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RED VOLUME II. NO. 7. RED BANK, N. "J., THURSDAY, AUGUST T, 1S7J). PEIt YEAR. GARRY & CO., 30 ^ 303&305GRANDSTREET ' " ^ ' l ^ * ^ . A R PI,, 1IIW U 0 O 0 , T3TA nrr n-^rvna ALL-WOOL CASHMERES SUITS! SUITS! Wu will exhibit this \vi«k thu invulnit slimln 111 II1I5 clly 111 Suits, Sacques"& Dolmans. Btfuri! |iurrliiwlnK rail mid ww thi-iu. It will luiy you. Xiilliliijrmlsn']ili'svliti'(l. W? (iwjtv&few of 11K. 1 PUPVI.AII 'l'RICIiH: CASHMERE SACQUES Uvin JW.75 upwards. BLACK GOODS. Ill nil ttv ni'Wt'sl slmili'S MMl und I All KXTOA Ol A1.I1V ill !.V. |«T Hi mils iiri" i\til ll> j u i s U l v e ! , '-.'•} [i.-r it il H'. per vnril.. JUKI. 1'licke SO.UOupwards. Shawls! Shawls! HKI'I.KTi: with A IlmiilsDiui' TriuiuiL'il muck Cualiiiierc Suit fur $11.00 An All-woul mark Cmliuiore Sult,£ilk Trimmed, for SS.-jO. wurlli SliMW. .- ^ Aii Kxtr.i Fiiii'CiLsliiiifieHull, Trliuniiiil wftli Heavy A lull lini' ut BLACK AND COLORED SILK SUITS $20.00, Sii.50 mnl fXJM; wnrlli reniiet'tivi'ly ''" i, sau.uu ami $35.00. SILKS! SILKS! COLORED DRESS GOODS JiLsLnict'lvi'tl fur our tiprinji 'i'linlc. Foreign . Striped and Fancy Silks Irulli HIrentsUJI. fully wnriii I.*!', tier viiM. R1LK AND WillII. MELAXliBN 20. :>5 uiul W wills JUT yd. HuMUIM:U hi re fur iit-iciihi ^)ptT (nil.. in<>n\ LAMMS OP JIO.VUMTII (OlWTY. An inspect ton of (tin* Jyuin-iw Stock fs n'>|H'c(- [iilly wiliWlat fmm tli>< fniuiin^ ul Moiuuoiitli GARRY&CO., 301 & 3 0 3 6BAHD STREET, UETWKKX KM.iIlliHit: AKIl AI.'l.KN STIiKKTS, XKW VOKU 4'JTY. riv,. , Ill), il i-., In ill] | Mltil lllis JOHN S. APPLECATE, COUNSELLOR AT LAW, RED HANK, N. J. HENRY M. NEVIUS, COU-KSELLOlt AT LAW, I1EI) DANK. N. J. CHAS. H. TRAFFORD, I'OUNSELLOB AT LAW, JIEO IUXK, N. J. CtinililUsliiiit'r fur New Yurk. D. H. APPLECATE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, sin.inrou ANUMASTKH I.N eiiANCKitv, OOl™ In J. A. Tlinii'kmurioii's Ilttll'lliiic- firm Fiwir FHONT S'fHEKT, KKDDANK, NEW JERSEY. JOHN E. SCHROEDER, A T T O K N K Y A T L A W , SOLICITOU, MAHTKIl AMI KXAMIN'KU l.\ (.'IIA.VCKUV. HKI) HANK, N. J. Ollli'c on Kmnl Slrwl. m;.\l ilimr In1'nrkiT X Cliiul- JAMES STEEN. COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Xt«lur) f 1'uiillL 1 , und foiiiiii^liiuijr uf DLHHIS fur Vurk, E A T O N TO WN , N . J . DAVID HARVEY, ATTOliXEr AT .LA If, ASIIL'RY 1'ARK, NKW JKIiMKY. FRANKP. COUNSELLOK AT FHEEIHII.ll, IV. J. LAW, Fllll.M I'liiLAIIKI.rillA. DR. TH. E. RIDCWAY, WI'K L. 8. A., ic, FI1O.NT AND W'ASIllNi;TllN STHEETS, Itl'D HANK. NEW JKIISKY. R|)i'rtill iiltrdn.tn to t-yi', »:ur mill tliroiit (lisi'ilsi-s. AlMieiir-'llll 1 r;i.<»\s. DR. ALFRED F. TRAFFORD. PHYSICIAN AND SUHIiEOX, J. H. BETTS, DENTIST, WIlilV JlulliVinK. riirniT .Sln-rJS, Hud UuilL. N. .1., nli Jlmik. SV~ Xltroiw Oxlili' <im r»r tlir l'«lnli»» Kilniill f llimul null Mi'ilmiiir jji,.~>iU.> till- l'lr.it \llliim;i] mini WIIIMI n-qnirnl of Ti-rlli. OR. D. W. BARKER, UEVriST, ATTIIK OKIICK UK Dlt. I'llAltl.KS llfllBAItll, RED BANK, MONMOUTU CO., X. J. All mi'i'liaulnil and di-mul II|MTII!1OII.S i>i-r/"nm.H] -In the bust liiiuilii'i-, ami at l'riir* Iu -lull- all. OFFICE ON FRONT STUEET, Orp. TRINITY UllL'ltCH. RT F. BORDENT DK.VTIST, Music Hull BuildiiiK, Ked Bank, X. J. raluk'.s.s iixtructlun nf tei'th liy thu u.sti ut nilnuis RED BANK MUSIC STORE. HABOtO ALLSTROM, 30 Broad Street, RED HANK, N._ J. DlillLT I" PIAHOS, ORGANS, VIOLINS, and otiiL'r musk'ul ia.strum(;nLs. SHEET MUSIC. All Hit 1 Infest snntfn, mtnfi' UIKI aiintini(.nlul.' tliinlitiK'n lOcciil imihic. Aliinni'ri JOfunl Miindiii Journal. Olti y\wl IDUMSI'UI very 1«'\T \\rkv#. Blank music pav M 'i' ami JKUIH. . Music ivlls uiul folios. A Sliivful (IlM-tilllll (ll (fUClKMrt. Instruments repaired, neatly and promptly. THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC 1? upon dally tur Inst-urllon In nuisli- (».oH lls hranrlirs /nun BA. Jl. lull 1". SI. Harold K. Allxlruni, •ill IIIHI/n STIiEKT, itKI) 1M.VK, N. J. RELIABLE DUUGS, Standard Proprietary Pre- parations and Toilet Articles HENRY E. SCHRGEDERS KROAD STREET REDBANK, R-Kir JK/tSKT. MUST BE SEEN TO HE APrUEClATEI). ELEGANT STOCK OK FIXK READY-MADE CLOTHING FOK Men's, Boys' and Children's Wear. Orders Jij' Mull Twelve ]>nrtliMilnr aitciillim. S l s mill I'rlci'H I'lirulslii'd If ilrsir<",l. WEDDING OUTFITS A SPECIALTY. UNDERiriLL, ST.OTE &MUCIIMOH 3 I'liy Hull I'nrk, III'IWIK-M Murray sinvl uiul Turk 1879. NEW SPRIKC COODS! THE CLOTIIIEU. Broad S-bx-eet RF.D BAM;, NKW Jr.itsi;v. U*Y A iii'imtiriil iis^'irtnifiiinf NKV; sritiMi our (TSTO.M TKA/'H. rw*MinK.*ft I>f[if. r "iiHl.i, Win utwi.1, rlit'xiutrt, 'l'liilH-is, fliiniicl-., tDKfttUT with Hi k'iuliiiK s[> le.-i in :;irliK-.s mill niixttiri'^. REAGMUDE CLOTHING! l>f nil J. f r;lilrsl!inl |iri:-i\-t. RED BANK CARRIAGE FACTORY, TOR, WHITE ST. & MAPLE AVE. J.W.Mount,&Bro FRORRIETORS. Ui 1 li;ivc In Ktiwk aniunlM'r tif <-arriu?iM of illITrr- i-t.t s\,li'S wliii-li m olTer for soli 1 al luw l>rlr»-a. Wi' iilsn liull.l I'lirrlaRcs In nnh'r 1" siili llmf.'isl' 1 nf Uii- cu^iinijrs. CARRhVtiES TAINTED AND PUT IX TUOROCTGII01iDF.lt. OR. H. B, VANDORN, DG.VTIST, •Vitli Dn. R. F. BOIIUXX, Miwlr Hull Bulldlnii. RliD V\~XK, N. J. H. K. ALLSTROMS A C A D E M Y OF MUSIC, BROAD STREET, J1EU BANK, N. J. Musle ImiRlit lu all Its Jiriuu-lies. Astot-k of sliuct ciusli: conslanUy mi limit]. AUKNT WIR PIANOS AND olMiANS. CEORCE McC. TAYLOR, SURVEYOR, ClVIt ENGINEER AND CONVEVAKL'EK, nEn BANK, NKW JERSEY. CMliM over White's CMcory, Unail Blm't. M. F. MANY, /Sjttcramr to 11. E. Stiunvnoii), WATCHMAKER AND' JEWELER, F11ONT STREET, (Opp. Globe Hoiul.l Hun HASK, N. J. J. A. THROCKMORTON, 1IGALKII IN LUMBER, LATH, LIME, CEMENT, BltlCK, NAILS, FAINTS, OIL, ETC., FRONT STREET,. J!KD IiAXK, If. J. PARKER &CHADWICK, pp..v|.ciia is LUMBER, LATH, LIME, BRICK, Cement, Cnlcliwil nnd Lluiti Fluster, Itnnhvnrp, l'ulllts nnii lllls, Coal, llunuliist, Giinno, ic. Alsu Dry. Goods uuil UroL'urita. ' FBQNT 8TOKET. RED BANK. CEO. McC. TAYLOR, REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE, No. 81 Broad Street, > RED BANK. N. J. Agent for the Monmoutli County Mutual Fjre Insurnjice-Co. R. R. MOUNT, FURNISHING UiVKEUTAKEU FRONT STREET, near tho Itallroail Ddpof! RED BANK, N. J, Furniture repaired ami vrirnlahed, Picture. Irorara /or sale, spuolul attoutkHi Hlyon to tlio Iniming of pictures. A WEEK In your own town, nnd no aipltulrlslreil. r«u«tn(flvotlwliU3l- 4* nos» a trlnl wttliontoxpiiiwo. Tim bnst on(lortuhlty over offered for those n-lllinR to work. You should trynothlnn else until you mmfor your- self wlint you enn ilo ul llin tuislnpss wo olri-'r. No room to explain lioro. You can Unvote nil your Unin jor only your spare ttimi to ttio bus(nes«, nud miiKo orait pny f6r uvorjr hour Mint you worn. Women innko Inn much oa men. Sunil for special prlvnto torins ond nnitlciilnra, which wn nrnllf TM. J5 Outn t freo. Don't complain of hum times nhlloynu liavo >urh n chanoo. Address II. Uallott * Co,, rortlund lnvv mU;. dill anil n KlUlcikloil Hi lij n i' our stwlc nnil (n< our prlres. SEGARS AH9TOBACCO iVLL BRANDS AND ALL PRICES, Philip Stoffel's, BROAD STREET, IIADDON BLOCK, RED BANK, N J. The Best 5 Cent Segar in Town. An Extra Cood Segar for 10 cents. A Fine Flavored Sccgar for 8 Cents, Four for a Quarter. TOBACCO, PIPES, CIGARETTES, &;. CALL AND SUE. COAL AND WOOD! SCRANTON, LEHIGH, CUMBERLAND AMD WILKESBARnE COAL at tilt) Lowest Market Rate*. OOItD TTOOD, LOCUST AKB CHESTNUT l'OSXS ANDCHiiSTAI/f 1 HAILS. JOHN A. WOHTHLEY, onice at VVerthlcy'a Dock, HKI) HANK, N. J. WOOD BY THE CORD OR CAE LOAD. CUT AND SPLIT AT THE Red Bank Crist Mill, (Near Hull Road Depot.) J. H. PARKER. FOR SALE.—UcntrnOlo Iluilil- lliK Plots of Bi-ound on fthrownliury Avonue, near null troiitlHK tlio New Jersey t?ontml Depot, licit ])unk. wlutro maliirh lit .unknowu. Also n numlwr within 10 mtnutcH' wiilk o[ thadeiiot, with tlii' rlBht of a cryrtiil Bprlnjr ninittlng W.ooii Kiillum dally. TiuUel^sH and mift; Koiid for n Shirt Manu- Incturers mid Hroworn. Ciill und seo Hcliwlulo und map. Prlcea low nnd terms eusy. Apply M C. LRIIillTON, Nowman Sptlnga, Iteii Bank, N. J SUMMER RESORT FOR SALE Ulflwsn mlnutan of LOUR nranrh. Tlin Munslnn llmiauut Iletl Ilank, 5'Milnulra'uiilt <if the New Jur»ey Omtral Deput; sltuuted nn thti imnK.s of tho BliniWBhury lllvcr whero iiialnrin is unknown, rfitli bcuiitirul sliiiilng lawn; larRp xanlon, luirn, mr- llnRe-luiuno und sluhles; itill waler ImtlilnK, K(HH1 tliihltiK aud boutliiii hi front of Iheiiremiwfl. Apply to . . . O. LEH3IITON, ) Newman SDHncs, Red Bank N. J. SUMMER RESORT FOR SALE Wliore inntarln In iirrtndwn. The Nomiian Sprinps property, tmuitttully sltuntctl on Urn liauka nf the Sliiwjnnr* Bfv«r, n mllu from tlio Nuw Sormy Central Dopot nt lied Dank: in minutes hy rail from I<oi«f llraneli: thlim are nlmil)' walks, nulln »rl»ni, lawiiH for croquet, n Imwilnft green, lillllnnl rcHim, Itcwl stiilillngnntl outbullillnjrn, slill.wntnr li.illilng, llshlnR und imiUltiK. nn tlio premises It a nryaUil Bluing cmlttliiK 50,000 gallons dully- Apply to ' 6D Ino I'remlscs. S iiiullllii-ni'n'iuid lulivl slyli's. CAI.I, AND INVI::STKiATE..,«.: JAN. JJ. WEAVKU, Mercliant Tailor> FKOA'T STIIKET, RED BANK, NEW JKRSKY. IllUV (111 llilllll II l l lUHl Well Slll'flfll ,K|Mlk llf CLOTHS AND KUITINCS 'SprliiL'iiil'l ^ In niaki-U|>In T li'iiilf. wlilcli hi' Is pri 1 - sl>li-mill at [VU.MIII;:!>I<> SUl-H'IT A CAM. AN'll INSI'EITION ()!•' MY (•TolK. UEOT'U. SXYDEK, FLORISTS i'nir Iliivcii, Hi. J. Trent. Huttfc .V 1 I'rgrtuhle I'lmiln. lnnil (It'Slfms ;itnl rliniri- ir-nt llnuTi's ut all WIISIHIH. tuntrinu luiski't* uiul vi^i-s lunilslii',1 imil tllli'il. lsn IriTS. ylinilis, vims. Ar., In lunrr nr siiiiill uiiDllUi-s. all furnlslir<l ut tin 1 vi-rv l"\vrsi nih-s. 4 * M S 5 § • f •_( 53 .g •fell} O8R I I'OK BALE. A fow fltm tmtlillng HURH urii orffiroil on tlio 1 Bhrowabury lllvitr, n tow inlhutt'ii wulk frun Bank. Dtturriim uin lie m-on nt . . WILLIAM UAulKlN'8, or el r. arorPBii'H SKIIAU STIIHE, Decorations in Oil and Fresco. All descriptions of Ornamental Work. PAINTING' IX .ALL ITS |il! AM'IIKS. 'articular attention given to Hor- mony in Colors. HE1I BANK AMI VICIXITV. Kill Hank bus an curly New York mail. It arrives at 7.20. - A full line of celluloid and otlicr trus- ses at Cluulwick's. Willie Worthlcv is imo of tlie lust oarsmen in Keil lijiulc. A discount nf HI |icr cent, on all patent iiml proprietary nil ides at ChuilwicU's. TJie 1'ev. Mr. "Wcrlis preached in ft. Oeui'iic-'s L'liurcli, Kuiiison, un Sunday nioriiiiifr. The Ki'V.'Dr. Ueilcy, of the Ilcfuriiieil Cliunli. lliiliuilfl, is suffering from an The Moninouth County Agricultural Soi'icty will lull,I its iiiiniinl fair at I'lce- hohl nn .SejilcMiher Pill, llltlililill lllll. In II'.M) e:i.scs out iif ii jinwiMi' l.lllli). n niilroiiil niiiu jirclerH to tell ll lie even when the lliilli just fairly hankers to lie t .Iii. Ili'uiUtuni's.. monuments, ccmeterv Ins inclnseil, iVc, liy ('. \V. T|.iini|iw.n. j-liuie cutler, West I''rollt street, lied Uii.ifc. TJie ]tt'\. A.Siilncy Dcalcy is s)ientlin^ hisvaralii.il in lleil Hank, lie is the (rut 1 !-! of llrs. MiVau.-slanil, nt the "Kyca- The liu.ly of ('linrlcs I'roe. of West lln- l.okcii. who \\as ilrnwneil in the l.on^ liraneli on ."Munilay. Delirious iee on tSuiulity. was iriuvereil cnlil ill'ink.s inatle fiiun inln-s full KM'I'IMATllS (H ri'-l: IT l.l.V (i!\TN. y !»• ii-r: ut 'nil: IILIIISTKII Iit in R. S. MERRITT, Fair Haven, PJ. J. 'Ailjniiiiii;," (lie I-'irst Nminim! Hnnlt, J.i:i) HANK, X. J. iim-pi,.|ii,n,l in II fllll Il.«"l11l|l-lll .If Dress Goods, 'ASIiMl.liKS. (WSIUIRKKS C.AMKI.S' IIAll; Ci.dTlf. CAMKI-I* IIAIK CLOTH. CAMKLS 1 HAIj; Cl.oTII. iRF.NADlNKS. :RI:NAIIIM:S. iHh.N A1 )l NI0S. (IKKN AHINI'.S. CUI-IN A M N K S . (: II!•;.%' AI )l N l-:,s. I'l.AIN SKA Ml IKS. l'l.AIS SKA M|ii:S. l'l.Al.N MCA M l IKS. H'XTIN'CS. lll'NTlNliS. M.'NTIN'i^S. ]H .NTIM.s '.UNTINCH. ltl'NTlNtJS HA1!.MM'N. iiAiniiiis, HA If AUKS. Mourning Fabrics (IT r \ r i'v Viit'lcty illl'l lllllllllfnriuii'. A sri'KltluU ^SMiitTMKNT UF WHITE GOODS, HOSIEET. Choice Groceries. "THE HATTER," 247 GBEEBW1CH STREET, N. Y. Sprhiir uml Simniii'i'Slvlcs ntjlinilifurlliivrs I'rlio. SI'Kl 'IAI.TIF.S: iILK HATS. !fil.(l(). XOblJV STUAW HATS. CLUH CAI',S-AII Styles. A ftllt A:^urti!n'iit nf fii-nt's iiml Ituys' llnl!i. Trunks, Satchels,Umbrellas HATK-IIWK'KEII VlltU': YOU WAIT. KOACLAWD, "The Hattor." 247 UitKENwii'ii Sntr.r.T, N. Y. Hhafers I-*rnit Syrujis. fur -MU- In Theo. White, S. I), (.•i.l.iirn, 11. K. Kehroeaeran.l lleimclt Urns. Mr. (ii'ii. Met'. Taylor is eie;a(;i'il in eulleetill^ the eomlni'reiai Htaii^lifs nf file Slnvu's'iiiry rirer for the t'nili-il The In ;ivy rain t>( j\limilay fiflcniuoj! ,"a.--l,ci! ihe rouils out to u eonsiilcrahle .\leiil. Smile iif the liuel; rnnils are su Illlieil Hr. to lie lliilli I illl|i:>x-,ilile. Tlie Ifi'V. liavaril TayUir oceu|iieil the |Hll|.|t III III! Smiilav iiml lli.lnnlel Haplist I'Imirli on ulli^. Ti Carriage Making, Painting, ASI) . HOUSE SHOEING At till' lilil vstiililhlliil st.nml ill : Mechanic Street, ItlvIJ HANK, ii. J, HORSE'SHOEINC promptly uilimik'd lo.by ulil uiul cxiMiriidii'i'il work- lui'ii. Ililllll ic scrnu.li « as Very lilcanil \V;I;I ^really a|.|>iecialcil hy Ihc I'ajit. II. 11, Kihv.irils. of Oeeani.ort. .ill enler lii^aVht "Vixen" in the l-'air lhivcii regatta on Saturilav. Mr. Tims. Iviilille. nt' the saiiu< [ilace, will cuter Itis Mew hn.ll "lii|i|ile." The ll'inian Cut holies who rcsiilcin Ihe v ii inity ol Coil's Neck are about to creel ii i hiirch of that ilcnomiit.itiun. A lol has hceii inirehiiseil of Mr. Keh^cy, anil or.ll on the builiiillg will snuil he eoin- IIUllCI'll. (in .Mi un lay ni^lit u while man alleiupt- il In hlealc into a SIIHIJI linnet' nn White aii'il ^h-s. 'Ki'Uji'. ll J 1 liii'r:iili7-5i'"fiiUi v iV''iii1 rv. and Ihc luaii run towanl liroail street anil cscjipi'il. (ircen's £ivat ilysj:c|i!ic pi'.nacca, "Au- UUst Mower," cures ilyspt-psin inall its forms, such as discuses of the stomach, linn-els, kiilm-ys. constipation, fidi lie.nl- iicli.-. &•: K.r sal,' in lici] Kant only)t i I' 1 . T. fliailn-ick, Iln.n<l street. The annual cuinp-iiievtiii^ of the A. M. I 1 ', /.inn t'liureh will lie-in mi l'riilay, Aii^usl stli, anil willcoiilinucci^lil ilays. The inecliiip, will he liclil In Morfiinl's t. r rove us tlnuil, II TII f there nill he a variety ol' li^hl drinks, cake, fruil, etc., fur sale on Hie ^rounils. Tal:ea«ouilsi7.eil S]IOIIKC. sow il full of rice, oats or f-rass seeil, aijil place it in a ilisli of witlcr. The sponge will nlisnrli the Wilier, illlil when the seeds hcrjl! to sprout attach a cont to the spouse aiul s!l^pellll il iii the wifulow uiul you will have a very pretty ornament. A rmviiu,' regatta, to he In-lil on the XhrewrOmry river nnil to take place some lime this in-mill, is in contemplation. Il is propiiscil to have a contest hetween members of the Mumnoulli Bout Cluli, a race hcH\ cell two yuTllljj men sixteen yi'iirs of ajje. mid a race, hutwui^fl nuiii- her of yoiitiH lailics. A spitz ilo(r lii'liingini; to Mr. Klishn Woollev. of Colt's Neck, reecnlly (level- oped traits of madness. It hit several do^s iu the neiglihorluioil nud u littli' <laii(,'litcr<if Mr. .Slewnrt Mallln-ws. Jlr. Woolley dill not helicvc thciloj; was mail, hut that it hail it distemper. Neverthe- less the don was killed. The funeral of Miss Julia Allaire took place from Trinity Church on Monday afternoon. The sermon svas preached hy the liev. Win. N. Diinin-11, mid the. Ucv, C'lins. A. Tihhals read the service. Interment took place in Trinity Cemetery n. Middletown township. Miss Allaire .viis ii ytiuni; Ituly of umisual gentleness if disjiositioli, and ivns umitly hclqved ly a lai'K<- circle of ari|»uiiil,-iiices. Mr. 8. ICclcliain, tho livery slahle keeper of Miiplo avenue, in tilt-rear of (he Central Hotel, luis hail -his entire establishment overhauled nnil is now prepared to hire out horses .-mil carriages at jnoilenile riltes. Ilo IIIIH received a niimher of now huK^iis ami has had nil Mr. A. H. Ctuilfunl and Mr. Rodney Kincli rcdtriH'd from tli'jir trip to the Delaware AVater ' (hip on-AVeilnesday niornhu:. Thf'\'~'\vent nway with the dcti'rmiuation to have a ^ooil time and' Ihcy came hick with the determination to say tliat that j^intl time had hpon hail. Hut (his assertion rcsls merely on (heir word. They have as yet otlercd no cor- rohorative evidence of having hail the jcooil time. It w;is Ca|»t. Benjamin Chamhers who snviil the lillle hoy from drowning al .Mount's /lock one day. las! week, and not his hrolher Alexander as stalM: The boy was lishiiij,' on the iliu-k nnil fell into the river, lli^shouteil for bell/ and ('apt. Chambers promi'lly plunged rboard and rescued him from drowu- . The hoy's mother was profuse iu IHT thanks and (ilFered Mr. (liamlieiN ,i haiidsoine .mini of money, but this he posflively refused to take. An eiiterliiinnient forthelienelH of St. was hni:iclitil Mr. Homers looked sur- prised, HH didn't fairly seem tp'realiztf that there wa's such a thing as Ux^fOtui brid^o in existence. After aifew.uio' iiiieuts ciinver:ationf Mr. Somers's mind! li-'caine more cleat" and IIH adniittocl that there was a lii'iilf,*u in' cxisteiice. Tli6 I'cjiorh'i' »v;is dcii^htetl, andhe askedi Mr. iSimiern if the. luidgo lind falleri down. To this Mr. Somera cheerfully' answered that the bridge was standing that morning. TJii'ri al seven ti'i link the n p.'ili'i 1 asked Mr. iSomers tivo bi.:ie.-i had i;ot fallen out of thri bridge on Sunday morning. As regards tliji fact Mr. Simmers seemed to be hope? les.ily igumaut. and when the rtiport- urial seeker alter Until asketiMr. Sij if lie did not hire a horse wild g on Siiiid.iv jii^ht lo^oto Port Moniuoutli in nrdrr ti i^i-l ineii to rejiuir the. bridge* before luc |I.ISS:.H' (1 of the niomiiig train/ Mr. Kiinei-i icplied that he only hirt'u\ llii'ln-:-, 1 and carriage for tho purpose' nf l.il.ing a ..:. astire ride, lie then turned Janus'Chapel will be g, venal theresi- ;n ,,, v v.llh „„. a! ,.,,, a m ; m w ho i llls8ttid dii of ( pt linkn at Little Silver of ( apt, litink-n, at Little Silver, by the Oakes brothers on the evening v( Wednesday. August l.'!lli. The enter- tainment will colisisl of all c.vhihilion of pictures intcrsjiersi'd with inusicand will be coneludi'd liy a grand hop. Tickets can be pfoeured at the door at . r »0 eenls each, I'hildreii half price. If the ahove evening shiiillil pruU' stormy (he ealer- laiiiiiieiil will he pnslponed unlf) the next f;tir e\ lining. A regalia will be held al Fair Haven mi Saturday of this w n k. The start wiil be made at I irelwcUrrom the frnnl nr the I'air Haven llulei:'-. 'Uie Xi w .Jersey Yacht Chili rules will |;nvcin the race. The beals are divided into iVur 11.is.es, and the prize money, which amount-* In sl;ill. will be awarded ils fi.llnWH : l''iM- elass. jib and mainsail, il feet and up- ward. ^."IO: sreond class, jib and mainsail, under SI firt.ifl.-i; Ihinl cl.e.s, cat rigged. ;'ll fcil and upward. |W: fourlli class, cat-rigged, under I'll feet, $|.). The course to be sailed over is twenty miles in length. A Sllil nf onlnrs will be present- ed to the second hunt ill each clas'-. The entrance fees for the hunts ill e.'lcll I'llKS are respectively an follows: {.fum, 11.1111. *:;.inland fi.tii). Aftei Ihe regalia i.-i over a tub race will be held. On Tuesday morning the Ibplist Cbiircb wan cuin furl ably lillcd by a well dressed iisi-elllhlilge of |«n|ile called lo- gether to n'itiics.1 (he iiiarriiige of Mr. James It. Weaver and Mi.,s Kilie JL. eld.-.l diiugliler of Mr. C. I>. Winner of Ibis (own. The bride was arrayed iu a brown silk dress, trimmed with velvet of ,.Id-gold shade, HIM! niii't. The bride was e groom wore i> i, ,_, i' a \» ry [iielly vcr\- beaultlid. l,.-..- .1. !.>;!> The marriage ri-reiuoiiv ivin perlorincit by me m r V. i>. r. i.n|>- sin r. When the cereniony was over Mr. and Mrs. \Veaver were cniigt-altllaled hy their many friends, nf I IT which they I'litcred a carriage nnd were driven to (he residence of (he bride's father, »f here a line wedding breakfast was partaken of. Mr. and Mrs. Weaver left on the III. Hi train for New Ymk, and from there they will go as far us Martha's Vineyard. They are expected back on Saturday night. The Kl.inwrnH tenders I hem its sincerest Hell-wishes for Jl lung life of connubial happiness and material pros- perity. . Jlajor E. J. Hopes, the author of the "Morley letters from New York," has written a small bonk on Long Uraiicli. A full descriplinii nf the great tubular wrought iron pier is given, tngetlierwilh the names of those whose rnlerprine and nergy have successfully eneuuiitered iir n i \Vi*rk uiul HIIOCH r nflmilli'd wltlunit fall, l Jltl l of nil kinds at ro- Watts &Duboise, itBl) HANK, N. J. ii WM'kiuyouruwntown. J-Intilllttni'. No O risk, liiiiuh'r. If you ivuntii l.ualiuaisiit wlikU liiirsiins u[ Hilmr mix run rtnki. Kront juijr all lliu Ili lliiiy work, write fur iiiirtlciilnrM . II. II.U.i.irrr,tco., riirtlnnil, Mnliin. ;CCT IMI.II'H'.IIymiran<ingiif>ii In. S."> M ?a) i" " I»'r iluy iniuln liynay wurkL'r ul cltliiT | an, riirlit In Ilielrinvn diuillilui. 1'artlriiliiM anil Biiiu]ili-.s wnrlli §5 fim Iniimiviv yntir Biiiii]ili-.s wnrl l i 1 nt ihl.i lin.iJin 1'iiitliinil, MIIIIH-. «ai, AiMrcsn Sn.vsu.> Si t'u. pmud suct'l, lied Bank. P0S1EUS prmtcil ut tho liEUlBTEtt ofllcc. liis Imrnefia with new. The horses ut IUHHIIIIJIU me all Rood nmilnters, nud he is doing a butter busmen than ever heforc. The Kcl'ionl hmiso nt Colt's Neck lms heen rt-nilt-d and |iut in thorough rt-jK t h o desliH and heiichi'a, which wero of thu old etyle. pattern nnd in n fearfully ilihuiiilaleil condition,1mvo boon rt'Hlneed hy furniture of a inoile.ru ditto, nnd tho crenking of desks and tho occasional cnu-'h of a bench ns it yields to thii uuiled weight of Buvim boyB will no longer dis- turb tho oxtreino, qiiietudo tlmt roigns during stu Jy lioura. During tho coming year thu ncliool will he under the liinnti nicnt of Sir. Stoplicn Higffinson, wlioso eillcioiicy during tho past yrair has met with the approval of both iiiuoutsnnd truslccs, very obslneTe in its construction and idl In-iii!en,ls to say. The reporter fol- luw il liini and asked if two braces did- lu'it I':.II out of tin 1 bridge- oixrjimilay, und- then Jlr. iSiiincrs iiiiinitlcil that they did/ Inn claimed ih.a it wan no more thai* i.i.-, K!,-. l,> lo liii|ijicn to nny bridge at ny liliu'. llepiCiinn of II. M. S. i'dinfore,. Tii ' ivpi Uioii of (iilhcrt & Sullivimy pi :.i, II..'I.N. !'iii,ilore,"hyllif,'iliron-B- uii .'.iiiiili 1'ir Club, was hardly as suc- essl'nl ::•: I'.en- 1 in-i-lll el lililllllellts of hist icek. A-i brine, the lit;IJ{e in MllSlO I.ill v is in nil- I-. ie|.ij'esenl the deck of » -liiji, Hi, in.ill r "im un each HIUV doin^ u ..-. i!i,'i ;il;ia, .•.!iili'-roi»llis, etc. Tlitf lowing isu ci.iii] ill le cast of the operai ";••' Ihvk !'<• i/itiif I'"'/' .inn/ i'i.,,1, rcpri'M ir..-'l b, .' I:.I-.C i.aiiic.,.:. ,i .Mis. Win. Mi w Tlii !..ii"r, .1' Ml.-r-l'i.. A. II. II I'iiil.inl. II.iiiy i 'HI rv. The pciforiii:'.' III'IIIH K 1 "'" "" •.i.iciiceaii.l.-aei willi t;rc;itef i-,i:i Jiii haiil S,iiniiie tjlleell's Navee " manlier wmlhy •./II.«I-/I/I Porter, K, C.Di Jlr. Ifichard Kamulers/ I'm. I 'iiiiiiiitnith'r It. M. Si .Mr. \\ in. I'iiilanl/ .\lr. I'. S. Jolinu.- .iuil.:inii'H. .Mr.ll.C.Terry/ ulil' si until tt •• Jlr. ti. W. Jlacy/ .-lanli-r II. Calil|ib«ll/ Mi!-s Julia (ireciv . it t.nmti.nit ifunutn... .- .\;i ^. A. V . Jennings/ Mrs. Wdcox/ ...Mi.-). (Icorije lirailforil/ oiiiin- ami aunts wcro II-.:. ruiiiiii- (iingi, Mint* . .'il,.-., h'liiina I'arkmaii, 11.-, and .Mi'*< Tillie ()il)>,'i/ 1. M. S. riiial'oie wero ,nli n, II. Wilcox, Chas. I'ainpliell and (Ji)orgo" ii csof last ivcck [mil cvj- i cl.arai U-r was assumed 1 - iind naturaliicss. Mr.- !•!. .is •• The ltuler of the ouiloeted himself in it oi' his lii^h station^-and made it the success it is. A chapter is levoteil to (lie early history of l/mg Hninch, which will be read with interest •y all who are ncijuaiiitcd with the ilace, l'iich of the hotels at 1/mg iraneh is treated of iu the chapter on intels, and an illustration of one or two .f them is given. Alist of Ihe nmre imminent cottagers is given in Ihe work. The different routes between New York, rhiladelphia and Ix.ng llraneli are fully escribed ami the peculiar features jif each is graphically delineated. A great and brilliant future is predicted for Long llraneli. The work concludes with a sketch of the Highlands of Navesiuk, theSwift Ilousciind the liist Vii'wTIouse. Throughout the hook are illustrations of he iron pier.-US seen from dilferent po- sitions). A number of hoys were in swimming in the vicinity of the New Jersey South- ern Hailroad bridge on Sunday morning, and two of them climbed upon the bridge for the purpose of diving into tho water. One hoy had dived and the other was al«)ut.tt> follow his example, when he inadvertently placed bin hand oil one of the middle braces—a stick of timber ibout eight inches square" and eight feet in length—when ho felt it trembling and in another instant it fell with u crash into tlio river drugging its companion brnco with it, One of the luds examined other parts of the bridge- Uiul found por- tions of the bridge sorotten that they rumbled at tho slightest' touch. On Sunday evening Jlr. Sumers, the station agent, visited Mr. S, lCeteluim'.f livery stable and asked for a horso and carriage tu go to Port Moninoutli. He was told there was but one. horse in tho stable niiiUt was too tired to take suuh a long drive. Mr. Soiners seemed to ho ex- cited. Ilo said that ho must have n horse—no mutter where ho got it, nor what he puid for it, as ho wunted to go to Port Monmoutli and-ua-vo-tho bridge repaired before tho train enmo over in the mormiig. llu scoured the horse. A KEOISTRH reporter called on Mr. Somers on Wednnsilny morning for the purpose of gathering olucinl information in 10 gnrd to thp bridge. -."When tho Bubjeel pleased the audience by giving them hit) idea ol ihf-vwav in wliuh (hut oilicial should *li p ut himself under various ami Mxneliini > r.-iile r living circumstances/ Mr. William I'intaiil, of Jersey City. iiKulea gn.id Captain of the l'itiufore, nnd his acting proved that lie had given the character of Ciijiliiin C'o/roniu careful study. IfcHinging was also very due, and bis last appearance in Hod Bank hn» done milch to strengthen his reputation as a singer. The persiiiiutiou of Hulph t:itrk*lniir\>\- Mr. K. S. Joliue, who is ahoof Jersey l.'ily, WIIH excellent, nnd tlie:iudiinci'sliowedtlieirap[ireciutionh/ liiirKlsiif i.p|.lauso. Mr. (j. W. Muc.y BUS-- tained the elmrui'ler of Dick Dnulrye, Mr. Mney irf a profeKsional and l«n|^ practice has iii.ibled him to master his part ciiiiipletely. His porformmice oil this occasion, Jimvever, u'as soniewhab irnu.-iial, us he ni.-ule an elfort to impi'ovB on the original text by interpolating ob- ucrviilioiis of bis own, His effort, at least as far as regards improvement, was a derided failure. Mi>s J u l i a 1 ireer, of Shrewsbury, in Uet character a.s Jn»'j>li int. established a rep- ulatiiiii us u liieul singer of excellence, and miTiteil and received freijuent and hearty iipplausi.'. Miss Greer has been l'nr 11 niiiiilier of years cultivating heV voice and she received especial training for her hu opera. Mrs. A. V. Jeiinin;;s ns little Uittlcrcup entered thoroughly into the spirit oC the clutrnC' ter she was to represent,, und gave evt< ileiicii of diligent study and "earnest pm<H •. The miustial exct-lleiice with wliicli Ihi.scharacter was perEoiiiitedcontributed in no small degree to the success of tlw opera. Mrs. George Bradford, ns Hebe,. leil the sisters And'thu cousins and tlio aunts of Sir Joseph, porter, nnd both slia and Mrs. Wilcox, naAimt Penelope, gaiil* cd fiivor with those present. The remainder of tho company, tha seaman and the relatives of Sir Joseph Purler, K. C. 11, individually and eoN lectively performed their parts and snng tho cliorusoa satisfactorily—to the au- 1 dieiiL-eat lL'ast. The members of thoKei Bunk brass band, who furnished tlu* music, for the occasion, hud spent consid- erable time inpreparation anil as a con- sequence the instrumental part of tha ope.ru was well rendered. Miss Julia Grour receivod a hnndaome baskot of llowora, nnd boiiuets were pre- sented to Jlrs. Jennings, Jlr. "Wm. Pin- tanl, Sir. Kieiuird S;\uuders and Jlisa' Funny Giiijri. The yiuini; people of Shrewsbury hard boon very-energetic in regard to this opera. They have received many com- 1 inundations, and lmve the satisfaction ol knowing tlmt tho people of this vicinity lmve been entertained with a most enter-- tinningontortuiiuneut., " : As the workmen were1 demolishing A house at Perth Amboy, built in llitM, they found nn oldDunish Bible that Imd . been printed iiillllil, in tho'nuson work, halt oE which WHS in ugood state of p r w ecvation.

