red bank register. - rbr.mtpl.orgrbr.mtpl.org/data/rbr/1900-1909/1903/1903.03.04.pdfred bank...

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RED BANK REGISTER. VOLUME X X V . N O . 3 * * Q RED BANK. N J , WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1903, PAGES I TO 8. DEATHS DURING THE WEEK 8, B, COBURN OF RED BANK PASSES AWAY. Mtenth nf Samuel Tutttm of Katmn. totrn, the Hell-Knoirn tmilmaker Mm. Mary Catherine Murray MHed •»• Monday Other Fteathit, Stephen B. Coburn, a resident of Red Hank for ihe past forty yours, died IHHI night sit hix o'clock at his home on the torner of Front and Spring strfots. Nine yenrs ago \w Imd a stroke of paral?- sid ami lie never fully recoveml. He stricken with a fatal stroke of tlie disease on Friday night. Tin* fu- neral will bo held at thu house to mor- row night at fight o'clock and the Rt»rv- ice will be conducted by Rt»v. John H. Haines, The body will be buried at Freehold on Friday morning, Mr. Coburn was torn at Burlington 73 yeari ago. He learned the cigarmaker 1 * trade and worked at that trade for mv- era! years. When he was 21 years old he moved to Freehold, where ho opened a confectionery store. At Freehold he married Maria Kenworthey of that town, who survives him. Next October would have marked the fiftieth anniversary of the marriage. Mr. Coburn came to Red Bank forty years ago and for twenty years or more conducted a restaurant and cigar store. He had not been en- gaged in any regular business pursuit since July 18th, 1881, where he was burned out in the big fire on Front street, Mr. (Joburn joined the Methodist Episcopal church 45 years ago and was a strict adherent to his Christian vows. For many years he was librarian of tli« First Methodist Sunday-school of Red Bank and was also a stewRrd of the church. Besides his widow Mr. Coburn leaves two sisters—Mis. Sarah Marshall of Red Bank and Mrs. Martha Stockton of Burlington. fiamuel Tutile, Samuel Tuttle of Eatontown died on Sunday morning at half-past seven o'clock. He had been sick about tw« months and his death was caused by paralysis. Mr. Tuttle suffered his first stroke of paralysis four years ago last January and he was sick then for two months. He was nearly 74 years old. Mr, Tuttle was born at New York. He was a sail maker by trade and for many years was employed in hie native city by Edward Garrison, a prominent sailmaker in his day, whose loft was situated on the corner of Dover and South streets, In 1858 Mr, Tuttle moved to Eatontown and he had lived there ever since. He followed his occupation at Eatontown until eighteen years ago, when he opened a loft at the foot of Wharf avenue at Red Bank, He was a member of the society of Friends at Shrewsbury and was one of the oldest members of Washington lodge of Free Masons of Eatontown. He had belonged to the lodge over forty years. Mr. Tuttle married Mary J. Hurley, daughter of Sarah Ann and John Hurley of Eatontown. Mrs. Tuttle died eleven years ago. The couple had eleven chil- dren, five of whom are living. The sur viving children are Daniel D. of Benson- huret. Long Island; John A, of Red Bank, and William G., Louis, Miss Helen W. and Walter R. of Eatontown. The funeral was •held at the house this afternoon. It was in charge of the Masons and the speaker was a friend from Asbury Park. The body was buried at West Long Branch, working on the Mutawuu trestle. The injury affected hituuind and he had been in the Htnte hospital ever nince. Mr. JobiiHon wan tli* HUH of Maria and JofH'ph J«hi)Hnn and was born at New Moimiouth, He married Ann K, Luy- ster and for it time afterward lived at Purl Moumouih. For a number of years previous lo his accident he had lived at Keyport, Mr. Johnson wan one of four brothers who served in the civil war at the saint* lime. He was wounded a num. ber of times and one of the bullets had always remained in his body. Besides a wife Mr. Johnson knives a K«II. Aaron S. Johnson. He leaves' also three Bisters and two brothers. They are MM, Elijah Walling, James S, and John Johnson of Key port, Mrs. John li. Walling of Bel- ford and Miss Johanna M. Johnson of Ocean Grove. Hillittm W. Dinbrote. William W. Dishrow. son of the late ohn N. Disbrow of Matawan and a ormer resident of that place, died re- rently at New York. His death was due o fatty degeneration of the heart and lie bad been sick along time. Mr, Disbrow went to New York when a young man nd engaged in the cartage business. He irospered from the first and at the time of bis deata had a considerable fortune' About a year ago he bought the Alfred Curtis homestead farm at Hazlet and had intended making that place his per- manent home. He had spent consider- able money in improving the outbuild- ings and was to have built a fine house n the spring. Mr. Disbrow leaves a wife, two daughters and a son. Mrt, Mary Catherine Murray. Mrs. Mary Catherine Murray, widow of Hon. George C. Murray, died on Monday at the home of her daughter Mrs. William T. VanBrunt, near Cooper's bridge, in Middletown township. Her death was due to heart disease. Mrs. Murray was the daughter of Rebecca Patterson and James Cooper of Middle (own township. She was a woman of an exceptionally strong character and a tine mind. Her life wan spent in cheer ful fidelity to every duty as a wife mother, friend and true Christian woman Besides the daughter at whose home she lived she leaves a son, George 0. Murray of Brooklyn, and a daughter, Mrs. Ovid A. Hyde of New York. The funeral was held at the house this afternoon at two o'clock and the body waa buried in the Baptist cemetery at Middletown, Joseph Johnson. Joseph Johnson, a native of Middle town township, died on Friday, Febru try 20th, at the state hospital at Trenton, aged 69 years. He was a carpenter by trade and fourteen years ago he was hit on the, bead by a piece of timber wbil John R. Hamilton, JohnR. Hamilton, son of Mrs. Emma Hamilton of Long Branch City, died on Saturday a week ago at Savannah, Georgia, His death was due to con" sumption, with which he had been sick or some time. His wife died last De- jember. Mr. Hamilton was then in fail" ing health and he went South in the hope that the change of climate would prove beneficial. He continued to grow worse, however, until his death, Be* sides a mother Mr. Hamilton leaves a on and daughter, aged six and nine years respectively. He leaves also three brothers, George, Fred and Gilbert Ham. Ilton, and a sister, Mrs. William Algeo of Philadelphia, Travis Johnson. Travis Johnson, one of ihe best known colored men of Pine Brook, died on Sat- urday morning. He was at Eatontown on Friday night. When he returned home he was taken sick wjth paralysis of the brain, which caused his death, Mr, Johnson was 59 lu years old. He was a bachelor and lived by himself. The funeral was held yesterday afternoon at the Pine Brook colored church and the body was buried in the church ceme- tery. Mr. Johnson was one of the best itizens of Shrewsbury township. He was honest and industrious, and he had the friendship of every man who knew him. William H. Vonk, William H, Conk died on Monday of last week at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Frank Walling of Keyport. He was 85 years old. He was born near Trenton, but had lived at Keyport for over sixty years. His wife died several years ago and since then he had lived withN his daughter. He leaves also another daughter at Keyport, Mrs, Wilson Walling, besides i^r€ other daughters and two sons. Jeremiah Traeey, Jeremiah Traeey, for the past eight years tender of the drawbridge between Matawan and Cliffwood, died on Thurs day night. About a month ago he fel and broke his hip. Inflammation set in and caused his death. He was born in Ireland but had lived in this country 88 years. He lived with his daughter, Mrs Kate Jones, in the bridgetendor's house on the drawbridge. Prince Prince Ludlow, a Freehold colored aoan, died on Saturday, February 21st aged 72 years. He was born at Eaton town but when a boy went to Freehold to work for the Brinkerhoof family Afterward he waa employed for manj years in the family of Graadin Yought For a long time he was sexton of Bt Peter's church at Freehold. Peter B, JBtmff. Peter B. Hoff died on Monday of lasi week at the home of his, daughter, Mrs George P, Walters of Keyport, aged 8: yean. His death was due to Bright'] disease. He was born at Bethany, eyport, his parent* being Maitha !*n<i William Hun!, He wit* it millwright by rade and ha built several mills in iliiM ounty. In iBIW lie moved to IVtern- urg, in (tape May county, where he en aged in cranberry growing. Last fall u went to KeyiRtrt to visit bin daughter, lo was then in feeble health awd he Tew HO much weaker that he was un- blf to return norm*. Kltnrr milett, Jr. Elmer Willett, Jr., the only son of ilnier Willett of Harmony, in Middle- own township, died un Monday of neumonia, with which he had IH'IMI Hick nly a week. He would have been four- een yeara old next month. Besides father and mother be leaves two sis- era, Lilian and Jeanettc Willett. The uneral will "be held to-morrow after- oon at the house. Rev, fiamuel i; (hattin. Rev, Samuel C. Chattin, pastor of the rlethodist church at Tuckahoe, died on riday, February 20th, aged (37 years. iis death was doe to pleuro-pneumonia. He had been s member of the Methodist onference for 44 years and was at one ime stationed at Matawan. A wife and ive children survive him. All the chil- ren excepting «ne are married. Mrs. FKoehe Reynolds, Mrs. Phoebe Reynolds, widow of ames Reynolds, died last Thursday at he home of he* daughter, Mrs. Susie Metzgar of Long Branch, She was ninety oars old and her death was due to a general breaking down of her health, he leaves eight children, four grand- children and two greatgrandchildren. THE CARNEGIE LIBRARY. The Sum of #*,f OO Ham Been Silfc- acribed T&tearda the L,ot. The committee having in charge the 'arnegie library matter met on Monday night and reported progress, Of the $8,000 required to buy the site $3,200 has been subscribed. The solicitors believe hey will have no difficulty in securing he necessary amount. In all probability a Broad street site will be selected should he library building become an assured act. Mr. Carnegie is ready to build the ibrary ai soon aa the local conditions are complied with. The next meeting f the committee will be held on Mon- day, March 16th, AN AFFLICTED FAMILY. Tiro thilttrvn IHe ntttt the Mother in Sirk. Two children of Robert Sample of South K itonlowii ilieil last week of diph- theria. They were William, aged ten yearw, and Jennie, aged Nixteen years. Both were tirst taken wirk with scarlet fever. The boy died on Wednesday morning and was buried mi Wednesday afternoon. The girl** death occurred on Friday afternoon find her burial took pliico on Saturday afteniuoii. The girl wun taken nick ten days before her death. At six o'clock on Thursday morning Dr. J.C. RIIMII, the family phy- sician, told MTH, Sample that the girl could not live. Tlir?e hours later, when the mother went to the room, she found that the girl bad eeamulto breathe, lier eyes were wide open and to all appear- anceH she was dead. Mrn, Sampio closed the ehild'HeyeH and straightened out the body and covered it with a sheet. She then left the room and told one of her sons to inform the doctor that Jennie had died. Mrs. Ham pie went back to the room a half-hour later. One of the girl'H arms had been thrown down and the sheet dis- arranged. Hurrying to the bedside she threw back the sheet from the girl's face. The girl's eyes were wide open and she looked at hcrmtther, although she was unconscious. Mrs, Sample? syringed the girl's throat and administered other remedies prescribed by the physician, She remained uaconsjious until Friday afternoon at three o'clock, when she died i Mrs. tiAmple herself was taken sick with diphtheria the day theson died,but she bravely kept up in order that she might nurao her daughter. After Jen- nie's death Mrs. Simple took to her bed. She is now out of danger, although still quite sick. Cline, another child, aged fourteen, was sieli with scarlet fever and he has entirely recovered. A, Moody Takes a. Partner. On the 9th of last month George A- Moody took as a partner Darwin L, Smith, and the name of Mr. Moody's tiarnesa tirm is now Moody & Smith. Sir. Smith has lived in Red Bank for he past thirteen years. He waa era- ployed for several years by Gowdy & itcher and afterward by Birdsal! & Son. For the past three years he has been employed by Mr, Moody, At the Opera House, The Dilger—Cornell company is play- ng a week of shows at the Red Bank opera house this week. Tonight the play will be "A True Kentuckian," the play to-morrow night will be " The New Minister," and the play on Friday night will be •• The Princess of Patches.'' The plays on Saturday afternoon and night will be announced later. THE TYPE BAR COMPANY. I7ie Annual Meeting Held at Jergey City on Monday, The annual meeting of the Composite Type Bar company, in which a number of residents of Red Bank are interested, was held at Jersey City on Monday. The directors elected are Theodore C. E, J. E, Sayre, Leslie T. Herbert C, McCle*e of Blanchard, Dr. Blanc-hard and Red Bank ; T, Mortimer Lloyd, E. How- ard Babcock and George H. Watson of Brooklyn ; Henry M. Dearborn, S, S, Slater and Henry S, Hathaway of New York ; Frederick C. Blanchard, James M.Seymour, Thomas E. Burke and Dil" Ion Beebe, Jr., of Newark, and Irwin B, Gilbert of Philadelphia. The directors elected the following officerd : President—Theodore C. E. Blancuani, v'lce president—Ur. J. E. snyre. fteeretary—Herbert 0. Mculeen. Treasurer-T. Mortimer Lloyd, A FASHION A BLK WEDDING. CELEBRATION TO-NIGHT OF THE BAILEY- HANCE NUPTIALS. Thv Marriage Take IHaee at H'ayne, i'ennnylvnnia, ti'here the tiride lArrH Mr, and Mm, llance Will Reside at Red Bank. The niarriiint'of MUM Nellie Pmekney Bailey and Robert Cal iraiih Hnnce, ohitHt HUM of Mr. and MIH. Robert 11 mice of lied Hank, will take place to-night in the (Vntrnl Haptitu church ar Wayne, Pennsylvania. The church will be deco- rated with palms and La Franco, roses, ami the ceremony will bo performed by Rev. John Miller, ijnclu of the bride. The bride will (Miter the church on the arm of her brother, Harry Bailey, who will give ber away. Hhe will be attended by IHT maiil of honor, Miss Julia Hance, a sister of the groom, and will be met at the altar by the groom and groomsman. The groomsman will be George Conover of Middletown. The ushers will beWal- ter (J, Wyckoff, and Kenneth A. Wyok- off of New York, Frederick Wherry of Newark, and Borden Hance, a brother of the groom. The bride's gown is of heavy white corded satin, handsomely trimmed with pearl passamentrie and the old family point lace. The bride will wear a tulle veil and carry a bouquet of white roses. The maid of honor will wear an elabor- ate gown of white over pink silk and carry La France roses. After the ceremony the guests will go informally to the bouse of Rev. and Mrs. John Miller, where the wedding supper will be served. After a trip through the South Mr. and Mrs. Hance will return to Red Bank, and reside at the Central hotel. The bride and groom are the re- cipients of many very handsome pres- enta, Benneit-Visleaon, Miss Annie D. Bennett, daughter of James H. Bennett of Nut Swamp, and Peter J. Gisleson of Red Bank were married on Sunday, February 15th., The ceremony was performed at Aabury Park at the parsonage of the First Meth« odist church. Rev, W. R. Wedder- spoon, pastor of the church, waa the of- ficiating clergyman. Mr. Gislenon is em. ployed as clerk in M. M. Davidson's clothing store and is a son of E. S, Qiile- san of Catharine street. The bride and groom are making their homa for the present with Mrs. Gisleson's shier, Mrs, I, P. Davis of Beach street. Troopers Bold m. Smoker, The Red Bank cavalry troop held a smoker at the town hall on Monday night. It was one of the pleasantest af- fairs of the kind ever held in the town. There was a short mixed entertainment, after which refreshments were served. Then the troopers and their guests spent an hour or more hi smoking. Steamboat Service to Begin, The steamboat service on the river will begin on Monday, March 16th, An ex- amination of the channel is now being made. The steamboat time table will be published next week. Butinemm, Libernl 'arrangements will be made with a young man who is a hustler and a first-class horseshoer to take charge of or run ashoeingshop. Possession March iat, 1908 Inquire at Central livery stables. Maple avenue, Red Bank, N. J. —Adv, Reception and Dance. Mrs. Wescott announces that she will give a reception to her pupils on Tues- day, Marchi 24th, at the town hall. The hour for children will be till nine o'clock. Tickets may be obtained from the pa- tronesses. -^Adv, -m i m —• titeinbach'B Men** Shorn Balm commences Saturday. $8.50, $4 and $5 shoes for $3 20. Steinbach Co., Asbury, Park, N. J.—Adv. Will Get Moit of Their Money, The Belford people who had stsck in Republic loan association, which went into the hands of a receiver about a year ago, have received a statement showiug that they will get nearly all the money that they had paid int» the association, The heaviest shareholders at Belford were J. E. Johnson, Joseph S.Clark and George Henry, They had each paid in a little over f 400 and according to the statement of the receiver they will each Teceive $357, Had the association con- tinued business in good standing the shares would have matured in a few years and these shareholders would then have received $ 1,000 each. •»-» m A Sale of Farm Property, Theodore F. White has sold a Bve-acre tract of land south of White's woods to E. C, Hazard of Shrewsbury. The price was $450. Mr, Hazard will use the land in growing tomatoes. This properly was part of the Capt. Parker farm which Mr. White recently bought. Fifty Head of Horses, Just received another lot of horses and mules to day, including five young mules and several second-hand mules. The lot also includes three pairs of gray horses, one pair weighing 2,400 pounds, another pair weighing 2,fcOO pounds and the third pair weighing 2,800 pounds. Also a good black team of hearse horse*, an extra nice team of bays, a trotter, two pacers and several other single horses. In fact I can suit anyone want- ing a horse or mule. Give me a call. William 0. Ely, Holmdel, N. J.—Adv. » i m Horses for Balm, Have just received at my farm, one mile from Eatontown station, a carload of good horbes, several good carriage teams, haddle horses, drivers ; also some good cheap horses. J. B, McLean, Eat' on town, N.J.— HopMotl Mm Elsie Hopson, daughter of Rich- ard Hopson of Red Hill, near Middle- town village, and George Jenkins of the same place, were married at the Red Hill Baptist church on Wednesday night. The ceremony was performed by Rev. W. A. Ely of Red Bank, Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins are living with the bride's parents. Basketball Newi. A basketball game for the junior championship of Monmouth county was played in the hall at Little Silver last night between ihe Wideawakes of Little Silver and the Netoacs Juniors of Asbury Park, The Asbury Parkere won the game by the score of 17 to 18, Another gfltne was played between the Shooting Starsef Little Silver and the Kurekas of Ocean Grove, the Eurekas winning by the score of 18 to 8. Two games of basketball were played at Little Silver on Wednesday night and both games were won by the Little Silver teams. The Wideawakes beat the Belmar Juniors by the score pf 18 to 3, and the Shooting Stars beat an Ocean Grove team by the score of 6 to 4, Mrs, Allen'* Double Affliction. Several weeks agoMrs. David Allen of South itreefrsprained her ankle by a fall and has since been compelled to use crutches. Yesterday she fell down stairs and broke her wrist. We will send free for a short time a beautiful souvenir book of views of Washington city, with pictures of presi» dents, etc. This offer is made to induce you to try our improved patent thread- ing needles, for 10 cents in silver. We send 8 papers, all sizes, and book of views free, worth five times our price retail. National Mercantile Co., cor. Lsfayette and Argyle avenue?, Baltimore, Md.— Adv, ••• m —— Wall Paper. We are on the ground floor in prices as well as location. Full line of 1908 patterns now ready. We do painting and paper hanging. Guyon & Springer, Adv. It pay* to advertise in Tra RsoiSTSB. Sham* /*r MBvmry Oeeaaf•!•. Men's $8.SO, $4 and | 0 shoei 12.30 Sat. urday. Steinbach Co., Asbury Park, N. J.—Adv.

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Page 1: RED BANK REGISTER. - rbr.mtpl.orgrbr.mtpl.org/data/rbr/1900-1909/1903/1903.03.04.pdfRED BANK REGISTER. - rbr.mtpl.org

RED BANK REGISTER.V O L U M E X X V . NO. 3 * * Q R E D B A N K . N J , W E D N E S D A Y , M A R C H 4, 1 9 0 3 , P A G E S I TO 8.

DEATHS DURING THE WEEK8, B, COBURN OF RED BANK

PASSES AWAY.

Mtenth nf Samuel Tutttm of Katmn.totrn, the Hell-Knoirn tmilmaker

Mm. Mary Catherine MurrayMHed •»• Monday Other Fteathit,Stephen B. Coburn, a resident of Red

Hank for ihe past forty yours, died IHHI

night sit hix o'clock at his home on thetorner of Front and Spring strfots.Nine yenrs ago \w Imd a stroke of paral?-sid ami lie never fully recoveml. He

stricken with a fatal stroke of tliedisease on Friday night. Tin* fu-

neral will bo held at thu house to mor-row night at fight o'clock and the Rt»rv-ice will be conducted by Rt»v. John H.Haines, The body will be buried atFreehold on Friday morning,

Mr. Coburn was torn at Burlington 73yeari ago. He learned the cigarmaker1*trade and worked at that trade for mv-era! years. When he was 21 years oldhe moved to Freehold, where ho openeda confectionery store. At Freehold hemarried Maria Kenworthey of that town,who survives him. Next October wouldhave marked the fiftieth anniversary ofthe marriage. Mr. Coburn came to RedBank forty years ago and for twentyyears or more conducted a restaurantand cigar store. He had not been en-gaged in any regular business pursuitsince July 18th, 1881, where he wasburned out in the big fire on Frontstreet,

Mr. (Joburn joined the MethodistEpiscopal church 45 years ago and was astrict adherent to his Christian vows.For many years he was librarian of tli«First Methodist Sunday-school of RedBank and was also a stewRrd of thechurch. Besides his widow Mr. Coburnleaves two sisters—Mis. Sarah Marshallof Red Bank and Mrs. Martha Stocktonof Burlington.

fiamuel Tutile,Samuel Tuttle of Eatontown died on

Sunday morning at half-past seveno'clock. He had been sick about tw«months and his death was caused byparalysis. Mr. Tuttle suffered his firststroke of paralysis four years ago lastJanuary and he was sick then for twomonths. He was nearly 74 years old.

Mr, Tuttle was born at New York.He was a sail maker by trade and formany years was employed in hie nativecity by Edward Garrison, a prominentsailmaker in his day, whose loft wassituated on the corner of Dover andSouth streets, In 1858 Mr, Tuttle movedto Eatontown and he had lived there eversince. He followed his occupation atEatontown until eighteen years ago,when he opened a loft at the foot ofWharf avenue at Red Bank,

He was a member of the society ofFriends at Shrewsbury and was one ofthe oldest members of Washington lodgeof Free Masons of Eatontown. He hadbelonged to the lodge over forty years.Mr. Tuttle married Mary J. Hurley,daughter of Sarah Ann and John Hurleyof Eatontown. Mrs. Tuttle died elevenyears ago. The couple had eleven chil-dren, five of whom are living. The surviving children are Daniel D. of Benson-huret. Long Island; John A, of Red Bank,and William G., Louis, Miss Helen W.and Walter R. of Eatontown.

The funeral was •held at the housethis afternoon. It was in charge of theMasons and the speaker was a friendfrom Asbury Park. The body was buriedat West Long Branch,

working on the Mutawuu trestle. Theinjury affected hituuind and he had beenin the Htnte hospital ever nince. Mr.JobiiHon wan tli* HUH of Maria andJofH'ph J«hi)Hnn and was born at NewMoimiouth, He married Ann K, Luy-ster and for it time afterward lived atPurl Moumouih. For a number of yearsprevious lo his accident he had lived atKeyport, Mr. Johnson wan one of fourbrothers who served in the civil war atthe saint* lime. He was wounded a num.ber of times and one of the bullets hadalways remained in his body. Besides awife Mr. Johnson knives a K«II. Aaron S.Johnson. He leaves' also three Bistersand two brothers. They are MM, ElijahWalling, James S, and John Johnson ofKey port, Mrs. John l i . Walling of Bel-ford and Miss Johanna M. Johnson ofOcean Grove.

Hillittm W. Dinbrote.William W. Dishrow. son of the late

ohn N. Disbrow of Matawan and aormer resident of that place, died re-rently at New York. His death was dueo fatty degeneration of the heart and liebad been sick along time. Mr, Disbrowwent to New York when a young mannd engaged in the cartage business. Heirospered from the first and at the timeof bis deata had a considerable fortune'About a year ago he bought the AlfredCurtis homestead farm at Hazlet andhad intended making that place his per-manent home. He had spent consider-able money in improving the outbuild-ings and was to have built a fine housen the spring. Mr. Disbrow leaves a

wife, two daughters and a son.

Mrt, Mary Catherine Murray.Mrs. Mary Catherine Murray, widow

of Hon. George C. Murray, died onMonday at the home of her daughterMrs. William T. VanBrunt, near Cooper'sbridge, in Middletown township. Herdeath was due to heart disease. Mrs.Murray was the daughter of RebeccaPatterson and James Cooper of Middle(own township. She was a woman ofan exceptionally strong character and atine mind. Her life wan spent in cheerful fidelity to every duty as a wifemother, friend and true Christian womanBesides the daughter at whose home shelived she leaves a son, George 0. Murrayof Brooklyn, and a daughter, Mrs. OvidA. Hyde of New York. The funeral washeld at the house this afternoon at twoo'clock and the body waa buried in theBaptist cemetery at Middletown,

Joseph Johnson.Joseph Johnson, a native of Middle

town township, died on Friday, Februtry 20th, at the state hospital at Trenton,aged 69 years. He was a carpenter bytrade and fourteen years ago he was hiton the, bead by a piece of timber wbil

John R. Hamilton,JohnR. Hamilton, son of Mrs. Emma

Hamilton of Long Branch City, died onSaturday a week ago at Savannah,Georgia, His death was due to con"sumption, with which he had been sickor some time. His wife died last De-jember. Mr. Hamilton was then in fail"ing health and he went South in thehope that the change of climate wouldprove beneficial. He continued to growworse, however, until his death, Be*sides a mother Mr. Hamilton leaves aon and daughter, aged six and nine

years respectively. He leaves also threebrothers, George, Fred and Gilbert Ham.Ilton, and a sister, Mrs. William Algeoof Philadelphia,

Travis Johnson.Travis Johnson, one of ihe best known

colored men of Pine Brook, died on Sat-urday morning. He was at Eatontownon Friday night. When he returnedhome he was taken sick wjth paralysisof the brain, which caused his death,Mr, Johnson was 59luyears old. He wasa bachelor and lived by himself. Thefuneral was held yesterday afternoonat the Pine Brook colored church andthe body was buried in the church ceme-tery. Mr. Johnson was one of the bestitizens of Shrewsbury township. He

was honest and industrious, and he hadthe friendship of every man who knewhim.

William H. Vonk,William H, Conk died on Monday of

last week at the home of his daughter,Mrs. Frank Walling of Keyport. Hewas 85 years old. He was born nearTrenton, but had lived at Keyportfor over sixty years. His wife diedseveral years ago and since then he hadlived withN his daughter. He leavesalso another daughter at Keyport, Mrs,Wilson Walling, besides i^r€ otherdaughters and two sons.

Jeremiah Traeey,Jeremiah Traeey, for the past eight

years tender of the drawbridge betweenMatawan and Cliffwood, died on Thursday night. About a month ago he feland broke his hip. Inflammation set inand caused his death. He was born inIreland but had lived in this country 88years. He lived with his daughter, MrsKate Jones, in the bridgetendor's houseon the drawbridge.

PrincePrince Ludlow, a Freehold colored

aoan, died on Saturday, February 21staged 72 years. He was born at Eatontown but when a boy went to Freeholdto work for the Brinkerhoof familyAfterward he waa employed for manjyears in the family of Graadin YoughtFor a long time he was sexton of BtPeter's church at Freehold.

Peter B, JBtmff.

Peter B. Hoff died on Monday of lasiweek at the home of his, daughter, MrsGeorge P, Walters of Keyport, aged 8:yean. His death was due to Bright']disease. He was born at Bethany,

eyport, his parent* being Maitha !*n<iWilliam Hun!, He wit* it millwright byrade and ha built several mills in iliiMounty. In iBIW lie moved to IVtern-urg, in (tape May county, where he enaged in cranberry growing. Last fallu went to KeyiRtrt to visit bin daughter,lo was then in feeble health awd heTew HO much weaker that he was un-blf to return norm*.

Kltnrr milett, Jr.Elmer Willett, Jr., the only son of

ilnier Willett of Harmony, in Middle-own township, died un Monday ofneumonia, with which he had IH'IMI Hicknly a week. He would have been four-een yeara old next month. Besides

father and mother be leaves two sis-era, Lilian and Jeanettc Willett. Theuneral will "be held to-morrow after-oon at the house.

Rev, fiamuel i; (hattin.Rev, Samuel C. Chattin, pastor of the

rlethodist church at Tuckahoe, died onriday, February 20th, aged (37 years.

iis death was doe to pleuro-pneumonia.He had been s member of the Methodistonference for 44 years and was at oneime stationed at Matawan. A wife andive children survive him. All the chil-ren excepting «ne are married.

Mrs. FKoehe Reynolds,Mrs. Phoebe Reynolds, widow of

ames Reynolds, died last Thursday athe home of he* daughter, Mrs. Susie

Metzgar of Long Branch, She was ninetyoars old and her death was due to a

general breaking down of her health,he leaves eight children, four grand-

children and two greatgrandchildren.

THE CARNEGIE LIBRARY.

The Sum of #*,f OO Ham Been Silfc-acribed T&tearda the L,ot.

The committee having in charge the'arnegie library matter met on Monday

night and reported progress, Of the$8,000 required to buy the site $3,200 hasbeen subscribed. The solicitors believehey will have no difficulty in securinghe necessary amount. In all probability

a Broad street site will be selected shouldhe library building become an assuredact. Mr. Carnegie is ready to build theibrary ai soon aa the local conditions

are complied with. The next meetingf the committee will be held on Mon-

day, March 16th,

AN AFFLICTED FAMILY.

Tiro thilttrvn IHe ntttt the Motherin Sirk.

Two children of Robert Sample ofSouth K itonlowii ilieil last week of diph-theria. They were William, aged tenyearw, and Jennie, aged Nixteen years.Both were tirst taken wirk with scarletfever. The boy died on Wednesdaymorning and was buried mi Wednesdayafternoon. The girl** death occurred onFriday afternoon find her burial tookpliico on Saturday afteniuoii.

The girl wun taken nick ten days beforeher death. At six o'clock on Thursdaymorning Dr. J .C. RIIMII, the family phy-sician, told MTH, Sample that the girlcould not live. Tlir?e hours later, whenthe mother went to the room, she foundthat the girl bad eeamulto breathe, liereyes were wide open and to all appear-anceH she was dead. Mrn, Sampio closedthe ehild'HeyeH and straightened out thebody and covered it with a sheet. Shethen left the room and told one of hersons to inform the doctor that Jenniehad died.

Mrs. Ham pie went back to the room ahalf-hour later. One of the girl'H armshad been thrown down and the sheet dis-arranged. Hurrying to the bedside shethrew back the sheet from the girl's face.The girl's eyes were wide open and shelooked at hcrmtther, although she wasunconscious. Mrs, Sample? syringed thegirl's throat and administered otherremedies prescribed by the physician,She remained uaconsjious until Fridayafternoon at three o'clock, when she diedi

Mrs. tiAmple herself was taken sickwith diphtheria the day theson died,butshe bravely kept up in order that shemight nurao her daughter. After Jen-nie's death Mrs. Simple took to her bed.She is now out of danger, although stillquite sick. Cline, another child, agedfourteen, was sieli with scarlet fever andhe has entirely recovered.

A, Moody Takes a. Partner .On the 9th of last month George A-

Moody took as a partner Darwin L,Smith, and the name of Mr. Moody'stiarnesa tirm is now Moody & Smith.Sir. Smith has lived in Red Bank forhe past thirteen years. He waa era-

ployed for several years by Gowdy &itcher and afterward by Birdsal! &

Son. For the past three years he hasbeen employed by Mr, Moody,

At the Opera House,The Dilger—Cornell company is play-

ng a week of shows at the Red Bankopera house this week. Tonight theplay will be "A True Kentuckian," theplay to-morrow night will be " TheNew Minister," and the play on Fridaynight will be •• The Princess of Patches.''The plays on Saturday afternoon andnight will be announced later.

THE T Y P E BAR COMPANY.

I7ie Annual Meeting Held at JergeyCity on Monday,

The annual meeting of the CompositeType Bar company, in which a numberof residents of Red Bank are interested,was held at Jersey City on Monday. Thedirectors elected are Theodore C. E,

J. E, Sayre, Leslie T.Herbert C, McCle*e of

Blanchard, Dr.Blanc-hard andRed Bank ; T, Mortimer Lloyd, E. How-ard Babcock and George H. Watson ofBrooklyn ; Henry M. Dearborn, S, S,Slater and Henry S, Hathaway of NewYork ; Frederick C. Blanchard, JamesM.Seymour, Thomas E. Burke and Dil"Ion Beebe, Jr., of Newark, and Irwin B,Gilbert of Philadelphia. The directorselected the following officerd :

President—Theodore C. E. Blancuani,v'lce president—Ur. J. E. snyre.fteeretary—Herbert 0. Mculeen.Treasurer-T. Mortimer Lloyd,

A FASHION A BLK WEDDING.CELEBRATION TO-NIGHT OF THE

BAILEY- HANCE NUPTIALS.

Thv Marriage f« Take IHaee atH'ayne, i'ennnylvnnia, ti'here thetiride lArrH Mr, and Mm, llanceWill Reside at Red Bank.

The niarriiint'of MUM Nellie PmekneyBailey and Robert Cal iraiih Hnnce,ohitHt HUM of Mr. and MIH. Robert 11 miceof lied Hank, will take place to-night inthe (Vntrnl Haptitu church ar Wayne,Pennsylvania. The church will be deco-rated with palms and La Franco, roses,ami the ceremony will bo performed byRev. John Miller, ijnclu of the bride.

The bride will (Miter the church on thearm of her brother, Harry Bailey, whowill give ber away. Hhe will be attendedby IHT maiil of honor, Miss Julia Hance,a sister of the groom, and will be met atthe altar by the groom and groomsman.The groomsman will be George Conoverof Middletown. The ushers will be Wal-ter (J, Wyckoff, and Kenneth A. Wyok-off of New York, Frederick Wherryof Newark, and Borden Hance, a brotherof the groom.

The bride's gown is of heavy whitecorded satin, handsomely trimmed withpearl passamentrie and the old familypoint lace. The bride will wear a tulleveil and carry a bouquet of white roses.The maid of honor will wear an elabor-ate gown of white over pink silk andcarry La France roses.

After the ceremony the guests will goinformally to the bouse of Rev. and Mrs.John Miller, where the wedding supperwill be served. After a trip through theSouth Mr. and Mrs. Hance will return toRed Bank, and reside at the Centralhotel. The bride and groom are the re-cipients of many very handsome pres-enta,

Benneit-Visleaon,Miss Annie D. Bennett, daughter of

James H. Bennett of Nut Swamp, andPeter J. Gisleson of Red Bank weremarried on Sunday, February 15th., Theceremony was performed at AaburyPark at the parsonage of the First Meth«odist church. Rev, W. R. Wedder-spoon, pastor of the church, waa the of-ficiating clergyman. Mr. Gislenon is em.ployed as clerk in M. M. Davidson'sclothing store and is a son of E. S, Qiile-san of Catharine street. The bride andgroom are making their homa for thepresent with Mrs. Gisleson's shier, Mrs,I, P. Davis of Beach street.

Troopers Bold m. Smoker,The Red Bank cavalry troop held a

smoker at the town hall on Mondaynight. It was one of the pleasantest af-fairs of the kind ever held in the town.There was a short mixed entertainment,after which refreshments were served.Then the troopers and their guests spentan hour or more hi smoking.

Steamboat Service to Begin,The steamboat service on the river will

begin on Monday, March 16th, An ex-amination of the channel is now beingmade. The steamboat time table will bepublished next week.

Butinemm,Libernl 'arrangements will be made

with a young man who is a hustler anda first-class horseshoer to take charge ofor run ashoeingshop. Possession Marchiat, 1908 Inquire at Central liverystables. Maple avenue, Red Bank, N. J.—Adv,

Reception and Dance.Mrs. Wescott announces that she will

give a reception to her pupils on Tues-day, Marchi 24th, at the town hall. Thehour for children will be till nine o'clock.Tickets may be obtained from the pa-tronesses. -^Adv,

-m i m — •titeinbach'B Men** Shorn Balm

commences Saturday. $8.50, $4 and $5shoes for $3 20. Steinbach Co., Asbury,Park, N. J.—Adv.

