geo. m. b en n ett, practical -honse painter, · 1# § j tm if wmm m . a s b tjfiy p a r k , n fjw...

4
....... ... 1#§ J tm if Wmm m . A S B tjfiY PARK, NFjW JER SEY . I < aRDAY, MARCH 2, 1878. No. 9, ^mO^SICTAlOjgggi . rnan aY.» tooxt' door to j f o t Office,- f o b u ^ f o r k J* ,TiBfiKM^*:*]MnBPHy< Onaatttni and' )&*• • J 3 (ijw yjj^w ,j?r^hoidtN. jit;... .:------ - . - :rM - ' 'SJi‘ Arias » m'uw.' b X*11 .. . S*?^£d|t»cj§§§ ? ?n w w- » . ' "S3 g* s l ^ n i l d l n r ' <3- Aabnry 8t.,ABBiraT PAMttHew Jwiey. J^ANNIHG & DORKAHOE,.,v OOUN8EI4 OBS AND ATTORNEYB-AT^AW. Solicitor* and Muter* tn Chancery gad Notaries - . -■ ' • Pablior r~ Bsbohh's Block, Losa Braxob WtVLxa*, N. J. John B. Lannlng, ,; i - Charles P. Dortanoe. W. ABROWSMITH,, , ATTO^NEY-X»-ir\W,. Solicitor, HMfcersnfl R**mlnw In Ofci&omv. freehold, N.J GEO. M. BENNETT, practical -Honse Painter, W H Itra!IJ> AV.,OQH. HBCK ST., OCBAN GROVB, N. J . t8|>erfs1 *tt*nticD given to coTilr.cU. etc. if fe?P TTgSDBlCKBON * HAGGERTY, ATTOBBByB ASD OO01BBLOB8.AT-IAV 69 Wall Street ' W 7QRK. D AVID HAHVBT, Jr., ’ATTORNEY AT" LAW; Solicitor, andBpmtae^Ch^^NoUj Public. II* J A W. HBTRIOK, M. D., HOMOtOPATHtO PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON, Cor. Oookmxn u d Bangs av., Asbuby Pabk, N. J Honrs i nntil 10 A. M., after* P. 'gi- ft U. PALMER, M. D., ' . 'HOMEOPATHIC R7TBI01AN - oiieetaBtelirtiMhrti :lWtn*-Cvf. *n!l L .* . Ay*. mwm ■««•■ f ‘' «! Aarour Pa**, N. J. C HARLES J. PARKER, .......... ' , COCN8EM)ft-AT-LAW, * AndMosteriu Chaneery,_ ToowJat*. MJhtrk H*lt. Aibnr ***. SQUAW yiLUUW.jN. J D R, FRANK PARSONS, BsjoAs, N.J. J - CtARBNCKCONOVE®, . . AT rORNBT-AT-LAW. , __ souorroR ANo master in ch Ahceby . Offic*, fid story PosiOfBoe Bonding, F*** hold, N. J ancers. H. KENNEDY Sc SON,- Civil Engineers and 8nrvgiyor»,-ficiL KatatcAremta apd Coawy. p I,C.KBNNBDY, “r " Mastev in Chsnocry.and Notary Public. ~Ujom, sccond floor, SteiuDacb’s Building, jahesbtre^ ^ ^ - SOLICITOR AND'MASTER IN OHAJSOBRT. Notary Public u d Ooian*issJoner of Deeds lor the HUte bf MowYork. — ftaTQirrowM, N. J. Mr D. PETTINGILL, " DENTIST, Will giro particular attention to all of tbo Tariona branobea of hi* profecsion daring the coming season. O m o s , Com. o r U xttoov Av. ahd JEmoby St., Aaborr Park. If. J. D . B . W Y CK O FF, PE A CB M AKER. All Difficult*ee and Difference* Arbitrated without r£coone't<rl6g*t jrirooets. - Offioe, comer Aabury av. and Main atreet. ' 1 ASBURY PABK, N, BXTSXNESS CARDS. 'i\ ; E !(‘4r-iv' Sr.--* ’Or-}* ''*— :- ft' ;U !- fe^‘ ^;.‘V /jpffiSODORB 8. WOOI^KY, V GENERAt AUCTIONEER Ttrms renoasblg. QBoa In Part lull, AsHniT P u t, N. J, B orden 3 TCT |CDeatersin ■■ JA N ( Si iffiA X rm S '“ ? 0RNACE8 ; ' I ,1 S.*" A BBURY PABK MISAT MARK*® , ' jo p S f t AUMOOKj’ Propristor. Tlie l)«rt 6f tU l -s 3» cl meat always on hand. Cn»- tomors affrred at their doorfc ^ " ■ ' ; ' PAB1S;RPW»,, . . - . I 'Z \ ‘ T - :■. ABBURY-PARK. B. », ft T. B/NKffMAN. SANTELB AND RA^OKB'SRT. - . . . . Ooba^BbaOR} SfsfJiTNoTorafe?? Wtb, 187‘4. ........ . This f» to oertlfj thatR.!H.‘.Newman AJ r o . haw l!i siifi W is th wresiBendlni domiKthtirlise. ‘*1 “' y ' themto^anj-warrtuig tubor 8apt ipsW* >t:rp- ,r'',\-Pxmcino'K,A‘Sii WoT*Esb®f.g|,!6 ^ • > , a^lBistooertlfT tb ^ R i^ ' Ne^nuMi^'Br?. ' --- «li«. to traojfcJgP Myir conckks ;.. : ---------- tt »d gM.BPSUTJBSS CARPS. FRANK B. WARNER, NBURANCEACENT - ^ ^ A 8 S « ^ ’-PAftK,‘-|l."i;' •' ^ 7 ' Over sno,000.000 C»pit»r Flepre.ontod. '■ st tbe lowest prices. Orders no$n» Sssle Agent* tn jfonmouth County for ike patent American Fence. TOREIOS, The ooost of Peru Uas again been desolated by.I a tidal wave and an earthquake, and the busy port, of Callao is partly in rotas. . ,Tho W ilts otthp ta&lne are stQl distressingly folt in Madras ttPJMjrcare. Unless. pjicra talioA downwdrd’taSi^St .tbe ,bflglnnlng of Maroh. tho relief works will .be compelled ,to, oontinno ontil Atignst tut Sepiemben. Rep^ta tram ; Otide- «Wl tho norlhwow prorinoea aro oqnellj an&T'orabl*.; Tbo pooref claBeea aro Buffering iheip'ost pinohing, Nicholas ha* icalled on it to sisti th* treSy^ onoe, and ordered General Gbonrko lo'adranbe with 80,000 men toward Ban Btofano. The relni? tanoe of the Porlo to surrender, any jrohclads i*: the main obstaole to the oonelnslon of peace. Austria and England are showing‘a. more peaceful disposition. In the latter country, howerer, war preparations oontinne.. " * \ The conditions of peaoe, as atinonnoed from Constantinople, almost complete tbe extinction of Tnrkey. They enlarge the boundaries of Bulgaria » f proride for its ocCapation for two years m ;2rA;pendlng bill fo rj .for'ft flew issue of f 60,000,000 of lojjal tenders. 3slc®l«l»t Friday Mrs. Isabella Booeher Hooker '■•’i k BjMHSoh onFemale'Suffrago bofo're a Senate DlUaa.- A huge number of prumlnent 1 adieu preaent. . ijjgtuy and minority reports to the lower House o t Cotigrata hare been made on the subjeot of the i,.«nd: Pacific, by thb Committee on Padflo —1'^Tda.v.The farmer proposes to aidtho road by it^oflaiid and trtnjantee of Interest Tbe lat- H. W O B T H IN G T O N , C arp en ter & B nlK or. . AlIkindaj>ficarMnier;Work done with neatoeu and diipatch. BUILDINGS BAISKD A MOVED. Job- bing promptly attended to. Eeildenoa, 8. E. Oor. 8owfelIAv. ft Emory St.' . ASBUBY PARK, N. J, LOKERSON BROTH BHS, Carriage Makers And Wheelwrights, C obnkb or S kwali , A t , and M ain S t . tST Jobbing Promptly Attended to. A. J. BROW N, Architect and Builder. Plana and apeeificationa drawn at the sjiorttiat notice. AI^»o pottaffee to rent. - • •• •••• Ro*Idenoev 4a0 Asbury Av©., ASBURY PARK. JSt. J. K IN M O N TB & oo., Dealerain. DRUGS, NTEDICINES, V— •■ BtO. . E tO- -r -----— o o o k M a n A .V ., Sextdoor toFeetO ffice, ABBUR.Y PABK N. J. w arren brown. CONTRACTOfh A ^ ‘ BUILDEB, Cor. Lawrence Arenue, near Main Entrance, O OEAN OR O VEh N. J. . Plain and Ornamental Cottages.. BnUdingrralaed and moved witb care and promplneu. B m M to* Aabaiy Fountain, Eaq^ Wm. Spader, Eeq., Matawan i Bev. H. B. Beegle, D H. Wyckoff, Keg.,Ocean Grove; George Evan* Esq . Philad’a. ^SB D B Y PARK AND QCEJAN GROVE LIVERY STABLE. Horaea, Haoka and Light Carriages alwaya ready ^ -v * at call. > , • • . ■" •■ ,»■- ■ j • " v Horaea boarded by the day, week or ^month. Car- rlagea and barneta kept In perfect order. , My 'Buawiii.meet e&\ trains. Freight and baggage deliVeredat(Jt>e ahorteat poatible notice. All freight of baggage sent to my care will be de- livered or properly cared for _ - v , - G. :W. ROGEB8, Prop, HATHAW A Y ’S Wetakapleasurein informing oar friends that we hire opened oaf new Spring and. Mummer Stock of Goods, consistingof • •••.' ,. ■ A goodassertment of *■ Bnilfleh* Harftwaie^ GaFriege Hardware, Ibos, S ta n , Hm5i!, Ri»f. s, aposs«, T^bb-Bolts, Aa. 8hoy«li, Spadeii, T’orkii, Sooopa, [on Bake*, Whoelbarrowe, Eto., Etc. Plowa, 'Boythea,Gi Palitt, bil«, Pnltr. OUo, Mtofl Palate Ufa Tnmeitlis. COACH AND FURNITURE VARNJSB. S E E D S , ra) Psrk Lawn Grass and a Tbe'adrantages whleh we possess in aioring onr goods In the large new store, combined with ont tsoili- tles for purchajng goods, gire us an aBtantage whleh we lfin oheerfnUr share with our customers. We will be itauad-toaanynucslland examine onrstook. Any ordera by mall wlll be promptly attended to. Goods tUltyred bee oiebarge. ■ i : J ' - JOHN O HATHAWAY. a G I illD IIE f ^PPLEiGfATE, JRnllSw^i, S;V-' J;. #abk. ,;. .^ . V-Ali kinda of Oanjenter- Work dorie with neatnecs. WASHINGTON. )V KtisaUn troops, and seonre important concea nfons for Bqasiata allies. The new terms also virta&lly close the Dardanelles to war veaaela, but establish free navigation to mcrtibanhnen^ Tnrkey is to oede p ^ t .of . Armenia in payment of a war indemnity, and ia likewise to snrrende^fcmr iron- olads. •!, y i u REAJj estate conveyance ^. MONMOUTH COUNTY. V Liat <if Conveyances, Monmouth Conner Clerk’* Offioe, for the week ending February 28, 1BTO. Wm.? M: Gawtry to Peter 1. Neviua-i-throe lota at Long Branch : ©On»ideration, |5,000. j wm. V. Wilson and wife/ to Jortph Covai^—four lota at Port Monmouth ; coniideration, $1206. EUaa Morford and wife to Joaeph Covert—7 50-100 acres of land at Purt Monmouth; consideration, #760. Hiram Seely and wife to Joseph Covert^-tbree acres of salt meadow in townahip of Middletown; consid- eration, $100. Wm. H. 8hafto, assignee, to Marr E. Sweet—two tracts of land in townahip of Waif; consideration, $300. . b Soring Lake B a a h __ ,________ ___ _____ __ . ft and 6 , of blook 18, and . .0 and 17, ot tyook 17, at Spring Lake; consideration. $S,635. Martin Kelly and wife to Catherine Murray—six acres of land in towmhip of Manalapan; conaidcra- ticnr$a00( -...................... ..-r-'-r- ----- — j— James D. Hall and wife to JameaE. Hall—farm in township of Millstone: consideration, $1.400.' Administrators of John F. T. Forman, deoeaaed, to James Donah ay—two lota of land in township of Howell; consideration,$177.50. ^ Administrators of J. F. T, Forman, deoeased, to Gdoige Taylor, Jr.—19 61-100 acres in township of Freehold; oonsideration, fSAiO.SO. 'Andrew ,Jffinfcer"ef al. to. Thomas 8. Wint^s-mlll progcrty in °* Middletown; oonsideration, Xdmfaistratora of J. F. T. Foi "■.-An ip of , __ Robert P. Fielder and wife to John Mnlhall—three The Spring Lake Beach Improvement Co, to C. H. ip—lots Noa. 1,2, 3,4. 6 and 6, of blook 18, and lota Nos. 16,16 and 17, of n)ockl7, at Spring L&ke; Camp __ _. _'orman, deoeased, to John H- Armstrong—three lots of oedar aw amp in4 ___ rong—1 ___ __ township ot Howell; oonsideration, $181. Robert P. Fielder and wife to John Mn and 68-100 acres in township of Matavan; considera- tion, $ m * i Robert Allen, J r , to Lewis T. Newingr^twd' aorea in township of Ocean; consideration, $1. _Jp|w phS; Walling to Alfred Walling—lot at Kay- portioonHdenttfon, $500. ...... « ~ Alfred Walling to Delia ’Walling—lot at Keyport; consideration. $600,; Wxn. L 8xnith and wifrto John W. Borden «< o/,r— property in town ahip^ol W all: oonsideration, $1.00u.' Jaenry H. Hoffmirc and wile to John 8.Tiirodk;«' morton—lot in township of Bhrewsbury; oonaidera-i tion, $450. , Hubbard Dennis and wife to Benjamin Brown— honae and lot at Fair Haven: consideration, f 1,000. , Martin Haggerty et a l to John El Jordan—twe lota in town of Freehold; consideration, $L Micbel J. Fitxgibbons to John'S. Jordan—two,.lotf, in town of Freehold; consideration; $1. Lewis T. Newing and wife to Edward Travis—lot at Long Branoh; oohaideration, $200. Ralph B. Gowdy and wife to Horace Little—45-100 of ah acre in township of Howidl; consideration, 11 and exchange. ’• The Ooean Beach Association to David L. Baum- gardner—loti Noa 950 and 951 at Ooean Beach; con- sideration, $700 The Ooean Beach Association toEmeline Thompson —lot No. 953 a6 Ocean Beach; oonsideration, $815. Alexander A. Yard to George O. BoekmAn—lot in town of Freehold; consideration, $600. Win* V. Heid and wife to Humphrey B. Chamberlin —lot No, 49 at Reid’s Villa P afkf' consideration, $5*0. Jamfa Cooper and wife to Adeline Scott—lot or tract of land in township of Middletown ; oonsider* ataon, $ 1 ^ 5 . John H. Patterson, sheriff, to Jesae Parker—sold aa property of Gilbert W. Davison, in township of Millstone; consideration, $560. GeorgnJW. Brown, ahenif, to execntora of Jefcae Parker, deceaaed—farm in townahip of Millstone, aold as property vt Martha AT Kirby and huaband: oon- sideraUnn, $1,000. " ' John H-Darison, at al. ex’rs., to Martha Packer —•four tracts or lots of land in townahipa of Millstone and Freehold; consideration. $5. 1 Linda M. Davison to Marina Parker—dower right in 4 trfcete of land in township of Millstone; oonsid* oration, $800. Elisa Moifilwainc to Charlea H. MoCheeney—farm in townahipof Marlboro; oonsideration, $1. ' Bobcxt Allen, Jr./maater, to Thomaa W. Cooper— several lots or tracts ol land in townahip of oaton- town; oonsideration, $3,280. ' ; *4 ------ h Robart AlIen, Jr.,masteri to Jamea Chaaey—two lota of land in townshipof Eatontown r oonsidaraticn, ------- .50. Npf riibber canctlinp; Btampa by strictly enforcing a regulation which provides that blade printing ink shall be used for the purpose of cancelation wbenevertbat material can be obtained, Other colors oi the same quality-, of Ink are, hcrwover, permissible. > An order, calling attention to the wove regulBtion will be published in the'next offi- cial poetal guide. Several days ago a petition for the relief ofJ.ean ’ "eLandrgM jras^presented.ifc the^H<d(use of itatives, by Mr. £21ist 6f Xbtilfl^ia, and _____ to the committee on foreign aflGaiTB. In 1844 the Peruvian Government bound itself to re- ward I d a specific manner any person who should make a discovery that would pxaterially inorease the wealth of the country.. Landrean devoted him- sell to scientific exploration and discovered many immense deposits of guano. The government agreed to' give him a certain percentage equal to about on4-third, bnt internal strife intervened and ha has never succeeded in obtaining hia share, which amounts to ; $100,000,000. He asks the UnitedBtates to help him collect his olaim. GENERAL. NEWS. Tbe BQronatio$u>f Poj& Loo XXfL will take place to-morrow. _’ William Workman, who died in Montreal on Sunday , leaves $400,000 to public charities^ Anderson, of the Louisiana Returning Board, was sentenced on Monday to two years in the peni- tentiary.— - ^ Peter Cooper has ‘established and endowed a gh-grade free school at Limestone Spring, South Carolina. Major Williamson’s surveying party have ascer- tained the height nf Mount Hood, Oregon, to be 11,225 foet: - r , One'man was killed and tbree injured by an ac- cident on tbe Richmond and Fredericksburg (Va.) viailroad on Mondav- The Pavon ia ferry boatjames Fisk:, Jr., collided with the i schooner Joeie Crowley on the North liver, New York, on Saturday evening; One aengerwas knotfmto be killed, and it is feared ol wqrelbst Hr. -James Gordon Bennett having purchased the Bteamshlp P^ndora for the purpose of Arctic expkoation, has petitioned the Government to ap> ptfmi lTntted States naval officers to the command ofjitheeipeditian, ... ' 4hii» Oommlittee on Indian Adairs, in their last r*P?ifc .declare that the present system of manage- m£niia-not aauccesafnl one, and-recommend that fhti ^Indian Bareau be transferred from the Inte- ri^T.I>epartmont to the War Department. ton was ran Spain in New ___________ _ eavy fog. Tho pton waa badly damaged- *Mr. George Carey, o, 10 Wall street, N. Y., was almost instantly rS » sa Obaaaand witf po Thomaa W- Cooper—lot in township o r Eatontown; oonsideration, $4,(500. The Ocean Beaoh Asao<datiun to William M. Fproe —lota Noa. 1,400. 1,401 and l,4ld at Ocean Beach; oonsideration, $500.' Tho Ooean Beach Auodation to Wm. M. Foroe— lota iSfoa 1^10. l,2il, 1,212, at Ooean Beaoh; conaid- ation, $500. Lewis J-Lyona and wife to William»H. Force-rlot No. 1.801 at Oceau Beach; oonsideration, $500.' William M. Foroe and. wife to Lewii J. Lyons—lot No. 1,40b at Ooean Beach; jcmnaidenj^ion,^^. Samuel C- Southard and wife to Samdel G. Robbins et al., administrators—two traota of land in townahip .Emma L, Conover and husband to Prothcro—14 and -------------- ---------------- -70-10Q^or6» ln-to\ifnship-of JAtlaatio ^«on»idsratiopy ^hiard ta the -i $940.80. .*■ A ^rhbn entnmce Aaron , Lonxstreot et al. to 8amuel Bowlea—lot in #hhnVl Ivina on township of Matavan; consideration, $$&. ■' A. Nioolls and wife to Richardson graham— seven lota at Spring Lake Beach : consideration, $6,000. G. [A. Nfbolls and wifo to Richardson' Graham—/ire lota at Spring Lake Beaoh; consideration, $5,100. The Ooeaif Beach Assooiation to Henxy H.-Yard— lots Noa^ 1.640,1,647,1,928 and 1,929 at Ooean Beach oonsideration, $1,6U0. ; ^ H a ^ ^ “Y tta Mt38WgrW:<hwold«lotrNo. 8,915 ‘at Ocean Beaoh; consideration, $1,000. i The Spring Lake Beach Improvement1 Co. to Ellxa- bethilartin-lofcs Noa. 8, 0, and 10; block 46; 28,19 and »}. block 45 and block 83- at Spring Lake { ooa»id*ra- ti(Su 17^600.. . V - ' ' Q. A.)r. Allaiifa^ al. to Stephen Garrison—H 4S- 100 aorea in township of Howell; consideration^j $744^0. "*4 t *' DeborahBritton to Emma HafcbawSy^iiS^ovillaae of Estontowui ccnsideTation, $5,000.... EUsa Jane NewSSJf'and husband to' George W. ^NertrmaQr?0*U-l 00 acres in township of Wall; tensid- ' erationviSM^ > - ••.<,{.; v - '* . Daniel Dodd st ah to Alexaiidar G. Cattell—lot %t Monmouth1Beach>oonsicierationA,$300.’ ; , v Alexander G. Cattell tp George /F,' Bakerr— lot at The excitement on the Castleton was in- Reports from Boston show au increasing_erpor£ of breadBtuffs for Europe; all the warehotfBos are fall pfive hundred full cars with no place to dis- charge ;. all the steamers engaged for a month ; no avaU|tble Bailing tonnage, and. steamships brought Ihjb^DaHt froirt Hampton Roads, S^ndy Hook and otiierplacesto load. Heinrich 'Wahlen murdered Max Hoehne, a wealthy Gierman, at the Granger's Hotel during the OentenniaL Wahlen’s trial took plaoe at Nor- ristown, Pa , last Fall, qnd resulted in his convic- tion and sentence to death. On Saturday evening his body was found hanging to a bar in the win- dow of his cell by a rope made from hia bed- clothes. " % , ' ^J. Fred Thornton, clerk of the St. Louis Circqit C^urt, tt a defaulter to an amount estimated at about $Q7,000. He waa elected in the autumn of 1874, and his term of offioe will end in November naxi He is a single man, and his salary is $6,000 § year; yet he seems not to have been able (o live upon that income. He is said to have been ad- ■ meted to gamblihg and hard drinking. /A Presbyterian clergymanj living near Montreal, has to ‘Cross a wide stream in going to and from hi$ churoh. h Od a recent Sunday, the ioe being bare and smooth, he skated, instead of riding, as tisnal in his sleigh. He now finds himself arraign-' for breaking tbe Sabbath. He argues that ^ka^as were the easiest and quickest conveyance that he could have employed; yet, when the (rtefttion ia put to him squarely, he does not deny that he derived pleasure from the skatmg. The atonn'of. last Thursday night and Friday waa, very severe oirer a large portion ofthe country. In addition to the three wrecks on the Jersey oOast,. the ship tit. Bernardo went .ashore near Reedy’s laUnd light, and a British bark was wreck- ed on the North. Carolina’coast Fort Hope, On- tario; was ’ visited by the severest flood known in jrdars, and three islands to the Della river, CaJ., containing 8,000 acres of cultivated land,,were j&bmerged. JKravel has been mu^delayed. ^•jlist Friday evening J. W. Barron, Treasurer of the ^Dexter (Mains) Savings Bank, not returning -hOnte >8 usual, search was made for him at the bfftil^WhWthB'doors^of theaavinga bank rooms id ’ been broken open Barron's ftroans could bo salt, in-whiflh_he_was looked, and was obtained to the vault he was STATE ITEMS. The venerable Bev. Dr. Gabriel LudloW died at Neshanic, Somerset oounty,’ Turaday, aged 80 years. . v A lafge quantity of frnit and vogctablcs, and a few plecee of partly burned furniture, were washod aahore at Atlantic City, last Friday. Lewis* C. Neu, for .seven years aderk in the Elizabeth post-office, has been arrested for tamper* tag with letters in a divorce case. Fish Commissioner George Ricardo, of Bergen countyr-wilTstock the Hackensack river, with 500,- 000 Bnad and’ an innumerable quantify of smelts the coining season. } The Rahway Savings.Bank is pacing out canh to small depositors onij- * ----- J ------ ------------- J mortgages and stc until cash can be does not intend to suspend. ■- "I Some half dozen citizens of Bound ^rook left there pn the early Monday morning trpin for Tex- as on a tour of examination, some of them expect- ing to return for their families to take up their I residence in that much praised qountry, if the ! prospect plegng),..... 1 In the Mercer County Court on Monday "Walter F. Bartlettjthe defaulting Tax Receiver of Treuton, was sentenced to two years in the State Prison. Joseph A. Beecher, convicted bf- libeling the Hon. Hi S. Little, was sentenced to pay a fine of $250 and be oonflned in the oounty jail for thirtVdajs. The Legislative Committee on the Soldiers" Home, of Newark, visited that institution Monday and made thorough examination. Written charges agafnBt the Superintendent were mhde to th^ committee by one of the inmates that several persons had died through neglect The changes were referred to the managers of tho Home. George Allen Stem, a brakeman on the Central Railroad of New Jersey, met with an accident last Thursday whioh proved fatal. He was standing on top of a box car on his way in from making a double from Hampton Junction, and being blinded by the smoke from the engine, did not notice the near approach to the Springtown bridge. He was struck on the btfok“of tSe bead crushing in the skull. Sixteen men are said td have lost their lives at this point owing to the bridge being en- tirely too low. r Daniel Leach, an old miser, who has lived in* Jersey City forty years, died suddenly last Friday, in a fit H e. was a rag pioker, and was well-known throughout the ifity. ~He lived im m old building in Railroad avonuo. Ho jpwned considerable pro- party; bilt was so mmerlyjthit he deprived nim- Belf of the most necessary things, and lived upon the meanest and cheapest food, in order to hoard money, He wore an oil-doth suit both summer and winter, and continued his work in tbe worst weather. Nothing is Known of the' early history of Leach, who was about seventy years of age, except that he was an Englishman by birth. He haa ho relations in this-country. The estate is valued at from $85,000 to $40,000. The State Board o f“Agriculture 'held its. animal meeting at Trenton last Wednesday, with Presi- dent Newell in the chair. Prof. Cook detailed the operations of the Board for the past ypar. Presidont Newell, In his annual address, showed that farming in New Jersey was more profitable than in almost any other Htato. All of the staple crops can be produced with the ordinfiTj^ routine, and where extra or high culfcjue is$veir the crops increased proportionally, . The President also stated that beef and pork can be reused on our clay and loam farms, while in tbe saotion of oor State where the soil is of a light char- acter, sweet potatoes, melons and small iruits are grown with profit After discussing various mat- ters of interest the Board elected the following officers-for 1873 : President, Thomas T. Kinney, Newark; Hecretary, t\ T. Quinn, Newarlf; Exec- utive'Committee, Wm. A. Newell, Wm. Hit. Force, Chalkley Albertson, XJbarles E .( Elmer, Geo. H. Cook. Jacob R. Freese, manager of the State Savings Institution of Trenton, whioh suspended payments early in January, was indicted for-misappropriat- ing its funds, having sold the good securities aud loaned the proceeds to.mssoiis on second mort- gages thus leaving over fifty thousand dollars of deposits unprotected, except by the worthless pa- per. Freese and his two.jaos pleaded non, vult contendere when charged upon the indictment last week* thereby .waiving a defence and throwing themselves upqn -the mercy of the Court. Tbe sentence was postponed till Mondayy when Chief Justioe Beasley sentenced J. H. Freese to the State Prison for five years at hard la- bor, and his two sons, Louis, and Harry, to the County Jail for b!x months eaoh. Mr. J. it. Freese was originally a physician, aud became conspicuous in Trenton as proprietor of the State Ggpette and as a volunteer in the late civil war. On his return home he established a banking and real estate office in Trenton, and has been very active In his efforts to organize a tax reform move- ment throughout the State. Some' years ago he made a European tour and wrote a work on Joru- salem, from-whioh he became known in the legis- lative lobbies as **JatuaalSSrFrebBe.'' discussed a t length, and then .made the special order for the'afternoon. A bill authorizing Boards of Chosen Freeholders to purchase their , own botida out of moneys in the sinking funds was paesed, and afterwards reconsidered fpran amorid- -— meut to suit Hudson county. The bill to discoh- 7. : . - tinue tb? manufacture of hats, shoes, 9to., in 'the State Prisoji^waa then taken Up and discussed at r length, pending which thp Hofna adjoifttied. In the Senate .'the foUowifigi>iU$~W0rff'p&88 iqd.s ^hibit the bridging of rivers or bays between ereey and other States without an «priejM^v^5% Legislature. -T p reduce the salairies &£'?$$$&*■ >f 0 o ^ Ne w t aot of the Legislature. -U,o i the Judges bf Common Pleas of Pasaaic pounty, . ^ ..... and to provide I'ortheffonding of the floating deJ)fBt>; of oountiee, . To amend the clharter of-Lambert-. ' . ville. To provide for.the annual. distribution •of. -• '+r % $100,000 to public schools from the General School .v Fund. / ' , COUNTY NEWS. •’->? From the Monmouth Ttujuirrr. A duelling house near Irwin’s mill was burped down'last week under circumstances that lead tbe community to believe that it was set on fire by those interested in obtaining the insurance. The * wbEbAh Vrfltt owned the bousa and furniture, but who lives in New York, came to her house that day, and when the fire^jroke out*iu the evening, twas playing cards wilh an Irishman, and was first informed of the fire by others, we biplieve. Once before the same .house was on fire and was saved by the neighbors. There was au insurance of $1,200 on the house -and fhrniture, ,and it. is be - lieved that the insurance people will look into the matter before they pay for the Iobs. , ___ found lying on the floor handcuffed, gagged, and ‘itrfLfpe about hti neck. He waa taksn out ih' a senseless condition and : died at 5:80 o’clock next morning. , He had several ^wounds on the head. The^robbera obtained less than $100, and probably th^pi?tfder?d the Treasurer because he reftiaed to open ihc^ safe. Monmouth County Surrogate’s Office. J ^ * W illi, Admitted to ProtKt^i y k From February 9 to February 25,187R, i; Dr.CharlesA. Laird, of Squan, deceaaad. Dr. Rob- w t’Laird^ executor. fe^BhwU-Lvfont oX yocan QroTCr4*oeaae<l Frank P. tfftoxty adaduiatrato^.withwill annoxed. * 5buoy Ann Hi pkini. of Allentown, deceaaed Wm. ^bbm s a n d Enoch vaffeyty, execntora. ' Letter* of AduInlatnitlbn 1 4 *?Chanted to ^ 7 Cha^Us B. Ellis and . Martha Ri Conover, admlnis^ ' ators of Rowlahd A. EUia, of Fraehold* daoeased, ‘aeo. Johnson. Xegfslatare. In the House on Monday a joint resolution was introduced and passed calling, upon 'the Senators and Representatives in Congress from thia State to' resist the passage of the bill now before Con- gress to transfer the Life Saving Servioe. froinr the Treasury Department to the Navy Department. The bill passed both houses on Tuesday. A bill was introduced, to authorize the city of Newark to erect publio markets, and" to issue bonds to provide for the payment of the same not exceedhrtr $250,000. The bills redistricting Paterson and Morris oounty were passed., In the House on Tuesday the Horslj-PbilUps contested election case was referred back to thi Committee on Election. - The bill allowing- one- dollar to- each enlisted man-now in the National Guard, who has been honorably discharged, for each and every day of service performed in the months oi July and August, 1877, for the preservation of the public ••e, was warmly Contested, and passed by je vote. The following bills were passed in the Senate : A it act relativp to past due^taxes; an act relating to •assessments in townships; an act validating certain mortgages heretofore given by railroad corporations, and .toniake such mortgages a lien upon the. ftarjehises"qf 'finch corporations: an act creating a sinking fund for the payment or certain assessments in cities (this applies to Newark); an agt providing for the sewerage, and drdnage by incorporated camp-meeting associations ana sea- side resorts; an act authorizing the receipt of taxes in installments; an act repealing the Dis- trict Cohrt Law so far a^it affects New Brunswick; a supplement to the aot incorporating fire depart- menta; 1 an' act providing for th* appointment of Commissioners to the Paris Exposition. On Wednesday* in the House, the bill tb an- thorizo, th e' consolidationyof railroads which He wholly in this State and whioh have been author- ized to hold other- railroads underlease, to absp- Llutely consolidate an d^iperge tiieir oorpdraterlghta, franoWse^ |>owe?8 aod piivlle^N n(o one, whB-Jyrt Jtew* From tne Mcmmoulh Democrat. Extra meetings of $n interesting character are being held in the Scobeyville school-house, con- ducted by Rev. Jabez Marshall, of Eatontown. The fifteenth anniversary of the?marrlage of M f. ___ _ and Mrs. W. D. Herbert took plaoe^t tne homtfJ^p^' stead farm, hear Englishtown, oh Tuesday even- i ing, February 12th. This is the second celebra- tion of a golden wedding in the Herbert family within five years, the groom’s sister; Mrs. ’DaVid Laird, having oelebrated her golden wedding a few years since. The Herbert family have been resi- dents of Mop month oounty for more than 150 years. Some of the members of tha family took * an active part in the war of the Revolution* par- ticularly in the battle of Monmouth. The family ware slaveholders, and after the emancipation of 1825, their slaves remained yitii them aod'were taken care lot until they died! The death of" the last of these slaves occurred about twenty ) rs ago. The original wedding ceremony of __ . and Mr8- Herbert took place at the DeNise homestead, near the Tennent church. The clergy- man, Rev. Job Halsey, who performed the ceremony fifty years ago (then a middle aged mari), is still living in Perth Amboy. Seven of the original guests were present at the oelebration on the 12th. ~ Prom toe long Branch ^Tews. , • . : i Mr. H. C. Lane has just finished a hiiictabme^^™ model aurf-boat, for Capt J. H. Merrlmon, d£thft ___ _ life-saving service. It is a very fine boat, and it is expected that Capt. Merriman will order a nnmber of others built of ^fte same pattern. Arpetition is ‘in ciroulation asking the Central Railroad Company to move Brahohport station to the Main street crossing. It is numerously signed, ahd it is hopdd that the request of the petitioners will be granted. Mr. Ed Slocum will donate the land required for the station. lloughly Bros, have taken a contract to build a bujlkhead m front of the cottages of Messrs. Timp- son, Ke^ser, Swift Blagdon, Lowe, Keyes and Jes- sup,at Monmouth Beach. It will be on a line near- • ly with the bulkhead recently destroyed. Spiles will bo driven down from 15 to 18 feet, and these will be planked five feet below and three feet above ground. The space intervening between the bulk- head and cottages will be filled in with earth. ' 1 From the Red Bank Standard. The steamboat Sea Bird will soon resnzhe.her trips between Red Bank and New York. Congress has appropriated $18,000 for the im- provement of tho North Shrewsbury river. The ordinance of baptisnJ was administered to eight candidates on Sunday night last in the •'1 Baptist Churoh. The bqildinc waa crowded to almost suffocation with people who wished to witness the ceremony. Margaret Logan, a colored woman, died at Marl- boro, N. J., February 10th,. at the age of 110 years. She was born a slave in the Taylor family living in that place, and has seen four generations of the Taylor lamily come and go, and was living with tbe fifth when she died. She was given her freedom when a little girl; her papers were in. her possession at the time of. her death, being dated over 100 years ago. She has a son living who ie 80 year? of age, and had two slaters who died recently at the advanced age of 105 and 112 years respectively. - j- ^ J' : The Boyle Will Contest. On October 7, 1866, Edward Boyle, for many years a city surveyor of New York, and who for many years resided in summer at his vilhrf/whiob joins Aabury Park, on Deal Lake (formerly Great Pond), made a will, by whioh he bequeatiibd nil his property to his wife, Mary Boyle, and, in the event of her depth, providing that it should fall . ,■ to the House of the Gdod Shepherd, in this tfty. On February 4f 1876, being then about to under- take a voyage to Europe- in oompany with his - wife, he made a codicil, in whioh, after- repeating - § .the original directions as to, the disposition of ' r property, he farther directed as follows: ‘rAnd if my wife, Mary Boyle, aud myaelf ^ehall- ^ —4 periahby the same calamity Qr _htf<ftdent; devise herein made to my wife, Mary Boyle, shall^l_^ bo-.void, and__the __ da vise hereh^^nade^. r: to the House of the Good Shepherd* sKatii be valid. Tho testator and hia “wife leAr-*"^ for Europe and arrived safe. Hia wife, however, J__-ii died on April 12, ensuing, and he also died three. . 7: days later. . The will and oodiqil being offered for ^ > 1- probate, William J. Cowley appeared as a contest- ant^and opposed tbe bequest of all the. decedent's ^ ‘ ^ estate to the House ofthe Good Shepherd., The c •$* contestant la the only child of William Cowley, ^ deoeased, who was the brother or Mary Boyle, the ^ motbor of Edward Boyle, and is, roermore, a : ' nephew of the testator, uowley objected'to t|ie ^ f- y - will being admitted to probate on'the ground that, S ^ a^ the testator’s wife- died firsts and that neither 'S- ?% died by any oalam^t House of tf e ~ decedent died intestate. . v . the devise to the Ihepberd was voidj and that the tate. The ease was follyarr gued and reported some time ^ago, and yesterday Surrogate Calvin rendered ah opinion stistainin^T the dedsion, affirming the validity of the wiHTWld admitting it to prbbato.^' B y this dodsioh, ^ ehotildi^ it not beliefeaflef reversed on appeal, the llousei1 nerty vU uedatl£im $800!OOO^to$flaMOO^ ejves^e ^ ^

