emporium - digifind-it.com · earles galleries, 810 chestnut street, philadelphia. . • „ a...

4
j j - 8. KINMONTH,M. D., ( ; Corner Grand and Asbnry Adelines,' Office nours-Tto 0 A. m., 1 to 2 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m. r>H8 , KEATOR’A ACKERMAN, -T . Homceop&tMo Physicians and Surgeons. •- Cor. Asbury avenne and Borgh streot. * nonra—Until 9 a.m ., 7 to 9 p. m. Telephona connections. * Philadelphia Offlco—1724 Choatnut a t J J R .E L L A TRKNTISS UFHAM, 804 Third avenne, Office/lours until 11 a. m, Asbnry Park, N. J. C W. GERRY, M. D. . * f IIOMOJO AT II 1ST. BRIGIXAM COTTAGE, 614 Cookmad Avenue, Hours—8 to 10 a. K. 2.to 4 and 7 to 9T. M.'. £)R. 8 . T. SLOCUM, DENTIST, Officp-^201 Main St., opposite Railroad Station, G^h ad mini s torod. Aabury Park, N. 3'. A. fl. BURTON, D. D. S. I. O. BURTON, D. D. B. DURTON BROTHERS, -L>' Resident Dentlito, ~Dorm Balldlngt~BOfl~Cookman avo-i Agbury-Park; New York Offlce-32 West 27th St. Gas administered. Appolntmenta mado.by tele- phone or by mall. Honrs: 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. M’f’rs of “ ZOZO ”—tho new preparation for cleansing and preserving tho.Teoth, J)R ; P. A. DAVISON, ■— Veterinary Knrjfeon anil Dentist. Graduate of New York Colleen of ■* VETERINARY SURGE0N8. Lato Veterinary Surtroon to 4th Aye. R. R.-Co. 1500 horses. OFFICESCoward's Livery Stablo, Rowall ave. Williams* Harness Store, 157 Main et. F St, Bolmar N. J. . Asbury Park.. 3. r. HAWKINS. THANK DUBAKD. fJAWKINS & DURAND, —Attorn eys-at*Law,-SolIoltora-A Masters In Chan ___ eery, Mikado Building, Cookman Av,/ Asbury Park, N. J. —^ J 8 AAC C. KENNEDY, .. Attornoy-at-Law, Solicitor, Master !n Chanoery and Notary Publlo. S pe clal attention given to examination^ Titles, &o. Monmouth Bnlldlng, Asbury Park, New Jersey. ~ pAVID HARVEY, Jr., ; CounH^or'at-LftwTHoIicltor, MMterafid^Eiam* lner in Chancery, Notary Public. Asburv Park, N. J. . JOHN HERBERT WINAN8, u Attoj$ey-at Law and Notary Pnbllo. 1 Attorney and Counselor for Mlchlgan-and Now York. Rooms 4 and 5, Monmouth Trust Bnlldlng. Aa- bury Park ; Room 912, Temple Court, Now York. f^EORGE W. BYRAM. « ATTORNEY AT-LAW, • Master and Solicitor in Chancery, ompnui Byram Building, Asbnry Park, N .J. - omcc8 7 11 Wall street. New York City. nENUY M. NkVIUS, EOJRfNU WlMOH, Counsellor at Law." Attornoy at Law. VfEVIUS & WILSON, -V'- Law Offices, ^ - RED BANK, N. J. pRAOTTv, BODXNlg . ARCHITECT, MIKADO BUILDING P. O. Box.855. ASBURY PABK, N. J, M bs. john m birch, B1.0CD TI0RI8T, 314 Soveath avenno, ASBUHY 1‘AUK, N. J . Lessons Riven In Classes, -or private, com- mencing Nov. 15. 1 N. H. KILMER, Contractor,.Cafpenter^pider Plans and spec I fleatlons furnished_and-estU mates mado on all kinds of carpenter work. Jobbing of all kinds attended to. Box 2065; ' 5 Pilrnnn ave., Ocean Grove. M RS. ROSAIilNE V. REPLEY, 307 Fourth avenuo, Asbnry Park. TEACHER Of PIANO, ORQAH ANDTHEORY pupil of Richard Hoffman. H .B.IJQ H N SQ N ,; Practical - Watchmaker, Dealer In Fine Watches, Jtewelry, Spectacles &c. Watchosand Jewelry repaired at City Prices. Main.Btroet, near Oopkman avenne, ASBURY PARK, N. J. GEO. M. BENNETT, HOUSE PAINTING n all Ita branches. Hardwood finishing. Grain- ing, Calclmlnlng, Ac. led onappllcailon. L. Box 8132, O0U«nrGrove, N, J . ADON LIPPiNdOTT, Contractor &Builder Plana and estimates Cheerfully furnished. ... Jobbing In all branohes promptly and carefully • attended to. Residence and Shop, * 907 Main St., bet. 1st and 2d, Asbury Park, N. J. H7l6. MARRYOTT, Contractor and. Builder, Estimates furnished for overy description of work. Jobbing attended to promptly. Residence— „ 612 itYEITXJK, Lock BOX 710 '‘“ANBURY PARK, N. J. SA M U E L .W . K L R K BRIDE, . ^ CONTRACTOR, Carpenter & Builder. Plans and specifications furnlshedr-Jobbing' . promptly attended to. Best of referenco given. • Resldonco-^Firat ave., bet Bond and Emory ata. Shop and Office—First avo; and Main Bt. P.O.Box 74?. ABBURY PARK. FRED. B. GOWDY. CHAS. H. PITCHER.1 CSOWDY & PITCHER, Carriages, and M anufactu- rers of Harness. BeptMltorlcs-AHbnry PArb, Bed Bank : and Toms. River. . a. a.tay lor; ’ ■ ; M ason and Builder, Bricklaying and Plastering In all branches of Masonry work. a Jbbblng promptlyjattonded to; • / . ^ P. 0. Box C97.. Oftltfe, 719 MattlsOn avenue. SEO.». MTTERSOM ’S SOtiS, . D&LKRSM PILIN G , TIM B ER , . , and ' General Contractors, ASnUj^/rAIiK, N. J. JA C O B DOLL, 4r.. PHACTICAl. * . y has on hand tho largest and flnost line of plain and gilt wall papers ahd decorations in the county,at lowest prices.'Also- W»ll Picturo Hopldlngs and Frames, Paper llanger’* Supplies, Etc. Frames' mado Jo order at short notice. The best New York and Philadelphia employed. ^Estimates furals ----- * ’ alsom \ paper hangers __ „ __. __________________ i ter paper hang- ng and kalsomlning. - ^ > 511 Gookmanavenue, Adjoining Commercial H otel^^^ ^ ^ ^ . y* V LIPPINCOTT, T - A - Z L O R Haitlson Ave. M en ’s B ’n raish .in g s, ROBERT T. GRAVATT,; ( ■ . - ‘ siALnn StovesTHeaters, Ranges; T I N W A B B , * o . .. , Cookman av., near Bond Bt., '• AfffiUBX PABK, N. J. TIR r a n i l , UADI1|, IVTTE1S, t l . COPPER, T i l AID SHEET IR0R i f S U OF A lt MONMOUTH ASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY. adthoK a L . $ 100 , 0 , 00 . Capital Paid in, $ 5 0 ,p s0 0 J*. Interest Allowed on Deposit#. Hr*Flrst-olass work at low ratoa. a* GENUNQ- & CO. DEALERS IN GRANITE AND MARBLE MONUMENTS^ND HEADSTONES. 8 LATE MANTELS. Curbing anil Flagging a Specialty. Yard and Office—Main 8 trcet and Sccond Avenuo, ASBURY PARK, N. J. M . M . C R O SB IE, ~ .Success or to David Cartwrlght. Tar' P&por, Sheathing Paper, Two and -Three-ply Roofing Paper. P. 0. Box soa. ‘A s b n r y P a r l e , W. -V. COOK HOW LAND, (Succctwor to T. P . Uergen,) -DEALER IN - mm FEED, HAY, STRAW, Prepared Food and Medicines for Horses, Cattlo, Poultry, and all requisites in such a business. ITiain at. A: ITIunroc ave.. Awbnry P ark. Contractor and Builder. Plans and-.spoclfi- ^ cations furnished. , GEO. C. ORMEROD, CONTRACTOR AND BU ILDER , ABBURY PABK, K. JT. Established 1873. Jobbing promptly attended to. Best of reference given. Office and Residence, COR. 8 EWALL AVE. AND BOND ST. Archibald Reynolds,- REMOVER OF NIGHT-SOIL . Orders by mall promptly attended to. - I guarantee the best work at the lowest prlco. Rosiddnec, WEST ASBURY PARK~N. J. P. O. BOX 696, ASBURY PARK, N. J. GEO. W. REDDEN, CONTRACTOR H BUILDER, Estlmatea furnished for overy description'of building. Jobbing attended to promptly. ASBURY PARK. N. .1. Oliier H. Brown, H0USEFURNISHIN6 EMPORIUM SPRIN fi LAKE ,N .'J. GREATLY ENLARGED, ~ NEWLY STOCKED, P U R E LY RE-ARRANGED, The Finest Stook of Housefornisliing Goods to bo found on the New JorserCoast. ’ Newest Designs in Furnitare. ANTIQUE OAK '* In Badroora Snits, Sidfr Boards, Chairs, Tikiu, Etc. Carpets, Mattings, Reed and Rattan Goods, BEDDING, Silverware, Iiainps, Stoves. A-ii tlioNovoltlofl in . French, Bohemian and Do- . mesfic Glass. Foreign and Domestic' CMna and Table Ware. j Goods delivered in Aflbnry Park and Ooean Grove. II. Complete Your Homo with one of PINKE’S HOME Parlor Vapor Hot Air and all othor fancy-or , MEDICATED iSAXH APPARATUS. It ia a legitimate artlclo also endorsed by leading physicians, and will do ali that Is claimed for it. CURES COLDS, RHEUMATISM, MALARIA, 1m- E roves the comploxion, ia good to restpro health i tho invalid, and prevent those In health from becoming diseased.- P ric e $13* Sent by ex- press with fulldlreptlons.. PETEB D. PINKS, Patentee, 1170 TIIIRP AyENCK, NKW YpKK Cl'XY. K lar p ro o f V n n lt, In Mb’nmouth Building, corner Mattison avenue and Bond street Wills rocolptod for and kept without chargo. / ■' >.. ISAAC C. KENNEDY,'President. ' DR. B. S. KEATOR. Vloo Pros’t. H. II. YARD. Secrotary. * ” A. C. TWINING. Treasurer. JJIRKCTor - G. D. W. VROOM, Trenton, N. J. W. J. HARRISON, Lakewood, N .J., OLIVER fl.*BROWN, Spring Lake, N. J. HENRY H. YARD, Ocean Beach, N .J. J. li. Br OHANAN, Spring Lake, N. J. JOSEPH McDERMOTT. Freehold, N.J. n. B. PIERSON, Philadelphia, Pa. . GEO. F. KROEIIL, Asbury Park. N.-J. BRUCES. KEATOR,M.D.i " *• A. C. TWINING, 15 • 4‘ ..♦ « '■ ISAAC C. KENNEDY. M ** $ 15,000 To Loan on Good Mortgages. S. C. COWART, Froehold,N.J. H. B. BEEG LE, (Late H. B. Bocglo & Son) * REAL ESTATE and - 'I K S U R A N G E - A GENT, l' Miii ktm, is«i t o . 1 1 Loans Negotiated avd Legal Papers Drawn H. B. BEEGLE, Notary I'obUo&ucfCbmmlssIoner of Deeds for New Jorsoy, Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia. rePtSo %• REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE & MORTGAGE LOANS, 763 Cookman -Ave. P ar 'S Sdurntlonnl. laiili Hom« . loardinf asd ty Stlai' For Girls and Children. 12th year opens S^pt. 18, 1HD0. Fullconreo In English Stud I cs.jd at hemat- ics, Languages and Music. Address MISS IlOSS, Principal,. ----- ----- 1—GO-LAsburyavenue..A}*uryl>aiK»-N.J EARLES GALLERIES, 810 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. . • „ A BRILLIANT. EXHIBITION OF THE.. WORKS OF 1 CHASS^EINHART IN BLACK AND WHITE. . A most interesting and delightful collection of P IC T tJtlES . James S. iii-oteisii it, m m s m ,. ASBURY PARK ^ O W E E GO. MAIN STATION: Railroad,'near First avenue. _ ^iKplshea ElectiHo Aro and1 Ineandesoent llghtS at any location. ... OFFICERS: ; Proaldent^lYRON S: GOULD,. Vice Pres’t —GEO. .F. KROEIIL. - Treasurer-rJOllN ROCKAFEIj LER, Seo’y and Sup’t-^GEO.M. LANE. DIRECTORS 5 ' Myron S. Gould, Geo. F. Kroehl, John Rockafeller, • J. Stanley Ferguson, »^Geo. M. Lane. t PRESCRIPTIONS will recelvo special caro and attention, and will bo oompoundod from • Chemically Pore 1 Thorougtily.RellaWe DRUGS af BBASO!fAB|.E P B ieis, ilt THOS. Rl, STEWART’S, (Snocessor to Woolley & Reed,) Registered Bltarinacist, Cookman 4io. and Bond St. THE PRESS, (NEW YORK)/" .. . • irtoi^ji soi. ' DAILY. SUNDAY. WEEKLY. (»pages, 1 ct. 2d pages, 4 cts. 8 or 10 psges. acts. 'fl’ho Ag^rossiva Republican JonmtOi , of tlio Metropolis.. y ;| : A NEWSPAPER FOR THE MASSE&. Founded Dccomborlst, I8ft7. TmiWxsslrthL -wires; bat no aafa^oriiles to avenge. T h e JfUost R em arkable Xewsgftper Success Ntw York J . * The Press Is a National Newspaper. Cheap news, vulgar4 sensations and trash find noplace in. tbo columns of Thr P ress. Thk Press has tho brightest Editorial’ 'pago lu New York'. It sparkles with points^ . T he Press Sunday Edition Is splendid . vontyTJago'papciT'Covering cvery-curredttopfc- of interest. >' * The pRKsa Wreki.y E dition contains all tho good thingaof tho Daily and Sunday edition** ■ For those, who cannot afTord tho Daily oral v prevented by distance from early rctfelving it, Thk Wbkklx Is a splendid substltutS, AS AN ADVERTISma MEDIUM .The P ress has no superior in Now York. > THE PRESS Within the reach q f all. The best and chcapcel : Nctv/paper publlthcd• in Awi*rtco. Daily and Sanday, one year, , - $5.Q0 " 6 months, Sim) ^ _ o n o ‘‘ 45 Daily, only,’ one* yeaf, ' - ^ ‘ 8.WJ -** «* four montlifl, - • 1*00 Sunday, ono year, - - - 2.00 Weekly PreBa, ono yoar, - .1.00 Rend for T he P ress ClrcularA :" W hples freo. Agents wanted everywhere. Liberal commissions. 1 Address THK PRESS, Potter Building, 88 park Row. H«w York. S crib n o r ’p M agazine For the coming year wllJ bo noteworthy' for a number of Bpeclal features which tho publishers believe aro of very, uijufuai interest, and among them tho foljowing may bo mentioned: Sir Edwin Arnold contributes tp the Becembcr number tho first of a series of four Articles upon Japan( its peoplo. its ways and its thoughts. Mr. Robert Blam, who was commissioned to ro to Japan for Scribner* Maaazln of d tides 11 . ....... low, illustrated by Mr. Blum. Henry Bf. Stanley has prepared for the Jantlary number an Import- ant article upou "The Pigmies of the Great Afri- can Forest.” Another contribution in this field will be Mr. J. Scott Kettle’s account of-the recent frlcan Exhibition held in London. Both papers liMw amply 111unrated." j.' \ The Wrecker, - 1 a Serial mn-el by Robert Louis Stovensoiy J id Lloyd Osbourne, will run through a lar^e tbojear. Illustrated by Hole. A two-part sto^y by Frank R. Stockton will also appear. Pror. James Bryce. Bf. P., author of " Tho American Commonwealth,” will write a series of Four Articles upon India, em- bodying thef' results of his recent Journey and studies on this land of never-ending interest. Ocean Steamablps will ho tho subject of an Important Berles some- what upon tbo lines or tho successful Kaltnuul Articles. “ Passenger Travel,” " -Tho Lifo of OIll- CeTs-ahd-Men,J*-“ Bi>eed*and Safely Devices,—and- “ Management," are somo of tbo subjects touched upon and illustrated. (•rent Strieiiof llie W«»rl«l Is tho tI|lo of a novel'collection of articles on whRih tlie author and artist will collaborate to givo tho characteristics of famous thoroughfares. Tho first, on Sroadway, will be written by Richard Harding Dayls, and illustrated bv Arthur B. Frost. Others will follow on Piccadilly, London: Boulevard, Paris; Tho Corso, Romo. The pricc of Scrlbncr'n Magazine admits of adding a nidisritptlon to 'one'* other remtlng at very rnnau co*/. Or<hT8 thuiild W'xaU atonce; 83ia Tear. 215c a Nnmber. The Asbury Park JotfnNAi. and Scrib• ner'i Magazine^ 1 yerir, $3.60. Oaah wit Order. ^ ' Chas. Scribner’s Sons, Publishers, 743-745 Broadway, No^ York. Seeing'' is Believing.” Perfect in Oonetrnotion. Aitletio in IJorign.1 Mjitailoaa in its Qgbt. ’Absolutely bhTo nn<l niib ro n k n b lo %bo sbupla* CblSdcanmuiiagolt. IfBllahttBpnrnranilbrlahto* than gABllj-'ht, sortw th«n electric lt«h< mow cW?ffu ■ thou either. Tharanre b n r tw* million t i n t . ItnuiRtboftRniiSlimjifto ^ «nclLa.i*HlBg IndtMHl Ulfl.for'Jeotapa moy crnno and lnmpa may go, but Tito Itochaitcr,,el»hic^ bn foreTerl Wo make otct 9,000.. rirtlgtlo viirlpttoa —HanRiiig ond;TabI« Uwnp9 , Bkntiuct and Btiidy* VfmQ_and 1 ’lnno Lamp*-, every k in d . In Jlfonzo, ^oroelalij, Klckol ant PlackWruutfht.lrrtlj. ‘ j. t-‘ ---- Qur written gynmntcc pocfl with every'lamp. Ask foi Iho (amt) and-tho Buarnntce, nn<l insist npon Scelniftht tUunp of tlip (fonu1 iKH-n T 1IK..R0CU s s i i b . ’* If thi lamp tU’aler ha*n’t tlio Ilochcatcr and.thoityl) you want,pond to us for free lllurtratcd catnlogno <nn<' nxlnecd prleo-llBt), and vio will box an it send yoU'anj lampaafely by express, right to your door. If you can it will pwyyou to vhlt our spacfoui. Itorcs.((liolariscst In Iho w orld),and net the display of, a r t in -laratS-mnkijig. Wt ^«w leardyou cn* io New York in b*yif‘£ j* ‘*ingU larrf. , ’’ . v HOGIIB8TRR ISM P C»n . . OT Unrolny 8t.,) now *orK» n-r rViri hldao and’ JBdralay Street both run ink* Broadway opposite tho Po4t~0jjlc«. JT.. 1 '..i.mlm 1 ' I rfal ... nI T«G COTTRELL A LL KINr»B OF Blue Stone, Brick,^ Cement, Lime, Plaster and Hair. Curbing and PavinK a b^edalty. • ‘ 0 FP 1 .CB Jones’s Coal Yard, Second avonuo and Main stfoot,' > JiSBBIlT PA»H,N.J, JAHE8 W. P01ABD, Rc^ldonco—Nowark Av( Si Main St,./Ocean Park * P.O. Box 735-ABbury Park, N. J. ^ Isto f Conveyances, Monmouth County Clerk’s Offlco, for the week ending January 17,1891: ABBURY PARK. . James A,*Bradioy to Joseph A". liulso— lot A»- bury Park. 81,860. f HBPTUHK TOWNSHIP. Georgo W. Henderson to James Woolley—lota B12 anafill, SecUoaA,.MOunt Prospect Cemetery, 825. -— Charles Tilton to Jonathan Applegato—lot at West Park. S4oo. Wm. J. Payntcr to Nowell R. Mount— lo t In Nop* ■me township. * Catharine a . Weatherly to Mary G. Ferri*-lot B, West Grovo. 8^00. Josephine M. Wlnans to J. H. Wlnans—lot 829, Vycst Park. 8500. - MI8CBIJJIKEOUS. , • George W. ChamberHirto Edward Sherman—3 50-100 acres in Wall township. 81. ^ BcnJ.'M. Ebcrlmrt el at. to Q. P. Woolley—lot 158, Loch Arbour. 8G50. - Charles A. Casler to John T. Leonard—lot 7, Atlantic.Highlands. $275. ---- Christopher Slcklcs to Frank GifTord—lot 7, Block N, map of Ludlow tract,' North Brighton. 8150. .. PowittC. Nowing to ArchioC. Newingr-Iots75 and 70, map Henry H. Wardell property, Long Branch City. 85,000. 1 Wm. L. Chadwick tt al. to AmandaP. Chadwick —loLkedJiank__________ :—!— : ----- ?_:--------- arrlct C. Carhart to Deborah ’A. Ludlow—lot ...Jdletown township. 81. 'Julia E. Tyler to Oliver H. Brown—lot 239, map of Brighton atld North Brighton. 8500. Mary F. Sandfotd to Oliver H. Brown—1 8-100 acres in Howell township, 8325. Samuol T. Hendrickson et al. to Matthias Barn- hill—lot 9, Howell township. 8100. John H. Geary to D. J. Roberts—lots a t Atlantic Highlands. Edward I. Ilorsman to 8. O. Hendrickson—lot in Ocean township. 81. Richard J. Dobbins to Elizabeth Kennedy—lot at Long Branch. 310,000. Dewitt C. Nowinga to Walter R, Cook—lot In Ocean township. 818.7,1. • R. P. Smock, Sheriii; to Marcus M. Davidson— lot 129, ShrewKbury township. 8)6. Gilbert G. Conover to Wm. Quackenbush—6 acres in Marlboro township. 877.50. r L John |I Laird, cx’r . to Annlo E,JfofTmanr^.TSi 100 acres In Maualapan township. 8175. Spring.Lake and Sea Girt Co. to 'tho Church o f the Honr Spirit, Asbury Park—lot 19, block 52, map of Hpring Lako. 8800. , , Isaiah Revy to James T. Dolph—6 2-100 acres In Shrewsbury township. 890.30. Hugh R. Herbert and wlfo to Wm. Lackey—lot at I/>ng Branch. 81. Slegmund T. Meyer to Rebecca Morey— lot 15, Long Branch, Wm. H. Denyse map. 81. Calherlno T. Kavanagh to William A. Hclaloy —lot in Ocean township. 81,500. - 1- - — ■_ ..... «' ..... Wm. H. Warner. Ex’r, to Charles Warner—lot 4, Ocean townsblp^&lOO___ —- —-------------- ------ - Charles M. 8loan to A. Sloan—lot in Wall town- ship. 8 m u■ : ' Robert C. Hubbard to Sarah Y. Wardell—lot at LonjPBranch. 8600. Samuel W. Wardell to Sarah Y. Wardell—lot at Long Branch. 81 and exchange. Geo, W. Hennessey to Garret Hennessey d at—2 03-100 acres in Ocean township. 81 and exchange. John 8cely to Martin C. Lonacn—1 23*100 acres in Middletown township. 81. Mary Shlol and husband to Martin C. Lobsen— t a t Port Monmouth. 810. Wm. II. Postcn, Adm’r, to John Hart—lot In Middletown township. 8315. Mary A. Miller to Franklin P, Roberge—8 acres In Shrewsbury township, 8575. Peter Cokelet to Kato L. Chappie—lot in Rari- tan township. $'00. Elizabeth G. Dickerson to Emma N. Bently—lota 190,191 In Wall township. 32.500. Maw E. Atkins and husband to AdelbertG. Mills—I-*}19-100 acres Middletown towuship. 81. AdelbertG. Mills to Mary E. Atkina—13 59-100 acres, Middletown township. 81 Daniel L. Conover to N. woodward—lot 30, At- Jantlo Highland#; 875.'- David Jones'Roberts to N...Woodwabil—lot 80, Atlantic Highlands, 875. James Freeman ct al.. to Charles A. Caaloy—lot 7, Atlantio Highlands. 8100. Mary R. Oliver ei at, to Thomas T. Rogers—9 91- acret, Atlantic Highlands. 83.700. • .. . , wary R. Oliver and husbana to Thomas T. Rogers—lota 970,071, Atlantic Highlands, $1,600. charlotte Jesaw to Louise M. Batzer—lots 193, 19i; Atlantic Highlands. 81. Caroliue P. Jenl to Bertha Stemple—4 acres In Shrewsbury township. *150. Sarah E. Dorsett and husband to E. J. Dorsett— lot 5S> , Red Bank. 81. Annlo Nixon to Wm. A. Close—% part of lota 8 and 4, Matawan towuship. 82,000. Hannah Corlles and husband lo Mary E, Smith -lot at Long Branch. 80,000. Theo. Fields to Wm. H. Sbafto-lot 75, Villa Park.8145.------- :__________________ ______ _ Catherine R Blunt, by ShcrliT, to Wm. H. 8hafto-~lot 75, Villa I’ark; 8145. *- A. II. Borden to Sarah Roche—27 97>100 acres, Shrewsbury township, 88,250. •* . Frederick W. Hope to Honry C. Whlte—lot In Shrewsbury. 8100. The Long^Branch Police Sanitary and Im- irovement Commission to-Jessie Meyers—lots 1, :, 3. ocean4 township. $^19.78. Lizzie Whittlngham and husband to Lavlnia Chumar—lot 205 near Atlantio Highlands. $1,000. John- E. Umnlng, M. C. C., to Albert Wardell— lot 13, Eatontown. $700. Deborah A. Johnson "by Master to Albert War- dell—lot 13, Eatontown. $700. Thomas H. Grant to John S. Applccato—3 81- 100 aores in Middletown township. $516. Catharlno E. MeClces to W. W. Taylor—lot In Holmdel. $170. *s — »*v . Joseph II. Richmond to Tho Inhabitants of tho townsldp of Marlboro—lot 2, Marlboro. $410. . The Freehold Land Co. to D7 A. Stateslr—lot 17, Freehold. 8235, ' Sarah Jeffrey and husband to Margaret Mo-, Kean— to t 'a t Oo^anvllle. $170. Elizabeth Hebnessfcy to G. W, nennossey—lot at North Long Branch. 81. . " Wm. II. Vredcnburgh, M. C. C., to John D. Thompson—10 25-100 aores at Freehold. $65. lleten Wilson and husband to John L»mb—S9 25-100 acres In Manalapan township. $1,275.62, Almira Norton and husband to Helon Wilson— lots In Manalapan township, 81. Chas. H. Ellis et al., Exo’r, to Alonzo Whlto— lot In Freehold. 80,000. Alonzo Brower to Andrew McDowell— lota 9 and 10 In Block D, Froehold. $250^ Thomas W. Cooper to Jamos G.- Lane-lot 18, Long Branoh, woo. _ Annlo E. Patter to Edward Handy—lota 19 and 20, Long- Branoh. $575. Spring Lako and Sea Girt Co. to W. W. Trout— lots 8,9,10, Blook 87, Spring Lake. $3,000. J. Smith Morris et at- td It J.- Dalton— lot .In Eatontown township. $115. . -. Thomas II. Robbins to Lillian F, Naylor—lot 15, Keyport 81 and Ex. Buildint; Contracts. FILED TO AND INCLUDING JAN. 17»„1891. j»I4—J. B. Boyer'with Carman & Holbrook— building ut Asbury Park. 81,450. Wondors'ofCalifornia, The beauty of thb Monterey cohst, tho won- ders of the Yosemlte, tho plctoroaquo deaerta of N^w Mexico, and the unique aobllmlty of the Grand'CaDon of the Oolorado^are tbe sab jecta treated by Charles Dadley Warner In hls article, entitled' "The lioart of tho Doa- ert,?* which 1b to, appear lo the February npmbar of Harper's Mdgaztnv. Introducing his dcflcrlptlon of the Grand Cafion, bo says; i‘*I went to It with reluctanco. I shrink ft;pm_ attempting to say anything abont it.^ ir you knew tbat there was but one spot on tbe earth where Nature kopt her*sccrotof secrets, the key tq the action of her most gigantic and patient forces through tbo long eras, fhemar- vel of constructive a^d destructive energy, In features of sublimity made possible to niehtal endurance by the moat exquisite devlcea^of. painting and sculpture, the wonder which te without parallel or comparison, would you not hesitate to ^approach It f Would you not wander aijid delay with this and that .ponder, and- this ,an<J thht beauty and nobility of 8ccneryn«ittlngrtrff-tbe“day when tbo Imagl- uatlon, wljlch Is our highest gift, must jj© pxtlngutehod by the reality f »* TIIB JOURNAL AND OTnEn PUnLlOATIONS AT A pIBOOUNT WHEN TAKEN TOOBTHEIt. Many readers of this papor aro subscribers to various magazines, and as this Is the sea- son To^ renewals wd make tho followlng-offer bf the boat publications, with the J ournal, at prices that will prove a moans of saving money. To all ofd or new subscribers to this paper, who romlt tho amount oppostO/die publicationsnamod bolow, botfi will befsont for one year. The offer appllos to thoso who pay baok duos or In advanco. The sum named muet^n all cases be forwarded with order, by money order, postal note or chock, payable to Asbury Park Printing II oubo. Tho Journal and Harper's Weekly........... ! " , narpor’a Magazine......... ' Harper’a Bazar.. **. Harper’s Young People.. M_ “ v Century........ ............. , / St. Nicholas..................... * *‘ ** ^ Scrihner’a .... '.. .......... . .** ’ “ .. Babyhood....... ................ ** - Agriculturist.................. . .“ " C<ismopolltan.. ....... " Gootl Uousekooplng........ " • " Wldo Awako.. . . ....... socurd low periodicals not named above, If subscribers will Indicate what they profor. Address com- munications to c*-'~ Asuury Park Printing IIcfusB, - Asbury Park, N.J.- .$1 60 . 4 50 . 4 . 3 25 . 4 50 . 8 50 . 8 60 2 00 . 2 50 . 2 75 . 3 25 . 800 Thinks It Would be a “Snap.1 If'tb e pooplo and tho Commissioners of Asbury Park know what they aro about.they™ will lose no time In acccptlng Mr.. James A. Bradley’s offor to soil to tho town for$15Q,000 the beach front, tho sower system and bis rights" In Simser Lake, iriolmjlflg St. John’s, Ialaudr- The hmount Mr. Dradleyaskrls only tt fraction of what prlvato parlies would be eager to give for his property: It Is doubtful, in fact. If maqagod for revonqp.onlv. the beaoh conld not be jnado to j(®ia-tBat much in the course of ^.single summerseason. The* proposal to’seli It Istthmlstakable evidence of Mr. Bradloyla deyotjon toJho Interosta pf the town, Just as tho success of tho resort which h©.fQUuded-aod.guard*d-KiLh-sa-many.-aoem-_ Ingly onerods restrictions Is proof of the wis- dom, the foresight and the knowledge of men which have galded hlmi^o success. Tho re- strictions in regard to business and pleasure at Asbnry Park are wise and.polltlo from the mere standard of the-aelf-lnteroat of tbe town. They help to make It a pleasant place and a safe one. They attract ny tbonsands vlaitors who are repelled by many foatnres of seaside resorts, and even those who grumble at them at times are likely to appreciate their true valne and benefits to tho placo, Its Inhab- itants and Its transient visitors. The death of Mr. Bradley Or hla sale of tho ocean front to men with Ideas different from his own might have well-nigh revolutionized the whole char - acter of the resort .—Newark News. He Prefers a Lonely Lifts. The Island of Juan Fernando*, once Inhab- ited by Robinson Crnaoe, Is now tenanted by a former Austrian officer, Baron von Rodth, ■ whot after botng far.cedby the'torrlble wounds which ho received at tho battle of Sadpwa In 1880 to leave the armyi grew tired of the monotony of existence in civilized Europe, and determined to dovolo bis fortune to %,llfo of adventug}. For fifteen years past ho has been living on tho Island of'Juan ^ernandea ,w!th aBmall colony ot.natives’aqd of Euro- . ^ j _ ■ -»i doserlors from "civilization, tm d only ings Raised ana MuVOOj ^ommuntcattngwltb (he world onco a year, whenhgBendahls flue sailing yeicht-to,Vat- paralso for provisions and supplies. Literary Notes. IS BTANLET a PIRATE f Mr. E. L. Godkin, In the February number of The Forum, under takes to provo that tho expedition to relieve Emin was clearly a piratical undertaking, Blnoo It bad the sano*' tlon of no government apd Its leader was responsible to no power. Mr. Godkin ex- presses tho hlghoBt admiration for Stanley’s couragtfand endurance, and approves of hlj^ conduct of tbo expedition. It Is Its legal character only that he criticises. Othor arti- cles that will appear In tho February Forum are: ’‘The Vanishing 8nrplufl,” by Senator Carlisle ;_ii.Tho.. Farmer’a,X’hanged_Condi- tion,” by Prof. Rodnoy Welch; “ The Gov- ernment and tbe Indians,” by Hiram Price; a biographical essay by Prof. Gilderelcove, of the Johns Hopkins University, and half a dozen other esaaya. THE UOITE-MAKBR for January la bright with Interesting papers and Illustrations. Tbe frontispiece Is entitled Debuanle of tho Season—Miss ’01.” Flor- ence Gray bas-a deaorlptlvo article on “ His Dear City of Itoiieor” and Mary Wager- Flsher writes of tfo^MQuooroat Girl In Ger- nimiyT” There aro a dozen othor papors and^, poems ahead ot tho HousowIfo’s Department, which opens with “ Tho Domestic Club.” Linda Belle Colaon gives “ A Glimpse of a French Canadian Market” Jennie Juno, tbo editor, tolls of-■“ How Wo Dress Now,” which Is Illustrated. The Shopper and Correspond- ence and Qaorlos will bo' found of special bonoQtlo lady readers. Tho Home-Maker Is publlshod at 44 East 14th St., New York, at $2.00 a year. It Is In magazine form and almost as largo as Harjtcr's. It may be ordered through the local nows depots. , Leo & Shepard’s latest publication la a novel by nenfy’Wood. Ita title Is “ Edward Burton,V and the critics have treated itgen- eronsly in tbolr reviews. Aa a specimen of latter-day novol It Is superior In Interest and cpnBtrbctlon. It will be a popular boon with educated pooplo„ and help the education of those not so gif tod. Sold at the bookatoroa, or mailed on receipt of flfty cents by the pub- lishers. _____ __ Kew Boards ot Trade* Tho pooplo of Atlantio HighlandszJiave organizod a Board of Trade wlih tho follow- Ingofflcers: , President—Jamea H. Leouard. Flrat V lee-Proudent—J acob T. Stout. SeQcyid Vloe-Prealdent—Dr. K. C. Curlla. Secretary—Willlmm T.-Frankliij. > Troaaurer-Percy Falklnbprg. Board of DIrecto re—T. H. I eonard, N. H. Rob- 0 rta,-8 . T. Whlto, P. S. Con vBr, Dr. John Van Mater, Geo. Mackey, J. K. B Iph, W. M. Foster. A meeting of the following morobanta .of Long Branoh was >->ld laat week for the pur- pose otorgftnlzing a Board of Trade: Jacob Steinbach, Honry K roe nor, Daniel Edwards, Wi R. Warwick; Jr., Matthias WoolleyrM. F. Kahn, Wm. ,Lackey, R. C. Adamson,-J. L. Townlo^and Mr. Hervey. __^ A faotory proposition was afterwards dis" cussedj and a committee of four waa appolnt- ed to consider the matter, j, Tjie Senate Committees. . The following commlttooa have boon namod by President A^raln of the Senate: Judiciary—Worts, Barrett, Gardner. Revision of LawVzMarsb, Barrett, Cranmer. Finance—Kess^EYcr^tt, Ruo. ; .Municipal Corporatlons-^Werts, Mallon, Gard- ner# '■ . , Railroads aud Canala—Mkllon, Brown, Cran- Bankaand Insurancc-rCornish, tflnton, Gard- ner. ■ Education—Smith, KoyS, Rogers.^ -<-<> Militia—McDonald, Barker, Cranmer. * Game and Fiaherlea—Wlnton. Mallon,(fowler. Agriculture—Brotvn, Smith, GardneriJ Miscellaneous Business—Smith, Marsh, Leam-r ing. ' Elections—McDonald, Keys, Carter. . , Claims aqd Pension^Moree, Rogers, Butcher.- Unil niiihed’BuBlncas—W inton^Koys. Carter. Engrossed Bills—Barrett, Butcher, Ruet \ Labor and Industries—Butcher, Cornish, CTan- mef. ' ’• . • Boroughs—Barker, Cornish, Fowler, H , . . Exporlenco of juat a year ago proves that passage of a Freo Coinage bill by the Sdnato :dooa not ncccasarlly. mean.ltq passage by the House. The very bill which-tho Sonato paased by 12 majority on Tdeaday night waa tho one defeated In tho Houso laat year,.after It had come from the Sonato with enthuslaatic pre- dictions of Ita success. The circpmatancca now arc somewhat ^different, It is truo. But It may well be dodbted whether any_ consider- able number pf Republican Uepresontatlvos, after refusing froo colnago last ■yMr;«na_-dotf- gorous to publlo crcdlt and National prosper- ity, an<l deliberately adopting another mea8-# ure aa'wiser and safer, will vote thia year that thoy wero In error. ” ' Neither Is It clear that the mcasuro, IWt Bhould be passed by tho House, would bccome a l^v this year. Thero remainsthopossibility of-’a.Presidential veto, and thoro la no visible reason to anpposo that tbe bill would havo the required two thirds majority, oven in tho Sen ate. Five more Senators than supported the bill Tuesday night would bo necessary, and It la doubtful whether any couJd bo Iwlucod to tako tho gravo responsibility of debasing tho currency. For it la clear enough that the strong arguments against tho pending meas- ure by Senator Sherman on Tuesday wero only open to criticism aa too .moderate a |d mild in statement. The mpasuro would'nSfonly tend to push gold out of monetary uso aftor a timo, but in airhuman~probability would do bo vofy quickly, through the operation of laws well known In all tho markets, and prac- tically universal In their influence. When a holder of silver bullion pan get for every ounce of It $1 89 in legal' tondor paper* that will make .the papor. worth no. more.than sliver may chance to be, but will not In any way tend to fix the value of paper with refer- ence to tho monoy of othor commorclal na-i tlons. Peoplo who havo money of other com£ morolal nations will dislike to put lt *out, ek- ceptatsuch promlpm as thoy way consider attractive. Thero aro thousands of merchants who have tcfpay In a year about seven hnndce<Lm!lll£*nfL In gold o r ita equivalent to foreigners. Other thousands have debts abroad or at homo on which payment of principal and interest in gold Is elthor expressly stipulated or necesi sary-to their sol voncy. Corporations by .the thousand bare dobts thus payable by express contract, and also Statos, counties, cities and towns. All thtso mnBt havo gold/and foar a state of things In whicb.lt cannot bo obtained in exchange for currency. Tb,oy will aak anx- iously whether the Government la ablo or suffi- ciently rcsoluto to continue paying gold for notes. ; ‘ ., v -f. ■"Quickly tbey will seo tbat tbo notes aro of different kinds. Tho new Treasury notes and tho old silver certificates cannot now be pre- sented in expectation that gold will bo p,aid for them. Bank notes are retjpomablo In legal tendora, and the legal tenders aro teohnfcally redeemable lu “coin” of tho Unitod States, and while Government may earnestly desire and atrongly endoavor to pay gold-in-order-to- save Ita crediffno moans exlat of compelling It to do ao if exhahatlon of its reserve Is near. The banka also, whloh bave~the~fprelgn ex- changes to make,1 arid tho commorclal and corporate and municipal payments for custo- m er, hold ono hundred millions of legal ten- ders, and would bo sorely pressed by tholr ouatomors to mako tholr reserves safo boyot^ qaeatlQij.__Ev.ery_mercbant_or_corporatianl having foreign debts to pay would ask that bis deposit should bo mado payable fit gold by express contract, and could draw tho legal tenders and got tho gold for tlicm at tbo Treasury if tho banks refuse. In tho process of protecting thomeolvos against a poflslblo danger, thoso who have gold to pay and tho banka through which payments bajVo to bo made can scarcely avoid exhausting tho gold reaervo of tho Government. Thus far domostlc demands only aro con- sidered. Can any ono guess how much for- eign capital Is now Invested In American rail- ways, telegraphs, mines, mills, lands and in- dustries on whtch Interest or profits might bo paid In legal tondors only f A compotobt au- thority estimated that In eight montha less than ono hundred and fifty, millions of bucb capital came hither, and waa mainly put Into securities which could bo sold without delay. The belief o^, foreign Inveatora aa to the folly of unlimited silver colndge Is almost unanimous. But iT only a part WffinfonsTdoF that atop auicidal ajiouldL withdraw tbeir in- veatmonts it would end tho matter. Wero bnt a fifth of such foreign capital taken away from this country It would enrpt^B^Treaa- ury roaorves of gold. I a it irat'tnrFfaln tlifct many foreign Investers.wourd begin to sell and withdraw tholr capital f The action of a ‘ fow would start others, and quickly thoro would come a premium on goldii ’ ! This' is not a moaauro whlch-Ropresontatlves who oaro for thplr own reputation, or for tfeo prosperity oflho countryvjwiH vpte"for light- ly, or without grave and anxloua thought. It Involves tho po8albility,4to aay tho very least, "of changes moat radical, moat doatructivo to- Industries aud trade, moat h&rtfuWo tho ralH- iona who wanT'aff good dollara a*, can bo bad In tho world when they earn dollars. A band of reokle88 domagogaoB, who havo no past and no future to consider, might tako such a risk. A Demooratlo Congress, frantically" eager to,capture the Presidency and tfteofflcea at the coat of any public calamity cbricolvablo, might tako euob a responsibility. But It la to bo hoped that fow Republican Roprosontativoa' will consont to make the mono^ of American commerce and Amorlcan labor less valuabio than;’tho beat that Is known In tbo .civilized WOjf|a.—New York Tribune. LSRIlINKAQB OF $300,000,000. ion.. W.; I. Trenholm; ox-Comptroltor of iQ^Curroncy, hasr-this to*say about ono fea^ iro of tho bill: Thofe are nearly 1,000 eavlnga banka In, tbo nited States, and they owe their depositors $1,500,000,000, representing that much In valno aavod by poor people out of tholr j’arnlngs, repolved by tho banks As ^oId or ita aqulvalont, aud presumably invested on a gold tpaalB. Hero fa a debt that should'be*held Fvjred by Cobgreas; yet jmdor the proposed lOl theao Inatltutlona Can settle with tholr de- ppiltora in allver, and this will probably bo efcscted with a loas to tho dopoaltora of 20 per omit, in the value of their deposits, or about $3^,000,000 In the aggregate.. " The Queen’a ladlea-ln-waiting are aald to be murmuring because thoy only recolve- $1,600 a year, and aro “ expected to appear In a new costumo at overy dinner.” It la singular they don’t eoonomlze by going out and taking dinner with a friend'occasionally. We don’t Buppoae tbey ever thought, of that? though. *T ' , K. of tlie G. E. Installation. On Monday evoning next, Jan. 20, tho' Gfoqd Lodge officer will install the new board of officera of Corinthian Cd^tlo, No. 47,_of thia place.- A. delegation from Clyde Castlo, of Mfinaaqn'rth, will bo.present. -/V-/” After tho Installation ceremony t8o. Caatld Vlll hpjd \vt: 0rs(5 annual compUmontary re-' ceptioo. Metnbora aro rcqneatod: to tie ^at CSello-by S o’clock, sharp. Ma,” asked aeven-year-old Tomihy, "what la a nlgbt^Dwl~ ‘‘tiooluityour father’s por- trait,” replied hla mother, “ and don't ask pny more Buoh foolish questions,”^ ;.: - lUercst In the Founder’s C^fter, 1 TneyWECTORs op the- poard of trade hb* LIEv SNt 18 A aOOD TUINO FOR TUB. JfOR- ^ OUOH, XNO -WILL DEVISE WAT8 AND MEANS TO SECURE THE BEAOn FRONT—MAIL MAT- . TAR3 IN FINE SHAPE AND Tnrf JL’ROSPBCT GOOD FOR CARRIER DELIVERIES THHOU.OIT - THE TOWN8UIP— THE FAOTORY DUILDINO'’ ' WILL SOON HE COMMBNCTED. * /■ ' Matters of vital Importance to Asbnry Park tfere discuescd at tbo Board or Trade rooms on Monday evotildg. JLwas the largest meet-, lng of tho Directors sinco the organization of tho Board. 'President James'II. Bird callod tho'meettng to order promptly at 8 o’clock. The sooro- tary(read eovpral communications which wore dIajrosed 6f. .1 ■•'--/■ Ono of tboso, relating to tho extension of tbejreo mail dellvory to cover Neptuno town- ship, and Ocean township aa far north as Deal Boacb, was fully and freely discussed - . and explanations mado for tho benefit of ; .thoso npt al ready *^6qualntcd with tho condl- * I tlons. . . The Post Ofilco"'i)opartmcnt at Washington la not only willing but anxious to consolidate 5 all tho locol ofllcca under tho management of ono head aa aro tho llrat-clasa offices. Tbo work Is materially simplified and tho delivery . . of mall far morp oxpedltlous, tho pouohoaand packages being .roado up by, a clerk;jpn tho. tjatn and ready * for carriers as soon aa tho~ train Teaches'tho station. It will not do away 1 with tho local offices, which are tobtfretalned * ^ for private boxfes, tho aalo of stamps and tho regular functlona of an offico as now, only thoy wi|l be relieved from the freo dellvory. ,f A petition which had been prepared waa Bigned by the members, and other papers will ' boclrQQjftted .tbroiighouttho_ district for.8ig-_„^„«„ natures. 0 . Atr. J. Stanley Ferguson, of the factory . committee, made a verbal statemont of what ^had boon dono toward tbo now factory pro- ject. Everything la in proper ahapo for be- ginning tho work In a few days. Mr. Bradley donated eight lota for tho factory site and *•"’ twenty-six lota of 50x150 tp be sold and tbo proceeds togo Into tho^buUding.fnndwThoao........ —’ _ lota havo all been taken and aa aoon as tho necessary papers are drawn tho monoy will be in hind. Mr. Henry C. Winaor Is truateo in tho 'transactions, and tho articles of agree- ment have been signed by tho Board of Trade and other contracting parties. The Messrs. Steiner gave $5,000 to tho bulld- ing fund and provide all of |ho machinery excepting boHer,and engine. They have also purchased four pf the lots. * Tho discussion on finances brought out somo of the deficiencies of the Borough charter with.relatlop to raising funds for music and other purposes wblch might be required In improving tho placo. The proposition of Mr. Bradldy to dlapoao of, the bekch, tho sower system and Sunset Lako, brought up a long Informal discussion as to ways and means. Mr. narrlson said there need be no trouble o?or tho sorters as they conld be controlled undor general law. S -Thfr. hwoh^inw tlnn ,y/u 9then u k e o ^ n p ^ ^ ^ and nearly all'preaent had a word to say. A »• proprietary luterost by purchase or lease waa regarded as jijgst cssefltial to tho well bolng . of Aabury pjirk. Mr. Bradley would no doubt, at his demise, leave tbo beach front with proper restrictions. The tendoncy and frequency with which wills aro broken would be disastrous to this placo If the front of !A§_bory_Park Bhpu!AP®8s into other hauda or bo'toft open for all sorts of catch-ponny fftiowe aa at- Conoy Island and otbor places. \ C ( ' Thl^ n|ow of tbd mattor became so strongly fixed l ih tho members of tho Board that a motion was-made by Mr. Glthena to recom- mend tbo_Borou£^Comhi(saloners^to leaso tbo beach with Its prlvilog^a for a term of years, the proceeds, after.,paying tbe neceaa- ary funning expenses, to go Into a sinking . fund for purchasing at tho end of tho torm ^agreed upon, and for tbe amount stipulated in tho contract. Tbo president named Messrs. Githone, Fub- gason and Ilarrlaon ,aa a committee to pre- pare such,memorial to tho Commissioners. —r- Tbo appointment of a committee on muslo for the, beach, and.the regular standing com- mittees, will bo announced by Presldont;Bird at the mooting on Fob. 3. Tho young man who wlshoa io go to ihe j^ont in hl^ ^oeatiOni and iitay^ihore, should sec¥ro a pnaltloh’ asVjtroot-car driver. . It Is estimated that thore aro 488,000,000 tons of coal beneath tho surf ACS'of tbo earth. Coal~:bolng eo low down^la what imakea.lt."" come ao high. ' ' *^r. . “ How did yon like Scrlblum’s now novel?” Only read two pauos( and then dropped it.” Why so ?” , Tho horolne’a namo waa Gladys and ,tho hero's Roglnald—^nd that 80ttl0<| "it.” . ' ; . ' Is Patti fared so well on hor last farewell tour lb Hits country, tbat sho has conoludcd notto_ . comohorQon another farowoll tour this sea- son. This country may misa lidr, but It will - - not miss eo mpch monoy. A personal Itjajn.states that “ Jay Gould carries a 35-cohtcfino.” ; Itsooma like an In- excuaablo piece pf extr&vaganco for. a ma'h worth-fifty millions.lo carry a fiS-cont cane when a very good walklrfg stick can be had for thirty cents. In the latest book for boys, tho hero, aged 16, captures two counterfeiters, ajjoota a bur- KlaKc^W‘esW a horse thief, ana breaks up a 'band of robbore. .The roa^on.ho didn’t go West and kill a dozen Indians w&a because' hoAvaan’t fooling well, f ^ Somobody sayB* that “ the' devil laughs when mon lie.” If this be t£UO, then the devl] must laugh twenty-four hoUra a day all the year round, and haa tp employ odo of his imps to woop for him When a sinner escapes • T , bla clutches by gottlngconverted. .One of Col. Ingersoll’s Chrlatmaa preaents, " sent by oxpresa C. O. D., waa a copy or “ Evidences or a Future State.V T h j Colonel," when ho phld tho oxpreaa charges, accepted tho gift aa an evidence that thoro onght lo bo . a future punlafiment at-least for the unknown dc»i}br. ^k , . Rev. Mr. TaTraagd saya tho atreot8 of heaven are,lIned with beautiful treca. As thoro wlllfv’” ""., be no horso-steallng In heaven, Toxana will bo unabloto soo why thore should be treea thoro. Can Mfc Talmago tell ub whether tho streets of tho-Goldon City are also llnod with tole- graph poles# . , A coloWated physlolan says that tho modi- cfelvfraternity of lOO^yoars henco will have such skill that no disease can baffie them. One hundred yeara seems a long timo to Wait for - the dlaeafio called poverty to be .abpllahed. ' Honry George's followers prom iso to do better thantfiift.' * ; ; —-£• “ Therqaro only about twenty really groat ~ dlamondsln tho world.” Tho moat romarfe- ablo thing about' them Is^ tbat no leas than twonty minstrel end. mon, thirty-aeven comor dlans and ono hundred and oleven “stara’l eaoh havo ono of tho, twenty. Some of tho others aro owned by ordinary pooplo anfi- su&mcr resortliotel olerka, • ' '\r—■* / > ThV“imythor-of-poarl workers of Vienna, — — ■owlio woro thrown put of wo>k, It la eald, “ ,b< thtf"MfiKlnl^jtarTS Irf this country;*’, ari rioting fpr ^btqaff1 .and" work,” and a freo trado^por saya “ tbis , 1 a one of the, things ; our. Republican cotetnporarloa thoroughly en- joy.” Not at all ;-bnt'stDl It ia less discour- aging to thom than If tho American workmen . wero rioting for bread and Work bocauao of thelabsenoo of a tariff In this, country. . ;yo.

