red bank registe - middletownrbr.mtpl.org/data/rbr/1880-1889/1882/1882.08.23.pdfred bank registe:ol...

4
RED BANK REGISTER :ol TOLUME V. NO. RED BANK, N.J., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1882. $1.50 TEAR. LAWYEB8. "JOHN'S. APPLEQATE, coxnsrsEaioB"AT LAW, BSD BANK, H-J TXENRY M. __ COUN8ELOBAT LAW, BSD BANK, H. 1. pHAR H. TBAFFOBD, ; OOUNSELOITAT LAW, Oommlalourtor NewYork. BED BANK, N. J. HXIAM PINTAKD, - COUNSELLOR AT LAW, . Orer Button'! Store Store. BED BANK, N.J. TOHN L. WHEELbK, ATTORNEFAT LAW, BED BANK, N. J. JOHN F. HAWKINS, ATTORNEY~AT LAW, omoe In Klnmootb 1 . Building, DENTISTS. •T\R. R,F. BORDEN, SURGEON DENTIST, MUSIC HALL BUILDING, BSD BANK, N. J. Over Nineteen Years' Experience itt Den- tistry in all its branches. Particular Attention Riven to the administration of Ajuratnetira. / ¥~\R. H. B. VANDORN, DENTIST, WlUi Dr. XL r. Burden. Music Hall Building, IIED BANK, N. J' PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. T~\R. G. F. MAR3DEN, ' HOMtEOI'ATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, omcu In Honlea's HulMIng, Broad street, RED-BANK. N. J. DRUGGISTS. C A. L0CKWO0D, PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST, Eleven Vaars' Eiporlonce. Cor. BUOAD AND WHITE STREETS, RED BANK, N. J TTENRY E. SCHROEDER & CO., PHARMACISTS, Reliable Drugs Only. BEDBANK, N. J HKSItr 15.8C1IR0K0KR. JOSSMI V. IIOHBIS. "REAL "ESTATE AND INSURANCE. A. M. MORGAN, Real Estate & Insurance Agent, HBO DANK, N. J. DE3IIIABLB PIlol'tSUTV ?O11SALE Oil TO LKT FURNISHED COTTAUE3 ON ItlVEB DANK TO LET. Plr.t-clau Inturancc Companies B«P- resented. p DAVIS, JK-, INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AUENT, FRONT 8TnEET, HED BANK, N. J. I 1 . O. Bux, 21. Insurance placed In tbo boat Companies on moel reasonable terms. I. II. SICKELS & SON, REAL ESTATE AND GENERAL - BROKERS, (DEALERS IN-ORNAMENTAL, IRON WORK. Ofllce, Cor. Brood and Front Sts,, Red Bank, N. J. CatalnsiiM upon application. JUSTICES OF THE PEACE. ITARUY J. CHILD, JUSTICE OFTHE PEACE, DRUAD 8T11KKT, RED BANE, N. J CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS. H. TOMPKINS, CARPENTER ANDBUILDER, TINTON FALL8, N. J. f~i C. OKMEKOD, BOAT BUILDER, Main Street, Asbury Park, N. 1 TITUS & CONRAD, Carpenters and Builders, TRENTON, N. J. Or address EAST LONG BRANCH, N. J. 4 L. UARTWELL, ARCHITECT, LONG BRANCH & ASBURY PARK. rians, Spocincatlona, Estimates and IMIs of ma- terial for [inline anil private buildings In nny p u t ot the country furntahod at low rules on short no- tice. Old buildings remodeled utld modernized. Special atUintlon to Ventllntlon and pralnafjo. Work Suiwrlnlondnd It Ueslrod. P. O. Address, A81MTRY PARK, N, J. MARKETS. tfPHE MARKET," "THE MARKET," Tlrf OLDEST ESTABLISHED IN REDBANK ia.wOw OPEN INTHE NEW AND >*' ELEGANT STORE ERECTED ON THE SICE OF THE OLD BUILDING. niBfeHHk CLOTHING. CORLltS, Tie Clothier. CLOTHING. 8TK&W HA.T8. I COLLARS AND CUFFS. HO8IEBY. " j ; SUSPENDERS. SHIRTS. IINDEBWEAR, YACHTING SUITS. READY-HADE CL.OTIIIWC.lt CLOTHING HADE TO ORDER If you want any ot toe aboVe, you will Bare monoj and get toe beat goods by purchasing at the CLOTHING HOUSE, No. 16 Broad Street, Red Rank. CORLIES, THE CLOTHIER. Clothing for Spring PATTERSON'S. Men's Clothing. A Large Stock in all grades. Clothing suitable for laboring men, tradesmen, professional men, and all classes of men. GOOD GOODS AND LOW TRICES. Clothing for Boys. The'rich and tho poor can find garments suitable for their boys at tho cloth- ing establishment of PATTERSON, The Clothier, Boys like to play, and parents like to see their boys enjoy themselves, but rough playing is hard on clothes. If you wish to get clothes which arestrongly mode and will wear well, goto Patterson, the Clothier. FRONT STREET, RED BANK. A largo assortment of Furnishings for Men, Youth'B and Boys. Shirts, Col- lars, Culls, Ties, Underclothing. J. MARKS, Merchant Tailor and Clothier, HAS REMOVED ALL HIS STOCK TO No. 189 Greenwich Street, NEW YORK CITY. By keeping his whole stock at ono place, and by giving his whole at- "" tentlon to that store, ho will bo able to giro bis enstom- era much hotter satis- faction. DON'T FORGET THE PLACE : No. 189 Greenwich Street, NEW YORK CITY. BAKERIES. TTPTOWN BAKERY. •WM. H.WILSON, FANCY 11IIKAD,CAKE, TIE* CHACKEH BAKER Comer White Streot and Mnple Avenue, IIED BANK, N. J. llr. Wilton's broad may bo obtained at tha follow- ng plum: lied Dank: M. Hollywood's bakery, WuhlDgtou rtreot, J. M. Bmlth'a grocer; store, oor, Front itreet and Maple avenue. FalrHavent Copt. B. h. Brown's grocery atoro. Ooeanlo: L. I/ongitreet's, Enrtglit llros.'n and Harry pattenon's grocery stores, aeabrlgnt: Jwoph Sher- man's nfooery "tore. Estontown: J. W. Johnson'! store, oosanport: AI the Moraa at D. 8, Wm. Clayton, anil Williams * Grtsoom. Mr. Wllion has established a dally route through ed Bank, Shrewibgry, Katontown, Ijong Branch, ad Tlnton Foils, ind another Uironjjh the eastern ._ . . . ._« Ooeanlo, Sesbrlght. J PnrtlM at any o Mod with tnah brawl erery jBibtorlber.or the drlren WM. H. WILSON. ReoBuik, anaTlnton . aide ot nod Hank, Fair Bunuon Neck and Pr tlien plaoH uajr btf i morning by potftylOBt] Hne Commerolal Printing Desolate-Hearted. Oil, thoii -J." tlio (li-mjjic heart I u iierc iiaji Hi; iiriKliI Jrf>am llovnf It) t iieri 1 liu «c<:i-j,t of lovti, To wikf with it* llrtt-fftvlng tone An *^Ho of gladness wutitn theof A Ji>y-ituln to claim u mine own t ThoD who h u t wearily lingered Amid the blank htunu or despair, Whoae soul liatli so long been o'eraliudowed By gloom clouds of Borrow anil care, Oh. say, ftpost uot ttioa gleaming Of Rinillgiit coiiunlngllug tlicref Canst Miou futhmn ttio doplhs of thy being. Anil am) but a dark, blank •pacer - Can-1 not ace an Image enjriave:: ' Some beautiful, atullllig facet Ua»eoveu bright dream visions loft thee. Or come not, for want of a i>lu':o f Thy spirit, entombed In tlio dai kneu Of slmlena exlstenoo liarli lain;. Awake, iiwake fro-u tlie Hluiuber— Thn iliiinb trance tliat'a over tliy brain. And H'HIIC In thominllirhi of gludnes*, Ami ILituuioJiiy'tiStvuot stralu. CRAZED BY LOVE. At last (her have given we ricu, ink nml paper. At last I can writo out wy Htury auj scud it forth iiilo the world—the world that shall judge me, and whose judgment I do not (ear. I glanced up just now from inj bmy writing. What did I eoe ? A room Mcru. polonslv clean aud neat, with two or three good pictures upou ltd wails, aud containing •omd few handsome arliolnu of fnrnitnre. Bat there is souiething odd—something wanting. What is it? Oh, I seel There is not a piece of china, a piece of glass, a singlo article of bric-a- brno which louJa to auy upurtiuent that graceful air of living. And why? Because china might be broken, and sharp edges oat, GUIBS also is dangerous. It severs arteries. They do not even leave me an ivory paper-knife to cut the leaven of the ^azines, which lie nnout, uurond, upon my table. The view from my two wiiuluirH in on a large and noble park, bnt 1 lurn from it shuddering. Ah, It ia crml, cruel I l)o- tweeu me and. it in grated iron. Yet I have ooumitted nocrime. 1 urn not in a prison, though a primmer. Perliaps yoa have gacssod tho Gecret I am about to tell you. I am in a uiad-houso, and thoy call me uitul. 1 luul to lay down my pen here nud Lin^h. How btranyoly my luugli tioauda in this quiet room 1 Hut let mo toll you why they brought mo here. Threo years wgn uiy btiautiful Italian mother died. You scu it is her foreign bloml in my veins which mukos mo so un- liko those cold poople, who, bncnuuo t hoy canuot understand me, say thnt I am luutl. I look like her, too. JI; eyes are lnrgo aud dark; uiy hair, which, unbound, falls to my feel, is blnak as midnight. My lips are red, nud through them my whito teeth fairly glistou. My liguro is tall and wil- lowy, aud slight. I was oiyhtcou when my nuolo—my father's brolhor— brought mo to hii homo. He had hut onu ilaughter, a yoar yoitngor thnn myself. Sho was still at sohool. It wns her uninhing year. Would thut KIIO bad never lived ! Would that I had uover seeu her fair, falso faco I I should h.ivo boeu DonitM'n wife then, ainl uow— Bnt I have not told you of Dimtild. IIo was uncle's partuor. Though a vory young uiau for so important a position, liis ser\iccti had boon so valuable to tin* finn ihut they had won him this roci,guiltt.,n of them. To my uuale he wan almost as a sou. Indeed, always I think it hail been his fhorinhod hono that ono day he would snKtaiu to him this relation; but. be this as it may, ho was constantly at our house. I shall never forgot tho first day l aw Don- nli) Craig. I loved him thcu, I lovohim now; I shall love him in my gnvo. I was Bitting alono In tho library,'gazing dreamily into the tiro, when he and Undo Frank en- tered together. "Lola, doar,"Baid tho lattor, "Mr. Omig dines with us to-day. Lot me pronont him toyou." I Hftod my eyes thon from tho flro to his face—the faco wbioh haunts mo now—tho taee, with its woudorful oyos and wonderful Ktnilo. Ho caino forward, nud held out hi8 hand with tho fnuik, oordial grace- which bolouged so peouliarly to him. I sawhis gliiiu'o rost on me. Tho blood mounted to his temples. I know that he was amazed at my beauty, ami for tbo first time in my lifo I gloried iu itR possession. Horotofore I had known no grntituilo for its fatal gift; now I could have fallon onmy knoos, to tlmuk God that I was as I was. Wo wont in to dinner later, but I oould cat nothing, nor did I talk much. lie tnlknd, and I listenod ; but after dinner, of my own accord, I went over to tho piano, opouod it, and sat down. First I lot my miters idly wander over the koys, thou I stniok a prelude and began to sing. Tho two mon ooaned talking. I Baw the amazed look iu my uncle's eyes. I had told him nothing of my wonderful voice—tho voice over whioh the great mastors had raved and well-nigh wopt, booauso I had uionoy already in abundanoo, aud neednot with it coin gold from the publie; but I wax not singing to him—I was singing to Donald. Bufora my nong had finished he had risen andorosHud to uiy side. I kuow that ho would oouio; I know thnt I had began to exorcino my power—the power whiah I mado oath to myself shonld usurp his lifo. No one spoke when I finished; no one spolto forau hour, whoa I arose from the piano. Thou uiy uuolo, taking me in his arms, kissod me, and Ifauoiod I felt a tear fall on my fooo. Doimld draw a long sigh, as of ono aac felted with coslaoy. I talked with him I hen. Uncle Prank U d n s alono together, <md tnlil htm ot my lifo abroad—of my mollior, whom I had left deoping in Uot nutivo land—of myuelf, and tho air horo which ohllled mo, " You think, thon, that wo have, uo boatt, no warmth r" he a»k«L " I do not ttop to aak tbo question," 1 nn- •werod. " I only know that I shiver uud" am (|pld, n "" ' i "Poor child! poor llltlogirll " he innr- nred, teuderb/. He came vory ofteu after thnt evening. Qh, how I looked forward to lusviuiu.' how I hnngeredfor his i>reMonoe ! .how' I thirsted for his voice 1 Yet I knew—knnw alwaj s—thnt he did not lave me. I fascin- ated. I bewildered him, bat I could not touch his heart. To overy sense I appealed except the sense of loviug. In vain I strove to dis- guise the truth, from myself. It was al- ways before me. Yet ho could not >:tny away from m«, There were times whou hn made theeffort. Ho always failed, aud I could see his >nger at his failure. No matter where be was, what he «•«« doing, I ooold wish and will him to uiy side.. Of this seoret control be . had no idea ; but all the same it fretted and galled him. So the months flitted by, until the sum- mer came, and brought with it, with it« HUH shiue and its birds, of which she secuicd HO Siting a part, the return of my oonuin to her home. I was, as I have said, bnt a yoar her senior, but the seemed to me a veriinble child—a doll, a plaything. She was like a lovely, unfolded bud, in her pinkand-while prettiness, for she was pretty, with her laughing bine eyes and hair of molten gold. Ok, how I Rhonld have loved to have twisted ono of Us glittering strands about her slender, milk-white throat, until— But what am I writing? To yon Ibis may sound like madness. You do uot yet kuow my provocation. Of course we had met before—»he had been home from time to time on her holi- days ; bnt then I had seen nothiug, HUK- peoted nothing. It remained for tbo long summer days and moonlit nights to reveal tome tho trnth—Donald loved her. YeB, my uncle's dream bade fair to bo ful- filled. Hbould it? To my own heart, I awore never 1 Say by day I saw it coming, this terrible rnYO of desolation, which would soon iweep ovor me—day by day, willi all my feeble strength I fought it back. Some- limes I had my moments of triumph— sometimes X exorcised ovor him my old, fa: al fascination, wheu sho was utterly pow- erless. One evening she was ill, confined to her room with a Bovcro nervous headache. He cumo anusual, and, wheu told hecould not 600 her, was about to leave. " Will you uot stay?" I asked. " I thiuk uot," ho said. But whou ho btopped for a few moments' conversation with my uncle, Ioroasod to tho piano and boyau to sing. In ton minutes he was by my Bide. I burst inlo an iuipuftsiouod lovo-song—my heart's niisory and longing found vent. I let the last notes die iu a nob, tlun I arose aud slipped myhand through his arm. "Taio me into tho air," I whispered I "I am stifling." Together we crossed over to tho window opening upou the vuraudah; .but, as he ulkud, ho staggered liko a man intoxicated with Uriuk. Tho moon was at its full. Its rays fell upon our faces. It revealed tho ghastly pallor of his. I, too, was pale. " Donald," 1 whisporud. "UushI " he said. " You are a witch," and turned to leavo mo. But I cluug wilh bulh hands to bis arm. " Donald! " I cried, again. "If 1 were indeed a witch, I could make you love inc. Louk at mo, Donald. Am I tu'deous iu your bight ? " Hitj glauco tbun rosted on me, and hlu oyotj deopouod and grew dark. I was dressed iu purest white, a uruuHOU roso at my throat, a great mass of them at my belt. What was this child's prettinesu compared to my beauty? His gaze was fascinated. He saw, he reooguized it. I drew a step nearer. His breath came short and quick. The color rushed to his faoo. " Donald," I said, again—but now my voice bad suuk to a whisper, so low thut even tlio night-winds failed to catch it— " kiss me, just once." This time he did not start awny. My words enthralled him. He bent his hand- souio hoad. In another nioniont his lips would have touched mine, when a little hand swept away tho oartaius from 'ho window. Palo and wondering, liita lookod out at us from the shadows of the room. In an instant Donald had sprung to her side. I had forever lost him. Noithor missedmo is I passed iu and away from them, though [ heani her nay: " I felt bettor, and thero was something so strange about Lola's song it startled me, ind I caino down to see." Before sha slept that night, elio knocked it my door, " 1 want to tell yon how happy I am," sho whispered, as she, kissod wo. "To- uight, Donald asked me to bo his wifo—to- uight; yet .only a little while ago, as I iloud in tho window, Lola, and »aw you l,oth logolhcr, I was almost jealous; but I novor shall be jeulous again, Donald says. It is so strange, too. Ho is so ougor for onr uv.irringc. Ho begs that it niny tnt.a pluoe almost at onco. Ho is goin^ nbroiid, he Rays, and wonts to lake mowith him." I diiu'l know how I answered her; but at lust sho loft mo alone. Sly bruin wad on lira, i • My, blood, like molten had, ooimcd Uirongh wy veins, the weeks! thnt followed were weekB of torlnre. Every- thing wimhurried preparation for tho wed. .uinp. . Ulangnea u 1 watohod It all. inhma knew that it should novor toko plaoo. I did not oven lougor strive to-exercise my power ovor him. I fancied Bometimei thut people watched ins strangely, bat I was very guarded. Only, In my own room, I talked, and told it of or in whispers to myself. Well, it wag the night before tho wed- ding. I had laid " Good-night," and gouo e&tly to my room, it oponod into lUWe, with eommuuloation door. Whou aha enma tip •lain I protended to bo onloep, bui •ho bout over aud k W d me. '- An hour *tt«rr J got ttn and oroMed over *'' k " i to my table. There I look np a pretty lit- tle Venetian daggar—a toy whiah had be- longed to my mother. I trailed as I felt its sharp blade. "Itwillnothnrt," 1 whispered; "bnt she will sleep the sounder." Then I softly opened the door and en- tered her room. She by on the bed asleep. One white, rounded arm was thrown above her head, and her lips were smiling, The lace at her throat was not whiter than her •kin. Why did I not strike at once r I do not know. Better—far better—if I had. I felt no pity, no remorse. Why should I ? I should give h,er no pain. , I only stopped to look at her, and think how lovely she wonld be dressed in her cof- fin in her wedding-dress. Yet I was far more lovely than my rival. My rival I Yes, that was the soorot. It was for this she most die. He hod dared to soorn mo and to love her. Where was her heart? There, and there only, must I striko, Ah, I could see it boat t 1 raisedrayarm. Another moment and it wonld have fallen, but in that instant some one seized it from behind aud wrenched tho weapon from uiy group. I tnrned, to look into my unelo's white, stem face. From that moment, and for long weeks mid months, I wmi'iuber nothing more. When I regained consciousness I found my. self horo—horo, behind grated bars, and wilh human eyes always upon me. Rita is married, they tell me, but I do not believe them. Some day Douald will give me love for love. Yet it was ho who first ctdled me mnd—he who begged my nnclo to sleep tliat night iu ltita's room —begged it so earnestly that he oonld not refuse. Ah, he did not know how I could lovo, when bo tnrned froili me to hnr! Cold and paHxionlesH, what can she teach him of the heart's true fire ? Ono of those days ho will waken to the truth, and come to claim me as his bride. Why should I try to take my life? He ia cimiiuj;. I :uu content to wait—yes, quite content, uud so I suiile aud let them call me mad. Swearing Without Words. There is tho sudden and euor^oiio ulnrc- xnlng of the 6Vy>r it theooiioluiion uf a do- bate a foroelxil ftttpliftyin whinh pmictnat^s argument and clinches an with tlio pound- ing of the flat the word which lui-i bcou spoken. A shrewd writer calls tho xluniming of the door in this style a "wood™ ontu." The definition is a well chosen ono. Tho person who thus violently oloscs the door is laboring under «n aocumulation of pent- • p exasperation which, if she were a uiau, would find its way out in a torrent of harsh expressions uttered with angry inflections., A man does not generally eloso tho door with a bang to indicate thnt he is in a state of wrathfulnes; neither does a woman swear. The condensed volume of eloquent ex- pression which is packed into the petitionl closing of tho door would, if expanded, make several large pages of type, most of which would he interactions aud excliiina- tiou points. AVheu the door slants roliof follows, juBt as after tuo explosion of a stoain boiler. Tho pressure is off. There is an opportunity for u broatliiug spoil. With the portiero which is now such a substitute for the hinged door, aud whioh in made of dry goods, there is a difficulty. Sho who would uso it as a moans of von- gcanco against her follow-being uinst tio tho end of it into a knot for assault. As to xbuttiug him out with it, that is as im- possible as to hold water in an ordinary siovo. It must bo admitted that the Hlninming of tho dour as an nut of argument or au expression of disapproval is not gracoful or huh/like. Still thcro are occasions when opinions must bo exprossod, and eveu anger and contempt must have thoir littln say. Sometimes tho door-slaniming is all thero is of argument or debate. Tho objcot of contempt or scorn happens to approach tho door with a view either of entering or pass- ing by. Its sndden closing in his face is au intimation that if ho valnos his peaco of miud he will dowell to pass by. Iu such a enso he is not a wise man who vongofully kicks tbo door open. That only prolongs the argument, wears out tho door, and sot- tlos nothing. Bettor uo content thaukfully and placidly to remain outside, and bo glad things are not as bad as they might bo.— Chicago Tribune. ••-• A Religions Duty. A lawyer, giving reiuiuiNoenoes of hu- morous casoB in court, said: "An odd case was thnt of tho State vs. luukhani, 69, N. 0., 211. The defendant was iudioted for disturbing a religious congregation. Us was an individual of exemplary deport- ment, but hohad a rather imporfeot idea of hymn-singing. The disturbance, whioh was decided uud serious, oousisted partly in his holding on the notes long after the other singers had let go. Tho effect of this porslstenae was to make one part of the congregation InugU and tho other wad; tha irreligious and frivolous enjoyed it as fun, while tho dovont wore highly indignant. On ninny occasions, being expostulated with, Iiiukhain invariably replied that he would worship his God, and that as a part o( Uw worship it was bis duty to sing. The jury, 1 boliove, found the man guilty, but the extenuating oircumBtanoes that ho had uo piirpone of disturbing the congregation and that his only fault was the eocoutrto cliai actor of hU vocalization sorved lo ro- vor.,0 tho vordict. Thoso cases are bnt a tuugontlou of tho rluh material for tho sati- rist and all literary fellows whioh Ues en- tombed iu tho dOBt-enouuibored records of tho courts." Tlio roooll of a blow strnok at another's interests has often tlio vengofnl wrath of Hem em Iu it, and tha volusu soul that wonld doptruy a fellow oroatnro for ita own pleas- ure, In Itsolf dowr<iyi*l, C '' Why Mohair)m«d w«i Successful. The canses which led to M..l.uiiunmt > , success will be best understood bj tilting. rapid glance at the condition of Arubj. about the time of bis birth. It must b* borne in mind that a vagne belief in one God existed among the Arab tribes long be- fore that event. Nor must it be forgotten that the Arabs and Jews were kindred races, speaking kindred languages, and hav- ing kindred customs, practices and preju- dices. Driven oat of their own lauds at snccoHsive epochs by Assyrians, Greeks aud Romans, many Jewish tribes settled iu Arabia; and when the Boman Empire be- came Christianized, colonies of Christians also scattered everywhere, found their way into the Arabian peninsula, causing runch mntnal attrition and interchange of thought between Jews, Christians and Arabians. Occasionally Arab tribes were thus con- verted to the faith of the oolonists. Un- happily, both the Judaism and Christianity imported in this way into the oonntry wero of a dobosod, character. They were not vory much better than the forms of religion already prevalent among the Arab tribes. Even the doctrines of God's unity bad been tampered with and oorrapted. No oroed worthy of the name of religion existed nuy- whflre in Arabia. Tritheisin, polytheism, Sabteism, adoration of the son and planets, idolatry, fetishism, animal-worship, plant- worship, Btoue-worship, superstitions of tho grossest kinds, were rife in various ways among tribes. Nowhere, except in the hearts of a few of the more intelligent and thoughtful, were any true ideas of God still cherished. It was under such circuni- Btanoos, and amid such surroundings, that Hohammed, "the praised one," (as hid name signifies,) was born at Mecca about A. S. 570. His father, Abdullah, died be- fore his birth, and his mother, Amiiidi, when he was six years old. Yet he en- joyed one great advantage, notwithstand- ing his orphaned condition, He had not to waste time and energy in pushing his way upward from obscurity. His grundfaiher, Abd-ul-Muttalib, who adapted him, be- longed to the Arabian uristocraey. He was of the noble family of Haxhim, of tho Kuresh tribe, 'and was tho nppoiutod guar- dian of tho fo/bah ur sacred temple ut Mec- cah, a small, cube-shaped stone building which had existed an a sacred edifice for many centuries previously. The guardian- ship of this templo was regarded as the highest honor to whioh any family could aspire, the belief being that it was origi- nally erected by Abraham ovor the spot whero he was abont to sacrifice Ishmael. On the death of the grandfather of Mo- btunnied, -while he was still a boy, his nnole Abu Talib became his guardian, and daring all his difficulties uover deserted him. His family, though noble, was poor, and the boy iloluiuimed was obliged to earn his live- lihood by tending shoep in the wilderness j thus from his earliost years resembling his great prototypa MODUS,' who had to aot as shcplierd to his father-in-law Jothro. It wot) not until Mohammed was twenty-five years of age that he married his rich kins- woman KJiadi,*h. She was a widow lady who had acquired great wealth by trading transactions, and was flftoon years his senior. Sho had intrusted the manugomeut of hor affairs to Mohammed, and, having found him eminently trustworthy, gave proof of her gratitude by offering him her band. It is remarkable that ho remuinod faithful to Khadijah till her doath, whioh did not ooonr till ho was in his titty-first year.—hlonier WUUamt, in the NinelteiUh Century. An Ancient Battle-Cround. Tho site of tho battle has of course uu- dorgono considerable transformation iu Inlor times. A canal and railway now in- torseot its area; tho swampy ground has been drained, aud a wood occupies what WUH once a morass, the nature of which had something to do with tho dispositions, and perhaps also the result of the conflict. Within living memory, many relics of tho tight, havo beon discovurod during draining upcratious. In tho churchyard at Dadliug- tou, large numbers of the slain wore in- terred; and a few yours Niuce, iu dig- ging now gravos, piles of skeletons wore unearthed, lying five or six deep. Tha ill-fiilod Kiug'B remains were disturbed much earlier; for when tho monasteries wuru sccularizod, his tomb was destroyed, nud it is said that his body wat thrown into the ltiver Boar, aud his stone coulii afterward used as a horso-trongh. In 1B72, however, Wren states iu hi* "Paren- tulia," thut he saw, iu Alderman Kohert Ileyrick's garden at Leicester, a handsome btouo pillar, three feet high, inscribed: " Hum lies tho body of Itiohard III., nonio- tiiuo King of England," and at the present day there is a tablet inKing Richard's lloau, Leicester, stating that "Near this spot lie tho remains of Bichard HI, tho last of tho Flautngcuets." But no gravo or mausoleum uow exists by which his last resting-place con bo verified, aud heuco thoso royal re- wains, unhonored in death, havo long biuco beun scattered—how and where none now calf toll. At Bosworth Hull, the soat or Sir Boanraont Dixio. are preserrod several al- legod relics of the fight, such as the suit of armor worn by the King, cannon-balls dug from tho field, and •various weapons, al- though sonio antiquirarios. are of opinion that .the last-named belong to a subsequent period.—(Matnfera'a Journal. The Malays have alkali times boon afl- dioterl to gambling. In thoso days, in Cey- lon, they would " play away the suds of their nugors " over tho draught-board. They would sit down with a Are burning, wham- on wns sot a pot of walnut or sesame ollj whilebosido it lay a small, hatohet with an exceedingly sharp edg*. ,Th»,' loi*r placed hlajiond npon a *ton«, -and. the winner chopped off •^olnt, when the '"•"*' dlluoi* WfUf plttUflVn ID •ui1 thereby oaitertad. . oftbogWvboUnakllfttl ITKMf or IHTIDtlT. In France, coal dost b ntObad by being manufactured into bricks. An English physician says that seventy diseases arise directly Irom aloohoL A yonng girl hi Waokon, Iowa, IA yean old, dropped dead at tha sight of a rat, one evening recently. A waterspout on Crooked Greek, Idaho, a few days ago, washed oat and Uft on lutd thousands of trout. Paris is agitating ior better transit The monopoly of a single oinnibos company is lunch complained of. . A thirteen-year-old Louisiana girl has growing npon her face a light brown besrj, two inches long, and very heavy. . An anvil weighing 24,000 pounds has Just been cast in Pottstowu, Fa., said to bo the largest casting ever mode in the town. 'A London surgeon says that only ona fashionably dressed woman In five hondrcd can draw a fall breath with her clothes on. At Barrow, Lancashire, England, $10,- 000,000 have been spent on docks, bat the outlay has not been met by a commensurate return. If you want to be very fashionable in your correspondence, you most nse fancy- colored sealing-wax and a big seal to close your envelope. Chicago has a "scalp surgeon." The term, however, does not indicate a noble red man, but a woman who irrigates bold heads with a wonderful hair provocative. The wife of a Milwaukee physician is go- ing to jail for fifteen days, rather than pay a fluo of five dollars, which wan imposed on her for persistently keeping an unli- censed dog. Sir Isaac Nowton said that infidelity- wonld probably prevail until it had quits- banished superstition, but then would swallowed up by the great light and evi- dence of true religion. An impetuoUB man at Winonu, Miss., fail- ing to coax a young girl to elope with and marry him, lassoed her as uhe was going to church, and was dragging her toward a jus- tice's office when succot came. A Pennsylvania girl was bitten by a cop- perhead snake. She was stupefied with liquor and a live toad was fastened on the wound. The toad absorbed the poison and died, and the girl recovered. , When hackney couches wpro Brat started in London, no coach might be 'hired for a transit under three miles. This was to pro'- toot the Thames watermen, regardless of ' tho fact that the river only affords transit in two directions. A gentleman in Norwich, Connecticut, has a genuine Oonfedorato silver half-dol- lar, coined In 1861. Those pieces are rare, and have commanded almost fabu- lous prices. One was sold for $800 in New York, recently. The British Consul at Mogadore calls at- tention to the cruelty of shipping live tor- toises in barrels, and sending them (oodless on a three weeks' voyage, on whioh many die. Under favorable conditions a tortouo will live ISO years. A youthful bride and groom arrived at New Albany, Ind. Two rascals got into tho couple's room, introduced themselves as police officers, aud pretended to arrest the husband for marrying a girl under 17. He gave them $10 and they departed. The following is from one ot Evangelist Barnes's sermons at Dayton, Ohio i " Bight Btraight from the swine trough to tho best robe suits the Lord best, fleas and all, rags and all, stench and all, poverty and all, and withal, ignorance to cap the climax." A Mormon elder of Salt Lake has had his thirteen wives photographed, both in a group and separately. The pictures have been placed hi an elegant album, and under each woman is engrossed a quotation of sentimental poetry, suggestive of her best quality. A certain Massachusetts captain has soiled. for forty years between Boston and Na- hont, making, daring the season, a voyage of fifty-six miles per day. He estimates that during the entire forty years he has sailed about 800,000 miles, all of these milud. being between the two peninsulas of Boston and Nohant. A Detroit man has, after a labor of two years, perfected a machine to make needles, whioh will usurp hand labor hi that direc- tion, and which promises to revolutionise the manufacture of that muoh-used article. It is estimated that not leas than 2,000,000 of needles are nsed per day throughout the United Slates. " No marriage is legal in France except with the consent of the parents of both par- ties, bat a man or woman over 25 may "re- speotfully cite " his or her parents to show cause why they refuse oousent. If they fail to show good cause, the marriage may pro- eood in spite of them. Such proceedings aro rarely resortodto. Florida has discovered that the. orooodils,. inhabits the lagoons of the peninsula. It 1* found deep down in the mud, where ii lias long been confounded with the alligator. Tho Indians oallod it the "long-nosed alli- gator." It is Identical with tha Jamaica crocodde, bat diffors from the South Ameri. can cayman. It lives ia salt water. Tus alligator stloka tofresh water. •. , A physician is responribhi for Ifat slat*. menl that a large majority of natoraldsaUli,":. especially in the OHM of oMUfe *** "on the turn of iij,« Ml^V (. «., from twain to ftew ottoofc'V dayornlght, adttiAlhwi" '* ble reason foVtbli. •J v'