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Page 1: RED - Middletownrbr.mtpl.org/data/rbr/1878-1879/1879/1879.08.07.pdfi-t.t s\,li'S wliii-li m olTer for soli1 al luw l>rlr»-a. Wi' iilsn liull.l I'lirrlaRcs In nnh'r 1" siili llm f.'isl'1

REDVOLUME II. NO. 7. RED BANK, N. "J., THURSDAY, AUGUST T, 1S7J). PEIt YEAR.

G A R R Y & C O . , 3 0 ^ 3 0 3 & 3 0 5 G R A N D S T R E E T '" ^ ' l ^ * ^ . ARPI, , 1 I I WU 0O 0 , T3T A nrr n - ^ r v n a ALL-WOOL CASHMERES

SUITS! SUITS!Wu will exhibit this \vi«k thu invulnit

slimln 111 II1I5 clly 111

Suits, Sacques"& Dolmans.Btfuri! |iurrliiwlnK rail mid ww thi-iu. It will luiy

you. Xiilliliijrmlsn']ili'svliti'(l. W? (iwjtv& few of 11K.1

PUPVI.AII 'l 'RICIiH:

CASHMERE SACQUESUvin JW.75 upwards.

BLACK GOODS. Ill nil t tv ni'Wt'sl slmili'S MMl und IAll KXTOA Ol A1.I1V ill !.V. |«THi m i l s iiri" i \ t i l ll> j u i s U l v e ! , '-.'•} [i.-r i t il

H ' . per vnril..JUKI. 1'licke

SO.UO upwards.

Shawls! Shawls!• HKI'I.KTi: with

A IlmiilsDiui' TriuiuiL'il muck Cualiiiierc Suit fur $11.00

An All-woul mark Cmliuiore Sult,£ilk Trimmed,for SS.-jO. wurlli SliMW. .-

Aii Kxtr.i Fiiii'CiLsliiiifieHull, Trliuniiiil wftli Heavy

A lull lini' ut

BLACK AND COLORED SILK SUITS$20.00, Sii.50 mnl fXJM; wnrlli reniiet'tivi'ly

' ' " i, sau.uu ami $35.00.

SILKS! SILKS!COLORED D R E S S GOODS

JiLsLnict'lvi'tl fur our tiprinji 'i'linlc.

Foreign

. Striped and Fancy Silks• Irulli HI rents UJI.

fully wnriii I.*!', tier viiM.R1LK AND WillII. MELAXliBN 20. :>5 uiul W willsJUT yd. HuM UIM:U hi re fur iit-iciihi ^)ptT (nil.. in<>n\

LAMMS OP JIO.VUMTII (OlWTY.An inspect ton of (tin* Jyuin-iw Stock fs n'>|H'c(-

[iilly wiliWlat fmm tli>< fniuiin^ ul Moiuuoiitli

GARRY&CO.,301 & 3 0 3 6BAHD STREET,

UETWKKX KM.iIlliHit: AKIl AI.'l.KN STIiKKTS,

XKW VOKU 4'JTY. •riv,. ,

Ill), il i-.,

In ill] |Mltil l l l i s

JOHN S. APPLECATE,COUNSELLOR AT LAW,

RED HANK, N. J.

HENRY M. NEVIUS,COU-KSELLOlt AT LAW,

I1EI) DANK. N. J.

CHAS. H. TRAFFORD,I'OUNSELLOB AT LAW,

JIEO IUXK, N. J .

CtinililUsliiiit'r fur New Yurk.

D. H. APPLECATE,ATTORNEY AT LAW,

s in . inrou ANU MASTKH I.N eiiANCKitv,

OOl™ In J. A. Tlinii'kmurioii's Ilttll'lliiic- firm Fiwir

FHONT S'fHEKT,KKDDANK, NEW JERSEY.

JOHN E. SCHROEDER,A T T O K N K Y A T L A W ,

SOLICITOU, MAHTKIl AMI KXAMIN'KU l.\ (.'IIA.VCKUV.

HKI) HANK, N. J.Ollli'c on Kmnl Sl rwl . m;.\l ilimr In 1'nrkiT X Cliiul-

JAMES STEEN.COUNSELLOR AT LAW,

Xt«lur)f 1'uiillL1, und foiiiiii^liiuijr uf DLHHIS furVurk,

E A T O N T O W N , N . J .

DAVID HARVEY,ATTOliXEr AT .LA If,

ASIIL'RY 1'ARK, NKW JKIiMKY.

FRANK P.COUNSELLOK AT

FHEEIHII.ll, IV. J.

LAW,

Fllll.M I ' l i i L A I I K I . r i l l A .

DR. TH. E. RIDCWAY,WI'K L. 8. A., i c ,

FI1O.NT AND W'ASIllNi;TllN STHEETS, Itl'DHANK. NEW JKIISKY.

R|)i'rtill iiltrdn.tn to t-yi', »:ur mill tliroiit (lisi'ilsi-s.AlMieiir-'llll1 r;i.<»\s.

DR. ALFRED F. TRAFFORD.PHYSICIAN AND SUHIiEOX,

J. H. BETTS,

DENTIST,WIlilV JlulliVinK. riirniT

.Sln-rJS, Hud UuilL. N. .1., nliJlmik.

SV~ Xltroiw Oxlili' <imr»r tlir l'«lnli»» Kilniil l

f llimul null Mi'ilmiiirjji,.~>iU.> till- l'lr.it \llliim;i]

mini WIIIMI n-qnirnlof Ti-r l l i .

OR. D. W. BARKER,

UEVriST,

ATTIIK OKIICK UK

Dlt. I'llAltl.KS llfllBAItll,

RED BANK, MONMOUTU CO., X. J.

All mi'i'liaulnil and di-mul II|MTII!1OII.S i>i-r/"nm.H] -Inthe bust liiiuilii'i-, ami at l'riir* Iu -lull- all.

OFFICE ON FRONT STUEET, Orp. TRINITY

UllL'ltCH.

RT F. B O R D E N TDK.VTIST,

Music Hull BuildiiiK, Ked Bank, X. J.

raluk'.s.s iixtructlun nf tei'th liy thu u.sti ut nilnuis

RED BANK

MUSIC STORE.HABOtO K» ALLSTROM,

30 Broad Street,RED HANK, N._ J.

DlillLT I"

P I A H O S , ORGANS, VIOLINS,and otiiL'r musk'ul ia.strum(;nLs.

SHEET MUSIC.All Hit1 Infest snntfn, mtnfi' UIKI aiintini(.nlul.'

tliinlitiK'n lOcciil imihic.Aliinni'ri JOfunl Miindiii Journal.

Olti y\wl IDUMSI'UI very 1«'\T \\rkv#.Blank music pavM'i' ami JKUIH.. Music ivlls uiul folios.

A Sliivful (IlM-tilllll (ll (fUClKMrt.

Instruments repaired, neatly andpromptly.

THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC1? upon dally tur Inst-urllon In nuisli- (».oH lls

hranrlirs /nun B A. Jl. lull 1". SI.

Harold K. Allxlruni,

•ill IIIHI/n STIiEKT, itKI) 1M.VK, N. J.

RELIABLE DUUGS,

Standard Proprietary Pre-

parations and

Toilet Articles

H E N R Y E . S C H R G E D E R S

KROAD STREET RED BANK,

R-Kir JK/tSKT.

MUST BE SEEN TO HE APrUEClATEI).

ELEGANT STOCK OK FIXK

READY-MADE CLOTHINGFOK

Men's, Boys' and Children's Wear.Orders Jij' Mull Twelve ]>nrtliMilnr ai tci i l l im.

S l s mill I'rlci'H I'lirulslii'd If ilrsir<",l.WEDDING OUTFITS A SPECIALTY.

UNDERiriLL, ST.OTE & MUCIIMOH3

I'liy Hull I'nrk, III'IWIK-M Murray s i n v l uiul Turk

1879.NEW SPRIKC COODS!

THE CLOTIIIEU.Broad S-bx-eet

RF.D B A M ; , NKW Jr.itsi;v.

U*YA iii'imtiriil iis^'irtnifiiinf NKV; sritiMiour (TSTO.M TKA/'H. rw*MinK.*ft I>f[if.r"iiHl.i, Winutwi.1, rlit'xiutrt, 'l'liilH-is, fliiniicl-., tDKfttUT with Hik'iuliiiK s[> le.-i in :;irliK-.s mill niixttiri'^.

REAGMUDE CLOTHING!l>f nil J.fr;lilrsl!inl |iri:-i\-t.

RED BANK CARRIAGE FACTORY,TOR, WHITE ST. & MAPLE AVE.

J.W.Mount,&BroFRORRIETORS.

Ui1 li;ivc In Ktiwk a niunlM'r tif <-arriu?iM of illITrr-i-t.t s\,li'S wliii-li m olTer for soli1 al luw l>rlr»-a.

Wi' iilsn liull.l I'lirrlaRcs In nnh'r 1" siili llm f.'isl'1

nf Uii- cu^iinijrs.

CARRhVtiES TAINTED AND PUT IX

TUOROCTGII01iDF.lt.

OR. H. B, VANDORN,DG.VTIST,

•Vitli Dn. R. F. BOIIUXX, Miwlr Hull Bulldlnii.RliD V\~XK, N. J.

H. K. ALLSTROMSA C A D E M Y O F M U S I C ,

BROAD S T R E E T ,J1EU BANK, N. J .

Musle ImiRlit lu all Its Jiriuu-lies. A stot-k of sliuctciusli: conslanUy mi limit].

AUKNT WIR PIANOS AND olMiANS.

CEORCE McC. TAYLOR,SURVEYOR, ClVIt ENGINEER AND

CONVEVAKL'EK,nEn BANK, NKW JERSEY.

CMliM over White's CMcory, Unail Blm't.

M. F. MANY,/Sjttcramr to 11. E. Stiunvnoii),

WATCHMAKER AND' JEWELER,F11ONT STREET,

(Opp. Globe Hoiul.l Hun HASK, N. J.

J . A. THROCKMORTON,1IGALKII IN

LUMBER, LATH, LIME, CEMENT,BltlCK, NAILS, FAINTS, OIL, ETC.,

FRONT STREET,. J!KD IiAXK, If. J.

PARKER & CHADWICK,pp..v|.ciia is

LUMBER, LATH, LIME, BRICK,Cement, Cnlcliwil nnd Lluiti Fluster, Itnnhvnrp,

l'ulllts nnii lllls, Coal, llunuliist, Giinno, i c .Alsu Dry. Goods uuil UroL'urita. '

FBQNT 8TOKET. RED BANK.

CEO. McC. TAYLOR,REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE,

No. 81 Broad Street,> RED BANK. N. J.

Agent for the Monmoutli County MutualFjre Insurnjice-Co.

R. R. MOUNT,FURNISHING UiVKEUTAKEU

FRONT STREET, near tho Itallroail Ddpof!RED BANK, N. J,

Furniture repaired ami vrirnlahed, Picture. Irorara/or sale, spuolul attoutkHi Hlyon to tlio Iniming ofpictures.

A WEEK In your own town, nnd noaipltulrlslreil. r«u«tn(flvotlwliU3l-

4* nos» a trlnl wttliontoxpiiiwo. Tim bnston(lortuhlty over offered for those n-lllinR to work.You should try nothlnn else until you mm for your-self wlint you enn ilo ul llin tuislnpss wo olri-'r. Noroom to explain lioro. You can Unvote nil your Uninjor only your spare ttimi to ttio bus(nes«, nud miiKoorait pny f6r uvorjr hour Mint you worn. Womeninnko Inn much oa men. Sunil for special prlvntotorins ond nnitlciilnra, which wn nrnllf TM. J5 Outn tfreo. Don't complain of hum times nhlloynu liavo>urh n chanoo. Address II. Uallott * Co,, rortlund

lnvv mU;.

dill anil n

K lUlcikloil Hi lij n

i' our stwlc nnil (n< our prlres.

SEGARS AH9 TOBACCOiVLL BRANDS AND ALL PRICES,

Philip Stoffel's,BROAD STREET,

IIADDON BLOCK, RED BANK, N J.

The Best 5 Cent Segar in Town.An Extra Cood Segar for 10 cents.

A Fine Flavored Sccgar for 8 Cents,Four for a Quarter.

TOBACCO, PIPES, CIGARETTES, &;.CALL AND SUE.

COAL AND WOOD!SCRANTON, LEHIGH, CUMBERLAND

AMD WILKESBARnE COALat tilt) Lowest Market Rate*.

OOItD TTOOD, LOCUST AKB CHESTNUTl'OSXS AND CHiiSTAI/f1 HAILS.

JOHN A. WOHTHLEY,onice at VVerthlcy'a Dock, HKI) HANK, N. J.

WOOD BY THE CORD OR CAE LOAD.CUT AND SPLIT AT THE

Red Bank Crist Mill,(Near Hull Road Depot.)

J. H. PARKER.

FOR SALE.—UcntrnOlo Iluilil-lliK Plots of Bi-ound on fthrownliury Avonue,

near null troiitlHK tlio New Jersey t?ontml Depot,licit ])unk. wlutro maliirh lit .unknowu. Also nnumlwr within 10 mtnutcH' wiilk o[ tha deiiot, withtlii' rlBht of a cryrtiil Bprlnjr ninittlng W.ooii Kiillumdally. TiuUel sH and mift; Koiid for n Shirt Manu-Incturers mid Hroworn. Ciill und seo Hcliwlulo undmap. Prlcea low nnd terms eusy. Apply M

C. LRIIillTON,Nowman Sptlnga, Iteii Bank, N. J

SUMMER RESORT FOR SALEUlflwsn mlnutan of LOUR nranrh. Tlin Munslnnllmiauut Iletl Ilank, 5'Milnulra'uiilt <if the NewJur»ey Omtral Deput; sltuuted nn thti imnK.s of thoBliniWBhury lllvcr whero iiialnrin is unknown, rfitlibcuiitirul sliiiilng lawn; larRp xanlon, luirn, mr-llnRe-luiuno und sluhles; itill waler ImtlilnK, K(HH1tliihltiK aud boutliiii hi front of Iheiiremiwfl. Applyto . . . O. LEH3IITON,) Newman SDHncs, Red Bank N. J.

SUMMER RESORT FOR SALEWliore inntarln In iirrtndwn. The Nomiian Sprinpsproperty, tmuitttully sltuntctl on Urn liauka nf theSliiwjnnr* Bfv«r, n mllu from tlio Nuw SormyCentral Dopot nt lied Dank: in minutes hy rail fromI<oi«f llraneli: thlim are nlmil)' walks, nulln »rl»ni,lawiiH for croquet, n Imwilnft green, lillllnnl rcHim,Itcwl stiilillngnntl outbullillnjrn, slill.wntnr li.illilng,llshlnR und imiUltiK. nn tlio premises It a nryaUilBluing cmlttliiK 50,000 gallons dully- Apply to

• ' 6 D Ino I'remlscs.

Si i iu l l l l i i -n i 'n ' iu id lulivl slyli's.

CAI.I, AND INVI::STKiATE..,«.:

JAN. JJ. WEAVKU,

Mercliant Tailor>FKOA'T STIIKET,

RED BANK, NEW JKRSKY.

I l lUV (111 l l i l l l l l II ll l U H l W e l l S l l l ' f l f l l , K | M l k l l f

CLOTHS AND KUITINCS

'SprliiL'iiil'l In niaki-U|> In

T li'iiilf. wlilcli hi' Is pri1-sl>li-mill at [VU.MIII;:!>I<>

SUl-H'IT A CAM. AN'll INSI'EITION ()!•' MY(•TolK.

UEOT'U. SXYDEK,

FLORISTSi'nir Iliivcii, Hi. J.

Trent. Huttfc .V1 I'rgrtuhle I'lmiln.lnnil (It'Slfms ;itnl rliniri- ir-nt llnuTi's ut all WIISIHIH.tuntrinu luiski't* uiul vi^i-s lunilslii',1 imil tllli'il.lsn IriTS. ylinilis, v ims . Ar., In lunrr nr siiiiilluiiDllUi-s. all furnlslir<l ut tin1 vi-rv l"\vrsi nih-s.

4 *

M S 5

§ • f •_( 53 .g

•fell}O 8 R

II'OK BALE.

A fow fltm tmtlillng HURH urii orffiroil on tlio 1Bhrowabury lllvitr, n tow inlhutt'ii wulk frunBank. Dtturriim uin lie m-on nt

. . WILLIAM UAulKlN'8,or el r. arorPBii'H SKIIAU STIIHE,

Decorations in Oiland Fresco.

All descriptions of OrnamentalWork.

PAINTING'IX .ALL ITS |il! AM'I IKS.

'art icular at tention given to Hor-mony in Colors.

HE1I BANK AMI VICIXITV.

Kill Hank bus an curly New York mail.It arrives at 7.20. - —

A full line of celluloid and otlicr trus-ses at Cluulwick's.

Willie Worthlcv is imo of tlie lustoarsmen in Keil lijiulc.

A discount nf HI |icr cent, on all patentiiml proprietary nil ides at ChuilwicU's.

TJie 1'ev. Mr. "Wcrlis preached in f t .Oeui'iic-'s L'liurcli, Kuiiison, un Sundaynioriiiiifr.

The Ki'V.'Dr. Ueilcy, of the IlcfuriiieilCliunl i . lliiliuilfl, is suffering from an

The Moninouth County AgriculturalSoi'icty will lull,I its iiiiniinl fair at I'lce-hohl nn .SejilcMiher Pill, llltlililill l l l l l .

In II'.M) e:i.scs out iif ii jinwiMi' l.lllli). nniilroiiil niiiu jirclerH to tell ll lie evenwhen the lliilli just fairly hankers to liet .Iii.

Ili'uiUtuni's.. monuments , ccmetervI n s inclnseil, iVc, liy ('. \V. T|.iini|iw.n.j-liuie cutler, West I''rollt street, liedUii.ifc.

TJie ]tt'\. A.Siilncy Dcalcy is s)ientlin^hisvaralii.il in lleil Hank, l i e is the(rut1!-! of llrs. MiVau.-slanil, nt the "Kyca-

The liu.ly of ('linrlcs I 'roe. of West lln-l.okcii. who \ \as ilrnwneil in the l.on^liranelion ."Munilay.

Delirious iee

on tSuiulity. was iriuvereil

cnlil ill'ink.s inatle fiiun

inln-s

full

KM'I'IMATllS (H ri'-l: IT l.l.V (i! \TN.

y !»• ii-r: ut ' n i l : I ILI I ISTKII Iit i n

R. S. MERRITT,Fair Haven, PJ. J .

'Ailjniiiiii;," (lie I-'irst Nminim! Hnnlt,

J.i:i) HANK, X. J.

i i m - p i , . | i i , n , l i n II f l l l l I l . « " l 1 1 l | l - l l l . I f

Dress Goods,'ASIiMl.liKS. (WSIUIRKKS

C.AMKI.S' I IAll ; Ci.dTlf.CAMKI-I* IIAIK CLOTH.CAMKLS1 HAI j ; Cl.oTII.

iRF.NADlNKS.: R I : N A I I I M : S .iHh.N A1 )l NI0S.

(IKKN AHINI'.S.CUI-IN AMNKS.(: II!•;.%' AI )l N l-:,s.

I 'l .AIN SKA Ml IKS.l ' l .AIS SKA M|i i :S .l'l.Al.N MCA Ml IKS.

H'XTIN'CS. l l l 'NTlNliS.M.'NTIN'i^S. ]H .NTIM.s'.UNTINCH. l t l 'NTlNtJS

HA1!.MM'N.iiAiniiiis,HA If AUKS.

Mourning Fabrics(IT r \ r i'v Vii t ' lcty i l l l ' l l l l l l l l l l f n r i u i i ' .

A sri'KltluU ^SMiitTMKNT UF

WHITE GOODS,HOSIEET.

Choice Groceries.

"THE HATTER,"

247 GBEEBW1CH STREET, N. Y.Sprhiir uml Simniii'i'Slvlcs ntjlinilifurlliivrs I'rlio.

SI'Kl 'IAI.TIF.S:

iILK HATS. !fil.(l().XOblJV STUAW HATS.

CLUH CAI',S-AII Styles.A ftllt A:^urti!n'iit nf fii-nt's iiml Ituys' llnl!i.

Trunks, Satchels,UmbrellasHATK-IIWK'KEII VlltU': YOU WAIT.

KOACLAWD, "The Hattor."247 UitKENwii'ii Sntr.r.T, N. Y.

Hhafers I-*rnit Syrujis. fur -MU- In Theo.White, S. I), (.•i.l.iirn, 11. K. Kehroeaeran.llleimclt Urns.

Mr. (ii'ii. Met'. Taylor is eie;a(;i'il ineulleetill^ the eomlni'reiai Htaii^lifs nffile Slnvu's'iiiry r i rer for the t'nili-il

The In ;ivy rain t>( j\limilay fiflcniuoj!,"a.--l,ci! ihe rouils out to u eonsiilcrahle.\leiil. Smile iif the liuel; rnnils are suIlllieil Hr. to lie lliilli I illl|i:>x-,ilile.

Tlie Ifi'V. liavaril TayUir oceu|iieil the|Hll|.|t III III!Smiilav iiml

lli.lnnlel Haplist I 'Imirli onulli^. Ti

Carriage Making,Painting,

ASI) .

HOUSE SHOEINGAt till' lilil vstiililhlliil st.nml ill

: Mechanic Street,ItlvIJ HANK, ii. J,

HORSE'SHOEINCpromptly uilimik'd lo.by ulil uiul cxiMiriidii'i'il work-

lui'ii.

Ililllll

ic scrnu.li « as Verylilcanil \V;I;I ^really a|.|>iecialcil hy Ihc

I'ajit. II. 11, Kihv.irils. of Oeeani.ort..ill enler l i i ^aVh t "Vixen" in the l-'air

lhivcii regatta on Saturilav. Mr. Tims.Iviilille. nt' the saiiu< [ilace, will cuter ItisMew hn.ll "lii |i | ile."

The ll'inian Cut holies who rcsiilcin Ihev ii inity ol Coil's Neck are about to creelii i hiirch of that ilcnomiit.itiun. A lolhas hceii inirehiiseil of Mr. Keh^cy, anil

or.ll on the builiiillg will snuil he eoin-I I U l l C I ' l l .

