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VOLUME EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION OF REMARKABLE DISCOURSES Kelivercil in (ho Memorial Xnlter- nticlo at Ocean Grovo During tlio 1’nst Hummer, nnd of Which, For- tunately, the StcnograplUc Notes Wero Taken by Miss Marsh. During tlie past s u m m e r. BiBlifil) Wilson delivered tit tlio morning Holiness Meeting In tlie Tabernaelo ' hero u series of brief discourses re-, marltable In many ways. These ser- ibonottes were so we)) received and , productive o£ so much good tbat ‘ thero haB been a demand for tbelr publication in pamphlet or book form. Miss Mary Marsh, the organ- ist In the Tabernacle and who also is a stenographer, fortunately took shorthand notos of these .addresses, bo that it was possible to nave them prepared for "press. It is under- stood tliat the work o£ having them published in now well under way. >A gem from the collection was that one delivered on the morning ot .July 23. • On that occasion the Bish- op solected as the basis of his dis- course four verses from the. flrst ■chapter of ColossiohB, 9-12. He said in part: . X want that we shall turn ; our thought this morning to a few verses contained In the ilrst chap- ter of. ColoBaians, from the ninth to the twelfth verses, inclusive: ‘,‘For this cause we also, since the day. we. heard it, do not cease to pray •for you, and to desire that ye might be filled with .the knowledge of his will In all wisdom and spirit- ual understanding. "That ye might walk worthily of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge ot God. ' “Strengthened with all might, ac- cording to his glorious power, unto ' nil ..patience and long-suttering -with joyfulness. "Giving thanks unto the Father, Which- hath made us meet to be par - takers ot the Inheritance of the saints in light.” You have been talking about some of the saints, and thinking of them as . they were when here In the midst of us, What they are today, Where they are today—-tlie "saints in light." I look Into your faces and I- think of them, and I think of your rapturous thought concerning them; but our thought does not at all encompass the reality of what this word iqeans—"the inheritance of . the saints in light.” ... God, who- was able to make saints of them'is . able to make saints ..of .' us; "Who hath-delivered us from the power of darknesB, and hath translated us in- to the kingdom of his dear Son.”■ And I. want you to bind up just, In a bouquet this morning the sweet btossoma.that haye gone out of the garden of memory here, and putting those blossoms of your love in their earthly setting and fragrance and beauty, I want you to bind them together. The song this morning, "When our ships come sailing home," was very suggestive, and aB It was being sung thero came to my mind the pic- ture ot these ships as they coroo sailing In; but If you think that tho ships were simply stirred by fra- grant and mellow breezes you are very much mistaken. Oh, there were handB that wero roughened and torn by tho ropes that lifted the sails; hands that were blackened as they tOBsed the coal Into the mouth of the glowing furnace. There were ' faces bronzed by the sun there on the bridge, and there were others who had their faces dashed witli the salt spray of the sea in the 3torm; and when the ship came sailing homp it came sailing homo because it liad crossed the troubled sea, and those that were In tho darkness and in the storm stood ready through all (lie lonesome and dangerous hours of tho night to . grasp hold of the wheel. Ever> hour of the perilous night the. ship came sailing home. It was not sail- ing home simply when all the "ship’s company” were gathered on tho dock; simply when the dock wns crowded with the friends waiting to greet these home-eomers. It was ready to come sailing home from tho moment that it started from tho • other side. Continued on fifth pace) Truck Hack fiolu Factory. The handsome truck of the Eagle firemen, caino back from the factory at Elmira, N. Y., to which place It was sent for repairs, last’Saturday. The apparatus was housed on Mon- day afternoon. At that time some person sounded Washington's call, four taps, anil members of the latter company, with their hose wagon, promptly responded. Bank Statements. Tho quarterly statements of the Opean Orove National Bank and tho Ocean Grovo and Asbury Park Bank may be found., in this paper. Both institutions, as' usual, make ti cred- itable showing. . Driftwood 011 tlio lieacli. The beach front is strown with a largo quantity of driftwood from re- cent storms. , Children are having 1 great sport- building bonfires, but it is a rather dangerous practice. DEATH OF"ALFRED SCOTT A SummerResident and Publisher ol the Auditorium Program Many permanent and summer residents ot Ocean Grove will learn with deep regret of the death of Al- fred Scott at his New York home, 243 West 138th street, last Friday. Some years ago Mr. Scott, suffered a severe attack of ptomaine poisoning, ,:the. effects of which i t : was Joiind Impossible to rid his system. With’ his family he occupied.his Bummer lipme in Ocean Grove, 0 Pitman ave- nue, laBt season aa usual, and • al- though his heaitii' was far from be- ing good' no serious results, were ap- prehended. The news of Ills death came as a groat surprise; He leaves rv wife and,two sons,. Irving and Stanley. The funeral service was held at the house -last Sunday afternoon',, tho n.cldress being made by : the Rev. Dr. Ballard, of Ocean Grove;'long- an intimate frlead of the family. Dr. Goodell, pastor of the church attend- ed by the family, read the lessons and' delivered words of consolation. On Monday Interment was made in Greenwood cemetery. Mr. Seott hnM been a summer resident of Ocean Grove for. soino years. He was a man of advanced Ideas and believed in progress, . a fact emphasized in his constant im- provement of his property. He was the publisher of the Ocean Grove Auditorium program, in which busi- ness he was assisted by his eldest son Irving. He also published the programs for all of the concerts in Carnegie: Hall and other centres of music in New York ,City. Of a jovial nature and kindly, disposition/ he made and kept many friends. His home was truly a house of entertain- ment, as numerous friends can testl- ty,.:. y..V. . . -■ • ■■•■ PBEACHEUS' MEETING. ' Instructive Paper and Discussion nt Meeting on Monday. "Times and Seasons of RevivalB of Religion” was the subject of a. ■paper read Monday morning before the preachers' meeting in St. Paul's cliurih, by the Rev. Dr. H. C. Mc- Bride), of Ocean .Grove, A general discussion followed the reading of the paper, which proved to be full of interest. Dr. McBride argued that the time for a revival was ' all tho time. If the churcli and the peo- ple be filled with the Holy Spirit. The paper was followed by a talk from the Rey. Dr. T. J. Scott on "Straws from the Election on the Liquor Question." Rev. Dr. W. A. Chadwick, ot Em- bury avenue, next Monday will'give a paper on "Children and the King- dom.” Famous Suit Settled? Lawyer William L. Edwards, of Long Branch, whose suit tor dam- ages against the New Jersey Central Railroad Company for being ejected from a train at South Amboy , has been pending for some time, says the .papers for a settlement have been prepared, and that the recent verdict of $400 will end all legal proceed- ings. The suit waB before the courts on four different occasions. . Mr. Edwards wiis awarded $1,000 dam- ages when the suit was first institut- ed. In Ministry 85 Years. Rev. Dr. E. M. Stanton, of Red Bank,, who I b now interested in mis- sionary work in connection with the A. M. E. Church, the other day cele- brated the thirty-fifth anniversary of his entrance: into theministry. Mr. Stanton was born on a farm in Washington county, Maryland, and served many churches in that State, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. H*> . wbb a war-veteran and a former school teacher. .. Ncps Xooklng Pcmianlwni'd. Chattle's defeat of"' Lakewood in the football game last Saturday at Long Branch puts Neptune, of Ocean Grove; in the running for the school, pennant, as Lakewood and Neptune are now tied for first place. Cliattlo had a comparatively easy time in defeating the boys from tiie pines, the score, being 12 to G. Nep- tune and Chattle play tills (Satur- day) afternoon. There will be some- thing doing from start to finish. Seii. Klootz to Speak jlgiiin. It is understood that the Hon. Whitehead Klootz, ,of North Caro- lina, whose 'Stirring address in the Ocean Grove Auditorium on July 4tli liist was received with marked fuvor by the large audience, hail ac- cepted an ; invitation to deliver, the oration on the same day, next sum- mer. He is sure ot an immense crowd to hear him. Dr. Todd Undergoes Operation. The' operation upon- Dr. A.' R. Todd, of Central avenue, Who went l.o Philadelphia for that purpose, ns told in the,Times last week, was per- formed on Saturday at the Jeileraon Hospital. The patient is now doing nicely, an<l If no untoward symptoms stet in, he will be able to return home in a week or two. Mrs. Todd' is with him in tho city. :.v. For Sale;. Two fine lots on Webb avenue, within two and one-holt blocks of the ocean; the only opportunity Iu year to get, vacant lota so near tha ocean. \ Fine location to build a- home. Inquire of H. N. Woolston. Real Estate, 50 Main avenue, ocean Grovo.