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Page 1: GEO. M. B EN N ETT, practical -Honse Painter, · 1# § J tm if Wmm m . A S B tjfiY P A R K , N FjW J E R S E Y . I < aR D A Y , M A R C H 2, 1878. N o. 9, ^ m O ^ S IC T A lO jgggi

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m .A S B t j f i Y P A R K , N F j W J E R S E Y . I < a R D A Y , M A R C H 2 , 1 8 7 8 . N o . 9 ,

^ m O ^ S I C T A l O j g g g i .

rnan aY.» tooxt' door to j fo t Office,- fo b u ^ fo rk J*

,T iB fiK M ^ * :* ]M n B P H y < O naatttn i and' )& * • • J 3 ( i jw y j j^ w ,j? r ^ h o id t N. jit;... .:------ - . -

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- ' 'SJi‘Arias » ■ m'uw .'b X*11

.. . S*?^£d|t»cj§§§

? ?n w w- » . ' "S3 g*s l^ n i ld ln r ' <3- Aabnry

8t.,ABBiraT PAMttHew Jwiey.

J^ANNIHG & DORKAHOE, .,vOOUN8EI4OBS AND ATTORNEYB-AT^AW.

Solicitor* and Muter* tn Chancery gad Notaries - . -■' • Pablior r ~

Bsbohh's Block, Losa Braxob WtVLxa*, N. J . John B. Lannlng, , ; i - Charles P. Dortanoe.

W. ABROW SM ITH,,

, ATTO^NEY-X»-ir\W,.Solicitor, HMfcersnfl R**mlnw In Ofci&omv. freehold, N .J

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

practical -Honse Painter,W H Itra ! I J > AV.,OQH. HBCK ST.,

OCBAN GROVB, N. J. t8|>erfs1 *tt*nticD given to coTilr.cU. etc.

i ffe?P

TTgSDBlCKBON * HAGGERTY,ATTOBBByB ASD OO01BBLOB8.AT-IAV

6 9 Wall S treet' W 7QRK.

D AVID HAHVBT, Jr.,’A T T O R N E Y A T " L A W ;

Solicitor, andBpmtae^Ch^^NoUjPublic.

II*J A W. HBTRIOK, M. D.,

HOMOtOPATHtO PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON, Cor. Oookmxn u d Bangs av., Asbuby P ab k , N. J Honrs i nntil 10 A. M., after* P. 'gi­

f t U . PALMER, M. D., ' .■ 'HOM EOPATHIC R 7TB I01A N -

oiieetaBtelirtiMhrti :lWtn*-Cvf. *n!l L .*. Ay*.

■ mwm ■««•■ f ‘ ' «! A arou r Pa** , N. J .

CHARLES J . PARKER, .......... ', COCN8EM)ft-AT-LAW, *

AndM osteriu Chaneery,_ToowJat*. MJhtrk H*lt. Aibnr ***. SQUAW yiLUUW.jN. J

D R, FRANK PARSONS, BsjoAs,N .J .

J- CtARBNCKCONOVE®,. . AT rORNBT-AT-LAW. , _ _

s o u o r r o R A N o m a s t e r i n c h Ah c e b y .Offic*, fid story PosiOfBoe Bonding, F***hold, N. J

ancers.H. KENNEDY Sc SON,- Civil Engineers and 8nrvgiyor»,-ficiL KatatcArem ta apd Coawy.

p I ,C .K B N N B D Y , “ r " Mastev in Chsnocry.and Notary Public.

~Ujom, sccond floor, SteiuDacb’s Building,

jahesbtre^ ^ ^ -SOLICITOR AND'MASTER IN OHAJSOBRT.

Notary Public u d Ooian*issJoner of Deeds lor the HUte bf Mow York. —ftaTQirrowM, N. J.

Mr

D. PETTINGILL, "

D E N T I S T ,Will giro particular attention to all o f tbo Tariona branobea of hi* profecsion daring the coming season.O m o s , Com. o r U x t t o o v Av. a h d JEmoby S t.,

Aaborr Park. If. J .

D . B . W Y C K O F F ,

P E A C B M A K E R .All Difficult*ee and Difference* Arbitrated without

r£coone't<rl6g*t jrirooets. - Offioe, comer Aabury av. and Main atreet. '

1 ASBURY PABK, N,

BXTSXNESS CARDS.

' i \ ; E!(‘4r-iv'

Sr.--*’Or-}*''*—:- •

ft' ;U!-

f e ^ ‘^ ;.‘V

/jpffiSO D O R B 8. WOOI^KY,V G E N E R A t A U C T I O N E E R

Ttrms renoasblg. QBoa In P art lu ll, AsHniT P u t , N. J,

B o r d e n3TC T

|CDeatersin ■■ ■

J A N ( Si i f f i A X r m S ' “ ? 0RNACE8;

' I ,1 S .* "A BBURY PABK MISAT MARK*®

, ' j o p S f t AUMOOKj’ Propristor.Tlie l)«rt 6f tU l -s 3» cl meat always on hand. Cn»-

tomors affrred at their doorfc ^" ■' ; ' PAB1S;RPW»,, . . -

. I 'Z \‘ T - :■. ABBURY-PARK.

B. », ft T. B/NKffMAN. ■

■ SANTELB AND RA^OKB'SRT. ■ — -

. . . . Ooba^BbaOR} SfsfJiTNoTorafe?? Wtb, 187‘4. ........ . This f» to oertlfj thatR.!H.‘.Newman A J r o . haw

l!is i i f i W

is th wresiBendlni domiKthtirlise.‘ *1 “ ' y '

themto^anj-warrtuig tubor

8ap tipsW*

>t:rp- ,r'',\-Pxmcino'K,A‘Sii WoT*Esb®f .g|,!6^ • > , ‘ a^lB istooertlfT t b ^ R i ^ ' Ne^nuM i^'Br?.

■ ■ ' ---« l i« .

t o trao jfcJg P M yir c o n c k k s ;.. :

---------- t t »d

gM. BPSUTJBSS CARPS.FRANK B. WARNER,

N B U R A N C E A C E N T- ^ A 8 S « ^ ’-P A ftK ,‘- | l . " i ; ' •' 7 '

O v e r s n o ,0 0 0 .0 0 0 C » p it» r F le p re .o n to d . '■

s t tbe lowest prices. Orders no$n»

Sssle A g e n t * t n j f o n m o u t h C o u n t y f o r i k e p a t e n t A m e r i c a n F e n c e .

T O R E IO S ,The ooost of P e ru Uas again been desolated by.I

a tidal wave and an earthquake, and the busy port, o f Callao is partly in rotas. .

,Tho W i l t s o tth p ta&lne are stQl distressingly folt in Madras ttPJM jrcare. Unless. pjicra talioA downwdrd’taSi^St .tbe ,bflglnnlng of Maroh. tho relief works will .be compelled ,to, oontinno ontil Atignst tut S ep iem ben . R ep ^ ta tr a m ; Otide- «Wl tho norlhwow prorinoea aro oqnellj an&T'orabl*.; Tbo pooref claBeea aro Buffering iheip 'ost pinohing,

Nicholas ha* icalled on i t to sisti th* t r e S y ^ onoe, and ordered General Gbonrko lo 'ad ran b e with 80,000 men toward Ban Btofano. T he relni? tanoe of the Porlo to surrender, any jrohclads i* : the main obstaole to the oonelnslon o f peace. Austria and England are showing‘a. more peaceful disposition. In the la tte r country, how erer, war preparations oontinne.. " * \

The conditions of peaoe, as atinonnoed from Constantinople, almost complete tbe extinction of Tnrkey. They enlarge the boundaries o f Bulgaria

» f pro ride for its ocCapation for two years

m;2rA;pendlng bill f o r j .for'ft flew issue o f f 60,000,000 o f lojjal tenders.3slc®l«l»t Friday Mrs. Isabella Booeher Hooker “ '■•’i k BjMHSoh onFemale'Suffrago bofo're a Senate

DlUaa.- A huge number of prumlnent 1 adieu preaent.

.ijjgtuy and m inority reports to the lower House

o t Cotigrata h are been made on the subjeot of the i,.«nd: Pacific, by thb Committee on Padflo

—1'^Tda.v.The farmer proposes to a id th o road by it^oflaiid and trtnjantee of In te re s t T be lat-

H . W O B T H I N G T O N ,

C a r p e n t e r & B n l K o r . .

AlIkindaj>ficarMnier;Work done with neatoeu and diipatch. BUILDINGS BAISKD A MOVED. Job­bing promptly attended to.

Eeildenoa, 8. E. Oor. 8owfelI Av. ft Emory St.'. A SB U B Y P A R K , N. J ,

LOKERSON BROTH BHS, C a r r ia g e M a k e r s

A n d W h e e lw r ig h ts ,C obn k b o r S kw a li, A t , a n d M a in S t .

t S T Jobbing Promptly Attended to.

A . J . B R O W N ,Architect and Builder.

Plana and apeeificationa drawn at the sjiorttiat notice. AI »o pottaffee to rent. - • — •• ••••

R o * I d e n o e v 4a0 A s b u r y Av©.,

ASBURY PARK. JSt. J.

K I N M O N T B & o o . ,

Dealerain.

DRUGS, NTEDICINES,V— ■•■ B tO . . E tO - - r -----—

o o o k M a n A . V . ,

Sext door to Feet Office,ABBUR.Y PA BK N. J.

w a r r e n b r o w n . CONTRACTOfh A ^ ‘ BUILDEB,

Cor. Lawrence Arenue, near Main Entrance,O OEAN OR O VEh N. J. .

Plain and Ornamental Cottages..BnUdingrralaed and moved witb care and promplneu.

B m M to * Aabaiy Fountain, Eaq^ Wm. Spader, Eeq., Matawan i Bev. H. B. Beegle, D H. Wyckoff, Keg.,Ocean Grove; George Evan* Esq . Philad’a.

^ S B D B Y PARK AND QCEJAN GROVE

LIVERY STABLE.

Horaea, Haoka and Light Carriages alwaya ready ^ -v * a t call.> , • •. ■" •■,»■ - ■

j • " vHoraea boarded by the day, week o r month. Car-

rlagea and barneta kept In perfect order. ,

My 'Buawiii.meet e&\ trains. Freight and baggage deliVeredat(Jt>e ahorteat poatible notice.