Upload: others

Post on 03-Nov-2019

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: EMPORIUM - digifind-it.com · EARLES GALLERIES, 810 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. . • „ A BRILLIANT. EXHIBITION OF THE.. WORKS OF 1 CHASS^EINHART IN BLACK AND WHITE. . A most

j j - 8. KINMONTH,M. D.,( ; Corner Grand and Asbnry Adelines,'

Office nours-T to 0 A. m., 1 to 2 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m.r>H8 , KEATOR’A ACKERMAN, -T .

Homceop&tMo Physicians and Surgeons.•- Cor. Asbury avenne and Borgh streot.

* nonra—Until 9 a .m ., 7 to 9 p. m.Telephona connections. *

Philadelphia Offlco—1724 Choatnut a t

JJR .E L L A TRKNTISS UFHAM,804 Third avenne,

Office/lours until 11 a. m, Asbnry Park, N. J.

C W. GERRY, M. D. .* f IIOMOJO A T I I 1ST.BRIGIXAM COTTAGE, 614 Cookmad Avenue,

Hours—8 to 10 a. K. 2.to 4 and 7 to 9T. M.'.£)R . 8 . T. SLOCUM,

DENTIST,Officp-^201 Main St., opposite Railroad Station,

G^h ad mini s to rod. ’ Aabury Park, N. 3'.

A. fl. BURTON, D. D. S. I. O. BURTON, D. D. B.DURTON BROTHERS,-L>' R e s id e n t D e n tl i to ,

~Dorm Balldlngt~ BOfl~Cookman avo-i Agbury-Park;New York Offlce-32 West 27th St.

Gas administered. Appolntmenta mado.by tele­phone or by mall. Honrs: 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. M’f’rs of “ ZOZO ”—tho new preparation for

cleansing and preserving tho.Teoth,

J)R ; P. A. DAVISON, ■—V e te r in a ry K nrjfeon a n i l D e n tis t .

Graduate of New York Colleen of ■ * •VETERINARY SURGE0N8.

Lato Veterinary Surtroon to 4 th Aye. R. R.-Co. 1500 horses.

O FFICESCow ard's Livery Stablo, Rowall ave.Williams* Harness Store, 157 Main et.

F S t, Bolmar N. J . . Asbury Park..3. r. HAWKINS. THANK DUBAKD.

fJAW KINS & DURAND,—Attorn eys-at*Law,-SolIoltora-A Masters In Chan___ eery, Mikado Building, Cookman Av,/

Asbury Park, N. J.— J 8 AAC C. KENNEDY, ..

Attornoy-at-Law, Solicitor, Master !n Chanoery and Notary Publlo.

S pe clal attention given to exam ination^ Titles,&o.

Monmouth Bnlldlng, Asbury Park, New Jersey.

~ pA V ID HARVEY, Jr., ;“ CounH^or'at-LftwTHoIicltor, MMterafid^Eiam*

lner in Chancery, Notary Public.Asburv Park, N. J .