Upload: dotu

Post on 09-May-2018

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

RED BANK REGISTER :olTOLUME V. NO. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1882. $1.50 TEAR.

LAWYEB8.

"JOHN'S. APPLEQATE,

coxnsrsEaioB"AT L A W ,BSD BANK, H-J

TXENRY M. __COUN8ELOBAT LAW,

BSD BANK, H. 1.

p H A R H. TBAFFOBD, ;O O U N S E L O I T A T LAW,

Oommlalourtor New York. BED BANK, N. J.

HXIAM PINTAKD, -

COUNSELLOR AT LAW, .Orer Button'! Store Store.

BED BANK, N.J.

TOHN L. WHEELbK,ATTORNEFAT LAW,

BED BANK, N. J.

JOHN F. HAWKINS,ATTORNEY~AT LAW,

omoe In Klnmootb1. Building,

DENTISTS.

•T\R. R, F. BORDEN,

SURGEON DENTIST,

MUSIC HALL BUILDING, BSD BANK, N. J.

Over Nineteen Years' Experience itt Den-tistry in all its branches.

Particular Attention Riven to the administration ofAjuratnetira. /

¥~\R. H. B. VANDORN,DENTIST,

WlUi Dr. XL r. Burden. Music Hall Building,IIED BANK, N. J'

PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.

T~\R. G. F. MAR3DEN,' HOMtEOI'ATHIC

PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,omcu In Honlea's HulMIng, Broad street,

RED-BANK. N. J.

DRUGGISTS.

C A. L0CKWO0D,

PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST,Eleven Vaars' Eiporlonce.

Cor. BUOAD AND WHITE STREETS,RED BANK, N. J

TTENRY E. SCHROEDER & CO.,

PHARMACISTS,

Reliable Drugs Only. B E D BANK, N . JHKSItr 15. 8C1IR0K0KR. JOSSMI V. IIOHBIS.

"REAL "ESTATE AND INSURANCE.

A. M. MORGAN,

Real Estate & Insurance Agent,HBO DANK, N. J .

DE3IIIABLB PIlol'tSUTV ?O11 SALE Oil TO LKT

FURNISHED COTTAUE3 ON ItlVEB DANKTO LET.

Plr.t-clau Inturancc Companies B«P-resented.

p DAVIS, JK-,INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE

AUENT,FRONT 8TnEET, HED BANK, N. J.

I1. O. Bux, 21.Insurance placed In tbo boat Companies on moel

reasonable terms.

I. II. SICKELS & SON,REAL ESTATE AND GENERAL

- BROKERS,(DEALERS IN -ORNAMENTAL, IRON WORK.

Ofllce, Cor. Brood and Front Sts,, Red Bank, N. J.CatalnsiiM upon application.

JUSTICES OF THE PEACE.

ITARUY J. CHILD,JUSTICE OFTHE PEACE,

DRUAD 8T11KKT, RED BANE, N. J

CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS.

H. TOMPKINS,

CARPENTER AND BUILDER,TINTON FALL8, N. J.

f~i C. OKMEKOD,

BOAT BUILDER,Main Street, Asbury Park, N. 1

TITUS & CONRAD,

Carpenters and Builders,TRENTON, N. J.

Or address EAST LONG BRANCH, N. J.

4 L. UARTWELL,

ARCHITECT,LONG BRANCH & ASBURY PARK.

rians, Spocincatlona, Estimates and IMIs of ma-terial for [inline anil private buildings In nny putot the country furntahod at low rules on short no-tice.

Old buildings remodeled utld modernized.Special atUintlon to Ventllntlon and pralnafjo.Work Suiwrlnlondnd It Ueslrod.

P. O. Address,A81MTRY PARK, N, J.

MARKETS.

t f P H E MARKET,"

"THE MARKET,"Tlrf OLDEST ESTABLISHED IN RED BANK

ia.wOw OPEN IN THE NEW AND>*' ELEGANT STORE ERECTED

ON THE SICE OF THEOLD BUILDING.

niBfeHHk

CLOTHING.

CORLltS, Tie Clothier.CLOTHING.

8TK&W HA.T8.I

COLLARS AND CUFFS.

HO8IEBY.

"j ; SUSPENDERS.

SHIRTS.

IINDEBWEAR,

YACHTING SUITS.

READY-HADE CL.OTIIIWC.lt

CLOTHING HADE TO ORDER

If you want any ot toe aboVe, you will Bare monojand get toe beat goods by purchasing at the

• C L O T H I N G H O U S E ,

No. 16 Broad Street, Red Rank.

CORLIES, THE CLOTHIER.

Clothing for SpringPATTERSON'S.

Men's Clothing.A Large Stock in all grades. Clothing

suitable for laboring men, tradesmen,professional men, and all classes

of men.

GOOD GOODS AND LOW TRICES.

Clothing for Boys.The'rich and tho poor can find garments

suitable for their boys at tho cloth-ing establishment of

PATTERSON, The Clothier,

Boys like to play, and parents like to seetheir boys enjoy themselves, but

rough playing is hard on clothes.If you wish to get clothes

which are strongly modeand will wear well,

goto

Patterson, the Clothier.FRONT STREET, RED BANK.

A largo assortment of Furnishings forMen, Youth'B and Boys. Shirts, Col-

lars, Culls, Ties, Underclothing.

J. MARKS,

Merchant Tailor and Clothier,HAS REMOVED ALL HIS STOCK TO

No. 189 Greenwich Street,

NEW YORK CITY.

By keeping his whole stock at ono

place, and by giving his whole at-

"" tentlon to that store, ho will

bo able to giro bis enstom-

era much hotter satis-

faction.

DON'T FORGET THE PLACE :

No. 189 Greenwich Street,

NEW YORK CITY.

BAKERIES.

TTPTOWN BAKERY.

•WM. H.WILSON,FANCY 11IIKAD,CAKE, TIE* CHACKEH BAKER

Comer White Streot and Mnple Avenue,

IIED BANK, N. J.

llr. Wilton's broad may bo obtained at tha follow-ng p l u m : lied Dank: M. Hollywood's bakery,WuhlDgtou rtreot, J. M. Bmlth'a grocer; store, oor,Front itreet and Maple avenue.

FalrHavent Copt. B. h. Brown's grocery atoro.Ooeanlo: L. I/ongitreet's, Enrtglit llros.'n and Harrypattenon's grocery stores, aeabrlgnt: Jwoph Sher-man's nfooery "tore. Estontown: J. W. Johnson'!

store, oosanport: A I the Moraa at D. 8,Wm. Clayton, anil Williams * Grtsoom.

Mr. Wllion has established a dally route throughed Bank, Shrewibgry, Katontown, Ijong Branch,ad Tlnton Foils, ind another Uironjjh the eastern

. _ . — . . . _ « Ooeanlo, Sesbrlght.J PnrtlM at any o

Mod with tnah brawl ereryjBibtorlber.or the drlren

WM. H. WILSON.

ReoBuik,anaTlnton .aide ot nod Hank, FairBunuon Neck and P rtl ien plaoH uajr btf imorning by potftylOBt]

Hne Commerolal Printing

Desolate-Hearted.Oil, thoii -J." tlio (li-mjjic heart I

u iierc iiaji Hi; iiriKliI Jrf>am llovnfIt) t iieri1 liu «c<:i-j,t of lovti,

To wikf with it* llrtt-fftvlng toneAn *^Ho of gladness wutitn theof

A Ji>y-ituln to claim u mine own t

ThoD who h u t wearily lingeredAmid the blank htunu or despair,

Whoae soul liatli so long been o'eraliudowedBy gloom clouds of Borrow anil care,

Oh. say, ftpost uot ttioa • gleamingOf Rinillgiit coiiunlngllug tlicref

Canst Miou futhmn ttio doplhs of thy being.Anil am) but a dark, blank •pacer

- Can-1 not ace an Image enjriave:: —' Some beautiful, atullllig facet

Ua»eoveu bright dream visions loft thee.Or come not, for want of a i>lu':o f

Thy spirit, entombed In tlio dai kneuOf slmlena exlstenoo liarli lain;.

Awake, iiwake fro-u tlie Hluiuber—Thn iliiinb trance tliat'a over tliy brain.

And H'HIIC In tho minllirhi of gludnes*,Ami ILituuioJiiy'tiStvuot stralu.

CRAZED BY LOVE.

At last (her have given we ricu, ink nmlpaper. At last I can writo out wy Htury aujscud it forth iiilo the world—the world thatshall judge me, and whose judgment I donot (ear.

I glanced up just now from inj bmywriting. What did I eoe ? A room Mcru.polonslv clean aud neat, with two or threegood pictures upou ltd wails, aud containing•omd few handsome arliolnu of fnrnitnre.Bat there is souiething odd—somethingwanting. What is it?

Oh, I seel There is not a piece of china,a piece of glass, a singlo article of bric-a-brno which louJa to auy upurtiuent thatgraceful air of living. And why? Becausechina might be broken, and sharp edgesoat, GUIBS also is dangerous. It seversarteries. They do not even leave me anivory paper-knife to cut the leaven of the

^azines, which lie nnout, uurond, uponmy table.

The view from my two wiiuluirH in on alarge and noble park, bnt 1 lurn from itshuddering. Ah, It ia crml, cruel I l)o-tweeu me and. it in grated iron. Yet I haveooumitted no crime. 1 urn not in a prison,though a primmer.

Perliaps yoa have gacssod tho Gecret Iam about to tell you. I am in a uiad-houso,and thoy call me uitul.

1 luul to lay down my pen here nud Lin^h.How btranyoly my luugli tioauda in thisquiet room 1

Hut let mo toll you why they brought mohere. Threo years wgn uiy btiautiful Italianmother died. You scu it is her foreignbloml in my veins which mukos mo so un-liko those cold poople, who, bncnuuo t hoycanuot understand me, say thnt I am luutl.

I look like her, too. JI; eyes are lnrgoaud dark; uiy hair, which, unbound, fallsto my feel, is blnak as midnight. My lipsare red, nud through them my whito teethfairly glistou. My liguro is tall and wil-lowy, aud slight.

I was oiyhtcou when my nuolo—myfather's brolhor— brought mo to hii homo.He had hut onu ilaughter, a yoar yoitngorthnn myself. Sho was still at sohool. Itwns her uninhing year. Would thut KIIObad never lived ! Would that I had uoverseeu her fair, falso faco I I should h.ivoboeu DonitM'n wife then, ainl uow— Bnt Ihave not told you of Dimtild.

IIo was uncle's partuor. Though a voryyoung uiau for so important a position, liisser\iccti had boon so valuable to tin* finnihut they had won him this roci,guiltt.,n ofthem. To my uuale he wan almost as asou. Indeed, always I think it hail beenhis fhorinhod hono that ono day he wouldsnKtaiu to him this relation; but. be this asit may, ho was constantly at our house. Ishall never forgot tho first day l a w Don-nli) Craig. I loved him thcu, I lovo himnow; I shall love him in my gnvo. I wasBitting alono In tho library,'gazing dreamilyinto the tiro, when he and Undo Frank en-tered together.

"Lola, doar,"Baid tho lattor, "Mr. Omigdines with us to-day. Lot me pronont himto you."

I Hftod my eyes thon from tho flro to hisface—the faco wbioh haunts mo now—thotaee, with its woudorful oyos and wonderfulKtnilo. Ho caino forward, nud held out hi8hand with tho fnuik, oordial grace- whichbolouged so peouliarly to him. I saw hisgliiiu'o rost on me. Tho blood mounted tohis temples. I know that he was amazed atmy beauty, ami for tbo first time in my lifoI gloried iu itR possession. Horotofore Ihad known no grntituilo for its fatal gift;now I could have fallon on my knoos, totlmuk God that I was as I was.

Wo wont in to dinner later, but I oouldcat nothing, nor did I talk much. l ietnlknd, and I listenod ; but after dinner, ofmy own accord, I went over to tho piano,opouod it, and sat down. First I lot mymiters idly wander over the koys, thou Istniok a prelude and began to sing.

Tho two mon ooaned talking. I Baw theamazed look iu my uncle's eyes. I had toldhim nothing of my wonderful voice—thovoice over whioh the great mastors hadraved and well-nigh wopt, booauso I haduionoy already in abundanoo, aud need notwith it coin gold from the publie; but Iwax not singing to him—I was singing toDonald.

Bufora my nong had finished he had risenandorosHud to uiy side. I kuow that howould oouio; I know thnt I had began toexorcino my power—the power whiah Imado oath to myself shonld usurp his lifo.

No one spoke when I finished; no onespolto forau hour, whoa I arose from thepiano. Thou uiy uuolo, taking me in hisarms, kissod me, and Ifauoiod I felt a tearfall on my fooo.

Doimld draw a long sigh, as of ono aacfelted with coslaoy. I talked with himI hen. Uncle Prank U d n s alono together,<md tnlil htm ot my lifo abroad—of mymollior, whom I had left deoping in Uotnutivo land—of myuelf, and tho air horowhich ohllled mo,

" You think, thon, that wo have, uo boatt,no warmth r" he a»k«L

" I do not ttop to aak tbo question," 1 nn-•werod. " I only know that I shiver uud"am (|pld,n "" ' i

"Poor child! poor llltlogirll " he innr-nred, teuderb/.He came vory ofteu after thnt evening.

Qh, how I looked forward to lusviuiu.'how I hnngeredfor his i>reMonoe ! .how' Ithirsted for his voice 1 Yet I knew—knnwalwaj s—thnt he did not lave me. I fascin-ated. I bewildered him, bat I could nottouch his heart.

To overy sense I appealed except thesense of loviug. In vain I strove to dis-guise the truth, from myself. It was al-ways before me. Yet ho could not >:tnyaway from m«, There were times whou hnmade the effort. Ho always failed, aud Icould see his >nger at his failure.

No matter where be was, what he «•««doing, I ooold wish and will him to uiyside.. Of this seoret control be . had noidea ; but all the same it fretted and galledhim.

So the months flitted by, until the sum-mer came, and brought with it, with it« HUHshiue and its birds, of which she secuicd HOSiting a part, the return of my oonuin toher home.

I was, as I have said, bnt a yoar hersenior, but the seemed to me a veriinblechild—a doll, a plaything. She was like alovely, unfolded bud, in her pinkand-whileprettiness, for she was pretty, with herlaughing bine eyes and hair of molten gold.

Ok, how I Rhonld have loved to havetwisted ono of Us glittering strands abouther slender, milk-white throat, until—

But what am I writing? To yon Ibismay sound like madness. You do uot yetkuow my provocation.