Will Get Moit of Their Money,The Belford people who had stsck in

Republic loan association, which wentinto the hands of a receiver about a yearago, have received a statement showiugthat they will get nearly all the moneythat they had paid int» the association,The heaviest shareholders at Belfordwere J. E. Johnson, Joseph S.Clark andGeorge Henry, They had each paid ina little over f 400 and according to thestatement of the receiver they will eachTeceive $357, Had the association con-tinued business in good standing theshares would have matured in a fewyears and these shareholders would thenhave received $ 1,000 each.

•»-» m

A Sale of Farm Property,Theodore F. White has sold a Bve-acre

tract of land south of White's woods toE. C, Hazard of Shrewsbury. The pricewas $450. Mr, Hazard will use theland in growing tomatoes. This properlywas part of the Capt. Parker farmwhich Mr. White recently bought.

Fifty Head of Horses,Just received another lot of horses and

mules to day, including five young mulesand several second-hand mules. Thelot also includes three pairs of grayhorses, one pair weighing 2,400 pounds,another pair weighing 2,fcOO pounds andthe third pair weighing 2,800 pounds.Also a good black team of hearse horse*,an extra nice team of bays, a trotter,two pacers and several other singlehorses. In fact I can suit anyone want-ing a horse or mule. Give me a call.William 0. Ely, Holmdel, N. J.—Adv.

» i m

Horses for Balm,Have just received at my farm, one

mile from Eatontown station, a carloadof good horbes, several good carriageteams, haddle horses, drivers ; also somegood cheap horses. J. B, McLean, Eat'on town, N. J.—

HopMotlMm Elsie Hopson, daughter of Rich-

ard Hopson of Red Hill, near Middle-town village, and George Jenkins of thesame place, were married at the RedHill Baptist church on Wednesdaynight. The ceremony was performed byRev. W. A. Ely of Red Bank, Mr. andMrs. Jenkins are living with the bride'sparents.

Basketball Newi.A basketball game for the junior

championship of Monmouth county wasplayed in the hall at Little Silver lastnight between ihe Wideawakes of LittleSilver and the Netoacs Juniors of AsburyPark, The Asbury Parkere won thegame by the score of 17 to 18, Anothergfltne was played between the ShootingStarsef Little Silver and the Kurekas ofOcean Grove, the Eurekas winning bythe score of 18 to 8.

Two games of basketball were playedat Little Silver on Wednesday night andboth games were won by the LittleSilver teams. The Wideawakes beatthe Belmar Juniors by the score pf 18 to3, and the Shooting Stars beat an OceanGrove team by the score of 6 to 4,

Mrs, Allen'* Double Affliction.Several weeks ago Mrs. David Allen of

South itreefrsprained her ankle by a falland has since been compelled to usecrutches. Yesterday she fell downstairs and broke her wrist.

We will send free for a short time abeautiful souvenir book of views ofWashington city, with pictures of presi»dents, etc. This offer is made to induceyou to try our improved patent thread-ing needles, for 10 cents in silver. Wesend 8 papers, all sizes, and book of viewsfree, worth five times our price retail.National Mercantile Co., cor. Lsfayetteand Argyle avenue?, Baltimore, Md.—Adv,

— • • • m ——

Wall Paper.We are on the ground floor in prices

as well as location. Full line of 1908patterns now ready. We do paintingand paper hanging. Guyon & Springer,—Adv.

It pay* to advertise in Tra RsoiSTSB.

Sham* / * r MBvmry Oeeaaf•!•.Men's $8.SO, $4 and |0 shoei 12.30 Sat.

urday. Steinbach Co., Asbury Park,N. J.—Adv.

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" J f

A BIRTHDAY iUBPRItE.

and FrietMtm Fttybrvar* f#«»i« «

IV»»

T e n h n w k I tavinof Front s i r i t t , Koii

Bank , rweivt ' i l » Hiirpiino vimt from

relativi'N mul m'l^hburH on TII«'HIIH,V

n i g h t of hint wt'ok in rt-h'hntMnn ni

t h e titftli Hiinivtrwiiry of Ins hir(hi l i t \ .

The gut'HtH iiii'l Ht Mrn, KOIMTI Clas tu i ih

on Ilriilgf uvi'iiui* mid wont from t h i n

SOCIAL MEETINGS! OF SINGERS.

Jfr»tfcn« of a thmral Horiety EnjoyThetnmelreB,

The Red Hunk choral Nociety mvt onThursday night a t MIHH Viola HendleyH

on Hiidge avenue , MlMst lU'udley in Hmember tif llli' MiK'U'ty, Mont of the

llulv Ci ty ," which iN to be sung by theMMiely in the near fu ture . Afli r [he I e

to Mr. Davis'n in A body. The affair wan | b e a m d a uncial period with * n jo j ed, and

OOt only H comple te M i r p r w to Mr. n fn-HhrneiilN were WTVI

D A V I S but to all the uu'iiibiTH of In

fami ly HH well. The evening WIIS Npeii

in playingway, Ht'fBeBHunnhloDavit* iMitithu occMHi

H and in a g e n e r a l HU<I:I'

hnii'iilH wen 1 w r v c d at aour, both Mr, ntul Mrw.l heartily into thcHpiiil of

mul thi1 evening W;IM pleuH

Thi- guiHtH wen' Mr. and Mrs, (*h,irU>HL. Davis, K'litli, Diiiny and H. KdsvinDaviH. Mr, ami MIH, Albert Mcyuctti,Marian, Lydin, K"Hi:n'th nnd ArthurMcQueen, MIH. L, L, Mryuii'ii, JoBCphinc, Jennie and LeBter Me^m-en,MIH, Hubert Clay ton, Hurry and .fuiiu-nClayton, Mm Elizibetii Clayton, MIH,Walter Noble and MUI Freddie, Mr*.William Ilubburd, Mr, and Mrn, Theo-dore Heotf, Hilda and Walter Heott, Mr.and Mrs. Harry McQueen and daughterHazel, MTH. Kuthurinu Walling, Mr«.Eno, Mrs, S. Walling, Mn*. VauH •lioick,Mrs, Chatnpinin, Mr«, IVawe, Mrs, FriekiMi«8 Coni Walling, MJHS Cordelia Davi^Miss Dulnian and Mr, Dalman,

On Saturday nighl the so<'ii'ty und anumber of other ^iiehlH met at MIHHCarrie Kin^'n on MapU1 avenue. MIHBKing, who ha.H been ;i memoer of tlieHoeiety since li WHS formed a fewiuoiHliH u^o, left lied Hank t o d a ywith her parents, Sir, mid MfH. JohnKing, Biid the vinii W;IH a, Hurt of fare-well meeting. Tin- affair wan a istirpriBe,HH Mi. H King hud no knowledge what-ever of (In1 proposed visit. A pleasantsocial evening was spent, A good partof the time wan taken up in singing.

The choral society Hiing two selectionsat Uraee church on Sunday night,

- ^^ # ^ ^Business men have iuuinl tliat adver-

in TJIK JiKiiisTKH liriiigH big re-Thnt IH why I in-: KKOISTKH curr i ts

so niiK'li advei tiwini;, —-Atfr.

NEWS OF THE BOWLERS.

Many Interesting €liimen Played onLocal Alley*.

A bowling match took place at theAmerican hotel on Thurpulny night be-tvveen John Johnbtwn and Charhs Em-moiiB, both of Red Bunk, Thu matchWEB for nfWQ purae. JuliiiKtun won fouruut of a Beries of «ix gamus, Tho scoreswere UH follows ;

J o h n s l u n . . . . , , , , , , . . , 1 M ifiSI inl'.KI

l iHIITU Ifi'J

8131ST

Relief engine company's team of liedBank pluyed a game willi uti AtlanticHighlands tf-am on Thursday night atthe Sheridan hotel. The lied BankeiBwon three games straight. The winningleani was composed of Harry BurroweH,George Bray, Harry Hawkins and El-wood IviiiB, The Atlantic Highlanderswere George Coiiover, ThoniaB Emery,Frank Wells and Edward Walling, The

were as follows :

BurrowsHawkins..Bray

HKI.IKF COMPAS\ 'B TKAM,

. . . . I K ), . lUl

. . . . . . . l t l. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215

H72J1

148miwi244

jiQ.

"III! 7138 7a iATLAN'Tli' H1«IH,A.VI»S TICAil,

Walltnn . . . . . . . . . . I S ? 140 150Emm .....,!« m 1Weils ....147 nn imsOonovor 1W aio I'M

014 (5T5 5T1

A PARTY AT t,ITTLE SILVER,

anil Mrs, r. 11. Vamphell Re-eetve a Burpritte Vtnlt.

Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Campbell of LittleSilver received a surprise visit from anumber of their friends Thursday night.The Burprisers first met at William J,Conover's. A very pleasant eveningwas spent. One of the amusements wasthe dancing of Mr. Campbell's trick dogBonnie. Dancing and refreshments oc-cupied the rest of the evening.

Those present were Mr, nnd Mrs.George M, Quackenbush and their sonE»erson, Mr. and Mrs. William Oonoverand their donghtera Sadie and MatiltlaMr. and Mrs. Winfield Robinson and theirdaugbter Henrietta, Mr. and Mrs. Hum-phrey Miller, Miss Elsie lford.^liss EllaPotter, Miss Florence L. Campbell, MissKiltie Hobrough, Wilson HobroughMyron L. Campbell and Jamee Va«note

AN ALUMNI DANCE.

It Warn Hmia at the Town Hall otThurmdny Sight,

An entertainment and dance was givenat the town hall on Friday night by thealumni association. About 125 personswere present. The entertainment consist-ed of musical and literary numbersThose who gave the musical selectionswere Miss Grace Chad wick, Mn. WarrenH. Smock, Miss Sadie Child, Prof Rudolph Malchow, Walter B. ParsonsWalter Sutphen and Del Fisher. Readings were given by Miss Grace ChildAfter the entertainment dancing was indulged in and was kept up until oneo'clock,

— «• i • •

• Sociable a t Coifs Neck.A dance sociable was held at Judson

Francii'fl at Colt's Neck on Friday erening, Arthur Soffei and Henry Francis hadcharge of the affair. About one hun-dred persons were invited, but on accounof the storm the gathering was small,Refreshments were served at midnight.Those present were Mr. and Mrs. LouisSoflel, Jr., Mr, and Mrs. John StapletonEdna WolcoM, Bfattie Snedeker, TeresaConover, Maggie Sickles, Laura BuckWin, McKay, Arthur Soflel, Fred Cono-ver, Robert Weeks and Albert Buck ofOolt't Neck; Edna Evans of Scobey villeand Everett Smith of Fair Haven. "

AND GARDENS,Lawns and Flower Beds

will llntl whin is wanti'd at

River View Nurseries.

J. H. O'HAGAN.

JTTLE SILVER, NEW JERSEY,

GROUND RINT,

Tbo MtiiU' of Dr. W, H. Huht»nl will UWJ* theirruiinit of v kit* on Mtinituiiitn nint't fur • i**rni offt or 10 M H A|>|>ly to he, i'timUti iiutttiM.nl, No,)Mi Hijih Kvi-Dui*. HnM>kl.vi; "i i'tHinjiint ¥,W lilu-. KKiUHTKH Hull Hun flint \tHnk, N J.

Ui, \«rsi Old man and K.^rr On* Kla«.

T h e Nt'*v J » - r « « ' y ( V i i f r i t l n u l r o H

n i T i i i i g i ' d i n s e l l n i l t - x i r i ' i i i i ' l v l o w

t n ' k i - t t n Hi iy r i n n n i o n p o i n t i n C' l i l i f

u t :i f a i t - iif $.">() IK), T n 1 U c ' > » a n ' HO n r

m t i g t ' i l t o p e r t n it p i t MM1 li i i •> t n il -v w l i ' t ' p

n i g cult* if i l t i h i r i ' d . H i i i j i u i r p i U i l c ^ t ' H

l i r t 1 i l l l o v v i ' d i n i ' a l i f u l Mlii. A r l i n u ' c o f

r o u t t ' w ih y;iv*»11 puHHi ' i i j i i ' iH w i'Ht o f

O i i i ' i i t f o n r S i . l ^ J i i i n , T u • k• • IH a l s o h i i l t l

v ia N e w OrlenMH a n d S o m h e r n P iu ' i t i i ' .H o u t f s h f t u ' t ' t ' n y o u r s t a t i o n a m i • ' I n c a ^ o ,Ht, LoiiiK o r N e w C)rU*an^ a r e I - I I I H T VIHBiitr i i l i i o r Wa>hi i iKt ( in , 1». ( ' . T r a i n sa r e HO H c h t ' d u h - d t h a t I ' lose ( 'onni -c tb i i iHa r e m a d e a t j u n c t i . i n po in tw. W i i i i h t o ra Imv r a t e #tt7,(H) *• ati• u I H I I ' i i t i c k e t t h a tw i l l im o n Ni le M a y 'Jd, m i d <>fi M a y 11 thlo 1 7 t h , n i f l i i s i»««, g o o d t o r e t u r n fillJ u l y 1 Ht li. K i r n l - c l u ^ s m n v e r y r e - p e i ' t .

l i y w r i t i n g I r a K NS'iivt. ' , D i t - u i i ' tI'aHHt'iiK'i'r i i n t ' i i t , Awbi i rv I ' i i r k , a n y i n -f u r t i i a i i o i i m a y ou o h t a m e d .

Mliake OHTta* WInlry Blast*.

The montliH of January and Februaryare thi' riKwt (iiHnprceaiile to the Ni>rtherner and delightful are they for theFluiidii tourist. The trip to Jaeknonville.is through n wction as historu' HH it ispicturesque, and the service to that pointvia the 1-inyjil Blue Line in the bent. TheNew Jersey Central IN Kning to run anexcursion to JackHonvillt' on Tuesday,Miirch 10th. Train leaves New York,Ft. Liberty Street, at 8.30 a, in., arriveWashington «t 2.10 j). m. same day ;leave WaHhington at 7.00 p. m, March11th. and arrive Jacksonville at 120 p.in. Match 12th. The round trip ratefrom Nesv York and vicinity is #50,00,and includes also sleeping car berths,meuls en-route, transfer and hotel ac-rommodati ms in WnshinKion on south-ward trip, paBsengtTB making their ownarrangements for the northward re-turn trip. Tlip arrangements are suchthat the care and worry of the journeyare in the hands of the railroad company,nnd the tourist has the entire time forenjoyment. The New Jtrsey Centralhaw issued "A Little Yellow Book" onthis Florida trip ; if you want j t send apostal to C. M. Burt, "General Passenger

9

!

%

I

sVV

1v.

•5

VVV

" It's Lent,"till id t ho d i iugh te r , w h e n he r m o t h e r nuked for a n I ' mbrellii , a n d nu t hcing ah le {<> nn 'o l lec l who U i r n n v c d it, HIIM

ei ime he re f«ir Hiiother one . W h i l e h e r e she hii« t h eall over t h e Mtore w h i c h r ead

i n o u r t c i i i | M > r a r y

m^ uiir new stur

SELLING OUT EVERYTHINGre, Meicanhle building, prior open-

4.

Agent, Now Y'ork,ing.

It's free for the ask-

• • • • • • • • • • • • PRESCRIPTIONS • • • • • n H I HA Cure For Dyspepsia.

The Knickerbocker Dyspepsia Tablets are a positivecure for Dyspepsia, They are prepared at the Knicker-bocker Pharmacy and there is nothing in their compo-sition at all harmful. They cure the worst cases ofdyspepsia,

KNICKERBOCKER PHARMACY,Itobert Van Derveer,

Broad and IWonmoutli Sis., Red Bank, N. J.

• • • • • • i ^ H B i K NIC K 6 R B O O K E R • • • • • • • • ^ • • H

I>O

c10•*

iIV

SI

JOSEPH SALZ, RED BANK,Dry (Joods and (leneral Merchandise.

1VV

0V•>ioi^:ox«>:<*>^^^

Large Familiesare cominended by the President of the United States and we are com-mended by hundreds of fathers and mothers as feeders of largefamilies,

FINE CREAMERY BUTTER, 25C. LB,Cal. Prunes, extra choice. 8 lbs, for 25c.Apples, (Evaporated fancy)

10c, lb,, 3 lbs. for 25c.Penrs, Cal. Evaporated, per lb,, ,, ,15c.Good Mixed Tea, per lb, , , , ,25c.Corn (Maine Sugar), per can., , , 10c.Soused Mackerel, per can . . , , , , , . , , ,18c.Asparagus points, per can. . . . . ,18c.Clam Chowder (3 lb. nan), per can. .,18c.Shepp's Shredded Cocoanut.,.,..,,,

I lb. pkg, 14c.Maple Syrup, per bottle , 18c.

Mustard Snrdines, per can,, 8<,Sardines in Oil, per can . , . . . , . . ,5c.Imported Sardines, per can, 10c.Bloaters, smoked, 2 for, . , 5c.Herring, smoked, per doz 10c.Salmon, (choice red), 2 cans for,, ., ,25c.Extra Choice Salmon, (steak) , , , , , ,

per can 20c.Lobster, choice, per can.,, 80c,2 cans Peaches , . . . ,2.5c.Force, 2 pkgs. for ,, 25c.

Fine Maracaibo Coffee, per lb., 18c. Choice California Oranges. 1 5 c ,18c , 20c, doz. Navels, 2 5 c . 3 0 c , 35c. doz.

We have a l a r y e stock of ex t ra fine New Mackerel, When in needus a call .

W. A. TRUEX <a SON,#3 Broad Street, opposite White Street, Red Bank, IN. J.

*

*Harness Talk.

If you are in need of any kind of Harness youmake a mistake if you do not look over thestock of

MOODY & SMITHbefore making a purchase elsewhere, We make the very best that it is possible

to make, and the prices and styles are correct. Our own make of farm harness

at $32,00, no collars, are the cheapest in the long run of any harness in Mon-

mouth county. We have a good factory made farm harness at $23.00, no col-

lars, as good as others advertised at more money.

We have a few fine, all wool winter blankets left over that we will sell at job-

bers' prices. It would pay you to buy them now for next winter. We carry all

grades of factory harness, whfch we sell at very low prices. Each set is selected

by an expert harness buyer, giving you the advantage of a good judge's judge-

ment ; and prices are no higher than others. In fact we are headquarters for any

article you may need for the horse or stable.

*

4

m/Witecprooflent Md Wagon

'Cover*

Note the N a n e i a n d Bfoi.

MOODY & SMITH,33 and 35 West front Street,

" r " - • • ^ ^ ^ C \ • • • • - . . . . . . . . •' ' • ^ ' ^ ^ • ' .

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!>, fi, PATTKRSON'S DEATH.IT OCCURRED AT MIDDLETOWr?

ON SUNDAY.

He Wm» €•*<• • / the M&emt M^tlttenimof Mtddlrtmirt* Tvtrftafclf* «*** H amthr t«thrr «f rvttffffH <*U«rem,Ttrrlff • / HfcCfft Are W r t » » .

1). ( l o r d o n I 'attiTHun, w h o WHH une of

t in . uUii-Ht n-HHicnlH ».f Muli l l i ' lown town-

BIII)), d ied at hiH homo in li i i l i lU-lown

vi l lage ea r ly on Suiui.«y m o r n i n g . H e

Inn! tHHii m fuilliiK hi'iiltii for w-v.rtt l

vi-jirs a n d for lln- jmnt t h r e e w i n t e r s IIIHI

t , ( t l i loinjH'!lMl In keep to his bed Hit*

tie.ilh w;)« eaUHt'd by e imre r of the

- i D i i i i i i ' l i . A l i o u i H l X l e e l i w i e k ^ H ^ o l b e

iiiweaw took u Hevere hold upon him andIn1 wiiH a ureat hiilTi rer until the endruuw. He lucked a month of beiHW HflyearH old.

Mr. 1'utterson wushurn nt'ar Kurminn-,lalt*. He hiHiruHl lh« carpenter1* tru<ie,whieh lie enKU«ed in for many yearn.The tradH in tlume dayw WIIH vastly dif-ferent from what it is to day. The curpeuterH were then obliged to out amihew their own timber in the woods andget it ready for building- The con-veniences for truvel were not HO g#odeither and the carpenter was* loiupi liedto drive or walk many miles tn work.It was a common tiling for a carpenterto walk ten or twelve luiliH to his woikund then walk back home at night. Mr.Patterson nssisUnl in the ertHtion of anumbpr of tlie old buiUlings in Mnn-mouth county. Among them are theMethodist churches at Adolphia andManawnian, the Baptiet church tit NowMonaiouth, the seminary at Freeholdand Edward Taylor's house at Middle-town rillage.

Mr, Patterson gave up the carpentertrade in 1804 and began fanning. Thelatter business he cngaRpd in until aboutthirteen years ago. when lie was com-pelled to cease active labor on accountof his health, Since then lie had livedat Middletown with two of his children—Miss Elizabeth Patterson and CrawfordH, Patterson. Most of his farming wasdone in Middletown township. He hadlived previously at Keyport and at placesin Howell township.

On November 10th, 1840, he marriedSarah Lane of Adelphia. Mrs. Patter.son died December 3d, 1888. The couplewere the parents of fourteen children,seven glils and seven boys, and all ofthem followed their mother's remains tothe grave. Two of the children havesince died—Egbert N. and EdgarC, bothof Red Bank. The living children areAlice, wife of Charles VanKirk ; EdithC, widow of B. J. Douglais, and MissAdeline A. Patterson of Red BunkWilliam T. and Tunis P. Patterson ofLong Branch ; Miss Elizabeth Patterson,Sarah A., wife of Richard Lufburrowand Crawford H. Patterson of Middletown; Isaiah S. Patterson of Shrewsbury ; Hannah, widow of MarcennaDickinson of Freehold ; Samuel F. Pat-terson of Atlantic Highlands, and Re-becca J., wife of Da?id H. Brower ofSouth Aroboy. Mr. Patterson leaves 23grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

The funeral was held at half past oneo'clock this afternoon al? Middletown vil-lage at the house of his daughter, MrsLufburrow. The services were in chargeof Rev. W. H. J. Parker, pastor of theMiddletown Baptist church, and Rev. 0Rollin Smith, pastor of the Belford Methodiit church, of which Mr. Pattersonhad been a member for several yearsThe body wa§ buried at Fair View eemetery. The pallbearers were Garrett SLuyster, Capt. George A. Bowne, Ger-ardus C. Morris, Abram Stout, DameIrwin and William 0. Story.

A NEW PHOTOGRAPHIC FIRM,

JF. Boitnemtm Heroine a Pavt-ner •/ JoaepU Diek&jf,

On April 1st Joseph Diokoff, the photo-grapher, will enter into partnership witlGeorge F, Holmes ot Little Silver. MrHolmes owns the building on Broadstreet in which the photographic studiois located. The building is being enlarged and otherwise improved. Thesecond flo»r is to be given up entirely tothe gallery and rooms. The store formerly occupied by Fred W. Moselle willbe converted into a reception room anda stairway will lead from the receptionroom to the gallery. The added floorspace in the building will amount to 494square feet. A, feature of the gallerywill be an immense skylight, which wilbe 15x18 feet. The carpentfr work isbeing done by G. Fred Supp of Red Bank

For a long time the two year ol<f childof Mr. P. L. MePherson, 59 N, Tenth St.,Harrisburg, Pa,, would sleep but two orthree hours in the early part of thenight, which made it very hard for herparents. Her mother concluded that thechild had itomaoh trouble, and gave herhalf of one of Chamberlain's Stomachand Liver Tableti, which quieted herstomach and she slept the whole nighthrough. Two boxes of these Tabletihave effected a permanent cure an^ iheis now well and strong. For sale by0, A, Minton & Co., 4 Broad street, RedBank, N. J,

THE ONLY COMPLLTt: DEPARTMENT STORESON THE JERSEY COAST.

THE CLIMAXOF VALUE GIVING.

Men's $3.50, $4 and $5 ShoesNot One Damaged Shoe

in the LotAT $2.20 THE

PAIR

ON SATURDAY, MARCH 7th, we will place on sale 3900 pairs of lien's $3,50, $*,00

and $5.00 Shoes at the uniform price of $2.20 the pair. The Shoes are all in the

advanced Spring Styles and not one shoe in the entire lot has suffered the slightest dam-

age; all are hand-welted and have genuine oak-tanned soles.

THE STYLES:Lace, Button, Congress. Blucherand Oxford

THE LEATHERS:Patent, Patent Colt, Patent Viol,Enamel,Viol Kid,Velour Calf, BoxCalf, Wax Calf, Cordovan, CoolieCloth, Kangaroo, Tan Viol Kid,Tan Russia Calf, . . . . . . .

THE SOLES:Light, Medium or Heavy.

THE LASTS:Straight or Swing.

THIS IS AN OPPORTUNITY TOSECURE TWO PAIRS OF SHOESFOR THE PRICE OF ONE *

STEINBACH COMPANYASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY.

• • • • Mammoth The Ocean PalaceBranch Store at West End, N, J.

' , ft — T •

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' £ ' • " ~*

THE RED BANKJOHM II TOOK Mll .r

HI »**Hil'TIOSO n e ? I H I

P I i m o n l l u i

n>d Praprl*t«r.

fit HE

nil i itB h o u l i i r i ' i i i I i I i o > . l i t I . ! ? • I I> K u r t i r i ' n o ! i n f e r l i m i tW m d i r t t l m u i . . i m t i k i i h n h t f i ' 1 o f H i 1 \ i T t l i « ' i i i > - n i »i b m i l i l I I - I I , I i H I . i l l ) , i 1 I I . ' I i H l r r i l i n l l M o n i i H V t i l g l i l^ , I V » ' f f l s i ' • < l l N I C . I n I ' M i l i t i f f u f I ' i l M i l t j i M K D u l li n i l n l H l i i l M i i l l . s U N . i f l r l ) H* t i l l V i l i v l l l * K l I t l i H Mf s l t r i i I f i i t I V* H . J l i l l N g l ! U i i < M K * * U ! h 1 H i S e i l e . i f i ' l

1 1 1 c t ' i i i . - i i I n n ' , f i n I i I I I M ' I I I H I I . T l n - w u n d o * w i l li » < p l H . t i l n l I i n - u I I I I M H n f < i n m i i M M i n , I M I H I k i l l A I f

U h l l i i l i l t I n > l l r i - » m i l l i » K l l \ , ! c » l g i l e w i l l I I n n s , I ' l l -.,w i n U ' i i i - c i h . ! i " i i i 1 1 1 i i i s I I i u r

WKhNKMt.W. MA lie II 4. MMM.

T i n 1 hi-M 11 riK in t in 1

W I I N l i i - a n l ( ' " ' l o i r t i n -

l i H " l i t I ' M u t i i i i _\ I ' s i i T i l u y .

u n t i l M u i i i l a y n i ^ h t H i n t t h e I

i/TA m i i n H I i n i ' i l « h i > l i u f t i

V i h i u t i r n u i i t c r

n n n i i n l -

tlnvo billHt h i i l l i i i i l I n i n m ¥ i i i i h h i u i t h e y i i i U ' i i i l i ' t l

t o | i r r * « - i . A t l l i n l i n i ' i t l l i ^ t i l l ' ) s t . i t l ' i l

t l m t i l n ' V i M ' u l i i t i v i i r 1 1 i f ] i a ^ - a i 4 « ' i > f t l i v

l u l l i i i i i k i i i j ' I v n l H i i i k a c i t s , a m i u n h i d -

i i i £ i t * pn-.-M'in t e r r i t o r y u n l y , a m i h a v i n g

a r i l i i • n i l u i i i r l u U M ' i t t t i i c l h ' t l ,

Y f s t t ' r i l i i T ( . ' i i n i i i i i > s i o r i i ' r K l > , t v i . . . I ' u e h

H o u s t o n w t : i i t t o T r t l U u l l t y l i t l]>

t i n - c i t y r l i i i r t i ' r t l i r i n i j r l l . T h e y

w i r e ni i H H i i p a i m ' i l b y I . F n n i k I l a w k i i i H ,

a n d b y L a w y e r s . l a i n t - s K. I X g n a i i n m i

J o h n H, A j i | i l f g i i t i ' , S r . T I H - V p r c w M i U ' d

tbt'ir nruiiUH-ntij in (iivur uf a city gov-ftntiicnt, arid tin- lu-urinK W.IH then ad-journed to nrxt Wcdnt-sduy, when tlumeopposed to imposing a city go «rnmenton Rod Blink will la- hoard.

The rtentimotit agfUtiHt incorporatingRed Rank as a city hatt grown very muchduring tho past week. Nearly every bus-

man iti the town is now opposed tothe proposed incorporation. The greatadditional taxation which would have tobe borne in order to pay the Haliiries andthe increased expenses of a city govern-ment and the sperm! taxes which couldbe levied on delivery wngons, busmensplaces, etc., would result in no compen-sating advantages ; and thin has becomeapparent to them.

The taxpayers are almost unanimouslyagainst the project. The aimll propertyowners, those who own a house and lotwhich they occupy an a home, and whocannot shift the burden of increasedtaxation to a tenant, are especially op-poied to the proposed change. Thelarger property owners and the businessmen of the town realize that inurenBedtaxation will result in a Btnallur numberof new retiidents and a decreased amountof business to be done ; and a numberof thosp who originally signed a petitionin favor of a city government now statethat since they have learned the charac-ter of the proposed city law they are op-posed to the change.

The agitation in favor of a city gov-ernment is still kept up by those whohope to hold salaried olfices under thecity government, and by those who ex-pect to profit financially thereby. Newsets of figures are produced by themnearly every day, in the hope, of creat"ing a sentiment favorable to theirschemes ; but their figures have been sooften disproved tlint they nro no longertaken into serious consideration. Themen who are behind tho scheme for ncity government have never been notedfor their public spirit, and their declar-ations that they .ire making this effortpurely for the beiieh't of the people doesnot carry much weight.

There are some who mny actually .be-lieve that the town will bebendited by acity government suflicient to compensatefor the great increase of taxation whichwould result; but these men are veryfew, Most of those who are clamorousif»r a city government are those who an-ticipate personal advantages by thechange.

T O W N T A L K .

K \ e r y J f r n c y n i u i i w h o a t t e n d e d Hie

1 ' M I I - A u i f i ii'HR f n u H ! i tu lTi i lo w a s Htrui-k

w i i h I n e wry jNsor H h o w m g iiuid<> by

NVw ,l<-i>r_\. SVIi i lc n l n u » i ( e v e r y Btii if

l i i td ii f ine h t i i l d i i i i j , N e w J e r H e * s I I I I I M

I i i | 4 « S i H H O I l l h l K K l t i c a i i t a w t i t i n i k f , l t T -

h c v i t i i ' f i / e t - l a . i ! i ( i f i i « * ( J o f ( h i i i h l a i c

• • •

At tin1 coming fair at St. l^un,- Ne*Jersey Hboiild be worthily nipTi'm-nted,A mi'ii'iiire IH now bcfoie the Htate legisliiture, appropriating a siiin siitlicirut togive New Jrr.iey n nuiiabli' building andto make a proper exhibit, National andinternational faifH are tuu'riHions whereuntold good can be done to u Mtat«> byhaving it properly represented, and ilieI'ost of HUCII an exhibit i« returned to thejM-iiple many fol<l. The IIICIIHUIC nowbefore the legiHlature Hhould l>e passedwithout a dissenting vnte.

C h u r c h N e w t ,The women's inisMonnry society of Ibe

Haptist church will hold a reoeptnn atMrn. (), 1C. David's to-inurrow iifteriloi'iifruin three to four o'clock. An inter,esting program IN being prepared. ABilver uirering will be taken up for thebeiii fit of the society'.

The monthly business meeting of theKjiworlh league of the First Methodistchurch will be held to-night after theprayer service. The devotion.il meetingof tho league next Sunday night will beTed by Edward H. Lafetra.

The trustees of the Red Bank Baptistchurch have appointed a house commit-tee to have general oversight over thechurch property. The committee con-sists of Starr H, A'mbler and Nichola6

Wilson.

LIVI PiOIONS WANTED.Al>p!v In Frank MuMooa, fmmtilil, N J

I n <•Hunk.

BOY WANTED.H. Twiford, No. tt\ tH>ring slrr^i, Kc

II |i

CLERK. WANTED,uiiH Imlv c le rk wdi iU- j A n Htn i i . ,'iO Breadi f l(<-#liullk

HAY AND CORNSTALKS,t t i mill tliiiiiLt• v liiiV ii i i i c urii hljilk« fur sail1.Whliu. I illlH Sllvur, N ,1.

CALVES WANTED.pi lri> pnlit fur I h r i iilsi'w In Uulli A

)')! IcMiiiiit; h i i lJ l jc is

A it-hiir«fiitjlii;

iiiiclitutt : ll . N J

BALI.i»[i|riM. Ift-horw* power (Millar,

iti) HBW Uhic *itv.« ntul miMlld-(IUU liM-utl iMMfR. H. I. IV«*p,

FOR SALEm»»«ui-r»iim IIOUM* in liwi Itank. IOKI-KHT *Hb

^|iri'« viii'itni iulH HittulnlnK. r a n In- houulil Ht vour«\*n fi«iii(«. i m u e i inwU In li>«vi'iumi AldJ , I', ii Una !»7. U«i| HttiiE. N .1.

PAIR OF CLOVIS STOLENIf t h e par l i e s H I M r e t u r n I'lthi-r t y mull o r »'*-1>»fi tin1 l l l n u * Ihu l VM'it" Lakfll from my hi-llw> Uit>

i d m uf nulv I s*lll iiiil jni,m>,-uii' lh*' iui i ie , its 1 know« t i u the imrty Is 11. I". Aniltrwili .

COW FOR SALF.K r i ' s f i ( i i i l c h f u n f o r s u i t i . f l V I - H C H I ' I I I .

W . H ( t l i l N - l l . t , S t ' W M u l l l l H H i l l l , N . IA |»|»1 v

COW FOR SALE.Y i i n n i f i l n T d u i r t i l t r p t i ,li>rsi'v i v « fur »; i lc

i | i i l r c uf I I . , i . Hi m - v i ' l t . I . l t i l c H i i i . i . V ,1I n -

HOUSE FOR RENT.l l n i i w 1 f c t r i ' t i t a t i m l W i i l l u i f " . l i i ' t ' i

m o n t h , l i i < | i i l r r l i t L U I I I I I W ' H . I . . I h I n i j i i . ' i

# ! 1 | K T

FOR SALE.O u t ' w m k i i i i o e u n i nix1 iciiiii uf innlrH. \V.

Wal l ln i t . I'titiliitjx ; I'tmlufflft'. l i n t Kmik. N. ,1.A.

PUPS FOR SALE.l ' l i re lireil Cul l te pi i |w Tor Hult< ut Sit .ui iiinl $.r),lMi

e a i i i . I'llHi lew \V. j ( i ne» . ikix Hi, l lult i i i lel , N. J .

FOR BALI CHEAP,(»ijn/'vIKidcr Hluve anil one ];iivi' 1'iiUi tub. Ap-

ply Mm, Klrivlier. 1B9 Stiruwxtniry KM niie. Town.

DOC FOR SALE,A tl iortWlUiml Wt. B»Thant i!ug fur HHle ; fi-male,

ntni' years old. Edward Lavion, IUKIIIHIUIH. N, J.

At the Reformed church ii'xt Sundaymorning Rev, T. A. Beekman, thewill preach on "The Labor of Love."The evening discourse will be "God'sProtection."

A bread, cake and apron sale will beheld in the lecture room of the Baptistchurch on Saturday, March 14th. Theproceeds will be for the parsonage fund.

TIn> regular quarterly meeting of theHollywood union of Christian Endeavorwill be held at the Red Bank Baptistchurch on Friday night, March 13th.

Rev. W. R, Matteson will give nextSunday night the fifth of the series ofsermons t» young men. The subjectwill be "The World of Polities."

The Christian Endeavor society of thePresbyterian church will hold a Bociablenext Friday night at the Presbyterianparsonage.

Walter Longstreet of McLaren streetwas baptized in the First Methodistchurch on Sunday night.

CORN STALKS FOR •AUf.W>0 8h*'iivt'« of nice green Kinlks fur wile. Inquire

of Z, THjrUir, J . J . (iibbuns'spiiiut', I.ittli'HllVL'r, N. J.

FARM TO LET.A funii of 4i< Hi'n's at itei'iiipurt bcli

T wii lUuis in i«!t on Hliant,of du l l t r w s (>o the pluoe.

i T. VV i I Hit m>, th ea nport. N. J.