. JO H N HERBERT WINAN8, u Attoj$ey-at Law and Notary Pnbllo. 1 Attorney and Counselor for Mlchlgan-and Now

York.Rooms 4 and 5, Monmouth Trust Bnlldlng. Aa- bury Park ; Room 912, Temple Court, Now York.f^EORGE W. BYRAM.« ATTORNEY AT-LAW,

• Master and Solicitor in Chancery, ompnui Byram Building, Asbnry Park, N .J.

- om cc8 7 11 Wall street. New York City.nENUY M. NkVIUS, EOJRfNU WlMOH,

Counsellor a t Law." Attornoy a t Law. VfEVIUS & WILSON,-V'- Law Offices,

^ - RED BANK, N. J.pRAOTTv, BODXNlg

. A R C H I T E C T ,MIKADO BUILDING

P. O. Box.855. ASBURY PABK, N. J ,

M b s . j o h n m b i r c h ,B 1 . 0 C D T I 0 R I 8 T ,

314 Soveath avenno, ASBUHY 1‘AUK, N. J.Lessons Riven In Classes, -or private, com­

mencing Nov. 15. 1

N. H . K IL M E R ,

Contractor,.Cafpenter^piderPlans and spec I flea tlons furnished _and-estU

mates mado on all kinds of carpenter work. Jobbing of all kinds attended to.Box 2065; ' 5 P i l rn n n a v e ., O cean G rove.

MRS. R O SA IilN E V. REPLEY,

307 Fourth avenuo, Asbnry Park. TEACHER Of PIANO, ORQAH AND THEORY

pupil of Richard Hoffman.

H . B . I J Q H N S Q N , ;

P ra c tic a l - W atch m ak er,Dealer In Fine Watches, Jtewelry, Spectacles &c.

Watchosand Jewelry repaired at City Prices. Main.Btroet, near Oopkman avenne,

ASBURY PARK, N. J.

G EO . M . B E N N E T T ,

HOUSE PAINTINGn all Ita branches. Hardwood finishing. Grain­

ing, Calclmlnlng, Ac.led onappllcailon.L. Box 8132, O0U«nrGrove, N, J .

ADON LIPPiN dO TT,Contractor & Builder

Plana and estimates Cheerfully furnished. ... Jobbing In all branohes promptly and carefully

• attended to.Residence and Shop, *

907 Main St., bet. 1st and 2d, Asbury Park, N. J .

H7l6. M ARRYOTT, C o n tra c to r a n d . B u ild e r ,Estimates furnished for overy description of

work. Jobbing attended to promptly. Residence— „

6 1 2 i t Y E I T X J K ,Lock BOX 710 ' ‘“ANBURY P A R K , N. J .

S A M U E L . W . K L R K B R I D E ,. CONTRACTOR,

C a r p e n t e r & B u i l d e r .Plans and specifications furnlshedr-Jobbing'

. promptly attended to. Best of referenco given. • Resldonco-^Firat ave., bet Bond and Emory ata.

Shop and Office—First avo; and Main Bt. P.O.Box 74?. ABBURY PARK.

FRED. B. GOWDY. CHAS. H. PITCHER.1

CSOWDY & P IT C H E R ,C a r r i a g e s , a n d M a n u f a c t u ­

r e r s o f H a r n e s s .B e p tM lto rlc s-A H b n ry P A rb , B ed B a n k

: • a n d Tom s. R iv e r . .

a . a . t a y l o r ; ’ ■ ; M a s o n a n d B u i l d e r ,

Bricklaying and Plastering In all branches of Masonry work. a

Jbbblng promptlyjattonded to; • / . ^P. 0. Box C97.. Oftltfe, 719 MattlsOn avenue.

SEO.». MTTERSOM’S SOtiS,‘ . D&LKRSM

P I L I N G , T I M B E R ,• . , a n d 'G eneral Contractors,

ASnUj^/rAIiK , N. J.

J A C O B D O L L , 4 r . .P H A C T I C A l .

* . yhas on hand tho largest and flnost line of plain and gilt wall papers ahd decorations in the county,at lowest prices.'Also- W »ll P ic tu ro H opldlngs an d Fram es,

P a p e r l la n g e r ’* Supplies, Etc. Frames' mado Jo order a t short notice. The

best New York and Philadelphiaemployed. ^Estimates furals

-----* ’ alsom\ paper hangers

__„ _ _. __________________ i te r paper hang-ng and kalsomlning. - ^ >

511 Gookmanavenue,Adjoining Commercial H otel^^^ ^ .

y*

V L IP P IN C O T T ,

T - A - Z L O R

H aitlson Ave. M e n ’ s B ’n r a i s h . i n g s ,

ROBERT T. GRAVATT,;( ■ . - ‘

s iA L n n

StovesTHeaters, Ranges;T I N W A B B , * o . .. ,

Cookman av., n ea r Bond Bt., '• A fffiU B X P A B K , N . J .

TIR r a n i l , U A D I1 |, IVTTE1S, t l . COPPER, T i l AID SHEET IR0R i f S U OF A lt

M O N M O U T H

ASBURY PARK, N EW JERSEY.

a d t h o K a L . $ 1 0 0 , 0 ,0 0 .

C a p i t a l P a i d i n , $ 5 0 ,p s0 0

J*. In te re s t Allowed on Deposit#.

Hr*Flrst-olass work at low ratoa. a *

GENU NQ- & C O .DEALERS IN

GRANITE AND MARBLE MONUMENTS^ND HEADSTONES. 8 LATE MANTELS.

Curbing anil Flagging a Specialty.Yard and Office—Main 8 trcet and Sccond Avenuo,

ASBURY PARK, N. J.

M . M . C R O S B I E ,~ .Success or to David Cart wrlght.

Tar' P&por, Sheathing Paper, Two and -Three-ply Roofing Paper.

P . 0 . Box soa . ‘ A sbnry P a rle , W. -V.

C O O K H O W L A N D ,(Succctwor to T . P . Uergen,)

-DEALER IN -

m m FEED, HAY, STRAW,Prepared Food and Medicines for Horses, Cattlo, Poultry, and all requisites in such a business. ITiain at. A: IT Iunroc a v e . . A w bnry P a r k .

Contractor and Builder. Plans and-.spoclfi- cations furnished. , ■

G E O . C . O R M E R O D ,

CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER,ABBURY PA B K , K. JT.

Established 1873. Jobbing promptly attended • to. Best of reference given.

Office and Residence,COR. 8 EWALL AVE. AND BOND ST.

Archibald Reynolds,- REMOVER OF NIGHT-SOIL

. Orders by mall promptly attended to. - I guarantee the best work a t the lowest prlco.

Rosiddnec, WEST ASBURY PARK~N. J .P. O. BOX 696, ASBURY PARK, N. J.

GEO. W. REDDEN, CONTRACTOR H BUILDER,

Estlmatea furnished for overy description'of building. Jobbing attended to promptly.

ASBURY PARK. N. .1.

Oliier H. Brown,H0USEFURNISHIN6

EMPORIUMSPRINfi LAKE, N.' J.

GREATLY ENLARGED,~ NEWLY STOCKED, PU RELY RE-ARRANGED,

The Finest Stook of

H o u s e fo r n is liin g G o o d sto bo found on the New JorserCoast. ’

Newest Designs in Furnitare.ANTIQUE OAK '*

In Badroora Snits, Sidfr Boards, Chairs, Tikiu, Etc.

Carpets, M attings,Reed and R attan Goods,

B E D D I N G ,S i l v e r w a r e , I i a i n p s , S t o v e s .

A-ii tlioNovoltlofl in .

French, Bohem ian and Do- . mesf i c Glass.

Foreign and Domestic' CMna and Table W are. j

Goods delivered in Aflbnry Park and Ooean Grove.

I I .Complete Your Homo

with one ofPIN K E’S HOME

Parlor Vapor Hot Air■ and all othor fancy-or ,

MEDICATED iSAXH APPARATUS.

It ia a legitimate artlclo also endorsed by leading physicians, and will do ali that Is claimed for it. CURES COLDS, RHEUMATISM, MALARIA, 1m-Eroves the comploxion, ia good to restpro health

i tho invalid, and prevent those In health from becoming diseased.- P r ic e $13* Sent by ex­press with fulldlreptlons..

P E T E B D . P IN K S , P a te n te e ,1170 TIIIRP AyENCK, NKW YpKK Cl'XY.

K la r p r o o f V n n lt , In Mb’nmouth Building, corner Mattison avenue and Bond street

Wills rocolptod for and kept without chargo./ ■' ■ >.. ISAAC C. KENNEDY,'President.

' DR. B. S. KEATOR. Vloo Pros’t. H. II. YARD. Secrotary. * ”A. C. TWINING. Treasurer.

—JJIRKCTor -G. D. W. VROOM, Trenton, N. J.W. J. HARRISON, Lakewood, N .J., OLIVER fl.*BROWN, Spring Lake, N. J. HENRY H. YARD, Ocean Beach, N .J. J . li. B r OH AN AN, Spring Lake, N. J. JOSEPH McDERMOTT. Freehold, N .J. n . B. PIERSON, Philadelphia, Pa. . GEO. F. KROEIIL, Asbury Park. N.-J. BRUCES. KEATOR,M.D.i " *•A. C. TWINING, 15 • 4‘ ..♦ « '■ ISAAC C. KENNEDY. M **

$ 15,000To Loan on Good Mortgages.

S. C. COWART, Froehold,N .J.

H . B . B E E G L E ,(Late H. B. Bocglo & Son) *

R E A L E S T A T E an d - ' I K S U R A N G E - A G E N T ,

l' Miii ktm, is«i t o . 1 1Loans Negotiated avd Legal Papers Drawn

H. B. BEEGLE, Notary I'obUo&ucfCbmmlssIoner of Deeds for New Jorsoy, Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia.

rePtSo%•REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE &

M O R T G A G E LOANS, 763 Cookman -Ave.

P a r 'S

Sdurntlonnl.

laiili Hom«. loardinf asd ty Stlai'For Girls and Children. 12th year opens S^pt. 18, 1HD0. Fullconreo In English Stud I cs.jd at hemat­ics, Languages and Music.

Address MISS IlOSS, Principal,. ---------- 1—GO-LAsburyavenue..A}*uryl>aiK»-N.J

EARLES GALLERIES,810 CHESTNUT STREET,

PHILADELPHIA. . • „

A B R ILLIA N T . EXHIBITION O F T H E .. WORKS OF 1

CHASS EINHARTIN BLACK AND WHITE. .

A most interesting and delightful collection of

P I C T t J t l E S .

James S.i i i - o t e i s i i i t , m m s m , .

ASBURY PARK

^ O W E E G O .MAIN STATION:

Railroad,'near First avenue.

_ iKplshea ElectiHo Aro and1 Ineandesoent llghtS at any location.

. . . OFFICERS: ;Proaldent^lYRON S: GOULD,. Vice Pres’t —GEO. .F. KROEIIL. - Treasurer-rJOllN ROCKAFEIjLER, Seo’y and Sup’t-^GEO.M. LANE.

DIRECTORS 5 ''Myron S. Gould, Geo. F. Kroehl,John Rockafeller, • J. Stanley Ferguson,

»^Geo. M. Lane. t

PRESCRIPTIONSwill recelvo special caro and attention, and will

bo oompoundod from •

Chemically Pore 1 Thorougtily.RellaWe D R U G S ■

a f B B A S O !fA B |.E P B i e i s , ilt

THOS. Rl, STEWART’S,(Snocessor to Woolley & Reed,)

Registered Bltarinacist,■ Cookman 4io. and Bond St.

THE PRESS,(NEW YORK)/" ’ .. .

• i r t o i ^ j i s o i . '

DAILY. SUNDAY. WEEKLY.(» pages, 1 ct. 2d pages, 4 cts. 8 or 10 psges. acts.

'fl’ho A g^rossiva R epub lican JonmtOi , of tlio M etropolis.. y ;| :

A NEWSPAPER FOR THE MASSE&.

Founded Dccomborlst, I8ft7.

T m iW x sslrth L -wires; bat no aafa^oriiles to avenge.T h e JfU ost R e m a r k a b l e X e w s g f t p e r

S u c c e s s <» N t w Y o r k • J . *The P re ss Is a N ational Newspaper.Cheap news, vulgar4 sensations and trash find

noplace in. tbo columns o f Thr P ress.Thk Press has tho brightest Editorial’'pago lu

New York'. I t sparkles with points^ .T he Press Sunday Edition Is splendid

. vontyTJago'papciT'Covering cvery-curredttopfc- of interest. >' *

The pRKsa Wreki.y E dition contains all tho good th ingaof tho Daily and Sunday edition** ■

For those, who cannot afTord tho D aily oral v prevented by distance from early rctfelving it, T hk W bkklx Is a splendid substltutS,

A S A N A D V E R T IS m a M EDIUM.The Press has no superior in Now York.

> T H E P R E S SWithin the reach q f all. The best and chcapcel

: Nctv/paper publlthcd• in Awi*rtco.D aily a n d S anday , one year, , - $5.Q0

“ “ " 6 m onths, Sim)^ _ o n o ‘‘ • 45

D aily, only,’ one* y ea f, ' - ^ ‘ ‘ 8.WJ-** «* fo u r montlifl, - • 1*00

S unday , ono year, - - - 2.00W eekly PreBa, ono yoar, - . 1 . 0 0

Rend for T he P ress ClrcularA :"W h p les freo. Agents wanted everywhere.

Liberal commissions. 1Address THK PRESS,

Potter Building, 88 park Row.H « w Y o rk .

S c r i b n o r ’ p M a g a z i n e

For the coming year wllJ bo noteworthy' for a number of Bpeclal features which tho publishers believe aro of very, uijufuai interest, and among them tho foljowing may bo mentioned:

Sir Edw in A rnoldcontributes tp the Becembcr number tho first of a series of four Articles upon Japan( its peoplo. its ways and its thoughts. Mr. Robert Blam, who was commissioned to ro to Japan for Scribner*Maaazln of dtides 11. .......low, illustrated by Mr. Blum.

H en ry Bf. S tanleyhas prepared for the Jantlary number an Import­ant article upou "The Pigmies of the Great Afri­can Forest.” Another contribution in this field will be Mr. J. Scott Kettle’s account of-the recent

frlcan Exhibition held in London. Both papers liMw amply 111 unrated." j.'

\ The W recker, - 1a Serial mn-el by Robert Louis Stovensoiy J id Lloyd Osbourne, will run through a lar^e tbojear. Illustrated by Hole. A two-part sto^y by Frank R. Stockton will also appear.

Pror. Jam es Bryce. Bf. P.,author of " Tho American Commonwealth,” will write a series of Four Articles upon India, em­bodying thef' results of his recent Journey and studies on this land of never-ending interest.

Ocean Steam ablpswill ho tho subject of an Important Berles some­what upon tbo lines or tho successful Kaltnuul Articles. “ Passenger Travel,” " -Tho Lifo of OIll- CeTs-ahd-Men,J*-“ Bi>eed*and Safely Devices,—and- “ Management," are somo of tbo subjects touched upon and illustrated.

(•ren t S t r ie i io f llie W«»rl«lIs tho tI|lo of a novel'collection of articles on whRih tlie author and artist will collaborate to givo tho characteristics of famous thoroughfares. Tho first, on Sroadway, will be written by Richard Harding Dayls, and illustrated bv Arthur B. Frost. Others will follow on Piccadilly, London: Boulevard, Paris; Tho Corso, Romo.

The pricc o f Scrlbncr'n M agazine admits o f adding a nidisritptlon to 'one'* other remtlng at very rnnau co*/. Or<hT8 thuiild W'xaU atonce;

83ia T ear. 215c a Nnmber.

T h e A sb u ry P a r k JotfnNAi. an d Scrib• ner'i Magazine 1 yerir, $3.60.

Oaah wit Order. ^ '

Chas. Scribner’s Sons, Publishers,743-745 Broadway, No^ York.

S e e i n g ' ' i s B e l i e v i n g . ”

Perfect in Oonetrnotion.Aitletio in IJorign.1

Mjitailoaa in its Qgbt.’Absolutely bhTo nn<l niibronknblo % bo sbupla*

CblSdcanmuiiagolt. IfBllahttBpnrnranilbrlahto* than gAB llj-'ht, sortw th«n electric lt«h< mow cW?ffu ■ thou either. Tharanre b n r tw * million t i n t .ItnuiR tboftRniiSlim jifto «nclLa.i*HlBg ■IndtMHl Ulfl.for'Jeotapa moy crnno and lnmpa may go, but

Tito Itochaitcr, , el»hic^ bn foreTerl Wo make otct 9 ,0 0 0 .. r i r t lg t lo v i ir lp tto a —HanRiiig ond;TabI« Uwnp9, Bkntiuct and Btiidy* VfmQ_and 1’lnno Lamp*-, e v e ry k in d . In Jlfonzo, ^oroelalij, Klckol antPlackWruutfht.lrrtlj. ‘ j . t-‘----

Qur written gynmntcc pocfl with every'lamp. Ask foi Iho (amt) and-tho Buarnntce, nn<l insist npon Scelniftht tUunp of tlip (fonu1iKH-n T 1IK..R0CU s s i i b . ’* I f thi lamp tU’aler ha*n’t tlio Ilochcatcr and.thoityl)you want,pond to us for free lllurtratcd catnlogno <nn<' nxlnecd prleo-llBt), and vio will box an it send yoU'anjlampaafely by express, righ t to your door.

I f you can i t w ill pw yyou to v h l t o u r spacfoui. I t o r c s . ( ( l i o l a r i s c s t I n I h o w o r l d ) , a n d net the display of, a r t in -laratS-mnkijig. W t ^ « w leardyou cn* io New York inb*yif‘£ j* ‘*ingU larrf. , ’’ . v

HOGIIB8TRR IS M P C »n .. OT Unrolny 8 t.,) now * orK» n-r

rV iri hldao and’ JBdralay Street both r u n ink* Broadway opposite tho Po4t~0jjlc«.

JT..1 '..i.mlm 1 ' I rfal... n I

T«G COTTRELLA L L K I N r » B O F

Blue Stone, Brick,^ Cement,L i m e , P l a s t e r a n d H a ir .

C u r b i n g a n d P a v i n K a b ^ e d a l t y . • ‘

0FP1.CB Jones’s Coal Yard,Second avonuo and Main stfoot,'

> J iS B B IlT P A » H ,N .J ,

JA H E 8 W. P01A B D ,

Rc^ldonco—Nowark Av( Si Main St,./Ocean Park * P.O. Box 735-ABbury Park, N. J.

^ Is to f Conveyances, Monmouth County Clerk’s Offlco, for the week ending January 17,1891:

ABBURY PARK.. James A,* Bradioy to Joseph A". liulso—lot A»-

bury Park. 81,860. fHBPTUHK TOWNSHIP.

Georgo W. Henderson to James Woolley—lota B12 anafill, SecUoaA,.MOunt Prospect Cemetery, 825. -—

Charles Tilton to Jonathan Applegato—lot at West Park. S4oo.

Wm. J. Payntcr to Nowell R. Mount—lot In Nop* ■me township. * ’Catharine a . Weatherly to Mary G. Ferri*-lot

B, West Grovo. 8 00.Josephine M. Wlnans to J. H. Wlnans—lot 829,

Vycst Park. 8500.- MI8CBIJJIKEOUS. , •

George W. ChamberHirto Edward Sherman—3 50-100 acres in Wall township. 81. ■ ^

BcnJ.'M. Ebcrlmrt el at. to Q. P. Woolley—lot 158, Loch Arbour. 8G50. -

Charles A. Casler to John T. Leonard—lot 7,Atlantic.Highlands. $275. ----

Christopher Slcklcs to Frank GifTord—lot 7, Block N, map of Ludlow tract,' North Brighton. 8150. .. •

PowittC. Nowing to ArchioC. Newingr-Iots75 and 70, map Henry H. Wardell property, Long Branch City. 85,000. 1

Wm. L. Chadwick tt al. to AmandaP. Chadwick—loLkedJiank__________ :—!— :-----?_:---------

arrlct C. Carhart to Deborah ’A. Ludlow—lot...Jdletown township. 81.'Julia E. Tyler to Oliver H. Brown—lot 239, map

of Brighton atld North Brighton. 8500.Mary F. Sandfotd to Oliver H. Brown—1 8-100

acres in Howell township, 8325.Samuol T. Hendrickson et al. to Matthias Barn­

hill— lot 9, Howell township. 8100.John H. Geary to D. J. Roberts—lots a t Atlantic

Highlands.Edward I. Ilorsman to 8. O. Hendrickson—lot

in Ocean township. 81.Richard J. Dobbins to Elizabeth Kennedy—lot

at Long Branch. 310,000.Dewitt C. Nowinga to Walter R, Cook—lot In

Ocean township. 818.7,1. •R. P. Smock, Sheriii; to Marcus M. Davidson—

lot 129, ShrewKbury township. 8)6.Gilbert G. Conover to Wm. Quackenbush—6

acres in Marlboro township. 877.50. rL John |I Laird, cx’r . to Annlo E,JfofTmanr^.TSi 100 acres In Maualapan township. 8175.

Spring.Lake and Sea Girt Co. to 'tho Church o f the Honr Spirit, Asbury Park—lot 19, block 52, map of Hpring Lako. 8800. , ,

Isaiah Revy to James T. Dolph—6 2-100 acres In Shrewsbury township. 890.30.

Hugh R. Herbert and wlfo to Wm. Lackey—lot at I/>ng Branch. 81. —

Slegmund T. Meyer to Rebecca Morey—lot 15, Long Branch, Wm. H. Denyse map. 81.

Calherlno T. Kavanagh to William A. Hclaloy—lot in Ocean township. 81,500. - 1--— ■_.....«'..... •

Wm. H. Warner. Ex’r, to Charles Warner—lot 4,Ocean townsblp^&lOO___ —- — -------------- ------ -

Charles M. 8loan to A. Sloan—lot in Wall town­ship. 8 m u ■ : '

Robert C. Hubbard to Sarah Y. Wardell—lot at LonjPBranch. 8600.

Samuel W. Wardell to Sarah Y. Wardell—lot at Long Branch. 81 and exchange.

Geo, W. Hennessey to Garret Hennessey d at—2 03-100 acres in Ocean township. 81 and exchange.

John 8cely to Martin C. Lonacn—1 23*100 acres in Middletown township. 81.

Mary Shlol and husband to Martin C. Lobsen— t a t Port Monmouth. 810.Wm. II. Postcn, Adm’r, to John Hart—lot In

Middletown township. 8315.Mary A. Miller to Franklin P, Roberge—8 acres

In Shrewsbury township, 8575.Peter Cokelet to Kato L. Chappie—lot in Rari­

tan township. $'00.Elizabeth G. Dickerson to Emma N. Bently—lota

190,191 In Wall township. 32.500.Maw E. Atkins and husband to AdelbertG.

Mills—I-*} 19-100 acres Middletown towuship. 81.AdelbertG. Mills to Mary E. Atkina—13 59-100

acres, Middletown township. 81 Daniel L. Conover to N. woodward—lot 30, At-

Jantlo Highland#; 875.'- •David Jones'Roberts to N...Woodwabil—lot 80,

Atlantic Highlands, 875.James Freeman ct al.. to Charles A. Caaloy—lot

7, Atlantio Highlands. 8100.Mary R. Oliver ei a t, to Thomas T. Rogers—9 91-

acret, Atlantic Highlands. 83.700. • . . ., wary R. Oliver and husbana to Thomas T.

Rogers—lota 970,071, Atlantic Highlands, $1,600.charlotte Jesaw to Louise M. Batzer—lots 193,

19i; Atlantic Highlands. 81.Caroliue P. Jenl to Bertha Stemple—4 acres In

Shrewsbury township. *150.Sarah E. Dorsett and husband to E. J. Dorsett—

lot 5S>, Red Bank. 81.Annlo Nixon to Wm. A. Close—% part of lota 8

and 4, Matawan towuship. 82,000.Hannah Corlles and husband lo Mary E, Smith

-lot at Long Branch. 80,000.Theo. Fields to Wm. H. Sbafto-lot 75, Villa

Park.8145.------- :________________________ _Catherine R Blunt, by ShcrliT, to Wm. H.

8hafto-~lot 75, Villa I’ark; 8145. * - A. II. Borden to Sarah Roche—27 97>100 acres,

Shrewsbury township, 88,250. •* • .Frederick W. Hope to Honry C. Whlte—lot

In Shrewsbury. 8100.The Long^Branch Police Sanitary and Im-

irovement Commission to-Jessie Meyers—lots 1,:, 3. ocean4 township. $ 19.78.

Lizzie Whittlngham and husband to Lavlnia Chumar—lot 205 near Atlantio Highlands. $1,000.

John- E. Umnlng, M. C. C., to Albert Wardell— lot 13, Eatontown. $700.

Deborah A. Johnson "by Master to Albert War­dell—lot 13, Eatontown. $700.

Thomas H. Grant to John S. Applccato—3 81- 100 aores in Middletown township. $516.

Catharlno E. MeClces to W. W. Taylor—lot In Holmdel. $170. * s —»*v .

Joseph II. Richmond to Tho Inhabitants of tho townsldp of Marlboro—lot 2, Marlboro. $410.. The Freehold Land Co. to D7 A. Stateslr—lot 17, Freehold. 8235, '

Sarah Jeffrey and husband to Margaret Mo-, Kean—to t'a t Oo^anvllle. $170.

Elizabeth Hebnessfcy to G. W, nennossey—lot at North Long Branch. 81. ." Wm. II. Vredcnburgh, M. C. C., to John D. Thompson—10 25-100 aores at Freehold. $65.

lleten Wilson and husband to John L»mb—S9 25-100 acres In Manalapan township. $1,275.62,

Almira Norton and husband to Helon Wilson—lots In Manalapan township, 81.

Chas. H. Ellis et al., Exo’r, to Alonzo Whlto— lot In Freehold. 80,000.

Alonzo Brower to Andrew McDowell—lota 9 and 10 In Block D, Froehold. $250

Thomas W. Cooper to Jamos G.- Lane-lot 18, Long Branoh, woo. _

Annlo E. Patter to Edward Handy—lota 19 and 20, Long- Branoh. $575.

Spring Lako and Sea Girt Co. to W. W. Trout— lots 8,9,10, Blook 87, Spring Lake. $3,000.

J. Smith Morris et at- td I t J.- Dalton—lot .In Eatontown township. $115. .-. Thomas II. Robbins to Lillian F, Naylor—lot 15, Keyport 81 and Ex. ■

B u ild in t; C ontracts.FILED TO AND INCLUDING JAN. 17»„1891.

j»I4—J. B. Boyer'with Carman & Holbrook—building ut Asbury Park. 81,450.

W ondors'o fC alifo rn ia ,The beauty of thb Monterey cohst, tho won­

ders of the Yosemlte, tho plctoroaquo deaerta of N^w Mexico, and the unique aobllmlty of the Grand'CaDon o f the Oolorado^are tbe sab jecta treated by Charles Dadley W arner In hls article, entitled' "T he lioart of tho Doa- ert,?* which 1b to, appear lo the February npmbar of Harper's Mdgaztnv. Introducing his dcflcrlptlon of the Grand Cafion, bo says; i‘* I went to It with reluctanco. I shrink ft;pm_ attempting to say anything abont i t . ^ i r you knew tbat there was but one spot on tbe earth where Nature kopt her*sccrotof secrets, the key tq the action of her most gigantic and patient forces through tbo long eras, fhem ar- vel of constructive a^d destructive energy, In features of sublimity made possible to niehtal endurance by the moat exquisite devlcea^of. painting and sculpture, the wonder which te without parallel or comparison, would you not hesitate to approach It f Would you not wander aijid delay with this and that .ponder, and- this ,an<J thht beauty and nobility of 8ccneryn«ittlngrtrff-tbe“day when tbo Imagl- uatlon, wljlch Is our highest gift, must jj© pxtlngutehod by the reality f »*

TIIB JOURNAL AND OTnEn PUnLlOATIONS AT A pIBOOUNT WHEN TAKEN TOOBTHEIt.