(in .Mi un lay ni^lit u while man alleiupt-il In hlealc into a SIIHIJI linnet' nn White

aii'il ^h-s. 'Ki'Uji'. llJ1liii'r:iili7-5i'"fiiUiviV''iii1rv. and Ihc luaii run towanl liroail

street anil cscjipi'il.

(ircen's £ivat ilysj:c|i!ic pi'.nacca, "Au-UUst Mower," cures ilyspt-psin in all itsforms, such as discuses of the stomach,linn-els, kiilm-ys. constipation, fidi lie.nl-iicli.-. &•: K.r sal,' in lici] Kant only ) tiI'1. T. fliailn-ick, Iln.n<l street.

The annual cuinp-iiievtiii^ of the A. M.I1', /.inn t'liureh will lie-in mi l'riilay,Aii^usl stli, anil willcoiilinucci^lil ilays.The inecliiip, will he liclil In Morfiinl'st.rrove us tlnuil, II TII f there nill he a varietyol' li^hl drinks, cake, fruil, etc., fur saleon Hie ^rounils.

Tal:ea«ouilsi7.eil S]IOIIKC. sow il full ofrice, oats or f-rass seeil, aijil place it in ailisli of witlcr. The sponge will nlisnrlithe Wilier, illlil when the seeds hcrjl! tosprout attach a cont to the spouse aiuls!l^pellll il iii the wifulow uiul you willhave a very pretty ornament.

A rmviiu,' regatta, to he In-lil on theXhrewrOmry river nnil to take place somelime this in-mill, is in contemplation.Il is propiiscil to have a contest hetweenmembers of the Mumnoulli Bout Cluli, arace hcH\ cell two yuTllljj men sixteenyi'iirs of ajje. mid a race, hutwui^fl nuiii-her of yoiitiH lailics.

A spitz ilo(r lii'liingini; to Mr. KlishnWoollev. of Colt's Neck, reecnlly (level-oped traits of madness. It hit severaldo^s iu the neiglihorluioil nud u littli'<laii(,'litcr<if Mr. .Slewnrt Mallln-ws. Jlr.Woolley dill not helicvc thciloj; was mail,hut that it hail it distemper. Neverthe-less the don was killed.

The funeral of Miss Julia Allaire tookplace from Trinity Church on Mondayafternoon. The sermon svas preachedhy the liev. Win. N. Diinin-11, mid the.Ucv, C'lins. A. Tihhals read the service.Interment took place in Trinity Cemeteryn. Middletown township. Miss Allaire.viis ii ytiuni; Ituly of umisual gentlenessif disjiositioli, and ivns umi t ly hclqvedly a lai'K<- circle of ari|»uiiil,-iiices.

Mr. 8. ICclcliain, tho livery slahlekeeper of Miiplo avenue, in tilt-rear of(he Central Hotel, luis hail -his entireestablishment overhauled nnil is nowprepared to hire out horses .-mil carriagesat jnoilenile riltes. Ilo IIIIH received aniimher of now huK^iis ami has had nil

Mr. A. H. Ctuilfunl and Mr. RodneyKincli rcdtriH'd from tli'jir t r ip to theDelaware AVater ' (hip on-AVeilnesdayniornhu:. Thf'\'~'\vent nway with thedcti'rmiuation to have a ooil time and 'Ihcy came hick with the determinationto say tliat that j^intl t ime had hpon hail.Hut (his assertion rcsls merely on (heirword. They have as yet otlercd no cor-rohorative evidence of having hail thejcooil time.

It w;is Ca|»t. Benjamin Chamhers whosnviil the lillle hoy from drowning al.Mount's /lock one day. las! week, andnot his hrolher Alexander as sta lM:The boy was lishiiij,' on the iliu-k nnilfell into the river, lli^shouteil for bell/

and ( 'apt . Chambers promi'lly plungedrboard and rescued him from drowu-. The hoy's mother was profuse iu

IHT thanks and (ilFered Mr. (liamlieiN ,ihaiidsoine .mini of money, but this heposflively refused to take.

An eiiterliiinnient forthelienelH of St.

was hni:iclitil Mr. Homers looked sur-prised, HH didn' t fairly seem tp'realiztfthat there wa's such a thing as Ux^fOtuibrid^o in existence. After a i f e w . u i o 'iiiieuts ciinver:ationf Mr. Somers's mind!li-'caine more cleat" and IIH adniittocl thatthere was a lii'iilf,*u in' cxisteiice. Tli6I'cjiorh'i' »v;is dcii^htetl, and he askediMr. iSimiern if the. luidgo lind falleridown. To this Mr. Somera cheerful ly 'answered that the bridge was standing

that morning. TJii'rial seven ti'i linkthe n p.'ili'i1 asked Mr. iSomerstivo bi.:ie.-i had i;ot fallen out of thribridge on Sunday morning. As regardstliji fact Mr. Simmers seemed to be hope?les.ily igumaut. and when the rtiport-urial seeker a l ter Until asketiMr. Sijif lie did not hire a horse wild gon Siiiid.iv jii^ht l o ^ o t o Port Moniuoutliin nrdrr t i i i-l ineii to rejiuir the. bridge*before luc |I.ISS:.H'(1 of the niomiiig train/Mr. K iinei-i icplied that he only hirt'u\llii'ln-:-,1 and carriage for tho purpose'nf l.il.ing a ..:. astire ride, l i e then turned

Janus 'Chape l will be g, venal theresi- ; n , , , v v. l l h „„ . a ! , . , , , a m ; m w h o i l l l s 8 t t i d

d i i of ( pt l i n k n at Little Silverof ( apt, litink-n, at Little Silver,by the Oakes brothers on the evening v(Wednesday. August l.'!lli. The enter-tainment will colisisl of all c.vhihilion ofpictures intcrsjiersi'd with inusicand willbe coneludi'd liy a grand hop. Ticketscan be pfoeured at the door a t .r»0 eenlseach, I'hildreii half price. If the ahoveevening shiiillil pruU' stormy (he ealer-laiiiiiieiil will he pnslponed unlf) the nextf;tir e\ lining.

A regalia will be held al Fair Havenmi Saturday of this w n k. The start wiilbe made at I irelwcUrrom the frnnl nr theI'air Haven llulei: ' - . 'Uie Xi w .JerseyYacht Chili rules will |;nvcin the race.The beals are divided into iVur 11.is.es,and the prize money, which amount-* Insl;ill. will be awarded ils fi.llnWH : l''iM-elass. jib and mainsail, i l feet and up-ward. ^."IO: sreond class, jib and mainsail,under SI firt.ifl.-i; Ihinl cl.e.s, cat rigged.;'ll fcil and upward. | W : fourlli class,cat-rigged, under I'll feet, $|.). Thecourse to be sailed over is twenty miles inlength. A Sllil nf onlnrs will be present-ed to the second hunt ill each clas'-. Theentrance fees for the hunts ill e.'lcll I'llKS

are respectively an follows: {.fum, 11.1111.*:;.inland fi.tii). Aftei Ihe regalia i.-i overa tub race will be held.

On Tuesday morning the IbplistCbiircb wan cuin furl ably lillcd by a welldressed iisi-elllhlilge of |«n|ile called lo-gether to n'itiics.1 (he iiiarriiige of Mr.James It. Weaver and Mi.,s Kil ie JL.eld.-.l diiugliler of Mr. C. I>. Winner ofIbis (own. The bride was arrayed iu abrown silk dress, tr immed with velvet of

,.Id-gold shade, HIM!niii't. The bride wase groom wore i> i, ,_, i'

a \» ry [iiellyvcr\- beaultlid.

l,.-..- .1. !.>;!> The marriage ri-reiuoiivivin perlorincit by me mrV. i>. r . i.n|>-sin r. When the cereniony was over Mr.and Mrs. \Veaver were cniigt-altllaled hytheir many friends, nf I IT which theyI'litcred a carriage nnd were driven to(he residence of (he bride's father, »f herea line wedding breakfast was partakenof. Mr. and Mrs. Weaver left on theIII. Hi train for New Ymk, and from therethey will go as far us Martha's Vineyard.They are expected back on Saturdaynight. The Kl.inwrnH tenders I hem itssincerest Hell-wishes for Jl lung life ofconnubial happiness and material pros-perity. .

Jlajor E. J . Hopes, the author of the"Morley l e t t e r s from New York," haswritten a small bonk on Long Uraiicli.A full descriplinii nf the great tubularwrought iron pier is given, tngetlierwilhthe names of those whose rnlerprine and

nergy have successfully eneuuiitered

i i r ni \Vi*rk uiul

HIIOCH

r nflmilli'd wltlunit fall,l J l t l lof nil kinds at ro-

Watts & Duboise,itBl) HANK, N. J.

ii WM'kiuyouruwntown. J-Intilllttni'. NoO risk, liiiiuh'r. If you ivuntii l.ualiuaisiit wlikUliiirsiins u[ Hilmr mix run rtnki. Kront juijr all lliu Ililliiiy work, write fur iiiirtlciilnrM t« .

• II. II.U.i.irrr,tco., riirtlnnil, Mnliin.

; C C T IMI.II'H'.IIymi ran <ingiif>ii In. S."> M ?a)i " " I»'r iluy iniuln liy nay wurkL'r ul cltliiT| an , riirlit In Ilielrinvn diuillilui. 1'artlriiliiM

anil Biiiu]ili-.s wnrlli §5 fim Iniimiviv yntirBiiiii]ili-.s wnrll i 1 nt ihl.i lin.iJin

1'iiitliinil, MIIIIH-.«ai, AiMrcsn Sn.vsu.> Si t'u.

pmud suct'l, lied Bank. P0S1EUS prmtcil ut tho liEUlBTEtt ofllcc.

liis Imrnefia with new. Thehorses ut IUHHIIIIJIU me all Rood nmilnters,nud he is doing a butter busmen thanever heforc.

The Kcl'ionl hmiso nt Colt's Neck lmsheen rt-nilt-d and |iut in thorough rt-jKtho desliH and heiichi'a, which wero ofthu old etyle. pattern nnd in n fearfullyilihuiiilaleil condition,1mvo boon rt'Hlneedhy furniture of a inoile.ru ditto, nnd thocrenking of desks and tho occasional cnu-'hof a bench ns it yields to thii uuiledweight of Buvim boyB will no longer dis-turb tho oxtreino, qiiietudo tlmt roignsduring stu Jy lioura. During tho comingyear thu ncliool will he under the liinntinicnt of Sir. Stoplicn Higffinson, wliosoeillcioiicy during tho past yrair has metwith the approval of both iiiuoutsnndtruslccs,

very obslneTe in its construction and

idl In-iii!en,ls to say. The reporter fol-luw il liini and asked if two braces did-lu'it I':.II out of tin1 bridge- oixrjimilay, und-then Jlr. iSiiincrs iiiiinitlcil that they did/Inn claimed ih.a it wan no more thai*i.i.-, K!,-. l,> lo liii|ijicn to nny bridge a tn y l i l i u ' .

l l ep iCi inn of II. M. S. i 'd infore , .

Tii ' ivpi U io i i of ( i i lhc r t & Su l l i v imy

pi :.i, II..'I.N. ! ' i i i , i lore,"hyll if , ' i l i ron-B-

u i i .'.iiiiili 1'ir Club, was hard ly as suc -

essl'nl ::•: I'.en- 1 in-i-lll el lililllllellts of h i s t

icek. A-i b r i n e , t he lit;IJ{e in MllSlO

I.ill v is in nil- I-. ie|.ij'esenl t he deck of »

-liiji, Hi, in.ill r "im un each HIUV d o i n ^

u ..-. i!i, 'i ;il;ia, .•.!iili'-roi»llis, e tc . Tlitf

lowing i su ci.iii] ill le cast of the o p e r a i

" ; • • '

Ihvk !'<•

i/itiif I'"'/'

.inn/ i'i.,,1,

rcpri 'M ir..-'l b , .'

I: . I- .C i . a i i i c . , . : . ,i

.Mis. W i n . Mi w

Tlii ! . . i i " r , . 1 '

Ml.-r-l'i.. A. I I . II

I ' i i i l . in l . I I . i i i y

i 'HI rv .

T h e pcifori i i : ' . 'III'IIIH K 1 " ' " " "

•. i . ic i icea i i . l . -ae i

w i l l i t ; rc ; i tef i-,i:i

Jiii ha i i l S,i inii ie

t j l lee l l ' s N a v e e "

manlier wmlhy

•./II.«I-/I/I Porter, K, C.DiJlr. Ifichard Kamulers/

I'm. I 'iiiiiiiitnith'r It. M. Si.Mr. \\ in. I'iiilanl/

.\lr. I'. S. Jolinu.-.iuil.:inii'H. .Mr.ll .C.Terry/ulil' si until tt ••

Jlr. ti. W. Jlacy/

.-lanli-r II. Calil|ib«ll/

Mi!-s Julia (ireciv. it t.nmti.nit ifunutn... .-

.\;i . A. V . Jennings/Mrs. Wdcox/

...Mi.-). (Icorije lirailforil/

oiiiin- ami aunts wcroII-.:. ruiiiiii- (iingi, Mint*. .'il,.-., h'liiina I 'arkmaii,11.-, and .Mi'*< Tillie ()il)>,'i/1. M. S. riiial'oie wero,nli n, II. Wilcox, Chas.I'ainpliell and (Ji)orgo"

ii csof last ivcck [mil cvj-

i cl.arai U-r was assumed1

- iind naturaliicss. Mr.-!•!. .is •• The ltuler of theoui loe ted himself in it

oi' his lii^h station^-and

made it the success it is. A chapter islevoteil to (lie early history of l/mgHninch, which will be read with interest•y all who are ncijuaiiitcd with theilace, l'iich of the hotels at 1/mgiraneh is treated of iu the chapter onintels, and an illustration of one or two.f them is given. A list of Ihe nmreimminent cottagers is given in Ihe work.

The different routes between New York,rhiladelphia and Ix.ng llraneli are fullyescribed ami the peculiar features jif

each is graphically delineated. A greatand brilliant future is predicted for Longllraneli. The work concludes with asketch of the Highlands of Navesiuk,theSwift Ilousciind the liist Vii'wTIouse.Throughout the hook are illustrations ofhe iron pier.-US seen from dilferent po-

sitions).

A number of hoys were in swimmingin the vicinity of the New Jersey South-ern Hailroad bridge on Sunday morning,

and two of them climbed upon the bridgefor the purpose of diving into tho water.One hoy had dived and the other wasal«)ut.tt> follow his example, when heinadvertently placed bin hand oil one ofthe middle braces—a stick of timberibout eight inches square" and eight feetin length—when ho felt it tremblingand in another instant it fell with u crashinto tlio river drugging its companionbrnco with it, One of the luds examinedother parts of the bridge- Uiul found por-tions of the bridge so rotten that they

rumbled at tho slightest' touch. OnSunday evening Jlr. Sumers, the stationagent, visited Mr. S, lCeteluim'.f liverystable and asked for a horso and carriagetu go to Port Moninoutli. He was toldthere was but one. horse in tho stableniiiUt was too tired to take suuh a longdrive. Mr. Soiners seemed to ho ex-cited. Ilo said that ho must have nhorse—no mutter where ho got it, norwhat he puid for it, as ho wunted to goto Port Monmoutli and-ua-vo-tho bridgerepaired before tho train enmo over inthe mormiig. llu scoured the horse. AKEOISTRH reporter called on Mr. Somerson Wednnsilny morning for the purposeof gathering olucinl information in 10gnrd to thp bridge. -."When tho Bubjeel

pleased the audience by giving them hit)idea ol ihf-vwav in wliuh (hut oilicialshould *li p u t himself under various amiMxneliini > r.-iile r l iving circumstances/Mr. William I'intaiil, of Jersey City.iiKulea gn.id Captain of the l'itiufore, nndhis acting proved that lie had given thecharacter of Ciijiliiin C'o/roniu carefulstudy. I fc Hinging was also very due,and bis last appearance in Hod Bank hn»done milch to strengthen his reputationas a singer. The persiiiiutiou of Hulpht:itrk*lniir\>\- Mr. K. S. Joliue, who isahoof Jersey l.'ily, WIIH excellent, nndtlie:iudiinci 'sliowedtlieirap[ireciutionh/liiirKlsiif i.p|.lauso. Mr. (j . W. Muc.y BUS--tained the elmrui'ler of Dick Dnulrye,Mr. Mney irf a profeKsional and l«n|^practice has iii.ibled him to master hispart ciiiiipletely. His porformmice oilthis occasion, Jimvever, u'as soniewhabirnu.-iial, us he ni.-ule an elfort to impi'ovBon the original text by interpolating ob-ucrviilioiis of bis own, His effort, a tleast as far as regards improvement, wasa derided failure.

Mi>s Julia 1 ireer, of Shrewsbury, in Uetcharacter a.s Jn»'j>li int. established a rep-ulatiiiii us u liieul singer of excellence,and miTiteil and received freijuent andhearty iipplausi.'. Miss Greer has beenl'nr 11 niiiiilier of years cultivating heVvoice and she received especial training

for her hu opera. Mrs. A. V.Jeiinin;;s ns little Uittlcrcup enteredthoroughly into the spirit oC the clutrnC'ter she was to represent,, und gave evt<ileiicii of diligent study and "earnest pm<H

•. The miustial exct-lleiice with wliicliIhi.scharacter was perEoiiiitedcontributedin no small degree to the success of tlwopera. Mrs. George Bradford, ns Hebe,.leil the sisters And'thu cousins and tlioaunts of Sir Joseph, porter, nnd both sliaand Mrs. Wilcox, naAimt Penelope, gaiil*cd fiivor with those present.

The remainder of tho company, thaseaman and the relatives of Sir JosephPurler, K. C. 11, individually and eoNlectively performed their parts and snngtho cliorusoa satisfactorily—to the au-1

dieiiL-eat lL'ast. The members of thoKeiBunk brass band, who furnished tlu*music, for the occasion, hud spent consid-erable time in preparation anil as a con-sequence the instrumental part of thaope.ru was well rendered.

Miss Julia Grour receivod a hnndaomebaskot of llowora, nnd boiiuets were pre-sented to Jlrs. Jennings, Jlr. "Wm. Pin-tanl, Sir. Kieiuird S;\uuders and Jlisa 'Funny Giiijri.

The yiuini; people of Shrewsbury hardboon very-energetic in regard to thisopera. They have received many com-1inundations, and lmve the satisfaction olknowing tlmt tho people of this vicinitylmve been entertained with a most enter--tinningontortuiiuneut., " :

As the workmen were1 demolishing Ahouse at Perth Amboy, built in llitM,they found nn oldDunish Bible that Imd .been printed iiillllil, in tho'nuson work,halt oE which WHS in ugood state of p rwecvation.

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'1**'* ,.'." O I. r.;t*<. -Jf I*--, • •• it. i.f ,-J:s

\V'J:JIi' " I T the iiiuudyw On. twgcl winds fcigli,Aijtl brdatlia of JVa^miice blow tar unil nigli,

? And tho tide fiowv by.

,A boy stands under the oak tree tall,At tin'old gray yu1<; by the orchard wall;

"Hultwiks larilwuy where the blue BUII BiniUtj,Wondering whcif! lie the Fortunate lalca,

- And the tide (lows by.

_ A youth and n maiden punso ami wait ,

In the *miai*t light at":]ie old gray giittf;Thoy silently giize in each otlier's eyesAmi clieuui of the rupture of Parmlise,

And thoUdu llowa by.

lU^idu tho giito slunds ti wire worn man,'Xcatli a wintry nicoiilight, liiiiit and >van;lit) looks Jar awuy ttnvnWl tlie cold, ^my aea,With u fi^li fur the daya tliul were oncu to be,

Ami IIiO tide flows by.

An old man stands by (he moss-grown gate,Snviuwing, >v»«nvy unil (Institute,Tin* starlight gleams o'er IL distant prtive,And over it soltly tho yisiv tree* wtive,

And the tide How's by.

Through the old gray gale, Imvnrd the shilling

west, , j"They liuve borne the wtsiry mits to h'm rest;Thu new day hrtuika and the tduuUiw> lice,Thu lith; ot' Lbe river Hows iiist and i'ree

Far out to sen!

— Suiiur W. Aloullon.^

POLLY.CHAl'TEU I.

"Jink! you are the most provokingfioy in thi1 worhl! You've got nn re-spect for your sisFers or anything on thi-.earth. Give me my letter this instant,sir! I would not have such work man-aging you, my young man, if nmnmahail only left your hair long enough lopull."

Dick, rejoicing in a. very close crop,dodges under her.arOUis 1'nlly makes agrab ut his bristly head.

With a "Don't you wish you couMgel it?" anil a delighted cackle at hergrasping n handful ofi'iupty air insteadof his auburn locks, In1 inaki'S Iris es-cnpi1, li»d»ing the letter with a skillfultwitch miii high bracket which holds abust of Dickens.

The boys in Ihe Nyuns family hadconic mostly girls; in luct.Diik repre-sented the single male nfl'-shoot, rind,like the had little boy of the newspapers,he wouldn't for any money h.-ive riskedbeing born again for fe.-ir of coining ;igirl next time.

"Joy go with you! (lood ritldunce \ubail rubbish!" is Polly's parting salute,anil she proceeds to fish out from beliiiMthe plnsUT-oftl'aris coat-sleeve of Mr.Dickens the apple of discord. And heri-okir,'\vbich hml risen unbecomingly dur-ing the scuflle with Dick, tones downiisslie rends it.

Supposing .lob hail received a' kindletter of invitation from one of his mot h-er'skind friends—for ihe first time, too—don't you Ibink it would have riledeven him, for IL brown, smudgy paw,sticky with molasses, to have seized ii,erkingit out of his hands, when he wasin the midst of opening il, withoutmuch asj"by your leave," and tonsil upto Ihe ceiling?

The subject of this visit hud beenbroached before; now conies lbe letterbringing matters to a focus.

"INot only putting in the peg, buldriving ithonie," says Kitty.

"Actually minus the time fur you toromc," remarks I'alsy; "anil Unit is morethan most city folks ilo. They willtry friends i'n July, ami tlicn TeTfomMobe SUI'C to call Wlleu Mite^in-s HI Lin-Ml v .Think of boiv Mrs. Aytoun treated tinDoilson's, Kitty."

11 And you've nothing to do bul packlip your trunk and mart, I'olly," s.-iv-Mrs. I,yo«a, inniveenlly.

"Mercy on us, mamma! liul packmy trunk anil start! I'nless 1 gel inmyself 1 don't see what there'll be |,ipack it with. If I depend on my al|i:ii-:iand blue poplin, I'll be leaning on :ibroken reed, I am sure: and lean to-;,my few things in, and then there'll In-room enough in the trunk forTouteni-and Dot t> play hide-and-seek.

"Come, now, Folly. I am sure you looknicely in your tilings. Kver sft muchnicer than the Dodson girls, who spciuiso much."

It is one of Mrs. Lynn's firm articles olbelief tlmt her girls look "nicer" thanall other girls at all limes. K fact, thaias far as her girls are concerned, there isnothing fer bearl to desirf.

"And nJuiilly,'.' cries Polly, " if I hadmy hands stuffed with money al lliismoment I wouldn't know what to get orbow to nnike it. That comes of liviuzin the country on the road to nowhere.If I were papa I'd move lo-moirow nndnot hide my talents under a napkin."

•'Tut, tut, Tolly! Don't (|iiole Scrip-ture ill n fret," says Diek. "Alwayskeep your temper, uiy child."

"Mamma, will you please to makeDiek behave!" seeing that he dodged allher efforts to box his ears.

"Richard,my son!""Oil, you'll scrape through," says

Kilty, taking up the thread of discoursewhere it was broken by the skirmishwith Dick. " We'll all help you nut."

" Dot, who was number four, andalways dressed in the others' old clot lies,gave up on the spot all right and titleto any and everything new thnt shemight, eould, would or should have thatwinter.

The family conclave was not brokenup till far into the night. Certain tripsto the neighboring town were plannedand taken, nnd many demands madeupon the family purse.

Hut at last Polly's trunk was packed—actually packed—with "good clothes,"iiudjhere was nothing more to be done.

I t was in quite a gushing state of mindthat I'olly bundles herself up in a bigshawl for a farewell walk the eveningpreceding the eventful day.

Being December, there were no flowersto assist sentiment; no nothing much,except bare brown hills and leafless,gaunt trees.

"Tho sheen were in the fold; the cowsgone, home;1' even the birdB gone toroost. But she would not bo balked.

" I ' l l try my fortune,"she said; and,looking around to see that no one is

. nora, ilie stops before a large tree. Asone of France's gifted writers had donebefore her, she takes a heavy stone anddraws very near*

" I f I hit the tree ."she says, ' l i t shallbe a Bign that before the month is out Ifind a true love. If not—then not."

v Uka .the' French philosopher., Roussoau, alio plumps the tree, and experi-ences the same feeling of relief and ex-ultation. ,

CIIAITEB « .

" Jus t to think! I'm roally starting!'cries Polly, ecstatically, bobbing up nnddown before tho squatty mirror to get agood look at her belongings. "Lookout, Kittv, and sec if tho carriage U atthe door." O ' °V -"'Meroiful heavens! what is th

matter?" they cry, asii shriek from theirmother reackea them, and a confusedsound of trampling feet..' They rush down, nnd find poor Dielying, white and still, on his nvother'ibed. - *• " I knew it," groaned Mrs. Lyons,

"IVo always said he'd bo killed b.\hopes or guns, or be drowned I AntMW ho'Il believe lib poor mother."

"Here is a bryken arm." isays JohnClary, tho doctor; '"•(iiliMie is a gooddeal bruised; butf-ivc'll get him around,1 hope. Who will help me with thisarmi' I want a steady hand—no flinch-ing."

Mrs. Lyons was so -weak she couldbarely stimd, Patsy trembling, andKilty had cried till'slic eould scarcelysee. •

" Here, Dot. take these things upstairs:" and l*olly tosses off the sprucehat and gloves with an irrepressiblesigh.

Poor .Dick stood the operation like uman? Thai dreadful stretching anilpulling, and grating together of thebroken bones.

Polly, like a \yi)iiian,,cxaelly, held thequivering limb lirmly nnd gently, helpedpin the last bandage, saw the color com-ing back lo DickV freckled face, and thengave a little sigh herself, ami didn't know-how she got up stairs to her room.

There she was bidden lo He down, com-pose herself, even take a nap. You Knowsome people pin their faith to " takingnaps," and would advise one to " take amill" even though (lie hou.-c had jus!burned down.

When they were all out, Polly takes oil'her "good clothes," her new buttonhoots, the new trnvcling-ilrras and all:putting on her old nlupaca) for tearsmake ugly spots), slit1 cries all sorts oflours—tears of sorrow for Dick, of vexa-tion with him: bul most of all tears ofdisappointment nnd pity for herself.When she had wept out all her "littleweeps," she went down. John Carywas gone, saying he would return hi theevening.

He was a well-looking, well-to-do,bashful man of thirty, or thereabout*,and'esteemed ijuite a "ca t ch" in theneighborhood. Indeed, il was the talkof the iieiirhborlioiid how those holdDodson girls bad thrown themselves at.his head.

Palsy ami Kitty acknowledged in sor-row their unsuccessful effurts to attractmore than a passing glance, and begunadvising roily, as soon as she camedown,to " t ry her hand and air her newliuerv for his benefit."

As' Doctor Cary hud lea Dick feelingi|ilite comfortable, the Lyons familyseemed inclined to celcbralc thisunconi-

on event of having an invalid in thehouse wilh considerable energy.

The younger members of the botise-bold, Tootems anil |)ot, crawled nrountlthe bed in a fever of curiosity to see

how Dick's arm wus ni"iidcd;" Kittyand Patsy, having recovered from theirfright, wanted to amuse the patient, andsee him laugh, and Mrs. Lyons was mak-ing some jelly and cake fur " Ihe poordear."

Only Polly w.-is ns glum :is :in oysier.She knew well that a small imp was atwork within her, bill could not make upher mind to drive him out; soslies.ilwilb red eyes ami. sulky face, gloomilyknitting. Slip didn't laugh a bitover theirirls' ji>kes. ami l>iek tlitin'l sec any poinllo them either.

" O h , Dick, you just ought to havebeen looking when Polly fainted. Doc-tor John didn't even slop to look at her.Why, if il hadn't been for Patsy and me.•dic'd have tumbled on the Iloor. Heonly said, ' Sprinkle her fiu-e,' and went

] on pun.-hing you about the ribs."

f r , ~ . J - . . . / J ( / . . , '*:•>•• '<, •-;"•;• •' "•••

! > ' : • » • < • -•••'' i - v j - ' I , a y J i i i u ' ' . . - t j i t i t . ) ) •

considered lie had more right to it titanuny one else, anil chuckled quietly tohimself at the unwonted ^uecess of hismanocuver.

"Why, Polly will scarcely have to getany wedding clothes," cries one .of tlit1

girls; " the liuCTy up stairs will eom> inexactly."

There eould certainly he no objectionto the match, :us Polly was eighteen,, anilDoctor John was plenty old enough totake care of her. Polly preferred wait-ing ;herse]f, but " the girls" would nothear of such a thing. So whi.'n Pollyjiiade another start to the citv, it w;us ona little hridal tour, insteailof*bouu-catrh-ing.

"l ie 's a slow old coach," chimed inI'alsy. "Polly hasn't Intel" much of astarl yet: I shouldn't wonder if a Dod-soii gets him yd. They are so persover- !in.ir."

" ()|i, I'm dying of love fur him," says1'itllv, sarc:isiicallv: "and, of course, Ishall cry my ryes out for him."

Dick was dozing, bul these words ofPolly's e.'iuglit bis car. and he kept n -,. .-^i-^ a ... K;..,.,..if. ii^tutnil seehia'^cy^'^ w^ere very r ed . und thai she

Doctor Cary shook h i s head when befound the family parly assembled roundUiek's bed nni! t he boy wi th a highfever.

"Ton many nurses eitlircly. Whowill lake ihe responsibility nt keepinghim c|iiicl? Miss Polly, will you attendto the pivseriplinns?"

Ol ciiur.se I'uliv would, and she ili<her duly so well that Dick rapidly im-proved." Me could soon enjoy readingaioiid, and dcliu'hted in having Iloetoi-Can sit wilh him and tell him the gal-lant exploitsof the Homeric heroes.

I le brought him Tennyson's " Idylls oftin- King," nnd read aloud lo him many a.iliiic'evcnini:, while Polly sat near, so-li, -rly working ami listening.

"(icrilillt" wan one oi bis favorites,who thrashed robbers in armor by thehalf do/en, us a boy would a walnutli : and brave "Sir l.auncelot," whotumbled knights over like so many ten-pins.

Tliov had been reading " Elaine," thesail tale of tin' "Lily-maid of Astolnl,"who lovi'il so well ami loved in vuin.

