VOLUME IX—NO. 25/ OCEAN GROVE .TIMES—SATURDAY, JULY 6 ...

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VOLUME IX—NO. 25/ OCEAN GROVE .TIMES—SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1901, Subscription $1.00 per year. A Popular Celebration at the Ocean Grove Auditorium— Grand Music by the Choir and Orchestra AN ORATION BY DR T. DE WITT TALMAGE Itoom! Bang! What's thin? thought many a Btratled sleeper In Ocean Grovo on Thursday about the moment "he morning aun pooped above tho wa- tery horizon, and tinged & path ot sWmmerlng gold directly to tho shore.' Under the spell of Morpheus the sleep- ers had become oblivious to the fact that they were at tho dawn of the glorlous-Fourth of JuSy," and the ono hundred nnd twenty-fifth anniversary of American Independence. "The sun of Austerlitz ; had Its his- toric glory, hut tho glory of the sun of Ocean Grove on Thursday morning shono on a different era, a brighter and better age. . ' "Boom!” repeated tho sunrise sig- nal, <mo a minute, until General Pat- terson had awakened the echoes ut Grove and Park, and thus Introduced “tbe day we celebrate.1 ' The flags and banners were soon ■waving in the early morning' breeze, and one topic sufficed for every break- fast table—one name In fact: Tal- mage! Both Mr. yatman in the Tens- pie and the older, class of people In the Tabernacle .-were on time in their dally devotions, and . in the spirit of. "70," while they enjoyed the first slice ol the annual Ocean Grove celebration, turning the.traditions of tho day to good account spiritually! by song arid testimony, all relating to the "glori- ous liberty of the. sons of God.” • THE GREAT, AUDITORIUM meanwhile began .to fill up with a pop-, ulous -tide of country people from miles around the Grove, A pleased thrill ot wonder awaited every one on entering tlio building. Decorators or One taste and unlimited reacurces Imd been, there and made ail things ready for a groat surprise. Organ, balco- nles, choir galleries, pulpit nail chan- cel, md tiie body and facade of the edifice, all were emblazoned with bunt- ing in every agreeable form of dra- -ppry. ■■-■■-. •. By 10.30 flvo thousand eager people sat enthralled by the orchestral over- ture, "America," a new thing here, iu which all the popular patriotic airs were blended, and the happiest sensa- tions of tho heart set tingling. Tliis performance received tumultuous ap- plause. Tho official chairs ou the platform wcro al! filled, and the.“orator of the day” appeared in prime physical con- dition dor required service, receiving' a royal Ocean Grove salute. . The services were then opened by ‘.'The Battle Hymn of the Republic," announced by Bishop FitzGerald, ;itad •It seemed as if the roof might rise 1 oholr, orchestra and audience came,to climax in tho chorus, “Glory, glory, hallelujah,' our God 0If-: marching on,” A devout and very appropriate prayer was offered by, the venerable Or. It Von Horn, of the Newark Conference, and after a flee? musical selection Mr. T. Frank Appleby, presidenl of the Aabury Park common council; waa in- troduced as the reader of. - THE DECLARATION OF INDE- .;. ' PENDENCE. Familiar as the '‘immortal docu- ment” has become, it is still listened to with' profound respect, especially when as well enunciated as It was on ' this occasion; . President FitzGerald again gave the audience a hymn which all could aing, and right heartily did they join iii .the strains of "Onward, Christian Sol- .rdtejB.” As tho clock was striking the hour of eleven, Dr. Talro&gc, after an ova- tion on the part of the audience, pro- ceeded with Rev, T. duWii-t Tacmaqc TIIE ORATION. 'of things. The world, he said,, began with a garden, anti will end with a gar- den. .Its trend is to batter tilings. The race has.had its marked epochs; r6od “Imply turned over a lef In his- tory,, and thin «>arth was prepared for iiumaB habitation and happiness. He turned <jver another,, and there was the deluge, and bo on down the courso of the; ages, until we- cowe to.the mil- lenium, nnd after that heaven. , ,: Humorous arid illustrative, anec- dotes marked tha address from flrsrto last, so for exactly an liour thu inter- est arc.’, delight of the -people never flagged for a single moment. : hie country, he proceded, has had flye great wara-Hhe' fir,-it for ' that liberty and independence we celebrate today. The last to wipe out Spanish atrocity and evince our- sympathy with oppressed and down'd rad'den hu- nianity. ' . Now, Is this nation worth what it cost? Not only the men, but woman- hood has taken a full share of sacri- , flee and loss, to gait; and maintain .hu- man right act? freedom; The outlook is not' portcntlous War will aoon become a thing of the past'; peace Is sure to; come, and pros- .perity never was half so" great as-now, at; the opening of tho twentieth cen- tury. ! Hia intimate acquaintance with the lav/ makers at the nation’s capital en- abled him to say both Senate and tiie House were competent and reliable. The perplexing complications of gov- ernment they will ilx in due,/time, for they are men noble anil true to God and. the country. WHAT IS SURE TO COME. ‘Our country”, now means more than It used to mean, “WANTED-- One hundred thousand -men to build railroads In d ll‘the South-Amerlcan states. Wanted—A hundred thousand telegraph operators, . artisans and iii- auBtriai;.. produders—reapers," clocks, iron workers; .lawyers, doctors, minis- ters. Wanted—Fifty Ocean Groves Between Capo May and "Capes Horn. Oh yes, the country open to.‘American •thrift and enterprise Is worth till it cost. . ;' ..' *. ■ - .Some "hesitate about emigration; say we are getting crowded. Not while Texas alone Sa larger than France with its fifty millions,, or larger than, Germany. Other lands are densely crowded, but on this continent there is plenty, o f room for, all, and all these SoutlifAinerican States are ready to come in; even Canadi is waiting fora wedding wills the republic.. :When asked she will clash,:look down anil reply, "nek mother.” They will all be under ono government and. one flog, tho banner you have made so conspic- uous hero today. . England is famous for her manufac- tures. ’..iermany fo r. education; all other European nations for one thing or another, bu: the United States of America is for God. Tho speaker here presented& statis- tical contrast between foreign coun- tries and this, in wages, home comfort and-future outlook, showing all the: ad- vantages in our favor, politically, too, we are better off; for every two or four years ito have a house clean- ing, and. the best .chnaco to rectify what is cumbrous or wrong in our system. - Thfe extravagance of European courts came in for .satirical denuncia- tion, und the unrest of Euraps and Eastern ..nations, ha thought, pr -.gag- ed the overthrow by the people nt Im- position and oppression. Dr. Talmage,. true to his- nptjrnistic profession, In handling the riellentc subject of trusts, monopolies and mil- lionaire, in the midst of touch empty handed want, had a good word to say for those immensely wealthy, people, whose large gifts to needy instl -tutlons of a benevolent . character has become a" feature of the timCB. The question' of unequaled dla tribution of wealth, nnd the relation of capital, nnd labor, lie said, could never be settled but by one person—Jesus, the carpenter’s son of Nazareth. Give him the supremacy and authority', anil he will set every wrong to right. Many good stories anil apt illustra- tions he drew from hla own personal observation while traveling In thosl lands, where the mngn'iflcense of cost- ly cathredals stand In severe contrast with abject poverty and grinding op- pression. Looking to the future, the speaker remarked that our children will havo a better time than wo have had here —better education and hotter avenues to enlarged-prosperity.' In response to tbe kindly welcome , accosted him to the Ocean Grove plat- form once more, he Invited all present to call and see him at his home n: Washington; but suggested that nil. had better not come ut once. He said whatever might bo the soluttou of tho scientist, as to where we all - come from, or that of tbe theologian as to wliere we are to go, one fact Is clear, we are now here, with an inviting'op- portunity.. to consider come things bearing On .our countar’6 history, atsd and loved* to look on the brighter .side (Continued on fourth page.) Gould to Build On Deal lake. The beautiful estate -which Daniel O’pay has made at Deal, has attract- ed the attention of George Gould, who now has a desire' to become Mr. O’Day’s neighbor. If negotiations for a tract of ninety, acres in Edgemere, comprising'one of the.moBt desirable sitos in the .vicinity of Deal lake, are . successful, Mr, Gquld; will build as fine 'ji.. place as'‘he' ‘fi asP^efe&e d '' i JLake- wood; costing! ihore than a million dol- lars, . ' CONCERT AND FIREWORKS Concert in the Auditorium and Fireworks .. " y in Asbury Park. ' ■ To run a first-class concert on the evening, of the -“Glorious Fourth,” In the face of. a forthcoming .iyrotecnic display in Asbtffy Park, req urud uu- usual nerve on the part of Prof. Mor- gan,, but he succeeded in the imiler- taking even beyond expectation.: The. immense crowd which he. held for an hour of unalloyed pleasure In tho Au- ditorium,' with scores and hundreds standing outside the open doors under tho spell of music and song, attested his genius and powen Bishop Fitz- gerald presided with easy grace of manner and timely flashes of wit, uri*/ til the 'explosion of bombs and . the 6wish and bursting of sky rockets out- side produced a ripple of inclination to move on the part of those who, wanted to take in two great events the same evening.: At: the proper- mo-^ ment the Bishop said, “It is. now quite appropriate that the last number on- our evening’s program should be a grand’ march.” So/while choir, and or- chestra started up Sousa’s patriotic, production, the, waiting throng filed; out in ordedly manner into the raooh; light,, and crowded every avenue lead- ing to- points of advantage to witness one of the finest exhibitions. of fire works in Asbury Park ever given on this coast. The “rockets’ red glare'’ became a many-colored spectacle, and the sky was illuminated with.;. “red, white’ and blue” and every other tint in the category of brilliant color; with golden showers, , curious formations, and magnificent set pieces. *. Th ere was a vast am oun t of po w-; der expended on ’private account as well. The hotels, ;many; of themj ha4 their own share of the ‘celebration, and at one 'time the blazing meteors were flashing;out over every part.of. the Park and Grove; while the small boy and his sister kept up the fusilade of bomb, pinwheel and “cracker,” un- til it was time to entei* dreamland, and- there .review the incidents of a re- markably jubilant and happy day. The Ocean Grove Assembly. The Seventeenth Annual Session of the cOean Frove Sunday Schoql As- sembly is to lie held July 8-18, and' will bo again this year, as from' the first, in charge of the editor of the N. 3.' Methodist and Advocate, Rev. 13. B. Loomis. A .variety of lectures and concerts and other entertainments will give spice to the program, but the main features of the Assembly will be a series of lectures on the “Life of Christ as set forth* In the four Gos- pels,” by the conductor of the Assem* bly, and a course of studies* in' Bllfle Pedagogy, by Prof. W. A. Hutchinson, for ndults. . ' { The Boys’ arid Girls' meeting will be held as usnal in the Temple at 8*00 a. m., and will be In charge of Mrs. B. B. Loomis. The lesosn this xcar will bo. on “New Testament History and Geography.” .. The Children’s meeting in tlio Tem- ple at- 8.00 a. m.. each day excepting Sunday, is ono of the most interesting of the excercises in the Ocean Grove program? Many adult young people, within the past two or three years, have said to their teacher, Mrs. Loomis, that the; foundation of all their systematic Bible study was laid in the Ocean Grove • Children’s meeting ten or twelve years since.' ■ V The detailed program will be sent on application to B. B. I-oomis, 131 Federal street, Camden, N. J. Letter List. The following is a list of unclaimed letters remaining in the Ocean Grove postofllce for week ending July 2,1901: '\: Rev. A. M. Averill, Mrs. B. H. Bowe, Rebecca Barnum (4), Mrs. C W Jdolt, Adela Bowne, Ernest Carly,. J.'Dough- ierty, Mrs. ’ C^as. Elms, Mrs. Foster, Lo Roy France, Robert Groff, Thomas Gouldy, Laura R. Haddon, ' Marjorie M; Harris, Mrs, Mary Hammell, Mrs. C. Harrington, Ernest' Higham, Har- riett Johnson/ Harry Johnson, Theo, Moore, Mrs. MacCoy, G, E. ’OContior, The Pinherst, Mary L. Powell, Ethel Parker, Mrs. .Stephen Randall, Hotel Rio Grand; S. Slater, .Mrs. Sculthorpe, MraV E. S. Stokes, A. Schlossbach, H, L. Scott, Spring View House, Mrs. T. L. Smith, John Teall, Mrs. M. Wilson, Mrs. B. Wainright. ‘ *. W. H. HAMILTON, P. M. *• Breeze^ at the Preachers' Meeting, There are indncatlons of a “breeze” at. the preachers’ meeting next Moa* day morning. Mr. Kenson,-represent- ing the David Cook publishing house of Chicago, and who has opened a branch store onv Main avenue, has been invited to address the meeting on the character rind’cost of hiat Sunday school publications, compared with those of the Sunday School Union of the 'M. E. Church, and Drs. Dougherty and Krantz, representing the latterj will be present to contest the claims of the new-comer. It will be another “battle of the books,” in which all the M. E.-preachers on the grounds will he more or less interested, PIr. Appleby Received a Hearty Greeting, Mr., Frank T. Appleby on coming forward to read the “Declaration’^ on the Fourth received a hearty greetin; from' the Auditorium congregation, and a still more enthusiastic round of ap- plause at the close; for he performed his duties with admirable self-posses- sion and dignity befitting the august occasion. 1 DenUt Parlors Open. Dr. S, G. Wallace will again open hls:dental parlors over tho Asbuijy Parle and Ocean Grove bank, at the corner of Main avenuo and Pilgrim pathway on July lBt.—Adv. ALL^NHURST INN DESTROYED One Hundred and Sixty Panic-Stricken / Guests Escape. Fire broke out Mondayevening in; the servants’ quarters in the iVUen- hurst lnn/and in an hour . the ' .hotel was a smouldering mass of ruins., Two . of the Inn cottages were badly dam- aged. : The hotel and cottages were manag- ed by W. Johnson Quinn^ proprietor of the Hotel Empire, New York City. The hotel and eight icottages, six of which were saved j were valued; \;wlth their furniture; at $17'2,0Q0, Mr. Qulnri carried an insurance of $107,000 dn t-hc entire property. ■Much of the hotel furniture was saved,-and the total loss cannot be accurately,stated. . There were one hundred and sixty guests in the inn when, the fire broke out, and all of the cottages were occu-, pied. The- alarm -was sounded just as the guests were at dinner. In an in- stant the dining room' was filled with dense snioke, and; the frnnic-stricken guests ran from the dining' room to ■ their ' rooms to save; their belongings.1 The' Allenhurst Fire Department consists, of a carriage containing, one reel- of hose. This;, of course, was in- adequate, and the. Asbury park de- partment was called on for aid. The latter responded promptly, •but ;their Work was hampered owing to the lack; of water., The fire departments from Elbpron, West Asbury : Park/... West Grove, Avon and the,Washington com- pany from Ocean Grove also respond- ed and did effective work, but the fire- men were powerless to prevent • the flames from destroying the hotel.' r .c The kitchen and servants* quarters north of the inn was enveloped in; flames arid ^yas burned to the ground. The cottage occupied by Mr. Ouinii next caught fire, nnd then the cottage occupied by Frank J. Matthews, of the Commercial- Trust company, of Jersey City. The firemen were tmable to save these two cottages before they were badly- damaged... ,Shortly after 8 o’clock the walls of the inn and the-servants’ quarters fell in. and the firemen soon had the fire under control. The cottages that es- caped the flames were occupied' by Henry A. HuUiurt, of New York; Mrs. Henry C, Miner, of. New York; F. B. Delehanty, of New York; Charles Ward Hall, of New.York; M. Goodwin, of New York; H. D Campman, of San Antonio; Ailing Reeves, of Newark; ox-Mayor Lebkuecher. of Newark, and Thomas C. Buck,’ of New York.- ? When the fire got beyond the control of the firemen, the. furniture ;Of the cottages was.carriecl to places of safe- ty, while servants;, with garden hose saturated- the buildings to prevent them from burning. The beat was so intense that cottages five hundred feet from the inn were badly scorched, and several of, them took fire from the flying sparks. Guests aided, the fire- men in subduing the flames and re- moving the furniture from the threat- ened cottages. Several thousand spec- tators from Ocean-Grove, Asbury Park and other adjoining resorts gathered to witness the conflagration. In the throng were a-number of sneak thieves who rifled several trunks carried from ,the inn and cottages. Several of tiie fire fighters were overcome by the in- tense heat, but no serious casuallties occurred. A Brilliant. July Wedding, Miss ' Josephine S. Ten Broeck, daughter of Mayor Frank L. Ten Broeck, of Asbury Park, and James W. Richardson, of Wosrington, D. C., were maried at noon on Monday, July 1st, in the parlors of the West End feotel, by Rev. Dr. W. J. Wedderspoon, pastor of the First M. B. church^ of Asbury Park. The parlors were handsomely adorn- ed with tasteful decorations and dra- peries, and numerous plants and flow- ers breathed out a pleasant fragrance. Many beautiful, presents were pre- sented to the bride. Among them were cut-glass ware, several handsome punch bowls, silver-ware of all kinds, chinaware,. brlc-a-brac and many framed pictures. James A. Emery, of Washington, D. C., acted as best man. • . ; j■ The bride is, one of Asbury Park's most popular young women, and Is tal- ented as an artist. Her large number of friends unite In wishing to her. good fortune, as is shown by their interest in the marriage. The groom holds a responsible po- sition in the War Department at Washington. A Good Showing;. The Ocean Grove National bank has declared d dividend of 3 per cent, to .Its stockholders. That this show- ing can be made, speaks well for the officers and directors. connected with ;thls institution, from the fact /that there: is1 always a ' heavy ' expense in fitting out a new bank, besides the current expenses- which are' going on all the time. . That this .has beeri done, demonstrates - that the. Ocean ' Grove National bank will soon be among our strongest ’financial institutions. Services at St. Paul's. At the St. Paul’s church tomorow morning,'after a short sermon by the pastor, Rev. B. C.'Hancock, the Sacra ment of the Lord’s Supper wi]l be ad- ministered. Sunday school .at 2.30. Young people’s meeting at G.30. -No service in the evening. Fireworks Unrestricted.- It appears that there were no re- strictions on fire works in. the Grove on.Thursday. There used to be an or- dinance against this dangerous ,pasr time, except'on the beach,-east or boardwalk. This year the police gave young America unrestricted Uberty. NATIONAL SABBATH. Sermon ,and Song: Take on a Patriotic Flavor. Sabbath, June 30,* preceding the ‘Glorious Fourth,’- ’ brought the great Auditorium congregation, face to face, with the spirit of “7G,” and became the harbiuger of “the day we cele- brate.” . This was. no innovation, but fell in with an old and houored - usage In Ocean Grove, established by that ar- deht-souled patriot, the late and great- ly revered Dr. E. R. Stokes, A;, long; list of “National;-Sermbris” by famous preachers could be enume- rated by. many of the older- residents and visitors, who are; still among, us. Not many—perhaps not one of those discources, had such an inspiring te t-' ting In its surroundings a3 that of last .Sabbith. We refer to the choir, or- chestra, and numerical complexion ,of ■ the audience., -. Reporters are often- extravagant" in: their guesses as to numbers.present.at; a religious service. ■ Deducting a thou- sand or so from their estimate, will still leave a surprising throng of four, thousand—surprising a^, such an early period in the season. The preacher of the morning was Rev. Dr. Millard, a prominent member and presiding elder of the New York Annual Conference.. Much waa expect-’ ed from his commanding talent, and none were disappointed.# Even the'introductory prayer offer- ed by Rev. Dr. L. W. Manhail, the widely' known evangelist, was in itself a public, benediction; ,It was.aS.com- prehensive a^ human need, and as rev-. erent and loyal to God and his truth and righteousness as the nations’*sin and peril should elicit from a patriotic heart. The wide-awake chorister contribut- ed his best at command, iu anthem, so- lo, and ordinary hymns.. ‘ Then the sermon. . The text was annuonced from the first Epistle of Peter, 2:17, and read, “Honor all men .. . “ honor the hlng.” This seemed an adventurous injunc- tion, at a time when so many men in: authority stand convicted of dema- ggogueism, and king-craft mostly mer- its republican contempt/ But the. preacher knew what he was about. He had no intention to deify a Nero, or wink at official bossism. His theme was Christian Government, and this lie elucidated by forcible argument and fine historical illustrations. He eulo- gized the American system, where pop- ular sovereignity places the power .and’ authority in the individual citizen. For the autocrat or despot he claimed nohting but merited detestation, and for integrity and virtue he showed that honor was due. The common- people, under our constitution are kings, and therefore we “honor the king.”- He found occasion to eulogize' the Presir dent as a manly,; pure and .patriotic- public servant, and did not close with- out a strong rand earnest plea for that rfghteousness which exalteth a nation; • • The'national anthem was grandly sung at the close of the sermon. : ' Dr. Munhall, by the appointment of ; the Bishop and. Senator McClellandi took the chair o f the absent Dr, O’Haii- Ioh. ahd the Bible; class had a. spirited and profitable session in the afternoon,. There was an admixture of Star' Spangled Banner oratory at the beach service at 6: p.. m., under the leader- ship of Drt Ballard. The speakers were > Evangelist : Robinson; ;of) Pate son, N. J., Rey,: -S. H, Cummings, a, “blind man eloquent,” of the,Baltimore conference, and Dr. Charles Roads; corresponding secretary of the Penn- sylvania -Sabbath School Association. The attendance was very large,. and the entire service .delightful. This notable day in the Ocean Grove calendar closed with a wonderfully ef- fective praise service in the great Auditorium. A THRILLING EXPERIENCE Mur Yountr People Adrift All. Might On . Lour Island Sounu. Last Saturday morning word was received troin Wai-dcnClyfTe, LJ., tbe . ■new resort which W. H. Beegle -la in- terested In, aaylng that tiie Misses Mary Porter and Anna Laura Beegle with'two friends had been blown out on the Sound Friday night, und when the telegram was sent (Saturday morning) they had not been heard from. Tho news caused intense excitement here where the family are so well known, anil W. Harvey Beegle left ut once for Wardenciyffe. Shortly ter he left another telegram wag re- ceived stating that they bad returned. 7 The following extract ft ora a letter from Miss Anna fleegle to her brother here gives tbe first correct account of the affair. “Porter and ! went bathing Friday about five, o’clock, and while in tho water, Randall Warden and Mr, Wil- -. son came down to tho. shore, and point- ed out a. sal! boat which was adrift - oti the Sound, and they suggested we go after !l in George's old boat whicb leaked frightfully. Of course, wo said yes, and soon had the boat; in tbe Sound. The tide was going out, anil there was a stiff wind blowing olt shore, and it did not take us long to get about two miles out. We then rea- lized that We would .have trouble to get back, and thought, we had better . ir:;:ke the'sail boat,'which.we reached soon, nnd Porter. Randall and Mr. Wilson got In. towing me behind In the small boat. , • . They tried to put up the sail, whiciir only went half way, and there was no centerboard, and what was worse tiie rudder broke. We tled.it with rope, nnd It did fairly well; we then turned ?o- . ■ward Port Jefferson, but made no headway, when we decided to try and get back to land In the small boat. We rowed hard and were about a quarter of a mile from the sail boat, ■when Hr. Wilson broke an oar. Wo knew our only Lope laid In m'nkir.r the sail boat again, Mr. Wilson took the only oar. and we took off our '. sweaters and made a sail, being for- tunate enough to reach the anil boat. The tide carried us further out, and'' V as ;t was now dark, we could set-'the Area or. 'shore which they kept - o! ek all night'; to make matters Worse they were'all sea-sl'ck except myBelC. The. tido changed toward morning, and wo were earled ashore about IKteen miles from Wardenciyffe. We walked two miles .on the stones to a wagon toad, then a mile back-In the Interior,'where- we engaged a farmer to take us home." •.■“ - Jersey's !S.iittosU!p ...... Governor Voorhees, iias announced that he would soon call a meeting of the committee appointed pursuant to the resolution introduced in the Inst session of the legislature, for the pur- pose of deciding upon some fitting testimonial :o bo given to tbe new ' battleship New Jersey. When It was first agitated thiit some testimonial bo presented to too battleship, It was suggested that the school children of New Jersey collect fumiB for the pur- pose. of purchasing n silver set as a fitting, tribute. A damper was put upon this proposi- tion b;- Assemblytann Waite’s resolu- tion. which--was as follows:, 'it'is neither right nor expedient that tho different schools of. tiie state should, bo taxed for money to contribute to-'' ward state affairs, which should bo provided for hy the . state ■ Itself through Its official representatives,t ho seriate and the general assembly." Among other things It has been Bug- ;:ested ll\at the testimonial in tr.c. form of a silver set. or an electric clock, with smaller'clocks for the rflf- erent rooms.' . . At Ihc Tabernacle; Something like a genuine revival spirit bus prevailed at the Janes Me- morial , Tabernacle ever since ,Mn Lizzlo K; Smith, by the appointment of the Devotional Committee, took charge of 9.00 a. m. holiness . meeting at the opening of the season. This zealous worker haa not failed but one year in the. past twenty-seven to be at the post of duty during camp meeting week at Ocean Grove. Then she was detained by deatli in the fam-. ily. This war she takes the place so Song f.Uad/by tbt-. amiable Mrs. Lank- ford Palmer, and Dlls It to.tbe admira- tion of the Bishop and the ministers who areioften with her on the time- honored. platform, anil greatly to tne help and beaeilt of those ylsitors to tho Grove who cling to the old-fnshion- ed fervor and power—tho. spirituality of the former days.. She-Is a fluent anil incisive expos- itor of “tho way of holiness; ” magnetic in manner and address,' a lino singer and tireless laborer in the Master’s vineyard. When people, who love to attend her meetings, aro detained from one, they count Ii a pei'soiitvl-lOBa. Her work is going on every day; and her people can exclaim, with the disciples, “Lord, it is good for us to be here!” A Feast ol Lanterns, In noticing the profuse and splen- did decorations of the Auditorium, we unwittingly overlooked one Important fenture of the display— the Chinese lanterns strung over Auditorium square and arching Ocean Pathway. This was not-observed in its fnli glo - ry until tho concert audience was dis- missed. Then it became an objcct of w.onder and delight to all. And, by the way, the credit of nil this very .flirge- ly !>e!ongs-ta, Mr.-, Myron , e. Mom, who raised', thei;- funds mb rln; tended all tlio decorations; V Preachers’ Meeting. " rt may be agreeable news' to the ministerial contingent, who are coming to Ocean Grove this summer as usu.i! to, enjoy their vacation, to bear that the New Brunswick District Preachers’ Meeting, holding its weekly sessions in the parlor of St. Paul’s M. E. church, intends, tg keep up'lts Monday -morn- ing'convocation all through' 'tnV pres- ent season, ond visiting brethren from nil over the country are invited tb drop in and make themselves at homo with the Jerseyites in their pleasant and profitable discussions Ail the. meetings through the-month of Juno have been well attended. There has been a fresh, spicy paper read and dis- cussed every Monday. The recent es- sayists have been Drs. Wallace, J. W. Morris' and Samuel Sargent Second Regimeni Will Camp. Adjutant-General Oltphant, by con- nmnr of Governor Voorhees, has dl- l'eo ted the encampments at Sea Gir- of Coropauics K nnd L of the Second Kegiment. The encampments will be held from July 27 to Augtifft 3, Inclu- sive, Company L is from Princeton, under Captain Lihbey, and Company K under Captain Browning, Is a Plain- field organization Both have/been organized since ln:r' summer. Tho en- campment of the Essex Troop with Second Brigade last year established the precedent tinder which these or- ganizations go into camp this. year.'. •The two companies will ■ receive no pay, but the state will provide trans- portation -and substinenee. Gen. Miles at Lung Branch. On Saturday. July: 20th, Long. Branch exepots to entertain many UOtablo people, 'Gen. Nelson A. Miles' .will be a visitor there on that day to > act as a judge at the equestrtan foa-. tures at Elltwood f’ark, anil Vice-Pres- ident Roosevelt'«nd Gon. Cnstleman tho

Transcript of VOLUME IX—NO. 25/ OCEAN GROVE .TIMES—SATURDAY, JULY 6 ...

