the coast - digifind-it · 2015-02-03 · mpt called lor anayeurered to all peru or belmar at...

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THE COAST VOLUME I. No. 49. BELMAR, N. J., FRIDAY, MAKCH 24, 1893. &1.OO PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. JfRAXK T. McDERMOTT, COUNSELLOB AT LAW. Offleo Adjoining Post Office, FREEHOLD, HRW JERSEY. gAMUEL A. PATTERSON, Attorney & Counsellor at Law. and Master in Clancery, Rooms 4 & 5, Monmouth Building, ASBU.BY. PARK. N. J. B. fl. BrETOX, D. D. 8. },1. BCBTOI, D. D. S. BURTON BROTHERS, RESIDENT DENTISTS. BOWK'S BLOCK, 505 BANGS AVENUE, Junction ot Cookmao \ venue. ASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY. New York Office, 33 West 26th Street. Office Hours. 9 A. n\ to 5 F. M. AppoiDtmeuta made by Hall or Telephone. MANUFACTURERS OF 020Z- MILOH.CREGO, Justice of the Peace, NOTARY PUBLIC, Commissioner ntf - Deeds, F STREET. BELMAR, If. J. GEORGE W. BRICE, CARPENTER [AND BCHDER, 21 XEAB6" EXPKBIESCX. Twelfth Awenoe, Near F Street, BELMAE, NEW JERSEY. Flans and Specifications Furnished on Application. Third Avenue Hotel, LONG BRANCH. V. J ILnnI ulluLL, . Jobbing A Specialty. SAMUEL HABERSTICK LIVERY STABLE ATTACHED. PLUMBER, STEAM & GAS FITTER. Pumps ot all kinds put Inand Bepaired. Gas Vacatnes Repalrea and put tn order. Stove Repairs of all kinds furnisUed at short notice. sanitary Plumbing executed wtfb neatness and dlspawtt. Sheet Lead, Copper and Sheet Iron Worker. Stores, H-aters. Ranges, and Gasoline for Gas Machines. orders by mall will ncetn prompt atwntlon. t Between 8tb and 9th Arenaae. Beef Je»c« WStreet, near l«ti i Belmar, New Jersey. Wm. J. Voorhees [Established 9.ye»rs.] BREAD, CAKE and PIS BAKER, AT THEOLD STJUJfc .ake Como New Jersey I take this method of informing the residents I Ocean Beach. Spring Lake and Como that I m prepared to eerve them daily with fresh 3 Pl B k l S l l d Cake. . NAYL O'S LOCAL EXPRESS, TtT- v **i IIT HBSET. Pianos and FurnitureJMoved With Care. MPT called lor anayeUrered to all Peru or Belmar at a&ort notice. Orden 07 Hall Promptly Attendedto. New York Hotel. Oae, Hot and C«ld Water and llatli. Open All The Year. POPULAR PRICES. LI VEST HV IBID At^fODATKHB. Mr*. CIIAS. GroM. Proprietress. Opp. S. *. BontlieB. Depot. BBAffCH. V.I. Hotel Rockwell, BROADWAY, NEAR THIRD AVE. LONGIBRANCH, N- J OPEN ALL THE.TBAB. POPULAR PRICES. Shed' Md Good Accommodation*for Livery- WM. CAWLEY, DUUI III Fine Groceries, FLOUR, FEED Butter & Lard. Call and look at our 5 & 10 Cent Counter. ' and you will be sure to buy. You will and me In the Brick Store on F St. BEL.HA11, N. J. AHARON E. JOHNSTON, ATTOBNY AT LAW OLICITOR AND MASTER IN CHANCERY. Office Opposite Taylor's Hotel, on Mala Street. FREEHOLD. N. J. At Farmlngdale Every Evening. The European House, (ESTABLISHED 1880.) COR 9th and RAILROAD AVENUES. Thla hcnse occupies one of H>» txwt locations In the place, convenient tu railroad, rtver and Deach. Itn rooms are large andcool, aud Its :lor» pleasant and inviting. Attached to the JH« 1B a restaurant, where the beat, cheapest and qulcketst meals can be aerred at any boar. 10 claim to p#8seBB the beat 34-Inch by TO .WIUIK alley in the State. And both ladles And gentlemen who delight tn the mme BSTB ample opiwrtunities to amuse and exercise themselves. Families supplied w^th Oysters. Clams, Ice Cream. Contncltona and other delicacies. Havlnij had 20 years' experience in segar laklng. I feel justified In saying that I can supply the trade with a better ftegar for less money than any otnvr firm possibly can, either wholesale or retail. Give me a trfal and be con- vinced. - JTOH ALLSPACH k WIFE, Propr's. N.J. S. E. HALL, Dealer In PURE HULK and GREflHI Depot, Cor. 8th Ave. and F Street, BF.T.MAB, S. 3. AOOOODATlOm FOB Of 1 s»J. Pies, BreaXIast Bolls andC TWO DELIVERIES DAILY. Address, Lake Como Post OS.ce. JOHN A. OSBORN, Blue Stone flii, Gil, COPING and SILLS OO.ce at 83 and Si Heck Atecn*. OCEAN GROVE, N. J. ard adjoining Freight Depot, Olflce at C- O. Hudnnt'B. BELMAR, N. J. estimates furnished for work at any point from Long Branch to Atlantic City. Prices Below all Competitors. THOMAS BRYAN PLUMBER, GAS AND STEAM FITTER, ALSO DEALXB IK PLUMBERS' GOODS OT EVEET DEaCBIPTIOlf. PUMPS Of all descriptions put in and repaired. Orders h- Hall will receive Prompt Atteatl.ni. f STHMCT, BIT. 7TB A1TD 8TH BELMAR, N. J. Richard Wight, TENTH AVENUE COTTAGE, BKLMAII, N. J. Two Blocks from the Ocean. Every Modern Convenience. Flrst-clsaa Board. Gncrd Spring Water, ft. D. PARKS. MAPLE SHAPE. COB. FIFTH AVENUE ANP F STREET, BELMAK, JT. J. Open-tor tbeseason of 1892, and wilt continue open all th« year. Tbe bouse faces Shark River, and bad All the jnveclenees of location aud furniBblng. to rea- der It attractive and comfort*ble to permanent and transient guests. For terms and other information address Tux UAPLE SHADE. " - Selmar, 3?. J. JOSEPH YONGEN, TON8OBIAL PARLOK. F Street, Between Blxth and Seventh Avenuee. iiELMAK, K. J. John E,. Brows, I And Dealer la Paints, "Varnishes, Oils, Ealsomine, Wall.Paper,; Brushes, Window Glass, Oil Cloth, "Wi-dow S>-adei, Etc. F Street, Bet. 7th and 8th Aves., JEW JERSEY. 6LEND0LA CEMETERY. Having opened up an annex to the above Cemetery I now offer BURIAL PLOTS FOR SALE AT REASONABLE RATES. TBS TITLE IS F32FSCT. ipplj •». or aMr»«a. RICHARD TltlOIT, GLE5DOLA, H. B. Hew York & Long BrancH Railroad. Stations In Jtew York: Central Railroad of New Jersey, foot of lllberty street; Pennsylvania Railroad, Coot of Oortlandt and Desbrmaea streets; ffew Jersey Southern Railroad, root of B*ctor street. Time Table of Nov. 20, 1392. Leave New York, foot of Liberty street for Belmar. 4 90, S 15, 1130 A. M., 130, 4 00, 4 30. « 16 v. •- Sundays, 8 00 a. m.. * 00 p. m. Leavs Hew York, foot of Cortlandt and Deebros*- es streets for Belmar, » 10, A.M.. 13 60. 3 40. ft 10, 11 46 p.m. Sundays. 9 40 a. in.. 5 IS p.m. Leave Belmar for New York. 6 02. 0 43. 7 33. " si. 9 03. 10 08. a. tn.. 1 01. 2 «2. .1fij.5 M. 6 30 p. m. Sundays. 7 27, B06, a. m.. * 18, 8 •», p. m. '. LONG BRASCH AMD BBIaVAB. Leave Long Branch Mr Belmar. « 46, 7*0. » H. 10 60. a. n... 13 10. 1DO, 2 35. 3 10. * 05, B00,fi4ft. 6 66. 7 65p. m.. 1 3u a. m. Bundsys, 10 So. 11 SO a. in.. S 40, 8 &5 p. in. Leave Belmar for Long Branch, « t t # 42. 7 61. 9 OZ.10 68, II 06 a. m.. 101, 2OX 3 2S, 3 BX 5 33. 6 30. s-56 p. m. Sundays, 7 27. V06. a. m., 4 18. fi 3S, p.m. ^ ASBUBT FAUX AMDBSLHAB. Leave Asbury Park for Belinar, 7 10, 7 :>',, io 10, 11 06 a. m.. 13 2B. 1 15. 3 00, 8 26. 4 20. 5 15. (J 00. 7 10, 8 10 p. m.. 143 a. m. save Belmar lor AsUury Park, 803, A42, 7 61. 9 03,10 68. 11 m a. in., 161, 302, %P . 3 B , 6 30. S 30. 6 65.p. m. BELXAS AND rOIKT pLJtABA2(T. Leave Belmar for Point Pleasant. 7 30,10 17, ll 12 a. m.. 1 33. a M, 3 33. » 31, 6 06. 7 17. S 17 p.m. Sundays. 1111, 1161 a. m., 6 01. 7 17 p. m. Loave Point Fleuant. for Belmar. 515,6 is, 1 35. 8 48. 10 40 a. m.. 12 *S. 145. 3 SO. S 06. B00. p. m- Sundays. 1 It), 8 50 a. m,. 4 00, 6 10 p. m. KL'Ft'S BLOnQETT, Sapt. N. V. * L. B. K. R. Co. H. F. BALDWIN, Aamt. O. F. A, €. II. K. of If. J. Port KssvUnc K. B. CO. L«MM. J. B. -WOOD, Geu. !•«••. A«t. P w w . It. 11. Pennsylvania Railroad Train* TU New York *t.d tons; Brunch BaUroad. Commencing Nov. 20, 1892. s.sss^i.s.5,Ka as s sssss ss £ s s | $*_ STRAW, COAL, WOOD, and Charcoal. fflfctel sunn,1 Rue. Belmar, N. J« THE OLD HEARTHSTONE. We (rather 'round the old hearthstone, Will o«t is heard thonorth wind's moan. Within all is delight, WLile 's^klaat ite pane ihe whispering rain SpeaLs ot a starlcsa Big!iL . *7c BIER the eonga r.z uscJ to sfng. When youth wit* o'^is and pleasure king, ' Nor heed ttc angry utorm. For Mndiy cbtcr Eialtes tirl^ht the sphem Ot tome where hearts are warm. Stories are MU or that dear lima When life Cowed on like smoothest rhjme, In' the (AT long ago; When ensiles rare were built ID sir. To melt, i « a j llko maow. Crandfaihcr and grandmother tefl Of olden days, when love'« tweet ipell Their hearts together drew; When hope was bright with tenderest light, And sorrows were but tew. Good Uncle John, Just hrnir fromse«, Tells of far aistaut lands, while wo Drink in bis honeyed words: As sweet t&cy arc. as swee' aud fair. As sweetest uonss of Oirds. And thus with story, lauffh and song, Wo pass the stormy night and long, Oiir hearts all free from e^re; Thank Heaven tor this: To-night there Is At home DO vifcaol choir. —Caleb IJuiiii. in N. V. I THE ETHICS OF FOOD. George's Experience with ProC Epatlias's Course of Lecture* Soon after our marriage, my wife, who iasomewhat of astickler for hy- giene, found the advertisement of a course of lectures on the "Ethics of Food'* under our knocker, and brought it ia to me. 'George, dear, isn't it fortunate? You know you were telling 1 me the other day that disease is often com- municated by food—and here's the very thing yve want- A course of aix lectures on the something or other of food; only a guinea the course, and by Prof. Spatling*. too. Don't you think, as you are always so busy writing-, I'd better go and see what the lectures are like? It'll be so useful to know what one is eating 1 ." The only occasion oo which I bad spoken on the subject At all was one Sunday afternoon, when I had read from the British Weplcly question from a correspondent, "whether toma- toes were ever the cause of cancer?" and had remarked on tbe improbability if such an event. Uat then I was new- ly married, and unused to the way*.of women, orpossibly unduly tolerant; so 1 made only a faint murmur at 'the ;pense." "Expense? Cut wouldn't it be false economy to study that when our health is concerned? Why, we don't know what (buffering- and disease'we may es- cape by taking- a little care.** AVell, the long and the short of it was that my wife was present at the lec- ture, while I remained at my fireside to thump out on iny typewriter ao article for the Olympian Keview. 1 be- came soabsorbed in thin, that when a gust of cool air blew into my room, and iy wife, with the usual outdoor smell that oue notices In winter about her clothes, came in, it seemed but a few minutes since she had left me. "Oh, George dear, I am so triad I aaw that handbill. It's so providential; for if 1 hadn't gone to-ni^ht, fi-oodni-ss only knows what might have happened." "What on earth do you mean, love?" My wife was too agitated to answer, but went Into the next room and rang the bell for Pauline. As a matter of fact, Pauline's kitchen is almost as near as the nert room, and she might have called her much more easily than by .ping the one perfect bell that we ssess. But the principle of style was involved; and to that my wife is ready to sacrifice any amount of personal Comfort. Pauline,, after repeated tinkling*, "came np smiling" from a novelette she bad just beeu reading. Pauline is a good girl, with a character which some day I intend to work into a novel. But that, an Mr. Kiplioff wosld prob- ably say, L. quite another story. '•Pauline." said her mistress, "take that meat away." The table was al- ready laid for supper, and I attempted a feeble protest against having mj meal spirited away thus before my eyes. Itut my wife was determined, and said: "Do you know, George, what the consequence of our eating ifTeat may be? It's quite pu&sible that we may go into consumption. Prof. Spat- ling says that meat is a prolific cause of consumption, owing to the capacity of animals to contract that disc as*. The 'basilica', or whatever you call those horrid little insects, gat from the meat into your system, and do the mis- chief. Jews are much freer from con- sumption than we are, solely owing to the fact that their food is always riff id- ly inspected i>y the rabbis before being used"— "For human consumption," I sug- gested, jocularly. But my wife was very much in earnest. "Then those pickles, too- Pickles are simply poisonous. Sulphate of cup- per is largely used in their manufac- ture, accounting for their bright green colors. You can five the beef and pfckles to Mrs. IVijrjfK tomorrow, Pau- line, to take home to the ehiidren." "My dear," I ventured to augfret>t. "if these are to disseminate the germs of consumption and to poison their re- cipients, doyou think it quite the thing—" I was point? to say "to give them to onr washerwoman," but a vieioB cf mothers-in-law flitted across my brain and I wa» about to sturgost that her mother might be'glad of then when mr wife continued: "Then that bacon —everybody who eats bacon feu trich- inosis. And you know you said your- self, George, dear, that tomatoes brought on cancer." "But, my love," I ventured mildly to suggest, "if we mayn't eat meat of any kind, or tomatoes, or pickles, what on earth is there left to live on?" "Oh, heaps of thing*—«grs. flab, poultry, vegetables, everything, al- most. And I am sure it wouldn't be right to fly in the face of ProTidenee after Prof. Spatting-'s lecture.*• Bo for the next week we were living on eggs, Tcge tables and flail, and bj (he time of the second lee I tire were rather longing for a change of (.left Pauline liai! just laid our F, upper— oysters nnt\ sardines, eggs, pastry and cheese—when my wife returned, tear- fully anxious. "Oeorjje, darling, doyou—have yen —are them any—any spots about you?" I said I hart no tiouht 1 could oblige her, but cpulil not tell with any cer- tainly. Hut she was evidently severe- ly serious. "Please, don't joke, George dean it's a matter of life or death. Doranop* stairs and see before'it is too late." So finally, after useless protests, I was seut up to my bedroom with pen- cil and paper to report on the appear- ance and location of any "spots" 1 might happen to possess. "Oh, I'm so thankful," said my wifo when sha was told that but o few pim- ples that had existed long before the era of food lectures, my skin had a clean bill of health, "I am glad that our folly has not, up to the present, had any serious consequences. Dr. Hutchioson, the greatest surgeon in England, says Pro! Spatling, has proved conclusively that leprosy is solely caused by eating too much fish; coast districts are always the parts principally affected. Norway, the only European country where leprosy flour- ishes to any considerable extent, finds in fish its staple food. And oysters oysters for supper! Good gracious, George, how could you be so foolish!" "Paulina brought them in," 1 ex- plained, feebly and rather meanly. Of course I had given Pauline the money. "I suppose you don't really want to get rid of me, George? I suppose you haven't got them with the deliberate intention of giving me blood poisoning or typhoid fever? Vet rarely you ought Io know that Thames oysters always— Vou haven't any pains about the—the breast, have you, George?" When 1 had satisfied my wife on this point, she went over her notes of the lecture, and one by one knoeked most of the principal articles off our bill of fare. To cut five lectures into one, week after week she did thesame, ter- ribly agitated about the ill effects re- sul ting from this or that article of food, and in mortal fear lest, through our ig- norance of the laws of healthy dietet- ics, typhoid or some other dire com- plaint should carry na off before the conclusion of the course of lectures. "It u a comfort to have one's eyes open at last," she said, time after time, as this disease or that frightened her nearly out of her senses by being caused by some correspond ing article of diet. After awhile she began to take amelancholy interest in discov- ering fresh facts and arguments, show- ing some new association of eating and ill health; andher time was principally spent in comparing the cookery book with the dictionary of diseases. Pastry was knocked off as bad for the digestion; sugar In any form produced diabetes; jam was simply turnip poisonously colored; tinned provision* wore notoriously dangerous; while anyone with sense and anatural desire for good wind and breathing- apparatus would avoid cheese like a pestilence. Then butter, according to a medical Journal, was known to carry the germ* of consumption; eggs were responsible for serious derangements of tb<s liver, and fruit and vegetable* meant cholera at the very leaBt I bore up aabeat I could under those deprivations, thinking it wise to humor my wife while the fit lasted; and con- soled myself in the "meantime withthe pipe and drinks that bad not yet been taken away. But their day was at hand- A special lecture was devoted to these subjects; andimmediately after, the corner of my mouth was vio- lently seized and examined by my wife for signs of cancer* blindness was threatened unless tobacco was instant- ly relinquished; and as for drinks— well, with typhoid caused by milk, t b b loss of nerve-power by NEWS OFJTHE WEEK. of InipnrtanI E»fnU DtiHrng ' . the Pfta* Savcn Day*. —Honeadale, Pa., was visited Sunday by a $86,000 fire. >-The bullion in the Bank of England In- creased $141,000 during the past week. —There an7,000 families along; the Kansas bonier ready to rush into the Cheroke* strip. —The Senatorial elections la Spain have re- sultedjn a sweeping victor? for the Mou- arcbisto. —Erank Shevy was burned U death i s a fire which destroyed the City Hotel at LewistoD, Idaho. —Matt Keely, the St. Louis politician, who was shot by Mi*, liar? Frush two weeks ago. U dead. —A bill to extend provincial franchise to women has been introduced in the Nora Scotia, Legislature. —Fire has destroyed about tfty small | buildings occupied by the* poorer clawea ot Eureka Springs. Art. —The Farmers" Exchange Block, at Easex Junction, Vt.. w-ns burned Thursday night. Lota, $24,ft00; insured. —The weekly statement of the Back of France abowa an increase of 85,000 francs in gold and 1,460,000 franca in «lver. —Mma. Cottu, whose revelations in the Panama Canal case created a sensation, has left Paris with her children for rest. —Th- report of [a fatal land slide on th« Canaiian Pacific railroad is declared to be bttnel*** by the superintendent at Wm- —The Wheeler Opera Hetim at Toledo. Ohio, was entirely destroyed by Arm Satur- day. —Belva Lock wool has applied for admis- i t th t i e f l i N Y k pp f d sion to the practice of law in New York State. Henderson Smith, t —The death of Squir. Abingdon Baird ia New Orleans of pneumonia will hare no ef- fect on tbe Mitchell-Corbet* fight. —The Alamo Hotel at Colorado aged 119, died Col.. was almost entirely destroyed by Bra Friday. The guests escaped amid much excitement. Quincy? 111., Wednesday'night. He was j —Chess Player Walbrodt was beaten by bora in Virginia, In 1774. . Delmar ia a Fompeiiaa opening Saturday -St. Patricks any was generally observed inNew York. Walbrodt, who played the In the usual manner in all th* larger cities of .the country Friday last. —The California Legislature has adjoorasd sine die. —Three firemen were hurt by falling walls at a fire inMinneapolis. Lose^tfO.OOf). - —Baron du Cuase, conspicuous i" France as a soldier and J jeets. is dead. writer on military sub- of work. defense, resigned after 4o moves. * —Tbe Klnyon block, and the Janaa Mock brick structure*, four •UiriMi bfeh. sad in the principal part of Oswcgo. X. Y., wen destroyed by lire Thursday night —One hundred miaera an on strike at thm Wheeling Steel Works miaes at Benwood. W. , for higher wages, laying the A thousand men are out —The entire senior class in tbe medical department of tbe Minnesota State Uni- versity has been suspended. —Tbe Rev Dr. Thomas Edward Ver- mi Jye. one of tbe oldest elwgxroen in New York: city, who was the senior pastor —Mrs. Anna Elisabeth {Bartlett), wif« of j the Cfcllegutfe Reformed Duieb church, James Phillips, jr.,. owner and editor of dead i u ms 71^ Tear —It Is stated by the Texan delegBtion that the President will probably nominate A. W. Terrell, ot -Texas, to be Minister to Turkey. —Fire destroyed tbe planing milt of Dakar A Kline in Wiliiaronport. Pa-. Saturday night. Loss, about $36,000; insurance, $12,000, —Prairie fires have been raging extensively In different part* of Oklahoma aince Satur- day. Much farm property IB being de- stroyed. —The brig Aquatic, ashore on Sow and Pigs reef, broke up, in Saturday's gale and the masts fell out of her. She was to have been sold at auction. —The City Milkt,atSordan, Minn., valued at $130,000 burned Sunday. Tbe mill had a capacity of 600 barrels of flour daily. It was Insured for $56,000. —Sadie Page and Maggie Gaines, two col- ered women, were fatally burned at Rich- mond. Va.. Thursday by the former j»ur- i ing gasoline in a stove. —Bob Caruthers, the well-known ball pliyer has been given his unconditional release by president Von der Aho, and Is tree to sign where be please*. —A bciler exploded in Bear Rtd«a colliery at MaLanev Plane. P*,. Saturday killing John Dannelly and scalding his brother Michael so badly he cannot live. —Gen. Green E. Raum. ex-Comnumfoner of Persians, has associated himself with his wen. Dania F. Raum. of Peoriw, ML, and winopen a law office in Chicago. —Secretary Carlisle has awarded the eon- tract tor building four ligi.t ships for use I on tbe great lakes to tbe- Craig Shi?build- \ fan; Company of Toledo. Ohio, at $64,400. | —The Government Board of Control of the World's Columbian Exhibition has moved to Chicago. H will be located fan the Government building in Jackson perk. 1 —A bill extending the right of suffrage to tbe woman in immcipai elections was de- feated by the Lower House at the Michigan Legislature Thursday by a vote of 38 to 39. —Mrs. Catharine Dran is dead from the j effects of m-lpractice in New York and ! Wilheniina Peper, the woman accused of ' having performed the operation, is under the New. York Press, is dead at Fitch- burg. Mass. *—The Hon. Thomas Lawrence, a venerable and leading citixea of New Jersey, is dead, at his home in Hamburg, Sussex county, aged 76 years. —A special election has been ordered In the Seventh Massachusetts Confrmwional district on April 35, to choose a successor to Hear; Cabot Lodge. —A special assembly «f tbe Presbyterian Church in Ireland, convened in Belfast, has unanimously psarwi resolution* con- demning the Home Rule bill. Austen & Pool, druggist*. K. Y , has been closed by th* judgment for $14,810.81 obtained by Mrs. A Oliver for borrowed monej. —Frank C Ia&ltn* 18 rears old, whil*at work in his father's factory at Oraogs, N. J.. was caught in the belting and the bone* of his right arm horribly crushed. —Chester Hair, one of the oldest merchants of Syracuse, N. Y.. is dead of pan aged a yean. He ha* been in the chant tailoring business since 1837. —Numerous Austrian, Swiss and German Catholics hare petitioned tbe Pope that he —The Municipal Tel i t d i h tb Co.. ha* been MesjBBfetJ incorporate^ with tbe New York Secretary of Sialtaswith a capital of $100,000. The majority of the* tnsorporatora en iuwreai - ed in an Albany pool room. —A Urge lot of deals, plank*, and batten*, belonging to an American vessel, have been washed asfcore at OMOrtme? [.Oral*. Th* wreckage bears the appearance of having been a long time in tbe water. —Tremont Temple in Boston waa destroyed by lire, which started by some unknown cause, intinsorgan loft, Sunday morning;. The structure has been celebrated as ths largest Baptist church in New England —'The city attorney of Indianapolis ha* sub- mitted an opinion declaring- tbe proposed ordinance raisina; $73,000 by taxation for the entertainment of tbe Grand Armyfin- cajnpment in September c —The steamers Luaenbara; SSMI which have gooe from Halifax, " search of the disabled Sarnie, I carrier pigeons, and If any 1 Sarnia areUeniad news will bed back the city by the earner*. —Mrs V. S. Grant has engaged a •Bite of rooms in a hotel at Highland Falls, X. have prtitioned the Pope that he call an tntcrnatfaRal eonferrenee to take f Y , overlooking the Hudson, steps to abolish gambling at UonSe Carlo. | window she can look npoo_ may —Manager McGovern, of the Brmniord fac- tory of the Yale A Towne Ijock ""••1*"- ttmng company denies that then is any ground for the reported coming strike at Jbis factory. —It is Mid that an attempt has been made to aasBftinate Mayor Marigold of Bridgeport. Conn., by those concerned is the gaining houses, which the mayor raided a few days ago. —Miss Lucy Cleveland died tn Alton, HI., very sadden)? lest week at th«i home of her sister. Mrs. A. C. Brit- ton. She wres a cousin of President Cleveland. —The large sines plant of the United State* Glass company, at Trenton, Fa., has been totally destroyed by Are, entailing a Ions of $150,000. At*mt 500 employes are thrown out of employment. —A severe tempest passed over Middleboro. Mass., last week Lightning »cruck the which w e n familiar to the General Is km cadet days. —Annia " ot Baltimore, ltd., bepsn taking food Sunday, sot is apparently unconscious ail the tune. A spoon eoc- sb« swsilwwsd tbs-liquid, little and this lc*d« to th* belief chat tha ^ifiiC" 1 " tranoi will soon he o*wr. —Captain Jacob H. TanderbUt. brother of the late Commodore VanderbUt. a* his Loea about %\%- and sundry other evils, a man would be criminal indeed to run such risk. For tbe last week I have been living on bread aad water and haricots, and match because she is a Catholic and he a Protestant. —Ex-Secretary Tracy's return to private life was formally celebrated Thursday by ' T ' r •• •• 4BCK* wa^v avwUJBIIJ .. I-J.. vao.an.^1 4 u u j n m j a^J even these were not obtained without the Hamilton club, of Brooklyn by a ban- * quit. Secretary of tho Navy Hilary A. Haricots were conceded doubtfully, with a pensive statement that' "perhaps it might not do any harm, andharicots were certainly very nutritious;" fo that since then, this white, fatty, instpM vegetable has —A fire Sunday in Spencer, Iowa, de- stroyed aa entire block, excepting one building. Nine frame buildings weradp-' etroyed. Loss eAinwWd $30,000, to $30, made its way to thotable in every con- °°° I"""** 1 "* $20-000. ceivable form scud on every couceiva- j ^ ^ * _ i P ^ . °* .J^? 1 * _?*•_• ta _"^^"f ble occasion. Water, mi wife thought, "*" g , * ""*£?* epideoiic, many c With regard to properties are ae> fattemfng, that my wife, who has aslight tendency to "em- bempoint," B-nd whom 1 ones discov- ered running surreptitiously up and down stairs with the object of reduc- ing her weight, called upon me on those grounds.to relinquish its use, re- minding me that, as Uyroa used vine- gar for this worthy object, so ought 1 to deny myself a Uttl* for the sake, of health, economy am' above all, ot a literary matt, the preservation of a poetical and pro(essicmal appearanoe. Here, however, I pet my foot down, and she did not insist. Tomorrow la the last lecture, and then, aftrr acting forftweek or *o the part of Succi or of Tanner, shall probably resume our usual reckless habits. I ventured to remark just new to my wife that our bill of fare was as- suming rather narrow limit*, and that tho morrow's lecture wonld probably deprive us of even our remaining food. She smiled assent, but then 11111., en- couragingly: "How healthy it will be. though! How perfectly charming to know of one's Unoiu n " —Chambers 1 Journal. N. Y.. N. H. A Hartford for 99 years. The former com- will receive a rental of 5 per cent, free l—An official of the N>w York A Ncwf nt?- laud rntul says that the report that the di- rectors have appointed a committee to con- fer with the New York, New Heven & Hartford directors is ahselutely without any basts in fact. —Bi«hop Brown, of tbe African Methodist Episcopal Church, is dead at Washington axed 79 He had been ,11 -for some time, and his death was not unexpected. He was eminent ia the church anil greatly respected and ssteemed? Thrown from HU Hr»r»* «.««t Wii-msOTOH, Del., March JfcJ.—8. P. Short, an undertaker, o< Brldfcevlile, was instenUy killed•Teafcerdaj by being thrown from his hearse. The horse reared aad plunged, throwing the undertaker o3 He struck upon his head, dying instantly The coffin in tbe hearsa was thrown out upon the ground. Rom:, March 22 —Tbs Italian stee' crulivr Etna, under the command of Ad- miral Maghaghl, has sailed from Spesxt* for New York to tak« part fn the Colum bian naval demon** ration. The Ktoa is a completed in lUt», and eteams IT knots ac r>tinr*v*n Will Arri.pt, Lownow, March 93.—It la understood that Lord Dunraven will accept the coiirti- tion.i of the race for tbe Aineritm's cup sub earlier date than Oct. 5 be set lor tbe ftrsl ST. PrrKassmo, March W.—The Mini. ter of Public Work* iw about to «iart on & tour of sBAitary Jtiepeetioa along the line*, vt railway in the provinces of Nijnl So* gorod, YHrosiav and Oral, where a numboi ot fatal oues of cholera are reported to Dartmouth _ Hanover, N. H., by thaiate Ralph Butter fl«ld of Kansas City, has b*«u rw^ti vetl and placed inCulver Hall museum until the Butterfleld building is completed. —Comptroller Campbell of New York hen taken an assignment fromGov. Flower of his interest in the Fire Island purchase contract, and gave the Governor a caeck covering the amount he advaacwd the Stats last summer with interest at 4 per cent., something over $51,000 In all. —The American Society for tbe Extension ef University Teaching haa decided to es btbliah a uutveretty «xt*n«.on summer nw-eUng where all the students now en rolled In tbe university extension move- ment throughout the country—estimated at over 00.000—can convene fur the pur- nose of continuing their studies. —The last hope of CarlyU Harri*. under sentence of deatk for the murder of his wife, Helen Potts Harris, is gone, so Car at the courts are concerned. Recorder Smyth in New York. Thumdaj afternoon, ren- dered bis decision denying the application for a new trial. Harris 1 only hops of life now rests with Oov. Flower. —Hiss BestM Mitchell Doolittle will start Wednesday night from Chkago on » very unique trip. In order to convince foreign reilrofid men that it is possible she will go from Chicago to the Pacific Ocean, from there to U«xloo, thence to tbe shora of thm Atlantic and New England, and backto CUiu*giv wttbout changing car» and wita- •ut putting ' <X)t to the ground. —Benjamin H. Field, who has for many yewrs been clunely identiftad with the raar- Itabli and philanthropic interests of New York City. Ud«a-l at the ago of 71 fears The Westingnouse Air Brake Company haa declared a quarterly dividend of 5 per cent, and an extra dividend of 5 par cent This meaau tbe distribution ef $000,000. —A cHlseus' lemajuB tuw been formed at New Brunswick, IE J., Ttx the suppression and prevention of race track gambling, and to secure tue twpeal ef the moe track boro and it was burned, 000; Insurance $7,000- —The French police neve arrested at Brus- sels two brother* ***»tted Schupp on sus- picion of hatching Mi Anarchist dynamite plot? in connection with the notorious French Anarchist XfetUau. —One hundred town* end villages ef Min- nesota held biennial sieerions Last week. Most of the candidates were chosen on Cttixens' or PtopW tickets, and political lines were not closely drawn. —Tfa« Zmpetor ot Japan basdonated $300, - 000 a year fur six ysan out of his private income and baa directed govermuent offi- cials to contribute 10 per eent ol their sal- aries toward a fund for building warships. —Secretary Hoke Soautii has appointed M. Cooper Pope, of Washington. Qa.. chief at the division of lands and railroads, Secretary's offoe. Interior Department, vice F. A. Weaver, of Pennsylvania, re- signed. —TW house of Bsnjjuain Fleischer, in tbe southwestern part of Jackson county, Kan.. was totally destroyed by fire last week His three children wen fistallj burned, and Fleischer's bunds and anas wore aimotf burned to a crisp. , —Judge Uonnisoti at Bradford, Pa., deahil tEfce luotion tor a new trial hi t'.c < :• --.n:'.-« case and. sentenced £clph Ciwmiro to the gallowB. The .Governor will net the dAy for the h *"c<TH when he signs the d**th warrant. —Articles of incorporation nave been tiled at Trenton, N. J.t for a corporation tobe known Mthe Consolidated Traction com- pany, with a capital stock of $19,000,000, for the purpose at consolidate og tbe tract km companies in the upper part of the, State. —Samuel Gould, ar., of Ballston, N. Y., aged S1 veers, a eoal merchant, dmnk half an ounce of ell of wtitturgTaen in mistake for medicine wfaick bad been pnaeribed lor him. By prompt medical attendance- and the use of a stomach pump he was brought out of danger. —Officer* Of tbe MHWsai hose-Ma State prison, speaking of the alleged expos* of that institution by ex-convict A very, say that Mr. Avery has an tmasvory prison record: that his repotatlcm for teUingr thr truth is not good, andthat his statement* have nofoundation in fact. —Henry of Wall ft defendant* befare Jddaw BmrthKt in tbe Supreme Court. Brooklyn, last we-* in a suit brought by the Miners" Saving* Bank. ef Pittirtown, Pa., ou aprornisaory no**for $90,000. —Judge MeAdam of the Superior Court tn New York city baagiven Mrs Leila Olrve Newnw an absolute divotve from Douglat J Naunc. Neame waa *• stock- broker in London, but haa lately lived in this country. Mrs N«un# is a daughter of William H. HwuriqiuM of the K«wYork Stock Exchange. —A severe thunder storm prevailed at RockviUe. Ccnn.. on March 14, con tinutnK from 10 o'clock until after midnight It was followed by a anew storm. Lightning struck iu a number of other places in this vicinity The Wasusra Cnloa Telegraph oftVe et Manch*«ter was burned out. ligntniac harin* struck » «ei egrapb wire eataide cae ogftrn —Cariyle Harris, wbo trial last week (or tae morder of bja wife, waa brought before Recorder Sniyta in New York, Monday for sentence III - «w to the questina why Ike d*a*k aan tenet should not be paasad Harris suad* a kMuz I'lc* which, howavvr, proved Ineffac cual Tae Recorder eepdnted MotKlay. May H. mmtbs d xy within " ment ot death should bt tfae a«e of 89 rear*. family were at the 1 came. -Be bad been { pneumonia and c —Jsmee X*. now tn Sing Sins; ' prison, who sentenced to die March 13 and who wan re- spited to March 30. has beeu a$rirr respited 07 Governor Fkrwer until April SO. He expected that bis aratenos would tw cpm- toU of Gwvermor Flower's action tn his ease. —Win. Paine, a prombnent produce dealer, of Hadison. Ind., who on Sunday shoe and seriously wounded his wife, wnona he found in a oompromwiag attawtk* witii James Wbitbv. tbe bullat bekif intended for Whitby, but tbe w«» throwinc aeraetf between b«r husband and her nenuaooi es the former ftred. now ia Jail, along with his wife's peramotur. —The fate of the steamship Xaronfc ia known. She ia lost. The steamer Coo- ventry which arrived at BreoMW. Hon- daj. report* that on March *t» while off New Foundland Banks, passed two up- turned life boats beiongiag to tbe Nareenc The boats had evidently not heett in water long and it is belirwd crew waa picked up by sooir passinc vessel. —John Dillon, Nationalist member ot Par- liament for Eaet Mayo, in speaking to a Glasgow aodieooe Sunday, seoutssi the idea of the parsemtion ef FroUsKiante by Car hulks in Ireland. Nevertheless, he said, the Irish w*re willing to eubnu* tn the humiliation ot having eauaes (or tbe protection of Proieetanla in Issteosl iaearv ed in the Home Bole bUL —The report that th* eaapioTes ot the Kew Etialnud division con tempi axed going 00 a strike is denied by the Re*rfing oAcsela During tee peat week the compeny ssert It eniines and crews to taat diviabM Io asaiel m raiaing the co»l and £rw«ot blockade. Tb* men wete sent from the main fins division, and it i* expected that tber wUl - —Squir* Ah who canw Mitchell morning in He cc ond fur HaH in 1 Baird was only 38 y«um old, aae wtsvltbv, hw i&com* amatmtin* to $1,900 "a d»j. He 1 Ivea, the jnuni N'moleoo ! :roet; Gmrge H. St«jner ] ta the ?air at imu- whioB an pnanllT n i d n l orobabte lor tte Fair. li» M Hall. daiajklEr af Join Ball. Nl —Prfnoo>ut . - of apptuntsneuta to the amoni th* most, protni» unrmjt Car mot nranlaat of wki<* *m* tbe (otlowlar Jaava «. ban* <* l^oM- u. u l a b > « E.Mau»Haaif awl Mi. l a w FkalaataMIarr af (ka l u u . SUM lohaw Kuar«> of mm traortlnaiT aiad ora Runr«o of tltcaordtoarr E. Hlakr of Now Tork. ta k>Ba< . ordlnarr and MIliioMt Hail|liiWtlTT M Denmark InM P. fcidwi. of Mary land, to ba FlrM Aodltor of tho Troararr TlMnaa Holcnmk of M m *> «• « «» Auitiot <il UM rrsaaarr. W«4o Hiaia>«i of Soutb OmUna. M WClairillllllMUT of of Sailnaoda p ,..1.nt Caaaau. Coam., wh* bj duappwiiw («o Ohio railroad haa aPMOa a a ouMdan:R;Htion putt it a doar rtcat of war the Wortl'a Fair. Tto Ula. til b . ia ahould makr link ««•«» ol If waiakjinc wiLa w°a1**J or wilk whtkj laIWWfct wttk