All freight o f baggage sent to my care will be de­livered or properly cared for

_ - v , - G. :W. ROGEB8, Prop,

H A T H A W A Y ’ SWe taka pleasure in informing oar friends that we

hire opened oaf new Spring and. Mummer Stock of Goods, consisting of • •••.' ,. ■ •

A goodassertment of *■

Bnilfleh* Harftwaie GaFriege Hardware,Ibos, S t a n , Hm5i!, Ri»f. s, aposs«, T^bb-Bolts, Aa.

8hoy«li, Spadeii, T’orkii, Sooopa, [on Bake*, Whoelbarrowe, Eto., Etc.

Plowa,'Boythea,GiPalitt, bil«, Pnltr. OUo, Mtofl Palate Ufa Tnmeitlis.

COACH AND FURNITURE VARNJSB.

S E E D S ,ra) Psrk Lawn Grass and a

Tbe'adrantages whleh we possess in aioring onr goods In the large new store, combined with ont tsoili- tles for purchajng goods, gire us an aBtantage whleh we lfin oheerfnUr share with our customers. We will be itauad -toaanynucslland examine onrstook. Any ordera by mall wlll be promptly attended to.Goods tU ltyred bee oiebarge. ■ i : J '- JOHN O HATHAWAY.

a G I

illD IIE f ^PPLEiGfATE,J R n l l S w ^ i ,

S;V-' J;. # a b k . ,;. . .V-Ali kinda of Oanjenter- Work dorie with neatnecs.

W ASHINGTON.

)V KtisaUn troops, and seonre im portant concea nfons for Bqasiata allies. The new term s also virta&lly close the Dardanelles to war veaaela, bu t establish free navigation to mcrtibanhnen^ Tnrkey is to oede p ^ t .of . Armenia in payment o f a war indemnity, and ia likewise to snrrende^fcmr iron- olads. •!, y i u

R E A J j e s t a t e c o n v e y a n c e ^ .M O N M O U T H C O U N T Y . V

Liat <if Conveyances, Monmouth Conner Clerk’* Offioe, for the week ending February 28, 1BTO.

Wm.? M: Gawtry to Peter 1. Neviua-i-throe lota at Long Branch : ©On»ideration, |5,000. j

wm. V. Wilson and wife/ to Jortph Covai^—four lota at Port Monmouth ; coniideration, $1206.

EUaa Morford and wife to Joaeph Covert—7 50-100 acres of land at Purt Monmouth; consideration, #760.

Hiram Seely and wife to Joseph Covert^-tbree acres of salt meadow in townahip of Middletown; consid­eration, $100.

Wm. H. 8hafto, assignee, to Marr E. Sweet—two tracts of land in townahip of Waif; consideration, $300. — • .

b Soring Lake B a a h __ ,________ __________. ft and 6 , of blook 18, and

. .0 and 17, o t tyook 17, at Spring L ake; consideration. $S,635.

Martin Kelly and wife to Catherine Murray—six acres of land in towmhip of Manalapan; conaidcra-ticnr $a00( -...................... . .- r - '- r - ----- — j—

James D. Hall and wife to JameaE. Hall—farm in township of Millstone: consideration, $1.400.'

Administrators of John F . T. Forman, deoeaaed, to James Donah ay—two lota of land in township of Howell; consideration,$177.50. ^

Administrators of J . F. T, Forman, deoeased, to Gdoige Taylor, J r .—19 61-100 acres in township of Freehold; oonsideration, fSAiO.SO.

'Andrew ,Jffinfcer"ef al. to. Thomas 8. W int^s-m lll progcrty in °* Middletown; oonsideration,

Xdmfaistratora of J . F . T . Foi "■.-An

ip of , __Robert P . Fielder and wife to John Mnlhall—three

The Spring Lake Beach Improvement Co, to C. H. ip—lots Noa. 1,2, 3,4. 6 and 6, of blook 18, and

lota Nos. 16,16 and 17, of n)ockl7, at Spring L&ke;Camp

__ _. _ 'orman, deoeased, toJohn H- Armstrong—three lots of oedar aw amp in4___ rong—1___ __township o t Howell; oonsideration, $181.

Robert P . Fielder and wife to John Mn and 68-100 acres in township of M atavan; considera­tion, $ m * i

Robert Allen, J r , to Lewis T. Newingr^twd' aorea in township of Ocean; consideration, $1._ Jp |w p h S ; Walling to Alfred Walling—lot a t Kay-portioonHdenttfon, $500. ...... « ~

Alfred Walling to Delia ’ Walling—lot a t Keyport; consideration. $600,;

Wxn. L 8xnith and w ifrto John W. Borden «< o/,r— property in town ahip^ol W all: oonsideration, $1.00u.'

Jaenry H. Hoffmirc and wile to John 8.Tiirodk;«' morton—lot in township of Bhrewsbury; oonaidera-i tion, $450. ,

Hubbard Dennis and wife to Benjamin Brown— honae and lot a t Fair Haven: consideration, f 1,000. ,

Martin Haggerty et a l to John El Jordan—twe lota in town of Freehold; consideration, $L

Micbel J . Fitxgibbons to John'S. Jordan—two,.lotf, in town of Freehold; consideration; $1.

Lewis T. Newing and wife to Edward Travis—lot at Long Branoh; oohaideration, $200.

Ralph B. Gowdy and wife to Horace Little—45-100 of ah acre in township of Howidl; consideration, 11 and exchange. ’•

The Ooean Beach Association to David L. Baum­gardner—loti Noa 950 and 951 a t Ooean Beach; con­sideration, $700

The Ooean Beach Association toEmeline Thompson —lot No. 953 a6 Ocean Beach; oonsideration, $815.

Alexander A. Yard to George O. BoekmAn—lot in town of Freehold; consideration, $600.

Win* V. Heid and wife to Humphrey B. Chamberlin —lot No, 49 a t Reid’s Villa P a fk f ' consideration, $5*0.

Jamfa Cooper and wife to Adeline Scott—lo t or tract of land in township of Middletown ; oonsider* ataon, $ 1 ^5 .

John H. Patterson, sheriff, to Jesae Parker—sold aa property of Gilbert W. Davison, in township of Millstone; consideration, $560.

GeorgnJW. Brown, ahenif, to execntora of Jefcae Parker, deceaaed—farm in townahip of Millstone, aold as property v t Martha AT Kirby and huaband: oon- sideraUnn, $1,000. " '

John H-Darison, at al. ex’rs., to Martha Packer —•four tracts or lots of land in townahipa of Millstone and Freehold; consideration. $5. 1

Linda M. Davison to Marina Parker—dower right in 4 trfcete of land in township of Millstone; oonsid* oration, $800.

Elisa Moifilwainc to Charlea H. MoCheeney—farm in townahipof Marlboro; oonsideration, $1. '

Bobcxt Allen, Jr./m aater, to Thomaa W. Cooper— several lots or tracts o l land in townahip of oaton-town; oonsideration, $3,280. ' ; * 4 ------

h Robart AlIen, Jr.,m asteri to Jamea Chaaey—two lota of land in townshipof Eatontown r oonsidaraticn, ------- .50.

Npf riibber canctlinp; Btampa by strictly enforcing a regulation which provides that blade printing ink shall be used for the purpose of cancelation w benevertbat material can be obtained, Other colors oi the same quality-, of Ink are, hcrwover, permissible. > An order, calling attention to the w o v e regulBtion will be published in the 'next offi­cial poetal guide.

Several days ago a petition for the relief of J.ean ’ "eL andrgM jras^presented.ifc the^H<d(use of

itatives, by Mr. £21ist 6 f X btilfl^ia, and_____ to the committee on foreign aflGaiTB. In1844 the Peruvian Government bound itself to re ­ward Id a specific m anner any person who should make a discovery that would pxaterially inorease the wealth of the country.. Landrean devoted him- sell to scientific exploration and discovered m any immense deposits of guano. T he government agreed to ' give him a certain percentage equal to about on4-third, bn t internal strife intervened and ha has never succeeded in obtaining hia share, which amounts to ; $100,000,000. He asks the UnitedBtates to help him collect his olaim.

G E N E R A L . N E W S .Tbe BQronatio$u>f Poj& Loo XXfL will take place

to-morrow. ■ _ ’W illiam W orkman, who died in Montreal on

Sunday , leaves $400,000 to public charities^Anderson, of the Louisiana R eturning Board,

was sentenced on Monday to two years in the peni­tentiary.— - ^

Pe ter Cooper has ‘ established and endowed a gh-grade free school a t Limestone Spring, South

Carolina.Major W illiamson’s surveying party have ascer­

tained the height nf Mount Hood, Oregon, to be 11,225 foet: - r ,

One'man was killed and tbree injured by an ac­cident on tbe Richmond and Fredericksburg (Va.)

viailroad on Mondav-The P a von i a ferry b oa tjam es Fisk:, J r ., collided

with the i schooner Joeie Crowley on the N orth liver, New York, on Saturday evening; One aengerwas knotfm to be killed, and i t is feared ol w qrelbst

H r. -James Gordon B ennett having purchased the Bteamshlp P^ndora for the purpose of Arctic expkoation, has petitioned the Government to ap> ptfmi lTntted States naval officers to the command ofjitheeipeditian, • ...' 4hii» Oommlittee on Indian Adairs, in their last r*P?ifc .declare that the present system of manage- m £niia-not aauccesafnl one, and-recommend that fhti ^Indian Bareau be transferred from the Inte- ri^T.I>epartmont to the W ar Department.

to n was ran Spain in New

___________ „ _ eavy fog. Thopton waa badly damaged- *Mr. George Carey, o, 10 Wall street, N . Y., was almost instantly

r S » s a Obaaaand w itf po Thomaa W- Cooper—lot in township o r Eatontown; oonsideration, $4,(500.

The Ocean Beaoh Asao<datiun to William M. Fproe —lota Noa. 1,400. 1,401 and l,4ld a t Ocean Beach; oonsideration, $500.'

Tho Ooean Beach Auodation to Wm. M. Foroe— lota iSfoa 1^10. l,2 il, 1,212, a t Ooean Beaoh; conaid- ation, $500.

Lewis J-Lyona and wife to William»H. Force-rlot No. 1.801 a t Oceau Beach; oonsideration, $500.'

William M. Foroe an d . wife to Lewii J . Lyons—lot No. 1,40b a t Ooean Beach; jcmnaidenj^ion,^^.

Samuel C- Southard and wife to Samdel G. Robbinset al., administrators—two traota of land in townahip

.Emma L, Conover and husband to Prothcro—14 and — -------------- -----------------70-10Q^or6» ln-to\ifnship-of JAtlaatio «on»idsratiopy ^hiard ta th e -i$940.80. .*■ A ^rhbn entnmce

Aaron , Lonxstreot et al. to 8amuel Bowlea—lot in #hhnVl Ivina on township of M atavan; consideration, $$&.

■' A. Nioolls and wife to Richardson graham—seven lota at Spring Lake Beach : consideration, $6,000.

G. [A. Nfbolls and wifo to Richardson' Graham—/ire lota a t Spring Lake Beaoh; consideration, $5,100.

The Ooeaif Beach Assooiation to Henxy H.-Yard— lots Noa 1.640,1,647,1,928 and 1,929 a t Ooean Beach oonsideration, $1,6U0. ;^ H a ^ ^ “Y t ta Mt38WgrW:<hwold«lotrNo. 8,915 ‘at Ocean Beaoh; consideration, $1,000. i

The Spring Lake Beach Improvement1 Co. to Ellxa- bethilartin-lofcs Noa. 8, 0, and 10; block 46; 28,19 and »}. block 45 and block 83- a t Spring Lake { ooa»id*ra- t i ( S u 1 7 ^ 6 0 0 .. . V - ' '

Q. A .)r. Allaiifa^ al. to Stephen Garrison—H 4S- 100 aorea in township of Howell; consideration^j $744^0. • "*4 t *'

DeborahBritton to Emma HafcbawSy^iiS^ovillaae of Estontowui ccnsideTation, $5,000....

EUsa Jane NewSSJf'and husband to ' George W. ^NertrmaQr?0*U-l 00 acres in township of W all; tensid- ' erationviSM^ >- ••.<,{.; v ■ - '* .

Daniel Dodd st ah to Alexaiidar G. Cattell—lot %t Monmouth1 Beach>oonsicierationA,$300.’ ; , v

Alexander G. Cattell tp George /F,' Bakerr—lot a t

The excitement on the Castleton was in-

Reports from Boston show au increasing_erpor£ o f breadBtuffs for E urope; all the warehotfBos are fall pfive hundred full cars with no place to dis­charge ;. a ll th e steamers engaged fo r a m onth ; no avaU|tble Bailing tonnage, and. steamships brought Ihjb^DaHt froirt Hampton Roads, S^ndy Hook and o tiie rp lacesto load.

Heinrich 'Wahlen murdered Max Hoehne, a wealthy Gierman, a t the Granger's Hotel during the OentenniaL W ahlen’s trial took plaoe a t Nor­ristown, P a , last Fall, qnd resulted in his convic­tion and sentence to death. On Saturday evening his body was found hanging to a bar in the win­dow o f his cell by a rope m ad e from hia bed­clothes. " % ,' J. F red T hornton, clerk of the S t. Louis Circqit C^urt, t t a defaulter to an amount estimated at about $Q7,000. H e waa elected in the autumn of 1874, and his term of offioe will end in November n a x i H e is a single man, and h is salary is $6,000 § year; yet he seems not to have been able (o live upon that income. H e is said to have been ad- ■ meted to gamblihg and hard drinking./ A Presbyterian clergyman j living near Montreal, has to ‘Cross a wide stream in going to and from hi$ churoh. h Od a recent Sunday, the ioe being bare and smooth, he skated, instead of riding, as tisnal in h is sleigh. He now finds himself arraign-'

for breaking tbe Sabbath. H e argues that ^ka^as were the easiest and quickest conveyance that he could have employed; yet, when the (rtefttion ia p u t to him squarely, he does not deny th a t he derived pleasure from the skatmg.

The atonn'of. last Thursday night and Friday waa, very severe oirer a large portion o fthe country. In addition to the three wrecks on the Jersey oOast,. the ship t i t . Bernardo went .ashore n ear Reedy’s laUnd light, and a British bark was wreck­ed on the North. Carolina’ coast Fort Hope, On­tario; was ’ visited b y the severest flood known in jrdars, and three islands to the Della river, CaJ., containing 8,000 acres of cultivated land,,were j&bmerged. JKravel has been m u ^d e lay ed .

^ • jlis t Friday evening J . W . Barron, Treasurer of the ^Dexter (Mains) Savings Bank, no t returning -hOnte >8 usual, search was made for him a t theb f f t i l ^ WhWthB'doors^of theaavinga bank rooms

id ’ been broken open Barron's ftroans could bo salt , in-whiflh_he_was looked, and was obtained to the vault he was

S T A T E IT E M S .The venerable Bev. Dr. Gabriel LudloW died at

Neshanic, Somerset oounty,’ Turaday, aged 80 years. . v

A lafge quan tity o f frnit and vogctablcs, and a few plecee of partly burned furniture, were washod aahore at Atlantic City, last Friday.

Lewis* C. Neu, fo r . seven years a d e r k in the Elizabeth post-office, has been arrested for tamper* tag with letters in a divorce case.

F ish Commissioner George Ricardo, of Bergen countyr-wilTstock the Hackensack river, w ith 500,- 000 Bnad and ’ an innumerable quantify o f smelts the coining season. }

The Rahway Savings.Bank is pacing out canh tosmall depositors onij- *----- J ------ -------------Jmortgages and stc until cash can be does not intend to suspend. ■- "I

Some half dozen citizens of Bound ^rook left there pn the early Monday morning trpin for Tex­as on a tour of examination, some of them expect­ing to return for the ir families to take up their I residence in that much praised qountry, if the ! prospect plegng),..... 1

In the M ercer County Court on Monday "Walter F . Bartlett jthe defaulting Tax Receiver of Treuton, was sentenced to two years in the State Prison. Joseph A. Beecher, convicted bf- libeling the Hon. Hi S. L ittle, was sentenced to pay a fine of $250 and be oonflned in the oounty jail for th irtV dajs.

The Legislative Committee on the Soldiers" Home, of Newark, visited that institution Monday and made thorough examination. W ritten charges agafnBt the Superintendent were mhde to th ^ committee by one of the inmates that several persons had died through neglect The changes were referred to the managers of tho Home.

George Allen Stem, a brakeman on the Central Railroad o f New Jersey, m et with an accident last Thursday whioh proved fatal. He was standing on top o f a box car on his way in from making a double from Hampton Junction, and being blinded by the smoke from the engine, did not notice the near approach to the Springtown bridge. He was struck on the btfok“of tS e bead crushing in the

■ skull. Sixteen men are said td have lost their lives at this point owing to the bridge being en­tirely too low. r

Daniel Leach, an old miser, who has lived in* Jersey City forty years, died suddenly last Friday, in a f i t H e . was a rag pioker, and was well-known throughout the ifity. ~H e lived im m old building in Railroad avonuo. Ho jpwned considerable pro- party; bilt was so mmerlyjthit he deprived nim- Belf of the most necessary things, and lived upon the meanest and cheapest food, in order to hoard money, He wore an oil-doth suit both summer and winter, and continued his work in tbe worst weather. Nothing is Known of the' early history of Leach, who was about seventy years of age, except that he was an Englishman by b irth . He haa ho relations in this-country. T he estate is valued a t from $85,000 to $40,000.

The State Board o f “Agriculture 'held its. animal meeting a t Trenton last Wednesday, with Presi­dent Newell in the chair. Prof. Cook detailed the operations of the Board fo r the past y par. Presidont Newell, In h is annual address, showed that farming in New Jersey was m ore profitable than in almost any other Htato. All of the staple crops can be produced with the ordinfiTj^ routine, and where extra o r high culfcjue is $ v e ir the crops increased proportionally, . The President also stated that beef and pork can be reused on our clay and loam farms, while in tbe saotion of oor State where the soil is of a light char­acter, sweet potatoes, melons and small iruits are grown with profit After discussing various mat­ters of interest the Board elected th e following officers-for 1873 : President, Thomas T . Kinney, Newark; Hecretary, t \ T. Quinn, Newarlf; Exec­utive'Committee, Wm. A. Newell, Wm. Hit. Force, Chalkley Albertson, XJbarles E . ( Elmer, Geo. H. Cook.

Jacob R. Freese, manager of the State Savings Institution of Trenton, whioh suspended payments early in January, was indicted for-misappropriat­ing its funds, having sold the good securities aud loaned the proceeds to .m ssoiis on second mort­gages thus leaving over fifty thousand dollars of deposits unprotected, except by the worthless pa­per. Freese and his tw o .jaos pleaded non, vult contendere when charged upon the indictm ent last week* thereby .waiving a defence and throwing themselves upqn -the mercy of the Court. Tbe sentence was postponed till Mondayy when Chief Justioe Beasley sentenced J . H. Freese to the State Prison for five years a t hard la­bor, and his two sons, Louis, and Harry, to the County J a il for b!x m onths eaoh. Mr. J . it. Freese was originally a physician, aud became conspicuous in Trenton as proprietor o f the State Ggpette and as a volunteer in the late civil war. On his return home he established a banking and real estate office in Trenton, and has been very active In his efforts to organize a tax reform move­m ent throughout the State. Some' years ago he made a European tour and wrote a work on Joru- salem, from-whioh he became known in the legis­lative lobbies as ** JatuaalSSrFrebBe.''

discussed a t length, and then .made the special order for the'afternoon. A bill authorizing Boards of Chosen Freeholders to purchase th e ir , own botida out of moneys in the sinking funds was paesed, and afterwards reconsidered fp ran amorid- -— meut to su it Hudson county. The bill to discoh- 7. : . - tinue tb? manufacture o f hats, shoes, 9to ., in 'the State Prisoji^waa then taken Up and discussed a t r length, pending which thp Hofna adjoifttied.

In the Senate .'the foUowifigi>iU$~W0rff'p&88iqd.s ^hibit the bridging of rivers o r bays between ereey and o ther States w ithout an «priejM ^v^5%

Legislature. -T p reduce the salairies &£'?$$$&*■ >f 0o ^

Ne w taot of the Legislature. -U,o ithe Judges bf Common Pleas of Pasaaic pounty, . ^ ..... and to provide I'ortheffonding of the floating deJ)fBt>; of oountiee, . To amend the clharter of-Lambert-. ' . ville. To provide fo r. the annual. distribution • of. -• '+r % $100,000 to public schools from the General School .v Fund. / ' ,

■ C O U N T Y N E W S . •’->?

From the M o n m o u th T tu ju ir r r .

A duelling house near Irwin’s mill was burped down'last week under circumstances that lead tbe community to believe that i t was set on fire by those interested in obtaining the insurance. T he * wbEbAh Vrfltt owned the bousa and furniture, bu t who lives in New York, came to her house tha t day, and when the fire^jroke out*iu the evening, twas playing cards wilh an Irishman, and was first informed of the fire by others, we biplieve. Once before the same .house was on fire and was saved by the neighbors. There was au insurance of $1,200 on the house -and fhrniture, ,and it. is be­lieved that the insurance people will look in to the m atter before they pay for the Iobs. ,___

found lying on the floor handcuffed, gagged, and ‘itrfLfpe about h t i neck. H e waa taksn out ih' a senseless condition and : died a t 5:80 o’clock next morning. , He had several wounds on the head. The^robbera obtained less than $100, and probably th ^ p i? tfd e r?d the Treasurer because he reftiaed to open ihc safe.

M onm outh County Surrogate’s Office. J ^ * W illi, Admitted t o ProtKt^i y k From February 9 to February 25 ,187R, i; Dr.CharlesA. Laird, of Squan, deceaaad. Dr. Rob- w t’Laird^ executor.

fe^BhwU-Lvfont oX yocan QroTCr4*oeaae<l Frank P. tfftoxty adaduiatrato^.withwill annoxed.* 5buoy Ann Hi pkini. of Allentown, deceaaed Wm. ^ b b m s a n d Enoch vaffeyty, execntora.

' Letter* o f A duIn latn itlbn 1 4*?Chanted to— ^7 Cha^Us B. Ellis and . Martha Ri Conover, admlnis^

' a tors of Rowlahd A. EUia, of Fraehold* daoeased,‘aeo. Johnson.

Xegfslatare.

In the House on Monday a join t resolution was introduced and passed calling, upon 'th e Senators and Representatives in Congress from thia State to' resist the passage o f the bill now before Con­gress to transfer the Life Saving Servioe. froinr the Treasury Departm ent to the Navy Departm ent.The bill passed both houses on Tuesday.

A bill was introduced, to authorize the city of Newark to erect publio markets, and" to issue bonds to provide for the payment of the same not exceedhrtr $250,000.

The bills re districting Paterson and Morris oounty w ere passed.,

In the House on Tuesday the Horslj-PbilUps contested election case was referred back to thi Committee on Election.

- The bill allowing- one- dollar to- each enlisted man-now in the National Guard, who has been honorably discharged, for each and every day of service performed in the months oi Ju ly and August, 1877, for the preservation o f the public

••e, was warmly Contested, and passed by je vote.The following bills were passed in the Senate :

A it act relativp to past due^taxes; an act relating t o • assessments in townships; an act validating certain mortgages heretofore given by railroad corporations, and .toniake such mortgages a lien upon the. ftarjehises" q f 'finch corporations: an act creating a sinking fund for the payment or certain assessments in cities (this applies to Newark); an agt providing for the sewerage, and drdnage by incorporated camp-meeting associations ana sea­side resorts; an act authorizing the receipt of taxes in installm ents; an act repealing the Dis­tric t Cohrt Law so far a^ it affects New Brunswick; a supplem ent to the aot incorporating fire depart- m en ta ; 1 an ' act providing for th* appointm ent of Commissioners to the Paris Exposition.

On Wednesday* in the House, the bill tb an- thorizo, th e ' consolidationyof railroads which He wholly in this State and whioh have been author­ized t o hold other- railroads underlease , to absp-

Llutely consolidate an d^iperge tiieir oorpdraterlghta, franoWse^ |>owe?8 aod p i iv l le ^ N n (o one, w h B -J y r t Jtew*

From tne Mcmmoulh Democrat.Extra meetings of $n interesting character are

being held in the Scobeyville school-house, con­ducted by Rev. Jabez Marshall, of Eatontown.