It is often these rattling,, rollickingboys who have the tenderest feelings,atul at the conclusion Dick was quietlysmillling and bowling the tears out. oflii.s i yes with bis knuckles. Polly hadslipped out to hide her own.

"Doctor,"says Diek, brokenly, "wouldyou let a girl die because she was lovingyou so?" i

"Never. Dick, never! Hut I am notthe slashing kind of fellow girls dieover," says Doctor Cary, laughingrnthcrsadly.

" Doctor," said Dick, in a hoarse whis-per, "oneof 'em's doing it. She cries,and droops over her work just like the' bily Maid' did: and she's loving you. Iheard her say so."

"Oh, no, Dick, you are mistaken!''ries the doctor, blushing furiously."Not a bit. I'll tell you who she is.

t's my favorite one of 'em. It's Polly,nit's who it is: and she can skate us

veil as a boy, and make good traps, andueh tally! Doctor, would it liui t me toat taffy now ?" i

As I have said; the doctor took in newdens slowly, but when they once madein entrance into his head, they came totay.For" the first time, in his recollection

lecp failed to visit him at his usual hour.lo lay tossing and tumbling, thinking.Jolly 8 pale laec nn 1 wistful eyes hauni-d him, and Dick's tearful words: " Onef 'em's doing it, sho loves you so."It may have been that he loved Polly a

jng time unconsciously. At any rate, itecmed to him now that he had loved hervery long time.He could stand it no longer. The beau-

iful girl pining away for him. HeIprang up and wrote her an offer ofuarriago in the dead of night. Ho handedthis letter to Volly himself ashe bode her"Good-bye" after his next visit, pre-;cndedly to Dick.

Polly took it quietly without openingit, thinking it to be a new prescriptionfor Dick, who, with his arm in a sling,now roamed at large.

She sauntered into tho sitting-roomwhore they all were.

Does Doctor John always directthem to you, Polly?" asked Kitty, opening it. The next moment she screamer'outr ight , ." Patsy, conic hero! Dick;what do you think P Doctor John wantsto marry our Polly. Did you ever inyour born days P"

Tho excitement was intense."So there's to be a wedding i n th

Lyons family tit last?" cries Palsy."Moroyl tho Dodsons will turn greenwith base onvy, What luck! Tell ushow you .managed it, Polly—do, Ohyou clever Polly!" '

And Mrs. Lyotos ctimo hurrying in, ancsmiled so blnndly, nnd crowed so trium-phantly over those "sclioming Dodsongirls," that Polly waftf erfeotly confuscil

- liUI'TKIt III.

What boy eould ever lioltl his tonguc;when he ought to, or keep a serret?_

"Polly, I must tell you," says Dick,'after she had her bonnet on, ready tostart. "Come oil'here—it is a sin-ret. Icaught the doetoi for you, miss; I toldhim how you'were crying your eyes outabout liiin, and how you were dyingafter him. I heard you say so. Oh, 1managed this matter iim-ely. Now,thank me for it, miss.''

1'olly was stunned. If she did not can:particularly about John Cary herself, sheat least imagined him to begrcully inlove with her. It was too cruel to destroythe pleasant illusion.

And Dick stood hopping first on oneleg, then on the other, waiting to hi;thanked. Sliec.ould have hiixctl him.

A moment more and the farewellswere over, and Polly and her husbandwere rolling side by side lo the station.

"Polly, dear," says her husband,"we've been in such a stir and bustle,and—and even our rourtsbip in suchconfusion, that I'm glad we'll have a.chance to get aiviuainted with eachother. You'll fall me John, won't you,dear?"

" Ob, yes," she answers, coldly. "Any-thing will do."

11 And you'll kiss me, now, won't you.Polly? Do you know you have neverkissed me u single time yet ?"

"Som'e people are coming, anil theywill liiugb lo see us such geese," saysPolly, hurriedly, pulling her veil overher face.

" You scarcely feel that you know mi",iloyou, Polly?"

She was crying so she eould not an-swer, and Doctor .John sighed rathersadly to himself.

" I don't know much about women'sways. I am ai'raid."

" Not this year, nor tlu* next one.either." I lick's wiirilsscnnied prophetic.

Polly did nol even gel half way to i hecity. Doctor John had gone lo the cooleru bring her a cup of water, and when

next l'ollyonened lier eyes,she was lyiiu;on her own bed in her own room, dark-ened, feeling very son1 and weak andstill'.

Doctor John, looking much older andunxiuus and wan, had his lingers on luvwrist, counting her pulse.

A railway accident, of course. I'idlyhad a terrible time of it gutting well,but she found out what a kind, good, de-voted husband she had in thost' weary,trying weeks of pain. #

When at last, there came a day whenshe could again be daintily dressed inbecoming ribbons, and when once murecrimps and curls were a part of life, itwas a great day for them.

" W'c were married last year, I'olly,"says John, looking at her admiringly." fieri1 il is tin1 middle of a new Janu-ary. We've been man and wife liveli'Hi; weeks. Quite an old couple, aren'twe?"

Piilly put her hand in his.11 You have never kissed

Polly."u.rth&'HrnAma'ms M O V ' ' '

" H e ! he! what fun!" came gigglingfrom the half-open iloor, and Dickihusbed oil'down stairs.

Pulsy and Killycame rushing up losee what could the matter be, and asKilty reported, " Poll) just up and kissedher bus band as bold as a lion before themall," though her face was as pink as the,rose on her limist, und John I'ary wasblushing like iifrirl.

And though when I'olly got well andstrong enough she gave Dick a good

baking, .she thanked him nil tin1 same inhe bottom of her heart, and they bolh'Ited and made much of the hoy, tiii

'atsy and Kitty declared he was mi theliuh road to ruin.

Uut rlolm proving a good husbanil.Ndiy was right. Marrying a man isike eating mushrooms. If you die they,'ero toadstools, if you live they w» relusliruonis. If a man bents you lie isaoadstool; if not, be sure lie is some;ind of a mushroom, lor which behatikful.

yet.

rood.

following is the second portof MissJu ' iet Orson ' s lecture on the "Rela-tions of Food to Health " delivered he-foiv tin; Farmers' Club, New York:

Water hits already been mentioned asa physic.nl clement, and its importancemay be estimated when we rememberthat it constitutes al: least two-lhirds oftin1 subsUuuM! of the body, and entersinto tin! blood to tlie e\tent of nine-tenths of its volume. The quantity ofwider used every dny cannot be estima-Icil by what is drank, because nil freshfoods contain it lo some extent, and driedfoods are cooked with the addition of It.•Soup and stows, which are exceedinglywholesome, contain about three-fourthstheir volume of water. Water for drink-ing, or rooking should be clear und color-less : it should present no odor, and havea pleasant, refreshing taste; cool, freshwater is more wholesome than thatwhich has stood in the sun, or in a close,warm room.

Hard water used for cooking purposescoats the surface of incut or vegetablesboiled in it with limo to such an oxtentus somotinies to render them hard to di-gest; this action results from thepresence of lime salts, and may he coun-teracted by soaking the dried vegetablesover night, draining nnd cooking themin fresh' water; very soft water, eitherrain or spring water, does not answer as

A Chicago Hotel Episode.One Sunday morning, a few years

luce, news was received in Chicago ofmost terrible milrond accident. Out ofwhole train load of piussergrrs manyere killed und but lew escaped unhurt,

"lii" railroad officials in Chicago, on re-•eipt uf the news, dispatched :i specialrain In the scene of the, disaster, withoctors and nurses, and soon had the

wounded and dying on their way to Chi-•ago at lightning speed. On arrival up-licntion was made at two lintels located

icar the depot for temporary shelter for:he sufferers. One proprietor refusedjoint blank—said it would ruin hisinuse and business. The other hotelproprietors threw their doors wido open

and said, " Bring on your wounded, wtwill not see them suffer if we can be ofxny assistance." The hotel proprietorwho refused admittance to the sufferersshortly afterward closed his doors forwant of patronase, and, in fact, sunkevery dollar he had invested. On theother hand, the proprietor* who openedtheir hotel and welcomed the sufferer's,regardless of what might be the conse-quences, received a remarkable run ofpatronage, and were compelled to en-nrge their house, although it was in noiny superior to the former. Previouso this event both hotels luid received

about an equal amount of patronage, butthis act of kindness, done in. the hour ofneed, was the tide in their affairs wh.iehdrifted them on to fortune.—Hotel (ln-zctle.

A Curious Family Dispute.A curious case, says a Paris paper, has

just been decided at Fontainbleau.wheroaM.nndMmo.Missiessyappearedin courtto plead against each other for two oftheir daughters. It appears that thismarried couplo havo seven children-five daughters and two sons—and thatthe father had insisted on the tltrec eld-eat daughters becoming nuns. Themother offered no resistance; but whonit came to depriving her of her two re-nmininEdntigfyors, who 'were also dis-patched toa convent in spite of her en-treaties and delicate health, she appealedto the secular arm. The court endeav-ored to shake tlio determination of thehusband, but ho remained inflexible, de-claring that Ui voice from a)jove hadcalled upon him to submit, and thnt Ills(laughters should remain where thoyare. The court of FontninWoau took amiddle course, and decided that the twoyoung ladies in question should bo released from- the cloistered convent, inwhich they haVo been imprisoned, andsent to the celebrated Convent of theOiseaux in Paris,-which isnot cloistered,and where thoy will bo iiblo to receivetho visits of their parents. i

substitute for hard water.Medium soft water is the best for gen-

eral cm iking purposes, although vegcui-hle's boiled in it without salt nre oftensoft and tasteless, ltoiling water wellsalted should always be used for boilingvegetables. Medium soft water ninnesthe best tea'and eoll'ce. Hoth ten andeollife are luxuries, but custom makesthem seem necessary at nearly all ouriileals: their habitual use should, how-ever, he decided by their eil'jct upon t l i csystem of persons using them.

Tea generally causes a feclingof wakefulness, cheerfulness and clearness ofmind, sometimes accompanied by nerv-ousness; it also retards destructive ns-siMiilation or the change of the nutri-ment contained in food into healthy andwell-nourished blood. Kor this reasonit should not be uswl in the morning,when Ihe physical forces :iro, at theirlowest ebb and the body needs all theooiirisbnient it can derive from food. Itis during sleep that "Ihe vital forcesgather their strength from the nutritiouselements of the food consumed duringlbe previous (lay. For .the same reasontea Is very bail for children,-whose grow-ing , bodies need nil the nourishmentwhich goml fond enn supply. If tea' ispropi'rly made it, may be used hv robustadults, lit the midday and evening mealswilhimt injury to the general health.Tea can he<l be made by putting the re-quired quantity, half an ounce or threeheaping teasooonfuls, into an earthenleapot, which has been well sciildod outwith Uoiling water, pouring in aViont :xfourth uf the quart of water intendedfor use, letting il stand unoul five min-utes without boiling, then lidding therest of the boiling water and using tin*infusion nt oiii-e. Coll'eo is the bestwhen bought in the bi»nn and freshlyroasted or wanned just; before grind-ing anil using. A very good break-fast eolVee can be liiuile by using abouttwo ounces or four heaping tablespoon-I'uls of finely ground coffee to I'ueb quart•>l boiling water. After the colTce isHindi1 il should • not boil, but should-t.-md where it will keep hot withoutbnilingiiboiit ten minutes until settled.

The etl'ect nflioiling upon tea or coffeeis tin- extr.-ictinn nf tanuie acid and thedissipation of lbe delicate essential oilwhich gives the aronni so much prizedin 11iey • beverages. The action of tan-nie aciil upon tin- milk used with tea oriw'i'ini t,-,!,!. '••vu'ivsn,,;/! -* .-• ll-f c iciscr 'aug-ment- the hitler t.-iste of both tea nndCoffee.

lbe rietual quantity and variety offond req'iircd to maintain health variesvii;b dilVei'ent oerun.-ilinns and pliysicrilpci-iiiiiiritics, but plenty of plain, nu-liitiuiN fare is called for rariyyi the dayin order to replace in the blooit those nu-tritious elements which have been with-drawn from it during the night.

A midday dinner is the best for hardworkers, beeiuise their store of strengthis decreased by every movement, andmust In- replenished frequently if theyare to lie kept in goml physical condi-tion.

A hearty dinner can be made from half•A pint of soup or vtuw, or three ounces oftish ; quartei of n pound each of meatliul bread; and half a pound pf vege-tables. A plain pudding or a litlc fruitnd i-herse nn1 excellent lo end a noonl l e a l . . • -The supper may be a lighter repast of

ire.-ul and butter, a little meat or o.lieesoora relish, and some starciiyfood,.such,s plain cake or crackers.

When an evening dinner is laken it.ibould lie light if tlie digestion is at »11mpaircd.

In selecting a dietary we mustrcinem-ier that the greatest amount of nourish-nent is derived from combinations, oliftVrcnt u'iratfntary substances. For in-

itapjeo, a pound of meat and a quart ofegetables, if cooked separately, wouldlake only a meager meal; but confbincd

with water and seasonings, in the formfa thick soup or stew, would make nn

ibunditntand wholesome dish.In estimating the value of different

articles of food we must disregard theiractual cost and consider them with di-t-cet reference, to the degree of nourish-nent which they nre capable of yieldingmilor proper culinary treatment.

For. instance, a pound of round steak,which costs about twelve cents in mar-ket, when cooked by itself does not fur-nish half as much nutriment us a poundif lentils, tho cost of which is about six•cnts.

Water, which is generally consideredas representing no money value, addedto the pound of steak, together with afew cents' worth of vegetables, greatlyincreases the nutritive value of tin: dish.

This is the reason why combinationdishes are more healthy as well as moreeconomical than joints.

Some importance is attached to theclass of food called by their advocates"perfect food," such its milk, eggs andgluten; the use of these foods is injuri-ous in proportion to the degree of con-stipation which they produce.

Not the least interesting discussionupon this subject is that between meat-caters and vegetarians. "~

When tho diet of tho latter includesmilk, eggs and cheese, as it generallydoes, it ^mswers the. 'requirements ofhealth pretty well. in...temperate nndwarm climates, hut great cure must betaken to select those vegetables whichnffnrd all the elements necessary for thecomplete nourishment ol the body. Thechoice rests mainly with tho cereals andthe legumes, otherwise the quantity ofvegetable matter required in order toproduce the nccesstuy umoui.t of nutri-ment would be so excessive as to grcatl."overtax the digestive organs.' • At leastten pounds of purely vegetable food arcnoocled to furnish the quantity of nutri-ment which the eater of a mixed diet do-rives from three pounds of meat, bread.

fclijtt which axu-y provt htn '* poiwB.1'I cannot close without reverting to the

injurious effect of concentrated foals.In this connection 1 would advise a verycautious u»e not only of those I have al-ready mentioned.BUeli as eggs and gluten,but also ofallcatined meats anil lish andconcentrated broths or mutt extracts.All these articles should be. used, in cnri-nci-tion with plenty of. vegetables andwater, or bread. Whentcn crackers will'not take the bread bi'cnuse they presentno waste matter; Graham crackers aremuch niori; wholesome because they contain plenty of waste. lSut an abundantsupply of fresh vegetables is the accom-paniment forall concentrated foods.

In regard to the effect of cooking uponfood a very few words must sutllce. Togive even an outline of the subject wouldrequire more time than has been setapart for this lecture. The best food isof small use unless it is properly cooked.On the other hand appetizingand whole-sonic dishes can be produced from simplemid inexpensive, materials. Heiuiworkus well us handwork must be given tothe mastery of culinary mysteries, ahdyet the whole art can so far be simplifiedKM to place it within the understandingofa child.

A Hank Story.A correspondent of the New York

j Renting Post, writing from Columbus,Ohio, tells a story about a weasel's es-cape from a hawk's clutches. The in-cident is similar to one told in old read-ing books. Not long since, says thewriter, while in a thickly-wooded dis-trict in the northern purt of this State,niy attention was attracted to the pecu-liar movement in the flight of whatproved to he a large male msus Cooperior Cooper's hawk. He flew in circlesjust over the tops of trees which bor-dered a meadow land, through whichrnn.» small stream of water. Each cir-cle he nnido seemed to be smaller thanthe preceding one, and notwithstandingmy presence each circle brought himnearer to the ground. Now ana then liewou Id take an upward (light, as if doubt-ing the certainty of his prey, when pres-ently ho seemed to know that his bestchance was at hand, and, swooping downupon his victim, seized it in his talonsand darted away. He hod not pone farwhen ho began to descend in a perpen-dicular line, witli a tremendous flappingof his wings, as if something troubledhim. Arising to about double the heightof tho surrounding trees he began slowlyto descend with drooping head; and histail, which acted so wdlius a rudder toguide him in his upward llight, nowseemed to be a useless member, whilethe wings had ceased their flapping andwere spread motionless in the air. Allthis time I could distinguish something,us it were, in the shape of a snake coiledup in his talons. Notwithstanding hisseemingly exhausted condition, everynow and then he would make an effortto ascend, but his efforts were in vain,"na few moments more lie struck theaground, when instantly from his talonsthere sprang a common brown weaselwhich made its -way to the nearest un-dcrbush. Upon examining the bird,which was more dead than alive, I foundthat this cunning littlernninial had suc-ceeded in forcing its slenderbcidy throughthetmlit grasp of the hawk's claws, until

DtcTf.,hI HVurty,""Mr. E. K. Cleveland, of Bodie, Ncv.,and a Virginia City Chronicle reporteraccompanied Superintendent Gillette intothe Savage mine to examine the greatheat issuing from the levels lately drainedof hot w^ter. While the party werewaiting their turn to descend a minercame up with nothing on but a pair ofoveralls, shoes and hat, hie skin lookingas though it had been parboiled. Thesuperintendent inquired:

" How are things getting on below?"" Oh, very well, sir; hevry thing is hall

right, but hit is very 'ot there now," an-swered the man.

In a few minutes the party were rapid-ly descending the shaft, which was sofull of hot steam as to produce at first afeeling of suffocation. TJie steatu comesup in a blinding volume, which increasesin tcinperut'ire until the landing place,1,300 feet from the surface, is reached.Here there is still much visible steam,although the atmosphere feels dryer andhotter than any yet encountered. A senseof horrible confinement from which thereseems to be no escape and in which theremust be a constant struggle to keep fromfalling exhausted seizes tho visitor and isnot dispelled until he enters the cooling-room, where the mouth of an air-pipecoming from tlie surface strikes him as agrateful blast from the North Pole.Without retreats of this kind tho minerscould not work at all. They are obligedto remain longer in the cooling-roomthan at the picks and shovels, so debili-tating is any exertion in such a tem-perature.

After attaining n comfortable condi-tion in the cooling-room the party enteredthe incline giraffo to go to the 2,100 level,the part of the mine last drained. Theiron sides-of tho giraffe were so hot Mintthey could scarcely be touched withoutburning tho flesh. The heat seemed tocome fairly out of the roek on all sides,while n perceptible hot draft proceededfrom the bottom of the incline. Eachhad a large piece of ice in his hand touse on his pulse, arms, neck or to holdin proximity to his mouth whenever thehot air appeared to burn the lungs wheninhaled1. "Thus provided thegiratlo wasrung down. It descended rapidly untilwithin about fifteen: feet of the 2,101)level. The heat increased with everyfoot until the station was reached. Hereit-was so intense that all felt themselveswobbling when thoy rose to get out ofthe giraffe. An uir-pipc close to theland ing place furnished temporary relief,while a bucket of ice-water near by was"ought with greater eagerness than everi. prominent citizen did the nearest bar-room after a night's SDree. The wayfrom the giraffe down to tho 2,100 levelwas by a narrow ladder placed betweenthe moving Cornish pump column onone side anil a donkey pompon the other—a position from which, if one fell, hemust be either killed outright or horri-bly mangled. The ice which the party,started with bad by this time all meltedawny in (heir hands.

W hen the level wus reached a stratumof beat frns entered such as nijglit comefrom hades itself The sensation was nolonger that of general oppression, but ofIhe danger of being, nlifiolutely burnt;instead of the feeling extending throughIhe whole body it was confined to the

" I n

. In

1"" ?vr" ;" ii ~\~ri~"-'i ' i"•;" skin and the lungs, which svtmed tot reached the part on the. left side of the fuil. |v Sl,ori.i l ing° W | u , n t l l 0 ]OT,.l wasbird immediately under the wing. There

it nibbled a small hole and drank theblood of tikis high-flown bird until itwas compelled to die the death it hadintended for its victim. The weasel wasundoubtedly about to take its meal froma number of ducks which were floatingin the .stream near by; but it feasted inmid-air on the biood of its would-be de-stroyer.

There are certaincharacter which aremost jcvery railwn)

general types ofobservable nn :il-train. and with

which we are so familiar that we paythem little attention. There is the ui.-uiof many bundles a family man ut course,who bears in his countenance the pain-ful consciousness of having; lost some-thing or fin-gotten something, and who,in :i desperate endeavor to recover aparcel which hiusslipped do\\n from onearm. scatters upon tin1 e«r Iloor an as-sortment of parcels which escape fromhe oilier, and are rrmnptly trodden

upon bj some hasty wretch behind him.There is the man who is always late, andwho, dropping breathless hto a spatafter a hrief race with the retreatingtrain, wipes his perspiring brow and re-cites to his neighbor tho circumstancesof his detention and hurry. There is thenervous woman, who after havingstudied all the time bibles, scrutinizedhe placards on the enrs, and harrassed

Liu-i-ickct agent to thi. verge of insan!' .illlicts her fellow-passengers with shrillnnd tremulous inquiries us to whetherhe train runs through to Albanyt and

whether the car she is in is the lightonelap less an'd'carcvvorn,.U)dividual! Smal;ood does the journey do, her, for thetrain has hardly started before she dis-covers that she has lout her ticket, and itis not until she is well along toward herdestination and has goaded the conduc-tor into a fremy and herself into tearstlut she finds the bit of pasteboard insome unexplored recess of aer traveling-iai, where she had placed it for safe-

keeping. There is the woman who willhave the window open, and the irasci-ble old gentleman immediately behindher who will have it shut; there is themarket woman with gigantic basketsodorous of herring nnd onions anil otlirrdelicacies; there is the man who sleepsthe sleep of intoxication, and who,yielding only an inarticulate response tothe protests of the conductor, and dis-closing about his person no trace <if aticket, is, presently bundled off by thebrakemen; and there is the multitudinousinfant, weary, wide-awake nnd vocifer-ous, tin object of loathing and detesta-tion to every bachelor in the ear.—.Bos-ton Jouriittl. J

ntcred the breath for an instant wastaken away. A nrarlynakedminerwhnsaw thepartvpjoing in cried out: "Don'tstay thore a minute. It's too dnngerous."His warning was unnecessary, for nnsooner had nil entered than one began tomake his way nut. The other nt onecfollowed nnd lost no time- in getting tothe air-pipe and the ice-water a few feetabove in the incline. „

y 1 r ' ~" ri n r D t i T , utyou ought to have been here before theblow-pipe was put in."

The drift ronnpeting with the Hale &Noreross on this hveldisplays nn inter-esijii^ phenomenon about midway be-tween tlie two mine*. The drift connectswith the lightning drift, running to theCombination shaft, at the Hale & Nor-eross incline. There is a strong currentof cool air coming from tlie Combinationshaft, which meets the hot air of thrSavage at the point mentioned. The re-sult is to convert tho hot air into visiblesteam, which tills the drift for about fiftyfeet. The point of contact of the twocurrents is us clearly marked as it wouldbe in the cose of opposite colors joinedtogether. The temperature is equallydistinct. In adistanccoftwentyfeetoncpasses out of an oppressive hot atmos-phere to a comfortably cool one, or viceversa.

The exact temperature of the heatedportions of the mines described has itotbeen ascertained since the late increase oftemperature, but the water is said to beabout 150 decrees Fahrenheit. Tile effectupon the visitor is to so thoroughly heathim that when ho reaches the surface,where before he descended he wa9sweat-ing in the heat of the day, he feelsas though he had suddenly been trans-ported to the regions of frost and snow.Cold shower after shower is scarcelysufficient to cool the body. It takes, atleast half an hour and the application ofHoods of cold water pa reduce the temper-ature to a normal condition, after which,however, one feels more vigorous thanbefore.

•sli and vegetables.An absolute change of diet should ho

mtulo only under strong pecssuro nndwith the groatcst cure, in ordor Hint thodigestivo organs may gradually becomeaccustomed to the, opposite physical ac-tion which Attends tho digestion nndassimilation of unusual kinds of food.

Tho fact is generally conceded thnttho caters of a mixed diet ai-o'.tliustronijest and healthiest; but tho jm-

' The Beet Sugar Industry.A letter from Baltimore says: Several.

Baltimore sugar merchants nre about toorganize a company for the manufactureof beet sugar here. Last year a quantityof German sugar beet seed was obtainedand planted this spring in different soilsin surrounding counties. Tho result ofthe experiment has been thoroughly sat-isTtictory, the beets yielding fwelve percent, saccharine matter, about' the samens in Germany and France., -An agentwas sent to tho recent convention of beetsugar manufneturei'd, nt Frankfort, anda number of German manufacturersagreed toepmo here, furnish capital andMing required patented machinery andskilled workmen. They stipulate a guar-antee that 2,000 acres shall be plantedannually in German augur beet, forwhich they contract to pay fivo dollarsa ton,,and offer tho samo price for allihcy can get. Tlw proposed refinery•will cost 875,000, and could handlo the,roiluct of 10,000 aqres, producing 300

i>- -11 nils of raw sugar to tho ton of beets,averaging eighteen, Dutch color stan-dard. Reports at tho. Frankfortconveu-tion showed tho lowest percentage ofprofit last year on the investment to hesixty per eont. An agent will soon be•sent togrange associations nnd farmersin"8Wrbund)na counties to contract forGerman sugarbeots. The average yieldis thirty tons to the acre, .at.wlneli. fnr-nicrs would realize $15Oporaorn on theircrop, nnd have a sure market. AaMarvland soil. lias been shown adnpta-blo for tho purposo, there is no doubtthat the plan will he carried into effectin time to catch the next year's crop.

s. A picnic party saw him swimmingwith his back Im out of water, anil

A Shark In Strange Waters.Two or three boating parties had a

good deal of fun with a shark that strayedinto tlie Bnltimoie harbor ft short timeago. He was a regular man-eater of tiieSouthern seas, and twice came near prov-ing it before he got through with theh o y s . ' - • — • - * - - = - - •up wnow nnd then stopping to pick up strayhits by the way. They threw their lunchto him piece by piece, and watched himdevour it with evident relish. He finallybecame so tame as to come noaing aroundthe boat, nnd one of the party attemptedto harpoon him with a boat-hook. Indoing s6 he loBt his balance and felloverboard. Ho was soon dragged in byhis companions, and not to soon, either,for just as his last leg was leaving thewater the shark was at the spot nnd hisgreat jaws were heard to snap at the holein the wntcr which the retreating legleft. By this time thn party hod gotenough of playing with shark, nnd:j hav-ing disposed of all their lunch, went onTto picnic on memories of the big lish andhungry stomachs. Tlie shark continuedhis way up the harbor, apparently onanexploring expedition, and another boat-ing party of boys nnd girls met him.One coy was swinging his feet over thesido of the boat in the water. The fishseized one of the feet, snapped off a toeand lacerated others. That was enougliof shark for that boating patry, and theterrified boys rowed the screaming girlsinto port without any further fishing ex-perience. The shark was afterward seenby divers others who were swimmingon tho benches, but thoy did not attracthi« attention, nnd ho tried no issuo withthem. Tho lost seen of the monster, sofar out ot his latitude, he was followinga tug down the bay, and would probablyfind his way out to sea and back home.Baltimore is ptl22lcd about how tillsman-eater of tho torrid latitudes hap-pened lo lose himself so far in Northernwaters.

At a fashionable Newport (U. I.) din-ner party, peaches that coat fifty centsapiece were served, each guest had anembroidered -white satin napkin and amrnd enrd on gold foil," and vocal nndinstrumental niusib was furnished.

y .t Sk. ftwi iivojr U>l-there lives a n mimed-George

U. 'i'oban.. With him live a wife and athirteen-year-old son. The family hasresided in a quiet way, BO far as any oneknows, until recently. One morning,ust after the yellow fever excitementleenn to spread over the country, llr.Tobiin, upon opening his door, found acard lying on the doorstep. On the cardwere written the words, " yellow fever."Very little attention was paid to thematter, but when, again, and again, sim-ilar cards were found, Mr. Toban be-came concerned, and, not being as ilearof superstition as might be, regarded thecurds as ominous and as a warning ofan approach of' the terrible disease.Every night he would read gloomy re-ports from Memphis and every morningbund the card, "yellow fever." Finally

he determined to watch and satisfy him-self, and on the doontep remained allnight. No one appeared; but when thedarkness was dispelled by the streaks ofdiylight he saw a card lying on thetop Tieside him. Catching it up and

examining it, he saw the words "yellowfever" written in exactly the same handhat had marked the cards before. Then

there was indeed anxiety in the family.The fever report* grew gloomier, nnd thefamily settled info the belief that Provi-dence, by a handwriting on cards, Imdadvised flight. Tho husband did notknow what to do. the wife was fright-ened into a terror that trembled at everysound as though yellow fever walkedwith noisy footsteps, and the son wasalmost dumb and sometimes deaf withright. It was at last decided that vaca-ion of the place would be necessary-

But a chitnge came, and the mystery,like mist, cleared up. On the night be-fore the proposed departure the hus-band, unable to sleep, sat on the bedside,almost terrified and weak with dread.Suddenly the door of the room openedand his son, in "night attire," stood inthe room. The father, influenced by asudden feeling, did not speak. Tlie boyadvanced to the mantelpiece, took downa pencil, went to "the little table," tookout a card, leaned over, wrote some-thing on it, and then, advancing to thedoor, slipped it under. The fatherwatched breathlessly, and when the boystarted to leave the room the ninncaught hini. The boy struggled, gaspedanil awoke. Ho did not know, nor couldhe understand, why he stood theregrasped by his father. The wife spuingout of bed. A few words explained all,and when the door was opened therewus the card bearing the words "yellowfever." The young man in his curlyyouth had exhibited signs of somnani-Julism, and reading every day the yel-low fever reports to the family no doubtinfluenced his action.—Little iiock (Ark.)Oazdlc. _ _ _ ^

A Hotel willi.a Million Koonis.For the benefit of those unacquainted

with Ihe term " dugout," as used in thefar-West, snys tho Now York Hotel Gn-certr.'it limy be proper here to stiiU* Hintin the early days of Kansas it was cus-tomary, owinstn tlie scarcity oftimber,Per the poorer class of settlers to mjiltetheir houses in the ground, generally onthe side ofa hill or slope, if their claim

Horded such. This statement may a t 'first thought seem absurd, but il is a factwell-known to those who h:uve traveledthrough the West. Intelligent and well'ducated people, who from one cause or

another incident to a lifetime had bc-•onie reduc d in circumstances, werenotunfreciuently met with livingin these" ilugouts," with SIR much comfort :indease as many of their former associatesin much costlier homes ut tin1 F.ast.Much depended on the muscle, ingenuityanil taste of the builHer whether hishome looked like a wood-chuck hole orn uUUUinlu)biti>Uon..,a*.m,.-. ,i ii-mtuiwealthy hotel proprietor in KIOISMS tirstcommenced business as a caterer lo thepublic. His patrons were cattle herders,Moxirnn " gre!i*ers"nnd r:iilro*»d labor-e r s who were content with the simplefore he set before them. His hotel con-tiiiniil two rooms, the "dugou t " andthe "boundless prairie." In the formern-iis kept the ciHikiiig utensils, stove, etc.,.-ind the latter served as his bedrooms." I haven million rooms," he would say,"room enough for the whole world,and plenty to cat :is long us the hull'alodoer last." His customers, tl)i«i»b of arough class, paid their bills promptly,which enabled him in :i few months tolay the foundation of qui'e a respectablehotel. A thriving town grew up aroundhim-, and, as money continued to come in,he miidi1 additions and added new attrac-tions, till to-day he enjoys the patronageof as fine a class of travelers as visit theWest. ^

Avarice, Outwitted.The ense of John Eyre, Esq., who,

though worth upward of §150,000, wusconvicUd at the Old liailcy and sentencedto transportation for stealing elevenquires of common writing paper, wasrendered more memorable by the oppor-tunity which it gave Junius to impeachthe integrity ol Lord Mansfield, who wassupposed to have erred in admitting himto bail. An anecdote is related of Mr.Eyre which shows in a striking mannerthe natural depravity of the humanheart; and may help to account for themeanness of the crime for which he stoodconvicted. An uncle of his, a gentlemanof considerable -property, made his willin favor of a clergyman, who was his in-timate friend, anil committed it, un-known to the rest of the family, to thedivine. However, not long before hisdeath, having nltered his mind with re-gard to the disposal of his wealth, homade another will, in which he left thoclergyman only $2,500, antl leaving thebulk of his fortune to go lo his nephewand heir a t law, Mr. t y r e . Soon afterthe old gentlomnn'a death, Air. Eyre,rummaging over his drawers, found thislost will, and perceiving the lcgiu-.y of$2,500 in it for the clergyman, with-out any hesitation or scruple of con-science put it in the fire, and took posses-sion of the whole effects, in .consequenceof his uncle heing supposed to Have diedintestate. Tho clergyman coming totown soon after, nnd inquiring into thecircumstances of his old friend's death,asked if he made any will before he died.On being answered by Mr. Eyro in thenegative, the clergyman coolly put hishand in his pocket and pulled out theformer will, which hnd be'pn committedto his care, in which Mr. Eyre had be-queathed him the whole of his fortune,amounting to several thousand dollars,excepting a legacy of $2,500 to hisnephew. .