Of course we had met before—»he hadbeen home from time to time on her holi-days ; bnt then I had seen nothiug, HUK-peoted nothing. It remained for tbo longsummer days and moonlit nights to revealtome tho trnth—Donald loved her. YeB,my uncle's dream bade fair to bo ful-filled. Hbould it? To my own heart, Iawore never 1

Say by day I saw it coming, this terriblernYO of desolation, which would sooniweep ovor me—day by day, willi all my

feeble strength I fought it back. Some-limes I had my moments of triumph—sometimes X exorcised ovor him my old,fa: al fascination, wheu sho was utterly pow-erless.

One evening she was ill, confined to herroom with a Bovcro nervous headache. Hecumo an usual, and, wheu told he could not600 her, was about to leave.

" Will you uot stay?" I asked." I thiuk uot," ho said.But whou ho btopped for a few moments'

conversation with my uncle, Ioroasod to thopiano and boyau to sing.

In ton minutes he was by my Bide. Iburst inlo an iuipuftsiouod lovo-song—myheart's niisory and longing found vent. Ilet the last notes die iu a nob, tlun I aroseaud slipped my hand through his arm.

"Taio me into tho air," I whispered I"I am stifling."

Together we crossed over to tho windowopening upou the vuraudah; .but, as he

ulkud, ho staggered liko a man intoxicatedwith Uriuk.

Tho moon was at its full. Its rays fellupon our faces. It revealed tho ghastlypallor of his. I, too, was pale.

" Donald," 1 whisporud."UushI " he said. " You are a witch,"

and turned to leavo mo.But I cluug wilh bulh hands to bis arm." Donald! " I cried, again. "If 1 were

indeed a witch, I could make you love inc.Louk at mo, Donald. Am I tu'deous iuyour bight ? "

Hitj glauco tbun rosted on me, and hluoyotj deopouod and grew dark. I wasdressed iu purest white, a uruuHOU roso atmy throat, a great mass of them at my belt.What was this child's prettinesu comparedto my beauty? His gaze was fascinated.He saw, he reooguized it. I drew a stepnearer. His breath came short and quick.The color rushed to his faoo.

" Donald," I said, again—but now myvoice bad suuk to a whisper, so low thuteven tlio night-winds failed to catch it—" kiss me, just once."

This time he did not start awny. Mywords enthralled him. He bent his hand-souio hoad. In another nioniont his lipswould have touched mine, when a littlehand swept away tho oartaius from 'howindow. Palo and wondering, liita lookodout at us from the shadows of the room. Inan instant Donald had sprung to her side.I had forever lost him. Noithor missed mois I passed iu and away from them, though[ heani her nay:

" I felt bettor, and thero was somethingso strange about Lola's song it startled me,ind I caino down to see."

Before sha slept that night, elio knockedit my door,

"1 want to tell yon how happy I am,"sho whispered, as she, kissod wo. "To-uight, Donald asked me to bo his wifo—to-uight; yet .only a little while ago, as Iiloud in tho window, Lola, and »aw youl,oth logolhcr, I was almost jealous; but Inovor shall be jeulous again, Donald says.It is so strange, too. Ho is so ougor foronr uv.irringc. Ho begs that it niny tnt.apluoe almost at onco. Ho is goin^nbroiid, he Rays, and wonts to lake mo withhim."

I diiu'l know how I answered her; butat lust sho loft mo alone. Sly bruin wadon lira, i • My, blood, like molten had,ooimcd Uirongh wy veins, t h e weeks!thnt followed were weekB of torlnre. Every-thing wim hurried preparation for tho wed.

.uinp.. Ulangnea u 1 watohod It all. inhmaknew that it should novor toko plaoo. Idid not oven lougor strive to-exercise mypower ovor him. I fancied Bometimeithut people watched ins strangely, bat Iwas very guarded. Only, In my ownroom, I talked, and told it of or in whispersto myself.

Well, it wag the night before tho wed-ding. I had laid " Good-night," and gouoe&tly to my room, i t oponod into lUWe,with • eommuuloation door. Whou ahaenma tip •lain I protended to bo onloep, bui•ho bout over aud k W d me. '-

An hour *tt«rr J got ttn and oroMed over

*' ' k " i

to my table. There I look np a pretty lit-tle Venetian daggar—a toy whiah had be-longed to my mother. I trailed as I felt itssharp blade.

"Itwillnothnrt," 1 whispered; "bntshe will sleep the sounder."

Then I softly opened the door and en-tered her room. She by on the bed asleep.One white, rounded arm was thrown aboveher head, and her lips were smiling, Thelace at her throat was not whiter than her•kin.

Why did I not strike at once r I do notknow. Better—far better—if I had. I feltno pity, no remorse. Why should I ? Ishould give h,er no pain.

, I only stopped to look at her, and thinkhow lovely she wonld be dressed in her cof-fin in her wedding-dress. Yet I was farmore lovely than my rival. My rival IYes, that was the soorot. It was for thisshe most die. He hod dared to soorn moand to love her.

Where was her heart? There, and thereonly, must I striko, Ah, I could see itboat t 1 raised ray arm.

Another moment and it wonld havefallen, but in that instant some one seizedit from behind aud wrenched tho weaponfrom uiy group. I tnrned, to look into myunelo's white, stem face.

From that moment, and for long weeksmid months, I wmi'iuber nothing more.When I regained consciousness I found my.self horo—horo, behind grated bars, andwilh human eyes always upon me.

Rita is married, they tell me, but I donot believe them. Some day Douald willgive me love for love. Yet it was ho whofirst ctdled me mnd—he who begged mynnclo to sleep tliat night iu ltita's room—begged it so earnestly that he oonld notrefuse.

Ah, he did not know how I could lovo,when bo tnrned froili me to hnr! Cold andpaHxionlesH, what can she teach him of theheart's true fire ? Ono of those days howill waken to the truth, and come to claimme as his bride. Why should I try to takemy life? He ia cimiiuj;. I :uu content towait—yes, quite content, uud so I suiile audlet them call me mad.

Swearing Without Words.There is tho sudden and euor^oiio ulnrc-

xnlng of the 6Vy>r it the ooiioluiion uf a do-bate a foroelxil ftttpliftyin whinh pmictnat^sargument and clinches an with tlio pound-ing of the flat the word which lui-i bcouspoken. A shrewd writer calls tho xlunimingof the door in this style a "wood™ ontu."The definition is a well chosen ono. Thoperson who thus violently oloscs the dooris laboring under «n aocumulation of pent-•p exasperation which, if she were a uiau,would find its way out in a torrent of harshexpressions uttered with angry inflections.,A man does not generally eloso tho doorwith a bang to indicate thnt he is in a stateof wrathfulnes; neither does a womanswear.

The condensed volume of eloquent ex-pression which is packed into the petitionlclosing of tho door would, if expanded,make several large pages of type, most ofwhich would he interactions aud excliiina-tiou points. AVheu the door slants rolioffollows, juBt as after tuo explosion of astoain boiler. Tho pressure is off. Thereis an opportunity for u broatliiug spoil.With the portiero which is now such asubstitute for the hinged door, aud whiohin made of dry goods, there is a difficulty.Sho who would uso it as a moans of von-gcanco against her follow-being uinst tiotho end of it into a knot for assault. Asto xbuttiug him out with it, that is as im-possible as to hold water in an ordinarysiovo.

It must bo admitted that the Hlninmingof tho dour as an nut of argument or auexpression of disapproval is not gracofulor huh/like. Still thcro are occasions whenopinions must bo exprossod, and eveu angerand contempt must have thoir littln say.Sometimes tho door-slaniming is all therois of argument or debate. Tho objcot ofcontempt or scorn happens to approach thodoor with a view either of entering or pass-ing by. Its sndden closing in his face isau intimation that if ho valnos his peaco ofmiud he will do well to pass by. Iu such aenso he is not a wise man who vongofullykicks tbo door open. That only prolongsthe argument, wears out tho door, and sot-tlos nothing. Bettor uo content thaukfullyand placidly to remain outside, and bo gladthings are not as bad as they might bo.—

Chicago Tribune.• • - •

A Religions Duty.A lawyer, giving reiuiuiNoenoes of hu-

morous casoB in court, said: "An odd casewas thnt of tho State vs. luukhani, 69, N.0., 211. The defendant was iudioted fordisturbing a religious congregation. Uswas an individual of exemplary deport-ment, but ho had a rather imporfeot idea ofhymn-singing. The disturbance, whiohwas decided uud serious, oousisted partly inhis holding on the notes long after theother singers had let go. Tho effect of thisporslstenae was to make one part of thecongregation InugU and tho other wad; thairreligious and frivolous enjoyed it as fun,while tho dovont wore highly indignant.On ninny occasions, being expostulatedwith, Iiiukhain invariably replied that hewould worship his God, and that as a parto( Uw worship it was bis duty to sing. Thejury, 1 boliove, found the man guilty, butthe extenuating oircumBtanoes that ho haduo piirpone of disturbing the congregationand that his only fault was the eocoutrtocliai actor of hU vocalization sorved lo ro-vor.,0 tho vordict. Thoso cases are bnt atuugontlou of tho rluh material for tho sati-rist and all literary fellows whioh Ues en-tombed iu tho dOBt-enouuibored records oftho courts."

Tlio roooll of a blow strnok at another'sinterests has often tlio vengofnl wrath ofHem em Iu it, and tha volusu soul that wonlddoptruy a fellow oroatnro for ita own pleas-ure, In Itsolf dowr<iyi*l,C''

Why Mohair)m«d w« i Successful.The canses which led to M..l.uiiunmt>,

success will be best understood bj tilting.rapid glance at the condition of Arubj.about the time of bis birth. It must b*borne in mind that a vagne belief in oneGod existed among the Arab tribes long be-fore that event. Nor must it be forgottenthat the Arabs and Jews were kindredraces, speaking kindred languages, and hav-ing kindred customs, practices and preju-dices. Driven oat of their own lauds atsnccoHsive epochs by Assyrians, Greeks audRomans, many Jewish tribes settled iuArabia; and when the Boman Empire be-came Christianized, colonies of Christiansalso scattered everywhere, found their wayinto the Arabian peninsula, causing runchmntnal attrition and interchange of thoughtbetween Jews, Christians and Arabians.Occasionally Arab tribes were thus con-verted to the faith of the oolonists. Un-happily, both the Judaism and Christianityimported in this way into the oonntry weroof a dobosod, character. They were notvory much better than the forms of religionalready prevalent among the Arab tribes.Even the doctrines of God's unity bad beentampered with and oorrapted. No oroedworthy of the name of religion existed nuy-whflre in Arabia. Tritheisin, polytheism,Sabteism, adoration of the son and planets,idolatry, fetishism, animal-worship, plant-worship, Btoue-worship, superstitions of thogrossest kinds, were rife in various waysamong tribes. Nowhere, except in thehearts of a few of the more intelligent andthoughtful, were any true ideas of Godstill cherished. It was under such circuni-Btanoos, and amid such surroundings, thatHohammed, "the praised one," (as hidname signifies,) was born at Mecca aboutA. S. 570. His father, Abdullah, died be-fore his birth, and his mother, Amiiidi,when he was six years old. Yet he en-joyed one great advantage, notwithstand-ing his orphaned condition, He had not towaste time and energy in pushing his wayupward from obscurity. His grundfaiher,Abd-ul-Muttalib, who adapted him, be-longed to the Arabian uristocraey. He wasof the noble family of Haxhim, of thoKuresh tribe, 'and was tho nppoiutod guar-dian of tho fo/bah ur sacred temple ut Mec-cah, a small, cube-shaped stone buildingwhich had existed an a sacred edifice formany centuries previously. The guardian-ship of this templo was regarded as thehighest honor to whioh any family couldaspire, the belief being that it was origi-nally erected by Abraham ovor the spotwhero he was abont to sacrifice Ishmael.On the death of the grandfather of Mo-btunnied, -while he was still a boy, his nnoleAbu Talib became his guardian, and daringall his difficulties uover deserted him. Hisfamily, though noble, was poor, and theboy iloluiuimed was obliged to earn his live-lihood by tending shoep in the wilderness jthus from his earliost years resembling hisgreat prototypa MODUS,' who had to aot asshcplierd to his father-in-law Jothro. Itwot) not until Mohammed was twenty-fiveyears of age that he married his rich kins-woman KJiadi,*h. She was a widow ladywho had acquired great wealth by tradingtransactions, and was flftoon years hissenior. Sho had intrusted the manugomeutof hor affairs to Mohammed, and, havingfound him eminently trustworthy, gaveproof of her gratitude by offering him herband. It is remarkable that ho remuinodfaithful to Khadijah till her doath, whiohdid not ooonr till ho was in his titty-firstyear.—hlonier WUUamt, in the NinelteiUhCentury.

An Ancient Battle-Cround.Tho site of tho battle has of course uu-

dorgono considerable transformation iuInlor times. A canal and railway now in-torseot its area; tho swampy ground hasbeen drained, aud a wood occupies whatWUH once a morass, the nature of which hadsomething to do with tho dispositions, andperhaps also the result of the conflict.Within living memory, many relics of thotight, havo beon discovurod during drainingupcratious. In tho churchyard at Dadliug-tou, large numbers of the slain wore in-terred; and a few yours Niuce, iu dig-ging now gravos, piles of skeletons woreunearthed, lying five or six deep. Thaill-fiilod Kiug'B remains were disturbedmuch earlier; for when tho monasterieswuru sccularizod, his tomb was destroyed,nud it is said that his body watthrown into the ltiver Boar, aud his stonecoulii afterward used as a horso-trongh. In1B72, however, Wren states iu hi* "Paren-tulia," thut he saw, iu Alderman KohertIleyrick's garden at Leicester, a handsomebtouo pillar, three feet high, inscribed:" Hum lies tho body of Itiohard III., nonio-tiiuo King of England," and at the presentday there is a tablet in King Richard's lloau,Leicester, stating that "Near this spot lietho remains of Bichard HI, tho last of thoFlautngcuets." But no gravo or mausoleumuow exists by which his last resting-placecon bo verified, aud heuco thoso royal re-wains, unhonored in death, havo long biucobeun scattered—how and where none nowcalf toll. At Bosworth Hull, the soat or SirBoanraont Dixio. are preserrod several al-legod relics of the fight, such as the suit ofarmor worn by the King, cannon-balls dugfrom tho field, and •various weapons, al-though sonio antiquirarios. are of opinionthat .the last-named belong to a subsequentperiod.—(Matnfera'a Journal.

The Malays have alkali times boon afl-dioterl to gambling. In thoso days, in Cey-lon, they would " play away the suds oftheir nugors " over tho draught-board. Theywould sit down with a Are burning, wham-on wns sot a pot of walnut or sesame olljwhilebosido it lay a small, hatohet with anexceedingly sharp edg*. ,Th»,' loi*r placedhlajiond npon a *ton«, -and. the winnerchopped off •^olnt, when the '"•"*'dlluoi* WfUf plttUflVn ID•ui1 thereby oaitertad. .oftbogWvboUnakllfttl

ITKMf or IHTIDtlT.In France, coal dost b ntObad by being

manufactured into bricks.

An English physician says that seventydiseases arise directly Irom aloohoL

A yonng girl hi Waokon, Iowa, IA yeanold, dropped dead at tha sight of a rat, oneevening recently.

A waterspout on Crooked Greek, Idaho, afew days ago, washed oat and Uft on lutdthousands of trout.

Paris is agitating ior better transit Themonopoly of a single oinnibos company islunch complained of. .

A thirteen-year-old Louisiana girl hasgrowing npon her face a light brown besrj,two inches long, and very heavy. .

An anvil weighing 24,000 pounds has Justbeen cast in Pottstowu, Fa., said to bo thelargest casting ever mode in the town.

'A London surgeon says that only onafashionably dressed woman In five hondrcdcan draw a fall breath with her clothes on.

At Barrow, Lancashire, England, $10,-000,000 have been spent on docks, bat theoutlay has not been met by a commensuratereturn.

If you want to be very fashionable inyour correspondence, you most nse fancy-colored sealing-wax and a big seal to closeyour envelope.

Chicago has a "scalp surgeon." Theterm, however, does not indicate a noble redman, but a woman who irrigates bold headswith a wonderful hair provocative.

The wife of a Milwaukee physician is go-ing to jail for fifteen days, rather than paya fluo of five dollars, which wan imposedon her for persistently keeping an unli-censed dog.

Sir Isaac Nowton said that infidelity-wonld probably prevail until it had quits-banished superstition, but then would b«swallowed up by the great light and evi-dence of true religion.

An impetuoUB man at Winonu, Miss., fail-ing to coax a young girl to elope with andmarry him, lassoed her as uhe was going tochurch, and was dragging her toward a jus-tice's office when succot came.

A Pennsylvania girl was bitten by a cop-perhead snake. She was stupefied withliquor and a live toad was fastened on thewound. The toad absorbed the poisonand died, and the girl recovered. ,

When hackney couches wpro Brat startedin London, no coach might be 'hired for atransit under three miles. This was to pro'-toot the Thames watermen, regardless of 'tho fact that the river only affords transit intwo directions.

A gentleman in Norwich, Connecticut,has a genuine Oonfedorato silver half-dol-lar, coined In 1861. Those pieces arerare, and have commanded almost fabu-lous prices. One was sold for $800 in NewYork, recently.

The British Consul at Mogadore calls at-tention to the cruelty of shipping live tor-toises in barrels, and sending them (oodlesson a three weeks' voyage, on whioh manydie. Under favorable conditions a tortouowill live ISO years.

A youthful bride and groom arrived atNew Albany, Ind. Two rascals got intotho couple's room, introduced themselves aspolice officers, aud pretended to arrest thehusband for marrying a girl under 17. Hegave them $10 and they departed.

The following is from one ot EvangelistBarnes's sermons at Dayton, Ohio i " BightBtraight from the swine trough to tho bestrobe suits the Lord best, fleas and all,rags and all, stench and all, poverty and all,and withal, ignorance to cap the climax."

A Mormon elder of Salt Lake has had histhirteen wives photographed, both in agroup and separately. The pictures havebeen placed hi an elegant album, and undereach woman is engrossed a quotation ofsentimental poetry, suggestive of her bestquality.

A certain Massachusetts captain has soiled.for forty years between Boston and Na-hont, making, daring the season, a voyageof fifty-six miles per day. He estimatesthat during the entire forty years he hassailed about 800,000 miles, all of these milud.being between the two peninsulas of Bostonand Nohant.

A Detroit man has, after a labor of twoyears, perfected a machine to make needles,whioh will usurp hand labor hi that direc-tion, and which promises to revolutionisethe manufacture of that muoh-used article.It is estimated that not leas than 2,000,000of needles are nsed per day throughout theUnited Slates. "

No marriage is legal in France exceptwith the consent of the parents of both par-ties, bat a man or woman over 25 may "re-speotfully cite " his or her parents to showcause why they refuse oousent. If they failto show good cause, the marriage may pro-eood in spite of them. Such proceedingsaro rarely resortod to.

Florida has discovered that the. orooodils,.inhabits the lagoons of the peninsula. It 1*found deep down in the mud, where i i liaslong been confounded with the alligator.Tho Indians oallod it the "long-nosed alli-gator." It is Identical with tha Jamaicacrocodde, bat diffors from the South Ameri.can cayman. It lives ia salt water. Tusalligator stloka to fresh water. •. ,

A physician is responribhi for Ifat slat*.menl that a large majority of natoraldsaUli,":.especially in the OHM of oMUfe * * *"on the turn of iij,« M l ^ V(. «., from twain to ftew ottoofc'Vdayornlght, a d t t i A l h w i " '*ble reason foVtbli.

•J v '

f B B RED BAHiC- ***********

Mn* »aa»»JH«"l» «l»«rti itarljlatfnnoe. Adwrtbewant" torskw period

0 1 * 1 0 : Ooa. 6B0AD AND FBONT STREETS,B«d Bank. N. J.

Mem «nd oonMpondfinoe on all subject! ,ol lorauImport we deatre. Oommnnicatloiu designed an" p u » " <w indlvJdmli or flnm we du iiot. Allletten Intwded fur publication must be glgned withthe DaniD nod address of tlie wrlt«r.

TliU paper U on Ola at Geo. P. Itowell * Oo'i., 10Spruoe gtroet, SVw Vurk City, where contract* foradvwtWne mKV be made.

"WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, J882.

—--to divide the profits of his thefts witli.

Let the Board of Health Act.The health of tlie town of Rod Bank

is a subject which interests all classes ofcitizens, and the article which we publishin our news columns containing inter-views with leading physicians will IKSfound to be of intrinsic value. .The citydailies have published articles within thepast week about thecases of typhoid feverat Seabright, and certainly it is not de-sirable that our town should secure a likeunenviable notoriety.

The complaint made by Mr. James II.Morford before the Board of Health inregard to the pig-pen of Mr. Joseph Gillin Wallace street should be promptlyacted upon, and the objectionable pig-pen removed from the town before itbreeds disease.

Bed Bank is BO finely situated on a dry,Bandy noil, with a natural slope to theriver, that it would Beem aa though Na-ture hud intended that the place shouldl» perpetually free from epidemic dis-ease of every kind. But with the refuseof a permanent population of five thou-sand and a large influx of summer resi-dents, the soil has become so impreg-nated with foreign elements that it callsfor the greatest care on the part of ourpeople aud prompt action on the part ofthe town authorities to sec that uotJiingdeleterious to good health is Buffered toexist in the place.

0m BJH"

tiu. tim£

<->**•jwages <d tbe laboring men employedupon the boats have been reduced andtbe price* of coal and other' materialsused in the economy of steam vesselshave fallen to half what they were dur-ing the war, the cost of a passage to NewYork is still held at the old figure offifty cents, and the freight rates are sohigh that the Central Kailroad can un-derbid them. To be sure, on Sundaysthe price of an excursion ticket fromthe city to Red Bank and return is placedat fifty cents, which is a differential ratein favor of New Yorkers as against Jer-seymen.

In the face of all this the brazen anddisreputable Standard has the assuranceto commend Miles ROBS because of hissuccessful stealing and his willingness

the people of this section. What shallWe think of a journal that editorially an-nounces such immoral sentiments? andwere the paper a fair exponent of thepeople among whom it circulates, whatwould the world think of the good poo-plo of ilonmouth? But the Standardrepresents nothing but its editor, andthat is the nearest approach to nothingwitli which we are acquainted.

General MrCloIlan, who »|WM il long lime inEtfypt several years affo, has written u puiie.r on thejiretu'iit war In Unit country for Die forthcoming(V»(ur|/ Maynzluc, and It In ,Maid he will nmkttmint1 severe crlllciMiU) on tlio English military meth-ods there,—JVHMKTOHK Exrhanuf*.

We presume McClellnn thinks theBritish waste too much time in fighting,and do not do enough retreating. It ispossible, also, that the Brilii-h Generalsinsist on their soldiers using the musket,instead of the pick and shovel, which isdiametrically opposed to McClellau'sprinciples of modern warfare.

Tlie matter of difference between THEKEOISTER and Messrs. Spinning & Pat-terson has been amicably settled to thesatisfaction of all the parties concerned.

