' test. .1 uat. be­

yond Broadway they were intercepted hy Officer Tantuni who directed that it he taken ln\ck to the .house, fearing that until tint boiler was repaired it waa in an

'unsafe condition .. The hoys d id 'not appreciate this disposition o f a Ha ini and it required considerable. skill for Mr. Tan tun j to gu ide .th e machine e le a rO f sidewalks and trees, and when he pulled, in one direction, the .hoys pulled tlie opposite or put on the brakes. A fter a good dwd o f persuasimi ami innumerable orders, the- engine was finally safely housed.

Getting the Cnp Stones Ucady.

The work o f drilling the cap-stones surmounting the heavy piers on which the great trusses o f the new Auditorium will rest, is progressing favom bly. The cap-stones are exceedingly hard and only ten or twelve itoJes per day can be com­pleted, even with the use o f a steam drill. There are fifty-two o f the atonea each to be drilled tw ice and about half o f them are now finished and in position on the piers, ready for . the finisher to dress them.

Unclaimed Letters.

List o f letters remaining in the Ocean , Grovo Post Oflice January ,'11 : • "

Conover, Rielmrd, Holmes, J. S. Esq.,rjouglus, May, Lundy, S., .lie Camp, Mary, (2) Stone, Annie,

' Fracsch, G eo „, Stockman, Mrs.; •Foster, Chas. N., W i I son Rebecca.

f, GKORQKW. EVANa, l’0«trpa«U)r.

Pleasant PencJiJnes About the People, Place and Property.

. Postmaster Evans made a trip to Phila­delphia Thursday.

I ) . II. Brown and T. J; Preston ^vere in town.on Thursday,

Hev: W . I I . Ijiwrence, of. Brooklyn, was in-town on Thursday.

M rs Susan Stricklin has 'been confined to t Jjc lionse wit h u severe attack o f neu­ralgia. . '

• Isaac. Haboitl ia again at work in the nost-otlice, pu tting ‘ up additional lock- ljoxes. ■' .

-Ittmea I'. Jtrelsford fell down cellar oh Sunday.last,'but fortunately sustained ho injury" t ■ •

(ieorgi; Ihiiuear made a fly ing .visit lo Xew York on Thursday, on Association business..

ijr. Wallace, editor o f the Jtovont, w ill go to Florida some time during the .com­ing week, . :

Miss L. \V, Seaman, o f Mount Tabor W av, is visiting friends at Newfotmd- land, N . J .

Harry Hummers is the happy father o f a bouncing boy. The .youngster arrived on Monday; *

Miss A llie l ’ eegle lias gone on an ex- tcnded visit to friends in Orange und New York City. • .

Mrs. Cornelius ^randeville, W h o dtslo- cated her collar hone some weeks ago by a Tali, is improving.

W . II . W ythe, a former j>roprietor‘ o f the J’itmnn avenue drug store w a s in town on Saturday:of lost week.

Kicburd Rose, one o f .the first reaidenta o f this vicin ity, was made happy by the arrival o f a sturdy girl baby on Tuesday last. . .

Mrs. W . H , Beegle has so far recovered, from her illness that she was able to go out o f doors on Wednesday for the iirst time.

Mrs. M, L . Dunnl o f Philadelphiaf is at the Grove caring for her aunt, Mrs. B. K. Keeder on- Surf avenue, who is seri­ously i l l . .

Mrs. M. M . Compton, o f the St. Elmo, who has been spending aome mohtbs in Trenton anti Philadelphia, returned to tbe G rove Thursday. ' ; .. . ; ;

Airs. Mary A. Pfeffer, o f Klizabeth, is visiting her futfier T. 0 . Decker, on Clark avenue. She w ill probably remain three or four weeks.

Mias Grace HofTman, tho presiding genius at the stamp w indow in the poat- ollice, went to Old Bridge on Thursday for a few days1 visit.

. Miea M illie W righ t has gone to New York and w ill spend the remainder o f the w inter in that city and Brooklyn, w ith friends and relatives.

Rev. Frank Moore, son o f Presiding Elder Moore, o f Trenton, left his charge at L ittle Silver for a day in order to pay a fly ing v is it to the Grove. .

W illiam Pittengei* has sold the property on tlie south side o f Corlies avenue, which he purchased a yi.»ar or so ago, to Mr. Hugh Moore. The price paid was $2 ,000. .

The serinon at the . “ L ittle Cliurcli in the W o o d s ,B ra d le y Beach, on Sunday evening, was preached by the Key. W . P.0.; StrMfljlaiMl,'Presiding ■ E lder ;o f Hlvis district^ '..'y-;;-: ' :> V ;;

I Dr. K* IL Sh»kes■ and Mrs, Stokes, AV- II . Stokes and I)r. J. II. Aldny .and fam­ily started for a southern trip on Monday. They will probably return about the first o f April.

A . T: Jones, WiUiatri Uirrabee, AYin- ■ field Havens and A lfred • Yarna 11 have returned to their homes in Bradley Beach, after spending the past few months iu Florida.

I lev- l>. B. Harris, formerly pastor o f St. Paul’H Cl lurch, Ocean Grove, has beeii spending a few ilaya at th « Grove. "H e has been tlie guest o f Mr. Elias Clark, o f Mount Tabor W ay. .

Ernest N. Woolstoh, who for the last two years has been engaged with E. , L. Kent in Orange, haaaccejited a position with W. II. lieegle and w ill go on dt\ty Monday, February 5.

John C. Dunham, Secretary, and Treas­urer o f the Bttflalo W heel Comnahy, paid a .flving visit to the G rove on 'luesdav, to visit his parents, M r. and Mrs. T . M. Dunham, o f Heck avenue.

T h e K. H. Stokes rChemical Engine ( ’empuny w ill g ive a musical anti literary entertainment in Association' Hall,', this ( Friday ) evening, a t 8 o'clock. Every­body should attend, us the boys lire notetl for the enjoyable rhuracter o f the enter­tain men ts t bey give.,

M . K. W hipple, who was-formerly in the hlueslone mitI granite huaincss here, . but-now a rent!eiit <»f EJizabethj was lit town this week. H is usually broml smile was niore expansive than usual and aii inquiry developed the fact1 that he .had recently become the father o f a bouncing hoy. r” • ■. f ' . . :

A thvee-musted sch<ioner, apparently in a disable Leo m illion, came to anchor a short distance idi* the Bradley Beach U«h pound:on Monday. .Owing; to the high easterly winds it was at one tim e thought that nothing could prevent the yessel from being driven ashore, as she seemed to be dragging her anchors anti drifting toward the breakers. However, the wind changed and early. Wednesday morning th » schooner put to sea.

The Situation at; Tr'enton.

Another week has rolled around nnd. the situation at Trenton, reg*rding tho senatorial muddle lias not materially changed. The Democratic body, contin­ues to meet, anti after calling the roll ad­journ, The Hepubliiun organization has passed some bills sent in from the House affecting Countv Excise questions and raced rack gambling. These 'were re­turned to tlie- Assembly and .w ill be sent to the Governor for Ids approval..

A fte r these biHa are .tiled it is proposed to have some one make a technical viola­tion o f one o f the laws thus created, and in this way bring the matter before the Supreme Court for that body to. deter­mine whether the Iiepublican Senate is a legalJbody. .

W H E E L M E N ’ S M E E T IN G .

Meeting of Citizens to Consider W a y s and Means to Entertain L. A. W . Members.

There were some fifty prom inent citi­zens on hand Wednesday evening, at the meeting called to see what encouragement was promised fur the entertainment o f the Wheelmen, in case the • committee succeeded in getting Asbury Park named for the 18!M meet o f th e ’U A, W ., ,T. 1'rank Appleby was niade Chairman and JJ. B. Ayres, Sccrelarv. '

In his address, stating the -object for w liieb the meeting waa culled, Mr. A p ­pleby gave a general outline o f what .was desired. (The League o f American Wlteel- men. was an important organization, and large cities were more than .deairous to secure the advantages o f its annual .meet­ing. It would bring into the town at least. 10 ,000' people for n period o f four days, nnd litrge numbers o f them would remtlin for a longer -tim e. As these wheelmen pay their own hotel and other expenses, this would mean bringing into the town from §75,000 to $ 12 0 ,000 in cold, cash;’ In order to g ive these visitors proper attention and a rew.side entertain­ments, the local wheelmen-desiret! some expression from the business men and hotel keepers as to. whether $2,000 could be secured by contribution for that pur­pose. .

James. S. Holmes, Jr., C h ief Consul o f the Xew Jersey Division o f the L. A . W., made an interesting address and urged that Ashurv Park was the place to hold the coining meet. Xew. York and Penn­sylvania were solid in ils fa vo r ; but Den­ver aiid Boston were tvorking hard to secure it, ami that matters must be pushed i f Asbury Parks carrie the day against them. .

Addresses were then made by Messrs. John A. Githcns, (J. I I : Z acharias, (»C*orge F. Kroehl, S. \V. K irkbride, J. K. Burt, Uriah White, Theodore Oves, J: S. R ip­ley, E. G. Hnrrison, Jamea II . Bird, W , M. Pawley, J. S. Ferguson, M . M. Cros- l>ie, N. E. Buchnnon, II . B, Ayres and others, all strongly favoring the idea that the small amount o f money required could easily be provided.

A motion by Mr. Kroehl, that the League o f American Wheelmen be invited to hold its 1894 meet at Asbury Park was carried, anti tho follow ing committees were appointed:

E stkktain .msnt ; H . B. Ayres, Dr. Bur­ton, J. S. Holmes, Jr., A. C. Tw ining, George E. Farmer and S. W . ' K irkbride.

AnvEimai.No , J, K Jlurt, C. R. Zaclia- rins, John A. Githens, W . I I . Beegle and Charles I^ewis.

F in a n c e ; J. S. Ferguson, J. D. Beegle, W . M. Croshie, G. F . Kroeh l and J. K. Weir.

Joseph McDermott, o f Freehold, appointed a delegate to go to.the meeting of the National delegates at Ix^uiaville, Kentucky, February 10, to work in the interest o f Asbury Parle. H e will be ns- sieted by A . C. Atkina, V ice Consul o f the New Jersey Division, H . B..Ayres, State <le!egato, anti A . !{, Parsons, W . I i . Stauffer, and C. H. Zacharias constituting a special com/nit tee appointed by the Asbury Park Wheelmen. ; - ,

Another, meeting w ill he held at the Commercial Hotel, Wednesday evening, February 7.

TH E O P P O S IT E S H O R E . TR O U B LE IN R IO H AR B O R . TH RO U G H O U T T H E S T A T E ;

Government Bonds Floated. ' .

The issue o f fifty m illions o f Govern­ment bonds, proposed by Secretary Car­lisle in' orrler to • strengthen the • United States Treasury, Will, through the recent action liiid libeml aubscrii)tious o f New York bankers, he floated w ithout d iffi­culty. A t the meeting held oil Monday, the bankers were dissatisfied with tfie meagre information given otit by the.Sec- retary, and gave him little ciicourage- 'incur that the project would he successful. Further consideration and conference he- tween the leatling financial men o f New York , however, led them to tlie conclu- aion that for the sake o f saving Govern­ment credit, the bonds must be floated*; anti the banks and other monied institu­tions o f the-city ' forwarded applications for about thirty millions o f the issue. To this was lidded some eight .millions from a Boston combination, leaving about twelve m illions to be placed through other channels.

Two New Congressmen Etected.

The anxiously awaited'special election i in the two Congressional Districts in j Neiy York City, where vacancies were f caused by the resignation o f Col. John A. i Fellows and Ashhel P. Fitch, was held on *i Tuesday and reaulted in the election o f I L. E, Omgg, Republican, in the Four­teenth District and Sidor Stmus, Demo- J cmt, in the* Fifteenth District; Mr. ‘ .Quigg's pJurutity was 'J84 agtiinst a Dem- J eratie plurality o f B,825 in . 1802 ; w hile j the plurality for Mr. Stmtia was reduced to 4,08t) from 1 1,8*3) which was the dem ­ocratic .plurality in 1802.

Th is extraordinary change in rates , is taken as an imlication thnt u majority o f the people are opposed to the passage o f the \VilsOn Turirt bill ami the results will pnihably have a tlepres«ing effect upon its progress through the House.

Notes on A sbury Pa rk ’s People and Their.Doings.

A ctirnice was blown frotn WarrPs H o­tel , l>y the b igb w inds on M onday.'

Airs, L; E. Watson liiia hetui quite serir ously ill, but is on the road to ; recovery.

Norinan'AV. Pcnfield went to Florida last week to witness tlie Corbett-Mitchell % h t.

The law anti order league o f Asbury Park has iastied an appeal f«jr money to carry on tlie -work o f the league this year.•X Jhirry W.- Townsend; w h t r has .been spending the -.past few. weeks iii Cape May conntjvson 111 Jersey? has returned home:•‘ Arthur A . Zimmerinan ;haa leased the.

half'u iile tnick at irreeholtly-and .will fit i t • up as a race-traek anti ; training quarters,'

Do not fail to attcm 1 the E. H. Stokes Cfiemtt-al Engine Company's entertain­m en t iu Association Ila ll this (F riday) .evening. .

Walter Carroll,. o f • Aabury Park, has been sentenced to two months in the county ja il for stealing eight pigeons from Andrew White, o f Deal i.fcachV. .,. . The pijie or^aii whicii . was formerly ,used in tho Episcopal Chureh, inis Ijcen, purchased’ by - th e ; congregation . o f the Presbyteriaii Church .of Belmar. '

.A 'ermiin’ * Service w i11 • be held . at. the I.ulhemn Church Sunday niornitig, Eebruiiry *L The Pastor, Hev. D*duglas Sjjaetbj w ill de)iver the sermon.

Henry B. Slmfto has been awarded the contract for paltering the interior o f the Hathaway House at Burlington, I t will require 1200 rolls, o f paper to complete the job.

A . Havens Morris, the “ Pioneer PoctM is one o f the Striiek Grand Jiirdrs in the contested election «ts c o f Peter Forman and Theodore . Aumack, ■ which is to be tried before Justice Beasley February 8 .

The Christian Endeavor Society ‘o f Westminster.,. Presbyterian Church has issued invitations , to the public gen­erally to attend.the, aerieaof special ineet-' ings to be held in the. church this week.

Hon. James A.' Bradley,: is about fin­ishing (ip another lo t.o f brushes fo r free distribution at Trenton next week. The brushes will be labeled and varnished, aud each.one w ill be ornamented w ith a neat bow o f ribbon.

Harry Cline, o f Asbury Park, who was released from ja il on Wednesday, was re­arrested and sent back again on Thurs­day, charged .with stealing an. exeuraion ticket from ' Freehold to Ixmg Branch. For his last offense he was sentenced to thirty days in the county jail.

. On February JO, at the Asbury Park Post-Office, w ill he held the annual civil service examination o f candidates for the positions: o f carriers and clerks during .the summer season. Applications are very slow in coming in, only one having been received so far for the position o f carrier and one for clerk:

Rev. Dougins Spaeth, o f tho Lutheran Reformed Church baa been, suffering for some tim e from a sore foot. 1a fit week it became so painful that a physician was. called who lanced the affected- part und by probing discovered a needle which was removed. Mr. Spaeth had no know l­edge o f how o r when the needle entered • his loot.

The colored citizens o f West Park have ( irganizeri a Property Protection • Associa­tion, for the protection o f their property from' fire. They are. circulating petitions, to solicit subscriptions.for the purpose'’o f sinking fire-wells in tlie vicin ity o f the colored settlement. It is undoubtedly a eoori idcii ami their subscription list

•should he m p id lv.fi I led..•Mrs. Ellen D. Fleming, w ife o f F. ,N. .

, Fleming, aiid daughter o f the late 0. \- 1 lave.ns, o fTrentim , died at one P. :AL, -j Sunday, January 2S, iit tbe Grand A ve­nue Hotel. She leaves a -husband, two sons anti two daughters, o f whom one. is the w ife o f Judge Beasley, - o f Trenton, and the other, Misa Kllen, is at the < »mnd Aveniie Hotel with her father.

In a suit, before Justice Borden oh Monday, M yron D. Gould was complain­ant and Joseph Jackson, defendant It appears thnt sometime .last April, Jack­son secured, half a ton ’ o f fertilizer from Gould, saying that his father had ordered the same. When tin; bill was presented to Curtis Jackson, Joseph's father,* be. emphatically denied having ordered it. Joseph.1was then brought before the Jus­tice anti in a trial w ith a ju ry he was found truilty o f false representation . and' comnellcri to pay § l “i, the. price o f the fertilizer, and costs o f tlie suit.

W E S T G RO VE IT E M S .

An American GunbnntfHred Upon by the Innut. gent Adm iral's Flagship.