VOLUME IX —NO. 25/ OCEAN GRO VE .TIM ES—SATU RD A Y, JU L Y 6, 1901, Subscription $1.00 per year.

A Popular Celebration at the Ocean Grove Auditorium—Grand Music by the

Choir and Orchestra

AN ORATION BY DR T. DE WITT TALMAGEItoom! Bang! What's thin? thought

many a Btratled sleeper In Ocean Grovo on Thursday about the moment "he morning aun pooped above tho wa­tery horizon, and tinged & path ot sWmmerlng gold directly to tho shore.' Under the spell of Morpheus the sleep­ers had become oblivious to the fact that they were at tho dawn of the ■ glorlous-Fourth of JuSy," and the ono hundred nnd twenty-fifth anniversary o f American Independence.

"The sun of Austerlitz ; had Its his­toric glory, hut tho glory of the sun of Ocean Grove on Thursday morning shono on a different era, a brighter and better age.

. ' "Boom !” repeated tho sunrise sig­nal, <mo a minute, until General Pat­terson had awakened the echoes ut Grove and Park, and thus Introduced “ tbe day we celebrate.1'

The flags and banners were soon ■waving in the early morning' breeze, and one topic sufficed for every break- fast table— one name In fact: Tal-mage! Both Mr. yatman in the Tens- pie and the older, class o f people In the Tabernacle .-were on time in their dally devotions, and . in the spirit of. "70," while they enjoyed the first slice ol the annual Ocean Grove celebration, turning the.traditions of tho day to good account spiritually! by song arid testimony, all relating to the "glori­ous liberty of the. sons of God.” •

TH E G R E A T , AUDITORIUM

meanwhile began .to fill up with a pop-, ulous -tide of country people from miles around the Grove, A pleased thrill ot wonder awaited every one on entering tlio building. Decorators or One taste and unlimited reacurces Imd been, there and made ail things ready for a groat surprise. Organ, balco- nles, choir galleries, pulpit nail chan­cel, md tiie body and facade of the edifice, all were emblazoned with bunt­ing in every agreeable form of dra- -ppry. ■■-■■-. •.

By 10.30 flvo thousand eager people sat enthralled by the orchestral over­

tu re , "America," a new thing here, iu which all the popular patriotic airs were blended, and the happiest sensa­tions o f tho heart set tingling. Tliis performance received tumultuous ap­plause.

Tho official chairs ou the platform wcro al! filled, and the.“ orator of the day” appeared in prime physical con­dition dor required service, receiving' a royal Ocean Grove salute.. The services were then opened by

‘.'The Battle Hymn of the Republic," announced by Bishop FitzGerald, ;itad

•It seemed as if the roof might rise 1 oholr, orchestra and audience came,to climax in tho chorus, “Glory, glory, hallelujah,' our God 0If-: marching on,” A devout and very appropriate prayer was offered by, the venerable Or. It Von Horn, of the Newark Conference, and after a flee? musical selection Mr. T. Frank Appleby, presidenl of the Aabury Park common council; waa in­troduced as the reader of.

- TH E DECLARATION OF INDE-.;. ' PENDENCE.

Familiar as the '‘ immortal docu­ment” has become, it is still listened to with' profound respect, especially when as well enunciated as It was on

' this occasion; .President FitzGerald again gave the

audience a hymn which all could aing, and right heartily did they join iii .the strains of "Onward, Christian Sol-

.rdtejB.”As tho clock was striking the hour

of eleven, Dr. Talro&gc, after an ova­tion on the part of the audience, pro­ceeded with

Rev, T. duW ii-t Tacmaqc

T IIE ORATION.

'of things. The world, he said,, began with a garden, anti will end with a gar­den. .Its trend is to batter tilings.

The race has.had its marked epochs; r6od “Imply turned over a lef In his­tory,, and thin «>arth was prepared for iiumaB habitation and happiness. He turned <jver another,, and there was the deluge, and bo on down the courso o f the; ages, until we- cowe to.the mil- lenium, nnd after that heaven. , ,:

Humorous arid illustrative, anec­dotes marked tha address from flrsrto last, so for exactly an liour thu in ter­est arc.’, delight o f the -people never flagged for a single moment.

: hie country, he proceded, has had flye great wara-Hhe' fir,-it for ' that liberty and independence we celebrate

■ today. The last to wipe out Spanish atrocity and evince our- sympathy with oppressed and down'd rad'den hu- nianity. ' .

Now, Is this nation worth what it cost? Not only the men, but woman­hood has taken a full share o f sacri-

, flee and loss, to gait; and maintain .hu­man right act? freedom;

The outlook is not' portcntlous W ar w ill aoon become a thing o f the past'; peace Is sure to; come, and pros- .perity never was half so" great as-now, at; the opening o f tho twentieth cen­tury. !

Hia intimate acquaintance with the lav/ makers at the nation’s capital en­abled him to say both Senate and tiie House were competent and reliable. The perplexing complications of gov­ernment they will ilx in due,/time, for they are men noble anil true to God and. the country.

W H A T IS SURE TO COME.

‘Our country” , now means more than It used to mean, “ W AN TED -- One hundred thousand -men to build railroads In d l l ‘the South-Amerlcan states. Wanted— A hundred thousand telegraph operators, . artisans and iii- auBtriai;.. produders—reapers," clocks, iron workers; .lawyers, doctors, minis­ters. Wanted—F ifty Ocean Groves Between Capo May and "Capes Horn. Oh yes, the country open to.‘American •thrift and enterprise Is worth till it cost. . ;' ..' *. ■ -

. Some "hesitate about emigration; say we are getting crowded. Not while Texas alone Sa larger than France with its fifty millions,, or larger than, Germany. Other lands are densely crowded, but on this continent there is plenty, o f room for, all, and a ll these SoutlifAinerican States are ready to come in ; even Canadi is waiting f o r a wedding wills the republic.. : When asked she w ill clash,: look down anil reply, "nek mother.” They w ill all be under ono government and. one flog, tho banner you have made so conspic­uous hero today. .

England is famous for her manufac­tures. ’..iermany fo r . education; all other European nations for one thing or another, bu: the United States of America is for God.

Tho speaker here presented& statis­tical contrast between foreign coun­tries and this, in wages, home comfort and-future outlook, showing all the: ad- vantages in our favor, politically, too, we are better off; for every two or four years ito have a house clean­ing, and. the best .chnaco to rectify what is cumbrous or wrong in our system. - ‘

Thfe extravagance of European courts came in for .satirical denuncia­tion, und the unrest of Euraps and Eastern ..nations, ha thought, pr -.gag­ed the overthrow by the people nt Im­position and oppression.

Dr. Talmage,. true to his- nptjrnistic profession, In handling the riellentc subject of trusts, monopolies and mil­lionaire, in the midst o f touch empty handed want, had a good word to say for those immensely wealthy, people, whose large gifts to needy instl -tutlons o f a benevolent . character has become a" feature of the timCB. The question' of unequaled dla tribution of wealth, nnd the relation of capital, nnd labor, lie said, could never be settled but by one person—Jesus, the carpenter’s son o f Nazareth. Give him the supremacy and authority', anil he will set every wrong to right.

Many good stories anil apt illustra­tions he drew from hla own personal observation while traveling In thosl lands, where the mngn'iflcense of cost­ly cathredals stand In severe contrast with abject poverty and grinding op­pression.

Looking to the future, the speaker remarked that our children will havo a better time than wo have had here —better education and hotter avenues to enlarged-prosperity.'

In response to tbe kindly welcome , accosted him to the Ocean Grove plat­

form once more, he Invited all present to call and see him at his home n: Washington; but suggested that nil. had better not come ut once. He said whatever might bo the soluttou of tho scientist, as to where we all - come from, or that of tbe theologian as to wliere we are to go, one fact Is clear, we are now here, with an inviting'op­portunity.. to consider come things bearing On .our countar’6 history, atsd

and loved* to look on the brighter .side

(Continued on fourth page.)

Gould to Build On Deal la k e .

The beautiful estate -which Daniel O’pay has made at Deal, has attract­ed the attention of George Gould, who now has a desire' to become Mr. O’Day’s neighbor. If negotiations for a tract of ninety, acres in Edgemere, comprising'one of the.moBt desirable sitos in the .vicinity of Deal lake, are

. successful, Mr, Gquld; will build as fine 'ji.. place as'‘he' ‘fi asP efe&e d '' i JLake- ■ wood; costing! ihore than a million dol­lars, . ' •

CONCERT AND F IR E W O R K S

Concert in the Auditorium and Firew orks .. " y in A sbury P ark . ' ■

To run a first-class concert on the evening, of the -“ Glorious Fourth,” In the face of. a forthcoming .iyrotecnic display in Asbtffy Park, req urud uu- usual nerve on the part of Prof. Mor­gan,, but he succeeded in the imiler- taking even beyond expectation.: The. immense crowd which he. held for an hour of unalloyed pleasure In tho Au­ditorium,' with scores and hundreds standing outside the open doors under tho spell of music and song, attested his genius and powen Bishop Fitz­gerald presided with easy grace of manner and timely flashes o f wit, uri*/ til the 'explosion of bombs and . the 6wish and bursting of sky rockets out- side produced a ripple of inclination to move on the part of those who, wanted to take in two great events the same evening.: At: the proper- mo-^ ment the Bishop said, “ It is. now quite appropriate that the last number on- our evening’s program should be a grand’ march.” So/while choir, and or­chestra started up Sousa’s patriotic, production, the, waiting throng filed; out in ordedly manner into the raooh; light,, and crowded every avenue lead­ing to- points of advantage to witness one of the finest exhibitions. of fire works in Asbury Park ever given on this coast. The “rockets’ red glare'’ became a many-colored spectacle, and the sky was illuminated with.;. “red, white’ and blue” and every other tint in the category o f brilliant color; with golden showers, , curious formations, and magnificent set pieces. *.

Th ere was a vast am oun t o f po w-; der expended on ’private account as well. The hotels, ;many; o f them j ha4 their own share of the ‘ celebration, and at one 'time the blazing meteors were flashing;out over every part.of. the Park and Grove; while the small boy and his sister kept up the fusilade of bomb, pinwheel and “cracker,” un­til it was time to entei* dreamland, and- there .review the incidents o f a re­markably jubilant and happy day.

The Ocean Grove A ssem bly.The Seventeenth Annual Session of

the cOean Frove Sunday Schoql As­sembly is to lie held July 8-18, and' will bo again this year, as from' the first, in charge of the editor of the N. 3.' Methodist and Advocate, Rev. 13. B. Loomis. A .variety of lectures and concerts and other entertainments will give spice to the program, but the main features of the Assembly w ill be a series of lectures on the “ L ife of Christ as set forth* In the four Gos­pels,” by the conductor of the Assem* bly, and a course of studies* in' Bllfle Pedagogy, by Prof. W. A. Hutchinson, for ndults. . ' {

The Boys’ arid Girls' meeting will be held as usnal in the Temple at 8*00 a. m., and will be In charge o f Mrs.B. B. Loomis. The lesosn this xcar will bo. on “ New Testament History and Geography.” ..

The Children’s meeting in tlio Tem­ple a t- 8.00 a. m.. each day excepting Sunday, is ono of the most interesting of the excercises in the Ocean Grove program?

Many adult young people, within the past two or three years, have said to their teacher, Mrs. Loomis, that the; foundation of all their systematic Bible study was laid in the Ocean Grove • Children’s meeting ten or twelve years since.' ■ V

The detailed program w ill be sent on application to B. B. I-oomis, 131 Federal street, Camden, N. J.

Letter L ist.

The following is a list of unclaimed letters remaining in the Ocean Grove postofllce for week ending July 2,1901:

'\: Rev. A. M. Averill, Mrs. B. H. Bowe, Rebecca Barnum (4 ), Mrs. C W Jdolt, Adela Bowne, Ernest Carly,. J.'Dough- ierty, Mrs. ’ C^as. Elms, Mrs. Foster, Lo Roy France, Robert Groff, Thomas Gouldy, Laura R. Haddon, ' Marjorie M; Harris, Mrs, Mary Hammell, Mrs.C. Harrington, Ernest' Higham, Har­riett Johnson/ Harry Johnson, Theo, Moore, Mrs. MacCoy, G, E. ’OContior, The Pinherst, Mary L. Powell, Ethel Parker, Mrs. .Stephen Randall, Hotel Rio Grand; S. Slater, .Mrs. Sculthorpe, MraV E. S. Stokes, A. Schlossbach, H, L . Scott, Spring View House, Mrs. T. L. Smith, John Teall, Mrs. M. Wilson, Mrs. B. Wainright. ‘ *.

W . H. HAM ILTON, P. M.

*• B reeze^ at the P rea ch ers ' Meeting, There are indncatlons of a “ breeze”

at. the preachers’ meeting next Moa* day morning. Mr. Kenson,- represent­ing the David Cook publishing house of Chicago, and who has opened a branch store onv Main avenue, has been invited to address the meeting on the character rind’ cost of hiat Sunday school publications, compared with those of the Sunday School Union of the 'M. E. Church, and Drs. Dougherty and Krantz, representing the latterj will be present to contest the claims of the new-comer. It w ill be another “ battle of the books,” in which all the M. E.-preachers on the grounds w ill he more or less interested,

PIr. Appleby Received a Hearty Greeting,■ Mr., Frank T. Appleby on coming

forward to read the “ Declaration’ on the Fourth received a hearty greetin; from' the Auditorium congregation, and a still more enthusiastic round of ap­plause at the close; for he performed his duties with admirable self-posses­sion and dignity befitting the august occasion. 1

DenUt Parlors Open.Dr. S, G. Wallace will again open

hls: dental parlors over tho Asbuijy Parle and Ocean Grove bank, at the corner of Main avenuo and Pilgrim pathway on July lBt.—Adv.

A L L ^N H U R S T INN DESTROYED

One Hundred and S ixty Panic-Stricken / Guests Escape.Fire broke out M ondayevening in ;

the servants’ quarters in the iVUen- hurst lnn/and in an hour . the ' .hotel was a smouldering mass of ruins., Two . of the Inn cottages w ere badly dam­aged. :

The hotel and cottages were manag­ed by W . Johnson Quinn^ proprietor of the Hotel Empire, New York City. The hotel and eight icottages, six of which were saved j were valued; \;wlth their furniture; at $17'2,0Q0, Mr. Qulnri carried an insurance of $107,000 dn t-hc entire property. ■ Much of the hotel furniture was saved,-and the total loss cannot be accurately,stated. .

There were one hundred and sixty guests in the inn when, the fire broke out, and all of the cottages were occu-, pied. The- alarm -was sounded just as the guests were at dinner. In an in­stant the dining room' was filled with dense snioke, and; the frnnic-stricken guests ran from the dining' room to ■ their ' rooms to save; their belongings.1

The' Allenhurst F ire Department consists, of a carriage containing, one reel- of hose. This;, of course, was in­adequate, and the. Asbury park de­partment was called on for aid. The latter responded promptly, • but ; their Work was hampered owing to the lack; of water., The fire departments from Elbpron, W est Asbury : Park/... West Grove, Avon and the,Washington com­pany from Ocean Grove also respond­ed and did effective work, but the fire­men were powerless to prevent • the flames from destroying the hotel. ' r .c

The kitchen and servants* quarters north of the inn was enveloped in; flames arid ^yas burned to the ground. The cottage occupied by Mr. Ouinii next caught fire, nnd then the cottage occupied by Frank J. Matthews, of the Commercial- Trust company, of Jersey City. The firemen were tmable to save these two cottages before they were badly- damaged...,Shortly after 8 o’clock the walls of the inn and the-servants’ quarters fell in. and the firemen soon had the fire under control. The cottages that es­caped the flames were occupied' by Henry A. HuUiurt, of New York; Mrs. Henry C, Miner, of. New York; F. B. Delehanty, of New York; Charles Ward Hall, of New.York; M. Goodwin, of New York; H. D Campman, of San Antonio; A iling Reeves, of Newark; ox-Mayor Lebkuecher. of Newark, and Thomas C. Buck,’ o f New York.- ?

When the fire got beyond the control o f the firemen, the. furniture ;Of the cottages was.carriecl to places of safe­ty, while servants;, with garden hose saturated- the buildings to prevent them from burning. The beat was so intense that cottages five hundred feet from the inn were badly scorched, and several of, them took fire from the flying sparks. Guests aided, the fire­men in subduing the flames and re­moving the furniture from the threat­ened cottages. Several thousand spec­tators from Ocean-Grove, Asbury Park and other adjoining resorts gathered to witness the conflagration. In the throng were a-number of sneak thieves who rifled several trunks carried from ,the inn and cottages. Several of tiie fire fighters were overcome by the in­tense heat, but no serious casuallties occurred.

A Brilliant. J u ly Wedding,

Miss ' Josephine S. Ten Broeck, daughter of Mayor Frank L. Ten Broeck, of Asbury Park, and James W. Richardson, of Wosrington, D. C., were maried at noon on Monday, July 1st, in the parlors of the West End feotel, by Rev. Dr. W. J. Wedderspoon, pastor of the First M. B. church^ of Asbury Park.

The parlors were handsomely adorn­ed with tasteful decorations and dra­peries, and numerous plants and flow­ers breathed out a pleasant fragrance.

Many beautiful, presents were pre­sented to the bride. Among them were cut-glass ware, several handsome punch bowls, silver-ware of all kinds, chinaware,. brlc-a-brac and many framed pictures.

James A. Emery, o f Washington, D.C., acted as best man. • . ;j ■ The bride is, one of Asbury Park's most popular young women, and Is ta l­ented as an artist. Her large number of friends unite In wishing to her. good fortune, as is shown by their interest in the marriage.

The groom holds a responsible po­sition in the W ar Department at Washington.

A Good Showing;.

The Ocean Grove National bank has declared d dividend of 3 per cent, to .Its stockholders. That this show­ing can be made, speaks well for the officers and directors. connected with ;thls institution, from the fact /that there: i s 1 always a ' heavy ' expense in fitting out a new bank, besides the current expenses- which are' going on all the time. . That this .has beeri done, demonstrates - that the. Ocean ' Grove National bank will soon be among our strongest ’financial institutions.

Services at St. P au l's .At the St. Paul’s church tomorow

morning,'after a short sermon by the pastor, Rev. B. C.'Hancock, the Sacra ment o f the Lord’s Supper w i]l be ad­ministered. Sunday school .at 2.30. Young people’s meeting at G.30. -No service in the evening.

Fireworks Unrestricted.- It appears that there were no re­

strictions on fire works in. the Grove on.Thursday. There used to be an or­dinance against this dangerous ,pasr time, except'on the beach,-east or boardwalk. This year the police gave young America unrestricted Uberty.

N A TIO N A L SA B BATH .

Sermon ,and Song: Take on a Patriotic Flavor.

Sabbath, June 30,* preceding the ‘Glorious Fourth,’-’ brought the great Auditorium congregation, face to face, with the spirit o f “ 7G,” and became the harbiuger of “ the d ay we cele­brate.” . ’

This was. no innovation, but fell in with an old and houored - usage In Ocean Grove, established by that ar- deht-souled patriot, the late and great­ly revered Dr. E. R. Stokes,

A;, long; list of “ National;- Sermbris” by famous preachers could be enume­rated by. many o f the older- residents and visitors, who are; still among, us.

Not many— perhaps not one of those discources, had such an inspiring t e t - ' ting In it s surroundings a3 that of last .Sabbith. W e refer to the choir, or­chestra, and numerical complexion ,of ■ the audience., •-. Reporters are often- extravagant" in: their guesses as to numbers.present.at; a religious service. ■ Deducting a thou­sand or so from their estimate, will still leave a surprising throng of four, thousand— surprising a , such an early period in the season.

The preacher of the morning was Rev. Dr. Millard, a prominent member and presiding elder of the New York Annual Conference.. Much waa expect-’ ed from his commanding talent, and none were disappointed.#

Even the'introductory prayer offer­ed by Rev. Dr. L. W . Manhail, the widely' known evangelist, was in itself a public, benediction; , I t w as . aS. com­prehensive a^ human need, and as rev-. erent and loyal to God and his truth and righteousness as the nations’ *sin and peril should elicit from a patriotic heart.

The wide-awake chorister contribut­ed his best at command, iu anthem, so­lo, and ordinary hymns.. ‘

Then the sermon. . •The text was annuonced from the

first Epistle of Peter, 2:17, and read, “ Honor all men .. . “ honor thehlng.”

This seemed an adventurous injunc­tion, at a time when so many men in : authority stand convicted of dema- ggogueism, and king-craft mostly mer­its republican contempt/ But the. preacher knew what he was about. He had no intention to deify a Nero, or wink at official bossism. His theme was Christian Government, and this lie elucidated by forcible argument and fine historical illustrations. He eulo­gized the American system, where pop­ular sovereignity places the power .and’ authority in the individual citizen. For the autocrat or despot he claimed nohting but merited detestation, and for integrity and virtue he showed that honor was due. The common- people, under our constitution are kings, and therefore we “ honor the king.”- He found occasion to eulogize' the Pres ir dent as a manly,; pure and .patriotic- public servant, and did not close with­out a strong rand earnest plea for that rfghteousness which exalteth a nation;• • The'national anthem was grandly

sung a t the close o f the sermon. : 'Dr. Munhall, by the appointment of

; the Bishop and. Senator McClellandi took the chair o f the absent Dr, O’Haii- Ioh. ahd the Bible; class had a. spirited and profitable session in the afternoon,.

There was an admixture of Star' Spangled Banner oratory at the beach service at 6: p.. m., under the leader­ship o f Drt Ballard. The speakers were > Evangelist : Robinson; ;o f ) Pate son, N. J., Rey,: -S. H, Cummings, a, “ blind man eloquent,” of the,Baltimore conference, and Dr. Charles Roads; corresponding secretary of the Penn­sylvania -Sabbath School Association. The attendance was very large,. and the entire service .delightful. •

This notable day in the Ocean Grove calendar closed with a wonderfully ef­fective praise service in the great Auditorium.

A T H R IL LIN G E X P E R IE N C E

Mur Yountr People Adrift A ll. Might On .L o u r Island Sounu.

Last Saturday morning word was received troin Wai-dcnClyfTe, LJ., tbe . ■new resort which W. H. Beegle -la in­terested In, aaylng that tiie Misses Mary Porter and Anna Laura Beegle w ith 'tw o friends had been blown out on the Sound Friday night, und when the telegram was sent (Saturday morning) they had not been heard from.Tho news caused intense excitement here where the family are so well known, anil W. Harvey Beegle left ut once for Wardenciyffe. Shortly ter he left another telegram wag re­ceived stating that they bad returned. 7

The following extract ft ora a letter from Miss Anna fleegle to her brother here gives tbe first correct account o f the affair.

“ Porter and ! went bathing Friday about five, o’clock, and while in tho water, Randall Warden and Mr, Wil- -.son came down to tho. shore, and point­ed out a. sal! boat which was adrift - oti the Sound, and they suggested we go after !l in George's old boat whicb leaked frightfully. Of course, wo said yes, and soon had the boat; in tbe Sound. The tide was going out, anil there was a stiff wind blowing olt shore, and it did not take us long to get about two miles out. We then rea­lized that We would .have trouble to get back, and thought, we had better . ir:;:ke the'sail boat,'which.we reached soon, nnd Porter. Randall and Mr. Wilson got In. towing me behind In the small boat. , • .

They tried to put up the sail, whiciir only went half way, and there was no centerboard, and what was worse tiie rudder broke. W e tled.it with rope, nnd It did fairly well; we then turned ?o- . ■ward Port Jefferson, but made no headway, when we decided to try and get back to land In the small boat.We rowed hard and were about a quarter o f a mile from the sail boat, ■when Hr. Wilson broke an oar. Wo knew our only Lope laid In m'nkir.r the sail boat again, Mr. Wilson took the only oar. and we took off our '. sweaters and made a sail, being for­tunate enough to reach the anil boat.The tide carried us further out, and'' V as ;t was now dark, we could set-'the Area or. 'shore which they kept - o!ek all night'; to make matters Worse they w ere'a ll sea-sl'ck except myBelC. The. tido changed toward morning, and wo were earled ashore about IKteen miles from Wardenciyffe. We walked two miles .on the stones to a wagon toad, then a mile back-In the Interior,'where- we engaged a farmer to take us home."

•.■“ - Jersey's !S.iittosU!p ......Governor Voorhees, iias announced

that he would soon call a meeting of the committee appointed pursuant to the resolution introduced in the Inst session of the legislature, for the pur­pose o f deciding upon some fitting testimonial :o bo given to tbe new ' battleship New Jersey. When It was first agitated thiit some testimonial bo presented to too battleship, It was suggested that the school children of New Jersey collect fumiB for the pur­pose. of purchasing n silver set as a fitting, tribute. ’

A damper was put upon this proposi­tion b;- Assemblytann W aite’s resolu­tion. which--was as follows:, ' i t ' i s neither right nor expedient that tho different schools of. tiie state should, bo taxed for money to contribute to-'' ward state affairs, which should bo provided for hy the . state ■ Itself through Its official representatives,t ho seriate and the general assembly."

Among other things It has been Bug- ;:ested ll\at the testimonial in tr.c. form of a silver set. or an electric clock, with smaller'clocks for the rflf- erent rooms.' . .

At Ihc Tabernacle;Something like a genuine revival

spirit bus prevailed at the Janes Me­morial , Tabernacle ever since ,Mn Lizzlo K; Smith, by the appointment of the Devotional Committee, took charge o f 9.00 a. m. holiness . meeting at the opening o f the season.

Th is zealous worker haa not failed but one year in the. past twenty-seven to be at the post of duty during camp meeting week at Ocean Grove. Then she was detained by deatli in the fam-. ily. This war she takes the place so Song f.Uad/by tbt-. amiable Mrs. Lank­ford Palmer, and Dlls It to.tbe admira­tion o f the Bishop and the ministers who areioften with her on the time- honored. platform, anil greatly to tne help and beaeilt of those ylsitors to tho Grove who cling to the old-fnshion- ed fervor and power— tho. spirituality of the former days..

She-Is a fluent anil incisive expos­itor of “ tho way of holiness; ” magnetic in manner and address,' a lino singer and tireless laborer in the Master’s vineyard.

When people, who love to attend her meetings, aro detained from one, they count Ii a pei'soiitvl-lOBa. Her work is going on every day; and her people can exclaim, with the disciples, “ Lord, it is good fo r us to be h ere !”

A Feast ol Lanterns,

In noticing the profuse and splen­did decorations of the Auditorium, we unwittingly overlooked one Important fenture of the display— the Chinese lanterns strung over Auditorium square and arching Ocean Pathway. This was not-observed in its fnli glo­ry until tho concert audience was dis­missed. Then it became an objcct of w.onder and delight to all. And, by the way, the credit of nil this very .flirge- ly !>e!ongs-ta, M r.-, Myron , e . M o m , who raised', thei;- funds m b rln; tended all tlio decorations;

V

Preachers’ M eeting. "rt may be agreeable news' to the

ministerial contingent, who are coming to Ocean Grove this summer as usu.i! to, enjoy their vacation, to bear that the New Brunswick District Preachers’ Meeting, holding its weekly sessions in the parlor of St. Paul’s M. E. church, intends, tg keep up'lts Monday -morn­ing'convocation all through' 'tnV pres­ent season, ond visiting brethren from nil over the country are invited tb drop in and make themselves at homo with the Jerseyites in their pleasant and profitable discussions A il the. meetings through the-month of Juno have been well attended. There has been a fresh, spicy paper read and dis­cussed every Monday. The recent es­sayists have been Drs. Wallace, J. W . Morris' and Samuel Sargent

Second Regim eni W ill Camp.