(Jnnllty of (ho Drain,Tho American tCnlumlist has an nc-

e.ount of n. cheerful- set of scientists in .France, calling themselves-'the Societod'Autopsie. Believing that the study ofthe brain of a man whom wo haveknown, not only through his works, butin his character and faculties, will con-tribute to the advancement of knowl-edge the members of tho society bindthemselves to surrender their brains tothe inspection of their fellows immedi-ately upon death. The first to dio wasJuke Asscza, thuj losing his elinnco atany other member. The second was aM. Asseline, whose brain contradicts inmany ways Important conclusions atwhich Btudentsof tho brain thought thoyhad arrived. The intelligence of M. As-selino was of nn exquisite finesso thatwas pushed oven to subtlety, and yet theconvolutions ,of his brain were thick andlarge. Broca, the great authority onbrains, was surprised to find it ofa coarse'texturo. • . ' • : • ' •

Page 3: RED - Middletownrbr.mtpl.org/data/rbr/1878-1879/1879/1879.08.07.pdfi-t.t s\,li'S wliii-li m olTer for soli1 al luw l>rlr»-a. Wi' iilsn liull.l I'lirrlaRcs In nnh'r 1" siili llm f.'isl'1

i*tj </i visa* I

Without relid,And paused a moment when she hoard that,

moan?Then raised her glowing eyes and met mine

own. 'Never a word she said,

Yet still I gazed and Btill waa ootnforterl.Tb.011 bending-^ow wilh wond'roiu gjii "

Shu laid her hand unon uvy eyes,Her cool hand on my bu^nipg iace,

And at hor touch bright visions rise, 'Fresh woods un.l strenma and unimnginori

In softest lonoSlio sung the Hoii($ thiit lias no close—That deathless sony which no ono knows.'"' Savu nli(! nlonis; "

'I'lio song tliat leaves no memory,The son;; ol cniilcsq victory

And future love;And i\y I lislcncil to the voice above,I lell IIH one rotuining from tho dead..Slowly I I'OSO and raised my drooping head.

—ill the Yeur Round.

ITEMS OF INTEREST.

A prowetl thing—A alilp.This Komo Sentinel says a postman is

a man of lutt»i*s.44 I'll tukc tUofiLiii'ch out o/you,"astl ic

pcTHjariition suiil to the shirt collar.—McsHcntflr;

According to an official return, seventy-Kcven persons died of starvation in Lon-don lust year.

Selling introductions to beauties is thelast nii'tuocl of money-making introducedat the Knglish fairs.

A child remarked, after guzing ear-nestly at :i man wlio was bald, but hadheavy wliiskers, "Mis head was put onupside down, wasn't HP"

An English miner tells of a black catwhich decoyed birds for ite eating byfeeding them on bread crumbs.

All should adopt this stirring mottoduring Llie heated term: Our temper:it must and shall be preserved.—KansasCity IHmes.

There have been constructed in theUnited States since tlie great crash in1873, and within n period ol live years,11,503 miles uf railroad.

There are 3,927 churches or places ofworship in tho. republic of Mexico, ofwhich twenty-seven are Protqstant andIhe balance Roman Catholiu.

Thn New Haven Register sees one ad-vantage in warm weather. At no otherseason of the year can you spread thebutter on th<; children1* bread so evenlyand M> thinly.

Vivn. P. ROWPII & Co., in the Aincri*Nrtvspttptr Directory for July, show

that tlie whole number of newspapers inthe United Stairs l.;is increased sinceJanuary of the CUD out year from 8,7011to \), 153. N'fw papers abound in the Ter-ritories. Suspensions have been fewerthan in any corresponding period forseveral years.

When mailing I111'*' ° ' e | - dewy vuleA sinuliRv filiti'lc is throwing,

Anil I winkling nyt;s in nxurc bkicaWitli i nlil urn overturning,

When nl! ia Mill, nml wood and hillI'rorliiiin ih« dny'w uMticlion,

Then il.t III", .-inl-il jrrii-U In-ginTo iloubl" "ii tliu '• dilution.

— Wa'ie WhipjilcAfUTthe rrt-cnt Mouth of a IMute chief

in \«'vad:i. an iidmiringIndianconcludulto kill his own sniiEiw, so that sliecou!d:inttiii|iaii\ tlii* ilii.1! to llie luippy hunt-inn iritiuml>; but tin1 woman did notwi-Oi tn lit1 >:i]',riJi-i.'lK rind so made licr rs-luiriril iL in tin* ni'ck in the ground Tiim!stmul Kiiaril over il, intending to let iisiiirvr i<> dftith. Aftrr three days tlchild W:LS ri'scuod by white men.

Thi'Traiisntlantic circus liad a livelyday at Leesville, Ind. Some sharper^who a<*c<»m]);iny thu show, failing in theirattemjit to swindle a resident with curds,stint t IHMI his money and hid in one of thptrnts. Soon afterward one of the womenI'HUislrianj* stole a watch from a manpocket as she passed through tlie crowd.The-robbed men lircd into the tents witlitheir revolvers. Tlie showmen retaliatedliy seizing three villagers, dragging theminto a tent., and whipping them sound!with rawhides. This incensed the crowdand a gcni'i'al tight ensued, in which finirshowmen and one villager wcro woundedwith hullt'ls.

There is :i ilng in Phil:ulelphi:i, :i DEUI-ish hoiiml, 11 int drinks htvr. He is keptchained during the day, but is allowed tmani at night in a brewery yard in orderlo make acquaintance with intruders, lies(>cnils his 1'n'etlom in sniflingaround thekegs and vats, seeking beer, tilth*1 morn-ing before being chained up he is givensnme beer, which be laps up with relishand says *' All!" The men say lie willdrink a half-bucket of tlie liquor a day;that is. in summer. In cold weather hewill take a great deal more, seeming to beaware that there is heat in the malt. Fe-lix was imported front Vienna, and prob-ably contracted a taste for beer beforeleaving home. However that may be,he is a confirmed beer-drinker now.

'//may

the a,usj>ices (jf tlie kuig of Belgium an 'the honorary presidency of the court oiFlandenis to assemble in Brussels thisyear to discuss tlie latest advances in tlu1

knowledge of American ethnology, phil-osophy, history, geology, and in fact ofeverything appertaining to America thatis of interest to mankind. New lightisexpected to be thrown upon, the dis-covery of the North American continentand upon its primitive inhabitants.There are in Europe many students ofAmerican history and science, and tins'will be their thud congress.

The fur-famed Alhambra is in danger.The hill above Grenada, on which standshe palace of the ancient Moorish kingsof Spain, has recently given signs olsliding away, so that this splendid monu-ment of a memorable epoch in the historyjf Europe ia in danger of complete ruinand downfall. It is also said that theAlcabaya, a spacious ami splendid struc-ture at tho base of the hill, which wasformerly the residence of the Moorishnobility, is in danger of destruction fromthe same cause. ^ The wall of this greatMoorish palace is more than a mile in•ircuit, incloses thirty-five acres and is

Hanked by thirteen square towers. Ancil'ort to restore tho paiaca wiw mude byQueen Isabella in 1862, Imt. the suras ofmoney devoted to it were not sullicicntto complete the work satisfactorily.

What will be the largest ferryboat inthe world is now being constructed atSan Francisco by the Central Pacific Ilai 1-road Couinany to ply between Marline/,•nml licnicia. It is to be longer than tlicgroat l'aciiii: steamship City of .Pekingeven, and has agrei'.cr breadth of beamtluui any vessel afloat. Fts length is42-1 feet, width 1 Lfi feet.and wheels 30 feetin diameter, ard it will he propelled bysteam generated in eight steel boilers,each twenty-eight feet long. The boat isa double-emler and is steered by fourrudders at earh end. The hold is di-vided into eleven water-tight compart-ments, which will make it impossible tosink her. Four tracks will be placedupon her de(*ks, which will accommo-date forty-eight freight cars or twenty-four passenger- coaches.

A child at Dover South Mills, Me.,eight years old, was born without eyes.He IKLS eyebrows and eyelids, but noth-ing which indicates the presence of eye-balls, and doctors say that he has noth-ing whatever in the nature of an eyeorganism. The little fellow is an unusu-ally bright boy. lie has never been heardto utter a word of compiaint at his^con-ditian, and ho invariably rebukes hisfriends if they give expression to anypitying words. That ho appreciates,jiowever, the misfortune that atllicts himis shown by this fact: His little niecebad a cataract upon her eye, and lie. hadhear*| (ears expressed lest it should de-stroy her sight. It was not long after

HI) MM A it Y OF NK WH.Cistern &MJ tti<dtc SUlw,

Prracott G. PflbOmry, cushier ol the Law-rence (Mtuw.) Naiioiuu blink, conftwsod to thepresident of tliu institution tliat he had takentho bank H iund- lo tho extent ol $64,000 tospeculate in mining utocka. The millingStocks .which he hat on baud were wortii$30,000, racking the loss to the bank about$-34,000. Mr. Pilfebnry then -went to Boston,surrcuda'tid himself lo llie National Bank K^surr(mii

The First Seniny Machine in Ind in.In tbn diiys when tlie sewing inarhine

WMS in its curliest infancy, a ltidy rosid-inj; in India knportcd ono, and for alongtime ki'pt its mysturious working liiiifrom thti kun of her native tnilor. Thisfunctionary wns the very slowest of hiajirovorliinl slow "caste, anil wasted noend of time drawling over hem and stitch.One day his mistress -came to him arm-laden with yards upon yards of sonicdross fabric. " Divzit1," s;iys she," howliui": will it tuke you to run tho.sobreadths together?" " Tree day, missis,"replies Dirzie. "Missis, plense, plentytoo much work." "Threediiys! Non-sense! Three hours, you mean. Youare a very luzy nmn and I'll cut yourpay. Give me the stuff; Til do.it my-self.1' Then the lady retires to herboudoir, from tho inmost penetralia ofwhich a sharp and continuous click andwhirr reach the tailor's ears. ^ He ain'tmakfr out what the sound Ms, andbe is mudi too lazy to speculateon it. lie eontinncs to "chewhotel," and yawningly to phi, needleand thread. A fter an hour ortwo "Missis" comes back, and throw-ing at Mr. Dime's feet tho raw materialnow fashioned into a completed skirtsays: "There! See! You wanted threedays, you sleepy fellow, to finish this,and I have done it already." AstonishedDirzio turns over tho drapery, examinestlio scams, scrutinizes the stitch, andsatisfies him3elf that all is proper and ac-cording to tailors' rule* Ho is confound-ed. It passes his understanding. Therelies the work done and no mifltakc. Buthow? He springs up from the mat onwhich he has been squatting; ho kicksover the little brass vessel which holds

" la's drinking water; ho scatters right andloft thread, needles, thimble; he stops notto put on his Bandals or to adjust loosen-ed - turban'. and waistoloth. Scared andbewildered, ho runs for very life into tliob h t i l l

y tlioas lie goes along:(The evil ono! the

b i t M '

w i l d r e ,bazaar, shoutingi

u ' Sh i t anb8h i tnn! (The vil o n ! theovilone!) *Je do tailor business atMom'shouse. I listen! I hoar I He cry ' Cleek,clcok, clcek!' Two> hour time ho noberstop cry* Den I Plenty too much true

• dis word I toll. Ebery bit true. Allwork done-tmiBb! I not go back dntbungalow."* And he never did.—Cham-bcri J f l

this that his mother heard his voice inan adjoining rooui, ami going quietly tothe door she was surprised to hearhim praying to (iod that the little biibymight not become blind.

Paris recently celebrated the anniver-sary ot the taking of the Bust ile and eventhe staid Journal ties Dcbata became elo-quent over the event. "The taking ofthe ISiustile," it said, " is not a men? mili-tary act, a mute-rial fact. His an image;it is an emblem; it is, so to speak, the in-ritrnatioii of a great social revolution.So ii hns been regarded both by Franceand the universe. In history it will al-ways signify the abolition of royal war-rants, of condemnation without a hear-ing, of personal and irresponsible govern-ment." The Hostile, literally, '* thebuild:ng," was built by Charles the Fifth,in Ufii), as a fort at the gate of St. Aii-tfllW ilM^iu^Q1 ^r'T-tlSto\'fy''foirstiiteprisoners, and so continued until the14th of .July, H8!), when it was attackedby the populace and. razed to the ground.Its site is now ninrked by a lofty" bronzemouniuent known as the* Column in.luly, with reference to the month ofwhich the Revolutionists did their workof destruction. At the ton of the beau-tiful column is a gilded figure of Mer-cury in flight.

How an Outlaw was Caught.A letter from ColinnbuV Neb.. give<

particulars of the capture of "I>neM

Middleton, the notorious outlaw. Sol-diers, under Detective Llewellyn, fromKurt Hurtsuff, and n party of dtixensfrom Grand Island, arrived atNiobrnrarivei-by difleivnl routes, about the sametime. The party proceeded immediatelytn the house of Midiileton'ri father-in-law,where they captured him anil five otherpersons. Tlie old gentleman was givenhe I'hoice of leading the party to Mid-lleton'.s hiding place or of being hanged.With tears fulling down his face, the mi-liappy parent led the party, consisting nffourteen mounted men, into the hightill Is to the northwest. Proceedingibout seven miles, tlie head of a deep•anon was reached. ' Large pine treestilled tlie gorges of the canon, from theicep rec.i'Hscs of which no sound enme tc;indicate that the brigand chief WHS hid-den there. Tho soldiers were quietlypicketed on commanding points. Rich-irdson, Middh'ton's falher-in-law, re-used to enter the canon, saying the out-awHwouid shoot him if they saw him

guiding the soldiers. Tlie party enteredthrough tliflercnt defiles that led to themain canon. In a short time the campwas discovered. The stillness was soonbroken by the ring of the rifles. Mrs.Middleton, who was in the campscreamed for a cessation of hostilties,She came up *to the sheriff's of Hall andHoward counties, who told her toback and toll her husband to surrender.She went back, and soon returned, say-ing that "Doc11 would notg^ive himselfup. Some men worked their way cau-tiously into tho camp, and it waa foundlobe ilescrtcd. The outlaws had fled.Middlelon was discovered crawlingthrough the gross, and in a moment abaJLcamc near ending' his life, liebegged for quarter, anil \vi\s taken witlarms on. lie said he was shot by De-tective Hazen with *a Winchester theSunday before. The wound only tem-porarily uisnbled him. lie was at onetaken to the top hills, and thence to tjtcmain camp, near MB father's house; southof the river. The camp of the outlawscontained fruit, sugar, ammunition, 'hod-ing, powder, canned goods nnd endlessnickKnacks. The tents were piled up

and burned.

Firos.The fires of 1879 continue in thoir da-

structiveness, and now it is estimatedthat tlic losses for the "year will reach$105,000,000. This fire waste is a na-tional disgrace, and it should be stoppedIt can easily bo reduced to less than one-third of its present amoiint. What wewant is mora caro in building, readymeans of extinguishing fires in tlieir in-ciniency, sevoro punishment of incendiancs and the careless who arc but littlless criminal. There should be authorityto examine into tho origin of every fire,to sec if it VHS tho result of negligenceM'iminalitv,.and punishments should hiprovided, In accordance with the factsThe question of insurance should also belooked Into;"and if it is found that tinpolicies have boon issued carelessly, oithat the insurance prompted the lire, tincompany issuing the policy fhould boheld responsible for its participation.—Cincinnati Price Current.

and in fleftiult of bail WIIH committedto juil. Herolofore hu has borne an excellentchanuitor.

PoliceCoininissioner Wheeler, oi New York,ia chiirgud wilh huviutf n (tendency in bis ac-count* to the extent ol' ubout $6,00U.

A pleasure party left Clayton, N . Y.f in two !stauu yuchls lor un excurbiou on tlie St. I A W Irenoe river. Tlio yuchts were lushed together,und« when ii short distance irom shorn an at-tempt wiia mude tosepuiulu thuin, when on«at lliem cupsked and auuk. M M . I'ltfHi-lln,His. Stimli Uodtwick, },lm. mul Miss liurkolow and Misa Httttic I'ollock wcru drowned.

The Rov. Juhntirnlium, J). Di t of BriglitouKn^luml, lout his lifo while batliiii^ in Iho Binint Capo Muy, N. J., huviiiK .ventured out toofur. 'Tlie body wus recovered through tliobravo eflbrtu of Dr. Graham's nBico, Misa Boa-sin flitilnim, ivlin scciiroit Iho tl rowing man,and cluitfi U> 111'* pim- until aid reacliuil her,M'lusn tho doctor was found to Lin dead. Tliecaii8U ol his (Unith ia said to huvu boun congea-ijon of the hburt rosultin^ from fright.1 Rev. \V*. H. II. Mutiny, hotter known iia"A«liroiiilaul; " Murniy, beoiuiao ol his 1 ravelsin tho Ailiro.ultick rci<ioi)B mid tlio Htoriun hohus [HiblinlH'il itltout thorn, in Uniiiuimllv um-,liurriiHwcd, and prnperty on hin lann nt (Juil-lord, Conn., hns l»e«u jittuchml toBiitinty thudoiiiitnclB olliis creditors. .Somo time tigo Mr.Muriuy- or^miizod thu " BOHUHI BuckblmidConipuny,-" ldi- tlio piirpoat of nmnfiliuiturtugu wagon invtiiitml and f)iii)int<!d by liiin, andlocated ilio hnitory in Newl luvcn ; hut thu#40,000 of stock which ho held in it hiw passedOUT (il his piiMscsh'nm.

Chuilcs I'reiit!, a Now Vork lithn^rnplier,WA twtfiity-lhrct!, -vit.itoil liiit hctuitliod ntl/.tnf; iJiiinuh, anil white bathing in h«r pres-ence bo KUiklcjily ili-ajipwirotl Irom view iniho water und waa drowned-

SeVenlenn liusincMS and dwelling houses iniloulton, Mo., liavo linuu doalroyed ••>• lire,ci'.using tl toiul loss ol twenly-llve thouaivnddollatd.

Citjimin l'aul Boytoi haa just swum lroniI-ouf{ Jlninch to Coney IKIHIKI in his rubbersuit. ThodisluiiLu: mado WUH thirly-IIve miles,in t wunty-eiglil hours.

Western and Southern Slates.

Kdv. John K. Young, Si\, a proniinonLtgutublu lariiu'.r ot ^Joilolk county, Va., ILIKI•olitihly Iho most axtenwivo oidtivutor olrnwLerricB in tho country, was drownedhili; out (labing. Mr. Voung wns forimsi-ly

Alluuiy, N. V.r and was u ininistur ol thei-osbyterian Cliurcli.A dispatch Irom Diibuqtiu, lnwn, miys thaiilisf'aieo akin to cholera i* ruging nl Centrejhit, Linn county, in tlmt State. Fully.•uiily persons died from us etVtiuta in two(>(tl;a, mid an equal nmnbar wavti prostnuod• it. It wiia HIHO raging in AValkor, a littleiwu Keren urileH from Centre l'oint, severalisntlis having occurred there.Twn brothers nained Covert nuarreled atie limikfuHt tii bio in tlieir father's residenceciirColu:nlius, Ind., and ended byeauh druw-g it revolver and ilring nt the othor, both ro-Mving wounds from which they died Bhortlyiciwaid.

A dispatch from It at tie Crock, Miuli., io»rlH tlio burning ol tlie pleasure steamer Lewfiilliicuut Gofjani'k Uvke, Lwo miles south olml jihwe; nlao the dwelling of James Cleve-nd iirtd three bo it houses. Mrs. Clovelandid her iiilimt poiiBbcd in the Humes, and Lwoiore ol hor children wore, lutiilly injured. Mr.'Uivehuul saved bin own nnd tho lile o» one ols children liy jumping lroni tlie second atoi'yimlow ol bis litirninir bonne into llie lako.

,'iio lire originated in tlio onginc-rooui of tlm.catnor.

A ilisjiatcli Inmi .Sun Antonio, TUXIIH, SIIJ'HU'.L catllo West tuid Southwetft are dying byrui'.reds of thirst. The Htoeli uiou nro HCII-!•; iliiiir stofk tiL whulever pnoes they ean ^et

The bcHt wire-pullers—Telegraph re-pairers,—New York Express.

Pension hUl (regular)PeuHioo Arrearage billConsular and Diflqraatic lull..Kxpftu. cs ol United Statt-s

pi.u.ta..MisiwJbineoiu

M0,Hf1£ttf$ W

2^,366,000 0026,867,200 00

1,097,73d 00

2,090,000 002,995,123 77

Total $(162,404,047 76

d mid H

; tri)•rir'u,; Kctinnil tipI 'iievnlicr Juinon

:nrliugs at .#••! tc $0..MI-H. Jdlm Howe, tlie will; ol ii prominentLsinen» man ol Cincinnati, aud Anna Drown,servant, tell tiirnrgh the floor of a vault in>vingloii, Ky., and boih wore sitlfocaird.

ilr. lioivn b<!iiria<4 their uric* ran tint anduij.ed riiMvn to tlieir relief. Hu was lakonii in.si^nsililc, but wus resuscitated.While cx-UnUeil Sin tea Senator Domey %viting in front ot t!ie (inind Centml Hotel, ini!iivcr, t 'ol , , i'uloiit'l (Juriy, of MenipbitJ,

iclv him twice with his (1st.jute, fared. H in said Hintml ot a ilitiigreeitul^o.iitiiiriii.i in Arkimaivilic, who lia.4 lieun cashier

tl' the Canal Jliuik. of New Orleans, tor moreInui tbiriy yems, and whose aucounls have•tin HM'ltMgning invuH.^iitinn, is found t<» bodiifaullur to tlie amount ol twenty thousand)!lurs."i'he town of Volcano, Wont Virginia, cou-.iniiiguUnil two tlwniHiind iiilmbitnni.s, Jiason entirely destroyed by fire. Tho flume*•i-iintili'd in TliompHon »fe flames' store aliuutur o'clock in the morning, and ni|)idly spread

LU lit lire and hursl, mid the burning oil milirnugh the si reel nt setting t)n- lo everythingII either sido. Tin* town win in u narrowillny between nvu itxewilingly steep and

,«)l\_v bills, and was without uny ap|iliaii(-cs fur\tiiiguishing or chetking a lire. It was en-in-.ly eiigiigeil in tlio oil business, and every-liing in it was .salunited with the inlliiniiuablonnli-rial. Once ignited there wus nothing lorIn- iiilhihibunsto*l'>but lo leave iL us speedilys* porsible. Many ol them were unable toit-cure any outer clothing wlialoi'wr, havingcen aroused troin (heir beria c-ro they had lln-'hfd their aluinbors. Ten Htores, the post-nice, the railroad depot and telcgmph ofllue,

hutel, the Walking-Beam printing plHce,inn dwelliiiK hounes, the Wis*t Virginia Tmns-orlation oHIee, Srnith's boiler works, one,iitnpinjr station, seveni' tithui-Ptnall buildings

htindred barrels of heavy oil wereAlmost Ihe entire contents of the

Cuytei-'y bflttlctleld on the Little Big Uo:nriver, Montana, is to be incorjmrated into anational eemetery. Orders from ihe War Di -jmrtment, just issued, direct Ihala Survey ofthe site bo uinde at once, and that the com-manding general, Department ol l)nkotn,nti-uouuue the miles und bounds in orders,

Forelqn News.

Auothor ol Mr Lorillnrd'w lioises that werebrought from Amoricujto England to compeleiigiiiuat Knglwh stock hai won a moo. 111Btwo-year-old bay filly (iemldin won 11n* JJI-vant stakes nl the Uoolwood luct1^, drliiiilingull the favjriteR.

Tlie IJiitiali Atlniiralty luia ordered ull theIndiiin troop-ships to he in rciuiiuesa lor sixmouths' contiiiuoiis aorvico, with tho view ofbringing "homo tho troops lroni the scene olwar in South AU^a.

Parole bus boon vanquished at the Good-wood races liy Isommiy, IL horno that ho do-loatcd so:ne time uga at Xuwumrket.

Konrteeij persons have been unrated by tlioppatiidb autiu*i'l(ioHUi (Jibmitar lor suiuling aloiter to the United States Consul, tleimuidiiVg

on pain ol tlie iSciith ol lumsell niuiin thu event ol rctusttl.

Die Count do Cluunbord, who <'luiins heFrench throne as the heir ot Charles A., tliuiusueu u uiiuiiiesto in whieli heuppuals lor theuupport of nil honest men, ami intimates thathe did right iu 1873 when he declined to be-come kiu^ under cmuimstumK-H wbinh wouldhave rendered him only a nominal ruler.

A lire at Hamilton, Ontario, (kwtmyodJ.Mo-luueu' block and u uiuabe-r of prominent buni-ness liouses, L'UUHing a total loss ol ovei- onemillion dollars. One little hoy was iulally nailanother badly injured.

A condition of nniucliy exists, in Ilayti, pur-linns of Ihe island being in possession ol llieiii.-turgents ami President Canal having ro-uignmi and.^ono to St.'Thomus.

Lord I'liolnit-forri, who commiindeil Ihu Brit-ish lroo|>.H In boil h Al'rkm at the outbn-ak olthe Zulu war, hits resigned.

It is stated that the city of Serinagur, thecapital ot Ciwhmore, ordinarily containingthroe hundred thousand inhubitants, IULH onlythirty tlKiusaiid since the famine.

A powder ningiizino at Dunuigo, Spain, busoxplodud, killing lourteen persons.

Colonel Valdez, at ClnipiidiiruM do lu Nuovii,Mexico, reports that he bus JHII-SIUHI tbrttc1) uidri ol Neiiiculeru and Lipitn IndiuiiH wlu'chhavo l ion mid i tig that country from Tex IIH.Tliey earrietl oil'two bund rod uml (Illy horsea,killed tlfteen persons in Mexico, and erosserl

A reeoHt cable dispatch iroin GIIIHJJOW, Seot-limd, says " (lho enthusiasm lor Rev. Dr. Tnl-[iinge oonlitmes unabated. During tins piiMtliri'e weeks he IIILH leeturud nightly to ihoun-inds, and on Sumtuys he has preaehod to tensr>l ihonsai^dH in SI. Andrew's Hull. To-duylie preaehud to six tliouwmd worshipers inthis city."

Sevon pernons, compriniKg the family otJtHi'iih Monetto, a Freneh Canmliiin liiriresiding tit Ht, Wnrtins, Canada, were poisonedliy ruling heartily ot bread tlmt hiul accidonliilljrjUwo/betl Boine Paris greou inlnndetl .orpoiiitiTbugs. Joseph Monutie and two sontsoon died in great ngimy, uud the oilier nu-inherd of tho family were nol expeeted tn live.

The Prince ot Bulgaria hue proelaimod t\sinto of bio^e against Mnliaminediiu iiisurgei:ut Vurnn Hiu>grud and lilena.

Tliusevei'est storui known Ihens for inaryjai'H iro

rcd in wirious pivrts ol I'jn^land, un>•p'-eiidly in the v l loy of tho Tlii'-aea, a lev

ni 'luH t>go. The atonu wiia atteiuU'd by u lul>f baii<to.if-1, Home of which were live itielie:in (wreii'iiferonee. Tim di'iiiage H> glii H iipliice.-) itnincflirlely aro.'ad 1/Jminn union HH t<IIIOUSMIUI ot poi'iida stoilin^. In u grouL purof ltodlordsliiiu the buy crop has been eoinpletely swepi awtiy, atid tunny cuiilo huv<hccn drowned. NewiiuukeL and the nni^bliorhnod are lluo<l<-il. Ti e nunliill at lin.-kmi i'. Dami'ges by llooils and lightning initlso reporloil lroni Cambridge, Noitulk, (iuil-i'or.l, Lmoe,st<-r, Hath and MminioiiUi.