Advices received at Washington on Monday froin Rear Admiral Benham: in command o f the American fleet in Bra­zilian . waters, Convey©d .'the startling intelligence that one o f h is ’ cruisers, the Detroit, lmd been lired upon by Admiral De Gainii while protecting American ves­sels in the landing o f their cargoes. T lie engagement Justed but a few momenta and only about a dozen shots hud been exchanged when Admiral He Gama railed for quarter. Th e .difficu lty is supposed to have arisen upon un attempt made by the' Insurgent Commander to prevent qui* 'trading; vessels' from innding their cargoes, A d [m im lB c it lm h t. ;■-.eontendetl Uiat tlieir' ri gl 11 to trade iu a f r iet t( 11 y port | w i 11 lou t liindriince; was absolute, anti he sliould protod them. W hen the Am eri­can war. vessels were got ten tinker way to escort tinymen*hantinen to the docks, the Aquidihan, Dt» (lama’s ilagship, s ig - nailed them not Io paVs.n given point, and no notice having been paid to the signal, he opened lire upcn the cruiser Detroit,-which was at fh e : bead o f the iine.: The fire wiiareturned/by the Airier-: ican .V esse i'Sopro iu ptly^an tlw ith stich good, e ffect. ‘ that Adm iral .De (iam ii promptl y iisket I f< >r quartt* i\ and the Ii ri n g: Roused. ■ T liis prompt act ion on the purt o f Admiral Borilmm w ill suppress a great tleal o f annoyance to which American Shipping in I<io Harbor has been subject for some time.

Lower Telephone Rates Probable.

The imients covering the receiver of| the Bell telejdione.; expired 'January ,*10; Ot her parts o f theJn^trunient such as the tnmsmitter and battery are still protected but it is evident that there w ill be a material reduction in rates. Companies are being formed w ith the itlea o f. wrest­ing business jrom the oltl corporations that have bled the people for ao many years. A gigantic combination o f ull the existing telephone companies is talked of,, the pow er thus acquired to be used in controlling all new concerns. It is doubt­ful i f euch a combination could be held together, aa the authorities o f the smaller cities or towns would orobably favor local enterprises over outsitie corporation*.

Patterson-Hcath.

One o f Aahurv Park's m ost' prominent lawyers, Samuel A. Patterson, was mar- r ie ilon Thurstlay afternoon, January 23, to Misa In ez I. Heath, at* the ‘ hom e o f her parents in Ashlnna, Ni! H; A fter u tri p to . 'Vashingtoh, 1>. C. i and other cities J-hey 'will return to ‘ Asbury Park and will reside in the handsome residence Mr. Patterson is building on Em ory Btrt|«t, near First-avenue.;

Hr. Kroehl Receives a “ Welcome H om e." .

Surprise parties appear to he the order o f the day m this V icin ity, and Thursday evening the promoters o f this pleasant character o f entertainment turned their attention to Mr. George F. Kroehl, the popular President o f the First National Bank o f Asbury. Park. A fte r filling, an engagement, Mr. KroeliI, returned to find his parlors in full possession o f a inerry band o f friends who .proceeded to give him a cordial reception and welcome to his own dom icile ;; Appreciating, tho eifc- uation, as well.as the kindly feeling that prompted the visit, the invndera were ,re- tiueated to make . themselves at home; which they proceeded to do and a very enjoyable time ensiled. M r.H a lsey W il­cox, as .-master o f ceremonies, not only kept the dancers in an exciting whirl, but b is boundless good humor, and ready w it also afforded rich entertainment- for the remainder o f the com pany.. The party waa gotten up at almrt notice and a large number who wished to attend, were unable to do so on account o f previous engagements. Am ong those present were Air. Kroehl; Mrs.. East wood, Mr. and Mrs. A . CV ^w in in g , Mr.; and Mrs. S. W» K irkbride, Mr.; and M rs. Milan Ross, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Grehelle', Mr. a n d ;; Mrsi E. H. W ilcox, Mr. and Mrs. J, H. Bird, Mr. and Mrs. D. C.: Covertj Mr. and Mrs.' A . L. Seighortner, Miss Cornelia and Masters George and Howard Kroehl and Messrs. S. A. Da vie, H . B, Johnson, T- J. W in k 1 er, W , H. Beegl e, W . C. Bnrronglis, and \V, S. CJ a began. >

Miss Lyon presided at the piano, ac­companied by Air. Underwood-with the violin.

Refresh incuts were served during tlie evening anti at a late hour the party dis­banded, in the hope o f being participants in many like enjoyable txrnsions.

A Sad Railroad Accident.

Austin Newman, « brakt*nian bn a Central freight tmin, running . between Poiiit Pleasant aud Jersey City,* was run over uud killed at Red Bank’ Thiirsday inorning. Xew man was walking back­ward, signalling the engineer, when his foot caught in a switch and before he could extricate )»inls\Mf tin; wheels o f one o f t lie cars \tassed «»ver (i is 111 igIi, se ver­ing it from tlie bodv. lit* was picked up unconscious am i.11ied short ly nfier. This ’ made the fourth, accident Newman has 1 met with during his servict; on the road : mid he hatl just gone to work -after hav­ing recovcrctlfrtan his last mishaji. l ie leaves a Wife ami an infant baby, on ly a few weeks old. v

Preacher’s fleeting.

TJie Bowery Gun Club hatl a shooting match Wednesday afternoon. ,.

C. C. Parker, o f Vanhiaeville, is paying a visit to bia son H enry Gravatt, on Cor­lies avenue. * .

El wood Stevenson, colorcd, o f West Park, was convicted at. Freehold on Tues­day, o f assault ami battery, on ‘Sidney Mcl'ielland .and was fined $50 and. the trosta o f suit. ‘ . . • . '.

It is understood that J. !>.. Woodward, the grocer, w ill discontinue business at the Corlies avenue store. April first. James Thompson, o f (ilenriolu, has been negotiating for the place aiid -wiU ■ open tip in the grocery ; line as soon as Mr.- Woodward vacatcis.. ■. ...

The revivaV seryieea at the Methodist Church, miner tho auspices o f Rev. W. 11. Ben ford are still in progress and good work is being accomplished. .Mr. Ben- ford makes a most acceptable pastor and is highly esteemed by his parishioners and tlunpeople in.general.

Misa Liz/.ie Gmvatt, the charming daughter o f Mrs. A . Gmvatt, gave a whist parly at their residence at the corner o f Corhes avenue und Main street, T h u r s d a y evening o f tbia week. A large circle o f young friends from West Grove; Ocean Grove and vicin ity had been invited and the occasion waa one o f great enjoyment to all:

Maritime Rumor says that the renowned scientific, boxers, Meesrtf. Dumfrey and White, expect to give ,au exhib ition o f their prowess and skill with the gloves

, on Thursday, February 8 , at Johijsoii Ttjylor’a barn. This may be rumor onlyj or it may be facts, but in case o f the lat­ter no serious results are expected to follow the friendly contest;

The Now Brunswick District Preacher’s i Meeting was.held in St. Paul’s- Church on Momlay. Presiding Flrier-Strickland occu]>ied the chjpr a rid' Rev. .M ilfon ; Rel -i yetti J; G. Eilwards, .L li, Thotnpson, Walter.Thompson, W illiam 1. G ill, Dr. Russell, J. W . Ijeeam l M. (h itiin bartici- patetl in the bx'ercises of. the day. An interesting paper Was read by Hev. W al­ter -Thompson, entitled ."H o w far is a man responsible for-his.beliefs?"- Topic for the next session' "Docs (he doctrine o f Chriatian perfection as held by the M . E. Church, tend-to lower the Chnstian con­ception o f spiritual life? ’ - 1 deader,: Dr. Wilson. - . . ’ .

Improvements at M r. W atnrigh t's Store.

Since selling out the grocery depart-.; ment, o f his business, Mr. W ainrigbt has. been m ak in g n eci w a ry trimmres lo enable him to entry on his extensive house fur­nishing trade as a separate. thqiartuicnt, and a force o f men is now engaged in putting the neivssary sUelvitig tuwi coun­ters in Hit* wcst .rooin o f the l»ritrk Imild- ing on Olin street. T h e ‘whole, front o f this sttke.>nom will b^ehtingetl and imr. proved;: bulk wiiidowa ami • snsh .tloors put in, aiid every.thing pqfc.: in shape to display'gootls and-conduct"the buainesa to advantage. . . .

Died From the Effects of Strong Drink.

Abraham Bullock, an employee o f W il­liam FI a veil, waa found dead on Sunday, in a house near Drummond's brick-yard, where he lived. Death was caused by alcoholism. James H. Sexton took charge o f the hotly. It is stated that Bullock was drinking on a wager, and after drink­ing nearly a quart, o f the poison, died from its effects.

Rublna Hutchins,

Misa Rubinn Hutchins, an aunt o f Misa Carrie n . Thain, died lit her reaidence on Wealey 'Lake, at half past eleven o ’ clock Thursday mprriing; at theage o f 84 years,

The funeral aervicea w ill he held at the house at four. P. M ,, to-day, (Friday) and- tlie remaina w ill be-;taken to Evergreen cemetery, Brooklyn, on Saturday fo r in­terment. '

Electric lights have been put in the I^i-hnar poat-otfice.

Mumps are epidemic among the school children o f Eatontown..

Atlajitie Highlands has an organization known a* the- Lightning Rod Social Club.

The fish pound at Manasquan was aold . r to Howard Osborn of.thnt place for $280.

Andrew Richardson o f Red Bank,has b«*i*n arrested for threatening to kill his wife. .' ..’ A hell tower th irty-five feet high waa

recently erected at Jielmar, and a lire-bell : hung at the top o f it. ■ . *

Frank Oetsinxrer, o f Spring I-ake, haa ' been appointed deputy keeper o f tha State prison at- Trenton.. Monmouth County bna a acbool fimd o f $T|7,407.01 and the county is free from bonded indebtedness..

W alter Taylor..associate editor Of that Long Branch Jitrord has been appointed Street Commissioner o f thutipliice. ■ . ..

Mia's Lizzie Forman, daughier o f H ub-’ Imfd Forman o f Manaaqnan; at Her home on Sunday o f consumption.

Tlie Central Railroad w ill require all thoir employees to produce a pass while . travelling oh the road, when o ff duty.

T lie revival aervicea recently held in ■ the North 1/mg Branch >1. £ Church resulted.in the conversion o f 115 persons.

Farmers o f Cumberland County predict an early spring and have already begun ploughing ground for their spring sowing. :

One. o f the largest electric search lights . in the world is to be placed at Sandy Hook. It will cost between $0,000 and ? 10 ,000.

Last week John Enright, principal o f Freehold public school, was appointed temporary County Superintendent o f pub­lic schools.

Numeroua cases o f destitution hsv# been dUcovered at Freehold by the com­mittee appointed to lopk a fter this part o f the tow n ’s affairs. .

Six youmr ladiea o f Bridgeton, N . J., recently engaged.in a wood-aawmg con­test. The show was given in the opera, house at that place. -

Lew is Snyder, agetl about 70, a farmer ■; residing at I^imbertviHe, N. J., waa thrown from a load o f Jiay on Friday laat, and instantly killed.

Frank Brighton, o f Spring I^ke, put a bullet through the forefinger o f nia left hand last week, by the accitlental dia- charge o f a revolver.

James Conine, a respected citizen o f Howell, N. J.;. committed suicide early Monday morning by shooting h im self in the head with a pistol.

•Congressman Geissenlminer is endeav­oring to get an appropriation. o f $20,000 from Congress for the improvement o f * the Shrewsbury River. . 1

The* rt'ceipts o f the Belmur freight sta- . tioti fluring tlie month o f December was : $ 1,02:1,20.. Th is is ^OO more than, they were in December a year ago.

A nurse o f sfi 102 was made up by the peoiile o f Freehold and given to Mrs. W illiam Jhtinear,-who lont.nll her house- holi I goods at the recent fire, a t Unit place i

The Republicans o f W all Township, have elected a Township Committee aa follows James K, Cook; Howell M iller,' W illiam S. Jaeksoii ami A. I>. Sexsmilh.

Joseph l'arrv, . who was indicted for . setting lire to a barn at Scobtsyville on • Novem ber 5, has htreti sentenced to seven Veal's hard labor in Stattt's1 prison.

Comluctor Lew i* Hunt .ami Kngineor . Jolin Cline, who had cluirge o f the train • out o f Point Pleasant, on the morning o f the aeeident near Briello, have betni tHs- fharged . ;■ Arm ohr Co. are reported to liav# purchnsed IWOO acresdf laml oh th e Hack-. ’ ensa«*k meatlows; for the purpose o f erect­ing extensive atock yards and slaughter llOUB«B. : ; ' . .

I^ist week someone made an attempt to change the course of. Shark Hiver; Aa this property belongs to private parties, the miscreants, were warned not to repeat tiie.oifeiiee. .

The imunbertt o f ' Ihe .Presbyterinu eliureli o f Maiius.qimmcontempjnte build­ing .11 stone.chinch. The. Baptist congre­gation also intend remodeling their place o f worship. . • ' J

T h e county bridge at. Osborn’s Mills, in Wall Township,, built o f iron by -Dean iJc Westbrook four years ago, was wrecked last .week hy the breaking away . o f the liiifi pond. *

Food and clothing are distributed every Tuesday at id Thursday afternoon to .'the poor people o f Freehold .. Th is is a move 111 the right direction anti certainly one that is appreciated.

Dr; JSdward biw rence, a wealthy Ph il­adelphia physician committed suicide.on Monday o f Inst week, by jum ping over­board from hia yacht at Atlantic City, He had been ill with tha grip for some time. ;

W illiam R. Boroughs, a carpenter-.of Treiium, w hile walking along f lie m iln tvl track receiitlv* caught his foot in. a frog, in .the mils, and before lie eoiild extricute Jiinistflf a train c;imo. along nnd he was killed. .

Cant. A. W. Bradshaw, o f. tiie l>ako- wood Tiun'n i i i i i i 'Jouniitl, general innmigcr o f the Ijikewootl Ijin tl nnd lm ^ provemtjnt Company, was stricken with paralysis 011 Tuesday. He is reported to , be in a critical condition.

W illiam Robinaon, formerly an em­ployee o f the New Jersey Central Rail­road, has brought suit against the company to recover $20,000 damages for tho loss o f a bund, which injury h e iut- tained while in their employ.

I t seems a settled fact that the camp . ground at Sea.Girt is to be ornamented with a handsome building to be."used by the New Jersey R ifle Association aa a. club house; I t is expected that the erec­tion o f the structure will be commenced in the near future. . ,

A t a fair recently held by the Navesink Hook and Ladder Company, Daniel Yet- man won a ton o f coa l.. As Yetm an owed the company for aome brick which he had purchased, it ofTeet its claim by refusing to g ive up the coal, arid Yetm an brought suit to recover his prise *nd was nou-iuited.

Page 2: pe r tin e n t · 2014-04-01 · Executive Committee which hits been ... PERSONAL AND pe r tin e n t. The Steamer Didn't Work. On Friday of last week I he.Eagle Hook and Ladder boys

OCEAN GROVE T IM ES—SATURDAY, FEBR U AR Y 3. <894.

OCEAN G R O V E T IflE S ,i'.vr.UY n,\ri u h a v a t —

No. 4 8 M a in A von ue , j

vj;1 ..= ; : , V/ibidA-M I I . Bm:«; 1.1 ftOtor. and PnW*ker.

- f^ ^ f^ r '!? ^ u b s c r ip t| o n , ' X)ntJ; D o lla r per Year,

y ' Y , y . - ' \ ' y _ • ' (in Advance.) ■ : . .. •*

vV | ' Ai'f'*VrI'.X'' S ' - . i R K T E S O F K D i l E R T l S I N C

;''\VTiii:ivj4.• i^ i z \:';5ll

.100 12,'

; l-"S 2.00:3 “ 5

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1751 ;i a-, -i lilii .v .m him 2 Sii 11x1 . r. -v,-,7;.V' 11(1

• (-iii .irwi'iMin woo1 « .I1IW. J -------p. rim'll

. .,S1 DO K2* \l'50j-a i m oo

270 a.tw1 00 .....

•ir>o 1 .a no*; 7 'ivn *».*. ft oo ho oo 1 1 'jiid'roiijaiiKiMri

r» iv 7'(H>'ii ovi7 0ti; aiMn

oiij2Tooi45 00i* som ii) ixnr> tw.7/> w\y'z

••Hi.wiiMv Hue;' each- f'ti'ser*' ^/ .^tV fSvV^ilon^for Ihnv tvivk* mvim m v 2.1 per.

vin.itU'ousck Imyo vp/tv ;iit-^y;::,-. ;..• v: y--;.

p i l i ^It ItlMltONDKSTS^Vo Slmll bV.tfllUlIpl'C*-;

Heimi ofnciV^.-uiiil-Vc'oiii !>/:'V;ul»Jco1« o f tntcrosi to.thlK roiniuxtiilty; W rite

only on.Olio hide ol (ho shoot.

■'J'' ‘ ‘ ‘ ” ‘ ^ T i » o ; fii l in n mo-:- ii ltd ml ii ress • .0 f t ) leVW rf tor^ h m iU l: nccotnjmijy: nit1 eoiiinumlcutions, -iiot.iy* nouto. accom pany; a n : com mumem mn.s,- mu.

i1 .V’.newyw'urUy for i)ul>iio:Vtkiii? bu t a« tr pimrn.ntee.■ ^ ^ ^ l S « ^ > l s o f g 66 (l-riilth; YAhonytiiouji lot 1 ers w l ! 1 n u t > 0^ , r ; ,

;/•> ■ ' Add rows all communications, either,for the-. 7 > ; X ;V,J'.\eil 1t or ltd or. hows departmehtsyto tho ., •

r ; *;: y. i •’-• ' tfdltpi'.of 'rittJTlMRS ,,j V ’"‘ X- 1 ** ‘ ’ ■ ‘ Oce.tn G iovc, N. .1.