The fifteenth anniversary of the?marrlage of M f .____and Mrs. W. D. H erbert took p laoe^t tne hom tfJ^p^' stead farm, hear Englishtown, oh Tuesday even- i ing, February 12th. This is the second celebra­tion of a golden wedding in the H erbert family within five years, the groom’s sister; Mrs. ’DaVid Laird, having oelebrated her golden wedding a few years since. The Herbert family have been resi­dents of Mop month oounty for more than 150 years. Some of the members of tha family took * an active part in the war of the Revolution* par­ticularly in the battle of Monmouth. The family ware slaveholders, and after the emancipation of 1825, their slaves remained y itii them aod'were taken care lot until they died! The death of" the last of these slaves occurred about twenty )

rs ago. The original wedding ceremony of__ . and Mr8- H erbert took place a t the DeNisehomestead, near the Tennent church. The clergy­man, Rev. Job Halsey, who performed the ceremony fifty years ago (then a middle aged mari), is still living in Perth Amboy. Seven of the original guests were present a t the oelebration • on the 12th. ~

Prom toe long Branch Tews. , • . : iMr. H. C. Lane has just finished a hiiictabm e^^™

model aurf-boat, for C ap t J. H. Merrlmon, d£thft____life-saving service. I t is a very fine boat, and i t is ’ expected that Capt. Merriman will order a nnm ber of others built of ^fte same pattern.

Arpetition is ‘in ciroulation asking the Central Railroad Company to move Brahohport station to the Main street crossing. I t is numerously signed, ahd it is hopdd that the request of the petitioners will be granted. Mr. E d Slocum will donate the land required for the station.

lloughly Bros, have taken a contract to build a bujlkhead m fro n t of the cottages of Messrs. Timp- son, Ke^ser, Swift Blagdon, Lowe, Keyes and Je s ­sup,at Monmouth Beach. I t will be on a line near- • ly with the bulkhead recently destroyed. Spiles will bo driven down from 15 to 18 feet, and these will be planked five feet below and three feet above ground. The space intervening between the bulk- head and cottages will be filled in with earth. ' 1

From the Red Bank S ta n d a r d .

The steamboat Sea Bird will soon resnzhe.her trips between Red Bank and New York.

Congress has appropriated $18,000 for the im ­provement of tho North Shrewsbury river.

The ordinance of baptisnJ was administered to eight candidates on Sunday night last in the •'1 Baptist Churoh. The bqildinc waa crowded to almost suffocation with people who wished to witness the ceremony.

Margaret Logan, a colored woman, died a t Marl­boro, N. J . , February 10th,. at the age o f 110 years. She was born a slave in the Taylor family living in that place, and has seen four generations of the Taylor lamily come and go, and was living with tbe fifth when she died. She was given her freedom when a little g ir l ; her papers were in . her possession a t the time of. her death, being dated over 100 years ago. She has a son living who ie 80 year? of age, and had two slaters who died recently at the advanced age of 105 and 112 years respectively. - j- ^

J' :

T h e B o y le W il l C o n te s t .On October 7, 1866, Edward Boyle, for many

years a city surveyor of New York, and who for many years resided in summer a t his vilhrf/whiob joins Aabury Park , on Deal Lake (formerly Great Pond), made a will, by whioh he bequeatiibd nil his property to his wife, Mary Boyle, and, in the event of her depth, providing that it should fall . ,■ to the House of the Gdod Shepherd, in th is tfty .On February 4f 1876, being then about to under­take a voyage to Europe- in oompany with his - wife, he made a codicil, in whioh, after- repeating - § .the original directions as to , the disposition of ' r

property, he farther directed as follows:‘rAnd if m y wife, Mary Boyle, aud myaelf ehall- ^ —4periahby the same calamity Qr _htf <ftdent;devise herein made to my wife, Mary Boyle, s h a l l ^ l_ ^b o -.v o id , a n d __th e__ da vise h e r e h ^ ^ n a d e ^ . r:to the House of the Good Shepherd* sKatii be valid. Tho testator and hia “wife le A r-* " ^ for Europe and arrived safe. Hia wife, however, J__-ii died on April 12, ensuing, and he also died three. . 7: days later. . The will and oodiqil being offered fo r > 1- probate, William J . Cowley appeared as a contest- ant^and opposed tbe bequest of all the. decedent's ^ ‘ estate to the House o fth e Good Shepherd., The c •$* contestant la the only child of William Cowley, ^ deoeased, who was the brother or Mary Boyle, th e ^ motbor of Edward Boyle, and is, roermore, a : ' nephew of the testator, uowley ob jec ted 'to t |ie ^ f- y - will being admitted to probate on'the ground that, S a^ the testator’s wife- died firsts and th a t neither 'S- ?%died by any oalam^t House of t f e ~ decedent died intestate.

. v . the devise to theIhepberd was voidj and that the tate. The ease was fo lly a r r

gued and reported some time ^ago, and yesterday Surrogate Calvin rendered ah opinion stistainin^T the dedsion, affirming the validity o f the wiHTWld admitting i t to prbbato.^' B y this dodsioh, ehotildi^ it not beliefeaflef reversed on appeal, the llousei1

nerty v U u e d a tl£ im $ 8 0 0 !OOO to$flaMOO^e j v e s ^ e ^ ^

Page 2: GEO. M. B EN N ETT, practical -Honse Painter, · 1# § J tm if Wmm m . A S B tjfiY P A R K , N FjW J E R S E Y . I < aR D A Y , M A R C H 2, 1878. N o. 9, ^ m O ^ S IC T A lO jgggi

'. i .1G i ' r - v - S i

AfeBURV ^ARR JO U R N A L , SA T U R D A Y , M ARCH 2, 187$.< M M

T H E

TBBM8 OF 8UB8CEIPTI01I.i year, In a<1 vanoe.............................................

months,In advance.. . . . . . . < • ; ....................a months, in advance............................. ,1..........i month, ia a d v a n c e ..'....,.........fllngleboples....................................................

. S i 50

The A.8BOUY PAUKvF OORNALUll«W*lVPfl.P<»\P«*a*A«<*“ * A tb n ry J 'a r l, Ifera Jerney. I t in printed ah good paper, and beside* containing the current new* o f event* along theJer- < eycoa*ti. give* a numm ary o f general news. It* selection* are made withvare^althouffh it i t composed principally o f grip Inal ... We aim to make it a good fam ily oaper.ff**4Mstre to

In circulation. We therefore auk our friend* atidpr - - enlnttbtcriber* to recommend it totheir neighbor*.

; ' • TO fORHRSPOHDENTS,W eeh a tlb ea la d to fecetve item * o j new ean dcom m tm icatton*

. on nnhjcct* o f in te r e t t to thi* com m u nity. - i ■ ' n w ritin g a r tic le* in te n d e d /o r publication , o u r frien d* w ill P 'ttS iJbear in m in d th a t a wheel w ritten upon both aide* ban to be copied Itffitregm nptn p r « n a labor w e cn h n o iu n d lttd k e .

.. ‘ A ll com m unication* xhould be accom panied b y the .fu ll nam e ' a n d addve** of th e w r ite r , n o t nece**artlyfar publication, but a*'tt an nrah teeo f aood fa ith , Anonym oun qstter* w il l n o t be noticed. j• j »£e tuinnot re tu rn refected com m uni^ tiot**t b u t w i l l e d tM n ifo r a lim ited tim * i f requ eu ed to .

A ll letter* in tended fa r - th e ed ito ria l o r n ew * departm en t *7iouldbeaddreM *edtdfhe

=fcTbo reeniar W eekly circulation or the

Afibnry Park Jonrnal exceed* TWKN^Y- • ONE HlTNDRBD €oplen.

S A T U R D A Y , M A R C H 2, 1878.~ — , -------.-------------------------------- - j ---------------

F O R E C L O S U R E O F M O R T - jv G A G E S .Q f W e have already intim ated tfcat the legal ex-

penses in tbe collection of mortgage debts, are en­tirely ont of hit comparison with othey legal and necessary charges. And that this state of things*

. exists only by the sufferance of the public, is potent 5 - to any peraon who* will reflect for a moment that - ours is a government of ’lho people by the people;; . Suppose th a t A owes B, say one hundred dollars,

■■ ‘ ’ -on book account, and that i t wonlK be necessafy, .y in order to collect th6 Same, to add as legal ex­

penses one hundred dollars more, and also th a t i t , took from three to six m onths td pn t B ih posses-

. sion of his rightfnl dues, W e^say, suppose the above case to be forced npon sooiety a t once, what a cry against the injustice of law would we hear from every quarter; b u t let the same result be

iti r„. reached by a gradual process, and the thing is ac- -«epted as a m atter of course. , .

Now-let me ask in what consists the difference _ of mortgacpd debt from a book account? Well,

you Bay, the one is a debt as well as the other, and &£•'. the debtor is under the same obligations (morally) £.1. to pay the one aa tbe other, and legally aa muoh, j- if he has tbe property to pay with. In the one

■ case, the debt or obligation is acknowleged, and supposed to.be secured°bv the first legal title to

Y 'v the property covered, while in the other coae, the -machinery of the law is invoked first to prove and

;i certify the claim before judgment can be obtained, and Ahereby becoine a claim or lien on the pro- perty o f the debtor,

r ■ N o . w h y should the secured debt require • longer time ana*cost more money than the one un­

secured ? W e wait an answer. An echo answers, ;V W hy? . . .

Having the best interests of the public in view, •v-- and malice or envy towards none, ib ourouly o b ­

ject in penning these lines.—M&nmoHth Democrat •»Asbubt Pabk, Feb. 12, 1878.

” r‘ D. H . W xokoft.

Our townsman jB sound in his reasoning. I t is really a W inder to us to iaee people, sub-

v;-, iflit so quietly to legal extortions. W e know m any instances, w here cheap lots could find readv purchasers, upon which small houses

y. -would beT erected but for the excessive cost to if default vjas made in paym ent of

5 4 in terest or principal. W hile D. H. W yckoff i';-- has h is hand inr grappling with these disabili­ty ties to progress, Buppose he tries ventilating pT^'the faoliah law s w hich makes necessary in al*

most every S ^ te a different acknowledg-' v4 m ent to deeds. W h y would it not be a simple ■f m atter for the States* to adopt a uniform

style ? I t certainly would sav^a vast amount of trouble. ~

JF ^ e t) B A N K .A bill was introduced into the Legislature on

Monday last by Hon. A rthur Wilson to change the 1nam eof Red Bank to Shrewsbury City.— Red B a n k ‘ Standard. /

Red- Bank, to a Btranger unaccustomed to the name, sounds quite as bad as Squan, U pper Squankum, or Low er Sqiiankum, which last two are enough to detey a man o f taste fr<5m wishing to reside in them, simply j ic c o u n t of the outlandish and (we beg pardon of tlie inhabitants thereof) uncivilized narnt?, for thera is> something in a name after all, much f as some seem inclined to ignore the fact. Red Bank i n a beau­

t i f u l placf*, destined, we believe, to become th e centre of a large population, and /deserves os good a name as can be found^'ior'it. W e cannot say we quite like the name Shrewsbury City either, but tastes will differ. / •

P R O S T I T U T I O N O F . T H E M E T R O P O L I T A N P R E S S .

. One m ight in vain search,all history for B a c h ef- L fectivo bnbery and widespread treason to principle

o* is weekly exhibited in the columns of many of o u r metropolitan dailies who unblushingly

yZ, *l Pn t on the livery of tho court of Heaven To servo the devil in.”

&<- * • Tho above was suggested by the New York cor- } reepondence of the Waflbington (D. C.) Republic,

,V; w h ich ,Jbporting ,a meeting of ‘‘ The New York !\ V Press (rfab,” say s; i

4| Everybody was in a good humor and calls were made for a gentleman whose name we think it pru-

•■v dent to suppress. He in regarded as one of the ablest managing editors of the New York Press. He

<■■■ 'Commands, oy a certain sturdy manliness, thtf res- ■ poet of nil about him. B ut asJjejis also a humorist

and a fluent talker,“lie hail'no’ sooner taTcen" the '.‘.•. -floor than every one in the room settjecj back com-

fortably in his chair and looked ok i? this particu- la r speQch'Woflld'bO' tbo treat of-Hhvthntnittg.- -

*• When the speaker dropped bis good humored Cri_€xpre8sion and turned almost florceJy upon his * ^ ^ “ dienee -with-thjs sentenoe, ‘ You aro a gang of H-'^-Blavoa,’ the listeners'laugbeiL— They thought it ^ ‘ was an introdubtion to some' unusualijtfunny joke.

-4 ‘ There is no t a man here,’ continued the ^ - s p e a k e r , 1 that can call bis bou| h is own. You are ^O^aqpack of'hirelings. I am a hireling. You are all S 'H tire tings! 'You represent the great Metropolitan ^ ■ i K ^ ^ H ^ i s no otig ^ f yoe th a t d a r^ wfit^ a l ^ ' l i n e , of his honest convictions. Thore is n o t one ^ ;^ o ty o u that 3Eres w rite a line of what jie believes. ( f»;-’l l f yOU were to write i t , i t wouldn’t be published.

soul would be taken out of i t I t would be: S^-SBppMsaed.- I would suppress it if it were brought ^t'|jf.to;:m e. .1 ge t a Tmndred wad’twenty-five dollars a

ji-vSseekfor suppressing the t ru th ; for cutting out the ofevery sen ten Co whioh comes,before iad.*

timile ^ h ieh played upbjar,UiejfiWtf« 0^ his audiepce dlFappeared as the epcakeT/W6nt on. I t

t^ v h a d ' suddonly -become ^ very graVe assem blaga. S K ^ T iu it’s fio; t o s , talking the tru th ,1 pame fyom

p t-fhn room. * W here ia there S ^ i i i e ^ ^ i n tlu a <rfty .who ijrflj. say right o4 t what

jTYh^flf fn’ thfrtrr' sn editor who writes, Where te h e? Show

^ p id suoceeaion the speaker then F rench and oar own p r e s s -

had com e, an d of th e im portanoe o f m ore elevated ideas,* a t th e Bame tim e n o t oonoealing th e im pos­sib ilities w hich b arred th e way to 0„radical change.n —Xfue-OClizon.■: W e sat beside an editor lately in a comU room while the counsel for the plaintiff in, a libel suit was informing the ju ry and the sey* eral editors present how a newspaper should be conducted. Our editorial friendieaned over and whispered, “ Y es, such a paj)er as he de* scribes would.ba.a eunuch.new spaper/- W e feel the force of the rem arks raaye by the representative of the metropolitan press, and while, wp are not particularly partial to French ideas, we certainly do admire the bold attitude assumed by the writers of the Paris press whOj notwithstanding the rigid government supdr”

/ vision exercised over them and the severe pen alties they incur, speak out bravely even if they find themselves in a dungeon afterward for so doing. A muzzled press is a weaker thing than a Samspn shorn of his 16cks. Law. makers cannot do a more disastrous thing for frfee governm ent and civil rights than to circum scribe the power of th e press. I t is the g reat lever to elevate the people;- to inculcate righ t principles, as well as to crush and de­stroy the wrong. I t is only those whose Jives and business are destructive to .civil law and order who desirp the press to be thus bound. Good and true men have nothing to fear. Should we tell the whole story about recent drunken row at a Freehold hotel, and how one • unfortunate victim was taken into tjje stable and tied,up like a wild boast until the effect of the rum he had drank a t that* regular licensed hotel had worked off, some*, body would fetft very much aggrieved that their private right to make m en-beasts had been invaded. B ut what about the private rights o f the poor Wife and children of that man, pr those men ? A h f they have the righj;. tp sit by a tireless hearth and weep, to crawl to a comfortless bed-and shiver through the night, to rise in the morning starved almost, and n o ' food in the house, while the money that should have provided for thjeir w ants goes into the till of th e rum-seller to enrich his wife ^and family. B ut the 0ay~is surely coming when the editors o f the county, will bocome wonderfully Frenchy when they write of these evils .that exist in our fair Monmouth.

H E . T H A T B E G E T T E T H A F O O L D O E T H I T T O H I S S O R R O W . " ~ P R O V E R B S .

Bari tan pays, I see, $215 fo r license, afld votes , 2.000 to nupport her poor, a sum which has to be- suppipmented by private chanty, and two-thirds of which goes to the viotimn of intemperanoe. Hofa muoh do. the criminals from Raritan c o s t? . How much the lunatics? W hat portion of; the cost caused by intemperance ? Some lunatics reported to have become so from other causes, lost their reason because of brooding over the intemperate habits of a hoflband o t son. ^They are generally reported aa 11 religious excitement cases. Some are the children of intem perate fathers, congenital lunatics or idiots. 1 To ask our wise Doctors to go baok for causes, would be to ask too much. Sta­tistics may easily tell us what we gain, never, what we lose, by thia iniquitous traffic. Is i t no t about time we, examined, .this- q u estio n 'in L the-ligh t of such facts as’ we can get, t o ’ascertain our posi­tion ? W e ' are becoming* deteriorated mentally and physically ; our best and our bravest are Call­ing victims to this soul and. body-destroying vice; and if we do not look to i t soon, the fools will be in so large a majority, t h a t . republicanism cannot extricate us from our degradation\’! Oorrespondent Monmouth Democrat. -

W e call attention to the portion of thoQuoted article that relates to fools and lunatics.I t is a well-known fact, a t least amorig1

"physiciansi'.and-way become indisputably plainto any who will take the pains, ito investigatethe subject, that a la rg o . proportion ofLtfre

tavern neoepsary,. and .\yill conduce jtolvtlie' public good,” may call \ the Asbury-'PajT< J o u r n a l the mouthpiece of fanatics throw all their sym pathy against it~whea-i t j i brought before the Courts foil telling i n ' S i ' varnished language tlie hon-ors o f a Kelliali traffic; but, w ith ’God’s help, "we wWl^econ-', ten t to fight on alone if need~lie, satisfied; ,;if w ^can only see, as wc are daily seeuagf .the’; results of our efforts in the reclaiming 6% ,m-; temperate men to a life of virtue and sobriety.

R U M —A R S O N I 'Mr. Charles Chamberlain, of Long Briuicli,

iind w h o is-one of the Long Branch Coin- missioncrs, had his barn and several horses burned dh Moriday, the 18th inst., a t 1 o|clock in the morning. Tho people of Long Branch/ have becomo very much alarmed by the fro- quency of theBe incendiary fires, ond have made every effort to ferret Out the perprtratohi/jjrot. w ithout much success, untjl a t last th ey j,lire being discovered, and arrested thfough ^he efforts o f a gentleman to whom L ong Brafieh owes a g reat deal. W e allude to . Mr, John H oey, wliose estate joins Mr. Chamberlain^:, By. referring to our Long Branch coiftpspond- ence, it will be seen that a man nam ed'K av- anagh, a keeper o f a rum shop, is charged with being the heal} 'arid front o f tbe recent.- incendiary fires. F o r setting on foot <*ny hellish scheme you can always depend upon' the rum shop for inspiration.

H O M E A G A I N .Lnst Sunday morning Rev. Jo h n S. Inakip

preached one o f his characteristic sennons in St. P au l’s M. E . Church, to a large audience. Our friend was in a happy frame of mind, and had a happy subject to preach upon, his tex t being: “ I t doth riot ye t appear w hat we shall be.” Some of the illustrations with which the sermon abounded were very fine, and the description of the sturdy oak standing alone; in the field, riven by tempests ye t ever defying their pow er until blasted by the lightning, was calculated to inspire witli-fresTi/coutage those who ware- determined to do right in spite of opposition, A t the close of tho surmqn Mr. Inskip, in a humorous manner, seconded the efforts of the stewards, repre­sented by D. H . Wyckoff) in collecting the balance of the pastor’s salary. T he people were in tha giving mood, and , evidently- enjoyed the privilege of giving, raising the wholB amount asked for, w e believe. Mr. Inskip, in a fefe pleasant remarks, said he had again taken up his residence a t Ocean Grove, which he expected would be permanent, and when the confusion of moving was over, he hoped all his old friends would call upon him, at his house. W e . expCct to be among the number, and avail ourselves of our old social privilege, and we hereby .tender to Mr. and Mrs. Inskip the warm sym pathy and esteem of their neighbors in this locality. •

A lm ost every month there occurs somethingto mark the social and intellectual growth of our neighborhood. I t has given us pleasure to refer occasionally to an esteemed friend, now residing among us, who is one of the distinguished corps of writers o f the New Y o rtr ' /Swri— a paper that pays more to encourage talented writers than any other published in N ew Y ork, not less than fourteen graduates of H arvard being engaged on its columns. A ud now it is our pleasure to in­form the public, that the editor of the Christian Standard, of Philadelphia— a paper circulat-

idiots th a t are born everywhere, ore the off- i t g in all parts of our country, is a residentof Ocean Grove. The paper is on file a t the A sbury P ark reading room, ail'd we cordially weleome its editor, Rev. John S. Inskip, to his seaside home and friends.

spring of drunken parents. Physiology long ago established this point, and ever since tho records of asylums and poor-houses have furnished corroborative evidence of its truth.I t is the terrible penalty tha t men must pay for becoming less than beasts, and is a law as inflexible fis any that governs the movements of the universe. P ity ’tia tha t the poor imbecile, results of such beastliness should haye to bear about in living bodies the effects of their pirrenta’ sin, y e t perhaps the 'all-wise Providence so ordered it that the reproach of their own wickedness should be ever before their eyes as a warning. W e once heard a celebrated physiologist lecture to an audience of , men, and the plain language he employed made an indelible impression upon our minda.The Doctor related the circumstance of. a gentleman who came to hjm. and told him he had several chijdrch that were noted for their brightness and intelligence, bu t his eldest son was an idiot. H e said that all hia ancestors, as far back as he had been able to trace, were intelligent, olear-headed people, and the cause of his son’a idiocy was inexplicable, and had been a life-long sorrow and .mortification to him. The Doctor inquired of the gentleman about hia habits a t the time of the birth of his

H e replied tha t he was fond of com- . ___'and d m n F o S ^ o S - f f l y : ^ i r ^ !a this

nover get drunk?” asked the Doctor. “ Y es,” answered the 'gen tlem an . “ N ow ,” said the Doctor, ‘‘ fasten in your mind, if .y o u can,

The brutal pigeon shoot recently contemplated by H. White, of R ed Bank, has been abandoned by W hite backing out. — Monmouth Jerseyman.

T he Monmouth county press has gmokedout those fellows that stick pins ilfrpigeons,pull their feathers out/ and bite their feet offto make thdm fly wildly and thereby render itmore difficult for marksmen to h it them.Take away the free press and w hat rascalitiesw ould be p e rp e tra te d !

A number of subcriptions expire with this issue, and the papers will be stopped, unless we are notified to continne them. Parties who do not receive next, week*s paper and who wish to continue their subscription will please drop a jpostal card to us stating th e feet.

■ ■ ■ **=■••«— _______

Tho city of Boston contains T,'800 women Who pay taxes on property which m -tbe aggregate am ounts to $76,000,000. The State of Massachu­setts contains 84,000 taxpaying women. Mot one of these women Is perm itted to vote for the legal offioers by whom these taxes are lev ied -an d collected, or for. t h ^ : J W : wh'mr^bff3a2BSE-U.

j appropriated for municipal and State purposes.I M ultitudes of males, however, who pay no taxes,

pany, •

whether you were intoxicated aome months previous to the birth of your boy.” The gentlem an's cheek blanched as the keen eye of the Doctor read his thoughts. . Yea, it was then made plain to him that while inflamed with liquoj he had- become the father of a

just 1 Is it the fair th igg to make such a discrim­ination aa between tax-paying wotnen and non- taxpaying men. Plainly n o t T be injustice of the discrimination lies upon its very face'. Say­ing nothing now about the general, question of woman’s suffrage, th e ye 'tj least that can be done, in consistency with equity, is to give those women who nay taxes the right to vote for the.officers that levy the taxes and appropriate the money.— In fo p tn d m t . .