Inn rittitund nccident txvween Nancy umlN'c/rliSe, l*'iniu!e, llvi* |K!1'HOIIH weie lulled, ainleleven HcrioiiKly and l»iny slighlly -injtireil.

1 >H|))ilclifM Iroiu the neat ol war in MoutliAliicii say that King Cetywnyo, wlien lervinj;tlu> butllcllfilil ol IHundi, tohlliln ehii lM Inlnokto their <m u safufy nml seek leruiH nl puicc us\mni. they could. Hi-* iinny [a bntken ii|i. Il«'nation i.t dispfised, and the kinjj is u fugitive.Zulu In ml will |}iobably bu divided iulo threeor lour priiu-ipalitio-H, i-avh tuider the rule olaVj independent noble. Celywnyd'w lirollier< 'nan will lecelvo hU own territory uiuler tbii1

uiiiiugenient. (inuinil Wolseley, in un nddie>f-a mniibe.1 of Zulu ehiel.n, saidtbut Cely wiiyo

win ii fugitive nnd could never more lie LinK.Ihe cliiets suid they wislieil hi Imvt* no umir>ln<;k kings, nnd would preler .lolin lJunii, ui uegadfi white, us Umir ruler.

oi necessity very uuperifcetJy.j«MJortiiisci,and certain debris; which in the nsult olnatural bodily waate and decty, doe** nol na-cuj>eaBit should, but remains U>eoituj>i ihoblood and develop poisonous humor* uuddangerous as well aspainlul diseases. U inone of ihe beneficent effects oJ ilontettoi-'sStomach Bitters to KentlywtiuiulaU) the uri-nary ,orgftnn, nnd prevent thuin irom luttpiiwinto ii stuUi ol inactivity, always provocative:il their mtliiminutory dcgenenition und de-shy. How* much bettor, tlirn, is it to adopt:hia mild diuretic a* n means ot meiting them:o aotion, than to i'»nur tho danger ol tliis de-struction, 'l'o expel irom the system wiutn

mttor Lhruugh t{ie bowels und kidneys, nndo regulate and arouse tho stonmch und liver,

among the duel uses of this valuable•oinedy.

'* LntiKlt RUil <Jim*' Fa t . "Thia anoiout iiit ol advice is well enough lor*pnro ' people,-but how about those I but ate

ulre-ady too lilt? What is to hoeoiue orUicm''Sit Mill, t indl ' l l tell you. Alter muiiv e.xpdii-neiits, extomliug through innuthy of patientnve-sligalion and toil, tlio eelcbi-aLod unidyli-

chemist, J . O. Allan, him periocted andgiveu to Iho world A Hun's Anli-Fnt. Thusfur, in several hundred eases, thU great rein-•dy lnid never luiled to reduce a eorpidontruinon lroni three to six pounds p«r week.It is perloctly harmless and positively ctllrioiil.Sold by ilniKijisi^ \

Kveiyliody knows tliat no long as them is'torn! tiesh in a sore or wound it will nui beul.

The obstacle in speedily removed iiiui tlio tlechreimiled by Henry's Carbolie Snlvi«, tlie tlucstfiiiliuihuiciil iu exirHtimeeol tlTtit supruiiio puri-Hot', furlmlic lu-id. It.s einollieul ingrcduMHH

(»Kl\' i u ]-iui'j;eiit iu-i<l l>u»is, so (hat it nevermleri/.tw, s! ings or scarilies 1 lui diseusin!ii-l. Sores and eniptions ol all kinds moired by it. All dniggisitisidl i'.TlMtHAT AlTIClTlONS AM* lIo.VUSllN'I'.SS —

All suUiiriii^ Irom irritation of the throiil andMiursetuiss will he agreeably surprised nt theilnuist ininiediati' reliet alVorded liy tlio Uco ol11 trow it's Itionebiul, Troehes." 25 c'u. a box.

It is impossible [a sell tliu be>t arliile of any.ind'iiH low us tlK'pnnresL nun be allordud. Hutbe prifi-H of Mason A Iliuulin Citbinul OigaiiHLre not nuieh morotlum those of vei y iiileriorirgans; while tlie dilVorenro in quality, andI'-speiiiilly in ihiruliility, IH very grejit.

Jlousekeepei's preler C\ (lilbert'H Slarcbt's.Chew Jackson's Best Sweet Navy Toliaw.n

Tl te io a r e p r o W b l ybuuiuii rate HunVriiiit ftuiu Inhow thcmwlvtu In aluiout |)Eotito the Injury /if, the patient. Tiny -,-»|[ou>". Tho tt£|>ertriii« of thirty yeurs ttliotfB tliiit t«ebert rtmcity for tills class-of dldcns a la

Tanraut's Heltzer Aperient.\H iiniiwrties arc flliiretlu', vvtiK-li arc siiedully ifur bUi'ii cures.

SOLD BY ALL DHUGGISTS.

la tlte OKI l l«liable Concentrate

FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING.Dlri':tli)nnHccomuAnjr4!iK each can for making Hard

Sort ami Tiill-t 3u«[i m i l e k l y ,IT IS you. WK1UHT AND STRRHOTB.

Tie Markd Is dumlerl »'lth (so-calleil) concentrattl.yt-, whUh It) oaulterHtcO wllli tall and reBln, antl won

"'"''' Hi rn smitKT. AM) HUT TBS .

MADE DY THK .

Penusylrnnii) Kiilt MimiiPg Co.,riin.Amii.i'iiiA.

(.* I) (I I(4 6 HO

. . . . (4 . . .1 Ifi «t 1 111

1 7ft^ 16

1"

41IIH

THE MAKKCTK.NKW rcnK

UmirOulUi.—Jlrcl. N J I I V P " , livp wl !>• M—Htnti- Altlk O'J 0*

«hi'np W'vitfI.»iu"b» IH i")1IOKH-LIV< l)l'4ir4

Uri'HM'ilFlour - K x . Slat.-, coot! lo luucy..

Wi«Ht<Tn, uuuil to Ui icy . . . ,Wlicut—No. 1 lied ,

WtOti Bt«tC.. .-A : . .l lye—SlitcItarfnl—Tnv-llowi'd HtuloGuru—llncmili'il «'i*IC!rn M l m l . . . .

tiuiittifni YclluwO»t»—Willie Sli.li>

n».v—Ilctull filixl.«...".!."?.".HI raw—Loiift Hyn, pur owlIlopa—State, 1H7HPork—Uni iLard—City Btonial'Dtrolrum—Oruilii 115 8 («S\ I H iWool—Btsto mil 1'KUU. X I :l'iUUULT—Ututt- tjii>uiiu<ry 14

ti-rii Orcamory 11Factory (17

Olieoso—atutc History o:tSkhnfl til

IIITII Fuctory fill

piiiLAnni.i>HiAriour—Pinni. chctcoto lancy 6 7(1Wbfat— I'uun. Ht'd ,

AiubiTllyo—State eilj,Ooin—aiito Yrllow f>Oam—Mlmil »«

in « nIS (dj B R.">

OA.1IS(<4 I"1 t'l'l f a . l l n n l - 0 ' .;i'j (A unH (« inV! M H

V''A

TAINTOR'3

GUIDE BOOKS.TAINTOB BROS., ifBRBILL * CO,.

758 Broftdwfly, New York.' These Guides describe Cities, Towns and SUUoni oo

the roui'Js, t'lvins itcuia uf interest to tlie traveler.

Illithtrated with 3Inp» UHd lf'ootUcuts, Price, %5*Cent» Each, v

by Mail.City « f lVew- V o r k .-Deecrlblng the Public Build"

nigs. Parks, Ccmfiterlefi, luUinao, nn-1 Public InaUtutidagin an>l arouuil New York City: also Principal Hoteli,Hanks, Annulments, Mbrarlea, Clubs, Socle tlet, DUpen-saritH, Horse Hailromls, Omnibus Koutes, Hack Fare*.Ferries, Street Truveltrs' and UhurcU Directoriei, taiHap uf New York and Brooklyn.

Seas ide HesortH,-T]io ALlantic Cout from theSL Lawrtoce^u tlic illKiisaljipL

H u d s o n l U v e r I l o u t « . - N e w York to WeitPoint, CaUklll Muuntaiiifi, Albany, Troy, SaratogaB l l k e Geurgu, J alcc Champlaln, Adirondick

Wontr-^r, and Quebec, via Hudson filver

aUklll Muuntaiiifi, Albany, Troy, Saratogal^ike Geurgu, J alcc Champlaln, Adirondick

W r d Quebec, via Hudson filver

IlhiM(ratei1,-Tho Visitor's Guide ofD l b l S l HrdlnKhousea

hiM(ratei1,Tho Vistors G ofDubirlblni; Sprln^a, HoardlnK-housea,niuacUKJtiUi.WulkB, Dl t With1 Lk l t W U

a, HoardlnKhousea,, Drlvea, etc. With

HarutoKa I l hSaratogik »jiTltii;fl.HotuliiJtiTattii^AnuacUKJtiUi.WukBHupa uf VllluifO un 1 Luke, uiul tiy Wu

T h e i : r le Houte.-Now York to Ittiaca. Ilavaoa,ffntkins' tiiui), KoHicster, Dunkirk, Bullalo, ana Kl*gir»t'ulld, via Erie lUtlway iini Lroucliea. '

New Vork to HnratoKn. Buffalo. NlaffumF a l U a m i TIIOUHUIIII littmrtH.— Via HudsonlUvfr unit Now Yink (Ji'iitrul Haihvny, mid L'tlca andUlack llivcr Hulhvuj. ' •

Hluuv lAn,- lUmte.-Nvw York to Boston, viaKfivlliivu ii, New l.iiti'luii, niui Provlitonci.1. (

The Newpor t Houte.-.Vew York to ItOBlon, viaN t iuul Pull Jtlvtr, with full dcbcriutluna ot Nevr~

l tt I!uj\

rt Houtll Jtlvt

u liiur of WaCoiinectlcut Hlv i i I toute . -New York to ttu

Whitu MuniiUlim, via N. Y^iiM N, II. and Ucun. lUveTHull. ™ .

Tlie IViirtliern Ucsorta.—Hoston to the WhiUMouuUliid. I-uki: Mi'iiijiljrL-iiiiiK<Ji,', (irtcn MoanUlDJ,'Lake Ohuui[iluin, UliuUluu, sluiiliL-itl, uud UgJeaslmrg.

The I ' e i iusy lv imia Ooal llealons*—NewYork ami )'tilla<l<'li>l)ln vt Uetlilcliiiin, IMawure WatarUH,), Maucli Chntili, .Scniitmi, Willlamiiport ami Klmlra.

l>elnivaru anil Hudson Itoute.—Phlladeli(n SiTantuii, itin^iiuiiitiin. (JitiiiiLTBtuwn, Sliaroa SprfSnnilouji, l tko 4iiinrw<'. lake Oliam plain, A J iromMmiiitiilim.mnl Muitr.Ml mil Quebec.

IVew York (<» Pli l ladelphlt t t Bu l t imor*nml WuHlihiKl.in

tiij/ ttf tlu nbwr teiit, i Ul, on receipt of 9S cent*.

x"o"D:trsrUU.

l..i.l .in ih» I...I lom.«. alnn. tli- HtJl!» i M»ult.iba Ify. (lalci 81. Vanl * I'

n, 11)

ltii*> tit. r . n i

3,000,000 ACRESUftlnlylo (be Famous

RED RIVER VALLEY OFTHENORTH.On loof Urns, low pricey and eaay yijuiooU.

Famphlrt wltb t nil InformaUoo mil led frM. Applr V

D. A. MoKINLAY, Land Com'r,Ht.P.n.Anf.U';, Wt. Paul. Minn.

STOVE RUSH;ForlH-nuty of Pollnti, Bnvlim Liilmr. ( '•urablUlvuni Clirnniu^H. ritcijimb d

llOlibK i 3 l ; r U

WESLEYAN ACADEMY,l M Iff

y—New York Factoryiim—Orudo O

Ohce

BUFFALO.I'lour -Clly flroliuil, No. 1 HprlliJ..*Vl»>at—Hi'ilWIiilnrHum— New \Vft!lf>ruO;ttn— Htntf . . , . , ,MiirlflV— Two-lloWL-d H l a l o . , , . . . . . . .

lUiuf—OaltlF, li vu wnliihl ' . . . . .

iir-WWnoiiHlh unit Mlmi. Vii *MU<«1 nu.l Yt-llovTH-- 'ixlru WJIIIP

y—Kline•Vool--tVkKu»d L'umbltiK * Ui'l

UIHllllUTON (MA^K.) (UTTI.

••( - O a l l l " , l ive wulfllit

; Hi-Iliifil, u<i\

iKH we*tT*vconsuineil.d ut about. .tfldO.OOO.

Tho

p ^ind s i \inrneil.ilorPH andoss is estimat

.lohn Tlio.ims, Mary Hanson anil Frank do..it'll wore drowned in tbo Mississippi riverloin1 I,n Croaso, Wiaconain, by tho upsettingil'a bunt.

From Washingon.

A recent WaslliliiXtdil tlmputch eoncerniiif;tlio prnpuscd eamd across tho Isthmus of I'un-tuimHuy*: "Inlonuiition from New York istti tlio elVec.t thiit-tho roporUi ol Admiral Ain-ntMi and Ml*. Mcliocul, American tioiiimission-

l t h l'llris Con»i-e88 on the Inleroeuaniuhd d i leauiil, lias hud a

lulltut, upon those

I i hu-lio um altompliiiK t" sccunt IUIHIH in thuLL-ily I'oi- thu project, ol M. du LOHSCIIS. Ad-niinil Amtncn wiia |in:8t;iit. nt lliu J'uris uon-riM'oitco witli llio lull npin'olnitioii ot this gov-onnucnt, ntjd his vi«w» uro llioHu ot tlio K()V*crntnout. It is now liulicvt'd Unit Uio publi-pulion ol his report ubroiul will linvo tho eflcotof potJl polling tho cxticution of tho sulioino otM. ilfl Lcssops, nnd iiossibly of Gliding it, alto-

It will now hcooino known nl onooiibruiul, not only tlmt tho ongincorin^ilinlbul-ticH ot tlio runanin vonto ttro prncticnUy inHuroiiintintablo, but that tho Unitbd Stiitc8 is dis-.Biitisflcil -withtho inciinfl whioli Imvo boonNikon to soourqeoncussionn. Dioprobabllitica

to bu'' thn) tbo ponding discussion willroaiilt in n. now survey, in wliioh tho onginora-ol eovonil nations will IKJ iiskcd lo tnko part."

Tho pn-yinunta mntlo from tho Treasury bywnrrnnts during tho month ol' July woro asfollows:On ncoouiitol uivil nnd miscoU

limcmis gC,157,125 83On ncoount ol War 4,917,303 07On nooount ol Navy 1,317,73-1 31Oil account ol Interior (Indians

und |ioiini<m») 10,880,371 I !

Tolnl ,:".. #23,272,J38 0:1Tho following' is a. Buitcmo'ut ol thu itn'pi'o*

priittions made (luring tlio tlitre! Bcasinu nt LhoFnrty-tllth Congress nnd tlio ilrst Kossioii oftho Fot'ty-sixtli, for thn flscnl year fullingJ 30 1 8 8 0 d l d t l i i l f

y , y gJuno 30, 1880,>ivnd lor dotluionoies lor former

d l l d i i i l

How I In; /ul UK Smoko.Wlii'ii tlic while nmn " inliulrs," hi'

l'liiely jillow.s Llie! snidko to pass licydiiilhis mouth and nostrils; hut thr ZumKiillir lixcs liis lius OVIM' tint Imiiiilnioutli of tin; liullouk's horn, closes his

lrils with lii.s hsitnls, iind ilnnvs intin' reck of tin1 huriiiiij; wi't'd till hislungs HIT lillcil. Tlien, liiuidini; tin1

pipe to hi« nri<!lihoi-, lie hiys liojiluf usiuiill timibooty reujl, nnd slowly lilnwsthe smoke llirotiph it until his lun^s an1

empty, i'hus unrunsc-iuiialy do theyillustnito tlic lyrienl conerft of tlie timewhen toliiii'co wi« younf? in E'nBliinil—tii "y fnii-ly " drink tobacco." Tlipi-e isno liiustQ or wildness in tlie earlier sljijresof sui'li a festival; for. sententious!)'talking together IUS the pipe goes slowlyround, and- wailing their turn in order,they blow out the spittle from theirseveral reeds, nnd trace in figures on tlieground the plains and pictures tlmt givelxnly to their talk. But one suchpowerful inlmlatinn of the weed is notenough for a seasoned smoker unionist,the men of Zululand. Again aivl acaindoes each warrior till Jiis lungs to reple-tion, and blow forth the dense cloudthrough his tanibpoty reed, until thepowerful nnreotic cither lays them pros-trate on mother earth or drives theminto paroxysms of madness. " I haveseen them so excited liy smoking," saysone who knows them well, "tlmt theyhnvc jumped to their feet nnd run awuy—running till they were out of sight;and on one occasion I remember iifellowrunning nt full speed, under the in-fluence ol this excitement, till liedropped down dead." It is clearenough, from this example, that theZulu knows nothing ol tho pipe ofpeace, and that he would lie a hopefulsuhje.'l for the philanthropic efforts ofthe Anti-Tobacco Society.—Niw fits-land Grocer.

A Vogeinblo Curiosity,A rcmnrknble ireivk of vegetation Inus

nppearnd in tlic grounds of R. li. Tnt-mun, nt Worcester, in tlio shape of apotiito vine which bears Uinmtocs. Itappears to be n 'mixture of the two vege-tables, and is accounted for by the factthat a strong tomato vino from chance,sown seed grew in tho Bane hill withtho potatoes, and tho pollen of tlic twoplants became mixed. Unfortunatelythn vines were pulled up before the pe-culiarity of the. growth was noticed.Some of our agriculturists mny derive avaluable suggestion from tjiia. As boththo potato and Hie tomato nre of theBolnimeic family, it isHot impossible thatmi" should be fertilized by tho other,and a remarkable economy of labormight be effected if careful and scientificcultivation should produce aplant whichp p t whishould benr good potatoes at thu rootsand good tomatoes on the tops,—SprirmfrM (Ma.i.1.) Union. , . " ' < ! "

'yuiir»i as prepared liy tho murnnt ilmninn oltho Treasury Oopurtinout: . .Dullciimcicfl $1,033,824 C5Lcgislntivo bill1. '..... 10,130,2:10.1)1Sundry Civil hill ,. 17,034,8(13 MArmy bill 20,707,30(1 no A womnn-nt La Salle, 111.1, hns been ilr-Navy bill 11,028,108 P5 toctcd stealing prayer-books from thoIndian bill., 4,713,178 08 j churchca IIH ft business

P a t e n t s Vi'iVMr1?,lii ni-iun- tluui |i[iiinn|i\ en • .1 lie' I. ,S. I I . » v A I ,KS i t M»j«, i i , . 1.1'... l.i- '%'|--.V*. • Nn l i t K|..i-,-,- yi , \ , w Vn I. •

-Mil M-I,I>- I-\]I,.II,.II,.,. in | | , , . IIIIH,,,

" S c i e n c e N e w s , " • • ' iIH HII.I T.-..I.T,, of |i . .•. Kiimiiif I'ulilri. a.u

• • - • * -

Only ill

MANY lii ' ' in. ' . I I i m t * M

[>rt.l]lt:y! I'll)!!'- .n lii,. . lili'k, L.illi

IIVUIM ItfintilyH ITCIrrlln- llllllt'N ICt'tHVlly."!,! ,,.

W.M. K. CI.AllKK, I'n.vl.tcm.-. 11 I.

n i l r I I IHIII ITH will Illi'l ltL<l^«-'ri Fn.nl j i M wlitil IIII. II k-lvi-> l i ca l th i.n.I httciiL'Mi. In . a n n . :Bi•. ,in n l . U ' O O I . H U J I I k IX) lul iul .

ltiHvtt A' ikamtin Vabinet Or (ft tunemuniytratcd brat by HKJI1E8T HON'OltS AT A 1,1.

W()KU)'S KXI'OSITIONS FOH TWKI.VK VB.ML8.it Vi\ffft V 1873 b 7S J'niM, |M7(j; I>A1U1878. Only Amcore ut nny micli

ITK, nml (JI'UND HWEDIBD floi.p MID*I..n OrKutiH ever nvranh-il liliilti'flt lion

\lintny micli. Sold for citrili or limfallmriil*- U&vtG I T I U ) Q U U ami ClrculiifR witli now MIJ-!OH amBi'iit rr«n. MASON /. HAMI.1N O1U1AN 0 0 .N V k d l l

ni'W Hook jupt out. rrlcp.91.BO liy mull. RrliHniiir<]<- d p y . | t O O O A K C I U N W n i i l r d

ilrt-hHiill urtlfTM to . F. 0. (MtOCICKlt A CO..I-os Ali cli-N, l.or> Allk'rii'HCo., ('ill. I'. O. IU>\ HXH

_ . F i in t c i i r r nml N h m v l S l r m i Ci'iiiMnnil,Vui so'* 1'JHK>T. Mi'Kl lliliiK nut. Si'iurcs vr.ur V.il

Iiili'tnvfllnit. Mfthenn Onor-liK-k I.uriiln• r . .F .v» rh . ty , , f , « , r r w . . . .1,1.1.1,

niui elicit)).l.llifml iliKi-

Sellsnt

l

l y . Kvi-ry travpli-r wniitu tK i i n t to (he trmlr-, Snul for uinulnr. A^ivrrywlirrc (JKO.M. VOCNt;, Kl PARD, UIIII

•oil to ruinlllrn, IK ._._ il Inrse ron^rnniTfi; lnrc

rut stuck in tin- country; (itiallly nml lennn tin1 luhl,(Joiuitry MnrpVi'onfTHnnftulil c-ill or write TUB W K I . L !

.TKA COMl'AN Y! i O l Puttnn 8t..N. V, . F.().-|lox 4Mt

CIIAPMANVS CIIOLEUA SYRUPCjircs DjBcntcry, rilnrrlipn nml Summer CumpUInU nfnhllilrrn. Prlri- (W»c. UKOIIGK MODKK, Prorrlutor,(Jn-M.Ki.ll^, N. II. Hnl.l t>y all Pni^lst*.

Profits on «lil«yi'lnvi!«tmonl ol—lnWc«tornUiilon,Jnne7—

Propiirtloiiil returns tvtry week on Stock Opllons of• VM. - srni, - sioo, . iftoo

Ofllclnl Ihpr tu mill Olrculam rrne. AildremT. POTTKIl WtllllT * CO., ll»n>era. : H Wall flL.U Y

0 < A * « i h i A n n * n v C 8 l c i " n Wpiiat. Htorks moltO l U I O w l U U U fortuaci every month. Hook Ben

Adilreas BAITRB k 00.. fl>nkcri£ I7,fr»)l St., X. Y

AGENTS, READ THIStier -month «nc« o will poy Apentn .*. Hb!«rv 01 , „.„ _ „

itid wonilerful invcnlinna. ll'o mtttn u&nt ire tity, 8*m-pie free. AtMreso 8HKKMAS.* VO , Murahall, Mlult.

Location unrlvniol. OollcRlitf •ndcbllear nre para tonCIoursfB. IlevH^O. V.Sprarinil 11. K. Avery, Frliiclp*ti.

I A I W O N T I I — A a e i i U W n i i t e i l jJIOboineUlnfcirtlclfBln tlii* worltli nne unmiiln tn

" , Iletrolt. Mlcti.FAY. -Wi ld BiencliOutflW.

R l n ct** Ie^a rapIJTr for 5 0 cti;~OftUJo8iirfrtU f U n . M- SPIUCIM, l i a ffwh'n St., nnitiin JiaFB.n Dili i i i I u .b i t *-. s ,k l u ?M-e*"^' ^I I M I I I W I uiida curtii. lowest Price*. DonotfaiU F I U I f i to write. Dr. P. K. Hmh, Quincy. Uloli. Qy

. « . I l lC l l ti CO., Poitlnn.l, for belt Agency ltuslness In tin

d. Kipenilve Ontat Free...^.jfl, for belWorld. Kipe

A YKAUtnJ •ijmnmtoijenu. UuttHKrnAil.lrem P. O. V10KRHY. /inni.l.. M«ln.-

a HooUi And expcnsci gtummte«*l to Axelllntlltfnw. a.iw>Oo*AmmiTi.iailn.l

T l i c F i H l T i T i u u f Mi l s e h ! n m l i M p i i l . i i l u o i l i i i M i i t i• • f i n A i i m i - « a i i i u m i ' i • • • ^ i i i m i f I : I w «-k«. Hi- 1

. » r n i « - i m . f » I I I 5 w r i H . - H ' i - T u i t i n H n - 1 ' r f i t r i r yunteinn Ciiuiwi* ur Sillily. t.^clliiT wltt' tuiml

H M

CURED FRER.An liilRllllilr nml i Miilcil Hcini-'ly fi

niu^Clll lfUiyorPill l l l lBHIrUllwIwmr«iil«if . t i i iij"'t . I »l"-'"'>' ""'

" A fi . e liolll« 'ITS,II. O. BOOT

THE WEEKLY SUN.D». II. O. BOOT . lilli'ft, !»'•

COLLEGE SONGS.r n r n i h i n Valei inlu t A Coll net ion uf American

>I1BHC SUJI^H. wllli JHiwlr ami Plunoforto Accompaal-

Cn r m I li it Co l i i i i i h lnun i Tliu Songs of OolumbUvllcKi', with Mualr nml ViauororUi Accoiopanlmnnti.Kxtiu Cli'lli, Itlui; ami wlitlu, S1.5O. •

TAINTOR BROS., MERRILL & CO,PU11L1BUEB8,

758 Broadway, New York'.NV N I ' - *'J

The Voice oi Worship,PRICE

$1.00.

FOR CHOIRS,

FOR CONVENTIONS, p^'Soi.

rOR SINGING SCHOOLS.

n i r r OK wou*fiiii* i»y i.. n. iMm-,.ii,. utiHTnnirriiMi^ luiukidy t h a u m t-'inlii.'Hi f«r uimMir .ui'l licAUtiful mtulc,r iim> fkUhiii-l ju-Uun'tit ilmpluyoil In wlio-

7V t-\nt litimiml I'tWf SINIilSU H(!||UO1. CtlUKSK.tn which »riv li'ii- lidiinm \t dlM

1. CtlUKSK.tn which »ri

are nil<-<lluryu, III-W

Tin" &e»nd Hundred i'agni the lirslnf liy inn Tiitits,SeiilMictl,*c., •l frrsh coll cili.n.

Tht Third Hundred I'agn

iUl M'I ut ANT1IKM».

cii cui>it'H mill)<'* fxiet-froe, for $1.00.

KHBUOH'I VIM!*I. MKTU»I> (Just (jut) lift* » noT«lamnueuifliil »f *yllaiiii-s. un.l other improT.inenttwtilcli «ro acualL'lti ttinl uiftfiil. pii-ndci'Tnt-i"* •»*—91 .bU. . _ .

C. I I . IHTHOW & CO.*8 1 3 « r o a d w » y »

J . IE. OITSOW Vfc CO. ,

«w York.

I II Jiutiinry l-f.

FOR HALF A DOLLAR.AililrMl T I I K « r N , M . V . < : i l ) .

TUl CUlm-HraM EiUbllihed lSsa.

PENSIONS,N e w L a w , Tboaundl of Soldlin and heln entltlML•anHlom dnt« luck to ilUcbtrge or detth. naultatttd.l l d n u with itanp,

O B O R G B E. I.BMOIV,r. o. Dr«w.r aaa, wmiingwn, p . o.

WARNER BRO'8 COflSEVr,

.Ac.'iLlPAH

J'LKXVHLB ttU'lM'(>IISI/I'. V A i i n * r . T r u <•' I ' " I - - ' -

"'HEALTH t

WiRMjtl nUUS.. 351 Broadwav

Tlm vi'rylicHtgooilmllrL'cL rrmii tlis lnni-.rlIm IIHllal cost. Tli'ttt liliill <-vi<r IJIIITCI] I I I Cmil lliriin Illiy»rs. A M . KXI'RltfS t 'HAIi1

TUB Hront American Ten Compiiny,i l l a n i l il.'l Vcaey N l r e i t , N e w V o r k .

I'. O. Box 43:15.ilfk |i, liuj'l I.K IV \ litlANTKI) A

iiiTfcit HIM- f"i .ill '*ih iMif I 'll.KS.

;••""« 111 Tunti is 'y . 'n ' i ' i t i i i ' i i.'.v.SAIT ItllKI M, HIIKI'M UIHSI.VlnNI-'-US, IIY.HI'KI".IA,i:AM'i'.il,JATAHIIII. I.II-! nil 'll*' '1* ' tl"!SKIN nml lll.uill). Klihri'ly Vi-u<-lalil... li.l-rn:it mul i-icl' ;!••! u,«.MCIIII'.V .-irniiilcil In il! i.i>a''<>niii:-urr : i i rur91Ji'ii.-a. 8>iMevir>-

* c r e . BendforpmniiliM. SI «Ui.ll.t-.

•I. I>. roWliK, Itomou.

P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE

ICTQRIALHISTORTOPTHEWORLD

iilslnii 1172 llni' 1ibtorlc. ^dnulilp column niu:cs, an.) \* tin*

r tl W r l l \ T p u l l U h lnlnry or tli Wiul |nr (•iiiLlniciie why Uai'il* flut

N T H Swiy otlxer tlm

I

\J i*i"j. i t i i i i i in i i i i i . rv. v . iIt. It., Il) Hi" fliiiiifiii/'iiin hifo :<- lnami BUT, ,,-rr.l , In.irv f..r Imllil.il«rary ll(-|iiipliiii'iiln mnl .i vny il

me A t lA \v«-'.!-"!i'l<

Tly

),.tI'

Xr lu l i

iiiitali]Ninli

c (': uuum-l. 1it-M .'Imlrnls

fnpi|r , K ( |nrrf. K i

l

>-L-iir. I'lin- iihclirt-rtll Kll|n-tV!i

- . .itHBIllil Hi III W0 Mill r i -Ct ' IVi ' l lSMIil l ' l l l t l ' 1"" >-^l" Hi" Ifor 1 T e r m for tll<> • for I >-«>•-, SIIUI. l i n -li'Kiiu BI-IIL r n- nn uiiii lull.in In llie l'rlin:l|ml, PI1UP.J. T. KDWAHIIS, p. ll. I'nllTi-rni'ii-ii-iH.Aiiir. a«l.

LQJL

perfectly Pure- Pronounced tbo but by tbn h!pth-niodicu autlioritien la tho vorld. alven hlKlicri

w&rd at 1 % World'H EIPOHHIOIIB, and at l'arla, 1S7

AUKNTS WAIHTUK FOl lBACK from the MOlIT/l«/ HELL."