"Teetota l" Depravity.The Puritans who settled in New Eng-

land were accustomed to sum up moralcrookedness in tho term " total de-pravity," and in modern times glaringlapses from rectitude of conduct has beencalled •' teetotal depravity." We judgefrom an editorial in the last issue of theStandard that that paper of alleged local

• usefulness 13 suffering from a severe at-tack of depravity of the " teetotal" va-riety. This opinion of ours is foundedupon an articlo which it printed in re-gard to the River and Barlwr Bill, audwhich bill the press of the conn try has ol-most unanimously condemned as a theftof the public money for private and cor-cuut purposes. The Standard exceptsto this general condemnation and says :

"If It be'a steal, we uotlc* that then! are manyanxious to share the KIHIIIB, und It it) a steal ibut hasbeen going on for years, and will continue u> existso long AS the government aul&ts In Improving nav-igation, olid this ticlng the fort, we cannot under-stand why our iuwnle rtinnid so ulijwt to havlnc aportion of the tuuUH'dlstrtlmtwt in tills liKriilUy in-stead of all being ezitcndpd In Iixutlltk* when; nobencllt is derived by tbe people of (his tfeWlnn. \Yethink that Mr. lloss should be romin^nued nulit*tliau bo condemned for being so sucn^sf ill In get-ting u portion of tbe * suuillngn' distributed In thinsection of New Jereey, rather than have It all ex-pended In the Boutliero states."

To people of ordinary morality the sen-timents in the forgoing excerpt will be ashock. To the people of this section it isa deliberate insult. According to theethics of the Standard, there is nothingwrong in the theft of money from thopublic treasury provided tlie people ofthis section are allowed a divide in the" swag.'^* That the stealing him beengoing oil" for years is no reason why itshould be continued, and the fact thatMiles Ross has been uuccesaful in secur-ing vast SUUIH for thix section is only onemore reason why he should be retired toprivate life. No honest mau wunlstobcn-fit by receiving stolen goods ; and aa thepeople of this district are proverbiallyhonest it is a fair inference that the con-stituent!! of Miles Ross arc averse to hispeculiar methods of " addition, divisionund silence" statesmanship. When theStandard asserts that Mr. Ros» shouldbe commended rather than condemnedfor his success in getting a portion of thextealings distributed in tiiiu section itappeals to the lowest traits of humannature, although it is hardly any betterthan could be expected of a paper towhich common morality is an unknownquantity, and which is as densely ig-norant of the theoretical meaning of theterm "morality" as it is indiffereut tothe truth or falsity of any statement itmay make in the course of argument.

Furthermore, tho money expended inthe alleged improvement of tho rivers,creeks and ditches in this section comesfrain the pockela of producing classed.Every farmer that grows a bushel ofcorn or a barrel of potatoes; every car-penter that builds a house, every masonthat lays a brick wall, every blacksmiththat Bhoes a, horse, every laborer thatcarries a hod or works on the road, paysa tithe of his earnings to keep money inthe public treasury that "such men asMiles Boss may appropriate it'for allegedimprovements that will only be used usa blind to pay political strikers for work

. at tbe primaries and conventions. ForK Instance |168,0QO has already been spentSiiltljeSluewsbury liters in nn attempt

. h J b I I1

MONMOUTH COUNTY NOTES.A fight occurred between an English-

man and a negro, both waiters in an As-bury Park boarding-house, on Sundayof last week. After beating and seri-ously injuring theJEnglishinnn, the negroescaped and is still at large.

Michael Brown, of Ashury Park, re-cently assaulted Mrs. Joste, (if that place,and was taken in by the police. Whenarrested a "sand bag" was found in hispossession.

A horse belonging to A. L. Scobey, ofScobeyville, was found dead in the stablea few mornings ago.

The chicken dispose has made its a\y-pearafice in Keyport.

Tlie contract for the erection of n nowlife-saving Htation at Deal Beach has beendriven to David V. Howell, of New York.His bid waa $4,887.

A BOH horse, measuring about fourinches in length, was recently caught inthe bay near Ifeyport by Isaac liedle ofMatawan.

A disastrous runaway occured at Free-hold on Tuesday of last week. Dr. Free-man's horse run away, and the buggy towhich it was attached collided with thatof Mrs. Showles, of Black's Mills. Mrs.Showle's buggy wua overturned, and thelady thrown out. The horse continue 1on its way and before being caught wasinjured so severely that it bail to bekilled. Mrs. Showles was slightly in-jured, and Dr. Freeman's buggy, as wellas that of Mrs. Showles, wus somewhatdamaged.

Mr. Hendrick E. Conover, of Freehold,wan recently badly bitten by a do^.

Tlie big turtle captured 11 fvw weeksago by the Keabnght fishermen wasburii-d at Long Branch, where it wnntaken after il died, anil where, accordingto the Democrat, it makes the air odi-ously odorous.

The liouKe of Mr. James C. Dnvixon, ntRhode Hall, near Freehold, was robbedon Saturday, August 12th. of $20 in etuOiami a few vnluublea. A liox continuing*8!)0 in bills was overlooked by thetlik'ves.

Monmouth Beach iH to hnvo a Casino.The estimated co«t will l>e $30,U00 or $:-W,-000. A number of gentlemen haveformed an association, nud mibucriptioiibooks for Htock have been opened. TheCasino will Ktand near the MonmouthBeach Center Htation. Ground will l>ebroken this fall, in order that tho build-ing may be ready for occupancy next

TOWH TOf»IO«,

itr,to Vx, C. B. Kwte, << Oceauoic.

Kn. Harry Finch's Borne School willre-open on Monday, September 20th.

Mr. Edwin Beekman, of Middletown,advertises a quantity of seed rye for sale.

A ball is to be held at the Silver BayHouse, Little Silver, on Saturday of thisweek.

The annual dam-bake of the Mon-raouth Boat Club was recently held atOceanport.

A number of Princeton college studentsare camping on the banks of the Shrews-bury river.

Mrs. A. C. Tice offers a house and lotnear the Central railroad depot for saleon easy terms.

Last Saturday was tho colored people'sSalt Water Bay. In the evening a ballwou held in Fisher's Hull.

Mr. John Lloyd, who was seriouslyinjured last week by being thrown outof a wagonj is recovering.'

There were three persons baptized intho river in tho Advent faith nearOceanic last Sunday afternoon:

Mr. James Broadineodow, of RedBank, and Mr. Iticbard Oliver, of thePhalanx, will begin canning tomatoesnext Monday.

The Democratic Congressional conven-tion will meet at Freehold, on Tuesday,•September liitli, at 12 M., to nominate acandidate for Congress.

It is reported that Walton, the "Amer-ican Plunger," has purchased the Stevensfarm of 200 acres at Shrewsbury. Hewill UHO it as a stock farm.

Mayor James A. Bradley, of AsburyPark, has gone to the White Mountainsof New Hampshire to escape the nnnuulvisitation of hay fever to which he issubject.

John T. Bennett ami Thomas

THE HKAJ/TJT OF TO TOWN fm

Worse than Cheesequake Creek.((•Yum the Ktiznlieth llcmlil.)

Some, of tlie New York papers haveHi'iit out exj>loriug t»xpedition« to lindCheeBetjunke creek. Why don't theyget up a party to come here and take aHijuint at Elizabeth river*' Chee.HequakeIIUK water in it, but our Elizabeth riveriii innocent of HUCII connection. Ourfriend, the Octagon, thinks it ought tobe mucadeinized in order to stop theproduction of mosquitoes, and we agreewith it. All the talk about its commer-cial advantages is poppy-cock of thelir«t water. An ordinary sower box candriiin it an dry as Broad street. If a cuual is needed and Congress wants to cutone, all ri^lit. Then we could devise aproper course for it.; but Nature, in heruiyHterimm workings, has givc-u up tlieElizabeth river im n mistuke. und noought we.

Falling Among Thieves.(Front the Detail lkaih fYn/i.)

The Rev. J. A. Worden, leader of thePresbyterian Seaside Assembly, went inbathing one day last week, "tit OceanIjrove, leaving his watch and other val-uables with the bathing mauter. Oncoining out he found that tionio one hadstolen the check and presenting it lit theoffice had received his things.

^ »- ^An "Involuntary Explosion."

(/'•"nil the Jjinin lliaiicli A'etnOOn Tuesday, while Horace, son of Capt.

OJO. II. Green, and a little, son of Kylvatius Eiumons wer h t i t t

V, Eustace, .proprietors of the LeightonHall billiard parlors, have dissolved part-nership. Tbe business will be continued'by Mr. Eustace.

The National Greenback Labor partyof this Congressional district will hold 11convention at Elizabeth on Tuesday nextfor the purpose of nominating a candi-date for Congress.

The cane.of John Howling v«. Michaeland Mary Kelly resulted in tlie releasefrom custody of tbe Kellys on their ownreeognizance for their appearance at thenext term of court.

A number of carrier pigeons belongingto Messrs. J. B. Bergnn, E. T. Field, II.M. Nevius and Whitall Hill, of K«d Bank,will be bturted from Freehold on the lastday of the county fair.

Tho Glee Club of I'rincoton gave a con-coil at the Hotel Shrewsbury, Seabright,on Thursday evening last. James S.Burdett will give an elocutionary per-formance there on Saturday evening.

A fresh lino of millinery goods has justbeen received ut Mrs. E. Weis's fanrystore on Front street. The prices at thisestablishment are always moderate, andcustomers always return and briug theirftienilH.

Mr. Win. W. Conover, of tiiiu pine**,has purchased the Newlmlil farm, oppo-site Pleasure Bay, for $BO.I)im. The farmcontainR 400 acres and IB one of the mostvaluable unimproved tracts of land ontin- bny.

Mr. Benjamin Trafford, Jr.! s|iont afew dnys at Ocean Grove and raine homeon Monilav evening tied up in a knot, HOto speak. Dr. TrutTonl attended his riw,which wns a serious one of cbolern inor-Inis. The young ihan is about again.

Mr. Warren Iji-lund, of the Ocean Hotel,Long Branch, proposes to have theUnited States Government build break-waters in' the Atlantic Ocean betweenSeabriglit and Long Branch ut an ex-pense of several thousand dollars, to pro-tect private property. •' •

Tho " Hotel Italian," consist ing oftwelve ears, which !ni.s beautified tlievicinity of Little Silver station for sev-eral months, will lx.1 removed to a puinlfurther south to-morrow, to the intensegrutiflLtition of the Little Silveiites andthe productive healtlifulnenK of tbeneighboring melon .palrbes.

Milllh] Paul, the largest prnporty-owner in Seabright, in having plansdrawn for a uew hotel, which will beerected this fall. It will be built on thehandsome plot of ground opposite thePeninsula House, and will lie one of themost complete hotels ou the coast.

In speaking lout week of the newplumbing firm of Fish & Garland, re-rent ly established at Si-abright, THERKHIKTKU snid that Mr. Fish hod beenemployed OH foreman plumber for W,H. Cooper for three years past. Weshould have said that Mr. Garland occu-pied that position.

Edmund Walsh, " the only boy ma-gician," will give a performance in Mor-riH's Hall, Entoutown, to-morrow even-ing. The performance will conRiHt ofHluig!it-of-h;iwl tricks, magical feats,and a minstrel entertainment. MasterWalsh is said by those who have Beenhim to be excellent in his sleight-of-handnml ventriloquial performances.

The borne belonging to Carman Jere-miah Longstreet ran away on Monday

, ttle s n of Kylvatius Eiumons, were shooting ut a tar-get with a. pistol, the weapon was invol-untarily exploded, the ball entering thopalm of Green's right hand and coinin-jout at the base of the littlo finger. Thelittle follow is now doing well.

Hlgh-Prioed Cattle. *'IFiiim the Kcuiinri KMcrj/r/M.)

Last'Tuesday foui flue Jersey cattle be-longing to Mr. Mills, of atarlborough,

i and tiio result of this expendi-| public money is that the fiat-

ats !'8ea Bird" and' aground with such— - - • - ' - t h e j m .

And. ., p.'Taylor and

came down on tho •' CorSeTR* Theyaggregated the sum of $1,400; two cowsnt *55U each and two calves at $150 each.

A Candidate from the Second DIs-trlot.

(From theEalontnumAilvertUer.)Madam Euinor now says that Mr.

Lafayette Schanck, of Morllwio, will IKSB candidate for Assembly honors at the

morning, while bringing a load of mer-chandise, from tho Monmouth Park racetrack. Tho horse started whilo goingdown AVluu'f avenue toward the steam-boat dock, aud before being caught wassomewhat injured about the forelegs and

i

a candidate for Assensuing election.-•'•

tolet, furnished of unfurnished,,or,«Uhout

d,to Mrs!

Bank.

j gslightly lamed. Tliu wagon vim alsodamaged slightly,-and tho crockerywhich formed a portion of the loud wasbroken.

A public fuilo of lots -will take place atBrevent Park, Atlantic Highlands, onThursday, August. 81st, A baud ofnuuio will be in attendance, at tl.e snloand a collation will be served. Tlietitles to the lots will be made absolute,tliora being no restrictions whatever asto what the purchaser shall do with hislot after ho 1ms paid for it. In a phrase,Ilrevont Park ia not to bo mndo a saint'srest so inuph'naax sinner's homo,., Forfurther partlcuraw_we_' refor" tho reader

A COWPMUMT ACAfHfT «AK*RJOSEPH Oli.L'« M 6 - R M ,

• r i M k d l Ferer-An Odor-in the Heart «r U»«M ( a P i H l t *lae»»-

VmUtM with th?jnbyateteaa-A CheapMalialMteM tor C—« jooU a a iSawera-Vfctf B*w4 of Health.From time to time complaints have

been made that certain parts of the townare not kepi as clean as a regard for thehealth of the town would Beem to de-mand, and lately these complaints havebecome more numerous. Since typhoidfever broke out in the Bellevue Hotel, atSeabright, there have been fears that thedisease might obtain afoothold here, andrumors that it had made its appearancein the town have been circulated. Actu-ated by these fears the public generallyhave been more careful to keep theirpremises in a condition conducive tohealth. There are, however, many pub-lic places where filth abounds, and whichshould bo kept clean by the authorities.

On Tuesday morning Mr. James H.Morford made the following complaintto the Board of Health :

To TIIK Ben IUNK BOARD OK HEALTH:—I wouldroniK-M'-tfiilly call ynur att»nUon to tin* pltf-uty In thorear ol the lot occupied hy Joseph GDI w* a bak«ryin W'ullarv struct. Tho tout culors wlih'h It emit*jiolMon tlie atnvwplH-re and renders tlie. ni'l lilMirlioodliable to un attack of epidemic dJt*>juM*, 1 would re-HjMK'trully u«k ttiat the Kourd of Health tiave theHunt) removed from trie town. J. U. MORFOKO.

11KD IUNK, Ali(ru« 21st, lsta.A REGISTER reporter sought out Mr.

Morford and questioned him about thecomplaint. x

" J u s t come with me," said Mr. Mor-ford, as he started in the direction of hishome, " and see for yourself."

On the way Mr. Morford said : " Thepig-pen adjoins my yard and is fifty orBeventy-flve feet from m y house. It isnot in w h a t you would call a filthy con-dition, but the odors it sends forth aresickening. This is particularly the caseafter a rain. I am afraid my childrenwill be made sick with disease from thoeffects of it. When the wind is fromthe direction of the pig-pen tho stench isvery bad and the members of my familymnke many complaints about it.''

THK REOISTEH reporter found the pig-pen as Mr. Morford had stated. It islocated on Wallace street, in tho rear ofGiU'B bakery. While the pen w a s notparticularly dirty, a sickening odor arosefrom it.

There in not much smell comingfrom it to-day," said Mr. Morford, "butsometimes it is very had. I should notthink n man would be nllowed to keep apig-pen l ight in tho middle of the townlike this. It in enough to breed disease."

On liin return fri-m Wallace streetthe reporter walked through tbe alleyeast of Broad street, and which connectsl'rout UIKI Mechanic, streets. Here weresoon JKIOIH of htagnaut water ami refusefrom the houses and stores. The wastepipes from the buildings led to this alley,and there bein^ no eonneetion with asower, tho water remained on the sur-face of the ground until it soaked awayor evaporated. Here and there wpreseen pieces of half-decayed vegetablesand BCrapBof other food. These emitteda rank odor.

Shortly after Dr. Mars*'en wan seenand asked whether or not there was anytruth in the minor that there wire sev-eral rases of typhoid fever in the town.

"I have beard that thoro were severalniilil cases in tbin vicinity." said be, "butso far as I know there are none m town."

To a question in regard to thesanitaryeomlition of the town. Dr. Marsden saulthat the eoii'litioii "f some of tlie placesiii town was bad so far as health wasconcerned, and a'Med that to keep hisrooms hahitable lie used large quantitiesof carbolic neiil.

Dr. Robert It. Conover was called on.He was fount! reading a book on "Ty-phoid and Kindred Severs." " The towniH not in a good sanitary condition,"saidhe, " but tbe people jiro taking moro andmore care every day to keep down thegormK of iliswixo. Thorp is a very eh' apand efficacious nut hod of killing tliogerms of disease which arise from cess-pools and places of that character." heHiiid, us bo arose and took down a smallhook. Turning to ;i certain page ho c n -timieil: "Tho committee of experts ap-|K>int«l by tlio Nutioiial Board of Healthiu 1H7W, saiil that the best preveutativefor the spread of poisonous germs fromeofis-pool«, ReweM. ntc , was roppr-rasdis-solved in water in tho proportion of oneand a half pounds nf copperas ton gallonof water. These men were consideredthe smarteHt in tlio country, and theiropinion has been almost unanimouslyaccepted by the medical faculty. Thereare many pluctw in Red UnnU whichshould bo looked after. I should thinkit was tlio duty of the Iinard of Healthto visit oveiy household in the town andsee that the peoplo aro informed of theliest means of avorting disoatie. If nnepidemic of typhoid should rage in thoplace it would hurl il for a dozen years.'

Dr. Conover WIUI told ulxnit Mr. JoseplOill'n pig-pen of which Mr. Morfi-rd haicomplained, and lie said the Board ofHealth should at once cause it to l>oremoved.

" But tho Board of Health say thoyhnve no money to work with, and nopower, and tlmt they cannot causo tl:sty to be removed," said the reporter.

"Can't cause it to bo removed!" re-peated Dr. C'onuver. "Suppose I tako nlot of poison and throw it down along-Hido of one of my neighbors' houseswhere I know it will cause disease, can'tanything bo dono with mo? It'sthe samp, with that pig-pen. The odort

An IUJI#./>'»

tbe fruit busineaa near the poet-office.Last v w k he had trouble With a coloredgentleman named Johnson who proposedto buy a pint of peanuts at 40 per cent.below the market price. This financialcheme did not work, and the peanuts

ultimately coot Mr. Johnson t2.06—f which sum the Italian receined five

jents and Justice Harry Child $2.On Tuesday an alleged Irishman from

Tinton Falls who had been partaking ofumerous glasses of the rum which per-sheth, undertook to take possession ofthe Italian's stand. The contract was tooig a one to be carried to a successfullose. The Italian objected. He objected

with so much fervor that the allegedrishman from Tinton Falls was incon-nently thrown out into the middle of

he street, whore he was arrested byflicer George H. White for disturbingle peace and brought him before Justice

Harry Child. He gave his name asorgurson, but Officer White •contra-icted him and said that his name waajagerson. ,

4 My name it* Fergurson," replied thorisoner.'• Well, you go by the name of Sagor-

ou," reiterated the officer.'I don't care what name I go by, my

ame is Fergureon. I guess I ought tomow my own name," retorted tho pris->ner.

" Well, Sageruon, or Fergurson,the fines $2," said Justice Child, ending thodis-lussion.

The alleged Irishman from Tintonalls did not have the money with him,

uid U[K)II the promise of Mr. Michael Mc-ormick, of Shrewsbury, to see that thene was paid, Mr. Fergurson, or Sager-

of Tinton Falls, was allowed to de-wrt.

" It's pretty tough to be licked by analian and then be fined $3 for tbe privi-

ege,"growled the victim, as be walkedit of the Justice's office.

from that pun noinon tho air- and makeit dangerous for the public health. Can'do anything? Why, the man could beindicted for kooping a nuisance if lcould not be reached in any other wayI would ratliorii man would throwpoisoialongsido my house than build a pig-p«:thoro, for I could hnve tho poison take!away, but the poison from tho pig-peiwould be there all thu time,;"

Justice Harry Child, the Priwidontthe Board of Health, said that thu Boardrecolvud no funds from any souroo, an

had '» itself to do anything,ld

yThe only way ft could act was througt h r l l l f l l 'As'a1 body.fBivenutyAva,Hal Bank, junuer particulars we_ rejoriLuo rooaer ine.reguiar logai ornoiais, ,• Asaoouy.it A full llgt of law blanks of all kinds

•A*"1"1'. '' *•'• • - ' toouriulVenjain^oolunu, . _ ' • hjtd-noMortpo^r*thttn-fta4adiv<diiati-4-fa on nala-trt-ToE,HnqiOTEB'Ouioef^Ad^

Trinity Parish Entertainment,The grounds and house of Mr. J. Cod-

lington on the river bank were heautf-ully decorated hist evening, having been

us pre]iared by Miss Ella Coddingtonnd the Indies of Trinity Parish, and thoceasion being a lawn party and musical

rv under the management nud forho !>ent>fit of Trinity Church. As onoipproaohed the house the swaying C.'hi-lese lanterns with which the groundsrere illuminated, gave a vivid brilliancyi> the scone, and the lieautifnl womennd elegant dresses flashing hither andliitbor mdor their scintillations, and alsolie exipiisiro music winch floate.l out,jv>n the evening air. were in perfect.armonv with tho idea of an orientalHe ehav.tpetre. The musical prop rammevas varied and consisted of Ixith vocalnd instrumental performances. Mr.iiidolph Mnlchnw, a brother to WilliamInlrhow, who has recently arrived fromicrmany. where lie ban lieen attendingid slndvinK nt tbo Conservatory ofusic in Rerlin, gave two or three fielec-ins upon the violin. His style and ex-

•riition are far superiorto anything ever>efr,re kni-wn in tbis section, and hewithout ilouht has a brilliant future lie-ire bini a-* a solo violinist. MiKsT'od-iiifrton. Mi*s .TuHatSoff. und Mr. Kodneyincli ]>arficij»attMl in the vncal part of!•- programme, and Mi". Coombs iruvr>ine recitations. All were excellent, assual.

Hefieshments were served by the:ulies. anil i'Vi*ry p'-ison present fioemoili enjoy the occasion exceedingly.

AfTalrs of Public Interest.A peach and ice cream festival will lx>

eld at Ix'edsville on Tuesday eveningf next week. A tent will l>e erected

HI the grounds adjoining thi'chnpel. andbe urticIeK usimlly sold on such occa-

sions will bo found iu abundance. IfTuesday evening should prove stormythe festival will lie postponed until the

rut fair evening.A festival was bold in tho room over

lennett Bros.' store at Tinton Falla enA'ednesilay evening hi.st. There was alar^c gathering, a number of the peoplepresent coming from Red Hank. Thewiling wasi'njtiyttbly spent and the netiroe.eods amounted to ahout $"il).

Tho fair tiiul festival held on Tuesiiny>f lutit week by the Indies or the .11. K'luircli. of Oceanic, was very successul. netting over $200. The Little Silver•uinet band was present, und enlivenedho occasion liy playing pimular airs.The ladies of Christ Church, Shrews-

Imry, are sparing no elTortH to mukc theirfair and festival, which is to bo hold tomorrow afternoon and evening, a sue

The train which will take tho Baptisiand Presbyterian . Kundny - schools tt:Asbury Park on Friday will leave HotBunk at 8 A. M., and on the return wilolive Aslmry Varl: .ltd I'. M.

Tho Odd Fellows' Kxcursion to NewImrgb on Tuesday, Septomber flth, promiscs lo he a very successful and plousauaffair.

"Ar< Evening with tho Poets."On Tuesday evening of last week a

dramatic mid literary ontortaininont WIUIgiven hy Mr..mid Mrs. Marline Brown afShady Sidi) cottage, Oceanic, where, thojare Bjwntling the. summer.