T he A sbury P ark J ournal ia decidedly opposed to rum-selling arid to the brutal

fool. Much has been w ritten and said or tho n ahooting matche8 of Monmouth county,evils of ii}temp<yance; but the plainest trutha, ^ ,g ^ decidedly in favor 0f female tax- that have been hidden because too vile al-* p.iyora voting for the officers of our township most to boar tho light, will be told some day ^ h ^ ^ p r o p m f f i n g o f the ta x money. to d e te r m en n o t on ly frOm poieom ng th e ir ^ .. . . _ .. • - J \ow n bodies, b u t from tran sm ittin g a h eritage . . „ 7 7 / . .. , , , a*.

\ v i .- ’ ,M J * *• ' There will be a “ handkerchief festival ’ a t theof suffering lo their-ch ild ren . T h e C hristian Ayepue f o r m e d Church next Tuesday1m en . o f Oceato tow nship , w ho Bign ta v e rn - , CTenj ng^ March 5th. Befre^hmonta in the way ofkeepers ' applications for licenses, in w hich oc- oream> candies, e tc ./w ilib e * served; ond-f^ecu r th e w ords, “ W e th in k ; such • jm inn . ox: ladies prem ise a pleasant entertainm ent'5 Sedegrading eUte which newspaper labor cur the words, “ ^Ve th ink B W b fib t w ox ladies promiae a pleasanteniemm

... v M A ^The vicinity 9< t t e - V ^ k ^ f e l ip o n e r MoDon-

P o n d “ during tii^ laa t few days has been tho scene o f ; many m irth-provoking inci­dents; Whioh vividly illostrate the reoklessneas. of

•©venmen-ih - making a plaything of a: deadly eicplCw • Sive. largo po rtion /o f tho vessel’s cargo, waa- 'm ining pow der-'-A bonfire w*a blazing on the beach sum m ildod'by drenched men ahd u rch ins;

Tone of then* niimbejr- snatched a kfeg partly filled vrith^dkmaged ' powder, and th re\r i t on t^e fireT There-waa a general/withdrawal., An instant later

‘a terrific explosion fhlIowed, butfortunately no ahe was injured; Bome^of iiur large-hearted m en tMi- splioited deatt o a t quantities o f ** D urham '^ wfcll mixed with “ llazzard’B FF j^ as a consequence; many cases of singed eyebrows ^ re recorded, ana a corher has been created in briarwood pipes ow­ing ^ ih e 'd em ah d to rsu b stf tu tes splintered bjrex- ptosion." Indeed,»one could n o t traviV^'Mip sand hills with safoty to life o r limb, Eaoh h ill waa a jpowder mine, kegs having been searoted in them until a favorable opportunity offered for the ir re-_ moval Inland by the advocates of cheap powder; happily there'was no premature explosions.

The “ tooat oold flooded crittars;*’ as a victim remarked, were those concealed in the dense cedars, who afte r seeing a^*f6ttow c ritte r” hook a k e g ,. ' deposit in the. sand'1 bank, 1 eroot a brush* twig to .m ark ita ^renting pUOe, would; emorge froto his obscurity and uncermonionaly disehtonkb the .kfg gf F F ^ -o n d depArt to a more secure point. *Tt\6 spom m ija from the Keystone 'State;who purchased..several k e « 11 no t passed '1 aftef testing It suggested the s tenc il41N. G . wotdd bo more appropriate than “ F P ,’1'as i t wm really

^worthless.« We. will,at some future timo w riteo n the .utility of oak staves fo r' fences, w h ich w illb e

rerected from . this, cai^ga , / ^ WreokPond and the beach waa Btfewn with staves, eighth- seven tons aa deck load; they are worth $20 per 1,000 in New“York. -The quantity about here is growing beantifollylesa ••*!> T he commuters of the Xiong Branch Division a t a recent m eeting in New York passed the following resolutions whioh attest/ the high charaoter o f . tbe late lamented John T. Bateman (of the 0 . R . o f N. J . ) and tho esteem in which his memory is cherished.\ " A t a- m eeting of commutera of the ttitig Branch Division of the Central 'Bailroa4 of New Jersey, held Feb. 1, 1878, i t wafi an­nounced to us that ou r friend, John T . Bateman had been killed* the evening before (Jan i 81, 1878), while in tne pdrforma^fXhof his duty at.Greftt Fond, and the following resolutions' were unauimqusly passed.” ‘ i . .. ;

J&xolved, That in the sudden death of John T. Bateman we have lost a valuable and truated friend, a geniaTand oonrteona official. He studied to please and make comfortable the., traveling public^and nothing seemed too muoh tor him to do. He endeared himself to a ll; and the Railroad Company (hia em- ployera) lose an often-tried an d trn s tea - «uLord inato.'.

Rdiolved. That we give expression of ,onr sad feel- mgs for this sndden IObb to his bereaved and aged

proiipoots beforeliim; anZ to ua a lesson 41 that in tho midst of life wo aro in death.”

Resolved, ►/That the resglntiona be engrossed and forwarded to his bereaved parents, with a letter of condolence, as soon as possible, and that a oopy of the same be also sent to tne G. R. R. Co., to show them the estoem our departed friend waa held in by the commuters.

e t ‘ £L P. M u l l e r ,J . T. O sborn,O. W. Buokun,A. B. Mabsh,

•B. X p w a , • Committee,

The whole is handsomely engrossed over a lan­tern in the background, and framed a t a coet of $60, and as a work of a r t is unsurpassed for de­sign, good taste aud beauty of execution, and is highly oreditable to the well-known reputation o f the artist, M r Fred. E. Foster.

February 27, 1878. J asfkb. .

OCEAN B E A C H . ;The w reck and cargo o f - ^ e G. L . Bradley was

sold at public salo to thiS^ht^Ost b idder.—The coal, 800 tona, of whioh 60 o r moj&.jfcons had

g a sh e d out of heir, was struok off to John G. Stiles, of Ocean Grove, for $50. The auctioneer,' John W. Borden, E sq ., then offered the schooner and everything appertainin£-thercto-exoept the cargo,- and the captain b id itoff a t $575. I t is not known what he will do with her yet, b u t i t is hardly possible' that she can be got off. All her loose sails"and 'rigging have been taken care of by the purchaser. 'I y

The contractors for the new depot a t this place are a t work on the foundation, and we expeot to see a very finp structure here to greet the eye of tho Btrangar as he alights from the cars. /

Mr. John Brown is building a neat cottage on 1) street, just south of the Association line.

o c e a n g r q v e .Hon. J . L. Hays, of ,Kewark, was dofra on

Tuesday.D r, Stokes paid a flying visit • to the Grove on

Monday.Socretary Evans spent last Sabbath a t the

Gryvo/ 1

Mr. L. E. W atson continues to improve Blowly b u t surely.

Mr. J . C. Johnson,'the jeweler, moved his fam­ily to Long Branch on Fnday.

Mr. C. 0 . Clayton is contemplating . an addition of several rooms to his cottage on Main avenue.

‘A constable 's Bale o f som e affects o f Mr. Wm. W attrtook place a t Oakland Cottage on-Saturday-

Rev. W. H. Kincaid, of Pittsburgh, ..Pa.', was a v is i to r^ thai^rove Friday and Saturday of la s t week. . •

Mr. W*. A. Cro&a is erecting a cottage for h im y 'self on M ount Tabor Way, near the Howlanu House. .

Bev. -J. S, Inskip has had h is property on Ooean Pathway re-painted, which adda greatly to its appearance.

Several barrels rosin from the wreoked schooner Thomas G. Smith w ere .fpund on> ihe beaoh here Monday. ■=■ - ' *

One of our builders, Mr. Chas. Oonlon, needing greater scope for the exercise of his architectural skill, h a a l eft fo r Sou th Am oric% .Applications for cottages and property fo r ren t

are num erous; bn t we should th ink ourjreal esta te agents ought to be able to meet the demand. .■

Mr.- Joa. Bops, of Phila ., was dowa during the storm o f Friday, probaBly to Spssiwl resulted to bathihg houses from the higH tide.

Soule oi the boys worked hard to polish up the engine for the Firem en's Pgrade on the 22d, b u t the fe a th e r was unpropitious and the parade did not takp place. i - -

S P O R k v lL X iE . uCaptain Dave iB doing.a good trade this w inter

notwithstanding th^ dull times. , j' ,0/fii Er polhem us is giving hia neat cottage a

coat of.paini, whioh^ together with the hew fenoe, present an attraotive appee^p^e. '

U iic lo im e d L e t t e r s , ' .•• JjUtftjflcttera repaaining in the Asbury Park pO«t-offlco for the week ending Fab. 28,4878 : * ’ vMir. Simon StulU. Miaa Sarah Whilber.

/ijnW ^r-P oreons callipg for thasa Jettere will plejuiaay “ advertised.” .

''.. '-r p. 0. SjroBcra,;• ..f • .. A/ut, Pottmuuttr.

a title.i W iW m

Wrecks fWSm iiing Branch t» 8<iuan.jfip& stretch of < , from jtrang Btm ob-

to Sqnan, a dlstance.of twelve mills', is the soene Of. more wrooia than, ever W ore at any one time •within burtnowledge. , -J ' lj,t '

A t ' t h e l a s t s t o r m o n '^ h o W id iQ r s i g h t , F e b r u a r y . 2 1 , t i l t o o B c h o o a e r s c a f j i o a f lh o r o i n t h i s s h o r t dl*-'. ta n o o ) ; w b ty ) i , w i t h t h e b r j g - a g j s o b o o n o r w r e o k e d

: . . .S tation No. e . - . ' ;.fTo Editoriip& it Jou iiia l;— .

. I noticed in VopS^iisne of P tb r i e a communica­tion signed t 'a g re o with biin that we would,be enMOfltjJng' the orew o l Station No. 0. by sending them som e heading m atter to p te i away the ir, lei euro hou rs/bu t do n o t -tEinlfi'papers c o n - ' ta in ing oomMunlMtionB from “ W. H .’f w m ld en- oonrago tho/p-jtriaob j: fo r ho flret advises o noour-. , a«amodt, and- tEen «nda, as the oow did. w ith a •H o t ' Now; M r.'Editor,'*. W. U.” must havo writ- . tea the last part of hfs articlo_from a praltidided —

or eWe he isjotally ignbrau^pfi’tw ^Iroum - stances connt oted with tho saving of tbs crow of

.the E.-M. Tucker.,,He says: M I f there had been' rtrlittlo more push and nerve with the drew tha fail-'.°rs’ clothes could all.havo been saved. No doubt, if VaiW DlaiaiflonednhbboatrltTronia have giv- en better , satisfaction., to., the wrecked crew'and - their olothos and valuables wunld havo'been land­ed with them;’’ Who p e tbo kcop^-sM crew enp- c posed to satisfy, thoedlfhoni they Baved, orTfew of the ja m e mlnfiiB- “ W.' H.r.’’.:IIero a r r the , wonls of the crewtfdnr days after the wreok: “All honor and praise to the keeper and crow of Station • ’■

'No. 6. for their kindness shown and tho ehdjrt time they Were In rescuing us -'frtm bqr danger./ They have done eveijthmg in thbir piiwer.C -We struck ; at or, about 6:80 A. M. j;we wers safoly llriaed, ' ... stood fifteen or twenty minutes on the beaoh,' * .a'T walked about one mile arddfid to thostatlon house ' ‘ > • '-.'fi •jMLstood. to thero at 8:45^(notwithstanding the - report that up to nitio o'clodt tiothing hail boon done) by a.good, warm stove. - They have done foius all that could be done. aod . thiiir; Jdudnesii Shall V grer be remembered, by the crew of the E tta II.-' - Tnoke^.” If ‘‘ W .it^ o a n seo any dissaUsfaotion to the abovaXtom the Interested parties it la more than I can. “ No doubt, if Vannote had^one in hia boat their cldthes'and valuables would^ave __i been safely landed.!’ For tbe benefit of “ w 7u.”/ I-'I will give one of Tannoto's orders or rules.

“ On boarding wreokr'th'epreservation ofclife will be the keeper’s flnt oonriitoratlon (Of that of the person in charge of tho boat for the time boingl,’and

will on no aooounl take in goods' or merohandiae 'Irh m t v a n ilk n m w th a . . f . i . . _M 1__ i __1 11 * ‘

previously j maKd f iv e ln a l i ; The first one oij the 'ooast north, is the two^,

masted schboner J . R.- Clpment, Captain David Pearce, of K eyport’ tilie loaded w lth o^storsjn the Chesapeake, and h e r cargo w^s . consigned t ^R- A. Ludington, New Haven,Conn. She struok the beach just above-frathaway’s Hotel a t J)eal Beaoh a t one o’olook in the m orning, ’and lminediat^ty began bYeakip^up. T he patrol of Ll/a Saving,Station No. 6 saw-the vessel as soon as ahe struok, b u t b^foj-p they.couid aid them theeaptam and orew, consisting of five meni jhm pad oVerboard in the su rf and succeeded in reaching the shore in an exhausted condition. They mado their way io tiie station houae wher^ thSy w ere Jproperly «irod foy by thb, otew of, No. 4: Theyrloat ail tbelr clothing;The Olfmont waa oW nedby.W mf Farson, 0f Phila­delphia, and JTohn :M. H^le,; o f Fredioa, Bel. ttSie-;schooner is *a to ta i loss, thetre bein^ no in ­surance on either vessel o r <3tfftp.; . .

The next lone aodth Is the b rig E tta i t . T ookcrJ which came ashore Thursday morning, Januaiy S l, a s account of which' waa* given i n the J o u ro ii /o f February S. ’ ; “ U*'.-

The next in o rde t ia ihe Thomas G. ^m lih, whioh came ashore Sunday m onung, February 3d. . ^ . ' i, . ; '"■■■

Off 10th avenue,' Ooean Beacb,iiex theaohooner G. L. Bradleyj Captain 0 . Chipman, of Buoksport,Me. ^Tho Bradley sailed from Philadelphia on tho 18 th o f February, and was bound to Norwich, Conn.,loaded w ith 8 0 8 'tons of soft ooal. During the ». y . r ---- w r*, . . a aa_ a f - , vc 'i Jf111011 ““ T "“ danRor the safety of his .boat and thestorm of Thursday night the traveler of the Brad- lives of those enn-uated to his oharge;,and should ley’s fore boom gave way Mid after that i t was im- anything o f the Idnd be brought in against hia remon-

,__M , ... , stranoe he is folly authorisad to throw it dVerboard.”possible to keep the a^oO ner oil shore although , . How m u c h to o re would the able judgm ent Of' the captain was beadmg northeast; they made <*w. H ."havo p u t in a four-oared boat (to lahd more J'ueway than they thought, and struok safely in a bad storm and su rf? I th ink if the -beach about quarter-past one o’clock on he ware io . have ten minutes* conversation with Friday mornirig. The captain and ortw of five keeper Vannote he would find a mSn who thof-

. t , ~, \ , . . . a oughly understands his busmess, knows w h a t hismen were Rifely landed about half-past three duties are and who iSTeady to p<ifonn them when by the.orew of S ta tion No. 8 and kindly cared for. <»lled upon. 1 H. W.The veM^l and cargo is a to ta lioss, with no in s u r l) I t o W S ^ o i . ’anoe. She waa owned in- Buoksport, where she _ -.•••. i . .was bm lt expressly for the coal trade. —T h e Editor o fth e Journal .*captain and hia two sisters own thnxU ixteenths of fa f ^ 0 n• - 0 . .-. . •_ a . a Tuesday, next the eholoe is made who shall con-her. 8be cost when pew, five years ago, $10,500. duct ourtow naflairs for the coming vear. To-day,

As we go farther south to Wreok Pond We find Saturday, the Democratic party hold their opnven- the threo-masted schooner Maggie McDonald, tion a t OceanviUe to nominate candidates. T he local This schem er, ^ m a n d e d by CapW n ^ p b ^ ha Stoelman, of Philadelphia, sailed rrom Bioh- are aU crowded in to a aingle day. 'l t* ia d f the mond, Va., on the finft day of Tebruary loaded, utm ost importance that every taxpayer should with 200 tons o f cannel coal, 87 tons o f stafves and ’ ^ te n d the prim ary meetings as well as the election, 020 kegs of condemned pow der^ T he captain says ~tho vessel would not mind her helm and i t waa im- I oers elected should b« men bf s tric t integrity, and possible to keep hCT off. H e had no idea he waa of good business qualities. The mere aspirant for so nearth o sEoreuhtil he haard the Breakers, when * °® ce Bbomd be rejected; IeTtfi<T offioe seek (he he let go the anchor and she immediately struok I X d ^ ^ w W e ^ ' y . ^ e ^ w T ^ l on the beaoh. All the men were, obliged to take to have a healthy state of affairs. t .the rigglii^ to save being washed overboard^ They were in 'th is position about four hours. The orew of Station No. 9 found them abopt four o'clock and landed them about six in tbe morning. At this tim e the schooner was broken Id two. The men saved nothing only what they had op. They were made as comfortable, as possible by th e men. a t Station No. 9. The H o D o n ^ w as1 built a t Cooper's Point, Philadelphia, six years since owned by the'oaptain and John McDonald, o f Philadel­phia. H er registered tonage was 1^7.69, and she cost about $12,000. T he beach is strewn w ith s tay tt from the wreck. About two hnndred Vega of the

-powder;Ues; piled; pp on the* beach:—This is the s^pond tim e this powder has been btyohed, the other tim e was on the Delaware, and i t r was now being returned to New York.

School Examinatfon.T he examination a t the Publio School in Asbury

The case was worked up by P inkertoH V j-park wUl take place Thursday, Maroh 7th.‘ ^ j t did n o t take plaoe February 21st, os adver-

tisod^on account o f the inability « f P ro l Lock­wood oo attend- I t is expected/that the County Superintendent will be hero on this occasion, as be delivers a lecture in the iSchool H all on the evening o f the 6th, and wtyl be in the place. W e shall be pleased to see thd parents and f ie n d s o f th e children a t 10 o’clock A. M., Thursday; Maroh 7th:" and also a t the reooption in the evening in 1 School HalL -

. \ G soaoa A lla k d , P rin .

. LONO B R A N C H .On Monday n ight Charles Karanagh was a r­

rested for arson. H e had previously been arrested for selling whisky without license'twice within a week, and when arrested for arson, on Charles Chamberlain's p ro p e r^ , supposed It waa the whisky charge again,: therefore, made no resis­tance.detective force from itew York, a t the instigation o f John Hoey* Eaq. T he detective* ascertained tha t there was a band united • together in Long Branch, fo r the purpjose qf burning peVeral build* ings, among whioh tha t have been attem pted are, John Hoey’s, the W eat-End Hotel, the Mansion Honse, East-End Hotel, Charles Chamberlain’s, r and others. The detective spotted one Pa»«y Hines, and from him drew ou t the whole plot, and he—H ines1—confessed to fietng an accomplice of Kavanaph’s when he fired the stables the first time. Upon his affidavit, Kavanagh waa^arj^eted, and on Tuesday, having waived examination, was sent to the county ja il (the offenpe not being bailable) to await the Grand Jury . I t is confi­dently said, by parties who p rofesato know, that the gang will all be arrested in a fow daya, and incendiarism in Long Branch will be broken np.

* ' F aloor.

S A N D Y H O O K . ' .tTo tht Editor of the journal r— ■ < ' '

From this end of Momnbuth county ‘We ^&Mfn ) lo write what may be of passing i in te res t W e bave ju s t passed through ano th e r severe storm, w ith no disaster on th is p a rt of oar. coast.' Dor-; ing,the storm jit seemed a t times that aonie o f the struggling orsft that had been caught in*, the S'nd- den storm would have to. come ashore, b n t by strong hands, brave hearts, and boneat, tdn (for ft seems that Some vessel^ need hot be wrecked), and staunch craft, they weathered i t info port, barely missing th e beach.

. ._Xh§^monsiSr^gim*., oJLyhioh "wo. have, before, spoken, is in position, and ia Offing tented. . The' gun alone, without carriage-or platform, weighs 89,850 lbs. Ih testing, tne 'charge fias reached 100 lba. of po wder and a shot of 688 lbs. I t would be no trouble to bo' a Shaking .Quaker here /at limes, as we got a pretty ffood shaking up,

Again S^ody Hook is an island, -the last storm having swept away the frail resistance putt.in slnoe the feurjfnl storm of the 1st ulL The.dam- age Ib onfy trifling, and the railroad will be in,r^. pair by Monday, ao that tlve bdei Will lose but tew trips. ; r - -H , r ■

Tho owan has made somewhat'of inroad lately, Bo mooh BQlhaLthfl XT. S- Englneera are bnildlnga le t ty to tryapd atop the waah.

The brig ibat wak ru n down a short tim e %lnoe hes juBt off the Hook, so near t|ie shore th a t the Coast Wreckmg Company’ftsteam er, RdUcf. can.be seen a t work around h er j we .lea.Tn tbat they pro- prose to 'put ohaiha about her,-and then wiih four or. five steam 'tags towl her Into the bay in still water, so they .can ge t ou t h e r cargo, which ia valued at.j|200,0p0,- H e„deck & 45 feet under. Water._ .. . . / \ .... \ .

A ntimber’of seals havoboen ae«uil>6ii t" i b e l ^ lately. It, m ust seem . Wrange to them V n^lio^’- I t ’has been a reiharkable ^ tW t '^ b tx m t f n & t ice and no floating ioe q f any amovhtf *- the oldest lBhabltant4 ® ^ lienever8aw.Bgoh awiuter,

Upon rec^lpt of otir laat Jotraif Ai; we were not alow inro<^hiaingoui-oldfriend;‘ 'Cookie.” Glad'to_ fio<? jtho unassuming but - ahergetio worker is thus brought th to prominence.;.' V* * ?. - • ' ' .+ + • ■ v BAJtox.BoCKp F eK 28,1878. i ■'

i tb . f M lJ - - ; / ' .

M uscular Sorftnen.To the Edilcrrof the Journal

I notioed to your paper o f February 1C, a para­graph from the Long Branch N a vi, in whioh i t la claimed th a t Jesse Howland, one ot (the crow of . Life .Saving Station No. 8, can throw tbo “ hand lead 'kw ith line attached, fa rther than any other m an M tho sarvloo, and that he has been known to throw tbe lead 7 t yards. H e will havo to do be tte r tHas that' t o . lay Claim to throwing farther than any other m ah to the scrvioe. . Charles Brand, of Life Saving Station No. 1, has thrown the lead 91 yards snd one foot Wtth line attached, and against the w ind ; these yards were m eaturtd with -aline. -------: . . . . . ........ . * • «

To the Editor o f the Journa l:—Perm it me to say that your Ooean Grove cor­

respondent of last week mlidnfbrmed yon concern­ing the condition of M r.'L . B.' Watson's foot. Al­though theHeah sloughed o a t on his hip until the periosteum was exposed and a portion of the tibia and nearly one-third of hia foot was removed, still, he possesses quite a respectable leg, with one- fourth the natural motion ankleiolnt.

Respectfully, H . 8. K m uo im t. February 27,1878.

H O U 8 K H O L I ) H I N T S .Kvm n ’T ins O ixp.—One-half cup sugar, one-

half cup molasses, anO-half oupaour milk, one egg, bu tte r aixe of egg, one Cup chopjped ra ia ins; spice t o t - 1-

Silbw Oax*.—Two cups Sdgfff one qup butter, one and a ha lf cups of flour, one and a half cups of oorustarch,' one and a half cups awast milk, whites of eight eggs, three large teaspoonsful of baking powder. S tir the butter to a areom. and then grad­ually add the flour. Add sugar as for frosting, and ~ pu t In th e last thing before baking.