S A T U R D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 3 , IS9-).

?'’/»v ’S.*" • wh° u'iM Mid to (fth. ‘Tlu\noli/'*’] '*hmdd - )rhctli<r th>'

1 -'S tJppU rd id .is kh jb i o r rn ltnrd, .ji/nn’ o f m /- S> t d ey n , ,t)i,l },m ( ottfn tidihvn*.

■- v; • • ‘ ' i ; - :-

^0S~^rMf»:an>iiiihrt--h>-imht\thej-.unmploinuI to'.{th- {rJ(Ti} 11 /((mil iHfi . i.f m i l ur& the

:> • T J .\ fIf S w il l j iv i id , f i r e <>/ vfi<in/rt h ri< f )w - .t !W / n n n Merchant*, contractors o r other},;

p g C ’L -'k i , '* '1; need (tf e lm v fd *kH(cd Mechanics•** p htborerj; (cw p th ty aid if ' adrerthemrntfi for'.jh\mes{<> serraiit.^ o f which the wppl>j

?PP€at'* (a etpiid Ou demand. ) ,Snch ■ ■' . ‘ . ' not ices *lt,/idd statethe,, na.tm,/‘ ‘f t h - ' iiyo'J; to -1:-:V /• he perform ed, and to irhom .and w hirr to :

0 ro a n izk i) labor troub les im ve reached

G ‘ ? vt^ ' f ie street ■ ligh ts w ere on' IL ’- b ' / J / l* tr ik e .U\hV w eek , and F r iday n ight.

th y\T‘ * wo i i t out.” - in a body.

HIh sei'y i ce l ie wbUliIreMgii:; : r >-'aBj);i?tor o f th e B rook lyn TuheJiiaelu.

• . T « i prom ised issue o f the Ocean G rove

V - ,> ^ V '_ V '. J itcord m ade its appearam 'e on F r iday o f N ~ lafit w e ek , 1 and its m uke-tip show ’s that

< : in r ^ W a lla ceV lo n g and serious illness has 'L ’'im pa ired h is a b il ity to produce a

paper o f absorb ing interest.

1 OnkoJ th e tem atkablt* in c id en t1' o l the

' f • v '(lay^tlmt v\ ill pi obab ly .^o ,d«i record and■ b r in g in closer rela tion ,’ e in p lo ve r and

; . ; e iiip lo vee , ban been c i t e d in J’ itt.-burg/

w h ere ii local labor o rgan iza tion loaned a "■ V-*• * ■ ; gliLssV nm nnfactn ring concern ^o6,00(V in

,v \ v ' y ' • ’•?oni(Mvt6'k e e p th e plant ru nn ing and p re :. vent/a shut d inyn , , -

; v . Peddegm st. th e asaausin o f C arter-H ar*.^‘^vHaoii, e x h ib ited g rea t in terest in tlie

S r i ^ ' ' p roceed in gs 'du rin g h is trial; and was fre* queu tly heard to say, ‘ ‘ I ob ject,, fo r m y

stake ,” For th e l i fe o f h is vie* O j : V . tirri h e;had no .respect w hatever, and it

• ' rea lly -m akes a d ille ren ce to m en o f his :v . • k ind w hose life is under consideration ,

■■ V " atid th a t .m eans san ity , o r a sutlicient, , .* m ark O f in te llig en ce to w arran t the bang-

. : . in g w h ich b e so r ich ly deKervcs!

• W e s l e y : L a k e . '

the.n ieeting^"held on Saturday lust ; v " vt.to cons ider th e im p rovem en t o f the sani* -

; ’ r u iry . con d ition o f : W es ley Lake, m any

■.- p lans W ere proposed bu t few w ere c ith e r

' ' • , pm ctica l o r -desirable,v • . T h e 'source o f dan ger lies not so m uch1 : V: in th o .unsigh tly drift, s tu ff w h ich - accu-

Voulrites u t (h e head o f t l ie U tke.as U does

v 'v ^ ;i. 1,1 MW im p u rity o f t lie w aters b y w liic l i it

' 1R fed . T h is stream , flo w in g th rou gh the^V: ’ th ick ly , popu lated co lo red settlem en t west

,"v V-_ \‘oT ;*the‘ railroad, w h ere sew ers are iin-

i s f - C . v . k ^ o w n , and w hose in h a b ita n ts ,h a v e no ' ,'•:•• . m ca iis .o f p ro v id in g , san itary app liances ,'

^ ’~'u- e v e n i f th ey w ere so in c lin ed ; m ust carry Vv/.'v d ow ii a vast am oun t o f m ost unhea lthy

".V • ' • . 'l^ it iu g c . N o plan th a t con tem p la tes the• con tinued ; du m p in g o f th is refuse in to

;p • the biisin o f th e U ik e is e ith e r sen s ib le o r

\ y ''f. p r a c t i e a K T o lilt up a portion o f th e U ik e w ou ld en ta il expense w ith no good

& $& ■■■}.; ■ results ; to till up-the en t ir e L ik e w ou ld\>e lo destroy on e o f th e great attractions

• o f our C ities b y th e Sea ; and to fill the basin w ith sa lt w a ter d ire c t ly from the

o c e a n at. lluod t id e is n o t feas ib le becauao ' ?.x . t he tides are seldom su ffic ien tly h igh ; to

. rcacli th e desired le v e l in th e I-ake, and: . o n ly tho-w atetn at th e lo w e r end w ou ld

; ■. l»e changed o r purified. ‘ / . V '

-• T o ca rry th e streain b v w h ich tliQ Lake

^ 5 v ; v ife now fed d ire c tly in to t lie ocean through

- . ; ; cu lverts, and keep tho b as in .t illed w ith. sa lt w a ter em p tied in to i t near the head,

is th e -o n ly true rem edy ye t 'su gg es ted .

T h is m eans U ie exp en d itu re o f a consid- ■ ; erab le rfui.n o f inunoy, bu t th is .shou ld not

* ‘ h a vo ito o .much w e igh t w h en pub lic health■ - is i p e n a p e d . ‘ • . ; .

T h e n e m o r a b le F o u r .

r;.Thotig li th e - i ‘ res idciit; hasaio <Ipubt iul-

^vimcod; s iiice l ie :s o c o iln d e n t jy ii f l lr in e d ; that 1 11e 'nirUl*: *Aviis^ ii Unv^c "lo iud /qttes^ |ion” b e J la s : n o t ) as- yVV ’ aci ju j red sudi-

cien t b read tii - o f vie.W ,. k n 6 \vle/lge. :o f. inoiv,' iVebdoin.';• f r o n i;• jn 'ed ju d u 'e ,; nnU

adap ta tion to, b i i ie ^ , . '. - t o '■ iiisu re ■' 1 liin

aga in st g rea t nMr'tnkes nnjb ibolish . hlun- Uers. ; W h ile ••xamples o f these b lunders m ay ;b e J* nin/1 in e v e r y : ■ departin 'en t;, ruii

7’l i y ;t l i i V ^ I ^ jie i'lu ips t lie v/ n o w iie i^ ;Slii.^e .--0 . co iisp ieub iis ly ‘ as in t h e ; d ip lo- : imit ie-;; V serv jce ‘ . T h i ivk ( o f V ii i i A lliui,

i.Uount^ ;W iilis, a m i S in y tlie . - W h a t, a :iji rilrtette;! W b a ty n rc h is: atlvii?ers fi I 'ioiii;:

.:|hat; th e y ; Vlo^/iibt save; Iiin i'v fi* '«‘ \ siiclt .

ij)lundvK? O r js;h ’e.;iib'6 y e -tit 1 v ice^U n (\ea iV^nttv,;w bn thcse'^

j n o t i t s aVe t I t e fi n is lied y i vs ijlt| <>iM i is anv) i ;p p iit ica l;.wisd<)in,-• o r • t lie ".ft|rspt‘itig !p f:th e cotnV)i i i od st sit iisti ia i i_sl ii p' o f 1 i i i itsel f : ii ti d connt!i 1. . W liutiU pit v sotncone cou ld • n o t .

get 1 i i s ea r I on g, e i lOttgi i ! V;t o w I tiSj >er -;-,t li ivt ' if-lttV in iulo. f»>olish *iippointnie'iits. tii pUUre :

;iit ou r o w ii cotin try o t i r o ^ t p eop le a lone w ptikr be I lie stt 1 Vet ei-s; but , - i f lie tna'ite r i - .

4licu lb u sa p p o in tm en ts '■ pryuiii«vssml.ore.'to. '<V*rojV!ii. cm irt^ 'i i o . <li^ihco<l iirf biih»re

c iv iliz ed w orld . ' .■ ’ • ': A's titight.:)>e • ex jid e te il, ;t hei>e ;rid in iipus'

'a i^po iiiltrie 'n t> i.huvebroiiubtaboiit;rid ictt-

1 oii^Triut* v\sr ;Vail A lla ti at las!■ dec.lined

■ 1 i\it tipi»pi nt itie1111• w e are, In b tijip y - ignor-; ani;e <’>f \vhtit.. wottl11 jia y o jlle o n the, btitr c b u ie lt i ttaiy.- 0 'f;;li)6'u n ^ iitic tth e rid icu le '

b e b ron ch i upon h.im ^elfand .11is-thastor,

by hi?* b lu s te r in g 'a u th o r ity , his oue- s idOfl,di.< jiotnVial il e , 'i ie (t i f iig g ii)g ,d e tie i tfu I

. C( a irse: it; is ii ti ii ece#u ;v.: J’tu't.i ie r : t o- s pea k;."j A fit I ; is jW-ii I i ;1 ess rid i c-ti JVitis % j A ccred i tec) t iV a frieiH Ily. g(H'erntnetit. \yi iieh. b e ipirne-

'd m te ly iia it^n ip ts tc>; t r oy ; ft« ^ i t sbbati to ;re liiicp tis li b is an tb o r ity j intrigU '

:iiiwiUVV;fV 0 »>t.liroiic*cl Ciueoir.1>y^h^ans:!|:,fii. tel.epliotie in b is bedchatiiber, for her

;reKt on it ioii.' v o i l e . need ask f«>r (u ly t h iiijf tnore con tem ptib le . • '■ : .;And n o w .Avtj 'eOtu'e: to:.Sm vthe,:VM in-*

is te r t o ; 1 la y ti, Wvho; isVreiiprteH -to b.ave vsent.Aa:; letter^ to its lU ile iv g iv in g h iiuli is - v i e w s . • as .. t.‘>; 1 io.w .lie. sh ou ld -ea r ry ‘ bn • hif* . govern m en t. - T h is , is the v e ry

l ie ig b t b f } >resiinipt i on. Tl i e :;I*residen t is not so happy, in ; his govern m en t ■af hon ie. not even in his ow n . jinlit-

jcai fain.ily, * that. Vh'e! shou It I .be iu s tte h . Sisiste • to n ied ille- in . tb'e- a lia irs i » f ot h er

;in ii j«>jis;:; -I f iie^ilbes. ;noi ^ iitn - t ii^ ^ Iu ise :f(io lis ii ^li’ts;| (Vf' liis;initii?-ieiy/\tb^rt»/ is 'a ! •glea uV .'o f hbpcj. tiir ; h e ; i iiiy ■ Ieitrn stiine-

tl i i ng 'l iv .ex p e r ie iic if :; ■ I lit i if; 1 l e cbies, t he

Lord p ity tiS.

A n o th e r Jam es II.

: \VhVtr*hnut‘S 11 ‘ a.^cendtul' th e 'th ro iie

- ru le ovtu* were'ahno.'-t a ll o f Tn .iv lig ious

faith; .d i il'oreii t • i ro in ;J ii is : p w ii ; /;bti t / tlVey w ere lo ya l h ind p ro v e d . th e ir lo ya lty .on.

t h e ; bat tie field "A y b iit ia ii ; itivad i ng.'usu r- ; per, sough i t o' \v rest‘C l lie'- icrow 'ii; fK iii^ h is

t.r I S l i t ; natty faithless, unjust—-si’» . iveklp.<s:;ip v io la tin g the constitu th ip and laws, atid

sbJ^e;ii:bp-;i>ii.iiisltiiig a 11 $ > ) u;;any;way '.displeased•• b itn f- thnt lu* .raised such a s.tonn o f in d ig iia tion against hiinselt* tha t l ie lle t i t lie k ingdom .' * • ’;’ i • : '/ ] , '

;^ T h e r e H ie 1 s e v e r a l ’i>bi ^: b e t w ) i i ; t b e :

C leveland . A ea in st counsel, ' .lam es j ob ­

stin a te ly pursued his -i.w ii course,’ and C leveland luts a good deal o f t lie 'sam e sp irit. A s fa r as he C ottlil .lam es pun­ished those w h o opposed h im , and C leve ­land .is kn ow n to lean st rong ly in that

d ire c t io n . '. .Janies a ttem p ted to force peo­

p le to adopt h is v iew s a n d ca rry out his nieasures, and m any com p la in that this

•is th e p o lic y o f th e President, as shown, b y h is u iethod o f m ak in g o r .w ith -ho ld ing appo ih tiu en ts .• : j

Jam es con tinued to turn a large part o f

his. fr iends in to foes,, and C leve lan d is d o ­in g tha t its fast as h is •bitterest enem ies

could desire.'; Janies appeared u tterly b lind to th e unm istakab le >igns o f the

•com ing, storm o f w m th soon to buret upon b is . head ; so C leve land seems- to have a cataract over, h is e v e s an il appar­en tly fails to discern th e sigps o f th e '

tim es which '1. a rgue the destruction of

h im se lf and party . A s Jam es .found p len ty o f t im e fo r • re flec tion in a fo re ign lan d ; so C leve lan d and h is fr iends are

l ik e ly to find p len ty o f t im e fo r the sam e

purpose in p r iva te life .

Class L eg is la tion .

Can a n y th in g b e m ore false than the

p lea pu t flir th b y those w ho seek to fas­ten an incom e tax upon th e people; that it w ill equa lize th e b id d en o f sustaining th e go ve rn m en t ? H o w can it be equal­

iz in g th is burden t o la y a tax on one in 800,000 atid le t th e rest escape ? I f the o n e because he has an in com e o f $4,000,

m ust pay a ta x o f 2 p er cen t!, w h y should

n o t an in com e o f $11,000 p ay 1J p er c en t? A n in com e o f $2,000 pay 1 p er c en t? A n incom e o f $ 1,000 pay A per c en t? A n d

an incom e o f $o00 p ay \ p er cen t ? I f th e tax w ere thus graded, th e y m igh t ta lk

abou t equ a liz in g t l ie burden o f supporting th e g o vern m en t. A s proposed, it ia the w orst so rt o f class leg is la tion and th ere is no sense in tr y in g to fo is t i t upon tho p eop le by such false pleas. T h e act ough t

to be en t it le d “ A n A c t to despo il the fru ­

ga l and industrious w h o h ave con trived to Secure an in com e o f $4,000 o r m ore, all o thers to be e x e m p t.” .

G en u n g :& Co;, th e p ioneer .e£one;dcal-: ers h a ve w m m cneed* a ltera tions a t th e ir place. <>f I nisi nesH,; to m ake n iore space in ' w h ich to; display, th e ir Otirge. .stock o f

. n io iiu n ienis and .lieadstones. v 14u*ge |>itr- e l i uses.- • lia ve booh m ade fo r ■; t he spri nur th inej j i rid w hen ;nll is • rewnve< 11 hey. w ill lie id»le to sh ow upwai'ds o f se.Vent.v; fin- ished designs, co v e r in g m a n y varie ties uf ni*irl»ltv''■■'iind; gran ite , and . .by^ fa r th e Jai;- gcst st<ick iu -tho I c o u n t r y .S e v e r a l gran- itejtiOiVtitiieiits h a v e been ii'npOrteit irotn. ^ c o t la tH la n d 'S A ved e tv/ good sa h h os tt in -

jk n ow n iii tliin see ti on o f tl i e coiin ty,. a iid unequaied b y a i iy doinestic- prpductioiis.

JCarl/s C lo ve r ;K ootr, th e g rea t . IMootl .iM rifier, g iy e s ‘ freshness'and clearness to th e ;C pn ip lex ion and ..... ;%*., to ..iiOc.,.

W h ite . ': ;/ - : : ; '

ii and cures .;Cohsltpji(ioiw Fbr. ;sule;.rby.-; A . :;'AUisoti;

i * ' o f c s s t o t i n I ( C n r J i s ; -

Q H . l lK F .G U v . V ; V ' ; '

v ? V.-': N o.' 7S Main. A veiitiiy pooi'ii^tl rove,- X.*3r_

OKtVcK UOUUS— tii.i) A , M.',;1- t(> 2, 0 to 8 IV,M.

p l i A U I l i : V . (3E IM IIN ,

v ;A T T O U N K Y A T b A W -.’ . V M A S T B K I N C:iTANCI'lUY,

l >i»si Otllco i i« iU l ink, ’•A'sl >nr>;, l ’«irk, j?,* .L,

Q U . G E u n u i'V U . n io iU iK U T , ; V. ; .-yV.