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Page 1: THE COAST - DigiFind-It · 2015-02-03 · MPT called lor anayeUrered to all Peru or Belmar at a&ort notice. Orden 07 Hall Promptl y Attended to. New York Hotel. Oae, Hot and C«ld

THE COASTVOLUME I. No. 49. BELMAR, N. J., FRIDAY, MAKCH 24, 1893. &1.OO PER YEAR IN ADVANCE.

JfRAXK T. McDERMOTT,

COUNSELLOB AT LAW.Offleo Adjoining Post Office,

FREEHOLD, HRW JERSEY.

gAMUEL A. PATTERSON,

Attorney & Counsellor at Law.

and Master in Clancery,Rooms 4 & 5, Monmouth Building,

ASBU.BY. PARK. N. J.

B. fl. BrETOX, D. D. 8. },1. BCBTOI, D. D. S.

BURTON BROTHERS,RESIDENT DENTISTS.BOWK'S BLOCK, 505 BANGS AVENUE,

Junction ot Cookmao \ venue.ASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY.

New York Office, 33 West 26th Street.Office Hours. 9 A. n\ to 5 F. M.

AppoiDtmeuta made by Hall or Telephone.

MANUFACTURERS OF 020Z-

MILOH.CREGO,

Justice of the Peace,NOTARY PUBLIC,

Commissioner n t f - Deeds,F STREET. BELMAR, If. J.

GEORGE W. BRICE,

CARPENTER [AND BCHDER,21 XEAB6" EXPKBIESCX.

Twelfth Awenoe, Near F Street,

BELMAE, NEW JERSEY.Flans and Specifications Furnished on

Application.

Third Avenue Hotel,LONG BRANCH. V. J

ILnn I ulluLL, .

Jobbing A Specialty.

SAMUEL HABERSTICKLIVERY STABLE ATTACHED.

PLUMBER,STEAM & GAS FITTER.

Pumps ot all kinds put In and Bepaired.Gas Vacatnes Repalrea and put tn order.Stove Repairs of all kinds furnisUed at short

notice.sanitary Plumbing executed wtfb neatness

and dlspawtt. Sheet Lead, Copper and SheetIron Worker.

Stores, H-aters. Ranges, andGasoline for Gas Machines.

orders by mall will ncetn prompt atwntlon.t Between 8tb and 9th Arenaae.

Beef Je»c« W Street, near l« t i i

Belmar, New Jersey.

Wm. J . Voorhees[Established 9.ye»rs.]

BREAD, CAKE and PIS

BAKER,AT THE OLD STJUJfc

.ake Como New JerseyI take this method of informing the residents

I Ocean Beach. Spring Lake and Como that Im prepared to eerve them daily with fresh

3 Pl B k l S l l d Cake.

. NAYL O'S

LOCAL EXPRESS,TtT-v**i I I T HBSET.

Pianos and FurnitureJMoved With Care.M P T called lor anayeUrered to all Peru

or Belmar at a&ort notice.Orden 07 Hall Promptly Attended to.

New York Hotel.Oae, Hot and C«ld Water and llatli.

Open All The Year.POPULAR PRICES.LI VEST HV IBID At fODATKHB.

Mr*. CIIAS. GroM. Proprietress.Opp. S . *. BontlieB. Depot.

BBAffCH. V . I .

Hotel Rockwell,BROADWAY, NEAR THIRD AVE.

LONGIBRANCH, N- J

OPEN ALL THE.TBAB.

POPULAR PRICES.

Shed' Md Good Accommodation* forLivery-

WM. CAWLEY,DUUI III

Fine Groceries,FLOUR, FEED

Butter & Lard.Call and look at our

5 & 10 Cent Counter.

' and you will be sure to buy.

You will and me In the

Brick Store on F St.BEL.HA11, N. J.

AHARON E. JOHNSTON,

ATTOBNY AT LAWOLICITOR AND MASTER IN CHANCERY.Office Opposite Taylor's Hotel, on Mala Street.

FREEHOLD. N. J.At Farmlngdale Every Evening.

The European House,(ESTABLISHED 1880.)

COR 9th and RAILROAD AVENUES.

Thla hcnse occupies one of H>» txwt locationsIn the place, convenient tu railroad, rtver andDeach. Itn rooms are large and cool, aud Its

:lor» pleasant and inviting. Attached to theJH« 1B a restaurant, where the beat, cheapest

and qulcketst meals can be aerred at any boar.10 claim to p#8seBB the beat 34-Inch by TO.WIUIK alley in the State. And both ladles

And gentlemen who delight tn the mme BSTBample opiwrtunities to amuse and exercisethemselves.

Families supplied w th Oysters. Clams, IceCream. Contncltona and other delicacies.