Ceaim Oi -.— A lady to the InU r-Q ttan says ’ she has used the following reoipe (or thirty years, and can vonoh for its perfection: Take a pinPbf 'water and one-half ppund-of bu tter; boil togelUer aUdstlr in while boiling three-fourths of a pound-'* of flour, then pour to a, dish and stir in ntoe eggs, .■ one at a t i d e ; when all are fyi; add one tdaspoou- ful of ★ater.; drop on;tina and bake to aoulok ov­en ; they /lhould be well bakdd, or thoy may fall» after taking thorn fTom ' tho oven ;~for the filling,— take a quart of.milk, thlaksn wlth four ogga, one— eup of Sour and two of "sugar, flavor with.lemon, lot.the cakes'stend tfll they are cool, then fin them...

D kxaa a H< f —Th oro are ladies who seein to think that it makes little difference what ia worn, at ■ home when only the members of their own family; -aro prosont. ■ They are willing to epoadAoura-oyot--.- their toilet when goingout, or axpectingcompany; but when- only^husband and children are to see them,- any old, cast-off garment, rip matter how soiled or.tors, answers every purpose. For them they have no time.- The hair ia given a twist to the morning,.am} nfght-tlmo too often finds i t to the asms oonditlon. JPhuo, from’morrilng uutilnlgntr the wife and mother works around, a sorry sight to be su^e., I f a oilier happens to, excuses must be made; and these art) sometimes founded npon truth and sometimes npojjJUsohood.V My be lie f is that a woman must-neoessarily lose her aelf-respeot, and the respect of her husband, fuad ehildran^ifshe illowrfherself.tbbeoome Uack_

,and untidy In her person. Now, would whole, clean clothes, a neat obljar and pin, wl{h.smootb, becomingly dressed halr hindor you in your labors one whit i*J Would riot half ari, hour baoh morntoft

devo ted to arranging your dress be . w asted? 1 . think riot, dud iriy aavtoe to married ■ ladies, is to b i lesa matter-of-faot, more willing to, tik e trouble fo r th s ir d eU '^ riu , .caring less for- Outsiders and - more for the ir husbands,'children and homea.—

Page 3: GEO. M. B EN N ETT, practical -Honse Painter, · 1# § J tm if Wmm m . A S B tjfiY P A R K , N FjW J E R S E Y . I < aR D A Y , M A R C H 2, 1878. N o. 9, ^ m O ^ S IC T A lO jgggi

Wm

A S E » U tR Y P A ftk JOURNAt; ^ tU ft ib A V , MARCH 2, 1878.

'■'■"J!.

3 !A ^ tT B D A T , M A E C H 2, 1878., ... t ,

RATESOFADVERTISIfJG

- W^«a-

i p inch.

$8/i.s’*1# ’ **StCiv,vf - V.“ .

*js&4.V/fc oou.; \. $g 2 g

#.JW.76

1,001.201J09.20s.oo0LOO9.00

a

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u : 8.00 8.75 8.60 4i00

i -8.60 lAOO

3$l.6o

1.60 a.oo fto o 8.60

y 4.60 ' B.60M.ooM,oo

M ourns.

$1.86U 6a.768,60

'4 .60

*S

a -

f t . 76 8,26 4.86 6.00 7.00m

» . 4o;oo

3

$8.604.00 8.607.009.00

11.00 18*00 aaJtio 60.00

.$4.00 f 6.00 ■ 8,00 10.00

, 14.00 19,QQ ,80.00 *40.00 ; 67.00

l a

$6.00 10.00

' UJ0Q17.00 •SfcOO 9T.O0 89.00,60.00 ,100.00

c . JPbr:Mte* for Pirn* Page pdd Twtrity-FlTe ,t<o tlie abov e. *

» plooodat thobotton * ado.’’ at tbo endr

. F a r e f r o m A a b o i r P a r k S ta t io n t*> P o li tt* !S" V o n - R e w T o r k a n d L o n g B r tn ie l im y la lo n

n » B . o f N , i .ViV'..: ’ ;.i- ■ • Y » * 0 .| _

X iport” !": A ao JHUtaboUl M o . . . . . 1 Jfc $iffi iv.:::: ill isP 8*|SSouth Amboy bo- 186is

. . . . . . 65 1 07

Bxa r R a d *, $3 M H o lm d e l..: .::........ t o §0

M f f i : . ' : : : :Shrew sbury B ranch part.Lonfc Branch.......E lb e r o n .. . . . . . . . . . -Ueal B e ach ...? .,. '

~ 3 G9100

i

F i s h i n g f o r C o o l, io s t Sunday the soft coal from one of t^e wreokB

below Ooean Beach •was coining up in ihe su rf in 1 minenbo quantities nearS ea piafou At one P o in t the unddrtow,was black with it,„and aa each wave , reoeded the grinding together.of.fcb q 1arge lumps oonid.be^plainly heard above the waves. At least f|ftjy or sixty in e n a n d boys "were, wading ’in the sarif w ith baskets,^ bucket and eoalp-nets catching

f^he pieces as they were thrown up by the sea; As,fast a* their receptacles were flljed the contents

< j h .. . _ . ( woald .be-depo^ited in piles a few yards back from 'Commutation ^ ok*to—AfinuRj park to nkw Tonx. water, A dozen men with team s were busily___tV. * (MM i 5 Mont nil_..... .. .. ....So* UU - '

80'30 . ao ... 12- 03 JO

0 £ f 5 S r c : : .B q u a n .., .v .......... . 3®. . ,.88

, BOUND BBOOKiBOUXE m v j ^TO lad e rp h la. ? frflO 4. 80J T re atb a. . . . . $ 1 *75 >«8&

I Month...........! ...............» 0 } ”

5 ........ .;... 7B 00

M onths.......................... vlm - i“ ................ . g> 0(A engaged removing the p iles to their houses, and the

lY o a r .......................'.....18700

F a r e r r o m P h l l a d e lo h la to A r t n i r ^ i r k , —— . v la N ew J c r n e r S o n lf te m K . B , t ~ —

...t.;................... t 300

D la ta n s e a .i,otro aiiANon nivisioit o. n. r. o f n. j.

.KowYork.i.......... .. ®Jersey Oity’. .................. J..... . »

M i Bergen P o in t... '. . . . . . . . . . . . 8j;:"-; ■ gllxHbothport.....................10 4

K astB »hw w r.........................i-y;- Wooabridso.................. W■SI*- AmKy..k.............. . 23

* Booth Amboy..........'.*«< Cliflwood................ ..................*7vM fttow an (K eyport).......... 20

W - ' H o l m d e l . . . 81 ;v='.-. Middletown.,

Thodl*tanoo ;C4.,tUeBbw JcV*n ; T crow^nw New York Ba! ■ i1' Branch, where ajunt

Bed Bank..*....................... 80B hrow ehurry .... .................*1Branohpott........ ........ . Mhbng B n u lc h .,............... .K lb o ro n ........... ....................47“?Beal Beaoh.................... . «

A B buryPark........................l fltOoean Orove............ Ooean Bcacb........... ....771J8Sea r ia tn ............................. •

Squiui.'......... ......................67tral Bailroad is ten mlTc« f nrther than by era B. B .; bat, aa th a t line use boataln1, It consume* atorwer tlm etoreach L orr

on Is made with tbo Central.

.. A a b n ry P o r k P o i tO f f lc e .J*KW York. UalU a ir t te a t 9*0 A. M. and M.

“ ■ ............... *£ - 5 ,pp m w DKU-i.(* g g g g ;

Chaplain Given, TL 8. N ., preached ,in S t Paul’s M. B. Obnrch on Tuesday evening. . j

l?hree car loads of bjiok pasaed'our staWon^a^t week for the new depot a t Ooean Beaoh*

^ -r r”— N o tice ih e advertisement of MoBsrs. A. 4 P . W.McConnell, the Iiong Branch clothiers, in another

T ^ r column. •

Mr. Lawrence Carton, of Matawan, and his 5? .. brother-in-law, Mr. Jas. Cottrell, paid us a ahort Ijf. visit on Tuesday. '

Services will be held in Trin ity Episcopal Church one freek from next Sunday a t 8:80,P. M ., Bev. Elliott I>. Tomkins officiating. .

We beg pardoh of onr young friends for omit* ting “ Children’s ColuTan” this week, b u t we conld not help i t 5 it was crowded out.

The Y. M. C. A. Wctldy Bulletin, of Washing- - to n , D ^O ., “ received. I t acknowledges the re­

ceipt of,the Joubkaii for the reading-room files.

; •B ta d ley '^ S m ith is tSd name o f♦ a ^ell-Jtnown brash ' house in New" T o rk city. The~namfeSj Brad­ley & Smith, have attracted considerable attention in thia locality the past week, and havo been the Qcoasion o f bad and good ptms ’from friends along Shark riVer. Bradley and Smith * happen, to be the names of two large soboonets that were wrecked ju s t south of Aabnry P ar^ in the fog o f lost week, o»d are both going' fb pieces a t this writing^'o^ Jbfl_beach. Tbe G. L . Bradley came ashore on the south side o f Shark river, and tbe Thomas G. Smith on the north side. Bradley and Sm ith ashore, o p e under the auotipneor’s nam- nbeihoti Wednesday, and were sold'ont to ' seveml buyers. B nt the brush' honse of the original Bradley & idintyh is stfll afloat on tie . broad sea of trado^ and b iavin^ the storms jjhich these winds of bgRiness depression are continually brewing. I t is to be hoped th a t under good pilotage, 'they will continue to keepL OflTthe shor«.

M e e t in g o f t h e M o n u m e n t

black.smokfr'issuing from t^e various chimneys in the noigbborhood gave evidenco tbat the bitum in­ous fuel was being utilized.

G rand A venue ileforn ied Church.The services (n thia churoh last Sabbath morning

were conducted by the pastor, Kev. P . F . Wilson. fiiB text was a. part of the twenty-sixth verse of th a eleventh chapter of the Acts of tho ApostleB^ “ A nd 'the disciples were called Christians first in* Antioch.” "m'. .

In the evening the Bubjcct of the discourse was, “ Theatres and their influence on society.” He took for the foundation of his remarks the frWenty- sixth Verse of the fourth chapter o f Proverbs, “ Ponder the path of tjiy feet, and let all thy ways be established.w The argum ent of the preacher was that constant theatre-goers could not be Christians.

W h a t a W r e c k S4>ld fo r .The oyster schooner J . B . Clement, wrecked a t

Deal ^ a c h on thff morning^o^th^22d»JwaffTl5ld on Wednesday last for $21.95, an per bill of sale. Mainmast, $5 .75; fore mast, $1.50; hull, $4.25; yawl, $4 ; jib Jxxnn, $1^50; main boom, $1 ; two gaffs, $} .7 fi; fpre boom, ^5 cen ts ; lot drift wood, $1125; total, $21.OS. All the rigging was sold on Tuesday, the day before, for $26, a t private ss)*.-

A s s o c ia t io n .A"Aj^l^l' for - ar e io the Sextant o f the '1 hj! . .J BrickrM eetinouse.

Mr. John Hance, formerly ot Long Branch, has become a resident of Ocean Grove. , He occnpie» a cottage that belongs to Mr. Brown, of Princeton, New Jetsey.

On St. Patrick’s day services will be held in St. Paul’s Church, Park Hall and the Reformed Church. The Central Railroad will run no trains to this plaoe on that day.

T h e managers of the Persimmon Band concert desire to state th a t it waa by an oversight (hat Mr. B. Warner’s name waSj omittedr from the programme as musical director. „

Mr. John A. Githens oontemplates making some ex^nedve in terior im provements in his store 'this spring. From ,the plans shown uri we think the “ pioneer store M will oompare favorably with any in th e county.

Mr. Isaac L. M artin, of New B runswick, one of ’ our summer residents, and a m ember of the As­sembly from the above place, will please accept our thanks for a report on the olay deposits of Woodbridge, South Amboy and other places'in

f New Jersey ., *. ; .

-i On Sabbath morning last, the sun came out in j l^ a U ittcfi^raty, after a long spell of easterly weather,

~ A fen knot breeze came from the west, and the grand old ocean was dotted with vessels of every

^V -description bound Boutb . A person on the beach p.{; coniited forty in sight at one time*

A B r u s h w i t h a H is to r y 1.One of the survivors of tluf^ftreclfed 41 New

Era,” which came-3on-lhe shore of what is now Asfcury Park 'in 1854, a t wbioh time nearly 800 German emigrants lost their lives, seeing mention made in> th© Jouehai* about some portions of the buried, wreck having come ashore during the re ­cent storm , requested in our last issue, that'any relic of the ehlp would be regarded as highly valu­able by him.—-Mr. Drummond White, who was a , boy a t the tim e of the disaster, picked up on the beaoh a German cloth brush with a curved back, made in the old-fhshioned way, the briptles being drawn in with twine instead of wire, showing the brush inust bo very old, aa none of the brush makers of the present day make them that way. T he bristles are white, but in the centre the name ‘^K och " i^ worked in with black bristles. Al­though Mr. Whito has used the d o th brush ever sinoe the shipwreck, it is in a tolerably good state of preservation, having lost only its curved back, which waa loosened by the salt water and came off. No doubt if tjie record of the names of the lost passengers oou|d be examined it would show the name worked in the brush. Mr. White says if the person making the request for some i*elio Of the ill-latedl ship will forward^another brush with the photograph of the survivor, he will send the

^>ld one.

. ' N ot P resent.. No perflon iem ore welcomed along the liiie o f the Central Bailroad than Mr. Geo. P. Hess, the vete­ran paymaster of th a t company. During hjs long -tenure of service, by his genial and courteous bear-t ing he has become extremely ..popular, and many anxious inquiries are made by the employees, should, perchance, his monthly visits occur a day o r two after the usual pay day. I f Mr. Hess had a memory, .remarkable for the retention of the many amusing-Jnoidenfc th a t daily happen in the pay train, be, conld fllla good sized^ volume. Here is the la te st At Glengardeoer a woman boarded tho pay car and presented the,following o rder:

u Miater Hiss the paymaster yer honor plaae pay Bridget O’Brien tbe wageii tor Patrick O'Bntm »he is my woman beoaae l m uot hero to take it miael.

1“ Y oura bo long aa i laat ,. *' Mibtkb O’Brikn.”

? James ft. Allgor, of New Bedford, haa presented i$ r ''the Asbury Park Muueum with a natural curiosity.

I t i s a quart <?ha{npagne bottle with som©; ten or o ^ Uwejive • oysters grown fast to I t. They are o t va^- fyf. ibus sizes, four pf them being quite large. It was fji: ' found in bis oyster bed in Shark river.

S8&&V- :• •---------- --------------Mr. W m. D. Bailey, the sash and blind maker

a i ^latawan, is putting in fo r M r^E. J . Brown, a t % gM J|hU plaoe?.the finest glass front in town, for bis I ^ S ^ W - B to r e a - „ Jh fl sash are. of very Handsome de­

sign, and strong' enough^© stand the heavy windri which prevail in this section, without breaking the glass.. _______ . ......

I f , ,

W i . ‘ i t r . H . H . Tard^ of Ocea^. Bcdbh, bought tho ’wr^ok or th e ‘schooner Thomas Sm itlra t New iBiaaohr^on Wednesday la st The coat o f arms

v .^ : rand eagle~on th e s tem Qt_theugaaaal-waq donated Asbuiy P ark Museum by Captain Leonard

m"Hand, master and owner, bu t i t waa inadvertently

J |? |lJ |w ld with the hull. After the sale Mr. H. H . Yard, ^ | j g w f i i |o u t any* knowledge of the previous presenta­

tion donated it to Jhe same institution* ,

• T te leoture to be giverl on Wednesday evening r'^®^:Jby;'-^pf.'‘ liopfewood/in School Hall, on the

Is0* tb'a Oyater,” ■will probobly ba

,ttie best op^citnnity pur.cltijfena will, ever have to ^ h j p i and wherefore’s 'o f that popular toff

^ delivered

jfelb ie gaid^^^that/was.inifltestingf^optiwhat'S^ypd^

V h*. MOWUMBN* TO BTA1H) Ott TUB SPO^’ WHXBB . THE JtZBSf BI/OOU WAS DBAWW ; , *

Pursuant to notice, published in the JounNin, tho Monumont Assrffciatiorimet ai tbe Court House. Freehold, on Friday last, mainly for the purpose of locating tbe site of Monmouth’s great memorial.

President Pafker called the Association to order at about 11 o’cloclc Ho first1'rem arked that notioes had been sent to the offlfeers aud otherd, stating tbat the question of location would come before the Association for their determination, and so he awalted'.the pleasure of the members u p o a th e sub­je c t ' j - V -v ' • ]'

D r. pSgerman, of Freehold, asked wbat.was tjie oharaoter of the most recent reports from th e va­rious townships.

The Secretary read the last reports, together with the minutes pf tho last meeting, from which it nppeardd^ that Freehold and Wall n8d been most thoroughly canvassed, while the other townships reported progress, but only a partial canyass.

l ) r . Hagerman thought that tbe collectors 6f funds could most certainly accomplish more .than they had already. He believed that there m ust be 5,000 or 6,000 persons ig ^ th e county who could and w6uld give at least^oUe dollar a piece.

Judge Beekman, chairman of the-legal advisor^ committee, being called'on, reported that the com­m ittee were of opinidn that the general l$wa of the Stato do not meet, this case so that a legal organ­ization, cpuld be eflFected. ,The oomihittee recom­mended the passj^e -Qf-a! Bpe<nal statute to m eat this exact case.

The rebort waa accepted and a committee, ?oh-! sisting Of Judge BeekmaU, Major Yard, Hon. Dan'l P. VanDoron and Dr. Laird, was appointed to* present the statute to our members of the Legisla­ture for passage.

On motion, the president and vice-presidents Were appointed a committee to call' meetings in the yarions parts of the oounty for th$ purpose -of aiding in tbo collection of funds.

Mrr^Obadiah, C. Herbert, of Marlboro, urged that tho location be promptly Bettled. Thejpeo^ pie in hia townpbip were moat favorably to Free ’bold ns the site, aud to Mrs. Schanck’s property aa the best p)aoe named.• Judge Beekman then moved that the Associa­

tion proceed to decide upon a aite for the loca­tion of the monument.

^ Jndgo WoLean objeoted to the passage Of thia ~mo\ion, aa he did not believe thg representation •from all parts of the oounty geriteral enough. The storm had .doubtless prevented & large and full at- tondancO. ^

Judge Beekman replied to Judge McLean. The • noticed, be believed, had been sent broadcast over tho -oounty* distmqtJy announcing, that the loca­tion would be settled at this meeting. Everybody, therefore, bad notice. Ho thought tbe attendanoe at the meeting an indication that tbe mass o f the people does not take any great interest in the to* cation, being satisfied to have the Association de-' cide tbat matter.

As to the old Tennent church as a site, Judge Beekman thought that^ the ancient structure itself was a sufficient momiment, known the pn ited States over, and Ibe people oould do nothing to. add to attraction. Betides, he realized that the monumenT^ooTd be better taken care of a t tbe county seat, being under tho direct supervision of the county officers, and benoe leas likely to be mutilated. It would not belong to individuals nor to Freehold, but to the poopleof the whole county. He answered the objection^tbat outsldO townships Were not reprenent'ed at this meeting, by saying tbpt he saw representatives preaent from Wall, Matawan, Eatoutdwn and Marlboro. To him per­sonally, he said, it made -no diffcrepoe wljere i£ was placed, bu t he believed ..if the riiatter oripoa- tidn on the best site was ^Titled and p u t to test, the whole attention would then be given to thecollod ion of fu n d s............. *

Dr. Lodkwood then asked for the report of the 00mmittee,s and Pr. Laird thereupon reported on behalf of a majority of th e committee (the other member not deairing to take either side and hence nqt reporting) that having taken into consideration the various aites, they v?ere itj-favor of aoceptijig^ the generous"offer of Mra Sohapok. _

Dr. Lockwood remarked that he waa quite au r prised to learn that Gen. Lee ordered the clearing away of oertain woods on the Freehold heights, for iso it appears that the initiation of the battle was right on tbat very spot, whereon it has been proposed to ereot, the monument, ob Mrs. Schanck’s property. I t is most historically proper and becoming to place tho monument there.

GoverUor Parker then remarked that the first man killed at the battle of Monmouth was a Oer­tain artilleryman, within two hundred yards of the very spot, on Mrs. Sohanok’s property, where it has been proposed to ereot the monum ent

^Fudge Beekman then withdrew his former ^mo­tion, and move/i that the report of the Committee on Location, aa made by their Chairman, in favor of accepting tbe generous offer of Mrs. Sobanck, be hereby adopted aa the sentiment of the Associa­tion. The question being put, there was a hearty and' enthusiastic response in the affirmative, not a dissenting voice being raised. t[

Some comparatively unimportant business was then transacted, including the' reading of a resig­nation from Hon. T. B. R. Brown as aTrhember of the committee, and the appointment of Mr. Thomas Burrowes in his stead, and the appointment of Joseph P . Hoff to fill the vacancy occasioned by the election of Mr. Burrowes as a Vico-President Also the examination of several plans of monument shown 'by Mr. Henry H. Davis, of Morristown, by a gentleman from tbe firm of Pullen to Co., of Hightstown, and of Mr. Hal Allaire, our own in .genious deviser] of plans. After which the As­sociation adjourned subject to the call of the President.

I ' ‘ • BI A. GABP2R.

[The/ollowing 4* appeel ” we commend to every' Sexton In the place; the spelling is ra ther poor, bu t the argum ent'is extremely forciblo. A lady jyhq has suffered from the effects of the vitiated air_ in some of our places of public gathering, send?,the artiole, which is taken from an old num- b e t of^the Detroit Tribune.']0 sfbctant of the meetinonee. wich Bweepe.. 'And duets, or is supposed to! Snd makes ff era, Andlites^the gas, and snmtimeB leaves a eorew loose, in. wioh-oaso it smolla orfnl—Worae than liunp-ile; And'wrlnga the Bel and tolea when men dyesto the grief of enrviTing pardnbr, and aweepe pathos; And for the eervaitea gita f 100 per, anpum,Wich'theui that thinks deer, let ’em try l i t ;CiQtin np befoar starlit® ih all wethers and Klndlin fiorB when tha wether tia a cold

?ero, and like a« not grean-wood for kindler#;. ouldVt be-hired to do it for no eomo,

But a B ertant! thero are 1 kermoddity Wioh’S moTe than gold, wich doant cost nothin, iWorthmore than anything, exaep the HOTe of Mann;1 mean pewer Are. aextantv i mean power Are!0 it is plenty oilt chores, so plenft i t doant no W h*t:on airth to dew with itself, bnt fly a about Soatterin lean and blowin off men’a haCW^-Jin abort, it’s je^tM free aa are ** out dorea.Bat o textant, ju our ohurch its aoaroe aa piety,Scarce aa bahk billa ^rhen aginta beg for mUohuna, Wich aOme aay is pnrty often (taint nothin to me,W at I give aint nothin to nobody); but o’sextant, u ahtet.560 men, wimmen and children,Spe4hally the letter*:np in a tito place—Bonje M bf^ bretba, none-aint 2 swete, • • Sombia fevery,‘some ia scrofloviS, some haa bad teath. And some baint none, and aoine ain't over oleen ;Bat every 1 on them breethes in & out and out and in Say 50 tiniea a minit, or I million and a half broths an

hour. . . - •jHow long will a ohurch fall of are laat a t that rate,1 ask you f.aay 15 minutes, and then what'a to bo did ? Why then they must bretho it all over again.And thonagin, and so on, till each haa took it down At least!]0 times, and let it op again, and wants more, The aame individible dont have the privilidge of brethen hia own are - and no one else,Eaoh" one must’take whatever cornea to him,O, Sextant, doant you know onr langa is belluses;To bio the fier of life, and keep it fromgoin ou t; and how can bellusses bio without wind,And aint wind are 7 i put it to yonr conscbens.Are ia the aame to ns aa milk to b Abies,Or water ia to fiah, qr pendluma to olox.Or roots and airba unto an Injun Doctor,Or littloriill uhto an omepath,Or boya to girls. Are la for ua to brethe.W hat sigain^s who Preaohea if i cant brethe2 Wats Pol ? Wats Pollus ? to sinners wbo are ded ? Ded for want of broth ? why sextant, when we dyo Its only cause we cant brethe no more,—that’s all.And now, olextant, let me beg of you2 let 1 title are into onr obnrch- . *(Pewer are ia oertin proper for the pew*}And d o it weak dava and Sunday tew—It aint muoh trenble—only make a hole And tho are will oome in of itself ;(It lnvs to oani in whare it oan get warm;)And o how it wiU ronae the peouie up,And spent up'the preeoher, and stop garps iAnd vawns and flgdits ai effeotooal Aa wind ou the dry Boaha the Proflit tella of.

