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Circulation of This Number IOOO. OCEAN GROVE TIMES Best, Advertising; Medium in Ocean Grove VOL. i. NO. 35 - OCEAN OROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1893. ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR, GRAND CHRISTMAS FESTIVAL A Large .Audience W itnesses the Exerclscs at St. Paul’s n. E. Church. The annual Christmas entertainment of St. Paul's.M. K.‘Sunday. School was cele- brated on.Tuesduy evening of this week. ; and it proved to be u highly successful and pleasing event to all wiio attended. Tho large church was beautifully trim- ; mod With holly and evergreen, aiul in tho centre of the building was the design of a huge bell mnde of laurel boughs, i.while a string of laurel 1,01*4 feet in length reached around the entire church. This was looped aud twined around tlie pillars or supnorts of the auditorium, and , the electric lights Irom the chundalier brought out its dark .green color in bold '• relief against the hard-oil woodwork pf tho ceiling ami. sides of the building. There were also several other very pretty lloral displays. - ; Aplatform'hiiil been erected over the pulpit, in the centre of which was an old- fashioned ' fireplace .m ade of . ’boxes filled with eandv, While ou oue end was placed a log cabin, with the roof covered .with snow, and long icicles hanging from tho rafters, and its sole occupant, .Samuel Christopher Young, a. little colored boy, gazing leisurely from the door. On the other end ofthe platform wan a miniature forest, with the branches of its .stalwart trees laden with stibwv • . : '.All* together this formed a beautiful scene, w idth required a great deal of skill to design’. . . ; : Long before tlie hour for the exercises .to begm had arrived, every seat in the chureli proper was occupied, when the .windows of tlie lecture room were rained and this additional space was soon tilled with people. , y Mr. Claude Guerin, tlie Superintendent of the Sunday school had charge of the programme, whicli was a wel! selected and exceedingly well rendered one, and w a s as foliow's: . . ' ' Oman Voluntary. .. SlnglUR............... .."All Hull (lie I’owcr,” . .* : •• . School. Scripture Heading. - Pmyer. Double Quartette,..;;; .... “ H a ll the Day," ■.Singing,.. ,;.;.VOn Christinas Morn,”' . In rantClass. . Recitation,..;....:..... ................ .:....“Tho Clock,” . Infant Class; • S i n g in g ...... ................................................... *‘Rock-a-Bye,” Infant Class. Recitation, ..... -.................“Threo I-.ittle Stockings,”. Lizzie K rvlen. Singing ...... , ...... ; ........................... ^ ....... “Blessed- Bnbe," School. . Violin Solo. Singing,;. i . ‘.‘Tidings of Joy,” Infant Class. Hesitation, ............................ “Chnitmnft Hells,” Edith Good now, Singing, :. ................................ ''Sing His Praises,” . Sehoot. . Recitation, ...................................... ’‘Santa Claus Bells,” Helen Boogie. Plano Solo,...;..... .... ; ...... ...Miss Emma Irwin. Singing,! ............................ ................. ....... “Silent Night,” .School. ; Recitation ................. ; ........................ .“Snow Hulls,” . E lsie M cKenzie. EisioShlnn. Singing, ...........................'. “The (inaul Old Song,” School. . - Singing,..; .... .................................‘..“ C h ristm as Carol,” Sam u el C . Young. Com ing o f S unla Claus. Recitation ..“Secret With Santa Claus.” KI In Ja ckson.' . Address hy Santa Claus. Singing,...; ........................... “Good Nlghi Song,” School.. ' Doxology. , Just before the conclusion of the pro- gramme, Mr. Linford heller-on, as Santa Claus,.emerged from tliosnow draped for- est at.the right of the platform, his huge sleigh being drawn by* six small boys, nnd then began the distribution, of pres- ents, and the.usual Christmas treat to the Sunday school All who participated in tho fernnd event are deserving of much credit for the ex? cellent manner iu w hich the details of the exercises were carried out. The Association’s Annual Reception. Some five years ago the Ocean Grove ’ Association began to give social receptions which are held on tlie anniversary day of the organization of that body. The design was to draw the residents of tlie community together, have a good social time, and to bring the people, into more pleasant relations, w ith- the gov- erning powers. Invitations were extended to each fam- ily residing in th e Grove, as well as to many who were non-residents, but would be’likely to participate, and also many people of prominence in Asbury Park and .surrounding towns. The last one took place Friday evening, December 22, in Association Ilall. This w as the twenty-fourth anniversary in the history ofthe Association and the occas- ion Was one of much social enjoyment and pleasure. After a prayer by Hev. J; R. Daniels, and reading of letters of regret by Secre- tary George W. Evans, Dr. Stokes made, an address of welcome, stating that it wus an evening to be given up to social pleas- ures and recreation, and urging those present to get each other by the blind and promote good fellowship and closer acquaintance. A little later refreshments were served and the youngjudy attendants had a tlifli- ciilt task’to serve the. people in the crow- ded hall. . The reception, broke up about 10 o'clock and .every one carried away pleasant recollections of the evening. A Midnight Conflagration. Two houses were destroyed by lire early inondny morning in West Asbury Park;, one.owned by U.S. Cottene undtlicdlher hy Stephen Conover. The lire originated iti Mr. Cottene’a cottage on Adams street which was unoccupied, and before it; could be gotten under .control the {lames spread to the adioin’ .ng liouse.' • The K. II. Stokes Chemical. Kngine Company wits lirst' on the ground and was lollowed by the Unexcelled of West Grove, and the Goodwill of West Park, a little later. Tlie boys did good work in preventing the lire from spreading to- other nearby structures. ' ' Unclaimed Letters. Following, is a list of unclaimed letters remaining iu the Ocean . Grove post otlice up to December 27, IBM.. Burke, Julia, Bogers, Cooke, Helen M., Stout,.Kenai Harden. Jennie M., Smith, K. F.f Holland, Kate, Van llorn S., Hickey, James, Vaneleif, Jennie, lngersoU,Kmoline, Westwood, Uev. J.U. l^eon, Peter, Jr.,. White, Mn*. lien. F. Ix)otij Peter, Warn, Stephen, Piiminger, Chas. 2s’* . ‘ OEOIinEW . E V A N S , Postmaster, Ocean Orove Camp Meeting Association. fCdilor Oi'otn ffroir Ttimx: When, the history of the-Xineteeidh Century shall be written by some impar- tial. hand, and the influences which have wrought for. Weal or' woe, are set forth'in all their serious bearings, no page in that history will furnish a brighter example of ull that has gone to make the world better, than that which records tlie origin and work of tlie Ocean Grove 'Gim p Meeting Association. Iu this age of political corruption and. financial depression, and these timo*, w hen gilded iniquity stalka rampant over the world, when vice and immorality are often sustained under the sanction of law- and even when the church, which, pro-; fosses to serve the living God, .is often hampered by ritualism and perfunctory services, it is like an oasis in , the desert to be able to Hnd one place, at least, on this footstool where the public acts of its lawmakers are not given over to the idol- atry and worship ofthe Almighty Dollar. This institution wlio.se foundation, was laid beny among the sands bf the Jersey- shore, less than a quarter of a century ajro, luul its beginning among the' aspira- tions, and prayers ofa small band of true followers *of the lowly Xazareno. and: mighty Gallilean King. If ever a com- pany of men “builded better than they knew;,” these are entitled to such a dis- tinction. ‘ You may go back over'; the pages of history-to tlie remotest , time, and no- where'will you tind. a parallel.. It has been reserved for the latter part of this century, to behold a band of Godly men, organized to carry” on a great religions work without the hope of worldly gain. Such an example the world has never seen before.: - It is true there have been other attempts sincc made, but the spirit of worldly spec- ulation has crept in nearly all of them,, and their influence for good has departed. To one. who has been an observer, of events as they havo transpired in connec- tion with this Association, there can be but one conclusion. To the ono man whose genius mostly conceived the ori- gin, anti whose mind has matured the’ tilting, and whose head, heart, and hands have been constantly applied in carrying on the work, (olteii amid discouragements from botii withofit and within,) but amid it all has ever stood tip and battled for the right, is due to a great extent, the gmnd success of this enterprise. Then let the men and women of this generation stand by this ‘‘J/tw*’’ of our time, and like Aaron and Hur hold up his hands when, they would otherwise fall. Long live Brother 1C. II. Stokes. ]>. II. W yckoki'. An Enjoyable Celebration. A very pretty Christmas celebration took place Christmas Kve., at the Luth- emn Church of the Atonement. The participants, were tho members of the Sunday School, and the church was tilled with the parents and friends of the chil- dren. A large tree had been tastefully decorated.and around' it were niasscil presents for the children, . A n ' interesting feature of the pro- gramme was the recital of the Christmas prophecies found in the Old Testament, by different hiembers of the school. The Lutheran Sunday School is the youngest organization, of*its kind, and Reserves credit for tlie admirable manner iii which it rendered its Christmas programme. At the conclusion of tlie service tbe presents were distributed. Rev.. II. Douglas Spaeth w as presented with a very handsome umbrella by.the ladies of the church, and Mr. van Gilluwe,- Super- intendent of the Sunday school, was also, remembered by the children , and the ladies. Another Blazeat Belmar. The Belmar House, a eood sized' hos- telry at Belmar, was totally destroyed by fire early Tuesday morning. Tho fire, was discovered about 2o’clock, and before the alarm could be given, the flames had gained such headway that despite the lierotc efforts of tho firemen, the building: and its contents were entirely consumed. The-house was owned by Mrs. F.S. Davis and valued at $10,000, on which there was an insurance of about $0,000. This isthe third disastrous conflagration which has occurred in Belmar within a few months. . . PERSONAL AND PERTINENT. A NewClub House'for Sea Girt. The New Jersey Rifle Association .has had plans made for a new club house to be erected on the' State Camp Ground at Sea Girt. The new .structure will prob- ably be erected in tlie vicinity ofthe riflle range, and promises to be a very im- posing edifice. The association has been incorpomtcd under the. laws of the State, and a long list of promiiient men' are at the head of the organization.' An. effort will be made to htive the building'completed before the next sea- son’s rifle practice. It is to be-used ex - clusively for the members of.the associa- tion. . A Narrow Escape Prom Death. While crossing the long railroad bridge over the Manasquan River one da’v last week, George \V. Fielder was struck hy ii VNeiv Jersey Southern train and badly‘in- jured. Fielder saw: the. train approach- ing, and as ho could not. get out of the way in time, prostrated himself on the edge of: the ties. The engine and ears passed over . him. without touching him, until it came to the last ear, which was a Pullman. The steps on the latter being eonsidembly lower than the other cars, one of Fielder’s shoes was torn' from Ids foot and his leg badly lacerated. First n. E. Church Services. ' A very interesting programme was pro- vided for the evening service at the M. B.- Church lost Sunday evening. The musical portion was especially good, many singers of local celebrity and repu- tation taking part and. assisting to make the occasion interesting. . Brunch Office Discontinued. ; Owing to hard times i Adams Kxpress Company has issued orders to have the bmnch oflice nt Xo.-IS Main aveniie dis- continued, and hereafter orders and pack- ages will .tieed to bo sent to the main olliee in Asbury Park. : . Pleasant PenclJInes About, the People,. Place and Property; . Mrs. M. A. Hunter has quite recovered from a serious attack of grippe. Postmaster George W. Kvaiis'and wife spent Christmas nt Orange, X. J< Miss Iriti Oakley is spending the holi- days with her friends in Roselle. . ]>. II. Brown, Treasurer of the Asspein* tion wns in town on. Wednesday'.. A. I). .McCabe, wife and daughter spent Christmas with' friends in Trenton. Mr. I). W. C. Martin ran down from Xew York Saturday for. a brief vacation. 'Mr. Frank Tantum and family spent Christmas at Paterson, X. J.,.with rela- tives’ .- Mre. Ann Loomis aiul Miss Emily A. Rice went to XeW: York to spend the hol- idays. : . Mrs. Elizabeth J. JohiisOn has gone to Philadelphia, where she intends spending the winter. * . Mr. Lcander Fox, of Bariiegnt, spent ‘Christmas in town, the guestof his daugh- ter, Mrs. A. F. Pine. ; . Mr. Chari ie A. I’eIcli, who is employed in Trenton, X. J., returned for the holi- days Saturday night. . Vivian Matthews and ai . iss Hila White were married at West (iro ve, December 27, by Hev. W. G. Pitt. J.. K. Wortmitii, has just ..completed a fine ice yacht, which will be used on Deal I^ike this winter. ;; Prof. Sylvester Townsend, of -Wilming- ton, is spending the holidays with his parents at the Amherst. . Another good road meeting will be held at the Court House, Freehold, Saturday, January 0, at 51 o’clock. ’. C. C. Clayton aiid. family‘ went to Brooklyn on Saturday to spend Sunday and Christmas with/friends. Professor * Fletcher Durcll, of Carlisle, Pennsylvania, with his family has been spending some days at the Jacknon House. Raymonds. Miller, ii'student of the University is spending the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Miller. ’ Mrs'. K. Kellogg and her daughter Alice leave for Florida Wednesday, Jan- uary* where they, will remain until •Spring. - Mr. Charles Herzog mid wife, oi I leek avenue, have returned from Philadelphia* where they lmve been spending a few weeks. Mr. .T. M. Goodnow who has been con- fined to the house for some time on ac- count of La Grippe, is again able to be‘ around. Mr. Harry Ik Ayres, cashier of the Ocean Grove Cami> Meeting Association, spent Christmas with his mother at Bor- dentown, X. J. . . A very pleasant surprise party was given to Miss Minnie Morris at the’hpuse of M. K. Sexton where she is visiting, on Wednesday evening. * Joseph! Hulse.and wife, and John Ik Ilulse, of Philadelphia,' came here on Tuesday to attend fhe fuiieral of a sister, Mrs. Eliza V. Cooper. Mr. Robert.Holbrook, who has been j: confined to the house for'a couple of ', w;eeks with a severe attack of bi (irippe, i is slowly improving. . Dniggist A. A. White and wife spent Christmas in Philadelphia, . Mr. George A. Woodward looked after Mr. Whitirs interests during his absence. The condition of John Longstreet, who Was injured by a freight car two weeks ago, is more favorable and it is now thought that he may get better. George .K. Farmer- the coal, dealer, went to Mont Clare to spend the holi- days w;ith his parents aiul was taken sick, lie is now confined to the house W ith Jii Grippe. Mr. Walter A .: Seaman, w;hose mind lias been slowly but surely failing for the past year or two. w as removed to. the State Iii bane Asylum at Trenton, X. J.,: Tuesday noon. Tlie cottage removed from tlie lot at Xo. 11. Kmbury Avenue, some’time ago and w’hich-lias since been standing in the Avenue near Central; resumed its journey Thursday inorning. Mr. Sumter 1,. Beegle aiul family ran down from Orange and spent Christmas with his father ami mother. Mr. Joseph Green was also a guest of Dr. I, X’. Bee- glc Christmas day. Master Fred Sanford, who wtis obliged to give up his studies at the State Xormal School, Trenton, X. .!./ on account of sickness, has rapidly improved and will return again January S. The, funeral of Mrs. Kliza V. Cooper, who died on Thursday of lastWeek, took pluce, . at her^ late resideuce. on v ilaitv avenue, ; Tuesday, December 20, at .11 o’tjloekj and the remains were taken to Freehold oh the 12.2(5 train for interment. Thomas Priee{ ofBrooklyn, X. Y., died Thursday morning at* 4 o’clock, at' the age of 71, a ft er a 1 ingeri ng i i I ness. .Mr. Price was wtill known to a great .many Ocean Grove people, having been connec- ted with Mie Surf Avenue 1 loue-e fov sev.*;. era I years. . . • ' A 'Haiiibow^SociaMf under the1 auspices of the Y. \\\ C..T. L1., of Ocean tirove, will be held in Association Hall this (Fri- day) afternoon and evening. There will be* no mlmission fee charged but ice cream and. cake will he. available. 