The programme, " An Evening willthe Poets," was under tho mamigomenlof Dr. Savage Wliitmnro. Snlectiomfrom Shakonpearo nud later poets werigiven and a gonorouH collation WOEserved by the hospitable hostess.

The " Pilot Story " OH recited by MISBWoolcott was admirably rendered antho crttarrul ecnuo ljctwcen BratUH anCaHHius by MOHSI'S. Hall and JacobuieclipRwl the perfonnarico of many, professioha) performers. JJr. JacobiiB's delivury of "Marc Anthony'i) Orationwas also vary line, Tbootbeiuwbo-Vcw'purt in the exercises w uro Mr, W. Pintnrd, Miss Eninin Boglo and Miss IdGridloy. Among tho company proseuwo noticed Mr. Clirisllan Fritsuh amwife, Miu Wm. Pintard, Miss Julia Oo;and Mr, Chan. I. Gordon,

*ui© rou

tor IM Batutcc of• nomr* Bin C+ntrwtU* K«*« San*.mer.MXB. Martha Smock is the wife of Mr.

Schenck Smock. She is a boarding-housekeeper. last summer among her guest*were Commissioner Tylee "W, Throok-morton, his wife and son Edmund, andtheir hired man. The total Bum forboard, according to Mrs. Smock, was

>, of which amount Mi. Throckmor-ton paid f249, leaving a balance of {80.The suit was brought for the balance,$30, and on Tuesday tbe case was triedbefore Justice Harry Cliild. The plain-tiff was represented by Counsellor HenryM. Nevius, a one-armed veteran of thelate war, and for the defendant appearedCounselor Charles Harmon Trafford, atwo-armed veteran of the NamelessiTacht Club. \

Tlie case was opened by CounselorNevius who said that in order to expeditenatters they would allow the corrcct-less'of the amount paid by the defend-in t and would simply prove and askudgment for the balance of $30.The first witness called was Mrs. Mar-

hn Smock, who testified that the wifejf Commissioner Throckmorton camo toler house lost summer to secure board;hat thu agreement entered into was that12 per week was to be paid for the board

of Mr. and Mrs. Throckmorton, $5 perweek for their son Edmund, a younglawyerprocticing in Now York, and $3.50[>er week for their hired man. Thut they;ame to her house on the 7th day of Juneand remained until the 1st of August.They then went away and returned onthe 31st of August und remained untilhe 10th of October. She Buid thut theirinn Edmund camo to hoard August 8d.nit us he was not always at tho house it-viis agreed that in his case the chargeiliould only be for the meals he ate. SheidmittiHl havingiecoived $M3.0i) in casb'rom Mr. Throckmorton, and eggs0 the amount of $5.97. She said thatdr. Edmund Throckmorton would sonic-.lines bring friends to the house to be en-ertaiuod and that she charged for theirncals. The testimony was not shakeni|x>n the cross-examination.

At thiH jKiint Mr. Trafford moved for1 nnn-Huit upon tho ground that Com-iiMsioner Throckmorton wns not buuudiy the agreement of his wife, and that,8 bia son Edmund watf over 21 years ofi;e, lie was not responsible for his board.lie motion was refused by the Justice.Mr. Edmund Throckiiiorton was culled

or the defense. Ho said that ho was niiwver practicing in New Yoik iiml thatle was over 'J! yeair; of age. Thatlid not niaki! any hargiiin with (r( .

for Ifci.ird, ami that he did not*.e any ono to make any arm

licuts for liourd for him. Ho said that'or ono wei'k of the time in duration

•u» a wiit-bt at tbe house of Mr. The->lore Moss, and that on one or two oc-casions he had taken a friend to Mrs.Smock's, and that one of these occasions

on a Saturday night, and that on4miil;iy he am! his friend had dined andup|Hvl at Mr. Mo.is -•*. Ho also said thatn New York he boarded at No. 2 Went•*ort\-third street with a lady who paid','. lOila year rent for her house. Thatie paid $!& ]M-r week, ami that he neveruid to pay an\ thing extra when litirought a frieml lo hi> entertained. Onlie cross-exaniination the fact was clic-tcil that be paid by the-week and that

• did not get any reduction when hus iilisint at mealtime.Mrs. T. W. ThroeUmortou \V\\A culled,ie said that she made tin.1 bargain formnl for the family. That her sou wiiti

u New York, and that on ono or two'•rensions when ho came home Into shenail to provide ln-i-fsteak find eggs foriis supper, and that she hud to go down

tho kitchen mid cook bis mipiior forurn. She also stati «1 that she had to'urnitdi a bed anil lied clothing for her-self and husband. On thecross-e.\iiinm-utioii Counselor Nevius asked the witnes?f she knew Mrs. Smock.

Yes; I suppose BO," replied Mrs.Throckmorton, "but wo have boonstrangers lately."

Then the gallant soldier lawyer com-limented the witness, and the oppoHinj

sailor lawyer casually remarked thut hwas giving hor "taffy."

('oimiiiRuionor T. W. Throcknioiton'as sworn and said thut be went tn Mrs

Hinock's on the 8th of June; that lie wasften ahseiit from meul.4 mid during the

time for which they ptiid his wife wannwny for five days visiting their daughterin Freehold ; that he did not know thatMm. Smock was HO penurious as to chargefor the meals which the friends of hirison ate at the house; that he alwayspaid his bills, and that lit.' did not thinkhe was indebted to thu plaintiff one rent

The counsel then Hummed up. eachclaiming that according to the law liii

liont was entitled to a verdict.Tlio Justice reserved liiK decision unii

to-day, when ho gavo judgment for Mrs.Hiuock for $20, the full nmouut of herclaim. _

Not tho Father of the ChildOn Thursday hint a trial wax held he

fore Justice Harry Child at Middletown.Tho case was brought by tho Townshij:of Middletown against Faigene Mngee,to compul him to support a child norrto Carrio Striker, an unmarried womanThe township claimed that Magoo, whwas recently marriod, was the lather o!tho child, but tho caso was decideiagainst the township. -

Suicide at Koyport.Joseph Mnuror, a well-known inn

keeper of Keyport, committed suicide onMonday morning by shooting himself inthu head. Mnuror, who was 57 years oago aud had been in business in Keyporfor 81) yearn, was found lying dead in tluhank yard by his wife at about six o'clock,By his side was a five-barrelled revolver,with four chnmhoni londod, For mauyean Mnuror has suffered terribly wita cancer in tho face and had two onrratlouB performed without oxporionclnAny rellof, Coroner Jeliu P, Cooper liolan innuost on Minday evening^ the, juryfinding that the deceased "came ito his

by hUjown hands.

Jrxi VttrkuT wax ifl town imThursday.

Bfahop O'Farrell, of tho New Jersey Di-ocese of the Koin&n Catholic Church, wasin town on Friday. Heis visiting the fam-ily of Mr. Joee F. deNavarro, of Eum-Bon. The bishop is a very learned man,and is looked upon as an authority inhistorical matter*.

Mr. Wm. D,'Hartnett is spending hissummer vacation with his parents atColt's Neck.

Mr. Geo. McC. Taylor, son of the Hon.Michael Taylor* of Holmdel, is. now thecivil engineer over a section of the P. S.andN. E. B.R. .

Mr. W. J. Kellett reported the BrightonBeach races for the United Press Associa-tion. •

Bishop Simpson, of the Methodist Con-'erence, is stopping at Ocean Grave.

Commodore K. M. Whiting has com-menced his Sunday trips between BedBonk aud Brooklyn in a row boat. TheCommodore and his wife are summeringat the Globe Hotel. •

Albert, the seventeen-year-old son ofJennings Holmes, a well-known journal-ist of Quebec, Canada, was drownedin Metedeconk river on hist Friday.

Edwards, the well-known long dis-tance walker, has taken the place ofCrawford, the former bar-keeper of Capt.James H. Corey, ut the Hotel Bellovue.

Halstead Brown, whose face has beenfamiliar about the Globe Hotel for thopast fourteen, years,,is very ill. It is tobe hoped that his genial facu will soon bewen in its accustomed place.

Mr, John S, Hubbard, who has beenseriously ill, is convalescent.

The Uev. Albert Wilson, of Chester,Vermont, isspendinga fow days in town.

Mr. Aaron Oaborn, for many years em-ployed by Wm. A. French & Co., hnaiccepted a position with Field & Bur-rowes.

Miss Mary Aldrich, of Brooklyn, isvisiting friends in Red Bank.

Mrs. Albert lloe, of Brooklyn, tho wife)f "Isaacs," the well-known writer ofDie Times, is visiting Mrs. Will J, Kel-lett, on Bridge avenue.

Ocean Grove now has an attorney-at-l&w.

Mr. A. B. Stoney has re-ORsumed the;«)sition of superintendent of tlio Key-[wrt and Now York steamboat line.

Miss Margarut •Smith, of Matawan,carex for a number of the children sentout of New York city l>y the Tribunefresh air fund.

Miss Josio A. Brown and Ed. M. Strong,>( Keyjiort, have been on a trip to Da-kota.

The young laiiion of Keyport arc nd-licted to the use of slang.

Oscar Wilde recently honored OceanBench with his presence fur several days.He was tho guest of Mr. Isaac Hender-son.

Gen. Grant'8 mother is at present so-journing in Ocean Grovo.

Tlie Rov. Wni. Riloy, of Holmdel,"de-iies that he Is a relative of Dr. Riley, theveterinary surgeon who was recentlykilled by the cars at Long Branch.

Notes from Long Branch.The little settlement in the rear of tho

Ocean Hotel. Long Hraucli, commonlyalhil ••Dublin,"' is a pestilence breeding

iJHit. Several |>eoplc are sick thoro withnularin, and one family nnmed Kennedy,eft the place lifter contracting typhus

fmer. TliU year Long Branch has nosanitary inspector, the captain of policohaving to do that duty besides policeiuty.

Where is the magnificent cottflge of 40rooms, which tbo " shore fiend" so re-IK'iitodly telegraphed to the New YorkAssociated Press, President Arthur wn«lo occupy? By the amount of free ad-vertising the collage got, its ownerought to lie able to"rent it for a handsomesum. • -.,

The New York papers aru a little toughu Miles Ross when they intimate that

liis ulleged river iiiiprovemcntHhavel>ct>iithe cause of the lute outbreak of typhoidfever at the Hotel Bellovuo.

(ion. HaiKht, the public prosecutor,should see that the saloon of Noah Tay-lor, adjoining Swift's Hotel, at tho High-lands, is closed. The placohas uo license;t is kept open Sundays and week days,

it is patronized by tho lowest classes, andI ho propriet .r hoiwtH that lie, carrim tboiMMirt in his pocket. Oon. Huiglit Inti-mated that he would close, tho saloonshould it open in doflauco of the law.

Miles Itoss and tlie almost defeatedHon. Mr. Harris, had a jolly timo of itut the Ocean House last Sunday with aiiumbur of Miles'a coustituentH. Mileshas promised Warren Loland to got onappropriation to build a breakwater inf runt of the Ocean Hotel. This tickledWarren, who repeatedly "sot'em up"for the two Harlwr Bill Uemls and theirfrionda, and all of them got pretty jolly.

Commissioners' Mooting.At llui hut meeting nf tho Board of

CommiRHionorH, held on Thursday evott-ing liiHt, tho entire Bmird, with tho ex-ception of Commissioner E. T. Field,was present. Tho application of Abra-ham Docker for n Bullion license wasgranted, and his bond approved. Noother business win transacted, with thoexception of punning the following bills:

Iio.ooT. \V. Tlmx-.tcmortMi,fino. I,. Wmid,M. (;. Tlmmiuoli,J .W. Mount A lino.,JameM Riluy,AMxirtl'opu,Jolin A. Iiubtiard,James Klnirnljury,OU).' L, AV(KXl,J. K. rattonwn,John BiQliiti,Dniilol llnrnolt,

Total.

Awt.Mamhiu-duty::.

23.1O13.80fl.tXV4.00

07.88.4.(10U.PQ11.00

en.oo09 00

tm.au

Mrs. Andrew Brown's New Dock.Mrs. Andrew Brown, of Brown's Dock,

has canned a uo\V dock to bo built ontho site of thn old one at tUntiplnco.Tlio now clock has turnouts for drivingon nud oft tho Btfuoturo, oonvenioncoawlllc|i tlie gld dock did not have, Thebridgo yttm Hull t' undtr • the "supervisionpf Mr. y?, U,\ Cooper, of a b W t > kT?M ttwar^ed thoOroe

Trying U> Mrito* • « Ofllew,Tt,w*i*y H, A. WhiiJt -nut fit.

&& (Umtrtd 11/J04 in «. puaiUaiy exhilz-rated condition, and insisted on beingallowed to go in and take dinner withthe guests. On aocoont of bis conditionthis was refused when he began to makea vtieturbanta. An officer was sent for,and White was arrested. Justice Childbeing away from Bed Bank at the time,and there being no other JuBtice of thePeace in Red Bank, White was taken tothe lock-up. On the way he offered theoffioer $25 to let him go, but thia was re-fused. White had just come into pos-session of a legacy and this was probablythe reason why he was so generous inhis offer. On 'Squire Child's returnWhite was brought before him and fined

Aged Twins.Joseph and Samuel Lippjncott are

twin brothers. They were born in May,1800. On Saturday afternoon they stoodtalking.together on Broad street. Al-though eighty-two years of age theycould readily paSB for men of bixty-flve

* years. Joseph resides at • Little Silverand ia a bachelor. He is well-to-do inthis world's) goods, but still makes a pre-tense of earning liia living by oystcring.Samuel resides at Iluttsville, Warrencounty, and is a fanner, lie also is incomfortable circumstances. He hasbeen married three times and had nine-teen children, fourteen of whom arestill living. During the late war, six ofhis sons Itoro arms in the. cause of theUnion. Of tho living children four arosettled in Illinois, three in Iowa, and therest are scattered throughout the Union.

Mtm& Of

Riverside Seminary.In our advertising columns will be

found the fall announcement of Mrs. E.II. Perkins's Riverside Seminary. Thisinstitution has always sustained a goodreputulion for the educational advan-tages it offers to parentR who wish toplace their daughters in a seminarywhere strict attention is paid, not onlyto the scholar's advancement in her stu-dies, but also to the moral and physicalhealth of the pupil.

On the Road to Fortune.Mr. John Willy, of Middlctown, ship-

ped one thousand pounds of Tullmungrapes to New York on Friday lout. Theywere sold at twelve cents per pound,making $120 that Mr. Willy received.This gentleman has a two-acre vine-yard of this variety of grape, whichwill yield him about nine tons of fruitthis season. The Tnllman grape was in-troduced in this section several vears agoby Mr. Edward Ueukmun.

Alleged Private Bars.VanDyke'B Hotel iife fa'abriiiht i« 11 li-

cenited hotel, which paid $150 for per-mfcaiou to sell liquors, but was instructedby the cnurt not to keep a public bar.The Peninsula House, Hotel Shrewsburyand Octagon lintel at the same place arenot licensed houses, yet it is alleged thatthey keep private bare, not caring a centfor the courts.

Arrcstod for Perjury.AI the May term of court Mr. Corey

3ipplJA*l for a license. His applicationwas opposed 011 tltt* grounds that thesigners were not all freeholders and thathe w:is guilty of Helling lujtior on Hun--day. Mr. Corey testilieil timl lie did notviolate the ttundity law and his lifelinewas granted. On Tii'-silav night a war-rant was issued for his arrest on u chargeof jierjirry preferred against him liyOeo. S. Hanfonl, his former bartender.Thero are wiiil to IM> Hewral witnesses toprove that he testified falsely before thecourt. Bonds were given fur his appear-nnce at tht! Outolier session of the court.—Seabright Sentinel,

To n KKIHSTKU reporter Mr. Coreystated that his arrest was a conspiracyon the part of Mitllin Paul and C. Stokem,tho proprietor of tho Hotel Shrewsbury.Lost spring Mr. Paul made an assaultU|X>n Mr. Corey, drawing a pistol uponhim. Paul was indicted, pleaded mmvult contendre, and was fined. "Stokem,''said Mr. Corey, "got in my debt lastsummer and this spring at one of yourJustice's courts at Red Bank I sued himand obtained two judgments which havenot yet been satisfied." Mr. Corey fur-ther stated to THE KEOIBTKK reporterthat when Paul made tho remonstranceagainst the Bellevue receiving a license1

•on the ground that liquor wan sold thereoil (lie Snhbath, that he stated to thocourt that lw sold more, liquor on Sun-day from the fact that on that day hohas from tlfty to seventy-five more gueststhan during the week days. It is claimedby neoplo living- in Senhright and wholook upon this last move against Coreylisa petty persecution growing out ofanimus mid jealousy, that liquor is soldnt private liars in the Ilotel Shrewsbury,kept by Mr. Stokem, and the PeninsulaHouse, owned by Mr. Paul, not only toguests, hut in many instances to tho out-side public.

Stealing a Sail-Boat.(rY«m the SecUirluM Sentinel.)

On Saturday 'evening Jerry Prico, ofJersey City, who has boon visiting Son-bright for a few days, made up bin mindto return, and ln;iug short, of the neces-sary funds to pay his passage took twodollars ami some Bhirtt) from a ilsh hut.From there, ho went to where Mr. Johnllustecd's uail-hoat was lying, and tookout tin- moat in order that ho mightpuss under the drawbridge. Aftor get-ting a, enfo distance from tho bridge hehoisted sail and started lor Jersey City.Mr. Busteed missed his boat on Sundaymorning and at onco suspected Prico ofhaving taken it. Mr. Myrn Minugh

' knew where Prico lived and ho and Mr.Thou. Busteed took the first train forJersey City, where they found both thoman und boat. They returned with theboat nt 4 n. m. on Monday. They allowed Prico to go on his promise noverlo ooniu to Suabright' again. Pricowon arrested on Monday on tho com-

n" 'nl of W. J. Browor, from whom hustolen Homo clothing, and returned

here by Dotoctlvo Piorcw. After a hear-ing before Justice Howland lie was com-mitted to await tho action of tho GrandJury.

< » * •

Elberon'a Statlstlos.Mr, Louis 11. Brown, the father of El-

boron, relates the followiug curious foots:"Elberon was oet,nblinhod six years ago.Not n death has occurred among the cot-tagers slnop its establishment,' not aniarrlago has boon Bolomnliod there, nor

Tti« eUw£-iuuU» of St. Luuis held a pic-nic at Sharpshooter's Grove, Missouri,on August loth. The policeman in at-tendance said aymnatniilugly: " Thisis the quietest crowd I ever struck. • Ifall the picnics in this neighborhood wereas quiet and the attendants so well be-haved, the lives of policemen and thepublic would' not be endangered everySunday."

The walking-beam of the new steam-boat "Kaatenkill," of tlieNew York andCatskill line, broke Friday night. Onepassenger was fatally scalded by escap-ing steam and several others were aeri-ouBly injured.

One boy wag killed and flvo people in-jured Friday night near Olney, 111., bythe collision of a railroad train and asleeping-car which had become detachedfrom it.

Senator Benjamin Hill, of Alabama,died last week from cancer on thetongue.

The Utah Commission has arrived, atSalt Lake City, and the Morruan churchhas engaged four lawlirma to defend thecounty officials who sire nliont to losetheir positions under the provisions ofthe Edmunds bill.

The consumption in the United Statesof whiskey amounts to about 70,000,000gallons per annum.

A number of Btrikes are reported inthe coal regions and others are threat-enod. . .'

Eighteen million menhaden have beentaken to the oil factories on Barren Is-land and Promised Land this Beason.

A three-mile sculling race for $500' aside will take place to-day in Little NeckBay, L. I., between George Gaizel andA. H, Moore.

A social reunion of the Shnrplcws fam-ily, the lineal descendenta of Wm. Penn,will take place on the old farm of JohnSharpless, near Philadelphia, on Thurs-day of HUB week.

Captain E. M. Shaw, Chief of the Lon-don Fire Brigade, will arrive on theWhite Star steamor " Baltic " next Sat-urday, Captain Hhaw's visit i» made forthe purpose of attending tho Fire Enp-1 leers' convention, to bo held ill Cincin-nati in September, and also to inspectthe tire apparatus in use in the largercities of tins country

An opium den, kept by a Chinnman inNew York city, was raided by the policeon Sunday night.

It is said that gamblers have had a priite wire from the Saratoga race tracli

for •to*, l/ttt y,jrk?.>i"jr>*>t*

_ W*Mi*os*, late .at the Colenjan House, Asbury Park, busbrought suit in the Supreme Court ofNew Jersey against Bin. Sarah L. Cola-man, the proprietress, upon notes heldi>y him and for a settlement of then- ao-xrant. The cause will be tried the nextterm. ' •

- «l • a»Monmouth county now has seven

hird-class post-offices, which is morelian any other county in the %Btate canboast of. The Asbury Park office re-;civca $1,800 a year; East Long Branch,1,000; Ocean Grove, $1,600; Red Bank,1,000; Freehold, $1,000; Long Branch,1,500, and Keyport, $1,200.

The River and Harbor Steal.(Prom the Baltimavc American.)

81ns a song of Congress,I'orketa yet to fill,

Eighteen million dollarsCrammed Into a bill.

When tlie bill was openedThe Press bofnm to d—,u Wasn't that a iiretty plluTo yank Irom Uncle 8am ?"

The rreaulentdetected rats.Anil slunK tEiO«to Ixild i

Coogreas wliuoknts wicked hoad' . And knocked the veto cold.

vateto Hunter's Point, by which they wouldsecure the names of the winners aboutten minutes sooner than the official an-nouncement. The gamblers would thenbuy |KK>IS on the winner, thus boltiug ona certainty.

A farmer at Port Jtirvis shot and fatallyinjured ayoung man who wot* trespassingon his property on Sunday. The youngman was picking up ap]ili'K under tinfariner'tt trees.

A number of tho New York post officeolllcinls have had their salaries rednce<l.

The "Albatross"iron Htianmliin8uccer<sfully launched liist week. The"AlbntrosH" in 200 feet lonp, 87* f«>tlwnm, 10} feet ilf*|)th of hold, nnd oftons burden, She .ifl built oxpr<*--<!y forthe United StnleB Fish Conimnwion nndwill, oncompletion, leavr for theLoudExposition,stocked with government amipnvati' exhibits. She will b<> providedwith dppp-spn (lrpilpfs nnd other upparn-tus.

An Indian outbreak is threatened inDakotn,nml friendly Indinns have otteredto assist tho troops in putting down tlieothpm.

Brownsville, Toxas, in be: rip; rnvngi'dby yullow fpvor, and Mntamnras, in tliesunn" stale, is visited with the snimdisenBO.

The ofHcial count of the votes cast atIhe present election in Aliilmiim showth« Huccess of the Democratic ticket.

In Clinctaw county, Alabama, on the1.r>th irmt., a hunillouf I>:I|MTK, disclosinRawell-organized plot nninnf,' the neRroosto kill the entire wlnti> population ofllmt county, wai fouuil. The papers werehumlrd to the solicitor uf tin' countyand n meeting uf Ihe white jieople held,at which it was resolved to hang theli>mU>r of tlie negroos, winch was done.The plot had boon in oxistenuu since 1878uiul the conspirotoi-H iimul>cml 400They hud jmwaer, shot and gtina amwere sufHciontly strong to uccoui|iliBlitheir design.

Mr. Herbert Sjioneor arrived in NewYork on Monday, having come to Amer-ica for recreation.

A herd of wild Toxan cattle ran throughthe streets of Hobokcn on Monday. Aboy was tossed and seriously injured.' A number of miners who were onstrike in tlie Cumberland mines, andwho wiiilied to return to work, were, prevented from doing so by about 1,000 otho:strikers.