D E N T A L S U R G E O N ,' Otlk '0 opjWisite tlio. l)op(»t, ovor ttie Anbui'y Park and U(*oii!i < 5ii>ve- llanlc. onrner o f Mnm St root, am t Mat Hsdh A vo., Astim y -Park , N . -.1. l lo m s .U a . M, io A i v 0 ns ad im nistom l.

^Appointnionts ratido l»y inwlI} >r In porsini; :

• q a y i i<-i i a h v i**y. >th.vy - . V-. ! * . . ■

. C O U N S E L L O R A T L A W .JtON>ioiri:iri tc i1.1>1 n o , ‘ ; A * i*1*ay P A k k . >*. J.

•'■CjtiiniiiissioiHT 'df-i>oods.ibr>Jilw; /York' alid' T• .Peniisvlvaniu-,; .'Aolv'n<»wloi!yonH.MU.s takon . j . ; * ■, o ta lt States. •

1 p A l l K Kit N \.Ill-iACK, ; ‘ ‘ >,

| ,-v C I VI L E N G i N EER^Jv- : e•j MON.MOUTII HlTir.DINO, A s i’ l'KV- PAUIC, S';.:.!.;

J i-j. i /As n i n g ,;}' (

’• ; C O U N S E L L O R T A T - L A W , '■ Itri(>.M N o . lO jM oN.'iotn ii lUJinniNOi

y • ' ; s )hiry Park , N . .i

0 A V I I ) a : NVYcivilKK,' ,

a U S T t C E O F T H E P E A C E ,. . *r; . ; : . • ; N O T A R Y • P U B LI C . ;

Goiionil Colleotlon Ajrono.y. •> - ,. Yr/.-'/y.Room No.l», MoaiuDiitit H’.hPnjr, Ashury-Purk.

q i t . ;v. a . p a v r . s u s . ,

V E T E R I N A R Y S U R G E O N ; . C ;; on toe No. (Ji)7 1st. A vo ..A s h t iry l ’ark, N .j; , ;■i j Tolophono NO,'4. ^ v"-v.;. 'T / Gniduaio '.N.'.Y,; I?.'- V.': S.,': I^Uo Sui'goon lth

.A vonno It. It.:'Now York.-

^ s . ttotJKlts,

A R C H IT E C T , S U P E R V IS O RO F C O N S T R U C T O N v - -

v’. :jb»go»^*V/ltotfoi-s;- ;: :.r-v\;;v" V-■ • ,:AI?iln St nua, Astnny.' ^

Bangs Ave & Emory St'

; A S B U R Y P A R K . ; :C op iino iicu iuo iil.o f W iiit i ir .Swtson Prices.

• Orchestra'Seats«tlcents." ' • OrolioKlnt Clwrto, Snniit fiOtv

■ Fnttro 11aIrony (not ' rosorvod) :2T oe*ntS. ;Ite.servod Seiits a t iv inm onlh ’s PrugSUiro, .

WATCH

This Space for the

Announcement

of a Coming piay.

i (7 i i a h iii& i • k . io k , a: A’A T T O R N E Y AT. L A W ,

PENNSYLVANIA RAILftOAD. ■

: ;Oil a iid .aftoi- Novom lior I|l,

T iia i n s r;KAyk. o e k a k ditov k : a s*S a s im a y •:- iW < / 'y + .'■■■ ilAlUC— WKKK. p a y s , it I , Fo r' N ow Y 'ork ;. aiid N ew ark S..10,:: S.20, li.10

a.m ., l.ni. p. in.; • . ■ . •F or lill/ahoth, ltntnvay linil .M alaw an ’,' (t.r»o,

(M 0 ,a .'in .,‘ l.I0, r».5K) p .m .For I.iong IhiimOi, «.ol», U.10, H.15ai in;, LI0,.; 2.;K,niw ;7.tVjp.jii.;-For Hod Hunk, it.fKVJi.iO a. iii.,■■LI0, o.iW) i>;in, For.PhlIailelphlii;;(Uroad St.) and Trohton, at . ; 7.0(1, a i ni., hJ.Uft.- l.t.l.p.m, ' r •For Cauiclonf.HurUhKtonandllordoutqwiii via,

H’von ton, I2,2tlp-.m ; .'•5 rFor Camden and: Phlladolphm, via Toin}<

; ■ltiveiv2.(« pi in;,- .Mondays and Saturdays . o n I y . • ; \ ;•• '•: •'.:

• For T«»ias Itlvor; IMaod Jtoights, and Interino-: ■•..•.• d |n t u ' slat ions, II .os. a , m ., ' woo k' day s i U.p;l

p.vtii.V-Sldndays and MatiiVdayS'only.- .. V.V ;FbrPotnt'.PIensiuii;an«l, Intermod.lato.statlOiiS,

: at .1,12, and Il.OSii. in., -2.V;l, .0.15, 7,1!} p. m.,■'.• ■ ;• ‘w cek -d u y jC ; ' ! '.v.', For N ow Hi tmswlok, .via -Monnidiilh '.Iunctlon

:.■ ■■7.o0a.m., 12.2(i, i.l;t i>.m. .■ .Til a i ns t.KA vh N!;w;Voitif{vlnt)pshrnssoW'a iid ;• -V C or t la ml t.; H t s. i'o riles) I 'oii ( »ei; A n < j i to v k• V 'A NI> A sh u n v .pAUK.. A t iuo) a,- iiw iini)rm. :i, io, 'j.io, luni; 11 j.'ni. m .

.• sSupdiiystJl.l5a,.ni;; 5.1f» i^ in .;:

*On Sim days Avill • stop . at-1 Thtorliikon an d A von ; In ; p la c e -o fN or th A sbury Park

.aiid.;ASh'ury Park;!o',|p-t oirpassongoi^,> j iA i ns iJk a v e : i i'li t j;a nKi.i’i ii A- {llm ad St j - KOU ASHL’ ltV I’AKlv—WKKK HAYS,;.' v. A l S>3v r i ,l l a. iiVi 'i.tKl.i' p. m .VM arket. St ix*ot . ; \V hit rt', via. tii in don’ a n d . TrontOn; 7,20,' ii nd.

10.S0 a. in.; Via Caitidcn .aiid Janiosbiirg,■' 7i20tii. m.V-I.W) p,in;-':"v'.:. - v : ;K 4 ^ ) it A V A S in N G ’IX )N A N 1 ) 'T IIK SO U T ir.' .

F o r l la it iinoi-c -iind W nsl11ngton,! 7.20,‘.«.:il, il.10, W.2J1, ll. lS a . in., 12. 0(l2.:i'». L h n lt-

. ; eiL Dlhlng.i’ar,). r,;l<). •' 1.11, (o.lii < ’on-grossioniil! I.Inti led. Pull than Parlor Cars

; ‘ aiul Dti.dng Car) 0;S7tU.5r».7ilO and 11.10 :p, in.' ; • woek-oays.* SiiiKhiys; ;t.5ti. 7,20; Ji.m,: ll.is 1 ; a', m., 12.1(1 l;l!, (*.55,7.10 and in. .,

■; TijntMai)los' otVall. otlior trains o f ;iho sys*; toin n iay lio ohtahiod at-Jhe . noket-olHoo .Or

; st a t Ions,... '• v . ; v , ■ v %... f .; .• ■ z, *'■. •••'1-..1. It. W ood, '.jirmU'-Ptm, Ant.

S. M. P ltE V O ST , f/cdV M ’lnuyrr.

p^E'w YORK & LONG BRANCH R, R.;

Tlmo'i'ahlo. In oiliiVt Oot'ohori.\ IS!' !.

t h is is the Trade-

r G o o d s a s g o o d a s a n . y b o d y ’ s . P r i c e s a isI l.iiw. SpLTiul iml»w>nici)t!j to nulrbnyonfc

T R YS t r e e t

-J E S .I M ,

C e n t r a l

^Th e Cosmopolitan Magazines. . . AIVlD t h e . - .

O C e K N C R O M E T I 7 E S .- O O / s o " S r e s t x l

, T I L E G R E A T I L L U S T R A T M ) ^ rO TSTT U IjT E S liaVc in tlie past sold for §4.UU a yoiai',- It was a wonder to printers Iiow ilie-'Co«jivo.Rplit£ui,' witli'ii:sry<j£i;riy i530'pa{>res of read- :inH-matter by the {ii'eatc'st. wrif.ers. of 1 lie world, and ita 1 2 0 0 Illustrations' by. clever .artists, could be furnislied for $3.00 a year. .1 n January last.it put. in tlie most per­fect magnzine prlntiny plant in the world, and n o w conies wlial. is rcaily a wonder: , I/':

■ We Will cut the price of ishe Magazine, in p l f ifoii!

W e w ill send ;.yb ti ; T 1 f i‘5;.C Q S M p V O b lT A N - M A G A .Z rX l.^ ;.:wh 1m s• th e stroiigeat. . s ta ff o f regu lar contributoi*H o f an y .ex is tin g p eriod ica l, and -

' < O T H E - W E E K L Y - O C E A N - G R O V E - T I M E S > »

.B O T H F O R O N L Y $ 2 .0 0 A Y E A R .

. V:i So}l( 1 ior Iii 11a n co r .vN o ta ry : I*u (>lie,; av.Ii h; O j . sonl.. Monmouth-Itl’iPg,. Asbury I ’ark, N, J,|.

' 1 \SlES K, ACKI'.il.M/iN, M. 1).,! . '. --.'Jlt):! (■fhiiuiJAyiM'litcv Asbury l ’ark,;N ..■ ]VUotTltH~^M1)-U)tv'-.'iii; - . ' - . '■} x V ■■ >.-*

q k o u g i : ;s ; l u k h n s .

C O N T R A C T O R A N D B U IL D E R . ‘ •;;;S&AV:>: ;iyif*»x'2i|titl.- Ooean On>viS N.owAfei^oyi,

. I A S . I I . S E X T O S ,

MEMi, UlKECTOli. SSD ;E)IM!:)!E!!,i-i Ufrjie itMnrtriivrit of. Otxkctx, \!tiK/coiikah(li/ o ii " , ; fiiiiid. ; Fiiiicerx.uf unp at xhyri mticcX:.;

Parlors aiid OfHcc— No. 17 Main* Street,

, A S B U U Y I ’A Iv K , N . .T.

Also Supe.rintende'ntof Ml. Prospect Cemctcrj .

C l i a i ’ K ' s I ' . W y c l i o l i ;

■ Mixed Paints, Oils andiVarnishes.'N.o.700 M ain s i. , Corner Sowell A w ., -

! ‘A sbu ry I ’ark . N . J;.

i I ! ' . B . M c C a r t h y ,

j Harness Maker and Eopairer, . :! N o . I ! M uln St., N rx t to S rx jo n ’s tlndcrtakin^ j Kstabllshmcnt, A sbu ry Park , N . .1. .

T o n i l i i i v o i i iV . W a l t o n ,

GROCERIES AND " PROVISIONS.!• Con ii‘r Moaroi* A V fim o an d Kniory Stroet.

Anbury Parle,*N..I. iI Sprolal att'-ntlon iilven lo'Oooan G rove lo ido .

by Sir. Walt*»n. . j

1 S E X T O I T ’ S

; Livery and Boarding Stable.

• O H Z ^ - E L B S T IL T O H ^T ,C e n t r a l , L i v e r y - a n d - B o a r d i n g - S t a b l e s ,

M O N R O E A N D C O O K M A N A V E N U E , Op/t, IM - Si. Jlriiltir,-

A S B U R Y PARK, N. J .i; F i f t y N e w S ta lls a n d S eve ra l Jh h v S ta lls ' fa ; .H o a rd ers * .; P rices R easonable . ’ G o o d -

V ''Care a n d AecOuitn'O ilatidns. Telephone Connection . /

,: ■ LKAVE XEW.VOItlv J-'O!t OCEAN OltoV H. Ao. : c ou tm M t.jt. o fN . ,i ; ^ l:h k .i.\ i ji; m,-i.«o,

. >1,15, 1.00. * 1 . 2 0 / lit* .>>»’. = Pennsylvjin la—0.10, ri.- mi,, l i l t ^ *;i. to, i>.lp, I t.l.l

p.ni‘. ( . i ■ • - • . ' ‘; LKA V lv OCEAN* OUOVII rOlt'.S'EW v o n K , sic - ' Cent nil It. It. bl “N. J;—0. IO, '*S.OO, I Utilb in:,

■■2.io; i.to, ii.:ki p. ni, . - ' * •.. .poiinsyIyanlaMi/iO,.*$.20, -.9.10,'iu m.,; l,10,-;5;:W*

. p.m. •' ■' ' .• -.■■ . ■For Philadelphia^ and' Treiiton,- via. -lloii.nd

;|lroo)t ltont<v-tf.l0, S.tHi; iv.-, tii.,‘ilO,>l,(Kl p.m.: For HelniarJ. Spring. Uike; Manasniiaii—;7,I0

7;o(l, 10.12, 11 JtS, a. in.; 12.20,: 1.1S, 2.1S, .‘1.2S,; 'a.57:/i.PS, ().ai, 7,i:t,S.j:i. p.iii. i . ; :iMaiia'squan- and .Point • Ploasaiit—7*10, 10.12

; 11.os, a. m., I .IS:; 2. Kl,: .'1.28, -5.15, (UKI 7,lit, s.lSp. m, ; ‘ • '

For, Fivohpid, Trent ori; ifn’d l*h I Iii del pi i (ti, -via.‘ • Soil G lrlr-7'WI,' <i* ml, 12.20,.V>7v p. i i u : . ' •: • • j

For Freohoid and InierUioiliato <<iat|oiis-~.|.2S j • ■ p. m.". " .'• ■. ... : ' ••

For T«>nis ltlvor— 11.0S, a.-in,,F o r Camden am i liilornu 'dluio stations via Sea ■

Shore Houle, on M on day* and .Saturday* ’ only, £PJ p .m .-

—*KxpresH. • It'UFt-S 111.01 )GKTl*. ,W .u , i1. l iA i .m v iN , <7. .1., r. k . tt. of. x . j .

.1. It. \V<mi), V?tvi7 J‘a.y. A „t . ZVnntt. li.li. t

; . Malta l-’or Ocean drove.i ; -Maii.h i i.i>sK.rou .I -N fW York and the Fast,—7.M. H».:t0 a.m. 12.H0 : >!.. :t,.*50,'0.tN» 1%M.| For I'hlladolphia West aiid South.~7.:t0,: A. M., I2.IKI M.. *...:»VO.IO l». m.j. For Asbury Pttrk.~7.5tO-A.3t,. 12.0(1 M.,0.00 p .m .

m m .S B : ; - 0

0 j , U

B I C Y C L E SM A I.I^ A l t l t tV K FIlOM

Now York Void tbo I jir*t— It* Vi .\. M., .t.!W,«.!»> »*. M*. . ; ' ‘

From. I'hiludt'lpliiii West and South. -7.S0, U.2-IA. M., :t.::n,' ii.15 c. M.

From Asbury l*ark.~-7.:lt' .\. m.. .UXt.o.ui p. m. Post Olltceopons? a.m., and idosos7,:t0 p. m.

JOHN A. OSBORNB L U E S T O N E

| '• Cushion Tire, 26 inch, nearly new, $,i$.

Two 28 inch, Pneumatic Tire Combinations,, f jo .

i One 1892 Warwick, Pneumatic Tires, $45. •

! ’ Two Boy’s W heels, 24 inch, Pneumatic Tires,^$25. ■

G ood track for use o f beginners, lessons, fifty ! cents each; Tandem and W heels to rent.

i it\. - 3

I iMicrvnt e A ro. S J)oorx Month Main A ir . Gate*, ;t OCKAN GItOVIC, N. J.

* A ll kinds of fashlonablo turnouts lo hire. Kpvolal iu'commodatlous forHtmw Itidiinr par t ion; closed ourrlafirs for ftmonils aud wotld luus ilninch Otlh-os—\V. H.. IIpokIo, and Ciiptaln lUiluoti r!s T»*nt J louse.-Telepbouo2lti. M» K. SF.XTON

- U O D E -3 i K 2 CCS3IHD, H . B E E C L E *

!COPING SILLS.:48. M a in Ave., Ocean Grove.

V D a t c b ‘ J 'h i s S f > a d e

-For-Bargains.-

: O ffice 82 Heck Ave.; -I

QGGnn G R e o e . n e j : ;

$ 4 0 )0 ;@ j W O R TH OF S i

HERE IS ONE MOW.

. G e t prices on cu rb ing am i flagg ing from G cnu tig & Co. th e p ion eer stono d ea lers !— A d r. " _

I f you w a n tp lu n ib tn gd o h o J oh n lx;on- ard w il l m ake, eontriw.ts 20 p er cen t, low er n ow than lie can th ree m on th s hence .— A dv. . :■•.' : . •: .