'A pleasant lime is anticipated. Miv. M. Van frmdt at the corner of Atlantic and Ocean* avenues is desirous of getting into communication with Mrs. INI. B. Van Sant, who tented •near Flet- cher Uikc/last summer, in order thut she may deliver a letter;thnt has fallen into her hands through mistake. Mrs, Mary V. Cameron, u daughter of John C. Johnson by his first wife, diet! in Philadelphia, Friday morning, Dec. 22, of acute pneumonia, at the age of *12. The remains were taken to llightsto.wn, her former home, on Christmas day and interred in Ccdar'Hill Cemetery. Those who attended St. Paul’s Church last Sunday, morning and evening,enjoyed a grand musical 'treat. The selections rendered by the choir, appropriate tq the Christmas service,. were excellent and much credit is.due Mrs..George M. Ben- nett,' (or the fine manner iu which ’the choir is instructed. • . - • Mrs. M. II. Bert ton paid a brief visit to tlu* Grove this week.. Slit? lias been in Pliilatielphia ftjrsome time past. Mr. F. I). Hatfield and 'wife left for Jack>onville, Florida on Monday last, where tliey propose.spending the winter. Their stopping place wilflie the St. Janifs Hotel. Mr. Hatfield is advertising agent for. C o lg a te C o ’s.soKp, a position Imluis ably filled for a number of years.. MK AV. A. Day, whpjficoniiected with th e ‘.S ' mh Building at Washington, D. C., epent. a few’tlays at the Grove this week, lie made his" headquarters at tlie resi- dence of his mother, Mrs. Mary L. Day, of.IIeek avenue, anti returned to his duties at Washington -Tuesdaymorning. Mr. Karnest X. Woolston surprised his friends Christmas afternoon by riding with ti number pf them to l/mg Bninch atul buck. The distance iy only 15 miles and a. short ritlo for one '.accustomed to riding u bieyclty hut whon taken into consideration tlmt Karnest mounted the wheel for tlio first time on Christmas morning, the boys'were naturally sur- prised. An Enjoyable Birthday Party. A very.pleasant reception was given at the resilience of Mrs. M. J. Ilollis, in Asburv Park, Wednesday evening, in hono/of Miss Anna’s seventeenth birth- day. Some twenty young people of both Hexes.hnd gathered to assist in celebnir ting the oecasioirand a very enjoyable evening was passed in dancing and .social festivity. Tho Indies had been requested to.wear some ornament in the hair ; and the gentlemen a boutonniere suggestive of their individual “fatIs’’ and many of: them, were both unique and interesting. . A very instructive and entertaining part ofthe programme was tlie “Observa-1 tion Roundabout” which consisted of an arrangement of inanimate objects in a way to suggest the title to a book , or a popular saying, witli a prize for the per- son who returned the greatest number of correct answers to the 20 puzzles, and a booby prize for the poorest guesser. The lirst prize, an after dinner cup and saucer was won by Mr. Witmer and the other prize, a pen wiper, was aw arded to Mr, Parhmlcc. The music wns furnished by Miss Lyon of Asbury Park. Among those who par- ticipated were: Miss Brill, of Oceanic, X. J. ; . Miss McClellan, of Morristown, X. J. ; Miss Barr, of Long Bmnch, X. J . ; Miss Cox; Miss Covert, Miss Parmalee, INIisa r^ord, Miss Bamman anti Miss Hollis of Asbury Park ; Mr. L. F. Russuni, of Elizabeth, X. J . ; Mr. Witmer, of Pliila- delphia, Pa. ; Mr. Winans, of Rahway, X-. J . ; Mr. Cox, -Mr. Parmalee, .Mr. Cooper, Mr. Ker. Mr. Osborn. Mr. Wil- son nml Mr, Hetrick, of Asburv Park, N .J. * Getting Headytor theTrusses. Kngiticer' Smith, who has general charge of the construction of the iiew auditorium, was down oil Thursday and Carefully Rtaked out the locations for the heavy piers which are designed to sup- port the immense trusses for the build- ing. These piers will be eight feet square and sunk eight feet in the earth, con- st ructed^ of solid stone ami concrete with heavy iron anchors running, through them, to which the bottoms of the trusses will be bolted. All of the materials for the construction of the masonwork Is on ihe ground and the work Will be pushed tis fast as the weather will allow.- . Tho walls ofthe cellar.and foundation under the ofjice part are alt complete and after the piers are finished no further progress can be mnde until tlio iron trusses are in place and- it will probably be about a couple of months yet before they are in position. The County Clerk Contest. Tuesday, January 10, IS! 14, was set by. Chief Justice Beasley ns the day oii which the suit of Peter Forman for the County Clerk’s oflice, now’ held.by T. A. Auinack, slioiild be heartL Mr. Forman bases his claim on the returns from four election districts in the county Which lie avers were incorrect. •There are'five ballots.in question in the. lirst district oflUuitan township, and 12 ballots in the second district of Raritan. In the Macedonian district of Shrewsbury tiiere were 25 ballots which .Mr. Forman claims'were marked for identification, while in the lirst district of Neptune U> ballots with Mr. Forman’s name, for County Clerk were rejected on account of a light blqe mark upon them. Mr. Ati- mack’s majority was so slight that if the contestant’s claim in.any one.of the dis- tricts natiiWl can be substantiated, it will result in a change of County Clerks.. rionmouth Park’6 License Revoked. Friends of the MoiimoVith . Park Race Track Association have openly boasted that notwithstanding any action that might be taken by the incoming Legisla- luture, racing would be conducted at Monmouth Park during the summer of IM4. In view of fads that have recently .come to light these protestations will need to be .modified. It • appears that the license fee of $‘>,000 demanded .by the Kutoiitown Township Committee has never been paid ami on the 7tli of August last that body revoked the license which it had previously issued to the Associa- tion. This action on the part of tlie com- mittee has just been uuule public. Westminster Presbyterian Church.. On Sunday,-December 5*1, Kev. S.. Kd- ward Young*, will preach ou the following, subjects ut the Westminster- Presbyterian Chureli, Asbury Park , Morning subject, half hour at.;tlie grave of ifoses,* * ' with talks to children on “The first 'Sun- day after Christmas; evening prelude, “ What the world is talking of this, week” atul sermon “Bird’s evu view of 1804.” Sunday School 2.150, Christian Kndeavor 0..*50; Bible Social Friday evening. Chrls*.mas Morning, 1893. - . O'er (lie vacant chair 1 here’s n sliroud of gloom; OI speak noCot'iulrth Uwlay, . For my heart is aseohlas in’y lowd oiie's loiui) And heavier; tar, thaiiHscluy. Itespeetfuily, JotiX. C iinn , I^ileof|:l Pilgrim I’ulhway,.Ocean 1 irove. If .you want plumbing done. John Leon- ard Will make contracts20 per cent, lower now tlnin .he can three months hence.— MU': '• •; NEWS OF THE WEEK. . Prlduy, !)••«•. t!3 . * A rich vein of gold lias been discovorcd near Burlington, la.'. TUrco miners were drmynetl in' the Oak Hill colliery at Delaware. Pa. . ; / A tray of diamond.s valued at $15,000 waR. stolen from a Chicago jewelry store.. A noled Hungarian- artist bas been ar - rested,* charged with forging bank notes. Tlio Roman Cutholic Church ot tho As- tension at North Tonuwntitla, X. Y., was .-destroyed by fire. ;. . John J. Vail, cashier ot the lato Com- mercial hank of. Brooklyn, has been ar-, rested on a charge of perjury. Tho trial of Dr. Meyer, tho alleged poi- soner, has been declared oft at Now York because a juror beeame insane. Juror Beusou, whoso illness threatened * to seriously retard tiio progress of the Coughlin case, has entirely recovered. Sixty employees' of a' largo dry goods firm In Sheffield, England, wero burned or Injured .In .escaping, from the building, which was destroyed by fire, Saturday, Dee. 33 . Herr Guttmann, editor .of The German Medical Gazette, died;of influenza. a . The jury in tho.Monsoii case at Edin- burgh returned a verdict of not guilty. Tlio Italian troops gained a victory in northeastern Africa over tbo dervishes and 'killed hundreds. . . A powder magazine at Waltham abbey exploded, resulting In tho death of several persons and the wouudingof a number of others.- Cdlonel T. W. Iligginson, essayist, sol- dier and reformer, was 70 years old Friday,■ and held a veceptlon at bis home hi Cam- britige, Mass. ; • A t Perth Amlmy; X. J., Georgo Scofield mistook Janies Johnson for a hurglar and shot him in the neck, inflicting a wound that may prove fatal. Grip has become epidqmic at the county poorhtjuse at Norristown, Pa.,.nnd about 100 of the Inmates’of that institution are- suffering from the disease. A laudslide near the Roanoke river, on the Norfolk anti .Carolina railroad, caused, a wreck inwhlch tho engineer Was killed and three hrakemen wero injured. Monday, Doc. 35 , Three persous died iri Pittsburg of star- vation. ■ • • . • • An armed crank was arrested in Spring- field, Mass. .A nickel-steel ingot weighing i50,000 pounds was cast iit Homestead, Pa. An elevator in tbe- new Stock Exchange iu Chicago fell, fatally injuring four men. Robert Sutherland, aged 18, and Louisa Ward, aged 10, eloped from Lowell, Mass. Maria Xaflet, who owns an *11,000 houso in Buffalo, was arrested there charged with shoplifting. . General X. P. Banks was found wander- ing about. Lynn, Mass;, too ill to give an account of himself. Threo policemen of *Ironwood, Mich., wero convictvd of stealing supplies from the public relief stores.. White miners who are on striko nt Lin- ton, Ind;, threaten to shoot the negroes who have taken their places. - William Hawley, serving a five yen is’ term for biirglaiy, committed suicide in tbe New Jersey penitentiary at Trenton by inhaling gjis. • TueRduy, Dec. 20 , . *. There was another antltax riot in Sicily. Chauncey M. Depew returned from Eu- rope. Chancellor von C’apriyl is said to bo de- sirous of resigning ids office,- Tho steamer Seneca, for Xew York, re- turned to Havana.wjth her forebold on fire. . . . Two Scranton (Pa.) police officials were seriously injured iu a battle with drunken Hungarians. \ Alexander Sullivan denied Mrs. Foy’s statements implicating him. in the Cronin assassi nation. H. B. Shields was arrested at Chicago for kidnaping K. M. Byers, a Pittsburg iiianufactuivr. Thero is great gratification in Topeka' over the appointment of J. C. Wrilson as one of tho Atchison receivers. . A dynamito crank has threatened to blow up Armour institute, Chicago,and to kill Dr. Gunsaulu?*, its president. . A train-was held up at Seminole station, in .tho.-Indinu Territory,, by eight despera- does, who robbed tbo mail and express cars anti each.passenger, the robbers escaping. . Wednesday, Dec. 27* Kansas is overrun with tramps. Smallpox .has broken out in Lowell, Mass. . . . . . Conrad L. Jordan has returned from Europe. Auarciiists threaten to blow up the rail- way stations in Paris. Mrs. Andrew Foy, the principal witness in the Coughlin trial, was cross examined. Ex-Mayor Grant of New York was ap - pointed receiver for the St. Nicholas bank. The buildings in tbo. Pittsburg Driving, park att Homewood, Pa, were destroyed by f i r e . . ■ '■ ; " . President Cleveland, Secretary Gresham; and Secretary Carlisle are duck hunting on thy Potomac. . George F. James of Philadelphia, general secretary of the American Society for the Extension of University Teacidug. has re- signed his position. Mr. Overton Price, lato cashier of the wrecked Citizens' XTational bank of Hills- boro, O., died in Cincinnati from nervous prostration resulting from mortification over tho bank’s failure. / Thursday, Dec. 28 . (Charles Mitchell and his party arrived at Jacksonville, Fla.- : Tho entiro upper end of Xarrowsburg, X. Y.,-was swept by fire. The churches of Jersey City are about to form an organization to rolfevo tho poor, j An Italian la Brooklyn who haa twioo been shot is supposed to be a Mafia victim, Prince Bismarck la reported to bo suffer- ing from his old complaint of neuralgia iii 'his arm. It was roported that .the troops in pursuit of King Lobetiguia bad been annihilated by tho Matabeles. ' . • ; - Pcop .lewill see hy visiting Johnston's stationery store, that ho luw reduced prices on all ”oods to make room for Hoi* it lay Stock. Sole a^ent for Caw’s Dasha-, way fountain pen.^—-Idiy • . ’. THE OPPOSITE SHORE. ■Notes on Asbury! Pork’s PeopleJEandJiThelr S Boloifs. 23; Ilenrv Heii nett is huihlirig. five housed on Wir*t Mudison avenue, West Pnrk.^^r The an i)ti;d eh rlion for tli rectors of the Asbnry Park and '0<mn (irove.Bank w ill be lieltl on Tue.-d;iy? January M. Trnflie on the electric mad was delayeil tin hour on Wetlnesdav. cjntvetl. by th e' broken axle of a heavily loaded coal wiigon. . ’• •* . ■ :r / '. Then.' . will be a nieefing of tho I'ire- inen's(Relief Association,; In Waslijngton^ K ngine Ih»u>t% a t H o’clock*Fi’i'«Ijiv'evep.-' ing, December 20. •* • ih’. A. S. Ilu non nmtle- the highest; scoro recordetl in t wo years at Parkers Bowling alley -last Saturday night—270 out of a.possible 5JU0 The election for directtirs of tlie First Xation.nl Bank, atul the Monmouth Trust Compiiliy,will be held iu .the. offices of both institutions on January o . ... Will jam,R. Kelsey, formerly of’Aslniry Park, ami for some years, past proprietor, of the hotel at Chadwicks Station, down on Barnegat Bay, died ^on Alonday, De- cember. 25, * . . . . One of the horses belonging to Ira Johnson tV Son the feedinen, rail away on Tuesday. He ran down Main Street and when near Suminerfleld avenue, fell and broke the shafts. He was seen ret 1 beforo further damage was done. •Hid. Wardell- won . the -silver handlerl uinbrella for the best guess as to tho vital- ity of the candle ih.Rockafeller,.* i witidow. lie said <» days, (> hours, anti 5 minutes, and the actual time was Otlays, 5 hours anti 55 miiiutes. - The monster candle iu the window of Xewlin’s I Jardware store burned 235* hours, 5{ niinutes ami 40 seconds. • J. C. Reynoltls got the first. tirize a carpet sweeper, on a guess of 2*54 liours, 48 min: utes, ami (5 seconds; anti the second prize, a pair of skates, was awarded to J. A. Ap- plegate, his guess being .241 hours. 551 minutes uud UI seconds. . THROUGHOUT THE STATE • i-'W '■ ----- Chicken.thieves are creating sail havoc- among the fowls indhe-vicinity of Long Bra n d i. Severn 1 chicken 11 ouses ^have been looted during the past week.yggjtatti William A. “Ilankinson and Joseph Thompson, of Freeholtl, have received $50 each from the Columbia Bicycle Com- pany*, for capturing a bicycle t’here last; Summer. . (.'ieorg.e Travers ami Sante I.ielitvice, of- Long Ihanch, are• in the. comity jail, charged with stealing a sleigh, stove and a lot of acfoi’s clothing from Jacob Showles. Thieyt's.broke into tin* resident’e’of Mr. Alexander Maitland, of Long Branch, early on Wednesday morning last.'. They' bail succeeded in collecting a number of the,preaclierV buoks anti ti lot of silver-- wtiiv, wIicii t hc 11ouiekcej>er. d is;covered thein ami tiiey wore ■fritrJitencd away, leaving their booty beh’nd* William Henry.DeWitt, the three-vear-'i olt I son of Charles IL DeWitt, of Freehold dicti on Saturday after an illnca of one day. The chiltl drank tliree ounces.of ^ whiskey, which he fouiid in ti ’ bottle, and', went to sleep almost immediately. . While sleeping oil' the stupifviiijj effects of the liquor,- capihuy' ..bronchitis de - veloped anti the--child tiled shortly aftt»r- : ward. • A peculiar suit’ involving $:;C(i() was tried beftire Judge Conover at Freehold, last week, {’hailes II. Leonard.brought suit apainst Wesley B. and Joseph*C; W. Stout on'a note for the above amount, en- dorsetl by R. TenBroeek Stout. The makers resisted pavincut ott the grounds that Leonard hatl-received. a* bonus of $150 in violation of the law*. The Judge reserved his'decision. ; , A'Friendly I.etter. AVii/rox,' X. Y:,|DecemberdI}, . Tu llif /editor nj IIII' ThlM ,— Through the k iut Iness of friends fit the t lrove 1 have seen several copies t»f your attractive paper. . You seem to have an- open Iield and I wish you great success. ; I am working in the fdurth tpiarfer of - inv thinl year in chargtr of ^Villon-Cir- ciut, Troy (’onfe'reiice. A gootI degree of ■ ■success has attended our etforts in a diflir cult Iield. Have recently been favored with a revival, resulting in t lie.wn version of forty-live studsi with juosi'e.cts of many tuVue to follow. Rev, George Clark, of Ocean Grove, spent twenty days with us,' ami won all hearts by bis ellective preach - iug uml persuasive address.- He rendered us most valuable .assistance, and we sboiiltl be glad to luive him come again. A .heavy fall: t»f snow, with sleet aiul extreme cold, has overtaken us, ami uv are thankful flu* in-door comforts.' Will have superb sleighing when the roads get well broken. We are happy, iu having , ■good work, ivndcnou'jh of it. '£ m m You.- with regartl,; •“ .■/- . S.’ T. H ou'ni- ii. A Serious. Fall. Mis'. 1’hebe Bear more, who resides on .Clark avenue had a seritais fall early Wed- nesday inorning. Sho started-to come, tlown stairs and tripped at the. top, pitcli- ing headlong .down-the staircase, t^he was unable to rise anti her son helped her; out into the room and she was soon able to move around again, but it is feared that some of her rit>a may be -broken. • Rush! Rusht Rustlt .. That:seems, to lio the condition in which the. Ocean Palucoof Ilenry Stein- Imcli, Asbury Park, can be found every day this week. The assortment; of Holi- day goods is;only eqmdletl by city houses, und prices in many insfiiuces aro even lower;,' Don’t leave your shopping to the last moment but visit this estahlisjiment,; while the assortment remain*} large.--.Idr.; Sliiloii’s Cure, -the great Cough atul Croup Curt?,' is in great demaiul; Pocket size contains twenty-five tloses only 25c.* Children love it. Sold by Druggists.