The strike of the Pun Handle coalruinern against n reduction from foucents to three OPIUM and a half, ended ou.Monday in their defeat, ami all the strik-ers who could obtain work at the. reduc-tion went in that nmrning. Tho strug-gle had lieen the most protracted aud apeimive ever known to tluit district. Inthe four nnd a half months Rincu AprillRt, when tho men laid down their nicksthey have lost in wages $200,000.

Tho freight-handlers of Now Yorkoily met on Monday and paased resolu-tions Having that they had been inducesto join tile Union through false pretencesand denouncing Jeroniiah Murphy andMoNamara. They declare tlmt theBtrike is at an end.

An accident him occurred in tho Hud-son river tunnel which will delay workfor ten days.

Foreign.

The prosperity of England is showrdecrease of ptuiporinm. Tho di

munition in the amount of relief exby tho (

tended to paupern for the pust thromonths amounts to threo per cent. TliLondon population hns not shared in thigood fortune. During the first week inJune the paupers relieved ill the world'smctro|K>lis amounted to 87,2%), ngninHt87,125 in the previous year, an increosoof ninety-seven. 1 '

It in reported that tlio Americanschooner "Dauntli'Bs" was- recontljboarded nnd searched by a party of Span-ish officials at Havana.

Mr. Leigh Smith and llw crew of hliArctic exploring yacht " Eira " hnvo huerescued by the stonmer "Hope" anlanded at Poterheud, England,

A deputation of Irish members of Parlinmonl will Ixi sont tn this country hjthe Mansion Houso Conunitteo for threlief of evicted tenants.

Small pox is nprciiding iu South Af-rica.

Improvement* at Seabright.(J-V)Ht On Senbrtoht Seiltlntt.)

Mr. Gwrgc 8. Scbtt hns sold hlsiiiariivilla and grounds at Monmouth Buaclito Mr. Htulmit, tho well-known druggibt. for tho Hum or $112,500. Mr. Scottwill at once begin a handsome n,nd spa-oloiiR cottage and other buildings uponhls

e u r h e on thu Itumson roadwhoioloiiR cottage and o ng pnew purchase on thu Itumson road.whoioho lias a froutngo of 400 feot, adjnlulngth ld H frmhouse The owner

g jthe old Hanoe farm-house, The owneof,the latter, ono of < tha Messni/Uanoo

i

_ i at home next fallAsking ro-electlon,

tip eom« tho voters nilWith strenuous objection.

Advertised Letters.Mst of letters remaining Iu the Red Honk Tost

Mttoo tor UIB wook undliiK August luth, l«*i.XHtgrvve, M. Mohan, Mrs. John"JIROIIX, James Moufe, Edward[aaditbrov, Mrs. A. ltocd, (.'has.

Hunry, Humes Jos. Bmlth, Mrs. H. F. ,Holmes, Miss Carrie Thityne, Edward

Woods, Miss Emma E.In culling for any at the above letters, please ask

lor advurtlsul letters.1*0*1 unice closes at 8 o'clock.

WM. AI'PLKUATE, Postmaster.

White Bye for Seed IThis Rye if fairly clean of foul Heed.

Price 85 cents per bushel.E. BBEKMAN,

Middletown, N. J.

AUCTION SALEor

ValuableRiver

FrontsAT.FAIR HAVEN

ON THE

HQRTH SHREWSBURY RIVER,ON

Saturday, Sept. 2d, 1882,AT 1 O'CLOCK, P. M.

For particulars, apply Box 42, FAIR HAVEN, N. J.

FOR SALE.A cotbwro or six rooms, about 200 yards from the

(Vntml UuHruod Depot. ^The bouso Is in goodrepair iind a well of good water la on tho premisesTitle perfect. Easy tenns will lie given.

Apply to HR8. A. G. TICE,Broad Btroet, lied Bank, N. J.

W h y W o m a n l'i.o I t .Ikf»u)» they have learned by experience that ItercunKWrie-Hponiietwyt Indigestion,weakness In theclr antl otlmr troulileu of the BOX 1M why womnnurywture UIKJ Patter's tiln^'r Tonic — Homemtrtial.—Atlv. ^ . ^

W a l n u t L e a f H a i r R e s t o r e r .It Is entirely different from all otliera. It la lutt'ur tw wuU;r, und, BH Itu nume indlcatta, tit u {tor-

Vet VegirUilUu Hair n^torer. It will ImmediatelyCrw. thu huud from ull daudruff, restore gray hafr toIts natural color, and produce a how growth whereIt haa fallen off. It dot's nut In any manner affecttin1 noaltli, which Sulphur, Bufnir of Uaui, and Ni-trate uf KUvor nreparaUtins nave dou«. It willcJmnge light or faded hair Iu a few day* to a Deau-tlful gturwy lirowu. Ask ynur drUKfflst for It. Each

.! 1» warranted. HMITH, KLINE & CO., Whole*sale Amenta, HhUadelphla, and C. N. ClUTTENTON,Nuw York.

HIABBIAOE*.M.AI.-K - I1OWMAN.—At IJtllo Silver wednes-

dny, July 'Jlith, by the Ityv. Wm. A. Mahdey, MlmMury Illut'k to Kdwanl A. llowinau, both of LittleHtlvnr.

EDWAItPS-WHITE.—At Eafcmtown, on Tura-Iny, Ati,LVlHt Kth, by tint Huv. James D. Vny, Miss L.Kmma Kdwards, or Katontown, to Hunry White, ofllhti) Hull.

FKHHY-BF.S'DY - A t ABlnirv Plirt. .in Worinea-»y. Anifust Sil, by the Itev. T. II. Taylor, Ml.w

Annli! Kerry, of Pophir, to John II. Bendy, ufMliklk'tmni.

Sli-CDItMirK-I.AWI.EV.-At Um Branrh. onFriday, Aiuru-st n t h , iiylltR It«v, James A. Walsh,Kllim McOonnU'k to Thomas Lawluy, both of Longicmnch.

TAYLOn—Hi>NCE.-At Holmdrl,on Wednewlay,Auirust inn. by tliu IIi'v. Win. Hlli'V. Mlna Julia,ibuiKliU'r of lion. Mlrhuel Taylor, tJi John W. Honce,both of llulmili'l.

TINKI.KIt-MlHlltK.-Al Mldillutown, on Tucs-divy, July *Ji>tli, liy Ju^tlrt; Win. C. Irwln, Miss IjturaS. Tinkler m Jc.bn H«nn>, IKUII (.f New Moiitnouth.

DBAfllS.niTiiWN.—At I:UXH(H;I1I, on Wednesday, Aiifnirtt

titli, Lizzie, daughter of Win. Uniwu, foruwTly of\i'y|n>rt. in ln»r nith yoiir.

t'Al.DWKI.1..—At Kulr Huvuii, tin Wwlne.sdny,Uisnist lilih, Mnrle liunvt'll, dnntliUir of Jmm* andLaura dild^oll, agrnd 0 years and 1) mouths.

OI:«K)KR.—At Matnwan, nn Mtmilay, August "lh,ThiuMcus CnKikH, In hl.s 4(tth year.

HOW.- At Shnmsbury, on Frfilny, Augui't lltli,Mr*. J«!ih Dow.

F1UTZIN0KK.—Ai Muuiwan, on Monday. AugustHi, J iu»bF.. lomiif Jacob F. and Mutlldn FrlUtln-T'T, lipHl .1 |M"llt!l».

HoliNKTT.--Atnml liunL, on Milunlay, Augu.it

IICLICK.— Near roll'w Nwk, on Saturday. Augustl£th, IVultt-r, sun ot ljcvvtoiinii Junu A. Hullck, ngfHl' nmnilirt.

KKNfMI.- At Eiit.»nt'iwn, "ii Tm-silay, August,.*>tli, Amy Kwvih. nj;w\ alx- ut lib yvara.

MAIFHF.U.—Nuiiiiimly, at Keyiwrt, on Monday,August £!Ht, Jd.M'|ih Mnurur, ngt^l 57 years.

M(]RFOHH-At Ilud Hank, on Monday, Aiiguit1st, Mrs. Tli'H. Morftiril, ugt'il tin yuars, il mnuuisml I?J days.OLEAIIY.—At Morrisvllle, on snutnlay, August

19th, Mury (t'I/«iry, npol u yean*.SMITH.—Nour ^Kmtown, on IMinrtay, August

t^th, I.ulu, yoiingt>st daughter of Clitirles and Kllz-U'tll Suilth, I'H-'I 14 muliths.SMITH.—AtsrabrlKht, »n Hatunluy, August lUtb,

Miirlion smith, iiu.il l.i yvani.SUTIIPEN.-Al Marll»n>, on Tuesday, August

rtth, Mrs. Aim siinihen.TlLTON.-Ni-ar MiiWlMimn, im Sunday, August

13th, jiimittiiin Tilton. ugtM i>7 yt' ire aud 7 months.WELCH. At llolmilpl, on Tuesday. August liith,

MaU'l i;., lufnill duughter of Mrs. Win. I'. Welrb,of rtraihold.

WHITE.—Near Katwilown, on Monday, AugustHtli, Miss Alice Whit.'.

WHITE.— At North I/ing Dninch, on Friday,August istli, licnjaiiiln White, ugtxl dl years and (Iluimtlis.

ESTATE OF WILLIAM H. CONROW,DF.CEASED.

Notice Is hereby given that the account! of theBUbBCliber. administration of aald deceased, will beaudited and Btated by the Surrogate and reported tothe Orphans' Court of the county of Monmouth, cmTHUU8DAY, OCTOBER TWELFTH, INK!.

JASPER BISAY.

O1 RULE TO BAR CREDITORS.EXECUTOR'S NOTICE.

William Pinurd, executor of Amelia H. Pintard,deceased, by order of the Surroimto of tbe countyof Moninouth, hereby (fives notice to the creditorsof the said deceoaed to bring In their debts, demandsand claims against the egtaw of said decedent, un-der oath or affirmation, within ulne monthB fromtlie TENTH DAY OF AUI1UST, 1882, or they willl>e forever l»irn«l of any action therefor acalnHt thoKild executor. WILLIAM PINTAKD.

The Finest Excursion of the Season II0NA ISLAND,

WEST POINT,AND

NEWBURGH.

Navesink Lodge, No. 39 J.O.O.F.OF RED BANK, WILL MAKE AN

EXCURSION TO

lona Island, West Point S NswhurghI1Y

Tlu> 1'eniini/lvfitila Half road andSteamer "Jllchartl Stockton,"

ON

Tuesday, Sept. 5 , 1812 .EXCURSION TICKETS,

From all points south of Little Silver, $ 3 . 0 0 ;iulf-tlckela, 9 1 . 2 S .

mm Ultlo Silver, )11 lied llank, }• * 1" MlUdli^Um-n, )

»5,

Half-Tickets, 91.OO.

Riverside Seminary.Faintly, Hounllng nnd Day Schitol fur yiumK Imllea

nd children, Moutncmth St., lied Hank, will Iw re-operunl on Wednesday, September 13th,

Tlw IIIUM( (if study Is crnnprclionslve enotitrli inmt'ot (]<(> wnnt.s ef ull iiiffM of m^KKil-Ilfe. eoinprlslnnt'ltimfutury aud lilfj;hur EujrUsh Uniuchvs, t'liwaU-sami Modern ljuiffiiuffy.s MU.HIC, Itoliitlnp nnd Dniw-

Tlit> iiiethfHi of Instruction \* sucli IIN IOIIK I'liHTf-cmii ha» invvitl thu miRit Hmvi'ssrtil; tliu work inIMIOI) dt>|tiiriiiu>ut l>olnu ilu»n»it(rh niitt HO arruniftnliw to pi-uiMir© Iht* puvll to pursue nur studies In any

I'ffll O|M>11 tO W D I I l f l l .

siKHiul tttioniion Is jriven U) tho Primary deimrt-ment, und to tin; culiiviitlon of tvrrwt hablU oflioiifflit ninl cxprt^Miou.

Ktifl. doiNtnitieni is under cumiwutnt und oxptiri-

Puni'liiallty mum Ins nHjulroil fnmi day tfiiolrtra,wltlumt which it la IinjMVvsiblr to Nct-iirc a (it»rhitundiirU of ;*W!ohirshfi>. Apply to

M1LS.M. E- PEIIKIN'fl,

SALE OF LOTSAT

BREVENT PARK,ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS.

UOl U)TS TO BE SOU) ON , EASYTERMS.

Thursday, August 31st,Thorn wil l 1H> nffuivd nt

PUBLIC SALE,en Easy Terms, S01 ixilB nt llnivonl Pnrk, niUilnlni(ilennhlo I'nrk, Atlnnllc IIlKhlnnibi, Manr of thololl

FRONT ON SANDY HOOK BAY,ami llio loin will nvornKu •— —

60 BY 170 FEET IN SIZE.

There urttl fte 110 rettrtction what-ever tn tho titles of thene lotn'J I

roni Hazlet, 1** Mnunvun, > $ 1 . 5 0 ." Smith AnilKiy, )

Half-Tlcki'ta, 75 lent*.

Don't forget tlio date :

Tuesday, Sept. S, 4882.Train leaven 1'oliH rleaNinl 0.«> A. M.

" Manawiuan 0.4fl "" " Ken Glrr i\.w "" '* Atfliury I'nrk

" l^llg ilram-li" " IlmnrhlHirt" " Little Silver

" lied Hank" Middletown'• Httzlct

" " Matawan

T.dil7.1.',7.17"JM7.307^87.457.B0

Smith Amboy 8.00

ncturnlng tnuti leaves Jersey cuy in n.30 r. M.

COMMITTEE:JOHN L. WHEELER,SAMUEL I1UU1IEM,JOHN 8. BAINTON,

CIIAS. A. DUBOIS,JOHN PEY,JOHN W. CHANDLER.

FERTILIZERS.GERMAN POTASH SALTS,

Land Plaster and Paris Creen,STONE AND OA8 LIME,

North Hirer Bine Stone Flagglng.Cnrl),Glitter and IilnteU.

At RED BANK STEAMBOAT WHARF.Coal and Wood Constantly on Hand.

J. EDWARD ALLAIRE.

PARKER'S

Thiielegaxtdnsthigb prdoRd by ihowwhohavo used it; to *Bf.timibr aiticle, on «o-kaunt of Iu superior[cleanliness and purity.It contaiaa nuteriaUonly that are beoefidalto the scalp and bibandalways

Parker's HtlrBabun b finely perfumed and bwananted to prevent falling of the hair and to ra.move dandruffand itching, HIKOX ft Co.. N.Y.

Mo. aid «1 tun, at talm la Irafi «M audldaas,

PARKER'SGINGERTONIC

ft StatflatW* Htltlh iMlafraaafh RMtaW.If you are a mechaaic or fanner, mrn out with

overwork, or a mother run down by family or nounhold duties by TARKsa'a (iiNcia Tome.

( I f you are a lawyer, minister or basinen nan «r-luusMd by mental strain or atunow caret, do not takelntodc«tlngiumul»nu,butuie Patker'aGiiieerTooio

¥ If you have Consumption, Dyipepda, Kheuma.ibm, Kidney Complainls, oranyQuordtroflbehingl,latomach,bowels, blood or nerrci.PAitKa'll'g CINOBSITomcwUI cure you. ItitlhoCrcaleitBloodFurite«l4 Hit l u t aU Sarnt C«i|k Cm t w UiMkI If TOuarowiHinitnway fh>m>(e, dotipadca orany aucase or weakneaa andnauba astbnulanttaka'iGnloaa TONIC attneei It will larlforate andbuUd'YOU up from Ihe first dose but will never intoxicate,i It baa tamd hundreds of bves i It may aav* y o m .• CA<mONt-B<fM>l]«Mr!iUi.r»>t»H<>Uri'TmblaaaastMtaflaeinlrrawltalanaUlalatiU n l fraa anMallwi si iUtrr slaw.

euAT $krma (urixa MIUB IHK

F L O R E S T O N

v/mvn

A. tTSEKCH & CO,,

WHOUUUB DEAXEB8 IN

FOREIGN & DOMESTIC LIQUORS,

FOREIGN & DOMESTIC LIQUORS,

FOREIGN & DOMESTIC MQUORS,

H0TTLEB8OF

ALE LAGEB BEER AND MINERALWATERS.

BOTTLERS OF

ALE, LAGER BEER AND MINERALWATERS.

SOLE AGENTS FOR THE FAMOUSHERMANN BREWERY

LAGER BEER.

W. A. FRENCH & CO.

COR. BROAD AND FRONT STREETS,

RED BANK, N. J.

West End Hotel,COR. R. R. AVE. AND FRONT ST.,

CHAS. G. DENNIS, Proprietor.

Fine Wines, Liquors and Ci-gars.

Liquors Sold In Quantitiesof less than 6 Calls, as

Heretofore.

Brunswick, Bnlku >V Co'» Bil-liard and Poo l Tables.

DRY GOODS.

Black Si

R. T. SMOCK

HAS JUST RECEIVED A SPLENDIDLINE OF ENGLISH CRETONNES,ONLY 28 CENTS A YARD, FORMERPRICE BEING 38 CENTS.

Black Si

Riverside Grocery,OCEANIC, N. J.

Patterson & Son,Dealers In

DRY GOODS,Plain & Fancy Groceries,

PROVISIONS, &c.

A Large and First-class Stock of Goodsat Reasonable Prices.

Patterson & Son,OCEANIC, N. J.

TO RENT.Furnished Rooms In tha Mansion House, with

privileffu of ltltchun, dining-room, carrlago housoand stable. Lawn aud river front; Rood noning,boating and bathing; Only iivo minutes' walk (ramthe Now Jenur Control Depot at lied Bank.

Apply at Soffd'e Grocery Store. Shrewsbury Are.

TO BENT.A house with lour moms and large work shop and

cellar, fronting the river at Newman Springs, & milefrom tho New Jersey Central Depot at Red Bank.

Apply at Soffol's Grocery Store, Shrewsbury Are.

ulhOr ^Xdr IMh ta Mar Ktna,

wmiajn Pin tart. AdmluMnlor of DUaPlnuitf,ceased, baring oxhlbtted to this Court, muter <M&

a juit and m e account of tbe penosul —*-*tdebu of U>e Mid decedent, wherete It a»*V> tbattbe peraonal eatala of ssJd deeeuad ts nwofljcleat lo

SyWdebB. and requested the lid ottneOawttaB pronlsea, it Is therefore ortered mat all penooi

lnteraated in tbe Una*, tenementsmenu of the amid daraeaed, eapear before Uae Courtat the Court Beo« In rreahoM, on TBDBSDiT.SEHTEM DEB TWE.STY-FlBSTTl'iiKf to show causeWhy so niucli uf the landa, tenetrwntfl and herorlfta-menta and rtixi ealau of the aald (leagued ahall notbe sold an will be suIOclent to pay her debu, or theresidue thereof, as the ca«e may require.

By tbe Court, DAVID 6. CRATES,8urregiue.

"JN RULE TO BAR CREDITORS.ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.

John 8. Hubbard, adminiatratorof Wilson SprUur-.^en, deoeaaed, by order or the surrogate ot thecounty of Honmoulh, hereby pivetf notice to thecreditors of the aald deceased to bring In Uxjlr debts,demands and claims against the estate of the aaMdecedent, under oath or afflnnatkm, within ninemonthfl from theTHIRTIETH DAY OF JUNE, 1HH2,or the? will l»> fomver barred of any action Uiereforagainst the said administrator.

JOHN 8. HUBBAB.D.

oRDER TO SHOW CAUSE.

JOSEPH W. CHILD,

Bread, Cake and Pie Baker,BROAD ST., RED BANK, N. J.

Only First-Clans Material Used in all• Good*.

A FULL BTOCK OF CAKE AND CIUCKEM 0 1ALL KINDS CONSTANTLY ON HAND.

' WaRon» run to all towns and villages In the oel«h-borbood of Ked Dank, from which my goods maybepurahaaod. JOSEPH W. OBXLD.

Monmoulh orphans Court, June aoth, MayTenn.lUBJohn 8. Hubbard, admlnlatrator uf Wilson Bprtnk-

steen, oeoeaaed, having exhibited to this Ouun, un-der oath, a Just and true account of tbe peraonal es-tate and debts of the said decedent, whereby It ap-pears that tlie personal estate of said deceased la ln-Mifflclent to pay his debts, and requested tbe aid ofHie Court !• the premises, tils therefore ordered thatall pttixma mttrmlMlin tlie lands, tenement* andhcrodiuineiita of the said deceased, appear beforethe Court at the Court Houseln Freebold,onTHUR8-OAT, SEPTEMBER SEVENTH, 188!, to SHOW causewhy so much of the lands, tenement*, heredluunentaand real estate of the aald decmsed shall not be soldas will be sufficient to pay his debts, or the residuethereof, as tbe case may require.

By tbe Court, DAVID 8. GRATER, Surrogate.

o,N RULE TO BAR CREDITORS.EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE.

Mary E. Collins, Executrix of Andrew J. Collins,deoeaaed, by order of the Surrogate of the county ofMonmouth, hereby gives notloe to the creditors ofthe said deceased to bring In their debts, demandsand claims against the estate of said decedent, underoath or affirmation, within nine months from theTWENTV-BBVENTH DAY OF JUNE, 1888. or theywill be forever barred of any action therefor againstthe said executrix.

MARY K. COLLINS.(Please present claims to John W. Hount, Bed

Bani,N.j:) •

ESTATE OF SAMUEL HOPPING,DECEASED.

Notice is hereby given, that the accounts of JamesR. KloU, deceased, late one of the Executors or saidSamuel Hopping, deceased, will be audited andstated by the Surrogate, and reported to the Or-phans' Court of the county of Monmouth, on THURS-DAY, THE UGVEHTH DAY OF SEITEHBEB, 1HH2.

WALTER T. KLOTZ,THEODORE P. JACKSON,

Executors of James It. Klotz, deceased.

ESTATE OF GARRET VANDORN,DECEASED.

Notice is hereby glveu, that the acoounta of thosubscriber, administrator of aald deceased, will beaudited and stated by tho Surrogate, and reportedto the ()rphaua court of the county of Monmouth,onTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7TH, 18&2.

HORACE B . VANDORN.

oN RULE TO LIMIT CREDITORS.ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.

William P. Yallalee, administrator of Charles H.Yallalee, deceased, by order of the Surrogate of thecounty of Moninouth, hereby gives nouce to thei-redltnni or tho said deceased to bring In their debts,demands and claims against the estate of said dece-dent, under oath or amrmation, within aix monthsfrom the SIXTH DAY OF JULY, I«M, or they Willbe forever barred of any action therefor against thosaid administrator.

WILLIAM P. YALLALEE.

/"\RDER TO SHOW CAUSE.

Monmouth Orphans Court, June Otb, In May Term,

William P. Yallalee, administrator of Charles H.Yallalee, deceased, having exhibited to this Court,under oatb, a just and true account of the personalestate and debu of the satd decedent, whereby itappears that the personal estate of said deceased IsInsufficient to pay Ms debts, and requested the aidor the Court in tbe premised, It Is therefore orderedthat all portion!! Interested iu the lands, tenementsand hcrudluiimmtd of the said deceased, apitoar be-fore tho Court at the Court House In Freehold, onTHURSDAY, 8EITEM1IEH SEVENTH, 1«83, toshow cause why so much ot the hinds, tenements,hereditaments und real estate of the said deceasedanal! not be sold as will be sufficient to pay Ills debts,or the residue thereof, as tbe case may require.

By the Court, DAVID 8. CRATER.Burrogate.