A pretty Nine-Koom Cottage on

the first block from the Ocean. W a te r

upstairs and down. Sower connection

and cosily furnished. I f you incan

business this is worth looking into.

D. C. C O V E R T .No. ‘27 Pilgrim Pathway;'

p . - o . iiox, » i 3 u. . ' v ;

LADIES’ MISSES’. AND GHILDSEN’S

FINE SHOES A T GOST.0.0. Iludniit s, Bclniar, anil Lakewood. 1

DEALBllS IN

Meats & Poultry.125 Hock Avoiiuc, turner Whitoficld,

• O C E A . \ K K O V K , IV . J . ;

Frosh Stock. Prompt S.ervico. ■ Proe • Delivery. :

SHOES ® AND * MATSP O E SvdlB lT a n d . B O T S

A T HARD TIM E PRICES.

PQB "T5MDb-*C>' Cookman ve., and Bond S t,.Asbury Park.

%

f S O R W B R L Y P I U C R : M > n T H W K Y , Q C p H N C R O J Z B .

x

t‘ V ' l :

mm.' i m s m

,Vr -

i i * .

"i

■“ J . MM ■ ■ 4 v , .- , ;, v '

T i n K o o l i i i ^ , t J n l t c r i n g

OCEAN OROVE T IM E S SA T U R D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 3, 1894.

TH RO U Q H T H E HOUSE.

:.The; Wilson Bill Is Passed by . a Vote of 203 .V /('*'• '■ • . to .140. .

six t)!clock jVIonilay 'afternoon-,: amiti V acetiCs o f great* excitem ent and • \yi .d I )ein- .oeratU; cheers j, the tart t f mvasu re kiimv ti (■ the Wilsoit BiH, with tfle bbjectitipable

iucoine tax' provisioii attaChedj passed the ,H ouse o f Representatives 1 ly n vote o f 2().'»

to 140. Notwithstanding the loud jti'ot(*H- tatiohs from many Uemoemtie Cotigressr inen that they would -not vote for the hieftsure, only;seventeen o f thein .htui.the

Vcourage o f their convictions, and lived Up to their, professed intentions aiid voted aguinst the bill on its filial jiassage. Kv- ^ ry lveputilican .vote was recorded against it'as well as^^one Independent, Mr. Nt»wr; landfi o f Nevada. The adilress o f Thoiiiae B.;;Itced againkt the measure was j i miis-

• terlj Ollort ; anil the appeals^ .of . Speaker Crisp and '.Chairman VY iison iti support o f the bill- w ere ' very strong and w orthy . o f a, better cause. * , . ■ \

{ v.'• .Second Niiw Jersey Brigade.

• Arn in|»em eiits fo r th e reception and ■entertainment o f th e Second Ne\v Jersey B rigade on th e n in th o f A p r il n ex t in A sbu ry P a rk , are : n ea r ly .-. com p leted . T h e re w ill b e a ’ reception com m ittee to escort th e 1 veterans to headquarters w here• th e y w ill ,be re ce iv ed b v C. K . H a i l Post, N o. 4 1 ; a c it iz en 's coh b iiiti.ee; o f 100 to «Sc6rt t lio B rigade to 10dueational- 1 la jl; w h ere th e business o f th e occasion w ill b e transacted and d in n er s e r v e d ; .an d ' a p u b lic reception to th e : G eneriils w ill lie. .tendered a t tl ie Com m ereia l H o te l in tho

• even ing/ ‘ v.: / : "H on .;G eo rge M :\Kbbeson ; is; expected '

• to d e liv e r t lie address o f w elcotne iii be­h a l f o f th e S tate and lio n . .liitiies A .-Brad* j e y , : o il the; pa rt o f A sbu ry ; Park a iid OtHMui-Grove. A baiid w ill also, b e '-p ro-' v id ed and Go. A . , Th in i lie g iin cn t,.. w iII

;.b e in v ited to pari icipate; T l ie occasion prom ises to. be. an en joytilily .one fo r all,

.'i‘oni‘r>rnr*rl. -:v‘

'•: Westminister Presbyterian Church, .- •-

'Followitig will be th e ; themes o f Uev.;:.' -S. I'M.ward\ - YouiW*^;'\cliHcipui ciB iy-iii :.'-tho.: ‘Westminster ''Presbyterian Church; As-

V bury Park, on Sunday next, February :4 :Morning, . -‘T lie higli'efft.yhappinesa of

; M o rta ls .*•>;;■■!<' ;V '- ‘ ,■ ; lCycniiig, “ VVb.y not; .beconie; aii out ^ihd out'CbristiauV’-’ '»V ; ;>V

; . Suiiday School at 2.110 ; Christian Kn- deavor fi.llO; Review o f the week’s events before the sermoti.. IThe special Kyangel-

y rstic services w ill continue through; tho . i^abbath; led by the pastor, .

. :: Re v , Si Kt)WAitt> -Y.ouno, Ptistor.

■C V Items of Interest.The iiin it o f Contractor. K ilm er's cap'ac-.:

■ ty to tuirry lutuber on.'a'-bicycle ? : ‘^■v. WiibrobllaVecl the .contents ,of. E. W.

Page's coaj bin one night last week? ; fiv-i:a A niuhber o f people.look- advantage o f ^the snow <m Saturday fitid ititUilged in u■ ttleigh ride;: _::

•; See Geniiiig <Si Co’sstock of.itibiitnnents andHieadstoi tes, (ir d ro ji a posUil cart 1 ant I

ithey'willtra.ll-jitil\m.ibiuU.designs,_-7-.lr/t'.:! s. T h e einployees. o f Steiner’s tii ills have . arninged to hold a ball/aiul reception ; at., Educational Hal I on ^February 21 ; .the ' .proceeds;tp be;devoted-to charity;"s ;;l; >{•> ■■:K; SH IL i0 IPS 0 U H K:is sold oh ii guaran* tftee.v I t cures incipient Coii sump tion. It v;ia the best Cough Cure. Only one cent a; doge! 25 ets., SO cts., and $1,00. . For

\«alo by A , Allistin W h i t e ; ^ . l • ; On;ThurHday ofjaBt week Sebaste Ma»- , trauka, o f Paterson, N . J.,; was sentenced to five years i inpriBonment. He had

• been tried and found gu ilty o f manslaugh­ter.- His,victim , Kdward Smith, was a re­spectable young man o f Paterson, and on ChristmdB eve Altistraukii stabbed him tw ice with fi knife,

On Monday night o f last week an at­tempt was made to wreck the 6.10 accom- mooution train oti the West Jerscv railroad between W enonali and 8ewall, by some miscreants placing several ties on the track. The engineer, however, saw the obstacle in time to avert a • dis­aster.

Mrs. T. S. Hawkins, Chattanooga, Tenii.; wivh : Shiloh's Vitalizcr ‘SAVE D M Y L IF lv ’ . I consider it the heat remedy for a debilitated si/ teM J reer used.” For

. Dyspepsia; L iver o r K iilnoy trouble it excels. Price 75 cents. For sale by A. Allison W hite.

Mrs. Greiner, wife o f Charles Greiner, a Ix)iig Branch tailor, has rcooived notice that she has fallen heir to a fortune, in Germany. The iiioney was aci*umulated. by u great uncle o f Mrs. Greiner, who wus a brewer iu Bavaria. 'Mrs. Greiner’s aliure o f the property .is .said to amount to

/one m illion dollars.George B. Clark, the voting man who

left Atlantic, Highlands in a demented- . condition, a few weoks ago, Iuw returned.

H e cannot account for his actions since ho.disappearcd. but when he came to h is senses ho found himself in Florida with-, out . money. Some benevolent person supplied the necessary wherewith for his. return home.

Mr. A , C. Tw in ing, the Cashier-of the First Nutional Uank, had a Sevore fall on Thursday, .caused by his feet . slipping from under .him while crossing a slijijiery pieco o fs idew a lk . I.Ie was badly jarred and tho sudden wrench caused him con­siderable pain in the musclcs o f the cheat and back, but after, a few hours o f rest and quiet he was able to walk out again.

Thought He Could Do It.

F ath er— You have asked for my daugh­ter's hauu. Can you take good care o f h er? . . .

'•'Well, I should say so, i f her fortune j is only half as large as reported.” _

. Told by.The Teeth.

W .— H ow do you. tell the age o f a hen?V .— By the teeth.W .—A hen hasn’ t any teeth.

; V ;— No, but I have.

HiidlitK Hlm Otf.

Fweddy.— A w — Miss Genevwa, could you—aw— live in a Hat ?

Miss Ginevra.— Yes, but not w ith ono.

On a sunlit «ea tho willor’s cyoThe appointed course mny kcep.

W hon ripples o'or tho watont die . L lk o Infants Hitillos In sleep,

Hiitwhon tho w inds In ftu‘y sweep Its breast Hill wavt>s to tuoiitilalus leap

Tho bark to ovorwhalui.. W hon rolling, rtiHhlnp, lleroo and high,

W h en ocean seotns to kts^ tbcj sky,The Captain grtiHps Iho. helm. .

Contemporary Philosophy.

Life ia flu oh a st range condition,, • Anyw here itH course Ih r u n ; '

You c «n lend ton thousand dollars W hcro you cannot borrow one. •

• ~Detroit /Vi§ Preit.

■ : -Two. Hands'at the 'Qnme, :;I v '

W e’ ve laid ti Jlltilo coniedy, ‘ 'Or a hit rln>ji | tiu tl.owii ott r way, ■

■ WhlcH tho jiolortt'havo'la'tjn I'ftttiti* up .; - Sine,6 last tiloetlon day..For.the.petipio then Vloelth’d; • ;.. That In. playin’ o f t ho oahls, .

; iX 'oldln 'who slHHihl:inaki»<nir laws, T lio^ ’d havo.no tricky parils;. ;

• A ii lieeordin 'ly iiie Vwillpt:. ; v: Was houosl, ohaui ntttl fair. • .

> And thbm on wo’ ve soht. to 'l reiiton, Mean{ todo.thobls ’noss stjuaro.

' Bui. to lose a Hood fat’sa In ry;.Is’nt Just the nicest I hlng{ • ‘ .

So U> keep the spoils o f otlloo, -r‘.- There was'formed ii little ring,

Soloetln point, o f numbers,Iti trloky ways lu.ll--..Hedged,. ■. --

’• Itogardless o f tho pronle,.To whoso Int’rosLs ilioy.wtiU! pledged.- •

. They meant, to sliowjheHo people. .;•• v : ■\vho talked o f ‘.‘sovondgu Will,'*

.'■■TUnt they hml.rtilod; No\v .Itii-ntjy, ;And they ivrould rtilo 11 s|.||l| ■*... - .

‘ T iioy look hlgh-hiiiitleil iVietisitres, • = v v Tho-senate.Io control,

By tho burrin’ oul/Of.luslleo,. •••■•; .. >.•■ An d tlnkorln’ tho roll. - •. ^• T « hwillzt* It^'actit>ns, •• • :. : • . v - .r-

Aiid tiiako thorn sooth ifujtj* rigid -.'And not;0vein ho Inferno v\ .‘-.v; ,Gives us a blaokor Sight. -V.;.^.w .y-r’;'.r

:;” Iusthero Is ii Suggestion' -. -1 _l : v-,, I ’d l ik o to pass orouni l , - : ■ -v-

! 'That. lAteJfcrorSahin, .WasOnee lh-hest^von.found. 7

• But he aspirod.to honors - • V'-; v: ? '.v.=.. That, warenM ills by right, >

A m l from tho Iitilgiii o f glory, , . : .Ho WtiH’iilunged Iii deepest, tilgh l,: v : •

•And no liiiatlor wiioso tlio'power..'- VXS* ‘ By: which t hey a ro,held tip, • .

There comcs .a day,' bf^recKoning v v:• Therein ti bitter cuji,‘ . • v;, . ' '-Which tho people are a. lioldln';

A n d a w allin ’, for Iho hour,:V;',> -: > 0;='; When thw 'rirlo id o the ttoxin* <

O f Uio borfses now ln powor, .; - ;y-/In every IGnd o f pliiiihi* : ■

:' 'I’hero’s ti 1 ways turn’ abotiI,.. v, :And so our time's a com In! . .' • \\-Whon we shall ldrn‘ thom on t.. . .‘

Ilowsoovor, Ih thU'meantlnio ■ : -,:;- Our brushes arentv.hand; . '

And wo’vo good nioti to itst^thoni; • -■jWIio' fu lly understand ; ; ;Th iit ligh t tloii’ t htihl Vvilii darknt-'ss,‘ Nor.right, clusii hands-with;wrtnig,

And that a Slate’s law nuikeht,-. ■: v. •• Should lii.kooplu liiws bu strong. :

S R T U R D R Y S ? L C G■:?•■••.. .I ’n ^ rs -s t o e e 02T -

D A N I E L & CO. ,T H E C A S H G R O C E R S .

6 3 2 Cookman A ven u e, A sbu ry park .

. The , follow ing prices iwill 1ji» niad/' on each Saturday for cash billy. It will pay you to buy your groceries whore youcatrlaiy thu most for 81. That place Is Daniel & Co's. .... •. .Gmniiiaied Sugar..,5e. 1 Good Flour per s’ k,:T>0 22 lbs. fo 1*................?1.(K) | Fair Flour per s’k;. -i5cFair Cojrpo....i.......;:'.22t; Ozon'eimd (Ji'tagonG o o d T o a .... I ... - lo ■- Soap; I!, bars.....'.aicW hite Iloatis,- pernt.Ti;; Goo(|.So!l|>, IS bars.4i5o Lim a Beans, per {jt. ; i;mnb(>i‘Hi's, per «jt. (Io- hard„v.>^..i...:...i.;;....'„1ktl- Clioleo. I tit Jsius........;7eChoicest ( Jretlmery . jM 11 is. i<»r. ./£#;; ; .Jluttor..;,.;:.i;i...i.‘J. ? {.(;hoU’<’ Cal ' PrutK’S.JOc I lit m .Viii'.iii .‘....i.TJi* I ClovcC. I lotiey. InI ’ork.V,‘-.i.i;;.......... . i i \; * 't.’o i i j b s I.;...:UGcCh.olco .ndw N . o . , I'iiioSoda Cnickeis,

: Mol 11 sSt's.-poi Vj t. 11 (■. -I pounds.....i.„.;.2)CChofce.'rabloSyrnp « Flni,* t lysU-r < Jbiek-'

1 ic: r< 11<......... .V..; .1 !"><'[ «' i 's .ii K i in i d s . aic<3tM>d.Corh'.'.V.ri..'. i-j.lt*c i Fhio Unekwheai a- ' v•I Cat is ff»r.i.\i...;i...'.A.:2Vr Mi.: j^rt'kage ..>l.‘loGtiod.vTomnli)cts,i-..;..|(lc ] 2 jiiioka*!**;; i(ir..f......'25ccans ipi;.:.!. . . i 1 *1 t.re-'Bhe.IcwHciit, lb.Ic

r- (»reii tty i'eiliiiHiil .jirleijs oti'. etitlre'sloeic forv each; Satiirday. •'It. will p i.v. y./u to call and see. vWjitcu tho'paper/.X'itoh.wc'i'k.. ,

SXOWFLAKIi STF.AM LAUNDRYj 816 C O O K M A N A V E N U E ,

'. .Near -Itailroud iJli.-poL.--. •

Asbury Park, New Jersey .-•

C . .F . I S A I . ’ J S K , l » i * « | > ' i \

ALL KtN.DS OF UAUNDKY W ORK f?ER- FORMED AT SH O RT NOTICE;

"A Here Is.My/ Heart.-1Here Is iny hearLI :m y GodJ glve it thee; ■I . I hoard -thee call nnd shy, v ■ . ’ ‘“ Not to tho world niy uhlld.i but unto me.’.V V

. I heard and w ill obo jv .: ‘ > <;? .■■ITero Is love’s oll'erlng to m y Itlftg, -. ; . : '•?W h I c 11.1 it g lad sac r i 11 ce I b ri |ig. . , '--v " v .'.; 1 • H e re Is my. heart, /Here lR iny heart tsitrely the gift, though poor,

. M y God will not despise; ,Vain ly arid long I sought to make it pure, . V

• ...; T o inent thy searching eyes:: .Corrupted Ilrst In Adatus fall, ; . , ; ; ■The'sUiiiis o f sin pollute It. all. ' -• •'/'.•'•• . • / ,i:.My gu ilty heart/;.Ifero Is.m y iieartf my. heart so htird i>efore,; - Now by Thy gmcu nmde' tncet;- Yet- bruised a nd wearied; It can on ly potir r .

7 rts anguish at Thy-feet,I I groans beneath-1he weight <»f slri, •■ .-•I t .slglis salvation’s jo y .to .win.* >-v :-

. : : , M y mournlug honrt! . ■:Hcre.ls niy heart. J In Christ . Its longings end,

' •Near to Ills cross it dniws; - • ‘ : / >Itstiyk. “ Thou"art nty.portion,.O, my friend 1 . : Thy blood my ninsoitiAvas.V: • .

'And-in tho Savltair it:has.found,. 'W.liat'blessedno.ss*and tieaco;abound,.