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Page 1: OCEAN GROVE TIMES - digifind-it.com · Circulation of This Number IOOO. OCEAN GROVE TIMES t® Best, Advertising; Medium in Ocean Grove VOL. i. NO. 3 5 - OCEAN OROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY,

C i r c u l a t i o n o f

T h is Num ber

IOOO. OCEAN GROVE TIMES t®

Best, A d vertisin g ;Medium in

O cean G rove

V O L. i . NO. 3 5 - O C EA N O R O V E, N E W J E R S E Y , S A T U R D A Y , D E C E M B E R 30 , 1893. O N E D O LL A R P E R Y EAR,

GRAND CH RISTM A S FESTIVAL

A Large . Audience Witnesses the Exerclscs at St. Paul’s n. E. Church.T he annual C hristm as en terta inm ent of

St. Paul's.M . K .‘Sunday. School was cele­brated on.Tuesduy evening o f th is week.

; and i t proved to be u highly successful and pleasing event to all wiio attended.

Tho large church was beautifully trim - ; mod W ith holly and evergreen, aiul in

tho centre o f the building was the design of a huge bell mnde o f laurel boughs,

i.w hile a s tring of laurel 1,01*4 feet in length reached around the en tire church. This was looped aud tw ined around tlie pillars or supnorts of the auditorium , and

, the electric lights Irom th e chundalier brought out its dark .green color in bold

'• relief against th e hard-oil woodwork p f tho ceiling a m i. sides of th e building. There were also several o th e r very pretty lloral displays. - ;

A p la tfo rm 'h iiil been erected over the pulp it, in th e centre o f w hich was an old- fashioned ' fireplace .m ad e o f . ’boxes filled w ith eandv, W hile ou oue end was placed a log cabin, w ith the roof covered

.w ith snow, and long icicles hanging from tho rafters, and its sole occupant, .Samuel C hristopher Young, a. little colored boy, gazing leisurely from th e door. On the other end o fth e platform wan a m iniature forest, w ith th e branches o f its .stalwart trees laden w ith stibwv • . :'.All* together th is formed a beautiful

scene, w id th required a g reat deal of skill ■ to design’. . .; : Long before tlie h ou r for th e exercises .to begm had arrived, every seat in the chureli proper was occupied, when the .windows of tlie lecture room were rained and th is additional space was soon tilled w ith people. ,

y Mr. Claude Guerin, tlie Superin tendent of the Sunday school had charge o f the programm e, whicli was a wel! selected and exceedingly well rendered one, and

w a s as foliow's: .. ' • ' O m a n V o l u n t a r y .

.. SlnglUR............... .."All Hull (lie I’owcr,”. .* : •• . School.

S c r i p t u r e H e a d i n g . - P m y e r .

D o u b l e Q u a r t e t t e , . . ; ; ; . . . . “ H a l l t h e D a y , "■ .S i n g i n g , . . , ; . ; .V O n C h r i s t i n a s M o r n , ” '

• . I n r a n t C l a s s .. Recitation,..;....:..... ................ .:....“Tho Clock,”

. I n f a n t C l a s s ;• S i n g i n g . . . . . . ............................................... . . . . * ‘ R o c k - a - B y e , ”

I n f a n t C l a s s .R e c i t a t i o n , . . . . . -.................“ T h r e o I - . i t t le S t o c k i n g s , ” .

L i z z i e K r v l e n .S i n g i n g . . . . . . , . . . . . . ; ........................... ....... “ B l e s s e d - B n b e , "

• S c h o o l .. V i o l i n S o l o .

S i n g i n g , ; . i . ‘. ‘ T i d i n g s o f J o y , ”I n f a n t C l a s s .

H e s i t a t i o n , ............................ “ C h n i t m n f t H e l l s , ”E d i t h G o o d n o w ,

S i n g i n g , : . ................................ ' ' S i n g H i s P r a i s e s , ”• . Sehoot. .R e c i t a t i o n , ...................................... ’ ‘S a n t a C l a u s B e l l s , ”

H e l e n B o o g i e . •Plano Solo,...;..... ....;...... ...Miss Emma Irwin.S i n g i n g , ! ............................ ................. . . . . . . . “ S i l e n t N i g h t , ”

.S c h o o l .; R e c i t a t i o n ................. ; ........................ . “ S n o w H u l l s , ”

. E l s i e M c K e n z i e . E i s i o S h l n n .S i n g i n g , ...........................'. “ T h e ( i n a u l O l d S o n g , ”

S c h o o l . . -S i n g i n g , . . ; . . . . .................................‘ . . “ C h r i s t m a s C a r o l , ”

S a m u e l C . Y o u n g . C o m i n g o f S u n l a C l a u s .

R e c i t a t i o n . . “ S e c r e t W i t h S a n t a C l a u s . ”K I In J a c k s o n . '

. A d d r e s s h y S a n t a C l a u s .S i n g i n g , . . . ; ........................... “ G o o d N l g h i S o n g , ”

• • S c h o o l . .' D o x o l o g y .

, J u s t before th e conclusion o f the pro­gramme, Mr. L inford heller-on, as Santa Claus,.emerged from tliosnow draped for­est a t.th e righ t o f th e platform, his huge sleigh being draw n by* six small boys, nnd then began the distribution, o f pres­ents, and the.usual Christm as trea t to the Sunday school

All who participated in tho fernnd event are deserving o f m uch credit for the ex? cellent m anner iu w hich the details o f th e exercises were carried out.

T h e A s s o c i a t i o n ’ s A n n u a l R e c e p t i o n .

Some five years ago the Ocean Grove ’ Association began to give social receptions w hich are held on tlie anniversary day of th e organization o f th a t body.

The design w as to draw the residents o f tlie com m unity together, have a good social time, and to bring th e people, into more pleasant relations, w ith - the gov­erning powers.

Invitations w ere extended to each fam­ily residing in t h e Grove, as well as to m any who were non-residents, but would b e ’likely to participate, and also m any people of prom inence in Asbury Park and .surrounding towns.

The last one took place Friday evening, December 22, in Association Ilall. This

w a s the tw enty-fourth anniversary in th e history o f th e Association and th e occas­ion Was one o f much social enjoym ent and pleasure.

A fter a prayer by Hev. J ; R . Daniels, and reading o f letters o f regret by Secre­tary George W. Evans, Dr. Stokes m ade , an address o f welcome, s tating th a t it wus an evening to be given up to social pleas­ures and recreation, and urging those present to get each o th e r by th e blind and prom ote good fellowship and closer acquaintance.

A little la ter refreshm ents were served and th e youngjudy a ttendan ts had a tlifli- ciilt task’to serve the. people in th e crow­ded hall. . The reception, broke up about 10 o'clock and .every one carried away pleasant recollections o f the evening.

A M i d n i g h t C o n f l a g r a t i o n .

Two houses were destroyed by lire early inondny m orning in W est Asbury Park;, one.owned by U.S. Cottene u n d tlic d lh e r hy Stephen Conover. The lire originated iti Mr. Cottene’a cottage on Adams street which was unoccupied, and before it; could be gotten under .control th e {lames spread to th e adioin’.ng liouse.'• The K. II. Stokes C hem ical. Kngine Company wits lirst' on the ground and was lollowed by th e Unexcelled o f W est Grove, and the Goodwill of W est Park, a little later. T lie boys did good work in preventing th e lire from spreading to ­o th e r nearby structures. ' '

Unclaimed Letters.Following, is a list of unclaim ed letters

rem aining iu th e Ocean . Grove post otlice up to December 27, IBM ..Burke, Ju lia , Bogers,Cooke, Helen M ., Stout,.Kenai Harden. Jenn ie M., Sm ith, K. F .f H olland, Kate, Van llo rn S.,H ickey, James, Vaneleif, Jennie, lngersoU,Kmoline, Westwood, Uev. J .U . l^eon, Peter, J r . , . W hite, Mn*. lien. F. Ix)otij Peter, Warn, Stephen, Piiminger, Chas. 2s’*. ‘

O E O I i n E W . E V A N S , Postmaster,

O c e a n O r o v e C a m p M e e t i n g A s s o c i a t i o n .

fCdilor Oi'otn f fro ir Ttimx:W hen, th e history o f the-X ine teeidh

Century shall be w ritten by some im par­tial. hand , and the influences which have w rought for. Weal or' woe, are set fo r th 'in all their serious bearings, no page in th a t h istory will furn ish a brighter exam ple o f ull th a t has gone to m ake the w orld better, th an th a t which records tlie origin and work o f tlie Ocean Grove 'G im p M eeting Association.

Iu th is age o f political corruption and. financial depression, and these timo*, w hen gilded iniquity stalka ram pant over the world, when vice and im m orality are often sustained under th e sanction o f law- and even when th e church, which, pro-; fosses to serve th e living God, .is often hampered by ritualism and perfunctory services, i t is like an oasis in , th e desert to be able to Hnd one place, a t least, on th is footstool w here th e public acts o f its lawmakers are not given over to the idol­a try and worship o fth e Almighty Dollar.

This institu tion wlio.se foundation, was laid b en y am ong th e sands b f th e Jersey- shore, less than a quarter o f a century ajro, luul its beginning am ong the' aspira­tions, and prayers o fa small band o f true followers * o f th e lowly Xazareno. a n d : m ighty Gallilean King. I f ever a com­pany o f m en “ builded be tte r than they knew;,” these are entitled to such a d is­tinction. ‘

You m ay go back over'; th e pages of history-to tlie rem otest , tim e, and no­w here'w ill you tind. a parallel.. I t has been reserved for the la tte r part o f this century, to behold a band o f Godly men, organized to carry” on a great religions work w ithout the hope o f worldly gain. Such an exam ple the world has never seen before.:- I t is true there have been o ther attem pts

sincc made, b u t the sp irit o f worldly spec­ulation has crep t in nearly all of them ,, and the ir influence for good has departed. To o n e . who has been an observer, o f events as they havo transpired in connec­tion w ith this Association, there can be b u t one conclusion. To th e ono man whose genius mostly conceived th e ori­g in, anti whose m ind has m atured th e ’ tilting, and whose head, heart, and hands have been constantly applied in carrying on the work, (olteii am id discouragements from botii withofit and w ith in ,) b u t amid it all has ever stood tip and battled for th e right, is due to a great ex tent, th e gm nd success o f th is enterprise.

Then le t the men and women o f this generation stand by this ‘‘J/tw*’’ o f our time, and like Aaron and H ur hold up his hands when, they would otherw ise fall. Long live B rother 1C. II. Stokes.

]>. I I . W yckoki'.

A n E n j o y a b l e C e l e b r a t i o n .

A very pretty C hristm as celebration took place Christm as Kve., a t th e Luth- em n Church o f th e A tonem ent. The participants, were tho members o f the Sunday School, and the church was tilled w ith th e parents and friends o f th e chil­dren. A large tree had been tastefully decorated .and around' i t were niasscil presents for the children, .

A n ' interesting feature o f th e pro­gramme was th e recital o f the Christmas prophecies found in the Old Testament, by different hiembers o f th e school. The Lutheran Sunday School is the youngest organization, of*its kind, and Reserves credit for tlie adm irable m anner iii which it rendered its Christmas programme.

A t th e conclusion o f tlie service tbe presents were distributed. Rev.. II. Douglas Spaeth w a s presented w ith a very handsome um brella by .th e ladies o f the church, and Mr. van Gilluwe,- Super­in tenden t o f the Sunday school, was also, remembered by the children , and the ladies.

Another Blaze at Belmar.The Belm ar House, a eood sized ' hos­

telry a t Belmar, was totally destroyed by fire early Tuesday morning. Tho fire, was discovered about 2 o’clock, and before th e alarm could be given, th e flames had gained such headway th a t despite the lierotc efforts of tho firemen, th e building: and its contents were entirely consumed. T he-house was owned by Mrs. F . S . Davis and valued a t $10,000, on w h ic h there was an insurance o f about $0,000. This is th e th ird disastrous conflagration which has occurred in Belmar w ith in a few m onths. .

. PERSO NA L AND PERTIN EN T.

A New Club House'for Sea Girt.The New Jersey Rifle Association .has

had plans made for a new club house to be erected on the ' State Camp Ground a t Sea G irt. T he new .structure will prob­ably be erected in tlie vicinity o f th e riflle range, and promises to be a very im­posing edifice. The association has been incorpomtcd under t h e . laws o f the State, and a long list o f promiiient men' are a t th e head o f th e organization.'

An. effort will be made to htive the building'com pleted before the n ex t sea­son’s rifle practice. It is to be-used ex­clusively for the members o f . th e associa­tion. .

A N a r r o w E s c a p e P r o m D e a t h .

W hile crossing the long railroad bridge over the M anasquan R iver one da’v last week, George \V. Fielder was struck hy ii

VNeiv Jersey Southern tra in and bad ly ‘in ­jured. Fielder saw: th e . tra in approach­ing, and as ho could not. ge t out o f the way in time, prostrated h im self on the edge of: th e ties. The engine and ears passed over . him . w ithout touching him , until it came to th e last ear, which was a Pullman. T he steps on th e latter being eonsidembly lower than th e o ther cars, one o f Fielder’s shoes was torn ' from Ids foot and his leg badly lacerated.

F i r s t n . E . C h u r c h S e r v i c e s . '

A very in teresting program m e was pro­vided for th e evening service a t th e M.B.- Church lost Sunday evening. The musical portion w a s especially good, m any singers o f local celebrity and repu­tation taking part and. assisting to make the occasion interesting. .

B r u n c h O f f ic e D i s c o n t i n u e d . ;

Owing to hard times i Adams Kx press Company has issued orders to have the bmnch oflice nt Xo.-IS Main aveniie dis­continued, and hereafter orders and pack­ages will .tieed to bo sent to the main olliee in Asbury Park. : . •

Pleasant PenclJInes About, the People,. Place and Property;

. M rs. M. A. H unter has quite recovered from a serious attack o f grippe.

Postm aster George W. Kvaiis'and wife spen t Christm as n t Orange, X. J<

Miss Iriti Oakley is spending the holi­days w ith h e r friends in Roselle. .

]>. II. Brown, T reasurer o f the Asspein* tion wns in town on. W ednesday'..

A. I). .McCabe, wife and daughter spent Christm as with' friends in Trenton.

Mr. I). W. C. M artin ran down from Xew York Saturday for. a brief vacation.

'Mr. F rank Tantum and family spent Christm as a t Paterson, X. J ., .w ith rela­tives’.- ■

Mre. Ann Loomis aiul Miss Em ily A. Rice w e n t to XeW: Y ork to spend th e hol­idays. :. Mrs. Elizabeth J . JohiisOn has gone to

Philadelphia, where she intends spending the winter. *.

Mr. Lcander Fox, o f Bariiegnt, spent ‘Christmas in town, th e guesto f his daugh­ter, Mrs. A . F . Pine. ; .

M r. Chari ie A . I’eIcli, who is employed in Trenton, X. J ., returned for the holi­days Saturday night. .

Vivian M atthews and ai.iss Hila W hite were m arried a t West (iro ve, December 27, by Hev. W. G. Pitt.

J.. K. Wortmitii, has ju s t ..completed a fine ice yacht, w hich will be used on Deal I^ike th is w inter. ; ;

Prof. Sylvester Townsend, o f -Wilming­ton, is spending the holidays with his parents a t the Am herst. .

A nother good road m eeting will be held a t th e Court House, Freehold, Saturday, January 0, a t 51 o’clock. ’.

C. C. Clayton a i id . fa m ily ‘ w ent to Brooklyn on Saturday to spend Sunday and Christm as w ith/friends.

Professor * F letcher Durcll, o f Carlisle, Pennsylvania, with h is family has been spending some days a t the Jacknon House.

R aym onds. Miller, i i 's tu d e n t o f the U niversity is spending th e holidays w ith his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W . F. Miller.’ Mrs'. K. Kellogg and h e r daughter

Alice leave for Florida W ednesday, J a n ­uary* w here they, will rem ain until •Spring. -

M r. Charles Herzog mid w ife , oi I leek avenue, have returned from Philadelphia* where they lmve been spending a few weeks.

Mr. .T. M. Goodnow who has been con­fined to th e house for some tim e on ac­count o f La Grippe, is again able to be‘ around.

Mr. H arry Ik Ayres, cashier o f the Ocean Grove Cami> M eeting Association, spen t Christm as with his m other a t Bor- dentow n, X. J . .. A very pleasant surprise party was given to Miss M innie Morris at th e ’hpuse o f M. K. Sexton w here she is visiting, on W ednesday evening. * ■

Joseph! H ulse .and wife, and Jo h n Ik Ilulse, o f Philadelphia,' came here on Tuesday to a tten d f he fuiieral o f a sister, M rs. Eliza V. Cooper.

Mr. Robert.H olbrook, who has been j: confined to th e house fo r 'a couple of ', w;eeks w ith a severe attack o f b i (irippe, i is slowly im proving. • .