Adjutant-General Oltphant, by con- nmnr o f Governor Voorhees, has dl­l'eo ted the encampments at Sea Gir- of Coropauics K nnd L of the Second Kegiment. The encampments will be held from July 27 to Augtifft 3, Inclu­sive, Company L is from Princeton, under Captain Lihbey, and Company K under Captain Browning, Is a Plain­field organization Both have/been organized since ln:r' summer. Tho en­campment of the Essex Troop with Second Brigade last year established the precedent tinder which these or­ganizations go into camp this. year.'. •The two companies w ill ■ receive no pay, but the state will provide trans­portation -and substinenee.

Gen. M iles at Lung Branch.

On Saturday. Ju ly : 20th, Long. Branch exepots to entertain many UOtablo people, 'Gen. Nelson A. Miles'

.will be a visitor there on that day to > act as a judge at the equestrtan foa-. tures at Elltwood f ’ ark, anil Vice-Pres­ident R oosevelt'«nd Gon. Cnstleman

tho

OCEAN GRO VE TIM ES—SATUiLDAY, JU L Y 6, 1901. •J"

WITHOUT TURNING A HAIR,

X L on d on er Calm ly R otn rned M onc/. G iven to H im l»y AliNlnkc.

A gentleman of my nequalntnsice hnd a curious oxperh»nt?o o f manners and customs o f . moiltti'ii Knjjlaml n; few nights ago at the •theater. lie. had

'taken four stalls, hut nt the last, mo­ment found two o f Ills party.unable.to come. On bis arrival at the theater he left the'two spare tickets at the box o f­fice, the clerk promIsin.tr to sell them If

■ he could and send the: ertsli to him when they wore sold. l ie took' his- place ami soon afterward was gratified to see his two surplus seats occupied. The indjvklunls, who took them were attired in evening dress and bore the outward sombhmee of gentlemen. My •friend began to look out for the money which was to come from the box office. Presently a concessionnaIre entered, passed,.down" the row seats and ad­dressed one d f tin* two ncwcoui.irs. My friend noticed that the conimisslonnaire passed something to one of tlie gentle­men, who. put it into his pocket witlii out a word.. A sense of - unensinessi stole over my. friend with regard to tlie 15 shillings that was due to'-him, and as the.eyen- lng was getting on lie thought he would go and make an inquiry nt the box office. Ills 'suspicions were veri­fied. The clerk had sdnt in the money by a commissionnalre. The commlsslon-

. naire was called from the door and on seeing my friend nt once realized that

• he had given the money to the wrong man. He promptly went back to the theater, my friend following to see the fun. The commissionnalrewent straight to the party to whom he had handed the mon£y and said, M’ Ere, you’ve got 15 shillings that don’ t belong to you." The other replied in an unconcerned way, “Ob. yes!” took the money out o f his pocket and returned it to tho com­missionnalre'. "H e showed no trace o f embarrassment,” says my friend. “ He handed back the money, as he-had pocketcd it, without turning a hair.”

I always like to think the best o f peo­ple,' and possibly this Individual, being a stranger to music halls, was under .the impression that It is the practlce o f the proprietors of such establishments to send a comm IsslonnaIre around from time to time to distribute-cash bonuses among the audience.—Loudon Truth.

•PECULIAR NAMES.ThVktlueer W n y Ten M illion Ch ildren

' v W e r e D ea ltfiiu tcd .’ “ In a long experience in the treasury department 1 have come across a very large number o f names, many o f which

.are.rather peculiar.” explained an old official, "but I think the lis t ‘o f names In connection with the subscription to the 8 per cent bonds surpasses any­thing in the way of peculiarity that I have ever observed. O f these tho one,

-j^jit_str,uck_nie‘..musi' ^vas a man who Bigned himself Ten Million and who re­sides out in Oregon. We thought the name was nu Imaginative ou6 and wrote the man that It was desired that, the bonds should be registered In real names only and that no further ntten-' tion would be paid to his subscription until he was heard from. He replied that bis name was Ten Million. His letter was written on the printed letter­head of the firm of Million & Million, two brothers.

“ Then followed, an explanation that his father and mother were(unable to select names for their children that were mutually satisfactory and that as

•a result, though they had had teu chil­dren. none of them was ever christened formally. The lirst child was a girl, and1 she was known only as One Mil­lion ’ The second child, also a girl, whs known as Two Million. Thus they rail along until Ten Million was reached,, and he was the writer o f the letter, the other member o i the firm beln«j a brother whose only name, as far as the famjly was concerned, was Seven Mil­lion, the seventh child. He added that

>0ne Million bad afterward called her­self Dna Million, that tbe third girl was known after she bad grown up as Trio Million. Tbe others had taken on addi­tions to their names, and he bad adopt­ed the*name of Tenis Million, but bis real name was Ten Million and nothing else. The bonds were Issued to him and on the boolq of the department were registered in the name o f Ten Million.”—Washington Star.'

• Old G ooseberry F o r New Ships.I t may be ungenerous to dispel a pop*,

nlsr delusion, but there Is no one among the thousands who witness a ship launch who does.not believe that the beautifully garlanded bottle of w ine broken against the stem o f a ship

. Ib anything but the choicest brand o f champagne drawn from the admiral’s cellar. Whenever a ship is launched Id a dockyard, the admiralty generously allow £40 as the cost o f the jubilation, and included In this Bum of £40 Is the ltdm of 3 shillings for wine. Hence It ►follows that not only Is the wine not drawn from the admiral’s cellar, but it certainly is not champagne o f foreign vintage.—English) Navy and Military Becorfl.

Understood nt Lnnt.“ Hello, Central. Give me one triple

nought South.” ' '“ What?” .

; ; VDon’ t you catch It? One zero, zero, zero South.” *

“ Wh-a-tV”“ South one double nought, nought” “ Can’ t you speak plainer?”

. “ One thousand South — ten hundred South. Get It now?”.! “ Oh, you mean South one ought, dou­ble ought. All r igh t"—Chicago Trib­une. •

nurd W ork . >. Employer—What's the :matter with you? '

Muddled Clerk—Tired; tha’sh alh “ Tir6d, eh?”

. “ Yesh; I been. workln like a horse.”. “ Ah, I seel Carrying a load; eh?”— Philadelphia* Record., . . ‘

W liy Baclm nuu S e v e r M arried .“ Mr. Buchanan, who wns the first

bachelor elected to the iHesidoncy, was 05 years o f age when elected and had deliberately given .himself to a life of celibacy,’’ writes William Perdue In Tbe Lndles’ Home.lournul;

( *‘Iu the: days; w lieu i.e was a youug I a Wy er o f La ucaster, Pa., he had loved: Miss Qolemau. a beautifu i 'daugliter of n citizen o f tliat towti. They had beeii. engaged to ‘be Quarried, wlien; one day he was surprised to receive liom heL a request to/ielease her frorii the prom­ise. . According to M r; Georgfe' Tick* nor Curtis, the separatioli .orlglhated lu a inIsunderstanding on the part o f the latly,. who was unusually sensitive, over some small matter exaggerated by giddy, and indiscreet tongues., Soou after the estrangement she. was sent to Philadelphia and there died sud­denly.

“ Throughout the rest o f Ills life, or for nearly half a century, Mr, Buchanan is not. known to have revealed to nny-

; body;: the ’ clrculiistances o f this' ro­mantic tragedy. H e would only say, that - It .had changed his hopes and pluns and had led him more deeply , than ever Into politics as a distraction from his. grief* In . his old age, long after he had;retired permanently to private-; fife, >:he called attention to a package containing, he said, the pa-' pers and relics which would explain the causes of his youthful sorrow and which he preserved evidently with the idea o f revealing them before his death. But when he died and his will was read it was found that he had di­rected tlmt the package should be burned without being opened, and bis injunction was obeyed.”

Ir ish Lnccmnklner.After the famine o f 1847 lacemaklng

was: revived in- Ireland. lilmerlck, the most successful Irish lace. Is not'real- ly 'a lace at all. .It is tambour work up­on net and muslin.

Tlio Irish point, so called, is the an­cient cut work, being mado ia quite tbo same way.

Net was first made by machinery in 17GS. The machine was an adaptation o f the stocking loom to lacemaldng and was cumbrous and not very effect­ive. In 1809 John Heathcote, a farm­er’s. son, evolved from consciousness and experience, the! first machine to make true bobblnet with perfect six Bided holes. It brought a great hue and cry aboUt his ears from laceworiiers, who fancied;they saw, themselves thus reduced to beggary.

The Luddites broke into the - factory where the machines were first set up and made scrap iron and kindling wood' o f them. The only result was to drive the new manufacture to - other and; safer quarters. For. long the secret o f the machine’s construction was most Jealously guarded by English manufac^ turers. Not satisfied with letters pat­ent they kept up a coast patrol to make 8‘ure 'thar tfobody took model or draw* ings to France. • -J- 'S. ,

At last though, they were outwitted. A discharged workman who had the plan o f it in his mind managed to get safe over sea aud build a .machine In France. - •

Sort o f n Cannibal.An old farmer for many years got his

dinner on market days at a srtinll hotel, kept by a widow.

She hud long suspected that he ate more than the price (Is. Gd.) warranted, bo she deterni Iried ‘to test him. ,She ac* ■; cordlngly. arranged matters so that there was no room for him at table, but she took him into a private room the table of which was graced by a steam -. Ing'leg o f mutton. He set to.In good earnest, and soon nothing was left but tbe bones.

Highly delighted with his*cheap feed, on passing the bar he tendered 2 shil­lings for his dinner and a quart o f ale.

The widow'decllned to take any pay­ment on the ground o f having Incon­venienced nim so much.

Chuckling to himself, the farmer lift- -. ed down his. market basket from a hook, and, finding It rather.light he tore off the covering and sUouted:

•‘Here, Mtb. Brown, where’s my leg . o’ mutton?” . - ,

“ Why,- ye old silly,” said the widow, **ye nave ate your leg for your dinner!” —London Answers. .

C on vers ion Throasrb Pork .An old Cambridge friend o f mine who

had a good deal of the wisdom o f the Berpent in him bad a farmer In bis par­ish in Norfolk whom ho could uot get to church. Whenever be pressed upon him,his neglect or his:bad example ne was always met with the same excuse, “ You . be too young and do not know enough to teach such as 1.” A t last he gave up tbe farmer In despair. But one day he happened to pass by tho farm while bis parishioner w as1 en­gaged in killing a fine pig. My friend. said: “ Wbat a plgl Why, be weighs &4 stonel” “ What dost thou know ot pigs?”, replied the farmer. “ 1 only wish be weighed as much.” When they next m et the farmer, to bis .surprise, told my friend that the pig had been found to weight just 34 stone. He added, much to my friend’s gratification, “ And thou w ilt see me at church next Sun­day, parson.” —Manchester Guardian,

W h a t A rc W e Com lna T o ,T h e fond m other had Ju st killed 10 o f

her 12 children.Sh s w as a floppy w ife , and her hus-

hand cam e home early every night.“ N ow ," she said , w ith a contented

Blgb, “ Joh n can close w ith the ageot fo r th at h ou se.*,- '

T h is w ns 20 years, from, now, when no landlord would accept a tenant w ltli moro than tw o children.—N ew Xork Sun. • •

Not. F o r I I I . H ea lth .H ub b ub s—W h y aro you m oving from

yon r sub urb an homo?Sub b u bs—I am a ll run down.

’ H ub b ub s—M alaria?Sub b u bs—No;-' g ossipy neighbors.—

P lilladelpbla. Kocord. \

T h e Son? o f the Gronne, Certain birds when the pdrlod o f

courtship comes round repair to partic­ular trystlng places and announce their presence there by well known calls or signals. . • •,The . ruffed grouse, as ’ every, one

knows., seeks an,.old log or other con­venient perclr: and drunis; v^ltli his wings,fti hint to any lady grouse with- . In hearing that “ Barkis Is willih.” '.

The perfqririaiicc o f the grouse is one frequently heard, but comparatively seldom seen. and fpr ihniiy. years there were numerous conflicting theories concerning the means by which the drumming whs produced; Sonip salil that, the sound - was vocal, and others declared that the g/ouse struck the log w ltli its wtugs.’ Kveii. today the pre­cise cause of. the sound- is not known, for, although the bird has been elosely watched, Its. wing movements are so rapid that It is next to impossible to tell exactly what takes place. This much, however, Is known: During the performance the grouse stands,upon the leg or other perch and strikes the air in front o f his body somewhat after the manner o f an elated harnyard cpclt. The first few strokes are'measured, but they become faster and faster until the individual thumps are lost, as In: the rolling o f a drum. Whether the sound Is due entirely to beating o f the air or whether it is increased by the striking together o f the w ing tips Is a question yet to be settled.—Hartford* Times.

W liy D inah W ep t.Not long ago a lieutenant In the navy,

was ordered away on a three years’, cruise., The order had been dreaded for weeks, and when it came the young wife, who was to be le ft in a Brook­lyn fiat with a. baby and a colored serv­ant, was in despair.;

She controlled her sorrow yory well, however, until the actual. moment o f parting came, and then she. wept as though her heart would break. The Cruiser was to leave the navy yard early next morning, and the lieutenant had gone to report fo r duty.

In the midBt; o f lier Iamentatlons the young :^ lfe . heard a sniffing; and- sob­bing in th e ; dining rponi, and upoh glancing through tl\e door she saw Dinah, the colored maid, rocking her body to and fro in a chair and weeping violently.,

“ Why, D-D-Dlnab, what’s the m-mat- ter?” cried the mistress. ' “ You seem to t-t-take Mr. Blank’s departure as much to heart as I d-do.”

“ 'Deed I doesn’t, Mia’ Blank; ’deed I doesn't!” sobbed Dinah. “What am boderin dis chile am de fac’ dat a cuLf lud gemraan friend o’ mine am gwlne sail hlsse’f on dat same ole crulsah!”— New York Herald. . •

Som e E x p lo d ed P o od ‘ F a lla c ie s .Fish as a food' o f the brain worker

must be consigned to tho limbo of. vanltlbs, though certain forms of'fish* are the cheapest of all foods, notably tho bloater. Oysters and turtle soup are frauds. I t would take 14 oysters to equal tho nourishment o f one egg and 223 to provide the same amount o f nutriment contained in a pouud of beef. ‘ .

Salt fish, especially salt fa t fish. Is the most valuable food for the poorer classes, and. whole races in the south of Europe live ou the Newfoundland cod.. Canned salmon we see at 18 pence a pound is no more expensive than cod at ^Ixjlence. Millions o f peo­ple live on it, aud tho North American settler who Is not well provided with cash finds It a good substitute and change from flesh meat at times.

Frogs’ legs are not o f high nutritive value, .• which need not surprise .us. Turtle soup from the chemist’s point o f view is not worth a tenth o f the price paid for I t —Exchange.

T oo Claaslo F o r Them .*A resident in a small suburban town

had a visit from a German friend who knew little English, but played the vio­lin well. One of this resident’s neigh­bors gave a “ muslcale,” and o f course ho and his visitor were Invited. The German took his violin, and when his turn came be played one o f his best pieces from ono of the great masters.

IVhen ho had finished, there was an awkward silence and no applause. The people were still looking expectantly at the German, who looked disappointed and flustered The silence grew pain­ful.

Finally the hostess, quite red In the face, edged over to the side o f the Ger­man’^ friend.

“ Can’t you get him to?” she whis­pered.

“ What do you mean ?”“Why, now that he’s got tuned up,,

isn’t he going-to play something?*'— Loudon Tit-Blts.

I l ls La te Honrs."Y o u n ever th in k o f stayin g-out late,”

said tho co n viv ia l and ill bred person, ’ ‘Som etim es I th in k o f It/ ' answ ered

M r. M eekton d istan tly ." B u t you don’ t care fo r th at sort o f

th ing.”“ N ot in the least.”"P e rh a p s you n ever had a n y experi­

ence?” .“ Oh, yes, I h ave. I t w a s onlv lost

n igh t th a t I w as out a t -h a lf past 2 a. m. H en rietta sent m e out to eeo I f I cou ldn 't keep tho bocl: ga te from slam- m lng.” —W ashington Star.

A .T e l lt a le ftonst,N ell—Sho used to boast th a t sho w as

ono o f tbo ch arter m em bers o f the W o­m an’s Su ffrage club. Sho doesn’ t ap pear to be a s proud o f It now.

l je lle —Oh, she 's ju s t a s proud, b\)t, you know , th e -:lub w as organized IB y ea rs ago, and she m ust h ave been nt least 20 w hen she Joined.—Philadelphia Record.

T h e geograph ical divisions o f the United States a re the north .A tlan tic group, tho .south A tlan tic group; rfbt>- north ' central group, tho- south central group and the -western group!

Special Train to San Francisco,viu Chicago & North-Western R'y, to leavo Chicago Tuesday, July Oth, 11.53 p. m. Stops w ill bo mado at Denver, Colorado Springs and Salt Lake, pass­ing en routo thp CnoBt seonery in the Iloclcy and Sierra Nevada Mountains. Party w ill fee .limited in r.umber and. 'under personal direction o f Tourist Department, Chicago &■ North-Western R'y. Only. ?B0 round trip, with choice of routes returning. Send stamp for illustrated itinerary and taap o f San Francisco to W. A. Cox, 801 Chestnut street, .Philadelphia, Pa.—Adv. July (j..

Reduced Rates to San Francisco.On account of tho Fifth' Interna­

tional Convention o t the Epworth League, to he held in San Francisco .July 18 to 23, the Pennsylvania Rail­road Company w ill sell, July 4 to 12, from all stations on its line, excursion tickets to San Francisco at greatly, so- dsjeed rates. For specific information ■regarding rates, routed and conditions, ■of tickets'^ apply to ticket agents,—A dt, June 1. ‘ .■

W A X '

Don’t tio tho top o f your jo lly and preserve Jara it* tho old faBblonod v?ay. Seal

them by tho new, quick, absolutely euro w ay—by a thin coating ofpuro, reflnod Para llino w ax . H aan o taato o r odor. I b a ir t igh t and aeld proof. Easily applied. Useful In a dozon other ■wars about tho house.

Fu ll d irections w i t h , each pound cake.

. Bold everyw here .Made by STANDARD OIL CO.

Trust and Sate Deposit Company

MONHOUTH BUILDINO,

Asbury Park, New Jersey.

Capital, $100,000 Surplus, $25,000

Krocatc* all trusts known to ths U.v. Loans money on Bond and uortrace. Receives deposit* subject to ehook and

allows Interest on dally balanoea. Acts as Tnistee, Registrar and Transfsr

A^ent.Pays oonpona.

Makes demand and tims loatts oa ap­proved collateral.

Safe deposit Vaults.

A. C. ^TVTl^INQ, PrsaMani.

B. O. 1C H A R V K Y , Vloa Pwaiflant,

BRUCE B. KEATO R , 8*cr«tary.

D. C. CO R NELL, Traasumr.

DIP.XT0R3.

Q. B. M. H arvey J. H. Buchanon.-D. C. Cornell, John P. O'Brien,Isaac a Kennedy, H. H. V r—land,Thomas P. Ryan. G. D. W . Vroom,Wm. J. Harrison, Henry Mitchell.Goo. P. Kroahl, Bruce B. Keatnr, |a t t Brown, Ross, >

A. C. Twtnlns.

H. K. BUCHANON, QEO, A . BMOOBmmm &smocs,W holesale and Rotall

Dealers In

»<LUIVIBER>«Builders’ Hardware, Paints

and Oils

Corner ‘M ain 8 t. and A s b u r j A v a a a e ,

ASBURY PARK. N. J.

OUR 8PEC1AJ.TIES.

Adamaat W all Piaster, Our owa manuXocture of Cedar Shingles, JOcg*# Windsor “ Cement Plaster,” Cedu Btaible Bedding.

JOHN LEONARD

Sanitary PlumberOpp. Ooesn Grove Main Avo. Gates

Aafoury. Park

- Estintates on sewer , and water Connections promptly furnished.

l«ow.prices and gdort work.t

B A W K IN S & D D B iM Q ,

A T TO RN BT -A T-LA W . 'A.bury Pai-,- &nd O c e u O r o n Bank

Bulldlnc, Ajsbory Park, N . i

J\t}fei6iana( Quids.

LAURA M. WEIGHT, M. D.102 Heck Avenue

C ornor N e w J e rp o y .A ven u o

Ocean Grove, N,. ,T. • H o u rs : U n t il 10 a . m ., l (t o 2, fl t o 8 p. m .

DR. BEEGLE - >No. 78 Malnr Ayonuo. Oceun G rove,. N . J.

Office H ours:? to 9 A . 12 to 2, 6 to 8 P . M .

• DAVID HARVEY. JR., C O U N S E LO R - A T -L A W .

M onmouth Building, Aabury P a rk , N . J . ComraJssIonor o f Deeds o f N e w Y o rk iand

Penn sylvan la. Acknow ledgem ents tak­en o f a ll States.

ERNEST N. WOOLSTON, COM3MISSIONER OF DEEDS FOR

NEW JEKISEY, AiND NO TARY PUBLIC.

60 Main Aveiiue,Ocetia Grove, N. J.

DR. GEORGE B. H ERBBaT, .D E N T A L BURGEON, . 1 ..

Office opposite • tho Depot,- over the A »- buiy p o rk and Ocean Grove Bank, oorasr o f Main Street and Uattlsoa Avenue. As­bury Park, N . Ji Hours, 9 A. M. to I K M. . Gas administered. Appo4*U»eot* made by moll or In ^orsoo.

GBO. U D. TOM3PKINS, D. ©.D ENTIST.

Rooms 2, S and 4, Postofflsa Belldlag, * Asbury Parte, N . J.

Offlos Hours, I A. M. to K P . 1C.' Cao admlalstecad.

D R . H . S. T A T U M t.V D EN TIST, ; '• -,

Graduate nnirsrsitar o< Pennsylvmln.Cor. Cookman Ava. aatW^monr 0 t

Opposite Poatoffloo, nrsr •M s ls (i»s Entrance on Emory «t,^Asbury Paric, N . f.

Office Hours, 8 to S. \ • , / *

IS A A C O. K 2 N M B D 9 ,■ A TTO R N E Y -A T -LA W .

Solicitor.Master In Chancery and Notary PvbOc.

Special attention given to satamlnatfon o f titlea, etc.

Monmouth Bulldlnr, Asbury' Parte.

. H. CA2UU11.Architect and Builder,

Offloo:Main Ave., next to Association BTdg,

Plans and estimates promptly ' furnialiod.

Residence: los Embury Av*.

Fire Alarms— Ssftnry Park17—B a n g s a n d C o o k m a n a v en u es .19—Cookm an avonuo and M ain street. 28—Cookm an and Bangs avenues.36—Second avenuo and M ain street.37—M ain Btroot and Munroo avonuo.

. 44—Second. and Grand avenues.4S—Asbury avenue and E m ory .street.,Cl—Bewail avonuo and H eck street. * 55—Asbury avenuo and K in gs ley s tre e t C3—Fourth avenuo and Bond street.54—Fourth and Grand avenues.72—Second and Borgh avenues.73—Fourth avenue and K in g s ley street. 82—Sixth and Grand avenues.84—Seventh avenue and Bond street. ♦ 91—Seventh avenuo and W ebb street. 93—Sunset and W ebb streets.

• S i g n a l s6— C—G— G e n e ra l a la rm ; •2—F iro out. ^ ,

Flro Alarms— Ocean Grove22—C layton ’s store, M ain avonue. .23—S urf and Beach avenues.24—E m bury and Beach avenues.25—M ain avenue and P ilg r im Pa th w ay .20—P ilg r im P a th w ay-an d B roadw ay.

-20. M cCllntoclt s treet and Beach ava. 82—C lark and N ew Jersey avenues.34-r-Heck and W h lto flo ld avenues.35—M ain avenue gates.42—Corlles and South M ain, W e s t G rovo43—Unexcelled Engine House, W . Grove.

S ig n a ls S—5—5—General alarm .

S H ER IFF ’S SALE.— By virtue,o£ a w rit of fl. fa. to mo directed, is* Blied but of tho Supremo Court

of tho state of New Jersey, w ill be ex­posed to sale at public vendue, on MONDAY, TH E 22d DAY OF .JULY, 1901, between the hours of 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock (2 o ’clock), in tho after­noon of said day, at tho Court House at Freehold, In tho, Township o f Free­hold, County of Monmouth, New Jer­sey, all tlio right, title and interest of tho dofondaut, Ernest J. Seymour, in and to all that certain tract and parcel of land and preniises hereinafter par­ticularly described, Bituato, lying and being in tho Township of Neptune, at Ocean Grove, known as lot No;. 1040 on a map of the Ocean Grove Camp Meet­ing Association. Bounded on the north by lands of Joseph. Jackson, on the east’by Delaware avenue, on south by. Broadway, and on the west by larid of N. J. McGibney, together with the buildings thereon erected.

Seized as tho property of Ernest J. Soymour, taken in 1 execution at the suit of Nelson E. Buchanoh et als,, partners, etc., and to bo sold by

O.-E. DAVIS, Sheriff.B. A. PATTERSON, A tt’y. 1

Dated June 19, 1901. 5t. July, 01.

IN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY.

TO A RTH U R BROOME—By virtue of an order of tho Court of Chancery of New Jersey, mado on the day of the date hereof in a cause wherein Clara M, Broome Is petitioner, and you; Arthur Broome, are defendant you are required to appoar, plead, answer or demur to the petition of said petition­er, on or before tho twenty-sixth day of June next, or in default, thereof, the said petition w il^be taken as confes­sed against you, and such decree tak­en against you as tho Chancellor shall think equitable nnd ju st

The Bald petition is filed against you for a divorce from tho bonds of matri­mony. v . •

Dated April 25, A . D. 1901. .W E SLE Y B. STOUT,

Solicitor o f Petitioner, Asbury Park. 1G-20 • •

AMOS LIPPINCOTT,Merchant Tailor ad Men’s Fanslsher

210 Main Street, ,,-OUPOiiH' 3. U. Station. Ariiatj Pwk, N. j,

'Pennsylvania R. R.The S tand ard Railroad o f A m erica

\ On and after June 2D, 1001.T R A IN S L E A V E O C E A N G R O V E —

k "W E E K -D A Y S ,ow York and" N jwurk,U.ll5 (AlondayH '). 7.*J0.7.43, 8.20, U.iO a. m .t 1.20, 2.85, a.35,

635 0.20 p. in.0.20 ni. * ■ •

For Enzabeth, 7.43, 0.20 a. m., 1.20, 2.35, 8.85, 6,35, hnd"0 20p. m. •

For Itahway,020a. in., 1.20, C.85, nnd 0.20 p. m F or Mum wan, 0.20 ft, m., 1.20,2.36,6,35, nnd 0.20

P- « n .\ \For Lonq: llm nch, fi-35, 7.20.7.13,8.20,0.20,

10.23, 10,31. 10.43, 11.36 a. in/, 1,20. 2.35, 2.51, 8 35. 44V>. R.00. 6.35, 6.12, (1.13. fl;23, 7.10, 8.01 (Snturdayd only), )*.20 p. m.

For ltcd bank, 7.20, 7.13, 0.20, a. mv, 1.20. 2.85,3 85. 6.35,0.20 p. in . • . •

For P l i l In dolphin, B ioad streot, nnd Trontou, (1.25,7.25, 7.62,0.12 a. m „ 1.12,1.07, 3.57,6.28 p. in.