LAW OFFICE OF J. L. WHEELER,Commissioner for State of New York,Spinning & Patterson's Building,

COR. BROAD AND FRONT 8TS., KF.U BANE.Pursuant to a Supplement to an Act, entitled "An

act to authorize the appointment of Commissionersto take the acKnowledgement or deeds and Instru-ments of writing under seal," approved on the four-teenth day of April, A. D., 1838. Pamphlet laws ofPennsylvania 1H3D, page ftt. '.,

Notlco is hereby given that I hare been appointeda Commissioner for thu State of l>ennsylrania, withmy office at Red Bank, Monmouth Co., New Jersey.

JOHN L. WHEELER.

BOOTS AND SHOES.

Red Bank Shoe Store.S. MILLER,

Dealer in

BOOTS AND SHOESBROAD STREET, RED BANK.

I have on hand a full stock of

FlHC SllOCN,

CongreH Gaiters,Slippers,

Rubber Booti.

Coarse Boots for Farm Work.I wish to assure tho public that I still do

CUSTOM WORKand can glvo better satisfaction than ever before.Hoots and shoes for Gentlemen and Ladles mode ofthe best material, In tbe beat manner and at LOWPRICES. Bepalrlug neatly and promptly done.

8. MILLER, BROAD STREET.

L. HERMANN,

Practical Boot and Shoo Maker,would respectfully Inform the people of Rod Bank

and vicinity that be has opened aCUSTOM BOOT AND SHOE STOKE,iu the building at the foot of Broad street

formerly occupied as an office byMr. S. Ketobam,

wtieru ha hopes, by uuuuitacturtnft a good nrttrle,to merit a shore of the public patronaffo and aup*p o r t . . • . . . , . . , . . • ' . , •

Too custom trade of Mr. 8. Miller, ot Broad street,In whose employ I have boon for tho past two yean,will be carried ou by mo. Previous to my engage*ment with Hr. Miller I was employed for nine yearsIn Bomo of tho lending New York houses, and caniruarnteo to give satisfaction.

L. HERMANN.

ADLEM&

KBWDE8ICN8.

HUher trades ai proponklaMal/ law I

Black and Colored Cmtvmare*.

A fun Hue of 1H

Cloth 8erginga for Ladl«a'Suits.

A handsome new dtafonal foods ta all «M W 4a-•Inblaetas4sa.

W« an dlswaylcf * complete Hat of low Hal i

Dress Fabric*.DECIDED BARGAINS.

LADIES'AND GENTS' KID GLOVESfor street and «T«ntB( wear. Also tbe

Poster Kid Clove.Lace and lace goods ta every variety, mdndtnff a

very lame Hoe ot ^ ^

HAMBURG EDGINGS A N D INSER-TION

at extremely low prices.

LADIES' AND GENTS' HOSIERY ANDUNDERWEAR.

ADLEM&COLE,BROAD STREET, RED BANK, N. J.

R. T. SIHOCK

CHOICE GOODS IS POLKA DOT,MULL, FICHUS, LACE AND EM-BROIDERED COLLARS, SPANISHLACE TIES AND FICHUS.

R. T. SMOCK,Cor. Broad and MechanicSreei,

BED BANK.

Grand OpeningOP

Spring and SummerDress Goods,

NOVELTIES.White Goods.BUNTINGS, ~ ~ BUNTINGS,

LAWNS, LAWNS,GINGHAMS,

PRINTS, PRINTS, PRINTS.

A full and complete line of Notion*.Oriental Lacei.

Spanlib Lace.Frencb Lace.

Hamburg; Edgings.Hamburg; i

Ladies' and 6 M T S Kid films.PARASOLS.

HOSIERY. HOSIERY.AT

R. W. COOKE'S,Wild Building,

CORNER BROAD & MECHANIC 8T8.,RKD BANK, N. J.

MILLINERS AND DRESSMAKERS.

FA*LL

MillineryGr-OOIDS

—AT—

•r

Mrs. E. WEIS,IBOMT 8TBOT, » D00B WWT

fiof Auim

««>«•« non«-Girem«pnn at yourJimmy, Wi»I—<Wn*»» (/«•)

The —«• wlio has been 'rotiud with (babqj* half tit* night la likely to fool flat thenoil morning.

When AdoIuliuJ placed bis anus aronudthe uesk of Angelina, bo raid it was fur aneck1* press porpoae.

NeoMaitT knowa no law, and tbst'e wberaueoemdty resembles a good mauy Inn jcrs.—Fnnkfvrt Herald.

A Wasbington Uwjer has obtained a pen-sion for a widow whose linsliand dircl iifarmy worm*,—Bradford SumUiy ilunting.

Soupstone Is ground up flue to give bodyand weight to hotter. " F a n s us the oleo-soepstoueriue, please."—New I/acen Jlrg-

• u u r . ; • - • • ' • • • • • • .

"Saw, Biddy, darling," said' Patrick,"have companion on mo mid be luiuo ;why, your tery heart Buys pity pat, piiyp»U"— Wheeling Journal

The booholor's rofraia—A IBIR ! Themaideu's rornun—Ah ineul—1'hil.nlf'pliiaMirror. The preacher's refrain—"Tboytwain, etc."—Tulrdo American.

Gonstant Deader: No, this Sullivan is notthe man'who launched II. M. H. Phmforo ;this SoUivaa merely lannebcd n " Tun-" Heisn't any. great shakes.—Bmmtrang.

It is a pretty true saying that some menwear the laiee** of their trowserB out iu suni-luer, gotting religion, aud the Kenti* nreworn oat in winter by backsliding.—JiaJt-tnond Independent.

Why She Powders.—Miss Liilliplmce KIIJBBbe Ufaeu powdor merely to Uiku tbo bljiiit) tiifbar face, but Fogy thiukti nho ut.ub it tutake the shine oil On* other women's fuue».—Button Transcript.

A St. Louis niau found in tbe street whatbe thought was tho leatbor belt of n iiywheel,' aud Bold it for old junk. Wliert'iipoua St. Louis girl had him nrreuicdfor bteuiiugher garter.—l/W/iof Tarheel.

^Afa reiiaurajif on a Virginia railroad atraveler threw a piece of a pie out of thewindow, and had to pay $300 for breakingthree ribs of a boy.

pay iVie ii,H pie in Virginia,

aud when it goes off ihuro's a funeral in itswake;—Bhomiugtvn Eye,

A Milwaukee drag ulcrk was lioked Instweek for putting whisky iuaprobibitiouint'scodii, aud fired out of bib biluntion tbo uuxtday on acconut of au " iulluoutial oitizeu "for failing to coiuprcbond tlio signiliciuiceof a wink.—JiUiamington Eye.

Out of twenty New York doctors who wereAskod to give au opiuiou of ice water, sev-enteen nuelared it iill right IIB a buvurufje.Tbo other three wore wealthy and rettiudfor life. Men's opinions are uouietiiuet> con-trolled by circumstances..—jituumiiiytunMye.

There is ft German baron who hns ei^btr-four pairs of trouserii. How lniul lit)would be if be came borne anil fouud tlmtbin wife had giveu away to au iuiii^e-miiueighty-three pairs for a statuette of (Jupidaud Psyche and a bust of Judas Iucariot.—ruck.

When a photographer wants to make hisvictim look as if he in about to have a tootliextracted, be givus his chin au oxuuwreiicb, direuts hib evuu to the coiling uiultells him to " keep perfectly KliU uud look(tgreeable uud pleabuut."—Tutetto Ameri-can.

A bolt of lightning descended, vin the(•tove-pipo, iu the uidbt of a Wyun.MigTerritory family tbo other day, killing thecat aud scaileriug the couteuts of u lieltleof "spring chickeu." Who can holp be-lioviug in special providences, now?—Tu-ledv American.

" Yen," said the gontleman. at the seasideto Inn fricud, " this flirtatiou is gotting t>cri-oae. Evidoutly her mother think* my bunknccount all right. Guu't wo connive it MIUn-.v'll overbear mo ask you for a loau, urnyuu're very sorry, but you can't spure it 'I "—JiusUm Putt.

An agent who baa Bold a Dutchman somegoods was to deliver them at hix residence.Tbe German gave him tbe following direc-tions: " You shootst goes beliiut do church:deu you turns up for a vile till you come toVon house mit a big hog iu de yard. Dot'sxuo. ' You forstoiu r "—MwrningU)n Eye.

"Ah, my friend," said a clergyman to aparishioner who was the husband of a ier-lnegaut, and who had made an applicationfor a divorce, " we should be yielding aud

Tr*ln.

nix* 'A m #i#t*#akooiuoUr« aud ou» a n adiuirud •»tlie train oouei* puiBug into the depot, batwhen •e»n frooi the point of »iew famishedb> the Hartford (,'cmn/U, the upootator Uastonished at the reuponnibllit/ placed Intlio hand* of an engineer, fireman, conduc-tor aud brakemen.

A railroad official, tbe other day, gnveoius interesting figures as to the value of

the midday expreni t om Mew. York, whichwas»fair representation of the fast ex-press train* on the consolidated road.

There were an engine, tender and eightoars. The engine and tender whichare considered together, were valued at$10,000; the baggage oar, $1,000; thepostal car, $2,000 j smoking oar, *5,000 ;the two ordinary passongor oars, $1,000eaoli, and the three palace cars, 915,000each j total, $83,090.

The palace care, put dowu at $15,000,are in many cases, worik an average of$18,000. These oars came Into use soonafter tbo Bleeping oooishos, tbe first beiugDHO.1 in 1803: In Home IUHIBUCCB thoseours have cpBt as high on $25,000 and $30,-000 where the interior workmanship wasvery elaborate

From tbe figure* Riven, It wlll^ be soenthat a comfortable dwelling may be builtfor tlie oost of au ordinary passenger car,and tho money expended for a palacecoa.li would erect a very lwuiluonio brickor lirowu-Ktone-front residence.

U k ait interesiing reflection that thesuf.-iy of tlio ciwtly truiiiH, to say nothingof I ie passoogor, devolves almost whollyU]II>:I one man—tlio engineer.

Tiioro urn other nieii, tlio couduotor,bii(.",'agiMnii«tur, fireman and threo or fourlirukuinen. but tlio liand upon the levor andilie Irnin directing it have an Immense rs-

Klnga at Whltestone.Much coiitroviM*? IIIIH, huvvovor, beou in-

dulged in li.v liist.mniin of Ijomlou as to thoIJIIII iu tlio lJniiipmiiiijj-liaU, Whitehall,wile nee CUarleii Blcpimd ou to the scnllold.Some nay that ho pnsned tlironyli a window,others that tho brick-work wiw disturbed forthe purpose. llerliorl, the King'b faithfuliittenilnut, who was with bin mauler to theond, tells us "tho King wan led all alongbo (jiillurioii and Hiiuqnetiug-uoilBe, nnd

thoro was a passayo broken through, thowall by which ho passed uulo the scnffold."Mr. Joseo nays : " It in perhaps biiuicieiit toobserve Ilint ut the reuovatiou of the Unit-• luotiug-liouso a fact wnn niiuta appiuoiitwhich, I auiiigiuo, will bo considered IIK net-ting the question at rest. Having curioniiyonongh to visit the interior of the bniUltng,tbo walls of which were then laid buie, a

me was pointed out ,to me belwuou tlioupper and lower ueutro windows of uboutsovcu fcot iu height uud four iu bri-iuhh,

f Ut h* la*, tptmibat U Uw intatlaot wan nuickeued • UUlethe whole part •ztoteno* woulU b« broughtto view again. In Mhutration, he ginm atleugth the rtory of the Ignonmt Mrraut^iiiwho repeated whole pmhjn In tbe originalHebrew wbun deranged, of whleh «hecoald not (wall a word in hor «aae mo-uieuts. She seems to hare learned themfrom an eeoentrio miniater1! ropeatibg them•londoa he paced the kitchen floor. DeQuinaey tells a little better than manyotbtrs of a drowning friend reviving hiswhole experience at the seaming approachOf death, with the intimation that nnderimilar excitement this would be the expo-

rienoe of nearly all men, showing that eventhe earliest post still lives. Mauy of ourGorman immigrants lose their nativetongue, bat in the weakness of the lasthonr nothing is more comm6n than its re-turn, with other thronging rocolleetionn of;hildliuod.

The famous William Tennent; of Nowfersey, seemed, at his retnru to life aftorwo days' death, not oven to recognize tho

Ilible his sinter was reading. By aud byliin brother was repeating a pOHSage from aLatin reader, when it burst like a lightningflash upon the strengthening oonsoiousuossf Tonnet that these wore old, familiar

lerm«, and all his forgetfulnesa soon disap-peared.

Niebuhr, the Oriental traveler, when old,oeblo and blind, saw hardly anything, hourflerhonr, but the magnificent uoones of

tho East pictured on his memory. Tbeloudless blue of the eastern heaven, bend-ng so motherly over the vast deserts be-leutb, shone more vividly than when he hadrandored in those scorching rays.Abercrombie tells us of a four years' old

joy, who, uftor being trepanned for a blowm bis skull, lost all recolleciioua of the iu-ury. But, ton years after, deliriumin night back every incident of bis suffer-ng, and h» detailed it all from the begin-ing. When Sir Walter Scott's memory

sooined to have gone, ho waB yet able torecall tho Watts' poems and tbo ScriyturoUSSOUB of his iufanoy, Those facts

i full of suggestions, especially to clergy-

tho bricks of which presented a broken amijagged appearance, uud tho brick-work in-troduced was ovidoutly of a different da:efrom that of the rest of tho building Tlu-iecan bo little doubt that it was through UIIN

,1pasture that CharleH walked to the Istage." A curious history is n.tlache.1 ntho wcathorcook we now sen. Ii w.werected by James II. directly lie linnthat William had ouiharked from Holland,in order that he might see whetherwind blow from tho oast or wont, lor fromthe quarter of tho wind he would juilWilliam's chances of reaching Englnrwhether thoy wero good or bad. A «lnuifemure of the weathercock wns that it Un cross, tlie peculiar symbol of JHUIO»'K roli-giou. Tho cross is uo longer there.— TktCt/rnhiU Magmine.

S a v a g e S u p e r s t i t i o n .

It w uot loug ago that 1 happened to bein n purl uf Ceutrid Afrio* whoro uo whiteunit) had boeu hofore. I was separatedfrom my coiupauious—a hundred miles dis-tuut. War was raging around me; thruail was dilliiult. 1 wished to communi-cate with those whom I had left behind.''Who will return," I asked of tbe nakedsnvnges, " to tho white meu and carry themsomething from mo?" Nuiubors volun-teered, glad to earn a yard of cloth for tlio

A letter was written and offered to aforgiving. There are uo divorces iu heav-j . .en." •' That's the reason," said tho Buffer- ] 0 D i .er, " why I am so anxious to get a divorce J U"«n, aud he was told that it would inform

~ my fricuda of all—that it wonld speak tthorn. He dropped the lettor on the groumaud ran away. Others wore tried, but ilwas useless. A great crowd assembledaud, ut a safe distance, gazed at tho littli

here."—JJloomington Bye.

"When did Oeorgo Washington die?'asked on Austin teacher of a large boy. " Islie dead7" was' tho astonished reply." Why, it is not more thau six mouths agothat thoy were celebrating his birthday,aud now he is dead. It's a bad year onchildren. I reckou bis folks let him cutsomething that didn't agree with him."—Texas Siftiugt.

The Sultan of Morocco has three hundredand sixty-four wives, and only noeds onemore to have one for each day in tho year.

fllranga 9t**Vm of NUtnery.A/>

tUUam ID S»W Tote O w a l « . K . « ( « . / , toot< Ltertj mrwt; 1\a.iwrtvmntaB. R, to* of OoM-

THE UNBOUNDED

I ' O P L ' I J A K I T Y OF

micock's Porous Plasters?Because tln\v have proved themselves the

HoHt Extcni.'il Homuily ever invented.

They will cure asthma, colds, rhpunia-

tis-ra, iieunilKiu, iiml any liwal pains.

Applied t<i the small of the hack they

iv infallible in Bnck-Aeho, Nervous De-

liilit.v, ami all Kidney troubles; to the

pit of the stomach they are a sure cure

for Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint.

Allcock's Porous Plastersare painless, fragrant, and quick ti> cure.

Beware of imitations that blister and

bum. Get A L L C O C K ' S , the only

Genuine Poroua Plaster.

TBAllla ME IIP M M .imn Hew Turk, via O. B. B. <* N.JL. T«,»00

-|«O,«O0, 4«,«<»p.lll.; W.

»,e<oa.nr4 1100 m.; » « ,9

8 60,600,8Kewark, BroaS Street Button,at71115a.m.; » « , 4 U M » , 6 0 7 p.m.;,Street Station, 101, »OS ajs.; U80, 3(7,417, 8 8 8 , 8 * pjn.South Amboy at 4M, « 44,84a, 9 57.116S,a.m.; 111, S it, 4 W.T08,868,« 0» pjn.

W* turn bound te Utmd,Lottfto*« who cmn follow. VanAerveer, The Uty& 'Bsunte Bewetene,

On tttYEBStDB AVBtWZ KBD BAVK N i

HQja.ln.: i *M,*4a , 4 85, 4 46, 5 87, 6 68,711, II) (II p jn .

•' Ooean Grove M « 08, «&5, 7 28,7 49,769,6 54,1047aJD.; IS 10,8W, 408, 427, 5IB, 5 40,<!87, 944p.m. .

•• I-olul Pleasant a t 0 48,6 82, 70S, 719, 785,831), I085, l lB6ajn . jS!00, 845, 409, 800,6 IS, 635, Oi l p.m.

TBAIN8 LEAVE BED BANK.For New York at 6 34,7 SO, 800,815,8 25, 9 88, 11 17

a.m.; U BO, 2 02, 4 40, 4 55, 6 60, II It, 7 SSi 10 15,

" Newark at 984,7 80,8 00, 8 16,9 SB, 1117 a.m.;12 50, s! &», 4 40, 4 66, 6 50 6 18, 7 S5,10 15 P.U1.

" Boulli Aiuboy at U iM, 8 00, V SS, 11 17 a.m.;It M, i M, 4 40, 5 00, 018, 7 25, 10 15 p.m.

" Long Branch, (Jvean Urove, sea Ulrt, Mana-•auanand rolnt Pleassnt at 5 27, 7 80, SIS,100H, I0S8, ».UI.; ISiiM, 143, 1)68, 4 21, 4 40,5 IS, 5 28, 5 41, « m, 180,8 41 p.m.

" ' Trenton and Pnlladelpwa, via " Bound BrookKouta," at 6 34 a.m.: s 68, 4 40, 6 60 pjn.

FOR FREEHOLD VIA. FREEHOLD AND NEWYORK RAILWAY.

Leave Bed bank at 800,883,1117 a.m.; 2 M, 440,5 50 p.m.'

Leave Freehold at 6 80. 7 60,1100 a.m.;£33, 428,520p.m.

For further particulars aee tune tables at statloua.J . F. RANDOLPH, Superintendent.

11. P. BALDWIN, O. P. A. O. B. R. of N. J .J. It. WOOD, Q. P. A. 1'. H. R.

TVTEW JERSEY SOUTHERN RAIL-1.1 WAY.

Commencing June 2Clh, 1883.

LEAVE RKD BANK.0 48 a.m.; 5 M p.m. for Fanntngdalc, HoncbBtfUir,Toms Klver, Barnefiat, Ac.

6 JH p.m. for Faruuntplole, MancUeaU'r, Toms Riv-er, Bamegut, Ac.

1 43, 5 50 p.ill. for l*ort Monuioutll.FOR UED BANK.

Leave Port Monmoutli at 6 05 a.m.; 2 47 p.m.• KatoiiK.wn, 7 40, II 0» a.m.; 4 14 p.m.

KarmiinfiloJu 7 17.10 51 a.m.: .151 p.m.Toms River 0 30,10 01 a.m.; H 00 p.m.Wlnslow Junction 0 01 u.m.

W. W. 8TKAKNS, U. P. UAM1WIN.(ien. Supt. (>«II. Pass. AKent.

FREEHOLD & NEW YORK RAIL-WAV.

NEW ROUTE TO FREEHOLD.

TIME-TABLE IN EFFECT JUNE SO, 1882.

Trains leave via. Central Kaltrmtd of New Jerseyfur Frcubuld, Marlboro, lllllstlule. Horgun-

vllle, &c. u» below :LEAVE RED HANK

At 8 00, 0 23, 11 17 a.m.; 3 M, 4 40, 5 SO, 0 12 p.m.LEAVE LITTLE HILVF.lt

At 7M. II !7, II 10 a.m.; 1!47, 4.11, .1 44. 000 p.Ul.LEAVE MIDDLF.TOWN

At 8 OH, V :il ii.lji.; a .Ml, 4 W, 57, » I?* p.m.llKTt UNl.Mi, LEAVE FREEHOLD

For Red Hant, *c.. Ai'., ut II •*, 7 SO, II 00 a.m.: 5 3.1,4 i"i, 5 uil |i.m.

KEYPDKT CONNECrlllN.All tr.iiiw »f Ci'iur.il IliLllr.inil <i>liiur[ilip wltll

n*'W nillnwid rutiuj to Keyiiort via. MiUuuttn.19T l!y the lino lraviinr Ited Itiink nl K no n.m.,

cciinerlinii in miiiie willi the JinuivliurK llrinrli utthe Pennsylvania It.R. for Eii(rlisht4»wn. Jaitn'st'iir^.Tri-uton, i c . J .K. RALPH,

j mi<! IM, IM«2. Sup'l ami Treasurer.

\ UOL'ST. 1H82.

Wehogjintiaaad to mw itoot«f TEAS, 0OT-IBM, SPMB an«J IDOAJU a l a w MM* «

CROCKERT.GLISSW.RE,Decorated W«re mni Tww, -

, COFFEES.Fine Old Mocha, 80c. 3} lbs. f 1.00

4 tb 11100e ,

Best Old GOT. Java, 96o.Best Old Marioalbo, 22o.B t Old M i J 25

} lb . f .4 tba. 111.005 lkw. jl.OOBest Old Maroalbo, 22o. j

Beat Old Mexican Java, 25c. 4Jltw.fl.00Best Old Rio, 18c. M lbs $1.00

SPICES.Pure Pepper. 7c. per quarter

" Cinnamon lie. "" Ginger flc. "" AUupice. 7o. "" Baking Powder..., 9o. "'• Cr. Tartar .8c .

No. 1 Nutmegs. 35c. "ColmanMusUrd... {*.}fc.£*S£

. • . • . . T E A S . . ••Ai the prloea of tuu vary so much we will not quotetoem, but we iruiirantee tnem to give patlJifacuon.

F. 8. MOCK WELL, Manager.

New York Tea Store, fled Bank, N. J.

. (wo or tone Uiuw a> mucn to auBufaature. rieuanlljurn«m'» make 15 to SW that coatnttche»,$SOtopM. 811'p. Dlunona ear-riUKS,000, JSilgagvlauul aui_ w

lated ware, best make, iurjtoat iliauount taken off. tine Jewolrjvnoleiale ratea. Watches and Jewelry n A T Irepaired*

MUSICAL INSTBUMENTS.

JOHN LLOYD, JR.,

JOHN LLOYD, JR., EFRONT 8P., opp. Globti Hotel, RED BAKE, N. J.

HOKT MOXMOUTII STEAM HO AT CO.