— tf. ■-; . THOMAS DECKER DEAD For Eigbt Years Was a Well-Known Resident oi Oeean (iiove A friend of the Times in. Eliza- beth, N. J., sends word that Thomas .0. Decker, a former resident of Ocean Grove, and -well remembered here as the sexton of St; P a u l ’s uliurch twelve years ago, died in Elizabeth the iatter part of last week, from the'effects of a paralytic stroke. 1-le, was eighty-four years old. Besides a wife, deceased is sur- vived by nine children. Mr. Decker jhad been in declining health'for over a year, and for two .years, he was. totally blind. It is claimed that. -Thomas O. Decker was one of the first men - In tills .country to vote -the Republican ticket, a statement provedby reo-. ords. During the Civil v War Mr. ■Decker .was an instructor of drun^ niing at Trenton, ahtl following the close of the war, he Was for thirty years a member of Company C, of. the State Rifle Corps.' He had llvod ir. Elizabeth all of his life, with the exception of eight years spent at Ocean Grove. . In 185G Air. Decker voted for Fremont and Dayton, and he had al- ways been, a staunch Republican since that time. He was a member of the Park Methodist Church. He was a mason- ..and carpenter by trade, but had also'been employed an a special policeman and as sex- ton of tbe First Presbyterian Church,In Elizabeth. At the centennial of the surrender of Cornwallis . at Yorktown, when Company C won the championship of the United States for drilling, Mr. Decker was present and took an ac- tive part. During the past ten years the life 'of Mr. Decker had been a lonely one, as he was partial- ly blind. Although many celebrated specialists tried to aid him, gradually his eyes lost their Bight, nnd two years ago the world became dark to him. Since that time his health failed rapidly. HOME MISSIONARY MEETING. Was Held on Thursday In St. Paul's Church, Ocean Grove, Considerable interest attached to the semi-annual meeting ot the Now Brunswick District Woman’s Home Missionary. Society held on Thursday in St. Paul’s church, Ocean Grove. The morning session ; was ' opened shortly after ten o'clock with a de- votional Bervlce conducted by Mrs. P. Hyatt, of thiB place. Rev. Marshall Owens, pastor of St. Paul’s, delivered an address of welcome, to which response was made by Mrs. L. G. Irwin, of Seabright. Other speakers on the program, as given in this paper last, week, weVe Mrs. .John Handley, of Ocean Grove; Mrs. Anna Kent, of East Orange; Mrs. G. M. P. Wells, of Tren- ton;. .Miss Martha Van Martcr, of New . York, editor of '.‘Woman's Home Missions; ■ Mrs. Clinton 13, Fisk, president of the National VV. H. M. S., and Miss Madelyn Why-, land, of the Bancroft Rest Home, Ocean Grove. TO FIX CEMETERY ROAD. Its Improvement is Authorized by James A. Bradley. James. A. Bradley has arranged to have his foreman, Homer Clayton, take up the work of improving the 'Mt, Prospect cemetery road leading into the enclosure from the ■ .cross- road between: Corlles avenue, \ West Grove, and Sprlngwood avenue, As- bury Park. For a long-time the road has stood sadly ln:. need of repair. It waB tor this purpose that one. of the Items defeated at the special election held on Tuesday, November 1, was put in the budget. To make the improvement com- pleto Mr. Bradley desires to have th£> improvement of the western road to the cemetery continue on to meet the Sprlngwood avenue road, thus raak». Ing a thoroughly repaired outlet nt each end. Eleven Cents Grows to Fortune. William Wallace, of Coaiinga, Cal., has been visiting his sisters, Airs. William Van Alaster, of. key- port, and Airs, William .Wall, of Wickatunk. Air; Wallace is in tile plumbing business and has financial interests. in other lines In his adopted State. He says there is nt, Place like Keyport, where lie wa3 born and lived until ho was a young man'. He left Keyport with eleven cents in his pockat and has accumu- lated a fortune In the, thirty years lie lias been in the West. / Held Clipping' lice. After, one or .two postponements on account of unfavorable weather, and a preliminary aWrmiBh to prove what might be done in the di- rection of furnishing amusement, the clipping bee of the Ladles' Aid Society of St, Paul’s church was giv- en last. Friday evening. Cake and coffee were served, anfl'ice cream was on .sale. Miss Marguerite Jack- son sang B.everal numbers and the Kpworth League orchestra * played. Music Scliool' for Teaclicrs. Bofol'o the BrooklynSunday School, Union on Tuesday evening Prof Morgan; ,director of music , at Ocean Grove, delivered a lecture-on sight singing, Hlb argument was so J well received that at the close ho was.invited to open tl school for teachers, and already a movement •looking to that end is under way in Brooklyn. . I.0ST GIRL FOUND DEAD IN THE WOODS TBE BODY DISCOVERED ALONG DEAL LAKE LAST SUNDAY Thomas Williams, a Colored Man, Under Arrest for Crime of Mur- :>; del-—-Suspect Was Threatened witli Slob Violence When Hurried to County Jail M onday Niglit. ’. Following the intense excitement, attendant upon the mysterious dis- appearance, on Wednesday of last -.week of :Marie Smith, the ten-year- old daughter of. Mr, and Airs. Peter Smith, whose home is at Wayside, the dead body of the little girl was found Sunday afternoon in a clump of woods along Deal lake. Search- ers had'passed again and again within twenty feet ot the body In the full daylight during the three days, and it was only a random glance keener than the rest that happened t<? fall on it Sunday. .Tho dlscovefy was mode by Wil- iifim S. .Benson, of. Bradley Park, who was among the many who had volunteered In the search. fit did not need an autopsy to es- tablish criminal assault. The child was small for her years and. not strong, but she had fought to utter exhaustion. The broken sticks and trampled ground around her showed that, as did her injuries. Her gray sltatlng cap and the blue ribbon sho wore In her hair, had been tied'tight about her throat, but she had also been beaten on the forehead with some blunt instrument, and the leaves under her face were cemented together-with her blood. Coroner Purdy, of Manasquan, .was at once summoned. After an ex- ‘amination of the spot, he 'had the body placed in his automobile, and removed to Undertaker Fred Farry's establish merit in Asbury Park. Here an autopsy was held by Dr. James Ackerman and Dr. Earl C. Wagner. The physicians were,certain that'the child had met deatS from a blow, on the .head with some keen-edged and heavy instrument, probably an' axe: This information the doctors gave out to the coroner’s jury, which was made up of John. LaBaw, William Truex, George Henderson,' Grandon Layton, Harold Jaequos and William Whittle., The same night Thomas Williams, a colored man who had been em- ployed as chore man about the house of the dead child's aunt, Airs. Jack- son, :was taken into custody as the culprit. Williams Is known as "Biack Diamond." He has served at least one term in prison. Hurried to the Asbury Park city jail for fear o f: mob. violence, Williams stoutly protested his innocence, although the meshes of the law were gather- ing' tightly about .him. He told a weird tale of having been'on a-pro - tracted debauch, but the threads of his story were not complete. Williams was found at a .house across the railroad track in Asbury Park. Detective Edward Hankinson made the arrest. In his room was found a towel bearing blood spots, but he denied ownership of the art- icle. It is claimed also that there were blood spots on his' suspenders. A. hostile demonstration against the prisoner on Monday night was foiled only by the activity of the lo- cal police. About the city jail was a crowd, |infurlated by contempla- tion of the crime and ready, with axes and crowbars for an onslaught upon the place. After, the crowd was dis- persed Williams, was put in an.auto- mobile in charge of County Detective Alinugh and Coroner Purdy and whisked away to the jail in Free- hold. • . v The body of the murdered , girl was ta’ken to Brooklyn where, bn Wednesday, tlie funeral service’was held in St,- Patrick’s Catholic Church.-Interment was made in. the cemetery- at Flatbiish. The authorities, of Asbury Park' Have offered ti reward of $500 for evidence leading to the conviction of the person or persons guilty of the double crime. Although .suspi- cion points strongly to the colored man in custody, many hold .to the . theory that he was not alone in the deed, and that after all he may not be. the principal, but simply an ac- cessory.. Union Thanksgiving Service. The cUBtom of. holding a union Thanksgiving service in .Ocean Grove will be observed next Thurs- day. St. Paul’s will be joined in this service by the West Grove and Brad- ley Beach M. Churches, and the sermon will be preached by the Rev. Daniel JohnBon, pastor of the West Grove charge.- Tho offering will be for the Home for the Aged. State Canvassing Board. Governor Fort has appointed the following Senators as members of the board of canvassers to officially dispose of election returns, on ■ the Governorship: Senators Price, Sussex; Bradley, Camden; Geb- hardt, Hunterdon; Osborne, Essex; Ackerman, Union, and Brown; Mon- mouth. ' The vote' will he canvassed •at 2 p’. m. on Tuesday, November. 24, Tlio Git nvrooil. Steam heated throughout, excel- lent tablo. Electric light, telephone andlbath. 90 Alt'. Zion Way, Ocean Grove; one block Emory street bridge. Rates $G to ?8 per week.