U>

Addrtwi

HAIR WORK.preiiiiri'tl Ui tlevuti1 my e n t i r e t ime lu m i k l n u

p r l ies , ciiiiililiujsJ. Hilt] nil kindH uf ha i r work ,AIIIIH-MS, L"it WeM l-'ii lit Hlrm'l, ur st'tld IMP word andm i l t'Hll upon vi'ii MISN I. l i r und . IttMl Hank ,

KINDLING WOOD FOR SALE.1 I m n ' H hi i f f i iuni i l l lv uf kind Ing WINK! a t myw mil l , whleh K1»|IIIM"MI. dellveNMHit Bt'ii Bank ,

Hi i ieur (hiTe, nt twi'iuv cenLi [KT bHrn'l. sixfcii H ( i t i l l a r l i n n l i ' 1 H . CtHik, T l n l u n Krt l l s , N , j .

COTTACE FOR RENT.rnttiige for rent. conUlnlnR U>n roomg. tnciudlog

lmth ; on rivei. Kln»> sjiidy ithoie. HOIHI IMUIIDK.nuMiern liniiruvemenLi. Applv to J, Trafford Allen.oinicripf Fniri! S I I I T I and Maplf avenue, fled Hank.

FARM FOR RENT,Farm of 143 aeren, less than a mile from Atlantic

HighlaiidH, forri'iit, Tlieliouseand uuibulliilnKBarBIn KIKMI condition. For further partlculBrH applyto MM, AnpH1 A, Ciiiiover, 77 Hroad atreet, IleiiB«pk,

HELP WANTED.(ilrl wanU'it in office; bov WHiited to earn the

pHimlilng trade. Cook 4 (julsk'V, Front slrwu, R«i

LATTICE LATH FENCEFor Mile. 1110 feet long. 8 feet High dlvldwj Up in 7frames*, will sell Chen p. Apply at M ShieWsburynveiiue,

COW AND CALF FOR SALE,Cow mixed Durham and Alileiuey: jrood milker.

Cn't one week old. Apply to M. Calltthan, ChapelHill, N, J,

FOR SALE.Scows, on? full blood Jersey; one bull, and four

ROWS eomlujf In profit. T, Fonuun Taylor, Colt'sNuck, N. J.

FARM TO RENT.Farm nenr Port Moomouth for rent. Has over 100

acres. Inquire of Mrs. Mary U, Pujne, Front street.Red Bank, N. J.

PRIVET PLANTS FOR SALE.14,000 stock? privet, from two to three feet

I i f I l k h d T b i P, 0 0 s t o c ? p e , m

fur sale clieiip. Inquire of Ilk-hard TobiD. PostofflceFair Haven,

GARDENER WANTED.Gardener wanted, second man; steady position

the year round. Apply to Alfred Brighton, Box 184,Sea bright, N. J.

ASPARAGUS PLANTS FOR SALE.Palmetto asparBpus plants for iale. Floe Urge

thrifty planta, P. V. Patterson, Red Bank, nearNewman Springs.

HOUSE FOR RENT.House for rent on Hector place, 7 room§ sod al'

improvements • 18 per mooin. Inquire 24 Rectorplace, Red Bank, N. J.

SEED POTATOES FOR SALE.(irt'i-n Mountains, World's Fair and American

(Hants, all uro*n from Northern need li«tyf«r, 11.75P*T barrel. Only a limited quantity left, FUstcome, first served. Hugh Brien, Woodvlew. Free,hold. N. J.

This illustration was made from thephotograph of a field uf Timothy.The portion on the left was not,that on the right w.is, fertilized with

Nitrate of Soda400 pounds to the acre. Every far-mer is interested in getting theheaviest possible yield of grass.

T h e latent edition of our Hiillelin, " F o o df o r P l a n t . * , " • iiniitins an mi-.rllent a n i i l e nn" (]r>sa Urowlnc lor Profit," with prooflh»t the yield of t*arn-cured hay may be in-creased toon jjounds per a( re for each 100|ioiintU of Nitrate of Snda iisrd, will he sentfrit to all inlereMeii, Send imnie on l'osi Card.

WILLIAM ». JnYKRM,If Union Ktresi,

*• New HruutHkk, PI. J,

ICGS FOR HATCHING.Barrpd Plymouth Rooks, I have an exeeptioniiily

Doe pen, closely related to Madison Square (Jar-den winners. Very prolific layera, I have a fewf>rv

til.'Bettings to epare at $1.01) pur thirteen. H, H.siriker,Octmnic, N. J.

MORTGAGE INVESTMENTS,If you have moneT to invest send for our list of

first mortgage inveslineots at 5 and 8 per cent. Forparticulars apply to Albori Robbing, real estate andinsurance, SM8 Main street, Asbury Park, N. J.Telepbone 11-1.

SEED POTATOES.If you want pure seed potatoes of the following

varieties, Americao Glantt. Blnib, BBnuurs, BlrWaiter Raleigh, Early Rose, Early Ohio, Bovee,('artneB'sNo 1.2 and 8, Other klodgquotPd on ap-plication. H, D. Smock A Co., WickatunH, N. J.

Two Farms te Rent or Let.The Taylor homestead farm in MWdleiown vlllate,

containing 100 acres, more or less, and the farmknown as the Shepherd farm, near HeaddeD's Cor-ner, containing 60 acres, will he rented or put euton shares. Address H. C. Taylor, Middletown, N, J.

Prizes for Scbool Children.The Daughters of the American Rev-

olution offer to the public school chil-dren of Monmouih county a prize of $5in gold and a second prize of $2,50 ingold for the best compositions on thebattles of Trenton and Princeton. Thecompositions UIUMI not contain less than800 words nor more than 1,000 words.Competitors must not sign their com-positions hut must send their name andaddress in a scaled envelope with thecomposition. All papers must be sentto Mrs, Henr.v C. Talniage, Red Bank,N. J,, by April 1st, 1908.

SEED POTATOES,(ireeu Mountain seed potatoes for sale. Grown

from Northern seed last year. Apply to W, S. 4 8.V. Bray, Holmdel. N. J,

TRUSTY MAN WANTED.A good trusty man wanted, who will work to the

interest of his employer. Apply to MM. A. Q. Rob-erta. New MoBmouth, N. J,-= : , — a — _ _ __———TO LET.

Six-room house and garden. Prospect avenue,near Little Silver. For rent to right party. W,VanFleet, Little Silver, N..!.

POSITION WANTED,A young man, experienced in accounts, desires

position as booktecp'r. Address " Bookkeeper,"Box 197, Red Bank, N. J.

FOR SALE.A desirable property for sale cheap to a quick

buyer, owner wishes to dispose of same owing tothe fact thiil till buiiDesa interests are elsewhere.Home situated at No, SJ Riverside avenue, RedBank, Modem improvernentfl, Addrew J. A. Ed-gar, 408 George street. New Bruoiwick, N. j .

WALL PAPER,V. VanDorn, aeent for Alfred PeaU celebrated

wall paper, new i9QS lample booki DOW on hand,A postal will bring them to your nome ind you H Dselect your paper at your leisure, also a discountallowed on all sums over §5 00. Your orders kiwllysolicited. Address V, VanDorn, Box 171, Red Bank,N.J .

WM, M. FOSTER, AUCTIONEER.

By a youoK man as fartnpr and gardener. Twenty,thrt'eyears'experience and not afraid of work, A.j , Oartner, Little Silver, N. J.

COUNTRY STORE FOR RENT.TUB old estabitshed store stand at Colt's Neck for

rent—where the Lairds and Chiirlt!S Sherman madefortunes. T. Foroian Taylor.

A Trolley Route Decided On.It haa been given out from time to

time thAl the trolley company which isbuilding a line through Middletowntownship had abandoned its proposedroute along the railroad between Key-port antf" Belford and would go fromKey port to Red Bonk by a more directroute, There lias been some difficulty ingetting the right of way for this routebut all the consents have now been se-cured and work on that branch of theroute will be begun at once, A repre,tientative of the trolley people made thestatement a few days ago that the entireline would be in operation by the first ofJuly.

- . — •* . • • —

Loving Cup on Exhibition.

The silver loving cup which was pre-sented to Judge Henry M. Nevlua of RedBank by the Hudson county court of-flceri on his retirement from the benchis »n exhibition in Robert Wilbur's win-dow, A story of the presentation ap-pears elsewhere in THE REGISTER,

Primary Meetings.The Democrats of Shrewsbury town-

ship will hold their primary to-night.The Democratic township executive com-mittee held a meeting last Saturdaynight and their judgment was that aunion ticket would be preferable to astraight party ticket.

The Republicans will hold their pri-mary to-morrow night. Both primarieswill be held in the township bail.

A bandHome south American parrot, wiili newrape, for sale. Good tuliser and fond of children.Addrew "A," Box i»7. Red Bank.

FARMS SALE.

Belated Kindness.Mr. Smith (in street car)—Madam,

take my seat.Mrs. Jones (who uas been standing

fifteen minutes)—No, thanks. I get offat the next corner.

Mr. Smith—That's all right. So do I.

Renaissance glassware is attracting at-tention at the Dorflinger stores, 8 and 5WeitlQtb street, near Fifth avenue^and86 Murray •treef, New York,— Adv.

— — - » . - .Hortet for Bale, /

Five cheap hones, good workers, suit-able for draft or farm work, for sale attfaf Central livery stables, Red Bank,

BuslneM.Merchant — Did you find out what

that gentleman wanted?New Clerk—No, but I found out what

he didn't want.Merchant—What? How dare you—New Clerk—And I sold It to him,-

Insignif icance.

Man dies! Unmoved the world goes tran-quil on;

Earth back to earths 'tis over soon, andn«

Meets the great change, yet leaves be-hind when tone

Not e'en a ripple on the living Boa.

Th« hand that for a eeason shook thtworld,

All potent In the great affairs of men.Sinks In the dust; a gasp, a feather

•wirled,A breeie gone by—the world forgetl

again I

Bow weak and fragile is the utralnlntthread

That holds a life! A second-It Is tonalBow Boon may. link tha moat Uuitrtoui

headA thouMtn4 )MtuM4«tp ^ Oblivion!

Two One farniB for gale? one 80 acres ancl oneTnft'e acres, near Hed Bank. Peter V. Patterson,Red Bank, near Newman Springi.

~ * HOUSES FOR RiNT. ~No 02 Walluee street, |8,Mh No. 108 WaUnee

Rtreet, $11.00 per month. Inquire at Ludlow'gClothing store, IB Broad street. Red Bank.

FOR RENT.Blacksmith ihop with machlnei and tooli. or with-

out PleDiy of work all ihetlnne". or will gell. B.W. Woodward. » White street. Bed Bank.

WAGON FOR SALE.A good strung two-borse farm wagon for |«5

eaah • also ftgood cow coming in profit in April, In-quire at the Michael Pary firm. Wayside, N. J.

FOR SALE OR RENT.Farm of fifty acre*. Fine nalf-mile race track,

twenty box stalls, two good houses and other out-buildingB. inquire of A. O. Parker. Bed •Bank,

HORSE FOR SALE.re, eight yean old, for rale.

„_...„, ....-kin all harness. Apply to I*Sbrawsburv avenue iod Herbert street. Bed Bank,

Roto man, eight yean old, for rale, floand andgentle, work in all hBrne»s. Apply to L^Lane, Cor.

SKID POTATOES,About 60 barrels of Blush seed potatoes direct

from Ontario County, N. Y., for tale. Price §2.85per barrel at the farm of H, W. Buck, Marlboro, N. J.

WANTED. ~A second'hand one-horse farm wagon, must be in

good condition 1 also a torn turkey and a few hens,

AUCTION SALEOF

HORSES, COWS, WAGONS,HARNESS. ETC.

on the farm known as the George Mackey puce, near

NAVESINK. N. J.The subscriber will sell at public auction on

Wednesday. March i 1th, 1903.AT WM O'CLOCK, A, M.,

2 pood Work Hones, Yearling Jersey Bull, FineGuernsey Heifer, coming in profit April 1st: FineBerHshire Sow, coming in profit; Lot of Fine BredFowls, Rhode island Red Light Truck Wagon,nearly new; Lisrht Carryall, I Farm Wagoni, 2seta of Double Harnags, set of Single Harness, UornBhHller, Btelk Cutter, Paris Green Gun. Log Chain,Block and Fall, 2-Horse Steel Edge Plow. Plowi,Harrows, Cultivators, Bhovels, How, Porks, etc.Also a lot of corn.

TERMS—Six months' credit with good note onsum* over $10; under $1U, cash.

J. P. SODEN.

PUBLIC SALE or

Personal PropertyThe Hulispriber, admin!»tr»trlx of Peter D. Stil!-

wel!, deo#a§ed, will offer for sale at public Fendue,on

Monday, March 9th, 1903,at 10 o'clock A. M., on the farm where she now re-

iidei,

IN THE VILLAGE OF MARLBORO.

all the following personal property •,

5 HEAD HORSES, 11COWS, 7 PICS,

Brown mare, 8 years old, flne hooker and goodworker; bay howc, 8 years old, good worker tnddriver; bay horne, 9 fears old, bay mare. 9 yearsold, good worker; bay horse, good worler. Tbecows are prlnetpBlly Jerseys, a choice berd. Twoyearling calves, calf 4 months old ; 3 cows, freshmiUers, 2 with cal?og by side; 8 lows 4 youngsbnata, 4 firm wagons, 1 new, never been used ; de-livery wagon, market wagon with top, dump, 2-seated carriage with pole aid ihafu, rubber tirerunabout, new last summer; pb«eton, jigger,spindle, cart, woodsled, BteiBh, t light wagon pole*.Osborne binder, in good condition ; McOornjickbinder, MeOornaick corn harrMter, only used 2years • Hoover potato digger. Champion drill. Buck-eye mower. McCormick mower, 2 Asiilnwall potatoplanters, Kraui. Jr., cuItiTator, roller, double A po-tato harrow, potato barrow, heavy A harrow, heavyfallow harrow in three sections, 2 i-borse cultivators,asparagus cait. Than as hay tedder, hay rak", FUherplow, Tibdall asparagus ridser, all oomplete withslubber; windmill,« pair hny gbelvings, 2 a-hor«iSouth Bend plows, road scraper, weeder, bog r«ci,ctif rack, pairgtaik poles, with trlfger; furrowingsled,2.hole com sbeiier. Howe scales, weigh fiOQ lbs ;ice box, Paris green gun, com dropper, 4 ladders,pototo bodf, wbMibarrow, flOgalloo oil tank, crow-cut saw, shovels, hoea, forks, crowhire, quantitT ofcarpenter tools, i pair flynfti and mny other ar-tides; '£ sets heavy double and set light double har-ness, single harness.

PRODUCE.About aw bushel! corn, about 8 Ions timothy hay,

about 70 bbli. Northern leed Giant potatoes, boughtlast fall • 16 bbls. World's Fair potatoea. Northern-sped; about 28 ibis, home growii World's Fair po-tatoes, t tn planks sawed for wagon tongues, tenwagon beds sawed out.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS.Hams, shoulders, lot of pork. Champion milk

coo'er, milk bottle*, chum, four strainers, palls,pans, extension table, 2 bedsteadi, chairs, lamps,stone and dinner poU. waaber,

AIBO at tbe same ticQe will be put up for sale Ibeproperty known as the Uanley lot, situated on Marl-taoro turnpike, near Vanderveer's distillery, consist-ing of ahout 19 acres. Conditions made known onday of sale,

TERMS.—All sums under §10, caih \ on all jum»of $H an I over, a credit of iix months will be givenby purobaspr givinran approved secured note pay-able in bank.

MARY 5T1LLWELL.JACOB C. SMUTTS, Auctioneer,A. J. C. STOKES, Clerk.Caterer on groundi*,

JACOB C. 8HUTT8. AUCTIONEER.

JACOB C. SHUTT3. AUOTIONIER

PUBLIC VENDUE

AUCTION SALEOF

Write particulars to "A, B,1

Bank,P. O. Box JOT, Bed

FOR SALE.Two bedroom suits, large and small bath tuB.

crib, dining room t'lbie, cradle, oarpett and otherarticlei. Tliomiis Voorhis, a « Spring 8tr«t, RedBank.

CARPET WEAVING.Carpet weaving done on the best warp. Rugs a

ipecialty. Mail orders promptly attended to. Wil-liam j . West, Hatawan, N, J., formerly of Shrews-bury.

C A R R I A C E F O R S A L E ,A two-seated family carriage for sale; glau doora.

Carriage in good condition tod will be told cheapfor want uf use. W. B, Lawrence. SBS Broad street.Red Bank,

TO LET.A store, and 4'rooms opuUirtit No. 176MonmonUi

•treet, Bed Bank, opposite railroad Button. Inquire« 4 D, PurtolUo, « Blfmidi Mtnoe, BedBank, m.t.

Farm Stock, Machinery, Etc.The subscriber will sell at public yendue on

WEDNESDAY. MARCH 11TH, 190S,At 1:00 o'clock, rtiarp, on the premises,

Near Mew Monmoutli,On toe road leading from New Honmouth to Keyport,

the following penonal property;FiFt good Work Hones, Sorrel Road Hone, per-fecUy gentle, 7 yetre old i Sorrel Pacer, team ofwell-mated Mules, driyere and workere; 1freih Cow and Calf, fcow, coming In proflt; 1 Bull,coming two years old,

Three Farm Wagoni, two hone Dump Wagon.Bigb-ieit Spring Wagon, 14-barrel body; SpringWagon, 10-b«rrei body: Vegetable Trucks. 0 two-•eated •Wagooi, % Buggies, Runabout, one-boneSpring Wagon, 8 lets heary Double Barnen wtlight Double Harness. 8 nets Single Harness, WoodSled, 1 Cutters, and Wheelbarrow,

New Mo wine Machine, Dcering make; Reaper, 8Hay Rakes, planet Jr. Sei>d Drill, 8 two-horse Bar-rowi, Seed Barrow, 4 two-horse Plows, i BOHPlows, 2 Gang Plows, 8 Cultivators. 8 FurrowingSleda, Bay BhelTingt, 4 ptlr of Whifflftreei. lot ofPlow. Whiffletieeg, W Hotbed Saih. » Root Cutters,Cider Press. Qrlnditone. 100 Tomato Crate*. lot ofBerry oraM, 4 Buggy Poles, Fiaber Flow, SUravelBodiea, lot ol FeDciDg Wire, Sbovela. Rtkei. BOM.Forks, and a lot of other article* too numerous tomention. »

TOO Boi^ela of Cora, 1,000 BoidlM of Stalks, Hay,ite.

CONDITIONS :-All iDUi under $10, ouih: over$10, riz months' credit with approved security.

GEORGE UNZNAYER, JR.

OF

Horses, Wagons, Harness,Farm Wachlnery, Etc,

The subscriber will «ei! at public vendue on thepremises, at

OCBANPORT, NEW JERSEY,ON

Thursday, March 12th, 1803,AT 1 : 0 0 O'CLOCK, S H A R P .

the following pereonul property:Team Brown Marea, 16 haodi, 8 and 10 years old 5Team Sorrell Hortei, 16 bands, 8 and 7 re in old ;

Bay Hpree,'16 hinds, SyeaiM old; Sorrel Mare, 15hands; Bay Horw, 16 hands. S yean old ; BrownMare, 16 hands, 10 years old? Bay Bone, » year*oW, ifl hands; Sorrel Horie. 7 yeare old, 11 bBDdi.Jereey Cow. 4 years old, coming in proflt.

portable Steam Engine, ft-horse power; Butter-worth Rye Thresher Aultman k Miller's WheatThreaber, Butterworth Oircular Saw and Bench,All these machines will be in operation on day ofsale. McCormick Reaper and Binder, MoOnrmiokMowing Machine, and Peerleis Bay Cutter.

Fight two-horse Farm Wagons, ail in good order •,extra Heavy Wagon, built by Thomas Beatty ofLong Branch i Heuvy Ttuok for hauling reilroadIron and timber, Jagger Wagon, 2 BuggiM, Surrey.two-Mated Carriage, iwo-horie Gig, b Dump Bodies,6sets Heary Double Harness, in good order; MiLight Double Harness in good order I 4 met* SingleBar nets, and 14 Blanket*.

Piano, ice Box, 60 loads of floe Man are, 100 feetof ^ - lacn iron Pipe, B0 feet 8-IDCQ Tile, LightWagon Tongue, 500 Sheave* of Btalki, Stack of 8«ltHav, a Light ttoad Semper. Plowj, Harrows, Whif-fletreQa, ihovels. MeckyulM, Rones, Ohalu.Uluflin,lot of -Plank, uedarlFosts, 8 small Scoop*. StationaryWashtabg, 8 parts; 9 fi-et long; 4 pair of Ailei,Extra Wheels with 8 inch tire, OrowMrs, lot ofBarren, and other goods uneful to any farmer.

TERMS :-8Lt months' credit on all luns over$10, with bankable note; under $10, MID,

SAMUEL SMOCK.

CEMETERY MEETING.

The annual meeting of tbe Holradelassociation for tbe purpose of electing directors forthe coming year will be. held at John W. Banes'*•lore on MONDAY, MARCH 18tfa( i t S O o'clock.

OLD COLD WANTED,= K0 dwt of oM gold wtnted.for sun er tmde. L. deB u t , . ™ .

ited. Any quantity takeni t BeoMfM«i Jeweler, B#d

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PERSONAL.

William lYdlow, an agent for fhfMetropuhtHti im-turamv company, hasbeen lfttii»rt»rr<Hl frmu HiuJ Hank to theOaiiideu district. JoMBpli I'ediow of th<»Hame company hat* bt't»n trmuiftTrtulfrom Perth Aiuboy to lied Hunk umi isliving on Moniuouth street,

William K, Colt'mun of Mi'LuronBtret't, who is a clerk in WiekleH's grut'eryHtorc, hutt been routined to iho house byHickiifSH during the past week. Mr.('-olemau's father, William (.'olemtiii ofWindsor, visited him yesterday,

Mrs, Julia F*raiins of Catherine streetand her daughter May were recent guestsof Mr, and Mrs, William Francis of Free-hold, Miss Francis attended the mili-tary ball at Freehold on Wednesdaynight.

Hurry HiUcockH of Brooklyn, a formerresident of Red Bunk, spent-Tuesday asthe guest of Miss Flossie PhelpH of EastFront Htreet,

Mrs, P. T, Brady and her daughterGrace of Enst Front itreet, who havebeen quite iiek with the grip, are re-covering,

Mrs, Tenbroeck Davis of West Frontstreet is spending a feVJayrwith herson. Dr. Edward T. DAVU of BoundBrook,

Miss Mamie Bray of Oakland streetspent Saturday and Sunday with hercousin, MLSB Lillian Thompion of Brook-lyn.

Henry Hardy of Riverside avenue wasthe guest o?er Sunday of his brother,James Hardy of Brooklyn.

Louis J. Tetley of Herbert street tookpart in a benefit entertainment at Plain-field on Friday night,

Aaron I. Marcus of Red Bank andFreehold is spending a month at Ashe-ville, North Carolina,

SHOPS IN JAPAN,

The Floor* Are the Voitntert andSquatting flaeem • / Buyerm,

To start a Japanese shop is the sim-plest thing In the world. You take thefront off your house and arrange yourworldly possessions on the floor,

Japanese floors are raised off the•treet, though nothing is raised offthem. The transient customer sits onthe edge of the floor sidesaddle. Areal shopper who means to do thething properly climbs up on tho floor,which is also the counter, and squatson his heels.

Real Japanese shops have no doorsor windows or counters. Shop windowsIn England do not leave much wall Inthe frontage, but even an English shopwindow does not take the whole frontof the house.

The Japanese have not many regularShops. There are very few streets ofshops even In Tokyo, which is as largeas Berlin, Foreigners never buy any-thing but curios. If they are fools,they deal with shops kept by Euro-peans; if they want bargains, they dealwith Chinamen,

There are many Chinese shops intreaty ports. The Chinaman is cheaperand more reliable than the Japanese.European shopkeepers do not set up InJapan for philanthropic reasons. Jap-anese shopkeepers are the lowest classof population except the outcasts,Servants and laborers take precedenceof them in society, and precedence isthe hobby of the Japanese.

You have a different bow and a dif-ferent salutation for a man who is be-low you or your equal, and several forthe people above you. You have evena different language for each, and Jap-anese writing wriggles like carving ontheir temples,-

WEAK IN THE ALPHABET.

A RUMIMI Banknote.The 100 ruble note of Russia Is

barred from top to bottom with all thecolon of the rainbow, blended as whenshown through a prism. In the centerIn bold relief stands a large, finely ex-ecuted Tlgnette of the Empress Cath-erine I. This is In black. The otherengraving Is not at all Intricate or elab-orate, but Is well done In dark andlight brown and black Inks.

No Ute a t All

He (who has offended her)—Won'tyou look up at me? •

She—If I did, you'd kiss me again.He—No- honest, I won't.She—Then what's the use?

m *^The Word 1 h a t Hold*.

I ww him peering through the bari;Hia eyes were small and red;

Hia face was marred by many BearsAnd was a thing to dread..

His lips wore coarse, his note was flat.His jaw was wide and square;

Hia brow was low beneath a matOf stiff and tangled hair.

I drew away from where he stood,Remembering •hamefully

The ancient tleg of brotherhoodHa still might claim with me.

With only hatred in my heartI watched him when he swayed

And wished him evil for tha part1 knew he must have played.

A Scream rang down the corridor,And then a woman hurled

Herself before the grated doorThat barred him from the world.

As if touched by a wizard's wandI eeaaed to see the knave.

But law a child clutch at her handAs if she still could save.

I heard him nobbing. "Mother"—thenHot tMura fell where I stood—

One word Qed save-to hold all mmIn ties ot brotherhood.

i^ttetm Thmt Men fan NeverJLmmrm tm Mmke.

•W hy is it thai with some men mnwletter?* of the ttlpliHbet are harder tomake than others find, in fact, Hintthere art1 some letter** that twine menlUiver learned how to makcV" iiHkttl nyoung man who taken ooiiHlderablu In-terest in the mutter of handwriting !ythe New Orleans Times Democrat, "ItIs H rather «!iigiilHr fart that nearlyevery liitm outside of the experts laweak on oiu« or more of the letters inthe English alphabet. Soiuetlmea theletter involved is a capital letter; some-times it Is of tlie Hinaller kind; some-times It Is one letter and sometimesanother. In nny event, you will flurtfew men who are exempt from the fall-lug referred to,

"I know of one man who In spite oftho fact that he does 11 great deal otwriting has never learned how to makea cjipitiil P, l ie simply makes a stag-ger at It, and. as a rule, the result ofhis efforts will look more like a smallp than like the capital I \ I know ini-other man who can't make a small f,to save his life. He can never get thelower part of the letter below the Hue,He makes it look like a clubfooted binstead of an f. There are others who,when they try to make the small b,give it the long shank, and it lookimore llko the letter f. It is rather sin-gular that these traits should hang onto a man's writing for a lifetime, butthey do It just the same, and if youmake a few inquiries among yourfriends and acquaintances you will findthat but fe,w of them are exempt fromthis fault.

"It is very much like the habit ofspelling certain words incorrectly.Many men who are rated as first classspellers pass through life without everin a single instance spelling certainwords correctly. It is due to habitlargely. If you should ask them howto spell the word, they would tell you,but, when they go to write It, that isquite different, and they will get itwrong e^ery time. So they know, too,how certain letters should be made, butthey simply can't put them down onpaper. It Is a curious but commonfault."

•m i m- —

Didn't Bother Him,A German clergyman who was trav-

eling stopped at a hotel much frequent-ed by wags and jokers, The host, notbeing used to having a clergyman athis table, looked at him with surprise.The guests used all their raillery ofwit upon him without eliciting a re-mark. The clergyman ate his dinnerquietly, apparently without observingthe gibes and sneers of his neighbors.One of them, at last, in despair at hisforbearance, said to him: "Well, I won-der at your patience. Have you notheard all that has been said to you?""Oh, yes; but I am used to it. Do youknow who I am?" "No, sir," "Well, Iwill Inform you, I am chaplain of alunatic asylum. Such remarks haveno effect upon me."

DR. THOMPSON'S

AromaTooth Powder,

FOR CLEANSING

•nd PRESERVING THE TEETH.

This powder in caivfully pre-pared from select ami best in-gmlientH ami contains nothinginjurious to tho teeth and gums.The llavors are so adjusted aato impart the most delightful:and persistent |>erfuine to the!

i

breath ; and for removing freshaccumulations of tartar andleaving a sense of cleanliness tothe mouth it has no equal.

FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS.

illllllllltlllMllllllllllltllMHIMIMIIIIIIIIIII

Pittenger's Meat Market.

SPKCIAL PRICKSON

SATURDAY, MARCH 7th

FRANK PITTENGER, the Butcher, iWith Sherman's Market Klcvt'u Years.

TELEPHONE 84-1.

Red Bank Opera House.One Week Commencing

Monday, March 2d.

Improving Upon Nature,"What on earth are you doing In

here, Tommy?" asked his mother, peer-ing into the darkness of the henhouse,whence had been coming for five min-utes or more a series of dismal squawk-ings, accompanied by a loud flappingof wings,

"I am trying," said Tommy, whoseemed to be doing something with aknotted rope, "to fix this rooster so hisalarm won't go off before 7 o'clock to-morrow morning."

Dilger-Cornell Co.,In Repertoire, Hlgh-eliii Plays and bright up-to-

date Specialties,

TONIGHT. WEDNESDAY.A True Kentackian.

Thursday Night—The New Minister.Friday Night—The PrtnceM of Patches.Saturday Matinee and Night—Pinys to

be announced later.

Reserved geata fit Minion'! Drug Store,fBICEB-10, 80 and 80 tents.

»•»•• • • • • • • • • • • •»• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •»• • • •»• •»• • •»»»»»»»

ii Shoes at Your Own Price. I<» Only three weeks more in which to dispose of my entire stock

of boots and shoes. They must go at any price.

Also Store Fixtures for Sale,New York Sample Shoe Store,

5. PRINCE,1 Front St., Foot of Broad St., Red Bank, N. J,

I

Hurrying Home.

Hurrying home as the daylight diesGoes the weary, toiling throng;

Somewhere a joyoua welcome lies,Children's prattle and jocund •ong;

Othero who know but a lonely room,Cheerless hearth and a taitelen fare.

Hurrying homo in the deepening gloom,Some with their joy and iomi thair

care,

Hurrying home as the years roll by,Onward moves the world" • great

throng.Some to discover their resting nigh,

Others the way both hard and long;Some by the beacon of Faith are led

Trustingly over the path they roam;Some In the gloom of a mystic dread,

All of them, all of them, hurryinghome.

FOR SALE.THE BUILDINGS OT THE

Mercantile Co-Operative BankIncluding the Fostoffiee Building

AT RED BANK, N. J..

Tflfoet frnnton Broad street, and 90 feet in depthon Wallace street, compoeed of Tiffany brick andIndiana llme§tone.

Terms will be made to suit con?enlence of p u rchaser. Offers art solicited,

MICHAEL T. BARRETT,

Receiver,

Address Fuller Building, Jersey City, N, J.

CEMETERY LOTS FOR SALE,The heirs of toe late BaDoah L. Bordea of Sbrewi-

bury, have opened In counection with the Shrewsbury Presbyterian jChurch yard, a plot of Broundcontaining 81 nne burial plow, each 12x25 feetAlso a piece of ground for single Bra?ea, For fur-tber Information call on or address,

W, L, BOBDEN, Trustee,Shrewsbury. N. J,

Do You Believe It is to your interest in buying a vehicle or harnesa to Rlook at a large itook such as you find at our repos- v>itory, where the price is as low as the quality of thegoods will warrant, rather than of some iDuall dealerwho must ask a large price to offset the few sales hemakes ? If you will look over our stock you will getjust what you wanted at the price you wanted to pay, B

The latest designs in Station Wflf ons, Canopy Snr- Zkreys, Runabouts, Stanhopes, CoTerts, BonleTardg, ACabriolets, Wagonettes, Speed Wagons and Carts, dPony Carts, Etc, Etc, d

Bminess Wagons, with or without tops, in every dconceivable style at any price you want to pay. d

Our Harness Prices a re Hard to Beat. y

Hand-sewed Double Draft Harness. $27.50 ^Hand sewed Buggy Harness , . ., 18.00 dGood Surrey Harness, collar and hames. 18,00 d

BIRDSALL & SON, \33-35 Monmouth St., Red Bank, N. J, i

!»••••»•••»••»•»•»••» • • • • •» •» • • • • • • •» • • • •»»• • • • • •» '

LUMBER AND HARDWARE. \Paints. Oils and Varnishes,

DEVOK'S READY MIXED PAINTS,DBVOB'S KeadT n i x e d QIOM P«lnt« for Floors; wi l l dry over might,

SUPKBISII FLOOR VARNISH; quick drying.ReadF n i x e d Orapnlte Paints for Tin Boofa % will cure a leakr roof,

O4LVANIZBD POULTRY NETTING,LIIHE, LATH, RO1ID4LE AND PORTLAND CEMENTS.

J. TRAFFORD ALLEN,FRONT STREET, opposite Maple A\ ««*, RED BANK, N, J.

•»•»••»•»»»•• • • • •»»•»•• • • • • • •»• • • • • •»• • •»• • • •»•»••;»

MtlRTHN,BRNNETT,—At Ealootovrn. on Tuesda?, Fehru-

•ry i4ib. Mil. Allen Bennett, of a daughter,CARTON-—At New York, on Thursday, February

26tn, Mrs, Lawrence A. Oarton, formerly of Everett,of a son.

WALLINO.—At RlFenidfl Drife, in Mlddletowntownship, on WedDMdHF, February 86tb, Mrs. JounD. Walling, of • daughter.

SPECIALS

jit Sherman's MarketSATURDAY.

i Seed Potatoes.rarnaers are invited to com©

\ \ and inspect my stock of ieed

i potatoes, which I have selected

, \ from Maine and New York state,

i These potatoes are bought in oar«

load lots and will be sold at the

lowest market prie#, _

PETER McCLEES,\ Wharf Avenue. Red Bank, N, h

Leg of Lamb,

Rib Roast,

Pot Roast,

Chuck Steak,

ALSO

Clwckens, Ducks and Turkeysat a Low Price.

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A GIFT UK A LOVIM] ('IT.JUDGE NEVIUB RECEIVES A

TOKIN OP EhTKLM,

The t'nurt Itfflferm • / ' ltmln>n I'SMM-ty Presented ftiiit II itli a Hand-• •me Mulld Siliei I <>i inu tu%> I tint

A i i i i i r k i ' i i i n l m l e u t r « ) > > t u , t . | u n l

t o J 1 1 • I n i • I l i m y M N - u i i i i l l H i ( I H . i i t U

l i i B l F I H I M V O N I n * ! • i i i f i n t i t a - < • ! i n i l

m i l l " ! j l l l l g C u l I I I I 1 1 i n I I ( • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 % , t d i l l 1 1 ^

W . I ' i t r k i ' l l i ; i : i I n e n ; l | i ; i i i i P I ! i . 1 I ' i h ' H ' i i ' i i l

j l j l i g t ' N f V 1 1 1 - , t i n - 1 : 1 I ( • • ! • • • [ I T > l l > > f ' " ^ • • "

y t ' i i r M h n * I I U t ' . \ | i i i - . - ' l , i i i i I M i S i ' v i i h

I i c I I I r i ' i i r t t h i T i ' l o r t i n ' I i i - l t h i n 1 l : i K t

F r i d a y .

W l i i ' i i . l i n l u ' N . v i i ! , n - . ! ' - m l I t i n 1

N ' n r l i l i i i t h e m o m m y u i h i « r i ' l i i i ' i n i ' i i t

t i n 1 i o u r ! r o o m « a - t i l l t ' i l w i t h c o u r t a m i

• • ( H i n t s n l l i i ' ' - i > . l ; n v \ i ' i - « . a m i

«i lh which ihi> jmlg

tin- it l l t l l rt of IllH tirtic*«*.

I l i c w i f l W H S it t ' u i n | i ! i ' t i - H u r p r i N i ' t o

f11•• J U I I K 1 ' Hi i i l In 1 W U H v i s i b l y u f f t u ' t t H j .