Many readers of this papor aro subscribers to various magazines, and as this Is the sea­son To^ renewals wd make tho followlng-offer bf the boat publications, with the J ournal, a t prices that will prove a moans of saving money. To all ofd or new subscribers to this paper, who romlt tho amount oppostO/die publicationsnamod bolow, botfi will befsont for one year. The offer appllos to thoso who pay baok duos or In advanco. The sum named muet^n all cases be forwarded with order, by money order, postal note or chock, payable to Asbury Park Printing IIoubo.Tho Journal and Harper's Weekly........... !

" , narpor’a Magazine.........“ ' ” H arper’a Bazar..“ **. Harper’s Young People..M_ “ v Century........ ............. ,

/ “ St. Nicholas.....................* *‘ ’ ** Scrihner’a .... '............ ..** ’ “ .. Babyhood.......................** - “ Agriculturist.................. .

. “ " C<ismopolltan.. . . . . . . .“ " Gootl Uousekooplng........" • " Wldo Awako.. . . .......

socurd lowperiodicals not named above, If subscribers will Indicate what they profor. Address com­munications toc*-'~ Asuury Park Printing IIcfusB,

- Asbury Park, N.J.-

.$1 60

. 4 50

. 4

. 3 25

. 4 50

. 8 50

. 8 60 2 00

. 2 50

. 2 75

. 3 25

. 800

T hinks I t W ould be a “ Snap.1I f 'tb e pooplo and tho Commissioners of

Asbury Park know what they aro about.they™ will lose no time In acccptlng Mr.. Jam es A. Bradley’s offor to soil to tho town for$15Q,000 the beach front, tho sower system and bis rights" In Simser Lake, iriolmjlflg St. John’s, Ialaudr- The hm ount Mr. Dradleyaskrls only t t fraction of what prlvato parlies would be eager to give for his property: I t Is doubtful, in fact. If maqagod for revonqp.onlv. the beaoh conld not be jnado to j(®ia-tBat much in the course of ^.single summerseason. The* proposal to’seli It Istthmlstakable evidence of Mr. Bradloyla deyotjon toJho Interosta pf the town, Just as tho success of tho resort which h©.fQUuded-aod.guard*d-KiLh-sa-many.-aoem-_ Ingly onerods restrictions Is proof of the wis­dom, the foresight and the knowledge of men which have galded hlmi^o success. Tho re­strictions in regard to business and pleasure at Asbnry Park are wise and.polltlo from the mere standard o f the-aelf-lnteroat of tbe town. They help to make It a pleasant place and a safe one. They attract ny tbonsands vlaitors who are repelled by many foatnres of seaside resorts, and even those who grumble at them at times are likely to appreciate their true valne and benefits to tho placo, Its Inhab­itants and Its transient visitors. The death of Mr. Bradley Or hla sale of tho ocean front to men with Ideas different from his own might have well-nigh revolutionized the whole char­acter o f the resort.—Newark News.

H e P re fe rs a Lonely Lifts.The Island of Juan Fernando*, once Inhab­

ited by Robinson Crnaoe, Is now tenanted by a former Austrian officer, Baron von Rodth, ■ whot after botng far.cedby the'torrlble wounds which ho received at tho battle of Sadpwa In 1880 to leave the armyi grew tired of the monotony of existence in civilized Europe, and determined to dovolo bis fortune to %,llfo o f adventug}. For fifteen years past ho has been living on tho Island o f 'Ju a n ^ernandea ,w!th aBmall colony o t.natives’aqd of Euro-

. ^ j _ ■ -»i doserlors from "civilization, tm d onlyings Raised ana MuVOOj ^om m untcattngwltb (he world onco a year,

whenhgBendahls flue sailing yeicht-to,Vat- paralso for provisions and supplies.

L ite ra ry Notes.IS BTANLET a PIRATE f

Mr. E. L. Godkin, In the February number of The Forum, under takes to provo th a t tho expedition to relieve Emin was clearly a piratical undertaking, Blnoo It bad the sano*' tlon of no government apd Its leader was responsible to no power. Mr. Godkin ex­presses tho hlghoBt admiration for Stanley’s couragtfand endurance, and approves of hlj^ conduct of tbo expedition. I t Is Its legal character only that he criticises. Othor arti­cles that will appear In tho February Forum are: ’‘The Vanishing 8nrplufl,” by Senator Carlisle ;_ii.Tho.. Farmer’a,X’hanged_Condi­tion,” by Prof. Rodnoy Welch; “ The Gov­ernment and tbe Indians,” by Hiram Price; a biographical essay by Prof. Gilderelcove, of the Johns Hopkins University, and half a dozen other esaaya.

THE UOITE-MAKBRfor January la bright with Interesting papers and Illustrations. Tbe frontispiece Is entitled

Debuanle of tho Season—Miss ’01.” Flor­ence Gray bas-a deaorlptlvo article on “ His Dear City of Itoiieor” and Mary Wager- Flsher writes of tfo^MQuooroat Girl In Ger- nimiyT” There aro a dozen othor papors and^, poems ahead ot tho HousowIfo’s Department, which opens with “ Tho Domestic Club.” Linda Belle Colaon gives “ A Glimpse of a French Canadian M arket” Jennie Juno, tbo editor, tolls of-■“ How Wo Dress Now,” which Is Illustrated. The Shopper and Correspond­ence and Qaorlos will bo' found of special bonoQtlo lady readers. Tho Home-Maker Is publlshod at 44 East 14th St., New York, at $2.00 a year. I t Is In magazine form and almost as largo as Harjtcr's. I t may be ordered through the local nows depots.

, Leo & Shepard’s latest publication la a novel by nenfy’Wood. Ita title Is “ Edward Burton,V and the critics have treated itgen- eronsly in tbolr reviews. Aa a specimen of latter-day novol It Is superior In Interest and cpnBtrbctlon. I t will be a popular boon with educated pooplo„ and help the education of those not so gif tod. Sold at the bookatoroa, or mailed on receipt of flfty cents by the pub­lishers. _____ __

Kew B oards ot Trade*Tho pooplo of Atlantio HighlandszJiave

organizod a Board of Trade wlih tho follow- Ingofflcers: ,

President—Jamea H. Leouard.Flrat V lee-Proudent—J acob T. Stout.SeQcyid Vloe-Prealdent—Dr. K. C. Curl la. Secretary—Willlmm T.-Frankliij. > Troaaurer-Percy Falklnbprg.Board of DI recto re—T. H. I eonard, N. H. Rob-

0 rta,-8 . T. Whlto, P. S. Con vBr, Dr. John Van Mater, Geo. Mackey, J. K. B Iph, W. M. Foster.

A meeting of the following morobanta .of Long Branoh was >->ld laat week for the pur­pose otorgftnlzing a Board of T rade: Jacob Steinbach, Honry K roe nor, Daniel Edwards, Wi R. Warwick; Jr., Matthias WoolleyrM. F. Kahn, Wm. ,Lackey, R. C. A dam son,-J. L.Townlo^and Mr. Hervey. __^

A faotory proposition was afterwards dis" cussedj and a committee of four waa appolnt- ed to consider the matter, j,

Tjie Senate C om m ittees. .The following commlttooa have boon namod

by President A^raln of the Senate:Judiciary—Worts, Barrett, Gardner.Revision of LawVzMarsb, Barrett, Cranmer. Finance—Kess^EYcr^tt, Ruo.

; .Municipal Corporatlons-^Werts, Mallon, Gard­ner# '■ . ,

Railroads aud Canala—Mkllon, Brown, Cran-Bankaand Insurancc-rCornish, tflnton, Gard­

ner. ■Education—Smith, KoyS, Rogers. -<-< > Militia—McDonald, Barker, Cranmer.

* Game and Fiaherlea—Wlnton. Mallon,(fowler. Agriculture—Brotvn, Smith, GardneriJ Miscellaneous Business—Smith, Marsh, Leam-r

ing. ‘ 'Elections—McDonald, Keys, Carter. . ,Claims aqd Pension^Moree, Rogers, Butcher.- Unil niiih ed’BuBl ncas—W inton^Koys. Carter. Engrossed Bills—Barrett, Butcher, Ruet \ Labor and Industries—Butcher, Cornish, CTan-

mef. ' ’ • . •Boroughs—Barker, Cornish, Fowler, H, .

. Exporlenco of juat a year ago proves that passage of a Freo Coinage bill by the Sdnato :dooa not ncccasarlly. mean.ltq passage by the House. The very bill which-tho Sonato paased by 12 majority on Tdeaday night waa tho one defeated In tho Houso laat year,.after It had come from the Sonato with enthuslaatic pre­dictions of Ita success. The circpmatancca now arc somewhat different, It is truo. But It may well be dodbted whether any_ consider­able number pf Republican Uepresontatlvos, after refusing froo colnago last ■yMr;«na_-dotf- gorous to publlo crcdlt and National prosper­ity, an<l deliberately adopting another mea8-# ure aa'wiser and safer, will vote thia year that thoy wero In error. ” '

Neither Is It clear that the mcasuro, IW t Bhould be passed by tho House, would bccome a l^v this year. Thero remainsthopossibility of-’a.Presidential veto, and thoro la no visible reason to anpposo that tbe bill would havo the required two thirds majority, oven in tho Sen ate. Five more Senators than supported the bill Tuesday night would bo necessary, and It la doubtful whether any couJd bo Iwlucod to tako tho gravo responsibility of debasing tho currency. For it la clear enough that the strong arguments against tho pending meas­ure by Senator Sherman on Tuesday wero only open to criticism aa too .moderate a |d mild in statement. The mpasuro would'nSfonly tend to push gold out of monetary uso aftor a timo, but in airhum an~probability would do bo vofy quickly, through the operation of laws well known In all tho markets, and prac­tically universal In their influence.

When a holder of silver bullion pan get for every ounce of It $1 89 in legal' tondor paper* th a t will make .the papor. worth no. more.than sliver may chance to be, but will not In any way tend to fix the value of paper with refer­ence to tho monoy of othor commorclal na-i tlons. Peoplo who havo money of other com£ morolal nations will dislike to put lt *out, ek- ce p ta tsu ch promlpm as thoy way consider attractive.

Thero aro thousands of merchants who have tcfpay In a year about seven hnndce<Lm!lll£*nfL In gold o r ita equivalent to foreigners. Other thousands have debts abroad or a t homo on which payment of principal and interest in gold Is elthor expressly stipulated or necesi sary-to the ir sol voncy. Corporations by .the thousand bare dobts thus payable by express contract, and also Statos, counties, cities and towns. All thtso mnBt havo gold/and foar a state of things In whicb.lt cannot bo obtained in exchange for currency. Tb,oy will aak anx­iously whether the Government la ablo or suffi­ciently rcsoluto to continue paying gold fo r notes. ; ‘ ., v -f.■"Quickly tbey will seo tbat tbo notes aro of

different kinds. Tho new Treasury notes and tho old silver certificates cannot now be pre­sented in expectation that gold will bo p,aid for them. Bank notes are retjpomablo In legal tendora, and the legal tenders aro teohnfcally redeemable lu “coin” of tho Unitod States, and while Government may earnestly desire and atrongly endoavor to pay gold-in-order-to- save Ita crediffno moans exlat of compelling It to do ao if exhahatlon of its reserve Is near. The banka also, whloh bave~the~fprelgn ex­changes to make,1 arid tho commorclal and corporate and municipal payments for custo­m e r, hold ono hundred millions of legal ten­ders, and would bo sorely pressed by tholr ouatomors to mako tholr reserves safo boyot^qaeatlQij.__Ev.ery_mercbant_or_corporatianlhaving foreign debts to pay would ask that bis deposit should bo mado payable fit gold by express contract, and could draw tho legal tenders and got tho gold for tlicm a t tbo Treasury if tho banks refuse. In tho process of protecting thomeolvos against a poflslblo danger, thoso who have gold to pay and tho banka through which payments bajVo to bo made can scarcely avoid exhausting tho gold reaervo of tho Government.

Thus far domostlc demands only aro con­sidered. Can any ono guess how much for­eign capital Is now Invested In American rail­ways, telegraphs, mines, mills, lands and in­dustries on whtch Interest or profits might bo paid In legal tondors only f A compotobt au­thority estimated that In eight montha less than ono hundred and fifty, millions of bucb capital came hither, and waa mainly put Into securities which could bo sold without delay. The belief o^, foreign Inveatora aa to the folly of unlimited silver colndge Is almost unanimous. But iT only a part WffinfonsTdoF that atop auicidal ajiouldL withdraw tbeir in- veatmonts it would end tho matter. Wero bnt a fifth of such foreign capital taken away from this country It would enrpt^B^Treaa- ury roaorves of gold. I a it irat'tnrFfaln tlifct many foreign Investers.wourd begin to sell and withdraw tholr capital f The action of a ‘ fow would start others, and quickly thoro would come a premium on goldii ’ !

This' is not a moaauro whlch-Ropresontatlves who oaro for thplr own reputation, or for tfeo prosperity o flho countryvjwiH vpte"for light­ly, or without grave and anxloua thought. I t Involves tho po8albility,4to aay tho very least,

"of changes moat radical, moat doatructivo to- Industries aud trade, moat h&rtfuWo tho ralH- iona who wanT'aff good dollara a*, can bo bad In tho world when they earn dollars. A band of reokle88 domagogaoB, who havo no past and no future to consider, might tako such a risk. A Demooratlo Congress, frantically" eager to,capture the Presidency and tfteofflcea a t the coat of any public calamity cbricolvablo, might tako euob a responsibility. But It la to bo hoped that fow Republican Roprosontativoa' will consont to make the mono^ of American commerce and Amorlcan labor less valuabio than;’tho beat that Is known In tbo .civilized WOjf|a.—New York Tribune.

L SRIlINKAQB OF $300,000,000. ion.. W.; I. Trenholm; ox-Comptroltor of

iQ^Curroncy, hasr-this to*say about ono fea^iro of tho b ill: —Thofe are nearly 1,000 eavlnga banka In, tbonited States, and they owe their depositors

$1,500,000,000, representing that much In valno aavod by poor people out of tholr

j’arnlngs, repolved by tho banks As ^oId or ita aqulvalont, aud presumably invested on a gold tpaalB. Hero fa a debt that should'be*held Fvjred by Cobgreas; yet jm dor the proposed lOl theao Inatltutlona Can settle with tholr de- ppiltora in allver, and this will probably bo efcscted with a loas to tho dopoaltora of 20 per omit, in the value of their deposits, or about $3^,000,000 In the aggregate.. "

The Queen’a ladlea-ln-waiting are aald to be murmuring because thoy only recolve- $1,600 a year, and aro “ expected to appear In a new costumo at overy dinner.” I t la singular they don’t eoonomlze by going out and taking dinner with a friend'occasionally. We don’t Buppoae tbey ever thought, of that? though.

* T '

, K . o f tlie G. E . In sta lla tio n .On Monday evoning next, Jan . 20, tho'

Gfoqd Lodge officer will install the new board of officera of Corinthian Cd^tlo, No. 47,_of thia place.- A. delegation from Clyde Castlo, of Mfinaaqn'rth, will bo.present. -/V -/”

After tho Installation ceremony t8o. Caatld Vlll hpjd \vt: 0rs(5 annual compUmontary re-' ceptioo. Metnbora aro rcqneatod: to tie a t CSello-by S o’clock, sharp. •

Ma,” asked aeven-year-old Tomihy, "w hat la a n lg b t^D w l~ ‘‘tioo lu ityour father’s por­trait,” replied hla mother, “ and don't ask pny more Buoh foolish questions,” ^ ;.:

-

lUercst In th e F o u n d er’s C^fter, 1TneyWECTORs op the- poard of trade hb*

LIEvSNt 18 A aOOD TUINO FOR TUB. JfOR- OUOH, XNO - WILL DEVISE WAT8 AND MEANS TO SECURE THE BEAOn FRONT—MAIL MAT-

. TAR3 IN FINE SHAPE AND Tnrf JL’ROSPBCTGOOD FOR CARRIER DELIVERIES THHOU.OIT - THE TOWN8UIP— THE FAOTORY DUILDINO'’ ' WILL SOON HE COMMBNCTED. * /■ 'Matters o f vital Importance to Asbnry Park

tfere discuescd at tbo Board or Trade rooms on Monday evotildg. JLw as the largest meet-, lng of tho Directors sinco the organization of tho Board.

'President Jam es'II. Bird callod tho'meettng to order promptly a t 8 o’clock. The sooro- tary(read eovpral communications which wore dIajrosed 6f. . 1 ■ • ' - - / ■

Ono of tboso, relating to tho extension of tbejreo mail dellvory to cover Neptuno town­ship, and Ocean township aa far north as Deal Boacb, was fully and freely discussed - . and explanations mado for tho benefit of ;

.thoso npt al ready *^6qualntcd with tho condl- * I tlons. .. The Post Ofilco"'i)opartmcnt at Washington

l a not only willing but anxious to consolidate 5all tho locol ofllcca under tho management of ono head aa aro tho llrat-clasa offices. Tbo work Is materially simplified and tho delivery . . of mall far morp oxpedltlous, tho pouohoaand packages being .roado up by, a clerk;jpn tho. tjatn and ready * for carriers as soon aa tho~ train Teaches'tho station. I t will not do away 1 with tho local offices, which are tobtfretalned * for private boxfes, tho aalo of stamps and tho regular functlona of an offico as now, only thoy wi|l be relieved from the freo dellvory. ,f

A petition which had been prepared waa Bigned by the members, and other papers will ' boclrQQjftted .tbroiighouttho_ district for.8ig-_„^„«„ natures. 0 .

Atr. J . Stanley Ferguson, of the factory . committee, made a verbal statemont of what

^had boon dono toward tbo now factory pro­ject. Everything la in proper ahapo for be­ginning tho work In a few days. Mr. Bradley donated eight lota for tho factory site and *•"’ twenty-six lota of 50x150 tp be sold and tboproceeds to g o Into tho^buUding.fnndwThoao........ —’ _lota havo all been taken and aa aoon as tho necessary papers are drawn tho monoy will be in h ind. Mr. Henry C. Winaor Is truateo in tho 'transactions, and tho articles of agree­ment have been signed by tho Board of Trade and other contracting parties.

The Messrs. Steiner gave $5,000 to tho bulld- ing fund and provide all of |ho machinery excepting boHer,and engine. They have also purchased four pf the lots. *

Tho discussion on finances brought out somo of the deficiencies of the Borough charter with.relatlop to raising funds for music and other purposes wblch might be required In improving tho placo.

The proposition of Mr. Bradldy to dlapoao of, the bekch, tho sower system and Sunset Lako, brought up a long Informal discussion as to ways and means. Mr. narrlson said there need be no trouble o?or tho sorters as they conld be controlled undor general law.S -T h fr. hw oh^inw tlnn ,y/u 9 then u k e o ^ n p ^ ^ ^ and nearly all'preaent had a word to say. A »• proprietary luterost by purchase or lease waa regarded as jijgst cssefltial to tho well bolng . of Aabury pjirk. Mr. Bradley would no doubt, a t his demise, leave tbo beach front with proper restrictions. The tendoncy and frequency with which wills aro broken would be disastrous to this placo If the front of !A§_bory_Park Bhpu!AP®8s into other hauda or bo'toft open for all sorts of catch-ponny fftiowe aa at- Conoy Island and otbor places. \ C( ■'

Thl^ n|ow of tbd mattor became so strongly fixed l ih tho members of tho Board that a motion was-made by Mr. Glthena to recom­mend tbo_Borou£^Comhi(saloners^to leaso tbo beach with Its prlvilog^a for a term of years, the proceeds, after.,paying tbe neceaa- ary funning expenses, to go Into a sinking . fund for purchasing at tho end of tho torm ^agreed upon, and for tbe amount stipulated in tho contract.

Tbo president named Messrs. Githone, Fub- gason and Ilarrlaon ,aa a committee to pre­pare such,memorial to tho Commissioners. —r-

Tbo appointment of a committee on muslo for the, beach, and.the regular standing com­mittees, will bo announced by Presldont;Bird a t the mooting on Fob. 3.

Tho young man who wlshoa io go to ihe j^ont in hl^ ^oeatiOni and iitay^ihore, should sec¥ro a pnaltloh’ asVjtroot-car driver. .

It Is estimated that thore aro 488,000,000 tons of coal beneath tho surf ACS'of tbo earth. Coal~:bolng eo low down^la what imakea.lt."" come ao high. ' ' * r.. “ How did yon like Scrlblum’s now novel?”

Only read two pauos( and then dropped it.”Why so ?” , “ Tho horolne’a namo waa

Gladys and ,tho hero's Roglnald—^nd that80ttl0<| "it.” . ' ; . ' I s

Patti fared so well on hor last farewell tour lb Hits country, tba t sho has conoludcd notto_ . comohorQon another farowoll tour this sea­son. This country may misa lidr, but It will - - not miss eo mpch monoy.

A personal Itjajn.states that “ Jay Gould carries a 35-cohtcfino.” ; Itsooma like an In- excuaablo piece pf extr&vaganco for. a ma'h worth-fifty millions.lo carry a fiS-cont cane when a very good walklrfg stick can be had for thirty cents.

In the latest book for boys, tho hero, aged 16, captures two counterfeiters, ajjoota a bur- KlaKc W‘esW a horse thief, ana breaks up a

'band of robbore. .The roa^on.ho didn’t go West and kill a dozen Indians w&a because' hoAvaan’t fooling well, f ^

Somobody sayB* that “ the' devil laughs when mon lie.” If this be t£UO, then the devl] must laugh twenty-four hoUra a day all the year round, and haa tp employ odo of his imps to woop for him When a sinner escapes • T, bla clutches by gottlngconverted.

.One of Col. Ingersoll’s Chrlatmaa preaents, " sent by oxpresa C. O. D., waa a copy or “ Evidences or a Future State.V T h j Colonel," when ho phld tho oxpreaa charges, accepted tho gift aa an evidence that thoro onght lo bo . • a future punlafiment at-least for the unknown dc»i}br. k ‘ ,. Rev. Mr. TaTraagd saya tho atreot8 of heaven

are,lIned with beautiful treca. As thoro wlllfv’” ""., be no horso-steallng In heaven, Toxana will bo unabloto soo why thore should be treea thoro.Can Mfc Talmago tell ub whether tho streets • of tho-Goldon City are also llnod with tole- graph poles# . ,

A coloWated physlolan says that tho modi- cfelvfraternity of lOO^yoars henco will have such skill that no disease can baffie them. One hundred yeara seems a long timo to Wait for - the dlaeafio called poverty to be .abpllahed. ' Honry George's followers prom iso to do better than tfiift.' * ■; ; —-£• ■

“ Therqaro only about twenty really groat ~ dlamondsln tho world.” Tho moat romarfe- ablo thing about' them Is tbat no leas than twonty minstrel end. mon, thirty-aeven comor dlans and ono hundred and oleven “ stara’l eaoh havo ono of tho, twenty. Some of tho others aro owned by ordinary pooplo anfi- su&mcr resortliotel olerka, •' '\r— ■* / >

ThV“imythor-of-poarl workers of Vienna, — — ■owlio woro thrown put of wo>k, It la eald, “ ,b< th tf" M fiK lnl^jtarTS Irf this country;*’, ari rioting fpr ^ b tq a ff1.and" work,” and a freo t r a d o ^ p o r saya “ tbis ,1a one of the, things ; our. Republican cotetnporarloa thoroughly en­joy.” Not a t all ;-bnt'stDl It ia less discour­aging to thom than If tho American workmen . wero rioting for bread and Work bocauao of thelabsenoo of a tariff In this, country. .

;yo .

Page 2: EMPORIUM - digifind-it.com · EARLES GALLERIES, 810 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. . • „ A BRILLIANT. EXHIBITION OF THE.. WORKS OF 1 CHASS^EINHART IN BLACK AND WHITE. . A most

....... f r - -

■ --

; / ? ■ . j. x

ASBUEiY PARE JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1891.

UNO MONMOUTH REPUBLICAN.

■JOHNKv WAlfc»CEr€om)B>TttrPftomeTWtr - W.V . LiROY, Assistant Emroa.

PUILMMID W1IKLY Atjr_H E.A 8aU RY _PA BJ^BU lTJN Q

*. 1 • * 718 MATTISON AVENUE,HOU8E,

Entered as second-class matter at the Anbury Park Post Office, February 7, 1888.

' s T E R M S OF SUBSCRIPTION.1 year, In advance.. . . . . . . . .y.................... . t \ BO6 months. In advance......... .......... t . vo8 months, In advance...... .......™Single ooples.;..........; ..................................

TO CORRESPONDENTS. - We shall be glad tp receive ltema of news and

oommnnioatlons on subjects of Interest to this community.

In writing articles Intended for publication, onr friends wlll'please bear. In mind that a sheet written on both sidbsAasto bo copied before go­ing to the printer—a labor wo oannot undertake.the fall nemo and address of the writer, not hooessarlly for publication but as a guarantee of good faith. Anonymous letters will not be notloed.

<We oannot return releqted comm an lea tlon 5, but will hold them for a limited time If re­quested to . / • .

All letters Intended for the editorial or news department should be addressed to the

Editor of Tim Journal Asbury Park, New Jersey.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 24,1891,

icart industries, has boen unusually per- sistont In Its attempts to mislead. I n a late issue it asserted that cotton add wood­en goods'and carpets bad advanced; 25 per

,cent. The acttial facte, as gleaned from ^ ber hi r g e ^ a a ^ 'i n o'st'TesponsiW e-tiealers,' showed the Times editor had rpado ft fallacious statements v>-/- f y > v,

Every "dally paper -In New, York city proves by lt§ advertisements tliut clothing never was cheaper than to day, and cotton fabrics have not advanced'tiut are If any- thing a sh^de cheaper. Carpets,*too, are advertised at lower figures in spite of the daily t utterances-Qf th e free trade press that " the McKiniey hill will ''ruin the country." .

= = = = =H u d s o n C o u n ty T a lk T

Some of the D em ocratic papers a re^ o w ild1 In th e ir opposition to the Federal Elections h ill as to recom mend'.revolution­ary methods. T iie Jersey City N e w says:

“ I f th e present Congress shouljl assail the liberties or tbe people by passing the ‘Force* bill, we hold It will be the eacred d u ty o f the Democracy, whenever It can.obtain the’pow£ er; to starve tho party advocating the infa­mous measure Into submission by refusing to appropriate money for public purposes until the bill Is repealed.*’

I t also BUgge6ts,a poe8lWUty oC resorttag to arms. W hat a w orld of buncotnbe.and incendiary ta lk is -interjected into fthese harangues, as i f to frigh ten th e B ep u b li

Slty ls'.diw t is " th l t le 6fi” xrem6crin c C!mti fromthelrpnrpot».“-Ther»wM uiach-* ’ - ' of the same Jlangaage used a quarter cen­

tury ago, hut the Republican party did nqt scare then and we hope it will not now.

w Liberties of the people” indeed. This, comes With bad grace from a paper pub­lished, in a city where an honest election has not teen held in years, and where a dozen or more election officials have been convicted and others are % be tried for perpetrating frauds on the ** liberties of the people.”

Go to, thou braggart 1 Cleanse your own door-slll, then you may prate of the “ lib­erties of the people and the fabric of the Constitution” being assailed by a law that demands a fair Election and an honest c o u n ty I t is high time some law was en­acted twmake all respect tFe libertle l o f1 all people, white or black, North or South.

door-keepers of the New Jersey Assem­bly, with only three doors to guard. Thus

■ far they have had five days each lu two ■v weeks. “What-a strain It must be on the

, mind and body. They will have the con­solation of drawiDg their pay, provided the State is not brought to bankruptcy by an extravagant Legislature.