For Cam don, v ia Trenton and Bordentown, 7,25, and 0.12 a, m.,'and 8.57p. m. .

For Camden and I’ hllnneiphta. v ia Toma Hlver.^.OO, 11,13, ft. m. 2.30. nnd 5.16 p. m.

ForTom H ltlver, Island ItolghtH nnd lnter- incdlato atntlons, 7.00, 11.13 a, m., 2.30 5.15,0.02 p. m.

For Point Pleasant arid Interm ediate sta- • lone, 0.00,7.00,10.R5, 11,18a. m., 1.3/, 2.2.5,2.80, 2.68 (Saturdays onty), 4.22, 4,60, 6.10, 6.16,0.02 0.46, and il.OOp. m.

For New Brunswick, v ia Monmouth Junc­tion. G.25,f?.52, 0 1U, a. m „ 1,12,3.67, aud 6 28,. p. m^ •/. ;?

T R A IN S L E A V E N E W Y O R K F O R O C E A N G R O V E . ; * .

F rom W es t Tw en ty -th ird S tree t S ta tio n , ’ tf.55 a. m., 12.10. 1.10 (Safurdaya on ly ), 2.25 2.5V 3.25, 4.10, 4.55 ana 0.55,p. m . Sundays, 7.65,0.25a. m.‘, 4,65 p .m .

From Dcabroases Btreot B latlon , at 3,80.0.00 ft; m., 12.20,1.20(8aturdayH only), 2 80 3.10,8*40,4.20.5.10, ftnd 7.00 p, m. Sundays, 3.15. 0.45a. • m . arid 5’15, p. m. \ •

From Cortland t street station, 8.30,0.00 a . m ., 12.20, 1.20, (Saturday's only), 2.80, 3.10, 8.40, 4.20,6.10 and 7.00 p. m. 8un*iays, 8.16 0.45 a .m ., and,6.15p. m. On Sunday, w ill stop a t intorlnken and Avon In place o f N orth Asbury . Park arid Asbury Parle to lo t olt passengers. - / • •/ ' ■

T R A IN S L E A V E " P H IL A D E L P H IA (B road St.) F O R O C E A N 'G R O V E ;

A t 4.05,0.50,8.22,12.27 a. m., 2.82; 8.80, and_4.17

S m. week-days, 4.05, and 8.81a. m. Sun- n.va: M arket street wharf, v ia Camden

and Trenton, 0.12, 7.08.10.26, a. m . 2 80, and 3.20 p. m. xeavo M arket street wharf, v ia Jamenburg, 7.08 a. m ., 4.00 p. m. weekdays. M arket Street W harf, .via Seaside Park,7.24, 0.12, a. m., 1.80, and 8J52, 'p .m . w eek­days. suudays, 7.80 a. m.

W ash in g to n and the South,. . MAY2flth»1001. ’

LEAVE BROAD STREET PH ILA­DELPHIA.

F or Baltim ore,and W aih lngton—3.60- 7.20, 8.32. 10.20, 11.20, 11.33 a. m. (12.86 L im ited d in ing oar), 1.13 {d in ing oar),. 8.18, 3.20, 8.48,4.10, 5.25., 0.05 , 0.20, 0.55 (d in ing car), 7.31 (d in ing ear) p .m ., and 12.20 n igh t week days. Sundays, 3 50, 7.20, 0.12,11.23, 11.88 a. m.,1.18 (d in ing car). 3.18,3.20,4.40,6.23,0.05, (1.55 (d in ing cur), 7.31 (d in ing car) p. m., and

,,12.20 n ight? . .T lm o tab les o f a ll o thor tra ins o f the

syBtem m ay bo obtained a t tho t ic k e t of* llqes o r at, the stations.

J. R. WOOD, Gon. Pass. Act.J. B. H U T C H IN S O N , Gon. M anager.

New York and Long Branch R. R.

T im e table In eireot Juno 15,1001.

S T A T IO N S IN N E W Y O R K ;C ontrol R , R . o f N ow Joraoy, fo o t L ib e r ty

and W h iteh a ll etreots (South F o rry ).P en n sy lvan ia R . R ., fo o t W es t 23rd, C ort-

landt and Desbrosses atreete.N «w Jersey Southern Hallway, fo o to f Hector

street (Sandy Hook route.) ‘

L e a v e N E W Y O R K fo r O C E A N G R O V B and A S B U R Y P A R K : .'

F oot L iberty street—1.00,8.80,11.30 a. m., 2.45, 3.53, *4.45 0.23 p. m . ' - V

Foot W hitehall street (South Forry Term inal) —8^5,11.25 a. m.. 2.25,3.85, *4.35, 6.10 p. m.

FootR ectorstreet—10.00 a. m., 1.00, 8.45,.4.80' p. m. ■

Foot West Twenty-third streot—8.55 a . m .. 12.40. 2.25. *3.25, *4.10. *1.55 p. tn.

Foot Cortlandt nnd Desbrosses streets—3.30,0.0J a. in.; 12.50,5.3J, *3.40, *1,20, *5.10 p. m.‘

L E A V E O C E A N G R O V E A N D A S B U R Y P A R K :

For New Y ork —0.17, *0.40. *0.58, *7,20.' *7.30, *7.40. *7.-f5. *8.00, *8.20. 0.20, 10.50 a. m ., 1.52, 2.25.8.35 *4.00, 5.05, 5.33, *7.02 p. in.

For UedBank, itatawan. N ew ark and E llza- both—0.17, *0,58. *7.‘ 0 (except Matawan and E lizabeth), *7.35, *7,45 (except Matawan), *3.00 (oxcopt Mutawan and-Elizabeth), *8.20 voxcept MaUiwau nnd E llzabech), 9.20,10.60 a. in., 2.25 *3.35,.4 00, 5.8.3, *7.0-2 p. in.

For Freehold, Trenton and Phllndolphia, v ia Son Girt and Penoa. R . R.—*7.25,7.65 a. m .,/

' 1.82, -1.07. 6.27 p. m.For Trenton nnd Philadelphia, v ia Bound.

Brook routo—0.17,0.68,8.00, 10.60 a. m., 4.00 p. m.

ForCamdon nnd Mt. H olly , v ia Seaside Pa rk ‘ —0.16 ft, m.. 2.37 p. m.

F or Toms U tver nnd intermediatfl stations, v ia Bay Head—0.16,10.50 a. m., 2.87, 5.15 p .m .

For Bolmar, ttprlnp Lake and Manaannan—0.(10. (1.15, 0.50,7.55, 10.35,10 50, 11,65 a. m., 1.27,1.82, 2 37, 2 5). 2.58, 1.07, 4.23, 4 85, 6.15, 5.27, 5 42, 5.40,5.65, 0.00, 0.13, 0.25, 0.41. 8.23 p. ra. ;

U a I n i D 1 nA a n . II AA 1) 1 tf FA 1 Cl <1 f 1 i

U.1 U .1U, Q.OJ, O.W , W. IO, U.-O, U.^A, O.fi) J». I I I .ForstntlonR in Lon g Branch—0.17, 0 40, 0.68,

7.20,7.80.7.85. 7.40. 7.45. 8.00, 8.20. 0.20. 10.23, 10.43,10.50, 11.45 n. m .. 1.52, 2 25, 2.52, 3.35, 4.00,

. 5.05,5.33, 5.40.7.02,7.07 p. m. ■ ’ '• Denotes express trains.J. R . W O O D ,

G . P . A . P . R . R . • fR U F U S B LO D G E T T ,

S u p t N . Y . & L . B. R . R .

PE T E R F. D O D D ,

JUSTICE of the PEACECommissioner of Deeds.

O E N E R A L C O L L E C T IO N A G E N C YR E TU R N S P R O M P T L Y R E M ITTE D .

No. 47 SOUTH MAIN STREET,Opp. Ooean Grovo GaW8,

ASBURY PARK, N EW JERSEY

QEO. PR ID H A MPRACTICAL

H ouse P ain terand Gralner

OCEAN OROVE. N. J.BOX * oij,

E8TDIATES PROMPTLY. FURNI8HH#

JOHN N. BURTIS.

645 Mattison Avenue,ASBUUY PAOK, N. J,

Oofflnat'and Burtal Gaskets on hood or ftus nUhed to ordor. Special atteatlen given to framing pi •twee, 'f^lephoneRL

P A R K E R ’S H A IR B A LS A M

OlonfCa and ocAuUSe* the hair.' I t’rmnote* a luxuriant growth. Novor yallo to lUotora Gray

1 Hair to tta Youthful Color/

tQq- and tl.OOat Prugyltu. ,

r _ ’ « '■* -I' AFTER THE BATTLE.;

A VETERAN’S STORY O P A TASSELEtJ TURKISH FEZ.

r- : - 'I T h o G r c i y a o n i c ’ I n c l d c n t I n ‘W h i c h J Io

j P A r t i c l p n t e i l n t t h e S c c o n d B a t t l e

| i o f AlnnnnHnN—A B r a v e B o y n n d I l lsD y ln 'ff R cqu cH t. . - f

. “ Whenever I soo a tnsseled TurkisU. fez,” Balii a Confcdernto veteran whoso

7; ' ^attention1 bail been'-attracted by a smoking cap o f tbat pattern in a Canal- street window, “ I am. reminded* o f a

y • curious and rather grewsouie Incidentof my canipu|gning dnys. It wns on the morning after the sccond. battle of Manassas,” be continued In response to a request for the story, “and several o f us from my-company bnd gone over to tbe field In the, hope o f picking up .a few things tbat we badly needed and

. • for which the dead had no further use--waterproofs, for Instance, nnd sound canteens. .

‘‘During the previous day's engage­ment you* may. remember that .a regl- ment o f freshly recruited New York zouaves held tho crest o f a bill and were charged and, nlmost annihilated» by Hood's brigade. They were mowed down like ripened grain and fell so

Y . thickly that their corpses literally car­peted tiie earth. I dare say it was as awful a slaughter, considering the. number engaged, as occurred anywhere in the course o f the war.

“ Well, we hadn’t gone very far when we came to this bill and began, to get among the* dead men. The poor fellows had been mustered Into service less than a week before, and tiiey were said to be the most gorgeously uniformed military troop ever organized. They wore scarlet. Turkish trousers, blue Jackets embroidered with gold bullion braid and purple fezes with long pend­ent tassels. ’

"Being just from the outfitters, all this fine iregalla was perfectly fresh and new, and somehow or other It added to the ghastliness o f the specta­cle on the blllslilc. The corpses were- in all sorts o f strange postures, and their fantastic costumes gave-them an air o f horrible grotesqueness that 1 couldp’t begin to describe in words.

“ However, to come to my point, 1 had plckfed up a fez to carry away as a relic and was about to leave tbe spot when I happened to notice a much handsomer specimen on the head of a little zouave stretched out, stiff, and stark, a few yards away, with a hand­kerchief over his face. I stepped up to make a 'swap,’ but bad barely touched the tassel when a low* sweet toned voice under tbe handkerchief said, ‘Please don’t!*.

“ For a moment,” continued the veter­an, “ that unpleasant protest, coming from what i bad supposed to be a corpse, made, my hair bristle on my head. Then I lifted the handkerchief and was shocked to see the delicate, refined features o f a boy not over 15. He was pale ub death and evidently desperately wounded, but he looked; at me calmly. • *My; God,’ I exclaimed. what a lad you arc: to be here!’ *Pm afraid I ’m dying unless 1 have help/ he replied. ‘Do you think the surgeons w ill be around pretty soonV* ‘The Lord knows!’ I groaned, for the boy’s cour­age touched me to the. heart. ‘Your surgeons have all run away, and we only havo a few, with more wounded than they can attend to.* ‘Then 1 guess all I can do is to.lie here quietly and die/ he said in the same gentle voice. ‘Can you get me. a little water beforo you go7 •

“ I took bis canteen and hurried down to a branch at the foot o f the hill, •where the first thing I saw, by the way, was the corpse o f a zouave float-. Ing in a pool. I went up the stream far enough; to-get out o f the horrible death *one, filled the canteen with pure wa­ter and was soon back at the boy’s side.I gave him a drink, and he thanked me. 'Is there nothing else I can do?’ I asked awkwardly, because I knew our com­pany was under early marching orders that morning and. that it would be Im­possible for me to linger much longer. ‘Nothing at all. thank you/ be*replled. ‘No message to nay body?’ *No; noth­ing, thanks/ * f

I turned away most reluctantly and had gone only a few yards when I heard his.thin voice calling me back.‘Excuse me/ he Bald, 'but \ want youto accept this as a present/ and he handed me Ms fine purple fez. ‘No. no/I exclaimed, greatly embarrassed; couldn't think of taking* It. When I started to a little while ago. I thought you—you'— 'Thought I was dead, o f course/ he Interrupted. ’Well, 1 soon .will be, nnd that other fez2 will do me ;Just as well. Please put. it on my bead, jind take mine/ I saw that he would be hurt unless I did as be desired, so I took the fez and went away.

“ In less thnn half nn hour our com­pany waa on the umrch, and. needless to say, I never heard anything more o f .the little child zouave. He was badly .wounded and undoubtedly died where I left him. I kept tbe fez a long time,” added the veteran, "but It was finally lost; with other odds and ends, in the general confusion following the war. I'd give some money for It today.” — Jlew Orleans Times-Democrat.

A Con fidence B etw een M em bers.“ I understand/’ said one member o f

tbe legislature, “ that tho senator whom .we recently elected was beset by foot­pads nnd robbed in Paris.”

“ Dear me,” answered the other mem­ber o f the legislature.. “ Those French-; men have such a brutal and direct method of getting a man’s money away from him /,W ashington Star,

*•1 love company,” said a Ioqal Mrs. Partington. " ‘I t makes things bright and lively—It breaks the anatomy/’— New York Sun, •

From a cliff. 1,000 feet hi£h one with clear, vision can seo a ship at a,dls-* Stance o f 42 milpn-

The mine miilo knows a thing or two- quite as well as does the army .mule. In one o f the mines in the Pittsburg district the ever patient mule proved himself possessed of an almost human senso o f coming danger., On^ morning when the full shjft was at work there- occurred’ nn unusual thing. The .air currents had seemed defective, and there was a restless fooling among the miners, something like;tho Uneasiness o f live stock before a storm. A few days previous a chamber had been elosed on account of gas, and the men were Instinctively thinking o f what that might mead. Suddenly there was a clatter o f hoofs, and a mule appear­ed. ' ■ Its long ears wore quivering; and its intelligent eyes were full o f .terror./ I t gave a shrill bray and then was gone down the entry, broken traces fly­ing after It. The men looked at ono another, nnd tlitjn the feverl^hness o f . the air moved them with oiie impulse, Dropping picks, they fled precipitately, making a headlong dash through tho; labyrinth for the open air. With scared faces other miners joined them, and while they, were wondering what it all meant a dull, deep explosion went; rumbling through the hollow : back pf them, followed by wave upon w ave of noxious vapors. Then they understood. When the bodies o f the few poor men who had been -hopelessly entrapped were recovered, another was tenderly carried out with theirs—that o f the lit- tie gray mule that sounded the warn­ing.—Leslie’s Weekly,

.’ - Serpent • W orship. .I t was probably in the character o f a

healer that the serpent was regarded by the Milesians, since most o f the lo­calities, of Ireland connected with tra­ditions • o f these. reptiles destroyed by St. Patrick were esteemed places o f bealingv; To these spots, generally holy wells, tho people of the poor and igno­rant classes still resort .'as pious pil-: grlms taking relief from their: infirmi­ties. They; drink o f the sacred waters and circle about the' fount on their knees w hUe repeating their prayers/ and it is a curious fact, as we are in­formed by an old time traveler In Ire­land, that _this circling was formerly done "groyoling on hands and knees or even lying flat on the ground and.wrig­gling like a snake.” This must un­doubtedly have been a relic o f the an­cient rites, though the people bad not the slightest idea o f its origin or even that such a religion had ever existed on their Island.-In the same w'ay they still on Bel­

tane eve (Bel-tlnne, or Bel’s fire) kindle "bale fires” on the summit o f every hill and send flaming wheels rolling down their sldos. though ignorant that they are celebrating a day consecrated to Bel, or Baal.,by their Phoenician and Irish ancestors, who observed it In a precisely similar manner.—New Llppln- cott

R equ irem en ts o f n Good S trok e Onr.During practice a good s.troke Is one

who is regular In his rowing and easy to follow. He must giver'the big men plenty of time to finish the stroke out. Ho must keep them swinging steadily, nnd In a trial over the whole Or any portion of the course he must get ev­ery possible ounce of work out o f them, so that they are completely rowed, out without.having got short, or flurried on the way. In a race he must know the capabilities o f h is ' Crew-and must be able to feel how they are going, when they w ant easing off and when they riro capable o f higher pressure, while above all he must have, that degree o f generalship , whlcii w ill enable him to decide in a well, contested race when to put the pressure on In order to take the advantage o f ’ station' a t a certain point o f the' course, when; t o ‘ease off I f he is . holding . hip opponent at a slower rnte Of stroke, how far it la. necessary , for him to save himself, for an effort at the end nnd especially in a really close contest tbe exact mo­ment at which be shodld make, tlio "grande attaque/’—Saturday Review .'

T h e y W e r e A 11 T i r e d ., The parlor entertainer has some amus­ing experiences, although be is not al­ways good.natured enough to tell them againstiiimself. One who appreciates a joke, however, relates that on a cer­tain occasion he had been performing at an "at home” and responding to so many encores that the programme be*; come unusually long.- A fter It was over his hostess with her young daughter came up to him and, after congratulating him on the success of the afternoon, said most cordlaHy: ’

"Oh, Mr. Blank, come nnd have.some' refreshments and sit down for awhile, I know you must be.awfully tjred.” /

"Yes,” chimed In the sweet young, daughter, with the best Intentions In the world; *Tni pure we are.” —New YorkM all and Express. '

n Ki*encli N ove l. • .Ion—I adore her!Narcisse— 1 Idolize her!"Ha, thpn we are rivals!” ’"Yes, but still friends!”"Aye, friends till death I” ."L et us tell heri”They tell her.She Bays:"Let us die!” .They buy 0 centimes’ worth o f char*

coal.They ignite it.They Inhale i t They all die.Vive ramourl—J. C. Goddard’s “ A

Leave of Absence/' ‘

Snorted Ont.Friend—What became o f your poem

called "Light. Beautiful Light?”Poet (sadlyi—The editor turned It

down.—Philadelphia Record.

Don’t wait until your friends are- dead to g ive them. flowers.—Atchison Globe. • . v • ,

When you can get a hearse at a bar­gain. drive the bargain.—Chlcaeo News.

T H R EE . S IM PLE QU EST IO N S .1And the L thrnrlnu Coaid Wot Aniuver

i. O n e o f Them . ■One day two well dressed young wo­

men approached the desk o f the read­ing room of a big library. Oneof them took a memorandum from her pocket- book.'

“Can you tell me how many yards— oh, that’s the wrong list!” she said, hastily bringing forth another slip o f paper. “ Here It Is. - W i l l you pleafce tell/me who Is ttudyard Kipling’s fa ­vorite author?” .■ * *.■ " .. ; ■■

“ I am unable to tell you,, never pav­ing heard thnt.be had one,” admitted one of the librarians. ' •

“Dear mer? said the young woman Irritably. “ It. la one of the questions for our next club meeting. Well, which one of Thackeray’s books brought him the most Income?". "V . • - -; ‘■ “ Thnt you caii probably find out:*.by consulting a book, the nmber of which I w iil(glye you,” said the official.

“ Oh< I can't stop to look it upl” she said hurriedly. “ I thought you; could tell me at once., Well, there's oue more thing. Bessie Cummock, mx,cousin !n Manchester, had a spieudid: book when I was there last year for anecdotes o f famous people. I can’t remember the name of if or who. wrote1 it, but it was about so big”—illustrating with one Un­ger on the desk—“and. It has a dark green cover. Now# can you tell me what It is? Some day when I have time 1 would like to get it out O f course you must have it In the libra­ry?” . •• *. ' ' .

For the third time the, official was obliged to confess . his inability to. give her. direct information.. She looked at him with: a piercing gaze and turned., away, suying audibly to her compan­ion: 1 ' ‘ .* ■ ■ ■ . ; • / 'v.- y ;■,.

“ There, that just shows what all this talk about their,: being examined for positions lu libraries amounts to 1 Three perfectly simple questions, all on liter­ary subjects, and he couldn’t answer one o f them r—Savlugs Journal.

The T o o th p ick Hnbit..“ I ’d like.to know what my custom­

ers do with all the toothpicks they car- ’ ry away,” remarked a restaurant pro­prietor the other day. “ Few men take a single toothpick. Most,of .them take half.a dozen and many a whole hand­ful, and when they come in here again for the next meal they; take as many over again. 'Phey don’t need them. It’s all due to the .toothpick chejving habit, which seems to be growing. There isn’t anything p^articularly.: pleasant, about chewing a wooden .toothpick, and it ma^ be Injurious "If a piece o f the wood lodges in the throat or gets down Into the stomach, as it Is very apt/to. But the toothpick; chew tog habit” is be­coming a rival to the gum and tobacco\ habits. The only reason 1 can give Cor it 1b tbat the toothpicks are free and gum and tobacco are not”—New York Sun.

T h e IIlR tory o f E tlqnett'e .Etiquette is a 'fo rm of fashion more

important than stylo in dress, *for (tlie reason tlmt tho varying codes o f raan- uers have Influenced morals, some­thing changing the cut o f a coat can-! not he said to have done. 'W hen eti-; quette denmndcd that a gentleman ac­cept a* challenge 'or acknowledge., him- self a coward In the rnlhds o f his fe l­low citizens, it encroached sharply ; upon ethics. No\y thjit it has gone out o f fashion-to kill, gentlemen find small difficulty in keeping ' the sixth, com-' mandment. The less formal etiquette becomes, the less wanton taking o f life there: la among those. Tyho consider good breeding o f consequence, ; .

As th6 civilized race now stands ei­ther-man or woman can be refined, re­gardless o f shape o f hat he or she. wears. This was true In any century, but 200 years ago and back o f that period a gentleman and lady could, ac­cording to. approved etiquette, gobble food with their hands from n common dish set In the center of the dining ta­ble and filled w ith the entire fashiona­ble bill o f fare prepared fo r t ie occa­sion. Gratefully tve now acknowledge such proceedings, to be *i)nd form” , and In so doing pronounce ourselves two centuries removed from the table man­ners o f swine and one point away from that brute, no matter how similar- to; him our turn o f mind mny remain. In Borne other respects.—Natlon*V Maga­zine. *

' A S n c c e s A f n l R a i e .

Mark Twain once used a successful ruse to attract the. attention of Presi­dent Cleveland to an injustice which he thought was about to be dohe to Consul General Mason 'a t Frankfort, one' o f the best men • in the. service. Mason wns notlfied that his resignation was expected and that n Mr. Happ o f Illinois was to be his successor. He was packing up his goods when Mark Twain happened around that way .and visited the cohsulate,.

Being informed o f the situation, the latter wrote a letter to Ruth Cleveland, the baby daughter o f the president, telling her that lie. could not interfere iu matters of patronage because lie was a Mugwump, but ho considered It a shame that a man of experience and ability like Cousul General ^Mason ■ Bhould be turned out o f otllce simply, because some Democrat who knew nothing about Its duties wanted the place. He said that he was acquaint­ed with a great many consuls anti ithat Captain Mason was the best lie had ever known, and If her father ever con­sulted her about the consular service he suggested that she advise him not to disturb good men merely to give places to politicians.

About a1 mi/nth later Mr. Clemens re­ceived a little.note In President Cleve­land’s handwriting, in which Miss Rutli Cleveland presented her compli­ments to Mark Twain,-tlmr-kcd him for calling attention to the threatened re­moval of Consul MaRon and shid that If he knew of any similar cases tho president would be glad to hear from him. .

Pennsy(yaSlaV; Railroad L ow - Rate Tour to the Pacific Coast. ^ 7 *

" The Pennsylvania Railroad Person­ally-Conducted Tour to San Francisco and thovPacific Coast, leaving N ew York, Philadelphia and Pittsburg by special train of Pullman Sleeping, Din­ing and Observation cars, July 8, w ill not be confined. to delegates .to tho Epworth League Convention, which will be held in' San Francisco from July 18 to 21, but will be run fo r the benefit of all who desire to visit Call-' fornia and the Canadian Northwest during the summer season. Stops w ill he made at Denver, Colorado Springs, Salt Lake City, San Francis­co, Monterey, Santa Barbara, Los An^ geles,- San Jose, Portland; Seattle, Banff Hot Springs, St. Paul, and other interesting points en route.• The round-trip rate from all points on the Pennsylvania Railroad east of- Pittsburg, $188.50,. coyers transporta­tion, double Pullman berth, and meals in dining car; two persons in a berth, each, $168.50. Rates from Pittsburg, $5.00 less. . ■

The tour will cover a period o f thir­ty days. •

Persons desiring, may return inde­pendently from San Francisco by var­ious.routes a.t proportionate low rates.

For further information apply, to Tieket Agents, or address Geo. W. Boyd, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Philadelphia.—Ady. June 1.

LiO-v. Sum m er Tours to . the pa Coast ai’d flounta ln i o f the

. In ' the southern end of Oregon, on the ver j summit o f the!Casca<i® Moun­tains, is Crater Lake; and there, ia no other lake iu the World, that - shows even an approach to its weirdness and griinsleur. It is rapidly coining into, notice as one 'o l the wonders o f tile world, which travelers and algui-seers cannot afford to miss. The lake is .el­liptical, ami is five.by seven miles.; i f . is 2,000 feet deep, the deepest fresh water on this continent, if.not in the world. Although -tho water Is fresh and sweet, the lake has,neither supply nor overflow that can be fouhii. Its most . striking feature ; is its walls, which rise)nearly perpendicular to a height of J,000 .to 3,000 feet. There are. only two points from which a de­scent to the surface of. the water can be made,-and this has to be done., by ciaiabering down the stupendous prec­ipice’. The colors on the water are wonderful, for brilliancy aud. variety. A .great cinder cone, evidence o f the expiring agony of the monster volca­no, rises over 400,feet from tiie lake, and In its top is a deep crater. The i-con: from the lofty altitude* o f the lake's rim Is strange, weird and inspir­ing; and from the great elev.ntic ■- ono sees all around a magnificent panora­m a o f.g ian t .peaks anu rtinge after- range of m ounta ins,The, lake is , ap­proached frota Medford, Oregon, a sta­tion on t h e ‘ 'Shasta to a to o f theSouthern Pacific Company, and the ride by stags .up the beautiful Rogua .'liver Is delightful beyond description. Fish and gamo are very abundant.

For further Information apply to Southern Pacific Co., 349 Brcariway, or N d.' 1 Battery Place, Washington building.—adv. ’

Pennsylvania Ralroad Reduced Rates to Detroit, account National

Educational Association.For the.meeting of the National, Edu­

cational Association at Detroil, July S to 12, 1901, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell excursion tickets to Detroit from all stations on its lines, at the rate of one.fare for the round trip, plus $2.00. “Tickets w ill -be sold July 6, 7 aad good returning to leave Detroit not'earlier than July 9, nor later than July IB: By depositing tick- ets withiJolnt Agent on or before July 12, and the payment o f cent;*, tfie return lim it may. be extended' to leave Detroit not later than September 1st, —Adv. June 29.

Oregon, Washington and Idahoaro the states to which a largo immi­gration isi now directed. You should take advantage o f She opportunities, and- the greatly reduced .rates. This -wonderful eonntry fully and .accurate­l y described and illustrated. I a a new booklet with ?. large snap., which, w ill bo mailed to any address upon receipt o f six cents in postage by W. B. Knls- kern, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago.— May. 18.6t - ; e - / ■ : _ _ ; '

Jeil-O, tbe N ew Dessert. vXx the familyJFoor fla-rara:—

• Orange, aaspbarry and Sttaw- bwny. A * year grooern. 10 cent*. Try tt today.