At I IT u g l i f y i n g to (hi1 w o r t h of Un> of-

l i i - i i - i u i i i l 11 I I i i i i i l i i i l r t ' l u t i o t i s i l i H t 11 i i t l

i i i « a s h i j . i ! - t i i l l u - t w c f i i t i n - c o u r t a n d

( I n - o l l i c i i i K I K ' M i n i :

" A m i i l i i i I n a u t i l i i l K i ( t , I ' O I I I I I I I , i o

n i l ' , a n i t i t ' ( • • « , n u t f r o m m e n o f w m l l h .

l l o l f l ' o l l l 1 1 ) 1 1 ! SS l i d h t l i l n l l i l ^ l l 111 M l U M l ' l V ,

Imt I rom men of tin* |H'oplr, 1 thu l l ap-

| i i t ( ' i i ! i 111IF- n i l ' t , c o l u m n t o i i u 1 t o -

i l n , i n t h i H i t j v , a - - a M i a i n f i ' H t i i i i o i i o f

y o u r i M i T i i i • 111> 1 f i i t ' i u h p l n j i f o r m e ,

i n H ' i l i i i i H ( h e - I ' l D - i t i o i i s o f I I I V h i ' r i r t , m i d

I a s - u i c \ o i l t h a t i t w i l l u l w i i V M t)«* j T i / . i ' d

a s o t i i ' o f m y m o s t v i i l u a b l t ' | M i s s i * ! i M i i i ! i t i .

" 1 HII p l i n n n f r o m h t ' i c t o d a y t o

m ii^jh1 i iy iu i i w n h ih t 1 p i o p l t ' . 1 r thul l

tit N i I t u r r i t t i n 1 r n a n v k i n d UMMVH t h a t

HON. HENRY M, NEVIUS.

the judge, A few minor matters were!disposed of and JucJm* Nevius was aboutto annonnce his n>tiretmnt when lie wasinterrupted by Ex-Betiator William D.Edwards, wlio, oti behalf of the courtofficers*, presented him with a solid silver ',loving cup.

The cup is ulmuHi'ul specimen of thesilversmith's nrr. It is ten inches highand stands on Hn ebony pedestal of aboutthe iume height. Silver handles are t ieither side and a wreath of silver flowersencircleH the bowl. On ono side is theinscription : " Presentee] to Hon. HemyM. Nevius, Circuit Court Judge of theState of New ,1 rsey. 1890-1903." Onthe reverie bide are engraved the namesof the court officers who made the giftIo the judge.

In presenting the cup thu speakir•poke uf the high regard in which thejudge was held by every officer of thecourt and said thnt the gift wns made inorder that the judge might always havein his home it memento of the love andaffection in which he was held by everyone who had occasion to meet him inthe court of justice. As to the mem-ber« of the bar, the speaker said thatthey would never foi get theevenlianded-

and fairness and good fellowship

MiMtiiiiniiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiitiiiiiiii

Skirt AnnouncementEXTRA VALUES DURING COWING WEEK.

NEW GOODS, NEW STYLES. NEW PRICES,\ V ( . m e n ' s W a l k i n g S k i r t s ,

I ' l u c * . ^ i . t v . ( > \ f i > n l m i x t i i K ' s

• m i l M a r k , o ^ i n d v v m i l n i . U c i i -

• i K . n i i ' t ' K ' u i . i d i ' , a k i n d w o r t h

$ : . c o , h e r e f o i a s l a n t I

nine. I i

Women ' s Ski r t s of woolsui t ing, Mack and r ay , walk-ing length, niri'ly >tiU'hetl andt a i l o i i i ia i i i1 , a k i n (i w o r t h$ 4 oo , h e r e d ti r i n gs a l e 2.

W o m e n ' - . S k i r t s m W a l k i n g a m i D r e s s S t y l e s , m a d e of a l lw o o l m a t e r i a l s a m i in t h e l a t e s t f a s h i o n , s o n i c f%t r i m m e d w i t h d t o p s a n d b a n d s of T a t T e t t a , t h e \r e g u l a r p r i c e is l o i ^ 5 0 0 h u t t o m a k e cji 1 ic k s e l l i n g U 9

NEW SPRING WAISTS.Our Waist display is gnnvino; larger daily. Kveiy new and

wanted kind wdl he found IH-IC, hotli in Silk and the newCotton Mercerized Materials, n ade in a large variety of styles.One that has already sold well is made of Mercerized FancyCanvass, trimmed with (7rape Ornaments, has a new sleeve andlarge buttons —the price, $ 1 . 9 8 ; hundreds of others at 5 0 C .and up to $ 3 . 9 8 .

Sale of Sateen Petticoats.Si.35 and Si.50 Values at 95c.Petticoats made of a fine grade of Sateen, mercerized in the

yarn, giving it a very brilliant and lasting luster. We have 18different styles, corded, tucked, accordion pleat and strappedwith hemstitching, designed for spring selling. All cut verywide and 38 to 44 inches long. Not a PetticoatIn the lot worth less than $1.35, some $1.50, butearly purchase enables us to sell this lpt at.

Store open pren-inan till N.OO.

Saturday* IO.OO.

Store often even.ing* till SiOO,

Ha turd a v* iO.'OO,

M t

SMOKE THE

Unccda and IloranCigars.

5 CENTS EACH.

Hold in all t h e load ing ( ' i gn r Store*,Piiij< Storen, e t c .

MunufucinrtMl by

E. H. WILBER,Fair Huven, «. J,

MonumentsandHeadstones.

1 am prepared to take ordersand to have wet up promptly ineemeteiies, headstones and mon-uments of all kinds.

I can show a very large num-ber of designs, which are car-ried regularly in stock, and canfurnish to order any special de-sign wanted.

I also do lettering in ceme-teries.

havo been shown me here, the manyhearty hand prasps the many words ofeneoiirnj e.nent, and I shall always feelthat I have done my duty to the verybeat (f my ability. That errors havebeen made there can be no question,Man la not infallihle, but I believe thatyou will think with me that when erronhave been made they have been errorsof the head and not uf the heart. Andnow in saying farevvtil it ii not as amagistrate but as one of the people tothe people,"

At the conclusion of the judge's speechProsecutor Spi er, in a feeling address,told of the aiFtction of the youngerrneraberB of the bnr for the retiringjudge and wished him every success inlife. In concluding Mr, Bpeer said tothe judge, "You hove a personalitywhich has impressed itself on the barof this county and made for you friendsof all with whom you have come incontact."

The members of the bar of Hudsoncounty will give a dinner to JudgeNevius at New York on Saturday night.

Judge Neviua has resumed the prac-tice of law at Red Bank, His offices arein the rooms formerly occupied by HenryJ, Child.

VVVvVVV

IvVVVVVVVVVV

•5V

ft

If

• 3vVV

S

A SUNDAY-SCHOOL FIELD DAY.

To Be Held «f I At no Hruneh flextlI'effji£Mflr*i#.

The Monmouth county Sunday-schoolAssociation will hold a Held day in theReformed church at Long Branch nextWednesday. There svill be morning andafternoon bewions, In the morning aildresses will be m:ule by J, H, Dinlse ofFreehold, president of the asHociation;Rev, J, W. Lissonden of Freehold, andMiss Josephine L. Baldwin of Newark.The speakers af night will he Rev. W, B,Matteson of Red Bank, Miaa Baldwinand Prof. Charles W, Blakeslee of LongBranch, Mr. Matteson's subject will be"The Teacher's Study of the Bible." Aquestion box will he u feature of bothwssions.

THE CARPENTERS' UNION.

inJf Mam Fifty-might MembermGood Standing,

The carpenters' union of Red Bunkmet on Saturday night and elected sev-eral new members. The union is steadilj* increasing in membership and hasBOW on tht) roll 58 members in goodstanding. The charter Hat will beolospdnext Satpwday night. The charter feeit 13. After the list closes the initiationfee will be $3 until June l«t, after whichdate the fee will be $10.

-m i m —

Ind iv idua l Communion Cup».The Red Bank Baptist church has

adopted th« use of individual communioncups. The cups were used for the fir§ttlnie last Sunday.

REST ASSUREDthat you receive fair treatment here. The

GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS

we offer are of the quality sought by those •**who want equivalent for their money. £<

DURING LENT we would call your atten- >f(tion to our stock of

MACKEREL,HERRING,

SMOKED FISH,CANNED SALMON,

CANNED LOBSTER,CANNED MACKEREL

Iiiand all kinds of Canned Vegetables and Fruits £j

—also a full line of Dried and Evaporated >•<Fruits—the Best Butter, Cheese, Coffee and | |Tea to be obtained in the County.

THE JOHN HUSTON CO.Telephone 91.

GROCERS. $4

Ho. 8 Front Street, i

FRED E, THOMPSON,

Monmouth Street, Red Bank, N. J,

Oranges.I have some exceptionally

fine oranges just at present.They are of both the Floridaand California varieties. TheFlorid as are a little sweeterthan the Californias, but bothkinds are wonderfully fine fruit.Some of the largest and finestTangerines I have ever seenare also at my store.

Apples.In apples I have Northern

Spy and Baldwins, both excel-lent eating apples. They arefrom the north, and are crispand fine. They are better thanwhen fresh from the trees, forthey have ripened and mel-lowed,

LOUIS PRATE,Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J

The Beautyof buying here is you get yourmoney's worth.

Everybody needs blooming plantsand flowers to make the homebright and cheerful at this seasonot the year. Your own plants mayhave been injured by the cold wehave had. Those I offer are readyto take their place.

Cut flowers of all kinds also.Wreaths, Crosses, Pillows and

other floral designs quickly andartistically arranged.

Decorations for Weddings, Din-ners, Receptions, etc.

J, T, LOVETT,Broad Street, Corner Monmoath Street,

Red Bank, N. J,MONEY TO LOAN.

tOO.OOO to loan in smountt from $1,000 to 115,000,8. C, CoWBrt, Freehold, N, J.

4

ii??YYYyfff

New Shoes Coming In. 1The first of the new spring shoes are here. More are on

their way and in a few weeks this store will contain the new-

est creations in dependable footwear. Our stock this year

will be larger than ever and our prices will be based upon

moderate profit.

We welcome you to come in to see the new shoes. You

won't be urged to buy.

FORD <& MILLER,BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J,

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THE BIT OF THE EVENING.

»*« tot got Him

the feu-i thai ht» •tood U fm»t2 (lU'lh'H tii IIIH Htut'klng fcu't ami thutthe grout uniNoh'H of IIIH iirniB Hudrfai'Bt wore tin1 »'iivy lif t'vt«ry man Inthe Bhoj), Tummy Kunrimt had a hcHrtan tender HH any WOIUHII'H. Even thedogs knew tlilw, and many o homelesscur MlilUui. whining, up to him an he•troth1 hoiiH'ward at nightfall.

Tommy's back yard win generallythe temporary quartern of n half dozenor more lioinelestt inoiigrelH, , If thenelghborN eoniplalned of the unearthlybowlings, ho would smile patiently and•ay; "Well, what'B to be done? Wouldnot have me turn Vin out to starves,now. would you*1'" And Hoinethinj,' Inthe round, frank face and the deep,cheery voice always innde (lie neigh-bors Buy, "No; oh, no!" moHt apologet-ically.

Tommy wns a drnftRiunn In the bigmolding mills on the outsklrtH of thetown. The little homo provided by hiswages WIIH presided over by IIIH moth-er, n frail little woman, to whom Tom-my was at once an Idol to be wor-shiped.

"That soft heart of his will be hisdeath," niie often remarked. "Why,only lnst mouth he Rave his coat to adirty bopu.'u- and cauKlit a fearful coldcorning luiiue without it."

The family physician, t< whom sheconfided this bit of news, smiled Im-moderately,

"I'll tell you. Mrs. Sanders, I'd bewilling to have a good many colds ifI had a heart like Tommy's."

"And that last stray pup he broughthome the other night pot up from thecellar and chewed up Tommy's speech,"the went on,

"The office at the mill has a dinnernext week, you know, and Tommy Isto bo one of the speakers, And it wasa real good speech he wrote too, l iehad all but the last of It by heart,and of course that was the very partthe pup chewed up. Land! I've beenall day trying to copy It over,"

The doctor grinned, "What did he doto the pup?" he asked.

"He?" said Mrs. Sanders. "Oh, just'Poor old doggie, trying to steal mythunder, weren't you?' "

Tommy laughed heartily that nightat his mother's account of her attemptto copy the damaged speech. The partwhich was chewed Into illegibility he§et about to rewrite with the meddle-some pup wriggling about in his lap,and when he had finished his writingand committed the whole to memoryhe and the pup had a frolic which leftthe manuscript of the speech In gadtatters.

No one but Tommy knew just howmuch he counted on sitting at the longtable with the officials of the mill andthe invited guests. On his part he wns ;determined to do his best. To this endhe went over the llnes-ftgain and againuntil he felt sure he could start in themiddle and go either way. And on theevening of the eventful day, arrayedin his dross clothes, he placed the pupon a chair and, standing before him,exhibited the heavy dignity of the ora-tion.

Tommy left the house with a lightheart and his mother's injunction to•'button his overcoat way up" ringingin his ears. His mind refused to strayfrom his speech. As he turned thecorner he was mumbling to himself."It is with some hesitation I rise to re-spond," when he was suddenly awareof a little group on the iidewalk gazingupward. Something on the spire ofthe old Wesley church attracted theirAttention. •

"What is It?" he inquired of one ofthe men,

"Kitten," was the response.Tommy strained his eyes, and in the

fast dying light he could make out atiny speck well up on the spire. In amoment speech and dinner were for-gotten,

"Where's the sexton?" he asked, withsudden energy.

"In the house there next the church,"tome one answered him. A momentlater Tommy was tugging at the door-bell. „

"You the sexton?" he asked, and, astbe man nodded, "Kitten on the ipirethere."

The sexton made some profane ob-•ervations concerning trespassing fe-Hnes.

"Get a lantern and come on," saidTommy, The sexton looked his -dis-gust and then emphatically expressedIt

Tommy fumbled in his pocket andthrust a bill into the sexton's hand.That changed the completion of things.The sexton got a lantern, and togetherthey climbed the rickety stairs of thetower. At last they reached the top.Above them was a small trapdoor,

"Roof of the bell deck, eh?" saidTommy.

"Yep," said the sexton, raising thelantern. Tommy had shed his. coat andovercoat and was fumbling with thehasp.

"Ain't going out there?" the sextonquestioned Incredulously.

"Sure," said Tommy. He flung thedoor open and crawled out. The keenair made him shiver. He grasped thelightning rod and stood up. Belowhim—far below him—were twinklingstreet lamps, and momentarily he wasdizzy. He looked up. Thelightning

rod run utralgiil uu tW spirt*, and heBide It, clinging tight and mewingfaintly, w i t the kitten. That decidedbllii. From the group tielow oanie afaint chtM>r. (JriiMptng the lightningrod, he begun to climb ntendlly up-ward.

It Heeined nn Interuduulile climb,Ilia breath came hard, IIIH temploHfiivinod burnt Ing, but always he worked•lowly upward until he was ahrctiHtof ilie kitten. "Kitty, kitty: ' tie calledMoftly, and, cHUtiowhiv ri-achlni; nut jone hand, he drew In the trembling lit-tle wretch and thrust H In IIIH trouserspocket. Then lie let himself Nlowlydownward until he reached the trap-door, crawled through and hat downon the rickety Mepa to regain hisbreath.

Presently he donned hl« coats, and,with the kitten in his big pocket, hemade liIn way to the Htreet, Arrivedonce more on the ground, Tommy re-membered the dinner, and even aw theonlookers pressed forward tu congrat-ulate him he broke away and speddown the Htreet to the hall.

When he reached the hall, the dinnerwas well tinder way, A glance at iiiHdirty hands and the iron ru»t on hisclothes made his heart sink withinhim, but with the help of some of thewaiters lie made himself fairly present-able, Still carrying the kitten beneathhlM coat, he luadu his way to IIJH neatjust as the toastmaster arose for thefirst tuaHt. the one to which Tommywas to respond.

When the toastmaster had finishedspeaking, Tommy sat like a graven lin-age until the man In the nest seatgave him a rather pronounced kick un-der the table. Then he got unsteadilyto his feet,

"It is with some hesitation I rise torespond," he began, "because—or—be-cause — or"—he gulped and glancedwildly nbout him—"because—er—hangit!" he went on, "I've forgotten everyword of my speech, I—you see—I—er—had occasion on the way down here-to—er—go up the lightning rod on thespire of old Wesley, and —er —thatknocked It clean out of me, you know,and BO—er"— lie paused and abstract-edly fished the kitten from beneath hiscoat. It solemnly surveyed the assem-blage and then gave vent to a longdrawn "Meow!" as it settled comfort-ably in Tommy's big hands, A roar oflaughter came from tho tables, and,confused and blushing. Tommy satdown.

BOW HUSBANDS HUOP,

d JM**M« That It WmiVft-imtA\ot Mtemmm the Lmdy,

Tlie pleasures of shopping are n« rigerously denied to "mere man" ns arethe udvautuK<*H of whirling to fair woman. The decree, being nature's own-Is universal, and tin1 attempts made tocontravene it are few and unsiieeeHS-fui. An exception, more apparent thanreal, was runde a few dnvs ago by anuxorious Herlin husband intent uii pn?ientiug his better half with a newblouse. He hurriedly entered one ofthe first shops in the capital and eon-nd«Ml his intention to the graceful younglady assistant. "I wiint a blouse agood one. You underHtsud. It must besilk-the best. Milk."

"May I a»k what color you prefer?"Inquired the superior young saleHwom-an, with a smile.

"Oh, I'm not particular about the col-or, but I may say that It may cost from8U to 4ii marks."

"And tin* cut '!""Tho cut? Well, I really don't much

care. Alter all, it comes to the samething."

"May I ask about the lady for whomit 1H destined?"

"Why, Blie is my wife, of course!Whom else did you"—

"I beg your pardon. What I meantwas what is her size, at least approxi-mately ?"

"It doesn't matter In the leant. Pleaseshow me Rome blouses, one blouse, anyblouse, and let me go, for I am In ahurry to catch a train,"

"With pleasure, sir, but if you can-not give me an idea of tho color, cut orsize or anything else to guide me howcan I hope to suit you?"

"Give me any blouse you like so longas the price is between 30 and 40 marks.It doesn't matter a straw what cut orcolor or size I choose, for in any caseIt's certain to be changed, I told you

i t 19 for a lailyr ' ~ ~ ' '

• * " * - !

Animal Oddities.Birds never eat fireflies and really

seem to shun their vicinity.North American reindeer usually se-

lect an old doe for their leader.The temperature of a swallow's body

is extraordinarily high, no less than112 degrees F,

Cats and boasts of prey reflect fiftytimes as much light from their eyes ashuman beings.

The average lake trout lays 0,000eggs each season, and the whltefish agreater number.

The female English viper does notlay eggs. She hatches them Internallyand brings forth her young aliTe.

Parrots are usually vegetarians,though the Kea parrots of New Zea-land have developed a fondness forsheep.

Garfish, sunflsh, basking sharks anddolphins all have the habit of swim-ming with their eyes above the surfaceDf the water.

Work,

Let me but do my work from day to day.In field or forest, at the desk or loom.In roarlni market place or tranquil

room;Let me but find it in my heart to say,When vagrant wishes beckon me astray:

"This ii my work, my blcBBing, not mydoom;

Of all who live I am the one by whomThis work can beat be done in the right

way."

Then shall I Bee it not too great norsmall

To suit my spirit and to proTe mypowers;

Then shall I cheerful erect the laboringhours

And cheerful turn when the long shad-owB fall

At eventide to play and love and rest,Because I know for me my work la

beat.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •»• • • •»• • •»»•• •»•»•»•»»•»•• • • • •»»•»••

Spring Millinery.W e h a v e in s t o r k fm y o u r i n s p e c t i o n . in ass« n t t u c n t of n e w

s t y l e s o l

UNTRIMMED HATS.I Also Artificial Flowers, Ornaments, Laces, etc, %

S h o u l i i you w.mt .i s p r i n g h a t l u ' l o r c m i r r e g u l a r o p e n i n g we

w o u l d be plfMNe'ii U1 till you;- o t t l c r at any t in ic .

injf M o n d a y , M a r c h 9 t h , o u r s t o r e wi l l b e o p e n e v e n -in j j s u n t i l 8 P , M.

MRS. E. WEIS,| RED BANK TEMPLE OF FASHION.»•»•»•»•»••••••••»•••• •»••••••••••••••»»»»»»»•»»••

lllitlllliiHtllliMmilMMUHIMIIiMMMIMIIII

REMOVAL SALE.Closing Out Stock Regardless of Cost, ]

Dry Goods, Notions, Stationery, Hardware,i Tinware, Glassware, Woodenware, Crockery,

CHARLES B. SALTER,Shrewsbury and Locust Avenues, Red Bank, N, J ,

CHARLOTTE RUSSEIn different flavors and colors.

FANCY CAKESIn varities for receptions, etc.

CHILD'S, Red Bank.

Tour Signature.

"I should be pleased to exchangecards with you, Mr. Barrow," saidCharles Wimps, extending his. Theyhad met for the first time. "I'm sorryI have no cards with me," said Barrow."Allow me to write my address in yourmemorandum book." "Do you knowthat is a very dangerous thing to do?"WlHips remarked. "It cost me $240once. I had the habit of carrying nocards and signing my name In a newfriend's notebook, Just as you areabout to do In mine, always on a blankpage. One day, after a convivial even-Ing, I was presented with an I O Vfor that sum, duly signed by m y s fIt was Impossible to dispute it.to pay up. But I have never''ilncebeen so free with my autograph." "ByGeorge, I never thought of that!" criedBarrow. "Suppose you write my namedown yourself,"

AfOOt.Long is the road 'twixt town and town

that rune,Traveled by many a lordly cavalcade,

With trappings gay and rich caparisons,Jester and squire and laughing knight

and maid;With gallant clash and stir they go their

way;I trudge afoot through all the drouth of

day.

For me the misty meadows fresh withmorn,

The tramp through noontide heat toevening gray,i

The far seen smoke from the day'i goalupborne.

The halt, the "friendly greeting by theway,

The distant hill behind far hill descried,The road by day, the rest at eventide,

I know each wayside wood, each moor-land brown, - . •

Bach hidden byway and reposeful nook.Where 1 may linger when the Bun goes

down,Dipping tired feet In some cool flowing• brook;

I know the free hill and the gloomingglen

And kindly fires and humble homes ofmen. l *

DOREMUS BROS.More Special Prices That Appeal

to Prudent Buyers.Last Saturday was so stormy that many people were unable to take .

advantage of the special prices that we offered. In order that none maybe disappointed we will continue the special prices that we have beenadvertising and on the following goods in particular:

Armour's Soups, 18c. a can.Ralston's Pancake Flour, 8c. package.Columbia Catsup, 18c, a can.Magnolia Milk, 9c, a can.SugCft 5c a pound.Alkathrepta Chocolate, 25c. tin for 21c.Blooker's Cocoa, 30c. tin for 20c.Olive Oil Soap, 10c. cake for 5c.

Our Meat Department.. This store, bear in mind, is a market, dealing in both groceries and

meats. We have meats at all prices, from a good pot roast at 5c, a

pound up.

The City Market,1 I and 13 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J.

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LITTLE SILVER MEWS.

Memmrmlm in the rillmme Jomeph H ,Hlny ititirally ttirk,

1 r e d Z H ' K U r i i f I ; u i H a v e n w i l l x h o r t l vBioV(< t o l l tIB |ili»t'«*. Hi* hart H i T r - p l e d U i i '| x n i l i i i i i iif K'UiJ i ' iHT I'll S i r , M u l i t g u m c i v H|)IHCI> o n t i n - H i i i i i N o i i m u d .

J o h n K e m p i i n i l f ; » m t h l i f t o n Tl i i i iHd * v f i t • S p l m o d u l e , 1 ' e l l l l n y I v a l i l t l , w h e n 'M r K e m p h i t* u p i i t i i l i o i i i d a I r i r g c

L f . t * I I I S l i m r i 1 I ' X J M ' l ' l M t l > I l l l l V t ' s i K l t lf r o m i I n * l « i i n U 1 l i n i i - i c t o i l i t * l i i u i s i - i l l

| h < ' l i l h - , J : I I ' O I I M u l i i ' l ! m i I ' l i i l M l i e l i c i t ,I ' . i i i i i k K n / i n a i i i ! » ' • • I I I I H I H M J y l i t H i e

S t C i l l ' I l i i l i - M * H l i l i <" i . | 1 1 1 i h l i ' ' H V I I | I > I t

klh 'Ul A p r i l I N ! ,KiUv. in l B u r i m li,1-4 I I I . ' V I ' I I ( m m M i » .

I ' , l i ; i l i n r i l i i i h h>HI^«« t o (hi- r a n ! IIHIINI1 .

M I H 'I'luwmit* h m i t i i n l Kr»'*'liultl . Mr* .W I I I I . U M Kolu ' r iK of N o w M o i i m o u i h ,M i s , W i l l i a m V a i i l i r u n t of M u l a w u n .m i l M I H J o h n 1'. V a i i K i r k ; n u i M>II H U HM-l ul ,Nt>« Y o r k hj ir i i t W V d n m l i i y w i t h

.mil M r - . W i l l u i m .1, C m i u v e r .mlii-li l \ V i i i i i r i « h t w a n r i i l i u n h i s I>i

r I H ' I V M ' 1 ' I I K ' ' l l 1 i . I I l k a l l l l I ' i l i l H l l V l ' I J

l i u i a y niKli t w h e n t h e f n n i l furkH.' l l n ' i i i l i T w a n t h r o w n o n IHH

' lul l I " ' w an l io l h u r t ..i]>pi11(• 1111, w h o IIHH IMM-II i v m -

hi 'Uhf fur t lu 1 p.i^t t w o wt ' t 'kHihi i t v i ' r , liuw h a d ti rehi jMuii in a r r i t i c a l r n m l i t i o t i .nbliN, w h o IIHB b e e n Ilijil U p

Mr,W

( M i

cmbrn{ H I »

W a l l e r Itiin-il t.i t hwi l l ) t s p htitnl IN i i^a

K d w n iwill) liliiml poisoning in IIIH hundurm, I 'Xpiit^ to n'Hiimt' Inn limit 's at K.{', HHr.nnl's factory m a Ivw (lays,

Mist, f i i r r ic K i n g mug two BOIOH at tln>M'thodiHi church mi Sunday m o r n i n g .Mi-w*<i- 'r inidf ami Rcbeci-fi Li I ley Hanga (liit'i a t (lit* t-veiling Mc-rvici1,

Tins regular mon th ly btiHincHh findsocial liitetiiig of tlu1 hpwur t l i I*»sigtn*will bt> hold in the leuturu room ofchurch i(, iiiiirrow night,

William Morris landscape gfor J. T. Lovt'tt, has begun lioUHt>kt>t>p-ing in Mrs. James tii'iiui'tt'ri bouse on('hurch street,

J. T, Lnvetl in liaviriH: Mime large treesmoved to Klbeion and Ltikewood, M.Rider of Ne-w York ntate is superintend-ing the work.

Mm Kiisi Potter wppnt Saturday atNew York. Hlu; was u guest of hersister, Mrs. Appleyato uf A.sbury Park,on Sunday.

William Conover moved to-day fromthe Adams hmiKt' un Prospect avenue toMr.-s, J. Lew in Da vis's huiisc- on thelium-Bon road.

Joseph W. King, who had a paralyticstroke lust week, is in a very critical con-dition, He is being attended by a trainednurse,

William U, Ctirhari is having hisbarn thoroughly overhauled and re-painted. George CurtiH is doing thework.

Mrs, Timothy White, Hr,, who has beenvery sick, is HO niucli improved that sheiH able to be up and around the house.

Mr, find MrK. Charles Burlin of LongBranch spout Sunday with Mrs. Burlin'BparenlH, Mr. and Mrw, Alfred Walling,

Mrs W. L deFabry nnd her son Haroldreturned home on Friday from a shortwisit with friends at New York.

Mrs, William H. Cjirhstrt is acnin con.lined to the house with another stvereattack of seiatic rheiimatiHm,

Charles Cox of Mount Vernon, NewYork, relurne-i home on Friday from a•viait with relatives here,

William El.ioft yf Nt'sr York, a land-scape architect, spent Saturday and Bun-day with friends hue .

Silver council, Junior American Me-chanics, will initiate two new membersnext Monday night.

MrH, L. US, Campbell is spending twoweeks with her sisters at Asbury Parkand Spring Lake,

Frank Putter of Imlaystown spentMonday and Tuesday with his sister.Miss Efln Potter, ' _

Miss Carrie King of Red Bank spent afew days hist we.ek with Misses Berthaand Ella King,

Mrs, William Morris returned homeSaturday from a vMt with relatives atSouth Am boy.

Linden Hhoemaber, a student at Princr-ton, was a recent guest of his aunt, Mrs.Nelson Biown.

ThouiiiH Ely of EngliHhtown spentSunday with inn sister, Mrs, George M.Quackenbush.

Sirs, Henry Parker was the guest ofrelatives at Ocean Grove on Monday andTuesday.

Miss Alice Applegate of Red Bank wasa recent guest of her unule, GeorgeWool ley,

J. E Harvey wan'confined to the,house a few days lust week with u heavycold.

Miss Florence L. Campbell visitedfriends at West Long Branch on Tues-day,

Mrs, Cornelia Ely spent Thursday withher son, Howard Ely of Red Bank,

Eugene Chad wick of the Highlandsspent Ihursday with relatives here :

MIBS Constance Smith of Ocean Grove'& visiting fr ends at this place.

Alison Sherwood visited bia son Wal-ter at Freehold on Thursday.

Mifis Lilian Dey of AHbury Park was aMcont jiiu'st of friends here.

James ti. Sickles of Red Bank visitedfriends here on Sunday,

EATONTOWN NEW*.

A Me flute In the MmtHmMimt fhutehHook* for the Library,

H v, W. It. WtHititTHpoon of ABOUT?Park h i l u r u d it) the MeihodUst c h u r c hon Monday n ight . HJM Huhjeel wa«11 Hfiil Armtor racy . " Tho I t -mire w mIhorotiiihlv enjoyed I»v an audience t h a ialHUit hulf lillfd tlu' c h u r c h ,

J{»>ok* an 1 lii'ing Nolirid'd for the imwbina ry and tin- i-oiiiniitlt-n in c h a r g e of

i die Holuiiing i« iiUH'ting with coiiHidi'r-j ahh* HUCCCHH,! Rev. Henry .lnhiiHxti. pastor of thei Mi'lliodisl i h u r e l i . IH ci indiict ing a NITH'B

of revival iiu'etiugH at Tinlon Fal ls .| I'Mgar Whit*1 of <htkhurwt occupied Mr,

.luluiMonV pulpit on Sunday night,I'reHcimt council, .Junior American

Mechanics, haw iiiiTeasod iln dtiilh U'liotil from $ltO<) to #500 and iiw tuck hvnHitfrom #1 to $5 wefklv,

Tlie Hiilijt'ct of Rev. Samuel I). Prit't<'Hnermoii at the Presbyterian church nextSunday night will bu " Bolomou'ri('hoice."

Dr. W. \'. Kurt/, and William I1'Davis intended the great counrll of thelied men of New jerney at Trenton hintweek.

The women'* temperance union willhold a meeting at Mrs. A. L, Scolwy's to-morrow hftt'rnoon at three o'clock.

The MethodiHiM have started to build aHuiiduy-Hchool room. The room will bein ii bnwiin'nt under the church.

Tho ladies' aid society of tho Metho-(1 int church met this afternoon at MrH,Dewitt Allgor'rf,

The Kpworth league will hold a busi-iH-Hs meeting to n i g h t at Rev. j . DewittFny'n.

The literary society will moot nt Mrs.Bloomfield D. Cook's next Wednesdaynight.

John Dangler, who lias been serioulysick with pneumonia, in now ablo to situp.

The Presbyterian prayer meeting lastnight was held at Miss Jane White's.

Hugh (jetty of New York was theguest" of R, F. Hopper over Sunday,

Daniel 8, Morris is spending a fewdays with friends at Philadelphia.

Mrs, William K. Stevens is sick withtonKilitis,

Walter VariKcuren is Hick with liirn-bngo.

Mrs. John Aumack is sick with thegrip.

COLT'S BECK NEWS.

A Hmrlmblt P^mtpotted « N A*•<••** nt mfHJrkne**,

On account of thti death of M™, JolmA. Siu«>ok ilie olippiiig tw>ti»bl« whichwim U) bttVH tieen held on February *<'th• t ThoiuaM Sherman's wan ptMlponed.It will in* held ut the siinin place, on Fri-diiy night. Every |H'I"HI»U IH expecloU tol»k« ii package toiilainiug ten ut'iitH1

woith or pay ten centM at the doorDuring the evening tht' packiigi-H will ix;Htrung on a, lint- »ud clipped at ten cvpts« clip.

Tlie quarterly ' ling '>f 'be OOIIHJH-tory of the Reformed t hurch will IM' heldon Saturday afternoon al 1 :«J0 o'clockfor considering temporal husinmi Hiidan hour Inter for hpiriiual businew*.

K.|«Brd Fnincis of Holmdel, HtittieFrftnciH of Reel Bank, Richard Francisand Mr. Fowler t f New York were re-cent gucstH of Mr. and Mrs. JudaunFrancis.

Tho regular weekly prayer meeting ofthe Christian Hndeavor society will beheld iu the school.IIOIIMI on Thursdayuight. Mrt*. F . E. lleyer will 1)4' leader.

Mr. ami Mrn. Andrew McKay, Mrs. C.K, Strong, Mrs. Fred Ltither, HenryMatthews, Louis Wubber and Mrp. Gar-rett MattheviB arc on the sick list.

Benjamin Sickles has returned toRutgers college after a visit with hisparents, Mr, and Mrs. Augustus Hickles,

The missionary society and missionband will meet at the Misses Soltel's onSaturday afternoon at three, o'clock.

William Sherman and George Heyerhave returned to New York after a visitwith their parents,

Rev, OctuTf VuuBi'veiTioudl's subjectSunday morning was " Preparatory toCommunion."

The Lord's supper will be adminiBteredin the "Reformed church next Sunday,

FAIR HAVEN NEWS,

A € hiHtnew Btmurn f>«*r»» fry tht HighWind.

Part of tbs chimney on John T. litir-tin'n house wai blown down during \\wbigh wind IHMI wet'k.

In tho fnntHAtic parade* at Red Bunkhint, week Johnnie Mulvihill ro«le a hoiwftiid rvpreHt>uted Uncle Sam, and VVUIUTMaboii rwpieHeutcd a clown.

A batikt'tbHli team from AHbury ParkplHVed the team at this plac** in Liberty•IHII on Friday night, The home teamwon by A Hcort* of 9 to H.

Mrn. i'hiirlcH N, Allen, who has bet-ntaken U> the hospital to uudeigo tr*-al-ment for blood poisoning, iu gettingalong well.

Alfred L, Hennett, who WHH ojuratcdon for apjx'ndieiiiH at the Long Hrauehbosnital, hns returned home.

The mite society of tho Methodistchurch will meet al Mrs. A, A. Arm-strong's tomorrow night.

Charles Williams will build H liverystable office on the Jobes proj)erty onMniii ntreet.

John McAnerney and family of NewYork have moved here for the season.

Mrs. Martha Bennett, who has l>eenseriously sick, U slowly recovering,

A poverty sociable will be held at theMethodist parson a gt» to-night.

Mrs. C. D. Chandler baa recoveredfrom an attick of tonsilitis,

William V. Bennett is having a new-roof put on his house.

Daniel Rankin is on a two weeks' tripto Niagara Falls.

Mrs. li. H. Wilber is sick with grip.

Choice Meats !

r havo a full lino of choice mealHwhich I am spjiing at the lowestpotiHilile price for cash.

8p««iai Pr ices on 8»turd«.y.

L, LANE,Successor to'tdward Ivlns,

Shre^bnrj Avc., Red Bank, N. j .

Millinery,vV

I

MARLBORO NEWS.

• • • • - • •

WAYSIDE NEWS.

tttipravewentii Being Made to JohnWeber's Place,

Hans Nelson of Asbury Park is nowoccupying John Weber's house. A wellhas been dug on the place by FrankBowman of West Long Branch and thehouse is being enlarged. Bennett Morrisis doing the car enter work.

Albert Wardell. Jr., received a surprisevinit from a company of friends onThursday night. Tho party was ar-ranged by Mi8H?s Alice and Etta Co-vert. The guests nipt at the home oftin* Misses Covert and went in straw-loads to Mr, Wardell's, completely sur-prising him. Games were played untilabout midnight, when refreshmentswere served,

Mrs William Eustace, who has beensick with Bright's disease for some time,is now in a seiious condition. On Sun-diiy morning a consultation was held be-tween Dr. Rush and Dr. Field,

Owing to the sickness of Rev. WilliamMitchell the Sunday afternoon serviceat the Methodist church was conductedby Isaac B, White.