M y trusthig heart! •■; Here is. m y heart I Oli, Iloiy.Spirit, obmi', • ; ' :'j Z'1-:‘--ILs nature.I.o renew, ' '. /■ '• . > '.•.And eonseomte itw holly as lhy home....'; . A teiuplofa lr iiml true. , '. •Teach It to lovoanil servo Thee nut re, ..To fwir,Thee, trust TltotMintl adore. /'m -".'.My clwuiHijil.'heart}Here Is.niy heiitt^ lt trotnbleshi dniw near ‘.

V. Tlii? g lory o f Thy th rone;G ive It tho shining robe.'rhy ^ rva tits wear,, , O f righteousness Th iilo own:-. ;;

I \k grille, nn tlfo l ly ohason wiiy,;A n a all its vanity, I pniy: •; •'/•• >.:y'S.

: i ■. i • / M y humbled.heart.Hero is niy. heart l-teach 'it, O, Lord to clingy

‘ In glad ness unto thee; -. ‘ ; . .Arid it i the day o f sorrow s t i ll lo s in g , ;

. .,MWelcoine.my,GO<Ps:decroe.', :. ,. * 'Believing all Its Journey through, . :That Thou;art wiki*, iind Just, mid True.*-: : ; i :: *:■'.■ • r‘V>’ wait I ng hea r t !Here Is'niy heart ! O,.tVlond o f frleiids bc near

•To m akecach'teuipter fly:' - :An d when m y latest foe I wait wlth fear,:

.•: * Give mo tho victory I G ladly on* thy■!oyt*r;.posing, • V ’Let nptjiay Whcu.lit'o;ls elosi.tig,.?.': — : • : ’.v;--- =.->■ ; Hero is m y heart, v

:: ••'; V -^y;. • : —It/trrnjried IJcdich

A Persistent Postmaster. ; :

James McCullough,. the poaf.master, at W averlv, N. J ., was arrested last y week j charged w ith illegally keeping the ppst- bffice at that place. , McCullough :was appointed poitmaater early, in PreBident Harrison’s terra, and on October 1, he lo ld out his store and moved to' a place on the outskirts o f Elizabeth, N. J. He took the post'ofike and all its belongings with him and lms continued to run the W averlv post-office at his. house ever since. As the peopjt; sre compelled to walk s distance o f three miles,' and into another county for their mail, they are justly indignant. On December 16, E d­ward Groves was appointed postmaster under the presunt administration, and after.receiving his commission demanded the paraphernalia o f the office, but M c­Cullough refused to g ive lb up and a warrant has been issued for his arrest. I f convicted o f illegally holding the office tie is liable to a fine o f $500.

, T h e s e H a rd T im e sI Everyone is looking for barguitm— so are

we; and by continually Wattrhiiig the; inarkets, have secured many, such as Hamburg Falgings, l^ce Curtains, Mat-' tiiigs, Carpets,t'cc. Cloaks arc selling at half price, all under goods at one third discount for cash. Doii’ t pass the Ocean Palatre when in search o f Bargains.

. ’ . H e n r y St ’kin iia c i i ,Asburv Park.— Adc.

Jo h n « G°oK.

H O U S E 1 P O I N T E R ,glcean ^ roV c , g ; '

First-Class Materials only. Lead and Oil used.\ jVo patent paints lo fade.

Fslim ales Cheerfully G iven.

^ T H I R T Y 1 V B R H S ' D X P Q R I B N C B , « -

T o C y e i i a t a aDoes the Niokloon your wheel rust In spite

o f good care? Got a bottloo f

I Z Z O T H T E . ! - ’ItooHts but Til) cents, and It w ill save you a world o f labor anti anxiety and is an absolute protection from dampucKs, fog and ruin. Ono application a month- Is sutlicient. Price CO cents. For sale by

W . H . B E E G L E ,No. IS Main Avumi.e, Oepnii <irove, N. J.

W A R R E N B R O W N ,CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER,

O C E A N G R O V E , N . J.‘

A ll kinds o f itipalrs receive prompt attention. Charges modumto.

Fa tiilly Hotel; a ml -stock w o rk •received atid latuidrled In il'itauiHesS;manner. -L'*cO'Chi'-; tnlns inado etjual to new. l-’ret.* collections and delivery.: ' • •■

P.P H A R M A C I S T

S 0 1 1 II 1 M a in S lv .cc t." y Opp. Ocean G'rovt; (Jatos. ’

-OLA GRIPPE ''rsf.Ka".T?.s>, V The Ocean ;’Grove Store at- NVi 47Maui.j Avenue will.reropeii about April. 1st..;: ‘ . !

R E A L E S T A T E B A R G A IN S .

T A K E

w T H E I ^ B E S T

25ct8.,50c ts. a n d ^ S W S1.00 B o ttlo ,^ Ono cent a dose.T n ia G u e a t C on on Cu k e prom ptly cures.

Where all others fa il. Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, W h oop in c Cough and Asthm a. F o r Consumption it nns no rival:

. has cured thousands, and will c u r b y o u i f • taken In time. Sold by Druggists on a guar­antee. For a Lame Book or Chest, uso SHILOH’S BELLADONNA PLA8TER.25C. r

Keep Yourself Fomillar W ith tlie.*Contents of This Column. New. Items are Added Each .

Week, and at Any Moment You flay ,' Strike the Opportunity You Huvk

y/ Awaited for Years. ; ;...

W A *VTKIJ—To rent tt; nIco 0 room col tnge for Jvmonnd .luly. NJee'imrUi's. Slnto pnetiatid location.-:, W . H . BKKGLH; Ocean Grove,

A SPLE N D ID OPPOitTIJNITY.^-SHOO ipilclc. cash buys two beautiful lots; , One. a corner, iu choice location. Must bo. sold to ;closo an oh-. tate. ' W orth '81500 easy, ; : ; y : . . ;

W A NTKD —A ’ secotiti hand hoitfie to bo moved to neW.lOeatloii,. State, prlco and loca­t ion ., .. - y ; #:y / v '

FOit H ALK —A ' himdsoriio stdro rfMnn In West. Anbury Parki ■ Well located' atidarm n-! god lot; gmeery triulo. l ’ rlco. ^ W , - .-- K O U M A LK ’OB UFiNT— l’roperty. on Lake . uvonttej Asbury Park. ‘>Lot- -KKvlOO. |;i Itobm HonseiV GoOd'Biirii.,', Price SWtMt, ilehtal -STmI/. •for the,year.; Hetitorand,oh:otrio;Llg|ils.; ’ ; :;-.

FOI t k \ I i l l Ol L i t E NT—A very hahdsome 10 roojn ixiuso wltli, largo plot o f ground. Sower ami ’ water ; edhni’otions.' -LoCnted oti' Broatl- - .wtiy.'--''.Pij(^^'^Ut-)uM ^a^ti.'']te i‘U H ! .^ > . ‘.,-';;

• F ()U S A L I i O il ItK N T i—A t ahiim/ifii, Tlie hantlsonie property corner .Now-. York: atic^, Cinrk avenues, w ith ' 2 or /». lots. For rent tor! the reason; at S:KW.;.; ; y; \P. FOit S A IjK —A iloslnibh* tent atid kitohen':' .furnished. Located on Cookm anavom io tiear. P ilgrim Pathway,-cm. fu 11 sized dot .'P rice SIOiw.,

FOR SALr*^“ 6 n Clark avontio, 10room Hlieii' cdttiigo, furnish,etl.J- Prleo.Sl:«X). . *.y.

KfMt SALI*i~On /F.mbitry uvoniio, three blocks iron 1. the ocean,:, nice «y rb o m . cottage,, sewer-and water, furnished. • M onth ly ’ pay­ments If desired, v Price 3171X1, ‘ ; . . . . y ; - '.r •; F(>it SA L K—Ten I. Ill x ' } « wit li new tly, I.loor,

gt»6d portnblu kHchoii rtind furniture^ Price only SlHJ, ; ; .'V

FOB S A L K —Oti Abbott ayehiieriwtr I’ llgrlin i *a fi 1 in 1 y, til ee II roo m en t tuge.. P r I ce ? 17IK1. .-. •:;• FOit SAIdO—Thts cheapest ii.blol. property In : Oot-att.lirove,-: Fully eipiii»ped,and tVirulsliodv. S[»londldly loejittiii; wit fi am ple gttaituls. Will- be soUl Way behiw. ya I ue.‘ ■. • / - , • „•*•; ' •. 1 F (:»l{■ sA L:F.-r-A hanilsonio • Corner projj|‘rty', on ly Ihreo blocks from' tliti: oeetau' ‘1 lots, 12 ’•rpoiiisipitl biilb. /.Priceonly ^.. 'FOB It’KN'T*"l:Int\trriish'HlJ'or a year,'n ice 0 ro<an cottage Oil Ileck ayonue. 1 Pricc gWt.*i;';y.

FOB-HA L K - f ) i i Kmh'tiry aVeniio near (.Vtir; t.nii, 7 riMini c-ottagt^.n' Wcr iuo.l; Water. . Price, ; furnislied. y y :V y y :' • rJX-t *1 IA N G K,'—< h Mid i ;<d; ■ 25x 100 .*: feel. 011 :.r N orflc (ith-; street,’ -.’r.X^wiirk ii»r.-.hit ’ in tJeeati f Grove,1 , ,-i

tfxC l!A 'N («l:'.-- 'I''v*> H>t> *Vn Sloektonavtlmif?,; Oee/1 u.i Jrove; a ,lb| In , l',pidl\-,vy |loach, or two :, lots in i Sid ma ty i» »r h i*r lit l i e : cot fagliin Ocean, Grovev - ■ - : ; % • ; > -'V”

F ilB SALK--,\ tlivt-elii^r^L'itfitogriii'ihef^ Ks-,* tabllshinent In Asbury parkV, w ltli apjiai-atus: atitlll\tiir(\sooinplote; ■ ' • ’■■■

. For $M).y I can sClI ii spb^tUd.:iioi;S0 on'.Pit-; man avenue,. w ith ;' two lots :aml. furnished- thrbtighour. ..-.Tills is', eel it ra lly ' located;: and •' has.arteslan Water ! aiid . sewt-r.cOutieetion's, The price for tills property Is very low .;.-, .*.-

It Is iiot.often that a n ic i‘ iifi v:.ite‘ cotbisj:e on • thntl'Vor popular thoromililare, Ocean Piith- Way tsitr bo imrclmseil. Vi - am- .noVv otlorUig one at a low figure and w i l l be pleaHed to;fur- nlsliiu ll information' t'.ponappl lea lion. Wrien’ the New Auditorium go tsimder: way.proper t y ' there w illntphlly.iiicreiise ln yajiie. -i^;r : FOB.sA I j 10—T \vi 1 oh«*l(*e lot s.eo'rn or o f B road­

way and lifiwrenee avenue. :Go:*d jdaee for.ati" a ll the year round tesldeiioe,/ ( irouiid.-)ilsjli, ontlcM ik westward; over t he? .tltitr.yard o f . K T , : Stour, a nd eastward to t he peen .1. - vi V*' ^

FOit SALI'J—A. 1 i! |(>0111 IiiaiMvliear tho A i i - . di tori un i,; Sewer and.watereoiihcetious, and ’ fit rnlshed. Price > '5( OD., • t on as; U * stii t.7;V * y; ;i: ,t ’ro.i*K ;iW Desirable; F.lat,'-7.rouiusand bath’;., iii I eoiiveiiienet*s.' f ‘oi'iier. Cpokma n avi'tiue ami Bond-st.,.-■Asbury'Park. .1 Lrli:,b>HN.stJN.

l-'i.i U S A LI','.~T(i close a 11 esuite*'"ji'mpcrty-'at!: NtJ. •> i ilhi st, S doots from 1 lieiiei*atti - :Hlgli t-yf: room s,sewor.and wijiter,:'jniei.;Sl.Ttlti?X*4--V-.j.' !* :•.)•.

FOB SALj'V~*Oti i'*rankllnjayemto-rioat* Pi!->j■ grini Pa th way. a very desinibl.l* 'jv.; story,: pins- - lured house’wiMi 7 rooms, sewi-iv tind water.:f. Price only^.l.jat) itnd tcriiis ea.^y, . ;-." .. j

" u iT ib 511)00, olterod for 10 day* Ibr.^MO. j ’ ■ W ILL IAM '-'i 'i . U llF.GLE,N< i, i 8^Inlh.Av«.*uue,Oci;au Griive

J. A.FI«Tlli2 .- -

n e w 1 3 r i c ^ u i l d i n g , J

O lh t ,. s t r e e t a n d I H t i n a n A m;.

OCEAN GROVE, N. J.

A fall and complete, line

61..everything requirecl to

farni.-jh a house, including

Carpets, Mattings and Oil-,

c i o t h . s . ■ ; ■ : : . ■ ■ / :

S P E C I A L P R I C E S .

lic.clroom S\ut« from $12; up.

. Foldi.ng- Berts .at $8.

i& IN R IC JK T .

John E. inskip►HILOH'S> CATARRH

REMEDY,H avo you Catarrh? This rem edy ia g n a .__

toed to cure you. Price,60eta. Injectorfree.

U st of Cottages and Boarding Houses j For Rent at Ocean Grove, N. J . , 1

by W m . li. .Beegle. Season i of 1894. ' ; !

* . • I'

HAST OK l-n .O lt lM I'.V T II W .\ V . .

Insure Y our P roperty

In the Qlens Falls Ins. Co.

FIRE OR TORNADO.\V. H . B E E G L E , Agent,

Z m and y.Q?,TC45B • •IE7ESTMENTS,

$500 T 0 L 6 K Ron Jioiid aiid. Mortgage.- •• W h6 <\vtii|t/i tfc?

$ 5 0 0 0 — On mi elegitnft:- property. etirity mid parties first-class. S ix per cent.; intereat.v . v-.;;‘ v.$ 2 5 0 0 , on batubpiiio ' property 011 .

• Wesley Lake; wort 11. $0000.$ IOO O '<> n p rop or ty 0 n Broad Way-worth ,' ;• V . . ^ 00 .;, •-:*• , v ; J V ■;"; :;;y ,.?/$ 3 O O O on ti i hot ecu rbbi 11. boti so E n i-

bu ry avenue, J lo ts . ^

$ 8 0 0 on good ‘ ;t»roper.ty o n ; K n ib ’u r y '; ■ ; a yen ii6j ; ,w prtl 1 ^IMiO. ■■;. /; •;** •; •; :V

$ 7 5 0 on a ,co rn er" 'p rop erty :on E n ibu ry . :y . a v en u e ,; w orth $1 f>0U . : y • y . U V ;

$ 3 5 0 0 011 house o i i . ’ ii ipts oiv. M a in avenue. * * ' ;’ . ‘

y A11 first-c l a s s s ix p e r : c e n t.- s e m i- a n n u a l' in te re s t w ith ; in s u ra n p p t o gov e r ; p; M

W. H. BEEGLEIVo./IS Main Avenue,

Ocean (licovc, IV. J.

N. K. llpCItAKON; OKO* A . fcM O O tcy

w m m : & smock,: W holesale m id B o ta lf Itealers lll •

O S H S M p ’s Hardware, Paints

and Oils,Giiriior ..Main-St.. and. Asbury Avenue,

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

O U R S P E C IA L T IE S .

A illim u n t W ill I Plaster, O ur ow n . M T g * r . ; u f Cctlur SliinglcH, K in fr ’s- W in d so r :

■■-■■ “ Cement Pliu>ler," Cedar Htiible .; lieijdmg.

A . G R A V A T T , S . F L IT C R O F T & B R O . ,

crg + v ien n s + b s k g r v s a n it a r y ••• p l u m b e r s

*v«. Itoom *. A w ane. iVHV.

1 57 ■Pitman, . «160l»2 15 - Broadway. y :W)J 21 . Ocean Pathway. . 700A • 7 . Heck, huII 7. Heck, 1007 * - 7 Kmbtiry, • 175H . 10 At bath Pit m any :W)II 11A bath Pitiimn. •:.•■•• :{IM)IU II Abbott, v. O ’ .’4fcT»11 II Abbott,' . : ..y 27512 • K Broadwav, . ' 2(10l:i 7 ' Path . 2W»11 0 • Olin, ..' •JWI.'. 10 Hea V iew . ‘ ‘275IH. -• 2» W ebb , . . tfiO17 i t W ebb, . ‘.‘.400IS u Km hdry,111 12 • .Surf, ... m

‘ 8 Surf, ’ 2'j0- I . *7’ Abbott, •iV.. 200

.H«fc Bath Pitm an, • . • :wo111 A. McClluttiek." . 175

■ s .. • • Hath. . ' ;. - 2'/)US 10 iV: Until Abbott, . 2*1

■ 7 Heck, ; ,C.. Kmbiiry,

105:w 2l) . 700iti 1(1 Broadway, :ao; « i:t. Broadway, ‘ . . . :to:i i 10 Abbott; • '-'yV* 210'15 - 2S •; Heck, . 7fjtl:n ' ‘ 7 . Kmbtiry, . 200its . Id • Km bury. ■ 1\Z\:cl II AbtHitt, . 2J5•10 .; 1 2 . Hath, . ? y :wo11 11 Hath,

W 'ebb,275.