— •48. COUNTY GIVES WILSON 12,721 Ollfeial Canvass ol tbe Vote Made at Freehold On Monday Canvass by the ivionmouth county election board o£ the vote In this county was made at Freehold on Monday last. John C. Patterson,, ot Ocean Grove, is chairman of .. the board. Woodrow Wilson’s official plurality, in. the county is 3,389. The official returns for. .the Demo- cratic arid- Republican candidates are given, herewith:.;. ", -‘i :. . Governor-—Wilson, Dein,, 12,231* Lewis, Rep., 8,932. . v Congressman— Scuily,, Dem,, it,- ; 923; Howell,, Rep,,. 9,316. Assembly--G'erah, Dem., 11,073; Hendrickson, Dem., 10,088.; Taylor, Dem., 11,069 ; Schuppan, ' , Rep., 8,- 453; Vredenburgh, Rep., S,95 4; Yarnall, Repvj 8,5^6. v; County Commissioners— Corlles, Dem., 11,512; Daly, Dem., 11,421; Jeffries, Dem., 11,570; Thompson, Demi, 11,460; Wyckoff, Dem.,. 13,- 580; Field, Rep., 9,747; LeRoy, Rep., 9,714;. Polhemus, Rep., 9,64§; Randolph, Rep,, 9,519; Reed, Rep., 9,484. The National Prohibition assem- bly candidates were John Hulshart, who was . also on the. Independent • pitizensV ticket and who received a total of 1,707 votes; William Lud- low, 107 and Hendrick VanCleef,: Jr., 89. On the Independent Citizen's tick- et, a local option ticket, there were assembly candidates only, Harry P. Bennett got 1,619; Garrett B. Con- over, 1,591, and John Hulshart, al* po on the National Prohibition, a to- tal of 1,707. WILSON THANKS LKWI& Gpvcrnor-Elccfc Makes Reply to Let - ter of Congratulation. The latfer;part of last week Wood^ rdw Wilson, DemocraUo tiovorhoT- elect of New Jersey,:sent a letter to \;lv'an M. liewls, the defeated }?e- publlcan candidata, in answer to Hr. Lewis’ telegram congratulating Dr. Wilson on his election; Dr. Wood- row Wilson’s letter follows: “My Dear Mr. Lewis: I want to thanfciyou .most warmiy. •: for .- your letter' of congatulaUon. -It was in liJi« with your handsome conduct all through the campaign. I am s«rd that J need not tell you that iny feel-; ing toward you has ueen of the most cordial kind. It fs delightful to feel that there has been nothing person- al in our rivalry and opposition* “I feel in. this moment of success that a great respo/izibility has been put upon me.” Home Election Next Month. Mrs.. G. M .. Bennett, representing the Ocean Grove auxiliary of the M. E. Home for the Aged; Mrs. Tali Esen Morg'an, of the Asbury Park auxiliary, and Mrs. Amanda Wood- worth* of the West Grove auxiliary, have been appointed a committee!to nominate officers for the Home’s board of managers lor the annual election, next month. Mrs. James M. Ross, the present executive,, has de- clined a re-election, owing to her contemplated absence . from town, through the winter. Many Patronize Turkey Supper. The turkey supper at St. Paul's church on Thursday evening was patronized by 306 persons. It. Was served in the Temple dining room by the meii of the church, who proved themselves to be past masters in pro- viding an appetizing menu. It would be hard to cdnceive of, a more Satis- factory, supper than this one, olr one attended with a greater amount of sociability. Everybody.: present dur- ing the evening had a good time. New Roads Planned. It is stated-by tliose .who claim to be in position to know that the next three ■ public roads to be' built in Ocean- county [ have been deefded up-; on as follows:. First, completion of the road from - Lakewood to New ■Egypt; second, Lakehurst to Browns .Mills; third,- Toms River to Silvtsr- ton and Mantoloking bridge. This is alleged to, be the ultimatum of the State road department, which has the last word in the' matter. Extending Beach Front. Services. The Plan of holding. Sunday after- noon service on the Ocean Grove beaicii front, inaugurated the past summer, will be extended . to the South End pavilion next year. The service, to, be held at 4 o’clock, will be iii charge-of the Rev. Dr. Bal- lard, who will^ secure , a-, competent leaderl It has been recommended also that a religious, service be held on the beach at noon every .day through tlie week, Pi’eachcrs’ GroupJHeetijig. The’date of the group meeting for the preachers of the Brunswick district Is Wednesday,. November 23, in the First M, B. Church, Asbury Park. The program of this meeting was printed in the Times last week. 'WorltVs.'reinperaiicc ,Sunday,' -With’a special service tho World's • Temperaiice. Sunday was observed at St. Paul’s church, Ocean Groye,'; last Sabbath: evening!. . The, pastor/, was assisted by Mrs; M. s: 'Wheeler; Dr. AVlieiiier and Dr. George '.Clarke. Hospital; Has 52,Patients. There'are flfty-twp, patients;under treatmen t :in fehe: Monmouth Memori- al Hospital at LoUg Branch. High- water mark, ninety-eight, was reach - ed last summer. NEW SERVICE INAUGURATED Pastor Owens Preaehes lo the Chil- dren In ConlesI Series /, Thirty-flve children registered last Sunday as contestants for the prizes to be awarded for attend- - ahce at. the special service for their benefit to bo given every Sunday morning at St. Paul's M. E. Church, Ocean Grove, according to. the plan already outlined in this pa- per. There , were other children present last Sabbath, but perhaps rot understanding the matter they failed to hand in their names to Secretary A. D. Clark. Pastor Owens preached a. short .sermon to the children, with the thought that they should keep God constantly before them, Illustrating that thought by exhibiting a phylac- . tery "brought by him from the :Hoi y Land.' The phylactery' fs Worn by the\ Jews every week-day morning, ex- cept on feast days, as they say .their prayers, so that the words of God may never be forgotten by them. Tbe pastor read the first nine verses of the sixth chapter of Deu- ternomy, aiid on this passage he based his brief discourse. He, told the children that they should k e e p •; God constantly before them by being prayerful. . The prizes^ three handsome Bi- bles, are to be awarded for regular attendance at, and interest in, these services. NOItDICA PRESENTS TREES. To tlio Oakhurst M. B. Church, in Which She Worships. Among the many gifts to the Oak- hurst Methodist, church - this ■.-fall, were several silver fir trees from Mr. and Mrs. George L. Young; of Deal. Mrs.. Young is Mme. Nordi- ca, Ocean Grove’s favorite ’.singer,- who worships in the Oakhurst church as often as she is at her.coun-' try seat, A shor.t time, ago Rev. Harry A., Relyea at the close of his morning sermon at the Oakhurst church sang a solo. In the church at the tfmt> were a number of visitors, among them Madame Nordica. When Pas- tor. Relyea was -introtf uced to the famous siiiger he began to apologize./ Madame Nordica quickly squared ac^» counts by inviting Mr. Relyea anti his wife to dine with her and her husband at the Young bungalow . atV Deal the next day. The invitation was accepted, Mr. Relyea’s preach- ing and singing pleased Madaiue Nordica so well that she has select<ed the little Oakhurst church as her- summer house of worship, 2,301 SUNDAY SCHOOLS. That’s the Number in This State, With 412,000 Pupils. From reports submitted to . the, New Jersey Sunday School Associa- tion, which opened its flfty-second r- annual jfconveri^ion /in Olivet. Pres- byterian church, Atlantic City, on. Tuesday, it is learned that New Jer-, sey has 2,361 Sunday schools. There' are .39,716 teachers and officers and a total'membership of 412,609, 'a/ gain of 10,306 during the year. During the twelve months 11,388 .scholars joined church or were con- firmed and 68,*530 are now com- municant church members. Other reports showed that the. State Association had received $7,- 258 and expended $7,226 In extend- ing the Sunday school work through- out the State. Service foi? John Huyler. Last Sunday evening in the John Street M. E. Church, New York, a memorial service was held to ex- press tlie fiffectionatte appreciation cherished for the late John S., Huy- ler, a former member of the Ocean Grove Association. The memorial was given in connection with one .also for Samuel W, Bowne by. their- employes and by the members and friends of the church. - Polheinus-CJayton. Halsey. D. Polhemus, an Asbury Park Press reporter, and Miss Reba C. Clayton Were married last Satur- day at Matawan by the Rev. B. Lippincott, Jr. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ilolmts Ci; Clayton, 614 Sewall Avenue* Asbury Park, Mr. and Mrs. Polhemus will live at 1118 Sunset avenue in that, city, and they will be "at home” af- ter January 1. Mrs. Uinns Laid to Ktvst. Afrs. George C. Pridham, of. 57 Embury avenue, attended the funer- al of Mrs. Lucy Binns on Thursday of last week from (he home of the lat- ter’s . daughter, Mrs. Ella Wolf, Elizabeth, N, J. Mother and daugh- ter are well known in Ocean Grove; Mrs. Binns was killed by an automo- bile in Newark the first of last week.; . For over thirty years she had been a summer visitor to this place. New Railroad Superintendent, Succeeding the late Rufus Blod- gett, .<>£ Long Branch, L. \V. Berry has-been' appoi n ted Vsuperintendont;; of the New York, arid Long Branch Railroad. Sir.* Berry has- been- th,o superintendent of the Lelilgh ahd Hpdson . River Railroad, with/ head-- q u a r te r s a t AVarwVclc, "N..Y. Grove. Gunners Rabbit. Hunting. Among the .gunners out after rab-. bits on Tuesday, the first day legally Bet apart for shooting cottontails, were Edward J. Davis, Gen. John C. Pattersdn, Rue Applegate and E. N. Emmons, of Ocean Grove.

OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, … EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION

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Page 1: OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, … EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION

V O L U M E E IG H T E E N , NO. 4 7 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 O N E D O L L A R T H E Y E A R

BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM

PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION OF REMARKABLE DISCOURSES

Kelivercil in (ho M emorial Xnlter-

nticlo a t Ocean Grovo D uring tlio

1’nst Hummer, nnd of W hich, F o r­tunately, th e StcnograplUc Notes

W ero T aken by Miss M arsh.

• D uring tlie past sum m er. BiBlifil) W ilson delivered tit tlio m orning H oliness Meeting In tlie Tabernaelo

' hero u series of brief discourses re-, m arltable In many ways. These ser- ibonottes were so we)) received and

, productive o£ so much good tb a t ‘ thero haB been a dem and for tbe lr

publication in pam phlet o r book form . Miss Mary Marsh, the organ­ist In the Tabernacle and who also is a stenographer, fortunately took shorthand notos of these .addresses, bo th a t i t w as possible to nave them prepared for "press. I t is under­stood tlia t the w ork o£ having them published in now well under way.

>A gem from the collection was th a t one delivered on the m orning ot

. Ju ly 23. • On th a t occasion th e Bish­op solected as the basis of his dis­course four verses from the. flrst ■chapter of ColossiohB, 9-12. He said in p a r t:

. X w ant th a t we shall tu rn ; our though t th is morning to a few verses contained In the ilrst chap­te r o f . ColoBaians, from the n in th to the tw elfth verses, inclusive:

‘,‘F o r th is cause we also, since th e day. we. heard it, do no t cease to p ray • fo r you, and to desire th a t ye m igh t be filled with .the knowledge of his will In all wisdom and sp irit­ua l understanding.

"T h a t ye m ight w alk w orthily of the L ord unto all pleasing, being fru itfu l in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge ot

■ God. '“ Strengthened w ith all m ight, ac­

cording to his glorious power, unto ' n il ..patience and long-suttering -with

joyfulness."G iving thanks unto th e F a th e r ,

Which- hath made us m eet to be par­tak e rs ot the Inheritance of the sa in ts in ligh t.”

You have been talk ing about some of the saints, and thinking of them as . they w ere when here In the m idst of us, What they are today, Where they are today—-tlie "sa in ts in lig h t." I look Into your faces a n d I- th ink o f them, and I th in k of your rap tu rous thought concerning them ; b u t our thought does no t a t a ll encompass the rea lity of w hat th is word iqeans— "the inheritance of . th e sa in ts in light.” ... God, who- was able to make sain ts of th e m 'is

. able to m ake saints ..of .' us; "W ho hath-delivered us from the power of darknesB, and hath transla ted us in­to the kingdom of his dear Son.”■

And I. w ant you to bind up just, In a bouquet this m orning the sw eet b to ssom a.that haye gone o u t of the garden of memory here, and pu tting those blossoms of your love in th e ir ea rth ly se tting and fragrance and beauty , I w ant you to bind them together.

T he song th is m orning, "W hen o u r ships come sailing hom e," was very suggestive, and aB It w as being sung thero came to my m ind th e pic­tu re ot these ships as they coroo sailing In; bu t If you th ink th a t tho ships w ere simply stirred by f ra ­g ran t and mellow breezes you are v ery much m istaken. Oh, there were handB th a t wero roughened and to rn by tho ropes th a t lifted the sa ils ; hands th a t were blackened as they tOBsed the coal Into the mouth of th e glowing furnace. There were

' faces bronzed by the sun there on th e bridge, and there w ere others w ho had the ir faces dashed witli the s a lt spray of the sea in the 3torm ; and when the ship came sailing homp it came sailing homo because it liad crossed the troubled sea, and those th a t w ere In tho darkness and in the storm stood ready through all (lie lonesome and dangerous hours of tho n igh t to

. grasp hold of the wheel. Ever> h our of the perilous n ight the. ship cam e sailing home. I t was n o t sail­ing home simply when all the "sh ip ’s company” were gathered on tho dock; simply when the dock wns crowded w ith the friends w aiting to g ree t these home-eomers. I t was ready to come sailing home from tho m om ent th a t it sta rted from tho

• o ther side.

Continued on fifth pace)

T ruck Hack fiolu Factory.The handsom e truck of the Eagle

firemen, caino back from the factory a t E lm ira, N. Y., to which place It was sent for repairs, la s t’ Saturday. The appara tus was housed on Mon­day afternoon. At th a t time some person sounded W ashington's call, four taps, anil members of the la tte r company, w ith their hose wagon, prom ptly responded.

B ank Statem ents.Tho quarterly sta tem ents of the

Opean Orove National Bank and tho Ocean Grovo and Asbury Park Bank may be found., in this paper. Both institu tions, as' usual, make ti cred­itable showing. .

Driftwood 011 tlio lieacli.T he beach front is strown with a

largo quan tity of driftwood from re ­cent storm s. , Children are having

1 g re a t sport- building bonfires, bu t it is a ra th e r dangerous practice.

DEATH OF"ALFRED SCOTT

A Summ erResident and Publisher ol the Auditorium Program

Many perm anent and summer residen ts o t Ocean Grove w ill learn w ith deep reg re t of the death of Al­fred Scott a t his New York home, 243 W est 138th street, la s t Friday. Some years ago Mr. Scott, suffered a severe attack of ptom aine poisoning,

,:the. effects of w hich i t : was Joiind Impossible to rid h is system. W ith’ h is family he occupied .h is Bum m er lipm e in Ocean Grove, 0 Pitm an ave­nue, laBt season aa usual, and • a l ­though his heaitii' was fa r fro m be­ing good' no serious results, w ere ap­prehended. The news of Ills death came as a groat surprise; He leaves rv wife an d ,tw o sons,. Irv ing and Stanley.

The funeral service was held a t the house -last Sunday afternoon',, tho n.cldress being made by : the Rev. Dr. B allard, of Ocean G rove;'long- an in tim ate frlead of th e family. Dr. Goodell, pastor of the church a ttend ­ed by the fam ily, read the lessons and' delivered w ords of consolation. On Monday Interm ent was m ade in Greenwood cemetery.

Mr. Seott hnM been a summer resident of Ocean Grove for. soino years. He w as a m an of advanced Ideas and believed in progress, . a fact em phasized in h is constant im­provem ent of h is property. He was th e publisher of the Ocean Grove A uditorium program , in which busi­ness he was assisted by h is eldest son Irving. He also published the program s for all of th e concerts in C arnegie: Hall and o ther centres of music in New York ,City. Of a jovial n a tu re and kindly, d isposition / he made and kep t many friends. His hom e was tru ly a house of en tertain ­m ent, as num erous friends can testl- ty, . :. y . . V . . . -■ • ■■•■

PBEACHEUS' M EETING. '

Instructive P aper and Discussion nt M eeting on Monday.

"Times and Seasons of RevivalB of Religion” was the subject of a. ■paper read Monday m orning before the preachers' m eeting in St. Paul's c liu rih , by the Rev. Dr. H. C. Mc­Bride), of Ocean .Grove, A general discussion followed the reading of the paper, which proved to be full of in terest. Dr. McBride argued th a t the time for a revival was ' all th o tim e. If the churcli and th e peo­ple be filled with the Holy Spirit.

The paper was followed by a ta lk from the Rey. Dr. T. J. Scott on "S traw s from the Election on the L iquor Question."

Rev. Dr. W. A. Chadwick, ot Em ­bury avenue, next Monday w ill'g ive a paper on "C hildren and the King­dom .”

Fam ous Suit S ettled?Lawyer W illiam L. Edw ards, of

Long Branch, whose su it to r dam ­ages against the New Jersey Central R ailroad Company for being ejected from a train a t South Amboy , has been pending for some tim e, says the .papers for a se ttlem ent have been prepared, and th a t the recen t verdict of $400 will end all legal proceed­ings. The su it waB before the courts on four different occasions. . Mr. Edw ards wiis aw arded $1,000 dam­ages when the su it was first in stitu t­ed.

In M inistry 85 Years.Rev. Dr. E. M. S tanton, of Red

Bank,, who Ib now in terested in mis­sionary work in connection with theA. M. E. Church, th e o ther day cele­bra ted the th irty -fifth anniversary of his entrance: in to th e m in is try . Mr. S tanton was born on a farm in W ashington county, Maryland, and served many churches in th a t State, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. H*>

.wbb a w ar-veteran and a form er school teacher. ..

Ncps X ooklng Pcmianlwni'd.C hattle 's defeat of"' Lakewood in

th e football game la s t Saturday a t Long Branch puts Neptune, of Ocean Grove; in the runn ing for the school, pennant, as Lakewood and N eptune are now tied for first place. Cliattlo had a com paratively easy tim e in defeating the boys from tiie pines, the score, being 12 to G. Nep­tune and C hattle play tills (Sa tur­day) afternoon. There will be some­th ing doing from s ta r t to finish.

Seii. K lootz to Speak jlg iiin .I t is understood th a t the Hon.

W hitehead Klootz, ,of N orth Caro­lin a , whose 'S tirring address in the Ocean Grove A uditorium on Ju ly 4tli liist was received with m arked fuvor by the large audience, hail ac­cepted an ; invitation to deliver, the oration on the sam e day, next sum ­m er. He is sure o t an immense crowd to hear him .

Dr. Todd Undergoes Operation.T he' operation upon- Dr. A.' R.

Todd, of Central avenue, W ho wentl.o Philadelphia for th a t purpose, ns told in the,Tim es last week, was per­formed on Saturday a t the Jeileraon Hospital. The patien t is now doing nicely, an<l If no untow ard symptoms stet in, he will be able to re tu rn home in a week or two. Mrs. Todd' is w ith him in tho city.