Tlie Nt*w Kn>Iirlu and Pr*u>nirer StcanuT,

WM. V. WILSON,CAPT. I1KNJAMIN (iltllifis,

Will run hetvvoen Port Munmmith uiul N'ew York.(f.Mt of Omul Si., l ier 11 S. It.,i u-s [..Hows •

POTCROWrl

STRAWBERRY I ITS.BSET

UllUlratlongjJ.J

:o,•uitiliu 2oT>.viuuiunt

r jtles, botb'new. aoil old.living honest descriptions with

[tittle Silver, 5 . jr.

bit of paper fluttering oil . tlio ground. u Ititi uicdiuiuo," thoy Baid. " It ie charuiod."la mill I tried to reason thorn out of theirterror. Nemo would touch it. " Will nooue," I said, "koop.it uud give it to tliowhile men as they pass tbiB way ?" A yell

HiH h7e is one jjraua rotmiou, and every Jay °f refusal and excited gOBtieulatious auha renewB his ac(|uaintauce with tho wife holast met the previous year. When the Mon-day wusluuK is hung out in tho buck yard of

. tho palace it look like a dry goods btore iu" BU Iowa cyclone.—Luranue CaUijtult.

It iB said that a Lake Bhoro conductorlias a now wny of addiug to liix incomellefore posuing through the train, he eats

awered my roqaout. ^X^hen I Hhull placeit hero in this trco," I said, moving towardit, wliilo the crowd (li»iiurheil iu flight," aud you can poiut it out to tho whitemen when they coine." Eveu this they re*fused to do. My frimuls pushed close tmderlh(A troo, hut uo ouo dared BIIOW thorn thia

.«.1M. '.'.OK

. .iU»i.;.ou

Leave l'<irt MTuesday Nl\\\>dntte.d"y -Jd.Tliunalay .1111-Ttday 4th ..SHturduy :>lh..Muiidity TthTiiiMduyKthWiHUuwlny "HiTburaUr H'tliFriilay lllh ..Sniunlay l i th . . .Mnhdiiy lilh . .ll.'MTui'.*lll>, l.Mll . T.II0Wwlwwlay li.lh T.'»Thursdii)-lTUi...n.mFrlilny IKlh .. !I.I«ISiiiurdayly*ti. ..ti.uoWondny aisi. .. l".3"Tuosdu'y Wit ..l.i^iWwlncsil'y i M . a.i'iTliurwliiyailli •-'.•'*!rndav-'Mli. . . :I.IMS;»lurilny ^'iili . .Tr.u'Munilay Mil . O.i"Tiuwla'y -lull li.i"Wedni'sd'y :i»ih..t.i»lTliur«luy3l»t. ..T.Kl

ljfn IY A*c if '.|Tut.'S<lil> 1st .. H.im a.n

Thurs i luyM H.I») "Friday llli . .lo.ou "^alll^•lu} 6 t h . . l l . i » "Monday 7th....lii.i«i ••TUBMIUJ- Klh M.* ' "

jWlHllKWl') !lUl.ll.i"> "

'Friday iitli ..'.ii)*i "suunlay lan .».mip.nM.u.iluy n t h . . T . I « ' U . I I

•TiH.-sduy i.r»tli . .T.i») "

H

mm0)PI•<

oo>2

The Estey Organ is the Best IThia UnrivulkM Instruuient la for Hale by

ALLSTROM & MORFORD,

who kiH-'p constantly un hiiud a Iaix<-' stm'k of

Musical Instruments of all Kinds,SHEET MUSIC, Etc., Etc.

?IELD & BURH0WE8,Dealer! In'

•UMBEB, LIME, LATH, PLASTER,Vment, Bricks and Drain Tll«, Builders' Hardware,

Unas Seed, * c Mixed PulnU a Specialty. AlsoGeorgia Pino, Ann, Whttowood and Walnut

Lumlwr.Near luillrond Depot. RED BANK, N. t

Instruments of all kinds repaired.

ALLSTROJI & MORFORD,UED HANK, N. J.

FCUN1TUUE.

1H07

KSTAItLrsUED 7"> YEARS.

B. M. UOWPERTHWAIT S CO.,153, 1.13 * 157 CIIATAM ST..

NEW YORK.

v and Retail Dealers In

y l l ilnirwIiiY lTlli. .s.ut) "

Friday lUlh .M.,'10 "Saturday lMh.10.KU "Munilay 21sl ...K.'W "TliB*lay'iM....S.On "Wisin'wl'jr a3d.l«>.i»> "Thuruluyaitli. 10.U0 "fridii)i';lll ...11.110 "Siitiinlny^.th .l-'.'>1 in.Monday iSUi.. .il.'fcia.in.Tiuvdiiy JShh ."•"" "Wwln'ud'ySlUi.ii.oo "Tliiirsilay.'llst. H.IHJ •'

All Imi'li rn-lirht must !»• mill l»'fup' dcllvi-ry.Tinw Tntili« may '»' uiiuilnml at M. u'llrtnu *

Suna, dm WtL^hliigHHi SI., ami at II. I'l'iileriaunu's,320 and 8*! WasliliifUjn St., N. V.

Fn'liflilcrs must im paid nn ttmn puncttiftlly, oathe bunt will lrav« on limn as K'ven In this TtlncTul.K'.

Positively uo free- tickets.FAUK1BCF.ST8.

three or lour rauk onions and takes a j c i m m ,od thing ; and thero it iu probably tochew of plug tobacco. When a Dasseuncr i / , a n • .1 i , * ,liauds him a five dollar biU for ftu-otho lfllH li"yV flu"on"« o u t U o b r a u o h °UhM

conductor just fans him with his breathBUdOHks, "How far are joa going siri"Bud the passenger holds up both huuds,and BUoutB: " Never uiiuil; move ou, youcnii keep the change."—ISrculfard tiuntunj^iariitug.

'.' We're in a piokld now," said n miin innorowd. " A regular jam," Niid auuth'ir"Heaven preservons," raoaued nu old woman.—Boston Star. I never Kauuo 8ttoh auine.—MarslialUwin Elatric Lig/U. " Ycv.inarnni-lado awake uights thiukmg ou it,"•Aid au old niah as ho insisted on puddiu^Ilia fool on her teuderest corn.—DetroitOhnff.. " I t boetH all the droves I hav,ever been in," iutorjoctod an old fanuoV n»lie accidentally trii.pod up a nmiilnn ladyaud " wondered what would turnip ncit."—Tuledu American.

" Edward Athclwald " -wants to knowwhat is meant by tho expression " dam-nod with faint pnuso." Well, Edward,*rhan a gentle-hearted editor, dipping his'pen in neptar, says of tbe journalist nt^ h f th h h

eilttorml Ability and KetieraL in

lig tree, liko uu ovil Hpirit, the aweuiul terrnrof tho tribe.-I'M rill.

-A Study -U. B,

A Strange Announcement.Fri-.iiiiwiiiH in tlio yea r 1770 m n s t have

ln-i'ii vi i l ic/ MI''JIV;H(?II ami uiiiiiHed t o road

tli.! lul i i ioiu^ nini 'r . i i icemeut in tho now

A'neitiutlr Gouritul of January 4th of thatjotr: ''TbiMiM to acquaiut .the public—That nn Mnuduy, tho first inst, boirig thoLodgn (or monthly mooting} Night of thoFree aud Accepted Mnsons of tho Q2d UogUuicnt, held at tho Grown, nonr Kowgnto,(Nuwcaslle.) IIrn. Boll, tho laudlady or thohuuso, broke opon a door (with a pokor)I hat had not beeu n»od for some time pnst;by which means sho got Into nn adjacentroom, miiilo two holou, through tho wall,mid by that stratagem discovered the eo-crets ot FreemaHonry ; and sho, knowingherself to be the first woman in tho worldl)mt over fonnd oat tho secret, la willing tomakelt known to all hor/jox. So nay lndywho in doHirons of lonralng tho doerots ofFreemasonry, by applying to that wcll-loamod womau (Mrs. Dell that ltvod fifteenyean in and about Newgate) may bo In-stxuotod in the secrets of Masonry.—Cham-ber* t Journal

HOW TO ADVERTISE.

Every tni'ivliant and dealer now-a-dayd, If lie cx-

p(y-triN)(lt> much biwlnesH, must advertise. Rome

advcrtlfti in one way and srnno in another. Bat It

has txsen pnjv«il that the most effoctunl method of

a«l viTtlstuff la thmuch tho medium or some well-

printtnl and wldely^lnuilaUjd newspaper. A hand-

somely prtntwl pajier Is worth morn to tho advertiser

tluui one more iioorly prlntod, and tho country paper

ntlnK the Incul nows In an attmctlvo manner

tho advertlwr mnre for his money than dims

n which the local news la mndo a losa lmport-

ant feature.

T H K R E D BANK IlKCISXI'.It com-

blni» all these (fond qualltltvi. It In prlnti*l on bet-

tor p a p o r than any other Muumouth comity Jour-

nal: Its prew work Is al*o oxiellrait, thus mnkliiR It

oimofllicnmst lmmlKoino p n p e r n p r i n t e d

I n ilio a ta to . It haa u very lar^e clrcuilation,

fs of T U B REGISTIiBMllKdln-

trlhuusl In eJiatern Mqnmouth county than of any

other pa|>er. In addition to this It Rocfl among t)i

-Ui-do ctiw«w, ttioso wlio have money to Bpend.

ocal itoivM d o p a r t n i o n t [a inojit caro-

ed i ted , (treat care being token to Rive IU

k UGUHT, 1882.

(Leave New York, finit uf Franklin street.)THE STEAMBOAT SEA BIRD.

Laivc .Vcw Viirk. Leave Iletl i*l?l1.Thiu-sday, Ulth S 00 p.mKrlilay i ' l h . .. A 00 "saturdnv,auth..;ioo "Sunday, vrrth...3 3O ••Monday. * t h . .3 00 '•Tuesday, 2Ulh.. a 0O ••Wed'dny, 8 0 t h . 3 : » "Ttmrsaay, 31st. 130 "

Thursday, &4th..lO oou.m.Frldiiy, iitli ...11 30 "Saturilay, 2'itti.. .7 ffl "Sunday, Wtli . . . . 8 30 "Monday, SMtli....H3d "Tueaduy, litnii... .K W> "Wisl'uday, :»tli .!M>l "Tliursday, aim. .'J 00 "

THE STEAMBOAT ALBEHTINA.Lam -Vfir York. Leave ltrd /t'liilr,

Thursday. 2 1 t h . 8 00 p.m. Tliurolay, iHtn (I.OOu.m,Friday, iitli ! « ) •• Friday, ifcth.... ii MO '•

• — Saturday, a'itli..II••»' "Monday, sMth... <IIW "Turwlay, C

FURNITURE,CARPETS,

BEDDING, ETC.— T H E -

LARCEST ASSORTMENTIN THE CITY OF

Furniture, Cunx-'t". Bodding, Oil Cloths,Window Shades, Curtiiins, Cor-

niciM, I«iinbr«iuinH, IjookinjjGlasses, Stoves, Clocks,

1. "V.X.Q., Etc., Etc.In foot everyildiiir nei*ii>d for Ilousekeepliiff ran lie

fdfnund

IX VAKICTV

Saturday, 20th.. .3 00Monday, listli.... 3 1*1Tuesday, 2*Jlh...3!l0Wed'sday, :«nii..3 .HiThurdday,.'llst...J 00

WMl'vday, :«Mi.'l-i»Tburwlay, 31»t..»«l

readers a l l the local newn , and to present It

In a readable a n d an attract ive atrlo.

All tlioae tnatnres mako T1IK I H i d l S T K B

unanrpanaod aa an advorilalnR m e

d l n m . ThiM v.ho UBO IU columns nnd tlio moony

expanded an excol lent Invoatmont.

Adrortlslng ratea will tio furnlshod on nppllnaUon.

jroniv n. COOK, publisher,

THE STEAMBOAT HELEN.Will leave New York from foot i>f Krankjln sirect,

IMer 3.V N. 11.. every Tuesday, Wtnln^fnliiy, Thum-dayaild Friday at 0>) a.m., ami uvury Saturday at12.HO111.

Learo PiMlirlRht (timl ol Rliurch Street), everyMonday, Tuesday, Weilne-sUny,Thursday uud Fridayat 4.00 p.m.

EXPRESS.

CENTRAL BAGGAGE DELIVERYAND

Red Bank, Oceanic & Seabright•• PACKAGE EXPRESS.

Iiuggogc DuIIrcruil to anil from Redllaak and Soaliright,

llnirtrngo, cheeks, and ordora left at (I. It. R.IJi'imt or fli'iioral Delivery (Hiiro cm Front Street,llul Hank, will meet with pnimiit attention.

Trips mndo dallyJietwetiu lied Hunk and Bea-brlKht. 1'iirclm-fa nnd Colluotluus uiailo. DankI)O|K»IUa8peelaIty.

J. W. CHANDLER, Manager.

In our larKe and convenient Show Rooms, and atthe very Ixiwest I'rlces-ulther for casn or on easyterma of credit.

All tfixids sold by us are guaranteed to bo as rep-resented.

A call will satlnfy ruiitfilnem that we can makeIt u> their lotereat to purcliase from un.

C O W P E R T H W A I T CO.,408, 410,1 412 FULTON STREET,

COR. UALLATIN PLACE,

BROOKLYN.

HAIR GOODS.

r* O AND SEI:; J l l « . 1'LECHNEU'S

ELEGANT NEW I1A1B STORENo. 8 Broad Btrcot, near Front,

UKD BANK, N. J.

Wlm, Waviw, Frlzzw, Monlejfiiw*. Piirfoctlons,n-lu'ht^, Curb, muilu on Urn jirumlHutt. Hulrcoinb-i .s muiln up In llrst-cliwH Htylit. Fuls** tiatr. Uycd

any Khudc. Ol<i Wlx* ntytkirixl m «<«><! a»Alu» 1 i m p a r t H HI Or Timlcninl Dyer wliicli pruvtliu Imlr from COIDIDR out, and 1IO1[>H tliu Kruwth onow hair. Oomo (in<i mw. You wilt tlnd » full lintof Infants* misaas', uud litdlun' rwuiy-inadti Untlurwwir. A large vuriuty uf rlilldn^ii a, irihweu' itttdla-lies' Cor.wia, ritirttfii^onnKitfi, luvu c t lu r s , zopliyrworatud, (ieriniuitown yuriis, tuulury, Ynnk«o no-tloan, EtiKlisli Ui>rby huts. 1'rlcus Lu wuiparu withrliy \)TU*A uud uvurytnlntf u> IILIHS. iw.&l (told midjmkl-plau*! Jewelry, Ostrich fttatlmnt, kid K'UVUH,uresH noixlti mid clothUiKi lucui unU curtulna clwinedttnd ityiHl. Ilusty uud fadtM craiw, tints, veils, trlmmliiKw. l<i(*c und <XU|HJ siu^ka redturtMl us K*>od an n«wIt will pay you to call and uullsfy yoursulf.

M1W. I'LEUHNER,

Itroud Btn et. Hot! Uunlt, N. J.

IIU1LAN HAIR CJOODS.

\VIOS, "WIGS', WIGS,"WIGS, WIGS, WIGS,

nrQThuiilnewiULUIanythlnn

Iness now bcroro inn public You can[o money fosUir ut work for un than at

-jythlnir clue. Capital not untiled. Wewill atari you. *lil a day anil upwards made athome by tbo Industrious. Hen, women, boy» andgirls wanted evorywhero to work for ufl. now Isthe time. You can work In spare time only or giveyour whole time to the UuulUBSM. VOU can live athome and do the work. No otliur bustuusa will payyou nearly u well. No one can full to nuke ODONnioui pay by engUKlng at ODOO. Costly outnt andterms free. Monoj mailo font, uu*tly, nnd konora-bly. Aildreu TnPK A Co., Aujruxln, Malnr, _

BHAJDS,BKA1DS,

BRAIDS,BUA1DS,

BRAIDS.BHAIDS.

Cuiia ami Frizzes Naturally Curly.

All Kinds of llulr (ioodH Constantly on Hand 01Uodu ut order at tlio 81iorU)Bt Notlra.

GREY HAIR A SPECIALTY.

WE WARRANT ALL OUR WORK AND QOODTO BE A8 UEHIKHENTKD.

Cdmbiuga motlo up at Lowest Rates nnin First-Class Style.

8 W ,TO..E8 UVBD ANT ^

Oreat chance to make money. TIUMOWIK)„ alwaya take advantage of tliu good olunoMUUbllifor making money that am offered iwneral-lyteoomo wealthy, while mono who do not Improvesuch clmaous remain In poverty. Wo want manymen, women, ton aud, girls to work for ui riant latholr own localities. Auy ono can do tlio v»rk prop-erly from tbo ant •tart, 'riiobualneiM will |»y morethan ten Ilinw ordinary waguu Kipenalre outfitf urnlihod free. No one who engagta lalU to maJtemoney rapidly, You oandorou; your "hole time tothe work, or only your spore momenu. Full loior-1

matloD and all Out la needed Mnt IrM. MitmO o r . B r o t U l « n 4 W r o a i M U . , U t i B a » k > W1IMKOo^Ppniand,Kaia«.

No. Hi BROAD STREET, Up-Staira,

WM. MALCHOW

a wookln your own town, 15 Outot free.No risk. Everything now. Capital not ro-

T - - quired. W* will furnish you everythlmMany aromoldmr fortunes. Ladles make armuc«amen,auiIuorsiuidgUUmakUBToaip»y. ReaOor,It you.want a budneas at which you can make groanajyalttitlnieyonjirortiWrUe tot partloulanpay all UM time you

WAWJHSSfl JZWKhttY,

On. tttYEBStDB AVBtWZ, KBD BAVK, N. i,

«• V«n«aiM| la tyuOttft

VANDKRVCKII'* JCWKkRV

Owak.

H.JOHNSTON | aurand

all ptooM of allver. TUTany's andthatooat T T - \ i i r p i r ^ n HO to Mo. Uotd suiu-wlnduig".V*,la I H \A/ H U r / f S S UdiWgoldwatche. (SB

WO <o I \2i VV J U f l L / d \ f5-™0' DHwoud rtngs »10 t<»id vti- J *-* " « ' - " - ' * » djmr rtngn (a to t£y. Bllver' " i t taken off. tine Jewelry or every duicrlpUon away below

'• K O BOWERY, N.Y.

LUMBER, COAL AND WOOD.

r A . THROCKMORTON, •I • •

Dealer In.UMBER, LATH, LIME, CEMENT,

Brick, Nails, PHtnta, Oils, 4c.ntONT BTBEET, BED BANK, N. i.

"10AL A N D WOOD,

'IRANTON, LErl lGH, CUMBERLANDA N D VVILrCESBAKRE COAL

At the Lowest Market Ilaua.OBD WOOD. LOCUST AND CHESTNUT POSTS

AND CHESTNUT HAILS.JOUN A. WOKTHLEY,

ttt WorUlley'8 Dock, BED HANK. N. J

\rORFORD BROTHEKS,

Dcalera la

COAL and WOOD,Sell only (;ooil aoutid pine and oak wood,

Sell none but the best grudt'H of coal.

Soil no dirt wltti their con!. s

MOIIFI1BI) BIIUTIIEIIS,

ont Stivet, Iti'd Hank, N. J.

P S. R. BROWN,L •

Dealer In

Coal, Lumber, Hardware,

BUILDING SIATKItLYLBUII.UIXG JIATiCl.'IAL

orner First and Atlantic Streets,

KEYPORT, N. J.

MAPLE AVENUE LUMBER YARD.J. TRAFFORD ALLEN,

Dt'fllor in

.umber, Lime, Unit; Ilrirf:. Litth.Cement, l'aitifa, OUK and

Hardware.

OR. KRONT ST. AND MAPLE AVE. ,

11F.I) BANK, N. J.

FLOUR AND FEED.

HAY!188S.

THOMAS DAVIS,

Commission Merchant,and dealer In

Hay, Flour Grain and Feed,FRONT 8T., KED DANK, N. J.

SEWING SIACHINES.

THEMQST POPULAR• o r ALL."— v

SEWING MAEHINEBLtr

LIFETIME**

meao UNION ea.NEW YORK

CHICAGO ILL.-©

WUITS* SMITH, BED BAN&VN. J.'

JOB PBINTINU of every doMrlpttonTBIHMBT1B omoa at moowtt* ttmi

. . ' . f L i " 1 " I I ' l l , < , " '

UT F. MANY, .

Buooeasor to a. E. Bum wood,WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER,

-rBONTBTBMT, • .JPP. Qlobe Hotal. BED BANK, N. J.

CIOABS AND TOBACCO.

J O H N CULLINOTON & SONS,

HANUFACTUnEIlS OF

PINE SEGARS,WIIULE8ALE ANU nEl'AIL DEALERS IN

LLL KINDS OF CHEWING A N DSMOKING TOBACCO, SNUFF,

PIPES, ETC., ETC.

H E , ALMA 8EGAR A SPECLVLTY.

FKONT 8TB.EET, IlED BANE, N. t.

PACH'SWHOLESALE AMD RETAIL SEOAK AND TOIU0-

CO ESTAnUSHMENT.

Bole agenta for tlie fnnniua

L E O S E G r A B S INO. IO BROAD STREET,

RED BANK, N. J.

BOOKS A N D PAPERS.

BOOK STORE INTHE WORLD.

497.304 New and Old Book!

ALMOST CIVEN AWAY.

New (autiirue Pnv. 8end atainp. linmenaaiva raid [or Old Books.

LKGGAT BltOTIIEKS,1 Cliambcra St., weat of Citv Hall lurk, N. V.

•-S.-15.N"o- 6 BHOAD

DEALKR IN

Oaily and Weekly Papers, Magazines,Aon Ac.

FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC FRUITSof all kinds constantly on hand.

STOVES AND PLUMBING.

^USIBERSON & WHITE,KJ

rLUMBEKS, STEAM AND OA8 FITTEnS,

TIN ROOFERS,

'IN ROOFERS, TIN ROOFERS,

TIN ROOFERS,

8IIEET IRON AMI COPPER, W0BKER8,

UED BANK, N. J.

STOVES, HEATERS AND RANGES.

DRAIN I'll'E,DRAIN riPE,

DRAIN I'll'E.DRAIN PIPE.

I'BIISOXAJ. ATTENTIOX OIVEN.

HARDWARE.

Carriage Hardwareand

Farming Utensilsat tho now alore of

T. B. MOUNT.WEST FRONT STREET, RED DANK.

Wiard's Patent Ghitied Plows,Rlgg's dang Plows and Furrowing

Sleds.oguot lor the

Champion Mower ami Kcnpcr,Tho Host in tliu Markot.

The Improved Water Elevatorfor uso In wolls and claujrna.

AH kinds of Carrlngo tnatorlnl, nndevery description or funning Imple-ments on hand, or ordered nt short no-tice.

T. B. MOUNT,Front sireot, nmr lllvurd.lu Aroniio, Red Bank

HATS A N D CAPS.

CORRECT STYLES. CIIEA1' PRICES.

HATS.Tho Boat 3!Ji!. UThe Heat mic. I-luU.The Best 75u. UnU.Tho Uiwt 1.00 HiilH.Tho Boat 1.60 Hutu.

Tho BoHt112.00 Hats.Tho Boat 2.(50 Hats .The Hunt 8.00 Hats.Tim Heat 4.00 HutB.Tlio Hoot Bilk H a t s .

Tho Best Goods for the Price SoldAnywhere.

LAIU1E ABHORTHENT OF

Children's Hats.Spring Styles forJ882 Now Ready.Also SHIRTS, Collars, CufJfo, Hosiory,

Uipbrollna, Suspondors, Ilandkdr-•' "•' ohlofe, Neckwear,Blue Flannel Shirt*, Underwear,

H. H. CURTIS,Tho Onlj Ilnttor In Monrionth Conntf,

BED BANK, N. J,Thuiaing'tbe publlo for part faTori I shall en-

deavor to merit a oanUntunes of pitrontee wltli tt*