President Adrian, of the New Jersey Senate, had held his position but three days before he committed two grave blun­ders. The first was his extremely partisan address on taking the chair, and the.other In placing. McDonald and Keys on the Committee on Elections, both holding their seats by fraud—McDonald without a shadow of right, as it was clearly shown

». by a fair trial at the last session that S tuhr. was elected by law ; Keys, by the best proof, haa been shown as. a voter-o t an-

' ■ o th e r State; yetrbotU have hean placed on a committee (making a majority of It) that is to take cognizance qf their own claims to seats In tlie body. Was there ever such an Outrageous proceeding? Could offensive partisanship go further?

: M a jo ritie s M ade to O rd e r .—-——NeW'Je raey, in th e peraon of the-Demo-

cratlc majority in the Legislature, haa lifted up its voice and protested against

'• the passage of the Elections hill now before >o Congress. There are doubtless many

'Southern States in which Democratic ma­jorities are manufactured to order, but in none of them Is la the science so perfected aa In Hudson county In this same State of New Jersey.

' 1 . From the developments of the <|ialIot- stufflng Investigation last year.it Is safe to say that there hasn 'tbeen an honest elec­tion In Hudson county in ten—perhaps twenty—years. T h e . Democrats regard this as their stronghold. No matter how much the Republican majority in the other

of- the State, Hudson county’s heelers could always figure out a surplus for the party of Jefferson and Grover Cleveland.

.1 —Men have held high oflices In this State who owed them to the corruption arid fraudulent registration and ballot-tK>x'

^B tufflng In Hudson county. The gang' there has taken advantage of every trick to hoodwink the people, not only through local ordinance but by special enactments at Trenton. l{ may be known sometime how many governors owe their election to the same debauchery of tha ballot. . ::

I t follows aa.a liiatter of course that the Democrats are opposed to any law that makes Federal supervision a part of Na­tional elections. They, prefer the old methods—methods that even caused New

. Y ork’s Tammany delegation to exclaim with uncovered heads: “ We can't learn

- . these fellows anything.” Hence the rep­resentatives of the State in the Legislature beg and threaten Congress to let these favorite Democratic methods alone. No-

I body who • favors honest elections- objects to the proposed law. B ut’D em ocrats^ . the South arid those at the North who are their tools and allies, are the howling mob that demands to be let alone; to control

. elections as they see fit; to disfranchise ■{ . those who will not vote, with them ; to keep

up their representation in Congress on the basis of population, but not by means of free elections. -New_ Jersey is a- great State, but it Ib ruled by a gang that would do credit to Mississippi or Texas.

T h e O c ea n F ro n t .■ The property ownors of Asbury Park have heretofore looked upon the Pf&kes-

F slon of the ocean front by Mr. Bradley as — ‘a matter of-courser and t^ k -n o jtu rth e r

^ thought o f Its Important bearing on the ‘“ .welfare and fCftQre prosperity Of the

place,, 1' I t was a wise foresight In Mr. Bradley’

„ to purchase this riphrlan right from- the State, th^t no parties inimical to his Inter­ests should secure it and use It for objec- tloUable purposes. A s ’long as lie lives

! there is little danger ^hat It will become a source of damage to us, and yet a t any day there may be changes by death or other­wise that might place us in jeopardy. We all know the uncertainty of human life, and even if all possible safeguards are placed around the transmission to : other hands, the mysteries of tlie law and its

s uncertain tenure might change all of the beqt laid plans for maintaining the beach In-ite most desirable conditions. •-

The Commissioners realize^his danger. n The Board ot'Trade also have taken hold

of the matter and will urge .that sotqe action be taken whereby Mr. Bradley, while living,' may place thla valuable franchise in such shape, that by no possi­ble contingency can the beadl\ ever, pass

^ beyond the control of the. authorities.

; . ', D e t e r m i n e d t o D e c e i v e .

• I t huasaw well authenticated that what- r'changes have take place in the prices

**of imported goods are due more“to de- «mand and supply or to the changes tn fashion, than to** any real effect from the change in the tariff. ^Many retailers, |o r j>olltical ^ffeefnud for the purpose of'add-

„ Ing to their profits, dId put up their'prices,, which certain ffree tradq. papers seized upon with a purpose to deceive.v'

The New York Tirpeif, either fr6m its ; predilection in supporting foreign manu­

facturers ox from its antagonism of Araer*

Itival F o rm ers- Orffftniztutlons,There aro now, two rival farmers’ organisa­

tions cooking ascendanBy, in this State. "The Farmers’ Alliance was begun In tlie West and has apreatt^oyer tho South, and npt only seeks

-t0-ooBtfoUegl8lattoh-but.l8.abasy-factor.ln; ihe poiiltcarficld. Tho AVUaoccbad adeclded offeot In tho eleotions laat fall in Bomo of the Western. States,' oleotIng enough men to con-

-troKho Legislatures and to elect Representa­tives In Congress..

The Farmers’ Political Leagoo waa flrst' or­ganized in Massachnectts in 1889 for the pur- poae of secarlng legislative action on the coloring and a&le of oleomargarine for butter. Thoeffcot wasso dccldcd that It was resolved to mako it a permanent organization for im­proving the condition of the farmer.* The- mflVfimcnt attracted the attentlon of farmers in other States and a National Lrfague was organised^In,Albany last September. .

Malde, Connecticut,. New York /and Penn­sylvania haVe their branches< and organl^ora have^jaat been prit at, work in New Jersey. Walter B. Plerco, an ex-8enator.of Chenango, N. Y., will have charge o/^tho wo>k In the nqrthern part, and George W. Kirby, of Dndgc^on. will* be In charge of the soathernr counties of the State. yr 1 * '-H \

’"Unlike the Alliance, Whioh also has.brqan- Izerp in the fleld, the League is not seeking tb create a new political party, but worka on tbe old. party lines to secure favotable legislation. The National ia in the line of Congressional work and ,the State Leagues .lm the Legisla­tures. T • ‘ '/

T he P . O^Jt*Apartment W iniuff.A le t te r ^ s been received at the JouaNAii

oSlce from Mr. Laurus Loomis, who pald~a personal visit to ^Flrat Assistant Postmaster General Whitfield and presented to him the petition of residents and property owners of Deal BDach and Loch Arbour who desire the delivery system of Asbury Park extended iu^ fafciforth as Grant avenue, DealJ5each.

Mr. Whitfleld gave tho matter eflpcolal

The enforcement*^f the existing laws.agalnat gambling in the arrest of bookmakers h t tho raco tracks and their conviction In Uhlori, Mdnmoutb arid Paaealo counties, has awak­ened tho supporters of this species of gam­bling to the mtfjesslty for a bill, to be passed by the Leglalarure, lcgallzlng bookmaklng In New Jersey.

I t is stated that such a bill has been j>re- pared, and that a large sum of money bas been raibed to back the measure. Those tn the Interest of the race course gamblers will stop a t nothing short of the accomplishment of thiffpernicious practice. < • - .

Will the peoplo of New Jersey submit to 4hls demoralizing evil I Tbe ministers of Unlop, county have<sent out ac lrco larto other clergy men .of tho State entreating them to enter their protest, by remonstrance, through the local representatives la tho Legislature, a t the first appearance of any bill In favor of legalizing gam bling upon tbe face tracks of .New-Jorsejrt.ot-pooKselllng connected there- wlth. • • • J . e r

attention, Igoked over tho map of the district and expressed his decided approval of giving free delivery In the district mentioned and ordered an Itnmodlato report from the Super­intendent of Free Delivery.

The appropriation tor the fiscal year ts about exhausted, but the General said he would place the matter In thlsJlscaLysar, If possible. In any evenPthe application would stand at the head of the list In coribectlotj with the Asbnry Park post office.r

Mr, Loomis advised the Bpard of Trade to take hold of the business, which It madehaste tb do a t the last meeting. There will b? no interference with tho present established offices. -

' H osp ita l A uxiliaries,Until wltblri recent years there was no hos

pltal along the New Jersey coast where ade quate facilities were afforded to those persons who from accldeni, received injarlea that needed prompt measures andljkiUfa 1 s u rg e d wlthHralned nurees who ooul<t give their un­

divided attention to the cases. Neither was there any place where persons necdingspecfiil treatment other than could he afforded.at prl- vate bouses might bo properly taken care of. Thls^cannot bo said now. The people of As- bury.Park ha4 ample proof of Its need last s.ummer in the case of the young man Injured at North ABbary. > .. —

In January, 18S9, there was organized and Incorporated at Long Branch what Is known as tho Monmonth MemorlafHospltal Associa­tion. I t Is regularly chartered, and Is man-: aged by a board of ttventy-seyon governors elected In classes to serve three years, nine being elected each year after the ono and two ye$r terms expire.

Dr. 8. H. Hoot |s tho efficient president, and to him is largely due the success of the undertaking. He harf been eleo£ed-agaln this yoar and is supported by a competent board of officers In the various departments, Drs. Mitchell and Johnson are interested as hon- prajy "members, and tho former is one >of tho governing boardi a

.Tho Central Hdtel property, near the de]£>ot>, has beenxparcbased. The managers hope to give oven better results tban befqre_wlth fuller accommodations 'and ftppirarices. The flrst year—accord(ngs ro the president’s report

.--oyer one hundred oases were treated with few fatal'results. This doos not include the dispensary Wbfkr Wfcfch would add to the numbor. “The management ask the oo-opora- tlon of the generous and philanthropic of this vicinity. tyutlons of money, furniture,household articles or grocorles, will be gladly received._.„-Women’a arixlllarles have been organized at. Long Bran^V'Red Bank and Freehold. I t la now proposed taorganlze bno.in Asbury Park and a mpeting- will-be-held in-Llbrary Hall, Monday afternobnT^eb; 2, for that purpose.

? E iite rta in m en t.’ The ptogram will open^xn^Motrday night a t

Educational Halfr with thoT'0orprl»e,' Party. Tbe following names of those participating promises something good : Mrs. W, H. Miles, Misses Martin, Ashmore, Mitchell, Conklin, Jeillff, 8cndderr Borden and Miller; Messrs. Wilson, Davis, Jolllff, Shepherd, Mllos Os­good, Miller, 'Minot, Sinbdkr'Vansant, Cor­nell and Elyln Burtis,

Yjolln solo by Mr. S. 0 . R n e p ia n o aoio, Miss Taylor, of New Y ork; reading, Mrs. V , W. Burch, of Hoboken.

Day’s Ice cream of: different flavors, and cake, will be served Immediately after the close of the performance.. Mra. J.. fcflnot haa ohargo of the refreshmonts,.

Wortman’s orotjestra will fnr^lah appropri­ate music. ^ l d m U t a n c |r ^ n t l t l I n g t o see and partakd^qf the above excolleht program, 25 cents. • • . . \

T h e Club Favors thcrfi in... The Young ftfen’a Republican Club of Nop- tune township hold a special meeting on Tues­day eveplng at their rooms and Unanimously adopted a j-esolutlftn eptffefslng the Federal Elootlotiabm and urging Its passage by the S a u a ^ ; . -■ '

. I t was*alined by the president,. F. L. Ten- Broeck f the eeQrotary,vM D. LeRoy, and thla Cpmmlttee: GpU, John 0. PattersSnand Geo. W. tre a t. I t for.wardetf to Qbngreasmat^ James Buchanan ,for. presentation at „the proper time. ;

The J o u rn a l rioted the fact las^weok that Mr. J . L. Coffin was, a candidate for posfmaa^ ter. This week he;asfca the 'assistance ot. bis. friends In the canvass, whioh, althongh begnh late arid -at the earnest sqlloltatlon ot^hoso who believe In bla thorough qnal I float Ion. for tbe position, bas gathered auch force as to give blm great encouragement. •* „

A round xhe JWiccory+» i t c . - jAll the lots have been taken, and the work

on the brick atrribture about rtady to begin.The MessTfl. Btelner bave secured four

lobs for tholr own use, bealdea agreeing to pay part of the additional cost of the factory. Th e ,est I m a te-won t -ti-liUl e beyond4he co m m 11- tce’a fignres, bnt sooner tban havo the design4 altered the future occupants agreed to make good the oxccbs.

The Ocean Grove Association has assisted very much In promoting the success of the negotiations for a siding fortfactory use. Tho railroad company at first asked a dollar a foot for over fifteen hundred feet, bnt after many conferences the. offer was"- made of a free switch-provided the O. G. C. M. A. would open a street threo or fbur blocks long on the west of thC tracks, extending from the freight house southwards. This the Association gra- olonaly consented to do, and cars may now load and unload directly on tho factory plat­form. f ' .

The deeda for tbo tranafer of the property were made out ant^ are now In- Mr. Bradlejr’s hands fo^ signature. As soon as this (® done the contractor ia ready for the batilo with the bricks and.mortar. ^ S :

Tim ely Topics.The law. against selling cigarettes to young­

sters Is practically a dead letter la Asbnry ■Park. No doubt It Is as bad In othor places. I t i s - a m atter tho Law and Ordor League

^hoald-takio. hold.oC ..Thero aro,stores Wljere trado la done In “ coffin halla?’ a t -

two fo ra cent, and tho Inoroaso of snjoklng among tho boya la notable. Tho post-office and the alloy to, tho east o f it Is their favorite loaflrig grburid. I t ;la no unusuaythlng to Sep a crowd of them waiting the*return of a com­missioner wlio has been entrnsted with the purchasing of two or three cents worth of Cigarettes. Thoae who have sobscrlbed^tbe cash takejflrst puU, and after they have eated t^oip appetite tho other fellows como in .-tor; tho butts. Tho stuffMbey^buy is the VileAt and cheapest that can bo madot< i t ’s no won­der some of them turn liver-colored and bo- come nearsighted,, 8 Qch truck would parar. lyie^a-horse a t ton foot.

; * ' * — ——— -Everybody- Is talking over tho now ,P08t-

master tbat-ls-tO-bo, and , commending Ihe lde§.of a voting contest to seo which of the gentlemen who are anxious for the.ogLcpjSiin muster Jh e most frlendsr“ Two of tho candi­

d a tes liave expressed tbelr willingness to sub­mit th6 question tb the pooplo, at aome future date,.w ith the undetetandlng,thatall Who have signed petitions an* left to vote accoVd- Ing to profororice, arid not be bound by ai/y paper b o y havo endorsed. Lot the candi­dates get together and arrange tbe details of the battle of votes. The people may be trust­ed to settle the controversy lo good shape.

(A real estate man In Asbuty Park has hi that the railroad authorities Intend .to close np the main station for regular brisinefia soon as the new bulldlug is ready a t North Asbury, and use it only as an excursion house In summer. The atatlon at North As­bury Is to be our principal business point and Ocean Grove Is to be provided with a similar station Bomowhere near tho head of Fletcher Lake. Thero Is one drawback to thla scheme. I f the business Is given op a t tho present sta­tion the grounds arid aquare—about five acres—which woro donated by Mr. Bradley, will revfert to him. Anyone who believes that the railroad company would consent to that can bellove that two stations aro hereafter to tako tbe place of one. There bas for some­time been talk of removing the old station back towards Main street, so aa to get room for an additional track or two, and tha t igay be done this spring. But the abandonment of the station must be a mlatake. I t wonld bo well for tho proper committee of tfie Board of Trade to keep their eyes open and dUcover whether this egg haa enough fertility in.lt vto batch.

The advocates of an electric light plant for tho Borongh should study tho subjeot, on both aides. Tho claim tha t an individual equipment owned by the town, oould supply a given*number of lamps much cheaper than

News B e y o n d , T o w n *Leland's Ooean Hotel, Long Branob, is in

the bands of the Sheriff (b be soid on Feb. 1,8 A now s^ooplo hab replaced tho one de­

stroyed b /a to rm on the-Mlddlotown Baptlat ^Jhorchr— -----------

F l u e s f o r t h e J o e k e y C lu l |S .

Judge VanSjckol on Monday sentenced the New Jersey JockeyfClob and the Linden Park Aeeoclatlon to -pay 1500. e a c h ^ n d oosts for_ pcrmlttlng_bookmaklng at tfielr race­tracks hea r Elizabeth. Two other cases are before tho Court of Errors and Appeals on technical points, and the Judge said if the decision was averse to tbe Jockey Clnbs they would bo sentenced on the other charges.

-Tho owners and managers of tbe race-track at Clifton discontinued races on Monday. I t was learned tbat tbe Grand Jnry bad tudlctcd them for maintaining a disorderly honao.

Mr. D. D. Withers, of Monmouth Park, Is said to havo secured the refusal of the old Jerome Park course for snmmer racing If there Is any attem jjt a t interference by the authori­ties at Monmouth nex tJn ly ;

H a v o c b y t h e W i n d ,

About 2 o’clock Thursday afternoon, dur­ing one of the gusts of wind then prevailing, the heavy railing on the top of the porCh o f Westminster Presbyterian Church was blown down. Fortunately no other damage was done.‘ The hanSTsbOe show case of Mr, J . K. Par­ker, wbjoh was on rollers outalde the door, went over with a orash,. and J h e plate glass-

‘djldcs wero reduced to fragments. The sample shelves of cigars Were exposed"to tho rain. This Is tbo second mlabap to "the same case. Mr. Parker thlnka he will havo It anchored to the sidewalk;

About tbo samo tlmo tbo^4«^go sign over Bird’s Knickerbocker M arket wcs torn loose and foil tb the sidewalk.

F ire m e irs B enevo len t F u nd.a_-^.The Trusteos of tho Exompt Firemen’s El^nd of the city of Now York bavo jn s t made their 25ih anntral ropprt, -T h e .dlabur^menta for the y«ar embraced $15 each t©“-S5C8 widows as pensiona, amounting to f53(520, and donatlonafor relief of widows and sick and Indigent exempt firemen, amounting tos *35,270.03, a total of |8»,780 03. The futfd now securely.-invested amounts to $249,860,13.

TKe rissbciatlon dates’ i ta h is to r y back to Jan. 26,1852, when the common council of the ciI^’T ll Now York appropriated to this fund fl,0 0 0 \b e interest of which should b e paid to tbe widow of Johq . Green, who waa run over and killed while go ln^ to a fire. I t

Ja chartered under a State, law and has be­come a great institution among the New York firemen. . -; ’ - J . . .'* ’

We have In Aautary Park two exempt fire­men of the old volunteer department of New ^ork—Chief Jas. H. Bird and Wmi ' H. Sohanck—who stlll^etaln a great Interest in Bre matters in ibwhjietropolls: Chief Bird Is a life member w tK fr Association of Exempt Firempn, and y , ^ attends the mootings.

, - Con^yAwff th e JDegree'.---A .largo numbei; of the Gri^jf Officers of Now Joreoy Knlshta Templar visited ^ rso fi Commandery on Thursday evening, tbpocca- sion of working tho Templar ^egreo and,ex­amining the records.' The degree of Knlgbts of Malta was conferred on about forty, mem*,1

:b e« .. ‘ -V.-' ' y « ' - - ••: ' *■’ Among tbo visiting Sir Knlghta wete Judge Trank McDonough, of Pilgrim Cbm- mandery, Hoboken ; G. C. Gen.Walter Dobbs, of Hugh d^Payen Canjmanderyj Jersoy'Glty; G. 8. John Lilly, of'St^Elmo Commandery» Lambertvllle; G, W. Thomas Watson, of Hugh do Payen Gommandqr/.'jersoy City.,.*

After the regular exercises ppeeohes were made by some of tho grand oflTGera eorapil- mentlng the knights qf Corson on tbelr good 'standing and fair record: A. banquet served by caterer Joseph R; Weir concluded.tbo even- Ing, - „

. P ay Y our Taxes.'Township taxes not paid by Feb. 1 will bo

returned to the County Clerk, when addition­al chajges will bo m ade;'. . * .

Dr, J* H. Galllngor haa been elected U; 8; Senator from New Hampshire to succeed Sen­ator Blair., * ‘ .

Charles Thompson, ol New -BHflfdfd, bSs' bought tho hotel a t Colt’s Nook. Tho price paid was 14,750.'

p r . Joseph Parrish, a noted physician and specialist, died on .Thursday a t hla home in Burlington, N, J . : ? '

Rov, W. C. A lexander p&tor^ of Matawan Presby ter I an CbnrcH.h as tendered his res|g-, nation, owing tb Ilffiealth, ■' - - ‘

The Presbyterian Church afR ed Bank was opened qn Sunday aljter undergoing extensive improvements, costing $2,000.

Abraham Lincoln’s birthday Is i o bocele- brated ln Now York on April 12 with a ban­quet by the Lincoln Association.

Dorlng 1800 the Pennsylvania itallrbad re­ceived from frelghta at the Freehold station over $70,000, -and from passengers nearly 120,000. . - ' ■ , .' Mr! William S. Burtis made a straight score of twenty a t the Freehold, shoot on Friday laat. I t has never boen equalled on thb (gT9 nndS(pf tba t club. v; ., »' New Y.ork> banka are lo eomparaUvelJ1

^asy clroamstancea. L ist week’a statement Bhowed that thoy held millions .of dollars in excess of the legal requirements. •

With appropriate exoroleoa and In.the pres­ence af Supt. Lockwood and otber notables, the J r . O. U. A. M. raised'arlarge flag on Fri­day laat on a polo a t the Fair Haven eohool.

Tho Now Jersey Grand Lodge, F . and A. M., meets at Trenton on Wednesday. A suc­cessor to the lato grand secretary, Joseph Hough, Is to be appointed, with other grand officers, 'l * ..

Dobblna & Loeb have the hotel a t Mon­mouth Park up to tbe second floor, Tbts la tholr socofid attem pt, . A-hurrlcane on Sun­day, January ,11, demolished aUrofrtfie struc­ture oxoopt the brick basement.

A meeting will be bold In the Presbyterian Chnrch, Freehold, Monday evening, to con­sider tho question of an effort to legalize pool- selling by the Legislature. Rev. Dr. Kemp- eball, of Elizabeth, and others will speak.

Keyport has twonty-slx residents over the age of 80 years. Of this number eighteen aro females. Mrs. Theresa Scbenok and Mra. Harris occupy tbe post of honor with 92 yoars to tholri6rodlt. Mrs. Tay Ipr comes noxt with 91.

Klaner & Bannett have secured a good flaw of Artesian water from the wqIIs for the Mon?, mouth Park Assocratlon, at a depth of nUpul

will bear investigation. Dynamos and lamps, with poles, w lr^ arid connections, bave been cheapened In tbo past few years, and It would cost less to mako a beginning, After that It Is a question of horse power and Intelligent management, i t Isn 't aa easy to manufacture electricity as it ia to pump water.

On Thursday and Friday, before the grand jury finally adjourned, it was known tbat none of the rum-drngglsta had been Indlotejl, The evidence presented .was deemed of suffi d en t force'to w arrant any unprejudiced body of men tn presenting the violators for trial. But the same old scbem eoftlrlng out witness­es, and -of putting them on trial beforeJhe grand Jnry Instead of receiving their volun tary evidence, broke the fctrength of the pkg- eoutlori. : i t Is reported that at first fBBTo'Were two o r ; jtbroe , indlotmeufa against Asbury, Park’s loading rumsellere, but later a recon­sideration waa asked tor aud frtonda on the jury pleaded forthe unfortunates so eloquent­ly tbat the cases wore dropped. Members of tho grand jury were^sald to have accepted of tho hospitality of one of tho accused drug- glsts, wboso counsel took good care to have him bandy for introductions and a “smile” at hotol barrooms. Their sympathy was en­listed for fhe oppressed, and tho prosecution Baw ho1?? easy It waa to change a m an's opin­ions—possibly for a very small consideration. There wore two mon on this grand ju ry from Asbury Park. They miiy or may not have taken aides. for or against tho Law and Order League; but tho majority of oltlzens will be­llove that thoy did not do tholr sworn dpty. The officers of tbe League are discouraged, but their work will oon tln u e^ itll the. last rum drug store )n the Park Is closed,

T h e SecbhdJW eek a t TrjsnJon.The Senate and Houae met Monday even­

ing and transacted some preliminary business and Speaker^teergen announced b!«f'Com­mittees. - -•

Theso bill* wore Introduced in thp Senate—, Forbidding Insurance companies to Issue pol­icies on children undor 10 years of age ; en ­abling, commissioners to employ pollce ’in townships, and to regulate driving in the publio-stroetg; enabling the governing bodies io any municipality governed by a commta slon, ^to expend not exceedltrg'|35k000 por year.for highway improvements when a ma­jority of the voters approve; providing that indlctmouts for .m urder may bo tried bytthe quarter rocslona In counties having a law 'judgor • „ • • '

Tbo principal bills Introddcod In the House Were—Giving coUnty derks the right to Isane licenses to hon-resldonts for hunting, and for the appointment of ten game commissioners; provldesjor tho Incorporation of the Pblla- delphjaand Camden Brldgo Com pany; pro­vides foL application for pardon j forbids shooting of quail for flvo yeare; makes ten hours labor performed within twelve consecu­tive hours a legal day’s work for employ&jbn rallroadBV'glvetf boards of freeholders pt^re^ to conatruot any- pnbllo roads authorized by vote of tbo people,^ whioh connect wlth any publlo patks, a t a coat not, to exoeed $250,000; provides for the continued legal existence of auV volunteer fire companies nntll they can dispose of all their property; gives married

.women right to dlspoae of tbeir .real estate tho eamo,as If unmarried ; provides that in- mates o f j$l]a and prlaons shall be divided Into throo classes.

On Tuosday, In the Sormto, these bills wero offered: Authorizes tho treasurer to pay oyer funds from aalo of r pnblle la u d a to rRu^ora- Bolentjflo and AtfrloultnirarCnllego; fixes aaU arles of asa 1stiMptrosocutors rpefmlu? public library associations to improve their propprty,,‘ not to exceed $^0(000 ; fixes salary of the crier of courts of common pleas a t $900 In coun­ties having a population of 75.000 to .150,000. ■ v In tho Houae—Provides tha t all corpora­tions ahall pay their employd^weokly^ under penalty of $50 for each offense;; fixing terms of office of colleotors and assessors a t throe years; deqlarefenlm proved land held ]fo r speculation nej|t®to Improved shall bet of equal valuation], for purpoaos *6f tax4tlori; fixes’salferleS df sheriffs a t $50 per jrcar. for each 1C00 of population ^.flxea tbe^aldrleB of coroncrs a t $10 ptSf year tor each 1000 of pop­ulation «•

At the conclusion of Tuesday’a.flosalonBi both houses adjourned till Monday next('■^:,

Thoro are 243,7 0 |, Ju lians in tho United States, nearly one-half of whom are self-sop^ porting. ‘ v

a wellrmanaget^ aqd econqmIcatcorporatloiL JM fe eL —The flrat well-wap.drl l lo d - to o p t h. . l . .. . ----- ----------------------------- J- -* of 900 feet arid strpek solid rock b u t no water.

On Tuosday a t Freehold, the Riverside.Gun Club of_Red Bank won the silver urn and goblets In the tournament betweon the Freo - hold, Dayton and New Bruriswlck clubs. Tholr scores wore 186, 167,179 and 169 respec­tively. ' " >

Lieut. Asbury F. Bedle has been electoil .td the command ot Company. Q\ Koyport, in place of Capt. Wm. Warner, resigned. Benj E} Lae, a nephew of Col. B. A Loe, Is* First Lieutenant, and Jam es P. AlleurSecond Lieu­tenant,

Tho steamships IroquoU and Algonquin, of tho Clyde Line, landed 240 passengers from New York a t Jacksonville on their last trips. Tbo AlgonqnWa list was the largest eyer ca r­ried on a single trip. Travel southwardsiisbumming. \ __--v

Threo thousand barrels of potatoes were raised laat year on three farms owned by J . F . and Richard "Crawford, J r ., of Middle­town. All bave boon sold, except five hun- dred barrels, a t $2 per barrel; The remainder will bring $3 per barrel.