Havlnij had 20 years' experience in segarlaklng. I feel justified In saying that I can

supply the trade with a better ftegar for lessmoney than any otnvr firm possibly can, eitherwholesale or retail. Give me a trfal and be con-vinced. -

JTOH ALLSPACH k WIFE, Propr's.N.J.

S. E. HALL,Dealer In

PURE HULK and GREflHIDepot, Cor. 8th Ave. and F Street,

BF.T.MAB, S. 3.

AOOOODATlOm FOB

Of 1

s»J. Pies, BreaXIast Bolls and C

TWO DELIVERIES DAILY.Address, Lake Como Post OS.ce.

JOHN A. OSBORN,

Blue Stone f l i i , G i l ,COPING and SILLS

OO.ce at 83 and Si Heck Atecn*.

OCEAN GROVE, N. J.

ard adjoining Freight Depot,Olflce at C- O. Hudnnt'B.

BELMAR, N. J.estimates furnished for work at any

point from Long Branch toAtlantic City.

Prices Below all Competitors.

THOMAS BRYAN

PLUMBER,GAS AND STEAM FITTER,

ALSO DEALXB IK

PLUMBERS' GOODSOT EVEET DEaCBIPTIOlf.

PUMPSOf all descriptions put in and repaired.Orders h- Hall will receive Prompt Atteatl.ni.

f STHMCT, BIT. 7TB A1TD 8TH

BELMAR, N. J.

Richard Wight,

TENTH AVENUE COTTAGE,BKLMAII, N. J.

Two Blocks from the Ocean.Every Modern Convenience.

Flrst-clsaa Board. Gncrd Spring Water,ft. D. PARKS.

MAPLE SHAPE.

COB. FIFTH AVENUE ANP F STREET,B E L M A K , JT. J .

Open-tor tbe season of 1892, and wilt continueopen all th« year.

Tbe bouse faces Shark River, and bad All thejnveclenees of location aud furniBblng. to rea-

der It attractive and comfort*ble to permanentand transient guests.

For terms and other information addressTux U A P L E SHADE. " -

Selmar, 3?. J.

JOSEPH YONGEN,TON8OBIAL PARLOK.

F Street, Between Blxth and Seventh Avenuee.iiELMAK, K. J .

John E,. Brows,I

And Dealer la

Paints, "Varnishes,Oils, Ealsomine,

Wall.Paper,; Brushes, Window

Glass, Oil Cloth, "Wi-dow

S>-adei, Etc.

F Street, Bet. 7th and 8th Aves.,

JEW JERSEY.

6LEND0LA CEMETERY.Having opened up an annex to the above

Cemetery I now offer

BURIAL PLOTSFOR SALE

AT REASONABLE RATES.

TBS TITLE IS F32FSCT.

ipplj •». or aMr»«a.

RICHARD TltlOIT,

GLE5DOLA, H. B.

Hew York & Long BrancH Railroad.Stations In Jtew York: Central Railroad of

New Jersey, foot of lllberty street; PennsylvaniaRailroad, Coot of Oortlandt and Desbrmaeastreets; ffew Jersey Southern Railroad, root ofB*ctor street.

Time Table of Nov. 20, 1392.

Leave New York, foot of Liberty street forBelmar. 4 90, S 15, 11 30 A. M., 1 30, 4 00, 4 30.« 16 v. • - Sundays, 8 00 a. m.. * 00 p. m.

Leavs Hew York, foot of Cortlandt and Deebros*-es streets for Belmar, » 10, A.M. . 13 60. 3 40.ft 10, 11 46 p.m. Sundays. 9 40 a. in.. 5 IS p.m.

Leave Belmar for New York. 6 02. 0 43. 7 33. " si.9 03. 10 08. a. tn.. 1 01. 2 «2. .1 fij. 5 M. 6 30 p. m.Sundays. 7 27, B 06, a. m.. * 18, 8 •», p. m.

'. LONG BRASCH AMD BBIaVAB.Leave Long Branch Mr Belmar. « 46, 7*0. » H.

10 60. a. n... 13 10. 1 DO, 2 35. 3 10. * 05, B 00, fi 4ft.6 66. 7 65 p. m.. 1 3u a. m. Bundsys, 10 So. 11 SOa. in.. S 40, 8 &5 p. in.

Leave Belmar for Long Branch, « t t # 42. 7 61.9 OZ.10 68, II 06 a. m.. 1 01, 2 OX 3 2S, 3 BX 5 33.6 30. s-56 p. m. Sundays, 7 27. V 06. a. m., 4 18.fi 3S, p.m.^ ASBUBT FAUX AMD BSLHAB.

Leave Asbury Park for Belinar, 7 10, 7 :>',, io 10,11 06 a. m.. 13 2B. 1 15. 3 00, 8 26. 4 20. 5 15. (J 00.7 10, 8 10 p. m.. 1 43 a. m.save Belmar lor AsUury Park, 8 03, A 42, 7 61.9 03,10 68. 11 m a. in., 161, 3 02, % P . 3 B , 6 30.S 30. 6 65.p. m.

BELXAS AND rOIKT pLJtABA2(T.Leave Belmar for Point Pleasant. 7 30,10 17, l l 12

a. m.. 1 33. a M, 3 33. » 31, 6 06. 7 17. S 17 p.m.Sundays. 11 11, 11 61 a. m., 6 01. 7 17 p. m.

Loave Point Fleuant. for Belmar. 515,6 is , 1 35.8 48. 10 40 a. m.. 12 *S. 1 45. 3 SO. S 06. B 00. p. m-Sundays. 1 It), 8 50 a. m,. 4 00, 6 10 p. m.

KL'Ft'S BLOnQETT,Sapt. N. V. * L. B . K. R. Co.

H . F . BALDWIN,Aamt. O. F. A, € . II. K. of If. J .

Port KssvUnc K. B. CO. L « M M .J. B. -WOOD,

Geu. !•«••. A«t . P w w . It. 11.

Pennsylvania Railroad Train*TU

New York *t.d tons; Brunch BaUroad.Commencing Nov. 20, 1892.

s.sss i.s.5,Ka as s s s s s s ss £ s s | $*_

STRAW,

COAL, WOOD,

and Charcoal.

fflfctel s u n n , 1 Rue.Belmar, N. J«

THE OLD HEARTHSTONE.

We (rather 'round the old hearthstone,Will o«t is heard tho north wind's moan.

Within all is delight,WLile 's^klaat i t e pane ihe whispering rain

SpeaLs ot a starlcsa Big!iL .

*7c BIER the eonga r.z uscJ to sfng.When youth wit* o'^is and pleasure king,

' Nor heed t tc angry utorm.For Mndiy cbtcr Eialtes tirl^ht the sphem

Ot tome where hearts are warm.

Stories are MU or that dear limaWhen life Cowed on like smoothest rhjme,

In' the (AT long ago;When ensiles rare were built ID sir.

To melt, i « a j llko maow.

Crandfaihcr and grandmother teflOf olden days, when love'« tweet ipell

Their hearts together drew;When hope was bright with tenderest light,

And sorrows were but tew.

Good Uncle John, Just hrnir from se«,Tells of far aistaut lands, while wo

Drink in bis honeyed words:As sweet t&cy arc. as swee' aud fair.

As sweetest uonss of Oirds.

And thus with story, lauffh and song,Wo pass the stormy night and long,

Oiir hearts all free from e^re;Thank Heaven tor this: To-night there Is

At home DO vifcaol choir.—Caleb IJuiiii. in N. V. I

THE ETHICS OF FOOD.

George's Experience w i t h ProCEpatlias's Course of Lecture*

Soon after our marriage, my wife,who ia somewhat of a stickler for hy-giene, found the advertisement of acourse of lectures on the "Ethics ofFood'* under our knocker, and broughtit ia to me.

'George, dear, isn't it fortunate?You know you were telling1 me theother day that disease is often com-municated by food—and here's thevery thing yve want- A course of aixlectures on the something or other offood; only a guinea the course, and byProf. Spatling*. too. Don't you think,as you are always so busy writing-, I'dbetter go and see what the lectures arelike? It'll be so useful to know whatone is eating1."

The only occasion oo which I badspoken on the subject At all was oneSunday afternoon, when I had readfrom the British Weplcly • questionfrom a correspondent, "whether toma-toes were ever the cause of cancer?"and had remarked on tbe improbabilityif such an event. Uat then I was new-

ly married, and unused to the way*.ofwomen, or possibly unduly tolerant;so 1 made only a faint murmur at 'the

;pense.""Expense? Cut wouldn't it be false

economy to study that when our healthis concerned? Why, we don't knowwhat (buffering- and disease'we may es-cape by taking- a little care.**

AVell, the long and the short of it wasthat my wife was present at the lec-ture, while I remained at my firesideto thump out on iny typewriter aoarticle for the Olympian Keview. 1 be-came so absorbed in thin, that when agust of cool air blew into my room, and

iy wife, with the usual outdoor smellthat oue notices In winter about herclothes, came in, it seemed but a fewminutes since she had left me.

"Oh, George dear, I am so triad I aawthat handbill. It's so providential; forif 1 hadn't gone to-ni^ht, fi-oodni-ss onlyknows what might have happened."

"What on earth do you mean, love?"My wife was too agitated to answer,

but went Into the next room and rangthe bell for Pauline. As a matter offact, Pauline's kitchen is almost as nearas the nert room, and she might havecalled her much more easily than by

.ping the one perfect bell that wessess. But the principle of style was

involved; and to that my wife is readyto sacrifice any amount of personalComfort.

Pauline,, after repeated tinkling*,"came np smiling" from a noveletteshe bad just beeu reading. Pauline isa good girl, with a character whichsome day I intend to work into a novel.But that, an Mr. Kiplioff wosld prob-ably say, L. quite another story.

'•Pauline." said her mistress, "takethat meat away." The table was al-ready laid for supper, and I attempteda feeble protest against having mjmeal spirited away thus before myeyes. Itut my wife was determined,and said: "Do you know, George, whatthe consequence of our eating ifTeatmay be? It's quite pu&sible that wemay go into consumption. Prof. Spat-ling says that meat is a prolific causeof consumption, owing to the capacityof animals to contract that disc as*.The 'basilica', or whatever you callthose horrid little insects, gat from themeat into your system, and do the mis-chief. Jews are much freer from con-sumption than we are, solely owing tothe fact that their food is always riff id-ly inspected i>y the rabbis before beingused"—

"For human consumption," I sug-gested, jocularly. But my wife wasvery much in earnest.

"Then those pickles, too- Picklesare simply poisonous. Sulphate of cup-per is largely used in their manufac-ture, accounting for their bright greencolors. You can five the beef andpfckles to Mrs. IVijrjfK tomorrow, Pau-line, to take home to the ehiidren."

"My dear," I ventured to augfret>t."if these are to disseminate the germsof consumption and to poison their re-cipients, do you think it quite thething—"

I was point? to say "to give themto onr washerwoman," but a vieioB cfmothers-in-law flitted across my brainand I wa» about to sturgost that hermother might be'glad of then whenmr wife continued: "Then that bacon—everybody who eats bacon f e u trich-inosis. And you know you said your-self, George, dear, that tomatoesbrought on cancer."

"But, my love," I ventured mildly tosuggest, "if we mayn't eat meat of anykind, or tomatoes, or pickles, what onearth is there left to live on?"

"Oh, heaps of thing*—«grs. flab,poultry, vegetables, everything, al-most. And I am sure it wouldn't beright to fly in the face of ProTideneeafter Prof. Spatting-'s lecture.*•

Bo for the next week we were livingon eggs, Tcge tables and flail, and b j

(he time of the second lee I tire wererather longing for a change of (.left

Pauline liai! just laid our F, upper—oysters nnt\ sardines, eggs, pastry andcheese—when my wife returned, tear-fully anxious.

"Oeorjje, darling, do you—have yen—are them any—any spots about you?"

I said I hart no tiouht 1 could obligeher, but cpulil not tell with any cer-tainly. Hut she was evidently severe-ly serious.

"Please, don't joke, George dean it'sa matter of life or death. Do ran op*stairs and see before'it is too late."

So finally, after useless protests, Iwas seut up to my bedroom with pen-cil and paper to report on the appear-ance and location of any "spots" 1might happen to possess.

"Oh, I'm so thankful," said my wifowhen sha was told that but o few pim-ples that had existed long before theera of food lectures, my skin had aclean bill of health, "I am glad thatour folly has not, up to the present,had any serious consequences. Dr.Hutchioson, the greatest surgeon inEngland, says Pro! Spatling, hasproved conclusively that leprosy issolely caused by eating too much fish;coast districts are always the partsprincipally affected. Norway, the onlyEuropean country where leprosy flour-ishes to any considerable extent, findsin fish its staple food. And oystersoysters for supper! Good gracious,George, how could you be so foolish!"

"Paulina brought them in," 1 ex-plained, feebly and rather meanly. Ofcourse I had given Pauline the money.

"I suppose you don't really want toget rid of me, George? I suppose youhaven't got them with the deliberateintention of giving me blood poisoningor typhoid fever? Vet rarely you oughtIo know that Thames oysters always—Vou haven't any pains about the—thebreast, have you, George?"

When 1 had satisfied my wife on thispoint, she went over her notes of thelecture, and one by one knoeked mostof the principal articles off our bill offare. To cut five lectures into one,week after week she did the same, ter-ribly agitated about the ill effects re-sul ting from this or that article of food,and in mortal fear lest, through our ig-norance of the laws of healthy dietet-ics, typhoid or some other dire com-plaint should carry na off before theconclusion of the course of lectures.

"It u a comfort to have one's eyesopen at last," she said, time after time,as this disease or that frightened hernearly out of her senses by beingcaused by some correspond ing articleof diet. After awhile she began totake a melancholy interest in discov-ering fresh facts and arguments, show-ing some new association of eating andill health; and her time was principallyspent in comparing the cookery bookwith the dictionary of diseases.Pastry was knocked off as bad for thedigestion; sugar In any form produceddiabetes; jam was simply turnippoisonously colored; tinned provision*wore notoriously dangerous; whileanyone with sense and a natural desirefor good wind and breathing- apparatuswould avoid cheese like a pestilence.Then butter, according to a medicalJournal, was known to carry the germ*of consumption; eggs were responsiblefor serious derangements of tb<s liver,and fruit and vegetable* meant choleraat the very leaBt

I bore up aa beat I could under thosedeprivations, thinking it wise to humormy wife while the fit lasted; and con-soled myself in the "meantime with thepipe and drinks that bad not yet beentaken away. But their day was athand- A special lecture was devotedto these subjects; and immediatelyafter, the corner of my mouth was vio-lently seized and examined by my wifefor signs of cancer* blindness wasthreatened unless tobacco was instant-ly relinquished; and as for drinks—well, with typhoid caused by milk,

t b b loss of nerve-power by

NEWS OFJTHE WEEK.of InipnrtanI E » f n U DtiHrng

' . the Pfta* Savcn Day*.—Honeadale, Pa., was visited Sunday bya $86,000 fire.

>-The bullion in the Bank of England In-creased $141,000 during the past week.—There a n 7,000 families along; the Kansasbonier ready to rush into the Cheroke*strip.

—The Senatorial elections la Spain have re-sultedjn a sweeping victor? for the Mou-arcbisto.—Erank Shevy was burned U death i s afire which destroyed the City Hotel atLewistoD, Idaho.—Matt Keely, the St. Louis politician,who was shot by Mi*, liar? Frush twoweeks ago. U dead.

—A bill to extend provincial franchise towomen has been introduced in the NoraScotia, Legislature.—Fire has destroyed about tfty small |buildings occupied by the* poorer clawea otEureka Springs. Art.—The Farmers" Exchange Block, at EasexJunction, Vt.. w-ns burned Thursday night.Lota, $24,ft00; insured.—The weekly statement of the Back ofFrance abowa an increase of 85,000 francs ingold and 1,460,000 franca in «lver.—Mma. Cottu, whose revelations in thePanama Canal case created a sensation, hasleft Paris with her children for rest.—Th- report of [a fatal land slide on th«Canaiian Pacific railroad is declared to bebttnel*** by the superintendent at Wm-

—The Wheeler Opera Hetim at Toledo.Ohio, was entirely destroyed by Arm Satur-day.—Belva Lock wool has applied for admis-i t th t i e f l i N Y k

pp f dsion to the practice of law in New YorkState.

Henderson Smith,t

—The death of Squir. Abingdon Baird iaNew Orleans of pneumonia will hare no ef-fect on tbe Mitchell-Corbet* fight.—The Alamo Hotel at Colorado

aged 119, died

Col.. was almost entirely destroyed by BraFriday. The guests escaped amid muchexcitement.

Quincy? 111., Wednesday'night. He was j —Chess Player Walbrodt was beaten bybora in Virginia, In 1774. . Delmar ia a Fompeiiaa opening Saturday-St. Patricks any was generally observed in New York. Walbrodt, who played theIn the usual manner in all th* larger citiesof .the country Friday last.—The California Legislature has adjoorasdsine die.—Three firemen were hurt by falling wallsat a fire in Minneapolis. Lose tfO.OOf). -—Baron du Cuase, conspicuous i" Franceas a soldier and Jjeets. is dead.

writer on military sub-of work.

defense, resigned after 4o moves. *—Tbe Klnyon block, and the Janaa Mockbrick structure*, four •UiriMi bfeh. sad inthe principal part of Oswcgo. X. Y., w e ndestroyed by lire Thursday night—One hundred miaera an on strike at thmWheeling Steel Works miaes at Benwood.W. V« , for higher wages, laying the

A thousand men are out

—The entire senior class in tbe medicaldepartment of tbe Minnesota State Uni-versity has been suspended.

—Tbe Rev Dr. Thomas Edward Ver-mi Jye. one of tbe oldest elwgxroen in NewYork: city, who was the senior pastor o£

—Mrs. Anna Elisabeth {Bartlett), wif« of j the Cfcllegutfe Reformed Duieb church,James Phillips, jr.,. owner and editor of dead iu ms 71^ T e a r

—It Is stated by the Texan delegBtion thatthe President will probably nominate A.W. Terrell, ot -Texas, to be Minister toTurkey.—Fire destroyed tbe planing milt of DakarA Kline in Wiliiaronport. Pa-. Saturdaynight. Loss, about $36,000; insurance,$12,000,—Prairie fires have been raging extensivelyIn different part* of Oklahoma aince Satur-day. Much farm property IB being de-stroyed.—The brig Aquatic, ashore on Sow andPigs reef, broke up, in Saturday's gale andthe masts fell out of her. She was to havebeen sold at auction.—The City Milkt,atSordan, Minn., valuedat $130,000 burned Sunday. Tbe millhad a capacity of 600 barrels of flour daily.It was Insured for $56,000.—Sadie Page and Maggie Gaines, two col-ered women, were fatally burned at Rich-mond. Va.. Thursday by the former j»ur- iing gasoline in a stove.—Bob Caruthers, the well-known ballpliyer has been given his unconditionalrelease by president Von der Aho, and Istree to sign where be please*.—A bciler exploded in Bear Rtd«a collieryat MaLanev Plane. P*,. Saturday killingJohn Dannelly and scalding his brotherMichael so badly he cannot live.—Gen. Green E. Raum. ex-Comnumfonerof Persians, has associated himself withhis wen. Dania F. Raum. of Peoriw, ML,and win open a law office in Chicago.—Secretary Carlisle has awarded the eon-tract tor building four ligi.t ships for use Ion tbe great lakes to tbe- Craig Shi?build- \fan; Company of Toledo. Ohio, at $64,400. |—The Government Board of Control of theWorld's Columbian Exhibition hasmoved to Chicago. H will be located fanthe Government building in Jackson perk. 1—A bill extending the right of suffrage totbe woman in immcipai elections was de-feated by the Lower House at the MichiganLegislature Thursday by a vote of 38to 39.

—Mrs. Catharine Dran is dead from the jeffects of m-lpractice in New York and !Wilheniina Peper, the woman accused of 'having performed the operation, is under

the New. York Press, is dead at Fitch-burg. Mass.*—The Hon. Thomas Lawrence, a venerableand leading citixea of New Jersey, is dead,at his home in Hamburg, Sussex county,aged 76 years.—A special election has been ordered Inthe Seventh Massachusetts Confrmwionaldistrict on April 35, to choose a successorto Hear; Cabot Lodge.—A special assembly «f tbe PresbyterianChurch in Ireland, convened in Belfast,has unanimously psarwi resolution* con-demning the Home Rule bill.

Austen & Pool, druggist*.K. Y , has been closed by th*judgment for $14,810.81 obtained by Mrs.A Oliver for borrowed monej.—Frank C Ia&ltn* 18 rears old, whil*atwork in his father's factory at Oraogs, N.J.. was caught in the belting and the bone*of his right arm horribly crushed.

—Chester Hair, one of the oldest merchantsof Syracuse, N. Y.. is dead of panaged a yean. He ha* been in thechant tailoring business since 1837.—Numerous Austrian, Swiss and GermanCatholics hare petitioned tbe Pope that he

—The Municipal Teli t d i h tb

Co.. ha* beenMesjBBfetJincorporate^ with tbe New York Secretaryof Sialtaswith a capital of $100,000. Themajority of the* tnsorporatora e n iuwreai -ed in an Albany pool room.—A Urge lot of deals, plank*, and batten*,belonging to an American vessel, have beenwashed asfcore at OMOrtme? [.Oral*. Th*wreckage bears the appearance of havingbeen a long time in tbe water.—Tremont Temple in Boston waa destroyedby lire, which started by some unknowncause, in tins organ loft, Sunday morning;.The structure has been celebrated as thslargest Baptist church in New England—'The city attorney of Indianapolis ha* sub-mitted an opinion declaring- tbe proposedordinance raisina; $73,000 by taxation forthe entertainment of tbe Grand Army fin-cajnpment in September c—The steamers Luaenbara; SSMIwhich have gooe from Halifax, "search of the disabled Sarnie, Icarrier pigeons, and If any 1Sarnia areUeniad news will be dback t» the city by the earner*.