Dniggist A. A. W hite and wife spent C hristm as in Philadelphia, . Mr. George A. Woodward looked after Mr. W hitirs interests d uring his absence.

T h e condition o f John Longstreet, who Was injured by a freight car two weeks ago, is m ore favorable and i t is now thought th a t he may get better.

George .K. Farmer- the coal, dealer, w ent to M ont Clare to spend th e holi­days w;ith his parents aiul was taken sick, l ie is now confined to the house W ith

J i i Grippe.Mr. W alter A .: Seaman, w;hose m ind

lias been slowly but surely failing for the past year o r two. w a s removed to. th e State Iii bane Asylum a t Trenton, X. J ., : Tuesday noon.

Tlie cottage removed from tlie lot at Xo. 11. Kmbury Avenue, some’ tim e ago and w’hich-lias since been standing in the Avenue near Central; resumed its journey T hursday inorning.

Mr. Sum ter 1,. Beegle aiul family ran down from Orange and spent C hristm as w ith his father ami m other. Mr. Joseph Green was also a guest o f Dr. I, X’. Bee- glc Christmas day.

Master Fred Sanford, who wtis obliged to give up his studies a t th e State Xormal School, Trenton, X. .! ./ on account o f sickness, has rapidly improved and will return again January S.

The, funeral o f Mrs. Kliza V. Cooper, w h o died on Thursday o f lastW eek, took pluce, . a t her^ late resideuce. on v ila itv avenue, ; Tuesday, December 20, a t .1 1 o’tjloekj and th e rem ains were taken to Freehold o h the 12.2(5 tra in for interm ent.

Thom as Priee{ ofB rooklyn, X. Y., died Thursday m orning at* 4 o’clock, a t ' the age o f 71, a ft e r a 1 i ngeri ng i i I ness. .Mr. Price was wtill know n to a great .m any Ocean Grove people, having been connec­ted with Mie S u rf Avenue 1 loue-e fov sev.*;. era I years. . . • ' •

A 'Haiiibow^SociaMf under th e 1 auspices o f the Y. \ \ \ C..T. L1., o f Ocean tirove, will be held in Association Hall th is (F ri­day) afternoon and evening. There will be* no mlmission fee charged bu t ice cream and . cake will he. available. 'A pleasant lim e is anticipated.

Miv. M. Van frm dt a t th e corner o f A tlantic and Ocean* avenues is desirous of getting into communication with Mrs. INI. B. Van Sant, who tented •near Flet­cher U ikc/last summer, in order thut she may deliver a le tte r ;th n t has fallen in to h e r hands through mistake.

Mrs, M ary V. Cameron, u daughter o f John C. Johnson by his first wife, diet! in Philadelphia, Friday morning, Dec. 22, o f acute pneumonia, a t the age o f *12. The rem ains were taken to llightsto.wn, h e r former home, on Christm as day and interred in Ccdar'H ill Cemetery.

Those who attended St. Paul’s C hurch last Sunday, m orning and evening,enjoyed a grand musical 'treat. T h e selections rendered by the choir, appropriate tq the Christmas serv ice ,. were excellent and much credit is.due Mrs..George M. Ben­nett,' (or the fine m anner iu which ’ the choir is instructed. • . - •

Mrs. M. II. Bert ton paid a b rief visit to tlu* Grove th is week.. Slit? lias been in Pliilatielphia ftjrsom e tim e past.

Mr. F. I). H a tf ie ld and 'wife left for Jack>onville, Florida on Monday last, where tliey propose.spending th e winter. Their stopping place w ilflie the St. Jan ifs Hotel. Mr. Hatfield is advertising agent for. C o lg a te C o ’s.soKp, a position Imluis ably filled for a num ber of years..

MK AV. A. Day, w hpjficoniiected with th e ‘.S'mh Building a t W ashington, D. C., epent. a few ’tlays a t th e Grove th is week, l i e made his" headquarters a t tlie resi­dence of his m other, Mrs. M ary L. Day, o f.IIe ek avenue, anti re turned to his duties a t W ashington - Tuesdaym orning .

Mr. Karnest X. Woolston surprised his friends Christm as afternoon by riding with ti num ber p f them to l/m g Bninch atul buck. The distance iy only 15 miles and a. short ritlo for one '.accustomed to riding u bieyclty hu t whon taken into consideration tlm t Karnest m ounted the wheel for tlio first tim e on Christm as morning, the boys 'w ere naturally sur­prised.

An Enjoyable Birthday Party.A very.pleasant reception was given a t

th e resilience o f Mrs. M. J . Ilollis, in Asburv Park, W ednesday evening, in h o n o /o f Miss Anna’s seventeenth b irth ­day. Some tw enty young people of both Hexes.hnd gathered to assist in celebnir ting the oecasioirand a very enjoyable evening was passed in dancing and .social festivity. Tho Indies had been requested to .w ear some o rnam ent in the h a ir ; and th e gentlemen a boutonniere suggestive of their individual “ fatIs’’ and m any of: them, were both unique and interesting.. A very instructive and entertaining

p a rt o f th e programme was tlie “ Observa-1 tion Roundabout” which consisted o f an arrangem ent o f inanim ate objects in a way to suggest th e title to a book , o r a popular saying, w itli a prize for th e per­son who returned the g reatest num ber of correct answers to th e 20 puzzles, and a booby prize for the poorest guesser. T he lirst prize, an after d inner cup and saucer was won by Mr. W itm er and the o ther prize, a pen wiper, was aw arded to M r, Parhmlcc.

The music wns furnished by Miss Lyon of Asbury Park. Among those who par­ticipated w ere: Miss Brill, o f Oceanic, X. J . ; . Miss McClellan, o f M orristown, X. J . ; Miss Barr, o f Long Bmnch, X. J . ; Miss Cox; Miss Covert, Miss Parmalee, INIisa r^ord, Miss Bamman anti Miss Hollis o f Asbury Park ; Mr. L. F. Russuni, o f Elizabeth, X. J . ; Mr. W itm er, o f Pliila- delphia, Pa. ; Mr. W inans, of Rahway, X-. J . ; Mr. Cox, -Mr. Parmalee, .M r. Cooper, Mr. Ker. Mr. Osborn. Mr. Wil­son nml Mr, Hetrick, o f Asburv Park, N . J . • * •

Getting Heady tor theTrusses.Kngiticer' Sm ith, who has general

charge o f th e construction o f th e iiew auditorium , was dow n oil Thursday and Carefully Rtaked ou t the locations for the heavy piers w h ich are designed to sup­port th e immense trusses for th e build­ing. These piers will be e ight feet square and sunk eight feet in the earth , con­st ructed^ o f solid stone ami concrete with heavy iron anchors runn ing , through them , to which th e bottom s o f th e trusses will be bolted. All o f th e materials for the construction o f the m asonw ork Is on ihe ground and the work Will be pushed tis fast as th e w eather will allow.- .

Tho walls o f th e cellar.and foundation under the ofjice part are a l t complete and after th e piers are finished no further progress can be mnde until tlio iron trusses are in place and- it will probably be about a couple o f m onths yet before they are in position.

T h e C o u n t y C l e r k C o n t e s t .

Tuesday, January 10, IS! 14, was set by. Chief Justice Beasley ns th e day oii w hich th e su it o f Peter Form an for the County Clerk’s oflice, now’ held.by T. A. Auinack, slioiild be heartL

Mr. Form an bases his claim on the returns from four election districts in the county W hich lie avers were incorrect. •There are'five ballots.in question in the. lirst d istric t o flU u itan tow nship, and 12 ballots in the second district o f Raritan. In th e Macedonian d istrict o f Shrewsbury tiiere were 25 ballots which .Mr. Form an c la im s'w ere m arked for identification, w hile in th e lirst d istrict of Neptune U> ballots with Mr. Form an’s name, for County Clerk w ere rejected on account of a light blqe m ark upon them . Mr. Ati- mack’s m ajority was so slight th a t if the contestant’s claim in.any o n e .o f th e dis­tricts natiiWl can be substantiated, it will result in a change o f County Clerks..

r ionm outh P a rk ’6 License Revoked.

Friends o f the MoiimoVith . Park Race Track Association have openly boasted tha t notw ithstanding any action that m ight be taken by th e incoming Legisla- luture, racing would be conducted a t M onmouth Park during th e sum m er of IM4. In view of fad s that have recently

.come to light these protestations will need to be .modified. I t • appears th a t the license fee o f $‘>,000 demanded .by the Kutoiitown Township Committee has never been paid ami on the 7tli o f August last th a t body revoked the license which it had previously issued to the Associa­tion. This action on the part o f tlie com­m ittee has just been uuule public.

W estm inster P resb y te rian Church..On Sunday,-December 5*1, Kev. S.. Kd­

ward Young*, will preach ou the following, subjects u t the W estminster- Presbyterian Chureli, Asbury Park , M orning subject,

h a lf hour a t . ; tlie grave o f ifo ses,* *' w ith talks to children on “ The first 'S un­day after C hris tm as; evening prelude, “ W hat th e world is talking o f this, week” atul serm on “ B ird’s evu view of 1804.” Sunday School 2.150, Christian Kndeavor 0..*50; Bible Social Friday evening.

C h r l s * .m a s M o r n i n g , 1893 . - .

O'er (lie vacant chair 1 here’s n sliroud of gloom;OI speak noCot'iulrth U w l a y , .

For m y heart is aseoh las in’y low d oiie's loiui) • And heavier; tar, tha iiH scluy .

Itespeetfuily, JotiX. C iin ’ n , I^ileof|:l Pilgrim I’ulhway,.Ocean 1 irove.

I f .you want plum bing done. John Leon­ard W ill make contracts20 per cent, lower now tlnin .he can three m onths hence.—MU': '• •;

NEWS OF TH E WEEK.. Prlduy, !)••«•. t!3. *

A rich vein of gold lias been discovorcd near Burlington, la.'.

TUrco miners were drmynetl in' the Oak H ill colliery a t Delaware. Pa. . ; /

A tray of diamond.s valued at $15,000 waR. stolen from a Chicago jewelry store..

A noled H ungarian- artis t bas been ar­rested,* charged with forging bank notes.

Tlio Roman Cutholic Church ot tho As- tension a t N orth Tonuwntitla, X. Y., was

.-destroyed by fire. ;.. John J . Vail, cashier ot the lato Com­

mercial hank of. Brooklyn, has been ar-, rested on a charge of perjury.

Tho trial of Dr. Meyer, tho alleged poi­soner, has been declared oft a t Now York because a ju ro r beeame insane.

Ju ro r Beusou, whoso illness threatened * to seriously retard tiio progress of the Coughlin case, has entirely recovered.

Sixty employees' of a ' largo dry goods firm In Sheffield, England, wero burned or Injured .In .escaping, from the building, which was destroyed by fire,

Saturday, Dee. 33.H err G uttm ann, editor .of The German

Medical Gazette, died;of influenza. a .The ju ry in tho.M onsoii case a t Edin­

burgh returned a verdict of not guilty.Tlio Italian troops gained a victory in

northeastern Africa over tbo dervishes and 'k illed hundreds. . .

A powder magazine a t W altham abbey exploded, resulting In tho death of several persons and the w ouudingof a num ber of others.-

Cdlonel T. W. Iligginson, essayist, sol­dier and reformer, was 70 years old Friday,■• and held a veceptlon a t bis home hi Cam- britige, Mass. ’ ;• A t Perth Amlmy; X. J ., Georgo Scofield

mistook Janies Johnson for a hurglar and shot him in the neck, inflicting a wound that may prove fatal.

Grip has become epidqmic a t the county poorhtjuse a t Norristown, Pa.,.nnd about 100 of the Inm ates’of th a t institution are- suffering from the disease.

A laudslide near the Roanoke river, on the Norfolk anti .Carolina railroad, caused, a wreck inw hlch tho engineer Was killed and three hrakemen wero injured.Monday, Doc. 35,

Three persous died iri P ittsbu rg of s tar­vation. ■ • • . • •

An armed crank was arrested in Spring­field, Mass..A nickel-steel ingot weighing i50,000 pounds was cast iit Homestead, Pa.

An elevator in tbe- new Stock Exchange iu Chicago fell, fatally injuring four men.

Robert Sutherland, aged 18, and Louisa Ward, aged 10, eloped from Lowell, Mass.

M aria Xaflet, who owns an *11,000 houso in Buffalo, was arrested there charged with shoplifting. .

General X. P. Banks was found wander­ing about. Lynn, Mass;, too ill to give an account of himself.

Threo policemen of *Ironwood, Mich., wero convictvd of stealing supplies from the public relief stores..

W hite miners who are on striko nt Lin­ton, Ind;, threaten to shoot the negroes who have taken their places. -

William Hawley, serving a five yen is’ term for biirglaiy, committed suicide in tbe New Jersey penitentiary a t Trenton by inhaling gjis. •

TueRduy, Dec. 20, .*. There was another an tltax rio t in Sicily.

Chauncey M. Depew returned from Eu- rope.

Chancellor von C’apriyl is said to bo de­sirous of resigning ids office,-

Tho steamer Seneca, for Xew York, re­turned to Havana.w jth her forebold on fire. . . .

Two Scranton (Pa.) police officials were seriously injured iu a battle with drunken Hungarians. \

Alexander Sullivan denied Mrs. Foy’s statem ents implicating him. in the Cronin assassi nation.

H. B. Shields was arrested a t Chicago for kidnaping K. M. Byers, a P ittsburg iiianufactuivr.

Thero is great gratification in Topeka' over the appointm ent of J . C. Wrilson as one of tho Atchison receivers.. A dynamito crank has threatened to

blow up Arm our institu te, Chicago,and to kill Dr. Gunsaulu?*, its president. .

A train-was held up a t Seminole station, in .tho.-Indinu Territory,, by eight despera­does, who robbed tbo mail and express cars anti each.passenger, the robbers escaping.. Wednesday, Dec. 27*

Kansas is overrun with tramps.Smallpox .has broken out in Lowell,

Mass. . . . . .Conrad L. Jordan has returned from

Europe.Auarciiists threaten to blow up the rail­

w ay stations in Paris. • • •Mrs. Andrew Foy, the principal witness

in the Coughlin trial, was cross examined.Ex-Mayor G rant of New York was ap­

pointed receiver for the S t. Nicholas bank. The buildings in tbo. P ittsburg Driving,

park a t t Homewood, P a , were destroyed by f i r e . . ■ '■ ; " .

P resident Cleveland, Secretary G resham ; and Secretary Carlisle are duck hunting on thy Potomac. .

George F. Jam es of Philadelphia, general secretary of the American Society for the Extension of University Teacidug. has re­signed his position.

Mr. Overton Price, lato cashier of the wrecked Citizens' XTational bank of Hills­boro, O., died in Cincinnati from nervous prostration resulting from mortification over tho bank’s failure./ Thursday, Dec. 28.

(Charles Mitchell and his party arrived a t Jacksonville, Fla.-: Tho entiro upper end of Xarrowsburg,

X. Y.,-was swept by fire.The churches of Jersey City are about to

form an organization to rolfevo tho poor, j An Italian la Brooklyn who haa twioo

been shot is supposed to be a Mafia victim, Prince Bismarck la reported to bo suffer­

ing from his old complaint of neuralgia iii 'his arm. ■

I t was roported that .the troops in pursuit of King Lobetiguia bad been annihilated by tho Matabeles. ' . • ; -

Pcop .lewill see hy visiting Johnston 's stationery store, th a t ho luw reduced prices on all ”oods to m ake room for Hoi* it lay Stock. Sole a^ent for Caw’s Dasha-, way fountain pen.^—-Idiy • . ’ .

TH E O PPO SITE SH O R E .

■Notes on Asbury! Pork’s PeopleJEandJiThelr S Boloifs. 2 3 ;

Ilenrv He ii n e tt is huihlirig. five housed on Wir*t Mudison avenue, W est P n rk .^^ r

The an i)ti;d eh rlion for tli rectors o f th e A sbnry Park and '0<m n (irove.B ank w i l l be lieltl on Tue.-d;iy? January M. •

Trnflie on th e electric m ad was delayeil tin hour on Wetlnesdav. cjntvetl. by th e ' broken axle o f a heavily loaded coal wiigon. . ’• •* . ■ :r / ' .

Then.' . will be a nieefing o f tho I'ire- in en 's(Relief Association,; In Waslijngton^ Kngine Ih»u>t% a t H o’clock*Fi’i'«Ijiv'evep.-' ing, December 20. •*• ih ’. A . S. I lu n on nmtle- th e highest; scoro recordetl in t wo years a t Parkers Bowling alley -last Saturday n ig h t—270 ou t o f a.possible 5JU0

The election for directtirs o f tlie First Xation.nl Bank, atul the M onm outh T rust C om piiliy,w ill be held iu .the. offices o f both institu tions on January o . ...

Will jam ,R . Kelsey, formerly o f ’A sln iry Park, am i for some years, past proprietor, o f the hotel a t Chadwicks Station, down on Barnegat Bay, died ^on Alonday, De­cember. 25, * . . . .

One o f the horses belonging to Ira Johnson tV Son th e feedinen, rail away on Tuesday. He ran down Main Street and w hen near Suminerfleld avenue, fell and broke th e shafts. He was seen ret 1 beforo fu rther damage was done.