Plans bavo been drawn for the new town ahlp hall at Red Bank. The proposed build­ing will be 44x75 feet, two stories bigb, and built of brick. The. coat is estimated a t $18,000, which Is more than tbe amount tha t can be uaed for the purpose.

Tbe big Hotel Lakewood, a t Lakewood, was formally opened on Saturday. A largo num­ber o f celebrities were on band to honor the occasion. This new honse Is .aald to be one of the flneat at any of the northern resorts and only rivalled by thp.se of St. Augustine,. The eighteenth annual meeting of the State Board of Agriculture will be held' a t the State House,, Trenton, Jan. 27,28 and 29. A num­ber of papers will be read on* subjoots of Interest to farmers, and discussions, on tbe same by prominent scientists aud practical mon. . rr

Capt. Jas. 8. Throckmorton bas been eleoted president and Enooh L. Cowart': c&shlet of the new Shtewsbuty National Bank, yhere have been three resignations from the board of directors, and matters now appear to bave settled down to a harmonious basis.

The United States mall wagons are to have' the right of way In Hew York City. Hereto­fore thero haa been muoh delay in crossing Weat Btreet to the forrles, and Inspector Byrnes bas given orders to the police to clear a passage so the wagons may make the trains. ( ' ‘ "

Five of the'World’s Fair buildings ar5 to be lqpated along ^the lake front, a narrow strip extending frqm tho Chicago river southward jn front of the ptty. I t is now occupied by tha tracks^f the Illinois Central Railroad, which tbo Fair Coin ml bs! oners deslpe to have moved further eastward nearer tp tbo water.

* N i p p e d H i s T h u m b .

Aa Mr. James H. Sexton was’’closing bis aafo on Saturday last, bla thumb was canght In the door and the end badly crushed.. Tbe pain waa so Intense tbat Mr. Seaton fainted flway and restoratives had to be administered before bo recovered. - ” . .

A't a meeting of the Waverly Fair Asaoola- tlori, on Wednesday,' the financial report showed a balance of $5,lttl of receipts over the expenses at the last exhibition. Tho* Meeting of the directors elected for preal debt, H. H. Isham ; treasurer, Amos Clark ; eecretarlos, T. W. Daweon and P. T. Quinn."

Last Saturday afternoon Conductor Riddle’s train for.fronton jumped the track just"after leaving tbe station at Jamosburg. Tho engine and cars ran along the ties for a hundred feet.. Nobody wasinjured, aqd after being hauled back on tho rails tho cars proceeded. An un­locked switch Is supposed to have oaueed the accident,

Frank P. Demarcate Democratic member of nhe$MjW York AssemWfTfrOm Nyack,.waa ar-restMyaBt Friday on the charge Qf tfmb,eszla|mont forgery. Demarest voted on Monv

^ a y /o r t)» B. Hill for U. S. Sonator to buC- ceed S en k l^ E v arts . Ho has refunded to thfe Union Steamboat Co. the am ount they chargod blm wltb ombezzllng, , v

Proaldent Harrison upset the plans of tho Republicans In Mt. Holly by nominating John S. Collins for poatmaster. Threo other can-* d]dates, Messrs. Thomas H. Pbarcs, Frank Si Haines and C. H. Eat 111,x Sr., were engaged in, balloting for a nomination by the Ropublipan voters when the news reached them. Haines bad a majority of 44 voles ovor Phare* and Eetill. - ________

- t h e N e w S e r i e s .

The eighteenth series of the Asboi> Park Building Loan commences Feb. 6. Tiio books are now open at the office for subscription ofstodfT" , * V . , . r

Tbo earnings of the Building and Loan 'As- Boolatlon tbla year .bave been $2,500 against $1,600 last year. More shares were taken out aud tho premiums bavo been, considerably higher. . '

' m onm outh Q u a rte r Sessions.; ,On Thursday, ^an. 15, seven*! road matters ‘were- before the Court. One repreaentedby Chas. A . Bennett,-J r ., was a petUIop of Milan Ross and others asking to Tacate an old-aridto^openftnewroad-at-IntorlttkDnr"TbO'pctlv tion was granted and the Court appointed the’ requlaite number of surveyors.' ^ i .

During the day the persons named below r were arraigned and their ple^rtakeriT V• William Jaokson, colored, assault and bat­tery on Qeorgiana DovfrlIng, plead not guilty, trial Jan . 19; Wm; n..D avis security In $100. "Ttbbort Vanwinkle, Indicted for taking Aaron Patterson's horse in Shrewsbury town­ship, plead not guilty; trial Jan. 23. Lecurliy, Thomas Glassy, in $200. “ ...j• Ida Reed, assault and battery, plead not gntlty arid furnished ball by her father In $100^:

Clarence Walling, of Keyport, sand-bag­ging, plead not gu ilty 'to an lndlCtmeut?bf assault and batlery and robbery. Released on $1,000 b a ll; James 8. Walltrigsecurity.

Augustus Lfewls gave security In the person of Asher Holmes for bis appearance the first Tuesday in May, '

Harry Hopkins has three charges to answer, ono of assault and battery and robbery, one of asSanlt and battery and another for plain unvarnished fighting, T, L. Seabrook went his ball for $1,000 in ono case,.$300 in another and $200 lor tho third. The first Indictment will be tried on Jan . 80^and tho* two last bn Jan. 23.

On Friday panlel Burnett pload non vull to an IndlctmeW for assault and battery. This Indlolmerit acc“8ed the defeu^aht- of assault­ing George Miller, of Bank. A t tho tlmo of the disturbance there was a row among tbo negroes at that place and Mr, Burnett, who was an officer, was trying to clear ou t tho crowd, when he says that Miller grabbed him and refused to let loose and ho used hla olub on bis cranium. Sqntenco sosponded.

Harry Chapman and Alfred Gilbert, who plead guilty to breaking and ontcrlng sovon dlfforent cottages at Occan GrOvo, were sen­tenced on Monday by Jndge Conover. Cflap man gets fivo yeara at TreutoU, belug opo year for eaoh of flvo houses entered^ Cotfrt suspended Sentence on two of tho Indict­ments. Alfred Gilbert only received four years, with sentence suspended In three of the Indictments.

An Indictment against three colored peoplo recolved considerable attention. Thedafend- ants were John Vincent, Lizzie Riley and James Miles, for breaking aod_enterlng the houae of Wm. W. Leibort,- a t North Asbnry, Park, and stealing carpets, silverware, cur­tains, etc, :Tbo Indictment .was nolle prote qnied as to John Vincent, and Lizzie and Jim were loft to go It alone. Thoso three lived in a hnt about a mile from Asbury Park, and according to the testimony, Lizzie was sup­ported, by James Mllea. •. Llzzla sald that James Miles know all abput the atolon arti­cles ; that he told her’to go to tho ball ground and brlng a.hondie to the house, which was- Ih e re ; aHolvent and got It aud when it was unpacked sho saw some of tbe curtains In It that had been In tho Lolbert houso on a for­mer occasion when sbo had worked thero. Jam os, on the other hand, denied.knowing' anything about tho stolon articles. John Vin­cent aald they bad told him tboy .had been married or be would not have bad them In his bouse. At any rate tho door of Lelbert’s boose had been pried open and several dollars worth of tblnga taken. The jUry obnutudod that both James and Lizzie were guilty. Liz slo’q brother, Canar, had employed John T. Rosell to look after her Interest arid thoConrt appointed James Steen to dofund James Miles. Tbo lawyers pitched jnto each others clients and Prosecutor Ivins wpis quietly en­joying the fnn an<i thinking of tbo fee the two. other lawyers were pushing into his pocket:

Felix Hanlbn wps tried for an assanlt.and battery on JphU McGuire. The defendant claimed that McGuire began tho disturbance.. The jury found Hanlon suUty 0f simpto a8eatilt. For 8tate, Iv in s ; for defendant, T. V. Arrowamlth.—Inquirer.

M r. M arrow W an ts a .Divorce.On Tuesday morning a physician was has­

tily summoned to tho residence of Mr. George Marrow, In Corporation Alley, to attend Mrs. Mftrrow, wlfo « was said had taken a dose of laudanum wft$ the Intention of ending her days on this sinful earth. Mra. Marrow was resuacltated and yet lives to answer h e r hus­band’s ohargoa of un^lfely conduct.

The trouble commenced on Monday night. George Marrow is a Grand Array man, and a member of iho colored post a t Long Branch. H e‘attended tho regular meeting on that evening, leaving Mrs. Marrow to attend to tho'ball whioh Georgo owns in-West Park, and which bearable, namo. Tho colored Masonic society occupied It for tholr weekly gathering. Mr. fa rro w camo baok earlier than usual, •and not finding Mrs. Marrow a t home, con­cluded to go to the hali and return ^H b her. The hall waa dark, and v^hen Georgo tried the fiSSt' door with bis key ho discovered anothor koy blocking his entrance. Ho w ent; to the rear and fourih that fastened tight. Returning to tbo front ho burst open the door and iriet Mrs. Marrow, wht^ endeavored to prevent his entrance. In tbe confusion Georgo hoard soiriofrpdy elae movlngikbout tho room and ebon diBcovored Jerry Burrell^a colored boot- black and newaboy, hlddon away In a dark oorner. Jerry Was in his stocklng-feet and otherwise lacking In proper attire. Thoro was a lively struggle, and Jorry la sald johavo been stretched flat four' times by tho usta of tho maddened huaband. Sevoral chairs were fqund drawn together and a mattress spread across, pnd~Mr^ Marrow h'od his own Ideas as to what had had been mado of tho1 shakedown.

MarrbW sent word to Mrs. Crittenden, hla Wfe’Q mother, that shp could take her daugh­ter home, "as ho would not'harbor her in future, or treat her as bla wiioi -But Mrs. Marrow went back to her usual bed and board* and it was In hor hueband’s house tha t sho attempted suicide. I t Is likely , tha t he will file a petition-for divorce. Jerry; the bootblack,is reported to have left town by first train next morning.

George Marrow Is one of tho beat known colored m ef^in tbo township. He haa for years had tb^eare of the horses used by, Mr.. Bradloy and thoso for the street teams. Ho has been industrious and saving, and has put hla money In subatanuaJ investments. J le married Sarah Crlttena^n, his second wife. Several ‘ years ago, andeverybody snppoaed their domc8tlo;reIatlbngwere',of the happiest. Mrs. Marrow bas bo_OnTrforomoat In 'ohnrob, Sunday school and eocleiy. work, and her .lot, Was ertvled by her les3 fortunate acquslnt-

W i m t E i c c t r i c i j l t r h t i n f r C o s ts ;' \ ‘ *r-To ihe Editor o f the Journal:

Tho Asbury Park Electric Light and Power Co, did not intend to make any pttblio state­ments in refereriepjo municipal lighting, but lBey'f6BI'tBffr3hbUH all5rhaa"bi^ri*^sFep7^ aented, arid they ahould at least endeavor to correct tho mistakes already published, and a t tho samo tlmo vindicate thomselyes. I t Is an easy m atte r to quote unreliable flgnre87but much moro Important to the general.publlp to. establlah fic ts. ,•

I t haa beeihJtated within the last few days by the hlgbesriauthorlty In tho United 8tates on electrlo lighting, t h a t** out of all tho cities or boroughs fnVnlBhlng tbe lr owu lights, not one has been able, When tho facts are known, to-furnlehj^ghts cheaper than,could have been bbtalnedlrom a private coirif«iny under sim­ilar conditions. Of the slxty-one plants now In operation by municipalities In tho United States,.not one has been submitted to thepeo pie or established by popular vo te; but nave been the outcome o t tbe action of, certain borough or city officials, for tbo purpose of political advancement or personal proflt.”

In reference to the comparative cost of eleo- trlo lighting, oxtracta from which were pub­lished last week,*quoting Ypsllantl, Mlcb.V&o,, and claiming to bave*been Issued by tbo Johns Hopkins University, the same authority says: •' ' : ../ '' ' ■ ■:

‘‘ I flud that said artlclo waa writton by one Victor Rosewater, a atndont;-1 also find that tho authorities of tho University wonld not countenance tho Barne, as they did not bellove tbo figures correct, nor that tbe facts wero all stated.- As to Ypsllantl, where i( is claimed the lights coat $23 61 per year'; .tbo facts are that they cost, $72 p e r year, and only, bum 18 nights In a month until midnight, on tbo moonlight schedule. This, reduced to all and every night, meana abont $200 per year for eaoh light. Instead of $23 01. Take another Illustration of tho absnrdity of theso figures. Lewiston, Me„ Is quoted at tbe rate of 14 cents por night for each light,' or $51.10 per year, running all Of overy night. This plant la run by water power owned by tho city, whtbh njeans no coal, no engineer, no fireman an$, no Interest on Investment for boilers, &o.‘Hn comparing thls^clty with one in tho vicinity of New York, using atoara power, these Items must be added, wblob amount to about $9.000 por annum, making the lights coat about $140* each lnatead of $U0. In Scran­ton and other towns in the coal districts, the low price of fuel necessarily cheapens the lights, and all othor places where lights are quoted as being exceedingly low, may be ac­counted for In aome similar inanner, as we find the average prlco per electrlo jight throughout tho United States is about $160 per light per year.”

This shojvs that our prlco fbr lights Is less tha« the general average ln jb e United Stales. Another Item to be taken Into consideration is the nnmbor of llgbta usod. It is evident that 500 lights can be produced at a less cost per light than 50 lights; Gko. M. Laub,

Secretary and Superintendent,

X ■ , . ett;A THOROUGHLY EQUIPPED

SANITARIUM.------* --- -*■=*■

A :

- N ■/ ■

| A N ew G y m u a s iu m C lass. ^i : V ;P Dr. Ella P.. Upham wishes to announce that a new gympaalum class is about to be formed In the Y. M. O. A. gytun^lium.\V b e old class has been about broken up by tbt%ood 6katlng of the past month, and the Instructor's Umo ls^too valuable to b'o wasted on a clasa that prefora ‘excesslvo^Bkatlng to valuablo physical training. *

'The ladioa should mako this branob of the gylnriflHlum « success hero aa It latIn ail other fillies. „ New drills and heavy work will be taken up as rapldiy as the young ladles’ inus- olos nro 'developed, aqd tha t can only be BcoorapIUbod by. constant practice. Any of tho ojd.Clhw who wish to keep on with- the wbrk can do so by attending regalarly,

Information ao .to the dress, fees, time, eto.i will bo glveu a t the gymnasium, or at the.Y, M, C.; A. robins, by the Secrotary. ;

At tbe semi-annual meeting of tho Retail Merchant^ ’ -Matnal Protection Association, hold last w,cok-In Burlin'gton^ it wa9 decided to hold tbolruext meeting In Asbury park .

P a s to r B f l l i l ^ 's T erm Ended*Tbo official board jo f 's t . Paul’s M. E.

<Jbjjrcb, at the recent Quarterly Conference, passed the following lri testimony o f Rev, Hehry 'Bel lTngTs Tal nifuleeiv 16b:

WnBSAB, AS our beloved pastor, Rov. Henry Belting, Is closing the fourth year of his pastor­ate In 8 t Paul’s Church, wo desire to record our seine of the.valuable service bo has rendered us in this relation.: IMoltcd,_Ab a minister of the worn, ho hasfllled tbo pulpit with decided ability. Hla expo­sitions or the Scriptures bave been clear, evan- geltcaT and omrnently practical and..edlfylng, and-dellvored with earnestness and unction.

2. As a paator wo recognize his dipnifled Chris­tian and ministerial example, hia pure Hie and efficient labors, and his conBclentlous attention to all tho details of churcb interests.

% n . BAKU'S HYGIENIC INSTITUTE,In to m a 1 arran gemen ts app roved by th e profession,

(8oo Ocean Grovo Annual Report for'1890,)Ofllco Hours—2 to 4 p. M. Olitsldo ‘practice lim­

ited to consultations and snbelal cases;For further information send for circulars.

0 . M. BABB, M. D.25 years’ continuous practice in Philadelphia. Member of Phila. County and1 other Med. Societies.. 8 years Phys, and Surg: to Phila. M. E. Orphanage. Burg, Post 77, G. A. B.,Phlla. -

H O T E L A S B U R Y ,Opp. R. Rotation, ABbury Park, N. J.

Open thoyearround. First-class accommodations. Terras moderate. 8. H.^TEVKNS, Prop'r.

THE PHILADELPHIA,507 Third Xvofluo,

Opposite Educational Hall Park. Terms for August, $7 to $J0; Fall and Winter, $5 to 88; Table board, $4. Spoolal terms to jamlllcs. Ex­cellent table. Open tho entire year. . ■*-

- . ' M. J, CAMP.

E s t a t e .

TO LET, FURNISHED,Until April 1, comfortablo houso, 38 rooms, two doublo heaters; flve-iplirutes’ walk-from railroad station. Inquire of T. Frank Appleby, r

FO R REN T. fTho ball of tho G. A. R., In the Mannliyffiulld-

ing, will bo refurnished and is oflere'i for rent from the 1st of April next on tho following ovon- lnga: Second and fourth Mondny, second and fourth Thursday, and every Friday and Saturday evening of eacb month. Apply, tp -

• ■ ~ JAMESJJ. BIRD.

FO R S A L E . “Houae and Lot a t Villa Park,

adjoining Spring-Lako, N. J. prlco 81,600. Cost.r- 82,700. Address Box 475, Aabury Park^N-J;-

ASBDRY PAKIC.PBOPiSUTY TO B E N T ,- — ------ SE L L G R J^XGHANGlr.-r-" -; - —

Our long.experlence gtecsjjiigrcatifaclllties for negotiating successfully. Twentjr-fOhr veais!, ref- eneea from patrons. E. A. DAILEY,

74 W, 35th St;, New York City.

L aw and O rd e r L eague.The annual meeting of tho “ Citizens'Law

and Order League pf Neptune Township, w a B held TricSday night, Jan . 13. In attend­ance, reports, and show of IntereBt, It was a very satisfactory meeting. Tho ofllcors elect­ed for tho enautng year are as follows:

President—Theodore Oves.Vlco-President—J. Emory Barber.Secretary—G. R;Snyder. v . ..

^Treasurer—George a . Smock." Directors—T. F. Appleby, Cook Howland, Rev. George Clarko, Gen. Joliu C. PaUeraou, Dr. John H. Shotwell, Uriah White, Rev. Wm. Franklin, Joseph Coyte, P. V. B. Demarest. .

Marshals—Derrick Hoagland, Charles E. Kl] Sidney T. Hampton, Wm. Devoreux, 8amuei Whlto. ■

K alakaua*s JOeatli.> Tho King of tho Hawaiian Islands, David Kalakana, died on Monday afternoon oT tbe Falace Hotel, San FrandBCO, of Brlght’a dls- eaao. Ho waa born In 1836 at Honolulu;.and waa crowned king in 1874. Princess Lydia Lltluokolanl, slater of tbo late king, succeeds to the throne. Sho la two years younger than her brother^___________________

Ck-T. U. C onvention.A oonventlon of tbe Women’s Christian

Temperance Union of Monmouth county will be held in the Baptlat churcb, Manasquan, pn Thursday next, Jan. 29.

Seaslona will convene at 10.45 IP the morn­ing, 2 p. m. and; at 7.80 In the evening, at whioh addresses will bo made by Mrs. J . T. Ellis, Mrs. 8. J . C. Downs and others in the Interest of- the orj&uizatlon. Tho Question Box and discussions will bo features of the meetings. . ‘ “

T h e C hurches.METHODIST.

First M. E. Churcb, corner (frandim d First avenue. Rev. Dr. Moffet will preach at 10 80 A. m. Service at 7.30. 8 unclay-school tft 3 B0: O. E. Socloty at 0.80. Ail Invited.

FIRST PHESnrTKniAN.__._Rev. Frank Chandler, D.D., pastor. '^Tbd

usual preaching eervlces a t 10.80 and 7.80. Sunday-school, 2,80, and Ghrlstlan Endeavor^ Socloty therhour prevlou8"to evening service.

WE8TMIN8TEK PRKSnTT»niAN.Services on 8unday_aa usual a t 10.30 a. m .

an d 7.^0 p . m. Sunday-school at 2.80 p . m, Btrangora and others without a regular place of worship are cordially Invited.

iiefoumed cnunon.JPreachlng.by tho pastor,' Rov. Dr. Scudder,

a t 10.80 a. m. and 7.80 p. m. 8unday-6cbooi a t 2.80. * 1 4

BAPTIST.Prcaohlng morning and evening by tbo pas*

tor, Rev. F. C. Colby. Sunday-school at2.80. Seato freo and.all are welcome. .

V l,UTUBnAN.English Lutheran services will, b o hold m

Y/M . C.-A, Hall, over thb post offloe,-at 10i45 A. M, . and 7.801*. m.

BPIBOOPAL,Trinity-Cliuroh, corner Grand and Asbury

avenues. Rev, A. J . MIHer, rector. > 8umJ(i& servlctis—Holy Commnnlon, 7.80; eermon at 10.80; even song, 7.80. Woekdays—Morning prayer at 9 o ’clook ; on Thu rsdays; morn Ing p rayer^ t 8,80; Holy Communion at 9. Sun­day-school at 2.80,

W AN TED .C o t t a g e s o r L o t s i n

A s b u r y P a r k IN E^ I/lASQE ..Philadelphia Property near my Office.

. . " c. HARRY^IIOWAKER.Conyeyancer and Notary,

Ofllco—jpor. 17th and Oxford Sis,, rhilada. Pa. ^

For Sale Cheap. Q-Room House, and Lot

25x100, on Munroe Ave, near Emory St.P B lC E 83 .300 if sold at once. Address or

call on • W. H. JONES,On premises, or Coal Yard, Main Btreet and

Second Avenue.

BOARDING HOUSE FOE SALE, On Easy Terms— Fully Furaishfd,

Finely located at North Asbury Park, second block from Ocean, 24 rooms. Has done a splendid business. Owner otherwise engaged. Pnc0$9,000. 33,000 down, balance in easy yearly Instalments. Address “A. B.,” care Journal ofllco.

. U n i q u e a m l C h ic .

One of the 'mpst tasle/ul invitations yet Issued for an evening entertainment Is that sent out by tbo.“ Peannt Party,” a club com­posed of young ladles of-tho Park aud Grove.

The invitation Is; 0 minute piece of tissue enclosed in a .peanu trBhell, one half of which Ib glided and the 'other Bllvered. Tht?-affalp takes place this (Friday) evening, a t tho Olive Houso, Ocean Grove. . . ‘1 _

Y . M . V i A . I > i r e c t o r s . .

.O n Tuosday-evening, T. A. Roberts and *F, Wi Hendrloks were elected dlreotora for two yeara, and W,fW. Lotsop, T. Frahk Appleby, Dr. Shotwell, Ernest Scbnltzler and W.#)V. McChesnoy, J r ., for three years.

The reports of'standlng copinlltteca showed effective work, and plans were laid focgreater effiolonoy In the fnturo. The Association is laboring to betfeflt the young men of the town In a aplrltual, Intellectual, social and physical manner. V ’ ‘ V ■ "r - •• \-

The olcolrlo cars have had fpw winter. Tbelr Buheduie bas been reasonably prompt, and with welt warmedr.interiors the traveling publlo bas been comfortable.

S ’ ■ - i"

^ o x S a l e ,

F a n , 80 Acres, a t Deal Beach, H. J.(Kennedy Homestead) 10 minutes from

R. R. station.•4000 PEACH TREES

in full bearing. Good buildings. Land suitable for truck and garden farming. Prlco moderate. Terms easy.

Or will R E N T for term of years to goodtenantat moderate rent. Address . ------- -

ISAAO C. KENNEDY. ABbnry Park. N. -T.

A R A R E C H A N C E• U K D A^D COTTAGES FOR fcAl E

AT DBAb IIKACH.

The Bubacrlber. wishing, to retire, offers his two cottages and 20 acres of-.land in lots to suit purchasers. -

This is ono of tho finest situations on the New Jersey coast, and no recommendation necessary when aeon. Title perfect. Terms^asy.

S. W. HENDRICKSON,Deal Beach, N. J.

l e g a l .

S;EOOND N OTICE TO CRED ITO RS.Notice Ib hereby glvon to tbo creditors of 'Tyleo

L. Emmons, of Aebury Park, In- th# -cCiuuty of Monmouth, New Jersey, that all clatmB agalnBt

-thS'eHtatt* must be exbttfltea tothe subscriber at'." his office in Asbury Park, under oath or...afllrma- tlon, on or before the .thirteenth duy of March' next, o r bo forever barred from coming in for a dividend of tho estate. said creditors pro further notified tlmt a liSior tho Claims against, tho said .Tyleo L. Emmons will bo filed wlth^tho ‘ Surrogate of the cdunty of Monmouth on said date when exceptions thereto may,be filed'by any 'person Interested. » .

SAMUEL A. PATTERSON, Assignee; if Dated January 30.1891., ^ 4

T^r©NM OTJTH,COIINTY CIHOU1TXYX 'COURT.The Asbury Park and Ocean 1

Grovo Bank t -Upon contract—; .... vs. f in Attachment. -7"

i. Anna W. Leavitt. J ; , „Notice is hereby given th a t a writ of attach­

ment, at the suit of The Aabnts.PaJrk and Ocean Grove Bank, against the rights and credtis, moneys andeffeats, goods and chattels, land aud ■tenements, of Anna W. Lewtitt, a non-resident debtor, forthe sum of five hundred and six dol­lars and eighty-flvo cents, issued out of theMon1 mouth County "Circuit .Court, on tho twenty-sixth day of-December,-A; -D„ * 1890.'- RcturnnbUr and; retumed iuto court, duly executed by the Sheriff of tho county of Monmouth, on tho sixth day of January, A.D., 1891.w JOHN T. nAIGHT, Clerk.DAVID HARVEY, Jn., AU’y/or Maintlff,. Dated January 8 ,18(J1._______ ‘ ________

o N B U L E TO HAR O pED IT O ES.Exkctotor' b, Notice.

Calvin B., McQueeten, Executor of,Em ily°P. Matson, deceased, by ordor of the Surrogato of the county of Monmouth, hereby gives notice to. tho creditors of the’Bald deceased to bring in their debts' demands aud claims against tho cstalo of eaJd decedent, under oath or attirmation, within nino.months from tho 23d day of December,, 1890, or^they will bo.fore.ver.bArrcdof any action there­for against tho said Executor.

CALVIN B. McQUESTEN.

ON B U L E TO BAB OBEDITOBB.Ai)mini8TRATOu’s Notice. :

William J. Straub, AdtnJi)l*tr«itoT of Elizabeth .

iringlntdebts, demands and claims against the estato of said decedent, under oatn 'or afllrmatlon, within nine months from tho30th day of December, 481)0, or tbby will bo forever barred of any action therefor against tho sold Administrator, ' - - ,

WILLIAM J. STRAUB!V

o N R U L E TO BAR C RE |>IT O E3. •-_ '- .' Executors’ Notice^James^.JBxttdley, Executor of Mary A. Steven­

son, deceased, by order of tho Surrogate of the county or Monmouth, hereby gives notice to iho creditors of tho said deceased to bring in their ' debts.1 demands and claims against the estate of said deoedent, under oath oriifllrmattou, within pine months from tho 17th day of December, - 1690, orthey frill be forever barred of any action therefor ogalnB^tho said Executor..' " '

1 ■ JAMES A. BRAD^Ey.,

T ON THE BANJO,1 AA llmltod number o f pupils received for In- _trux5tion on tho Banjo. For terms, Ao,, address or call on / E. OSGOOD,.stroction on tho Ban io. or call on ’ _________ _

607 Third avenue, Asbury Pask.

Page 3: EMPORIUM - digifind-it.com · EARLES GALLERIES, 810 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. . • „ A BRILLIANT. EXHIBITION OF THE.. WORKS OF 1 CHASS^EINHART IN BLACK AND WHITE. . A most

and MONMOUTH REPUBLICAN. .