—Mrs V. S. Grant has engaged a •Biteof rooms in a hotel at Highland Falls, X.have prtitioned the Pope that he „

call an tntcrnatfaRal eonferrenee to take f Y , overlooking the Hudson,steps to abolish gambling at UonSe Carlo. | window she can look npoo_ may—Manager McGovern, of the Brmniord fac-tory of the Yale A Towne Ijock ""••1*"-ttmng company denies that then is anyground for the reported coming strike atJbis factory.

—It is Mid that an attempt has been madeto aasBftinate Mayor Marigold of Bridgeport.Conn., by those concerned is the gaininghouses, which the mayor raided a few day sago.

—Miss Lucy Cleveland died tn Alton,HI., very sadden)? lest week atth«i home of her sister. Mrs. A. C. Brit-ton. She wres a cousin of PresidentCleveland.

—The large sines plant of the United State*Glass company, at Trenton, Fa., has beentotally destroyed by Are, entailing a Ions of$150,000. At*mt 500 employes are thrownout of employment.—A severe tempest passed over Middleboro.Mass., last week Lightning »cruck the

which wen familiar to the General Is kmcadet days.—Annia " ot Baltimore, ltd., bepsntaking food Sunday, sot is apparentlyunconscious ail the tune. A spoon eoc-

sb« swsilwwsd tbs-liquid,little and this lc*d« to th* belief chat tha^ifiiC"1" tranoi will soon he o*wr.—Captain Jacob H. TanderbUt. brotherof the late Commodore VanderbUt.a* his

Loea about %\%-

and sundry other evils, a man would becriminal indeed to run such risk.

For tbe last week I have been livingon bread aad water and haricots, and

match because she is a Catholic and he aProtestant.—Ex-Secretary Tracy's return to privatelife was formally celebrated Thursday by 'T — — — ' r •• •• 4BCK* wa^v avw U J B I I J .. I-J.. vao.an.^1 4 u u j n m j a J

even these were not obtained without the Hamilton club, of Brooklyn by a ban-* quit. Secretary of tho Navy Hilary A.Haricots were conceded

doubtfully, with a pensive statementthat' "perhaps it might not do anyharm, and haricots were certainly verynutritious;" fo that since then, thiswhite, fatty, instpM vegetable has

—A fire Sunday in Spencer, Iowa, de-stroyed aa entire block, excepting onebuilding. Nine frame buildings wera dp-'etroyed. Loss eAinwWd $30,000, to $30,

made its way to tho table in every con- °°° I"""**1"* $20-000.ceivable form scud on every couceiva- j ^ * _ i P ^ . °* .J^?1* _?*•_• ta_ "^^"fble occasion. Water, mi wife thought, "*"

g ,* ""*£?* epideoiic, many c

With regard toproperties are ae> fattemfng, that mywife, who has aslight tendency to "em-bempoint," B-nd whom 1 ones discov-ered running surreptitiously up anddown stairs with the object of reduc-ing her weight, called upon me onthose grounds.to relinquish its use, re-minding me that, as Uyroa used vine-gar for this worthy object, so ought 1to deny myself a Uttl* for the sake, ofhealth, economy am' above all, ot aliterary matt, the preservation of apoetical and pro(essicmal appearanoe.Here, however, I pet my foot down,and she did not insist.

Tomorrow la the last lecture, andthen, aftrr acting for ft week or *o thepart of Succi or of Tanner, w« shallprobably resume our usual recklesshabits. I ventured to remark just newto my wife that our bill of fare was as-suming rather narrow limit*, and thattho morrow's lecture wonld probablydeprive us of even our remaining food.She smiled assent, but then 11111., en-couragingly: "How healthy it will be.though! How perfectly charming toknow of one's Unoiu n "—Chambers1 Journal.

N. Y.. N. H. AHartford for 99 years. The former com-

will receive a rental of 5 per cent, free

l—An official of the N>w York A Ncwf nt?-laud rntul says that the report that the di-rectors have appointed a committee to con-fer with the New York, New Heven &Hartford directors is ahselutely withoutany basts in fact.—Bi«hop Brown, of tbe African MethodistEpiscopal Church, is dead at Washingtonaxed 79 He had been ,11 -for sometime, and his death was not unexpected.He was eminent ia the church anil greatlyrespected and ssteemed?

Thrown from HU Hr»r»* «.««tWii-msOTOH, Del., March JfcJ.—8. P.

Short, an undertaker, o< Brldfcevlile, wasinstenUy killed•Teafcerdaj by being thrownfrom his hearse. The horse reared aadplunged, throwing the undertaker o3He struck upon his head, dying instantlyThe coffin in tbe hearsa was thrown outupon the ground.

Rom:, March 22 —Tbs Italian stee'crulivr Etna, under the command of Ad-miral Maghaghl, has sailed from Spesxt*for New York to tak« part fn the Columbian naval demon** ration. The Ktoa is a

completed in lUt», and eteams IT knots ac

r>tinr*v*n Will Arri.pt,Lownow, March 93.—It la understood

that Lord Dunraven will accept the coiirti-tion.i of the race for tbe Aineritm's cup sub

earlier date than Oct. 5 be set lor tbe ftrsl

ST. PrrKassmo, March W.—The Mini.ter of Public Work* iw about to «iart on &tour of sBAitary Jtiepeetioa along the line*,vt railway in the provinces of Nijnl So*gorod, YHrosiav and Oral, where a numboiot fatal oues of cholera are reported

to Dartmouth _Hanover, N. H., by thaiate Ralph Butterfl«ld of Kansas City, has b*«u rw ti vetl andplaced in Culver Hall museum until theButterfleld building is completed.—Comptroller Campbell of New Yorkhen taken an assignment from Gov.Flower of his interest in the Fire Islandpurchase contract, and gave the Governora caeck covering the amount he advaacwdthe Stats last summer with interest at 4per cent., something over $51,000 In all.—The American Society for tbe Extensionef University Teaching haa decided to esbtbliah a uutveretty «xt*n«.on summernw-eUng where all the students now enrolled In tbe university extension move-ment throughout the country—estimatedat over 00.000—can convene fur the pur-nose of continuing their studies.

—The last hope of CarlyU Harri*. undersentence of deatk for the murder of hiswife, Helen Potts Harris, is gone, so Car atthe courts are concerned. Recorder Smythin New York. Thumdaj afternoon, ren-dered bis decision denying the applicationfor a new trial. Harris1 only hops oflife now rests with Oov. Flower.—Hiss BestM Mitchell Doolittle will startWednesday night from Chkago on » veryunique trip. In order to convince foreignreilrofid men that it is possible she will gofrom Chicago to the Pacific Ocean, fromthere to U«xloo, thence to tbe shora of thmAtlantic and New England, and back toCUiu*giv wttbout changing car» and wita-•ut putting '<X)t to the ground.—Benjamin H. Field, who has for manyyewrs been clunely identiftad with the raar-Itabli and philanthropic interests of NewYork City. U d«a-l at the ago of 71 fears

The Westingnouse Air Brake Companyhaa declared a quarterly dividend of 5 percent, and an extra dividend of 5 par centThis meaau tbe distribution ef $000,000.—A cHlseus' lemajuB tuw been formed atNew Brunswick, IE J., Ttx the suppressionand prevention of race track gambling,and to secure tue twpeal ef the moe track

boro and it was burned,000; Insurance $7,000-—The French police neve arrested at Brus-sels two brother* ***»tted Schupp on sus-picion of hatching Mi Anarchist dynamiteplot? in connection with the notoriousFrench Anarchist XfetUau.

—One hundred town* end villages ef Min-nesota held biennial sieerions Last week.Most of the candidates were chosen onCttixens' or PtopW tickets, and politicallines were not closely drawn.—Tfa« Zmpetor ot Japan basdonated $300, -000 a year fur six ysan out of his privateincome and baa directed govermuent offi-cials to contribute 10 per eent ol their sal-aries toward a fund for building warships.—Secretary Hoke Soautii has appointed M.Cooper Pope, of Washington. Qa.. chief atthe division of lands and railroads,Secretary's offoe. Interior Department,vice F. A. Weaver, of Pennsylvania, re-signed.

—TW house of Bsnjjuain Fleischer, in tbesouthwestern part of Jackson county, Kan..was totally destroyed by fire last weekHis three children wen fistallj burned, andFleischer's bunds and anas wore aimotfburned to a crisp. ,

—Judge Uonnisoti at Bradford, Pa.,deahil tEfce luotion tor a new trialhi t'.c < :• --.n:'.-« case and. sentenced£clph Ciwmiro to the gallowB. The.Governor will net the dAy for the h*"c<THwhen he signs the d**th warrant.—Articles of incorporation nave been tiledat Trenton, N. J.t for a corporation to beknown M the Consolidated Traction com-pany, with a capital stock of $19,000,000,for the purpose at consolidate og tbe tract kmcompanies in the upper part of the, State.—Samuel Gould, ar., of Ballston, N. Y.,aged S1 veers, a eoal merchant, dmnk halfan ounce of ell of wtitturgTaen in mistakefor medicine wfaick bad been pnaeribed lorhim. By prompt medical attendance- andthe use of a stomach pump he was broughtout of danger.—Officer* Of tbe MHWsaii hose-Ma Stateprison, speaking of the alleged expos* ofthat institution by ex-convict A very, saythat Mr. A very has an tmasvory prisonrecord: that his repotatlcm for teUingr thrtruth is not good, and that his statement*have no foundation in fact.—Henryof Wall

ftdefendant* befare Jddaw BmrthKt in tbeSupreme Court. Brooklyn, last we-* ina suit brought by the Miners" Saving* Bank.ef Pittirtown, Pa., ou aprornisaory no**for$90,000.—Judge MeAdam of the Superior Courttn New York city baa given Mrs LeilaOlrve Newnw an absolute divotve fromDouglat J Naunc. Neame waa *• stock-broker in London, but haa lately lived inthis country. Mrs N«un# is a daughterof William H. HwuriqiuM of the K«w YorkStock Exchange.—A severe thunder storm prevailed atRockviUe. Ccnn.. on March 14, continutnK from 10 o'clock until aftermidnight It was followed by a anewstorm. Lightning struck iu a number ofother places in this vicinity The WasusraCnloa Telegraph oftVe et Manch*«ter wasburned out. ligntniac harin* struck » «eiegrapb wire eataide cae ogftrn—Cariyle Harris, wbotrial last week (or tae morder of bja wife,waa brought before Recorder Sniyta inNew York, Monday for sentence III -«w to the questina why Ike d*a*k aantenet should not be paasad Harris suad*a kMuz I'lc* which, howavvr, proved Ineffaccual Tae Recorder eepdnted MotKlay.May H. mm tbs d xy within "ment ot death should bt

tfae a«e of 89 rear*.family were at the 1came. -Be bad been {pneumonia and c—Jsmee X*.now tn Sing Sins; ' prison, whosentenced to die March 13 and who wan re-spited to March 30. has beeu a$rirr respited07 Governor Fkrwer until April SO. Heexpected that bis aratenos would tw cpm-

toU of Gwvermor Flower'saction tn his ease.—Win. Paine, a prombnent produce dealer,of Hadison. Ind., who on Sunday shoeand seriously wounded his wife, wnona hefound in a oompromwiag attawtk* witiiJames Wbitbv. tbe bullat bekif intendedfor Whitby, but tbe w«» throwinc aeraetfbetween b«r husband and her nenuaooi esthe former ftred. i» now ia Jail, along withhis wife's peramotur.—The fate of the steamship Xaronfc iaknown. She ia lost. The steamer Coo-ventry which arrived at BreoMW. Hon-daj. report* that on March *t» while offNew Foundland Banks, passed two up-turned life boats beiongiag to tbe NareencThe boats had evidently not heett in waterlong and it is belirwd crew waa picked upby sooir passinc vessel.—John Dillon, Nationalist member ot Par-liament for Eaet Mayo, in speaking to aGlasgow aodieooe Sunday, seoutssi theidea of the parsemtion ef FroUsKiante byCar hulks in Ireland. Nevertheless, hesaid, the Irish w*re willing to eubnu* tnthe humiliation ot having eauaes (or tbeprotection of Proieetanla in Issteosl iaearved in the Home Bole bUL—The report that th* eaapioTes ot the KewEtialnud division con tempi axed going 00 astrike is denied by the Re*rfing oAcselaDuring tee peat week the compeny ssert Iteniines and crews to taat diviabM Io asaielm raiaing the co»l and £rw«ot blockade.Tb* men wete sent from the main finsdivision, and it i* expected that tber wUl

-

—Squir* Ahwho canwMitchellmorning inHe ccond fur HaH in 1Baird was only 38 y«um old, aaewtsvltbv, hw i&com* amatmtin* to$1,900 "a d»j. He 1

Ivea, the jnuni N'moleoo !:roet; Gmrge H. St«jner ]

ta the ?air at imu- whioB a npnanllT n i d n l orobabte lor tte Fair.

li» M Hall. daiajklEr af Join Ball.N l

—Prfnoo>ut . -of apptuntsneuta to theamoni th* most, protni»unrmjt Car mot nranlaat of wki<* *m*tbe (otlowlar Jaava «. b a n * <* l^oM-u . u l a b > « E.Mau»Haaif awl Mi.law FkalaataMIarr af (ka l u u . SUMlohaw Kuar«> of mm

traortlnaiT aiadora Runr«o oftltcaordtoarr

E. Hlakr of Now Tork. ta k>Ba< .ordlnarr and MIliioMt Hail|liiWtlTT MDenmark I n M P. fcidwi. of Maryland, to ba FlrM Aodltor of tho TroararrTlMnaa Holcnmk of M m *> «• « « »Auitiot <il UM rrsaaarr. W«4o Hiaia>«iof Soutb OmUna. M W ClairillllllMUT ofof Sailnaoda

p , . . 1 . n tCaaaau. Coam., wh*bj duappwiiw ( « o

Ohio railroad haa aPMOaa a ouMdan:R;Htion putt

it a doar rtcat of warthe Wortl'a Fair. Tto

Ula.

til b . iaahould makr l i n k ««•«» ol Ifwaiakjinc wiLa w°a1**J orwilk w h t k j la IWWfct wttk

Page 2: THE COAST - DigiFind-It · 2015-02-03 · MPT called lor anayeUrered to all Peru or Belmar at a&ort notice. Orden 07 Hall Promptl y Attended to. New York Hotel. Oae, Hot and C«ld

LTHE COAST ECHO.

PUBLISHED EVERT FRIDAY BT

THE ECHO PUBLISHING CO.,BEI^MAB, N. JE.

J. W. LAFGHLIX,CHAS. E. KINO, \ EDITORS.

SUBSCBIPTIOK:AJOTUM - - $l. fl IK

Taw NOMINATION of TiaSiklore Bun- J of next week. If it should beyon, ex-Chancellor of the State of ; sustained the railroad employees willNew_Jersey, to bo Minister t8 Ger- j find that the Inter-Stata Commercemany is a conspicously' good one.Mr. Bunyon has a lonpand honorablerecord as a lawyer and judge, and asChancellor he won the highest regard*>T all his fettow-citizensi^His loss of

net is a most powerful weapon againstthem.

Moumouth Courts.

The annual meeting of the School ofthat otSce was as honorable as his j Methods of tho Monmouth County W. C.appointment to it. Gov. Abbett T. U. will be held in the First M. E. Chutrhsought to use his high official and I Bed Bank, on April 4 and 5.personal influence in politics, desiring

Bueklen ' s Arnica Salve.The Beet Solve In the world for Cuts,

Bruispe, Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum, FeverSores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, ChilblainsCorns, and all Ufedn Eruption, and positive-y cur< <e Files, or no pay required. I t is

#uaraiiteed to give perfect satisfaction ormoney.refunded. Price 35 cents per box.For saU» by F. P. Philbrtck, Ocean Beach«nd Ch: 8. A. Bye, Spring Lake Beach.

SisaiiE Cones,him to "stump" the State, in a politi-

3 CENTS, j ca[ campaign, which he refused to-do,

ADVEB1ISING RATES:For transieat or contract prices, apply by

mail or at the office, where subscriptionsmay also be made;

as'a thing Unbecoming the highest a hemorrhage, but he soon recovered.ffi f h l hg g

judicial officer of the commonwealth, O u r ^oa<l in re3entme^t of his refusal the w o o d b a

^ h^ w o o d b h e n a p p g

Governor decline^to renominate him this district to the World's Congress ofto the Chancellorship on the expir-ation of his term.

Entered at the BeJmar Poet OtSce as sec-ond claae matter.

FRIDAY, MARCH 24,1893.

GOVEBNOR WEBTS can stand all thecensure that may be heaped uponhim for vetoing the bill to cripple thepower of Mayor Wanser, who waselected by the aid of the votes ofthree thousand Jerseycrats.

City Demo-

TBE FKIESDS of Jacob A. Geissen-hainer, who represents this district inCongress, have taken steps to pushhis claims for a foreign mission.While we believe that the Adminis-tration would honor itself and thenation by his appointment, we feelthat he Is needed too much where heIs to be sent away. He is one of theablest and best representatives thedistrict ever had and we cannot sparehim.

THAT THE steamship Naronic islost at sea no longer admits of doubt.The only question to bo solved now iswhether any of her officers and crewhavebten saved and will reach landto tell the story of the disaster.

The fate of this vessel is a sad blowat the twin screw theory, and alsoshows once more that so called watertight compartment* are really of novalue whatever when the emergencyfor which, they are supposed to provide

Mr. Jerry HoJT, of Keyport, took thirtydrops of iodine in mistake for a doep ormedicine. It burned his throat and caused

superintendent. Dr. Lock-a p p O i D t e d delegate from

f

THERE APPEARS to be a desire on thepart of some persons to have Gover-nor Werts call the Legislature togeth-er for an e^tra session in order to I A n6W h o t e l wiU ^ e r e c t e d b y whave the Parker bills repealed. It is j F r e n c n g Q^ of Red Bank, at Middletown.

I b i t! H L

Educators to meet at Chicago in July lW« understand that Mr. Charles Gehlhaus

intends removing: to CHffwood in a fewdays. The house on his brickyard is beingentirely renovated preparatory to his livingthere.

even said that pressure is being put!upon him to that end. If we mightpresume to offer the Governor anyadvice it would be to.leavo the Legis-lature severely alone. It has shown

_ e contract has been awarded to H, L.Pease, who will build the same tor *4,160.The hotel will be completed by May 15th.

Recognition services will be held in tbeCentral Baptist church, Atlantic Highlands,

itself the most un-Democratic assem- •[ on April 6. Sessions will be held at 10:30bly that ever met in the State House j A, M. and 2 p. M. Kev.Mr.Stillwell,of Free-at Trenton, its sole object being tohamper the Chief Executive as muchas lay in its power, and by tricks that

hold, will preach the recognition sermon.ChartestTrafford, night operator at the

Bed Bank station, was taken suddenly illare vain to cheat the people out of its on Wednesday night of last week withrights. That disease of selfishness is cramp colic. A. tramp who happened to stopso thoroughly engrained in its system j m-the ticket Office, was sent for a physi-as to render hopeless and absurd any °*idea that the Legislature would takea back track in anything whatever.It is much more probable that itwould go from bad to worse and per-petuate legislation even more uncon-stitutional than it has yet put forthand more glaringly than ever insultand defy the Governor.

Captain James Mulligan of Life .SavingStation No. 4, a t Galilee, shot and killed a(fray goose Tuesday afternoon of last weeknear his station. The species of game israre here and the captain wilt have the birdstuffed.

Judge J. Clarence Conover has been noti-fied of bis election by the trustees ofPrinceton college as one of the judges to

BEFOBE His inauguration Mr. Clev- ! uet-rmine the Junior Orator contest of tbeeland persistently refused to discuss i college to be held June 12th. He has*shjui-the question of an extra session. ' He | n e d biB acceptance.is now reported as till declining to

Mon ii-out h County Common1'lens Court.

In the MatU-r of the Application of Wil-liam S. 'acksKin and others for a specialniectioD tu be heid for the purpose of votingfor or a+rainst the incorporation of the Un -ingii to be known aa "The Mayor and..Sounoil <>f the Borough of Belinar," underthe provisions of an act entitled "An Actfor toe Formation p-ud Government of Hur-uuehs." approved April 2d. 1891, and thesupplements thereto, the boundaries ofwhich said proposed borough are to be asfoiiows. viz.:

All that tract of land and water, lying andbeing In tne Towosbtii of WsJJ. tu tin- C'outity ntlioomoutb, and State of New Jersey, puxtleul&r-ly descri Wd is to Hum *:

£egiaing aL» potui lu the middle line andnorth end i>r tbe County bridgecreasing tbe eastend of Lake Corao. Said poiut of Deglaiilugbeing about eight Uinusaud Iw( •ouLbvrijr from"te moutb of Stiarft Kiver; thence iij northwest-

•: y by a straight line tu tbe iuieroei-ilua ol tbe.iddte line of Twentieth avenue producedeat-Tly with tbe w«ierty side

_f line Of "B" street produced souther-ly tbirteen bundred and afty reet. more or less;thence i2) northerly along »ald westerly side orUne of "B" titreet, (wo ibousand utid eighty feet

.ore or leas, to a point dtstaut sixty feet south-ly Irom the northerly Bide or Hue of Tweltlb

_reoue: thence (3) westerly parallel to andautyfeel distant from tbe northerly side or line ofTwelfth avenue, sixteen hundred and fifty feetto tbe middle line of -B" street, produced aoutb-•rl;-: thence (4) south westerly Qve hundred

f\

We Merely Mention F . P PHILBRICK

middlei hundredy side

line'ol Tblrteentb avenu . _,and fifty feet easterly from tbe ea«te..v _.line ol •' F" slreet; thence (5) southerly parallelto tbe ••steriy side or line of •• F " street siihundred aad ninety feet to the southerly side i>line of Sixteenth avenue; thence (6> westerljalong tbe salil southerly aide of the County road#known *s Sixteenth avenue to itm intersection jwltU tbe westerly side or line of the public rodb 1knows as the " Turnpike." H street, or the rofcd, I

The fact that when in want of anything in the way of 'i

Dress Goods, Trimmings, Domestics, Hos-iery, Notions, Clothing-, Millinery.