•Hid. W ardell- won . the -silver handlerl uinbrella for the best guess as to tho vital­ity of th e candle ih.Rockafeller,.*i witidow. l ie said <» days, (> hours, anti 5 minutes, and the actual tim e was Otlays, 5 hours anti 55 miiiutes. -

The m onster candle iu the window of Xewlin’s I Jardware store burned 235* hours, 5{ niinutes am i 40 seconds. • J . C. Reynoltls got the f ir s t. tirize a carpet sweeper, on a guess o f 2*54 liours, 48 m in: utes, ami (5 seconds; anti th e second prize, a pair o f skates, was awarded to J . A. Ap­plegate, h is guess being .241 hours. 551 m inutes uud UI seconds. .

THROUGHOUT T H E ST A T E • i- 'W '■-----

C hicken.thieves are creating sail havoc- am ong th e fowls indhe-v icin ity o f Long Bra n d i. Severn 1 chicken 11 ouses ^have been looted during the past week.yggjtatti

William A . “ Ilank inson and Joseph Thom pson, of Freeholtl, have received $50 each from th e Columbia Bicycle Com­pany*, for capturing a bicycle t’here l a s t ; Summ er. .

(.'ieorg.e Travers ami Sante I.ielitvice, of- Long Ihanch , a re • in the . com ity jail, charged w ith stealing a sleigh, stove and a lo t o f acfoi’s clothing from Jacob Showles. •

Thieyt's.broke in to tin* resident’e’o f Mr. A lexander M aitland, of Long Branch, early on Wednesday m orning last.'. They' bail succeeded in collecting a num ber o f the,preaclierV buoks anti ti lot o f silver-- wtiiv, wIicii t hc 11ouiekcej>er. d is;covered thein ami tiiey wore ■fritrJitencd away, leaving th e ir booty beh ’nd*

William Henry.D eW itt, th e three-vear-'i olt I son o f Charles IL DeWitt, o f Freehold dicti on Saturday after an illnca o f one day . T he chiltl d rank tliree ounces.of whiskey, which he fouiid in ti ’ bottle, and', w ent to sleep alm ost imm ediately. . W hile sleeping oil' the stupifviiijj effects of the liquor,- capihuy' ..bronchitis de­veloped anti the--child tiled shortly aftt»r- : ward. •

A peculiar su it’ involving $:;C(i() was tried beftire Judge Conover a t Freehold, last week, {’hailes II. Leonard.brought suit apainst Wesley B. and Joseph*C; W. Stout on 'a note for th e above am ount, en- dorsetl by R. TenBroeek Stout. The m akers resisted pavincut ott th e grounds th a t Leonard hatl-received . a* bonus o f $150 in violation o f the law*. T he Judge reserved his'decision. ; • •

, A ' F r i e n d l y I . e t t e r .

AVii/rox,' X. Y:,|DecemberdI}, .T u l l i f / e d i to r n j I III' T h lM , — •

Through the k iut I ness o f friends fit the t lrove 1 have seen several copies t»f your attractive paper. . You seem to have an- open Iield and I wish you great success. ;

I am w orking in th e fdurth tpiarfer o f - inv th in l year in chargtr o f ^Villon-Cir- ciut, Troy ( ’onfe'reiice. A gootI degree o f ■ ■success has attended our etforts in a diflir cult Iield. Have recently been favored with a revival, resulting in t lie.w n version of forty-live studsi w ith juosi'e.cts o f many tuVue to follow. Rev, George Clark, of Ocean Grove, spent tw enty days w ith us,' ami won all hearts by bis ellective preach - iug uml persuasive address.- He rendered us m ost valuable .assistance, and we sboiiltl be glad to luive him come again.

A .heavy fa ll: t»f snow, w ith sleet aiul extrem e cold, has overtaken us, ami uv are thankful flu* in-door comforts.' Will have superb sleighing when the roads get well broken. We are happy, iu having ,

■good work, ivndcnou'jh of it.' £ m m Y ou.- with regartl,;

• • “ . ■/ - . S.’ T. H ou'ni-ii.

A S e r i o u s . F a l l .

M is'. 1’hebe Bear more, who resides on .Clark avenue had a seritais fall early W ed­nesday inorning. Sho s tarted -to come, tlown stairs a n d tripped at the. top, pitcli- ing headlong .d o w n -th e staircase, t^he w as unable to rise anti her son helped h e r; out into th e room and she was soon able to move around again, but i t is feared th a t some o f her rit>a may be -broken. •

Rush! Rusht Rustlt.. T ha t:seem s, to lio th e condition in w hich the. Ocean Palucoof I le n ry Stein- Imcli, Asbury Park, can be found every day th is week. T he assortment; o f H oli­day goods is;only eqmdletl by c ity houses, und prices in m any insfiiuces aro even low er;,' Don’t leave your shopping to the last m om ent bu t visit th is estahlisjim ent,; w hile th e assortm ent remain*} la rg e .--.Id r.;

Sliiloii’s Cure, - th e great Cough atul Croup Curt?,' is in great demaiul; Pocket size contains tw enty-five tloses only 25c.* Children love it. Sold by Druggists.

Page 2: OCEAN GROVE TIMES - digifind-it.com · Circulation of This Number IOOO. OCEAN GROVE TIMES t® Best, Advertising; Medium in Ocean Grove VOL. i. NO. 3 5 - OCEAN OROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY,

OCEAN GROVE TIMES—SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1893-

OCEAN Q RO VE T lflE S ,r— I 'U U 1 .I S I I 1: 1 ) i : V I : K v . S A T I • IM IA v A T —

N o . 4 S M a in A v e r in e ,

. W ifsLlAM I I .B l i l 'G l .K , a n d f t( i,li< h c r f

S u b sc rip tio n , One. D ollar p e r Y ear, , ‘ (In A d\nncc.)

' 4 1 - R K T E S O F A D V E R T I S I N G *

Tlie Cry for Alore rion y .

y i ' A c i : .

a tn*

' r\vT:i:ks. Mo n t h s . ;I J - 2 }• 3 I 1 I 2 ' I 3 . I G | . 1 2 . .

7.*, «i \v $\ i» s i o 0,s r» oo : . v 1 i l ' • i rtf. v : . v i v ; -t m i, - r> s o ; \\ w

I lNij I W ‘2 «<»• '2 .Vi, I Iti, ft £*» 7 fjO, 13 00, 1 -J,v 2-1 hlj 2 .-12-V 0 Oil; W IW

.2 7.* :» ii*/ -I'tnv 0 o o i s o o m o o , 22 a » j' 5 2;*' j ft* r»2 'i. 7 o o 11 a v i 7 0» :s m » r :

There is a widespread ri nd-feverish c ry . for/m ore money. M ultitudes Mh-ii* b>. think Uml if a large nililiti«>n o'liM bo m ade. to tho sum toinV of money in th e cMtmtry, it wouM cure the hard times now pressing so heavily upon us. N olh-. ing could be more lallaoums. ! U th e luiyeriim ent should jo int £o00,000,0t'K) in greenbacks; atul National and S tale Hanks should pel ilu* necessary au tho rity atul add a similar amount to tb e ir circulation, il Woulil not im prove m atters in tb e least.

Neither tlu* t lover nine 111 hor tbe bunks a re g<»i U- *«V £iv‘\ t h e ir • m oney a wa>y or eharilahly d istribute it anam ir.tlieneedy.

i s & s f ® s ^ i i - ^ i i s ? » a ( ' n s - i " • * * > * i - i w h i ^ i.M>v siV;t0oiVt:ui«2i |i».2'*ft> r»i«. nm« j nr gul-edge nott.\< and-securities. /. but la- »im 1 - . I " lM j i,< aiivM.ly n ,lr in i!„. u u ik r i , mr.l

1 <oehl-notico?s, 10 eenis per line: «;aeh tiisrr* j hundreds o f thousands apply in vain for. Jloni forlltiyo weelcs »r'm on\ 2'M»'r cent. ;dls- .em ploym ent. TUoso who cim .buy il, do

n o t w a n t . it . fo r t h e y h a v e 110 u se fo r it. T h e y a i v b u i l d ln c .n o n e w m ills , s t a r t i n g

-■ .■yTo c\iniVnM'«iYiM:N 1— \ \e s h a l l ’h e tilu d .to r‘S , n o n o w . . fu e lo r ie s .' em l> :irk in g in n o n e w ootvo H eins o f .m 'u s an d com m m i I e a t Ion*. o n . ; e i t t e r n r is e s e a tlin ir fo r t h e in v e s tm e n t o f

‘ R u b jc c tso f liu m 'v i to th is c o m m u n ity . . : -■• • 1 .U only 011inneidde.nt t in * slu'd* . . . • 1 ’ 1 ‘ ‘ ; 1 ; . V • :

Tho ifuii .li.'iiin' n itil1 a il‘ln»ss o f ' ilu*’ • w r i te r ) l b e > T a r i r t ; m e.ih llers l ia v e m a d e . t l ie :.jphoah1 :»rN*iiinp.iny nil ro> nnn in lc:U tons,;iio l ( fm n fp , ^ u u e e r ta in , t h a t t h e n ie n w h o

n , , . u i y l i i i v c n o i . f : U t l o ;

•' • , | enpi^e in . enterprises Svbere loss is niore;■■-X'vVtlilnw''nil.eominunirhtions oltiie'r;r.»r tlu» 5 likely .to result than' .gain. Theie

cMU or ini or noM> <loiw rt mon t*>. toting v ■ .. * ;• Ktlltor of Tn k.Ti'm i>

Kn r.lV Qlover I foot will pit ri fy you r blood, clear your I’omplexion, regulate your bowels, siml ntake your head elear sin tt bell. -Joe,oOr. Soh 1 by A. • A11 iso n W hite, Pitman aveime. * • ‘ .

T l i u y I n l U j i t 'o u t n w o t O i i t r .s s p i n ; i v .- A s t h o i i f i l t II lu u l n M m ll ; .

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s t r a w b e r r i e s i n b l o o m , p e a s i n p o < l , o n i o n s ; i a d i s l i e s , ; c a r r o t s , j / o t a l o e s a i i d l e t t u c et n e v e r , g e t t h e r e a g a i i i . l i n t t h e ‘ w i w

.!:•;• V 1 i c a d s a r e p a l i i f u l l y c o i i s c i i * t ls • o f . e n o u g l i A f t e r . s p e i i d i n g t l i i s * p l e a s a n t * < l a y i u c o m -

i t l i t . u h n i t l i u n t t i d t U n g ..................................... ..

;/ - j i f . i i m D i 'i i i i l iL 1 ! ' ; a n d i i a v i n g - h w i r d a . ' - i i ' -

, | ) i i l i p n f e r u y i b H t i g ; » . ) ^ v ^ o y e n i b t i i i i a s : ^ 1. l i . i b y f;

o p e i n o i a t i o i r ? o f Q ! ‘ r i s t ' s b i r t h f S y . e r e t i T r n e d

i i p i i i ' e - i i i r t l i e g l o w o f t l i e ^ s t i t l i h g s i t u , M i s s ! A l o s n i J u i ’ r e i u a r k i n g ! “ T i i i s i s . o n e , o f , . t h e .

j i m . s t b l b s s e d C h r i s t m a s - d a y i ? . ; ! h a v e s i x n i t ,

i t lOe^r '^y ti i i ] i t l 1 d ^ i i l . j ’ ' ; •! . , . " v; [. ■ ■■ ■ i w . " .D u i i A - C u o K V i

Isin rctn c 'Ave. 2 Doors fymth Main .1 1 <*. (in(< nt O C K A N G H O V E , X . J .

A l l k i n d s o f f a s h i o n a b l e t u r n o u t s t o . h i r e M x .-e ln l u c i 'o m m i i i l u t i o n s l o r S t m w H i d i n i r p a r tk*.-?; c l o s e d e u t r i a g e s f o r l l n i e n d s a m i w e i h l l n u s K v u u c h < ) t l l e e s — \ V . i t . p L e s l e , n m l C a p t a i n l & i I n e a r ’s T e n t J i o i i s e .T u l e j i h o n e 2 1 1 . . M . K . S K X T O N

BOND and MORTGAGE ■ m S T M O T S ,

$ 1 0 0 0 o n p r o p e r t y w o r t h $ 5 0 0 0 .

$ 1 0 0 0 r u t t e n r o o m h o u s e o n P i l g r i m

P a t h w a y . "

$ 1 3 0 0 o n e i g h t ' r o o m h o u s e , t r o i n e r l o t ,

o n P i l g r i m P a t h w a y ,

$ 3 0 0 0 o n h a n d s o m e p r i v a t e h o u s e o n

C l a r k e a v e n u e , 2 l o t s .

$ 3 0 0 0 o n n i n e t e e n r o o m h o u s e K m ­

b u r y a v e n u e , 2 l o t s .

$ 5 0 0 0 o n h o u s e a n d 2 l o t s o n M a i n

a v e n u e . ^ ‘> 0 0 0 t o . b e u s e d • f o r i m ­

p r o v e m e n t s ' o n t h e p r o j i e H v .

. AIT first-c la ss six per cent, sem i-annual interest with in­surance to cover.

W. H. BEEGLEIVo. 'IS ill si in A v e iiiic , .

O c i ' i i u t « i ' o v ( ' . A . J ,

PARK O pE ^H O U ^E

B a n g s A v c & E m o r y S t

A S B U R Y P A R K .

II. AliBKf, jianap.C o m m e n c e m e n t o f W in te r S tm so n l ’v ices.

. Orehe.slni Seals'ii) ren ts .; .- Orehi-slra Cirele, : tiu m l TiOt*

F n |I re Huleon.v (not reserved);-21. cen ts , Iteservod Souls a t K im m m th ’s I>rtt|».Store,

FRIDAY, DECEMBER.29.Tho Original and Only

H I . H e N R Y ’SFAMOUS M INSTRELS.

3 0 ! B t i n i t C o r k C e l e b r i t i e s . { 3 0

5 p cc tacu lu r and . 5ccnlc Dlsplovs.

S C E N E I X M S U W A Y P L A i S A N C i - . .

St»a i l l ) I nn A rm or, F u n n y d ia m e te rs , .* Mn rei i line <• hid la tors, sp e c ia lly Features,I toy a l IU issai'O tvhes, U n m d MiUlnvy L land ,'

t 'n d e r th e pei>onal .superv ision o f A m eri­cas H euow ned (.'urnt't V irtiio so a m l M in­s tre l A u to cra t,

* H l - r H E N R Y , *^ P r o p r i e t o r 'Q .n .d . Z w E a .a a .a c r o r . -

p E N N ^ Y L V A N l A R A I L R O A D .

O n a n d n f l e r N o v e m h c r 1!». 1S1»*;.

.T it A I Nrt I .K A V K O C K A N ' O ltO V K A X . 1 A S U l 'R V

V A K K — W K K K l l A V S .

F o r X e w Y c a k , a n d N e w a r k «{.*»(», S.L’U, Si.IU n . m . . l . i n . j f . i t u p . n t . ' - •

F o r K l t z j i h e l l i ; i t a h w u y a n d M u h i w a n , II..VI,. I ' . ln , a . m . , t . lt l ,,o . :iO p . m . .

' F o r L o i u r l i r a n e h , s . l i i / t l . 1 0 , l l . t - o i . i n . , l . i o ,7.a*» p . i n . . . . .

F o r Him! I t n n U . |J.o il, 1U ( i a . t n . , I . t o , r * . :i t ip .m . F o r i ' h i i a d e l p h i a , ( b r o a d S t . ) a n d T r e n t o n , u t

T .*•*». a .- i t i . , l'-VJii, 1. 1:1, | i . i i i . .F o r C a m d e n , U n r l m n i o n a m l H o r d e n l o v v n , v i a

• T r e n t o n , j'J.L 'it p . m . • • F o r C a m d e n . u n d P h i l a d e l p h i a , v i a T o m s

l t l v e r , ' - . l U p . i n . , . M o n d a y s a n d S u t u r d u y s o n l y * . ' . .

F o r T o m s K l v e r , I s l a n d H e l j s t U s , n n d I n l e r m e - . . d l a t e s l a t I o n s ; l l . t w , a , i n . , w e e k d a y s . li.iM % p . i n . , M o n d a y s a n d S a t u n l n y s o n l y .

F o r P o i n t P l e a s a n t a n d I n t e r m e d i a t e s t a t i o n s , a t 1 . 12 , a n d l l .U S a . ' t n . , J . t » , .*>.1,1, 7 . 1 3 p i i n . ,

. w e e k - d a y s . .F o r X e w I h u n s w l c k . v i a .M o n m o u M i J u n c t i o n

7 . - l t in .m .f liV JM , l . l t l p . m .T U A i n s i . k a v k n k w v o 'i t t c ( v l a 'D o s h r o s s e s a u d

C o r t i a n d t S t s . , f e r r i e s ) f o u o c k a n u u o v k 'A N t l A H U U ItY - l ’ A l t K .