O y s t e r F e s t iv a l .. An intellectual feast of oysters will Mg.Bervea up

a t Anbury Park Public Sohool Hall, on Wednesdaye v ^ March 6, at 7:80 P . M .. , . __

WhO-’doea not like good oysters? AU who affect' a fondness for that kind of 41 frail ” come and hear

• Professor LopkwOod deliver his “ Natural History of the’Oyster,a «^id feed your intellect upon some­thing as delicious afcthe oyster to the physical be­ing. , Come and hear the Professor give a full de­scription of this high-priced commoditry.1 -He-will not only tell jo u nbout the “ sentinel that,Stands guard over it,” but also of its spoed in traveling. See tbe adyertis&nen^. . ‘

P e r s i m m o n B a u dLoot Friday CVoning, d esp ite . the stOIin, the

Persimmon Bandihold forth in ''the Sahoo| Hall

standing the o r^C stra advertised did not put in,an appearance, and their plaoe waa supplied by^Mr. F. B. ‘Warner, v ^ o presided a t th^Tpiano. The songs and choruses wpre well sCleoted, although there was an evident lack of dar^fu^ drilling whioh Is so essential to the success pf voctd musie. The jokes were most ortginat"and some Weto deddodly sharp, eliciting laughter and applause.. Sketches, bur-, lesques, oomio orajtioUB, etc., followed until after ten p’clock^wbep the audience dispersed, seemingly mnph.pleased with tho entertainment, r ^

On'Saturday evening the band again performed, timo.Uij a i ^ f tho boll fund,1 The attendanoe

wos good and the performwioa was in some roBpeeta better, than on the previous night. About foteteon dollars was added to tho fuijd,' maiding about $00

Ijjxeady onad d itio n a l$10jD| ia^^taiu t.,'edtho bell wBlb0foitE6oroJ&gv ^ ^ ; ^ 'K*' V

A N e w . T e m p e r a n c e B o o k .-By Mr. Panisi^, anthor ol the Moody Histories. A

whole Temperance Library in a single Volume.. Over 800 pfigea. ttb Illustrations.

A spirited and life-like record of the rise, pro­gress and latest triumphs of the Temperance Reform in America, from the days of the Colonial Blue Laws and the early .** Tem perate” societies, down to thp work of the Orusades and the Gospel Temperance Reformers, Dr. Lyman Beecher, Mr. Gough, Nell Dow, F ather Mathew, the various Temperance Guilds and Fraternities, together with the great temperance leaders of this decade, as Mr. Moody, Mr. Murphy, Dr. Reynolds, Miss Frances E. Willard,' etc., appeaj in th is book, and most o^ them havo been aUowed^bjTtSe author to have^their say. The four addresses by Mr. Gough, for instance, are alone worth the price of the book, 'being the only speeohes of. this matchlesa T em ­perance orator aver permitted to be reported and. published in America. The book may rightfully claim to be a whole Temperance Library in a single volume. * Bold by subscriptions- at $2. *

Rev. W , F. Randolph is the agent for Asbury Park and vioinity. ..ft-can only be bought from the agent, ancTIa net for sale in ttio bppkstores.

---------

A s b u ^ 'V ^ k L y c o u m .Tho Ly teum* was catied fb order b y ‘the P resi­

dent a t tbe nsuol time. The offloers.of the Society were all present. The question for debate wa tfaffl>rftad-aa follows ;— Thnl invnmoT^ influence over the m ind than hatred.” Mrs Eiwood Newman waa the regular disputant on the

to a crowded audience. Owing to some misunder- “affirmative, and he selected Mr. Jam es £tagermanto assist hini. Mr. Daniel G. Moiris was appointed on th o . negative, but foiling to respond, Mr. P . Mahoney volunteexed to take that.aide pf thpquea- .tion, and he engaged Mr. H. D, Coleman to assis t him. > The discussion was opened by Mr. Newman, who ocoupied.his allotted time very much to the pleasure of all present, and with bredlt to lumseU Mr. Jilahoney responded on the part of the negative, and brought ou t ,some very interesting aud in- atructive Bug^eat^tina^ and facts. The discussion Was then tbraw n opOinTio the audienoe for five m in­ute speeohorf, Whioh waa-responded to by Mr. Jacqea A. Bradley and some others, $11 talking'on tho afflrinfltive. Mr. JToeC- Hagefnlian then finished bn the part of tho affirmativo, after which Mr. H . I). Colemanvclosed'the. debatp on the negative, and the -case tfiis g iv e i to.the feo^rd of Decision, who dedded the ^nostion in thp negatiTer*

jjlaaa property in Asbury Parle Ad-WANTBD on firBt mortgage on firat-

^____ class property in Asfdress'R , ilox 67, Aabary Park, N. J

" - LAKE! LOT FOlt SALE. *'* .On Lak*-avenue*_Aijb[iry Park, just above Grand

avenue inlet, 50x100 feet, magniHcent view of Wefley Lake, Ocean Grove, and tne broad Atlantic. For terms, address Uwnkh, P. O. Box 175, Choator, N. Y.

W ANfffiD-j-A ro|D3an tjh^t understanda general houiework, and 'can give good referenne.

Apply to the store of O. C. C la y to n , Ooean Grovo,

L E C T U R E !Profewsor Lockw po d, Superinteniqndent o f Public

Schools for Monmouth Co unty, w ill doliver' A . L E C T U R E

S O ^ O O X a H A t i l * ,ON

Wednesday Evening, March 6th, 1878. S U B J E C T :

“ The Naliral History of the Oyster ”ADMISSION, - - - " 'lOCXS.

Proceeds for the benefit of tho public School.

Qliest Estalilisliea Store in Asliury PartS P R I N G , 1 8 7 8 . '

JOHN A. GITHENSwill offer a large stock of

lOlEFOfflSHING GOODSAND

BUILDERS" HARDWARE.To be sold at

BOTTOM PRICES,to meet the requirements of the times. -< .

.^KPGreona wishing any information aa to famishing cottages and hotuls, what they can get and what they cannot get, pricea^etc.; will receive prompt attention.

Main 8t . & R ailro ad Av.*J Aabury Park, N. J .

. . i s ' t 3 r a B X i . x o ; s j a . X j 3 0 .The suheonbera, administrators of EBBNB^GR

ALLEN, decea«ed, will sell a t * - ^PUBLIC SALE, HASCH 30, 1878,nt l’ -’cloak P. M., on the premises, one Dwellini House, nearly new, consisting of four (4) roOms am cellar, and lot 50x150 feet? with usual ont^houscs.

iroperty ia pleasantly located on the *-,g from Squan Village to “ Oabprne’e

*• >, M( '

The abc main road, lu<uuK Mills,” WftUJTownahip, Monmouth oonnty, W. J. Abouttine (lj milo from three (3) railroad stations, viz.: Bquau Village,Baa Girt, and Spring Lake. A desirable property for country reaidenee.

i ’B C E N E W . ..

SASH m DOOR FACTORYiT O e jP E C E I F t f B X a X O .

H aving long felt the w ant aud necessity o f a Facto ry*4n connection with" our branch of business whereby parties desiring to purchase can get their tyflii or special work at ehortnotice..Snd avoid many annoying delays, we now havo the,pleasure of calling yonr aitention to the fact that we h ive erected such an eatabliuhuiont, in close connection w ith our aajesroom and office,

C or. MAIN A SEW ALL AV S.,ASnUB.7r PARK, N. jr.,

W h e » t we ill maSufacturo, at short notide,

SASH, DOORS, BLIKDS, Etc.,A t Prices that defy competition.

- W o keep all tho1, regular or stock aixea oouBtantly on hand and ready for use. We fnrnish estimates, o u a p plication,^o^«very andany thing.in.onr line. Having a lopg^xpenTOwrirftbe* business w e fully nnderetand all the wqulrfcnjifnta of the trade, giving our peraonul attention ibeWto. * *

Soliciting ^})continuance o f favors bestowed, w o re-main, f t --’f r i ..... .. • - i t *

,V |ry tn ily yours, .

ATTENTION,MANUFACTURERS.

A sbury^ark i* a filage on the Atlantic coast, fortv-fiv? 'tntles from New York city? | t haa already obtained celebrity as aVsummer re­sort \

The place haa doubled in site sinoe 1874, and aa the original proprietor of the Park owns a largo tract lying weat of the old tnrnpike, three- quarters of a mile from the sea, he desires to^call the attention of Man­ufacture ra. either in a small way or on a large scale, to the fact tl^at we have unemployed labor here in the fall, winter and spring, Whjch would be benefited by the establishment of some permanent work, while a t the same time Manufacturers would be benefited themselves, as lands lying immediately alOng'tho Central Rail­road crack wonld be sold at a nomin­al price to Manufacturers. Price of land to be graded aooording to the ' number of hands employed.

Asbury Park is opporito Ooean Grove, aud'catt be renohed direct by tho C e n t r a l R a i l r o a d ov Nbw J e r s e y , from the foot of Liberty street, New Yo^k, via. Jersey City, and alao by* steamboat from foOtof Reotor atroot, N. Y., to Sandy Hook, affording a fine view of the Narrowa, harbor fortifications, eto., thence by the New*-Jersey Southern R . BL, to Branchport ,0-H , milea from Long Bancb),„and cOnupctlng there with Central Kailr. ad of New Jersey. 8 o there arp two lines of oomiptmioa- tion. From ■ Philadelphia, the cara run to Asbury Park direct. Rail­road time from New York to Asbury' Park, ahonra; express in summer, about hours; and from Philadel­phia to Asbury rark, 2 hours and 85 minutes!

We haVo three Churches; a Day Sohool,• costing$1Q,000. with a dally attendanoe of two hundred and fifty scholars; a weekly . newspaper— A sbdbt P a rk J o u r n a l ; two Pubiio Halls, one seating 1,500; „ Reading Room, Masohio Society, Lodge of Good Templars, Lodge of Kmghte of Pythias, Debating Club. . Blacksmiths’ and Wheelwrights’ Bhops, Lumber Yards, Qteam Saw­mill, Temperance Hotels (paje- of . liquors prohibited), Drug Store, Pnvsioiana, Dry Goods Stores, Bakeries, besides stores of various other kinds.

If the above nbonld interest any ofi the readers of thiS paper, please address

ALLEN R. COQK.,Superintend­ent. _______

ASBURY P A R K ,NEW JEBBET.

Q E N T B A tB iB .O S ’NEWjrBHSB?: * '

NEW/T08JC AST) io N S BRANCH DIVISION. Commeaclnr Kovember 20, 182,7 . .

* rainrleo yo foot o f L i b e n y stree t, N o rth R fve r# io r f Ijong B ra n c h , OceanGrovjfe o r A fibury Park^.Oceafl-^ Beach and Sea G ir t at 8.15, 11,45 a. m., 4. 00, 5 ,15 p . mW A rriv jh g at Ccean G r o v e , 10 ^ 0 A . i f . , 1. 50, 55 5, 7.2 0 'P . M. . . I ;; -.■ . ^

Le a ve L o n g B ra n o h fo r Ocean G ro v e o r A s b n ry P a r k , Ocean Beach and Sea G i r t , 7 .05, 10. 05, J l . m ..1. 35, 5.40 7.05 p. u. R e turn in g , leave Sea G i r t 6.15, > 7. 20% 11.15 a . m . ,3.50 5. 28, p . m ., aVriving a t O c e a u . G ro ve 'C .30, 7 .35. 11 . 30V , M .f 4. 04, 5.43 p . M.

Trains lepve Ocean G r o v e , o r A s b n ry P a r k S t a t io n , for N e w Y o rk and all intermediate pomta a t 6 .30, 7 . 35, 11.3d a. m .,i 4.04, p . u . A r r iv in g In N e w Y o r k 8,35, ^9.35, a . 'm ., 1. 35, -Q.10 p . m. :

Le a v e L o n g Branch fo r N e w ^ Y o r k , 0. 45, 7^50,,11.45 a. m ,, ^ .20, p . m . Clbso connections fo r E l f x a * be th.and N e w a r k . A j l traing fronf isew Y o r k ruii'

^irough to Ocean G ro v e or A ^ n r y P a rk W ithout jjhapge dl care. . ' :

“ O c e * u G r o v e S t a t i o n l a I n A a b n r y P a r l e ,

JOBN C. JOHNSON & SON,

WATCH AND CLOCK MAKERSAND DEALERS IjN ,

Jewelry and T’ancy Goodst^r~— AH ft UR Y J*AltK A Z.ONO B R A N C H .

R epairing Done a t Short Notioe.( GIVE US A CALL.

PartioB wishing to.pnrobase Fine Jewelry or Watches iu New York will do- well to leave their ordej-8 witn ua, im we have ft large experience in thla business.

C ookm an A v ., near P a rk H al) A S B U R Y P A R K . N J .

a A i L m i i L B . s .

m

x

NEW JERSEY SOUTHERN R. R.

• Time-table commencing Monday, Dec. 10,1877.The Steamer “ Jesse Hoyt.” will feaveNew York

(Pier g, North river, foot Reotor a t) ,fo r Long Branoh 11 a. u . and 4:00 p. m.

LEAVE LONG BRANCH. ■For New Yoirk, 7:51 and 11x54 a.-u , ■’Fbrr Philadelphia, i»:50, p. m. and 5:50 P. M, ‘ ‘ •

LEAVE PHILADEJLPHIAi (Foot Market street, ppper ferry,) • .. 1

For Long Branoh,.8:15 A. Mi• \ , W . S . S N E D E N , J '

General Manager.,,

: M

J p E N N S Y L V A N I A RAILROAD;

P h ila d e lp h ia t t n d T r e n lo n t o ( J c e t tu G r o v e a n d A s b n r yPark direct. / * ' <Un and after Nov. 15,1877, and uulil further notif^v

trains will run as lollows:L eave Eastward.

S t e i n b a c h BROS

sA~ C A . R 3D .SPECIAL NOTICE is hereby given to ail our

patrons that we have enlarged our store for the purpose of laying in a very, large additional stock of all articles in our line, whioh will enable summer residents to purchase evenr'article needed at oity rates. As we shall buy all Domestic goods by the caBe. it will bo nnneceaaary for our summer residents to supply themselves before coming hero with anything in our line. In addition to an immense stock of ready­made oldthing, we wijl keep full line of Ladies’ and Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Stationery, Zephyrs. Yankee Notions, etc.. eto. Special attention is called to ourJargelatQok of‘Bathing and Boating suits for Ladies ana Children wbich we are UoW manufacturing for the coming summer. As we have had considerable experience iu that line for the paat five years, and know tbe wants of our customers, we. feel confident that we can give them entire satisfaction. In the Shoe Department wo shall-keep a full line of all grades of shoes, making this branch a specialty. We beg leave to inform Hotel Keepera that we, are about laying in a full stock of table linens and bed spreads, wnioh wo shall be able to sell a t the loweat prices; a liberal discount when large quantities ore supplied. Thank­ing the pubiio for< past patronage,

Wo remain,STEINBACH BROS.,

Long Branch and Asbnry Park.

, \ r

p . u .. ii oo . 3 07 . 4 38 * . 5 26 . 5-^5 . 5 3#. 5 37 . i* 43 . 5 -19 . 0 <J0

A. M. )Pltila. (Market S t.) ... 7 30...............................Trenton ..................... a ifil........................ "1. ."F reeho ld ........ ........... y 55...........Sqm iu ......... .............|o 41................. '* ‘Sea G ir t..................... i f I f f . : . ; . . . ,bp ring Lake........11 18. ___ I"".".!!!!!Ocean Ueach..............11 JKJ............ ................ j'Ocean Grove*............11 30............ . . . .* ! ! ! ! !

, D eiil'..............11 34. _________Louu Brauch ........... 11' 43. . . . . . . . . . . .

L eave Westw a rd^

Long Brauch.............. *7 05. .......................1. . . . . . **1 35Deal......................... 7 16..............................' . . . . 1 45Ocean Grove*........... 7 21............ ........... 1 50Ocean B e a c n 7 28.............................. 1 56Spring Lake ............. 7 33......... ........................... . 2-02

...................J as— . . . . . . . it 05...............7 38.................................. . 2 OS

freeho ld .....................8 65.......... ................................ 2 45T re n to n ..................... 10 14......................................... ....Pbila, (Market St.)«^.ll 20. . .............................« . . . 5 50

'O c e a n (UroVe S t a t i o n l a ln -A » b u ry P a r k * 838 Chestnut Street.

Broad «V. C hestnut M arket btree^.

Depots, Thirty-second and Market ata.FRANK THOMSON, L . p . FARMER*

Ueuerai Manager. Qcn’l ^utt&tiger Agknt

v x ivn u w r o v e s t a t i o n i a iu %( 838 Chestni

IICKET OFFICES < S. E. Cor. I V t H> Market

i s smmi i

v'- .. ..

T h e celebrated N b w Y o r k I n k C o ’ s In k ? and M u c i l a g e fo r

..' sale b y J Q . H N L . C O K F m ; p S E J h ° J Office) Aabury

j p R E E H O L D A N D N E W Y O R K I t . K .' ' V ... T I M E t a b l e , -r • •

Ta kin g efrect M onday, Novem ber 26, 1877.Tho Depots of thin line in New York are ‘ 'for Rail­

road connections, foot of Liberty gtreet, N. R.^Central K. R. i f N. J .j, aud for Boat connections, loot of liar* rison Bir’eet.N. R. (Steamer Matteawuiuj

* ^ \ i t 3

«Q3 v. So S

4 I

><<D

: % S*T,>SP-

m

p4M

e gTJ JD ■w

* tc<x» V S5

o —

Co nn ectio ns.At Freehold with the F. 4 J . Agr’l R. R.» for Farm

iugdale, Jamosburg, TVonton, etc.At Freehold June., with the Central It. R.. of N. J . for

New York, Newark, 'Elizabeth, Amboy, Middle* town* Red Bank, Long Uranch, Asbury

P a rk , etc.,J . E. RALPH, Tfeaa.

O C E A N B E A C H .

R . C . B U H L E E ,PRACTICAL ! ~-

h 6 u q b p a i n t e r ,10th ATs&ne, bet, 0 a n i S Streets,

O C E A N B E A C H N . J ,WIU glvo pcr»onnl nntl prompt attention to AruhltecUT UuilUcra’ EMtlmuU'H ami Uoiaraol^,-

C U B A . P I C M E A F l

BUY YOUll GOODS AT

D. A., WALLIM’ii STORE,O C E A N B E A C H , N . J .

Whprewilfbe found an exte'uaive assortment of all kilnls ol

, ' 1 . , *

MEROHANOISJB, Consisting o f

DEY GOOiDS, BOOTS AN D S H O ES , H A R D W A R E,

Groceries, Etc. e - 4Also Sealer:! In Lehigh & W llkes^arre Ooil,

flp better assortment can be found in anv i store, and the goode-will be sold

lliflr timjlfit-.a t '

LOW PRICES.B ^ A n invitation is extended to a ll. fa r an n e a r,

examine tnls'stook.^ ^ G o o d s delivered to a n y part o f Ocean Beach

aud vicinity.

Centennial Building for Sale.\ ' • ---------- ''-.s

Th e Centennial Photographio Co m p any offers ih e lr ' l andaome studio, 65x 180 feet, ou th e Ce ntennial E x ­h ibitio n G ro u n ds, fb r sale. B e qutiful^ w e ll b u llt ,. an d has a porch, under roof all around^ i t , Suitable fo r*' cpttagoa, ohapel, p a v ^ o n , H Ulroo d a t a t f c ^ d i ^ f i ^ } i '~ A photograph and fu ll p a rticu la ris e n t to a p p U c w V r Can have u n til A ^ ^ _ l ,g t , to rem^Vtritv | :

EDWARD L. TOLSOtfv^pria^Sf.’:' . A t B f a ^ o ,o r l Q ^ p f 7 t h B l ^ f l c t ,y h l l ^ s l p h f ^ ;^

Page 4: GEO. M. B EN N ETT, practical -Honse Painter, · 1# § J tm if Wmm m . A S B tjfiY P A R K , N FjW J E R S E Y . I < aR D A Y , M A R C H 2, 1878. N o. 9, ^ m O ^ S IC T A lO jgggi

wwy i '/« *

1; \ . r*<-;■;>i£ £ * • * » . : ' Vr ; ? r ^ Vn ^ -*''': ■'!- '"; '-' J'

&'■ -V-'I■ifr-. ,

44 T h e G re a te s t A n c ie n t P o e t o f M o d e rn - - T im e s .”' The Detroit Free Press haa -weekly reports of

tbe transactionb ofthe “ Lime-Kiln Club,” which ie- cotnposed of colored gemmen of the whitewashing persuasion. Here Ib an extract:

“ What I waa gwine to re-inark abont dis time,” 8nid Brother Gardner, aa Paradise Hall quit sueez-

J n g and coughing, ‘' was do fact dat wo hocentered , into nnodder y’ar. De y’ar 1877 am laid on de

ob de shelves, dar toraoulder an’pine away De epyeode of 1878 am arrovea. an’ fehe

cornea up to the mark wid the amlloob a p'Ossum. Commonicoshatna ’tended for difli^lnb muaJ.J?© dafced.1878 after dJs, an* dis audience mns’ Jeave de pafs bellin' i t an’ gallop for’ard to de unknown fooohei1. How many of ub may own a bank, o r be‘; Ip n ' in de peaceful tomb one y ’arfrom date, I-he* no pencil 'handy t*> calkerlate/ but I wishes de club peace, riohea, chiokena an’ de lowest prices ebeV* knowed on whitewash brushes, nlater-marino an* lime. Doorm’ de paat’ week I digested to B rudder Walpole the iddab of dashin' off a few poetry ou d*> anbjeck of de old y ’ar an’ de p6w, an’ I reckon de

haa implied.”** th e owed.”

Isaac rose up, with the stern dignity of nn constable, carefully unfolded a sheet of

►l&cnp, and with a look Laround Ihe hall to com- md Hil^nce he settled his feet and began ;

WAT OFF DAB. , 5Jit/ iSir Isaac WalpotepRsfTv- * t

“ Whar’B de ole year, brudder— * „Whar’g do good ole year ? 1

It’s way off dar, «v ^...... - -As -block as tar. . ‘........ ......L....

Now drop tho bustin? tear—Sho’a gone—do ole, olo year*

“ Whar’s do ole year, brudder—W har’B do good ole year ¥ ,

Do ole year’s fled-~ ‘ ■ 1 ■Do ole year’s dead.

Sho’s restin’ on d,4 bier—Anodder date am heah.

“ Whar’s do ole year, brudder—Whnr’s dat. seven tfy-Bjjvou ?

Hhe’s gone to mat-—Do hoops did bast—

And de year baa gon'o to heaben—From whence de same waa giben.

‘‘ ’Bout dis now year, brudder—What ar’ ye gwine to do J*

Ar’ye gWine to stay . Till do fadin’ day

Puts miodder year on you—Tiinmi’- do black ha’r blue?*

“ ’Bout do now year, brudder—Will ye be’n upright man ? 1

I reckon you will.An’ wid all my fill,

I wish you may live out do Bpan,’ >■ And succeed in mos’ every plan."

[* Noto by the poet.—White wonldn’t rhymo.]

There wasn’t a dry eye in the hall as the poet I his oology and, dropped back on tbo un­

pinned bench. More than a dozen members shed tears out of both eves- a t once, and others blew their noses and tenderly said :

“ All dat man needs am a suit of Btore close an' a pair o* Bleeva buttons to make him tbe greatest anciont.poet o' modern tim es! ’’

H O TK LS* E to .