SATUKDAY. JANUAEY 2i,1891.

B a t M o f A d T c r t i s l n g ,

MomLij

5075

1001...175835800550

1000

at.,70

J 25 160 20Q 975 850 450 850

1700

8100150200250850450650

11602300

SI 25 175 276 8 5fl 460 550 750

1600 8000

$1 76 825 425 600 700 800

1800 2500 4500

a; 1912 501$40018 600 400 600 1000 660 800 1400 700 1000 1800 0 00 1500 2500

1200 20<J0 8500 J8 00 3000 6000 85005500 8500 65 00190001160 00

Local JtOTiostf.—A limited number of local aotioes will bo admitted a t tbe rate of fifteen cents per line. They will be plaood at^the bot­tom of the looal oolnmna only, and must have " adv " a t ihe ond.' When continued four weeks or tongor, a discount of 25 per cont. Is allowed.

Tirawe.—Yearly advertisements are payable Quarterly, In advanoe: advortlfiomenta for leas perlodthan three months aro cash.

O a r A g e n t s . . /Geo. P. Rowell A Co., 10 Spruce St., New York.

. - W.:W. Sharp & Co., 21 Park Row, New York.■ Edwin Alden & Bro^ 140 Nassau Bt,, New York,

and'Cincinnati. .J . H. Bates, 41 Park Row, New York.N, W. Ayer & Son, Times Building, Phlla’d , P ra tt & Co., Ninth and Aroh ats. JPhlla’d.Will receive advertlsomenta for Tint J oubkAt ;

a t regular published rates.In all oases wo reserve the right to reioot any

advertisement that mav bo obleotlonable to us.

l e g a l N o tic e sJ Our friends will please boat In mind tba t Tna

JounNAX Is a legal newspaper, and aa suoh Is the m for all legal iproper medium for all legal notioes. Some ad­

vertisements belong to us by law, while wltb many others it Is optional w itu the party lntor- pated as to what papor should publisn them.

•« F re e . N o t! ces.*>By . mutual agreement, and by reoommenda*

tlon of tho New Jersoy. Editorial Assoolatlon, tho newRnapors of Asbury Park have decided to abolish the unfair and unwarranted custom of giving free local notices to entertainments of any kind whioh have as their objeot the raising of money for the benefit of Societies or indi*five cents per line to residents and^ ten oen ^ ^ e r

, - -. line to traveling or outalde companies or I

Moro bicycles are seen on the stone road those days. . .

The carrier system in Aabury Park laBt year cost $3,408 25. ~

Ice dealers- breathe easier and are not afraid of an oarly spring.

Jno. L. Schneider has made heavy pnr- chasea of oirpets for the Spring trade.

Samuel, A. Patterson has been appointed ad­m inistrator of the late George W. Patteraon’a

.e s ta te . . ~ . ■ . • ...The ...earliest of the Febroary magazines,

w ith1 Other lato publications, are on sale at- . Qnlnby’s. *__ ■ •_____

Architect J , W. Roberts has removed hla office from the T rnst Building to 223 Market street, Newark. . ___ _______.

1

AU towns of 5,000 population aro llkefy.to b i included io the. freo. delivery system beforem any-m onths. ________

Slnco tho Legislature opened, travel on tho ' FroeboldKfe-jjamesburg .llmUed*haa consider-;

ably Increased. ' l . 'Bnnchos of Incandescent lamps bave been

placed on the new iron gates a t the entrance of Ocean Grove.

Postmaster Toland still,smiles,'and wonders how It will foel to enter the hotel business again after n e it Jane. *- --

Mrs. Cornelia A. K roehi'and her son, Geo. Fred. Kroebl, are named as executors by the will of tbo late Hehry Kroehi.

Frank Riggs has given up coal oil as an illumlnant and introduced the luoandosceut fluid in his Rond sttcot obrdwalnery.

A pnbllo Installation of officers of Corin­thian Castle will be held a t tbelr ball in Modi- mouth Building on Monday evening. *

Mr. F. L. TonBcpeek is extending his build­ing on Cookman avenue In the rear to obtain greater robTm for domestic purposes.

XThe.date of the entectalnment for the bono- flt of the Y. M.-.C. A. Gymnasium Is Feb. .10. The program will be announced later.

Mr. Jam es J . Parker wilt move this spring from bis present residence to Cookman ave­nue aud occupy the rooms over his store.

Tho McKinley bill ba3 cheapened dress goods and clothing in Asbury Pdrk.*'’ Look at

' Henry Stoinbach’e stock and prices to prove it.

Messrs. Mqhegan & D o rs e t‘are ready for , .contracts to manjifacture new mattresses or

renovate old oneaUt their factory, 143 Main• street. ________

,Thfl vaqant lot on Seoond avenuo, opposite , Educational HalVha^ been sold to Mr. W. 8. Gabagan, w.ho will procoefl^to erect a cottagea t once .' ______

Stauffer bas finished some striking portraits of tho late Mrs. M. «J. Ingkip-Hateman. They

-m ay'be obtained atjhis studio on Cookmanavonue. . ' •_____ . ‘' I t is,proposed to form a business men’s gymnasium class. A meeting 'was called by Secretary Hope for Thursday evening for

■ org^nlaajlflp. - - ' n s . Tlio new Bryn Mawr Hotel, near Philadel­phia, Is to be conducted by Miss Simmons,

' who Is also-lesaeo of Avon Inn. Both houses areTto b.o opened soon.

The yaphtlng cap apd tho flannel reefer are to bo leading articles of feminine wear for nextsnmSmer. .......... ..._ Ratrior has It that Mr. Chas. Bcbwager,wlU shortly ladmlt a partner to share hlB^oslness &t the People^ Store......."J .-' . '*

ASBURY PARK’ JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 1891.

P eo p le W ho Com e a n d Uo.

Dr. atad Mrs. Alday, of Ocoan Grove, leave

The Ladles* Aid 86o|ety of F irst Prcsby-, tertan Churoh will have a J a p Clipping Boo eoolable on Feb. fid.' ,

Mr. Frod L, Snedeker baa boen elected VJce- Connclllor of th e 'J r . Q. *U. A. Mo to DU a vancancy in the board of offlcere. v '

Mr. A. C. Atkins recelvod congratulations on Tuesday with a broad solf-aatlsflod smile. Another Republican ^pter. He will bear the name of his grandfather, Geo. L. Atkins.

Many of the Ocean Grove, residents have signed tho petition asking tha t Asbury Park Bhall be made a general dellveryoflloepso tha t their mall shall be dellverediSy^arrlors,

Yon can .enjoy the laughable situations In the Surprise Party, Day’a lco cream," and; Wortman’o orchestra,^ next-. Monday night at Educational Halli for 25 cents. ‘I t la for the Library’s benefit. Y

. Johnny^Boyce, a lad working for* Seth & Warner, fru it dealers, while ou t delivering goods on Saturday last, fell from the wagon and broke-hla left arm below the elbow. Dr. Kinmonth set the Injured .limb, , V *

■. Several stage loads of visitors from Eiberon Connell, J r . O. U. A. M.‘, fiUoud&d the meet­ing of ABbury Connoll on Wednesday even­ing. ; Two new members—Geo. WVTtaax and Chas. Southard—were Initiated.

Mr. Miller Coward, of Allentown, was in town pn Tuesday on matters of business. Mr. Coward will take charge on'A pril 1 o fthe extensive stables lately owned by lsartlne Brown on Summerfleid avenuo.

Mr. David C. Cornell, of the Trust Com­pany, undertook to ride ovor a lamp-post the other evening^ on his bicycle. .The wheel came ont second best In the encounter and will need a term a t the repair shop.

Saturday’s rain spoiled ,a holiday _ t^ t the boys and girls'had_J^een- anticipating for & week. I t stopped tho skating and kept them indoors. Ou. Monday and Tuesday,' with continued cold weather, they_tnade up 'fo r lost time.

Prof; Oagood and the leading members of

T h e W o rk o f H u m an Devils.Two men living near the coantry residence

of Mrs. Jano Kilpatrick, in Somorset county, after robbing th^Souso and taking $57 from tho pockets oftfohn Tom s,'the watchman In care of the premises, whom they had knocked Insensible, deliberately tied, bis bands and with another rope attached hung him to a hook In a closet where thoy left him. ^ He-re- .malned In tiie most excraclatlng agony^wltb a toWel thrust in his mouth, from Saturday until Monday—fifty-one honra—when the fam­ily falling to receive thQlr milk from the farm, 3ks ugnal, cogpladod-^abraothl ng was the mat­ter. They w ent up to the farm and with a neighbor broke In house jand .found, the poor man more^dead than oHveT A' faete of

the X. M C. A ai^ planning a minstrel e n t ^ ^ apan,nb raok Kon1(i be none too good fortalnm ent for next month. As a funny manT -■

and ban joist Mr. Osgood has few superiors. But when “corked" up he is said to astonMb the pyofcsstoniils.

A rtist Cady has made a design for the sta­tionery and official emanations from the So­c ie ty of Asbury Park PIoneofa. * It.m ay pro­perly'bewailed the coat of arma. I t Is In the engraver’s hands, and will be published as soon as perfected. ►

-A -la d y giving her name a s j Vorrell jqm pod from a train "whllo ln motion at.the station on. Friday, and narrowly cscapod rolling unde?' the wheels of the car. She w ould glvn no reason for her rash act, apparently being tn a dar.ed condition^

On-Tueiday tho first of-the F lo rid a’tours started from>New York- with! over three oar- loads of tourists. They had pleasant weather for the ir start, aud mado. schedule time to Jacksonville, arriving Wednesday efening. The second tour starts Fob. 8.

skating tbls woek ondod on Tuoalay. ^ lB uohang |0 of temporiturrf on Wednesday and

Thursday -weakened tho ice. Colder weather Is promised soon by the tomporataro 6xpftrta.

I t may bo that leather has u g;one up,” ' but iii.BUph a way that >,bo rlco& of p-idal covor-

v l«gaatthoB tarB hoo Utorp h^e^gcnodow n. Some special bargains sire preadated' to-the J o u b h a l readers thla week, - ' .. ..’V

Richmond Bros., of Delauco, N. J ., have ae cured tbo .contract .for building- the new pier a t tbo foot of Embury .avenue, Oeqan Grove. I t ia to bo a substantial structure, jjud will extend flvo hundred foot Into the scfi. The

. piling jrUI afford protection to the outlet of the sower pipes. Aprll-^0 is tho date, named for Ua completion. y . >. / * ;

( I f you are In nood of a now parlor stoveor. kitchen range, or a sdpply of utensile for domestic use, remember tha t D. Eorlght, 705, Cookman avonue, bas the best stock-ond aells a t j6 w prlce&4 .Tlt\, roofa au^l guttora fur

; nlabod for new bulldlngB, or repair^ for old ones.—Adv. . ’ ■

T urcoiiinn C urta ins. “Now-pattorns and fresh goods, lu.Turooman

Wfid Laco'dn etook at ^ohneldor’a, 167 69 Main Btreet.— Adv. 1 : ,

Bourne's English Dyspepsia PI)la_aCt .on the ‘ ’ food, insuring Wealthy digestion and proper

■ ftselmilatlon. Drngglsta keop thoin.—Adv.

O. & O . I to u to W est.T heF . F . V.» h solid tra in of Pullm an vea*

tlbule sleepers/ dining car and day coaches, ‘heated by steam,’*and Ughted'byelectricity.

New York td Cincinnati anjl Loulsvniorfvla .. Washington, without-^xtra fafe, leaves New

York by Pennsylvania Railroad, 5,00 j v m.. Philadelphia, 7.40 p . m. ; arrives Clnclnndtl.O p. m. next d ay ; Louisville. 9.80; St. Louiai

■ '--^7.05 next inornlngJ giving direct connections to points bqyond. . • *

FIrdt-claas limited rates, from Asbury Park to Cincinnati, $16} Louisville, $19.50; St,Lpuls .

- : $31.25, -Thrnngh tickets apd baggage chocks a t Asbnry’Park station. ,

W O, R.. Bibbop, G. E . A,. * F bakk MoConnbll, T. P. A.,

v* 862 Bropdway, Now Torfe.—Adtf*

Mr. p . G. flqedeker, with the aaslstancoof M r. George H. Rowland bas been holding re- llgloua ineetlnga on Asbury avenue, a t Weir’s corner, with.good results. Rov. Geo. C. Mad­dock has preached frequently and there is a revival spirit that wlU work much good In tha t looallty, I \

In the primary classes of the public schodl the children are combining instruction with amusement. During spare m itnents they are maktng boxes from cardboard and paper tha t are to be.filled with confections and sold a t the fair next month for tbo bonefit of the library fund. 11 . _ _

On_Tuesday night the region about Mata­wan waa given a coating of sleet that looked out of plaqfi.jp passengers oh the railroad. A t Asbury Park there waa a heavy frost, bu t beyond Red Bank, and as far as Amboy, trees, fences, telegraph poles and the ground were sheathed in Ice.. A warm sun and a south­west wind dissolved the frost king’s grip dur­ing the day and made the roads resemble a mud pQdding. *■

•The steamship Karuas City, of the Savan­nah Hue, took oot seventy persons oh Wed­nesday who will bo employed a t the Hotel Cordova in St. Augustine,; Tho steamship hadn’t 6 vacant berth on the trip, and many,, who applied lato for passage had to wait over till Friday 's ship. As the result of well- directed advertising the steamship companies are dividing the Southern travel with the tall- roada. -W ith tbe exception of a longer tim e en route, the sea voyage le preferred on ac­count of tbe superior accommodations fu r­nished. . ' _ _ _____ _

Rsv. Charles J . Young preached an earnest and practical sermon a t F irst Presbyterian phnroh on Sunday morning from the-text, “ Are there not twelve hoars In the day f” The question was an answer to one propounded by tbo disciples of Christ whon be was asked to go onto Bethany to see thoalck brother of Mary and Martha, in tho faco of danger from tho Jew s who bad before sought to Btone him. The lesson i?f the text and th e sermon was to prove tha t aa the natural day la 12 honra long and aa Jesus Christ completed and finished hla work In tho allotted tlige, sp lice man’s timo full as by God’a appointment, and can­not be prolonged, hence tjje importance of ^qtlog Wltldn that ttrae, and^ds-inan haa-no assurance or knowledge when his hours will ond, i t la tho part of wisdom to act .now—at the present time.

T l i e ^ o s t m a a t e r p h l p . / ■

To the Citizens q f Atbiiry Ih rk and VidnUy ir—;I am a candidate for .thejpoatmastorablp of

Asbury Park. Io tbla my first attem pt to seek' a public office I ask the* active and earnest support of all my frlenda. Entering: upon the contest a t a late stage I shall need all the help I can command. Will yon accord i t to me ?

.... ' J ohn L. Coffin,•Adv. • ' • <Late editor o t the Jo u b n a l.)

N ig h ts h ir tsat.43c, worth 69o, a t Jo h n Stelnbach’s, Satur­day and Monday only. \

Main street near the Lake/—

noxE'weeir fo rFTorTda".'"Onr U ndo William Brumaker, tho great

flshofroan, ‘visited Aeiiury -Park Tuesday^6n bu8ines8.~. '— :— " • •...• -

Attorney U. S. Ludlow expe^ta to spend Fcbrnary^hd'M ofeh .in Texas for tho boocpt of hie health. •* ' ’ ' 1 : /' Rev. S. Edward Youug la to be absent from his pulpit sevej$jtt weeks. A portion of the time he will spoh^ (nTToronto, Can. v

Dr. Henry Mltohell baa returnees from bla trip to Daytona, Florida, and ropofta his late chum, Capt. Mlnol.; as ohippor as a game^ Chicken, t . . '. > •

Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Evans contemplate a Florida tour. Tho removal to Qrango has not been of tbo expected benefit, lo Mr?, Evans’s health, : _ . .

Mr. John F , Runyon and Mias Mary L„ Bol- ton wero married a t Keyport on Thursday morning last by Rev. Jam es N. Graced Mr. Runyon Is tbo leading grocer of the b3rough. Tholr wedding trip, extonded to Washington.

Mr! Robert Peters and wlfo returned this week from a visit to the .former’s parents in D undee,. Scotland. While abroad they also visited tho noted places In the United King­dom. For the present they will reaido’ at G rand Avenno Hotel,

Mr. .Labrua Loomis, of Doal, Beach, has lately visited many of the'-Spntherri" States,’, stopping off a t Washington an d Baltimore. He takes InrOhlcago next and . wilt doubtless have something to aaJy alJout the preparations of the Windy City for the Columbua Centen­nial in 1893

such flenda If.they are caught;

A ^ 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 S a le . ^ ...

Mrs. S. E. Urle haa phrchasod . from Mra. Matthew Baird, of Philadelphia, tbe block at Spring Lake known as Hastings Square. . I t fa a'flne jproportyj and it ia reported tbat Mn>. Urle paid five hundred thousand dollars for it. She haa great faith in the futuraof Spring Lake, and haa resided here in summer for several years past, .managing the Essex and Sussex ia Hamlnga Square.-, Mrs. Urlo is also the owner of twtTlino cottagoaljppdaltfr Has logs Square.—Seaside Gazette.

- I n th e S u rro g a te ’s Ollice., Recent appointments aa executors and ad­

ministrators have beoir/mado by Surrogate Crater In the following eases: 1 ‘ . . .‘

Maria Carey—James H. Bexton, adm’r.Daniel W. Disoaway—«usan E. Dteosway, adm'x. Thomas A. Heulett—Wm. L Tilton, adto’r.. Blicabeth Brown—Wm. J. Straub, adm'r. - , Mary A. Stevenson—James A. Bradley, ox’r. Emily P. Matson—Calvin P. McQacatln, ex’r. * Honry Kroehi—Cornelia B. and Ueorge Freder­

ick Kroehi, ex’rs.

A M a n in th e H o u se !'On Monday evening, at-Bradloy Beaclv a

pleasant social time was spent ja t the resi­dence of rfr. E; Johnson Ro cm in celebrat- Ing hU 21st birthday; A bout‘fifty o f his frlenda were p’reeontr 'The hours wero de- Voted to muslo, gamos, and In discussing tbo refreshments;- A grab-bag and'1 the potato game caused much amusement. In tbe latter Master DanieljRogers secured the first prize and Mr. Hardy took tho booby. A.number of handsome presents were received, among which was a deed for. the house and lot he oc- copies. . I t came from hfs father.

There were several places throughout the country on Thursday with coldor.weatber than a t Aabury Park. Atlantic City waa 31*, New Orleans 40% Now York 47°, Chicago 32°. I t was 48° here. 7

A regular gypsy ten t will contain a gypsy queen at Educational Hall on Monday night a t the Library emertainment. Fortunes* good And fortunes otherwise-will be truthfdliy (?) told. Be Bure and call on th e oracle.. c-

o i A s . m w k m m ' ' - - :

I: --

020-622 C00KUAN AYENUE.

W e - ' h a v e b e g u n t h e e r e C t i o n o f a l a r g e a d d i ­t i o n t o o u r s t o r e o n C o o k m a n A v e n u e , w h i c h w i l l e n a b l e u s t o p r o p e r l y d i s p l a y o u r

SPR IN G STOCK OF GOODS.As we opened our s to re la s t Fall, our Spring .Goods will b e1 a i r new,^ind will include all tbo l a t ^ t patte*mS in tne trade. In a few weeks we will display an 'im m ense stock of

WANT

A GOOD

LADIES’

DONGOLA

BUTTON

SHOE

FOR

DRY GOODS, MILLINERY, CLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES, MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS,

•« • .

T H E . B A L A N C E ^O F

MEN’S SUITS AND OVERCOATSA H D

L a d i e s ’, M i s s e s ’ a n d C h i l d r e n ’s .

A N D

W i l l b e s o l d r e g a r d l e s s o f C o s t , b y

$ 2 . 0 0 . 1

ORA

FRENCH “

KID ^

FOR /

$2.75

</ALL AT' ‘ . ,r *« .

STAR

SHOE STORE

147 MAIN ST.

H. & W. NATTAL.

/ . ■ .

JO H NM a m S T E E E T , N E A R T H E L i K E ,

The Surrogate in ew'York~jbas‘ decided against the claim o f Evangeline Mann-Uam- ilton to a share in the estate of tbe late Rbbeft- Ray Hamilton. During the tr|a l the woman admitted tba t the famous'babjr was not flam-ilton’a child. ______’

Judge McDonough, of Hoboken^ ltlo Deputy Exalted Grand Ruler of flew Jersoy the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elke, will attend the meeting this (Friday) evonmg of Asbury Park Lodge, No. 128. Tbo >*idnd-ance of.evory membor Is requested. V /.

J u s t P u r c l j a s e d

a t the closing out sale of Hlrsoh .fc Co., a lot of Torchon Laces, w&cb will be offered this Saturday at less than cost to manufacture, at 'the Ocoan Palace of Henry Steiubach.—Adv.

Fancy plushea, extra grades for little money, a t SchuoIdCT’a,; 167469 Main street.— Adv. _ .

Ilappy and content la a homo wlth“ kThe pRochester,”u_a lamp with the light of the

" Call on qr write to Rochester Lamp ir,'423*ark:PIaco, Now York.—Adv. .*•

''“A White Bronze Monument lB*t&uch supe- rlor ;Ior. this purpose to teltber<; marbles o j . granite, becauBd" it cannot d|eifitegrdte.,-, )‘ (Thos. R. Baker, Ph!D.» Prof. Nat,. Sciences, BtatoNprmal School,-Mlllersvllle^Pa) P. G Snedeker is agent for Monumental Bronzo Co., aud will glve.prlces and show designs — Adv. .

L a d ie s * H o bo .

60 doz fast black' ladlea’ Hose at 25 cts. a pair, worth 60o. Saturday and Monday only^

, John Stelnbaoh’s,Main atreet near tbo Lako.—A

THE ELKS.Farmers’ Alumnae, 5 c e n ts ,, For salo at

Snedeker’s'Statlonery Store.—Adv. y

We wish to draw attention to out o f Horse advertising Humphrey’s Veterinary Medi­cines. Tberfe reinedloa are highly recoto; mended ^aod ■ can be, procured-of Gowdy -pitcher, of of L. E. W atson.—Adv,

; - • JTust P u rc h a sedand will pffer this Saturday a t the Ocoan Pal­ace o t Henry Steinbach ;

1 case Standard PrlnW a t 4 ^ 0 ., worth yjfi 1 case yard wideUnblcaobed Musllpv«t4>^a 1 case yard,wide .Bleached Musiln, a t 5c.—

Adp, '■ tv..--' r y , ' / ’

IMPORTANT.

9 4 T O E L O. EXJE,f f ' VIOUH18T and T£A V1IE.R

EMQRY SiJBBET, ASBURY PARK.Violins and bows repaired.,

S a tu rd ay a n d M onday Onlywe wIlj^agaln Boll lOO doss.JJnlaundred^blrtaj linen tMWom^at^Bo each^worth^double.•Jjpfitrf^ 8telnbachrs,M a ln 8 t.t neartho Lak e.-^AStn.

,tX piiolstety G o o d s.^ A l l the ja tes t novelties In npholstery mate­rials In tiilk and plush." We sell by the yard, or reoover your furniture according to difetK. tlons. Schneider, 167 69 Main 8tr0£t.j— «

H i O S T .On the street Sunday evening, a L a d y ’i

^ r e a i t p i n , s m a l l alaitifm U i n c e n tre .A suitablo ropard will be paid on return of B^mo to^Sl-Asbury Avenue. «

Df

I ; / HOUSEKEEPEB,wA’lady competent to tako charge of a dwelling

or hotel, deslrgs. a situation in, Asbury Park. Would take care ot vacant premises until open­ing o f season. Address HuUSEKEEPKIt,”' caro Of JOtJBNAl/offlCO. ■ ;

rseason. .JBNAl/ofll(—t 'I .... .lE f o rt S a l e G h e a p .

S P B ffiG M E L D GAS M ACHINE FOBover ono huntlrod lights.

Inquire at 407 Second Avenuo, Anbury Park, N. J.

SEED. SEED,P e te r H en d erso n ’i T e ited Seeds'. .

; Coy te‘s Hardware and Notion.Bazaar, y . . . 9or. Bond street, and Bajss avenue.

’■ •• N ew ;, Y o r k ,January 19th, 1891.

Natural bargain time. Goods arb not being given away exact­ly, but prices have been pruned here and there, in many cases to less than cost.

So it happens that a man’s heavy serviceable -U lster may now be got for $10; a neat Cape U lster for $ 12 .- Suits, $15, $18 and $20 t,hat were several dollars m ore/' W inter Underwear for ’ $ 1, $1.50 and $2—^fifty per cent, below reg­ular prices. Some warm A s­trakhan G loves with leather palms, 75 cents. Some Eng­lish town-made goat Gloves, same price.- .

S i t e s f o r F a c t o r i e s a t W e s t

B r a d l e y B e a c h w i l l b e d o ­

n a t e d t o p a r t i e s w h o w i l l

e r e < j t s u i t a b l e b u i l d i n g s . _ A

S u b s i d y w i l l a l s o b e a d d e d i f

i t i s d e e m e d n e c e s s a r y .

. A p p l y t o ; t h e

BOARD OF TRADE,“A s b u r y P a r k , N . J .

Free delivery’to all points within one hundred, miles of New York City. . .

R O G E R S , P E E T ^ t CO .

THRER I Prince .BROADWAY Warren,

STORES* ‘

O I I m u K t u m b u l b sJiist arrived; iu fine condition to plant for early

' blooming. Tho grandest of alt Lilies.*FOR SALE AT THE

PA R K G R EE N H O U S E ,M a in S t.. e a r . S eco n d A venue,

. . a b b v h t p a m k .

Isourcd-by Boumo’s English Tonic PlllsA Won derAil remedy for Indigestion and stomach dis­comfort. A trial, will Co a rpvolatlon. Bold by ail druggists.

DAHIBL KBHEOAN. FRANK L.. DOM EtT.

Mebegan & Dorsett,Monufacturera and Dealers in'

* Of every description. . r*

RenovatingPromptiy Attended To.- : ; \ I. • ..

1 4 3 M A I N S T . ,A sburyPark.Head of Lako Avenue,

. Seoond Floor.

^ TelophonQ CoQueotlon.' _

'^ s t r e i d e r s given prompt attepUon,'’

- - • . T 'X v , '

, ftow, ofte,o wo hear, tbo above from our elders I Is i t imagination.that causes them to feel that ■*< Wlfaters are not as cold as when we were boys **«o dinners as good aa mother’s," or is the pres- flittoge degenerating aa to tbo weather and good ainQeref ^ •

WhaS la tho matter with that M dear old door­bell” tbat isnotheardasitused to bo Inthe "good old times?" It may be ago, but moro likely tbo trouble is caused by closed doors.

An ELECTRIC BELL may.bo placed so as to bo heard throughout tbo houso. Prices from-§3,50 up. . " \ - •

D o m i n g & Z a c h a r i a s ,74-2 Cookman Ave.,

Electric ,Light Wiring, Burglar Alarms, &c.