:.v. F o r Sale;.Two fine lo ts on W ebb avenue,

w ith in tw o and one-holt blocks of the ocean; the only opportunity Iu y ea r to get, vacant lota so n ear tha ocean. \ F ine location to build a- home. Inquire of H. N. W oolston. Real E state , 50 Main avenue, ocean Grovo.— tf. ■-; .

THOMAS DECKER DEAD

For Eigbt Years Was a Well-Known Resident oi Oeean (iiove

A friend of the Times in . E liza­beth, N. J., sends word th a t Thomas .0. Decker, a form er resident of Ocean Grove, and -well rem em bered here as the sexton of St; P au l’s uliurch twelve years ago, died in E lizabeth the ia tte r part of last week, from the'effects of a paralytic stroke. 1-le, was eighty-four years old. Besides a wife, deceased is su r­vived by nine children.

Mr. Decker jhad been in declining h e a lth 'fo r over a year, and for two

.years, he was. totally blind.• I t is claimed th a t. -Thom as O. Decker was one of the first men - In tills .country to vote - th e Republican ticket, a sta tem ent p ro v e d b y reo-. ords. D uring the Civil v W ar Mr. ■Decker .was an instructor of d ru n ^

■ niing a t T renton, ahtl following the close of the war, he Was for th irty years a member of Company C, of. the S tate Rifle Corps.' He had llvod ir. E lizabeth all of h is life, w ith the exception of e ight years spent a t Ocean Grove.. In 185G Air. Decker voted for

F rem ont and Dayton, and he had a l­ways been, a staunch Republican since th a t tim e. He was a member of the P a rk M ethodist Church. He w as a mason- ..and carpenter by trade, b u t had a lso 'b een employed an a special policeman and as sex­ton of tbe F irs t P resbyterian C hurch,In Elizabeth.

At the centennial of the surrender of Cornwallis . a t Yorktown, when Company C won the cham pionship of the United S tates for drilling, Mr. Decker was presen t and took an ac­tive part. During the past ten years the life 'o f Mr. Decker had been a lonely one, as he was partia l­ly blind. A lthough m any celebrated specialists tried to aid him , gradually his eyes lo st their Bight, nnd two years ago the world became dark to him. Since th a t time his health failed rapidly.

HOME MISSIONARY MEETING.

W as H eld on Thursday In St. P au l's Church, Ocean Grove,

Considerable in terest attached to the sem i-annual m eeting ot the Now Brunswick D istrict W oman’s Home Missionary. Society held on Thursday in St. P au l’s church, Ocean Grove. The m orning session ; w as ' opened shortly a f te r te n o 'c lock w ith a de­votional Bervlce conducted by M rs.

P. H yatt, of thiB place. Rev. M arshall Owens, pastor of St. P au l’s, delivered an address of welcome, to which response was made by Mrs. L.G. Irw in, of Seabright.

O ther speakers on the program , as given in th is paper last, week, weVe Mrs. .John Handley, of Ocean Grove; Mrs. Anna K ent, of E ast Orange; Mrs. G. M. P. W ells, of T ren­ton;. .Miss M artha Van M artcr, of New . York, editor of '.‘W oman's Home Missions; ■ Mrs. Clinton 13, F isk, president o f th e National VV.H. M. S., and Miss Madelyn Why-, land, of the B ancroft R est Home, Ocean Grove.

TO F IX CEMETERY ROAD.

Its Im provem ent is Authorized by Jam es A. Bradley.

Jam es. A. Bradley has arranged to have his forem an, Hom er Clayton, take up the w ork of im proving the 'Mt, P rospect cem etery road leading into th e enclosure from the ■ .cross- road betw een: Corlles avenue, \ W est Grove, and Sprlngwood avenue, As­bury Park . F or a long-tim e the road has stood sadly ln :. need of repair. I t waB to r th is purpose th a t one. of the Items defeated a t the special election held on Tuesday, November 1, was pu t in the budget.

To m ake th e im provem ent com- pleto Mr. Bradley desires to have th£> im provem ent of the w estern road to the cem etery continue on to m eet the Sprlngwood avenue road, thus raak». Ing a thoroughly repaired outlet nt each end.

Eleven Cents Grows to Fortune.W illiam Wallace, of Coaiinga,

Cal., has been visiting his sisters, Airs. W illiam Van Alaster, of. key- port, and Airs, W illiam .Wall, of W ickatunk. Air; W allace is in tile plum bing business and has financial in te re s ts . in o ther lines In his adopted State. He says there is nt, Place like Keyport, w here lie wa3 born and lived until ho was a young man'. He left Keyport w ith eleven cents in his pockat and has accumu­lated a fortune In the, th irty years lie lias been in the West.

/ H eld Clipping' lice.A fter, one or .two postponements

on account of unfavorable w eather, and a prelim inary aWrmiBh to prove w hat m ight be done in the d i­rection of furnishing am usem ent, the clipping bee of the Ladles' Aid Society of St, P au l’s church was giv­en last. F riday evening. Cake and coffee w ere served, a n f l 'ic e cream was on .sale. Miss M arguerite Jack­son sang B.everal num bers and th e Kpworth League orchestra * played.

Music Scliool' for Teaclicrs.Bofol'o the B r o o k ly n S u n d a y

School, Union on Tuesday evening P rof M organ; , d irector of music , a t Ocean Grove, delivered a lectu re-on sight singing, Hlb argum ent was so J w ell received th a t a t the close ho w as.invited to open tl school for teachers, and already a movement •looking to th a t end is under way in Brooklyn. .

I.0ST GIRL FOUND DEAD IN THE WOODS

TBE BODY DISCOVERED ALONG DEAL LAKE LAST SUNDAY

Thomas W illiam s, a Colored Man, Under A rrest fo r Crime of Mur-

:> ; del-—-Suspect Was T hreatened

w itli Slob Violence W hen H urried to County Ja il M o n d a y Niglit.

’. Following the intense excitement, a ttendan t upon the m ysterious dis­appearance, on W ednesday of last -.week o f : M arie Sm ith, the ten-year- old daughter o f . Mr, and Airs. P eter Smith, whose home is a t Wayside, the dead body of the little girl was found Sunday afternoon in a clump of woods along Deal lake. Search­ers h ad 'p a sse d again and again within tw enty feet ot the body In the full daylight during the three days, and it was only a random glance keener than the re s t th a t happened t<? fall on i t Sunday.

.Tho dlscovefy was mode by W il- iifim S. .Benson, of. Bradley P ark , who was am ong the many who had volunteered In th e search.

f i t did no t need an autopsy to es­tab lish crim inal assault. The child was sm all fo r her years and. not strong, b u t she had fought to u tte r exhaustion. The broken sticks and tram pled ground around h er showed th a t, as did h e r injuries. H er gray sltatlng cap and the blue ribbon sho wore In her hair, had been tied 'tig h t about her th roat, but she had also been beaten on the forehead w ith some b lun t instrum ent, and the leaves under her face were cemented together-w ith her blood.

Coroner Purdy, of Manasquan, .was a t once summoned. A fter an ex- ‘am ination of the spot, he 'had the body placed in his autom obile, and removed to U ndertaker F red F arry 's establish merit in Asbury Park . Here an autopsy was held by Dr. Jam es Ackerman and Dr. Earl C. W agner. The physicians w e re ,certain th a t 'th e child had m et deatS from a blow, on the .head w ith some keen-edged and heavy instrum ent, probably an' axe: This inform ation th e doctors gave out to the coroner’s ju ry , which was made up of Joh n . LaBaw, W illiam Truex, George H en d erso n ,' Grandon Layton, H arold Jaequos and W illiam W hittle.,

The sam e n igh t Thomas W illiam s, a colored man who had been em­ployed as chore man about the house of the dead child's aunt, Airs. Jack­son, :was taken into custody as the culprit. W illiam s Is known as "B iack Diamond." He has served a t least one term in prison. H urried to the Asbury P ark city ja il for fear o f : mob. violence, W illiam s stoutly protested his innocence, although the meshes of the law were gather­ing' tightly about .him. He told a weird tale of having b een 'o n a -p ro ­tra c te d debauch, bu t the threads of his story were no t complete.

W illiam s was found a t a .h ouse across the railroad track in Asbury Park . Detective Edw ard H ankinson m ade th e arrest. In h is room was found a towel bearing blood spots, bu t he denied ownership of the a r t­icle. I t is claimed also th a t there w ere blood spots on his' suspenders.

A. hostile dem onstration against the prisoner on Monday n ight was foiled only by the activity of the lo­cal police. About the city ja il w as a crowd, |infurlated by contem pla­tion of the crime and ready, with axes and crowbars for an onslaught upon the place. A fter, the crowd was dis­persed W illiam s, was pu t in an .au to ­m obile in charge of County Detective Alinugh and Coroner Purdy and whisked away to the ja il in F ree­hold. • . v

The body of the m urdered , girl was ta’ken to Brooklyn w here, bn W ednesday, tlie funera l service’ was held in St,- P a trick ’s Catholic C hurch.-In term ent was made in. the cemetery- a t Flatbiish.