ChesU r White, who has been living atTrenton with bis sister, Mrs, D, WesleyManners, and attendingschool there, hasreturned home.

The last quarterly conference of thopresent conference year will he held to-night at the close of the prayer meeting.

Mrs, George McCloskey of Point Pleas-ant and her daughter Marion are visuingMrs. Edwin L. Havens,

Valentine Dangler has returned fromn visit to his daughters at Long BranchCity and Ashuiy Park,

James Green has returned from a visitto Belvidere, where he visited Miss Vic-toria B Smoyer.

Edmund Fary lost a cow last weekwhich he valued at f 100.'

Mrs, Lydia A. Dangler is very sick,

UIDDLGTOWN VILLAGE NEWS.

The Enfant Son of William JohnmonDied on Friday Night,

The seven-monthFKild son of WilliamJohnson died on Friday night. Thefuneral way held at the house on Sunday,Rev, W, H, J. Parker having charge ofthe service,

David H. Casey, who is employed asfireman on a train that runs betweenTrenton and Jersey City, is visiting hisparents, Mr, and Mrs, William Casey.

Rev. J. T. Schock of Key pen11 preachedat the Reformed church on Sunday. Thesacrament of the Lord's supper was ad-ministered at the morning service.

Frank Carney, who Is a brakenian ona freight train running between Ho-boken and Scianton, ia visitiig his par-ents, Mr. and Mrs^Juhn Carney,

The subject of Rt-v. W, H. J, Parker'ssermon next Sunday morning will be" Life's Compensation/' The eveningsubject will be " Life's Losses."

William Dean, a fireman on a boatwhich plies hftwaen Perth Amboy andNew York, was a recent guest of friendshero.

Mr, and Mrs, Frank Oaborn, who havebeen spending a few weeks in Florida,returned home on Friday,

Daniel E.. the eighteen-months-oldeon of William T. Wilson, is sick withpneumonia.

Mrs, David Wyckoff of Freehold spentMonday with Mr, and Mrs. Charles H.Morford.

Miss Mamie Brower returned home onMonday from a visit to relatives at Free-hold,

The choral society will meet at theBaptist church next Friday night.

-m • m-

Lincroft News.William Wack, who is employed in

the Bowery bank at New York, spentSunday with his father, Adam Wack,Adam Wack spent Thursday and Fridaywith friends at Long Branch.

Montie Krug of West Long Branchspent Sunday with Louis Kreimer,

Alvin Bennett, the trapper, sold fiftydollarfi' worth of furs last week.

Miss Nellie Story has recovered froman attack of the grip,

Mrs. A. A., Sanborn spent Monday withfriends at New York.

Fred Mouser visiled friends at LongBranch on Thursday.

SHREWSBURY NEWS.

An AthtuMH on Indian*^ \ ond Girltt.

Smart Itmyo

Scobeyville N©w»,

Sirs. J, F, Keohey is laid up with thegrip and sure throat. Thomas and Clar-ence Willett, who hare been sick withthe grip, are again able to be out. Wiliiam E. Morford's family have all beenlaid up the grip, but they are recovering.

T, F, S inker will move next weekfrom th*1 Daniel Polhemus farm to theRobert Hartshore farm at the Highlands.

William and Daniel Polhemus of As-hury Park were giiefits last week of theirlather, Henry Polhemus,

Lewis Matthews's family have, movedto Long Branch, where Mr, Matthewswill engage in grading.

Garret and Fred Polhemus of NewYork were recent guest* of their father,John H. PolheruuB,

Frank Hanoe has put up a large build-ing to be used as a pumphouseand also as• tool house.

Mr. and Mrs. John Neiberlien of Marl-boro were guests of Henry Brower onSunday. -

Henry Polhemus lost a fine heifTer onSunday.

. Thomas Younger of Princeton theo-logical seminary will speak at the Pres-byterian church next Sunday morning.His subject will be *• Indiana," Mr,Younger has had a wide experienceamong the Indian mission schools in theWest, He will also address a meeting ofthe young people's band at A. H, Bor-(JPII'H on Friday night.

The public school chlUjren who wereneither absent nor tardy fast month wereJohn Kelly, Ed ward Kdlf, Martm Marx,William Casey, Frank t#NOormick Wil-liam Hancock, Mary Oa^ey, MargueretaKelly, Mae Hancock Stinley Brandon,Cinrence Wiederholt, Herbert Rich-dale, Esther Hurley, Marie Hurley andDonald Johnson.

The ladles' helping hand society of thePresbyterian church will meet at Mrs.Milligiin's ntxt Friday afternoon at threeo'clock,

Mrs. Samuel D, Price and lipr daugh-ter Adelaide are visiting relatives "otPouRhkeepsie and Newark,

Miss Bessie Burden' returned home onSaturday from a trip to Brooklyn.

O c e a n p o r t News.Chuetanunda tribe of Bed Men cele-

brated their elevehlh anniversary lasnight. A large number of warriors werepresent and they had a fine time, Aftean entertainment and refreshmentsdancing was indulged in,

Mr, and Mrs, Frank Price, who havebeen spending a week with frieDds atShrewsbury, have returned home.

The Daughters of Liberty will hold adance at 6aka!*>ta ball on Thursdaynight, March 19th.' Miss Uaiiie Oorlits of Brooklyn ii

spending a few days with relatives here

I Mandolin and Guitar Cinb <**•-gani*ed in the Ullage,

A mandolin and violin club lias beenrganized here with Prof, Malcbow of

Red Bank as teacher,Mr. and Mrs, Horatio Whaley attended

the funeral of Mrs. Whaley's aunt, Mrs,Hannah Poling, at Keyport on Wednes-day,

The exercises held in the public schoolon Washington's birthday under the di-rection of Prof, Tiernan were very fine,

Gertrude, daughter of Mr, and Mrs,Charles Brown, has been suffering witha soie hand during the past week.

There will be a sale of personal prop-erty of the late Peter D, Stillwell on hisfarm on Monday, March 9th.

William Brower of Eitontown was theguest of his brother, Joseph Brower, onSunday,

Thomas Fields and John Neiberleinspent a day last week at Perth Amboy,

Ehea, youngest eon of Harry E, Van*Pelt, is sick with a severe cold.

Mrs, Susan McChesney spent a fewdays last week st Yonkers,

Mrs, Berthoff of Yonkers is visitingfriends Jiere,

Mrs, Foraian Striker is very sick withpneumonia,

John Neiberlein has bought a newlorsp,

Mrs, 0. C. Herbert ia on the sick list,

IVVVV8

Watch this space for our *•{

Spring Announcement I

IMISS A. L, MORRIS,

Millinery.\ No. 66 Broad St. near Monmootfc,

opposite the poslofflcc.

I1

J^OTTCE TO ABSENT DEFENDANTS,

IN CHANCRRYOF NEW JERSEY.TolJuy WalllDB.BHriih M. WalltDR. Claj

iid Dossey Willing : B l t f d

Holmdel News,The women of the Reforujed church

will hold a supper in the chapel on elec-tion night, March 10th, Tho affair willbe called "The feast of five tables,"

Mr. and Mrs. Chrineyonoe Holmes havereturned from their wedding trip andare living at the homestead farm.

The Junior American Mechanics in-itiated two candidates last week andthree more last n'ight,

The Lord's supper was adminhteredin the Reformed church on Sundaymorning,

George Young of Key port spent lastweek with Mr, and Mrs. Lemuel W. Sut-phen.

y B . B r h M. WalltDR. Claj Wallinaaiid Dossey Willing : -By Tlrtue of au order of tbeCimrt of Chancery of New Jersey, nude on the dayof ihedate hereof. In a cauw wherein William mBoeckei Is complainant, aod TOU and other*, aredefendant*, you are required to uppear pleadangvpr or demur to the bill of said complaJnaat, onor before the twenty-flfth day of April next, or tbesaid bill win be laten aa conf»iMed a^aiost you

Tbe Bald bill ii Bled for partition of certain'laodiIn the townshlpi of Sbrewibury, Katontown, f^eanand Neptune, in the count? of Monmoutb.New Jer-sey, of wbich Eliaba John Morri,»OD died seized andyou Guy Wailinp, iarab M. Wailing, Clay Wal-ling and Deitaey Walling, are made defendant* be-cause you are tenants In common therein

Dated February 25th,, ]9&i.CHARLES H. 1VFN8.

Solicitor of complainant, Register building. RedBank, New Jersey.

TREASURY DEPARTMENT.Office of Comptroller of the Currency.

WABHINOTON. D. C, February 84tb» 1903,WHEREAS, by satisfactory e?ldence preaenied

to tbe undersigned, it baa been made to appear thatThe First National Bank of Bed Bank, located inthe Town of Red Bank, in the County of Moomouthand State of New Jersey, bag compiled with all thepnivisions of the Act of Coogrew "to enable Na-lional Banking Associations to citond theircoporateexlitence. and for other purposes," approved July12th, ]M2. as amended by the Act, approved AprilKth, 1902;

NOW, THEREFOR!, I. William B. HldUrely,Comptroller of the Cunency, do hereby eertlfy thatThe First National Bank of Red Bank, located InThe Town of Red Bank, in the County of Monouutband State of New ersey, jg authoriz*d to narcBuccfriBlou for the period specified in its amendedarticles of association ; namely, until close of buil-nes« on PebruHry 24th. 16^},

IN TESTIMONY WHBRBOF witneffl my handand ieBl of offloe ibis twenty.fourth day of Febru-

1908ary, 1908.WM, B. RIDOBLY.

Comptroller of tbe Currency.

Currency BureauSeal

of theComptroller

of theCurrency

Treasury Department

Extension No.

Charier No. 445

TOQUET LAUNCH AND MOTOR CO.,OF SAUGATUGK, CONN,.

Bunders of High-Grade

Launches and Motors,AT POPULAR PRICES,

For speed and family use. Motors Ht 8, 5 and 8 H, P. from 8 up. All madedouble cylinders, light weight and guaranteed, Launches from 18 ft. and up.Catalogue for the asking.

CORNWELL & CURTIS, Agents,

24 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J .

Oceanic News,Wellington Emery fell and broke his

arm while in New York a few days ago.The injury was dressed at a New Yorkhospital and he then returned home,

Evie Briggfl received a surprise visitfrom a company of friends on Saturdaynight. Gertrude Parker planned theaffair.

Mrs. Lawrence Longfltreet, who hasbeen seriously sick with pneumonia, isslowly recovering,

William Patterson has rented theCharles Allen house on Lafayette street.

Ariel Seaman is recovering from anattack of pneumonia.

Howard Wymbs hag been sick withthe grip.

Shoes andSlippersat 25c. a pair.

This Week Only.Positively Oasb, and

changed nor returned.not to be ex-

ff You can Earn, Bonrow orBeg a Quarter, Come; You can

Make Enough to RepayYou Thursday.

On Thursday morning I place on sale all the odds and ends left frommy recent salei as spring shoes are coming in very fait. I can mention buta few as there are not many of a kind. Every pair worth from two to fivetimes 25c. Now don't wai t till next week for It !• only for theweek and 1 e ipec t all to be fold o n T h u n d a y .

40 pair Child's New. Warm'Slipperi, I have been selling at 50o. to 6Bo., allMe,

Some Men's and Women's House SUpperi, were 50e. to $1,00, all 85c.A good lot of Men's. Women's and Boys' 60s. to 85o. overihow, all 25c.Several Boys' $1.60 Show, fine 18 88e*1 pair of Men's Congress Gaiters, number 19, were $1.85 26c.SO pair Men's and Women's Cloth Storm overshoes. 75c. and $1.00 grades

_.. SSe,Poiitively cash, and they can not be exchanged nor returned.

THIS WEEK ONLY.

CURENCE WHITE,

l i

rim •wrrraitsmt—i&v&w*r«i&iv&.

Page 9: RED BANK REGISTER. - rbr.mtpl.orgrbr.mtpl.org/data/rbr/1900-1909/1903/1903.03.04.pdfRED BANK REGISTER. - rbr.mtpl.org

RED BANK REGISTER.VOLUME XXV. NO. RED BANK, N J,, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 4. 1903. PAGES 9 TO 16.

MIDDLETOWN PRIMARIES.BOTH TICKETS MADE ON SAT-

URDAY AFTERNOON.

A Hard Tmmk to Fill th* BmnferatieTicket an* Mowt« • / the Aemlff re*May Not Run \m Mrmakm in thmIt e publican Hlatm.

Both parlies in Middletown townshipmade their tickcU on {Saturday. Bothprimaries were lieltl at Belford and bothwere called for the game hour. TheRepublicans met at Johnson's hall andthe Democrats ui#t ut Dan if] Bcnnt'tt'Mhall. Both primaries wore similar—theysimply convened, made nominations andadjourned. The attendance at each wasabout fifty. The only respect in whichthey differed at all was that the Repub-lican primary was a cut and dried affairwhile the Democratic primary had ahard task to make up a complete ticket.None of those whom the Democraticloaders had picked to win would consenttu be nominated and ao it was left tothe primary to make up the best kindof a ticket that it could.

After 'aptain Benjamin Griggs's deaththe Democrats of the township pro-

to believe that they had a chan#eto carry the township, but if they everentertained such a belief they certainlyshowed no signs of it at the primary.The proceedings were disposed of in thename perfunctory method that haschiracierized Middletown Democraticprimaries for years, when almost everyman nominated knew that he wa§merely offering himself as a saciiflce.

The Bepublican Primary,To the moat casual observer at the

Republican primary it was clearly evi-dent that the mantle of Captain Griggs'aleadership and authority has fallen uponOmar Sickles of Navesink, In mappingout the work of the primary, " greasingthe machinery," so to upeak, everyoneHeemed to look up to Omar on Saturdayas they did to Captain Griggs during hissway. But there was none of the Cap-tain's confidence in Omar's manner. Theentire proceedings seemed as though aprompter was needed, as though therewas a constant fear that a break wouldbe made somewhere along the line. Butno breaks occurred.

One notable feature of the Republicanprimary was the fact that William E.Andrew, Jr., was chairman. ' He is theBOD of William E. Andrew, the standingcandidate for the Democratic nomina-tion for state senator. It is said thatthe young man nourishes political am-bitions and that discouraged with hisfather's experiences with the Demo-cratic party he is inclined to look uponthe Republican party as the surett high-way to political success. It may b« justas well la state here that this determina-tion was made several years ago and notwithin the past few months. YoungMr. Andrew made quite a speech uponassuming the duties of clmirman. Thespeech was of the " spread eagle" ityleand was very unlike anything everheard before at a Republican primary inMiddletown. Oratory has never beenJiart of the Republican creed in Middle-town—having absolute control of thewires has always been considered ofgreater importance. Young Mr. Andrewworked in the " public weal," the"duties of citizenship," " routing the

called the rank ami tilt*. Not one ofthon<» who like to bo dawned a« " the oldwar horses of Di'inorniey" graced theassemblage. With uno or two exeep-lions none of those nominated wertpresent at the primary and some ofthem had not even bem consulted re-garding the usu of thfir named on theticket, Tho ticket aw completed is anfollows r

Assessor Gi'orgji Tlltoo.CollHior-iir, WliilMiii f. Patlprmxi.Township iMinmiltiwinep—WiiiiHiu UeyiT (thr«>

yt'ars), John HillviT < OIIK yearl.Oversew of itis poor—Walter B, Connor.roiiiDil«inncr of aupeiita - JatTiPi P, Hopping,SurvHvorn of thy highway- Thomas Ahearu,

Joseph w, Thompson.t ' t b l Martin Ualt.

the present mayor, hail given it out tluithii would not be a auwlidaU* for n<election. He was present nt the enucuNat the beginning but he wai called outbefore it wa« over. The next day beseemed to be somewhat aggrieved overwhat he termed ringened to break the shleast. He was satisnominee for mayorwork in Fielding R.man. The doctor's fengernu&s to nomin-ate Mr, G?/yuu cat led quite a rumpusat tho primary. Wfen nominationN formayor were called

rule and he threatte, or a part of it utled with the caucusbut he wanted to

Owynn for council

A LITERARY MEETING.

Dr. VanMater

enemy," the " utter annihilation of thecommon foe" and all the glitteringgeneralities usually indulged in by cam-'paign orators.

All the nominations at the Republicanprimary were made unanimously, thesecretary, Frank Yarnell, casting theballot in each case. Fred Sickles ofNavestnk bad threatened to make a littletrouble for bis brother Omar by runningagainst him for assessor. Fred was atthe primary, accompanied by quite adelegation, but he did not even go intothe convention hall, The full ticketnominated was as follows :

AMMief-Omsr StoklM,Collector—GerardOT 0, Morrii,Township cotnmltteemao—John Woodward (three

yean), Richard Luftrarrow (one year).Overseer of the poor-Henry 0. R bertt,Oommiaeioner of appe*m-8tout t . Oomptqp.Surreyon of the highway—Mattnew Brown,

George B. Wlllett.OoDftable-wllUam Htrtetb.JiMtlooof the peace-B. B Zebley.Ponodkeeperi—Aaioo Uopkloa, Cbarlei H. Mor-

ford, Qeorje Cot, Cnuiet . Leonard, Fred Snyder.

The appropriations voted were $8,000for roads, $9,000 for poor, and $8,000 forways and meant, the same as the appro-priations of former yean.Th* MP«m0*>rmtte Primmry.

The Democratic primary was calledto order by Edward Oakes. Timothy M.Maxson was chosen obairman and Rich-ard Poet secretary. Very few of theleading Democrat! of the townshipwart present, the primary being made*up of what might more properly be

Ia tho matter of appropriations theDemocrats took quite a departure fromformer years. It has been the custom inthe township for each party to make thesame appropriations and only on a veryfew occasions have the amounts differed.When the appropriation qiieption campup at the Democratic primary on Satur-day Edward Oakes took the floor and ad-vocated the cutting down of the appro-priation for roads, Mr, Oakes said thatduring the past few years the countyhad built a stone road all the way fromAtlantic Highlands to the Oceanicbridge, a gravel road from near ChapelHill to the Highlanda, and another gravelroad from Navestnk to Atlantic High"lands, while the roads at the Highlandshad been taken into that borough. This,he said, relieved the township of the careof several of its principal highways,while the township kept on raising $8,000for roads, the same as it did before thecounty roads were built. He said thathe wouldn't object to the raising of thissame amount if there seemed to be anytendency to make the rest of the roadsthat much better; but he said that thetownship committee kept on making theappropriations in the same old districts,to the §ame old overseers and spendingthe appropriation ia the same old way-He thought that if $8,000 had alwaysbeen enough for roads it was too muchnow, and he recommended cutting theappropriation to |6,000, which was done.The poor appropriation was increased to$2,500 and the appropriation for way1

and means was left at $3,000, the sameas it has been for years.

After the nominations were made themeeting was thrown open for remarks—somftwhat on the style of a Methodistexperience meeting, Edward Oakesmade a speech urging the Democrats toget out and hustle and take advantageof the opportunity that they had to oap=ture the township. The only otherspeaker was William T. Winn, a Nave-sink colored man. He addressed thevoters as fellow Democrats, so of coursehe must be of that political party, evenif he is colored. His speech was some-what on the style of young Mr. An-drew's at the Republican primary—very"spread eagley" in style. Both evi-dently used the lame care in the selee.tion of big words, but Mr. Winn got afew of his misplaced, particularly whenhe said he felt "highly graduated atmeeting so extinguished an assemblage."Part of the quotation might have beenprophetic.

Very few people believe that the Dem-ocrats have any show of carrying thetownship, although there are some whothink that Dr, Patterson might win if heputs up a strong fight. The doctor'sgreatest strength would be at the High-lands but since the setting off of theHighlands as a borough the voters thereha?e no voice in township affaire exceptto vote for freeholder. The handful ofHighlands voters left in the townshipnow vote at Navesink, but there are notenough of them to give the doctor muchof a boost. It is conceded on both sidesthat Dr, Patterson will carry the Nave-sink poll, which is Democratic anyway,but no one sees how be can possibly getenough majority there to overcome thenormal Republican majorities at FortMonmouth and Middletown, withouttaking into consideration the big per-sonal vote that Mr, Morris will get inthese two polle. Mr. Morris has been inpublio life as a school teacher and as atownship officer for nearly fsrty yean.He is as honest as the day is long, and bewill make a wonderfully strong candi-date.

gut up and planed William At, Huberts innomination and theri went on to iiomin-Hte Mr. Gvynn for councilman. Dr.ikiidrickBon, the chairman, called hisattention to the fact that be was out «.f•rder, ns nominations for counciltuetihad not been called for. The doctorcontended that he bad a right to beheard but he was declared out of orderand « as obliged to take his seat. Later,when nominations fur councilman werecalled "Tor, he nominated Mr. Gwynu.The names of Mr. Wells, Mr. Hart, JohnTansey and FrankliQ^atterson were alsopresented. Mr. Wrils and Mr. Hartwere nominated, Wells receiving 133votes and Hart 85. Owynn, Hart's op-ponent, received 75 votes. FranklinPatterson received 20 votes and JohnTansey received 8 votes. Mr, Hart ismanager of the Aitlantic HighlandsJournal and a peculiar feature of hiscontest was that he was kept at work inprinting ticketi for his opponent untilalmost the hour called for the primary.Joshua E, VanPelt was nominated forcommissioner of appeals.

The primary pracjically decides the

ttnlii an IntervmtlngHtmmioii,

The CliHUtiiiiquii circle, of Hed Hunk

met on Kriiluy niglit at Frederick Hie-Venn's on Walhiee Btrt-t-t. Thrro W;IH ;Ilarge attendance of nit>iuherK and a fewinvited gueHtH w*'re present HIHO. KdsotiM. Cleveliiud, president nf the (Mrcli1,had chargt' of the iiifeting. A numberof timely papers were read, amongwhich were tlw,' following: " Hu*sia,"by MJHH Flora Will uHH ; "The Kriippn,"by Urn. Nelho IfpiHlcy ; " I'aderewski,"by MIHH Mnbel Unities, and " BritishImperial Fi)iindations," by C». A, Long-strtH't. A selection froiii one of Kipling'sstories wa-i read by Miss li. M. llelmes,and Rev. John B. UaincB led a short dis-cussion concerning current events. Mr.Stevens entertained the circle with abrief account of one of his trips while hewas in the navy. A social season fol-lowed, during «Inch cake and ice creamwere served.

The next meeting of the circle will beheld at Miss Mabel Patterson's on Mapleavenue on Friday night, March 13th,

NEWS FROM MIDDLBTOWN.

THE BAPTIST BOY'S CLUB.

election as it is not lirely rh-it there willbe any other ticketMn the Held, Theprimary voted the sborough purposes.

ltn of 115,000 for

IiOLMDELNS PRIMARY.

AfmeeroMe Ticket the Only Onein the Field.

The Ilolmdel township Democraticprimary was held on Saturday afternoonat Edward Perrine's hotel. George W,Lamberston was chairman and HenryL. Holme* was secretary. The vote wastnktn by the old systiltt of squad. Therewill be no other ticket ro the field onelection day and the Democratic nomi-nees are therefore certain of election.The ticket is as follows :

Collector—William Morrell,Assessor—Aaron Longitreet.

, Township eommitteeman—Wesley Mawm,•ommlMloners of Appeali—Garrett D, LopgBtrwt

(threvrcani, Henry L, Holmm (two ; e i n ) .Surveyors of the hlghwiy—Henry L. Uolmes,

William I . Crawford.Poundfeeepers—William T. Hendricltion, John

Dane, Michael Ryan, Theodore Bill well, Eugenelly.

The appropriations voted were $1,500for roads, $1,000 for ways and means,and |800 for poor.

The Knightm of King Arthur Gratr-ing in Numberm and interest,

The boy's club, known as the Knightsof King Arthur, which was organized atthe Rod Bank Baptist church recently^ isgrowing in numbers and interest. Theclub uses the boBoment.of the church forits "castle," Bjnjaiiiin Ford is in chargeof the club and he is assisted by thepastor. John S. Mount is drilling theUoys iii military tactics. It is proposedto hold a public exhibition soon, whenanyone may see the nature of the workthat is being done by the boys.

EDWARD BRAXTON LET OFF.

• STRIFE IN RARITAN.

Both Parties Mate Full Ticket* inthe, FHmU.

The Democratic and Republican pri-maries in Rantan township were held onSaturday and both parties have fulltickets in the field. At the Democraticprimary Fred Armstrong, editor of theKeyport Enterprise, ran against W. Con*over Smith for the nomination for assefi-sor but was defeated by over a hundredvotes. W. R. Walling wai renominatedfor overseer of the poor over ThomasH, Walling and Oyrenlus VanMater.Asbury Walling was renominated forcollector, John B. Hendrieksoo was re*nominated for township eommitteemanand W, E. Warn was nominated forcommissioner of appeals.

The Republican ticket is as follows :Collector—A. F. Bertie.Ajsewor—Sylvanui Lee.Township commlttoeinaa-Charles T. Clayton.Commissioner of appealt—Oeonte N. Tllton.Oveiwer of the poor—T, 0. H U O D .

SEABRIOHT'S FIOBT,

But He Hum Told That JTi* FaceWarn Too Familiar In Vourt.

Edward Braxton of Middlelown town-ship, who was indicted for malicious mi§chief in going to the home of his wifeand destroying certain household articlespleaded non vult in court last Thursday.Judge Heisley said that there were gomemitigating circumstances in the case andthai he would suspend sentence. <w Hewarned Braiton, however, that his facewas entirely too familiar in court andthat he would pursue a wise course innot coming before him again very aoon.

< » » — -Sick With Appendicitis.

Charles Root of MJddletown, who isemployed es bookkeeper by Root & Dib-ben of RedBank, was taken sick withappendicitis last week. On Saturday itwas thought bebt that an opperationshould be performed and he was takento the Long Branch hospital for that pur-pose. The operation was very successfuland the young man is doing as well ascould be expected.

A Missionary Society Meeting.The w«wen's foriign missionary so-

ciety of the First Methodist church helda sociable at Mrs. William H. Wilson'son Maple avenue on Mondiy night. Ashort program was rendered, consistingof readings by Rev. John B. Haines andMiss Laura Birdsall, a vocal solo By LilaRobedee and a recitation by Edith Dun-oan. Refreshments were served.

Rev. J. K. Manning's Affliction.Rev, J, K. Manning of Trenton, for-

merly pastor of the Red Bank Baptistchurch, is unable to preach on accountof throat trouble. The trouble is/believedto be only temporaryr and *Sat a restfrom preaching will result in a comlete

TWO SKATERS FAtX IN CL4YPITCREEK.

SUmm Mftmie Travmrm ami HowardUihnon Mtrenk Through the MemII/./I*- tikating A Beff*rd Man'mAffliction,MiHH Mamie Travers and Howard Qib-

son of Locust Ptuiit were Bkating to-gether on the creek at that plaM lastWednesday winn thpy broke throughthe ice at a point known as ** narrowplace hole," The w iter at that place illuite dk-L'p but tho skaters struck theidgo of tho holy and did not go in aboveheir t^houldfrs. Juseph Johnson wailear by and he holped the skaters out of;he water.

Jacob Dennis of Belford has been deafn one ear for a great many years. Re-"ently he had an attack of tuo grip andhiH left him HO deaf in the other ear that

lie can scarcely huar at all. Dr. Fay ofAtlantic Highlands ia treating him. Itis feared that lie may have to undergoan operation.

Alberta Walling of Keyport, who hasbeen visiting her aunt, Mrs. George Ooeof Port Monmouth, lms returned home.

George Roberts of New Monmouth,who has been acting as ferry mastee atthe Liberty street ferry at New York,has gone tu Neodash, Kansas, to workon a ranch, He is a sun of Henry C.Roberta, overseer of the poor of Middla-town township.

A dance was given in Bennett's hall atBelford on Friday night under the man-agement of Everett Henry, Edward Ben-nett and Albert VanBrunt. About 75couples were"present and a fine time waihad, The same young men will giva"another dance on Friday night.

R. Leroy Durner of Jersey City spentSunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs,James H. Durner of Fair View. MisiMarie A. Arkenun of Jersey City spentseveral dayi lust week with Miss MaryC, kuyster Durntr.

At the coming schoul election in Mid-dletown township on Match 17th, theterms of Eijwin Maxson, A. R. Reed andThomas B, Wilson expire. It is expectedthat they will be reelected without•pposition.

Martin C, Losben, Charles (Jasier«iidE, Walt Havens of Belford went toTieu-on on Monday to protest against theroposed legislation in the legislature

which affects the interests of tho olam-mers. '

James Heyer of Belford, who had hisrm amputated at the Long Branch hos-lital several weeks ago as the result ofin injury received at Sandy Hook, re-urned home from the hospital on Sun-ay.Revival meetings are still being con*

inued at the Port Monmouth Pente-costal church under the leadership ofRev. Joseph S. Glark. About 46 persons

ave been converted thus far,Thomas Carton has moved from George

linzrnayer's house at Navesink to Cen-erville. Mr. Linzmayer will give uparming this spring and will occupy thelouse himself.

Walter Bl«omer, who moved fromersey City to Navesink about a year

ago to work in the Bloomer mill, hasmoved back to Jersey City.

Albert Dennis, who is employed onthe Hoboken ferry, spent Sunday withhis mother at Port Monmouth.

Mrs, Joseph Johnson of Navesink andJacob Halsey of Port Monmouth areick with grip.John L Ingling's house at Navesink is

o be painted. Walter B. Connor willdo the work.

Arthur Gaunt, son of Isaiah Gaunt of

Prlmmrv.The primary to nMfewate officers for

the boreug^f Atlantic Highlands wasbelcL jm JEridfty,. night In tha stori re-cently vacated by Roberts 8b White,Dr, H. A. Hendrickson was ebairtuan ofthe primary and Henty C. VanNote wai

and ElUmtt tm Wight it OutAgain.

P, Hall Packer and George W, Elliottare rival candidates again for mayor ofSeabright, Each has won one victoryand this contest is looked upon as the"rubber," Frank Hampton and JohnE. Howland are candidates for council-men «n the Packer ticket and Dr. CharlesA. Reed is a candidate for reflection asCollector. On the Elliott ticket John W,Gyles and S, H. Horton are candidatestpr councilman and CharleB Smith is acandidate for collector.

restoration to health. Mr, Manning re-mains on the field and attends to all bispastoral duties except that of preaching

m i ^

Moved to Pennsylvania.John Kemp, who, for a number of

years has lived at Little Silver, and hasbeen engaged in raising n#w and im-proved varieties of flowers and plants,moved to Springdale, AHeghanycounty, Pa., last week. He will takecharge of a large nursery there, and hemay acquire an interest in the business,

— • — m> m- • —

Jfmt a tale mf '•• JL+/t-Qven"or "seconds," The $«.&<), $4 and | 5

secretary. A caucas had bevn held tbe I men's shoes we are going to sell at $2.30previoui night.. Thii oaueni deoMtd w« «dvance Bpring •tyles—manufactur-upon Wililiim M. Boberti lor mayor and ^ k " ^ ^ M > , Sttinbach ^ . , A.buryWilliam WeUi and Harry B. Bart for T

counoilmen. Dr, John B . VanMaterJ T m REOEBTER is $1.50 a year.—Adv,r

g y, Sttinbach

Howell'a Hot PrimaryThe Democrats of Howell township

held an exciting primary on SaturdayThe main fight was for the nominationfor collector, Joseph L, Donabay defeated Henry Garrison by 5? votes. Egbert VanSchoick who was also a candidate, withdrew in the interests of Oam,son.

— T»t»L

1W« Pmtrm • /for the price of one. B M displaySteinbach Co., Asbury Park, N. J,—Adv,

Port Monmouth, is sick with quinsy sorethroat.

Miss Mamie Mount of Navesink. is vis-ting at Brooklyn,

m i m

Breaks a Water Main,The water main on Broad street, oppo-

site White street, bunt on Saturday,The break was caused by electrolysis.The main is fully four feet below thetrolley tracks, but sufficient electricityescaped from the tracks to burn a holein the water pipe. The damage was re-paired on Monday morning.

Mtvpnhlteam uThe Republican voters of the township

of Shrewsbury are requisted to meet atthe town half, March; KH, at 8 o'clockp. M,, for the purpose of nominatingtownship officers, and the transaction ofany other business that may come legallybefore the meeting. George B> Snyder,chairman.—Adv.

Men'm m*mm Sale *•8.50, $400 and $5.00 shoe*, $8,80,

Btninbach company, Asbury Park, K, J ( '—Adv,

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" • * • #

• i •WATER CONTRACT LEGAL,

Fort am Oeeiitem in the 4'mn.temteM i,fM0 Hrmnch Came.

Judge Kurt hut* giviMi « diK-iHli it ii|i

h o l d i n g t i n 1 a i tni i i of t i n 1 uWI I n u i r d o f

CHHiimiNhiontTH lit 1, i n g B r a n c h in a w a u l -

i n g H t e n - y « ' a r I ' o n t r r i f t In t h e T i n l i r i i

W H I « T c o m p a n y . A t u n r l t ' i ' t i . i i i c l o s r l y

f o l l o w i n g t in - a v v i i n l m g of t h e c u i i i r H c t

U I O H t ( i f t i l t ' t ' t U U I U l K H I O I I C I H w l l O V i ' l t ' i l

for ili«' w a t e r r o u t m e t w e r e d r fc . iU ' i l .

Tin1 m a j o r i t y of t h e rn-w h » n n l w e r e

t o ilii ' r o n i n u ' l a m i p n u ' c i ' d -

w e n 1 m - n u i t i i l in tin1 niljiri'iiii*

i ' i un ( to Inivt' i Iw c o n t r a c t wet iinidt'

T h e pomtH of o l i j c c t i o n rais«'d wer t 1

llml (* immissi<>ii«'r VV. S. H, I ' a r k c r ,

iiH lu- l i i ig p i t hidi ' i i t , luul iiu i-1j4ht t o

p u t t in1 mi l l ion ; Unit u t i lv t w o m r i n -

bciH s o l i d for tlit ' r e s o l u t i o n ; t h a t C o m

m i s M o i u T I ' u rk t ' r a t t h e t i nu 1 of v o t i n g

for th*> rvwoli i lmn w a s in t h e e m p l o y of

tin1 \\ a t i ' i r o m i t a n y ; a11< 1 t h a t t h e n ' SV;IH

no t ii stilti i ' i i ' i i i a pi 1111111 nit ion lo nit ei ilit*

I ' x j u ' i u l i u n t ' a u l l i o r i z t ' d . Cii e v e r y p o i n t

t h e a c t i o n uf t l ie ulil l iourd wan HIM-

t a i n e i i , Tlii1 j i r c w i i l I'omiiiisNiwtU'r* h u v e

flpptiihtl lilt1 CUM1,m * *

MISHAPS TO ICEBOATMEN

Tteo ItoatH Collide ami One tioenThronuh thm lets.

Two iceboat accidents oer.ured at Key-port IHHI week, William WallH andLeander Wood were iceboat ing on thebay when their boats collidt'd. On theboat with Mr, Wood were IU'H wister Lola,and MIBB Mabvl MuynarU. Mim fllay-nard'n coat was ripped up the, back bythe broken bowsprit of Wutts's bout butBhe was not injured, Miss Wood wagJ)lnned under one of the boats but shealso eicaped injury, as did Wood andWatts.

Captain Henry Smith of Keyport wasOut iceboating last week find when about300 yards offshore his boat broke throughthe ice and Mr, Watts was thrown inwater up to his arm pits. The ice wouldnot bear hits weight and he had to breakhis way through the ice to the shore.After about an hour's struggle horeached the shore in an almost exhaustedcondition. A doctor was summonedand after a good rubbing downto relievethe numbness Mr. Smith was soon allright again,

ESCAPED STATE PRISON.

AN AGED WOMAN BUST.

Mr*. Amhev tollinm of Keyport hall ai»o%rn Via If.

MIN, Ashe'r (Jollm* of Kevport metwith H Ht-riciUM accident n few nights ngowhile K"i'iK u|wt!i<rn to retire lor then u h t . Mhe WHH IIIMMII hall « tiy upsltiir*when a doubt cutlw into her mindwhether or not (-lie hud locked ii cerliiindour. She wtiirted to g<> down Him-when K!K' Umt her balance and fill to thehollo o. Her head Ntruck oil a coiilHcuttle which had been left sit thu footof the Hlmrh and her f*co was badly cut.Mrs, C'oIliiiH lives alone, although she IHM yearn old. She attended to her in-juries HH beNt she f'ould and her plightWHH not discovered until JoHeph Auinackwent to the houne the next morning toperform bin daily chores for Mrs, Collins.AHHiHtance WHH at wire rendered aridMrs. I'olliiiH, deHpite her advanced yuandis rapidly recovering.