Mortgages.Wanted, on first bond and Mort­

gage, 51,200 at six per cent;, on new ho-ase, six rooms and bath, 2 lots, val­es $3,000; $1,000 at six per cent, on new house, 6 rooms aud bath, 2 lots, value $2,600; $5,000 at six per cent, ou handsome residence property, value $12,000; $2,000 at five per cent- on 12- room house, 2 lots, value $4,600.

W. II. BEEGLE,39 Cortland. St., New York.

\ ---------- t— ----- -----t .-Special Real Estate Bargains^

For Sale— On Broadway, 0-room cot­tage iu, excellent order, with lot and a half; flee location. Price, $1,700. A mortgage for $1,200 can remain at C per cent.— tf.

David City, Neb., April 1, 1900. Geneeeo Pure Food Co., LeRoy, N. Y.- Gentlemen:— 1 say a word iuregard to GRwiN-0 tlhat there is noth­ing bottor or ‘liealtlilca-, iWe have used ,lt for years. My brother a great oolfee drinker. Ho was takea sick aud the dootor said coffee was tho ce.uso o f it; and told us to use G R A »,‘-0. We got a package but did n o t 'lik e it at Ci®t, but now -would, not -be without it. My brother has been well ever since.wrj started to use it. .

Yours truly, L IL L IE SOCHOR,

This efcuftturo ia ou evory box the fonulno

laxative Bromp°Quinine Tabl«taUie romedy tbat enrea a c o ld l a t o e d a y

Canadian N orth w est via the Pennsylvania Railroad.

In view of the extremely low rates authorized by the various transconti­nental lines on account of the Interna­tional Conference of the Epworth League at San Francisco in. July next, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company announces a. thirty-day' tour across' the' continent, leaving New York, New­ark, 'Philadelphia,. paltiraore, 'W ash­ington and other stations on its lines ; east. of Pittsburg,, on Monday, Jtily 8, returning to New Yark Tuesday, .Au­gust'. 6.- ;•:•; - • . -\

The route will include stops at all the really important points for rCst and sight-seeing,'among them being Chicago, Omaha, ’ Denver, Colorado Springs, Glenwood Springs (w ith a daylight ride through tho Rocky Moun­tains, including the Royal Gorge and Grand Canon of the Arkansas), and at Salt Lake City, arriving at San Fran­cisco 10.00 % ra., Tuesday, JuIy l6, be­fore the. convention ‘ opens. Six. days will be allotted to San Francisco; for which time no hotel accommodations or other features.will be included in the tickets. Leaving San Francisco Mon­day morning, July, 22, Monterey, Santa Barbara and Los Angeles w ill be visit­ed, a l l . traveling over the new Coast Line of the Southern Pacific Company being done,by daylight, in order to view what is reputed to be the most attractlvei scenery . jn , California. Leaving Los Angeles, San Jose w ll be visited, thence Portland, with , two days’ stop, after which will come .the crowning feature of the trip,'the. jour­ney homeward via the Canadian Vaci- flc Railway through the' Unrivaled mountains: of British Columbia,

The schedule over the Canadian Pa­cific Railway ^111 be prepared with' especial care, and the train side-track-. ed at nights where necessary, in order that no part of this delightful feature may be missed; by night-traveling. This in itself is a raro opportunity. In; addition, stops Will be made at Banff H o t. Springs and St. Paul, ■. . .v. ’ J

The tourist will travel in the highest grade of Pullman equipment/ and the special train w ill be composed of vesti* buled' dining car( 'sleeping cars, and an observation car. The latter car .will* be similar to those used-on the famous Pennsylvania Limited.- '

W ith the exception of the time de­voted to San Francisco, passengers w ill be located on the special train during the entire tour, Breakfast, luncheon and dinner will be - provided in the dining car while en route, and when side-tracked, at tho various plac­es visited. Our patrons will therefore avoid the expense of high-priced hos- telries, the hurry and annoyance o f meal stations, and the unsatisfactory accommodotions afforded by inferior hotels;

A thoroughly experienced Tourist Agent and a Chaperon w ill accompany tho party, and in fact, the entire tour w ill be conducted under the same careful management that has made the “ Pennsylvania Tours" world fa­mous.'

The total rate for the entire trip as outlined above, covering one double berth and all meals In dining car, from New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Harrisburg, Altoona, and points on the Pennsylvania Railroad eaBt of Pittsburg, will be $188.50; two persons in a berth, each'?1G8.50. ,

Rate, going with tho main .party,’ with Pullman berth and;meals up to arrival at San Francisco, returning from San Francisco independently by any direct route, with transportation only on .return trip, $118.10; two per­sons in a berth, each $108.10;

Rate; transportation, Pulman berth, and meals on special train to San Francisco, with transportation only re­turning independently via Portland and Northern Pacific Railway, or Can­adian Pacific Railway and St. Paul, un­til August 31, ?127.10; two in a berth, each, $117.10. This, route w ilt espe­cially appeal to those who desire to visit Yelllowstone Park on their re­turn journey. The ticktes admit o f Btop-over at Livingston, at which point a ticket covering five and one-half days' hotel accommodations, with B ta g e transportation through Yellow y stone Park, may be purchased for $49,50.-

Rate, covering same as preceding trip up to San Francisco, with-trans­portation only returning Independent­ly via Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland and Canadian Pacific; or Northern Pacific and St. Paul, $131.60; two in a berth, each $121.60., RateB from Pittsburg, $5.00 less than

above figures.For information of those who desire

to travel independently after arrival at San Francisco, it should be noted that tickets permit btop-off within lim­its of August 31, at and west o f Den­ver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Colo., and west , of St. Pau l.' Stop-oVer w ill also be allowed until August 31, at Niagara ' Falls and Buffalo, for Pan-. American Exposition, on tickets read­ing through those points.

Descriptive booklet w ill shortly be issued, g iving, the schedule and fur­ther details. .Diagrams aro now open, apd as the number who can be accom­modated will be strictly limited; names should be registered immediately.

For further, information apply to Tourist Agent. 119G Broadway, New York; Thos. Purdy, Passenger Agent Long Branch District, 789. Broad St., Newark, N. J.; J< K. Shoemaker, Pas­senger Agent . Middle . District, 1*111 Chestnut St., Philadelphia; B. Cour- laender, Jr., Passenger Agent, Balti­more District, Baltimore and Calvert Sts., Baltimore, M d.;, C. Studds, .Pas­senger Agent Southeastern District, 15th and G Sts., N. W., Washington,D. C.; or address Geo. W . Boyd, As­sistant General Passenger Agent, Broad St. Station, Philadelphia.

AOUOH on T o o th ach e ./ Instant relief, IBc. Rough ox H e ad ac h e , T ablets , 15c..Rough on Worms. Liquid, easy {aken, 25c, Rough on Corns. For lmrd or soft corns, B e .

Rouoil ON CORNS. Don’t make the feet sore, IBc. Rough on Corns.' The old reliable staolard.lCc Rough o n Co£ns. Sells around the world* IGc.

ROUGH O N B IL E , TABLETS. I f nothing clso clcars the bile out o f you, these w ill, 2ia

ROUGH ON BRO NCH ITIS , TABLETS. The •worso tho case tho more nmrked and noticeable tiie relief. Simple, coughs nnd colds may be helped by simple means but those soverecough* inp spoils thut rack tho bronchial tubes and lungs, deep seated colds, coughs and bronchial, • throat, chest and lung affections, severe per­sistent tickling, hacking and irritation can bo auickly quieted,.helped, soothed nnd cured by this remedy only. 23c. jit druggists or by mail.-

CORN R EM ED IES M AY COME A N D GO,but "Routf h on Corns” goes on forever; remains the standard, the old and ever reliable, ncver- failfng cure, fo r hard or soft eorn«i. JEc. at ' druggists. '

“ Rough ou Bunions.”New and successful treatment, only complete

:uro. Gives ease and comfort at once. Sub­dues inflammation. A llays fever, pain, sore­ness, tenderness. Reduces swelling and en­largement of jdints. T o tired, soro or fevered feet it gives relief nnd comfort at once. Best nossible remedy forsprnins, mashes,contusions, yack eyes, etc. 85c. at druggists o r sent prompt- ■ [y by mafl. e . S. W ELLS, Cbcraiat, Je*eoy wity, N. J. . .

M i m e Ic o f Heating.■ Poison, Itch. Salt Rheum, Eczema, erred Dy W E LLS ’ “ .MIRACLE OI? H E A L IN G ” pow< Jcr. Cures ulcers, skin diseases, felons, bolls, 3umB, scalds, eruptions, mosquito ond all in­ject bites, dog bites, wounds or scratches by myanimnl. A s an inlection, is cleansing, cor­rective, healing, curat jve. ‘ 2Cc. bottles at drug­gists or sent by mail promptly on receipt o f jrice. E. S. W ELLS, Chemist, Jersey City, N*J,

. “ Roush oa Piles.”Used largely in this and foreign coontrfcs., )y comPlete. absolutely successful,, never,

ailfng cure. R elief at first application, nnd [uick cure. External and internal treatment 1 n tho ono package. Prico.00c. at druggists or ent promptly by mail. E.S. W ELLS, Chemist,10 Grand S t , Jersey City, N. J.

Dos, Snake or Spider Bites,dosquito and nil Insect bites, wounds or cratchcs by any animal, cured by Wells’ 'Miracle o f Healing” powder: K ills Iv y Poison, tch, Salt Rheum, Eczema; Miraculous in heal- ' ng power. Cures ulcers, skin diseases, felons, ioils, burns, scalds, eruptions. Disinfectant,, ;leansing. Makes perfect injection. Cures any > oro on man or beadt. :25c. bottles nt drug- ;ists, or'sent b y mail promptly on receipt o f irice. E. S. W ELLS, Chemist, Jersey City, N.J.

Are You oa Your F ec i?. I f you walk or 6tand much, and you r'feet get ired, pain and achc; i£ they aro tender, fever- sh or sweaty, “ Rough on Bunions” w ill g ive jase and comfort at onco, and hardens tho feet o stand any demands mado upon them. Tho mly real euro for Bunions, nnd cannot be ap- iroached as a remedy - — '— ----- ■jusionsj '

Zhemist, Jersey City, N. J.~

Soresy Itch , Sait Rheum, Eczema.W E LLS ’ “ M IRAC LE OP H E A L IN G ” Pow-

•,eri! o ? ^ r y pl o f UealinS* Kiiis I v y Poison, tch, bait Rheum, Eczema; Cures ulcers, skin liseases> tclons, boils, burns, scalds, eruptions, nosquito und all insect bites, ■ wounds or cratches by any animal. Cleansing, corrective, icming, curative, as an injection. 25c. bottles

i g ^ orB . * r * w ® 8» ^

Paint Your Buggy fo r 75 cents.

with Dovoo’s Gloss Carriage Paint- It weighs 3 to 8 oz3. more to the pint than others, wears longer; and gives a gloss equal to now work. Sold T»y- Buciinnon & Smock.

Stops the Coagh and W orks Off the Cold.

Ijt.vs.U r* Bromo-Qttlnima T ab le ts ea rs * osld in one day. N o c u r* no Bay. Prtoa 3 crai«, ■. '

■ n w 3 m <y ;r * '

Becoming gmymyA r e th e L e a d e r s In

Paper M ing Painting

Decorating, €tc.W a l l P a p e r In E n d le s s V a r ie t y . A U th e

N e w F a l l O eslg ;oa .

W e w ill deoornte your. houa* Inside and out In ibo fluest manner and best taste, by contract or otborwise, to your out! re satisfaction.

Geod W ork a n d Low Prices

C H A R L E S A . B A K E R616 C «o k m s n A v e n u e , A r t u r ? P a r k

B r a n c h , J77 V e r o n a A v o . . N e w a r k , N . J .A B r a n c h , 177

P e r r in e & J a c k s o n

i>XAums ik

IWIeat8^iPoultryFRESH STOCK

PROflPT 9BRVICB

FREE DELIVERY

No. las Heck Avenue- Oor. Whrt#aeid

o c £ M « r o v e ; iv . j .

JAS. H. SEXTONfuneral Director and

Also Supt. Mt. Prospect Cematoo A larc* MMrtsMBt of OMkM», « l k

■— M tm n t t r o n b a n d . S T Iew egs M U 7 ilMlgn at abort motixm.

Parlors and Offioe:No. 17 Main Street, Asbury Paric, New Jersey

W . E. T a y l o r A. D. (JLAUK

TAYLOR & CLARK Builders

Office; 36 Pilgrim -Pathway

P. O, Box 57 V OCEAN GROVE, N. J.

A GRAVATT8 ' .

CRG + Y 1 S Q M * BSKGRVBread, Pio and Fancy Cake,

South M ain Street, Opposite Brotulwiiy Gates

A e B X T K Y P d O J K 2ST 3*. .

O R D E R S P H O im m v A TT tf N D B D TO ?

W JE ISO N H .K 1 L !H E R , ARCHITECT AND BUILDER

Plans and specifications drawn fo r a ll kinds o f m odem wood, stone orbrtck buildings. For workmanHhip.and prieos wUl refer to all for whom 1 havo dono work in the Grove and Park. Eh tt mates cheer fu lly given.Box H0H7. Pitman Avomie. Ocean Q r e v a

G e o r g e m . B e n n e t t ‘

PaintingIN A L L ITS BRANCHES

No. 116 Hcck Avenue, OC&AN QROVE. N. J\

OCEAN ■ ©RGV3 ,.T IM E S-^A TBR I)A lf i 1901;

PUBUOHCD EVERY SATURDAY

d 9 M A I N A V E N U E , O C E A N G R O V E

Entered nt tho postofllcoutOccon Grove, New Jursoy, os Bcc0nd*clas8 matter.

TO C O R R E S P O N D E N T S —W e Bhall bo g lad to receive Item s o f news and com ­m unications on subjects o f in terest to this com m unity. W r ite only on one sldo M th e sheet. .

T h e fu ll namo and address o f the w r ite r should accom pany all communications, not necessarily fo r publication, but’ as a guaran tee o f good fa ith . Anonym ous le t­ters w llll not bo noticed.

Address all com m unications, e ith er fo r the ed itor or news departm ents to

» -T H E E D IT O R , 1Ocean Grove, N. J.

S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T B

, One y ea r ..................... . ............................$1.00Blx M o n th s ..............................................60Th ree M onths ......... . - 3 5

Single Coplod S Cents Each.

SATURDAY, JU LY G, U>01.

. . T H E A L L E N H U R S T F IR E ‘ ■- The moat sad and startling event of

.'tlie week has beoen the destruction of one o f the finest hotels on the coast,

. . w ith-its smoke and flame near enough the gay life of Park and Grove to make one shudder at the possibility of such a calamity, in our more crowded

c communities. ' W ell may the disaster awaken universal sympathy for those

-so suddenly bereft of their chosen summer homes and pleasures, with property considerations of untold val­ue; and more than this: painful reflee-’

• tion and unavoidable' apprehension that danger lurks in unsuspected cor*

• ners all about us. Nearly all these• devastating fires are tracable to triv­

ial causes. Forethought runs into carelessness, and this into wreckless disregard of every ordinary precau­tion, day and night, and hour by hour, to prevent disaster. The.care,of gaso­len e in charge of stupid ignorance, is bad enough as a menace, but the ap- •pearancea on the scene o f the ubiqui­tous' clgaret fiend, with, pocelct :half- ful of loose matches, and the striking

. o f these anywhere, everywhere un­thinkingly, to keep the awful clgaret in Bmoklng' order, costs the nation millions in property destroyed, and a terrible havoc o f life into the bargain,

r- Who has fingers, enough on which/to j-vcount the conflagrations In hotels

alone caused by this silly and idiotic indulgence! •• One gQod result, however, may

grow out of, the, recent disaster. The two or three hundred public houses of.

-entertainment in this vicinity may be incited to inspect their basements, cel­lars, servants’ quarters, and even- guest chambers; to look after the scat­tered matches * and the wreckless

'young smoker. .Reflection w ill also unavoidably

v turn to the question of using * gaso- lene^in any and every form about our premises, except under the most wise

’ and prudent control. Ocean Grove has had Intimations enough o f the

! danger line to keep a vigilant watch » until some good day coming the Asso­

ciation may consent to the introduc­tion and general use of gas. Thl$ would be a safety measure that might serve to keep out o f use .the more in- flamable fluid, which has caused moro fl.re. alarms and nervous shocks to the Ocean Grove population than anything

. elsel.. A good old custom might be revived here with advantage. In the primitive history' o f this place it wtfs recom-

ij. mended, if not required, that buckets, of water should stand ready at every tent door in tho night, and night or, day on every porch or veranda; in case of a, sudden alarm. Older residents

. and visitors remember .very well run­ning to a point, of danger with a

, bucket full o f water In “"each hand. ^ 1%Is often saved a cottago In short metre, and would do so still.

It is pitiful to see the crowd of men, women and children now at first tap of fi^ ^ e ll^ ru n wild, get In the. fire­men’s way, and only regard a big’ fire as a divorslon or a show to be laughed at, and made an occasion of disgrace* ful loot.and robbery.. Think on these things! • . '

Our firemen are fearless, brave and alert; but they are a sensitive set,

\Vvhen it comes to credit they deserve and do not get. For instance, the Park reporters in. their own and the city pa* pers they correspond with, took spe­cial care, it would seem, to name only their own companies at the recent 'Al- 'lenhurst conflagration, Ignoring the

• splendid work done by the Washing­ton of Ocean Grove, and the equally prompt attendance of half a dozen sub­urban companies, which were in ser­vice,. This the Washington men re­sent, and are a little sore over such a

• slight, wliiqh, aftor all, may have been quite unintentional.

V A very attractive Kentucky orator,’ * Rev. H. C. Morrison, of Louisville, and ‘ v a powerful evangelistic worker, vislt-

V; ed Mr. T. W . Lillagore at the Grove last w eek, and gave two remarkable

' ' addresses a t the 9 a’clock Tabernacle services on Wednesday .and Thursday. H e then had to lea^e to preach at a

; camp meeting In progress near Delan*: co in this state.- Many would count it

V; a privliege to hear him again.

The title of this paper alone implies •thfetSits ml68lonr1tf: 0: fii£fiy t(J"XuVntslf t£l transcript of life ’s activities, whethe^ social- or devotional, a t.< QceanVOrdve "The Times,” In ordinary parlance,- comprehends everything of current in­terest, good or bad, which may be suit­able or suggestive. o f> note and coni-' ment by a live,; enterprising journal/ in its effort to serve the public, by shaping opinion, conserving morality; correcting popular abuses, and reflect­ing enlightened sentiment.

In* this community, for Instance, and during the season on which we. now.enter, It will not for a moment be questioned that the spirit, nnd all con­trolling feature of "The Times,*’ for the ensuing two or three uontba, is;/ as usual, to be educational in'the prom-' inent phases o f religious life. •

Some of the-most distinguished pub­licists of the country at large are in­vited hero to occupy pulpit or1 plat­form, and'.pour out tho wealth o f their intellectuality and experience for the Instruction and pleasure o f uncounted' multitudes of people. The season for'th is annual consociation has al­ready been' opened under auspices the most encouraging. Ocean Grove, in what it stands for, should.' neither be allowed to stagnate nor retrogade. In the nature of things it must, in the el­oquent language quoted in an Audlto- 'rium sermon, June. 23, “ Sail on, and On! ” It must advance with "the times,” and its careful and competent management g ive palpable evidence that their banner still Is "Excelsior;” -'-

The “Summer Program” ’ illustrates this. How rich and varied it Is! How many thousand eyes w ill scan its num­bers as the days go by!It will be the accepted province, there­

fore,, .of the "Ocean-Grove.Tim es” to follow every speaker of the season, and give the gist of his lecture or dis­course. It w ill take the admeasure­ment of every meeting, selecting “ nug­gets” from Tabernacle and Temple. It will g ive right of way to the popu­lar ministry, of music, in the highest and most sacred combinations o f that sublime art, and it alms to place before the world a consecutive, history of .what Is said and done here, so far as sayings .and doings, this entire season may be considered worthy o f the im­mortality o f type, and so' far as we possess the ability to discriminate the wheat from, the chaff;

Our Religious Department is there­fore placed under tho supervision of one of the most experienced reporters available, and due space and promi­nence will be given in every Issue to the work1 of the Association, , and the workers they have called here for the delectation o f the. massos.

' One of the most notable personages about Ocean Grove for a few weeks past, has been a handsome, well pro­portioned gentlemanly looking man, still young, with; forty years of faithful •ministerial life behind him. He Is the Rev. Samuel H. Cummings, a member of the Baltimore Annual Conference, who with his devoted w ife and • little daughter resides at No. 1G Pitman ave­nue. But he Is stone-blind. Th ls: a f­fliction came upon him twenty years ago; yet he labors as zealously and e f­fectively as ever; He attends aiid par­ticipates In all the meetings in pro­gress, and preached an . eloquent ser­mon last Sabbath evening at the Res­cue Mission. '

"W hat has become of Dr. CrHan- lon?” Ib the o ft repeated question on Sabbath afternoons, when people re­pair to.the Auditorium Bible class. He has been absent two Sabbaths. The explanation ik that he has been filling preaching engagements, but will be In hlB accustomed place next Lord's day, when it is likely he will meet with a cordial greeting by hundreds o f old friends. •

A copy of Prof. Morgan’s Interesting sheet, caleld "The Citizen,” Issued last week, bears in evei^ page, paragraph and line the stamp of-his own versa­tile genius, not merely as the prince of. singers, but an editor of the flrfct rank. There is an imperative desire that “ The Citizen” , should become a weekly contributor to the pleasures of the reading public hereabouts.

Never was. a cloud in the sky watch­ed with, moro eagerness, and the rum­ble of distant thunder listened to. with higher anticipations of a coming* shower, than on. last Tuesday,. with tho mercury up in the nineties* The cloud, however, sailed by, the thunder, died. In silence, and we o f this meridi­an got no rain until next day.

Dr. Ballard Is giving further detailed information in regard to topics to be treatpd by lecturers during the Sum­mer School of Theology. Several cor­rections have been made this week in the program as fqund in our col­umns. ' ,

. Until Monday, July 1st, the ocean water was bo chilly that few dared to venture In fpr a surf bath. On that day and since, however, sea batiing IVaqi>been pronounced the highest lux-, ury. ? .

»;-V • .’ . . . . . . • :

It was "by way of experiment" that Bishop FitzGerald hit upon a Sabbatn evening ‘'praise*, service” Jln -place, 6t the usual sermon In the Auditorium. The two already held have made a favorable impression, as instanced in larger audiences at least. But what if so much magnificent 'singing wea­ries the people, until familiarity runs into religious dissipation?

General Joe Wheeler, the Southern Hero-General, who fought so nobly and successfully In the great conflict which' liberated Cuba and severed Manila— the Christian man among soldiers and the unflinching advocate o f temperance everywhere, will occupy the Auditori­um in the evening of the Temperance Sunday, July 28, on a topic involving these great issues.

; One of the most richly enjoyed vo­cal performances in the Auditorium last Sabbath, and there were many, was that of a comparative, stranger on the platform, Miss Nellie Brown, who, we learned, is a niece of Dr. A. E. Bal­lard, and rOBldes at Nutley,- N. J.

The decorating flrjn of Laggner & ball, of Elizabeth, N. J., took the Audi­torium in hand, and transformed the, huge building Into a blaze" o f bunting, for the “ Glorious Fourth.” W e have hever-seen a more tasteful and thor­ough job in this line. So say the people. : . . :

| The coolest place-found during the recent torrid wave In the absence o f sea "breeze was in tfte great. Auditori­um, it is a kindness on the part o f the Association ;to . allow, the. doors ta be le f t open in the intervals between meetings; for public cofnfort during hot days. : * . • ; ' "

The paper.Is delayed this week ow­ing to the overhauling of the linotype machine, and celebrations Incident to the celebration oMhdependence Day. -

THE FOURTH OF JU LY (Continued from first page.)

As to clipiatic conditions he said he would prefer a two-roomed habitation here to owning whole countries where reptiles abound, and malarial fevers sap the very springs of life.. We have everything desirable and delightful here at our hand, coal from the hills of Pennsnylvanla, corn in plenty, in New Jersey, wheat In Long Island, rice in the Carollnas, and in Georgia cotton to keep us warm. Even the intense heat complained o f recently was splen­did for the corn crop, and however inconvenient, would cheapen food-for; the ;poor. i

Large expeditions to discover the North Pole, he thought, had better be applied to bringing those shivering be­ings who starve there, away from such frigid scenes, and leave the country and Its ice-berg8 to the walrusses and bears.• His contrast drawn between’ the

eighteenth century and the present, in dress, schooling and the old-time school-master, with amusements and frolics, was excessively witty, and- not less wise.' "The former times” so of­ten quoted, wero not better-in. any re­spect than the times we live i n . ,

For a commanding peroration the speaker reserved a wonderful word por.traiture of the two days* march of the victorious armies , of the Republic in 18G5; through the streets, of Wash­ington. Such another pageant the two hundred thousand spectators who witnessed it shall never see again.

Destructive wars are at an end. Fence is coming to stay. The Emper­or of Russia told him that the prin­ciples of the Hague Peace Congress would finally prevail, and hj^believed it.

.When in Moscow he stood at the foot of an immense bell tower, around which were parked nine hunderd can* ons, dug out of the B n o w after the re­treat of Napoleon.- He entered and ascended the tower,, and when nt the top all tho bells began to ring. It was the custom at sunset. Hundreds of bells of all sizes blending thpir tones in dome, steeple and. tower, all ring­ing at once. He thought such,a scene would be appropriate to celebrate the utter cessation of war, and the bring­ing in of a jubilee of peace to the whole w orld.. * .

With the singing of the American national anthem, the morning service closed.

Properties for Exchange.

Two excellent properties In Ocean Grove, containing ten rooms, and both, finely, located; ono property has two lots. Owners w ill exchange for email cottage ^nd cash for the balance. Not much money would be required. Houses are all-the-year-round ones. Apply E. N. Woolston, Real Estate, 60 Main avenue, Ocean Grove.

A Cheap Lot.For Bole— A fino lot on Webb ave­

nue, size 30X60 feet, on the block next to the ocean.. Excellent location for a cottage. Price ?850. Inquire at once to .. E. N. Woolston, Real Estate,

• ' 60 Main avenue.

Four Lots for 5sle.To close an estate.I liave four, desir­

able lots, size 30x60 f^et, for Bale for $1,600. Good, high ground; a big bar­gain for some. one. Inquire E / N , Woolston, CO Main avenue, Ocean Grove, N, J. • ’ . ‘ tf. ,

A teacher; of industrious. habits, would llkb position in linen room dur­ing) tho summer- Address G.'W.,* care Tidies,— ^t.

.i-ald<y-\ !Vi35WTHH 'JWA JAH02Sa<t

SEVENTH AYE.

Bath HousesC H IS group

• has the , finest;

-Bathing Grounds along the Atlantic shore

3. Caylor

HrtisiMr. Taylor h&a been modailng i at Asbury Park for ■’ Eight Years. ,

| n gbailengc! Obo Hundred Dollars :snva ’jeon placed with the Asbury Park Board Of Trade to be given to the winner in d sard rnodellng contest who can excel IJlr. Taylor. This challenge is to all the sand artists of merit in tho world,

’ '.j— — — -

, JUDGES.

- Assemblyman Samuel Kirkbrlde, As- U uryPork,| Hal Allaire, Alllaire.

I Frank M.- Taylor, Long Branch Rec­ord. . ' . . .