The authorities, of Asbury P ark ' Have offered ti rew ard of $500 for evidence leading to the conviction of the person or persons guilty of the double crime. Although .suspi­cion points strongly to the colored man in custody, many hold .to the

. theory th a t he was not alone in the deed, and th a t a fte r all he may not be. the principal, b u t simply an ac­cessory.. ■

Union Thanksgiving Service.The cUBtom of. holding a union

Thanksgiving service in .Ocean Grove will be observed next T hurs­day. St. Paul’s will be joined in this service by the W est Grove and Brad­ley Beach M. Churches, and the serm on will be preached by the Rev. Daniel JohnBon, pastor of the W est Grove charge.- Tho offering w ill be for the Home for the Aged.

S tate Canvassing Board.Governor F o rt has appointed the

follow ing Senators as mem bers of the board of canvassers to officially dispose of election returns, on ■ the Governorship: Senators Price, Sussex; Bradley, Camden; Geb- hard t, H unterdon; Osborne, Essex; Ackerman, Union, and Brown; Mon­mouth. ' The vote' will he canvassed

• a t 2 p’. m. on Tuesday, November. 24,

Tlio Git nvrooil.Steam heated throughout, excel­

len t tablo. Electric light, telephone and lbath . 90 Alt'. Zion Way, Ocean Grove; one block Emory stree t bridge. R ates $G to ?8 per week.— •48 .

COUNTY GIVES WILSON 12,721

Ollfeial Canvass ol tbe Vote Made at Freehold On Monday

Canvass by the ivionmouth county election board o£ the vote In th is county was m ade a t Freehold on Monday last. John C. Patterson,, ot Ocean Grove, is chairm an of .. the board. Woodrow W ilson’s official p lurality , in. the county is 3,389. The official re tu rn s for. .the Demo­cratic arid- Republican candidates are

■ given, herew ith :.;. ", -‘i : . ’ . Governor-—W ilson, Dein,, 12,231*

Lewis, Rep., 8,932. . vCongressman— Scuily,, Dem,, i t , -

; 923; Howell,, Rep,,. 9,316.Assem bly--G 'erah, Dem., 11,073;

Hendrickson, Dem., 10,088.; Taylor, Dem., 11,069 ; Schuppan, ' , Rep., 8,- 453; V redenburgh, Rep., S,95 4; Y arnall, Repvj 8,5^6. v;

County Commissioners— Corlles, Dem., 11,512; Daly, Dem., 11,421; Jeffries, Dem., 11,570; Thompson, Demi, 11,460; Wyckoff, D em .,. 13,- 580; F ield, Rep., 9,747; LeRoy, Rep., 9,714;. Polhem us, Rep., 9,64§; Randolph, Rep,, 9,519; Reed, Rep., 9,484.

The National P rohibition assem ­bly candidates were John H ulshart, who was . also on the. Independent• pitizensV ticket and who received a to tal of 1,707 votes; W illiam Lud­low, 107 and H endrick VanCleef,: Jr., 89.

On the Independent Citizen's tick­et, a local option ticket, there were assembly candidates only, H arry P. B ennett got 1,619; G arre tt B. Con­over, 1,591, and John H ulshart, al* po on the N ational P rohibition, a to ­tal of 1,707.

WILSON THANKS LKWI&

Gpvcrnor-Elccfc Makes Reply to L et­te r o f C ongratulation.

The la tfe r;p a r t of las t week Wood^ rdw W ilson, DemocraUo tiovorhoT- elect of New Je rsey ,: sen t a le tte r to \ ; lv 'an M. liewls, the defeated }?e- publlcan candidata, in answ er to H r. Lewis’ telegram congratu lating Dr. W ilson on his election; Dr. Wood­row W ilson’s le tte r follows:

“ My Dear Mr. Lewis: I w ant to thanfciyou .m ost warmiy. •: for .- your le t te r ' of congatulaUon. -It was in liJi« w ith your handsom e conduct all through the campaign. I am s«rd th a t J need n o t tell you th a t iny feel-; ing toward you has ueen of the m ost cordial kind. I t fs delightful to feel th a t there has been nothing person­al in our rivalry and opposition*

“I feel in. th is m om ent of success th a t a g rea t respo/izibility has been pu t upon m e.”

H om e E lection N ext Month.M rs.. G. M .. Bennett, representing

the Ocean Grove auxiliary of the M.E. Home for th e Aged; Mrs. Tali Esen Morg'an, of the Asbury P ark auxiliary, and Mrs. Amanda Wood- worth* of the W est Grove auxiliary, have been appointed a com m ittee!to nom inate officers for the Home’s board of m anagers lo r the annual election, nex t m onth. Mrs. Jam es M. Ross, th e p resen t executive,, has de­clined a re-election, owing to her contem plated absence . from town, through the winter.

Many Patron ize Turkey Supper.The tu rkey supper a t St. P au l's

church on T hursday evening was patronized by 306 persons. I t . Was served in the Temple dining room by the meii of the church, who proved them selves to be past m asters in pro­viding an appetizing menu. I t would be hard to cdnceive of, a more Satis­factory, supper than th is one, olr one attended w ith a g rea ter am ount of sociability. Everybody.: present dur­ing the evening had a good time.

New Roads Planned.I t is sta ted-by tliose .who claim to

be in position to know th a t the next th ree ■ public roads to b e ' built in Ocean- county [ have been deefded up-; on as follows:. F irs t, completion of the road from - Lakewood to New ■Egypt; second, L akehurst to Browns .Mills; third,- Toms River to Silvtsr- ton and M antoloking bridge. This is alleged to, be the ultim atum of the S tate road departm ent, which has the last word in the' m atter.

Extending Beach F ro n t. Services.The Plan of holding. Sunday after­

noon service on the Ocean Grove beaicii front, inaugurated the past sum m er, will be extended . to the South End pavilion next year. The service, to, be held a t 4 o’clock, will be iii charge-of the Rev. Dr. B a l­lard, who will secure , a-, com petent leaderl I t has been recommended also th a t a religious, service be held on the beach a t noon every .day through tlie week,

P i’eachcrs’ GroupJHeetijig.T h e’date of the group m eeting for

the preachers of the Brunsw ick d istric t Is Wednesday,. November 23, in the F irs t M, B. Church, A sbury P ark . The program of this m eeting was prin ted in the T im es last week.

'W orltVs.'reinperaiicc ,Sunday,'-W ith’a special service tho W orld 's

• Temperaiice. Sunday was observed a t St. P au l’s church , Ocean Groye,'; last S ab b a th : evening!. . The, p a s to r /, was assisted by Mrs; M. s: 'W heeler; Dr. AVlieiiier and Dr. George '.Clarke.

• Hospital; H as 52 ,Patien ts.T h e re 'a re flfty-twp, p a tien ts;under

treatm en t :in fehe: M onmouth Memori­al Hospital a t LoUg Branch. High- w ater m ark, ninety-eight, was reach­ed last sum m er.

NEW SERVICE INAUGURATED

Pastor Owens Preaehes lo the Chil­dren In ConlesI Series /,

Thirty-flve children registered las t Sunday as contestants fo r the prizes to be aw arded for a ttend- - ahce a t. the special service for their benefit to bo given every Sunday m orning a t St. P au l's M. E. Church, Ocean Grove, according to. the plan already outlined in this pa­per. There , were o ther children p resent last Sabbath, bu t perhaps r o t understanding the m atter they failed to hand in their nam es to Secretary A. D. Clark.

P asto r Owens preached a . short .serm on to the children, w ith the thought th a t they should keep God constantly before them, Illustra ting th a t thought by exhibiting a phylac-

. tery "brought b y him from the :Hoiy Land.' The phy lactery ' fs Worn by th e \ Jew s every week-day m orning, ex­cept on feast days, as they say .their prayers, so th a t the words of God may never be forgotten by them.

Tbe pastor read the first nine verses of the sixth chapter of Deu- ternom y, aiid on this passage he based his brief discourse. He, to ld the children th a t they should keep •; God constantly before them by beingprayerful. .

The prizes^ th ree handsom e Bi­bles, a re to be aw arded fo r regu lar attendance a t, and in te rest in, these services.

NOItDICA PRESENTS TREES.

To tlio O akhurst M. B. Church, in W hich She W orships. ■

Among the many g ifts to the Oak­h u rs t Methodist, church - th is ■. - fall, were several silver fir trees from Mr. and Mrs. George L. Young; of Deal. M rs.. Young is Mme. Nordi- ca, Ocean Grove’s favorite ’.singer,- who worships in the O akhurst church as often as she is a t her.coun-' try seat, ■

A shor.t time, ago Rev. H arry A., R elyea a t the close of his m orning serm on a t the O akhurst church sang a solo. In the church a t the tfmt> were a num ber of visitors, among them Madame Nordica. W hen Pas­tor. Relyea was -introtf uced to the fam ous siiiger he began to apologize./ Madame Nordica quickly squared ac » counts by inviting Mr. Relyea anti his wife to dine with her and h e r husband a t the Young bungalow . atV Deal the next day. The invitation was accepted, Mr. Relyea’s preach­ing and singing pleased Madaiue Nordica so well th a t she has select<ed the little O akhurst church as her- sum m er house of worship,

2,301 SUNDAY SCHOOLS.