COAL GAS E S C A P E D .

father and Nun Altnuut A*phy.rititedat Lang Itraneh,

John Horner and bis son Clarence1

,vho live alone in a two-room house onincroon Iwland, near Lnnj; Branch,ame nearly being asphyxiated by coal

gris on Thursday night. Frank Horner,another Hon of John ilornpr's, lives near

i father and he is in tlie haliit of stop->ing at tho house nearly every morning1

When he called Friday morning no onewas around and upon knocking at theJoor he got no response. Suspectingthat something was wrong he forced hiaway into the house and he found both:iis father and brother unconscious inbed. It was some time before theycould be revived and they Buffered fromhe efTecti of the gas for several days.

The gas escaped from the kitchen stove.

> \

Mfr ^ ^ ^ B » i ^ II

Wit's

A Shooter Let Off With a Vine onthe Plea of Hit Victim,

The caae of Charles Brand, the Way-side farmer who shot Francis T. Hearstin the back and neck for gunning on hisproperly, came up in court on Thrusday,Brand had been indicted for atrociousassault and battery and he pleaded nouf ult to the indioujent. Mr, Hearst, thevictim of the shooting, pleaded for leni-ency for the prisoner He aaid that heand his sons had trespassed on the prop-erty in detunee of notices and that hebelieved the shooting was done in a tit ofanger, as Mr. Brand had been annoyedconsiderably by gunners. In pronounc-ing sentence Judge-Heisloy said thatordinarily Brand's offence would deservestate prison but in view of all the cir-cumstances he would let Brand off witha fine of #'250 and costs.

• « • - • - • •

DIED FROM SMALLPOX.

MittH Epie Aettenton of Freeholit aVietiin of the itineaue.

Smallpox broke out about two weeksago in the family of W. S. Wilkinsonof Freehold. Miss ElHe Ackerson, amember of the household; was one ofthe flist to contract the disease and shedied on Saturday of last week. A childof Mr. Wilkinson is sick with the diseasebut it is believed that she will recoverEvery precaution is being taken to prevent a spread of the disease. The afflicted persons remain at homo but astrict quarantine it» maintained.

jnootft.

month

New Pensions Granted,During the month of February ppn

iionfl were granted to Monmouth countypeople as follows :

Mrs, Julia 8. Wrifflit, AllenlmrBt, original, $&jnootft.

'D Yetmfti), EnglishtowD, increase, 811onth ,Walter J. Evans, Long Branch, origlnil, | 8

rnootu.Frao't W. Conrew, Long Branch, wnr with Spain

$6 a moDth,Cbarlei H. FraDOii, West Long Branch, original

| 6 a month.earriion W. Maynurd, Keyport, increase, $8 i

monuj.Jobu McOahan, Red Bank, increase. 817 a monthWnejhh Sherman, Manaiquan, increaie, Sj& t

month. .James Miller, Keyport, increase, J9 a month.

Factory a t Farming dale.The old factory property near the Oen

tral railroad station at Farmingdale habeen bought by the A. 0. Soper canningcompany of New York, The factory ibeing fitted up for the canning of tomatoes and the making of catsup. The newcompany bjaalso bought a lot adjoiningthe factory.

— m i »

FeU *nd Broke Bla Leg,William E. Brehm, a hotel keeper a

Seabrigbt, slipped on the icy steps of hihotel last week and fell. Hia leg wasbroken above the ankle.

Itpaystoadvertit«iD Tin REGISTER

TomatoesWanted!

We are prepared to contiactwith farmers for tomatoes at$8,00 per ton—delivered at:nir factoiy in Shrewsbury.

Seed will be furnished freeof charge, or we will supplyplants at $1.50 per 1,000.

E.G. Hazard & Go.Shrewsbury, N.^J,

you nhoulil liiive ajfui. Boaa HMfFmieti < lot K'uim In orderto protect, the worka »nil los'ien tho n n ! ( f ri \n\.\\n. T\m

BoMal'iMO U mftdoof two layors cif Botld i-uh! w\\\\ H Inyar o(•ttlffiiiliiK metal botwsen. It 1* iK'tVr t h r u n miUti i_;t>\,\ nmttMfc'aii.M) It la stroD|?er and ao cioaa.nttluf as to ko«i> uut K M ,imuku, dual ftad dampnau.

/AS. BOSSWatch Cases

»r» rMOfniUd »• tha it»ni1«.n1 the worli! nvrr, andBold uii Biiiti by »ll joweltri, Tho Iloa* IH tin* only•tlffiiiitl layie In use long enough In jirtivi. l.y m'tiitilW M I that they will outlast tlio ffiypHT BUnr-tnli••'.There la W>ne"jatt M f(»d." Tho KcyiiUiiiD lr».l»-BATK here shown la i taApM In %mih lioHa ense tf

Consult the jtweler. Write ui for itookUtTHI KlYSTONI WATCH CABI CO., Phliadvlplila.

^ CCtOKCE MATTHEWS. FOWIM MATTHEWS. JESSE MATTHEWS.

Matthews Brothers,Artesian Wei! Drillers,We also move buildingi of all sizes,

Matthews Brothers, Red Bank, N. J

ART STORE.

We have a great many dainty useful articles

JO Broad Street. Red Bank, New Jersey,

COAL AND WOOD.W. N. WORTHLEY,

RED BANK and SEABRIGBT.

Yards at N. J, S. R, R. and Railroad avenue, Red Bank • Front ffcreefc,Red Bank ; River street, Seabright.

•» • • • •» • • • • • • •» • • • •» •» • • • • •»» • • •» • • • • • •»» • • • • • • • • •» •

Schroeder's Hair Tonic kills dandruff, keeps the hair

from falling out and makes the scalp healthy. That's

enough for it to do. At Schroeder's Pharmacy.

T. Manson & Son.HigK GradeGranite Work,

BLUESTQNE. SANDSTONE,

SEWER PIPE.Iron Covers and Drains.

Monmouth Street, near Town Hall,

RED BANK. N, J.

f BROWN

.*&

A FINE STOCK OF

Monuments and Headstonesto select from at reasonable price*.

Work put up In any cemetery and guar-anteed,

A slate burial vault for inspection.

J. F. REILLY.

Funeral Directorand Embalmer.

Xo. »a Fenrl Street,

RED BANK, NEW JERSEY.

Long Distance 'Pbone, 19-B.

WIVI. H. ADCOCK,

Foundry and Machine Shop,No. 218 WEST FRONT STREET.

RED BANK. N. J,

BRASS AND IRON CASTINGSAT SHORT NOTICE.

Boiler and Engine Repairing. AllBranches of Machine Work

Promptly Done.

* ! •

?yy?y?yyy?tytY?

THORBURN'S SEEDSFor 1903.

1

?tYyyt

AT

IyyyyftyTt

Hendrickson & Applegate's,HENDRICKSGN BLOCK,

• >

Front Street, Red Bank, N. J. %•It

!H3=imV.i..i,*= . , -.= «=J!»M

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WHAT THK PAPERS SAY.AUTOMOHILL8 SHOULD BE NUM-

BERED!

The hiumherm Hhould He f>i*j>l<ii/«f€ mnmpte'UvHmlM and the Itrimtrm mfthe SMnehimrm Should Be LteenmettIn the iHtmremt of fubUe Hnfety.

t M f i i i i fhe Hvw Yitth Jimi IUU.I

'Lhf jiiitt eomplainttt mad*1 utftuntit the jurn nut to iw< met bv tiic in- jof hi 1 (M into li KI.MIJIUII VH that

would H<i limil the MjH'i'd of tht1 inui'hiiieHH.H to rot* their UHO of nil pltiti-turi* midvalm*.

S u c h liilln a r c liorn of ignorai ic t 1 aiiiip r e j u d i e e . S h o u l d they be t-naeli-d in to |invv^, itnd »'nfori'«'(i, i hey w o u l d r id t h e jc o u n t r y of aulo innhiU 's - w h i c h would |IK< an wiat1 HH to d e p r i v e UH of l l i« ' |nco- jm o t i v e and nend tiH buck to th*1

Ihiiioubtedly there should bo a h'ni^lii-titiii for the regulation (> ' uuloinnhiU H,tuit this If^inlntiuti ought to l>«- intflli-getit—it ought to bv of n kind to encotiruge their tnultiplieatinii, not tomake it a crime to own and drive one.

The hhrnitiy Journal would like to HIONew York, the chief city of the UnitedBtales, lead off with an ordinance thatshould Herve HH an oxumplp to oilier fit it H.

This ordiimnce should provide :That all drivern of automobiles iw li-

cenHed, the lieenweto l>e issued only uponproof of tlit' rocipiein'H com|H.'lencv.

That every automobile he numberedconspicuously,

Such an ordiuaiiCH wuulil he in linewith the practice of France, tho homeof Hiitornohiitng. Tliere no one can re-ceive a license us a driver who has notbeen so thoroughly instructed as to leaveno doubt of his compett 'oey. And be-cause of the conspicuous number on hisvehicle, no automobilist who runs overanybody in France, or exceeds the pre-scribed speed, or is guilty of any act ofrecklessness, can escape the police andthe consequences.

Here anybody who can buy or hire amachine is free to drive it, and fools arefond of taking chances. Nearly all theautomobile accidents among us are dueto the unn'tness of the drivers,

It is quite coniruon for the drivers ofmachines—especially of city cabs—tostart up and run away when anythinghappens. The small numbers, or nonumbers, on their vehicles enable themto succeed in doing this.

Then the crowd which has gatheredcurses autonttohiles in general, instead ofthe absence of right regulation, underwhich no driver could bolt and evadepunishment for damages to person orproperly,

Autouiobilists who deserve the name,men who have gone to the trouble oflearning the mechanism of their ma-chines iind the art of driving them—andthere should be no others permuted atthe lever—feel even more strongly thanthe general public does the need forlicensing and numbering. It would pro-toct them from perpetual misjudgmentand annoyance, while safeguardingpedestrians.

The automobile is here to stay. Thatis as sure as that steam and electricityare better than horse power as a meansof locomotion. Although at present themotor is chiefly employed for pleasure,its use for busineis purposes is rapidlyincreasing. Anybody who keeps his eyesopen can see that, Ere long it willlargely supersede the horse on the streetsof cities, and on country roads too.Enlarged use will bring ohaapnes.B ip i'atrain, and what is now a luxury of thewell-to-do will bo within the reach ofmultitudes.

See what the trolley has done for thepoor by opening the country to them.

The automobile in time will do a stillgreater service, since it needs no rails.Co-operation will work wonders,

Meantime the Evening Journal urgesupon New York's board of aldermenthe enactment of an ordinanoe requiringall automobiles to be numbered in largefigures and every driver to be licensed—no license to be granted to any onewho cannot give proof of skill.

That is the way to abolish the danger-ous nuisances who now bring unpopu-larity upon one ol the most useful amongthe inventions that have blessed theworld,

A Fountain Of Corruption.(From Me New York Herald,)

The enactment into law of the billabolishing the fee system of compensat-ing county officials would have as puri-fying an Iffeot upon New jersey politicsas a thunderstorm in clearing the air inthe dog days. These fees are the chiefsource of the big corruption funds raisedby both parties in every important eleclion for the purchase of voters, The op-

„ position to the bill ii the mostoonjmaud."ing reason why it should be passed.This opposition comes from the machinepoliticians, who do not want to see thesource whence the foul stream of corrup-tion flows abolished. The fees of countyclerks, surrogates and sheriffs bring inthose officials $10,000, $80,000, $80,000 andeven $40,000 a year. These positions areconsequently regarded with greedy eyes,as rich prizes, in the larger counties. Asthey require no special training or schol-astic ability, they are fought and con-tended for by mercenary politicians, ofresolute and unscrupulous temper, whotight for the prizes with weapons thatmen with a more refined tense of honorwould scorn to use. They buy their own

Sarly votera at the primaries; buy tip theelegates, who often seek these positions

when rich offices are at stake for thechance of •ailing their votes; buy up thecommittees, and then buy the workersand the voters in the election. Thereare counties in this state where the uierenomination for a county office has cost thesuccessful candidate $80,000 uf $40,000.These fights for county offices richly en-dowed with fees are often absolute car-nivals of corruption. They are the mostdegrading and demoralizing things inNew Jersey politics. Every experiencedpolitician in tbe state knows thin. Everyman interested in public affairs is con-scious of this rankling poison in our poli-tics. Every good citizen abhors the eviland waita tosM it abolished.

All Borta of plans have been tried,-with more or leas sincerity, to br«ak»p

this monstrous bribery evil. Law8 havel***!i pHMM'd i m p o s i n g ht-vere pena l t i e sh o l b U|>O!i tbe !>iib«T a n d (he t i n U ' e , huit h e y BTP no t tMifoiced, They nevvr willlie. T h e r e is a p r i n c i p l e t>f " hotinra i i i ung U n e v e n " w h i c h makes* b. th \mil ies wink Hi e i n h ot ln r'n uVlmijiu'iicu-n.A fww HrreittH a r e (HvitNinnally m a d e mt h e lieUl a n d fury i>f a i '«ni imi^n, hutn o t h i n g coint'H uf iheu i . T h e Ciiintu!hVer« Hiid t h e g r a n d jiiriiH a i e g ivent h e t i p Hiid t h e s m o k e b lows u \ r r . NoiMKly eve r proH«MMi!eN. T h e e lec t ion endsnil. The uiily t t fee t ive « » « of putlni*:mi e n d to ttu-he tut i i rnal iH of em nip i iu i iin o u r p o l l i n g is liy t a k i n g un> weHpoMHout of the liiiiidH of t b<> iiit'll whw uset h e m . If t l i f i e were no m o n e y t h e r uwou ld he no vote l iuy ing . If t h e r e wereno m u n i t i o n * of war these o d i c o n e bat lht*couh i not t>« fough t . I1 AM. e x p e r i e n c ehaH n t t u j d i d i-uiiHpicllout o b j e c t letwonscoi i f i r t imtory uf iliis v i o * of t h e m a t t e r .T h e liiggtHt and m o s t n o t o r i o u s c o r r u p -t ion fund r insed for t h e p u r c h a s e ofvote rs in tliiN«liit«< l o r i u e r l v cmiie f romthe great slain otlicials. Throe oflicialhwere then paid bv feen, and thewe aggre-gated $:$l),lX)0 and #40,Uh) a year wacli.In important flections a puliiical fund offlllO.OilO could l»e rained in the HtateHouse alone. ThlH was the true mjcreiof the lung leiict' of power held by theDemocratic party iit HIM t.tal<\

TheHe olliffrs are now all on fixed,moderate salaries, the contributions tothe election " pot " have correspondinglydwindled, and bribery Ims, tnarKcdly de-cicased of late years in thiw ntate inconHfijuence. If all the county officials•ould be jilaced on salaries and the feesturned into the public treasury, as pro-poned in the Strong bill, or some othermeasure, a still larger and more prolificsource of corruption would be abolishedand our politics would be vastly purifiedand elevated. There are t'venty onesheriffs, twenty-one county clerks andtwenty-one surrogates in the twenty onecounties of New Jersey, anaking sixty-three of these officials all told. If bythe Strong act an average of f.1,000 eachwould be turned into the treasury in theway of fet H, it would mean a total of$815,000 a year added to the resources ofthe taxpayers, and the cutting off of an

normoud fund for the corruption of ourpolitics.

Substantial Reductionson IIH'U'H Miiil IKIVV W i n t e r

Su i t s , OvtTt'oatN ami Htvivy

Clo th ing «>f all sorts,

hlxtift fine s tork of men's

Outing Flannel ami Muslin

Night Shirts,

50c, t o $1,00,

2 9 c , 8 9 c , 49c , a n d 6 8 c » r Men's

Unlaundriod White Shirts at

LUDLOW'S,9 Broad St., Red Bank, N, J ,

in IlnrrooniH.[Frum the Krypnrt Enttryrw.i

In charging a jury in a eise, wheretwo men had been tried for fighting in abarroom at Long Branch Judge rleisleytook occasion to deal out some whole-some advice to hotel and saloon keepersthe other day. He said the proprietorsand managers of these places shouldmake it a rule not to permit profane andvulgar language to be used by patrons oftheir bars, and if they would prohibitloud and boisterous tulk much of theirdifficulties would be prevented. Thejudge said that a barroom keeper whosold l'quor of any kind to a drunkenman, or one plainly under the influenceof drink, WHS not fit to have a license,and he. further said that the same wastrue of the man who made no effort tostop the flow of dirty language which BOoften polluted the ears of respectablepeople passing by or who might evenhare occasion to enter the place. Headded that it would be well for the own-ers of licensed places in this county toheed this bit of advice. The judge isright and hi§ advice is good, A licenseto tell liquor does not carry with itany permit to keep or maintain a dis-orderly house in any sense of the term,and there are too many of thtse kind ofdives in this county, judging from thecourt records,

[HOWARD FREY,• MONMOUTIi ST.,

KKI* BAXK, \KH JERSEY.

practical'•• I lumber.

ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY KURNlHHED.CONTRACTS TAKEN,

JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.ALL W(jySiK GUARANTEED,

^ I carry roostintly on hand all the latest| sanitary BppHancvB, uud heum uui ptvpured• to do work without dnlay.

[IHIIIMIMHHIimiMM

It paya to advertise in THE REOISTIRbecause nearly everyhody41 hereahoutitakes the paper. — Adv.

There is Work for tho PlumberIn your place and it should be attendedto at once. Sickness is frequently causedby cioRged drains. Costs too much, yousay? Not at all. My charges for highclass

Plumbing, O a i Fitt ing or Steam

Heating Work

are quite moderate. I use good mate*Hals and exercise great skill and care inall operations. I guarantee perfectwork,

WILLIAM O'BRIEN.

M WIST YTtOm BTBIET, RID'BANS, N, J

Bar It Now,

Do not wait until you or some of youfamily are siok nigh unto death, and thenBend for Chamderlain'a Colic, Choleraand Diarrhoea Remedy, but buy it nowand be prepared for emergency. It is theone remedy that can always be dependedupon in the most severe and dangerouscases. For sale by C. A. Minton & Co.4 Broad street, Bed Bank, N. J,

ELECTRICIAN.Wiring for Electric Ughti. * Battery, Magneto

Pneumatic Belli. Telephone* * SpeeUlty,

MS Br«M »t., tt«*P. O. BoiBlB.

ft. J

I J. J. Antonides, I23 West rront St. near Broad St.,

Red Bank.

A T THE OLD STAND.

The game reliable and floe old W h i s -k i e s , such as Trimble. J. H, Cutter, Wil-son, Hunter, Canadian nub, Hollywood andthe favorite Chamberlain's Old Cabinet Rye,10 year* old. (none better) in full quart bot-tles at 11.35.

AIBO nil other leading brands, ag well aatbe bogt California Brandy and Wines, anda full line of be»t Imported Brandies, Winesand oini.

Us a Call,Ton Will Be Satisfied.

• • • • • • • • • • • • •» • • • • •» • • •»<

THE 6ERHANJA HOTEL,1618 Front St., B«d Bank.

THE GERMANIA, formerly eon-ducted by J, Degenring, is wellequipped with all the essentialsand accessories of a first-classhotel. The features include

Lunch and Cigar Counters,Pool and Billiard Table*.

And a, Beading Room.

The bar is supplied with first-class Liquors, Wines, Beers andCigars.

First-class accommodations arefurnished for permanent andtransient guests. Special atten-tion paid to getting up dinners.

| J. EDGAR BROWEB. Proprietor,» • • » » • • » • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • » <

HiMMMMMi »•••••«••»»»»»•••»»••••»•«»»•

THEODORE F. WHITE,Real Estate, Insurance and Loans,

BROAD STREET, RED BANK. IN. j,

$16,000 TO LOAN ON RED BANS PROPERTY IN BUMS

TO SUIT BORROWERS,

HOUSES TO LET.

I havi' thf following list ol limisrs ami s to ics tor rent : O n elarge house on Broad street, $35 a month . One house on Pe te r splace, $.'5 a month . Two houses on Moumouth s t reet ; one $$<?>one $15 a month . Two houses on Oak land street , $i<> a m o n t h .T w o houses on Rec tor pl .ue, $ jo a month. T h r e e houses onMechanic street, $ iS , $1 .«.50 ami $12 a month One house onS p r i n g street , $tH a month . One house on Locust avenue , $taa month . One house at Hast Side Park, $ I J a mon th . O n ehouse at West Side Park , $13 a month . One house on Wal lacestreet , $13 a month . One house on Leonard s treet , $15 amonth . One house on River street. §10.50 a month . O n e houseon Beach street, $10.50 a mouth,

STORES TO LET.Four on F ron t street-, one S^o, one $20, one §25, one $10.

Barber shop adjoining opera house, with five rooms oil secondfloor, $18 a month .

Houses and lots for sale in every street in Keel Hank,

FIRE INSURANCE.I am making Fire Insurance one of the leading features of my

business. If you have any Insurance you wish written, send mea postal and I will call on you, or call at my oilice, rooms 1 and2, Register Building, Broad street.

THEODORE P. WHITE.••••- •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••»»••••+••

Brownie Cameras.

I have a large number of Brownie Cameras, which I am sellingfor a dollar and two dollars apiece.

The dollar cameras are like that shown in the cut. They arerecommended for beginners, and they are capable of doing gooiwork. These dollar Brownies take a picture 2% inches square andeach Camera carries six films. .

The Brownie No. 2 is a two dollar camera, It is built on prettymuch the same principle, as the dollar camera, but it does twice asgood work. The Brownie No. 2 is fitted with two finders and has acarrying handle.

We Handle the Christy1 Pictures.

C. R. D. FOXWELL,Register Building, Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J.

illlHIIIMHIIIIHIIIIIHIIHIIIMMIIWMMMHIIMIIMHllHlllillll

SULPHUR.Farmers wanting sulphur for spraying

purposes will find it at my store in any quan-tity and at lowest market prices.

Inquiries solicited.

JAMES COOPER, JrM

Broad and White StsM Red Bank, N. J.

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t

•r-

M i l . MOTBI ' I rUNEBAL,

ft N i l UrlM tit KmvrmiMk lifmt Hmturda* « * ) N l N f .

ThH fuiiiTttl of MTM. V i r g i n i a M O V I T ,

m-ifn of H»v, Wil i i i im (} Mny i r , w h o

du'd on Tiit'miuy nf hint w *-«ii at I'tMiim-

grove . «i is iiclii on Nai i in lay inur i i ing a t

her (ilcj h o m e n( N.i vi-nink. Tin* H « T H M

w«»ri' hclil in the Mt'tliiHlial c lmrc t i Mini

ni ' t l iwiil ist tiiiiing the * to rmv went ln ' r

t i l l ' c - I l l l l r l l V. 1AH t ' l l i t ' l i . H t ' V . i l H m i ' M

M < « > r r . ii f o r m e r p r c M i l n i K »• I»1 *»r o f t h e

N e w H r i i i H i v i i k i l i s t n r i , i i u i i l c t i n * p r i n -

f i p a l i n i ' l i f h s . H e h a d u f l H i n U ' t l i l l t i l t s

w t ' i i i l i r i k - i - i ' i ' i ' i u - ' i i y ' i f M r . m i d M r a ,

W o y o r . Hi v . M r . M o i r i n o f H u v n ' V i l l . i

i i U i i i i i H i i i ' ii f e w i i ' m i r k s O l h i T r a i n -

i - t l e r ^ w l i o I n ik p k l t i n ( l i e H t T V J i ' O W t T t '

K i ' % , L *t%% n t i . C i l i h o f A t l a n t i c H I K I I -

l i i i i i l H , H i ' v . l ' h : i r l f - i S , M i l l e r o f N ; i v » >

s i i i k : i m i l u v , . ! . . - » ( i l l ( i u r r i s i n i o f S i ,

. l o l i i ) ' - ' i l i i i r c h o f K r y p o r t ,

M r * . M i s i r w i H i i h \ i n n w r i t e r o f c o n -

h h l i l a i i l i ' l i i » ! i ' y i i i l i w n n f h i ' i i i w r i ( 1 1 1 1 1 -

p i i H i l l o l i H i ' T i 1 " 1 1 1 1 ( 4 i l l I n I f u n i T h l h y l ) r ,

K . ( i , \ i h l i f W i i m i l i i - i ( i i i i i g h l i T , M I H , ( ' ,

A . M o u n t ; M r s , H , H , I f i r l , M r s . A l l i t T t

S i c k l e s * ; u i i l M i > s l ' v i j , , I i i y l i n ^ . Mm,

M o u n t , M r - . H u r t , M I H S i r k l t ' s m i d M i w s

I l l g l i l l g w e r e I ' n r i l l r r M ' l i i i . i l i l K l h ' H o f M r H ,

M o v e r a t N a v i - s i n k . T i n 1 t w o l i y m n s

w i ' i c " A l w a s H w i t h i n c " a m i

" is l i v i n g w i t h i n f . " T i n 1 lp>t

f l i io Itmt. l i y n i n \v; i* Biuj^ii l i i r ly

i l a i i ' . T h o wonl r f IIrt* ;

t v i i i l i ' i t u v m y f n i i i I r i i l s h a l l I n 1 f u l i l i ' i l .M i n t ' e y e s I d I ' l t r t h ' s ( , ' l u r l i - i y m w i t l l i i ;

I t h e n B l m i i i i w i i k i - i t ) H U i i k t i i i ' MA m i e v e r I n ' I h i n s f w i t h H i m ,

The floral offerings at th»< funeral wfrpliiiujt'roii^ ami beautiful, Tho casketwas completely covered with flowrs.

The, body wan biiriuil in Bay Viewl , near

A SUDDEN DEATH.

Jamtt «, Taylor nf Saveaink Dfoptfiend ill the Nttict.

(i. Taylor of Niivesink diedvery suddenly at that place on Wednes-day morning of la^t week, His homewiiB about uppusiU- the residence of 0,Mell Jnhnson. He started to go acrosBthe street to Mr, John^m's and had justgot outside of \m gate when he fell tothe grounJ. Charles D^ane happened topass by about the Rams time. Hecarried Mr. Taylor in the house and thenwent for Dr. Andrew, When the doctorreached the hmme. Mr. Taylor was dead'His death was due to heart disease andit is believeil that lie wan dead when hewng curried into the house,

Mr, Taylor wan 7U years old. He wasborn at Lincroft but had lived at Nave-sink for almost fifty years. He hadworked at farm laboring and carpentering. He nerved in the civil war withcompany D of the JiOth regiment, Hfmarried a daughter of Harry Saddler ofNavesink, who was a sister of Mrs, Roh-bjnH, wife of Captain William II, Robbins of KedBank. Mrs. Taylor bus beendead a number of year's and since thenMr, Taylor had kept house alone. Mr.Taylor leaves one daughter. Mrs, GeorgeJohnson of Navesink, His funeral washeld at the home of his daughter onSaturday afternoon. Kev. J. O. Lord,pastni1 of All Stunts' church of Naveaink,conducted tlie service. The body wasburied in All HaintH* cemetery.

A BUREAU ON FIRE,

A Saw mink HvHidpuce Knvfoivly MC

W O B M I i l M Church DaM,

About ft year ago twenty women of

the AllYutowii liHpiiat church pledged

tliiMiinrln'M to raim1 $M each mid thui

niiie $1,(MN) to pay or? HIM iiiorlgHge on

tin* iliiirch, UIMI week u BociiiMi' WBH

held HIKI the HmoiititH were luriiwi in,

the women (riling how ihey ••iinied the

iiioiiev. A few enriu'd more limn $A0

ami llu> tutu I atuoUnl niiHed wan

$1.(W.U\

It»provlD|£ m, Church.

The Hpisriip i! chureh ill Mid lltletown

IH clusetl for three Wtfekn nt iiccount of

Kiipioveinents which am bein^ nmde to

the I uilding, A new Hour \H being laidand the interior IH being repainted. Thefloor will he r e d

L u l l * b y .

nie MarHC Bun done son* t r r rra1,ICn Htiadilfra am a-ororpln' ;

Bed for ll'ls (hil lun'a hen'Wi'u s t a r s iu'Ktit u-pt-pjiin'.

Pon ' yer liiar dnt owf H-crytn'?"Go liT liid ' 1H w'at hf say,

Kll Of Will' Mil Huf'ly Slgiiiil'Iri a lullutiyln' wny.

Now d^ pprrrltH am a-pcfrlnFir (if truck uv ]i )c ft-et,

V.n (loy'll k('ti'ti y'T, I 'm n-fcarin',Kf yer BtKiti don' go ter Bleep.

NlRhttim' ii I ii* t no tlm' for chillun;Dnylinht atu do tpalilfH1 fron',

OIc Marse Darkiifsn grabs en cnit ' u nW e n de rtay comes ter an t'lV,

(NOTICE.We hereby (five niitlco that the season for rheu-

matism IN here und the remedy Is BIUII'IIH' " Sp*;p(1y "Rbi'umQtif, rure. It never fallH; il rannot fail, usit removtiN the euuse, (iunruDtee with every twltte.Try It aud HOC fur youiselvtsj. 7:*) ct'uta at Cooper'spharmacy.

Clipping Machines Sharpened.

Lawn Mowers and Field Mowers

Put in First-Class Order,

Robert VanSchoick. one of the best ma-bine workers in Monmoutb county,ias charge of this branch.

WALTER H, MERRITT,Corner of Gold Street and Maple Ave.,

RED BANK. N. J.

The residence of Dr. It, U. Andrew ofNavesink narrowly enciiped being burneddown last* Thursday flight. Dr. andMra. Andrew had been to Atlantic High-lands io visit their son and they returnedhomo shortly alter dark. A patient waswaiting for th« doctor and Mrs. Andrewhurried upstairs to got a lamp that be-longed in the office. H\w lighted thehvup and hurried downstairs. Shortlyafterward Raymond Tiiylor in passingthe house noticed a flickering lightthrough the upstairs blinds. He notiliedthe doctor and on going upstairs MrAndrew discovered that tho entire topof the bureau was on fire. The smokewas BO stifling that the doctor couldhardly enter the room but lie succeededin beating the lira out with a rugEverything on the bureau was ruinedincluding a largo fancy pin cushion thaiMrs, Andrew Und completed only a fewdays before. It is supposed that in he:haste MrH. Andrew threw the lighteimatch in a tray of celluloid side oornbsod hair pins that WRH on the bureaiand that the celluloid articles caughfire. _ _

Raising Money For a Chapel.Biihjp Scarborough is endeavoring t

keep up the Interest in the chapel at Alluire which was built and sustained bthe late Hal Allaire, There are a number of families who worship at thchapel and the bishop is anxious that thchapel shall be repaired and preservecmt a memorial to Mr. Allaire. He is raleing money toward the improvement 01the chapel and heulready has about fl(Xon band.

- — m i »

Be in the Advertise in THE

MiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiMHiiiiiinHiiiiiiiiiiiiMiNiii

X Openi Mornings

> Cholre MR4. rrul aalnNew York.

WITH AN

International Reputationthe goodi in the list below needno words of i ecooimendation f jomus.

The prices!, however, are un-usual. Wines and Liquors ofsuch high quality coit muchmore elsewhere.

Whether these goods are usedfor health or hospitality they willgive satibfaction.

California Port or Sherry Wine,From $1.00 per gallon up. Bottle, 25c. up.

IUhmint C'luh Kye.Choice oki goods. Hpenial price, per gal-

lou, $a.»). Par hottlc, 6Sc.Vhoiee Old lilaekberry Brandy.Per gallon, gl,r>0. Per tiuart, 45c,

California Vlartt,An pxocllcnt table wine, P*r gallon,

81.U). Per bottle, 2fic.Very Old California Krandy,

PIT gallon, 83.75.' Per quart, 8I.O0,pure Old Apple Brandy.

A pulatetlcklrr. Special per gallun.fS.M.Quui't. 75e,

No ildeboard is complete without a bottleof our

Detlwood Itye.Full quarts, khk quality, TSe., XXXXqiiulUy, Sl.tK). Old lU'serve. $1.2,1.

Gold Star Rye,Pur Ballon, f 1 75. Per quart, GOu.

Choice Old Jamaiea Hum.PergallOD.ia.W, Per bottle, 76c.

Our Bud Streak ApjtlejaeHlias been reduced In prino and Improved Inquality. Full quart bottle, $1.00,

We sell all the popular brandsof wines and liquors at reducedprices.

J, I. MONSKY,Successor to the Geo. R. I amb Dlst, Co,

tO East Front St., Red Bank.

DR, STILES,

Doctor of Optics,Will viilt Red Bank, W. J,,

other Wednesday.

HAHNE & CO.J.

OI0M

1O p . U.

Area atOre»l atAny 2Vew

York Store.

DAIMIEST WASH FABRICS.Fifteen Thousand Dollars' Worth

of all the new desirable and correctly toned weaves of this season's pro-duction placed on sale at almost cost of production, as regulated by to-day'strade conditions. The fifteen items presented below are each in their re-spective class worthy of your keenest consideration, and an investment atthe present time means positive savings.

Rliirting Prim*, white grounds,neat designs, HtrijK'H und dots, gr «f color, regularly &'., lit-- . w v

(iinghum, HtripfH, dotaand neat erft»et«, all lhis Benson'sbest rtjles, regular 48c ,at. 35C

White Mercerized Mad ran, stripes,neat designs and nil over fffects, 50choice designi to select from,regular 85c , at . . . . . . . . . . . . .

40-inch India Linen, a fine shwrquality and (rood cloth, allperfect, regular 20c., at. . . .

Madras, nent drsinn-; und fliraleffects, 40 of this BC;IM)H'H best stylesto select from, regalnr 45c,t ;

45-inch AH-wool EtHiniiie, goodregular weave, sheer and crisp andperfect hlaok, actual value n n .• 1 . 0 0 , a t . . . . . . . . . . . ".; 89C

These Will Be Found on Special Tables as Noted.Table No. 4 —3fi.inch Corded

Mndras; white grounds, stripes,dots, and neat effects * fast - | fk/%polora ; regular 12|c, at.., | U V

Table No. 7—White Madraaand Pique ; dots, stripes and all-overdesigns; this season's best pro-ductions; regular 35c, at Qfi*f*

Table No. 0=Fine Dress Ging-hams ; plaidi, stripes and checks;this season's best styles; ^fast colors ;regular 15c, at

Table No, 10—Fine Dreps Ging-ham, fast color stripes and checks,all this season's best styles, 100 de-signs to choose from, regular1 3 * , a t . . . . . . . .

Tab le No. 18 —Fine importedDimity, two and three tone printings.Neat designi, dots and floral effects,white and tinted gounds,value 25c , . . . , . , , , . , ,

Table No. 14^—Lice stripe Swiss,white and tinted grounds, two andthree tone printings, fifty designsto select from, regular 25c, -4 Q «

Mala Aisle—Plain Cheviot, allthe newest ihades and colorings, agood fine cloth for shirts, waistsand shirt waist suits, 29c,at.. 25C

Main Aisle, Rear—Fine sheerBatiite, white and tinted grounds,two and three tone printings,atripei, dots and neat designs, Wstyles to select from, regu- 1I l 5 h

Main Aisle, R e a r —8g inchColored Madras, white and tintedgrounds, stripes and nea,t designi,75 styles to choose from,regular 25c., at

SECOND FLOOR.

MILLINERY.Second Preliminary Opening of

fine Imported Pattern Hats, Toquesand Turbans ; also High-class Nov-elties in Trimmings, Ornaments,Flowers, New Feather Effects, StrawBraids, Trimming Materials, Untrim-med Hats, etc.

Largest and most complete assort-ment of Ready-to-wear Suit andTailored Hats in the trade, at from

$2.45 to $15.00.At $475, the most up-to-date

assortment of Trimmed Hats to befound. They look like $7.00 to$10.00 hats. Your choice (C4

MAIN FLOOR.

Dress Trimmings.Sale of 1903.

Dress Trimmings in latest designs andcolor, comprising Garnitures, Collars, Revers,Appliques in black, white and colors, Silk andjet Passementeries, Drops, Pendants, Orna-ments.

Black, white and colored Silk Appli- QQnque Trimming, value $1.25, at, per yard wUUl

Black, also white Silk Applique "7Of*Trimming, value $1.00, at, per yard / wUi

Black, white, black with white Guirnps,in variety of designs, per yard, IOC. QQp

I.to

Black and white Silk Passemen-teries, value $2.75, at, yard

Persian Bands, all the latest Ori- E f i nental colorings, per yard, %%Q, to UiUU

Silk Drops, black, also white,12SC 19c, 25c, 49c

MAIN FLOOR.