Underwear, Huts, Caps, in feetanything in Dry Goods line,

You will find it to your Pecuniary Advan-tage to give us a call We embrace a

greater variety of above goodsand sell at closer prices than

any house on the sea coast. Oursteadily increasing- trade demonstrates

tfiis fact. -:- -:- -:-

Cook's Bee Hire,Park, *• " • New Jersey.

known a the urleading from "Fea

l t hundred a. street, ortore to Sharkt ft

leading from Fearcea store to Shark Itivtrf,slxteeu hundred and thirty feet, tuore or l«s«;thence (?) northerly ak th ld t l t ior line or the "Turaptke or Hhundred feet, more or lees, to tbe

l d s d b th O B

owned by »hundred and sixty feet to tbe s

of tbe lands owned by tbe

. it Its lop,,j) nortberly along the westerly line or landsowned by said Ocean Ataeh Association, "

I t has been heldscrews to propel

that withsteamship

would always enable her to concludeher voyage if the other became use-less, and the compartments have beenpraised as a safeguard against siok-ingin case of collisisioa. The resultin this case shows that nether theorycan be relied on. The danger of thosegoing to sea is almost as great nowas it was In the olden days.

^ . -

The press of this State, with a fewexceptions, deplores the action of the'*** in and Flynn legislature iaregard to the race track bills. Someof our exchanges, however, commendthe legislation which granted suchextraord inary priveleges to thegamblers. One of these sheets, whichis edited by a man who prefixes hisname with " Rev.," goes out of the

. way to say that the members fromthis county did. the right .thing incasting their votes in favor of theParker bills. Compared with time-serving editors either the " Duke" orhis Starter Fivnn may be regarded asa saint of high degree.

L! THIS is richness personifiedOf all the refreshing gall that is dis-played so often among our republicancontemporaries comjnend us to theEdWr of the Seaside Gazette.

We bave no objections to being"called down" when ever we are dis-covered to have made a flagrant"break," but we do protest mostheartily against being misstated ormisquoted. We never used the lang-uage imputed to us in tbe abovearticle, but we did say that we believedthat our democratic representativesSenator Terhune and AssemblymenHonce and Strahao acted and votedconscientiously and for what theythought were for the best interest ofthe people of the County, and thatthey should not be censured for it.We still think the same.

Regarding1 the fling at the prefixof one of the editors, we desire toenter no argument. We can stand It

take the matter into consideration on| the ground that there is no apparentnecessity lor an extraordinary convo-cation of Congress nor any weltdefined certainty that good would beaccomplished by it. This incident isillustrative. There will be no unneces-sary legislation or needless outlay byExecutive instigation. The calling ofan extra session depends on financialcontingencies. With such emergen-cies, within the scope of existingstatues, Secretary Carlisle has alreadyproved himself fully competent todeal. The Executive branch of thegovernment will not shirk any respon-sibility. Oil the other hand it will notassume authority not duly oonferedby law. It will neither anticipatedifficulties nor evade them. Shouldit become plain to-day, to-morrow, orat any other time, that the statutes inforce are inadequate to avert immi-nent peril, Congress will be summon-ed for legislative duty without hesi

William 8. Applegute, of Oceanic, wasbitten lost fall by a dog belonging to N< vman Brown, or-Brown's dock. He was laidup three weeks from his wounds. Hebrought suit for $150 before a jury at Bed

rarded $7!

ey,iously missinp.

of Farmfngdate, is myster-He left home two weeks

tation.will be

But no such actiontaken prematurely to

quiet any one's apprehension,to sooth anybody's sensibilities or topromote any special interest. Prac-ticle and businesslike in all bismethods, President Cleveland, indealing with the finances as with allother matters of public concern, willobserve the homely maxim, not to tryto cross a bridge until you reach thebank of the stream.

CARLTLE HARRIS was sentenced onMonday by Becorder Smyth, to beelectrocuted in the week beginningMonday, May 8, When called to thebar he made a speech, but it wasdisappointing in every way. I t wasexpected that be would make a dra-matic appeal to the audience and de-nunciation of the law and its minist-ers, but he did neither. He made aninconsequential harangue which leftlittle impression on the spectators,although it evidently evoked somesympathy from the patient and much-abused judge on tbe bench.

Harris showed more sense thansome of his champions have shownduring the past week. He deprecatedthe idea of a mass meeting to setas a court of appeal, and he indulged

if the Aifftifted editor of the Gazette , in none of the abuse of the judiciarychi the charge oi •• that has been beard shouted from the

hadn't the editor j street corners. On the contrary, hei d l i t d th doff hu* high peifh? Not

™nJi an &a tn-cti, any A foot, orYard ol this allegation can lay;oor la comparison with the

qualities of

of the SfatawanIn last week's issue under-do us up Brown for our

inconsistancSee on the racequestion, and the attitude of

ir representatives in the legislature.s us the compliment of quoting

our remarks on the conduct of thepr&aid'mg officers, ID their refusal togive the people's) representatives ahearing, and commends our positionon tbe side of decency. For thismuch, many, thanks?

Then the Journal, proceeds to giveus a slap for defending tbe action ofthe Monmouth County representa-tives, when we merely expressed ourbelief that they acted under the cir-cumstances according to the beat oftheir understanding and with an "eyesingle to the good of the major .partof the people of the county.".

Well we stand by both article*, and* fail to find nny in*1 onsistancy. la the

light of later history are we not rightBro. Brown? Xj

How about the bills that make win-

ago last Monday and was last seen going;up tbe railroad track toward Freehold. Itis reported that he was seen near NewBrunswick. Ko cause 1B assigned for hisleaving home.

A tramp, aged about 65 years, was founddead hi Williams' woods, near Farmingdaie.The man had apparently been dead forsome months as the body was badly de-composed, especially one side of the face.It is believed that he wandered into thewoods diuig r the extremely cold weatherand froze to death.

Miss Ixmie Worthily, daughter of Benj-amin P. Worthley, of Little Silver, has beenengaged in a stupendous bisk for severalmonths past. It its to secure tea thousandcanceled postage stamps for a prize of tendollars. She has now eight thousand Inher possession and expocta to have theremaining two thousand in less than twoweeks. *

During a scrimmage between ClaudeDoty, Tom Walters and James Bellly, atMatawan, the tatter was seriously stabbedin the left shoulder. Bellly was at Walters'house when Doty came in and started afight, during which he seized a pair ofscissors and thrust one of the blades intoBellly's left shoulder, the points comingout at the back.. Doty escaped.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Dougherty, who live nearHolmdel, narrowly escaped from death lastThursday night. ; Thj?y were-going to theirhome from Bed Ujfnk, and while drivingover the crossing near Middletown werestruck by a south-bound passenger train.The wagon was demolished and the occu-pants thrown to the side of the track. Theyonly received slight wounds and the horsewas unhurt.

E. A. Bowman of Little Silver has bad alarge and handsome stable erected on bisplace near his residence. The stable hasstalls for twenty norses, and is 40x30 feetand two stories high. When tbe cellar wflsheing dug the workmen unearthed twohuman skeletons. The bones were quitesoft and easy* to crumble. Several brassbuttons were found in the grave of one. Itis thought by a number of persons that theskeletons were perhaps those of soldiers oftbe revolutionary war.

evidently appreciated the consider-ation that has been shown him, and"belied some of the worst things thathave been said about him.

But Harris said nothing that canshake any honest man's belief con- _ - - - . _ • - -coming hi8 guilt or innocence. Those | £ ^ 2 J f ^ 1 ^ ^ ^ . ^ ^ L *that were convinced that he* poisoned

A Sojourn in tbe South a n dPi lg r image to t h e F a r Wes tvia t h e Pennsy lvan ia Ra i l roadOn March 28th the last personalty-con-

ducted-tour to Florida will leave Ne<Fi"orkand Philadelphia. Tourists have the optionof returning on any regnlar train prior toMay 3ist, 18W. 550 from New York, USfrom Philadelphia, ami proportionate ratesf th

phis wife are of tbe same opinion still,

p , , adround-trip transportation, ailexpenses*n route going.

On March 39th the last California tourand those who held to the contrary leaves.tho East for the most wonderful andcan find nothing In bis speech to j delightful trip it is possible to- make in thiseither strengthen or weaken their i country. Kfaith. He however, did himself this j A. Tourist Agent and Chaperon aoootnp-service—he cleared away the difficult- j a n>' e a c h ****** a n d everything possible Isiea that bis mends and sympathizers ! d ° n o f o r *** <*"** d t t i t f

h f i Ulf ***Sput in the way of receiving executiveclemency.

Ulft and entertainment ofisifonuatkm __ _

j rales, routes, tie., may be obtained on »p-} piieatlou to the Tourlet Affent, Pennsyl-

, , • „ - , , 1 vniila Bailroad Company, 233 South FourthAN EXAMPLE of how readily a law in- j 8 t r e e ^ PhUailolphia, 849 Broadway. New

™^-.j*-.—»-.» »— *-- -—• | t o n 8 t r e e t Brooklyn, orAN MPLE of w readily a to i n 1 8 t r e e t Phitadrt

tended to remedy one evil cao be uao'I j Yort, sm Fult t th d diff Ticket Agwrits of *he company.

tor racing Illegal? Does not MOD- a^ted principally for tho purpose of

to create another and very differentone is furnished In the action ofJudge Toft of the United States Cir-cuit Court at Detroit recently when1

he enjoined Chiefs Arthur and Sar-gent of the Iiocomotive Engineers' iand Firemen's Brotherhoods, respec*-1 J£jiJ!f"£r

a

tlvely, from ordering a strike on the j era fmmrailroads doing business with the • »nrl UIHle _ . .- , . •-•-, ,,1B , , , , ! rocovpry. fry a sample lx>ltle at ourAnn Arbor railway and also ordering ; M,WOse ami l«arn tor younwlr just howthem not to, place a boycott on the I £«°d S^NK11? £ r?"i T^-1.K?Stlr" "freight cars of that road.

This action Is taken under the Inter-State Commerce law, which was en-

Now Try This.It will cost vou nothing and will i

i«y wfi

Sundrod feel to s JJ tm Sto*r* Mirer; thencea PVJQt.10, u-irttaoisterly by a iof tttree thousand, tour ,less, u- a point lu tbe middle lino ol tbetrack of the New T<>rk k. hong S

b h d of tbel

track o he New T r kComptiuy tit tbe north e

a t o g tixe southerlyrailroad brldg*

~

Druggist,

Granite & Marble Monuments

F Street, and Uinth. Avenue,

BELMAR, N. J.

:vherij _ _ _ _ .theatre till oortheuiterly eight hundred feet.more or less, lu a point tu tbe middle line of theiron brtdte recently erected by »he County of

jomiiuUi, crossing Shark Kiver. aud belog thenlinuati.m northerly of '•""• " **~- -

.-J>aorth«gh»y.OTedfgrBni. __ ._,two hundred Iwet; thence 113) south seveoty-flvedegrees easl tiro^howaao'I f*et: thence (Hi south- !

-ly parallel to th« wrsurly Bid* or lin- of Otv.ovciiuf, as laid out from First avruur to Twe TUi

_vmn/. rijfht thousand ttrt; ttuuee (IS) wcsUrtyby a straight line to tbe point of tfctgtanlas.

_ r „ t in duly vertued petitionpresented iu Che foregoing matter, it ia onthis thirteenth day of March, ttixbteec hun-dred and ninety-three lit beiuff the .day towhk-h said application was by me poet'poned) ordered tlmt a special elwetion beheld <«i the twenty-eighth day of March,eightaeo huodrad and liinety-tcreM, at theFire En#iue House, on the corner of Ninthavenue and £ street. In the Borough ol Bel-mar, in the township of Wall, tn the Countyof Monmouth and State of New Jersey, theobject uf which raid election shall he tovote fur or against the Incorporation of tbesaid proposed borough to be known anddeelfjnatpd by the name of " The Mayor andCouncil of the Borough of Belmar, underthe provisions of the eaid act of the Legis-lature of the State of New Jersey, entitled" An Act for the Formation ami Governmentof Boroughs," Approved April 2,1891.

HEAD-

STONES

Cemetery]

:. Inclosuret*

f B r g ,The followingd l l t

persoin tbe

sons bVin^ freeholde* tbe said profxned *"

i n t d t h i d l

Building: Stone Of All Kinds.

CURBING AHD FLAGSINE.Work done in all parts of the State.

GENUNG & Co., Asbiiry Park, N. J.and legal voters ,_. _ _ .ouffh are hereby appointed to huid-an;! _Tin-duct the election aforesaid, via: Ctmilee T.ClavUm, Clerk, Lawrenue MeCortMck amiWilliam B. Crowthcr, Jr., InBp«lcif*>rB of said1

election.And it Is further ordered that this order

be forthwith filed in the uflicp uf the CI*Mkof the County of Monmouth, and that coDleehereof be set up at least ten days previousto said election in five of tbe must publicplaoes within tb<* liujlta ot the said proposed

arough, and published at least twice inborough, and publishe" The Coast Echo," a

d b l i h d I i spaperpd

The Coast Echo, a newspapeand published In said proposed boroujrtlimito, and also In the " Seaside Gazette,' anewspaper printed and published In theTownship o! Wall, aforesaid.

And iC Is further ordered, that to thecopies hereof ordered to be set up and pub-lished as aforesaid there shall be annexed astatement of the time and place when andwhere the aforesaid order was Hied.

J. CLA&ENCE CONOVEB,P. J. Moumouth Pleas.

The original order of which the foregoing*te a true copy was filed in Che Clerk's Officeof the CouDty of Monmouth at Freehold,on the thirteenth day of March, A. T>. eight-een hundred and ninety-three

THBO. AUUACK, Clerk.

Farm for SaleOn Easy Terms

Containing 9 0 Acres,

At Allenwood,

70 Acres Tillable, 20 Acres inWood. Soil suitable for anykind of crops. House, Bans,and other building. PossessionApril 1st. Address,

R. M. Morton,an & 37 Cedar St., New York.

AUCTION SALE

overyfor^OQBumpUon,s guaranteed to ylv© Ibo paid ba^k. Suffer-<mnditjust the tbin« Tuesday, marcn 28, '93,

We will sell »t auction,N MJ w sell »t auction,

»1 ««"•«» &i,nTrlal W'h " . ' T " * ' o u r repository. No. 510 Main 8t, Anbury

P. rlumrK'k s JitMniar. unu CluiH. A.Bye8, p a r t v J ™ir ».,Hn. a*.u-t ^t W H D M Irliw L»ko BBKII, l>ru« Sture. Ikrgi 5 »\^L w ^ m W ^f° n 8 '> Me and S100

*»1 «F. P.Bpl

> Me. and S1.00.

mouth get something of a show now,, jthrough the efforts of her represen-tatives, particuliarly our Senator andyour honored townsman?

What we want to make clear, andhope bave to the opaque vision ofoar Matawan friend, is tbe defiantstand of Speaker Flynn. his arbitraryrulings and partiality to the low

Now that the changeable weath-er of early spring is upon us

is the time to try our

any employees from doing anything! I l K A T I V K G V I J A T O R .

entinff discriminating charges bythjpfdifferent railroads in favor of onepoint or another. I t is now wrestedfrom its original purpose to prevent

that trill Interfere with the running-' ,of trains and carrying on of tnifBc.

This law can only be applied in this out cost,way to roads which do business in

We place them on trial with-

Berrang & Zacharias,.mblin#*fraternity that infested the I tWo or more States, but how manyLegislative halls should receive a j roadsare^there which do not come!proper rebuke. We think they have. ! mlder 1U provisions ? Short and IDA Bectri»l CoutracWrs,

And again to •how that our Henator rslgntfloenMines are the only ones that \ '*• pookHuw Avenue,_ . . . _ - . - _ . - . . . I - - [ t o r y o f ) ASBURY PAHK, >

import- Electric Light Wiring.and Assemblymen were actuated b/f«onflne thera-elves to the territory ofno sordid or mercenajy motives, bat n single State*.* Every one of import-solely Is the interest of their constlt- | ance has stattena in a number ofuents whose wishes they had heard j States.and felt bound tj cimply " *~ "Thfit'3 all.

|rtilBlnjunotion%)f Judge Tcft ts to

Electric Bell and Speaking TubeWork.

be argued on thelrrth inst. -Monday' Electric Light and Gas Fixtures.

Harness. Bobes. Wbipa, Biaokete, Sheets,Nets and all the stock and equipment of afirst claaa carriage and harm** repository.

Our Stock consist* of over 250 wa#ons atall styles and niak«s, Burrles, BuffRi'*,Phaetons, GabrloletB, Grocers wagons.Uarte, BiH-klxMirtlH, Thr«« H»>at Wast^n*.Spindle Waifons, &onBln«rton wasons, i\wrrvtntzunH, Jaegers Milk watfuue. PspriiiK bustnesa "waxonB, and all other Bt|yi«a>now In the market.

The harness (mostly of- our ownconsists of 200 Beta t>t doufcto axHf stogi*BuffSy. Hurry, Coach, Coupe, FarmrKxpc«a»Hack, etc, elu.

Kale pmttl vc—• no postppDeDMntot tbe weather.

Long time will be given on note withapproved security.

G0WDY & PITCHER.

The Crandall Typewrite

BEST SIACHIKE

I.N THE MAl;kLT

TABULATIXU.

WRITING IS

PLAIN SKiUT.

TWKSTV-IIKiHT

8 4

We QB« dltTvrent Btytfn of type on the it.m« mnrhlnr.Can chainfie Train one Htyle of typ* tn another In five second*.

to all other mftehiiM* for variety at work.si-rangt ntent of key-boant. Speed readily aetui !(•«•(].

Crandall Machine Co.,GBOTO.V, >•'. Y.

ASBUBT

When the Breeze Dies\ Take to the Oars I

Dtrti

When B~asine&s Languishes, Push It.

This is the method used in the Grocery Business carried un by

Z. E. BEEGENFruits, Groceries and Butler.

We try to Reach your Pocket Book

l>y alwjays giving* you immeiee values

for as little money as possible.

All the balance of our

Ladies' Jackets & Long Garmentsw e ai<e n o w c^o s" io ° u t a t

ONE HALFtheir real value. Also everything: in

MEN'S OVERCOATS and SllTSat Astonishingly Low Prices.

JOHN STEINBHCH.F Stroet, I Jet. 8th ami 9th Avenues,

BELMAR NEW JERSEY.Old Stand, ASBIIIY PARK.

Established 1872. Oldt«t Established Place on shark JXlvev.

JOHN R. WARREN,GO.

(8uot eesor to Fennett A Son.)

C0MKIS3I0NEH OF DEEDS. NOTARIES PDBUC

South. Street, Maaasq,u£a, U. J,

BOAT;

OOH.SIDE 0

RESTAI7HA1TTRIVER BRIDGE.

ST.,

SBXTOjkCabinet Maker and Undertaker,

HTREKT, tFKAU «»' HVHMV U l . C .

Boats for sale, or rent by the day, weclc, or season, i t lowest ratesThe best placr: for boating, fishing and crabbing.

All kinds'o f fishing tackl e, oars, oar-locks, anchors, etc.

Asbury Park, - - New Jersey.[lift? - ' °l'l* I a k e H«Mfc Sprfaw lake.rrlULO. ( Mrs. MiUer'i. F'Strcct,. Hihnar.

ladles' and Cents Restanrant and lee Crcaw Parlor, C O F F I N SMeals a t all hours. Oysters and clams in every style

Furnished roc ms to let. v.nth or without biSSrd.Clam bake*; provided at short notice i£n»t at reasonable rates-

Give me a call before going elsewhere.

JOHN R. WARREN Proprietor.

AND B&BIAL CASRKWuff Iu Bli Us brtnruw

P I C T I K E F It A M E N a m i

int. A IMfl Itua- .if

MOlLDIKiil

d tH>ni|Mvt«tet Is stv<n MUlntsi-t.tii.iti U> all wtiu wtrnj I M W m - MUI Uielr iM»>it«ir«i.nocti"i*» m m priwen*! h**wi» «n«l Mutm la UM Par t «ad Oimii ( « » >»\*»n iiu.i wait

Page 3: THE COAST - DigiFind-It · 2015-02-03 · MPT called lor anayeUrered to all Peru or Belmar at a&ort notice. Orden 07 Hall Promptl y Attended to. New York Hotel. Oae, Hot and C«ld

THE COAST ECHO.BELMAR, N. J.

FRIDAY, ilARCH 24, 1893.

BELMAR ECHOES.

The Hotel " Melruee Inn" is advertisedto be sold at public sale.

Mrs. Charles'T. Clayton is spending aweek with her sister-in-law Mrs. H. Peck-•weli, at Ii \ iiipton, N; J-

T. F. Moehan and wife, of Brooklyn, werein town on Wednesday, attending to theirproperty on Eighth avenue.

Clarence Jones, who has been spendingthe past thive weeks at John A. Buhler'sreturned to Trenton on Monday.

Township Committee.The Township Committee met at the

hotel of Bobert C. Height, at Bailey's Cor-ner, on Friday of last week for organiza-tion. James W. Laughlin, the newly eltvt-

The numerous friends c f BPV. 3. R.Thompson aie pleased to learn that he willreturn to this charge for another year.

* George Cuitis has moved into T. C. Pol- Beihemue' house.

Miss Margaret Todd. of Shamong, was intown over night on Tuesday.

put on the grounds surrounding the Henry

ed Town Clerk, was sworn into office"* •>• tl;teU 1 ig clerk, after which he called themeeting to order and the l>oard or»ranizcd

j by the election of Henry . Wainiight as, president. George P. Woolley was elected r :

:o represent the township on the County j r j ^ t ^ ^

LONG BKAMH.