T hat’s th e Num ber in This S tate, W ith 412,000 Pupils.

F rom reports subm itted to . the, New Jersey Sunday School Associa­tion, which opened its flfty-second r- annual jfconveri^ion /in Olivet. P re s­byterian church, A tlantic City, on . Tuesday, i t is learned th a t New Je r- , sey has 2,361 Sunday schools. T here ' a re .39,716 teachers and officers and a to tal'm em bersh ip of 412,609, 'a/ gain of 10,306 during the year. During the twelve m onths 11,388

.scholars joined church or were con­firmed and 68,*530 a re now com­m unicant church members.

O ther reports showed th a t the. S tate Association had received $7,- 258 and expended $7,226 In extend­ing the Sunday school w ork through­out the State.

Service foi? John H uyler.L ast Sunday evening in the John

S tree t M. E. Church, New York, a m em orial service was held to ex­press tlie fiffectionatte appreciation cherished for the la te John S., Huy­ler, a form er member of the Ocean Grove Association. The memorial was given in connection w ith one .also for Samuel W, Bowne by. their- employes and by the m em bers and friends of the church. -

Polheinus-CJayton.Halsey. D. Polhemus, an Asbury

P a rk P ress reporter, and Miss Reba C. Clayton Were m arried last S atur­day a t Matawan by the Rev. B. C» Lippincott, Jr . The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ilo lm ts Ci; Clayton, 614 Sewall Avenue* Asbury P ark , Mr. and Mrs. Polhem us will live a t 1118 Sunset avenue in that, city, and they will be " a t hom e” af­te r January 1.

Mrs. Uinns Laid to Ktvst.Afrs. George C. Pridham , of. 57

Embury avenue, attended the funer­al of Mrs. Lucy Binns on Thursday of last week from (he home of the lat- te r’s . daughter, Mrs. E lla Wolf, E lizabeth, N, J. Mother and daugh­ter are well known in Ocean Grove; Mrs. Binns was killed by an autom o­bile in Newark the first of las t w eek .;

. For over th irty years she had been a sum m er v isitor to th is place.

New Railroad Superintendent,Succeeding the late R ufus Blod­

gett, .<>£ Long Branch, L. \V. Berry h a s -b e e n ' appoin ted Vsuperintendont;; of the New York, arid Long Branch R ailroad. Sir.* Berry has- been- th,o superin tendent of the Lelilgh ahd Hpdson . River Railroad, w ith / head-- q u arte rs a t AVarwVclc, "N..Y.

G rove. Gunners Rabbit. H unting.Among the .gunners out a f te r rab-.

b its on Tuesday, the first day legally B et ap a rt fo r shooting cottontails, were Edward J. Davis, Gen. John C. Pattersdn , Rue A pplegate and E. N. Emmons, of Ocean Grove.

Page 2: OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, … EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION

2 THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910.

AI0TUKH, I M (JOING TO. THE CITY TO-wonnow.”

the foot of the hill where the turnpike swerved sharply to tho left to avoid climbing the

• • , abrupt elevation and close by the brook, which, Uncling Its source

; Bomowhere among the hilltops,' dercd leisurely through swamp and \»wale nnd cut the farm squarely in two, stood the old homestead. The

• moss grown shingled roof peeped mod- ;cstly from behind a screen of age-old trees, and the low down sagging foun­dations M’ere scarcely, anywhere visi­ble behind the rampanl growth of rose­bushes tha t clambered’ halfway up the south side of the house. Thero were

. lllncs grown in to 'trees, syrlngas that f; crowdcd half, across the gravel walk,, a giant honeysuckle vine timt:'had been choked and pruned baric until Its gnarl­ed old trunk resembled a grotesque f reak 'o f nature.

The old homestead-had lumped, and . ‘reared soven generations of men and.• ' women of the .same name, but It had ' come to pass th a t those of the seventh

generation wero widely scattered and the old homestead no longer knew them. There*were seven of this gen* oration—seven boys—and the last to leayo the old homestead had gone

forth, like the others, to battle in the larger

1 >■—-o |b=| world for lifeI. 18 and happiness.

J Unlike mnnyold couples left

• behind on the farm to watch and tend it in Its declining years;

.these two were ; not shorn of the necessaries' or even . the luxu­ries of life. They had laid aside tlieir little sum,- and they ' lived with no" dread of the morrow., 'No shadow of debt or threat of mortgage fore­closure h u n g over their heads, and they lived in

quiet peace on the homestead that had sheltered so many of their ancestors.

But there was loneliness in the moth­er heart. When the llrst son had bro­ken away from the farm the paug had been sharp and cruel, but there were six left behind. Then the second had grown restless nnd followed in the foot- stops 9 f the elder. The third waited a few years, silently tilling the fertile farm and watching for his chance, i t came one day with unexpected abrupt­ness. .

“Mother, I ’m going to the city tomor­row,” he said a t the closo of a hard day's work iu tho flelds. "My oppor­tunity has come."• There was no open opposition, but

this heartstrings were quivering. So the third sou went, and after him the fourth. In a few years tho remaining aturdy babies had grown to the stature of manhood, and they, too, cast longing eyes cityward. Would not ono of them remain on the farm?

The last to go had been her favorlto, for. was ho not the baby? And with

. his going the light seemed to gojput of the world for the aged couple. But these two were of pioneer stock, and they had met and overcome adversity In many forms, and In time they fell back upon each other's company and found a measure of contentment.; There were seven sons, and each week seven letters left the homestead mailed to different addresses. One went to Chicago, another to New York, a third to Boston, two to St. Louis, one fa r off to the Pacific coast and the last to a nearby city. Monday was devoted to thoughts of the eldest; and the moth­er brain and heart put into his letter all tho little news of tho home life •which he had loved. He had been de­voted to the live

-^etock, and she re*1 corded faithfully

the d e ta i l s of . their p ro g re s s .

B i l l y , his pet horse, had loug

' B i n e o died, but another colt had been named after him, and he was always held in re­serve for Ills ab­sent. owner.

T ile sd iiy ’s let­te r w a s m o r e difficult, of com*

• position. It call­ed her forth into

; the woods to get uqws, for the sec­ond son hud b.een

jvc reamer nucTH -friend of evory squirrel and rub- ue-.vh.pveu am* o v e r bit. ' He could im- ‘ auain th e uhikf itnte tiie call o f. ei-isti.es. . the bluejay and whistle the piping song of the Unche-i. She had learned the nesting season of Hie dltTereiit birds lie had loved, and her letters were full of woodland scenes aud wild life.'

Wednesday was :i day of easy letter writing. H was all a bo at. crops/ the condition of tne north and south tlelds, the probable yield per »tm* and hi harvest time an account ul‘ the results. On Thursday her letter tv.w addressed to the you ng - a re I j I tec * n. X ew Y ork, and she spoke of the things \yhlch he had loved, and Friday sin* roamed the woods again for m ateria l,’for he of San Fraucisco was the hunter and trapper of tho family, aud Saturdays

Thartog iv iixgm :

George EthelfeertWalsIi

CCOpyrtght, 1D10, by American Press Asso- elation;] . V

she peered into the streariiB and the tliirH pools of the river for information

; about the sll very pike a nd speckled trout, for the sixth son w as of the Izaak Walton school. Then came Sun­

day* with its calm peacefulness and thoughtful reflec­tions. H e r ' baby had. been of au artistic iind re-

: Uglotis-'. tenipora- meiit, and the

.Sabbath .was cou- sc*crated to ; him. She / coil IQ-.;; speak: ■mon?r f r e # and v. Intiinately of her 1 n n o r thoughts and home life, , a i i d h e r , p e n moved m ore. rap­idly over the pa­per.

At flrst the w e e k l y letters were answered more or less reg-

TiiEY sat down, at ulorly. She was the table alone, a wise motiier

and did hot expect a reply to every ef­fusion of her own. They were busy . boys,. engaged in the battle o f life. Sometimes weeks passed, aud then a few lines compensated for the lonely waiting.

They fell hi love and married in time. They .brought the ir brides in . hurried visits to the old home. Chil­dren came to them, and each birth added to the cares of the father. * She longed intensely to know of lier grand­children, and If she wrote long ram ­bling letters of the old farm her heart was aching, for minute details;of the children born In the image of their fa-, thers. ' ■ ■ ’

Hut the rush of life in the ti t le s made the farm seem a long way off;. Letter writing was oftentimes Irk­some, and the. seven'sons had duties that absorbed their time and strength. The letters grew few er arid their length-shorter.- On the old homestead the aged eo\ipie. laboriously, read over and over again the brief epistles,, pon­dering and thinking and. speculating— and sighing. . ' •

In due. time the. seven sons forgot to write or delegated the work to their wives. They were too occupied' to waste their time in epistolary com­position. They know, moreover, that th6ir parents kiiew they would send word if anything unusual happened.

And nothing unusual happened to them—that is, nothing th a t would in­terest the aged couple living on the old homestead. They would not caro to read of things in the city which were so vital to the sons of the sev- , enth generation—of social gatherings, of business developments, „of art: lec­tures, of politics, of religious and char­ity work. These were things of the city and not of the country.T h e i r parents would not under­stand, as if the mother love was not i n c l u s i v e e n o u g h to, emr brace all things that touched the hearts and lives of her offspring!