LACES Extraordinary Saleof 1903 Laces,

including all the most desirable and wanted Laces for coming season, Venise,Cluny, Crochet, Antique, Marquise, Retzella, Point Gaze, Alepcon, Valen-ciennes, etc., etc.

Real Cluny Luces, value 20c, at i 0 e . Value 69c,at 80c. Value 98c, at 7Se,

Real Antique Laces, 86c f, 8 9 c , 69c,, 98c. yard.Imitation Ciuny Laces, 8 to 5 inches wide, value 17c,

at 10c. per yard,Veniae Lace Galloons, irregular designs, value 39c,

at i 9c , per yard. Value 49c., at t 9 e . per yard.Torchon and other Washable Lace§, value 10c, at

Be, per yard. Value 134c, at 8 c ptr ^mrd.Washable Lacei, Point de Paris, Platt VaJencfennf s

Lacpi and Galloani, vilue 9«,, at 6c. per yard; value15c, at 9c. per yard.

French Valenoiennei Lace Edgings and Insertlngs,value 89c., at 85c, per piece of 13 yards.

Lace Robe*, Unmade Lierre Lace, white andbuttef color, value $25.00, at 15.00; value $39,00, at$10.001 value $85,00, at $85.00.

Batiste and Linen Lace Trimmed and Embroidery,value $15.00, at $10,98, Value $20,00, at $16.00.Value $86.00, at $85.00.

Robea—Black Point d'Esprit Net Robes, silk appli-que embroidery, value f29.00, at $18.50.

White Point d'Esprit and Net Robes, new designs fnembroidery, with flare skirt, $25.00, $39.00,$49.00.

We Cheerftilly fill n a i l o rders and make free wagon deliveries withia delivery te r r i tory ,

and to a l l ra i lway •tationa In New Je r sey and Grea te r Hew York.

: HAHNE & CO.IMMMIIMMMMMIIIIII

Newark. HAHNE & CO.

Next Visit Wednesday, March 11th,

Free consultation and ei-imiDiUoD. QlaMM If Deededat moderate prlc««,

For Headache and Neural-Bin. ba?e jour eyei turn-tned.

Bmmrmt 1 to & jp, jf,

SMOKE THEUneeda and Floran

Cigars.J CENTS EACH.

Sold in all the leading Cigar Storei,Drug Storei, etc.

HftDafM|uf«d by

E. H. WILDER.

S We'll Put Your Heating4 Apparatus In Order,

Ih

mate the necewary repairs n d attendto the plumbing work in your bouse i t •reaionrtta oaiL Our mea h*?e donetbtR kind of work for many ran. Ttaat'iwhy ihej nndtretiBd It fo thoroiighljr.

prop HI « pot Ml.

We Also Have a Fine Line ofStoves.

JANES FITZGIBBON,

PKANK R. ROGERS,

Paper Hanger,81 Street,

RED BANK. IfEW JERSET.

ESTIHATES GIVEN.

j •

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TT

KMUU1D FIFTY TEARN.

Mr. mnd Hrm, A#*«rf fmtterbrmte ifce Kvent.

Last Thursday waa the fiftieth ooniVfruary of the marriage of Mr, and Mrs.Robert Potter of North Lung Brunch,No unusunl preparation for celebratingthe event W»H made by the aged couple,but relatives and frienda decided that noimportant an occasion HIHHIUI not passunnoticed and accordingly paid them asurprise vioit, Mr. ami Mra, Potter re-ceived many handsome presents, includ-ing a Morris chair from their four chil-dren.

Mr, and Mis, Potter were married atFresh Pond, now known as MonmouthBeach, and have lived in that vicinityever since. They belong to the NorthLong Branch Methodist church and areregular aitenduntH in all kinds ofweather. The fcnir children are Mrs,William L, Chadwick and Mrs. ArthurJ, Whiting of Red Bank, and Mrs.George R. Hoyt and William Potter ofNorth Long Branch, Tlie couple alsohave six grandchildren. Two of thegrandchildren are Miss Grace CTiadwickand Ray Whiting of Red Bank,

Brothers in m Fight,Ira D, Emery of Oceanic was arrested

on Wednesday on a charge of assaultpreferred tiy hiu brother Robert, wholives at the same place, Robert clintusthat Ira hit him in the noie. Ira wasarrested by Marshal Stryker and takenbefore Justice Sicklea of Red Bank. Hewas required to give flOO bail to awaitthe action of the grand jury. WilliamH. Emery, his father, went on hii bond

Tonri To Log Angeles On Account OfTkt Presbytarlan General AMcniblr,Under the FeraoBally-Coiiductrdftyatem of tbe Pennsylvania Hall-

M D POINT M l i O I T , MICH,,RIO ID, AND WASHINGTON.

•u-

For the Presbyterian general asiemhlyat Los Angeles.Cal,, May 21st, to June1st, the Pennsylvania railroad companyhas arranged tfaret transcontinentaltours at extraodinarily low rates. Spe-cial trains of high-grade Pullman equip-ment will be run on desirable schedules.A tourist agent, chaperon, ufHcial sten-ographer, and special baggage masterwill accompany each train to promotethe comfort and pleasure of the touriits.Al^Sunday travel will be avoided.

The Pennsylvania railroad is the onlyrailroad that will run tours to Los An-geles on this occasion under its ownperaoually-conducted system.

No 1 ASSEMBLY TOUR.

Special train of baggage, Pullmandining and drawing-room slteping carswill leave New York May 13ik, goingvia Chicago, Denver, and Royal Gorge,stopping at Colorado Springs, Salt LakeCity, and San Francisco, arriving LosAnjselefl, May 30th ; leaving Log Angeles,returning June 1st, via the Santa FeRoute and Chicago ; arriving New YorkJune 6th. Round-trip rate, includingtransportation. Pullman accommoda-tions, and* meals on special trains,|184,5Q from New York, $189.75 fromPhiladelphia, f 128,75 from Baltimore andWashington, $120.00 from Pittaburg,and proportionatB ratei from otherpoints,

Tickets for this tour, covering allfeatures1 until arrival at Los Angeles,with transportation only returning in-dependently on regular trains via goingroute, New Orleans, or Ogden and St.Louis, and good to stop off at authortEedwestern points, will be sold at rate of$109 50 from New York, f 107.75 fromPhiladelphia, $104,75 from Baltimoreand Washington, $98 00 from Pittsburg ;returning via Portland, $11.00 more.

No. 2, YELLOWSTONE PARE TOUR,Special train of baggage, Pullman

dining, drawing-room sleeping, and ob-serration cars will leave New York May13, going via Chicago, Denver, ColoradoSprings, and Salt Lake City, wiih stopsen route, arriving Los Angeles May 20 ;reluming, leave Los Angeles June i, viaBantu Barbara, San Jose, Wan Francisco,Seattle and St. Paul, with stops en routeand a complete tour of YellowstonePark ; arriving New York June 29.Rate, including all necessary expensesexcept hotel accopamodatinns in LosAngeles and San Francisco, $258,00 fromNew York, $251.28 from Philadelphia,$240.95 from Baltimore and Washington,$244.00 from Pittsburg, and proportion-ate rates from other points.

No. $. HOME MISSION TQTJR.

Special train of baggage, Pullmandining and drawing-room sleeping carswill lea% e New York May 18, going viaChicago and Sante Fe route, GrandCanon of Arizona, and Riverside, arfiving Los Angelei May 20, leaving LOBAngeles, returning, June 1 via SantaBarbara, San Francisco, Salt Lakn City,Royal Gi>rge, and Denver, arriving NewYork June 11, Rate, including all ii«ce§-lary e*X|>enses except hotel accommoda-tions in L»s Angeles and San FranciHCO,$159,00 from New York, 1156,75 fromPhiladelphia, $159,75 from Baltimoreand Washington, $144.60 from Pitts-burg, and proportionate rates from otherpoints.

Tickets for this tour, covering allfeatures until arrival at Los Angeles andtriniportafrion only returning independently *ift jiirect rbutes with authorlatdstop oven, will be MM at rate 1131.00from New York, $118.50 from Philadel-phia, $118.00 from Baltimore and Wash-ington, $110 00 from Pittsburg \ return-ing via Portland, $11.00 more.

The tours outlined above have the In-dorsement of the officers of the Presby-terian General Assembly, and are designed to meet the requirements of thoseattending the General Assembly as wellM those desiring to visit the Pacific ooastat a minimum expense. *- Detailed itinerary is now in course ofpreparation. AppJy to Gto, W, Bold,Aastatanfc General Passenger Agent,

I Stwet Station, Philadelphia.

Dap Tairvl i Faaasy !*«•!« Hall.roa4.

Ttau first perBOnaliy-coBducted tmir toOld Point ti>mfort, Richmond and WHKUin R ton via tht« Pennsylvania railroad forthe present Htuwon will leave New Yorkand Philadelphia on Saturday, March14th.

TicketH, including tru'importation,meali ra route in both dirfctioiiH, trann-fers of pKHBengeraand b-iggagi'. hotel acrommcHintions at (Jld i'oint Comfort,Richmond, and Washington, iind o ir-riage ride about Richmond--in fm-l,every nt'cetwnry uspenst* for H period ofsix days—will be Hold at rate of fiJrt.OOfrom New York, HrooUyn, and Newark ;§i)4,50 from Trenton ; |33.00 from Phila-delphia, and proportionate rates fromother stations.

Old Point romfort Onlr.Tickets lo Old Point Comfort only in-

cluding luni-lu'on on going trip, one andthree-fourths days' hoard at Uliamberliuhotel, und good to return direct by regu-lar ir'iiiiB within six days, will he sold inconnection with this tour <it rato of$17.00 from New York ; $15.50 fromTrenton • #14,50 from Philadelphia, andproportionate rates from other points." F o r itineraries and full informtttionapply to ticket agents ; tourist agent,203 Fifth avenue, New York ; 4 Courtstreet, Brooklyn * 788 Broad itreet,Newark, N. J,, or George W. Boyd, n§-sistant general^ passenger agent, BroadHtreet station, Philadelphia.

Tkree-Dar Tour to WiiblDilon Un.der la* Peraon«IIr<Condaeied t*r•>«•

of the Pennsylvania Railroad.The next Pennsylvania Railroad Per-

ionally^conducted T«ur to Washingtonleaves Thursday, March 5. Rate, cover-ing railroad transportation for the roundtrip, hotel accommodations, and transferof passenger and baggage, station tohotel in Washington, fl4,50 from NewYork, $18.00 from Trenton, and fl 1.50from Philadelphia, These rates coveraccommodations for two days at the Ar-lington, Normandie. Riggs, Ebbitt,Shoreham, Cochran, Gordon, Barton,^r Hamilton Hotels, For accommoda-tions at Regent, Metropolitan, National,or Colonial Hotels, $3.50 less, Specialitde trip to Mt, Vernon.

AH tickets goo4 tor ten days, withspecial hotel rates after expiration ofhotel coupons,

For itineraries and full informationapplv to ticket agents; Tourist Agent,268 Fifth Avenue, New York; 4 Courtstreet, Brooklyn: 789 Broad Street, New-ark, N, J.; or address Geo, W, Boyd,Assistant General Passenger Agent,Broad Street Station, Philadelphia.

• • • • • • • • • * • # • » • • • % • • • • #•••••

Mew Publication." The Suhurhaniie " is the name of a

new monthly magazine which willshortly make its appearance, publishedby the Central Railroad of New Jersey.It will epitomize ' ' the suburban idea"and contains much matter for those whoare, as well as those who ought to befinterested in suburban homes. The firstissue will contain articles on "Jersey,—the AutomobilistB' Paradise," by Win-throp E. Scarritt, President of the Auto-nubile Club of New Jersey, " A Su-burban Home Garden " by Joel Benton,"'Picturesque Cranford'' by Jaa. Rod-gers. Advertising Manager of Harper'sPublications, "Building a Suburbanstable" by John Irving Romer, editor ofthe •' Equipage," " City verius SuburbanLife," 'Social Life in the Suburbs," " ASuburbanite to Some Purpose—A TrueStory," " Atlantic City at Easter,' " Ad-vaDtages to the Children of a SuburbanHome,'! etc, The new magazine will behandsomely illustrated with engravingsfrom photographs of suburban scenestaken specially for it, and will containuseful data concerning distances of vari-ous suburban points from the city andcost of commutation, A feature willalso be a department of light gossip, en-titled " In The Smoker" by The Com-muter. Sample copies may be bad assoon as issued by application to C, M,Burt, General Passenger Agenr, CentralR. R. of New Jersey, New York.

Prescriptions.Every druggist says that his

drugs are pure. Every druggists«ya that lie does not substitute.Every druggist says that he dotsnot use inferior or adulterateddrugs. Every druggist says thathe doeft accurate work. What isthere left for us to say differentfrom anybody else ? Well, we. in-vite you to bring your prescriptionhere and see the kind of treat-ment you get in our store, andnotice the way everything is done,and then see if you do not feelthat the medicine is put up justas your doctor would like to haveit.

Sehroeder's Pharmacy,Bergen & Morris, Props,,

16 BROAD S T E M I , RED BANK,

12-f.

W. 7. MOSELLE,

NEWSDEALER

AND STATIONER,

34 Broad Street,

RED BANK, N,J.

i • • M ' t ! t

Meetings of the Board of Health.

ocular met'tlngs of the K»H1 ltauk Hoiiril nfHpalth will b« beld on the Hit Thuwtigy of mchinn th, «» H.00 t, M., i t tim ofllrt' of tin

on MecUBnic strwt.

CHARLES D, WARNKH. IJAMW H.

Just For a Flyer.GOOD FOR ONE WEEK ONLY,

1 liou.1 Mixed Te;i 8 6 c ,Mlv. KvujHirateii Aprii-otw . 8Bc ,H ibH, Rva|ii>rtiUNl Applen . . , . S 5 c ,ii II)H, KviijHirnti'il IVnclu's 8 6 c .il lbf. Kxtru Km*1 Pniin-s 8 6 c .Ji cans lVai-hes 86c«? lbs. Hood Uat Mial 2 6 c .4 Iba, Hood Rui' 8 6 c ,

p.s , 2 6 c .

1 11), (SIMHI Mixed TeaI 1b. Special CotTi't'1 run !f llm, llnziird's Npinuch

Ib. IViir! TupiociiIh. box l'urn

1 5 Urn, tlinger

bus i(HH) MuU'hei.ii !i», I'Hii Hee tN, , ,

'.Mb, can ('urn . , ..

86cSOe.15c,

6c.6c,

, 6c.6c.Be.6c,

j We Sell the Nu Broom.

F. F. SUPP,Telephone 9-1. R e d Bank, N. J .

MIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllliHMIIIIIlllllM

REAL ESTATEand Insurance.

Property for sale and to rent inall parts of town. Several specialbargains just now for sale,

Loans effected.Agent for Girard Insurance Co.

D. W. WILLOUSS,Cor. Front and Broad Sts.. Red Bank.

^

Teach Your Childrento Save Money.

of the most important things to teach children is thrift. Ifthey learn to save their money when young they will more

than likely do so when older. The successful men of the day arethose who learned the value of money in their youth.

You want your children to be successful. Then teach them tosave. Get one of our savings banks, of which we keep the key.When they have a dollar or over bring it to us and we willcredit their account with it and give them

3 Per Cent Interest

Navesink National Bank,Broad Street, Red Sank, N J.

^>«^*^«^«>«^«^^#^v**«^^^

Depot Wag'ons.The most popular carriages today are Depot

Wagons, or " Rockaways,'h We carry a full lineof them, with glass all to drop, making either anopen or a closed carriage at will.

Also the same with glass front and doors, andwith curtains. The prices on these are right.

We are about giving away some second-hand carriages. _ Better look themover and select what you need. Don'.t forget, we hay,e the best Buggies onthe market.

J. W. MOUNT <& BRO.OUR FACTORY AND REPOSITORY

Cor, White St. and Maple Ave Red Bun);, N. J,

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'I ha Nosf of Labor,I f I n i l u l i i n i< M I I K S m i n o r p M i f

A n i l ! > h i « I M m i i i n f i i i I I n a i l s e ,

T h « < " H I H I K i i f 1 . . i I n - r H i n g e i i h i ' H l t

" l ' l l l i l I ' l H i ( i H l l ^ i l l l l 11 ( M i l . l . t l H C .

T i l l ' H l l u l l l - , ( l l f H . i f l f i l I ' l l ( 1 1 1 ' i l l !

t i i f i ' V r y i u t i ' i m i l l <• < > u r n

A i u l W I I H I I - n i l . I H i i . l . i i i - . * , » I I . - « - l . r f . ' i i '

T i n - t l i i l l n t j u l t o f h i t l l i i i i n i >

T h e f i l i o i n » ; i k r l l n ' » h i p > l u l l * .

T i l l i t I l i i H i i i u - I I I , I S 1 ' I " [ 1 1 1 t I 1 1 1 I I l l V ,

I t C H J I i i I l i i i I I I i n I I I I - H l l l K l i ' M I ! i H

T h r M I i i - , » ( . p f i h K f o t i t j i n i , i w u i : n y .

Y o u H u e i l l - i I n t i i l a i n i i s ^ h i i ^ M i n '

A l l l l H I 1 : , W M S • A l ; l l f I I I L I I . - I n ! M l H f "

T i i , ' I I n I h i n l i ( ! • ' « I m m l ' i o . i ' l - • : i • 1 > u M r ,

A i i i l l i i i i i i i j i i a f l H ( I n M i i i . i i I I w i i i v

A n . i t i K n f - - N n . | ' ; i ! l i > I " » ' l

' I ' l l . ' i u i i r f i i l i M ' i i « h : i U . m i H n l ' \ H » ,

T o W r i l l t l l l « l n - K l i i N « l i i ' M r l ' P " . . I

A m i U > 1 1 1 * - I I i - i T i i - . U s i i H i M l * . -

O h , t n , i v l l r l l i i l H M i ' i l l ' i ' i r s . f r . 1 '

( l o m l w i l l I n h i t l e r I l i i M i ^ l i t M i i i i i y M c m l ,

H u m , m i 1 h m m i i i l l s p i i . l c a i • •!.

A n d l i m n U > n i . i i i . i t i i n i I t i i l u l .

B I l l K " H . " I ' l R ' ' I ' - ' ' H S V i - l ' l i w ! H O 1 1 £ '

H i r i K M I . t , j I i n m i r | n - i i M | i r r i i . v .T o \ \ i , i 1 1 I i m i l l M i w h t h i i i y l n ' i i r t H i u i

H l t i K i l l ! t o

L O L ' S h T l t A T K G Y ,

"I don ' t k n o w whiit ll IN," Naiil Lot

" J l l i n j j i l l H t i o l l . " r r t l i r i l r i l h i s n l H t * T

shortly,Lnt tuniod nil her. "l.unk lii'iv, MH-

r l a B i i i i i K , " l i t 1 N i i i i l i i l i m i s t H t T i ' i ' l y .

'"Vou prido .M)iirsflf nil \ our familyfor HOt'lng things. You've IMTII hi-rothree days, and haven't you Keenthat thrre was something rome be-tween us filnct1 you wore hen' beforeand that BIIO has stopped raring any-thing about iiie?" Ills voiee broke attlio IaHt words*, and ho turned awayfrom her.

Maria looked at his back, and therewas an expression on her fare of min-gled pity, contempt and iinnisement.

"I've been here three Unys, Lot," sheBnid quietly, "and I've Keen tlint youare a pair of foolish eliildren. Hut be-fore I go on I want to nsk you If youhave gut over nirluK for her."

Lot looked at her with Indignationtoo strong fur words.

"I didn't think you had," said hisBister in a tone of relief. -"If you had,It would be a serious Mate of affairs;but, ,'IH you haven't, I don't see anydifficulties."

"You must admit that she isn't hap-py," lie said at length.

"Yen.""Hut, don't you SPP, it must be me,

because she doesn't sec anybody else.hardly."

She settled herself more comfortablyon the grain client and began to speakdeliberately. "Don't you know thatwhen two people, I don't care who theyare, live on a lonely farm and don'tsee anybody but each other for weeksat a lime—don't you know that theyare hound to get morbid and imagineall KortH of things about themselvesand each other? That is why so manyfarmers' wives go Insane."

"Hut what ran I do?" Lot asked, alook of terror in his face. "I've triedto get her to go to places with me, butI can't."

"I'll tell you," said Maria derisively,"The first nice day take her out overthe farm and spend the day. I'll sento things while you are gone, and I'llput up a lunch for you. Show her allyou are doing and flltm to do. Takeher to the pretty places and, most ofall, make love to her as though yourlife depended on It,"

"I don't believe she'd <a>, 1 couldn'tpersuade her. You've 110 idea how setshe is."

Maria looked at her brother scorn-fully, "Perhaps you never heard ofsuch a thing us strategy,"

She turned away and walked out ofthe barn.

For a long tliiio ho stood looking athis Grandfather Stetson's old coveredwagon. It had been considered an ele-gant affair in its day, but now It wasseldom taken out except when some ofthe children came home at Thanksgiv-ing or for short visits.

He took out his jaekknlfe and openedit, felt of the edge, then got into thewagon iind knelt down on the seat,Very carefully, and following thethread in the eloth, ho cut a slit twoInches long in the back of the seat. Hepicked at the cotton batting stuffingwith tho point of his knife. Then helet the flap go back In place, the cot=ton batting showing a little all alongthe cut. "That looks very natural," hemuttered.

The next morning Lot spoke to hisilster when Eunice was in anotherroom. "Just a§ soon as the dew getsoff some," ho said, and she noddedafter breakfast she carried to the barna large covered basket, a demijohn ofwith a look of comprehension. Sooncold tea, a shawl and her sister-in-law's•unboiinet. These Lot helped her stow•way under the back seat.

At 0 o'clock Lot came into the house,"I'm going to start off with the old cov-ered wagon in a little while," he said,"and I find there's a tear or a cut inthe back of the seat. Do you supposeyou could mend it?"

Eunice went to get her workbasket.She found a piece of green cloth andpulled some ravellngg from It; then shewent out and got Into the coveredwagon and set quietly and patiently towork.

Lot watched her furtively from thefcara. When he thought sWwaTnearlyhalf through be began harnessing withfeverish haste. What if she should getthrough too MOD? She looked arounduh» backed the horse jnto the shafts.

• • I ' m n o t . | i i l t » - t h r o u g h y e t , L o t , " • h i -

HUM I m i i t l U

" p u n t h u r r y , " h e i i n w w t T i ' d . H e

w ,i it I'll \ \ 1111 i l i f r e i i i N In In . - b a n d u n t i l

s h e l u i . l t a k e n H i e I I I M M i t c h , t h e n h e

| i i i i i | , , . , | i n . f - . i l d o w n b f s l d f h e r i t M i l

. s | i . . | » e t o t i n - h o i h e K i m l f f h a l f h t a r t e d

1 , . S i f i ( V e t . I n n h e h u d h i * * I i i i u d g e n t l y

i > u i i , r . i t m , H i u i h l u ' M i n k b i i i - L i i K i i l u

\ \ ,• ; I I e U n i i i K l o r u l e o \ c r t h e f i l l 1 1 1 , "

f i e M I i d i | U ! i ' t l y

H e i l i n u ' o n . u i l U m g r a p i d l y n i ' w M i t

Ii 1 M p i . H I M . r e c a l l i n g i i h i i l e n l H o f t h e

l u i . v j u n k i n g a l i d H p e H k i i i g o f t h e g e t

l i l i K i l l o f t h e e n s i l a g e ,

Kiinlce \v;IM si lent , a n d In sp i te of hi*livt'ly . h a t t e r 1 ,ot w a s a n x i o u s

In t h e m i d d l e of t h e p a s t u r e Lot• t o p p e d t h e horse and g l a n c e d abou tHome of t h e cows w e r e f eed ing near ,a n d they lifted the i r h e a d s to lookvvil 1; big, inijiiirliiK eyes .

" I ' r e t t y good looking c a t t l e , 1 callt h e m , " he nald p roud ly . H e p a u s e d .H i s faee w a s quie t , w h i l e a n d agit a t e d , and he did not d a r e look a t hiswi f r

"1 alsvavH t h o u g h t an a w f u l lot ofHi i t t e re i ip . " sa id L'uniee in her s w e e t ,

gen t l e voice. "I liked he r looks KO we!)t h a t I l ea rned her to d r i n k a n d tookall t h e c a r e of her inys i l t ' . "

" Y e s , " he snid . "1 r e m e m b e r , a n d Itwan a good t h i n g tha t yon did t a k ec h a r g e ot* her She ' s m a d e a line c o w . "I l l s " vuiee g r e w ciiriou>ly h u s k y , findhe s p o k e a l m o s t s h a r p l y to the. ho r se ," (Je t Up, Nel l ,"

AH they went wlowly through thepasture the cows one by one droppedtheir nosi'S to their feeding again.Eunice gazed about Inn1 eagerly, a newlight In her face. "Oh." she sighedcontentedly, "It IN a lovely day,"

The cart path was very rough, andthe wngon bounced and njtehed along,the overhanging bushes and youngtrees brushing against Its top andBidcH, Kunicf laughed like a child andnow and then gave an Involuntary lit-tle McrcHin,

Lot laughed too, "I guess I'll haveto put my arm around you," he said.And he drew her close, driving withbin free hand.

'•Isn't this fun?" she laughed, "AndIt won't hurt the wagon, either. Howdid you happen to think of Ruch a niceIdea"?1'

"Why didn't I think of It yearw ago?"he returned evasively. "I ought tohave, with the poor little wife kept athome with a weak ankle."

"I have wanted to see the farm awful-ly," she said, nestling up to him as hisarm went around her again, "but Ididn't see how I could, and 1 never ex-pected lo,"

Suddenly she impulsively threw herarms about his neck and buried herface on Ills shoulder with a little sob,

"It's awful silly," she murmured,"for folks as old as we are to act sospoony, but I—thought—I'd got a notionthat you'd got alt over earing anythingabout me, and I'm so glad to find itIsn't so,"

As for Lot, he held his wife close, andIn bis heart was a great joy.

Too Long.An old lady^Qj-'his flock once called

upon Dr. Oiirwith a grievance. Thedoctor's neckbands were too long forher ideas of ministerial humility, andafter a long harangue on the sin ofpride she intimated that she hadbrought a pair of scissors with herand would be pleased if her dear pas-tor would permit her to cut them downto her notions of propriety.

The doctor not only listened patient-ly, but handed over the offending whitebands to be operated upon. When shehad cut them to her satisfaction andreturned the bibs, it was the doctor'sturn.

"Now," said he, "you must do me agood turn also."

"Yes, that I will, doctor. What canit be1.'"

"Well, you have something aboutyou which Is a deal too long and whichcauses me no end of trouble, and Ishould like to see It shorter."

"Indeed, dear sir, I will not hesitate.What Is it? Hero are the scissors.Use them ai you please,"

"Come, then," said the sturdy divine,"good sister, put out your tongue.**

m - m

The CataUptic Trance.It cannot be doubted that in numer-

ous cases of cataleptic trance the ap-parently lifeless patient has been ac-quainted with all the arrangementibeing made for his interment. SeveralInstances are recorded in which, al-though the body presented every ap-pearance of death, the patient was con-scious of everything going on aroundhim, but absolutely unable to raise alimb or in any way communicate withthose near his bed.

Love,Tro« lovt la but a humble, low bora

thingAnd hath Its food served up in earthen-

waresIt !• a thing to walk with, hand in hand,Through the everydayneii of this work-

day world.A love that flvti and takeiNot with flaw seeking «yei like needle

pointi,But, loving kindly, ever iookj them down,• love that thai! be new and fresh each

hour.

W/VLL PAPERS

HARRiSON'S,

Fertilizers. , % N-S. \ S S

"Educate by Example

Broa4 R«4 Bank, N. J,

1 lwive fit»«uit 1,000 totm of

Fert i l izers . 11u* 1 u11111LT MHIH'H'H,

Stm-kbi idge'n and Bowkei'H,

I have JIIHO about 1 .'HI ton-, of

N i t r a t e of Siuln.

I want to sfll this iVrtili/.er

us quickly an |n»ssil»h', and

early orders for it will IK* to,

the advantage of the luiyer as-"

well an to uivself.

These fertilizers are the very

best for their special purposes

that can be obtained.

FRANKS. THOMASPort Monmouth9"N> J«

says President Roosevelt.Then why tiot now take out

a policy of Life Insurance inThe Prudential, and whenyour sous reach their man-hood, knowing you to bewise, they will do likewise.

THE

PrudentialInsurance Co. of America

>

READ IT THROUGH.

Two of the best makes are rep-resented in our corset stock.

TheCIB La SpiriteAND

Thompson's Glove fitting,

All the new models, including"The Small Girdle" and new" Militant," so exclusively used atpresent.

In fact, we keep everything inStraight Front, Low or High Bustand Long or Short-hip Corsets.

MRS. E. WEIS,

Red Bank Temple of Fashion

Four Forceful Facts.

Free Street ConnectionsFrom main to curb line, for anyhouse on line of our mains.

Gas Ranges,First-class, c o m p l e t e con-nected, ready to light, for$15.00.

Gas Heating Stores,Various styles and sizes at$2,50 up.

Welsbach Gas Lam,Prices lately, reduced to OneDollar and Twenty-five Cents.Use 3 ft, of gas per hour, givea 80 candle power light. Onportable stands for reading.The best and cheapesf artifi-cial light.

Consolidated Gas Go. of N. J .27 E. Front St., Red Bank, N. J,

Home Office ?Newark, N, J,

JOHN K. IiIiVDKN, I'MwWwit.J.KSLIK I). WARD, Vice PreMliliMH.KliiiAH B. VVAHi), M Vie»< rrt'Kiili'ut

mill emitiHi'l,KdllHKSr K, n l lYDEN.i i l Vice I'rcs't,EDWARD (illAY. S»'iT»'t«ry.P, (i WAKNF.lt, Sup!.,, Hnmii RMI! WHI-

IHCC K!r,*fl)<, Kc4i Hank, N. J . Tele-phone tfc!-A.

W. 11, H()l'STi)N,(ii'iiiThl Agciii, Nu. its) Hum j Hirt'i-L Rod Bank. N, J .

RUOENTIAL

HHl

• • • • • • • <

'Twould Spoil Ttala Slorj to Tell ItIn The Headlines,

To UHe an eighteenth century phrase,this is nn " o'er true trile." Having hap-pened in a small Virginia town in thewinter of 1902. it is n story very much ofHie present. Up to a short time agoMrs. .John E. Harmon, of Mel fa Station,Va,, had no personal knowledge of the 'rare curative properties of Chamber-Iain's Cough remedy, " Last January,"she aays, " my baby took a dreadfulcold and at one time I feared she wouldhave pneumonia, but one of my neigh-bors told me how this remedy had curedher little boy and I began giving it tomy baby at once and it soon cured her,I heartily thank the manufacturers ofChamberlain's Cough Remedy for placingso great u euro within my reach. I can-not recommend it too highly or say toomuch in its favor. I hope all who readthis will try it and bo convinced as Iwas." For sale by C. A, Minion & Co.,4 Broad street, Red Bank, N, J,

GOOD CORSETS.

MONEY TO LOAN.Money to loin in m m to suit borrower* on tart

tend Md mortgsm. A, L. MM, I M » D tafM-ing, RedBiBlE.iCJ.

New Wash Fabrics.

It pays us to begin the selling of Springand Summer Wash Fabrics early. It paysyou to make your selections early, for byso doing you get the pick and choose ofthe representative styles from the best mak-ers of wash goods in the country.

ADLEM & CO.,Broad Street, Red Bank, N, J.

Coal, Wood and Fertilizers.Good, free burning Coal, well screened, at the low-

lowest possible market prices.

FERTILIZERS FOR SPRING USE,

Wood, either Sawed and Split, or by the Cord.

Brick for Sale. Freighting Done on Reasonable Terms.

THOMAS P. BROWN,24 Wharf Avenue, Red Bank, N. J,

TELEPHONE CALL 27.

HARNESS. rWe continue in the lead for all kinds

of good custom made harnese. We alsohandle all grades of factory made har-ness, trunks, bags and suit oases, glovesand mittens, dog collars, etc. In fact,everything (hat goes to make up a firet-class harness store, MM

Our motto: Good goods at low prices.Note the name and number.

NODDY'S HARNESS STORE,88 to 85 W. Front St., Bed Bunk.

GEOBGE A. MOODY.

MHHIUHHIMMIIMMM

Winter Comfort IWhile sitting around the

fireside these winter nights,smoking a pipe, smoke

CULLINGTON'SCIGAR CUPPINGS!

They're the finest pipe to-bacco ever made—pure,clean and sweet, no drugs,no artificial flavoring, justpure, clean, sweet tobacco.

10 Cents a Package,! 3 Packages for a Quarter.

! William Cnllington,I Front Street, near Broad Street.

R E D BANK, N. 4.

iimimHMininnim

Page 15: RED BANK REGISTER. - rbr.mtpl.orgrbr.mtpl.org/data/rbr/1900-1909/1903/1903.03.04.pdfRED BANK REGISTER. - rbr.mtpl.org

MEN'S FIVJ] SENSES. QIO«I iouiiUve of all parti WVoueh, tlio

furious Fact* About Thritt \ot UrnmraUy Nntirii,

\tYiim the Itoniinn l',>.it,i

For some unknown reason differentpiirtH of th»> tongue lire HMNigueU forIhe perception of different tastes.With the tip we tiiHte H\VC«M tuibstHiU'oaand HiiltH, with tiie back we taste bittertilings and with tho Hides we taste,aeids. Tlie middle pur! of the tongue'ssurface has scarcely any sense of tustulit all.

The long named substaiuv paralirom-beuzoic sulphlnide prodUivs a most re-innrkable effect, for It gives a HeuHe ofhweetnems to the point of the tongueand of bitterness to the back. I'tirowater tastes sweet after sulphate ofmngnesin.

We can only taste things in HOIU-iion; hence If tlie tongue were perfect-ly dry it would not be affected by thestrongest Havered HUlmtaiieo in u drystate.

The t;uMo nerves are paralyzed byvery hot or very cold liquids. Afterdrinking very hot or ice cold waterwo could not taste even such a sub-Btmice as quiiiiue. This fact suppliesH useful hint for consumers of ill lla-vored medicines.

Smell, though the least useful, ii thomost delicate of all our senses. Wecan smell the three-liuudred-millionthpart of a gram of musk. No chemicalanalysis can detect such minute quan-tities. The moat powerful microscopewould not render a particle ten thou-sand times as large visible, We couldnot tnate it were it many thousandtimes ns largo.' While we taste liquids, we can smellonly gases. Fill your nostrils with eaude cologne, and you will experience noodor whatever. Fine as our sense ofsmell is, it has deteriorated immenselysince the time when our forefatherBwere wild men. The Cnlmueks cansmell an encampment twenty milesaway; the Peruvians can distinguishall the South American races by theirodor.

But smell is a sense highly suscep-tible of cultivation oven by the modernwhite man. Dealers in tea, spices, per-fumes and drugs, in consequence oftheir training, can distinguish thefaintest differences in odors.

The organ of hearing is one of themost marvelous pieces of mechanismin the body. In nulmnla the externalear acts as a trumpet to collect thesound waves; In man it is little morethan an ornament, but the internal earie alike in both. So wonderful is itsconstruction that we can distinguishsounds varying from forty to 4,000 vi-brations per second. This feat is per-formed by a portion of the ear calledthe organ of Cortl. What a wonderfulorgan that is may be understood fromthe fact that it consists of 5,000 piecesof apparatus, each piece being madeup of two rods, one inner hair cell andfour outer hair cells—that is, 35,000separate parts. In some mysteriousmanner the rods, with other things, aretuned to different notes, and when theyTlbrate they cause the hairs to trans-mit an Impulse to the nerve of hearing.To be musical, therefore, is to have agood organ of OorU.

Why is It that scratching a piece ofglass with metal causes such an un-pleasant sound? Because it Is what iscalled the fundamental tone of the ear,which is very high. What the funda-mental tone exactly is would take, toomuch space to explain, but if you blowacross the mouth of a bottle, a hollowglobe, etc., you get its fundamentaltone.

The ear is a deceptive organ, and Itii often a matter of guesswork to tenwhence a sound comes. Indeed, if youplace the open hands in front of yourears and curve them backward soundsproduced in front will appear to comefrom behind.