The Long Branch students a t Lafayetteam Cos of Kew Brunswick, who has ^ 1 ^ ai* all home owing to the presence^finedtothe house for some time < * • « « • < «*«* of amte t fever in the

attat-k of bilious fever, has reeov- c o i l*'8 e-be out on Tuesday. The cottage of Thomas W. Markley on

tmeeUneof the new Mayor and ™"™ln avenue has **»> ""W *• •; •**Council™, held on Hunday evening and j P a t e r e i > I " t e - K to said the price paid « -

il Councilinen Stines and

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Slocum, of LongBranch, spent Sunday in town.

William A. Morris ancT family moved intothe Charles Owen's eottage on Monday.

Mrs.E. Davis, of Trenton, proprietress of

ttt cottage on Sixth avenue.Charles H. Hilyard and wife,of Brooklyn,

were in town on Wednesday looking afterl:ie new eottag;** on Eighth avenue.

House board.All the newly elected officers presented

their bonds and were sworn into office bythe clerk. John M. Allen filed his bond asAssessor and was sworn into office. MiloH. Crego, who had been placed in nomina-

ere sworn in and took theirThe old eom-

Council went into j his life.Dr. John

Grove, are visiting Mrs. Clarke's parente-at | on the ticket a»Como, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ludlow.

IJev. J. H. Clarke and family, of Penn's , lion at the prinmry and hie name printed>r, presented liini-

self sod requested to be sworn in. but theGemseTItus lias had his store fitted up j Committee on advk-e of theirCounBel re-

t..r eSeetrtc UghW. - Messrs. Berraog 4 lused to acknowledge him as As^esa.w undZaeflariaa, <if Aebury Park, did the wort. "Z^IlllZt

after itvas dian

the Belmar House, was in town on Tues-day. I Rev. S. M. Nichols has been returned as j for old work in their tlisti

John Height and familv moved to their! I""5*01 n I t i i e M - & P w < * I o r anotherj-ond vouchers drawn uprarteenth avenue on Wed-! >"car- We extend him a cordial welcome. | the amounts. The monc

John A. Osborn has commenced the put- j ' o r r o » d Pininees duringinK down of (he crosswalks on F street for I «as appropriated among tho vauous dis-which he has had the contract ai) winter, j trk-ts.

The Uiaid decCued by a unanimous voteMiss Belle Miller is nt home sick with a ' m e e t , )n t l m flret Tuesday of each month

very bad cold this week, and has -been un- : a n d t h a t t h e l r nioetings be held at Bailey'sable to attend to her duties as teacher at | Corner, unless otherwise ordered. Ttafc. att4>rncy. E.

| Wayside. • action was made necessary by the antipa- Mr. Iiankm.Samuel Small, who works for Mr. Amos j thy that exists throughout the township

I Kogere, and Miss Lizzie Johnston, ot. Jfew ', against the board holding any ot Its meet-'" York City, will be married at the residence : ings In the borough of Uauasquan and out

) of the bride on April 6tu. | of the township._ _ , . . . „ James L. Allgor, ex-preeidfnt of the

Dr. Fred V. Thompson and^MM Sraee ! toard> w | d a n u m b , , r c f c i t U 6 e u 6 w e r e p r c s .ent jit the meeting.

old places on the. the B<«inittws of lastsevvral bills ietme of the meeting tiuexecutive session and the following appoint-ments made foi- the ensuing year:

Clerk—E. I \ Longstreet.Street Commissioner—Chariea Peterson.Marshall—5f. M- Burdge.

The case ot tlie Township of Wall againstJames Banktu fornon-supportot blB family;ame .up on Monday afternoon before

William A. Seaman has purchased thesail and row boats owned by the late ("apt.

•re re-appointed and : John Lane at Branchpoint and will continuedered paid. At the j the business carried on by Mr. Lane during

P. Pemberton, accompnied by

n at Justice Crego's offleo at

pr. J. W. Taylor, Dr. J. J. Eeed and D. B.Bearmore visited New York Friday nightof last week- Dr. Pemberton was initiatedinto the mysteries of the Myetric Shrine.

The united societies connected with theStar or the Sea Church will hold an Easter

new home on Founesday of this week.

Samuel VanBrunt ie laid up this weekfrom the effects of a bad cold,? contractedabout election Lime. *

Kev. James E.,Grant, who has been sta-tioned at the Memorial M. P, Churub, atCatnvk-n, has r^igoed his. charge..

. Brie© has Mr. Cohen.'s new

erpeere of HoadVAs were audited I Bf&&» Ben;the Collector for Eelmar. A crowd had gathered around theT oidered raised , Jus'tiiv's court expecting to see Boxne fuiihe ctnning year | *'uL **w disappointed as the defendant's \

attorney had secured enough evidence t o ' The law legalizing honse-racing in thieasily disprove, the charge of non-support j State and the probable operation of the

itvument the. complaint track-at Mon,

Festival in the Town Hall Monday eveningApril 3d. Major Allstrom will furnish the

i music for the occasion. The supper will be1 in Castle Ball.

1 by the Justice and Mr. Ran-iiseharged. Manasquan'a young

P. Longstreet, represented

I»O I> T P LKA8ANT.•\ store on F street raised and

most enclosed. George is a hustler.President Adrain of the Senate, has ap-

pointed Senators tikirm, Terhune. antiHinchliffe a s the Committee on WorldsFair.

John Duncan, baggage master on eon-ductor Bearniore's train, P. K. R., has been

^at Camden receiving the necessary instruc-tion to qualify him for a conductor of apassenger train.

How the days have lengthened. It -isnow clear until nearly seven o'clock- in theevening. Spring arrived on Tuesday andin a very short time people will come fromthe cities by the score to secure summerhomes.

Persons making changes In their place ofresidence are requested to drop a card tothis office stating where they are movingfrom and where they are going to in orderthat we may give publicity to the changesgoing around about us.

Prof. Itobert MacCain, who is a summer•resident of Belmar, has been very eick withpneumon

H. W. Neary is working at South Amboy.At tho McFarland pavilion, work is going <

outh Park have given thisplace a big boom. At the West End thereis not a single cottage which has not beenrented for the season.

It is very encouraging news to learn thatonce more the Barber Asphalt Company isat liberty to fulfil their contract for pavii

Gassin, who have been spending a weekwith friends in New York and Brooklynreturned home on Wednesday evening.

Mrs. Robert Estell, who has been sick forover two weeks, had improved so as to beable to sit up 'on Sunday last. By somemeans &he got a fresh cold and is againconfined to her bed. .

The foundation for William M. Bergen'snew stables have lieen erected and the con-tract for tun carpenter' work has been

Brtck„

Sparing Novel t ies .**&& t h e advance of Bprfnff and

P-township fishermen are bitterlyIS ii^iuiist the anti-net law.

Third avenue.for almost 4sltion have withdrawn their protests.

After delaying the pavingr, those creating the oppo-

lose

begin to wonder what to wear an.! uln'ii'togo to get the correct thing. There is BOnecessity ol worrying when such a houseas the Ocean Palace of Henry Kteinbach,Asbury Park is coristnnUy (-ateiliig to your

A contract has been signed with the NewYork and Long Brnnch*Railroad Company

, tor the transportation of the great Barnuni| Y<- Olde Folfcw-i pave a concert lastThurs- ' A Bailey show, which will exhibit at Long. ;lay night at the Presbyterian church. Branch on August 17th. I t will require

being made at the I sixty-seven care to transport the circus.Improvements areCellars by contractor George Newbury?

A lively time that caucus—wasn't itJ^Butnot to be compared to the day of election.

Building goes on slow because of un-

awardetl to. J. E. lr> Mr-push tbfi work, commencing, immediately.

Silns Fon*e. of Broofclyp, visited town onI Sunday. He came to tako an ac«-ount of

irants. lleing in the market every day,j watching every opportunity and producing I settled weather, ljowever, we have a

•suits in point of style »nd prL-'\ I new bouseso» hand.The spring stock of this, houseall others; and cur ttoek of Dres-sMillinery, Clothing. Shoes, etc.. is

ids

y c mthings in his cottage at Como. which had i aUy large and vciy complete.

J th O P lbeen broken into. He offere a reward J the Ocean Palat-e.*250 for infonnatian that will lead to the j A F a r m F o r y a I c a t a - B a r g a i n .guilty naities

B58S t«r«el liti

I : l l s u - : of The»*** \ front.i

•it is what mt-ractor J.expects to remove from the site

u, the new hotel on the beach

The ball committee t;f the Liquor Dealers'Association met at the law office of C. Ewing-Patterson last week. They are makinggreat preparation for their coming ball,which will be held In the Long Branch rink<.m the 5th ot April. The committc O M K Nof C. Swing Patterson, .William Towen,Titos. Johnson, James Butler and JacobDejfenxing.

The famoiiB drive along the ocean front

guilty parties. j i B , , , m , ! U l C , . . U ] F , m o ! , l l r m

3. G. Burroughs & Son'iiave the contract j only 4 miles from seashore, suitable foto erect a building near tic railroad track, j seneral fiirminc, truckinir, fruit Browing 0

onia at his icsidenco in FhiladelphiaJ 8 o u t h o f t h e f r e i l ! l l t d ' ' p " t ' w U ' ' h te *" ta I dairy farm; Good buildines, feneinit, Truitstime it was thouKht doubtful t h a t ! occupied as a feed .to.e by a man named ltc.. Tlin-^M. T»-o-thirda of purchase

he would recover, but we are pleased to •learn that he is now able to be aroundagain >

Indications thus far point to a very pros-perous season here the coming summer.The real estate agents have already re-ceived a number of applications for cottag-es and it looks now as if the limited num-ber would be inadequate to meet the de-

Forman, of Asbury Paik. The niaterial forthe foundation ia already on the ground.

Few persons know what is meant by a"size"in matter of coats, shoes, etc.. Asizelnaeoat is an inch, in underwear ietwo iuches, in a sock is one inch, in a collar " f ^is one-half an inch, in shoes one-sixth of aninch, In a shut one-half an inch, in trousersone inch, in gloves one-quarter of an inch,and tn "hate one-eighth of an inch.

We understand some fault has been foundabout the communication slgne:i by " Me-chanic," which api>eared in our last issue.We know nothing about the matter, andBinaply insetted the communication by re-quest. If it was not true, the trustees orsomeone interested should have written areply. Our columns are open to them.

Some of our sidewalks are a dismal fall-tire. Duiing a storm a person will go overtheir shoe tops in water. This is notablythe cast) with the brick walk on Ninth ave-nue between F street and the railroad. TheCouncil should see to it that the walk is

We desire to- repeat what have said AI>ril lb t-

price can lemain un Imnd andj term of years at 5 per cent. Po

time- ami again, that we are not responsiblelor the optuious of correspondents expressedin communications. Our columns areopen to the pablic to discuss all. questions,and we simply require the name of the

I Bus -IS. F,A good location,

e, N. J.

at UUs place will not be open this summer.We hail with delight the proposed new • There is a dispute among the propert-lilt factory at Manasquan; but would [ owners and it will have to be closed. The

Point Pleas- I storms of the last two winters have wash-her whiter ! ed out tUs greater part of the bluff beyond

j the drive and In many places the. roadway| has been s«*pt away. The road has been

moved shoreward several times and nowLlie owners refuse to give up any mote

,'and. llwworkof building the bulkheadplace ami are making arrangements I a m R u e s ^ a ^ ^ n ^ Mtod it is hoped

tlie road Will be In good condition. ^

pwfer to have it even nearer.| ant afacnld furnish work Boresidents.

l i e cea&ee of the Knights of the Golden |Entries at Asbury Park, Spring Lake and'Hanosquati hare joined with LctHi Castle]irf ll.r

, for a.! in E*.lutloth.

ntl suppermid Hall ut

and entttrtainment jtilt; evening of April j

correspondent as a guarantee of good faith. I *We are neither responsible for nor endorse [ utheir opinions.

The members of tho Mite Society of theMethodist Episcopal Church of Belraar,

y eSpreestheirappreciation

W. E. Yanfcusen has been on the Picklist this week.

Monroe Wyckoff and family are visitingL Hightstown.

Mrs. Harry Reynolds ,epent Monday, in j

of the kindness of Mrs. 8.1. Hoar, proprie-tress of the " East Lynne," in offering the .use of her house and its appointments forthe supper h^ld their on Thursday evening, IMarch Kith, fUk'U Has nut in the Vvpasu

Kew York Citj

Mr. Fred W. Brown ishouse with a bad cold.

Marks A Antoni<l*'r; have during the past week.

confined to tht

£o&iaeer Mondenhail nmst think that•ryt-<«ly in I'l-int Pleasant is desirous oftiu r u[i ami jroing to the depot to seel eeorae En, if we are to jiulcre by the wayhkuvs his whiwtle at 2 o'clock everyriling. Now we eater our pn,>test, and i

huf*1 hereafter he will desist and not blow |f the uhisiii1 any longer or louder than is' neics^aiy. MV want tA &Seep and theI whi^tJiujr ia a nuisance, and we sincerely; hnpe it will bastuppeiL.

of the society H3.58-

The school meeting on Tuesday eveningwas very largely attended. George B Kis-ner was re-electrd trustee without oppo-sition. $2330 special money were orderedraised for ttiis year. The matter of rough-casting the building was laid over for twoweeks and a committee oppointed, eonsiet-ing oIGeo. TV. Brici?, 3. G. BurrouRhs andW. E. Allen, to examine the. Lutlding andreport at the adjourned meeting-

Elwood Borton, father < of Borton Broe^died on last Friday afternoon.

raised or the ground between the brick and | b e e n sufTeriug from heart trouble for eometime and his death was not unespecWd.Mr. Uurtoa was tn Utoelghty-flrst year. He•was a native of Moorestown, BurUngtonermnty, and his remains were taken therefor burial on Monday• His wife has been

9 time. He was an Industrious

curb is cut down.Bo as to permit the waterto run oft

On Tuesday next the election- to decidewhether Belmar shall be re-4ncorporated ornot will be held. The talk has all died outand the matter is scarcely mentioned anymore. Perhaps the people have madeup their minds and think it is best not tore-incorporate until after the decision oftho Supreme Court has been rendered.That is our opinion, but the people can doas they jitease. .

The members of the Bethel M, P. Church,of Peon's Grove, held -a business meetingon Wednestlay evening- of last week anddecided h> build a new ediflce. Alreadyseveral hundred dotare navo <8 l

of the following,

en ml

dead foreand prominent citizen and had hosts offriends.

B o r o u g h C o u n c i l .

Organization meeting of Council washeld on Tuesday evening, March 21st, atthe Engine House.. Present, Thompson, (Mayor*, Allen andBurroughs, and members elect Cit>welland W. S. Jackson.

€ ' « k **»»* that tho officialjpaths oMessrs- M - * » d * - * ™ had ^

Rev. Jas- [ niea-

Mr. Sauford Comlis, vi Tennent,in town a ff\v days this week.

Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Campbell, of Lakc-wotKi, wore hi town on Monday.

f T*ai toikai-I and vili

t>teefcrtem.ltt: says: "Among the

Mr. and Mrs- Andrew Xewmao.who resideat the Of •can Hotel, were-preparing to retirelast night, when they were summoned tothe door by a terriific knocking. Uponopening the door, a crowd of merry isur-piisers rushed in, taking full popgesslon ofthe premises. They had called to makeMrs. Newman's 42d birthday a memorableone, and they departed several hours later

I being fully satisfled that they had aceomp-I.tahed it. The party numbered about flftyand they carried plenty of good things withthem besides an abundance of got*d luimcrand merry laugh te

comieet towns•nther etratigp that onealong the tseaehore, to

connect the great and popular rdsorts.strung together so closrfy as almost to

Work was begun on an addition to Anton- touch each other, between Point Pleasant

pr

gides A Son's drug: store this week. j sod Monmouth Beach. There is no such

promi 'injr lU'ld for an flectrie road outsideof the largest cities. It is sura to come."There is already one on Its way and the

J. Lewis' store, will be closed, on account j rond about to be built from Ashury Park toof a holiday, on Saturday night, April l«t. j Belmar will soon btf'ext*ndod to this place.

Mr, and Mis. John Wyckoff spent Sundaylast with relatives at Prospect Plains.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bilyeu, of Red! After the regulS" ticket with the presentValley, are visiting relatives at tins place.

Mr,. William Berry and wife, Point Pleas-ant, were the guests of Mr. (ieorgeClickcer jon Sunday last.

Mayor, William Segotoe, as candidate forthat ofuce, was. nominated, the Tammany

| braves split off and put a ticket iri*the field! headed by Larry Vaunote. It was a closeI fight—both are Democrats—and every

Mr. John B. Sherman has been confined | voter exwpt two In the borough was out;to has house for two weeks with a frog i a n d [ t resulted in a tie for Mayor.felon on his left hand.

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Wood, of Jersey City,are spending a few weeks with Mrs. Wood'sparents, J. P. Hiidenbrand.

George Stillweli removed from Church 'street to Mrs. Ellen Brown's hou^e at Sea jGirt, on Thursday of latst week.

The double house on Main street owned •by K. B. Campbell, has been rented to two [parties who will be employed in the shirt'factory.

Council, William A. lions, Charles Damp-

Asseseor, James T. Havens.Collector, Charles K. Erarie.Commissioners of Appeals, Z. P. Vannote,

J. J. Micklc.Ptiint Pleasant has lost one of her best

i-iliBMis-Mr. William Stillwagon—who re-mnved his family to Jersey City last week.

Boroii] ;n O r d i n a n c e .

An ordinance to grant permission to. theManaaqvian ElectriiT Light and PowerCompany to lay wires through the Bor-ough of Belmar. New Jersey, for the pur-pose of supplying the citizens thereofwith electric litfht, heat ami power.

Be it enacted by tlie Mayor aod Council ofthe Borough uf Belmar:SEC. 1. That permission be and hereby is

granted to the. Mauawiuan Elwtrie Ughtand Power Company to run ite wires in andthrt>ugh the Borough of Belmar and forthat purpose to attach the said- wire* U>buildings in-said Borough and to erect onthe sidewalks in the avenues streets andalleys in said Boroutru, p<»]*« and supports,fixtures and appliant^-s for carrying ami

R said wires fur electric lUrht. heatr a d t e t i bild i h

alleyfixtu

and power, and to erei-t ami build in thesaid avenues', tftreets and alloys any under-ground conduits where required for holdingand conveying said wires, and to connect'the said wire^. i IWIIIIIIIIH and other appli-ances with a suitable plant or plants forthe purpose of supplying the citizens indi-vidually or eoll*vtiveJy. who may consentto use electric light, heat or power.

SEC. 2. That each M e shall be so setthat its centre shall be three feet Inside ofcurb line, and no pole to be set on any-street running northerly OTBUOMIMIJ with-in forty feet of the nfTiinmt <mrb line of anyavenue running eastwanJly or wtnstwardlyand iikowiwi? on any avenu * running ea^t-wardly and westwarttly, no pole t* be getwithin forty fuet of the nearest curb line ofany street running notlhcrly or southerly;and any poles which now or may hereaftertte erected shall not he IIT*« than tbirty feetabove fibs aurface of the curbing of saidavenues, streets or alleys; poles are to beat the surface of the gin»und no more thantwelve inches in diameter nor less than liveinches in diameter at top. straight, cleanlyshaved, and kept well painted; ami no wireor wires at the. lowost point shall be les-sthan twenty-live feet above the surface ofthe curbing.

SEC. 3. That said poles shall uot beem-ted In front of any premises and nowires shall t>p attached to any buildingwithout tirst obtaining th-1 «-ous<?nt of theowner t*r a m n MhwrooB; and tliat the said|K>les, conduits, wires, uppliain-es and othernxtui-esof whatsoever kind shall be so lo-cated or conveyed a» in lu'wiw Ui interferewith the safety or aon««l£enM el person orI>ers«ms. vehicles, tralti.' or trade of anv de-acnpUim or travel in or over any of thesaid avenues, htrtvts or alkiys.

HE*-, i. That fill wires el any descriptionthat now or may hereafter be us»M by thmsaid comiwny slitill U» ciivereil with riiblx'r(•r other t*uitaUc c»>vi'.ing tliat will i^-rfect-\y insBiate tlw Mid «!«•!«, BO that they willnot hij&ny way or BMraner tn itijuriouj; ordetrimeiital t» any </lU«r wfcreB Lhat are nowor may imwmtbm I*1 laid or c*»nveycAithrough tlie said u.vems»s, stnvts or alleys,or dangerous to the public in any manner;and that where any joinings of wires occurthey must also be coven*«1 in liko maiint-rand all c'nduits. fixtures and apuliam-ftsmust b* made perfrt-tly safe in ail wavsand nianni'rs from any danger of wiiatso-vnv kind".

SET. 5. The_ said coin ithey shall havi* any otxam*raeavHtloos ta any "f thsbneteat rlleys. hall tirstto make sucii excinjiti.-ii \ami CnunfH of tin> fit»miismtttei

i u> make anysaid avenues,

pbtfl&B a permit""in Lhti MayoJ",

>r «ueh C*JOJ-

o. s.largest Furniture Establishment

ON THE COAST

Most Complete Assortment.FINEST GOODS. LOWES PRICES.

Hotels and Cottages Furnished in thePlainest Style, or Most Elaborate Manner.

Importer of Fine

&c GLASSWARE

BKIC-A-BBAC, ETC.

Goods Delivered Free of Charge to any Point.

THIRD -AJ>T2D JBESET

Spring Lake, ITew Jersey.

Charles McDermott,

OifBce Near Railroad Depot, Belmar, N. J.

as they may desijcriiute; and the saidBSOWWiy fsliu.ll pia»-e tl*e sai<i avenue, streetor alley in as K"io«i condition aw they wereU'fore^u«:h *>xcnvutuui Wiii. mud.-.