K ASBURY PARK

M Rouses\ P.*G.i SNEDEKER 5 . 'S u p e r in t e n d e n t

Open W e e k d a y s From 7A. M. to 6 P.M.

Sundays From 6 to 10.30 A. M

The Celebrated

Sails from foot of First Avenue, Asbury Park

for the fishing banks at 8 a. m.

F A R E $ 1 . 0 0

Bait and line included in fare. Ocean sailing- excursions only at g p. rd. Fare 50c.

' C ap t. L . New m an 1 C ap t. F ra n k P e a r c e

YOUR BUSINESS SOLICITED

Real Estate Money to Loan

Insurance

WILLIAM G1FFARD(F orm erly W . W h ite 's )

222 ,Ma!n St., Aabury Park , N . J .>bjnoo or Townahlp Collector

Association Building, Main Ave. OCEAN GROVE, N. J.

■\ , ■

Capital . . $25,000 Surplus . . $5,000

vi ■ .

,W. H. B e e g l e , Pres. " W. H. H a j.i i i .To n , Vice Pres.1 T.' A. M i l le r , Cashier.

Board of Directors:Wu-LiAu H. Beegle W iix i in H. HXKnaoit ; Ca i.vih V H ra w v

..SnehiEN D. WoMunr' "•■• NArnAN .T. T iV ib n ' . -’jk co n Sitvm . T. NitLSON IdLLAOORE • , WILLIAM MOBAN j.

Transacts a general banking business, issue’s letters of crodit available in the princijpal . cities of the world.

CallActkufs casefullj made and promptly semitted.

t - . i / ■**Tbe Btatntos regulating tho oporations or National banka avo or each wlas oonoecrton Burt,

oooBclonUoualy con form od to by o moors and (1,1 reo tors, no lnstltnilon o f Wwttng ‘ p «»ch o * th* National for deserved oonfldonco of and soenrity to patrons-’* • , , V -

GfioROB P . KnoK itL, President.

. . M a e t iw H . ^ o t t , Caabier.

! Da.SAMuw* Johnson, V ic« Prteideat.

J. E. DAVIS, Asat, Cashlor, t

FIRST NATIONAL BANK• ’ ; ' l . . - ■ .• * " ... f ■

: Organbtod February, 1£M • f , • . • .

Mattison Avenue and Bond-Street /

A SBURY PARK. N. J. '

Capital, @100,000 Surplus, 170,066

Transacts a general banking bustuess,-Issues letters oi f < credit available In the principal cities or the world. Fot* d gn and domcstlo onuiangta boaght and sold.* Coileo- Uohb carefuHy m ade and prom ptly accounte4 tor. Din- . count meetings held Tuosdays ana Fridays at 8 A . Mi ,

Board o r Diujkctors:

Q .B . JKrochl, A lbort a Tw in ing, Isaac a Kennedy, 8. W . K irk bn do, OUvas H . Brown, 8 am* uei Johnson, Mahion R . Margo mm , D. C, .Covert, W m .H . Beegle, W m . H athaw ay. •

H. C. W rsson , Presldeht O. C. Cla yto n , Vteo President

. EL E. D a y to w , Cashier Jhrse MiNOf, AsaU Gashler ,

Asbury Park $ Ocean Grove BankOrganlzod Januaty, I

Capita! - - $60,000Surplus - - $50,000U n d iv id e d P r o f i t s $ 6 ,0 0 0

TO TAL RESOURCES$ 756,000

Mattison Avenue and Main Street, ABbury Park

M ain A v o . an d Pllecrlm P a th w a y , O oean O ro v e .

Transacts a General Banking 13usinews, Issues Foreign and and Domestic Drafts. P rom p t attention glvon to a ll matters ontrnstod to us* You r patronage solicited.

* 7 COLLECTIONS MADE A N D PROnPTLY ACKNOWLEOOED, Soto Deposit Boxes to Root. V.- . * ;

; DiRBOToaa: N . E. Buchanan, J. S. Ferguson, Geo. W . Evans, C, C. C layton, Goo. W . Treat, Dr. J. A . Hotrlolt, John Hubbard; Henry a W lnsor, T, Frank App leby, JLewls Raln* ear. Am oa Tilton . ,

S T I L E S ’ E X P R E S SS N D S T K G B L I N E .

CHIS is the oldest established line ir. Ocean Grove sad Asbury Park. Special facilities <or t i c prompt end carefni handling of, all loads of Furnitare, Pianos,

Boilers and Safes. Shipping tags furnished free.Storage for ail kinds df goods: Separate -com part­

ments. Each Individual furnished with a key.

J K C O B S T I L E S' O FF IC E S :

7 0 2 M attison A vo ., Rattroad D epot, Asbury Park . ^ 6 Corllaa Av&>, W e ’ G rovo . 4 8 Main A vo^ Opp, Assocla tlan O fflo e j O oean .Q icvo i Ifost ofTtca Box 6 0 9 , Aetotxry Pork , N . J.

New Dimities! New Lawns ! New Batistes!

In choicest patterns and coloring. Special values in Made Sheets, Pillow and Bolster Cases.

New Line of Table Damasksin bleached and cream goods, 25c, to 62c. a yard.

• SHIRT W AISTS -, ■twenty styles, all sizes, reduced to 25c. each. Choicest styles

in shirt waists at reduced prices.

r “ T H E U IN B N S T O R E ”607 -609 C o o k m a n a n d 608-610 M a t t i s o n A v o n u o. / A S B U R Y P A R K

THEJTabI(T|irat<3lass.

21, 25, Z7, 20 OUn St., Ooean Q tQ V*, N. J. h o cfc Box 04. AH mo derm Improvements. Arto felon water. Free boate. Plano and organ.

/

/7-if w 1 j'; .*-0 ; * jif:$l*;*i?)~i) - '^ y 'K iv . .y./v * ^H-.Vv ’j. ‘.-^ r f - : ;

_ _

>4 !-,’J ,.’V..*-< !•'■■'.*.'c»tj:-V .V> > >*;•« l'-’ ’ i ,/V> iSji.V,-- . . ... t ];'*••» • / ' ;•-. 't.'j.’i'* '• • ■ ■ ' •;•'.!'«V!*?V"s . ,

v ^ l A ^ e R g ^ ^ ^ # S A T U ^ ^ Y £ j U ^ 6, | y i |

ibH8 p ;

: C h

PERSONAL AK1>: PERTINENT

Pleasant Penclllngs About the Peopli/1 ■' .-’ ,; ; Place and Property, " V V

. A ; Car ml ck, of New York, Is a re­cent arrival at the Sheldon.. . 1( ■

j . w . James aud wife, of New 'York, are guests at the Sheldon. . . , ^

Alfred E. Horn, of the Empire bung •works, Brooklyn, Is at the Seaside.

Mr. Townly Ball, of tho U. S. Navy, is registered at the Atlantic Hot/se.

Miss Helen A. Hunt, of New .•'York City, Is a popular guest at the Arling­ton. . -■.»■ . «'> Mrs. M. A. Brown, of Philadelphia, is spending the. hot spell at the Wav*

•erly.Henry P. Vincent/of Princeton; New

Jersey, 1b registered for a stay at tho Sheldon. .-. 7 . •

Miss Josephino H. Walker, of Ro­chester, N. Y., Is a guest at the Ocean House. • : ; “ * ■'

Mr.-J. G: Walln„ of New - York, is spending the hot spell at the NeW jPhil- adelphia. .

Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Russell and fam­ily t re at the. 4-rdmore for :rest and recreation^ ; ‘

MIsb M ary: V7- Moore,* of Elizabeth, .N. J., is a guest at the Majestic for two weeks... • - ... ■' . . .

Senator W. B. Haldeman and family, of-Louisville, Ky., are quartered at the Alaska.

Key. T .“ Snowdon Thomas Is'^pend-* ing, a few 'days with his daughter] itf Newark, N. J.’ '

S. J. Wallace, of Lakewood, N. J., •was seen on the veranda of the Atlan- tic this week..

. Clark, of MaysvlUe. N . Y.,. is a guest at the Summerfleld on Ocean Patti wa r. - « • — ..

Mrs. J. M..EJmbree, wife of a pobb?s ; Ferry, N .';Vv ).i!n'erchant; Is reMatermed at the AbofdeSq. / f

“ Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Baker, with their young son, Herbert P., are staylug at Dr. Stark’s hotel.

Rev. James Moores and*'.1 family, of New Brunswick, are occupying their

co ttage at 37 Abbott avenue. „ . • -, Mrri. Margaret Bottome, national

president of the Society of the King's Ipaught^ra.' ie at«;tho5;Majestic;; ■ t,:< *7?>

; itrBv f e ;Roger. antT daughter," -of Pat- ord6nu N» J# are guests at .the Ocean House' for rest and recreatidn.. Mrs. P. B. Aldrich, of New York, registered, yesterday for-a stay by'the sea.as a guest at the .Chalfonte. ..

Mrs. C. N; Hawkins nnd tw oJittle daughters arrived laBt Tue^I&jyror a two weeks’ stay at the Chalfonte.

• Dn L. W . Munhall, of Philadelphia, the noted evangelist, and his wife, are "being entertained at the Seaside.

Mr. and-Mrs.* J. , E. Quinn left last Thursday, for a visit to the family of

*, W . H.' Beegle, Wardenciyffe, L. I. ' . Mr. C. H. Yatman and Tali Esen

Morgan are judged by the'peoplo.as the;right men in the right place. >' Rev. Dr. W. McKendree Darwood,

of New York <Hity, a well-known • di­vine, has. arrived at the AUrora.

V Mrs. Stelnmetz and son; Hawthorn, o f Lancaster, Pa., are registered fdr a two weeks' stay at the Waverly.

AmongHhe late arrivals at the Queen' are Mrs. Tackenburg and Miss Caroline A. Weaver, of New York.

MIbs Florence McMillan, one o f tho brilliant artists o f the Ocean Grove orchestra, is a guest at the Waverly.

H; R. Northrop,, organist of tho First Baptist church of. Summit, N. J., is spending hi's vacation at the Ardmore.

Mr. Randle and family, of Brooklyn, N. Y., are occupying their cottage on Lake avenue, near Pilgrim Pathway.*

Hudson Bennett, a wealthy citizen o f Freehold, N. J.,- and wife, aro stay­ing at the Seaside for a few weeks’.

J. N. Webb and wife and daughters, Misses Carrie and Helen, of Water- bury, Conn., are guests at the Sheldon,

"''‘“ Boating on Wesley lake Is enjoyed by" m any'of the summer visitors, al­though not tq the extent as in-former years; • . V:‘•.".'State Senator Benjamin F. Jones,, of East Orange, speaker of the House'of Assembly Inst year, is staying at tUe Alaska. .

Mrs. F. P.: Lewis, of Ridley. Park, Penn., is 'occupying' the teht at 2 -Kingsley: Placo for . thei summer •months. ;.r v-

Mrs. E. Thalman, o f Rome, .N. Y,., 0 bas rented the Cole rdottage, 14 Main

avenue, fior ..tho^seaBon.rand arrived: bn • Tuesday.! . .

Paul L. Woolston, of tiie New York L ife Insurance company. New York, was a visitor to tho Grove over Sun- day last. •. >

A new shingle roof ha8 been placed on the pavilion at tho foot of Ocean Pathway, where the beach .meetings are. held.; Frank Harris, wff© and daughter

: Elizabeth, are at tho Highland House, where they exppct to remain for the summer.

J. B. Howells,. o f Philadelphia, Is a visitor here for a week’s stay. Mr. Howells is a pressman on the Public Ledger. '

Mrs.. Helen Jelliffe, o f Brooklyn, N. Y „ has rented tho cottage at 85 P il­grim Pathway, and took possession''on. Sa'turday. - ‘

Dr. A lice Ii.. Wood,, a; leading,phy­sician of Bloomfield, N. J., is- at the Langdon for rest and recreation for

: a few weeks. ■ .Mrs. Chapman's pretty residence at

10 Pitman, avonue haS been rented by Mr. Ziraerly, a resident o f the, “ Key­stone State.” ’

•’’■I Mrs. Lou Polhemus and daughter, Miss Margaret Polhemus, aro among tho latest additions to guests at the Ocean House. •

Evan W. Thomas and wife, o f Phil- : adelphia, are. visiting their mother ut .her tent on Pennsylvania avenuo, near Fletcher lake.

John H. IComi), w ife and child, ac companled by Mrs. F. St.- Amond, of Scranton, Pa., are registered at the Highland House.

. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leake and fam­ily at,e-eojourningtStkth.(/New Philadel­

phia on Ocean Pathway,. Mr. Leake is ,'flTNew York b a n ^ j. .\,JTU5 geneCoU^ f l U p l a y ^ o f ' a n d , ; ;

Inin fi h g : fn ;0^ea‘« Gtovd on1 tiie.fourth would) Indicate that the splrlt*oX p^.trlV otism Is not dead.

Mr. H. R. Baker, a New York mu? slclan, whqae studio is at Carnegie. Hall, is a guest at the W averly on Ocean Pathway. ‘■ The Misses Lucy C . . Kearnfey, of Paterson; N. J., and Anetta M. Baken- burg, of .New York, are guests at the New Philadelphia^ .,r ’V*; .* ' '

A . R. Plumley and w ffe are a happy bride and groom, who are enjoying their ihoney-moon ns "guests of the New Philadelphia.; W illiam R. Alford, of Brooklyn, a student^t Williams college, Williams-, town,; Conn;,' Is"*registered for the sea­son at the •Ardmore. • .■■■■: ,i

C.: W, Oakley, of .Elizabeth; regis­tered yesterday a t :the Sheldon.: Mr;, pakley is a member of the firm . o f Oakley & Sons, archtects.

J. N:*Webb and w ife;' accompanied hy their daughters Cafrle and ;Helen,, of Waierbury, Conn., are at the.Lanfe- don for the month of July.- '

The attention o f parties looking fo r>, accommodations is called to the ad­vertisement ot;? the Mulford House,- which appears in this Issue. ! •, l;; Mrsv^Williamj Johnstone .and daugB- ter;' Manuella, of Dobb's Ferry,. N. Y., are. enjoying an' outing by. the sea and are guests at the Aberdeen.! Rev>W . ’ H. Wdrd'ell anti w ife took possession of their handsome*, cottage, 02'Main averiue, on Monday lastl They w ill remain for the entire season. . /•r James Atkinson and'family, of Los Angeles, Cal., arrived a t the Grove last week, and are- enjoying, theirf pleasant home at- 38’ Heck avenue. *

The 'new flre engine hotise has now reached the first floor, but on account .Qfcv.Jhq;:.intense5 heat^ during ^the past few : dayB.-^work has been suspended.’ ThoB© desiring , up-to-date printing

Jn pJl lines, can secure, their work done at reasonable prices at the. Ocean Grove Times office, „ 50 Main avenue.

W. ’ J. Bell, court examiner^ot the com miss loners of account o f New York;’ is stopping with his . family for the summer at his cottage, 107 Broad­way. , • •• ':;-Mr.'‘r!joseph; Mcilwatn,' a prominent business man of Philadelphia, Is oc­cupying tho cottage ot “E. N. Wools ton i 75 Pilgrim Pathway, fo r1 the fourth, year. *

MIsb L. Corning, a popular young lady and a: charming conversational­ist; of Yonkers, is One o f the promi­nent guests sojourning at the La- Pierre.,. '. The electric storm, which passed

over Ocean Grove last Wednesday af­ternoon,, littered up the parks with branches from the trees .broken off by the wind., M rs.’ M. McIntosh, of Now York, who has just returned from an extend­ed European tour, has located for the summer at the pleasant; New Phila­delphia.

Misses Addle and, Elizabeth Arlng, of Farmlngdale, are at the. Queen for a short stay. Miss Elizabeth Arlng’ has entirely recovered from her late illness.* Mr. W. H. Hatfield, who has charge of the Western business, of Colgate & Co. with headquarters at Chicago, 111., •was a visitor to the < Grove on theFourth ; . A i -V* ^

Master George pmiiey, the celebrat-, ed , boy. cornetlst-of Brooklyn, was a visitor In Ocean Grove on Independ­ence Day, together with Prof. Welham, Clarke.

Mrs. Tall Esen Morgan attended a reception given by the junior class o f the high school at Bloomfield ’ last week, o f which her daughter Ethel is a member. •, Rev.- L. P. W olfe, rector of the “P. E.

church of the Holy Comforter, Phila­delphia, Is a late arrival at the High­land House, where he- is making nu­merous friends.

Mr. Frank J. Minck, o f New York, an old summer resident; of Ocean Grove, w ill occupy the handsome cot­tage on the corner of Sea View and Beach avenue.• Vis’ltbrs and others in need of shoe^

should .go.to.Woehrer.’s,- 13-16 . South Main street, Asbury Park, where they

' w ill find a large ' and' well selected stook of shoes, .etc. j -7. • . '

... The Ocean Grove : firemen ’ were treate<l to cold lemonade’ on their re­turn from the AllenliUrst’ fire. lJdmes

■ Prldham. and General. J-.C. Patterson arranged the treat. ;“ Mr. Harry Swain,' a; popular'young New Yorker, spent Sunday“ ln Ocean Grove with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis H. Sawin, who have rented a cottage on. Atlantic avenue.

Mr. Jam os PiMdham, o f Ocean Grove, was overcome by heat-at tho Alien-

} hurst fire on Monday evening. An­other unfortunate victim was. robbed of jewelry to the amount of $2,000.. Miss Jessie G. Crom ,. of Philadel­

phia, a student In domestic science at the Drexel Institute in her* home city, is at the Alaska as a guest ot her friend, Miss Marguerite Brown.

William H. Hoislor, of pembertou, N. J., president of the Tradesmen's National bank, of Philadelphia, has lo­cated with his family at the Queen, where they w ill Bpend the’summer.

Mrs. Margaret Bottome, national president of tho Society of the King's Daughters, w ill bo tendered a recep­tion by visiting delegates in the par­lors of the Majestic this (Saturday) evening. " • • •< W. A. Knapp, o f New York, who holds an Important position, as general salesman for Tiffany and company, is at the Atlantic House for the season. .He is accompanied by his son,. Georg3 S. Knapp;. James P. Teaz and family, o f Phila­delphia, havo located in their old placo for the summer, 32. Spray aye nue. Mr. Teaz is tho superintendent of Union Tabernacle Presbyterian Sunday School, t A prominent guest at the Atlantic House Is Mrs. J. M. Llchtonberger, o f St. Paul, Rl lnn., whore she is. manager of the large Friendly .Home for,;Young

, Rev. L. W. Munhall, D. D„ the not- . edMevangellst; and .w ife , aro at the geaE per^rri? Munhall has .frequently prea’ciied lit ’ the ^Auditorium, aridv- Is well and favorably known to the peo­ple of Ocean Grove. .<■ Mrs. Martha G. Thomas, widow of the late Evan W. Thomas, for many years a resident of this, place, arrived, here last Monday evening, and .is/oc­cupying her tent on Pennsylvania ave­nue, near Fletcher lake.

Among the late arrivals at the Sea­side hotel are J. V, Switzer and wife, and their daughter, Miss Helen Swit- zeV, of Falrbury. Neb. Mr. Switzer is a wealthy wholesale lumber merchant, anti Is a frequent guest at the Seaside.

Miss Elsie Bailey, of. Summit; N. Jj,' who made many friends , during : her stay hero last summer, has arrived iat the Ardmore, , where she .Is registered for- the season. ■ Miss Bailey: Is'.a stu> dent- at Smith’s College, Andover, ' M j a s s . j ; . - ' : ; V

Dr. J. D. Wood, w ife and 'daughter, Miss Kathlene, of Philadelphia, are spending a few weeks by the sea, and are registered at , the Sheldon; Dr. Wood holds thk responsible appoint­ment of special surgeon for the Penn­sylvania Steel company > • /

Mrs. Chillman, w ife of .Prof. Chlll- man of the faculty of the Troy- college, N. Y., Is' a pleasant guest at the La- Plerre. Mrs. Chlllman Is a handsome .brunette and Is. possessed^of: charmlug manners. Her husband w ill also be p.t the LaPlerre in a few days.; John Lloyd Thomas, of New York, and his family, have - taken up their residence for the summer at 49.Broad­way, Mr. and Mrs. Burnham’s charing Ing home; MisssLoulse Thomas,;hia daughter, Is the • contralto soloist in Dr. Wilbur'Chapman’s church, Kew .York.■ : ' •,J Mrs..F, H. Bartlet and son, Kenneth Bartlet, of New York; are-registered fo r an extended stay at the Highland |House. Mrs. Bartlet is the wife o f Dr. F. H. Bartlet, assistant surgeon at tho Manhattan hospital, New York, and Is b specialist In diseases of the throat and ear. • ;* ■ •_ ■ :

Dr. A.- Ball and wife, Mrs. H. T. Leavenworth and Lieut. Garrrlson.

a' sbn- Of the first mentioned,' form a happy party of guests who are making life pass merrily; at the' Atlan­tic House. Lieut. Ball has just re­turned from active service in the Phil­ippines. ' ,. S. D. Mackey, a : prominent whole­sale and, retail coal dealer of Jersey City, is registered for a two weeks* Stay at the Arlington. He is accom­panied by his sister-in-law,; Mrs. A. L. W. Stephenson, of .Jersey City, and his niece, Miss Carrie Mackey, o f Cox* sackle, N. Y.

The yacht Emma B. makes two trips each week day, as. will appear by ^he^advertlsement of Captains New- ma? and Pearce. Tho owners o f this wujht- have placed a gasolene englno ^)q{1 propeller in her. This w ill prove a. great advantage, as it will enable her to return promptly on time.

Mr. and Mrs.. C. Wilde, of Hacken­sack, N. J., are stopping at tho United States hobel. Mr. Wilde Is in the- wholesalo dry goods business .in New York City. During the; last fourteen years he has . spoken for the. leading Y. M. C. A ’s, from Portland, Me., to Washington, D. C. He Is a member and an officer of Asbury M.'E. church at Hackensack, N. J.

Hotel Property fo r Sale.— Eor Sale— On the noted Ocean Path­way, a 30-room houBe with two Iota, partly furnished and In good repair. Excellent patronage. For particulars inquire of E. N. Woolston, rear estate, 60 Main avenue, Ocean Grove.— tf.

Money to Loan.Money to loan in amounts from ?400

to $3,000 on bonds and mortgagee. B. N. Woolston Real Estate and Insur­ance Agency, 60 Main avenuo. Ocean Grove.

TIMING YOUR TRAIN.

W n r « In W h ic h io L c n rn H o w F f l l t Y o u Ai*c T r a v e l !T ig , .

“There has b e e n p ' e t n r e s q u e fiction, written a!H)u.tv tlu1 i-jirfc* with which rnilroail rumi dnisuniers aresupposed to, tick r.lT. she lullea ns the tinln spiH.'ds iiK)!i|i tsoV:i things they can see froni. the said arailroad coiiOui;tor riV » r*;iwrffa\ - .. “ Then?. is‘ 'only orji• r; i u . r u rate way, nud tluit js yourw^f on theBide o f the11niiir may l eobservcKl the \vUll<» inljv that line the road aud hold your wiiteh on them. I f you have a spilty^cond'watch, it will p row interesting to... note that' while you made one mile In CO seconds the next was covered in 53 and the third in 70 seconds, arid so on, as the speed of the train Increases or slack­ens. you may n Iso follow aronnd the little second hand on an ordinary watch; It kills time. • •-- “ Some pretend to say that they can tell the speed o f the train by counting the telegraph poles. I f there were, an exact number pf telegraph poles to ev­ery mile, this might be done by a little figuring, but there is a difference. The number of telegraph poles to. a mile vary from 33 to 40, depending upon the straight stretches and the curves In the track, the latter having more poles than the former. So. you’ see. It is not ha easy as the drum mer would have the other passengers believe.'. , - ‘; **I£ the poles are planted 83 to the mile, they are ICO feet apart, and every 11 passed represents , a/third o f a mile. I f placed 40 to a mile, they are ,132 feet apart, and every 20 represents half a mile. ■ ,

“ These are easy figures to remember,, and by applying them on a journey a passenger. may obtain an Idea. more or less accurate o f the opee6 o f the tratn..1. “ Another way is to attempt to count the. clicks o f the wheels-of the truck o f your car as they pass over the rails where joined. The rails o f the roads as placed today are. too evenly joined to arrive at an exact determination by this method, because It you nriss two or Uiree Joints your .calculations are thrown out as to necuracy.

“ Hov\*eyt*r. there are railroad men who cannot tell you the number o f rails to the mile o f their own roads, and rails vary In i»*»g?li, the average being 30 feet, soirn* Xi feet and some 60 feet. At 30 ,thi*n* are 170 rails to the mile, nnd If you ean count 170 consecu­tive cl inkh nx your train flies along you may determine Us sp»hh1 nnd not other- wlse.u~-Wnphlnt»tni) Frnr

, Mme. Ogden-Crano Vocal Instruction Summer School, postofllce buirding, Asbury Park, Mondays, Tuesdays, Fri­days, and Saturdays, 10.30 to 12 a. m., 2 to. 6 p. m.— Adv. Sop. 20.

NEW YORK and BACK8 0 CENT ~

PATTEN LINEA N D T H E A T L A N I C C O A S T E L E C T R I C

R A I L W A Y O O .

Via Pleasure BayL E A V E P L E A S U R E B A Y .

W eo t days 7.20 a. m., 2.10,4.10,5.10 p. m.

R E TU R N IN G L E A V E N B W YO R K .

Foot W est 13th St. 8.00,’.9.00, *11.00 a . m., 2.40 p. m.

Battery Park 8.40,0,30, *11.30a. tn., 3.10 p .m . Su n d a y s .

Leavo Plonsaro Bay 4.15, 4.30, 4.45 and 5.00

L e a v e 'N . V-., foot o f W . 13th at.: 8.20, 8.40 9.00 and 10.40, a. m . .

Lonvo Battery Park 8.50, 0 10, 9.30 and 11.15 a. m.

On Saturdays only 11.00 n. m., boat leaves W cat 13th Street 12.45, and Battery Park 1.15 p. m., Instead o f 11.30 a. m . . .

B acgago ca rried fre e w ith passengers.Tako carwhf eb leavea Aabory Purk not

later than 0.30 a. m. for 7.20 a. m. Boat. For afternoon noat take car not later than 1.10 for 2.10 boat, and 3,00 for 1.10 boat, and 4.10 fo r 5.10 boat. Sundays 3.10,3.30, 3.40 and 4.00 p( m; ,

I• r

i13

J. EDW. FLITGROFT \

I I IIt

i

Tinning, (Sutters and Leaders, Hot Air and

Steam Heating

GARDEN HOSEPilgrim Pathway, Opp. Poatofflce

OCEAN GROVE/ NEW JERSEY

| John 11. isiriisI .2 7

| Dimrent t makes

, f ' ' £

H. C. F A R R E L L , P r o p . Telephone G0-F J. L. B L A C K , M gr.

Crosbie F u rn itu re CompanyPLENTY OF DOLLARS IN SIGHT

For tho man who looks in tbo right

Sluco for thomt and that is right hero, •ollars saved m prices, • dollars saved

in values, and dollars saved in satis­faction. Now is a good timo to get

‘ your, share.Go-Carts, $ 7.0* t » ${>••* Sideboards, 7.5 * te a8 Rccd Rockers, 1.5 * to 4.50 R u g i, ' t .e e 'to a.fio Comblaatlon Bureaus and Stands, - . 8.00Cblffenlars, 5 «oo t e I3 .ee Whips, 13c. to 1,50 arpets—Ingrain, 4o to « o c „ Brussels, 65c. to

l.a^ . Mattings, 16c. to 3 ec.And Stoves of a ll kinds at p rices that cqn’ t: • be beat. Come and see them ,

CROSBIE’S OLD STAMP,6 <ba M AIN STREET, . ASBURY PARK,

G O O D S B O U G H T B A C K A T E f iD OF S E A S O N A T H A L F P R IC E .

flew Cocation : ;

6 4 5 mattlson jive.flsbuir ParK, n.,1.

ft I.argest stock of > Pianos and § Organs on the

Jersey Coast

I " ' ■ — ■J Free delivery 5 bet. Bay Head § and Seabright

i •—f( Tolephono 4 Call 131 br . ,

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I ,fei ■'

i '

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Ii M

Wvncoop &Hulshart— .