Human beings and rSonkeys see moitthings with both eyes. Our whole fieldof vision extends over 1,80 degrees orhalf a circle. The middle half of thiswe ioe with both eyes together, butthe quarter at each side is seen onlywith one eye.

All other animals see most thingswltu one eye only. Scarcely ever canthey fix both eyes on anything at thetame time. But there are considerablevariations. A bulldog, for Instance,somewhat closely approaches the con-dition of a monkey. The larger the pu-pil the greater the quantity of lightwhich enters tthe eye. Large pupiledpeople, therefore, see the world in abrighter and more cheerful state thanthose with small pupils. They can seethings better in the dusk or at night

As every one knows from the opticalillusion pictures, the eyes are easilydeceived. A white square on a blackground appears larger than a blacksquare of the same size on a whiteground. Red near green looks redder;blue near, yellow looks bluer; whitenear black looks whiter.

Touch really includes several senses,Thus there are spots on the skin whichfeel heat only, spots which feel onlycold, spots which feel only pain, spotswhich feel only pressure and spotswhich feel tickling, These spots aresupplied with nerves capable of doingonly one particular du^f. The sensa-tions of the skin are grouped by physi-oloRista Into three kinds—touch, painand tenapermtiire. The rtin which «o?>era a Bear kai only one klnl of sensa-tion. It can feel neither prf&ure (tenchproper) nor temperature, but pereelmpato^fMyjeiitrti. ..-pUfr-tMiatJp 9*

forehead and elbow to boat or cold.We only droum Bights and sounds.

We never dream tastei or tmuMU, Ifwe (Ironin of a flower garden, wo seethu flowers, but do not BIIH'II them. Ifwe dreiiin of a dinner, we Bee the dish-es, but <lo not taste them.

The Changed Grl**ly.There are numeroUH reliable Mate

unlitM of grizzly bears having attackedmen, bill nowadays the gi'1/./.ly dooHnot Heck uul IIIN human victims, IIHthere are ereilible statements that hisforefathers used to do. Neither doeshe lie in wait and, pouncing upon ithunter, tear him Into bloody shreds indelighted (ieiidishness, as the old timestories used to tell. The ehHuge inthe grizzly's disposition is likened byveteran hunters to the ehange in thecharacter of the white cousin of thegrizzly, the polar bear of the arctics.When the NtatluiiH for the Iliidtsou'tsHay company were established, thediaries of Hie men there often referredto the fright of lit tack by polar bears,

in the arctic seas haschewed to death byTor nearly a century

not been rev.'iple 1a n i l I ;> v;i<!:i i n it i s

Manybeen ipolarthe pias (•>iiiiiks ii

soi-iat itied li

a l I M V i :

'la Wedhen I'H.

i h i i

vclu-

y

.•lin!

nutir hasrive

v i I'd !y I i .V

.1

NOTICE OF ELECTIONN u t k ' t ' lit h e r e b y g i v e n t h a i kU telin, ' llnti w i l l l w

h e l d In

SHREWSBURY TOWNSHIP

Tuesday, Mareh 10th, 1903,K I T IIII> oUwlluu of (tin follow lug

'Ids*'I'IIWT u n(Itic• •III'Mllr

iishlp riiHlii|i csiirvi'vii.111 IIIl!liwli.v, , i | ) S ( 4 l l

I'oliiiil ki•*• i

;>•

affiiirti

Pull.(1V It M'fe

utruniUi^iiiHnilIIIIllLtlH'lllHIl

for inn1 ifur i invi

urn (if the liiifti*Hv.ssi.ihcr of IHH»Of tilt1 IN'ttt't1.i l l1

UTS.

tci vole IIUINI'V I "

daring t i l l ' ens i l ing >

i wi l l open al (S n'ckxi. I1. M,

I'Hrry i t(•it r

•k, k, M,un.l ut

Tlie (Milling pliu'CH mi; u» follow* :Kaatf iru D l B t r l r l Truck hi'iine. oniui l r .m i d d l e D l i t r l r t -NnvcMink Hook inn! Liuidt*1'

(•<uii|miiy'M bulldlOR on Mcclmnic sin'ri, liiMi itunk

W f i a l e r n DlBtr lr l -Townsh ip iiiill on Mun-u:euth striH't, Ii»'(l Baiik.

West Krd Bank DUtrirt 1 n! -u ho<it>ooii)|iHiiy'M hLiildlug on Hhi'i'Wubuiv iivi'inu-, liedBank.

M o D i h e r n D i s t r i c t - Charhn H l lml-vVslici]! tit Hhrowsbiiry.

A. C, HAiiltlNON, Towushjp c i t rk .

N ( ; w

The Town Hall

YORK AND LONG HKANlUIHAILROAl).

SUtlons tii N»>* York : ('Mitral R. II, Of N«w J*rmy, fiml of i.ltMirijr tUruf t , Bin) Stiiith Ki-rry T I T -nili iul; I'l-iniNylvHiila It , It . , ftmt of Wiwl iSltl. I 'oi 'l-ImitJt mi.l Di'slirii^cfi S l n - c i ^ .

i in Htiii a f i t r NovcmlNT .**> ' th , lflus.'.

r K A l N H S.KAVK KK1» B A N K .

Km New Yi.rk »' :«l (Thiirmlufi* diilv". H(-ii, n AK.•7 •.',, *7 :rr. *M 1 r-i. *niv, «H 4:1, »fm *IU;IN, !i 40ii. in ; \M\Vt, -.' M . «4 S i , 4 :U», HUH, 7 » i |i IIIHi!UiiA%N, Ml),!, M 4(1 ft. i n . ; 4 H i . l i lHI, H S I . ««('I4Ii i n ,

F o r S i - u m k m i d M I / . » l M ' t l i . IS 111. (Mfi, *7 iiT, *H a t ,•H <m. v :*'. 11 40 II. in : i» ;IA, y M. 4 i d . » UH, 7 tii| i , i n . s m i i h u i . , H i u i , s i 4 U 1 1 . i n . ; 4 f * i , 11 i n . , f i « ( ,* y 0 4 | i i n

K o r l , < n t f l i n i i i i ' l i . A s l m r v I ' l i r k , I » C I > M I I ( I H P I C H N I Ii n h i l i i c i l i i i U ' i - t . i U i i i i s i n I ' u l i i i . I M i - i e > . u d . I - . > ,11 i n i n 0 0 , H i i i i i » . i n , ; 1 - :,::. I , ' i e 4 : , n ,',\ i f p , i i ' _ " . . 11 X \ , 7 y , p . i n . s i i i i i t n v N . 1 K ' I . I n . M i .1 1 - J l 11 i n ; '• > 7 , U -II) p 111 S 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 U 1 i i i i i i ( i i ) i i i i l

H I o | l I I I A NI > 111 S I l i l k U l l i l 1 i i l ' I I I I l i l l i i c ,K u i i K l t K K I I i M . i l v l.\ M . I T A H A N ,

l . t ' a v c I t t ' i l H u n k i s i i i n i i i i *. c x r c i i l i - d 1 , t n o . M SI I . i l l . : 1 ^ l i f i , 4 , \ , i | i , i n .

T I J A I . N ' N I . K . V I - : K I U . K I K i l . l i K d l t I t K U H A N K .V I H M u l H A i i l l H i r . 1 1 , h i , ; \ , i I d , ; i l ," i , 4 L i i . U H 'p , i n .

T K A I N S I . K A V K N K . W V O H K t o l l K K D H A N K ,K o o l I . l h c i H . - t i v t ' l . 4 INI . S ; « ! . • ! ( 4 0 , 11 . k i n i n , : * 1 ; t n

* : l I I I . 4 1 0 , » 4 4 5 , "."i O n , ' i i M I , 5 i i H , i i ; « i , l l . f > i '( W i t l f l t - s i i u y s u n i t H i i l i i r d i i S N o n l y 1 p , i n . H 1 1 1 1 -( I I I S N , l i i n , M O i N i i i , i n , ; 4 O i l | i , i n .

S o u t l i K c r r v i i M i i . l n i i l , H i i f i , M t M r i . " 1 1 L1.1"] H . M L ; * 1 l . f i .•a ;IA, :t tut. *4 ;a, *4 nfi,*5 yf», n 25.11 ^niWcOJirti.i l i i y i i i i n l S u l u n l i i y N < i n l y ) j>. 111. H r n j i h i V H , H i" i \*i> Ti'i 11. i n , ; ;i iiri p . i n .

F o o t \ \ c » t : " k l s l r i H ' l , H .Vi n I I I , ; 1 ^ , 1 0 . *: i -.'I), * 4 S.fi.I I 'J'< p . i n . S u n d i i v s . V,'"t a , i n . ; 4 ,Vi p . i n .

FIK.II ( o r t l m u l t und IH-sl'idSw'S " t r i x tp . H i i «. m :1^»), *,U(I. *'i 1(1, 113U p . in . HlHidiiyh, N . >a, in ; 5 lf> p, in .

For fni i l i iT piirtii 'ularH si1*! t ln i i ' tulili'ii HI (. l i i t loui,* I )cnol i '» cxiu'i-KS t n i l t i s .

j . It, W O i m , (it ' i i ' I I'usii, A g e n t . I ' t ' i in, 11. I i .('. M. l U ' I i T . Citli ' l I'lissiciiKi I AKi'tit, C e n t r a l I t . U.

of N. ,1.UUFl's Iil.oiXiKTT, Suiu'riiitcndi-nt N. Y. and L.

u. II. R.

A Simple Lesson.Maria Ed fir worth, in her time second

only to Jane Austen among literarywomen, had a warm pyinpatby for nilkinds of life, which accounts for thuardor with which she writes of humanbeings. A trifling incldpnt, related inone of her letters, impressed her deep-ly.

"We went the other day to see a col-lection of natural curiosities at a Mr.Brodcrip's. My father observed thathe had hut very few butterflies.

" 'No, sir,* he said. 'A cireumitaneethat happened to me some time agodetermined me never to collect anymore butterflies. *I caught a most beau-tiful butterfly, thought I had killed itand ran a pin through Its body to fas-ten It to a cork. A fortnight after-ward I happened to look In the boxwhere I had left it, and I saw it writh-ing in agony. Since that time I havenever destroyed another.'"

— ^ , » —,—_Mother a t Prayer ,

Once, says a writer, I suddenly open-ed the door of my mother's room andsaw her on her knees beside her chairand heard her speak my name in pray-er. I quickly and quietly withdrewwith a feeling of awe and reverenceIn ray heart. Soon I went away fromhome to school, then to college, thenInto life's sterner duties. But I neverforgot that one glimpse of my motherat prayer nor the one word—ray ownname—which I heard her utter. Welldid I know that what I had seen thatday was but a glimpse of what wasgoing on every day in that sacred clos-et of prayer, and the consciousnessstrengthened me a thousand times induty, In danger and in struggle. Whendeath came at last and sealed thoselips, the sorest sense of loss I felt wasthe knowledge that no more would mymother be praying for me.

CAN BF. HAD FUR

Dances,Parties, etc.

For terms and particulars call on oraddress

JOHN I . TETLEY,CUSTODIAN.

RED BANK, NEW JEBSE\

W. A. HOPPING.

REAL ESTATE.

Property for Sale and for Rent inall parts of the town.

Money to loan in sums to suitborrowers.

Trttex Building, Broad Street,

RED BANK, N, J.Telephone all 48a,

ANDREW NASER,Successor to Chailei Rogen,

FRESH BAKERY PRODUCTSOF ALL KINDS.

JENKSVLVAN1A RAILROAD COM-PANY.

On and tiftiT November UUtti, 1WK,TKA1NS WILL LEAVE RED BANK

For New Yuik, 7 :I7, 8 43, H SO ». in.; 2 M. 6 OH p. in,HundayH, H 41) a, in.; 6 C-0 p, m.

For Newark. 7 37, 8 43, 9 mi a, m.\ 2 S3, 8 OS p .m.Sundays. H 40 a, m. • 6 (M, p. m.

For Elizabeth. 8+3, 9 50 a. m,: 3 63, 6 08 p, m.Sundays, S* 40 a, m.; 8 06 p. m.

For HahwaT. B 50 a. ni.; 2 58, 6 08 p. ra. Sundays,H4t)R. m. ; OWip m.

For WoodbridKe, 9 SO ft, m,; S S3, 8 08 p, m, Sun-dftvs,9 4(1 a. m.; 6 08 p. in.

For Perth Aiubov, 9 60 a, in,; 2 63, 6 08 p. m. Sun-days, 9 40 a, ra.: 0 00 p. en.

For South Amboy.9 50a. m,: a 68, 8 08 p, in, Sun-days, 9 40 a, m ; 6 U6 p. m.

For Matawan. 9 60 a, in.; 12 53, 6 08 p, rn. Sundays,9,4)1 a, ra.; 8 U« p. ra.

For Middletown 9 60 a, m.; 8 53, 6 08 p, ni, Sun-days, 9 40 a. m • 6 06 p. m.

For Lone Branch. Point Pleasant and Intermediatestaiipns. 10 30 a, m,; 1 fiO. 4 48,8 85,12 58 p. m.sunrtajs, li Si a. m.;ft49 p, m.

Stop at iDterlnken /or isbury Park and Orean(irovH on Sundays.

Trains leave New York for Red Bank from West23d street station. 8 55 a. m.- 1210, 3 25,410,4 55, p. m. Sundays. 9 26 a, m.; 4 55 p. m.

From D«hrosse« and Toitlaud strepts, 9 cu a, m.-,12 20, 3 40, 4 ai, 5 10, p. m, sundayg, 9 45 a, m.5 15 p. in.

J. B. Hl'Ti'HlNSON, J. R. WOOD,General Manager. Gen. Passeneer Aamt.

H,

F1

ATPLEOATK & SON,LOKH AT LAW

OfflctiB cornor Hmud and riunt iIlKD JUNK, N. j ,

HKDKKICK W. HOPK,COrNSKI.I,ni{ AT LAW,

•in f ini isT Itiiiud iiiiii Kriiiit:ILUU l iASk . \ - j .

MU.K.S H. LVINH,( i C N S K I . L t l l t A 1' L A W ,

KINIIIIH ii uiul 4, lit'MiHttTS T U K K T . Hi.ii H A N K , N ^

l / I>Ml 'N!) WILHON,MJ ('(it'NSKI.LOIl AT

i S l l i ' i i ' S N O I t i i N i ' \ i l l » 4 V S ' I I N U I I ) ,KKD HANK. N. t ,

i i T c i ' i i I ' o H T - u t • H K H r i i i M M i .

AMIOS K, PKdNAN. "~"( (it NSKLLilli AT LAW,

l l idAII STKH-T, U K ! ) l l A N K , N . j .

Ii A. (K HKOWN, 7~KVi:, KAlf. NOSK AND TIIKKATSPECIAUST

!i. (-id. lice i;«( Hmail Slrii't. lifd Hunk, N. J.(ifilic tmuiH is In H i', M. iiady mid T'lftHiny and

HHl i in l i i y i i fUi i i iMii iH,Ti'h'phllm1 ll-l$. Hi'd Hunk,

KLLA riiKNTiHH UPHAM. " ~

LAW

,1

DISKASKS (IK WOMKN AND ('HILDHKN.KLlHTHl l ' l rY ,

ICixiM ri. lU'tilSTKU lU'll.DIMI, UK.11 B A N K , N. j .At lied iJank uillct' Tucwliiy auU Kriduy

. HEKKERT K. WTIXIAMS,KIMUJEON DENTIST.

(trudiiBlf I'Dlvt'Rtity of Pennsylvania.(ifllre Days in KM Bdnk:; Mondavs, W dmitl Hiiniidiiys: TueHdiiv cvi'ninjfs frimi 7:110 t# 8:nHiKister UiiikllriK, 42 nroad suvt't, Ht'd Hank, N. J.

HlKJIIlH 111 Hlld II.

SI'IUJEON DINTIBT.MVHW HALL MUILDINCJ, itED BANK, N. J.Particular attention given to the adiniuiMtrmUon of

Antt'sthetica,

7J7tNo. 5 Broad street,

|~yH.~~F7irwiHGHT\

DENTAL BUIUiEON.OKK1CK:

Red Banfc, N.J.

ATSUIUJEON DENTIST,

RED BANK, N. J.Broad street, opposite BerBeu'H,

""CTHURLEYT"" ~ ~ ~SURVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER,

115 Bridge Avenue. HKD BANE, N, J,With George Cooper for Bfteen years,

LONZO Of DENNIS.BRICKWORK. MASONRY. PLASTERING

AND BOILER SETTING,ORNAMENTAL CORNICE WORK A SPECIALTY,

Residence 199 Branch Ave,, Red Bank, N. I,Estimates cheerfully submitted.

Spoiled His Eloquence,A committee of Kentueklans went to

ace Abraham Lincoln In 18(31 with ref-erence to the abolition of slavery.Many Kentueklans owned slaves. Theywore anxious to remain in the Union,but they did not want to lose theirbondsmen. The spokesman of the pnr-ty was a tall man of about Lincoln'!height. Ho mndo an eloquent ipeech,filled with fine sentiments and flowerymetaphor, and closed with a crashingperoration. After he had finished Lin-coin looked at him a moment and thenBald quietly, "Judge, 1 believe your legiare as long ns mine,"

Delivery a t Door Every Morningand Afternoon.

Send word if you would like us toserve you.

No, lOt Shrewsbury Avenue,

EADING SYSTEM.NEW JERSEY CENTRAL.

Corrected to November J8tn, 1M2.TRAINS LEAVE RED BANK.

(all rail route)For New York, Newark, Elizabeth, 4c.. i t 2 8)

(Thursdays ' ouiy), 8 On. H 45, 7 27, S 15, 8 29,1135, II 4il 8, ni.; 18 35, 4 S6. 4 35, 7 20 p, in.Sundays 2 1 , HO3a. m.; 4 50 8 S% 9 04 p. m.

For Freehold via Matawan at 8 (JO, 829 a. m.; 12 35,4 m p. m.

For Lakewood. Lakphurgt (Mancheater). Ac, at 8 47,lU44a,ni . : 803,580 p.m. Sunday! at 11 04a, in.

For Atlantic City 6 47, 10 44 a. m.; 8 08, 4 41 p. m.For Philadelphia, Vlneland, Bridgeton, 4 c , 6 4?

a, m ; 8 0!ip. in.For Toms River aqd Barnegatat 8 47, 10 44 a, m.:

8 0:1. 5 30 p, m, Sundaysill U4 a m.For Atlantic Highlands 11 86 a. m,; 4 05 p. m,W, G, BEBLRR, C. M, BURT,

Vice Prei, and Qen'l Mgr. Gen'l mm. Agt.

T^OTI?E OF SETTLEMENT.4 . 1 ESTATE OF ANNE McOi ANE; deceased.

Notice is hereby Riven that the aueounta of thesubscriber, administrator of said deceased will beaudited and stated by the Surropfote, and reportedfor settlement to the Orphans Court of the County ofMonmoiith, ON THURSDAY, THE 26TH DAY OFMARCH nest.

Dated Feb. 14th, 1903.HENRY 0, MCLEAN,

. WM. H. LAWES, JR.VETERINARY SURGEON.

Graduate of Ainoriuan Veterinary College, N. T,Residence • Monmouth Stre«t,

Between Broad atreet and Maple avenue. Red Bant

~ E O . D. COOPER" ~~"CIVIL ENQINEKR.

Successor to Geo, Cooper, C. I .Poat Office Bulidlng, RED BANK. N. J .

J ACOBC^IHUTTS,AUCTIONEIR.

Special attention given to soles of farm Btocifarm implements and other personal property,

P^O. Address, SHREWSBURY. N ^ j .

TTIf W. LEONARD,VV • CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER,

Estimates given or work by the day.Lock Box m. Atlantic Hlghlanda, N, J

TTENRY^OSfE^DORFF, "X I TUNER AND REPAIRER OF PIANOS AND

ORGANS.Office at L. do la ReuMlirs Jewelry Store.

Telephone Call 18B. NO. »H Broad St., Red ~

—— mBe Was No Friend.

"I thought you were friends."''Friends! Friends! Why, the man'i

enmity is so malignant that he givesevery book agent and canvasser whocomes to his office my address and tellshim I'm an easy mark',"-

When You Needa Plumber

Call on us. You will notregret it. You will be very gladuf it. We do excellent work,and our charges are only reasonable. We work on the principie that a satisfied custonier ieour best advertisement. Wefurnish estimates of any kindpromptly and cheerfully.

SABATH& WHITE,16 and 18 Front St.* RedB*uk,N.J.

H.

:. H, SEELEY,PORT MONMOUTH, NEW JF.R8EY.

Notary Public. Soldiere' Vouchers PrepiBills of Sale for vestels,

special Notice

RELATING TO NUISANCESIN THE

Township of Shrewsburv,

Never Needed Vindication."You were never compelled to

fora vindluatlon?""A vindication?" echoed Senator Sor-

ghum geornfully. "I ihould gay not.My motto 1B, 'Don't get augh t ID theflrit place.* "-

Jf off I L a y Me.

Now I lay ma down to sleep(Closer, Death, to thit I creep!)Bo I prayed in days gone by;flp I pray a a night drawl nigh.Now I lay me down to sleep;God hli little child will keep.

Now I lay me—God has keptWatch above me while I slept.Earth has been a goodlier plac©For the shining of his face.Should I die before I wakeGod his little child will take.

f\m RULE TO BAR CREDITORS,\J EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE.

Margaret A. Fowler, executrix of WilliamFowler, deceased, by order of the Surrrignteof llieCounty <if Moumouih. hereby gives notice to thecreditors of tlie said deceased to hring in their detits,demandg aod eiultns agalDst tue estaie of said de-ceased, under osth or afllrmatioa, withtii ninemonths from the FIFTH DAY OF JANUARY. 1»I3,or they will b»> forever barred of any action there-for against the said executrix,

MAllUAnET A. FOWLEn.

r \ N RULE TO BAR CREDITORS.V_/ EXECUTORS' NOTICE.

Georffe A. Hope and Frederick W, Hope, executorsof Helen C. Hope; deceased, by order of the Surro-gate of the County of Monroouih, hereby givenotice to tiie creditors of the suid neceased tobritiB In their debts, demands and claims againstthe estate of said decessed, under oath orafflrrna-tlon, within nine months from the TWENTIETHDAY OF JANUARY, I M , or they will be foreverbarred of any action theiefor BEainbt the said ex-ecutors.

UEORGE A. HOPE.FKKDERIUK W. HOPE,

FREDERICK W^HOPE. Proctor.

NoticeTo Bicyclers!

gucoeiion to D, W. Smith.

Practical Horseshoers.

The many friends of John Blount willbe pleased to ISHTD that he has entirelyrecovered from his attack of rheuma-tism. Obamberlaio'i Pain Balm curedhim after the beet doctors in the town(Monon, Ind.)had failed to give relief.The prompt relief from pain which thiiliniment aflorcb* It alone worth manytimes its cost. For sale brt) , A. Minton& Co., i Bi-oad ttreet, Bidf iuk r M, Jk*

Mechanic Street, MED BANK, N. J.BpecliI flhoes for quirttrcraek, teDder-footpd and

Interfering taorset. Bstra attention to trotters androaditeri.Published e?ery W dnesdBT afternoon at RedBnnk.

Monmouth county, hew Jersey.

CHARLES LEWIS,WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN

Lumber, Saah, Doors, Blinds, QUMBand Builder*1 Hardware,

RED BANK, N. J,

Yard at corner of "West and Chestnutstreets, near railroad,

BRANCH YARDS: Spring Uka and Altalf Pmrt

FACTORT i SD1IUI, M. Y.

The ordinance prohibitingthe riding of bicycles on thesidewalks within the limits ofthe Town of Red Bank will bestrictly enforced. All personsriding on the sidewalks, all persons riding without lightedlamps at night, and all personsriding faster than six miles anhour, within the corporate lim-its of the Town of Red Bank,will be arrested and fined,

F, P. STRYKER,

Chief of Police.

DOMINIC A. MAZZA*Fir*t-ClM« Boot and Shoe Maker.

I do Or«t-«l«M ihoe repAlrini, union the bertiMttow, the belt thread •nd lbs T«TJ best workmma-jjhlp, and mj prioM i n fair low,

« • Brmmm Mroet, mmmr White Street \Mm* BmmM, Jf. J .

Nuisances within the township of 8hrewibur> arehereby doflned and aeclared to be, and they shallinclude and embrace:

1. The placing or deposiUDg in or upon any streetor alley, or in of upon any public or private propertyin this"township, any dead animal or any part ot thegame, or any dead fish or any part of the game, ortilth from privies or cesspools or catch basini orrubbish of any kind or description, or any bouse orkitchen slops or parhasre, manure or sweeping! 'pro-vided that stable manure and other manure may beused as a fertilizer), or any foul or offensive or ob-noxious matter or substance whatever.

a. Any full or leaky privy vault, cesspool or otherreceptacle for tilth,

3. Allowing or permitting any nipht sell, garbageor other offensive or dtcpmposinir solid or fluid mat-ter or substanct' to leuk or ooze from nny cart orwagon or vessel in which the same may be conveyedor carried,

4, The carrying or conveying through any streetany substance which has \mm removed from anyprivy vault or ci s-spool, unless the same shall be in-eloseii in nir-tiu'ht Iisirrels, or In a perfectly tight andproperly covered wagon.

B. All carting of garbage through the streetsthe township except between the hours of sunsetand six A, M.

6, The burning of any matter or substance whichshall emit, or cause, or produce, or cast off any foulor obnoxious, or offensive, or hurtful, or annoyinggas, smoSe, steam or odor,

T, The casting or discharging into the Shrewsburyor Naveslnk, or South Sbtewsbuij rivers, or inliany stream in this township, or on the boundary lineof this township, any substance which has been re-moved from any vault, cesspool or siuk, or any offaloi other refuse, liquids or solids, by any pipea orotherwise,

8, Any and every nuisance as above defined ishereby prohibited and forbidden within the town-ship of Shrewsbury, awl any person nwliing, creat-ing, causing, uiBlntaintnp or pernilttiDg any of saidnuisances stall forfeit and pay a penalty of twenty,flve dollars.

The above is an extract from the ordinances of theboard of health of Shrewsbury township, and tMrarae will be thoroughly enforced.

*> W, C. ARMSTRONG, M. D.,Presiiu 11 of the Board of Health.

4, C, HABBISOU, Becreiary,

Notice to Delinouents.Notice is hereby given that

the property of all delinquent

taxpayers in the town of Red

Bank, whose taxes are not paid

within the time required by

law, will be advertieed and

sold, in accordance with the

provisions of the statute gov-

erning such cases,

THEODORE F. WHITE,

„ Town Treasurer

Page 16: RED BANK REGISTER. - rbr.mtpl.orgrbr.mtpl.org/data/rbr/1900-1909/1903/1903.03.04.pdfRED BANK REGISTER. - rbr.mtpl.org

BRIEF ITEMS OF NEWS.MINOR HiPPENINOB Iff ALL

PARTS OF TUE COUNTY.

I'rtmonul Xutem, Til/ling Accident*,Odd iHdtlrntm and Inter*mt4*tgi-'rattirem of Life In tillage andi ountry.

J o h n M m i h c w s I n i H i n M i g ! i l t h e H i i k l i Hp l m 1 * ' l i t l l o w t ' l l .

W i l l i a m H , l i i c k H i > n I I H S I H M - I I r e a pj h i i n t i ' i i j i i m i i i H i f . l i i Ml H H I H U I I . ^

l u i i m i i i U n p i n i l l K i ' . \ | i ' > t ' l I " M i i t l i ' Kl . i h t w e a k t l u i t W « H ' . ' 1 3 t ' . i i h i i h l .

Mr. mill Mrs, Ju i in t i II . \V\nkoo |> ofM a i i H H i j i J i i i i u r t ' o i l a I r i p to K i n > > p H ,

T I I O I I I H B < I . 1 ' o i l i l k ' i<f K t y p i i r i IN b u i l din^ K new luuiM1 fur IIIH own occupaiii'y.

MrH, William I). I*trriij«» of Frei'huldI- a palii'iit ill Ua> Long Hrum'h hospital.

(', t'uU in Wulling of Key port IIHHiiHivcil to MilUpaugli VanBnu'kl'.-'H farm.ti MilZlet.

The piihlic Milmiil at Ardi'iiii. in Unwella new lilirury of 85

One huiiiis*1'] •ml nixly dozen knivesarc turned out dmly ut t l u Keyportiiit(fry works,

Wiliiiirii I'ouse of Farniiiigtlulc willJMVP up farming IhU Hpring Hiid willmi>vc to Ahbury Park.

A horse belniiL'ing (• ll ' irrett .lont'H ofKey port wan HIIOI hint wtn'k to end its*Miftprmg^ from lockjaw.

Walter Join's of Freehold was BIKTPHS-fiilly «|>emleil on for nppeijdieiiiH at tliul.otig Branch hospital 1-1*4 week,

Baker Stabh of Key port diovo in frontof a trolley car a few duytj ago. HwwHgfMi wan upset but he twnpt'd in-jury.

A house at Keyport orciipied by Wil-liam l)andridt,'e muKht firp a few daysiiKf from the cliiumoy but very little

was don*'.

I Vhnnu* ofLewis Wagoner will give up the farm

and mill of William H. Mappa at Ardenalliis spring and will goto L'ikewood towork as gardener on Ot»orge Gould'splace. Mr. Mapps, who 1I;IH been living•it Asbury Park, will resume chargeof the farm and mill.Ituried In a Snow Slide,

Edward JIuDiinit'l of linluvvtowndrove to the mill at that place a fewdays ago and while standing in front ofthe mill a Know slide from the roof com-pletely covered him and his rig, Hewas not injured,A Tlouklller Who ShootH Hog*.

Hamuel Pauco.iBt, a hogkiller at Im-lays!own, shoots* the hogs instead ofsticking them according to the oldmethod. He Inis killed 1,500 hogs inthis manner during the past season.Ho norm for P. Hall Packer.

P. Hall Packer of Sen bright has beenappointed a special deputy state coun-cilor sf the Junior American Mechanicsto have chnn>t> of ihe 81 councils in Mon-mouth county.An Ahsvvms Honored.

Mists lAvMP Estell of Mannaquan hasreturned from a Philadelphia hospitalwhere she had an abscess removed bymedical treatment without resorting tosni operation.A^Keumovt Hoy In tint Navy.

Angus WalU'i>-, son of George P. Wal-ters of Keyport, has enliHted in the navy,lie has been assigned to the ship Frank-lin, which is now at Norfolk, Virginia,Social I'lub'm JVeir Offleem.

The young men's social club of Browm-point, near Keyport, has elected JudsonHopla president, Henry Hopkins secre-tary and OrsemuB Cottrell treasurer.

A neddlug Anntvernarv.Mr. and Mr-. David 0. Walling, Sr ,

of Keyport, ce.lebrate4^TIife\fifth anniver-sfiry of their marxiftge a few nights agoby entertaining a company of Irienas.Ousted frmm Hln Former Tlome.

Albert KnHpp of Keyport wae dis-posseBSed a fesv diyg ago from a housebelonging to his former wife, who wasrecently divorced from him.Loaned $15 on u WorthluHH Ring,

John Holler of Freehold recentlyloaned a stranger |15 on a ring whichlooked like a good one, but which hasproved to be worthless.A Vluh'n Jteii- Officer*.

The Holy Cross athletic club at Sea-bright has elected John J. Pollard presi-dent, John Ay 1 ward secretHry, and PaulHinleluittnn treasurer.Money Made on a Quilt,

The ladiew' aid society of the SeabrightMethodist church recently made #304.78on an autograph quilt. The names onthe quilt number 1,114.I'eter F, VoUler Injured.

Peter F, Collier of Eatontown, who is

in Ireland, was thrown from hia horselast week while on a hunt and he is nowin a Dublin hospital.A Church to Hnve, a, Perish Hall,

St. Mary's church of Keyport is arrang-ing to build a p'lrUh hall on the churchlot in which to hold entertainmenta andHther Bocial

A Wedding at Farntingdale.Miss Annie Van Note and Garrett Van

Brunt of Farmingdale will be marriedat the Presbyterian church at thatI>lace to-night.Cut Her Thumb With an Axe,

Miss Katherine Bennett of Manasquanwas cutting wood lawt week when the axe•lipped and cut the end of her thumboff.

Undergoing Trmatment /or C'aneeiGeorge Bouse of Manaaqiian is under

going treatment at a New York hospitalfw the removal of a cancer of ihe faceMm m Xeu» York HmmpUml,

Mrs. Harrison H. Vail of Keyportgone to a New York hospital to ba operated on for the removal of a tumor.

JOSEPi 0 . ESCHELBACH.

COLUMBIA HOTEL,IM WMt trout Street, oe«r Pearl, Red Back, M, jEreuger't Bwr and F. t M. lebafer'i

Wclaer B*er alwivi on draught.

I U O BABTHOLOMAT BOCHIBTEB BUR INBOTTLU,

About Bicycles.f

•4•4i

The cost of coal, leather, steel, labor and in fact everything that enters into the constructionof a bicycle has increased to such an extent during the past eight or ten months that all factoriesfound it necessary to either raise the retail prices of bicycles or to cheapen their product. In a veryfew cases the list price was not changed, but the dealers' price was changed ; in many cases the re-tail price was raised, but in MOST cases the cos/ of production was reduced by using INFERIOR

MATERIAL and WORKMANSHIP. Anticipating this increase in cost or a corresponding depreciationof quality, I made a number of contracts last October for bicycles to be built to my specification asto material used, and by contracting for large amounts, to be made during the early winter tnon/hswhen bicycle factories are not rushed, I was fortunate enough to obtain the lowest possible pricefor A 1 goods. Two hundred of these bicycles ire now here, and several hundred more will arriveshortly. All these were made under the personal supervision of my representative and I KNOW

EXACTLY WHAT THEY ARE MADE OE.

As has always been customary at this store, every bike sold will carry my personal guaranteefor the entire season, and no cheap goods of any description will be offered for sale here. Manydealers this year will have to sell junk to their cheap trade ; a few early buyers bought the leavingsof old defunct factories and these will be offered in some places as one-year-old goods, when inreality they are several years old, factories out of business and no parts to be had in future, all partson hand, good or had, being used up to turn out the bunch of this kind of junk.

HOWEVER, the bicycle buyer of to-day has learned something in days gone by about cheapbikes, and to-day is wise enough to invest only in stock made by responsible standard makers, wellknown to the public and to buy them from dealers whom they know to be responsible. I never didnor will sell new junks. If you desire to limit your investment, better buy a good second-handwheel. Your life will be safer, and it will cost you less in the long run.

The bicycle department will be pushed MORE THAN ever in 1903 at

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"STORCK'S of Course."

ST,

IF YOU SEE IV ATmmFREEHOip

BROAD STREET, RED BANS.

Mid-Winter Bargains in Millinery and Furs.> Great Reductions in Infants9 and Children's Bonnets.

\ It Pays to Buy at Aaron I. Marcus's Up-to-Date Millinery Store. J|

THERE IS NO BETTER RELISH THAN GOOD

APPLE BUTTER.Made of selected tart apples, pure cider, granulated sugar and

pure spices. We sell that kind made by H E I N Z *

Heinz Apple Butter in Stone Crocks ofVarious Sfizes From 3 Pounds Up.

COFFEES.We have a full line of Chase & Sanborn's Coffees

which we are selling at from 12c. 1035c. a pound. These goodsalways give entire satisfaction.

Also a full line of choice Teas, Canned Goods and Cereals ofall varieties.

h full Line of Liquors and Wines.We are still selling a fine Old Port, Sherry and Tokay, at fi

per gallon. Remember our Old Errickson Rye, full quarts, for-merly $1, at 70 cents.

THEODORE SICKLES,Telephone 64-A.

Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J.

Bobby Shaftoe's gone to sea,

Silver buckles on his knee;

He'll come back and marry me—

Pretty Bobby Shaftoe,

Then we'll rent a little flat

And 'round our board grow old and fat.

Who could wish us more than that ?

Happy Bobby Shaftoe.

'Mid these happy homelike scenes

We'll retire upon our means,

And live long pn BUCKLIN BEANS—

Lucky (Jobby Shaftoe.

Very truly,

J. & W. 8. BUCKLIN.

ALLAIRE & SON,TELEPHONE 69.

Offices 1 20 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J.

INSURANCEAND EFFECT

ESTATE

REPRESENT HOME INSURANCE * COMPAMY OFYORK AND OTHER LEAPING COMPANIES.

ESTABLISHBD 1873.

J ; ;.-

* * • -

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