Sizr.u. That if at any time it shall be-«>in(Miww«ii-v n> teini«'niriiy cut or dte-corinect any wire or witvs. or remove ajiyi>ole or jxiles, i.r any lixture of any kiad l*-longing t*> the tiaid cotiiimiiy, for tin* pur-

[taus undcror over them while in the i>n>-veo&uf moving. lUe owaj«fty slia>l do allsuch cutting or dlwjmmutlim and repla***the same, and the U M H ftae maek swvit-esiiaii U? rwiid f.tr i'V tiie mm«ai »«• owners ofsuch buildiiij,'or any uth-r LJ:iug that mayrequii-e sm-h s*»rvie«; (nuvided siR-h ex-pense t>hail ma Iff inuiv than tbv m-tuulLiust of such ctiltunr or lii^-oimectinfr.

BtBe, 7. That if ;tt any time the said coin-

A Genera] Real Estate'and Insurance Business Transacted. -

COTTAGES RENTED, RESTS OLIE TED, LOANS SKUREI

AT BELMAR, COMOMaps Furnished.

AND SPRING LAKE.Your Business Solicited.

Tile iUkwood ParkBroaclqwrt, w81 roak*! va'st improvemeDtson its property ttois spring. An elegantgrand stand, bettinff ring and other build-Ing will-be wected, ami no expenae 'wffl *spared to make It one of the tineet racingtracks in tlie country. The grand stand, ttis expected, will cost about $25,000. It willbe 140x38 feet in dimensions, and the bettingling will be large enough to aeoomodai**i.sou people. The sumnwrt raclnv will beby po»ie«. similar to

d hast suoimer ony p

the old: Jlonmooth Fark raoc tim'k whichon>red so much amusooient. ElkwooUPark la convooleutly situated along the

Vorkand hong Branch railroad, andis very conveniently reached. The officersrecently elected by the Association are asfollows: President, George"W\Brown; "VicePresident, PhUip IMy, Jr.; Treasurer, Phil-ip Daly, «r.; Seavtary, W. R. Warwick Jr.;Directors, E. C. Burtt, A. P. Cubberly,Walter E. Patten and A. OL Newin*.

M u a m o u t i i C o u n t y Motes.

5St ih^ dtud or not in mtm, fur

strict:-.

Mavor

-*.! f

and C*>uiicB$mm\ in default th*1

and Council (•hall rttrn<

mmH,id Bui-tMif.-h within

T notice. BNBU theto ri*DJovti thef the said Mayor

^ the some a t tlie. 'nse of the &aidma 8. That the BMU Marias*iuan Electik-

Light and Power C'tmjpauy shall | M itsplant in fuli llliplMJTurnlbh and rMipply eieitrii _,

i the ftrrt

>I»MJlti.HL, . .hC, heat amilay of July

1898, or foi-feit ail Uie l^rmisaions herebygranted.

8BC . 9. That if the Kaiti company shallneglect or refu»- U) furnish eU*etrie light,heat or i»ower tor the ac^iinodution of thepublic for the [teriod ol nine MUHEWttMinonthR. tli-'ii tl».> May.-r and Council shallhaw the i h I U [ i ti..M to rent the pole*, wires, ___

iluits mid all iiitlijii apptiaoces ofwhatwHfv-T hind that iuay M!• rilliliwHiHibe placed wttliiu the Iknuugh boundaries,toauyottior person »>r persons, coinpafiyor companit*. who will \*t willing to furnishor cause U> be fumWred ttloctric tight, heator power tlin mgli tlie turne; and cause ti»eeald rent to be paid to th*1 BunniKh treas-urer for use of the Borough. Or if theMayor and L'oum-il shall l>e unable to rentthe name as aforesaid, or to t-«use the said

| company to use the HUBS tor th« pur[niw«*(<Work was begun on the" new brick-yard permitted by this ordinance, for threw

ol the CUffwood Brick. Company last week, 'jwuths. O/UT tha wtnw ha* tiwn aban-1 dotted as aTuiuaalu by tbei stud numpany

The Oldest. Established Express in Belmar.

LOCAL EXPIESS.Smmer and Winter-

Orders by Kail Promptly Attended to.

Baggage and Furniture Delivered and Called for at all Hotels aad

cCottages upon the arrival and departure of each train.

C. T. CLAYTON, PROPRIETOR.

The Bellurd Cornet Band gave a musicalAViiiiamhasU'ami ijfbi. kn

- i i < of our most rwpular | entertainment lu the M. E. Cburch OT» Wed-d

H CTerke B G Wood, Eli Btrimple Jolui E^signation of Aesessor John K. Warren,Turkelson, John Hlnlmler, W. S. 'Lanning ""and W. F . Yeager.

;>f March -45, 1893, and to takeeffect immediately, was read.

On motion thut tlie refcignation of Mr.On motion thut tlie refcignation of Mr.A short time ago a subscription papfcr "Warren as Borough Assessor be accepted

wae sent out to the different schools and ' w a g B O ordered.Individualg for the purpose of collecting I Mayor stated Uiat repreeentaUves of theenough money U> ornate a Columbian Lib* Neptune Electric Co. had called on him anderty Bell for use at the Chicago Exposition. requested that proper action be taken toIt Is estimated that the bell will cost *8,500. enable thfem to'locate and set up their lineand if sufficient funds are forthcoming a QT poles.duplicate bell will be. made so that if an pn motion that the matter of locatingaccident happens to the original the dupli-cate can a t once take its place.

Mrs. Charles H. Wissner presented herhusband, with a line boy on tho 12th ofMarch, and the reverend father was quiteJoyoue over the event. We are sorry tohave to say the life of this little stranger atthe parsonage -was very short, for he diedon March 15th. Mrs. WiPsner'e health ha»been quite'poor all winter and she has notgained much yet. We sincerely sympa-thize' with them and hope Mrs. Wiesnermay soon be restored to health.

Mary C, wife of Andrew F. Rogers, lateof Hamilton, died, on last Friday at tlie res-idence of her win, Ira T. Rogers, at Borden-town, of heart fail u re, aged sixty-eightyears. She was visiting her son, while her

Monday. ti

Mrs. Georgo Wortman, of UlackweH's iMills, who has been visiting her sister, 51ns. IGeorge Cllckrier, for a week, returned home !on Wednesday morning.

citizens and will be greatly3ed around town. We are sorry to lose\ a valuable citizen, but our loss iati-y (.ity's jriiin- William watt an honest,>i -mid industrious young man, and by, of hard work, dove attention to busi-9 ami studious habits William has earn-

John Applegate lias beeneral dayk graining and

very busy fordecorating ttie

ell bis promotion to amem. He has been assigned to aMger engine in the depot for the

present and no doubt will soon aet a regularrun. While we mourn his leaving us, wewish him success in his new home.

parlor and hall of Mr. James Moore'stage, on Morris-'uveu ue.

John PeanW, of NIMV Yo

A S B 1 1 U l ' A H K .

poles of Neptune Electric Co. be referred toa special committee and that the companybe requested to designate on a map wherethey*de6ire to havo poles located so that 1the matter can be brought before the Coun-cil for action, was so ordered.

Mayor appointed Messrs. Marsh, Allen

of this place. 1ms bsetl very «^iiitwo weeks past with typhoid fe

, fi>rincily ;

usly ill forer followed |

iiifl W. Kirktn-ide. has the, contract foriwtion of a $S,US house for Mrs.•Kroehl.

ne**day evening.

Farmer Joshua VanPeH of BradevHt w illmove to Atlantic Highlands and becomeone of it* merchants.

Ex-6eaator Buius Blod*rett had sent anumbsr of books from •Washington to theK*d Bank pubUo library.

Enlarged Store!- Increased Stock!

William Javlc&on. of whU«

by erysipelas. Ho is uo.w (.•onvalesciui?.

Kev. Mr. MacFarlanci, a student of Prince-

ter of Neptune Electric CH.The Mayor appointed sOyjding epmmit-

tees as follows:Ordinance, License, Police:—Jackson,

Marsh and Allen.Highway, Sieewalk, Street Lights :—

Marsh, Jackson.and Allen.Fire Apparatus, Finances, Property:—

Allen, Marsh and Burroughs.K^wery, Sanitary:—Burroughs, Ja^keon

and Allen.Adjourned.hunhand was arranging for a pluee to live,

and wan expected home on Saturday last.She died very wddraly. Herremalns TOT* C o i i i i n u m c a t t o nbrought to Hanasauim on Tuesday morn- To TOE EDITOK OF THE COAST JUmo:Ing and buried in Atlantic" View Cemetery. J D^ar Sir—In last week's edition of yourBervicee were held In the M. P. Church. paper I ritw that a Mechanic, wrote about

I his working imrd to procure an Amerteai

Ith*! the Irwrfeea: principal of

on a UiirkUMechanii-

and present-public BChoui, and that

ad Iilp'd a foreigner to act asur Hrb<*>l and that the forelgn-

• liritlbhird in thevhn wrote

On Thursday evening of last week a targe; „number of th« young Mends of Miea Roele ™Tllton surprised her a t the residenoe of herparents, Mr. and Mr*. William L Tlltou. atNew BedCurd. The occasion, was the .birth-day of Mips Boole, and she received numer-ous presents. A very enjoyable eveningwas spent In games and other amusementoand the party broke up near midnight,wishing Miss ftoste many returns of theday. Among those, present were MissesMinnie White. Laura -Wrtls, Bena Lane,Nora Ailgor, Lillle Hlocum, Ltbbl« DeOmi,Carrie Newmsn. Lilli*1 Haberstk-k, Mamiepearre, Oor» Burr, Florence DeCoo,<hattieWhite. Ada Peart*. Flora Burr, Llnnio AH- 1 ' J ^ 'gor, Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Wooll^y, Mr. andMFB. WHilftin H. Williams, of Aflbury Park,Mr, and Mrs. Joeeph Woolley, Messrs. Kd.Iktwne, QtiOTgfi WaU-ori, Jack WUImaier,Ed. Oomb», Edgar Newman, "*U1 Heulitt,Arohle.Newman, Wm. Tllton, Harry Vw.r-h m . Win. Whiter Drimmiond Wllltamif.

to the sehol&rs

ho filled tho pulprt yh on March r.th,

that chiiR-li next Su

x)u Seminary, •Presbyterian Chagain preach i

The regular meeting tat thschool trust**.- wa« iwkl at thon Tuesday evonloff. Dr. K.

Tiie Fii-^t National Bank has reopenedtheiv 1'inn.h In Ocoan Orove wither . A.MiUer in charge. •*•"•

Tb»' eittwiiH have deckled to build a »15,-ixx* bemae In West Aabury Park and

elaeUua >t t\- to t»siV»iid 45«oo In theschool hou^e j School.W. Herbert,-! -,

thewill

d u y . ; M

coupling cars at Matawan station had hisright hand badly crushed.

D. I). Dennis, of Freehold has be*nappointed one vt the board of visitors to theState Agriculture College.

Mrs. Harry 8. Sproul of Kcyj>ort has sent |a lace lied spread and pillow dhamtt made •by hetself to the*W«.rlde Fair.

The Little Stiver poet office has been Jraised, to t\w> presidenUal class, ami John T.Lovt'tt iinH btJen apindnted iioet-masU'r.

The New Jersey Sttcfety of the Daughtersof the revolution Intend to celebrate tiie

of tbe High • anniversary of tlie battle of Monmouth onJune 2Sth.

then tilt* Mayor and Couiiiil shall have theTlgltt to enuse tho waid ]n>lt; , wliwi. eon-

to l»e removed from the avenues, s t r u t s |luid all**y»i<>f tlie »;ialvl Bocrcifttk,and X-> sell j o u rami dtK[KWie uf tn« materials tb^.emf, andnfter puying fill expenses uf i>u<-h mmuvaland Bale, and POfJulHg e& said avenues,sti^^ts or alloys, pay the balance, if any. tothe legal rPpiiTai'iitativea of the said coiu-

\ pany.( -Siati. in. Tliat all of the work l>ertainintfI tt) the forojriiiny: hwtitn.h m> far as th« in-

tw under the supervision and ilirocti.in ofthe Mayor and Goundi or the KR.II! lkn>.ughor of such r.iemVier or BancaboFB at* they

Having enlarged our warerooms to double their late size, wenow cease handling factory harness, and will manufacture all

i-Haraess lay Hand.We emptoy only tho bmt workmen that can be fiMind, and warrant all nor grondB to

b« as repreetmtied. We keep about 1M * ' t s wHistantly on hand, of JrOerent Ktjrlw,t^ngbe aad Doubte *

R , Surrey, Coach, Hack and Huss Harness, and only askd i t k t f b d b b W

I. Tliat tho iitudMayoime the tight nnd pm•onduits. listii!-.-^ inni[ wlwttnemkind !*•!..unpaii;

i»nd Ca«"r toit her a

iother

. lur tein-» fu

m are rw 'niyf a ij-ou to ix:»me and ejuuuine our st«vk before you buy etoowbere.tyof a

Buggy and Li very Single Harness for $15, which cannot bebought anywhere el*** for *2H. Wv. aJeo t-axry a loll line ul

Blankets, Robes. Whips, Etc.

T. S. KING &. CO.,F Street, Belmar, New Jersey.

SKC. 12. Tiuit tliecil hfiel.y n-eeorwea > ttMtt th

l

and r.mn-right 0* al-

i

|9at any futureThai iiottiirtjj

shall U'tleiMuy way to ini|wd (.\mufil to g

m t hrijirlit

whowi'term expired, was re-elected without j ^ .

opposition. , • dru

An enter ta inment will U: given in teefstoPresbyterian Church on Tuwday e\-pning. ^nest by a q u a r t e t t e from Princeton. Tick- j * n

ets 25 cents. I*ro«-ecda for the benefit of ( S l I )

Iheehurch. '"Messrs. Conover A Puriiy are (lrivint

busineHH as usual. Tlteir new st.iek ie a triving and they are als«> di'liveriujf g<«Mlievery day. The ttfl.nd»oine i«»]H'r and. dadorations placed on the walls of JuuieiMoore's residence were furnished by tiioui

Tim meeting held in the Baptist Chore.on Wednesday evening by membera of th«

luiuled

.f th«Mayor ami (.\niijeil to tfiant to any otl»«r

the rlgtit to use the »vuaw», MtrtMJtH and, alleys of tUo Boivug* f-'r th« purpose of

EWilllanifi who hnfi ftevet-altimes = Watson Stillwagon. o t ClifTwood, itaa nupplying t'lwtii-1 Hgltt, lu<«t or |M>w«*r. orliquor a t his 1 moved his h a m near t u t t a alte of the |uitel • *>r any ->Lht-r |»trpom w l ^ « w « « r m £ r g

aOBdwe* three • i-eeently destn.yed by Ore, and wlU convert • J f io r i ty m e r part '^ ' l i iuplM ttf the ' said•v; summer. | it into a hotot.

id, ill

as 1 h

rivy (nor partromus ntn^ti" *«' aii»'j.

1 8KC. H. That ihe permission lioivhynes A. Biadl .T lias decided tha t Tlw regular meetlnv of the Monmouth | g,-a i lted HhallW revocable and revoke.! hyH<-aeh nretU an auditorium and County Bt>ard at AKriculture was held i>i thti Mayor and Council whenever the public

nmenced as the Court Honeo, Freehold, on Saturday [ ffi»od may r.MLiiiv il, of,which they, th»-last at 1 91 t- M-

ABRAHAM FIELDER,DEAL.E& IK

mtiyRtli

will lie 1iits.

having a large show A jury has l**en impaneled to trymi<Tnil

I Closer M n f c N

Uriah WMtewindow pm In tho seeond »ti>r>- of his Main March 27Ui febfistreet buildiuff. The place will be occupied with the man»!au*rht*T

; by Hurt is Jt Zimmeimmt few tho «ale ot I nt Eatontown last July.l.ieyek's.tlie^.rulngwumiuer. . Joseph Wuoite of Red Bank has boon

' (*. L. and- A. C. Atkins Imvo Unight n ! grunted a patent on improved railroadi Florida hotel property. It consists of over f froff- It has lieen'adttpjMl by the Pw

Salvation Army, Asbve&y well attended, the houf*"

d

,iy Park, w.-u-packed.

T litnil, upaKQB,titoo

thoaUive showed awont of <-due»tii)n. He t-Itiarly proved thatthe truHt*H"R did not know whftt they weroabout, in his esUuiati.m, hut I guesfi the1MIS1....S know if lie does not that ttio .->-•called foreigner intiHt have dix'lared hia i"-tontlon to hwouM* 11 citiiien of tfcw UniWii

«tor L'-1-1 a dunce thun to IfiirnUn dlfV.Tenl tokga of all nuti..rtM. I under- !Htnnd Unit the flftgH diBpluyed ai-e drawn ontlv blmkbounl in caaotwrt fehfttka. Thai \1»'truste.'ft and te»chor8 are ffitflty of anywnwiif Hi-lng I fall t.i Wf. hut on tlw con-tr-nry 1 think thut they show «.«»! B^nne In

tho different flugK

Tlie meeting was very good and was 1joyed tiy all preHpnt whowere bitoraaCsd.A series of K&ofa liieiMingB held in our townwould lie awarded with good Huccess.

Mr. Thomas Lows and Miss Mollle \>n-able were united in njarriage at the resi- ,AnoB al Mrs. lir, &KSWD, OO TlmvMnyevening, by lb*v. Frauk C. ltrown: Thecerenicny MM witnrewod by a IHIIUIK-L- offriends.- The ern.pl** were the nflpients piwvenil useful pH'twntP. . We extend OUTmiiUTiUulntionH Bint teat wttfttM for » hap-py and pn*p.'ruuM future.

I'mf. VanHUme aiuNfarnily had a verjnarrow ctfc'Rpv fruin RiiffocaUnn by go« onKa^inlay nignt. While Hhihlry? »P Uw

CiH>k stove iu thi! iifU-rniHiii a dahi|>er hud' been unknowingly moved, nermittfng the

n which are Bfveralrange gi-ove, a nui-

Monroe, op-

vaiiiii railroad andgsttnff It.

itherroadB arv invi-«ti-

. The eclutol trustees who are looking for ard. The property will bo" put j 8 u U a b l ( , «itefor iiew-whopl house in W«*i

]n!l. alater

t»rk are MilWilj coiiVemv)latiinf>f UradlpyBetu-h.waBM'f CiiiU3.E. OWMITOH, corner of

in>rniitt7 for beating his i avenue and Pine street.Park llnll. the ttwn

Two hourstake him a H - "ifTord,

titmbliMl with J

Slayer and Oo'—dH, siiull lx> U»> Mile jud^^e. |JiRi\ 15. That .the sai«l Mjiiuiwumn l h »

trie Light and Power Ci»tttpany snail tilo intho offict> of the Borough oAerfc a writwii

i.lent, uud'-r tlu'ir o>i(»>ralSiLsaal, of tUeprovisionB "f this '»rdiriiiin-ii.arnl» failurp U*iili- such written aooepfmgB wllhin thirty 1>iuy»aftt3r th*1 imssHjje ,,,t thi* oniittainvr-lu'ill be taken and deemtxl to lw a refusal.«>> to do on the jiart uf saul * 'ompuny. andtlienaupon all ru;tits nr»l ptivituww t*t tlwmheifby gT-aiited shall ISoiwrar cfmse and t<eat an eud.

KEC. lfl. That tn*')4(Uil Manawiuan Bw-trie Light And Power t'fuiipany Kiiall, ira-

,e<liate.ly on the eompU-lkw uf th*' '

BEEF, VEAL, MUTTON, LAMBPORK AND POULTRY.

Orders solicited and delivered free of charge.

TTotels and Cottages Supplkul at Reasonable Prieei.F STBEJST. BETWKKN SEVEXTH « EIGHTH i n n n ,

Belmar New Jersey

', and v dtabors PolniIH\ Sului-dnyHe was tali'

tHlpUredbrfalndtl\heri the coartajbte' Justice Itordfn Pttland W^M gi>ne.

otwr

hud ntrtp|>ed liimwlf, SI)IIIM>Z«H1 through the

of arid furlii^li fllm-tric

ifanlir- till? fai)MBmB« Ktntbit*, east of K t-treet, «u,i on*P ai

M l • •d. litleft behind an over- \ **p«'*«l

hif Htomat'h wae ills->i

old hhlit.

«tii aasape dm-ing the night. The family— — • j 1 V*-*M* m ttft bfcia ^vi,*"'p. " w»." —r— • • *PMiii u t i h 1 '• 1 •• ••' 'K^ n e \ 1. m i t r u i n g n ILII \ e r y w a d 1 ii.*fti 1

Wm.PetUfc, Howard Kloc«*m.8tulte(*ffford, I H ( ( i ) h i w l h a t y^ .^ , , , , , w |1 , riw?r better i a--he*<. Prt.f. VnnWtone wnM unable to at-Joe Adapie. Percy Hall. Sheridan Southard, jmjgyjj.,^ Ui t t l l, futun*. I remain vours etc. j ten«i to lite duties at* organlPt in thp Vit«-dennrtt Bettrtl. Monroe Lane, Charles Mor- AKOTHKK M K H A N K . 4 byterian Church on Hundayri», Ben Woolley. ^-^"^

twkin«Hii<t Puriindhftvo fnstlUitetl nullnsi Bk-hard Ttlton of OWirtota, In ><-otCHlbert t'. W«ed«w of tlie same placehe ran of *5,000 tat false Imprison-t. Mr. t i i t m about thrrn^ months agoM thon,th

fell away, and he WHSfltwli and ntrength.

arrest of Mr. W«eil«jl for perjury.lien ring before the j i _ . .

.... hi» charges and aUmittwl thatre was no foundation for it. Mr. W«ed-

. ,. ,'talins that the <-)u*r£fn waAinmiBMralniitIiiin niuliciouuly nnd thrtt ht* hut Uwn

; iriwitlv injuied tn hit* UisinenK. ffiwd IMUUW! and JstJimUng and hence his eult.