A I K . 10 , a . i n . , i L M JO .in .i l . l i ) ,o . l l l .n n d l i s M p . - m S u n d a y s , | i.M a ; m . , . \ M p . i n . '

• O n . S u m l a y s w i l l s t o p a t I n t e r l a k e n a n d A v o n l u p l a c e o f X o r t h A s h u r y P a r k a n d A s h u r y P a r k t o le t o i l * p a s s e n g e r s

T i t a i n s ,1/ K a v e I ' J i i i . A n K i . f i U A ( I l r o a d S t . , ) 'K O Il A S H C U V 1* A l t K — W K R K D A Y S .

A t S .2 JI , t l . l t a , m . , - 1.0 0 , p . m . M a r k e t S t r e e t W h a r f , v i a l . ' a m d e n a m i T r e n t o n , 7 .2 0 , a n d llt fW a . i n . , V i n C a m d e n a n d J a m e s h u r i r , 7 ,13 ) a . in . ,- M X ) p . m . •

F O H A V A K I 1 I X O T O X A X I » T I I E S O U T H .

F o r H a l t l m o r e a n d N V a s h l n g t o n , a..K>, 7 .2D , K .a i , 1 1 .10 , |o .2ti, 1 1 . I K a . n i . , 1 2 . 0 ( l2 . : t . l . I . l t u i t r .

■ o i l , J i l n l t i n C a r , ) l . :« i , a . m , M l , ( .5 .10 C o n - u r r s s l o n a l I . l m l t e d . P u l l m a n P a r l o r C a r s a n d D i n i n g C a r ) « .1 7 j i , '» . 1 .7 .I O a m i 1 1 . 1 0 p . m . w e e k - c a y s . S u n d a y s , a..H ). 7 .2» i, O .lti, 1 1 . 1 8 a . m . , 1 2 . 1 0 . 1 . 1 1 , <$..>),'7.10 a n d 1 1 . ^ 1 p . i n .

T i n t e - i n h i e s o f a l l o i l i e r t n i l n s o f t h e s y s ­t e m m a y h e o h t a i n e d u t l l i c t i c k e t - o l l l c e o r s t a t i o n s , .1. U. Wood, C v u 'l /Vm.v. a a t . K . M . P H K V U S T , f .V a V Manayer.'J \ J E W Y O R K f t 1 . 0 ,N O ' P R A N C H R . R .

T i i n e T a h l i v i n e l l * s e t . O c t o b e r 1 5 , IS!i:t.

S t a t i o n s i n X e w Y o r k — C e n t m l H a i f r o a d o t X e w . I c i s e y , f o o t o f L i b e r t y S t r e e t , P . H . 1 1 . , f«>ot o f C o r t i a n d t n m l I ) c s l m » s s e s - S t r e e t s ; X . . 1 . S o i i t i i e r n . H a l l w a y , f o o t o f l t e e t o r S t . -

• I .K A V K N FAV • YO K K I *0 u O C I i A N O K O V K . A c . C e n t m l H . H . o r X . J . — I.:# l, 8 . 1 . 1 , M :* n « ; i n . l.'U),•1.1.1, I.W, • 1.2*), 0.lit p. m.P e n n s y l v a n i a — I M o ,» . n i . , 1 2 . 1 0 , * ;l , 10 , . 1 . 1 0 , 1 1 . 1 5 .

p . m . -

I .K A V B O C K A N « ;n o .V K F O It N K W Y O U K , &c C e n t m l 1 1 . H . o f X . ' J . — 0 .1 a,- *S.0<>, i i ; 0 5 a . i n . ,

2 . 1 0 , 4 .nrt.'iv-tt>p . m . 'P e n n s y l v a n i a — 0..K), *8 .2 u , H.IO, a . m . , 1 . 1 0 , .l.:R),

| » .tn ,F o r P h i l a d e l p h i a a m i T r e n t o n , v i a . P o u n d

I ) r o o k H o u t i* — 0 . 1 0 , S.tHi. a . i n . , 2 . 1 0 , J.tK) p . m . F o r I t e l u m i v S p r i n g I j i k e , M u n n s u u a n — 7 .H )

' 7 ..10 , 1 0 . 1 2 , 1 1.O S, a . i n . , I2 .2H , 1 . 1 8 , 2 . W , a . 'J s , :i . ■»; 5 . lo , 0 . t « , 7 . 1 a , 8 . i a . p .n i .

M a n a s i | u a n a n d P o i n t P l e a s a n t — 7 * 10 , 1 0 , 1 2 i t . a s , a . m „ l . i s , 2 . 1a , a . i s , . i . i . i . i u d 7 . i a , 8 j a p . m .

F o r F i x 'c h o i d , T r e n t o u a n d P h i l a d e ) p h l a , v i a .

S e a O h 1 — i i . m , , 1 2 .2 0 ,a . .7 7 . p . i n . .F o r F r e e h o l d a n d I n t e r m e d i a t e - s l a t I o n s — .‘1.28

p . i n . - • •F o r T o m s H I v e r — 1 1 , (W, a . i n . .F o r U n m l c n a i i d I n t e r m e d i a t e s t a t i o n s v i a S e a

. S h o r e H o u t e , o n M o n d a y s a n d S a t u r d a y s o n l y , 2 . 1.‘l p . i n .

— ♦ E x p r e s s . ■ I I U F U S U I . O I K J E T T , S a n f .I I . P . IJAIjDW 1 X , (S. P. A., C. It. Jl. of Av. J .

J . H . W O U I ) , Cfcti'l J ‘tiK; A(/t- J ’eiitia. Jt.Ii.

' Avails For Ocean Grove. 'M A 1I .S C I.O S K F O U

X e w Y o r k a n d t h e E a s t , — 7.a0, J0 . :J0 a . m . 12 .0 0 j i .. ' o.oo i'.M .

F o r P h i l a d e l p h i a W e s t a n d S o u t h . — 7.:}0 , A . M . , 12 .0 11 M ., a.lU l, t5 .ll! i* , >t.

F o r A s b n r y P a r k . — 7.-‘lO a . M „ 1 2 .0 0 5 1 .,0 .0 0 I’ .M .M A I I .S A U U f V K F ltO M

X e w Y o r k u n d . t h e J y i s t — 7 .J10 , lU.OO A . M ., a .W , ( J .p i l*. M .

F r o m I 'h l l a d e l p U l a W e s t a n d S m U l * - 7 . ‘.V0,- t l . 2‘1 a . m .. a .t ia , i i,h i i*. m .

F r o m A s b u r y P a r k . — 7.:!U a . .m . , a .:!0 ,0 .t jO I* , m .P o M u l l i c e o p e n s 7 a . i n . , a n d c l o s e s 7 .:t0 p . m .

D E A I . E l i s I X

Meats & Poultry.l i >6 Ilo ck A venue, corner• W liitcficld,

! . « c u a . \ ( a t o v i ; , iv. j .Presh Stock. Prompt Service.

' ' ■. Free Delivery. .

This is the Trade-Mark of4 H _ . f V H N G I L . L U i A £ e

o i l f O U I N O K A C O K l ’ I s K , a f i n e b l e n d , f r n g m n t m i d t l e l i e i o u a ;He Sells (TKM (iI.KKX AXI) ,B L A C K , f o r f l a v o r u n e x c e l l e d . !

; ;. r s ^ E x r s r .Olin Street ancl Central Avenue.

^The Cosmopolitan Magazine ^• AND T H E •

O C 6 K N G R O M E T I M E S .ISotlh. for $ 2 . 0 0 a. T e a r !

THEORiOAT .1LLUSTRATED MONTHLIES luiv.o iu tlie past sold for $4.00 ;i year. It w as a w ontley to .printers h o w ’Tlie Cosm opolitan, w ith itsy ea r ly 1530 pages of read­ing'm atter b y th e greatest writers o f t h e w orld, and its .1200 illustrations h y clever artists, could h e furnished for $3.00 a y ea r .. In January last it p u t in th e m ost per­fect: magazine p rin tin g 'plant, in tho w orld, and now com es w hat is really a wonder: >

lA/e W ill cut the price of fehe iVJagazine iri Ijalf fou

We will send you TIIK -COSMOPOLITAN MAtiAZIN'K, which bus tbe strongest statVof regular contrUnUors of. any .extslinj; penodwal, and

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EMPORIUM,

M ill 1 1 1 IIIE ' . ;. OGMI ilW l, ;

BARGAIN SA LES EVERY W EEK .

T I L T O K , .C e n t r a l - t i v e r y - an d , - B o a r d in g s t a M e s ,

M O N R O E AND COOKM AN .-AVENUE, Opp. I M . S i. n ihhjr,

ASBURY PARK, N. J.Fifty New Stalls and Several Uox Stalls' lot Hoarders. Paces Reasonable. Go(A

Care and Accommodations, Telephone. Connection.

CHRISTMAS GREENS

N. !■:. rn. CU A NON. OHO. A. SMOCK.

BUCHAHOK & SMOCK,W h o l e s a l e a n d H e i a t l D e a l e i s h i

Builder’s Hardware, Paints and Oils,

Corner Main St. and Asbury Avenue, A S B U R Y PA RK, N. J . ‘

O U R S P E C I A L T I E S .

A d a m a n t W a l l P l a s t e r , O u r o w n M T ^ r ,

o f C e d a r S h i n g l t v , K i n g ’ s W i n d s o r

“ C e m e n t P l a s t e r , M O d a r S t a b l e B e d d i n g .

Jliwtletoo, W ild S in ilax , lla ^ n o lin and P a lm Leaves, . S p a n i s h I K c . H o l ly , Cedar and Ijaiirel.

A ll a t Moderate Prices. • .•S/ST i)n t IPfowert* kit A f t T im a s .C o m e a n d c o n s u l t w i t l i m e a b o u t y o u r D e c o m t i o n s ' ,

G EO R G E R, KNAPP, Main Street Green Houses,

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

T o C y c l i s t s 0Poe.- the X leldeon .vour wheel ruM lu spite,

OfKOod eaiv? (Jet a hot tie of

li costs lail ijfl em its aud It will save you a world of liihor and anxiety.:and Man ah.solute jirotectloii froni dam pness; fo<Jr.and nll'n.. Oiie appllealloh. a m onth * Is ?iUlllclent.M Price TjOieuatii;-:. For sale hy' . r. 1v=--.:r*

^ ^ w . h . b e Ie g l e , : : £N o . 1S ^In 1 n A vm 111v;. Ocuun ( < rp\*(i, X ; J ;

BICYCLES.C ushion Tire,.26 inch, nearly n ew , $ i j.

T w o 28 inch, Pneum atic Tire Com binations, $}o .O ne 1892 W arwick, Pneumatic Tires, $45.

T w o B oy’s W heels, 24 inch, Pneum atic Tires, #25,

Good track for use of beginners, iessoiis, fifty cents each. Tandem and Wheels to rent. :

Page 3: OCEAN GROVE TIMES - digifind-it.com · Circulation of This Number IOOO. OCEAN GROVE TIMES t® Best, Advertising; Medium in Ocean Grove VOL. i. NO. 3 5 - OCEAN OROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY,

. G C E A N ( Q R O V E T I M E S — S A T U R D A Y , D E C E H B E R j o , 1 8 9 3

A. R SH R E V E S ,CITY VS. COUNTR':■ Influences of Large Towns* Detrimental to Per-

..fect Physical and Horn! uevciopment.7. . Biiootf.vx, N. Y., Itecti 21}, 1«!)«..; A t tt rather early nt»rioil ol* my lifo qiiite itn unfortunate tiling happened to: ji\e.in thw.«ity~-I wtw 6orn here.. Tliat it would Imvo been u decided ad-

- vantage to nic not to have been born nt all, lioni or el«e whore, I Imve often.figured out, but whal. I jmceinllv hold against tlio gods nnd the other “ Iiiuli tontrncting particM” rcsponmblo- for putting mo “ in evidence” . hhii human unit on uuh terreH- trial Hpherb; ia that, having arranged to •bring Jne out’ of chaos into being, they {•elected a eity,. and a big “chump*' of a

••city at that, ‘for my birthplace, instead of location m y debut; out in tlie country whei'e alone'mundane conditions •enable, one to get a proper, or promising start on life’s journey..;5 -Blessed are,the.meek, and tlie merciful and the other •‘unco’ guid” of Karth-H population; but for a downright, genuine, gilt edge*! beatitude commend me to tliis; one, "Blessed are the country born, for they shall inherit health,” the sweetest boon,’.and surest basis of mortal happi­ness. .Nurtured;al' Nature’s breast they shall imbibe a rtijiyed rectitude, and a mental ami jihysual robustness where­with to meet the ills of existence, that shall assure whatever of • success is possible -to ;tlie sons of men, “ in the .world's liroad Held of battle.”

And accursed from bis mother's womb is thut scupe*goat of the fates, a city-born, boy. liis youthful Juind < I war fed and

'stunted by fhe circumscribed boundaries of his linck antim ortar environment, his. young soiil forever feUcved in its natural

.aspirations by llnding nothing to feed on ‘save tho human seUlshness all about him; his bodily vigor and growth hindered in

- Ua development l\v t he polluted air he breathes and the other ad verse conditions he.is snbjeeted to, of which it may be said : “The trail of-the spoiler is over them all,” foreordaining him to . inevita­ble failure in the arena of life'' where brains, clmraetcrand vitality of the high- e?*t order are required to win or wear the. prizes at stake. • • • . •

1 have' been siumtliiig. several months in Brooklyn aiul Now York noting tbe local features of these two great cities, and the more 1 sec of them the more J won­der at that mad infatuation of tbe human race to huddle together in large towns. A wide spread impression prevails in other parts-of tho land that your New Yorker or Brooklynite is somehow a superior being, possessing gumption, get

u p , and all the admirable qualities of hu­man nature.to au exceptional degree. I waiit to dispel that delusion a t once.

• Among the higher classes of the metropolis sind its Long Island annex* who have trav- vled and have shaken oil* their local iden­tity niore or less, there are to be found

'many person* of marked worth and intelli­gence; but taking the-average middle or

. lo w er class inhabitant of New York or , Brooklyn; as be or she is found in. their native fair; aud earth cannotshow tip big­ger John or Jenny donkeys than these. Your true ( iotbamite.is saturated with the egotistical, idet that, nothing oiitaido of (i'othanris worth noticing or knowing; . hence he only burdens his alleged mind

: with mat ters and facts of local import, and is as igiiomut of the general news of the

wol'ld as a Hottentot is.: The denizens of the densely crowded districts of these two large cities are as distinct a race of beings as the Tartars or Cossacks of Asia. Then* servile, automatic, hand to mouth struggle for existence, year in iind year out, with­out variableness or shadow of turning, makes meie human machines out of most of them, devoid of individuality, inven­tion or.even ordinary animal intelligence. They are the vast, army of day laborers, clerks and toiling vassals o f one kind and another who work their lives away in the service of this or that company or con­cern having use for .white slaves ns help. Thousands of these serfs, now old men or wornon*‘.found employment in certain stores, o likes or factories years ago as errand boys or girls, aiid continue yet, without promotion worth mentioning’, to totter daily to tlieir tasks for a beegarly pittance in wages just sullicient to buy a scant supply of food, pay a tenement hoiise rent, and keep a “shabby genteel” outlit bf clothes on their backs. I have often stood at the ferries or the bridge here, ill; open mouthed amazement, watching the. swarms of bondmen and bondwomen hurrying in the'm orning tp their work, o r listening back to their homes a t night, my wonder being that creatures in tho form of God bn high should rest content to go on like tread

m ill horses, grinding out the same weary round of toil, their lives through, as the )U ice or penally of casting their lot in a great-city, when the whole boundless continent was‘open to them , to choose a rnitiUn/ houH!, and be happy, healthy, independent and prosperous. *

L have said these city serfs were a dis­tinct people aiul mean by this they take on a peculiar cast of ignonince, of dialect, manners am I appearance as-1 he result of j their circumscribed and monotonous ex­istence. I ciln tell one of t hese Uotham- ized or Brooklynized Yahoos as far as I can see or hear them. They all have the suppressed look of people used to service, and yet every blessed one of them, out of work*ing hours, carries; a ballast of sly conceit that seems to say to im onlooker: “ Gaze a t me in awe; 1 am a New Yorker.” Tiiey all have a >*lang jargon of Speech never heard elsewhere, ainl a llasliv, cheap; tailor-made aspect as to their apparel* never.seen elsewhere. Talk with one of them and it will stick out like a rabbits ears, in less than two minutes, that they have knowledge onlv of their immediate environment, and fuive eves, ears and understanding only for tlieir local'iiflail's.' It is customary to speak of country people as being “ provincial;” but the term is misapplied; in the foregoing cbnheetipn. Your average country, man may bo somewhat deficient as to actual observation of m atters. outside his own bailiwick, but h e is in ninety-nine cases out of a hutidrcjl aii o'mniveVous reader, •aiid possesses book knowledge .o f every thing worth knowing. And it may be added that he is rapidly becoming a trav­eler too. There is not; a county, village or settlement of the North but habitually fills its quota nowadays in the grand armv of nomads moving .up and down the earth with trite American curiosity to see what, is to be seen hither and yon in this big world of ours. But curiosity is an un­known quantity, in your nvenige New Yorker, lie knows or cares for no world beyond Ids own ward. There’s nothing outside, of “ town” tlmt to him is v'orth. know ing; apd as for reading, lie don’t havo either time or taste -lor that, lie reads Vde paper” every day, and “dat settles it.” If when his da'ily grind of service is done, the nightly resort to some .neighboring saloon is ever deviated from,, * ‘de Tecatro* ’ comes, in lor a visit; iind so be lives and moves and has his being in

S u c c e s s o r l o T A y r . O R A I l Y N O ,

UKAl.KI: IN

Stoves and R angeT in Itoofin^ , (< ii(lei'ing

miiiI JCe|ihiriii^. .H ot Aiv l'u n iactH , E sti­mate*! Ciiven o n S team and H ot W a ter H eaters, and; Hot. A ir and H ot W a ter C om bination Heater*.