Upper Lehigh Coei!a Specialty

/•Dealore In

COAL, WOOD, CHARCOALAND COKE

at Lowest Prices

Oak and Pine Wood. by Cord or Barrel

Yard and Office :

79 South Main St.T e te o h o n o 5 9 A

GEO. W. PATTERSONThe Leading Custom

For Men and Boys

No. 622 COOKMAN AVENUE

ASBU R Y PARK

C. 4 . Faraday & Co.40 Pilgrim Pathway,

Oraan Orove, N. J .

blectrical GontractorsDesigners and Manufacturers of Gas, Elec­

trical and Combination Fixtures, Refinishing, Plating and Repairing. Expert Locksmiths and Bellhangers. Estimates cheerfully given.

Brooklyn Address, I442 Broadway

A. P. W E B S T E R , Manager

1 W ILLIAM H: BANNARD |1 W A L L PAPERS f| •/:■■ • 1 , -vI Just received, a large assortment of inexpensive | t but very pretty effects in b.ed-room papers. Just the ^& ~ — j 1_________ 1__________ " :‘ 4 - '

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thing for hotels and boarding houses.

Open evenings until 8.30.

4* ;

Grand, Cookman and Summerfleld Avenues A SB U R Y PARK

K■9

ivtt ,

H. L. ROSS. C. B. WILQUS.

ROSS & WILQUS-. • . . . j • _ . .

Leading Paper Hangers and Decorators •

Estimates furnished on all work at fair prices.Orders left ut Hotel Qrand and I37 iMt. Herman Way, Ocean

Grove, will receive prornpt^ottention.

P. O. Jos 71s;

kV?

..

TIRED OF THE TRIP.' SO HE GO T O U T OF T H E -BALLOO N

B Y T H E JU M P RO U TE.

A n d T h e n ’W lie n H e T o l i l i h e Ifin g- llM h m c n -Ile M ol W lm t l i e I lu d D o n e T h e y C u n n ld e r n ( e ly C a r r ie d H im Olt to nn In N n n c .A ity lu m ,

“ I went up in a balloon once, and I never want to make, such n trip again,” sajd Colouel A. Noel Blakeumn. “ My

.experience as an aeronaut was in Lon­don,” lie continued, “ and It would never have occurred but for a frieud I chanced to meet there.. l ie was going to make.an asocnt, and he persuaded

, me to accompany him.“ Tbo balloon was a feature o f some

big exhibition, aud every day it was inflated and made an ascent, with four or five passengers, in charge o f an ex­perienced aeronaut. There were about five in tbe party the day I took tlmtrip. We got into the basket, which was boxed in quite high, then let the rope go, and we shot up about 3,000 feet. I t

• was interesting to look down on tbe world and hear the noises o f London streets coming from so far below. The balloon sailed along smoothly, and ye drifted for about eight miles.

“ It .was when w e tried to. descend ,that the trouble began, lilic method was to throw out anchors as the bal-

.loon settled toward tho earth.’ The aeronaut said that when one o f these anchors caught firmly he would haul the balloon down to the tree in which

•tlie" anchor was expectcd to become fastened. This would be done by wind- Ing in the rope on a winch in the car. We would be expected to climb out o f the balloon into tile tree, he said, and

■ he would then take hold o f the valve rope and, standing a safe distance

• away, open the valve, let the gas fes- ; cape, nnd the big affair would collapse

and sink. l ie informed us that we must get clear o f the sinking folds, ns they would come down fast, and i f

■ they caught and covered, us w e would be in. an atmosphere of most poisonous gas. .

“ A ll th is w a s v e r y in te re s t in g , b u t• we did not seem to be making very : much progress toward the point where

we would have to look out for tlie de- ; soendlng folds of the collapsing bal*. ‘.'toon* The anchors caught in a. whole

lot o f trees, but they did not hold. One would, get tangled in a tree, and then the balloon would sway far over, tilt-

: ing the basket In which wo were until 1. :it seemed that-we would be spilled out.

Then the anchor would break loose, and we,would shoot up again.

’ , “ I became very tired of this and told, he aeronaut that I thought it wns time

bring the voyage to a conclusion,‘ 'old me i f 1 did not like it 1 could

out A t first I thought ho was \ resentful o f my remark, but he

•ant w’hat he said. : he car tilts over again, you i the edge/ he said, ‘and let probably be a plowed field us„ and you won't get hurt.’

••Weil, l did as he suggested. When tin* anchor caught again, I climbed out and bung to the edge o f the car. When-

"'T.suw that the car was os low as it was ^Ik^ly. to get, I lot go. 1 dropped about

12 feet, and, as lie expected, a plowed /field was below us.

' “ A s soon n s 1 d rop p ed o u t th e b a l­loon. re lie v e d o f m y w e ig h t , sh o t u p in tin* a i r a g a in a n d Boared o ff. I w a lk e d

, to tlie n e a r e s t ro ad a n d co n tin u ed a lo n g it u n til I e am e to a n inn .

• VI asked , th e la n d lo rd h o w f a r i t w a s : to Lo n don , a n d he to ld m e It w a s e ig h t

mliHs. I ordered a carriage to take mo tiling* and while I was waiting the landlord asked me where I had come

. v-frow. .J “ I took him to 'the door o f the inn; jand, pointing to the balloon, which was

/ then sailing along about a quarter o f a* mlie above the ground, I said, ‘ I jump­

ed out df that.1“ The man looked at mo In alarmed

fashion, and after I had returned to the sitting room I noticed that several peo-

, pie peered through tho window at me. “ Finally my fonr wheeler was rendy,

and I s6t oil for London. A fter we bad driven along for half*an hour or so the coachman suddenly turned the horse In through a gate, and we drove Into a big courtyard. 1 yelled to him and asked him what he meant, that I wanted to.

... ; go straight to London; but he paid no attention and slowly circled.the court. When he stopped on the other side, a man wearing glasses stuck his bead In the carriage, scrutinizing me closely,

. pulled back, said something to the coachman, and we drove on to London.

•'•Finally we reached my lodgings, and . when we did so the coachman jumped off the box, ran up the steps

: and as soon as his knock was answeredasked i f Mr. Blakeman lived there. The maid was Just answering that 1 did when I reached the top o f the steps and collared the fellow.. '* *What was that place you drove me

’ .Into on onr way to London?' I asked him.

•“ ‘ It was a hinsane hasylum, sir,’ he replied. ‘When you said you had jump­ed out o' that balloon, we thought you

, was crazy*,and maybe you was a es­caped patient from tho hasylum.'’**—

. Washington Post.' ’

R e a c t e d I I I * O w n Blndnena.“ Now you are tired o f me and abuse

/toe,” sobbed the young w ife whose hus­band refused to hire another maid to take care o f her pet dog. ‘ ‘Yet,” sho

‘ continued, “ not two years ago you were just crazy to marry me.”

“ Yes,” answered the complacent man brute; 4'my friends told me. so at the time, but I didn’t realize It until after we wero married.” —Kansas City Star.

P a rd on a b le Cariosity*“ iN^avo-met,” remarked the old man,

“ but two sensible women In my life,” .The inhqeent maid gazed Into his

. face and- asteed, “ Who was the1 other woman?*—Chicago News.

T h e Blyatcrton* Sunday D I«c l»«e ..Many people are seemingly well dur­

ing the week, but afflicted : with all manner o f ailments when Sunday comes around, and on Monday* they are all well again. I really dread the ap­proach o f the Lord’s day, for with the day there come to many o f my flock colds, sick' iliertdaches,. pain in the side- and.nausea, while numbers complain of “ that laugiiid feeling.” l/

Sunday before last I spent really an a nxious day,- for there happened' to be ■ absent from Ihe services quite a num­ber, ‘for the best o f reasons, o f course— a rushing in the head, avouch o f sciat-: lea, cramps; .toothache, hardness 61 hearing, .catarrh, torpid 111 ver, inflam­mation . o f the membrhnes, lumbago and,'; worse t,han all, “ that tired feel­ing.” .: ,"yV’' - V -

Then, what greatly d 1 stressed rhe the next day was tliat Mrs. Henry Van Blarscom had ..Issued invitations to an • “ at home” for. that evening, and- the fear well nigh paralyzed me that but few would respond, seeing many of her invited guests hoH: been absent from the Sabbath services. Imagine, then, i f you can, my profound surprise to see on that Monday evening so wholly un­expected, so general and complete a re­covery, and when I made inquiry con­cerning the Sabbath ailments only two were able to recall what had really been the matter with them the day be­fore.—A Minister In Christian Intelli­gencer,

P la y ln s : F o r K e e p s .I have observed in the larger game

o f marbles which we call “ making a living” that most o f the boys are “ playing for keeps” and only a fe w for fun - and that those y h o are - playing fo r keeps are the boys with the most influence and' standing in the com­munity. 1 know a whole lot o f boys, some of them living In Massachusetts- today, who are playing, for .keeps, but Instead o f - marbles they i are using wheat or corn or railroad stocks. No one o f them knows just whom: be Is. playing, against but each knows that, fo r each dollar he wins a dollar Is lost bjjr some one else. ‘ ^

Nevertheless I am old fog/enough to say that for myself I do not, regret m y . early train Ip g, nor am. I ready to leave behind its principles, but as long’ as tbe majority of parents wish their boys to be successful it seems to me you ought to make it clear that-play­ing marbles for keeps; Is an excellent w ay o f drilling boys In that acquisi­tiveness which will, make it possible for them in after years to provide tbeir. •wives and daughters with silk dresses, opera clooka and automobiles.—Spring­field Republican. ’

• A I ln p p y F o o t .The custom o f wishing a friend “ a

happy foot" is to be found In all parts of Europe, and It goes to show how' much superstition is connected with our footgear. It is to be assumed that the well lifting boot or sboerwhich en­ables a person to walk in com fort is symbolical o f happiness.

The. accidental placing o^ the right shoe on the left foot, putting a shoe on : awry or the breaking o f a lace is a bad sign from the popular point o f view. To tie’ the shoe o f another indi­vidual Is indicative o f humility and lowly .position,'yet the Chinese wor­ship the shoes of an upright judge.

There Is l a curious superstition in some parts o f England which advises that when the youngest daughter -mar­ries before her sisters the latter should dance at her wedding without shoes in order, to Insure husbands for them­selves, On S t Valentine's eve, accord­ing to a similar custom, girls should hang their, shoes outside the window i f they wish to secure lovers.

Some actresses carefully preserve the boots they wore when they scored tbdlr first success and wear them on all im­portant occasions.

Cot M ore F o r tb e M oney.A gentleman living in a rural part o f:

England Bent his coachman to a neigh­boring village for 5 shillings* worth o f penny stamps.

A fter a time John returned from his tramp of two miles. •

His faco wore a self Satisfied look when he came into his employer*^ pres­ence.

“ Got.tho stamps, John?’“ Yes, sir,** the man replied, banding

over a batch o f halfpenny stamps.“ I said penny stamps, John, and you

have got halfpenny ones.'* \“ Yes, sir,** and the smile widened. *1

asked for 5 shillings’ worth o f stamps, an t te postmaster says, ‘Halfpenny or penny? ‘Do you . sell halfpenny stamps? I naked./Yes,’ said be. ‘Well/ says- L fi f you can buy stamps for, a. halfpenny, what’ s the use o f payin a penny? An. 1 bought the halfpenny stamps, sir/*—London telegraph.

1 *1 ;■ 'The.- R e d c o a ts * •An* incident at the siege of^puen; in

1591, shows that red waa lroked upon as the English; color, fo r in mentioning the death of one o f the Earl o f Essex's captains it is remarked that the French­man .who shot him got near enough to do so by putting on the red coat o f a dead English soldier. In 1643 the king’s life guards, as also tbe queen’s and Prince Rupert’s, wore red coats.

I t D r in k s H e r , E tc .VWhat do you do-when your w ife

gets sulky ptfd refuses to talk to you?” “ Why, I begin to praise Mrs. All-

good, across the B t r e e t or some other- woman I kpow she detests.”

“And that brings her, eh?” .“ Yes, it brings her and sometimes ev­

erything throwable that happens to bo In her reach too.” —Salt Lake City T ribune.

{ T h e n e v o in llo n o f 'I8 4 8 . ;’'4 ‘ r ? ; 'In March, 1848, I had to go over, to

Paris to finish up some work there and just came in for. the revolution,. From my windows I had a fine view Of . a ll: that was going on. I well remember the pandemonium in the streets* the aspect, o f th e savage mol), the wanton firing o f shots lit quiet; spectators,; the hoisting o f Louis Philippe’s nankeen trousers on the: flagstaff o f the Tulle-, ries. ■ When the bullets bega nr to come . through jn y windows, .1 thought it time to be pff while it was still possible. Then came the question how'to get my box full o f precious manuscripts, etc., belonging to the -East Ind ia , company,, to the train. • ' .

The only railroad open was .the line; to Havre, which liad been broken up close to the station, but farther oh was Intact. In order to get there w e had to climb three barricades. 1 .offered my concierge C.francs to carry my Vox, but. h'is. w ife would not hear ;o f his risking bis* life in the streets. Ten francs; the same result But at the s ight.of. a^louis d’or she"changed her mind, and, with an “Allez, mon ami; aliez, toujours/’ dispatched her hus­band ;pn his perilous expedition.: Arrived* In London, I went straight to the Prussian legation and was.the first to g ive Bunsen the nows of Louis Philippe’s flight from Paris. So even a poor scholar had to play his small part in the eVents that go to make up* history.—Max Muller’s Autobiography.

T h e le tte r “ p ” is l ik e a s e lfis h fr ie n d , th e fir s t In p ity , b u t tb e la s t In help*— C h ic a g o - New’ S. . * - • - •

In 1700 Pennsylvania had a colored population of 10,274.

M ontem m a 's W e ll .One o f the most pleasing natural

curiosities in tlie territory o f Arizona is the pool of water known as Monte­zuma’s well. It Is situated 15 miles northeast o f' the old abandoned mili­tary post known as Camp'Verde. It Is ’ 250 feet In diameter, and the clear, pure water is about .GO feet below* the surface o f the surrounding country. Some years ago certain .military offi­cers sounded the-pool and found that it bad a uniform depth o f 80 feet o f water except in one place, apparently about six feet square, where the sound­ing line went down about 500 feet without touching bottom.

The well empties into Beaver creek only about 100 yards! distant the wa­ter gushing forth from the rocks1 as though it were under great pressure. The w ell is undoubtedly supplied froni subterranean sources, possibly through the-hole sounded by the army officers years ago. The sides o f the well are honeycombed with caves and tunnels, permitting sightseers to dcscond to the water’s edge.

Montezuma’s well contains no fish. The flow of water from It.Is the same throughout the season. Popujar opin­ion has attributed the origin! o f the w ell to volcanic action, but as the rock surrounding It is limestone it is more than probable that the action o f tho water Is responsible for Its creation.— Native American.

M illion s Mndc b y PlantInpr T rees . Any one who takes a vital interest.In

the W elfare o f his grandchildren can insure their being rich by planting trees on treeless land, which landrbo‘< can leave to them in his will. Some big British fortunes havo been provid­ed for in this manner. A predecessor o f the present Duke o£ Atliole had a lot of;Jand. but It was not especially valu­able—in fact, he was “ land poor.” , vHe determined that his descendants

should fare bettor and so began plant­ing trees. In the course o f his lifetime bo planted 1,4,093,719 larch trees alone, covering an area o f 10,324 acres, H is last plantation covered 7,800 acres, which. In the ordinary way becomes a forest o f mature timber 70 years a fter planting. Thinned down to about 350 trees an acre, each tree w ill contain at least 50 cubic feet o f timber, which, at 25 cents a foot, gives a;sum of $4,375 nn acre, a total for the value o f tho timber on the last plantation alone of $34,000,000.

The whole initial outlay fo r this plan­tation, which has so increased the wealth o f the ancient houso o f Athole, is said to have been only about $15,000 for the seedling trees and the cost o f tho labor o f planting them. The main­tenance o f the wood was paid fo r out o f the profits arising from the sale o f young, wood when thinning the planta­tions.

A be L in co ln ., O f all the great men I havo known Lincoln 'is tbe one who has le ft upon me the, impression o f a sterling son o f God. Straightforward, •unflinching, not loving the work ho had to do, but fac­ing it with a bold and true heart; mild whenever lie had a chance, stern as iron when the public weal required it, following a bee line to the goal which duty set before lilm, I can still feel the grip o f his massive hand and the searching look of his kindly eye. I re­member that when • Lord Lyons, who was a bachelor, went to communicate the news o f the marriage o i the Prince o f Wales to. him officially be took thp queen's letter in his hand and said, “ Well, Lord Lyons, all I can say is, ‘Go and do. thou likewise/” —Sir Ed­ward Malet's “ Shifting Scenes.”

T lie E rring: One,I t is impossible for one who never

goes wrong nor makes a mistake nor commits a blunder to know just bow to be sorry for an erring-one. We; must stumble ourselves before w e can really judge of,the hardships of a fpugh road and the frailty of weary' feet; Truet character Is first tender, then hopeful and afterward reformatory. — Ex­change,

W i l l in g : t o H e a r o f It."*A Methodist critic, wishing to put

his bishop “ In a hole/* or, as Dr..W il­liam Everett would say, “ to deposit him In a cavity,” asked in open meet­ing whether or not the bishop came to the conference in a Pullman .car,

“ Yes,” tho bishop cheerfully replied. “ Do you know any easier.way?”—Bos­ton Christian Rnc^ter.

THE RI6HT THING TO PUT O R / '(Banaon’s Plaster la Pain’s Master.)

From tho natural impulBo to “ put some­thing oa” a painful spot all applications for tho roliof o f pftin havo arison.

Tho most successful havo ovor been poul­tices or plasters, and tho boat o f theso ia BouBOn’s Porous Plaster.

No othor. has anything like tho samo. power as a .curativo agent; it in highly and scientifically medicated, and its .standard is advanced year by year.’: ■

Ubo Bonson’s.blaster fo r ' coughs, colds, chest 'diseases, rhouinatism, grip, neuralgia, Vidiioy trouble, lamo backhand other ail­ments that mako Wintor fl Boason o f suffer­ing and danger. I t relieves; and euros quicker than any other remedy,

,Do not accept Capsicum, Strengthening or Belladonna plasters in place o f Benson’s, as thoy posBoss none o f its curative powor. Insist on having tho gonuino,> Tho people of every oivilizod land havo

'testified for years to the suporlativo merit of Benson’s Plasters; and 5,000 phyflicians and druggists of this country hayo doclasod thom worthy pf public confidence,’ In official comparisons with others, Ben­

son’s,, •Plasters, .havo beon honored with ; fifty‘five highust awards.

For Balo by all druggists, or wo w ill pre­pay postage oh any number ordered in the United States ou thorocoipt o f 25c. each. Accept no imitation or substitute.

Seabury & Johnson, Mfg. Chemists; N.Y.

ASBURYPARK

Steam • LaundryQ

U K L IT Y U IC K N B S S U K N T IT .V

8 1 0 C O O K M A N A V E N U E

A s b u ry P a rk , N . J.

PIlaM o Domestic flrilnh 'lf dcatrcd.Hand worU I f desired.Teiophoue 40-jj. C. J. H a u s k ,

€xcel$ior Paint dHd Roof Company

K J .H a u s k & Bow.

W o use the best grade o f Hed M ineral Excel­sior Pn in t and D ixon ’n Graphite, for a ll roof, ch im ney anti brick work,

O fllc o : •

«io Coalman Jfvenue'

TH EO . OSBO RNSuccessor to

J. ARNOLD OSBORN S SON,

BLUEST0NEFLAGGING

A N D

CURBING71 Embury Anenue

OCEAN OROVE, NEW JERSEYE stim ate s furn ished fo r a ll k is d s a t

Bluo St.ous W ork, a t any poin t In tbs S tate o f N ew Je rs e y . F la g g in g an • C u rb in g a Specialty .

DISBROWIS

TOOTH WASHI^or Cleaning ant! Preserving Use

Tfi»tk and QuraB, aad Imparting a Re- freshing Taste nnd Poellng to tho Mouth.

Compounded and for sale by

S. D. W OOLLEYD r u g g i s t

4-7 M a in ^ v e , , 9 S o u t h M a in S t .

Opposite Ooean G rove Gates.

M. C. GRIFFIN

Contractor and BnilderEesideHce, Ns. 66 Seek Avennt

O e e a a # m « , N . J . .

PATENTanything you Invent or improve j also get CAVEAT.TRADE-MARK, COPYRIGHT or PROTECTION. Bfind model, eketch, o r photo, for freo exjuninuUon and advice,

ON PATENTS ^ tra .A . s m w & g o .PtttenH auyeta. W A S H IN G T O N , D .C .

IF Y o u W A N T A F E N C E

tb it Ii cbetpi itrongi neat. dnt»Wi »nd tMommentU ttwir, exiralne ttul nt'le *t Mount Ho 11/ by th# K. J. Feno« Co.; 600,000 f*ct beln(? now In ntUfMtory uk. Mk3« of «»lT»nUei (U«i wire lnMrwortn with ecd*r plckeU, gen«f»)lf *Ulonl red. It will turn *ny *wck, poultry, boj», Ae. It will not **f

' wbm properly »u<tcbed. rlokeu c»noot b* pulled oat*od. nttda no bowd under It. ro»u io»y bo f»om 10 to 18 n.*p«rt. rricei are ftom 6 to 6H0- per l-lb»r»t tCf(n» to »5?Dt«, ne»erlptl?e price 1l»t wnt on •pplle*tloo. • .• THE. KSW lESSEJ FtHCE CO , MOIJHJ HOUY, K.l.

ADON LIPPINCOTT

Contractor^ni-BuilderOplco and Shop. 007 Mai

A S B U R Y P A R K . N .Eatlmales for a ll kinds o f w ork fu

sbort notice.

The 5a ramento River an6 Canyon -the Domes, Spires and Falls of Yosemite— the Charms of Lake Tahoe, and a Score More—the Impressive Stateii- ness of the Big Trees—the Varied Delights of Los Angeles and Its Environs—the Quaint Spells of the Old Missions . '

a r c o n ly a f e w o f t h e

Ravishing Experiences in Store for Travelers

v . on the i.uperbtrains of the

N E W COAST LINE between LOS ANG ELES and SAN FRANCISCO,

Passing through the principal P acific coast resorts of California, b rin gs passengers d lrctly to center of City o f San Francisco w ithout w ater transfers. - Two new P u ll- m en T rain s. Y o u r cholse—dayligh t ride or s leep in g ca rs . “

For full information, free illustrated pamphlets, maps and time tables, also lowest rates,'sleeping ■ car tickets, and baggage checked, apply to

R. J. SMITH, Agent100 S o u th T h ird S tre e t, P h ila d e lp h ia , P e n n s y lv a n ia

KMmm,t h r e e s a i l i n g s a w e e k

D I R E C T TOC H A R L E S T O N

and JACKSONVILLEA F F O R D IN GVRA1L . COHN ECTIONS

O A U . S O U T H E R N '' R E S O R T S

•» 5 * B Q W 1 I N O G R E E N , N E W Y O R K . «

The Underwood TypewriterPrinciple New Writing: Visible Speed Increased - Touch Elastic Automatic Conveniences Operation Unchangred Tabulating Rapidity

;■ Billing SpeedStrength Malntaineid

' ; Actual Advantages

Manafactur«d bjr W AG N ER TYPEW RITER COMPANY

3i8*aao BROADWAY, NBW YORK Chlam* Branch I Na, I84 La Salts S lfx t

C H A R L E S L E W ISSuccessor to Cuab. Lfew i8 & Oo,

LumberDoors, Sash, Blinds, Frames, Mouldings, Hardware, Paints,

O ils, E tc.

S O U T H OTKIN S T R E E TAsbury Park; Nl J .

Faotory, Dtsnfelrb, New Jersey Branch Yard, Spring Labe, New Jersey 1

W. KNOWLTONP h o t o g r a p h e r

610 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park

Everything new in Photography of the best styles and at reasonable prices. Photographic Supplies for Amateur and Professional Photographers.

Developing and Finishing for the Trade. Eastman’s Kodaks and Supplies.

’ S PENS' THE BEST MADE. ALL STATIONERS SELL THEM.

Bend 10 cents/or 12 aetorUd pent.THE EBTEUBROOK BTEEL P EN COb

20 John Bt., KcWYork,

C T :

OCEAN GROVE TIM ES— SATU RD AY, JULY 6, rgor

MAIL SCHEDULE

$0~&23&kt5&^saa^sfeaESS

I J l f l ii s s f

A rr iv a l and Departure o f M ails F ro m jh e Ocean Grove Poslofflce.

c l o s h f o r ,Now Yorlc, Brooklyn, Northern and

Eastern States—0.30, 10.30 a. m.; 2.00,3.30 and 6.30 p. m.

Freehold, Long Branch, Hod Bank, Newark and all points on the N. J. Cont. It. R., G.30, 10.30 a. m.: 3.30 and6.30 p. m.

Philadelphia, Pcnsylvanla, Southern nnd Western States—7.00, 10.30 a. in.; 1.00, 3.30 and fi.30 p. m.

Trenton and Camden—7 a. m.; 1.00,3.30 and 0.30 p. m.'

ABbury Park, N . J — G.30 a. m.; 1.00 and G.30; p. in.

■ A SR IV B FROM

Now York, Northern and Eastern States— 6.00, 7.00. 10.35 a. m.; 3.40 and6.60 p. in. .y.".'1

Newark, Frooliold, Rod Bank, Lons Branch and all points on the N. J.' Cent. R. R.— 7.00, 10.35 a. m.; 3.40 and5.60 p. m.

Philadelphia, Southern and W ostbm States— 6.00, 7.00, 10.35 a. m.; 3.35 and

; 5.50 p. m.' Trenton and Cnmdon— G.00, 7.00,10.35 a. m.; 3 35 and 5.50 p. m.

Asbury Parle, N . J.— 7.00 nnd 10.5B a. mt; 6.00 p. m.

Office open from 6.30 a. m. to 8 p. m. Aceesa to lock boxes from 6.30 a. m. to 10 p. m. Registry and Monoy Order ■window open from 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. Deliveries by carriers, 8.30, 11.00 a. in. and 4.00 p..m. .

Collection from street letter boxes, 3.30, 8.30, 11.00 a. m. and 4 p. m. .

Office open on legal holidays from . 6i30 to 11.00,0. m „ and from 6.00 to7.30 p. m. /

Excellent Business Opportunity. /FOR HE3NT—Tho Arlington Ice-

Cream Parlor wdth store, fixtures, etc., B. N.

Boegle, N .J .

Beautiful QIoss .tho varnish In Devoo’s

Floor .Paint; coats 5 cents moro a quart though. Sold by Buchan-

& Smock.

H ow to go via New York Central. When to go on July 6th,'7th or Sth, W here to go to Buffalo (Pan-Ameri­ca Exposition) Derolt, through tho reat Lakes, Mackinac, Duluth, . the Pacific Coast, Yellowstone Park, < on special reduced rates. ..Apply early io Milton a Roach, G. E. P. A., 1216 Broadway,' New York.— adv. June 29.