Eleetrie HitteEdwanl Hlm

Bitten* midArnlt-a K&lvJ h H

a and Uh.HUiml.t-mlenid, hhi I l m wa*UK donna, appetit.terribly mbmed in

TlllfS' tn'tlleh nf

tmi

t the s*«utlHe* of »airt Harh

all funiisii (*m'hv U- re*»Mlfwl by ilifr>r««il KieM feu[..[•.'lly lUdlU-dex.-l

: x l M

Shm lUk K

th*> vt

ured him. 'WHil llarrisb itf. 111., had

and withimtany euat wto OM wild Bon'Wh of 11-

17. That Ihis m.i

1 Vitutptuty1 whatever

t'ffift «h*!

nd bin leg b*V l a t C >

ofti anil i>l lArnlt-a K&lve. and g an l

John Hpoaker. (Vlawt«,C>.. had tlv.- large-Fever nores on hi« leg, i|oi-t<nii itald lm waxtiicnrabltt, t)nn ImttlK I^tH'trtc BiLtitiv autlun" l*>\ Bu.-kh'ii'K A mini HUIVH ourt«d himet'ilimlv. Hold by F. P. PliUhrtek. IMm.trand I'hKH. A. live, Spring Luk» l h w h ,Urutf HUWW ?

1 Hi-' tiil by tanLho BSfNWHi.t b y t l

c p t e d Mil

.-UM.I f«-,' t l i ' - l inw r.-

MAM^itfdiU?*n

Attest:H. L. (i 1 I.U-:N, Clerk.

BERGEN'SLivery and Boarding Stables.

me ma ouesi mm m BEK E M \mAT BELMAR.

We are here tiie rear around awl cur Base* mm *II trains. CarriagesCoapea and all at} k-» of u m o u u n five niimta Botiee.

BOARDING STABLES ATTACHED.Wm. M. Bergen, : : Proprietor.

Page 4: THE COAST - DigiFind-It · 2015-02-03 · MPT called lor anayeUrered to all Peru or Belmar at a&ort notice. Orden 07 Hall Promptl y Attended to. New York Hotel. Oae, Hot and C«ld

"THATs cf tbe oi^bt arc dosing

On tho scattered hoiHCS rcpoauijSinks the cvtntiCc . •

Aa I Ticw tbu stem; u:(orc meIn VJX fading ti?i;t.

Just as sow the tmifght's gloryGatheti the vale in Rolti,

As X atooil and told Uic siu-ryThai is never old.

No reply my darling utteredTo the worQs I siiU,

Dnt I i-aupln tuc Uu.cfc that GutteredTo her L-heel; Instead.

Years have flown, tuj-J Eoldcn tressesShow n silver afcocn.

Hut vkOu^prijaK time comes, QULI uressfiS

t, * hile around ua

0 that bound uanightr Lyons, In N. y. Ledger.

AN EMERGENCY HUSBAND

Newspaper Man's Thirty Min-utes of Matrimony.

litoraliy dancioj \viih v&gc "So youare the blackfptaril who has inveijrle:! 1my danghter into this idiocy. Sir, I've 'a good mind to thrash you!" and the |cine was" raised threateningly.

"I hope you will change yoov- taind •and improve your lanp-uag-e," I wenton as calmly as possible. "Your pros- \cnt conduct will result in a scandal." j

"Scandal, sir. What could be more jseantlalons thaia the present state of iaffairs?' he cried.

Things went on this way for ten min- \atos, until tho old man howled himself jhoarse, and I could hoar the bell boys 'tittering- in the hall outside. Then begradually calmed down, and as a last ,resort tried the sympathetic dodge onthe tcirriOed young- woman. ' Tho lat-ter had hardly spoken a word thronjjli- Sout tha scene She was too badlyfrightened, I think.

There were tears in tfic old gentle-man's voice as he turned toward raysupposed wife. Had she not alwaysbeen well treated? Was not her moth-er the best of mothers? Had he notbeen the most indulgent of fathers? \Was not her home one of luxury? etc.,etc- Yes, she admitted eac!) clause ia, jthe indictment as it was checked oil.

"But, father," she sobbed, "I lovedhim so very much, and—oil! I could not ,marry thut other.1*

"Where was tliis wretched marriage 'performed?" he inquired, savagely, j

•'Milwaukee/' answered the girl, in a*1'great hurry.

"I'll have it dissolve.], 1 will!"swore the enraged pater, getting noisy ,

THE COAL COMBINE PROBE

• "L^t ma reniiud you, sir," I saiJ, d3-; liberately, "that your daughter ii of.j affe" (I was not sure about it); "that. we are leg-ally m arrietl, and that auyi amonnt of talk will .not alter the! fact. I must also suggest that as our! train leaves for tho south ct fou>I o'clock we have very little time to de-j vote to this sort of thine-"

"Eh, what! adding- insult to injury!"I he rdarcti. "Well, I'll leave you here

' Tho date eft this occurrence is notimportant; in fact, it is just us well leftuntold.. I was on the hotel run for a.morning paper in St 1'a.ul at the time*and, glancing over the Ryan registerOIMS afternoon, I saw the name Mrs.Ueorge Trehune. It was written ia thelong-, angular scrawl affected so oxtetk-sively by women of tbe axumatie pro-fession, and, although I had .never be-fore beard of Mrs. Trchirac, her signa-ture attracted my attention. There ismore of instinct than any other sense inseleetinp from a li>ti£ list cf signaturesthose people worth interview iu -. Mrs.Trehune's slap-dash characters set mewondering what sort of a woman shewas, and nothing- was easier than toHod out, so 1 banned my card to theclerk, pointed to the room, number 235,and awaited tha return, of the bell boy.

In fiTe minutes or thcreabonts. he j f o r the present, to t you will hearinformed me that I was to "go right \*D&» sir," shaking- the cane in raynpY" and up 1 went. I face. "I'm not the man to submit

"Come io,j" called a voice, ia answer tamely to a rascally abduc.ion of thisto my tap on the door. I eutered. Kear ) character. You're a scoundrel, sir, atho open tire, in an armchair, sat a scoundrel," reiterated my angelic fa-young woman. She wore a white ! thor-in-law; and with this choice part-(jown of that soft caressing- woof tiutt : tn" shot be retired, slamming- tbe doorBO invariably sets off well the wearer's i after him.charms. Rising aa I entered she ad- 1 "How did I manage it?" I inquired.vanced tovrunl m^, and her manner fce- ] turning- to- where the future Mrs. Tre-trayeU at once tbe. well-bred woman. • hiine was sitting. She had fainted', .lustI took a mental photograph of the face : like a woman. She bad the nerve to g-oand n>rure before me. The former wiis | through a scene like this undisturbed,oval, well-featured, set with a pair of : to all appearances, and then when tiiolustrous dark, eyes, and framed iu curls } -'anger was over, she must spoil it allof aa indefinable color—half golden, by an exhibition of weakness. I rubbedhall brown. Tho latter was tall and j to t u p water, poured a glass of it outshapely. \ and approached the younf* u-omaa.

"Pray bo seated," she said, as 1 be- &kc was recovering, thonjrh, before I(T»n to explain why I had asked for an reached her, and in an instant sat up.interview. "Oh, yes," she went on, "I 1 "How can 1 ever repay you?" sheknow why you came. I have several 'asked. "You did it superbiy,' and

DccUl.-a T'l.it Fritz XT fit-Z-2 —After a

ier's jury h.ise m;:u fo'4n !

drift

adensd.whu-li he

;vfcsth:it ths rII shot

Thjit

olv

of the thick'jack of tHe h

was notme un-

e man to t!»e edgeshot him in the

Advertise

In

This Paper.

It

Will Pay You.

The People of Belmar are highly pleased with the- popular pricesfor superior goods which -prevail at

FIRST IATIOIAL BANK,MANASQUAN, N. J.

J

on all Points at Par.

WASHINGTON*,well. wb6ee mupostmasUT-^;-; KSenate on Hoodthe office to-dny

uationn of pastetlftftS, RTlll t !:•?<<!disposed of befiare taken up. *

MaxvU 23.—Bofeert A. Max-miiLUiiHi as fourth assistant'V.LI. \V;LS c-nHfir.iKtl by- thejiv t.iok formal charge of. There MB aa file in thera tiuta fiwe ihojs;ind reaig-tastWB, many uf th." fourtheases will ha considered and |i-e *my eases of removal*-

Guilty Wi tba K-JAMAICA. L. 1..

cnd-ttio-ia.—The

t o

jury intuo trial JH Fre/t&ns i iiaupt, cUiirgi-d withthe munler KX George Ni-iftVrt. n fellowfarm limit}, on £e <T. 1. List iH^ht broughtin M vei-.li. t of i',\i;\.y with a rw.-..:ii!JieuOa-t'uiutu uiLToy i n : V i'ouuty Courts Hauptbroke two of Si'ilT.-rt'd ri!»s witii the tailLyardnf a farm u ,^o: j . Seiffert died Vmiu;,*b 'i&tizY ia ilie FiUobing ho^[jital.

LtbrPHI r,A.n;

the PO1H.H

r tin Fr*«iter-,' ir.unr.

hand, and her large dark eyes lookedstraight into mine. It -was an embar-rassing situation, and I cottfoas I hard-ly knew what to make of it. With aneffort I met the fnze of this straiijcyoung woman, and t*aid, inquiringly:"You dislike nervous people?*'

"I should hate myfielf i£ that werethe case," replied Mrs. Trchuuo, "forI am all nerves. Oh, dear, dear, if Ionly dared to do it."

With a sudden whislc sh^ was out ofthe chair and par'ag- back anJ fortli on .tbe carpet like n. eag-td lioouss. Tbere 'was vet".y evideutly somethidg-" 'wronfjwith. Mra. Trehune. Why, goodheavens! she wae sobbing.

"My dear madam." I. exclaimed, "IfI ean bo of any possible service"—-

**Oh, I dare not ask it of a stranpfer,"sbo protested, throwing- up botlihands dramatically. "Ami yet," sheadded, "none but a stranger wouldd a "' The siffht of the tears had scatteredmy self possession to the winds. I wasready ifow to fiffht a' dael or two if

fleorgo wiLl soon be here now" (glanc- •icg-at her watch). "My dear sir," she •went on, "I cannot tell you how g-rats-ful I am. I shall make Mr. Treliunocall at your office (his evening an'dthank you personally."

My eng-agement as Miss Talbofs hus-band was evidently at an end, so, pro- •testing that I wonld willingly-have !

r her, I with-ber shapely white j " " A r e B ™ e came m late iu tbe af- ,

- ! ternoon, and they were married byI tho rector of Christ church. TUc Kaa- ,sas City yonn# man called on roc in :

j tha evening1 and insisted on icy g-oinjri-to supper with him and1 the bride. U'oJ had a jolly little spread of piite Uc foisj eras and cliaaipaign at the Uya.n cafe,I and I have never set oyes on either ofthe Trehunes o r the veuerable Mr. Tal-

f bot, of Chicajfo, from that moment tc !

this.—-Chicag-o Ilcrald-

frienda in the protessioo, and ia fact.have the greatest regard for daily

. newspaper writers. They are equal toalmost anything."

"You flatter the craft," I answered."Some of us are very retiring1. I am"—

"I hope you are not, sirp* said mycharming vis-a-vis, leaning impulsivelyforward as sho spoke. Her elbow , ,found support on the arm of the chair, I (1

1ono t w ' V S ™

her ehin rested on *«.. ci,,,™,!,. ™u;f« ! " r e w - lrehonc came

Coloradostewlay.

subject

FOEMEELY OF BROADWAY. H. T..

* - JESIDENT AIAT0K0A1 - : -

Boot and Shoe Maker.— LEADER I S STYLE —

JtMake sboe« that w«m- from 1 to S j*mx».Employ •JHDT* firoeor tkillwl workm«&

IMitke lasts to Bt the toot,Kf©u ali ib« I U H lotftot, M>Am prepared to Oil mnj [utore order* "HaJce eboea tot d«t(\maed t««t.M»*« o»«y shoes lor lender I*et,Gu*rftLiw « perfect fit

{ Ship mi shoes to any address.I no all kinds of repalrinj.] lut. nt sod m*le shoes to mseanra on on*

d&T'fi notlpft. Ke»t, Quick mna Cheap.7 0 7 COOKJIAN IVEME,

PARK, K. J .

Their enthusiasm resembles the hilarity of a circus audit-TVthat it is spontaneousand genuine. Good digestion, the effect of'pure food, is also a potent cause of good feeling.

Our stock will stand the closest scrutiny and bur patronr ant!the public are invited to inspect it carefully.

Our Dry Qoods & Shoe Departmentswill afford you pleasure and profit to look at.

BORTOH 1E0THERS,Corner F Street and 10th Avenue, Belmar, N. J.

C. J. PARKER,PRESIDENT.

M D. I. MACKS,CASIIIEJ

E. S. VANLEERESALKH IK

CHARLES LEWISS Wllite Pine'

Spruce and Hemlock(Successor to CHAS. LEWIS & Co.,)

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER AY

L: U : M : B:E:R,JID ^77" -A. I E ,

Builder's Hardware, Sash, Doors, Blinds,

mm' Sillies

ASBURY PARK, N. J.

Branch Yard Spring Lake N. J

Send for Estimates before

T

th-ir favoligbtboo

a they ka\

Finest Appointed and LOWESTPRICED Pim-CU» DENTAL

Two very swell young women g-ot ona down-town elevated train tho otherday at Fiftieth street. It was easy tosee tbatthey were 'way up in the F,ocialscale. They took seats in one cf thecross scats in the first car. The earwas Well filled. When the train stoppedat tbe Forty-second street station thetaller of the two j"ounff women saidsomething to her companion v.hich

j made her laugtt. TUttt laugh, revealeda void where pearly teeth should be,

I and the charm was broken. It mustj have been the first time the yatmft

_, j woman had laughed since she left hernecessary Sn defense of this mysterious bonse. Sbo cbenped color, clapped heryonnff person. * - hand to her mouth and startled the car

"Ask anything you like,1' 1 sail, des- by exclaiming:pcrately. "1*11 do i t " r "Oh. Lilian, Vv

ITnoT. N. .V,

whonbspanFlower, sfteryears sentence,•terclay whiiu in t]ciyar Rtore on Gen'•;LLI. alias Ke;:ni4,

LIBGEST, . .CONCERN in the country.

B«st Tcetb, ta.oo up. Filling. Gold, S1.50 np.Soft, 50 cent« up. Extracting, with Cu , 30 cents;without G»., as cent*. -Maw York Mice Never Cloies Pay, Nifht t Um**y

n., 1 llod

WnjowsroK, Del..o( Bvhvrt J. Hoy, th<it was ihr.iigLt Wan ?throwu iuto th- t i:

munle m

"Will yon?" whispered Mrs. Tre-nnne, coming- hnrriecDy toward me."U you wiil do what 1 ask I can nevertlo enough for you ia return. Mine isa case that requires immediate andskillful action. You will have to useall yonr finesse, for 1 have not time toexplain matter* fully. You must bopatient, then indignant,*aml finally ex*asperated. Do yon understand?"

"Certainly," .1 answered promptly.Crazy UB a March hare was uiy inwardreflection.

'•And you will do tliis for a stran-jjer?" inquired Mrs. Trebune.

"Command me," I replied."Then listen," she aaid, drawing-her

chair near mine with an apprehensiveglance at the doof. "I am not Jtfrs.Trehune. j shall ba this afternoon if

1 all goe» well, but at present I am ClaraTalbot> I have run away from myhome in Chicago to marry Mr. Tre-hune. lie Is of Kansas City, and wasto hove met me here. 1 have receiveda telegram from him to sny that hfstrain is several hours late. Nevertnind why it waa beceasary lor me torun away. It ii a family matter. Mypeople have never seen Mr; Trehune.1 met Mm at the house of a friend inEurop* last year. They wanted mo lomarry another man. I 0e4 yesterdayafter telegraphing- G<*or*c to meet meIwre My father has followed me.lie Is in the hotel now'' (anotherglance at the door); "his card precededyours. 1 teat word thai I wns <)• • ••-•Inpv and be is waiting down stairs, jWhen I r«-ad the name on your card—& \nrwiptp-T man—t conceived ihis plan: jWill yon be my husband for half an !honrT"

I started op like a scared jaclt i»»t-bit. "Good- (rracious, madam,'" 1 ex- !claimed, "I don't know enough about ••ton to do the thing sncceBBTully."

'Wh, t;-y," ploa<Ie i thu brown-eyed ifugitive, "please try."

"I ' l l do H," 1 suitl," fl«apcrately, and itho next tnstiint. luoro Warn a ci•«*!».Tho door flew back, and In burst anold gentleman with .1% Tory rod fat-c,from which u couple f ll•napped angrily 0 B bnod cane Uowo on tltf evntar talite.URIOK the loiter as a (.ort of a rostrma,he glared strafplit a t tbp gul and !«•-(Ton to raye, Ignoring me entirely.

"Woll, madam" (in a tonn of concen-trated fury), "what do you mean bythis disgracoful eftoapatfeT*

My temporary wife glanced hopcful-ly toward where I sat, within easyreach of the old gentleman'* otuie.Hummonlrfr all my fortitudu I nv<><,.>and looked the Irate parent ntmight iathe eye.

"I shall have to request, sir," ] said,"ttiat in addressing this \-.u\y ><". nil Iremember tha t respect Is duo her a imy *rtfe *nd your daughter. Yon mutt•how h«r that respect, sir. Do you un-derstand!" raising my volco a little onthe last few words:, "Ob," shrieked tha venerable pater.

're forpfotten ray teeth!"The two youn,T women jumped np

qniclily and rushed out of the Car justas the train was starting. Laughterrippled through lb.e car all the way totbe Uattery.—N. Y. Herald.

—Kot the Peruvian Kind.—He badjust come from the dog show: "Ugh!The horrible barkt" he exclaimed. "It'sringing in toy bead yetl" "What?Quinine?" "Na Can inc."

is iuves ig-atmi* the c

The small daugtminded family Iuthat Katun CndBThe other taarntramps uulk-.l v.

made tbo cvstuiobtaininff or.iplovthat every BVCBOclosetj. Tiu-ji thward from h.-r reer's sitirts and s

itiii- lMriziiiKeet. John Ourarrested.

rvenrft1] 33—Tha bod>•n keeper, whorwl and bis bjdjKI river J*evera'.

E. The coroner

N>w Yort., 206 6th «v,., ear. 14th «t.BrQOk^n, 478 F««o«, « . , <VMt Elm P

City, York, cor. Grov*.

g•.hint: r oato

f a charitablyB Wen told frecjucntlvwork for idle hands. |ng «ne of the tribe of |ih t&e usual stury ofluibtross ...f the house

;ary BB&ffna&an aboutn.1,1. and was af^snredl uf acif-aappoct was• small trie! cutM for-Ltfre behind her moifc-ti 1 Id t iocs of kindly1'ln'l tSiitau tind any-

Howard OsbornDZ4LSBIH

Dry Goods and QneeriesBOOTS AND SHOES,

f miDemornfi Patterns,

Hlaln Street, jnanasauBib H.J.

of small .eves«laf.!iett bis bat

WMXLM PIANO?

H E

PEOPLE'S STORENos. B20, B23 OooKman Hvenue.

PAINT, AND MAS8NS' MATERIALS.

OFFICE AKD TAED,

SOUTH STREET, MANASQUAN

Past Experience is one of

Our Future Guides, and

theT-owest Prices our aim.

WM. I , WILLIAMS.MANUFACTURER OF

FINE HARNESS,And Dealer in

I ' I , Traveling Bags, Tronic dtvaps. Shawl S,ra;i,i_ap Robes,;Dusters, Sheets. Etc, and a Tn'l

Assortment of Hors« Clotving.

iRcpaiving Harness and Trunks a Specialty.At Reasonable Rate* and.Ln;a_'Workmaclit« Manner.

STBBET, TJSBURY PflRK. H. J .

A Large and Complete Assortment of

Dry Goods, Notions;

Clothing, Men's Furnishings,

Fine Shoes and Slippers.

We have made extensive alterations and additions to our Storewhich will give us greater facilities for catering to the

wants of our patrons. The space in many of thedepartments has been increased, and

» you will find them all well filledwith First-class goods.

Another Feature to our Business is a new

millinery Department.Here we take Pride in showing all theLatest Styles and Novelties in

HBIQ STRIKE.The Big Strike of the Season is at

TOSEPI A. WAIIRIGHT'SThe Leading Dealer in

FURNITURE,

Trinimed and UntrimmedFine Flowers and Trimmings.

Huts,

A Large Assortment of

Ladies' and Misses' Jackets,Children's Coats. Etc-

We respectfully solicit a call from you for inspection. Our Good*arc all shown on one floor. Our store ts the Lightest and

Brightest in town. With a bright new stock andPersonal Attention to_the wants of the

trade we hope to merrit • fareshare of your custom.

Mail Orders will receive Prompt Attention.

Gnailes Scnwager & Co., flsDury Park, N. J.

OCEAN GROVE, N. J.Folding Beds of our own make a Specialty, and the prices are

so low they will astonish you. Come and see them.

We struck a large lot of the celebrated Roger Bros, silverplatt-il knives, forks and spoons which had been made for a latrirehotel, but by a failure of the house we got them st a great bargain.anil we are able to dispose of them at far betow their value Nowp your time to buy these goods. We have also a full line of

YOUR CUSTOM IS RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED.

J . I f , VASTBTOTB. E. C. En

VANNOTE & ERRICKSON,

Mnvtt wo mmil

FREEASTHMALENE^ will anil dad cure a-sthuin

DR. rwr'not. .»B>ICI«E CO.. nocHtsiEn. «. r

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN

LUMBER, SIIIILES, LATH,AND ALL KINDS OF

BUILDERS' MATERIxVL.

Yard Near Depot, Point Pleasant.