MPHREYS

) I e ^ v e

® L O O D

Bold by QOWDY & P1TGHKII, Aehury Park. ~Z U E. WATSON, Ocean Grovo.

^ ; c .For S a le .- T, A choice ten-room cottago on Aabury ave-

ntiOj furnished completely. Lot ,50x150. babdsomo lawns and shrubbery; house con­nected wltb Artesian water abd sewer.

Addrcaa "O .” care Jou«j^£L offico.—Adv

j^K W T O B H * LOHO BRAHCH R . B ,

Time Table, In effect Novpmber 16 1880.stations'in New York—Central R.B. of New Jer*

sey, foot of Liberty Street; P. B. R., foot of Cortlandt and Desbrosses Streets; N. J. South­ern Bailway, foot of Rector s^

t u n m r'Y o ax to b abbubt fab x , Aa.Central R. R. of N. J .—4.45,8.15,11.15 a. m., 4.00,

4.80.6.00 p. m.Pennsylvania—9.10 a. m., 13.60,5.10 p. m.Leave Newark, Broad St. Station, for Asbury

Park, Ao. — 8.22, 11.25 a. m., 4.02, 6.15 p. m. Market Street Station-0.80 a. m., 1.10, 5.80 p.m.XJU.VB A8BCBT TASK TOB H*W TOBk, Aol

Central R. R. of N. J.-6.13, 7.48 a. m., 12.M, 4.10 p. m. .

Pennsylvania—fl.BC, 0.10 a. m'., 5.80 p. m.For Philadelphia and Trentori; via. Bound Brook

Route—6.12,7.48 a. m., 4.10 p. m.For Ocean Beaoh, Spring Lake, Sea Girt—7.30,

8.00,10.20,11.05 a. m., 12.25,1.10,2.50,4.W>, 6.00,. 7.10, 8.00 p. m.

For Manasquan and Point Pleasant—7.20, 10.20, 11,05 a. m., 110,2.50,6 00.7.10, aoo p. m.

For Freehold, Trenton and Philadelphia, via. Sea G irt- 8.00 a. m., 12.25,4 20 p/m.

For Toms River—11.05 a. m. ^For Camden and. ,lntormodiato stations—2.50

p. m. on Mondays and Saturdays only.RUFUS BLODGETT, Sttpt.

H. P . BALDWIN, O. P. A. O. R. B. qfN . J.J . R. WOOD. Oen'l pat. Aat. P. R.R.

HfiRRYJ. ROCKAFELLER,rr .S n c c e sso rto P O R T E H T H E H A T T E R lr

' A FULL LINK OPHATS and CAPS, „

Men’s, VVomeh’sA Children’s Shoesalwaya on hand. / . . . .

■So|e A«ent for the Bf. A. P a ck ard an d W. Iu ^D o au lo s Celebrated Hhoes,

220 Main St., Opposite Depot

M I L A N R O S S ,MealV Estate and Insurance Agency, .

• 1 . ■ •*"

208 M A I N B T R E E T ,

OPPOSITE RAILROAD STATION, ASBURT PARKIN. J.

1 3 D -A -1 JT X E II- . C . C O T T B i e a : , ‘

REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE AGENT,a* P ilgrim Pathway, Ocean drove, N. J .

iL o a n s JS T e g o tia te d o n R e a l E s t a t e .Correspondence Solicited. .....

I N S U R E T O - D A Y !D o n o t w a i t u n t i l t h e w h o l e n e i g h b o r h o o d i s d e s t r o y e d , b u t s e c u r e a n I n s u r a n c e P o l i c y a t o n c e i n G I L T - E D G E D C O M P A N I E S , s u c h 8 s a r e r e p r e s e n t e d b y

T. F R A N K A P P L E B Y^ 7 0 6 Cookman Ave.. Asbury Park.

65 Main Ave,, Ocean Grove. .

GEO. F. KROEHL, Presidents I / l O . H . BROWN, Vloe President.ALBERT C. TWINING, Cashier, MAlhTN V. DAGER, Ass’t Cashier.

Organized Febraary,.188G.

, , "OLD RELIABLE ” ' ...; MATTISON AYENUE AND BOND STREET, ..

A S B U R T P A B K , 11. J . ,C a p i t a l , $ 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 . H a r p i n g * 7 0 , 0 0 0 .Transacts a general banking business, Issues letters of credit available In the prlnolpal oltlea.of the world. Foreign and domestic exchanges bought and sold.

Collections oarernlly mado and promptly accounted for.

G. F. Kroehi, -Bruce S. Keator,

Milan Ross, JobuL.CofDn.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Albert C. Twining,

.. Ollver H. Brown,____M. L. Bamman, Sherman B/ Oviatt.-

Isaac C. Kennedy,Henry H. Yard......Chas. A. Atkins. Chas. A. Young.i

Hknby c . Winsob, President. Geo. W. Evans, vico-PreStdent. Ed kund& D i jrb w , Ca«hler '

Asbnry M i l l Ocean Grove B a t,MATTISON AVE. AND MAIN ST ., ASBURY PARK.

1 S OEGANIZED jAJtOAKY, 1889, " -C A P I T A L , 6 6 0 . 0 0 0 . 0 0 . B U H P L X J B , 0 1 , 3 0 0 0 . 0 0 .

Transacts a general Banking Business, Issues Foreign and Domestio Drafts.’ ’ Prompt atten tion given to a ll m atters entrusted to us. ^

COLLECTIONN HADE AND PROMPTLY ACENOWLEDOEKD I R E C T O R S :

N. E. BUCHANON. J. S. FERGUSON. OEO. W. EVANB.0 . 0 CLAYTON. GRO. W. TREAT., J . A. WAIN RIGHT.DU. J. A. W. HETRICK. - JOHN HUBBARD. HENRY C. WINSOE.

YOUR PATRONAGE BOLXOITED. • ^

On and after November 2,1890,THAIMS LBAYB ASBUBT PABK—WSKK J)AYS

For New York. Newark, Elizabeth, liahway, Red Bank, Long Branch and intermediate stations, G.60, 0.10 a, m., 5.80 p. m.

For Matawan, 6.50,9.10 a. m., 5.80 p. m.For Long Branch, 6.50,9.10,11.15 a. m., 2.80,5.80,

7.05 p. m.For Philadelphia-(Broad St.) and Trenton, at

8.00 a. m., 12.25, 4.20 p. m.For Camden, Burttngton, and Bordentowp, (via.

Tronton, 8.00 a. m., 13.25, 4.20 p. m.

i uuia illfUIi toiauu uoi^uw, »uu tuwiuiourate stations, 11.05 a. m., and Mondays and Sat- urdayB»a)y,-2.B0 p. m.

For Point Pleasant, and intermediate atationa, at 11.05 a. m., 2.50, 7.10 p. m.

VBAiks iiXAva bbw tobk (via. Desbrosses and Cortlandt Sts. ferrtea) toh asbubt pabk

At 9.10 a. m.. 12.60, 5.10 p. m.TBAXHS LXAVB PSUJIDBLPBIA (Broad St,) JPO*

ASBUBT PABKAt 0J20,11.16 a. m., 4.00 p. to. Lv. Markot St.

. wharf, via. Camden and Trenton— 7.20,10.30 a. m.» 8.80 p. m. Via. Camden and Jambs- burg, 7.20 n r m.,4.C0p.m. rr ,

J . R.: WOOD, G tn 'ira ti. Agt.CHAS, B. PUGH, Oen'l Manager.

MORROW, DAY & CO.C a t e r e r s , B a k e r s ,

r-AKD—,

ICE CREAM MAKERS,81 Montgomery Street,

J E R S E Y C I T Y .

W e d d i n g F e a s t s , P a r l y S u p p e r s a n d C o l l a t i o n s

served everywhere. •*~'

B B ID f i ’S C A G E S alw ays'onhand. ,

ordered by mall or wire promptly expressed. Ten

____. . . ____ . . ’ twenty quarts wholesale, toburches, &c.. expressago fteo.

ICE CREAMquarts re ta ilo r twe

G ive Your P oor F eet a C hancei

‘ z m ®S H O E l

G e n t l e m e nCOMFORTABLE. DURABLE. 1T1TUSH. ECONOMICAL,.

• 64.00 12.00 w

; R O CK AFELLER , AG ENT,Main Bt^opp. R. II. Station. Aabury Park. N. J.

EVERY PAIR WRMMED FOR SALE Bt

N O V E L T I E SF in e S ta tio n e ry , D olls, Toys,

C u tle ry , W ritin g M a te ria ls , e tc ,

? At QUINBY & CO.’S N E W B R IC K SJTO R E

Main Btreet, opposite Depot.

OP

" :ETC.-

TmS SATURDAY, JAN. 2 4 , 1 8 9 L

O C E A l i T ^ A I i A C E -

-O F-

H E N R Y S T E IN B A C HCookman Avs. and Main St., Asbury .Park, N. J,

V -

J - C". > , -

' , ^ '"W J

: • • ' ,k " ■ •• • - —rr— ,. j.V. .

Page 4: EMPORIUM - digifind-it.com · EARLES GALLERIES, 810 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. . • „ A BRILLIANT. EXHIBITION OF THE.. WORKS OF 1 CHASS^EINHART IN BLACK AND WHITE. . A most

ASBURY PARK JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 1891

8 I8TER’8 CAKE,Very, Obliging.There la a tradesman in this village whr,

occasionally nets off n good thing. The n e t tb a t be is innocent ot any intent to joke1 adds forcer to his "comical sayings. The other day a lady called a t his place of business and asked: ’ ‘

“m y e you spittoons?” ^“Eh?”'Bnld the morch&ntvpri cklng up his

‘‘Can you show me a spittoon?” repeated tbo.lady in a' high key. : ..

“No," said the merchant; *'I have noth-, lIng_ o if_ th e .:W o d ^^u t,” rhettdded„hosplH ably, “you cau sp it In the coal hod.” •'

.The listeners chuckled audibly, nnd the lady smiled and took a hasty departure.— Richmond (Me.y Bee. ^ o . ......

r d not complain of Slstor Jane, for she was good and kind, ' V

Combiningwith rare comeltdess diatlnctlyo gifts . ‘.of ralnd; •' \ *~r.- ;

E ay, I ’ll admit It wercupost' fit that, worn by ao cl^] cares, , . • ‘ •

She’d crave a cbarigb.from poriof life to that be>1 , low tho stairs, ='•'

-And that* eschewing- needlework-and nrasi£^*Bhe' should toko j

Herself to the substantial a rt of manufacturing. cake.'1; .....

-At breakfosty-thcn, It-would befSH that Bister Jane would'say: -

“Mother, If you havo got the things, I ’ll make somo cake, today!” ■

Poor mother'd cast a Umid glance a t father, likeaanofc— ‘ - ....

For father hlnfcbd dialer's cooking cost a frightful !v ’ . lot—

. But neither she nor ho presumed to signify dis*. . sent,. ....L I ! / . '

Accepting I t for gospel truth that what She. wautod wenti . '■■■.*

No matter what tho rest of 'em might chance to have in band, - : /

Tho whole machinery of the house came to a sad* den stand. t 1

Tho pots wore huBtledjpa the store, the Are built ' upano>V; ' '•: ' -

With every damper set just so tO heatthe dven " through; ‘ . v

The kitchen table waa relieved of ererytlllng. to make • t •• •’ *

That ample spooo which Jane requlredwEen she compounded cake.

And, oh I the bustling hero and there, thoflying toond fro; / _ „• '

Tho click of forks tbat whlppod Uio eggs to Iathor white as enow— ' * ‘

And what a wealth of sugar melted swiftly oat of eight—. ,

And butter? S^oihersald such waste would ruin father, quite!; '

But Sister Jane preserved a mien no pleading confound ‘ '.1 -v-V'’ ' „V -

Aa she utilized1 the raisins and the citron by the* pound. ■ |

Oh, hours of chads, tumult, heat,. vexatious, din and'whirl!

Of dcep,humlUation for tho Bullen hired girl;Of grief for mother hating to seo things wasted

SO,And of fortuno for the little boy who pined to

taste that dough!It looked so sweet and yellow—sure, to taste It

were no Bin— v But oh! how sister scolded if he stuck hia finger

Dealer in Select Brands of

623 M attison avenne, Asbnry P atk , N. J.Handsomely furnished and well appointed Billiard and Bowling Rooms attached.

^W. C. GOTTRELL,BUILDING CONTRACTOR AND

SUPERINTENDENT OF CONSTIAU grades of work contracted for, and co n s i s u c t io n o f b u ild in g * s u p e r in te n d e d fo r »er c e n t, o f c o s t. \ ' ^ Z - p .

515 Summerfleld Ave., <*'•■»»«» st. Asbury Park, N. j . r"

C 3 - e o . " W - T i u a s , Licensed Auctioneer,

$1 0 0 ,0 0 0 to Loan oh 1 st Mortgage.

rO U R T H“I tru s t tha t be will .make a baudBome portrait for me. ”

r “He, no.4oMbt^illc_.A»r^ l s t .as great, aa be is cati do almost anything.”—Life.

•■pi';.. H e W as W li Ipsa wed./ ‘Can you drive?” asked a fair young

E ast End damsel as sho stood by the side of her adorer ond gazed out^xfjthe window a t the snow. .

“ Ob, yes,” replied the young* man u n ­thinkingly. “I ’m quite a good driver.”

“And i t looks like good sleighing,” the g irl went on. ,

“Y-^e-s.” •‘ The young plan relapsed into silence. Which was occupied (chiefly in mental Cal­culations as to bow many sleigh rides a t current rates he conld afford on his $10 a week salary.

“You said you could drive, didn’t you?” asked the girl, resuming the subject.* “ Well—er—it’s been a long time since I did much driving, and I ’m afraid i t would hardly be safe for me to undertake it.’’. “Oh, I ’m so sorry! ( I was ju s t going to

"ask p n p a ^ b av e tho cutter hitched up so we could^ake a r i d e .P i t t s b u r g Chroni-

' clo .. ■ ■ ■ •______-'Settled a t Liut.

Mr. Hayforke (reading The Weekly Wel-' come)—-ASecond’Adventist out west proves conclusively by the Bible th a t the world will come to an .pnd .qn the 23d of next month. ,

7 Mrs. Hayforke (dropping her knitting)— Land sak^Bl Then what's tbe use o’ me flnlshln’ these stockings? Maybe i t won’t even bo c^ld by that time.- Iky, look in The Farmer’s Almanac an’ see what the weathefc^sgoln’ to be.

Iky (after a moment)—It’s goin’ \to be moderate, mother; moderate an’ fair.

Mrs. Hayforke—Does the almanac stop on the 23d?

Iky—No; it goes right on- to tbe ond o’ the year. «• -

Mrs. Hayforke—Don’t It say anything about th ’ world coinin’ to an end?

Iky—Not a word.Mrs. Hayforke (resuming her knitting)—

The Bible is wrong.—Good Nows;

- Tho Ruling Passion.They wero teaching the swell little New

York girl to count.“Three hundred and ninety-^even, three

hundred and-ninety-eight, three hundred and ninety-nine, four hundred,” said the mother.

And the child followed correctly. • ' - ’ •‘Four hundred'and pne,” continued the mother. \ ' -

“Go on,”- said the mother, “you were doing very nieely.”

“No, mamma.” she said w ith dignity, “ I can’t go beyond the 400.”

And there ShoBtuck.—Washington Star.

Tlip fowot.of Suggestion. • *"Goodifess gracious, w hat is that?” he

c r i^ , starting from the table as a noise like a cyclone wbrklng piecework shook t&e house.,

:“I guess it’s th a t awkward new girl let one of tho cakes I baked for dinner drop ,on the floor,” *• - “Oh, i t’s that; I thought the house was only struck by lightning.”—Philadelphia Times. ' ________ -

Five Dollars' Clear Profit.Drummer (to country merchant)—How’s

biz, Mr. Sharpe?” •“Can’t complain; just made five dollars I” “How was that?” .

■ “Man wanted to get trusted fqr a pair of boots, and I didn’t let him have’em I”— Mupsey’s Weekly. •'*

Tho chances were as ten to one, befpro the Job was through,' ' r ' 7*

That sister'd think of something else she’d great deal rather do! < ■ ’

So, Uien, slic'd softly steal away, as Arabs In tho ■ night, •

Leaving tlie girl ana zna to finish up aa best they might;

Theso tactics (artful Sister'Jane) enabled her to t*ko, U

Or shift tho credit or the blame of tha t too treacl>erous cakoi .

And yet unhappy' ls>'tho~'inaa trtio has no sister Jane—

For ho who has no sister seems to m e'to IivdJn vain, _

I never had a sistor—may be that is why today I’m wizened and dyspc^tie, instead of blytho and

gay; 'A boy who’s only forty should be full of romp

and mirth,But I (became I’m sistorfcsa) am the oldest mad

on earth!Ilad I a little sister—ob, how happy I should bo! I’d never let hor cast her eyes on any chap but

mo; ;«•I’d love her and I ’d cherish her for better and for

worse— _ v.I’d buy her gowns and bonnets, and singj her

praise In verso; ,And—yes, what's more and vastly more—I tell

you what I 'd do: _ . . .I'd let hor mako her wondrous .cake, and I would

eat It, toolI have a high opinion of the slaters, as you seo— Another fellow’s sister Is so very dear to met

work-fUMMic.Uce'^wbentiio^smaktngcTer' frocks. . '•*" ' ' i ■ ’

WBiai Hlio-patchertitthytrousersor-dams pccsalo. socks;

Out I draw the line a t 000 thing—yes, I don my hat and take

A three hours' walk when ibe is moved to try her hand a t cake!

—Eugene Field In Chicago News.

BRANCH OFFICES:—M. L. Bamman & Co., Asbury P ark; J, A‘. Walnright, Ocean Orovo’. TELEPHONE 25b.

O F S A V A N N A H

Fastest Passenger SUli ry ing the American’

FIRST-qLASS TABLE D’MOtE, UNSURPASSED ACCOMMODATIONS

0 8. Kansiis city, S. S. Chattahoochee,a, 8. City of-BinrilrjRham, 8. 8. Naoooehee,8. 8. City of Augusta, 8. 8. City of Macon,

8. s. City of Kavannah, 8. 8. (late City.8 8. Tallahassee, S, S. Wesson g.

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. DEADER IN

lime, Lam, Hair, Cement, Plastei

And all kinds of

1 *, v r r : r ;v .• Mother—Tho' xloctor says you’ve been

such a good, such a very good . boy, Harry, th a t he’s going to let you got out of bod jfist as soon as you’ve taken every drop of this cod liver oill—Scribner’s Magazine. v r i H n w u H k . ' uiuuuui) maiuj

a t the old established yard ___I N R E A R O F L A K E V I E W H O U S E .

Branoh offices—J. IL Shepherd’s Grocery, Bewail avo. and Emory st., Asbury Park, and Ai Beal Estate offlco, 05 Main avo., Ooean Grove Bit ANCI1 YARD AT SPRING LAKI

> TELEPHONE CALL 27 A. „ ^

_ Somft;Exceptions.— “I have tho best wife in town,”, he said. “Sho can cook, bake, sew on buttons, iron shirts and do all tho other work Incident tef housekeeping.”

“You m ust have married a fanner’s daughter,” ventured a friend. w*t “No. She was a Vassar college girl.”

P. 8.—It sometimes happens th a t way despite the newspaper jokers.—Norristown Herald. ______ . . .

By the n p ar. _Ho (kneeling a t her feetH-Only this one

question; say, will you be mine?Sho—Oh, bow sadden! p o give me a Ut- !

tie timo to think!Ho—Torture me no longer; I must have.

your decision a t onco^ ' 'She-^-But why this bBste? 'Ho—I cannot stayany longer. I’ve a cab

waiting at tho do6r.*—Boston;Traveler,

Business Is Business.“Say,” shouted a bell boy, “th a t near-

sigbted man in 496 ju s t fell over a steplad- der and spilled a bucket of water on him­self!” - -

“Take him up av towel,” said the^lerk, “and chargo him for onobath.?^N ew -Herald. - ___*

F ro b Realism to Beallza^ton.. . Annlng—Haa Badders madti a success c f the stage?

Manningj-Yea. He acted the part of ' butler so well l n a play last w inter th a t [ got a p|oco in a F ifth a ra ta e family.— Munsey's Weekly.'

A College Story.Grind (a t the library)—Hello, Billy; whab

book havo you got?Billy Lowstand (*93)—Why, I ’ve ju s t got1

a new book w ritten about-our class, called “Ninety-three,” by a chap called Hugo.— Yale Kocord. ' *

Watchmaker and Jeweler

MAIN ST.Largo clock in

front of tho store DIAMONDS.

[ WATCHES andJEWELRY.

I Fine repairing nnd adjusting a specialty

lim itin g for a Romo.Mrs. Homeseeker—Theso apartments are

charming, and th e , price is certainly rea­sonable^ Are you sun? there are no nui­sances connected with the building?

Honest Agent—Well, 'mum, i t has a jan­itor.—New York Weekly.

THE CLYDE STEAMSHIP CONew York, Charleston, S. 0., k Jacksonville, Tla,, Service. •

S(:JoIin'8 liivcr Scnic* bcttrem' JactoontiiUfi and Sanfofdt Fla., and all intermediate- Undinga on St. /oAn’s liiver. ■* . j.

Lumber, Building Hardware, Ready-mixed Paints (all prices) White Lead, Oil, Varnish, Brushes, &c.,

is a t the Largo Establishment of ^Vv A 1^— e V---- t W----- -ttBjinks—I’ve jil^t Invented an ink bottle

which will make my fortuno. Bjones-r-What k ind is It?Bjinks—I t sounds an alarm a t theap-

_proach- o f-a mucilage brush,'—New-York -Herald; - _' ......------------ ........-... . - ; .....-

H ls Vocation.Trapson—Never handled a gun, eh ? Good

gracious! W hat’s your occupation?Spacerily—I writo up tho hunting and

.shooting department - for a daily paper.— Week’s Sport. T’

■ - 'H is Reason^“Carl, i t is not very good of you to Bay

bad things.ofyjour friendbehind his back.” “ Yes, Jmb/Sajffier,. when 1 say them-to his

face b^r beats me.” —Fliegende Blatter.

. 6 A K iss in th e B a rk .Itw as In the dark a t tho foot Qf the stair

Whero after the'dance I traced her,I heard her step and I caught hor there ,

And fondly kissejjmd embraced h e r . ......8ho did not seem to take it amiss,/And finding myself In clover, 1

‘ °t wasn’t coufcwit witli-a Slngie kiaa," kissed her a dozen times ovef^ _

know thdt I wosnot giving offencp .„ To her, for sho seemed to like it.Ah', mo! ‘twas a blissful experience— '

How lucky I ‘was to strike ltlV~ Therfa llghtiappeorod and flight I took

Withlbjy hynd eo distraction’s borders;I had coughtond been kissing the colored

. ...... cook -Who was going up stairs for orders. *

: —Cape Ood Item.

BUCHANON & SMOCK^ Successors to N. E. I5uclianon & Co.,£‘ •

Cor. Main St. and Asbury Ave., ASBURY PARK, N. 1.We make a specialty pf C E D A R S H I N G L E S at wholeealo as well as retail,

whloh we manufacture at Manahawken, N. J.v l

Also A B A M A N T , a patent Plaster, which is superior to anything In tho market, and is Just tbo thing for cold weather,’as freezing does not affeet i t . ' ‘ \

SaUsfaetlen Guaranteed to all'Castomors. .

E,Saolusoo. Seo.A.Smock.

Mannfaoturew and Dealers In all branohes of

j W O B KMain Street, M unroe Avenue and Railroati,

A S B U R Y P A R K , N . J .W indow Fram es, B ash ,B linds, D oors,M ouldings, B racke ts an d Carved W ork.

* H a rd nnd Soft Wood M antels. T u rn in g and Scroll S aw ing a Spe­c ia lty . Beafgns a n d P rices F u rn isb ed o n Application,.

- Returned Alter Many Days. _Briggs—I wonder why th a t fellow over

thero is wearing on outing shirt in the middle of winterJ*, Grjggs—He muat have ju s t got i t bade

from tho laundry.—Clotbler and Furnisher.L . M o N a l l s r ,Practical and Roliablo'Makor of ‘

Ladies’ and EBntlemen’s Fine Shoes,ahd Leader of Style.

Easy lit for deformed or tender feet. *

J O n N F . S T R A TTO N f t S O S , fc 46 W«lker 8 t. N E W Y O RK ,

WUraE^gB^gK . ___ OnnAfthn p n p pMHiSrfiQgg&g | s « jrtqpe* i n r P C i l i ily.4. lIUjl the worlrt. OurwcmHeiirt

i l : L 1- »upetior(too«liwa\»lll iendritll rrM Ml 111 i tooN* l-msnw In «»ch locajlly,TD®i! M B : Only thmo who wrtt»' B I S ‘ ua at onrnran mokfl turo olW . l a ; BBipSI ibe chnnca.'All you hayotodoln M p w r a 5 rflum la la thovr our nocxJi ‘tatbo«g who call—your ntlfrhbon - * tho— mound yoo. Tho btk._ginning of lhl» •dvrtiwmenr liluilU ■ ■ ,iiow» th* •m«Jl end of Ih# tele,

■cop*- Th® folltming cat gi*W «he nprxaranco of ft reducedto •

- H E i b , OF JWESLET LAKE, MAIN STREET,

A S B t f .n . . :3 F l ,K .

R E A L E S T A T E , INSURANCE &

MORTGAGE liOANS,k '708 Cookman Av.t1, . J

, A pamphlet of lnfonrnt!on anij ab- \atractof tho lawd> Bliowlnit IIuw to/ » Obtain Patents, Ci»TCiit»,Trado4

Marks, Copjrisbts, sent in s . /m CflUNN &. Ilraa^w ay,

Itepairing of all kina; .707 C o o k m a n A v e ., A s b u ry P a r k , IV. J

; -----■* Old No. UO.v*' Upholstering in aj] its branohej carried bn, also a full’lino, of -Picture Frames— ‘and Mouldings kept oonstantly on hand. Window Gornioes of all descriptions.

C o r o n e r ’ s N o t i c e ,' Asbury Park Printing House.

Newest designs of type^atest Improved ms* ohln'ery; skilled-workmen; every description of printing; oaUmatcsgtven. Spoclalpremrufiaftom the Oohnty SIr for flne planting. w ■ „ .

„ Having had several yeariToxperlence to the undertaking business in Asbnry Park*and vlcir Hs I feel competent to give satisfaction to all who may favor me with their patronage.

^ : •. ;; ' •’’k v : .# •. '

TELEPHONECONNECTIONS with principal hotels andstor^gki Park and Cfrove. • *

Offloe open day and night. ' 7 a a o b h . e s a s r o i j i ^

/This Is to . give notice tha t I havoautnorlzod James Sexton to tak& charge of all bodies South-of Elberon and In my dlstrlot when I am

-not personally present, and tha t may require the ^services of a- coroner, said James H. Sexton to take charge until ! arrive, .

. WMl E. VANDYfeB; Coroner. Long Branoh, N. J.

A i ^ w e a l t h y m e r c h a n t s h a v e

l i b e r a l l y p a t r o n i z e d t h o

• n e w s p a p e r s - ' v . "

Is your ifnalnoss D u l l?Iniw>rt«r*jif nnd Who!e*ala Deal era In *11M U SIttftU M ERCHA NDISE,

Vionimi. (JIIITAIIH, 1IAN40B, HASnOLlSKS,Aooordeons, Harm onicas, Ao. Ill klida arSTUUOS, oto., eto.

SKNI) FOK CIROD^R ANp HfKCIMENB:Moke i t L lvely-b i A dvertistos^