To Cure a Cola in One Day Take Laxative Brurno Qulnlno Tablets. A ll druggists refund the money ,'lf It falls to cure. ■■ E. W . Grove's signature Is bn eacfh box. 25c.

F ive Lots fo r Sale.To close an estate I. have five desir­

able lots, size 30x60: feot, fo r sale for $1,750. Good, high ground; a big bar­gain for some one. Inquire E. N. Woolston, 60 Main avenuo, Ocean Grove. N. J.. , tf.

Z inc and Grinding MakeDevoe Lead and Zinc Paint wear twice as long as lead and oil mixed by hand. Buchanon and Smock,sell It..

Ocean Orove and Asbury Park

Summer Resort Bureau

Information given of hotels, boarding houses, with rates,

At Information ; - Bureau. ' ■"

No. 40 Pitman Avenue' r ; Ocean G rove.N .J. .

226 Main Street, Asbury Park

FLORIST.jam 7 j z i . r_ _ 5 s : . - v

J. Bergen Thompson,Cor. Lawrence and

W ebb Avenues,- O C EAN G R O VE.N .J .

Parks, Beds, Vases, etc., prepared nnd planted. Six Greennoyses.C2:

T h e A r l i n g t o nG. H. MlL.L.r\R

The Leading Hotel in Ocean Grove

EverV convenience. A ll modern improvements. Appoint­ments and service first-clasS. Exceptional location. Un­surpassed cuisine. It will pay you to send for bookletand;.terms.. • ;

Open June 22.

A T L A N T I C H O U S EPitman Avenue, Near the Ocean

Established 1876 CHAS. J . HUNT

- LE VASSAR COTTAGECornor W EBB and B EAC H A V E N U E S , OCEAJN GRO VE, N . j..

Ono block from tbo ocean, L lllagoro ’s Bathing Ground and Pavilion . T w o m inutes from hot sea wator baths and tlio on ly fishing pier In Ocean Qrovo. D elightfu l outlook. Homo cooking. -Lowrutes. . R IC H A R D W ILSO N , Jr., Manager.

Ocean Front HouseM RS. E. YOUNG

Cornor Main and Ocoan Avonuos, Oooiiu Grovo, N. J . Tho flnont ocoan v low In tho Grove.-

T H E L A N G D O NM. J. H o lt

No. 8 Oceau A venue, Ocoan Grovo, N . J. Box 2217. D irectly on tbe ocean front. Modern In a ll appointm ent*. Juno lo October. ;

_ — _ ~N o. 83 Broadway, Ocean

• Grovo, N . J. Elghvh season. Otie and a naif blocks from the ocean.

A . H . WnrANfl.

LLEWELLYN COTTAGETab lo board,. 85 per woek. S triotly homo oooklng.

EA ST V IE W H O U SE' • 18 AAlnriUo Avenue, oornor Boaoh, Ocean Grovo, N . J.One blook from the occan. Close to Auditorium and a ll places o f interest. Beautiful ocean vletar, flue porches, abundant table, pleasant and hom e-llkt houso. Terms moderate.

Special rate* for Jupoand September. 1 Maa. A . Cabsbpay.

Jackson HouseMna. Jt p . Jackson.

, Sook Avenuo and P ilg rim Pathway. Ocean Grovo. N ew Jor»*y. Pleasantly and contrally located, noara ll principal point* or Intoreat. Convenient to Poatolllco, Telograph Ofllco audA tid I tnrliiHi.

TH E LAKESIDEMrs. s. P. S in qk r .•

100 Lako Avenue, Ocean Grove, N ew Jorsoy. • Convonlont to a ll points o f intoresU

T H E ARD M OR E ■M r s . M . M . I Iu b s il l , Proprietor.

Ocean Pathway, boot ocoan. Ocean Grave, N . J. Flneet location. A U modern Improvements,

U N ITED S T A T E S H O T E LM ain Avenuo, Oooan G rove,'N . J. One block from the ocean. OponfJuue 1st io Soptombor 15th* F or terms addroes the proprietor. W i l l ia m Onu.

v. v . MRS. THOMAS HOBSON® • * V -

Germantown Cottage94 M ount Tabor W ay, Ocean Grovo. N . J. W ill opon Ju ly 1st, 1901. Board by 4.ho week, at

reasonable prices . ’

The Aberdeen and AnnexM. B, H m u t a o e , form erly o f th t Llllagaard.

Burf Avenue. Ocean Grove, N. J. W ith in ono m inute’s w a lk o f ocean, Wosloy lake, A u d i­torium and Young people's Temple. Accom m odations for 76 guests.

The BOWER HOUSECorner Main and Central avonuos. On tho second blook from tho oceaa. • Ooean Grove, N. J. Centrally located w lth lu easy reach o f tho Auditorium , bath ing groundB, ocean promo* nado and all points o f Interest, Ratos from 88 to 810 a wooto. Spoolaf rates fo r Boason. Box 118. C la r a Som ers.

T h e M a j e s t i cCl k m e n t A Olijmient *.

Oornor Ocoan Avonuo and Ocean Pathway, Ocoan Grovo, N ew Jorsey. Delightful otoau view,

TH E ALBATR O SSW . S. T o w n s e n d .

83 and S i OoeanPaUiWay, Oooan Grove. South aldo, m id w ay between Beach aud A uditorium

:.\ .-• ’■i V'.-.;. *•:.<; ' • ‘ • - V ' I < i

A L A b K AN . H . K IL M E R , l* r o i i r i « t < ir

O P E N H L L T H E Y E H 'Fi.

Cozy sun parlors. Hot salt water baths. Cool rooms, and comfortable accommodations for summer guests,

permanent and transient. . .Nos. 3 and 5 Pitman Avenue, Oceah Grove, N .J. .

The Ocean View HotelUnobstructed v io jv o f ocean add lako.

Scrvico and-cuisine excellent.

• Aocom 'm odatlon l fo r btcyoles.

Tennis court a n d . children 's play­grounds opposito ' t lio house. .■

:. fipeclal rates fo r • ' Juno and

September.

F o r tormp address

GEO. C. PRIDHAM

Ocean Grove. N. J.,

p . o . B ox 1

T H E

I D irec tly on the O cean Front.T h o rou gh ly refitted, inc lud ing 'steam lien J,

electric lights, etc.

Open Throughout the Yeari For terms apply to . / v

' 7 T . C L E M E N T "

Cor. Oceaii Vvf. ti«:l Ocean P ath w ay , «c c a n fifove , J\’. J,

H . S T O C K T O NP ro p r ie to r .

O C 6 H N N . J .The largest and best equipped hotel on the; ocean, front.

Thoroughly modern. Enlarged and improved.

T H E W A V E R L YH .H . A lco ck ; - I . - . .

O C B K N G R O IC B , N B W J B R S B Y Reopens Saturday. Juno ‘22. Situated on Ocean Pathway, near the beach. Im proved and

renovated throughout. P . O. Box J. IiOng distance telephone.

/ •« . H E N R Y W B L S P O R D

Cor. Pitman and Central Avenues, Ocoan Grove, N. J.( , ' c . . --------------- -— _ «

Sixth season under the propriotorsliip of II»n ry Wolaford. A. first-cloRa houoo, convoniont to evarytliinf; of interest in tho Grove. For particulars apply to pro­prietor. P. Ol Box 2121.

NORMAN HOUSEO. R . PH IE ST

28 to 34- Bath Avenue, Ocean Grove, N.J.F inely located botweon Auditorium and ocean, and noar’ bathing grouuds. Special a t­

tention to com fort o f guests. Open Juuo to Ootobor. P. O. l lo x 52147.

T H E IV Y H O U S EM ain Avonne, Ocean Grove, N ow J e rs e y .C o n v e n ie n t ly ; located hear ocean, Auditorium and postofllce. v. .. ' MRS M. E . St u l l , Proprietor.

Firsfc-claps Boarding, ' ; Permanent or Transient. . Aiso Table Board.

AvenueHouse

Miss M . CROSSETTProprietor.

Cor. Main and CBeach Avenues

Ocean Q rovei N . J.'19 Mai ii Avenue. ’

5 A B B O T T A V E N U E .

Adjoining the beach. Thoroughly renovated and refurnish­ed, and under new management. Electric, lights and im­provements. Close to Lillagore’s-bathing grounds.

H. M a n w i l l e r Manager.

LANE VILLAMrs. S. A. M. LANE - . Proprietor

Pilgrim Pathway and Cookman AvenueOCEAN GROVE, N. J. V'^

lo c k Jiox 2171 .

The New PhiladelphiaOcean Pathway, Ocean Grove, N. J., second House from the Ocean ,

, Mra. C. A . COX, Owner i\nd Proprietor '

SUPER IO R FU R N ISH E D ROOM S TO RENTIn tho most beautiful part o fth e Qrovo. Unobntniotod v low or the ocean. Conveniont to

all placos o f Interest. Appoln tm ouU Qratrclafi.. B loyclorooro. June to Ootobor.

2 4th season.

E . A . IR E L A N D , Proprietor.

Opposito Thom pson Park

Convenient to all points of interest. P. O. Box 21.53 .-;

OCEAN WAVE11 Embury Avenue, OCEAN GROVE, New Jersey.

Furnished, new throughout, Near a ll points o f Interest, O n ly a few doors from the ' ocoan .and bathing pavilion. Bathing, llahtng, boating. Rooms cool and table flrst-olans.' P lano. Spacious verandas, home comforts. Tablo board. Term s moderate. Opon June.20.;

• . ' Mas. S. P . J en k in s , P. O. Box 11, Ooean Grove, N . J,

LA K E V ILLA• ' M. W i l m a .m» o k , Proprietor '

No. 45 Broadway, Ocean Gmvo, N ew Jersey; Facing'oceon, lako and playgrounds. N ow ly •tlttcdup. S ix tU season, tileotrlo lights. Special mtca for Juno.

LA W R E N C E H O USEO C B H N C R O IZ B , N . J.

Corner location, near ocean, w ldo verondas, beautiful shade trees, good rooms, excellent board; Tormft, 87 and 83. Misa M. W a r r t .

. F. S. H a v n k s . . Ocean Path­way, Oocau Grove,New Jorsey, Tbo finest location on the

41i •. . , beaclu Unobetructod ooeanvlm vand Auditorium , To nn s. moderate. Special t ill July 4th. Open Juno 1st to OcL let.

SummerfieldD i - r \ n r l u r n \ / L J a i m n Corner o f Broadway and Beacb Avenues,D r O a U W a V n O U S S Ocean Grove, N. J. On F letoker Lake, , • ; ^ J * w one block from ocean and bathing pav il­ion. Large verandas. Torms f7 to 512 a weok. A lso tablo board. Special rates Juno and Sept.'____________________________ *. J. D. IC1 NQ8LA.ND,Manager, r' v

: THE EL DORADOO CEAN GHOVK, NENV JERSEY

Facing ocean and H etoher Lako. One mlnuto to Bathing grounds Appoldrm onls and ser- ylco flrst-class. ’________ M ils . P . W . F ISH E R .

HOWLAND HOUSE05 M ount Tabor W av, Ocean Grovo, Now Jorsey.

Coo venlently.locatcd near Auditorium , postotUco nnd beach. Exoo.lent sorvlco a t m odorate rates. •______________ Mina R . W ood.

HOTEL CLARENDONO oroer P llc r lr a P a th w o v a n d M t. T a b o r W a y . P le a s a n t ve ran d as , tin e v ie w of oo eo a ,

c e n tr a l ly loca ted . T h o ro u g h ly ren ova ted an d re fitted . M kh W i 1.1,1 a m M o r a n .

THE AMHERST14 P ltm au Avenue. H a lf block from tho ocean. Convonlont to a ll points o fln tcrea t. Term s

f7 to?i2 por weok. Appoin tm ents and sorvico hom ollkc.. L i l l i b C. B b o w k .

FERN COTTAGECornor N ew York avenuo and Mt. Horm on W ay, Ocean Grovo. A l l m odern improvements. Cozy.and hom elike. F o r terms and particulars address, M rs. A . R . G aj.i.. P, O. Box 2163

T H E O M A H ACornor Central aud P itm an avenues. N ear Ocean and Auditorium , and convenient to a ll points o f Interest. Spoctal rates Juno and Sept. C ircular on application. E. E. Mosximt.

GLENWOOD HOUSECornor PoaiiBylvanta avonuo and M t. Zion W ay, Ocoan Gnove.':'C en tr8l ly located. Torms

moderate. < For particu lars address, ~ . Mits. H. A tkinson .

4 Surf Avonue, Ocean Grove, N . J.-.A . Sc h e n c k , Proprietor, form orly o f Tho Clarendon.

Directly on the Beach

The N ew Arborton7 Saa V low avenuo. K op t by Friends. H a lf block from Occan, near hot and bathing grounds. Special m tos Jnuc and Sept.' F or partioulnrsaddrcss, H .

Glen-Cairn Cottage20 W ebb avonuo, Ocoan Grovo, N . J. Ono block from the Ooean. Opon from Boat for uso o f gueBts, Term s 87 lo 810 por week. Special rates fo r May

■ > MKS. M. H . CKANKr-sMlSS M a k y A.

O A K L E Y V ILLAForm erly the Ellwood, cornor P ilgrim Pathw ay and Mt. Uormon W ay. Opposite near Auditorium , beach and a ll points e f interest. Terms S7 to 810. Mns. E . V

Olive HouseFirst-clasg in every particular.

Corner ol Heck and Beach Avenues, Ocean Grove, N. J. One block from tbo ocean. .

M ra . M . H , Sc h w a r t z .

K. N . P R E N T IS Proprietor. ‘ OCEAN HOUSE

Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, N. J.

A pleasant fam ily hotel a t : popular rates.

HOTEL SPRAY VIEWOn the ocean front. Ask for booklet. . Joseph W hite, Prop'r.

THE CHALFONTECorner Ocean ahd Bath avonuos, Ocoan Grovo, $i. J. Appointm ents aud furnishings a ll new. aud m odern, , Spenlal rates for Juno and Soptf^pber. . • /> S. W . E u lkbs,rates for Juno^and Soptj^pbor. ^ H. W . ]

THE ST. ELMO77 M ain Avonuo. DollghtfuUy located on prlhplpal thoroughfaro. Qnon 87 Uj 810 a woOlc. Speolal rates spr ing, fa ll and w inter.: W rit e fo r booklet.

BEACH AVENUE HOUSEOne block frofu ocean, oornor BoacU aud W ebb avenues. Ooean outlook, m odern im provo- meuts, good tablo. Special rates for Juno and Soptember. Address W . H . K n a p p .

. .V BATH AVENUE HOUSE, .Cornor Central and Bath Avonuos, Ocean Grovo, N ew Jofrsey

F lno location ; near tbo Aud itorium , \yesloy Lako, ocean and batblng grounds. Pleasant accommodations. M . F . MACPnsusoN, Proprietor.

Fu ll v iew o f 8 e \ and Beach Promouado. Twcntioth Bcasou.

v i H E K U R O R KNo. O. A T L A N T IC A V E N U E , running Uirough to Surf A ren oe

OOBAJK G R P V E . m » W JK S S B T

■OCSAljJ;' G R O V E ;X IM ES-^3ATURDA:Ys JU L Y 6, rgort &•• ti. -v. .pin? ; ron?ftpbfc?» .two ‘ j& zxS

OCEAN &R0VE SERVICES,

The f inest Display ofProgram m e of the R elig io us E xercises to Be Held T his Sum m er.

FOOTWEARJfittericait USatcftes

Diamonds JewelrpOur stock . always contains the

latest and newest goods at right prices. When you want something out of the ordinary in watches or diamonds, why not try us?■ Orders always receive prompt and careful attention.

f l . 0 1 . C o rn e liu s629 Cookmatt Jloenue, Sisburf Park

Over Shown in This Gity is Now on Sale at Our Store,

Everything New in Shoes .for Man, Woman or Child.

T H E Q U E E N Q U A L I T Y S H O Efor women is positively a work of a r t They come in a variety of materials and we have an assortment of sizes that surely includes the one to fit your fe e t . ■* . ■; *. The shoeswe sell are serviceable and reliable* v , *RiflM iransformed into day by

elcciridty, ana

frozen into exquisite flavors by639=41-43 fcuokniari Avenue, Asbury Park

SHOES BOUGHT HERE SHINED FR E E Y

‘ I f you get .it at Day’s it is good ice cream as is ice cream and served in the open a i r - under cover.

Commissioner of Deeds, Notary Public, Acknowledgments taken for all States.NO MATTER AL E. SE X TO N ’S

New Livery arid Boarding Stable

N e x t t o N e w S c h o o l B u i ld in g . T h e o n ly b r ic k , F i r e - P r o o f L i v e r y S ta b le o a th e c o a s t .

OCEAN GROVE, N. J.

who sold you your wheel, permit me to repair It. I can do it bettor and do it quicker than any one else.

I can do. it better, because my facili­ties are tho best. Porsonal inspection of my factory will convince you.

Were 1 to say that I done enameling and nickel plating on the premises, it would be true, but I don’t A i r this work is done for me in the cities by Arms who aro masters in these branch-

50 Main Ave, O C E A N GROVE, N

Properties for Sale, for Rent and Exchange

Special bargain in a six-room cottage, with lot aad one-half on a good street.

BLOOM & EIDELSBERG6I I -6I3 Cookman Ave., Asbury Park, N. J.-

B Ladies’ Cus-. _ L .

to m T a ilo rs .Suits made to order. We

carry a full assortment of Ladies’ Cloaks, Suits and Skirts at moderate prices.

Ladies’ and Gents' gar­ments cleaned,, pressed and repaired, All our work is fully guaranteed.

Particular Attention Given to . Boarding Horses.

A l l k in d s o t c a r r ia g e s to h ire .. S p e c ia l a c ­com m o d a tion s fo r e tru w -rld ln g p a r t ie s ; c lo s ed ca rr ia g es fo r XuneralB an d w ed d in gs .

Branch offices: W . H . Beoglo and Captain H a ln ea r ’s ten t UOUBO. - {

T e le p h o n e a i » B

C. R. ZACHARJAS725 Mattison Ave., Asbury Park

WAGNERS BAKERY

Pure flahufactured and Natural

s 1 26 nount Tabor WayNo. 35 Pilgrim Pafhwoy

OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY

Eichard WilsonOFFICE:

No. 108 Heck AvenueOCEAN GROVE

Deliveries made dally. Twice ., on Saturday.

Order by postal card.

Needs Pain tingWe are able to show you

Let mo estimate ori the job. Tho work I have iione in and around Ocean Grove is my recommenda­tion. When I paint a house, the paint ib put on right; no ekimping in cornera nnd odd places where the paint iB not liable to be seen, I understand harmonizing o f col­ors; and never leave a job unti I it is finiehe'J. nnd done satisfactorily. Then, too, my price is lisrht, it must bis if I gel your work. A t any rate consult me on your next job o f painting.

W . E. HURFORDPaint Specialist

89 Brpadway, Ocean Orove, N. J.

DesirDurReliSpecial attention to the small

trade this season, which will be served promptly as heretofore

Camp*ffleitlngAUG. t?—Pmye’r service In the Auditorium,. 10.30

to 11.30 q. m. Workers’ Consecration Meeting, Tabernacle, 3 to 4 p. m. Lord’s Supper in Aud­itorium, Bishop FitzGerald, presiding, 7.45 p. 111. . . • .

AUG. 18—Opening Sabbath. ‘ Rev. .Couftland Myers, jfflis tor o f the Baptist Memorial Temple, Brooklyn, will preach morning nnd evening.

AUG. 19—Camp-Meeting services every day un­til September 7. Preachers to be announced daily. Sabbnth, 25th, Rev.Joseph Smith, D.D. Jack and Haydu Cook, o f England* w ill assist ten days of the meeting. Rev. Dr. Smith w ill lead the aftemoqn services during the last ten days. Camp-Meeting Love Feast on Septem- bei^pi—CMose of Camp-Meeting on Monday, S^pmnbeK 1 , j Missionary ‘fram ing School. Mrs. Oshoijn.

SUPT. 8 t o l5—Services in the Auditorium.

' for everybody a t , ; '

WOEHRER’S1 3 - I 5 South M a i n Street, Asbury Park

Opp. Ooean drove. Oates

W e ore the largest, and oldest, and most reiiable’nnd exclusive shoe house on the coast. W e also repair shoes.

A L B E R T R O B B I N SREAL ESTATE INSURANCE

Hotel a and Cottages for Rent' Mortgage Loans/ J A M E S A .

/ F R E E M A N ’ S S O N S Auction ee rs

Store: 422 Walnut Street, Philadelphia

226 MA|N STREETASBU R Y PARK, N. J. van G ILLUW E

/ ^ f t O C E RSome, changes may be necessary and wil?

duly announced. * • /J. N. FITZGERALD, {A, B. BALL AUD, /J. H. ALDAY,

Devotional Comrilttee.

A . R . S H R E V E & S O N, • D e a le r s In •

Best Quality Fresh and Smoked

. MEATSJerso y L a rd an d P o u lt ry a S p o c fa lty . Q o o d s

d e ilvo ro d fre e o f ohurgo. On reo e lp t —o f r e q n e s t w iU o a l l a t - y o u r — .------------

rca fdenco a d y

M arket: 55 South Main StreetO p p . O c ea n G rovo H ig h S ch oo l,

ASPURV PARK, N, J.

Sale on the Property at Ocean Grove, New Jersey.

Two-Story Frame Dwelling and Furniture, 32 Embury Ave, Saturday, June 29, 1901

. at 3 .30 P. M.7^roorrCdwellir!a and Furniture,

lot 30x60 feet • , Administrator’s safe

Estate of Mary A. Sewell

What Shall We Hare tor Otsaert?T :.^ ' qtieRttoo ttrftros ta ftwnlly

.w a r/ 'lay,' S jofOB satsrsres’ K 'todays cyJell-O, a- Pm-

pared ta tyro mJnwss. ijsb add tax ; Mar cad Bet to a x i ,F!awms-.—JjBinnn, O ssa ® , BbsjSwsv? sod Btrem bum Utt j iS a gmoam. 10 cento. CENTRAL AVENUE A N D OLIN STREET OCEAN GROVE

f jr e s o ch u p& p j -7 J.onx, a.*.'C^01 to HWtr.v *v! ;* r * : . - ‘j

COUNTY AND STATE

There was a sale o f grass at the State camp ground on Tuesday. It brought from ??G.OO to $10.50 per acre.

..T h e full summer schedule o f the Pennsylvania, Central and Kew Jersey Sdhthern Railroads'went into effect last Saturday at midnight.

-The Shrewsbury public library now has 2,000 books and Is prospering Miss A . E. White has been elected president, aud Mrs. A. V. Jennings secretary.

Harry Barkdlow, of Red Bank, at*, tempted suicide last week by cutting his throat and wrist with a razor.. He struck no. vital parts, however, and w ill recover.

Governor Voorhees has given notice to the State Sewerage Commission to proceed at once with the investigation nnd surveys for a sewerage system, in the Passaic Valloy.

.. Prom inent, society women of Me- . tuchen. have organized an improve*

ment society for the betterment o f the . borough. Mrs. W- M. Thornball, wife

of the Mayor, is the presideut.. .A commission will shortly be ap*

pointed to redistrict the city of Eliza­beth, and it is expected the number of wards will be decreased. The com- missibn w ill be appointed by Governor

'■ Voorhees. > .... .A pig. iron made in 1761 is.ono.of

the treasured relics in possession of ^ ^ p m R. Ayres, of Andover.- There was a furnace there in early, days of the colony, at which the iron \ya ,

. - ' made.; , • ..' ' : :. .The Monmouth County Historical

Society met at Old Tennent church,. Friday’ afternoon, June 28. Mrs. M»

C. Murry*Hide, of New York City; and . . Rev. F. R. Synimes, of Tennept. made

addi-esses. !• ..Th e first car of the Camden and

. Ti4nton. Traction con’ipany ranthrough Burlington last. week. As

.soon a s ‘the subway at Edgewater is ' finished, the line will be complete from

Riverton to Trenton.. ,V ..Rev. Robert Blackburn, pastor of

the First Presbyterian church at Long Branch, has .resigned to accept the pastorate of the First Presbyterian

. church at Reading, Pa. He has been Btationed there for the last three

; 'v :years,-having succeeded Rev. Maitland• • ' Alexander, of Pittsburg.t < : .The new steamer .Thomas Patten,

Mwhich was built at Hoboken expressly for the New York and Long Branch *St£a‘<mbpat Company for service be-

:,v tween New York and Long Branch, .•V,':wa8 giveb-a trial trip on the Hudson

■ R iver fo r the purpose of testing her V engines and other machinery. The

, test proved highly satisfactory to " ' both owners and builders, the boat• ;1 showing a'speed* of nineteen miles an tf; ,•? hour. . \ - ~____ . . ■

Re Ilad ii't Lost a Bartfiof.'j . ^John,” she said, suddenly shaking

: him, “ there is a burglar in the bouse.” ‘/Are you sure?” he asked.

?;• . *‘Positivef,J she'replied. “ Don’ t yon hear him?”

He. got np and began to dress hastily, but quietly.

1 ‘/What are jrou going to do, John she inquired.

" f am going- to sneak out the back way * and get a policeman,” he an*

. \ swered..‘ /“ But If you go right down stairs now/* she said, “you’ll find him in the

’ . dining room/*“ Oh, I ’ ll find him,' will I V he retort­

ed sarcastically. “W e ll now you Just look me over carefully.M

V.- “ Yes, John; wbat o f It7^f Do I look like a man who has lost a

burglar anywhereT ."No; of course not, but"—“ Do I have the reputation o f being

an impertinent fellow who is always Interfering with other people's busl* ness? Do I In any way resemble the lost and found department o f a~'dally

'. newspaper?H ; • 1 “ No.” ' ‘ '

“ Then why should I get tangled up with other people's property ?*

■( “ Yop‘ro afraid, John.*'“X S a id nothing!” he retorted tntflg-.

nantly. **I am looking at it from an .ethical point o f view. This burglar un­doubtedly has been lost by the police, and i f I took charge o f him they might ; ,tJUnb'I was trying to steal him and make a lot o f trouble for me. Besides, I'm no searching party. You women

. don’t understand the ethics o f business \t alL”—Chlcaeo Post.

Letter to Wm , H. Bannard, A s b a r y P a r k , N . J .

Dear Sir: There are two sorts o ffurniture. You know both; for yon

/ se ll ’em both. One sort.loqks better \ than it is, and the other is better

'than it looks. There isn’t any, .other so rt . ■

. The same, two sorts o f .paint, no more; and w e make ’em both— we make tons of stuff that isn’t worth ite,

• freight. Belongs.to the business—• ;you have to.

But this is aside. We put into cans, our name on, the very best paint

y iere is in the w o r ld D evoe lead and ■ zliic. It is twice as good as lead and , ■ oi\; lasts twice as long. And we take

theyisk of it— tliere isn’t any risk. Yours truly,F. W. DEVOE & CO.*

Books al Auction.V isit tho Book Auction^it No. 218

Cookman avenue, Asbury Burk. There you will And a raagniflcentlas^prtment of Bibles in over thirty different styles, and many helps to the Bible students such as Peloubet’s; Suggestive Illustra­tions, Gray’s Biblical Museum, Smith’s Bible Dictionary, Lyttleton’s, Bad- ham’s and Crosby’s notes on. tho Gos­pels; Fleetwood’s, Farrar’s, Beecher’s, and Roger's lives of Christ, and bun/ dreds of other books .of equal., meiyj^ and interest to the seeker after truth. ATI these can bo had at your.own pric­es. Auction sales a t '3 and 8 V .. m. Private sales at all hours at average auction prices,— It.*. ’ . ■ ...