South Main Street,Opposite Ocoan Grove Gates

a s b u r v ; p a r k

S S J l S S f = & & E 8 !§ S g !$PQftpmtii' Ocean Grove Srlumf lfnu.tr.

• B e it Q u a l i t y o f : § f c a t i O n ly !

H e w B u i l d i n g ,

50, FOR A G ftSE IT W> UL~N OT CURE. BA n agreeable Laxativo. and N euve Tonic.

Sold by Druggleta o r sen t by mall. 25c.,60c. and $1.00 p e rpackago. samples free.W A Tho Pavorito 500TH 50TOHBJkjL v U . V for tho Teeth and Breath, 25c.'

C a p ta in Swocnoy, U.S.A., San Diego,Cal., says: “ Shiloh's C atarrh Remedy ia tho llrafc medicine I havo over found tb a t w ould do mo' any good.” Prico 60 eta. Sold by Druggists.

SH ILO H ’S c u r e ;Tina G reat Conon Ctmn promptly cures

'WhoroaUothcrsfnll. For Consumption it haa no rJval: has cured thousands, ana •wilt cmta you. If taken tntlmo. Price25 cts., 60eta., 51.Q9.

Olin• Street and IVUhair. Ave.

George. U , Bennett, ' ^ P : A I N T I N G P ^

IN ALL IT S B R A N C H E S ,... ; -y\ .. Lock. Box,2132^ ,

Ocean Grove, N. J.

OCEAN G RO VE, N. J

A fu ll a n d com ple te line•‘ . J t f K R R B N - B R O W tS I , ':1 »•*

} ’•}1’ ‘ O CEA N GROV E, N; j , •• 'AU.kinds ot repiiire receive prompt atienlien.

: Clinrgos modonite, ; . ::V:: ;

G R EA T B A R G A IN S ,.KOKSALM.—New six r.miit housi* m ur llu- OatfSi H«w«t nml WaiCr t'onncftloris. gl.vw. limy In? l«Hight on very nisy. terms.MXC’ir.A XtJIv,—< !»mm1 I .tit, . 2.1x10') feel on Xurtli tjlli slreCt,: Newark l«»r lot .In t.icniu Orove, . • . •

■''KXCH A N< »!•:.—;Twr* lols’oit StorUtotn*veinip Oim'joi CJnJVfj.n lii| in Hntdley. Hnieli,or two lots ih nelniar, lor nlee Utile. roti«*:i* in tienoi Kmve< .; •• ' "* '..*' ' , *:’ l - ' O U S . M 11 r>tTi7«ss IMtoltwi-jipliers $*.: fiiiillshtui’nt In Asimry .park,- wMliuppamtns nnd Mx.mres i-oinplele. ; ; : ' • ; •

KorSaiO*) Imn si'll iTyjilen'lhl lioiMe.on IMt- nmn avenne, witli two lot.** and I’nrnlslied throiiKiiont. This Is c-outrully loejileil.rmul lms artesian- water aiid sewer eoii licet ions, The price for lids pi*oporly Is very low* .*. It Is not oflcn that a nle/s private fottace on that Aver popular Ihoroimlifaie, Oeean l’jith- way can bo mireliascd. I mil now otrerlntr one nt a lowlfifure and. will lie pleased to fur­nish full Information upon application; W.non the Xow Auditorium gets under way property thero will nipidly InercaKc In value.

FORSATiK—Ijidlcs' l.llicrly llleyele, nearly new, cost $150.. cheap. Apply 18 Main avenue.KOlt S A I.K—Two cliolce lots cornHroad­way and I*awrenee avenue, Oooil place for an till the year mil nd. residence, IJ round ’ hlith, outlook . wchI want over the line yard of It T. Stout, und eastward to the oeean.KOH.SAI.K—A. 12 rtioiu house near the Au< dllorluin. Sewer and Materconnections, and furnisluHt. ’Price £MXW.,;lerins to Suit.

. TO \ jK T - - Desirahle Klat, 7 rooms and hath, all conveniences; rorncr Cnukman avenue, and Uohtl st., Ashury Park. II. II. Johnson.KOH SAI.K.—To close an csliile, properly nt. No.*5 Olin st, :t doors from the tieenn.- Klyht rouiiis. sewer ami water, price 51*/Hi;

" KOlt sAl.K.—-On Knmklin avenue near 1*11- irrlm I'atliway.iV very deslra hie 'iy , story, plas- tored house with 7 main*, sewer"nnd water. 1‘rlee onlySlojjtiaiul terms easy. .

of evorything- .reciuired to

J . S . F L IT C R O F T &. BR O .,

SANITARY -- PLUMBERSfurnish a house, including-

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

Jpn2 3 j;;C0 3 I N T E Y : ^•• One'Cowa1.Milk for Infants and Invalids.; ’

: -Box J]!).'], • Asbury Park»; o r ; box 303; • Ocean Grove. Mi IkDepot, .Lawrence ave... between Main and.Bioadway Gate, Ocean G ro ve. I Telephone. Gonnectionv ' v.. -.

G’arpets, M attings ancl Oil AND DK.M.lilW I S '

S to v e s and R an ges,O p p o s l t o r p s t o m c e ,

'.5Oiptlis;

Bedroom Suits.from $12. up.

Folding Beds at 88.

And One That is Grand to BeholdT h e T ^ t l c m t i c ^ o u s e ,

Hench and Pitman Avciiues; . Ocoan Q-rovo, - iTo*w Torcoy.

Steam Heat, 1’ure Water,' Sun Parlors, Klectrlc LIjdil, Kates Reasonable. ‘

Will be openall the year undnr the proprie­tor’s manugement.' T. X3T. B E C K E T T .

-; . W hiclv on ly 'half describes our elegant : w in d o w sand their , contents.; You m ust see them i n .order to: derive any benefit from their b ea u ty .. ' •

; W ithin our store w e can sh o w you such a bew ilder­ing line of Holiday G oods as w ill alm ost dazzle you, and anyone w ould be hard to please w ho could not find here som e suitable gift. . •

; Our grand offer of beautiful Silverware w ith e v e ry $10, $20, $2^; $30 of worth of goods purchased for CASH is attracting trade from far aw ay, from the fact that these beautiful articles make handsom e g ifts in them selves, and as w e-shall continue the offer until January F irst,every­one should take advantage of it.

In order to reduce our large stock of LADIES’ COATS, MEN’S and BOY’S SUITS and OVERCOATS, w e w ill con ­tinue to offer them m uch.below their value, and regardless of cost. Economical buyers should visit us, but everyone is invited tO vtake -a look at our grand H oliday Display; th is

I .t» t w o r t h $ 1000, t i l l e r e d f o r 10 d a y s f o r S d i a . W I L L I A M H . H K K t J L K ,

. N o . i s M a i n A v e n u e , O c e a n O r o v e

A. G RAVATT,

cijG + V ienna + b s k 6ryB r e a d , P i e a n d F a n c y C a k e , .

S o u t h M t t ln S t r e e t , O p p o s i t e B r o a d w a y O a t e s ,

^.£323XTivi"sr '3iT. x .O R D E R S P R O M P T L Y A T T E N D E D T O

N o . 7*0 M a i n A v e n t k , P c k a n O i i d v r

M oney to Loan on Mortgage* Collages

for R en t or. Sale. Insurance Placed

in most Reliable Companies.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30TH

T l i i s i S p a c e R e s e r v e d t o r

GENUJSTG & CO

PALACE,

fla in Street arid Cookman AvenueJohn E. Inskip,

•. B r ic k Store,

Olin S t., and Pitm an Ave. O cean <«rove, J .

Main St. & Second Ave.

LADI E S ’ A TTEN TIO N !(D c c a r i ^ r o v 'c , K . g

tii m u d Closing Out .Sale o ff^ u lic s ’ H isses aud C liildreii’s/'jrpt-C/ass Materials' only. Lead and

Oil used. jYo patent paints to fade. .

Estimates Cheerfully Given. .

H a v i n g c o n c l u d e t l t o c o n t l o c m y s e l f I n I h i a r o t o t h e s a l e o f H A T S a n d S H O E S f o r M E N n n d

B O Y S . 1 n o w o i l e r m y e n t i r e s t o c k o f L A D I E S ’ M I S S E S a n d C H I L D R E N S H O E S A T G E N U I N E B A R G A I N P R I C E S . - /

v $2000will buy a very nice property on AVebb avenuo near Pilgrim Putlnvay; provided tho decision ia made soon. I t is a well built house of 9 rooms, plas­tered throughout, with sower and artesian water connections, and fur­nished. I t cost the present owner from seven to eight hundred.' dollars moro than he asks but money ia needed and tho house iiiust go. P rice §lit)00. §500 cash, balance bn mortgage.

W H . H. B E E G L E ,4 8 'r ia in A v en tie , O cean G rove.

live hundred dollarii ($500) to those who’

I n o r d e r l o m a k e 1 1 I n t c r e s t | u « : f o r e v e r y b o d y d u r i n g t i l l s n U o - 1 w i l l a l s o , .s e ll h A T S

f ’ a n d S H O E S f o r M E N a n d B O Y S a l C U T P R I C E S .

Kmpiiru of Charles linger*;, • I Und I by

TDj’ Q Cookman A ve., and Bond St,1 . i l ' ■ Asbury Park.POR7VtERLV PIUGRiM PKTHWKY, pCEKNiCROl-'B. '

V ' .V';. -

' ■ -- v - .

. V : . : '■ , .. v '

' ;,V■■: '

w M * ^ W £ W § S Ii s ® #

Page 4: OCEAN GROVE TIMES - digifind-it.com · Circulation of This Number IOOO. OCEAN GROVE TIMES t® Best, Advertising; Medium in Ocean Grove VOL. i. NO. 3 5 - OCEAN OROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY,

OCEAN GROVE TIMES—SATURDAY, DECEMBER joy 1893

N E W E N G L A N D G O E S U N D E R . I H ) T A l , ' r| ’ K T> M E L L O . T J R A D L E Y

t h e : W l C T H E R O Y T R Y I N G T O F O R C E M B p A r . H '

HIM INTO A FioHT. . : :

f S A V E D B Y F I R E M E N . JJotet and R e sta u r a n t,T09 MATTISON AVENUE, .

ASBURY PARK, N.J.l.’< nil fi.» !• t a bfy. Fu r h I si 1 ed Rooms’by I he 1 my or

’Tiicmms C. PliitfcAppointed Temporary.It«oolvor ITortho '

' ; ALiiAxv, Dec. 28.—JudgeW nl inco affixed J i’i.s s ig n a tu re to / nil o rder tak ing tho New- Y ork and XewI«hi g land ' railroad o u t of tho m anageria l h an d s of 1 ’resident A. A ; M c­Leod iu id p lac in g i t in i lie caro of ex-Sena-, to r T. C ..P la t t , one of jh e road’s d irectors, and s tock holders.' The - app 'b in tm cut of. th o receiver was.^the refiiilt of sonni qu ie t, w o rk done by a com m ittee appo in ted tb

: ra ise money w herew ith to' m eet a n in te r - es t paj'ineiit pf $130,000 d u b on Jah ; l . Tho m oney could n o t’.buvobtained, nm l as the coin in it tee is m ade up o fan ti-M eL ebd men they determ ined to th w a r t an y a tte m p t oil the p a r t of th tvpresident: to be appointed

^t-eceiver;. . .-•/-'. v:-'-. V : ; •:";. 'N k w J Ia v k n , Dec. 2 & -W ill la m K . Lor- Ing of B oston and C harles 0 . P erk in s of . I la r tfb rd , counsel -f«.r Mlu* tru s te e s .o f the second m o rtg ag e bondholders of tho New- Y ork and 2<ew knuhlH d road, called iipon

! J udge'Ay i 1 Hum K . T t»w use 1 id p f t iiQ.Un I ted S ta te s c o u r t here aud iled.aii application for a tem p o ra ry roe-iversh ip fo r tbo Oon- n e c L lc n t in te r e s ts /T n e a tto rn ey s ' s tated; tlm t th e p roperty of t lie ro a d w a s in danger of being attached , it iC o n n ec tic u t; an d t o 1 p ro tec t th e bondholders a rece iv e r , was asked for. ' J u d g e T ow nsend;appointed as ' receiver for tins C onnec ticu t-in te rests AVil-, liam T. H arb.of Bbstbii; / •.

ir lFT Y ^ W ER E IN PAN.GER iN A BURN •■'.V ■ ING’, O F F IC E . BUILDING.

Tho In su rg en t A dniirnl Avoids Polxoto’s Dynuiiilto TIiroH’c r and Goo* A ftor Con- ’vlctfl to Ito e ru lt lfin Crow—Njiv’rtl'Bftttle

■ la Expcctod, :Y

. . P e u s A M D U C O , D e c . 2 0 . ~ T h e s i t u a t i p i i bi- a f f a i r s h a s v e r y m a t e r i a l l y c h a n g e d i i r t h l s . c i t y w i t h i n t h e : . I n s t f e w h o u r s . U n t i l

M o n d a y m o r n i n g P e r b n m l n i c o b e l i e v e d - t h a t i t s h a r b o r ' w a s t o b e t h o s c e n e o f • t l i e

/ f i r s fc b i g n a v a l b a t t l e l i e t w e e i i \ t h o : R e p u l ) v

l i c a , - A d m i r a l . - M e l l o ’ i*. b e s t w a r s h i p , a t i d

t h e A q u i d a l i a n ; h e r c t i m p n n i o n ! r e b e l 's h ip * o i i t h e o n e s i d e , a m V t i i e N i c t h c r o y , P r e s i ­d e n t , P e i x o t o ’ s . d y n a m i t e g u n c r u i s o r , o n

t h e o t h e r . T h i s b e l i e f w a s a m p l y J u s t i f i e d

b y t h e r e p o r t r e c e i v e d . a f e w , d a y s a g o o t i a p p a r e u t l y g o o d a u t h o r i t y t h a t t h o R o p u b -

• lica and tho A qiiidabau had been seen b li­th e B razil inn coast headed' n b r th w ard, and appa ren tly .bound for P ernam buco , as. if tb, •take th e N ictlieroy by stirpriso audco m p el h e r to lig h t .w ithout a chance o f p u tt in g to

■"•sea. ... > ' ■ ; I.'., ■L a te r new s received ' here changed the

w hole a sp e c t. of affairs. T he rebeL w ar­ships, i t w as th e n .le a rn e d , w ere n o t oii; .th e ir * w ay to P e rn a m b u c o ;b u t : ; on ' tiib, con trary had .sailed :tow ard tlio m ountain* ■

.‘ous and rugged island of Fet’natulo de Np- \ ronha, w hero there is a largo Vonvict! set­

tlem entA fto r C onylo t.K ocrults,. ; . ; -

.The is land , despite ;its j ruggedness, pos-. sesses considerable fe rtility , a n d .its se v e ra l. harlibrs, defended' by fo rts ,' wo'Uld .enable M ello to m ake a. vigorous res is tance i f iit-; tacked. -.The revo lu tionary 'a d iu ira l’s 'o b ­je c t in going to F e rn an d o .do Nbronhri; w h ich , is over •100 m iles from th e m ain const of B razil, is to, com pel ,as m a n y able- bodied convicts as .ho. can find in th e set­tlem en t to go .aboard his" vessels am i join tlieir. crew s; I t is sa id t h a t1 ii’c; ex p ec ts .tb ‘ secure n o t less t han 1,000 nien lu th is wriy,'

Upon the receipt of th is pew s aboard the N ictheroy thero was' g re a t ac tiv ity notice­able. M em bers of - the crew wero sen t ashore in sm all; boats to search th ro u g h th e : tow n for such o f th e N ic theroy!s’men'.