Iljr ouo wlio baa been there I"Rite anil Vnll of the MOUSTACHE."

By tha IlnrllDRtun Hawkoye bnmorlat."Samniitiui tin up. A. anil F. I."

liy Joslah Allen's wlfo.Tha three brightest and beBt-wlllnKbooknout. ARDIIISyou can Dnt these buoka In everywhere Itest ti-rms•Ivtn. Andrew for Azoncr, AMKUIOAN ruilUsniNQCO., Hartfnnl, 0t.| Ohtawo. III.

FO«1.0,0.F,K,ofP.

I.0.O-T.K,cfH.'A OH Wlira 'jn<..i, nrulitt, and all other Bomiilo In i.rdi-r liy 9I.<J. UllFjr ACo., Cot,Mia. Hemt for 1^-le* List*. . •ISjIltRry antrtromcn'a Ooodi,Banncra ft Haga | .

TJOOKIST MlUTtOlVAUk.iTUr. Foota'a HcolthMoilthMornuv Iliu. Poa. IU>. W i w . -O'li

Til

UUOWumnnll.f,ono year,:,!)

VflTT A stTilj lccXVIU Ufblllty m anrlntof atamr. Mcdlcln

t ( t t l l

i l j l c c T of mineral tratv, usUfblllty m any form I Lrclnre Flm

upr<n recrlntof atamr. Mcdlclnft narranteil torfiictraillcit lurrtn (our uwt*,jioatnalil,t2' Benil carefulautLinfiitofcns*. Atliircaa P. O. llox Sf|7'li l?oston,'Uosii

An OpenSecret.

Tlio fact ia well understoodthat the M E X I C A N MUS-TANG LINIMENT is by fattho best external known forunm or boast. The reasonwhy bocomos a n " o p e nstjerot" when wo explain that"Mustang" penetrates skin,

'sh mid muscle to tbo voryhone, rmnoviiig all diseaseand soreness. No other lini-iiitMit dors this, Lciico noneother is so largely used orIocs such worlds of good.

t'lrat E a U b l l i h n U itfoatSucccufnll

THBIB INBTBUM^NTSbaTe a Standard Tains InIhe

Leading MarketsOf the World!

KTerjwhere recojulied ai the FINEST IN TONR

OVER 80,000M R d e a n A l n u H . KewDeBlgnsconflUntlj. UHWork and LoweEt Prices.

4 9 - SoDd lor a OtUlogne.

Tremoat St..ppp.WaIUiam St.. BOSIDD, Mass,

Ail TbtttUttm, n.

SETHTHQMAS

VOUNC MEN iOUmnnlli. K

lion. AildKM

Page 4: RED - Middletownrbr.mtpl.org/data/rbr/1878-1879/1879/1879.08.07.pdfi-t.t s\,li'S wliii-li m olTer for soli1 al luw l>rlr»-a. Wi' iilsn liull.l I'lirrlaRcs In nnh'r 1" siili llm f.'isl'1

41KI* BAlilLPL'SUSUED £VJSHY THVKSDAY HOKMSO

BV ^

H E N R Y C L A Y & C O . ,AT

BJJD BASK, MOKMOUTH COUNTY, N. J.

SUBSCRIPTION HATES.One TeartiiiMinlthsTiih* Mdlitlia,Siiurlu Cony,

ADVERTISING HATER..Bl'.U.'K. j 1 tt'-jliW. ! (J V. I 1 111.1- 111.! "I lM.riilII6 1 j r .

s!75|.T25|Tri:-3.'.'."i' 3."-'! I.'"1 I'-'1 I". '"1 Illl'

000 :ru»i -i miC'.i): .101' .UK:l.o.)l I.."»:)' li.i'.i:l liT .'»O'l H',tl./,o| ti 'ni '

, H.'.ti 1:1.511 -^'.(Hi

lll.7.'i I . ' . ' " -'I.WM:i.ifc'L'li.im, x'N.iki

].*».IM'.M.IM .'1>.I*I

ni.iti5..VIJ N.OI lil.W I'.'.VI Irt.SlilJM ST.."*' li'.l.ll:i

l/K-ul iialli-eH l."i wilts luT llm-.OljUiutry mulct's uutlp<n",i\vlii m i l s IMTIIMI'.

Address llEXilY CI.AV A CO..lii-.l liiuik-, X. .1.

- * -

RED BANK. N. J.. AUi.'UST-r. 1NTII.

The New Jc-racv Kmttl imi ruilruml

biitJ^f which misses tin- Shivwsliury i:.

in a iliiiiKi-vinu cuiiiliticin nml should lie

ri'|iair>'d liefmv a si'rimis urcidrnl <MTV.I-S.

Tliis liridKi' has liefii built fur ii Imi); )«•-

r i«J , mill its t imbers li:ivi* IM-CCHIH' su elf-

rayed that tlu- imssciwrs who crews it

ay bu literally slid to Ink.' t l n i rmay bu literally slid to Ink.' t l n i r l l v ' ^ , n i n l n l U B j , 1 K , u tii-atli. was iieloru

i n thei r hands. The pins wl.irli lu.l.l the C m n , ) | l t ) ] | T ( . . l s l , w ; l s ,1(M ,1)UI l l . .j

Btructuro tngether ami Ih r Invuvs wlmli

nix* .supposed to make it linn, are. iusonie

places, comiili'Udy rotten, iiml tr.ifn* in

ll l h l

TiliiUViUl Cv

On Monday last the Court of Quarter

Sessions met for the purjxisc of taking

the pleas of prisoners who were confined

in l!:o' county jiril, and w)io wished to

\vaivt> indictment and receive senluuce.

Thomas Richardson (colored), of Red

Bank, pleaded guilty of assault on Anna

,C. Richardson. .

Jerry Ilunon, of Neptune township,

p'viijUjI guilty of assault on Williifln

Devereux, of New Branch. Ifo WJIS fined

0.(1(1.

John Clarlfsoii ploaderl 'q-nilty of petit

larceny in stealing a lap-ruhe at Long

Branch. Fined slll.110. .

John C'onover (rolorwl), of Neptune

totfliship, I'leailed guilty of petit larreny

and of entering the house of Jane

lionnliton withinU'iitto steal. It Heenis

that Cuiiover lias'a j/iiNsiiMi i'«r JIOU'ITS,

aiHl to gratify it*slo!i! a hanging basket

from one llaiiles. This feat, together

with mi unfortunatu mixing of the pris-

oner's blurts in the laundry of Jane

Hougliton with the shirts of some other

'gi'iitleinan, whereby the prisoner ap]>onr-

e<l in a new Imilcil shirt that did not ht-

lunn to him, led toliis being sentenced to

the c aunty jail for :!0 days.

MiiUl.liiiiivcii le.jlored). who was sent

to jail from Asliury 1'arlfon a charge of

ha\ ing thrown her infant into a vault

nml eausing its death, was heforo the

tu

await further e^idt-nee.

The Court adjourned to Friday, August

1.1th. •

Tin1

c r i K « i i i ^ c a t i s c it l<i Ir i ' i i i l i l i1 . -ml ,-li;i)ii-

d n i i f , ' i i ' ' m s l y . T h e f'fli't t l i a t t i n i l i , r- I M I I

b i ' t u r n 1 r t m i t h e b r i l l s liy l i ' i y s n . - i n j ; it

a s u plii i ' i ' t« ilivck I 'n i i i i is • . i i l t i r i n i t i - \ i -

dc iK-e (lift! i t " c i i i i . l i l i u n i> il:m:,'i'i">ui!i i n

t i n ; t -x l rmi iL ' . T l i e ' i i i-w i i ia i ia j ' - ' i iM' i i t

alln' .lltl s « ' ll^lll t i n - lil 'nljri ' is i n i i i i m l i i i l i ' l y

a m i l l i o r o t i K l i l y i-i ' |«iiri ' i l . » r t!);il 1 •-:»In—

a r e s t u p i ' d l n i i i i i i n ^ n v n ' i t . N n r.:: 1 •'• KI, 1

s l i o u l ' l h i ' i i i ' n n i t l r i l t t i r i s k I h , - H M S nf

t l i e p i i h l i c l iy s u r l i ( , ' l : iriii^ n . - K ' c t .

MON'MMITII COr.M'V NOTKS.

T h e K i - y p o H l l " r r W l / - : i y s H i n t t i l l- N i ' t t '

"Yuri; a n d K i v i l i u l i l l i ; ' i l " " ' ay C . u i i | > n n y

l i i i s i l i ' i ' i i l i ' i l 1" l.iUc n i l t l " ' )>!•..]>i-rt>- n f

Jl-r . A . - i n n i B i i l h ' i i n I ' m n t >lii-i t ,it *:i.i>in>,

t in - tMi inu i s . - i f ' i n . r s a n a j i l i i i ^ a s m a l l

amount in addition.

Lotsari'Milil iitAsliin-y l'ai-1;. NVw .ler-

pi'V. on what is n|iiival>'iit tu a p '-m-tua I

inurt^age—one hundrril v c a i s ^ T i r |mr-

clmscr, liuwi'vcr, r w r v i i i n Ijti'vinht In knil'i'-mid thrust it int

pay tlie j>rhi<-i]i:il nt any tinif -. "i- trii pn1

••••nt. will bcalluuvil for rush.—.!<//'.

On roninliiiiit of T. N. Mnr-iliy. Ji.lni

Jlcl 'nhi' appi'iiml IIi'fi.nMuslii-r Wani 'T

on Tuesday »f inM «' ' r l : nnd pliadi'il

guilty nf violating the Sunday la« l'.vi-\-

posing goods fur sale. A li f !>"> ami

costs was inuioyi l and paid. Tlie all'air

grew out id' a I'i'i'siinal ili'Tn-uliy.

A moth r r at liie Mansion I I , n w . l.nn;_

Branch, uasalinul;_'ivin;;lu-i-iirtiiiil -HIIH-

(as she supposed) ciiin-aral>ie «-liirli was

t.n ilrn<r stovi' MI Ni'jv Ynrk.

Kinl'liing Affray.

Mntawau Jimnuil s a y s : " L a s tv evfciinjj llii'iv was a par ly at a

K.'iif li'iMiinVliiiii-i' opposite (IKI residencenf Mr. (iiHiert Vau.Maler, 'iilniut n milefmiii Kevjuirt. un tin1 road to (irauvillc.and the parly were enjoying themselves,when Asa ami William Willis, residents• >f (iriuivillc, eaini- (here in a d r u n k e nI'oiulitinii and tried to raise a row. Theyv.i-re ordered mil. and refusing to go,I Ii'- p i i t l ' i i u n railed nn Mr. .John Tiitonto assist liim. a11, i they siu-eeeiled in eject-ing 1 lien l.'l ill nn, I low ever, get t ing handledplvt t ) M'veielv. Tillnii was advised tui^n tn Ihe next Iji-igllhnr's llnllst', a Mr.t nltjell . for fear Dial the -Willises inh,'htiln h im wmie violence, l i e went andfrom there started fur his home, a shortcli i lniieelinio Ihini iony. .Meanwhile theWillis lirotlii'i's had heen wai l ing in aeon i lieiil, ami \v11»• II Tiiton ilrove up.Asa.the eldest of the two, seized tile horse hythe head and William nulled him out ofI lie, wagoA, und then Imth pouueed onhim. and no dnulil wonlil have serioush-injured liim had he nnt d rawn his pockL't

Ihe left side of

A>a. jiisy^al>ove the groin, indict ing awiiiinil iipotit one inch and a half deep.On i ' , i in|laiiit of Mrs. Willie. Tiiton wasarn-sied lui a charge nf assault nnd luit-t<-r\ witlikintetiftn kill. Tiiton t lien pre-li'ivi-d a^iai 'Ko agaih.st the Willis hoys. 1( 'niisl.'ilili-s W.dliiig.'iMd Dislil'ow hrnujihtall t lneel i i - folc l l l s l i r i ' Wlll'IHT wlio lieiil

tin-in tn luiil iii the HUH nf £".'011 each foriheir ai 'piarai icc al tlie next term ofcouri . Tiiton has always hi'i-n a lia.nl-w n liin.^ iiiiliisirii^is yniing man. and ish'-ld in gonil l'eputL- hy all who know

Boots & SfioesFOR THE

Spring and Summer Trade

AT

S. MILLER'S,

14 15U0AI) ST1IEET,

RED BANK, NEW JERSEY.

Custom AVork at Fair Prices.

Kepaiiing promptly attended to.

356,432(iENUlNE

Sewing MachinesSulil hi ltCti, w!i

Our IIMMHHH'Ichinch, nnd ?-'• |l a i n - i iu (•".!•••• 11,,I luii',1 l l i . n . .

mn ruiir.sAUK HHKATLY iti:nrci:u.

w

7-l.c,-_i) nmn- thun In any [ire\ i-ulls wa r .•t-'J-'i ,,n lilt- III-IIVITV nf nia-nuj uiilll |ianl for. o u r »alrs,JIIS:> i lurliy Hie wtii.li- i>t-rlu,l

t lhri'e-(|iiiirtersII,,, v.i-i 1.1.

f uil UieNisvliiK Ma-

iiiuiitti t'tninly sin1 in'

,; 1o u r tirii'l-'|ii.irii>rH fur M

Ki'iMfciiiK. Mr. U. I'. Viuilmni. in i i lnwr. 'llramli• illlii'. .*„,.'.".I S,,mli slri'i-l. t-'ri-i-linlil. ill Jalni-s Viin-N,,if'n \1I11T1-;v full iisiiruni'iit ul Ki't-iUiM, oil unilAltarjili h r<,nill km,Ui-l Miidilm, nu i In' l,,uii'l

n .KAM.Vi ami IWAltUSIIvt nil klml-11/ 11111-I'llilii's lUMiiHiil) nUilnleU In, Mill slltl-^Ilu-Uull l-rlliir-

KSTAI1IJSI1ED I.N lSli'J.

TIK)MAS~ DAVIS,COMMISSiON MERCHANT

THE VERY BKST (iRAI)KS OF NEW

I'UOCESS

FAMILY FLOURHAY, <.KAI\, ITB'.ID, &.C.

LKKIHTON II.\I .I , Bt'II.DlN'0,

FKONT ST1IEKT, RED BANK, N. J.

miii-liased ut a drug store MI V w ) " ik .

when she noticed tl'.al Ihe cnlnr was n, , |

r ight . She lKl'1 II e \a in : . . ,u i., . i - i , , ,^ -

gist and it wa.s found !<> lie nvi l i r nei'l.

nnd if it hail hcen'taken she child would

have (lied.

" A u n t y " Vim Winkle isan'i Iderly lady

of ahoul T-") years, who has li\e,l al,niu

ten years in a dwelling owned hy lu-r

near Matawan station an,l widnn an

e i g l i t h o f a milcfniiu (ou-ii. Andyi - ia ! -

though within sight nf eve|jj-train .-lie i

was never in herl i fe on Ihr i-:iis until

Thursday ni-uiiinj;. and was never in

Matawan, though living within sigh! til

it fur ten years.—Journal.

J. L. M'Lean. ton of the Uev. Dr.

M'Lcan. has been staying at tlie fn i ted ;

States Hotel, lvmg I l ran ih . The father

of this gen tli-man is well known t limu^t:- j

out this county, especially at I-'neh,,M \

and lied Bank, where he was jia-tor oi'

the Pivsbvti 'rian chuivhi's. This L.'I-3I(.U-

A liit of the celebrated mitlinrs, whoselivt-s and writings a re represented invnhmie!! (if the Hew Ac"*** *«U*i.— -£

er.-'turi'. jn - t r.eet-i\i-d. is eeriai idv very

nllIM< t in- to any person of line li lcmryta.-te. Kn.V. J'ellll. Ha.Xter, Itullvaii.

Locke. New!,ui. llnnvne. Hale, Walton.lll'Mli'll. Telll|ili'. Knvelyn, I'epv.s, liutler..^.'Irjl.-on. Sis ill. Pope. Itajjisnv, t "(liher,Meele. licrkeley. Defoe, nnd Ij'nlinbn.ke,all-a U-w of the brilliant stars whichbii^liieii the -Ilii pagi's. " I t will bring^1 niii ,-- tn many a silmlar's lieiirt." RUVSlie VVini-s. nf I'l'iia lilphia. " to linil thiit

truly ailiniralilel -hl williin tinkits." Right Midi

printed,

lliis truly ailiniralile work h;is lit1

range of shallow\nlutnes, beauti-.r,*iMtly bound in

•lli. for only s:i.no, ur a specimen vul-iiine foi'i'xiiniiiiatiiin. with privilege ofriMirn for *.~) i-ents, post-paid, is certain-ly a inaiAcl of cheapness, ami shnilld es-liildi-li nn eiiriiibli- repulalinn fur the]ni 1 di.-slicrs if it can nut make their for-tune. It nu^ht tn lie in every libraryand Inline in the land. Ilescripiive cir-cular, with riitaliiKUc "f several l iumlnilother slandard |»nldii-;iti>ms. terms to

iVe.. will he sent free on request by

STANDARD.FACTS!

J.1MARKS,1*A)IOR

230 Greenwich St.i*"t. P;irk Placp nnrt'Biirritiy Strwt,

NEW YORK.:o :

I l i r e U'livc to I n f o r m tin- T n M I r , t l int t invlnt r nti-l i i i i i f i t)i>' r-ffiiLtatinri nf 1-rliik' t l ie nnwt K M . I A P I . KC I . H T U I K U 111 t l i c l j t w i T imr t "f t h t M ' i t y . a n d i i w i n yt - t t l l •1iMlllH-lI tni'.IVUSi' nf liU.sltH-NS. MlliVf fi'llflfii n i - r o - a r v tu e n l n i f f m y b u s i n e s s , a a J t b u r u f u r e

f njN-iii->l un luMltiuUitl HUJTV u l

ISO Greenwich Street,rri' I ."hull PLiustaitilj* keep on Ijund a large

MEN'S, YOUTHS' & BOYS1 CLOTHING,( I E N T S F i n M S l l I M J (iOODS. \C . , AC.

I <iliiill wll iw hiTt'tufuru ut I'rli-M cut to In- niuaKMS.-w Yfik . ,

All cm-U IH'ITIIT niiinitfiii'iurfd under my nwiiI)H r\Kl< !\ i'lialilfs tin* to t*lvf to iny I'liirnim Uic•*,[ iiudlil) "I NiuU-itilnnil tlii'tiiiisi ili-simt>lt- iniulf;i KunufiUs at lim L O M J ^ T l\i^iiu.L FUiLiins.

man, tlie only sou of the doctor, is lo- j tin- publishers, the American Book Ex-

cated in West Virginia, when- lie La-1 , , -

come [irominent in the legal prnfrs-i ,n.

r ' r ' " ' e k i n a n street. New York.

ld of:;A must heart-rei idine 's ton

William Hussel, of r'<irtui»i'l;, m-ar 1-ong [' 'J ji"1^'

• Branch. Ins wife was about tn bi'i-onie

a nuiilier, and her husband inshad of go-

ing for a doctor went away and gut drunk

and came homeand bent her. A lad hap-

pening to come in at the lime attempted

to interfere, but he was in turn beaten.

A warrant 'was iiflervvai'ds proi-nred ami

lie was placed in safe keeping unlil the

meeting of the next Ornnd Jury.

There were six competitors started in

the Bwimniing tournament for a gold

medal yesterday. The route was from

the shore on the south side of the Pier.

around the end of the I'iei'. to the .shore

on north Bide. Tin-contestants started at

10.30 A.M. Winfield Thorp took the lead.

anil came in nn easy winner. Time, x

M U t l t l Vt.l'.s.

\VK*VF.R-w\!P.Nr.n.-At rim tiiipiNt Chhrcri,TIM'NIU.V. AiiL-im .'nil, lurn. hy the,i],-r, Mr. .1 vims II. Wi'-iver unil Miss

KiiileM..iliiiiL-hlrri'I.Mr.('liiu. IJ. Wuruer.

T. r , HNIl'TIN. AucTHiXEEB.

ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE

HEAL ESTATE.In luirsim'i'-e

o l ' C'aiiil by virtue of nnnnlernf the

.,( M-iliii|,>ili|i 1 ..iinty. miule on Hieliii ii iluv i't -Inn.-. A. n. l-;:i. Uii' S U I « T I I » T . Ailmln-i . l r i .nr . r t l in l . l If. ll.iniel.ili-i-.-asnl, will sell at1'llHic Villiltlr. nil tlir Jirrlllisi'.H, nil

Saturday, KeptemW 2()lh, 1879,

i-ji l!»'hoiirji <>f l-'iiii'l 5 i.'i-liH-k. (at Sn'clnck):,It.-in.••!! ,,[ 4il<l ilny. nil Hint certain old

sl.-ii'l t-'ii• in. "I which M M Kennel illeil selziil,• ul M rri^ll l i ' , In UK' Tnu-mlil|i nf Sllildle-(•iiillily r,[ MMIIIIIOIIUI. Slutf i>f New Jersi-V,iil "ii tin' north liv IiimU lit >lrs. Itli-liard

, T! . T , " I (ruiifcnl. mi IJii'i'.i.sl jiD'l -''Ulli l>v Jand.i o/liiHi. W.minutes. Frank Dougcrty was second. I ir.iufr.nl I-SKUI', ..ir n,.- we.-i hy'tiw n»nl h-ndliiR

III Ui<l l ' . T l i ,Ml Hi l ll n - . v i i

and the other« reached the goal in stnigling order. There will be another matchnext Mondny.—JXev»

Thu bi'il in an answer to tlie injunction |obtained by Mclntyrc & Co. ag-aiust the iLclamlH to restrain them from contruct-jng a certain building on thu hlull, and 1also from continuiu;r,n nusiance by allow-ing the refuse water from the Ocean Ho-tel to run oa the rear land of the Man-sion House, was argued before Chancel-lot Runyon,at the Commissioners1 olTice,Long Branch, on Saturday, by E. Allen,Jr., in behalf of Mclntyre & Co., and byS. E. Lanning for the Lelands. • The pa-pers and will give a decision .in u fewdays.1—Xeics.

Receiver Lathrop, of the C. R, R.ofN.J liii> kbucd a tiiml ir to unploj ces oftb«N J S R E H(,IKI1 b> hnnsilf is

President of that roid icmo\ in|_, tin ^cncralofliccof the Southern to tliu G RR of N J building in Libu tj hti n.1Now York and innouncnif, the i» w 01gnnization of. the load m it is to be humAug_ l_Mr 'W_S Jni den reiuiius incharge with the titlcTof Assistmt Ginerol Superintendent, Hon Ruftis Bloilgett becomes Supenntcndent N J SDivision, and Wnj Panncntiei fat IJ H liaAssistant General rrei>,lit Agtnt Oui«ral Freight Agent WjLkoff and Giujtrol Passenger Agent Baldwin, of the

- 0. K. H, tnk[£ charge of those dcpiitJu«ato of tlio N. J S —Inquv er

i fnun l y btwelve ucr

yM " r r l s v l

A nmile kliuuii nn ilay of sale.

KZI1A A. iislsnUN, Adininlstrator.

Mlil,l|i'i>'\m, S. J., July in. lhju.

ry t,f tin* stalest Nt-w Jersey, will he exjioseil I

ON FltlDAY, THE i i o DAY OF AUOUST, 1ST9,

lletweon the honf s of 12 nml 5 o'eliH-k, (at 2 o'clock.)n Hie tirutrnnDii of sitkil day, at tlie rourt-llmisc. al

Frei'li'ilii, In tlie Township »r l-'iechtild, lu the Coun-y of MuunilHltli, New Jersey,

All tlmse. twn ltits uf Woodland. In tlie Trnvaslilpur shrv\v8hury. Cimiily ntiil suite, nfnrtwald, jnir.dnisett Iroia EiluiunU T. Williams liy Saumi'l CMdirls, nml is knnwn as the Poly tract, and Ifliouuilei! on tlm mirth hy limd.iu! (;nrrel MorfonI,cusl by Tliouiu S. WItllaiiia, iiiat wi-st by llwijainhi\V. t'orlles, ami Is the HIIIIK, pi-operty luuTliiwiMl liySainncl C. Morris fnim Kilwln T. Wllllain.saniUvlfe,hi two deeds. No. 1 daled felirmiry 4, 1838, ami Iri'wirrtiid at l-'iiH lioltl, In the Montnoutli CiiuntyClcrk'fl nfllii!. Ill KooK X II ut Oewls, iiano 220, anilfonnihm Ililrty-fnur neroii anil furty-^even han-liriillhs of un ucre.

ijit \'i». 2. Also imivhiwiHl from Kilhmnd T. Wll-llim<» nil wile, by deed ilated Nuveiiihcr .r)th, 1H">",mi I Is i LTiiriletl In tin; Jlonininilli l.-onnty (llerkv

like ut Krcflio'.ri, In Ilnoli V (i of Deeds, ]ia»i! -Kit,V nnd contains live acres ami nveiity-jilxtli luin-In 1th if an acre, anil was |ian'has.»il hy said

in in 11 Williams from I.yilla, John 1.. and TluI 1>«> liy deed daled SOIJi Jinmary, A.Il. 1KII1,in I n -Mnli'il at Fut'luild In Honk T -I of Di'eds, follcII Ir , unil Joins tliu llrst. mentioned tract, am

link s In ull Tor tills Indenture to cover tlilrty-uliiiinn-« i uil Buvcnty-llinse hiindri'illlia of an urre, uI la lnnl, liimr tlm HutMvuy llouue,

u n hip nfoa^aldr^ Ui 1 us tins |in>|ierty of Tirdwcll Morrlj nn

\\if li hen ID exunitlun at tliu suit ol Leah l'urker,un 1 lo bo sold liy

. . CHARLES AU.KN, Bllerlff.n Ai I.KS, Jr., Rilicltor.S, jr., c

Jnnu lu, Its™. [Pr'a fee, $7.20.]

y i rnnko nioucyfritter nt work ftir 11s than nylhliiKiilsu. Capital not required; wo wll

»-irt yon. 81'J P«r iluy nt homo maile by llui In.(lit itrlnllH. Mon,wntiimi, boyH and frjrls wnlllot!

n i ryv , lii 'retuworkforaii. Now Is tlio Ifml). Comi]outllt uuil terms In»c. . . .

Adilrcai TntiE & Co.,- AURiuto, Koine

j . S,WMi's:ik> and Retail

CLOTHIER,89 & 230 GREENWICH STEEET,

NEW YORK. ,\ . ll.-('ii«U>ni WurU a

BOOKSAND

WORRELL'S.

ICE CREAMAND

CONFECTIONERY

WORRELL'S, .FRONT STREET, RED BANK,

BEST OFFERS YET!TwTiiiy-tlvp. I'ntterv IMi'hiri'.i, 1H Hlu'el^ nf Piipcl

IS Knvelopi's. renholiler, PiinU, a (iolilun l'nnn, HttiiiKH, mid 1-' Ili'i'i'ljiis, !iS I'niilK, nostimlii. dr, ffiPottery Wi'lure.i, I) sheets aM'iiiH'r, U Knvi'liipe», .1(iolilell Pt'im, JO Snnca, :uiil 13 lli'i'i'ljita, 15 ooillsjxwlpalll. lleautiriil Putter; l'lunres, In urcat vllrlely, 7eentu a Slieel.Hlaiiiiis tiiken. Clrelllinn fmAililross Crane & Ackvriiiiui, 1017 Ijirayutte. Avopuillnxiklyn, N. Y.

?« SOOOOAYEAn.or $5to$20ilifi 111 yntliMiwiriiiailliy. Nrink. Woiui'ii doas well us inm

M y Mum 0:(>ji)nni)ntNutti»l iiliovo. Nmiu ejui full to niakii luoniiy la.it.' Anycnia ean tlithu work, Ymi ciin miike fnim so elmito f 2 un Imiiby dovotlus yntir cveniiiKs nml upani tlnio In litlitiHltieHS. 11 coHtu nutlilng tn try tilt) hiitdnfrtH. NothInifllkli It for money iiiiikinir ever olTi'riil tH«rori'JliMlnew) |ilm»int ntiif dirf('U,r)ionifriil)Ii}. Hmtilor, 1you wntit to know ull about II10 bR«l iniylng tumlnoibefiini tlio milillc, send u» your mlilri'ss nml ive wllmsiid you full purlleuliira uiiit prlvntu tnnim frootuunpltuiwoitii 95 nlHiifnHi; you ran thon ninkn iyour inlnil toryimrwlf, Addri'saUEOltCiBB'il.NBOi Co., rortlaml, Jliimc, ' . . .

MANUFACTURERS.

AshiiryPark Is ii villnpcon tlif?iW. iiiuMi, fwrlj-Uvo unity fntiiiVui-k rliy. u l»u uln'udy btvk'hi'Uy us a tiuiuuicv remit. __.

ThL' pliu-i! hns riotiblfd in size ulnce1RM, iinr] us riiu original jiniiirlftur ofIht- 1'itrk I»\VIIS 11 luvtni tnu-t lyluif west(pf tlie oM hii'fipllvc, tlttVi'-'iiutiK'r* " /a mil'' fiom Hie m i , lie I I ^ I I T S to <'»11

•Iln: ttiliMiiiim of MuiiuFiu-UinTs, CIUILTIn it siiiull uny or nit ii Intyc sc:ili'< lutin- fiu-i timt \vi* lmff uni'tii|>l".vr(l li*li**rl inv In tin1 fall, w i n t w and spmifr,whirl] uoulii lie liciir-iJIcit Ii) tlif csluh-li.sluiK'iit (tr>i.iui' iicniiiiih'iit work, wtiilnut Hit' saint' timr Mailllfactiiri'rs wulihlhe t.riii'iii.'ii tliciiiM-lvt's, ;is lands lyititfliimuxlliiti'lyiil>>nf.'tlM! Ci-iitnil Itjilli"ii«itr;n I win hi IH- s<i[<l at a nutnliiiil ]>rlcuid MiiiHifiii'tiin rs. 1'rii-f uf fuml fo i«i£i-.i<!i''lmvtuUiiiK tu Hie m i i n l i L T u l h U

As\>nry I'jirk is oppoMh'Oi'PiinGrovo,nml ran'In- icailii'il direct hy tin: f'KN-THAI. liAllJUlAH (IK NKW JKIWKV, fromIhi' fimt nf MliiTiv mm' ! , NPW York,via. . l e w y i ' i i y , nmt nlsn liy »i*'iiinl)f.ntfldlll flint itf " Itfilor Mfivi, N. V., UlS;ifi«!v IJir-'(1,.;ifl.)j-i)if)ira Iliji' vlrvv o! thuN a r r n ^ ? - , imrlKii ' f i-rl i t l i ' i i t iuiis, e t c . ,UillK < ItV tfir Si 'W .1. •!>«•>• Si l l l lUTI) I t l t l l -r.tjul in HiiiiM-lijK.iI iIVu mi l t ' s f runi 1-OUKll i i i i i i - l i i .u in i i-itiiiiri'liiiM t h e r e w i l l iC i - l i -in i l itiiili-odd nf N e w J e r s e y . Su t l i i r uiiri'(«'»i Uttvs of ruiitiiiuiiitutluu. I'lomI'liiiiMlcljiliiii, the ca i" run tu Attl»uryI'iirli i1ir<->i. Hiiili-oaii 11 in*' from NYvvVnrK I" A^l.nn hi rk .U hours ; expressin -iimriier, ul"-ul \\.'< linnr-<; uiul finiiiI'liiiinlelphfa to .Asbury 1'urk, ~ liuuraUUli '''•> l l l l l l l l tCS.