•12 . 8 * : 2<J0i:t ' 8 . W ebb, 21011 12 V'nibury, iliO45 . «

HAST OK

ileek .-j . ’ y, •II.OUIM PATHWAY.;

; 125

m ■’ 15 A bath Cookm an, • 45017 • 27 i\t bath Broadway, ‘ wjo•IH •Id . Km bury,. , • . 42»

II W ebb, . 2t0.ol 8 W ebb , * . . -, 22*>5.1 U iV bulll C ookm an ,-• • 25051 7 Cookm an, . •-;• 175

WEST OF PII.OKIM PATIIW A VV -■-•••201 8 ‘- E iobury , . 175•JDJ . t» . 11 niatl way,'11)1 ' • ir •.*• *-• Hroadwuy. •'. i;ia2iV, H Broadway, 100•JOdTent A Ivllch’n.Cook m an K)207 U ife bath Clark, •4ao2dS 8 Abbott, . 175210 5 • .Abbott, .1252C1 10 . Clark, 2>ri0211 V -0 Heck, •150215 10. Broadway, 27521U . 1 0 Abbott, .,*• 200217 ti Abbott, 150218 10 M ain, .

W ebb,m

2 HI 25 45022U 0 n

WtX.1^0K.N ew York

I’ lLO U lM t'A T IIW A Y ,.125

•222 9 Cookm an, • 175•iti O Abath Cookman, 200

‘ a n d ;.d e a l e r m.-j;.'.. y ;,:

C l i i r x a , ,

O - l a . s s T x r a . r e ,

. < £ z o .

The quality of all goods tyuar-.j anteed to be satisfactory,

; of liioiiey refunded;::

Prices as Low as the Lowest.

Breadi P ie!and Fancy Cake,

Sout h Mil i n Strce t ,Opp<>.s i to. 11 roiu 1 way Gtitos,

: A S B X T E T 3iT, T .

O R D E R S P R O M P T L Y A T T E N D E D T O

C . S IC K L E R ,

p y S ’lTfE s i IXSURiXGB 3GBST,No. 70 M a in .A vknck, OCj-ivn (»uovH.

. .- •.;•• ■; — A>:i). I»E,\LE!tS.;tN“- 7.■ '•{, ;.v. . ;

S to v e s an d R an g es .y v’-. .; Opposite PoHtOlIice, y y- y 'vy

O C E H N O R O V E

Money to Loan on; Mortgage. Collages

fo r Pent or. Sale. Insurance .Placed

in most Reliable Companies.

Joe Taylor and licl. Letts are still connected with tlie establishment and will con­tinue to look after the inter­ests of their customers.

STONE SIDEWALKI

And Curbs.

0 r a n i t e a n d 7 V la r b l e

* Unfurnished for 11 year.A ll furnished unless otherwise stated.For further Inform ation o r an Inspection o f

the property call onW M. 11. B E EG LE, 48 Main Avenue.

H . T R U A X & S O N ,

PURE' COUNTRY MILKOne Cows' M ilk for Infants and Invalids.

’ •liox'.1!l;i; -Aslmry. Park, or box 803, Ocean Grove. M ilk l)ei>ot, Ijiw reneenve.. between Muin ami Broadway Ciate, Ocean Grove. Telephone Connection.-

K c n i c n i b c r t l i e P l a c e ,

B R IC K S T O R E .

Olin St., and Pitman Ave.,• tJ. A. Walnrlght'H Old SUuid.i ;

Ocean (Jrovc, iV. .1.

{lEAD^TORlE IVJOWUMEMTp

H N D R E ¥ T A Y L O R ,Successor to T A Y L O lt A* B \ NO ,

• in:at.Kit i s X . f

Stoves and Iia-nge

and Itcitairiiig-.Hot A ir F.iirqam , Bxti- mules Given on Steam and Hot W ater Healer*, and Hot A ir and Hot W ater Combination Heaters.

-South Main Street,Opposite Ocean Grove Oaten

A S B U R Y P A R K

1IRADLUV KEA€HliOTS FOR SALE.

The recent nioveinent:at Uradlcy Ueuch

have unfortunately led real estate ownem

to put up priceu. This ia to be regretted

and to stem this uuheidthy current, the

subscriber w ill sell lots ou the block with

thc/“ L ittle Church in the W oods” for

live hundred dollars ($f>00) to those who

w ill erect cottagcs to cost liftecn hundred

dollars. W ho le amount o f purchase,

money can remain on mortgage.

Enquire o f Charles Itbgers, Unulley

Beach; T. Frank Appleby, Asbury Park.

or at Park Hall;

Estimates . Cheerfully Given,

‘•‘■ p r i c e s Z E B ig T lr t - ”

G E N U N G & CO.A s b u r y - p a r k , - nr. - j .

George M, Bennett,. , v ^ P A I N T I N G P ^

IN A L L IT S B R A N C H E S .Lock Box. 2 .15 2 , . ' *••'. . . v

Ocean Grove, N. .t.

A. R ' SURE VES,

$ 2 0 0 0

Jam ih A. Ui!Adij;y ,

w ill buy a very niee property ou W eb b avenue near P ilg r im Pathw ay; provided the dooisioh is made soon. I t is a w e ll b u ilt bouso o f 9 rooms, plas­tered throughout, w ith sower and artesian w ater connections, and -fut1- nished. I t cost tbe present owner from seven to ' e igh t hundred dollars more than he asks but money is needed and tho house must go . P r ic e S‘2000. $50 0 cash, balance on mortgage.

W H . H. B E E G L E ,4 8 r ia in A v e n u e , O cea n G r o v e .

9 y

a s j i s s ? a s' Opposite Ocean Grove School I I o iw .

•Beat Quality of KTcatA 0 nly-

T h e R tlantio ^ o u se ,Beach aud Pitman Avonuen;

Ococua. O - r o v o , , - USTq ’w CToraojr.Hteum Ileal, Pure Water, Hun Parlor*,

ICleetrle Light, Rates Uensduable. *W ill bij open a llthe year under the proprie­

tor’s management. yTOT.-EC 7 . XC. 2 D E C K 3 3 X T -

. ■

mm

M .'M . CRO'SBIE, S l a t e I S c o f e x

AVUST ASHUKY PAUK,,Opp. P<VitIC H A L L .:Tho old, eelobniud Wlllhiiti Chapman «IuUj

alwavH 011 hatrd. A t this shop tlie . public inti-, nolwhnt they desire. Jobbln« promptly at­tended to, • ' - l- I . 'i*

Page 3: pe r tin e n t · 2014-04-01 · Executive Committee which hits been ... PERSONAL AND pe r tin e n t. The Steamer Didn't Work. On Friday of last week I he.Eagle Hook and Ladder boys

:'/4 OCEAN GROVE T IM E S SATU RD AY, FEB R U A R Y 3. *894.

I N TH E R IG H T PLACE.i H E C O N D IT IO N S F O R A S U C C E S S F U L

A N D H A P P Y LIFE.

1 S e rm o n b y R « r . M . J . S a va ge lit tin?

C h u rc h oT th e U n ity In IJos ton — I>o M on

; .G e n e ra lly -1 'i m l I h r P la c o T h a t Htdonci*

‘ to Then»?r-51nnl»»m«l 1h tJic Tliltij;.

r -L o r t , wlmt « i! i ih o iih a v e me«U»?—A ctslx ,6 .. These* words. na doubtless you n il ro-

ln em Iter,' wort* t lioso flin t fe l 1 from tho lips o f Saul. as tho story is told.ns, on bis w ay to J\unasctis.' S tartin g to per- jpocnto tlio Christinns, fee lin g that that TvaB l i i s l i fo mission, Ini is met hy Ihia

! vision, w h ic h piitA an end to w hat he bail in tended.to accomplish, and rt’cog­n iz in g this fo r a h igher an|hority ho asks, -‘ 'L o rd . w lm t. \vilt thou havo motO (lO ?”

.“ Som ething to do, somo one to love, som ething to hope lo r ‘ ;r— these,- accord-, in g . to the. j?iyat (ierm an, Immanuel K an t, are tb«» three conditions o f a jnic- ceesfu) nnd 1 nippy life . Tho .last tw o '

.w i l l not concern us th j^ inorn itig i but the first— something to do, I h iding one's placo in , tin! .w orld — is w hat wd -arc seriously to consider. V •• a spin: t o k f f o iit .' T suppose that there arc n ot' many

among us today "who so iiiterp iet that providence w h ich oversees tlie a fla irs o f men as to feel .in any .degree sure that G od has given him his position;

‘ that God is desirous that he shall stay ■■^yhero- lie finds himself, placed.. W o ought, not, then, to he content. But this statement needs to ho qualified; and qualified in a v e r y serious manner. W e ought, not to ho discontented in the •senso that wo are unhappy; that w e are b itter, envious or jealous, or in any way- havo .tho sweetness and the beauty taken out o f ' our present life , I havo «a id ,m o ro than once in this place that tho greatest happiness t i l l e r o f tho w orld , oven worse than the anticipa* tion o f e v il c r some overhanging calam ­ity , is this kind o f discontent that makes

>4po perpetually thinking. .... W hen 1 ge t there,.when I have ac­

com p lish ed this or that, .when I have reached such'and. such a place, then I am go ing to bo content, then la m go ing to ho happy, then I am go in g to lead an unselfish life , then 1 am go in g to do this or that e r a thousand things fo r ray fe llo w men! 2 have talked often w ith business men w ho havo set a figure be­yond which they do not propose to save a dollar. Th ey say. when they get so rich they are go in g to begin to bo gen­erous, hut I have never known a man

' to get to that point when he had set it v e ry ranch ahead o f his present position,I never have hopo o f any m an’s gener­osity who is go ing to begin to bo gener-. •us by and by. I have no hope o f any m an 's unselfish love who is sim ply go­in g to begin to be unselfish next week or next year. W e ought not, then, X think, to bo discontented w ith .the place whero wo fiud ourselves in such a .w av as shall prevent us from looking round and finding a ll the happiness there is in that place, a ll. the good thero is, a ll ibo opportunities there are offered o f joak ing other peoplo ‘ happy} a ll the •hances o f doing something tor the rest o f mankind.

•; OUT OF PLACE.; And now w e are face to face .with the second-, question. Do- men generally find th e r y a l placo .which belongs to them, which they ought to fill? I have

.'not.had tim e to read M r. M ozoom darV address o f lest Sunday, but I am told that.he outlined the b e lie f o f the H in ­doo w orld in a destiny which rules and determines the 'lives o f men. I do not th ink wo are accustomed to believe in that kind o f destiny hero, and.yet, now and then, you w il l hear people say o f ono w ho has fa iled, It : was no fau lt o f

.his condition. o f his circumstances— thero w as .some weakness, in the m a n h imself..’ ’ 1 remember some.years ago

. reading an aodnys hy tlitf la te President Garfield, 1 think, which was given be­fo re ho becam e.‘president. R eferr ing to tho dittietilties and struggles o f a great m a iiv men. and o f the obstacles thoy have to overcome, lie expressed to the young men who heard him the be-

. 'l ie f ,.tliat if- there was anything in a man i t was sure to come out. In other words, personality was alw ays m ightier than condition, and. i f a man bad it in him to be great he would bo great; i f he had it iu him to bo a poet, he would be a poet; i f lie had it in him to be a

"isoldier, he would bo a soldier. I f that• p rincip le be a llow ed anywhere, i t must• be a universal principle. I f we really

believe this, .'there would be no very 1 tender sympathy in our hearts toward those who fa il. W e should feel that people had got a ll they w ere capable o f

• ge ttin g ; that they receivo a ll that be- .longs to them.. But I do not believe that this is true.'- I do not believe that people, in spite o f conditions aud ci„** enmstances,; find their places; that they always have opportunities or are capa­ble o f m aking opportunitU's to show a ll that is in .theni,. I rather believe that, it is a common and melancholy truth which G ray has g iven poetic ex­pression to. in his great “ E le g y .” He tella'us,'. as he looks over tho graves o f the weary peasants, tbo peoplo in the m ain unknown w ho are buried in the

-churchyard, that probably: Bomo route inglorious Milton here may reel.

Ho talks about bands now turned to dust— •Hands that tlie rod of empire might have

BwayodO r waked to ocata6y tho living lyre.

I believe that this is ono o f the sad­dest truths o f . tho world. A nd right hero is one o f tho things I bopo, to see in some other life . I hope to see the ontblossoming, . the outflowering, o f thousands nnd millions o f souls in to 1

. greatness and beauty and g lo ry in this E rection or that who had no opportu­n ity here even to put forth a bud.

Suppose thero had .been no war; whero would tho m anifest greatness o f G rant havo been? . A nd yet i f he had liv ed through a time o f profound peace and wasted the magnificent, energy o f h i* brain in thermal estate office, y « t In

potency, in . possibility, ho would havo been great as tho w or ld acknowledges him to he... So-tako L incoln .' S u p p le , again,

thero had been no war, supposo there had*.been no slavery agitation, i t is probably tru e thnt Lincoln.would never havo been president. He m igh t have; distinguished himself lo ca lly as a law ­yer, but the chances are that in popular estim ation;nlI over the country Doug­las, w ho was the incarnation o f sm art­ness, would lmvo been regarded as the greater man o f the two. A nd yet. w ith no opportunity to m anifest what was in him, lie s t ill would have had the pos­sib ility in brain and heart nnd soul o f reaching that tow ering position o f tho. highest and grandest Am erican who has overliv ed . '

DIFFICtJLTIKS IN THIS WAYiL e t us note a . fe w o f the difficulties.'

that stand in the w ay o f people finding their places. I was asked on ly this last w eek to g iv e niv opinion concern-, in g the question o f human freedom nnd. o f responsib ility in the kind o f lives w e lead. I f you look pver fho matter care­fu lly and candidly, I think yon w ill agree w ith mo that we* must lim it this responsib ility in tho most serious wav. A p p ly i t this m orning to this matter o f finding one’s place in the world . W e are born w ithout any consultation as to w here .we shall . he born, whether in A fr ic a or Boston, whether w hite or black, whether our parents, shall bo ignorant or educated,.vicious dr. v ir ­tuous., \Yu are born, and that, in tho : main, determ ines' a ll that fo llow s; Then during our youth the question ns to whether we shall be . properly edu­cated or not, whether w e shall be trained into fitness fo r .this th ing or that or have a bias im planted in .som e; direction— till theso things are deter­mined before the question o f tho fr e e - : dom o f our own w ills has. any chance to assert itself. Here, then, is one o f the great difficulties that stand in the ■way o f finding one’s placo.

There is one other th in g-,that I wish to speak o f in this particular, aud that is one w liich the most of- you w i l l he surprised to have me class under this bead. I; think one o f the niost serious things in 'ou r modern world that stands in . tho w ay o f any m an ’s finding his place is being born o f parents who hap­pen to possess too mueli money. \ I-be­lieve that this is as serious,, and some­tim es more serious, than any o f the; caiiseB tlia t I have had;occasion tb re fer to. I know young men by the score in the great cities o f this country— in N ew York , in Boston, in W ashington,- in Baltimore, in N ew Orleans, in Chi­cago, in St. Louis, in San Francisco— young, men w h o w il l never find any place that is worthy o f a m anly timn.’a ambition, who h ave not waked up to the idea that it is important that they should find any .place< sih ip ly because they can say as' they are grow in g up, “ Father has money enough, and it does not. make any difference whether I be­come anything or hot.-’ I think that is a very serioua danger that men with, money specia lly need to guard. F o r the young man w ho thinks'that, there is nothing .more fo r him to do in this world ex cep t. to ge t rid o f the money that his fa ther has earned is one o f thoso that w e can spare w ith the least conceivable amount o f Joss. He is woTth noth ing to the world.

WU AT MBS MOSTLY *CAHK FOJt.W hat is it today tliat most men care

forV. In this country, at any rate— and. it is com ing to be more and more true in Europe— tho one . great th ing that people long for and seem to caro for, niul'-which.seems to promise the niost, is o f courso money. I gnid this is'edin- ing in' Europe. I t lias not come yet, because there is,still a reinnantx in Eng­land and • in France and other parts o f Europe.; o f the old days ’ o f ch ivalry, when n ob ility meant so ipeth iiig ,' and when to belong to an old anddionorablo fa m ily was the one gieatest th ing that a man could boast. In these conditions to belong to the nob ility or to come un­der. the'shadow o f ,tbe nobility, to be­com e'astoci a ted or a llied w ith ' it . in some way, means more than money, nnd money by comparison - is regarded as vu lgar and poor. But in this coun­try , where w e have,no n ob ility ; where w e say-that one m an is just as good as another— though w e do not belfeve.it—• in this country tho one great th in g that seems to piomiso.most, to g iv e a man position and power-anti all the' things that; lie desires, is money. So, when a young man is looking round for a place in the w orld , the one th ing which is up­permost in his mind is the opportu­n ity, the promise, in that place fo r get-! t in g rich ; how liincli monfcy is there in it? The. position may be a poor one,' may have some servile aspects about it at first, but is there ati opportunity to rise, to ge t near the firm, to perhaps get into the firm? Is it a business that w il l reward one who fa ith fu lly devotes h im ­se lf to it w ith a large amount o f mon­ey? Th is is tho great m otive.