; ns had been' allow ed leave to land an d to h u rry th em back to tlio vessel. ’T h e coiu-r m and ing oflicer of th e N ictheroy had ai)- p a ren tly received fu l l ‘ in s tru c tio n s , a s to• how; he,shou ld ac t in such,- nn etnergencyi and these in s truc tions , i t is believed, w ere/ to tlie effect th a t ifs he becamo convinced ; th a t the rep o rt of th e coining^ to P e rn a m ­buco of th e I ie p u b lia i and th e A quidaban proved to be u u tru e , and th a t tlieso ves­sels, in stead of seeking,' \vero; evading fight, ho should.lose no fu r th e r tim e, b u t • ■put to sea a t once an d force th em in to a n av a l con test for super i or i t y. . = '

T ills view o f the case proved to bo correc t,. fo r ’ when, a i r the m en . belonging to the N ictheroyJs crew had been; g o tten aboard th e . governm en t battlesh ip , she w eighed anchor, s team ed 'o u t to sea and pointed h e r nose fo r th e no rtheast. ' v • - -•

T he A ssociated P ress co rresponden t is •reliably in fo rm ed th a t the N ictheroy’s destina tion is tho island of F ern an d o de'. N orouha. I f th is in fo rm ation is correct, th e ,long expected sea b a ttle betw een the revo lu tio n ist and . th e governm ent: Avar vessels 'w ill in a ll p robab ility be fo u g h t’ w ith in a sh o rt tim e. . . ,

T o s t O n i c c r - B o x 2092, O c e a n C Jrcv

0 3 ® A I , 9 W d l ) © ! ) A K E )

( O H A I K ^ D A I L c . .

j la i i t bfTicc—M ntlisoif Avenue ' opposite tlie F ir s t N ational Bank’yv Ar<bury.P nrk . Ocean Grove Branch a t S tiles’ K xpress O ffice; • '• "V .V-V.

BRICK BUILDINGC o r n e r C o o ltn ia n Ayoiiuo n n d B o n d S t .

A sburv l*arl>.

-A ll t l io la t e s t d e s ig n s i i i ld ' 110

in W n to b e s a n d J e w e l r y .WAITE ON PROFANITY.

COAL, WOOD AND CHARCOAL

y a r d — g o u t h 7Vlain S t . ,■ ; - f o k -tt •

Stoves,Kapges, Heaters,T?.ui'- naces an d House 3?ur-

liisliirig Goods.-. , VJo b b in g P m m p tlii A to o th illn .

Tm llMfimj.,, fyc-MlO,.TIIK K]:i.SKY COHntJ(lXTKI) WAU5I AI1!

• rUltNAOIJ.' T h i s w o n d e r f n l h i e l - . s a v e i V :A v Ith o n o l i t t n - d r e i l f e e t f u o r o r a d i a t i n g o r h e a t i n g s u r f c i c t t h a n a n y o t l i o r l n r n a e e o f ( h t \ [ s a m b s i z e g r a t e , h a s p r o v e n a p o w e r f u l H e a t e r . : W r i t e f o r c h -

, e u l a r a n d t e s t i m o n la I s t o E p s a x s E I T S ' - ; . > •

•/;,.. J?eaV Broadway Gates Of Ocean Grove. ' V

-V-: T E L E P H O N E CA LL f l 'o . SO ,

Coal A lw a y s Sheltered

; jBnulley Bench, is now incorj)Qrated atid these are th e olHcers o f the; Boroligh : •. ,MAYOll.-—Benjnnnn.Beii.nett.' ; ;•;>; c p u i c u ^ l i c ^ —A in^i; It. lYarnall, Peter, Poland, AViljihm Giirdr<l uhd Jer- ome R. Muddell. v -yi ’•••,... ; '

CLERK.—Addispil Ilutchinyon. .. vA.SSKSSOR —J'mnk Herbert. COLLECTOR.—AViilihni AV. Larriibec ,

a c b M > iiss ip N E R s: id f ■; a p p e a l . - -Roljert Peterson, W illiam «T. Payuter and William Flood.', - .

’;•.-: POUNDKEEPEIL-—Charles M iirphy.

Estimate ! oil Sewer arid Water Connect ; > ions Promptly Furnisiied. ' I-ow ■

. V ;. ; "Priees nnd Good Work. V . :S u c e t s s o n t o ,W . H . JO N E S A C O .

OCALER IN ;H. B. BEEGLE,Com m issioner o f Deeds for

Penr.sylA'ania and tlie D istrict o f Columbia.

B L A C K D I A M O N D 3' YARD MAIN ST. 4 2ND AVE.A S B U R Y PA R K , N . J . mmmmm

COAL, WOOD AND ■ CHARCOAL •

M LSO IV II. G IL M E R , A R C H IT E C T AND B U IL D E R !

P l a n s : n i i t i s p e c l f l c a t l o n s d r a w n f o r a l l k i n d s O f m o d e r n w o o c t , - s t o n e o r b r i c k ;b u l l d i n g s . F o r w o r k m a n s b l p ' a n d j i r l c e s . w i l l . r e f e r t o a l l f o r . W h o m I h a v e d o n e W o r k i n t h e G r o v e a n d P a r k . E s t i m a t e s c h e e r f u l l y , g i v e n , . . ; : -' .y

B o X l jO S ? ; v 5 P i t m a n A v e n u c , O c e a n G r o .v e . '

QHARLES ROGERS. * ■ ; . : : ;

PIONEER REffiL ESTATE RGT,Main St. Coiner Fifth Avemie.

B K A D L E Y - B E A C H , - X . - J ,

OCEAN 5E0VE, N. J-

.- O- COVEET,R E A L E S T A T E A N D I N S U RAN C E

CoiiiiiiisNionei' o i’D ecils; and IVolary P u b lic .W oney TiOaued o il R ond and illorlga^e.

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Palniateer • Brothers,' Lum ber ■ l)ea.ei,s.‘ ■ Jam es A. Bradley. .

- ; A . A . T a y l o r , M a s o n a n d l i n i l d e r . •

T V I L O H n I " P A T H W A Y , N e a r t h e A u d i t h r i t i n i

j OCEAN GROVE, N . JJ)KTi:iM’OLAXD, -

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: “ T l i e S t a t u t e s r e g i d a t I n g t l i o o p c n i t t o n s o f N a t i o n a l H a n k s a r e o f s u c h ' w i s e c o h e e p t l o u t h a t . - e o n i i e l e n t l o n s l y - c o n f o r m e d t o b y o t l l e e r s a n d D l r e c t ( » r s , n o i n s t i t u t i o n o f B a n k i n g a t v . p r o a e h e s t h e N a t l o n i d , f o r d e s e r v e d e o n t l d e h e e o f a n d s e c u r i t y t o p a t r o n s . ? '

m m mFIRST NATIONAL BANKIi. 3UJDDEIJ.,

siiwpaiiasiHWi®i:. V.:. . . . Organized February 1 SS6.. ::G EO R G E I v K ROK H L, President, " ' O. II . RROWN, Vice Presidertt.

A LBERT C. TW IN ING , Cashier. M ARTIN V. I)AG l\R , Ass’t Cashier.” ,... ' 1 M attison A venue and B ond S tr e e tA s b i ir y .Parkt N , J , ■ ' ■* ' ••

F o r Convenience o f Ocean Grove patrons : ... vOffice- Ocean: Grove. Camp M eeting Association Build ings Ocean G roiiei Af. v/.-

C a p i t a l , $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 . S u r p l u s , 8 7 0 , 0 0 0 .T ransacts a geueral b ank ing business, issiids le tte rs b f ’c red it ;.ava!lable;.- i i i : tiie ;

principal ciUes.of tlie w o rld .. Foreign an<L dom estic exchanges bought/ an d sbid^ Collections carefully lilade and p rom ptly accounted for :>V:•'v

BOARD OF DIRECTORS:^-V" ' •** i*“ * . *G. F,.Kroehl, ■ ■ ’ Albert C. Twining, . Im uc'C . Kennedy}Bruce S. Keator, • Q lkerJl. Brown, , Samuel Johnson,Milan Boss, - 'M. L s Bamman,\ . Charles A itid tk im ,^John L . Coffin, • Shm iun i J l.Q riull,, ’ . O/iurlcs'A;-Young;1iI). C. Coieii, • Willimn.JI.■■Beegle, . ■ . William Hathaway,

BU TC H ER .Bradley Beacli,

W§wmp i . GKIFFIX,• Kxpeota a Iiig NuTtii Ituttlo. >

W a s h i n g t o n , Dec. ‘27.— M inister ' .Men- douca o f ; B ra^ i I believes t U iit the:' crisis b f

'th e B razilian .revo lu tion is a t :haud and; th a t th e decisive s tro k e w ill be made, th is

, w eek.. ■ H e . B a y s ■ th a t -.the ,tw o .g re a t iron-; c lad s of<A d m ira l M ello and; th o flo tilla of li t t le torpedo craft h a s tily im provised by- p re s id e n t Peixo to are’ rap id ly : nea ring each o ther. •. The: m in is te r says th a t a collision is a lm o s t ce rta in to occur before n e x t M on­day.- H e recogn izes th a t th e li ttle torpedo an d dynam ite boats a re • tre m en d o u s ly : overm atched by the rebel sh ips, b u t he counts inuch on the ab ility of th o .sm a ll boats to m aneuver q u ick ly and to ’, dis-;charge th e ir novel explosives. ' j. ' .. ...

I n s o m e r e s p e c t s t h e e n g a g e m e n t w i l l b e s i m i l a r t o t h a t b e t w e e n t l i e b i g C o n f e d e r ­

a t e r a m M e r r i m a c a n d t h e o r i g i n a l M o n i ­

t o r . ; • S e u o r M e n < l o n c a . i ’s- j i b p e f u L a i i d c o n - , f i d e i i t . t h a t t h e ’ M e l i o ; f l e e t w i l l , b e d e f e a t e d

a i i d . t h a t t l i e P e i x o t o ' s h i p s w i l l - t h e n b e

a b l e t o . t u r n t h e i r a t t e n t i o n ; t o t l i e o t h e r ; • r e b e l a d m i r a l ; ; G a n i i i i S v t io ' i s . i n R i o h a r b o r m e n a c i n g t h e c i t y . • * . - ;

. •, Tlio Nl« w York Otr Fo r Ii 1 o. ‘ ’ ■N K W Y o i l l v , D e c . -’ t i . r ^ T h e ; c r u i s e r N e w

Y o r k s a i l e d f o r R i o J a n e i r o t o d a y . ;. ’ , - •

■ • Slay 1 le h Swed liiU-Korwegtan War. i -; •(. L o n i) i> N V Dye. . iL—T he T im es p r in ts :a ; specinl B erlin artic le on ‘th e . relation's- Of Sweden.' I t sajts tlia t .th e re is every reason to believe t h a t . the k in g of. Sweden is pre- |Hired: to .iiae force t'o in a in ta iu union- be-v tw een the-tw o coun tries.; v' - ■■ ■r"-:>•'-•/••••••*• -y-i!,

T E l f l S T E l t .

-Bradley (BeiicIi, N ew , J e i 's e v

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Fi ft I iA vb.;, a h d M ain St., Brad 1 ey’ Beacl l,

CHAS. LEWIS7T T . W I * T : U U A D I j K Y ; H i : A O H ' i s . L O -

■ tx . c i i t e d . ; . t h e .- h u g e ( N i g h t ; . S h i r t F a c t o r y

o f 8 T K I X E U «fc S O N ’ . ; T h i s f a c t o r y - e m p l o y e s ’ ; t h r e e h u n d r e d l i i iu d s .^ -It. I s w i t h o u t d o i i b t t h e

• l a r g e s t f a e t o r y q f t h e k i n d i n . t h e - U n i t e d S t a t e s . : ’ : ; • • : ■ • ' ■ ' ■ - -.

Lumber, ,-

Doors, Sash, Blinds,

Frames, Mouldings,;

Hardwafe, •

Paints,

Oils, etc.

M - t C lX '-O n TO—

Bi t A D i a - J Y ; B E A C H E C H O . - T h i s I s - «i

‘n i o i U h l y p u p t.-r p u b l i s h e d ' ' . p r i n c i p a l l y l o t l i e I n t e r e s t . o f t l i e 1 1 R i d l e y H b a c h " C h u r e h . 1 1

i s a n . e l g h t - p a g o p a p e r . a i i d , 1 s , c o n d l i e t e d w i t h

i n i t c h s k i 1 1 j i n c l / c n 1 t u r e . R e v ; A 1 b e H S v v I f t i s t h e e d i t b 'r a t i d p u b l i s h e r . v . ; ,“'v?

C H A S . I - B O W I S A : C O .

S -:> p n . E e x t e n s i v e i ' l \ > i i »l n *g s t a t i o n ;

•L 'V o f ; t h e . ; p e w n / • 'G r o v e ? I A r t e s i a n - : t W a t e i * W o r k 's , a l s o t h e l a r g e E l e c t r i c L i g h t P l a n t b e ­

l o n g ! n g t o t b e . s a t n e j c o r p o n i t I o n , t i r e , I i i . 1 t h o B o r o u g h o f■ U n id h i^ ’ - i l e a c h . ■•. •

’ j\ S i t u I I Y ; ' P A R K : G A f t ;- C O M I ’ A N Y ^ - T I l i S

C o n i j n m y w i i l o i V M a . i : 1 s t b e :-.a iH e t b lu r -- .

i d s h g a s t o t h e s t o r e s o r ; c p t t a g e s a t J l n u l l e y R e a e i i . ' * O lH e e A s b u r y ;P i i r k , ■ ' : '•••: <■/"■

F a ctory D im kirk , 3ST. J.BranTh ’Yard,. Spring Lake,

;# -te s w s « w ii mrnm

. T h o U y o r s K i d n a p i n g C a s e . . ;

C h i c a g o , D e c . • i i8 . r r - T l i e ; c j i s e o f H e n r y . B , .

S h i e l d s , ; t h e w e a l t h y . O h i o h i i i n c l i a r g e d w i t h k i d n a p i n g M r . B y e r s , a P i t t s b u r g

■in i 1 1 i o i i t i i r e , w a s , c o n t i n u e d u n t i I J a n . 5 . ; ■ ••’

- ‘ • - .:. ■ , *< • i i' ■ ' ' r i ’ ’ ’ ' >' > i ’ i ‘ '■ / /

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f p I I I - V E X T E N S I V E F R E I G H T S T A T I O N O F f ; 11 l e I V n n s y l v a n l i i a n d . L o n g iV r a n e h R a i l ­

r o a d s i s a t ' W e s t B i n d l e y B e a c l i . , F r o n i . t h i s ;

d e p b i . O e e a n G r o y o , 7 * 8 1 i i r y P a r k a n d B r a d l e y .

R e a e i i :g e t t l l e i r - n l e r e h t i n d i S e . , . T h e b u s ! n e s s

d o n e a t t h l s s t a t i o i i . i s d o u b l e t h a t a t L o n g

Bm ueli.; v . ' V ; r : . ;

- S w e l l e d 5 C e n t s t o . a F o r t u n e .

C l lA M l i C I t S B D lt O , P a , , D e c . , 2 7 . — J a c o b H o k e d i e d h e r e . H e c a m e h e r e i n 1 1 8 4 1

w i t h b u t 5 c e n t s ‘ a n d e v e n t u a l l y b e c a m e t h e l e a d i n g - m e r c h a n t o f t h e c i t y , f

.. W o r k F o r 7 2 5 P e r s o n s .

W i l m i n g t o n , D e l . ; ; D e c . - 2 5 . - ^ T l i e N e w C a s t l e w o o l e n m i l l s , w i l l ; r e s u m e W o r k o n . T u e s d a y : w i t l i 7 2 5 h a n d s . - : ” -. i

’ N o w J e r s e y ' s S t a t o L i b r a r i a n . .

T r e n t o n , D e c . 2 7 . T - C b l o n e l M o r r i s - R .

H a m 1 1 1 b u - w a s r e - e l e c t e d s t a t e 1 i b r a r i a n f o r i t h i r d t e r m . . . . ' V ;■ ’ ’ • - . , r :'

' ’ MM1Q). m M M iJs th e oldest established line in Ocean Grove and: A s­

bury Park. Special facilities for th e prom pt and careful handling-of a ll k in d s o f Furniture, Pianos, Boilers and Safes. ; Sh ipping tags furnished free. Storage lor ail . k inds of goods. Separate Com partm ents. ; Each individual fur­nished w ith key. ' • ■

, .-:>JACbB S'XIUjDEjS -4. • Q m o x s N o . .,702 Mattison: Avenuo, Knilroad Depot, Asbury .Park;. Corlies

Avcnud, W est Grove; No. 4G Miiin Avenue, .opposite Association, Office,, Ocean Grove. Post Oflice Uox 009,’ Asburv- Park, N. J.. -; . -V, v-;-- -,--;' ■' "' v. v ' : . . • . .

■ . • ■ . ’

Br a d l e y r e a c h s c h o o l , d i s t r i c tP rin c ip a l—M iss H enard, ■ '•. ’ .

Teachers—Ml&s R en ard , M iss K n i|ly H arris .. -Two'-Depart m en ts, T n te rin e d late / 'a i id 'P r i - innry.; A botit'410scholars.-./ / /- .'. . I S■ im m §mM ethodist episcopal cHurtcn, . ‘

’ ' ( L i t t l e C h u r c h i n t h e A V b o d s .) : R R A D L E Y R E A C H , N . J , • ■ ’

R k v . A i . b k h t S w i f t , , P a s t o r .

S e r v i c e s — lO.IW A . x . a n d 7 .110 ,1*. .^ . ’

’ • _ '■^;-,’ S u i i d a y - s e h o o l 2 .3 0 i \ s r t > ' ‘- . ,

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