L ake Yiew H ouse,ASBTJEY PARK. N .J .

O p e n . ^ 1 1 t l i e T e a r .H ob been* enlarged and| renovated. Haa every

convenience; Rooms large and airy. Furuifftjgd,^ ih good stylo-. Waiters courteous and^obliging.’”“f: "

_ B ABBES. SHOP ATTACHED. .Large and commodious livery Btables. Within two minute^ walk from C. R. R. depot, Telegraph offlct^aod Post OQlco. Commands fine view of ta k e nnd Ocean. Wo Rpare no paina to please and make comfortable. * •

A. IU TOLANI), Proprietor,

HOWLAND HOUSE,O c e a n G r o v e .

This Honso, the first established at Ooean Grove,, has been greatly enlarged, improved, and handsomely repainted. Each room has a door ana window opening’ to verandas, which extend all around the building a - each story. The rdoma aro all newly plastered and neatly furnished. I t is conveniently located in the Gro\Je, ou Mt. Carmel Way, within a few yards of the '.Congregation •GVounda,1 Post Office, Telegraph Office, etc. ItJb well kept, and now open for visitors. Every 'Stfgi^yiH be made to (five satisfaction in all respe&a.

C . L . H O W j . A l i P , . P r o p r i e t o r ,

This Day Choose X e Slate or Shingiesl

T r u e P r i e n d s l i i p .[Extract from a lecture delivered by ftov. J . II.

M. Ohumaoetro, itobbi, at Carondelet street 8yna- goguo; on Habhath, Feb. 2, 18781 . a

“ And Jonathan said to David: * To-morrow is tho new moon. And touching the matter of whioh wo have spoken, thou and X, behold the Lord is between mo and thee forever.’ ” 1 Samuel, xx, 18 and 28. v » ’

* * * In order to impress Israel also w ith this p(eculiar institution, it was established that on ihe Sabbath before thcr new moon special prayers Bhould bo pffered a t our synagogues, and

' on certain: occasions also tho words of our text were to be read. And Jonathan said to David: “ To-morrow is the new moon.” We have selected this-verse for to-morrow, “ Rosh Hodes,” com- mences the Jewish month, or new mfron. W e do not know of any subject which deserves more spe­cial attention when man ia reminded to arrango his worldly affairs for. another .period of time, than this-sketcb-of 'disinterested friendship* the history- of David and Jonathan. I t has no equal in sim­plicity and beauty, in purity and grandeur in other writines and b^ other authors, for it belongs to the Holy Writ, composed iby inspiration of the Divine Author. If we dosiro to pass a tranquil life, not of­fending our fellow beinRs through our selfisbness ahd unrestrained am bitioij. then we^hould regard tbo friendship of man aa aafcred'as'our own honor, our most solemn obligation^ the binding promise aealed with tha infallible name of tho Most High ,* “ and touching the m atter (of friendship) of which we have spoken, thou and I, behold the Lord is between me and thee forever.”

”*** When Jonathan made thiB solemn declaration, Haul, his father, was king.in Israel. I t was an­nounced to Saul that for disobedience to God’ commands the crown would not descend npon his heir, but oiie more worthy and competent would occupy the throtio oi the Jewish empire. The ambitious Saul did noO^accept thia decision of the Almighty God. Ho forgot that without the least claim he was selected and annointed by Gods prophet, and that tho Lord giveth and taketh away as liis 'justice and mercy finds proper. Jonathan, t t* legitimate heir to the crown, understood tbe Divine behest as nature’s law ; that the son must, will nnd does suffer for the iniquities of the father. He considered /this loss of kingly honors aa a consequence of hia father’s misconiluct, for which the innocent David, as God’s instrument, should not be pertecvited. For this correct in-, terpretation of Jonathan, hifj father banished him from his presence, and cfven attempted to slay hiB own son. But this unnatural act <Jid not atyer tbe firm resolution of Jonathan to protect his friend David at all hazards ; yea, to save him, if necessary, at the risk of his own life. * ' # * * * * * * * *

My hearers, let us banish all ambitious de- Biretv; let us foster -the aims of true, religion, mutual confidence, respect for one another/g. teelings, deep regard for the rights of - meh,,

1 conrteona behavior toward our fellow-beings, sym­pathy for the offli^tcdy pity for the ambitious ty-

’* rants who make u b suffer, pardon for tbe offenders of God's laws, which command ub to live in leve and union together.\ i Lot us not ‘return the evil whioh the modern Sauls bring upon us, our families, and those en* trusted to our care, bu t relying upon the infinite power of the Eternal Judgo, imploring bis mere? upon 011 in ' tru th and faithftdlness professing:“ The Lord is between me and thee forever.” Amon.— Hebrew leader. ’ v]

D A V ID C A R T W R IG H T ,

Plain a i Ornamental Slate Hoofer,ASBTIKY PAKK & OCEAN GROVE. H.X

OFFICE AHD YARD s ,MHVROE AV., NEAR RAILROAD, ASBURY PARK.

Having had 2i» years experience in the 81ate Roofing business I am prepared tp give the pub(i9 satisfaction with the beatjmateriul in tlie market, ut reasonable rates.

All*work warranted snow and w atertight. Mate­rial always on bana. Jobbing promptly attended to.

All orders. reoeiTed b^jnail^gjjflJUfVatJJtfrk Hall, will receive prompt attention.

SMOCK & BUCHANON€or. -of Main and Asbury Ars.,

A S B T T R Y P A R K . N . J .

_ Dealers in all kinds of

LUM BERAND

BUILDING MATERIAL,Bricl, Lime, Lath, Plaster, Cement, Mir k.

NAILS ,& BUILDER8’ HARDW ARE,

w A SDOcialty

All kinds 6 f Lnmber constantly in the yard.

Hemlock, Spruce & White Pine Timber. R O O F IN G S L A T E

Of the bent quality, or contracts iaken for roofs complete.

Every article lu our line delivered with dfttpaich, at the loweflt poflfiible prices.

Parties desiring to erect Cotta^ea will not do them- selves jnatice nnleaa they give us a call.GARRET V. SMOCK, NELSON E. BUCHANON.

c . w , . p o x tA R C H I T E C T A N D B U I L D E R ,

A S B V O ^ P A B K AND OCEAN G R O V E ,Contracts taken. Plana and Specifications F u r­

nished and Estimates made. Sea-side Cottages Specialty.,-EXSIDSKCE QBAWD AJ, UZAS 000XUAH ABBU2T PAUL

BBAB1.EY & SMITHM anufacturers and Im porters o f

, ; Patent No. 200,000 has just been issued; but that does not represent the total number, as prev-

— -- -ious to 18<M>~tbe issues were no t numbered.

N E W C O A L Y A R D .The Subscriber (haa opened a Coal and Brick

Yard, on tbe

COR. OF ASBURY AND MAIN A VS.,i f c ,

A S B U R Y P A R K .

W t« ts ho win keep on Kgg, Stove ami H a t Coal of th e best qualities, Ked and White Ash. Ona object will be to make our bnsiuess ao acmJEimodfttioi;' to ■ &J1 parties, ia tti'e Country ah w»U aa to the Citizens o f Oooaa.GroTe and A sbuij P a rk . A ll . •

COAL WILL BE SCREENED & DELIVERED,B y tb e C a r L o a d o r T o n .

ORDER A FILLED WITO DISPATCK. ^

„ , - Brio^a fey o’f i ,0^0*’Boal^ for weighingJ v 'y _ all lands ot country produce correctly. ,

fit, 10,1877,

n.i

CI1A8. E. HOWLAHD

NEAB FUI/EOH 8TBJEET.

S u r ra 8ofec ta rcrs la-thoA ilty o f N ew York;

B b ad u tt & Svtrrs were the first In the Bra eh Trade to issue, an lllnBtrated .C&talogae, which they faralah on spplicatton.

BAKERY TO* A First-class Bakery to Let at this plao^ {^ihurjr

Park), eotabliflhed three years apd doing a good business

Satisfactory reason for giving up. .Terms, very-rptaon*

,able. ‘-Apply a t the Bakery, corner Cookman Avenue and

Bond Street, or address *

A. W . LEW IS,Abbdrt P a r^ I N , J .

~ F O fi SA LE.The Sobicriber offers Hi* property W Aalrafjr‘P ark ,

sitdated on Main 8treet, Bonth of Park Hall, and now occupied as a Moat Market, for'sale. The premises couBtst of a lot 25x100-feet With three story 'F rer-U roofrbnilding 25*30 foot.and basement.Ing to secure a firet-daea business stand, will ‘v to call and examlnethe same. . .. ,

The property is offered at private sale 19th next, and if not disposed of by that Umoi 'gwl sold at public skle, on Wednesday. March at1 o’clock P. M.t on the premises. Address >;,'» o ' R, B. CAMPBEI^Li Piop’r,

P r, ' SQ

iTS

Asbury Park U located directly op- podte the oelebnUed .Ooean Ofrove

' cani^moeting grounds (Wesley Lake dividing the two plaoe#),.fouivmili below-General/CTrant’s cottage

' Long Uranoh, Ne^» Jersey. Over eigh| hundred cottages Jiave boon btplt a t Asbury Park and Ocean Grave WithUalx years, costing over

. one, miUwn dollars. ' Asbury Park ■ - ^-frqjiia^direcUy on the ocean. I t does

not front od a bay, or. sound,-or riv­er, bat on tbo broad Atlantic, stretch-

W ing away' for thousands of miles., As?, bury Park was assessed in I8p9 at ■ ;tl57XX/r the assessment for 1875 was

, $250,000. 8treete running at right angles.to the sea are from one to two «-—-,“ J ' —» advantage

" s resorte

HERBERT CITX-300 lots For Sale at the above city, at, loV

A part of them underlaid with potter8r cfijv lots are located near the Camden and Amboy road. FOr particulars address,. „ \

WARREN BROWN,A sB uar P abk , N .'J.

NEW BRANCH LOTSF o r S a l e .

ThoBe lots are near Shark River, on the highest ground along the shore. They a re ,50 feet front and 225 feet deep, fronting ~on 'th e wide graded turnpike leading to Ocean Beach. The owner offers these lots for the present at the ' ...

L o w r * r i c e o i ^ 2 S 3 t C S ,

ON TKN TKARS’ TIMK, OR

$ 2 0 0 O A ^ H .

For carpenters, fluhermen snd teamsters having work noar Shark River, these lota D.rtt' clieapor and BuperJor to any now oflbred ih this section.

Apply t c \ ' • •

I S A A C C . T t E I N P i E I i Y , ""

• Aabury Park, N . J . , ^

HOW TO SAVE M ONEY.Buy Property or R en t a Cottage of

E . J . T A R B S L m . ,

— FirBt-ol&sa Properties in Ocean Grove, and Asbnry Park, for 8ale or Kxohange.' Famished or Unfurn­ished Houses to Rent.

C. D. WARNER & SON,■BEAL ESTATE ft I B S im S O S AGENT8,

A g m j B Y P A B K , N . J .

P r o p e r t i e s F o f S a le , E e n t o r E x c h a n g e .

Buildings and their oontents insured n the best and most reliable Fird* Insurance Companies a t the lowest rates. Over $ 3 0 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 .0 0 Insurance Capital represented.

Ovfic* : Main S trb b t, next door to the Reading' Room, Aabury Park, N. J *' P . O. address, Asbury Park, N. J

HOUSES AND LdT8 in Freehold, N. J for Ale or exchange, for property eligibly situated at or

pearA S B U R Y P A R K , N . J

Also a store house and first-class stock of merchandise .Inquire at this office. «

A B P L K N P ID FA R M . 158 Acrei, Large Brick House.lS rooms,, Marl, Water and Wood

plenty.1 Will be sold cheap on long credit, or ex­changed. 500 yards from R. R. Depot, ohurches, mills, storps, schools, etc. Apply to „

. . . i vx - .- - f , Long Branch, N. J

—. :i Ocean

D- Grove, can be reached direct b y the C b n te a l R a t l^ o a d o r N aw J a n

EIPf

t Lo — r

GEfl

BBT, frOm the foot of Liberty street. New York, via. Jersey City, and also by steamboat from foot of Rec­tor street, N. to Sandy Hook, affording a fine view of the Narrowa, harbor fortifications, e ta , thence by tbe New Jersey . Southern R^ R , to\ Branobport (If miles from Long Braiichit and connecting thbre- trltfi Central Kailroad of New Jersey. So

.there are i y r o Hde^ of oommunica- tion.'7 From Philadelphia the « u s rum to Asbttry^ Park- direct. Rail­road time frtm New York to Asbury > P ark , 2! hours; express in summer, , about' 11 hours j, ana from Philadel­phia to Asbory P ark , 2 hours and 35

-Park are as follows: First* When parties bay and do not build, one-third the purchase money will be required, down, balance in five years. Second. Where purchaser builds, no money will be reonired down, btft a morit gage can be given, payable In ten - years, with the privilege of ten, like renewals,' making the principal sum

hundred years hence, tbe--dpe onepurchaser, however, reserving theright tojm y off tbo ‘ — - time. T h i r d , Ten

TH

ring-1off tbo mortgage a t any i. Ten per oent. off to rv

cash' at time of purchase. For pricev 6f lota, address, ' ’JAMES A. BRADLEY, or ISAAO BEALE, 251 Pearl 8t., New York,

, - orALLEN R. COOK; Asbury Park,

N e^ Jersey.'

HEW JEBSEY.

5 (I IL fl T Si RIS il t BT I li 8 li

B R A N C H Y A R D ,

Manufacthrera and Dealers In

Oak, Fine & Hemlock Timber,B o a r d s , .

J ^ l a n l c ,B i d i n g ,

L a t h ’S h i n n i e s ,

P t "o a t s . >■ M a i l s ,

E t d .

C O A L .(L eiiiK h .- Q a z e l to n , B a o k M o u n ta i n . )

Brick, Line, und Hair, Base Dipt,Phosphate. Pondrette. din, Ume,

Irsa Clad PalsrJ, Etc.

H u t s a d F a c t o r y P r i n c e t o n , W . JT.

IToor Patronage Retspectfally Solicited.

EDWARD H. F1SLDEK, Kfts^V.

1,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 C ash C a p ita l M oat re lia b le in th is C o u n try .

W H .L IS F O E I) D E Y V Agent, : <. ' OSNEBA<. BEiAL I •-1 ■, f -i jiP ') i R FOB' ‘

<

O o e a n G r r o v o , ' l * v : a , * p k a n d ’ f f i e i :

- . i

'W eido n o t claim to be t h e o n l y reliable folks in th is community, n ^ t do w i/do ttllthe.lbiai are other gentlemen whose business qualities and ab ilities w e > are bbtm d' to-.respect. B u t . we you in first-clasa Companies, ren t you any Jdnd^oi a hotise, and scjl o r exchange , properties ttrT e x as^ — 1 ■: ..-•' ■ - --j*--*- .. ' '*^7 i •

I> O R E fi 7.0RCCN H b U S E S -E & T A B L IS H E D IB 6 4 .

I & S O N *

, I • i " ' B i E p MURSERIES.AND OttBEN. HOV8EB AT RUMBOM

e v e m 'r - t i A s s p i ? ' : - ; . ■ ............. ...................... ...._____' . : • : * tNBlODIHBT^EUQEST NQVCCI1ES O f

R U B T I C W O p K - f R b N V A S E S W I R E V ’O R I■<' v C A TA LO D U C S F R K TD A P P L ^lC A N T S ' :-, y 'T V '2 ...

OKOUMOa lA /O OUT ANO C ariH A TTf® JOtVKti. r w * fiKO f?l*N T£O rtJVIRIO StPtAH rio.D H o V o e . ' F L O W E R S - s u p p l i e b ~ • ’ ~T ’ r “ x J d i u n A n a ■F L O r a l D E s iG N t^ sk b R tE sj n q i i GE:

v s c 3 D a w i a m v » # b c e > - a s » B K p « S ': o i s . , .■

Flowei^s-Cough Jc, Consumption Cure,FREE FROM OFIDM!. -FEEE FROM MERCURY! FREE FROM FOIOOH!

The BEST TONIO AND BLOOD OENEBATOB known,", I t is a prompt and radical enre for Con- sumptipu. Coughs, BroncWtU, Asthma, Weak' Lungs, W aiting of Flesh, Loss o f Appetite, Night Sweats, Nervous Debilityt Female Diseases, and losaof Nerve power. Reliable, sale and speedy in effect. 6old by Druggists, or sent by Rxpresa, on reoeipt of prioe, $1 per Bottle, orfl for45. Send Postal Card for circulari*s ,:w l

n o p i l l s ; • - •'u-?— ..- : " d b u o s . 'FLOWER’S DYSPEPSIA R E M E D Y .

■J**'

to death. por*5?©ttJel -2 B o ttles ”♦ NBVER FAJLS, Yon can eat the bestruf food a ftir $5. Either remedy sent C. O. A),

' , T ., / DISTINGUIBHEIigHow. W. H. H endiuokbon, g *n. G*o. A. Sramn>Aif; Azabtaii Cowov^n, ,C o l. E u a b C onovkb, . " . H . C. W ahm oth , W. & « n ^ b n , E sq ., N. J . H . R. R.

* ‘ (Kxtraet from the Eatonloivn Advertiser^ Nov. 10, 1877.) _Dr. Frank Flower, of this village, ia working wonderful cures in Dyspepsia, Coughs'and Consumption.

i!7 * ® rem,e? ie*> work iikemagio. This is being done qbletjywlthoufc advertising’but amid the MERORttT opposition. This of itself ia a good point in their favor.*’'

If your Druggist does not have my remedies, take no other, but send to me a t onoe.P.O. Saris. v-TOiSK f&ojnp, Sitimtow^'Xnpmith Oft, S. 1.

XOXXN XX. B IO B TO lf, O e eu I A tfe n rr P a r k , A m en t to r t h e a b o r e r»nssa i»« .

MAP OF THE CENTRAL RAILROAD. OF NEW JERSEY.S h o w in g t h e n o w l i n e b e t w e e n F W !a d e lg & J a a n d N e w V o r k , a n d a l s o t h e L o n g

Branch D M d o n to Anbury Parta,

E S T A B L IS H E D FO U R YEARS.

W . W . M C C H E S N E YManufacturer a f

ICE CREAMM ain S t., O pposite R ailrpad P a rk .

j y Wds, iakm ih n i ftarfm: im u

K m WARM AND DEY.R H. W oetu iko ton is Bole agent for this county for

the sale of the \ ..

P A T E N T I K O N D O O i t 8 A & I> L E f rWarranted to keen out all snow and ram. Call and Examine at his residence,. - *•' .

00B. 8EWALL AV. & EKO Y ST.

BUILDING LOTS FOR SALE. The snhsenber, executor of the estate of Wm. Jflarvey, doceased,

offers a t private Bale abou£_80 lots, lying on the east' side of the turnpike, between Ooean Grove and Bhark River, near Duok Creek. Also, for rent, a house on the same tract containing two rooms on first floor, and three rooms on seoond floor. Call on or address,

ABNER ALLBN, Kx'r,Dbal Bhach, N. J .

l ? O B ;Or will sxchange for. property ih Asbury Park, a T

S K I^ L I . F A R A f , ' (Containing 85 acres, with all necessary buildings. Finely located in Montunuth oonnt^^hree.milss-lrtfn- Engliahtown. For further particulars, address, ; ENOS APPLEGATE, or 0 . D. WARNER & SON,

AbbObt P a r k , N bw J a b b k t.

1 8 7 8 .

A. % F.1 1 .

Drapers & Tailorsj t o y & B R A w p a .

A p erfee tf iti goodas |have jTssi receWed a fresh s to c k , o tWejWill make np garaM tte In Uie.l^UB «tjla», M:tlsa; lowest prices e e o M e a t withSnst-elae*

A . & P . McCONWELK;

J. I MO.RFORD & YAM DERTEEB,LONG BRAHOH VILLAOS, '

duulicsb in iDRY GOOnB, ,

G H % E M E S ,SSOqKEEY,

HAaBWABE, ' r TISWAEB. _■

WOODBH-WAHE,Attn

SL A SS-W A SE . F T JR K IT T IR E , C A R P E T S ,

O U . C L O T H S, WIHDOW S H A D E S , E(o. M eo h an io a ’ T o o ls , W in d o w l i r a & P q t t j . .

— jvriacrEix* i»A .narrB .F a n s iin i? Im p le m e n ts F i e ld a n d G a rd e p

L a — f e e d * ." \aounct. you

P K A 'I T H A S T H A L O I L ,• , -"AW).

‘ M m e. D e m o re i t ’f R e l l s b i e P a t te rn * .

I . f.< NOBTOKD • ■ 1. f . TiK D«»Tlg; .

W , S E X T O N , ‘

Carpenter and Builder,Comer Baaga A». and Emory St.,’ j

A g f B T T B V P A B ^ N j J '

J . W . STITPH ElT,

eiMKSMITH & HORSESHOES,C a r r ia g e W o rk i n a l l i t« b m n c h e i .

M A IN S T R E E T A A 8B U R V A V .•* . ~m. ...k. . - ......

Refers ss to workmanship

.William Hathaway, Esq.1, , James A. Bradley Esq.O. N. Hiller, jEsq. ” ^

i j -. n . s j t e x ' x ’o j ^ r * •

C A B IN E T M A K E R , U PH OLSTER ER ,

AND FOKNlfeHINO. UHDEBTAKEB,Cs*lieti|Coffln«,' SKroad*,, Crftp«n, Clothfl, .

hand o j faililjh*4 to order, ■'unerjtla penwulljr e<in- ducted to point of destination. ... ‘

PAPER-HANGER AND pARPET-kAYER.

i > j o T u n n 3 B * n , a mon band and made to order. I

U P H O tS T E B IN G A 8P B C U L T Y ., M A I N S T R E E T ,

4 A a b u ry N . J , ‘’Refers to H ey. Wm. Osbdrn and Lewis Ralnear

Ocean Grove.

J . F , e A O T O » » #Wholesale and Retail Dealer in .

CHOICE, TRENTON AKD MSpTI HAIIS,O-oodiaj: JSfco.

o r . C O O K A * . S tV , t 'B O D P H T B B B X f ASBliBV FABK, N . J.

He willoontlnue to^o "

"Mitba 'v-.'if ■-

SROCEBT KND, OVI O tfH E.A t NEW tO B K R E T A l L P E J C E 8 ^ t i : i i

PLdPIt AND Ptmb j • W4HBB u t t e r , a t i d ' T e & a x S p e c t a f a *

•iatoltfl3'far».ittf6Tor»/«®'4»Ueitiatfss!!»r« ofyooi?y ,3 to the temtOoj '; . • .; • . . ■ , v '1 Yoaritrnly, A ' -

PAiTERS

makq the oiily reliable paints.

R aw Linseed OH,B a lle d IA nse«d Oil^

...... ....: ............... M k b I I m , W i t t y

Cine C olors,. ”- - . J. * .B rm b e i, E tc.

G L A S S ,A fall tonic o f O la a u jla n y ii orii^and.

, 8 U P P L I M 8 j : ,

At Rfiw York prices..

Deqembsr, 1878, JOS. W. RICE.

om « 5 , '«P!Ki8lto # ^ , $ w e , tB a tg ? ,..

J 08. T . l i w r , «n«oe»or to J ,® Jjoi»y‘&C3i ,-,wlllv' continue the business a t jtho old stand, on Cookman ;> av., and will hereafter spjl, the ,bBit( and flnept Grp-V ceries, a^'tl^fbottom^figures* ’’ J.’. / K

; ' s ' m Z G T L X ; X V M : , V A J S .B ‘ '*’t/hmiiii. for pustliirota, ir/.iuL1?. by fair

dealiag and itrlot atteation to hia ooatomere, their Wtorn patrenagf.. Ctul! aid ojqwiJfle'iDy stocl;

— — :--------T f ^ r ....................................

Map* and p»- . I j i I C T f l jH » «, ' n 1 * v ; . .,and mnolf gmeral

m 3' .Ooa*» S ? f npon>p;|(;;

(vSk-'-ii —a '•'Monmnuth'