DES1HK FOK POWER AN I) PLACE.There- is another th ing that men de­

sire. They desire power. From the! tim e when the boy likes to be strong and admires un athlete up to the tim e when the man lookB out over the w orld ' and sees h igher' and h igher manifesta­tions o f force there is.in a ll an honest adm iration lo r power, and many a man who is immensely wealthy, i f you could analyze bis real fee ling , cares not so much fo r the money itse lf as fo r the power that is in it. H o loves to organ­ize those farreaching combinations and to show him self a k ing in his par­ticu lar financial realm . So many a man who is looked upon as s im ply a money getter is rea lly ambitious fo r power. And here, again, it is w ell. Pow er is a magnificent thing i f m ag­nificently used, but it means eithOr selfishness, cruelty, despotism, or it means service. I f you seek it fo r the ono end, you w ill become mean and un­developed in your manner,-but i f you Eeek it for the other you m ay be among, tho grandest o f your kind.

Then thero is still another m otive that leads m en'to seek fo r their place, and that is ambition, the desire fo r fame. I remember once seeing a little.

boy h igh ly oxcited over tho fa c t that his nam ow ns actually in print. I t was. on ly among tho arriva ls at a summer hotel, bu t it (lid not matter; hero was tho first touch o f fam e; hero was some­th ing that other peoplo would read. Thoy would sco his natno iu print, nnd this is something that , appeals to and touches us all. W o love, to bo o f repu­tation ; w e lovo to havo onr names and our doings in tho mouths o f our fellows. I f w e can got a.reputation thnt reaches

j beyond our town, over, tho staL? and beyond tho stato lim its or across the

I sea, there is a sw ell and im pulse o f I jirido and satisfaction, in hav ing at- ! tnined this reputation in the m inds o f | men. And hero, again, i f one wishes j to bo known m erely as a feeder to his I vanity, it is a very sinall and poor c’on- ! corn indeed. But if. one wishes to use

this as a jiow er f(*r sjireading over the w orld aii influence that shall teach, that , shall enlighten, that shall l i f t mankind, then indeed ho may forget h im self in V iew o f this help, and lie m ay bccome : noble, unselfish, grand iii tho type o f his manhood here, as w e ll as in other d irec­tions. ' '

y '• TIIIv II1011 KPT (MOTIVE... B tit . le t ' us go one step fu rth er and

find tho .highest m otive o f .n il. The I grandest in on o f tho world havo not j been those w ho have desired ’.pow er;' they have not been those actuated by a j desire fo r fame. Take.one illustration,! the supremo one .o f a ll. For w e, all { the jnore because wo believe ho wns a i m an ,' tlio imtcome o f humauity., its

blossom, its glory.-—we a ll the more can afford; to pay. our reverent regard to tho grandest soul o f tho w orld , the Nazarene. H e had nowhere to la y his head, lie sought not money, lie. never desired power, nnd when some o f his disciples enme to him , anxious for places in his kingdom, he said: Y ou do : hot know what manner o f spirit you are of. The pi inces.,of this world des ire ' power thnt they muy exercise their lordship over the ir fe llow men, but it is hot to bo so in this kingdom thnt I w ish to establish. He that is grent among you must bo o f service nnd grent on ly in his service. You are not to lord it over others; you are not to ca ll yourselves father or rabbi, for-you aro all the children o f one Fa th er in, heaven.

I t is said constantly— and hero is tho point I wish to have clearly in m ind— by those w ho do not believo in tlio high­est possibilities o f c iv iliza tion , “ Yon cannot get peoplo to work or to dovoto. themselves to a ca.uso except on the basis o f the low er m otives. ** I t is said by those w ho oppose c iv il service— you w il l pnrdon me for being enough o f a politician to re fer to that by w ay of illustration— “ That is a high and fine dream that certain reformers cherish, but i f you expect men to work fo r a . pnrty or a cause you must pay them fo r the ir w ork .” I do not believe it. I f

; the dreams that w e cherish o f the high- j est c iv iliza tion are ever to be realized,; we.m ust find men who are w illin g to I work, even i f they do not get paid in I cash for it. W o must find men w illin g i to w ork w ithout regard to the power |- that men' exerciso over others. W e must

find men w illin g to devote themselves | w ithout desiring anything in the way o f i fame. W e must find men, lik e Jesus,

who make themselves o f no reputation./ ‘ • : THE BEST PLACE.

One point more must 1 re fer to... You• m ight thiiilc perhaps from what. I have : said that 1 should advise you to he very . humble aud to take a sm all place. Men

nre anxious fo r a large place,*bnt the ! fau lt I havo. to. find w ith most men—' pardon liie f»»r using that w ord fau lt—

is that they do not seek for places that are large enough. I fiud a. man who is w illin g to have a place that is not b ig

; enough to hold him aud. his conscience at the same, tiiue. l i e is w illin g to go into a jilace and- leave his conscience outside. There is no opportunity, in

! t lie fe fo r his nioral and spiritual na­ture. I have heard a great many p c i-

. sons'in m y life say .that it was very fine spun us a theory, but thnt it would not

| work .in .practice; that i f you are go­in g in to business you must fight w ith

; business methods; that business and re- ; lig ion are tw o things nnd should be

kept as mucli apart ns re lig ion und pol- 1 itics. The more re lig ion yon m ix w ith 1 a certain kind o f politics tho worse it• w ill bo fo r the politics. I know, and i f• a certain type o f re lig ion bo m ixed w ith , business, it w ill be worse fo r the busi­

ness. But a man cannot afford to go into a business that is not la rge euougli

• fo r the free play;o f his nioral nature, fo r a ll that is highest and. best in him as a man. Iu other words, in seeking

i fo r a place, do .not be content or long ■ engaged in any business that would ; better not be done. Do not be content

w ith being engaged in any business the ! general outcome o f which is an in ju ry .. to tho world.. Get a place largo enough ! fo r you r conscience. :

Then ge t a place largo enough ; for some degree o f your, intellectual life , and then find a place , la rge enough for your afleetional nature, fo r your generr ous impulses, thut bring you into touch

'.with your te llow men and m a k e you fee l that yon are a part o f a w orldw ide humanity.

A nd then, above a ll things, fiud a place large enough for your soul, largo enough to lead into tho d ivine life , so that you can riao into a conception Of

: yourself as a ch ild o f God, tbe in fin ite spirit, so that yon need not crump down

• and shut iu your life . In other words, do not fit yourself into your place aud let thnt shape your manhood. K eep

1 your placo flex ib le and compel it to adapt itse lf to your manhood,

j Th is is what 1 would have you do. M ake your placo subordinate. Remem­ber that your manhood is worth more than your condition, moro than the house you liv e in or the street on which it stands, worth more than the position vou occupy. Rem ember that yonrm an-

I hood is the great thing. Pu t that first, make that dominant; Bo somebody, do something, devote yourself to.tho h igh­est thoughts in yon, und you have made yourself a place -where yon can render service to your kind and where you can fu lfill the highest possible destiny.

RADLEY EACH

This tract lies between Ocean d rove on

the North and Avon on .th e South. It

lias a frontage o f one mile on . the. Ocean.

The streets run at right angles to the sea.

Much o f the property is still in the hands

o f one person, who is not a seller at the

present time,, hut who has aided adjoin­

ing owners iii mapping out and grading

their lands on . t l ie ‘ best. possible plan to

prepare for the oncoming hosts o f our

great. cities, to whom New Jersey coast

•must alwavs be a sanitarium.

The follow ing persons are properly

owners at'Bradley Beach and are offering

desirable plots ami lots for sa le: .

Robert Rutter.

,1’almateer.Bros. \

Dr. U . S. Kinmonth.'

AVilliam B. Br.idtter.

Mrs. A . S. Brinley,. (tllroiigh T. Frank

Appleby, agent), and others.

. Maps o f these jiroperties can no doubt

be furnished by Charles Rogers, the real

estate agent«

I t l T C U l l R ,

‘ Bradley Beaeli, .

U TM. G R IF F IN ;

X ew Jei>*iv,

Bnidlev Beach. New .lersiy.

Bnidlev l>each is now incorporated and

these are the o fliceiuof the Borough :

M A Y OR,— Benjamin Ben nett.

COUNCJLM KX.— Alfred R. • Yarnali,

Peter Poland, AVilliam Gifford and Jer­

ome R. Muddell.

C L E R K .—Addison Hutchinson.

ASSESSOR.— Frank Herbert.

CO L E C T O R .— W illiam W . I jirrabee.

COM M ISSION EltS OF. A P P E A L .—

Robert Peterson, W illiam J. Paynterand

William. Flood.

PO U ND K E E PE R .— Charles Murphy.

QH/. RLES ROGERS.

P IO N E E R . R E S L E S T A T E f lG T .

Ma.n St. Corner Fifth Avenue.

BRAD1-EY - BEACn, - N .-J;

. 11KFEREN CKS:

I’aiiiuilcor Brothers, Lumber Den.ere. Jnme.' A. Hradley;

A. A. Tuylor, W hou und builder.

j p E T E R P O LA N i),

' l l O l s i ;

jin t'lley lk'aeh, - * Kow .Tcisey.

I if. M I'D D E LI.,

J . H P A R K E R ’S^otel and Restaurant,

7 0 9 M A T T IS O N A V E N U E ,

ASBURY PARK, N .J .Comfortably FurntKhcd Uoouih by tlie I>ay or

Week. .

/Regular Dinner from // - to j , 30 Cents,

SiieccHHOr to L. >1. TA YLOIt, .

. IVKAI.RU i n

(BOAIL, W © ‘(Din) AKIID ( D M A I R A I L p

Main Office— Mattisoii Avenue, opposite

the First National Bank, Asbury Park.

Ocean G rove branch at Stiles’ Express

Ofiice.

“ U p p k r L e h ig h Co a l a S p e c ia l t y .”

m m o n m m u i

— in:Ai.i-:its is*—

COAL, WOOD AND C H A R C O A L

Yard — §outh 7Vla *nNciu; IIroad w 11 y Gates of Ocean Grove.

TCLCPH.ONC CALL NO.-BO.

Coal Vina y* Slicllcrcil.

JO H N L E O N A R D ,

M I I I A I I FlUUMBEIKo

Opposite Ocean Grove Main A ve. Gates.

Estimates on Sewef’ tmd W ater Connect

ions Prom]>tly Furnished. Low

Prices and Good Work.

SILAS w . nAKTOni,

m m m and BUILCSRCorlies Aveniie, near the Ohtircli,

W est Grove, N ew Jersey.

Post Office— Box 20SI2, Ocean Grove,'

Promjit attention given lo order«-for hiiuvU

lobtf nnd reiMiirn.

J E W E L B E v

HAS HRMOVKH TO T ilK

BRICK BUILDINC,Corner Cookman Avenue and Bond St.

Anbairy I*arii.. — iS i— •©> ‘

A ll tho latest designs and. novelties

in Watches and Jewelry.

G O T O

B O B I D E I T ’ S- ron— '

Stdves,Banges, Heaters,Fur- uaces and House Fur-: •

liiehiny Goods.Jobbing Promptly Attautal to. >

Tin Hoofing a »Specialty.

Till? KKI.SEY I.OItUUOATKD W A llM A JK KU KNACK.. • ,

T h is wondcrfu l fuel saver, with one bun - dred fret m o re ‘mdiiititif; o r hcntinK surlUce than any other furnace o f tiie name Hize grate, Iuih proven a j>owerful H eater. W rite for c4r- ' eu lar nnd te.stimoniu!s to b o u d e j t s .

120 M ain Street, A sb u ry P a sk , J*-. J .

H 3. B E E G L E ,Corhrriissioner of Deeds for

Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia.

I S T o t a x s r . ^ - u / t o l l c

Central and Cookman ives„O C E M G B O V E ,u . j .

J . D. B E E G L E ,■ ucccaoon to W. H. JONES * CO.,

BLA C K DIAM ONDS.VARD-MA1N 8T . A 2ND AVC.

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

COAL, W OOD AND

CHARCOAL.

I V I i L S O IV n . K l f i l T l E R , A R C H IT E C T A N D B U I L D E R i

Plans and Rpcciflcatlons draw n for all b inda of ino<iern wood, stono or brick buildings. For workm anRhip and prieen w ill refer to a l l tor w linm I have dooe w ork In the G rove and Pa rk . Ewtlmatefi cheerfully given.

Box '2087. 5 Pitman Avenue, Ocean Grove.

“ The Statute^ regulating tlie operations o f N ation al Hanks are o f such wine conception that conscientiously conformed to by OlUeers and Directors, nO institution o f B ank ing ap ­proaches the N ation a l, for deserved confidence o f an d security to patrons.” *

FIRST NATIONAL BANK,O rgan ized February j8S6.

G E O R G E F. K R O E H L , President, O. H . BR O W N , V ice President.A L B E R T C. T W IN IN G , Cashier. M A R T IN V. D A G E R , Ass’ t Cashier,

Matlison Avenue and, Bond Street% Asbury Park, N . J .. . F o r Convenience o f Ocean G r^ve patrons :

Office. Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association. B u ild i^ , Ocean Grove, N . J .Capital, $100,000. Surplus, $70,000.

T ra n s a c ts a general banking business, issues letters o f credit available in the principal cities o f the world. Foreign and domestic exchanges , bought and sold. ' Collections carefu lly made and prom ptly accounted for

• ' BOARD O F-P IR E C TO R S :' .

O. P. Kroehl, ' J in u r *S’. Keutvr, Milan Jlok'f,John L . Coffin, h i C.■■Covert.

Albert C. Twining,,Oliver I I . P rom t,M . L . Jiaiaman, Nhenriail B . Oviutt,. William I L Beegle,

hoar. 0 . Kennedy,' Sam a ft Johmori, tjharhn A . Atkin*, Charles A . Young, }VUliajn:ITal)iaieay.

JJIAItT HOGKK.S, •

Civil Engineer and Surveyor,Fifth A ve., and Main St., Bradley Beach!

! 7JT WKST BUADLKV BEACH IS LO- j cate.d tbe large Night • Hhlrt Factory J o fST^ IN K K it J*ON." This Victory employes ! three hundred hands. It is without doubt the j largest factory of the. kind In the United

SUites.

CHAS LEWIS,~i*lTCCKKHOU ro-

t : i lA S . M iW I S A CO..

Lumber,

Doors, Sash, Blinds,

Frames, Mouldings, Hardware,

Paints, . .

Oils, etc

BHADLKY..BEAC1I. ECIIO. — This - is 1 1 .I , .

I inouthly paper published principally In ( the interest o f the B null ey Beach Church. - It j Is an eigbt-imge paper and Is conducted with I much i-k111 and culture. Hev. Albert Kwlil fs ■ the editor and publisher. *

V 'T I IK KXTKNSIVE I ’p.MPINO STATION 1 i o f the Ocean Grove Artesian Water ' Works, also the lar«e Electric Light -Plant be-, j Ion'lluy to the same corjMiration, are In the

Borrnii;h of Bmdley ik-ach.

TTSBUHY PARK GAS COMPANY— THIS Comjuiiiy will on May 1st be able to fur­

nish gas to the stores or eotUi^ea at Bmdley Beach. Ollice Asbury Park.

'TH E EXTENSIVE FKEIGHTSTATION OK j -I the Pennsylvania and Long Bmnch Itall*

roatlsis lit Wcat Bmdley Beach. Kmm this dejpot Ocean Grow, 7.si urj* Park and Bradley Beach get their merchandise. The business- dorte at this station is double that at Long Bmnch. " • .

Br a d l e y - b e a c h s c h o o l , d is t r ic t .OOJ . Principal—Mlbh Benard.

Tt-achers—Miss Benard, MIbs Emily Harris.Two DepartmentH, Intcnnediat* and Pri-.

rnary. About 110 scholars, •• ♦

M ETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH,{Little Church in the Woods.)

BRADLEY BEACH, N. J.R k v . A U ik j it S w i f t , P a «to r .

Ser\ lew—laSO A, k . and 7^0 p . M.H on do?-M lloo l 2.00 F. M.

S O X JT K M J i m S T .

Factory Dunkirk, N.J.Branch Yard, Spring Lake.

b t H j E S ’’ :e s x p r e s s i s

■ 1 T O ■ S T A a E ; E s I H B * '

Is the oldest establisiied line in Ocean Grove and Ae- bury Park. Special facilities for the prompt and careful handling of all kinds of Furniture, Pianos, Boilers arid Safes: Shipping tags fu rnished free. Storage tor all kinds of goods. Separate Compartments. Each individual fur­nished with key.

' 4 T A C O B S T I L E S ^ :O kpickb:— N o. 702 Mattieon Avenue, Railroad Depot, Asbury Park; Corlie*

Avenue, West Grovej No. 40 Main Avenue, opposite Association Office, Om m Grovo. PostJOffice Box 669, Asbury Park, N .J .

IT PAYS TO AD VERTISEf llN T H E TI7VfES.^-

TRY IT.