We have Him1 nunvhes; ft HaySiii'Ml.i'tiMiiii.' f Hi.ihii. witli a (tally at-u-)i-U:)i-r (.; IVMI hiitnln-'l iilnl tlft.v

. si'Imliiiv: ;i weekly Hcws|iai»T—ASIilUYI'.Utk J l H I l W I . : IWo l'lil.llc HlillS, 11IH!MMiinj.1 I . ' ^n; Iteiidiu^ Ilii'Un. Mu^mli1.SiH'f.'ly. ( jK lwur i I Triiiriiir.-. \Mt»i• >f KniL-lii- ..,{ ]Millii>i.s. DciMliii^' Club,HlnrlisiiiitU*' (Kid VVJieHUTijfJil.s' SJH-JH,l.'iinl"1!1 Viinls, Sii-iim Saw-nilll, 'I'fm-jiiT.inc- Mou-ls isale of li rs »inrliiliiii'di. lirnir Mure. I'liy-.ii-iiiiw. liry(,i-ills Slores. Iliikei'ieS, I'f.Hidi.'S slnlTS utvarious " H U T kind*.

If (In- iiti.ivc <h'UtI(f iiilcr<yt «iiy at ihoreiitli-rs i l liits imiie-r, [ih'iisi1 iul'tlri's.-*

ALLEN U. t'UUK, tfuperiiilfink-ut,

ASBUKY PAUK,

NKW JKRSEY.

Cabinet Maker

URNISH1HG UNDERTAKER,'fffliw. Cash h. tw>l every requisite for

Funeral* );ro}ii]>tlx furnished.

in ull its

OH FllONT STIIKKT, Kr.i> BANK, N. J.

MONTH Cimrmiteol. $l ;Jftduv'"" ' I ' 1 msiili'hy tin- Industrious

i|iliiil put n'tjiUnii; we wllUinrtm. Men. woitn-ri, tmyt drul ulrls mnke ninne.v fu?t-

11! unrk for tix ttiati iit anvthlii).' else. 'The vmrkIlfht llu'lit aii'l vl''i'* ;int, anil Midi as ntiy ime can• llirlit iit. Tiin>r who are uisc wild sci- this not tee111 wild 111 Hi" if addresses »t i.tire and set- furl Wm-

v Viisity uiiitlt HIJII terms frt-e. Now Is tin-1 tine,u ln^dy at work an- laying ii|» luriri* HIIIILS ut

>•. Address TRl 'E A l'i>., AiieiLilu. Maine.

Cheap Freight Line!

TI1F. STEAMBOAT

E. MORRIS,dipt. W. T. Vnnllrimt,

CAPT. J. E. IirnLEY, anil ntiieni. Salesmen.>n nnd after Wednesday. May 21st, 1ST!),rill run lu'lwwn New Vnrk il'ler ST. fi«it of I'urk•ian-jaliil lli'd liallK, tmin Allaire's llock, sto|i|iiUK

aL all [luiuls ull tlieslni'\^l,iiry Itiver.

.eaviiif,' New York Daily nt 8.0(1 A.M.,

eici'ulliur SATUUIlAYS ill tl.lK) ii. in.; rolurnliiK

Leave lied I3nnk lit -1.00 I ' . M. ,

m-Miing SATTItUAY, when she makes her trip miSunday uttiTinoii.

J"r'"rn'is-'!it n-i-i-lve,l nn [In- I'ii-r jit Ni'\v Vnrknil Iii-H-. "f lh.' il:iy nr niKlit. Freight rci-,-1II,.,I Hunk in nil l i '^ns .

THE REGISTER

JIEKCANTILE

Printing House,FRONT STREET,

(Over Worrell's Stationery Store),

RED BANK, N. J.

TInvlnir tllti-il up an nfllce with new mnierlsilhn,ui:h,illt. we oiler nur servlci-s In the jrein-nil•ilbllc to promptly I'lt'ciilhn; |i|ain and fuuey print,ill,' iu Urst-eliLvH slyk- anil al low inices.

B U S I N E S S M E N

In need of

ENVELOPESENVELOPES

NOTE AND LETTER HEADINGSNOTE AND LETTER I1EAUINGSNOTE AND LETTER HEADINGS

CAEDSCAHDSCA11DS

ISHIPPING TAGSSIIl lTlNa TAGSSUlPriNO TAGS

RECEIPTSRECEIPTSRECEIPTS

CIRCULARSCIRCULARSCIRCULARS

POSTERS-POSTERS.POSTERS

BILL HEADSBILL HEADSBILL HEADS

STATEMENT,'STATEMENTSSTATEMENTS

mill In fact nil kinds of

MERCANTILE PRINTING, MERCANTILE PRINTING

MERCANTILE MINTING .

aro rcsiHicltiiHy Invited to gtvo us a call.

HENRY CLAY & CO.,FRONT STREET, RED BANK, N. J

' -w,',.<./,:. i:!.n.t:'.t.ij in- ?-i.;<

JKKSKY.

NEW YORK AXD LONG BRANCH DIVISION.tatlon Ui NV«- Vort-. fmit i>l IJIwrty Hlnvt. InBrooklyn, fool of Fultnli street, (Je.\vuU'a Wharf.j

.TJino-Tahle poiiillienclni? June Kith, 1HT«.TniliMli-iivv New York, foot of liberty Street: •

'or MAT/ WAN, at ".l"i, U.0U. l l . t t a . m., 1.30, 4.0(1,5.1.1 uml d.ni p. m.

'or HAZI.KT, at 7.15, 9.00, 11.45, a.m., 4.M, 6.15li.OO |i. in.

'or M1DDLKTOWN. at f.45, 0.00, li.J5a. m., 1.30,4.UI,5.Hil4MI0u. in.

'or ltl-;i) HANK, a t " .« , 0.00, 11.45 u. ni., 1.80, 3.30,4.(M, 5.1S, (IjOtlp. III.

'or LITTLE SILVUlt.al 7.45, COO, 11.45 a. ill., 1.30,. •i.lKI, 5.15, 0.00 p.m.

•orLiiNU liltANl'll, at 7.45, 0.00, 11.45 a. ia.,'1.80,a.ao, 4.00,0,15, «.oo p. m.

' IIKTUHN1NU.>ave I.ONO IlltANIII, lit 0.4.1. 7.50, .8.15, 1P.32,

ll . 'Oa.ni. , •J.iV -1.2:",, li.a), 1I.:J5 p. in..cave LI'lTLB KII.VEIt.ut O..VJ, 7.5H, 10,10, 11.58

ll. HI,. S.3:l. l.3.'i, 0.iK, 0.4.1 |i. 111.ve I1KI1 JIANK. al (I.:*, H.IO. 8.S5, 10J0 a.m.,tt.<B,a..'i:i.4.4i,iui, w o p . in.ve JIIIIDLKTIIVVX, lit 7.0V K.I 1 a. In., K'.IO,S.-W, 4..1II, 11.40. 'J.rfi p. ill.

^•ave IIAZI.KT, ut 7.1:3, H.lOu. in., 1^.18, £.50,0.00,li.lH. 111.03 p. in.

/ l ive MATAWAN. al 7.18. 8.24, 11.01 a. III., l i . i l3.(11, 5.tt">. (1.53, t».«? [i. in.

'OH UUUOKLYN ANIl KKIE DEl'OT, JEltSEVCITV.

ilinecllon Is niaile at Jersey City station to andfrinu llriHiklyn nni! Erie ll'epnt, Jem-y City, hyIKJHI.S of tfie Vimiklyu unil Krie Annex.

HEIi HANK AND LONG IlItANCH./•live Kill Hunk for l^nir Ilralli h al li.K, 11.21, 10.S5

u. in.. l.'Jl, L'.M, 4.41. 5.S.1, 0.M), 7.:i.1 p. in.«ive Liine Iflalirli f.,i- Hid Hunk at li.45. 7.50, H.15,

J0..U, ll.Cllu. Ill,, S.S5, 1.S6. tl.3), il.!5 p. 111..(tl) BANK AND tlCEA.N (illl)VK AN1) KyL'A.N.,cave Itcil lliiiiK fur Ocean (irnvc m- Ashury l'ark ul

6.3j!. 11.21, 10.3.1 a. Ul.*," l.L'1, 3.5li, 4.11, D.25, U.50

,eave lie, 1 Hani; fur Sea (Jirl nt 11.3'!, 0.21, 10.!J5a. ni.,1.-.M, 2.511, 4.41, 5.25. U.fiO, 7.:i."> p. III.

<»«• llceilii linive or Xxliury I'urk fur Red Hunk nlO.-T,,7.32,7..')ti, 10.10, l l .a i a. in., a.07, 4.U7, (1.O0,Wtl |i. lu.

,eave sra lilrt at 11.10. ".1.1, 7.40, 10.00, 11.15 a. ui.,l.tii, "t.50, ft.-15, ll.ixt (>. in.

l-'ult NKWAltK.>'ave Luiiir Bmncli fur Newark at fi.-irj, 7.50, 10.32,

I1 .MIII . I I I . , 'J.'.'S. J.'J.'j. IJ.'JI p. in./•ave It.-.1 hunk fnrNcwui-k aKi.'iH, S.03,10.40 u. in.,

lS.li:l, 2.:)'.l. 4.41,ll.XI;i. III.fave NeWiirk fur Ked Hank mill Liini.' limnrhiil

7.47, 0.07, 11.55 ll. 111., l.:j.r,, l.tM), ,r,.2.">, li.lU [I. III.

Kl)l( rllll .AIJKLl'lllA.U'ave lied linnk for Tivnlmi uml l'lillailel|>lila via

Kli/uhi'l!i|h<rl ami "llnund l".rn.,k llnllti'" utti..rt8, H.0.i; 111.17 a. 1)1.. 12.02, 2..'!!). 4.11,li.:;;l p, m.

STACK ('OXNKlTlt)XSTo nnd from KKVl'nUT nl Mntilwnn Rtutlini: In

ml linn Oeeuiiu- aii'l I'lli Haven at lied H;ink; Inml fruni I'ninl 1'lcn.sanl-iit Sen (iirt wilhall Imins.'ltKKIIUl.ll AM) M'.VV VllltK UAll.HOAI) CON-

.M'.tTlllNS.'rains leavlnu lied Hank at li.58. R.ltl. a. ni.. 12.03,

4 11, |-,.:l:J. '.I.-18 p. in., connect ut Mula«aff Junc-tion f,,r I'-ro'lmld.

Trains IcaWllK Kni'holil at 7.M, II..I5 a. ai., J..'Kl.O.lop. in., conned at 'lnlawiin Jan lion fur ItcilHank. " •

I-'nr lurllier particulars see liine-tiihli' ul stations.II. 1'. IIALUWIN, Cell, l'uss. Aeenl.

JEliSKV SUUT11KRN RA1L-

ROAD LINE.

I.EAVK NEW YO11K.'nun Tier s, Nurlli lliver ([nol nf Itirlor Street), ut

•1.1.) p. in.U r h e i n New Vnrk. 11.3.1 n. in.

I.tAVE l'llll.ADKLrillA '•'rolii tiH.I of Market Mice! for l lnl Hank 7.30 a. in.,

nml ''.:iO |i. in.

AltltlVi: IN I'HII.AIIKI.I'HIA

' M I lied llnuk 111.'•II a.m.. r>.so uml 8.50 p.m.

LEAVE I1EI) 7IAXK.T.10 A.M.. fur New Vmk \!a Samly Hook, ills

for I'lilltiilelpliin. Mt. !!>>ll>. '1 lli-l.t-rloiTmiw River, Hrlitslmi-u, Vm-lmlU umlTri-nlnli.

11.2"! A.M., for llrirkshnrir, Toms KUcr and "VarL'-

10.W A.M., for 1','irt Mtinmouth. v

~- I1. M., fnr l'hllitiielplila. 511. Molly. Tuiki-rlnllIt. It.. Hrii-kshurc.. Mani-lii-sli-r, Tom.-Kin-r. Wlielnw Juiiciion, Vitieland,Hriilt'elnn mill AIllUlllc I'll}'.

5.27 P.M., for l'lil'iidt'lphln. Ml. II,illy. Harmful.Tncl.erlnn,'loins It!ver. Hilekslmrtr auil

5.M 1'. M., loiMlikllciowu, Hopping and Port Jlonllli'IKll.

TKA1XS ARRIVE AT ICED IIA.VK.13.55 A. M-. from I'orl Mnniimiiili. Ac.d.uo A.M., from Tunis ltiver, Wurrunrn, Ilrli-ks-

ituiL'. Kamnl, wn. Ac.

2.:"0 P .M. . from Tor: Mnnnnutli . Ac.4.34 P.M.. from Warn, iwn. Tmn> Klver. .vc.5.5; P.M., truiii New York via Snml) l lo ,* . /

from I'll!lail, !|'!iia. Ml. Mnj|v,'|-|ickeiIt. It.. T. ' l i isUiwr. llrleLsburK. l-'rcel

X^''• PsiwiiLi'rs for Seiihrlulit, llk'hliiniN uml•ail'lv llo,,k ,-an ulsn nike c . 11. it. ul ,\. J , iniiii,'u\iiiL' Ki-d H.mk .it '.i.21 nml II).-"!.", A. M., 2.."i.% 1111,1

fi.25 I1. M..';iml e,,inie, liujr vln llnincli|>orl Jinn-lion;also 1.21 I". M. via West hnil .liun'timi.

' '"suii,l;iy tniin. l/-inc New Vnrk, I 'iery, X.it. fool Heclur SI.'.1.30 A.M. It'-luniilif.'. li'iiVf LulltTllniiirli 5.1>J, Seuhrl).'lu, 5.11 r..M. a r r n e in -New Yorki.50 e. M.

Wll . S. SXEIlEX. Ceneral Manai

& NEW YORK li.ML-

AVAY.

NEW lilllTE TO I'HKF.ilOLU.

Excursion Tickcl-t to Freehold andltelurn. $1.1)0.

TIME TABLE TAKI.V,' EFFEl'T JL'XE lfi, I

Tminshave viu. Ci-ntrul Itallruuil nf New .li-rsey furFivi'liuld. Murlliuru. Hlllsiliili-,..Murjlanville,M

iislM-li.iv:

LEAVE UEIJ 11.1 NKAt 0.5R, 8.0:111. in.. I'.'.tH. 4.41. r,.:i:!. 11.4s ]i. ni.

l.ll.tVE LITTLE MI.VKICAt 11.5:1, 7.5S 11..-* 11. in.. l.:a. 8.2S. 11.43 p. In.

I.EAVK MIIH1I.ET11WXAt r.ffi, H.i 1 ,1. ,„., i-j.iii, .i.r.o. li.m, 11.5.1 p. 1

[tKTI'lt.MNti. LEAVE 1'IIEKHOI.I)Fur lteil Bank, i c . . ,Vi'.. ill 7.5(1,- 11.15 u. m., 4.30,

and 0.10 p. in.,1. K. Il.U.PH. Treasurer.

Asbury Park.KEAV JERSEY.

w

0

O

A'burj-Pnik Is loriitril flfrtTily uppo-n\u- the ti'lctinitcil i i r tan (Jrnvc* cuirii>-mi-cHittr cruiimisi Wesley Like (HUddiy

eitil (ini'il's*tntlJiL'e in l.(iii}: Itnini'li,Ni'W ,h rsey. l)\i-r eif.'hl Imtlilfecl cfrl-tjitri-n tmvr liecri luillt m Aslmry l'arknml ij-viin (iiuvi' williin *ix yimn*, r-ust-iiifr uver (me minimi f.'oi/mx AslmryI*iirk Iiwits illi-ectly un '.Uii iH-eitTi. U(liti-.H rn>l frnnt n<i II ti:iy' ur suiiml. urriver, Imi mi the Inoml Alfsuilic, stn-tch-liif? away for llinusiiiuls <»f miles. Ax-biirv Purk WHS 11^1'sseil in isiifi atSi.VdOO; tlw iissiwim'iit fur 1H7H W;Wtiiilfii million ilnllarH. f*r,riH-t.H runningat i1{:lit ainrlw t-i tlm sea uri! fniin unulo twii lumiliHl n.t't v.lcle—an tulvan-tii^ii puNsrsse'l by no "itHT soii-alilu r«-s*jri un Hit* New Jersey « ; w t .

Aslsui7 1'ark, oppfwitc nr-can Omvr,nil) hi* ruu'litM UinrL '•>' tlie CENTKALIUII.I ' .O.MI OK Ni:w ,ln:si:v. tnmi I horoot uf Lllx'.riy Mivct, Nuw York, vluJi-rnuy Hty, and ul.su by vivuinbuilt frunifen-t-TTir-Ki'i-trii' «^'(!l N. Y., los iuu tyHim);, nftunllnfr inlni; view of tlin Niir-n>trs, imrtHjr [urtlllrHlitiiw, ->U-., Uienetiby tin; Xi»w Jci-scy ftitilliiTn II. H. UtBi-iineliiioi't (H-y niili'H from Ij*»n^ItrjiijHjVninJ eonnei-tlnj,' tlicnt with CVti-1ml Ibfllnuul <if Nuw Jersey. Uu tlierclive twi'liney of rnitiitiunicatlon. F n i nl'liilndelpliiii, \\w car.4 n m to Asbur'yI'urk dln-ct. Hniiniiid llm« frum Ni.'wYork tn Aslmry I'ark, 2 lioum: uxprf-sa(n winmier. iibunf \H IHHHU; nnd fromI'lillaileliililn ti> Aabury rtirk, * liuura

The terms nf sale ttf tats !n AslmryPink un* us fullnws: Flixt, Wlien ?iur-• ' • • • • - • • • n ( , t I J H I H L ( j i n H h l n l t l K !

WO

tftwbijyuHiVdn not IJIIIML (jiiitIhlnl tbupuri'liiiso ninncy will lie rciiiilrcd dnwn,t llvi* ycinn. &$ctin\(U Whini)

I i l i ill l

so nintu l

XJl

llvi* ycinn. &$ctin\(U Whini)piinlmsiT ImiliiH, no moimy will lm n rquintl down, lnit u mort^ i i^ rim buKiT(<i\j luiyuWi! in ten years, with ihoprivJliv'J of Um liko renewjiK nm\s\n\*tlio principal sum duo otm hnndn'd ycuinlii'iH-c, tlm piircliaw't', liowovtr, ivsorv-injjr ttiu rluht to |>ny dlT tint mnrlfciiff" atany tirni;. 'XlxlnU Ten percent, off forluwh at tlinu or purclituH). Fur price oflots, nditmw, '

JAME9 A . ' M M D I X Y , or IflAAOBEALE.li.'il Punrl St.,Now York,

ALLEN B. COOK,. Asbury Park,i New Jcraojr.

OH

H

Ul

O

O

Asftury Park,NEW JEltSEY.

VAWDEGEIFT'B

MW MILLIHERY AND FANCY GOOD?

-Corsets.-

Fi±ages.T'-r-i -m 17-1 H T-| g S o :

i: o :O :

3 ^LisXe O?T-i r e a d C3-lo-ves.Lace Han.c5L3si©xloli±©fs.

F a n c y G-Oocisin general.

r>O 1STOT -ETOIIC3--BTVAXDEUGIFX'S, Cor. Bruml uiicl Wliltc Strcctn,.Bcd Bunk.

SPECIAL BARGAINS!SMOCK. -&

WHITE.

SMOCK•&

WHITE.

SMOCK&

WHITE.

WIHKU.'N AND DOMESTIC

-DRESS GOODS-INUI1BAT VAUILTY AND AT l'Oi'L'LAIl TOICES

BLACK SILKS.TllIMMIN'U S IUS AND SATINS.

BUCK AND CUUlItEl) ALL WOOL

CASS-IF^ERES,HIKAf.

AN BLEIiA.NT ASSOltTMKNV OF

Parasols & Sun Umbrellas.UOSILIiV. HOSIKHY. HOSlEliY.

Lisle Cloves.I..ACF.S, FIIISIJES AND ltlTIIF.S.

THE "KAVIHUTK" KID ULIIVR, TWO ANDTTIKEK Iirn 'ONa,, EVERY l'AIIl

WAItllANTi;i).

Opposite

M. E.

Church.

RED

BANK,

N. J.

THE CHEAPEST HARNESS STORE IN NEW YORK.

Hand Made Harness of Every Description.Ruinry llanicKi snWii i Lilies'Saililles J m . . . 80 ot> (

labels ' Hanii'ss ' IS I*) | (irnrlcnieii'.s bailillcs R. t WTmek Harness lid l» Sliei-H 25

Ilallers a)U11I1V Al' UHOI.KSVLI: IMtlCF.H.

T e a m Harm's .*, wl l l i

i> vit'i-p" or I IAI I \KSS MOLD.

Osborne & Burke, 71 Barclay Street,OXF. uiiim FHOM (inw'.Nwini STUKCT, NEW; YOIIK.

Tin, Copper and Sheet-IronWorker.

SOU! MiF.m FOl! TIIF.

CSLEBRATEE SUNSHINE RANGE,I'.V'UIii^tKKt! livat in TJaikol .

Tin Rimling and llciitfr w-urk ii Siu'cially. Jobbing promptly attended to,

rFIROUSTT S T R E E T ,XI'.AI: JIAI'I.K AVKNVE, KED'BAKK, IV. S.

COOL SUMMER DRINKS.FliM pn'ininiT! nn-nnli'il nl Ilia- ri'iili'iinlnl CxUllilttiwi Tor Ilii- prut : VnriT FlAVnn and E X C K M E N T

T \ S T F "I tlicsi' syrups: wlil'-li. nilxnl mw |«irl Stin't' and /(re puiLs h-c M'utir, nmkesthe pumi t .lili'iuiiuli'St mill lu-iilUifil ilrlnk ll) Ihe WurW.

DELICIOUS ICED DRINKS FOR THE SUMMER. .

SHAFER'S

(FoniiL-rly known as CiORDON'S.)

KiiKpIicrr)-, Strawberry, licnion. Ginger, Vanilla, ami many-

— ~ . „» rt _ _ _ _ _ *-m _ _ T i .._«___ m . * i-+ l i ' n . i , ,-.*-« i.* _ - _ ^ i B . h r i T c %»n» 41» . - _ C T i~rBr IJi r"__r*m r « *v

For flic SOCIAL CALL. FESTIVALS, PicNirs, Exnrissioss, tlie SICK ROOM, orfor PmliliriK Siiucca, ur for tlm Ejiiuure in Liquors thty are unequalled. Do notwnsto li'inmiH, siifpir and tiniK whi-n yi>u caa miike un equally good drink fromtbo above Syrups at one-half tlu* cost ami no time lost. -

Iluy nuiH! bill HIIAFBIl'H KVIirPH, irhlih linvc nlnnj-B licrll foluul the Bnt In the Market.

NEW STYLE WHITE FLINT GLASS DI'.CA.NTF.It IKJlTI.ES, lull r|unrts and plnls.

<liiartn, per bottle - - - $1.00 I Pint*, per bottle - - - 60CU.

Medicinal Blackberry Brandy,Miumfiirtured troin ttiu Itlochtwrry Juice and Root, mid pun; Importud French Brandy,

v.xiwlully for xancis»L i\>i:, by

I . SHA^EE,76 CORTLAWDT STREET, NEW YORK.

The Reneml doinnnd fur 11 Purr Blarkbeny Rmmly for tumlly nsft, as a preventive of, nnd r m e vfur Diiirrliu-ii. Oillc, nml Mlmilur ilifniiiui'iuciiUi uf Hut nynti!iu, hiw inUurud Hit1 advertiser to prepare aniirtlclc wlilcli fully niwtH the icriitin'iimtit, ami can IM; iireMTllKiil nnd reirutnincndix) liy tliti pliyalclan,uml Uiktiii hy adult or child wli h iii-iftvL ntliiiucc us t« It-t purity and i^lcacy. Uelfift prepared from tlio,fniltiuul ftKitnf ihit itliu'klHirry, In ioraliluutlon vl lh luinortetl Fnnieli ilrundy, tliln rumcilial upont mimwutcd In thy nujst iffllcl'cnt r«»rni knnwn, and tlie udvurtl.sur trust?* tlint Ills ustufUlHliud reputation ofiniinv yiiiirs' Htiiiulliif; ILS H tuiumfnrturtfr nf .similar prnpaniUcnu will tuirve ns a Ruaniiily for tbo rccom-inctiilJilfnn Df nil** iLi the jut ml anif lifxt article, of it* Itimt in the iiinrhet. 1'ut up In Hnlf-Plnt, Pint)unil ijiBirt Kuttlc-t, onts tUvmn in 11 vima. Price pvr dnzun Imlf-plnts, $5.09; price pur dozen pints, gl).0O;

tora2,lluiru5,^S

MoNTf'LAiR, N. J., February Oth, 1871).MY DEAR Mn. SIIAFKII:—f li>slirj' irllli pliswimttn Ihe vnhio uryimr VMLHIICIIUII Iiluckberry llmnay.

W!LU;1I I WILS itidiicciLlivlry by your^tiitcnu'iit tin which I plnwitlH' iilmoat eiinllUiwt'). that It waHctiin-IHIWH! es<t'tuljil!y or (IIMHI Hmwly, wlilunli'Unltc quiintlty I'JI Klukl Extract of Hlnc.fchfirry Iloot. Younm we'll ifi'wnil un IIIH i'x<-t-i:i'riri- ur Ihc'artlck's which enter lntii Its iiniipmHIun, fdr yuilr mic^css In

l l l l l II I k n w n tlmt you luiv! uueqluiUBi (aollltlus [urubtalnlnu tho fcrat mute^ti:i'riri ur Ihca r t l cks which enter ln t i It iini

ulihilnlnu uiilHin wliBn unit' II Is known tlmt you luiv,! uueqluiUBi (aollltlusrlula and tlie ilUwxHlttn lu urnko ll»> btwt ii.sis of i h i n

niipmus [ur

, fr yrubtalnlnu tho

M „_21& & £2Dr.ri-eM\vie!) Street, SKW YoitK, Februury IHtli, 1870.MR, I. CALVIN SHAVER—DnirSfr:—"We tjnvusutil your '• Metlfcltinl Jllaekburry Bninily " for tho jwist.

tliree veurd, wltli uiitiru satisfiictlun tinmr tnidu, unil bcllcvu It to bo thu iH'Htarticle of Its kind In tbeumrkul. . Ynura truly, HALL & HUCKEL, Wholesale DrugKlst,

- - .. JKKSKY Cm*, N. J., P'ebruory JBOtfi, 1870.Mn. I. CAI.VIN SHAFKR—Dear Sir:—I riiwo boon si'lllnj? your *' Mcdlelniil ltlaWtlit'rry Bmiirty " for thft

past tlm-tt yenrrt wllli (irmt Hiillslnctimi, mul beln-ve it to be un excellent remedy for dfurrliuct, and tlmtxt-it urtldo or ltd kind In tliu cuuiitry. Very truly yourw. TURNEIl & BENNELL,

Dcnlen fn Fine Tens, Wines anil Gfocerle8s1 Mo.NTtXAHl, N, J. , Dcctaifrur Mb, 3877.

Mn. I. CAI.VIN 8HAFKR, 70 CmiTllundt Street, Nnir York.Sir:—BI'IIIK iillli^li.d with IL suvt-ni mtiick of Hunimur Cnmpliiint In tho mnnth ot Aiiffust last, I pro-,

cured u Iw^tlii or your " Mitdlclnnl Ulncklwrry Ilnindy/' nnrt used it with -tlio most gnillfylnff result. IKiive ii.niirt of tt lo out! of-tny friends troublcil wltli tliu sutiu; diniculty, and it, as in my cusu, ttiwedllyetfuck'd u i>mintit)ent cure. I n>(oird It us u very vnluublu Hied lui uo.

Very respectfully younu MASON LO0MIS, Civil Engineer. ••" • 111 Broadway, NEW YORK, February lGtb, 1878.

I. CALVIN SIIAFKK, New York City.-1)L-IU Sir;—I Intel u jihyslcian's dully nttfindnnce for somo tlinn liwt summer on a boy of elghteca

niontlin old, who .vns HIIOTMIIIK fnnn Uhoicni Infnntnin. I wiis directed to your place of business lopurfhiiHc bnuiH^ wlifeh Jwl lo ynur siif_;( *sthif; (atler my informing you of tlio CUSG) a trial uf yourMtHllrlnal Uliu'hbnrry Bniudy. Ilud 1 m-curcd »uch relief at tlie ontbrtyik of the disease, tfte terribJoHiilTeriiip, tlio HyinpiillmHc wutdlitn^nntt heavy expense would have- betm saved. I look ut my Httlo feUlow now i-nj'iyiiifr K'HKI IIL-HKII, and toiiHlder Una I tmve Livery rotison 'to feol pratctul for Din suggestedtrial and tlm wondrous win; It uHm-teil—a llfn snvwl, thnt for weoks I deapalreu of, It fflves uio g rea t 'ptmufiiro to rticommuud it, uud I can usmiru you of my unbounded uppn-ciuti(,n of IU Gflliacy.

' Youw, very truly. GEO. 0. WHEELER, Arcliitcct.

• NEIVA«K,N. 4.; January 20tlM870.MR. CALVIN finAPKR—D«ir Sir:—-During tlio nn«t year I punbnscd sovorul bottles uf. your " MedicinalBlackberry Untruly " for usu in my family iiou muniur my employetiH us u euro for dlarrnoca, and navefound lu every cumi Unit It edit!ted ii npueily cum, and I tlilulc ttiut every family would do well to keep abuttlo of it on liuud, ua I certululy Kliall

TAVL BVOIUNAN,Proa't Newark uud lrvlnmon liotso It. It. Co,

F O B S A L E B Y . . . . . » • • • ' - . •

Henry E. Sclirocdcr, DruggiHt, Theodore'White, GrQCcr, ...Bennett Bros, unil S, It, Cobiirn, Hod Bank, N.J.