So the sadness and loneliness of the life on the o l d homestead took on a keener edge; The aged couple would sit hand iii hand and W a t e h the de­parting rays of sun with • mois- w atch ix a th e i'ad- tened; d i m m e d : ; **N0 LIGIlT* eyes. The broiider back of the man was sturdy enough to carry .the bur­den,. but the mother was bending u n - ' dor the load.• “Don’t worry, mother,’' soothed the

man. “They have their families and their cares* and we m ust be content.” • •lit is not that,” she murmured,“ but’’ •; •—and the eyes had a frightened look in them—“i do not feel equal to^-to writing—tiie letters, any more; I—I— , find them ii burden now.”

The nian gently ‘ pressed the hand , that...had -penned the daily letters. “Itest, then, mother, rest! They will not”— lie- stopped, ho could not say they wou Id no t hi las them, aiid yet the quivering heart a t his side linew he mount* it; ‘‘That, is it,” she replied slowly; “ they will not .miss them, and that is—What—hurts.” •

The . eyes dropped, and • tbe head rested heavily on the shoulder by her side. They sa t there, a long time watching the fading light and tbo com­ing up of the nq\y uiooii. The dew. of. the evening wet them before they vose”slowly and made their way inside.

Long habit aiid training cannot be changed in a ’day or liigiit, iuijd si uioth- er’.s y earn tug for tier sons insisted th a t some message should be sent, but each week the letters.gi’ew shorter and there was no heart or life i n : them; < Sametimes they- were so perfuuctory that one was merely a dup 1 Icuto,of ’th e . other, a mere reference to the weather and crops -arid an assurancO tlia t al 1 were well. The hand copied from day to day whrtf the brain had dictated for i>ne. There was little variation.

The summer passed and harvest time approached again. The Thanksgiving season brought its train of mem­ories. ' >

A. week before Thanksgiving she looked anxiously for letters from lier eons. Each day they .drove a mile to the village for their mail, but the letters were not there. Tivo days before the event the frail body was keyed; to intense suspense. On the morrow one of them surely would write and gladden her heart. But they returned from tho postotlice w ith­out the letter.. ;

•‘We m ust go to tho village today, fa* -ther,” -sh e urged on Thanksgiving morning. "Wo need—wo need sa lt or sugar, I forget which.” , . _ •

The 'nian’ accepted the gentle lie without a quiver/ There was a single morning mall, and perhaps—perhaps —but who - can. toll? They drove s l o w l y through tho crisp autumn air and returned a t dinner time.They were both very silent and grave. The man was more con­cerned over the white drawn-face a t his side than nt tiie neglect, of his sons. I f tli^y o n l y knew — if they only knew!. They sa t down at the table alone, she rousing her­self by a final ef­fort for the sake tiiey raised their of the man who eyes.had shared her life’s burdens with her, and lie kindly, courteous and consider­ate,of her every little comfort. “Moth­er. wTe will ask A blessing for our sons and their families,” he began. . ■■ ‘

The plates were set for the seven, a custom never abandoned even though tliey remained, em pty‘ throughout the Thanksgiving meiil. The two did hot hear the outside noises, nor the. rattle of the lumbering stage, nor the. lifting of the latch. When they raised their eyes tiie room was full of bearded and bro iled and pale and clean slmyeri faces—faces . which ; in spite of wind and weather and toil and. sw eat had a strange family resemblance. I t was unusual tliat they should bo there, but I t did not seem strange, so confident was the mother heart that her prayer would be answered.

“Mother, I was worried; Your let­ters were so different, and I. came home instead 6f writing.”

it/w as the eldest who spoke and em­braced her. “And I m et the others on the train- or a t the station,” he con­tinued. “They felt the same and eoultf not w ait to write." .

“Yes, mother,” added another, a lit­tle' reproachfully, “It made me home­sick not to hear from you oftener, and ,when your letters did come they were so—so different I knew something was v?rong with either you or father. W hat is it?”

They glanced from one aged parent to the other. The faded eyes of the woman turned tremblingly from one to the other and finally sought in fear and confusion the face of her husband. He nodded responsively.

“Yes, mother has been sick—heart­sick,” he began slowly. “You were homesick, but she was heartsick. 8 he has been giving you of her life, but you have returned little Of yours. She has carried the old home to you in lier letters, but you have neglected her in yours.” _.Even then the mother hunger was

predominant and could not abide the chastening Of her offsprings. The frail hand waved aside the speaker, but he added softly: \

“Even now .she’s ready to give more than she will receive.” ;

T hen;w ith a twinkle in his eyes: - “Mother, Is the feast spread for nine

or two?” •. Ten years suddenly slipped from the gray head and the fra il body, and

• • " -•'•'■• * the f a c e w a s w r e d t hed in a holy smile us she b. u a t i e d about and c li a n g e d dishes and added m o r e t o t h e table’s, supply;; ’“We only set places fo r ' your spirits, and n o t , for your bodies,” s h o murmured guiltily. “A n d you nre all such

■ icarty eaters!”• “Yes, h e a r t y eaters—big eat-:, ers, m o t li e r!” they said hi one voice. .“But we know, where you keep the turkey and the cranber­ry sauce and the pumpkin pies nnd

a l t the other good things. . W ait until we see?”

The raid on tho kitchen which fol­lowed worked havoc witli the week’s cooking,., but the joyous cries nnd wrnngllng words mingled with laugh­ter were music to her ears. . She had her seven sons back again, and . they were boys still in spito o f beards and deeply lined foreheads and wrinkled i-heeks.

tiie raid on. the . Kitchen. •

The Borden Milk Distributing Station,^established at W est End at the request of Borden’s New York .customers sojourning for the .summer in Long Branch, As­bury Park and neighboring localities, is to be continued and maintained through- out the entire year.

This time at the request of p e r m a n e n t residents.

Here, as in New York, the general public lias come to realize the superiority of

Borden’s Country Bottled MilkCLEAN—:From healthy, carefully-inspected cows in

model dairies.

BOTTLED IN T H E COUNTRY—In the genri- • free country air,

COOL—Shipped under ice and kept continuously cool till it reaches your doorstep.

These things and many more have proved to you,- as to thinking New Yorkers, that— ’ ' 1

"It should be BORDEN’S”Telephone your orders or.send a postal card to 'B O R D E N ’S C O N D E N S E D M I L K C O .8 3 B r i g h t o n A v e . , W e s t E n d , N . J.T e le p h o n e W e s t End 179

For Sale by E. N. W oolstonReal Estate and Insurance

48 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, New Jersey96. Boarding house property on Embury

avenue. Good location, with 25 rooms fur­nished. Part easLj part mortgage. Price $7,oo°.

97. McClintock street, one block from ocean, a cozy 7 -room cottage, furnished. Price $2,300.

xoi. Franklin avenue overlooking ocean and lake, 10 srooin cottage in excellent re­pair, bath and furnished. Price $4,000.

108. Heck avenue, near, the ocean a 15 room boarding or rooming house furnished, easy payments. Price $3,500.

109; Heck «,venue, a pleasant 6 room cottage with bath, furnished. Price #2,500.

i l l . -Embury, avenue near the ocean, a 7 room cottage, furnished. Price $3,500. ■

329. A good brrgain in a 7 room cottage

on Cookman avenue. A good home for someone. Price $3,000,• 334, -Fine opportunity to secure a good all the year home for a clerk or business man. Located on Embury avenue with 7 rooms and gas, Price $2,300.

336, Mt. Carmel Way, a 6 room cottage, also bungalow on same lot, in good repair, including some furniture. Price $2,500.

103. Clark avenue, overlooking Fletcher lake, eight room cottage, furnished, with gas. Price $3,000.

97, McClintock street, eight room cot­tage, furnished. Price $2,100.

94, Webb avenue, seven room cottage, furnished. Price $2,750. -

87, Heck avenue, eight room cottage, unfurnished, with bath. Price $3,400.

324. Stockton avenue, a finely furnished five room bungalow, with bath, gas, electric light. Price $2,000. ' ' --

W e have other v a l u a b l e bargains both in cottages and boarding houses that do not appear on this list. Most any of the above properties can be purchased on easy terms, and in many cases a large size mortgage can be allowed to remain. A ll the properties have water and sewer connection. Any further information will be gladly furnished and the properties can be inspected by applying to me at my office.

W E. HURFORDHouse Painter and Decorator

88 Broadway, Ocean Grove, N. J.E s t im a te s F a m i s h e d .B e st s i i t e le « n c c .< ■ UNDERWEARM . C . G R I F F I N

Contractor and BuilderR esid en ce , 6<S H eck A ve.

O cean Q ro v t

Jo h n N . B u r tis Undertaker and Embalmer

SM M A T T I8 0 N AVJCNTJB, A B B U R Y P A R K , N E W J E R S E Y .

Oofflns and burial caakcta on hand or furnished .to order. Special a ttention gtv on to framing: pictures. Telephon* 03. ■

ERNEST WOOLSTON N otary. P u b lic

C o m m i s s io n e r o l D eed ts f o r N e w J e r s e y 48 M a la A v e n u e

O cea n G rove, N e w J e r s e y

fJT \ T C Knox hats. Beacon hats, made by the Knox ,1. ijp Manufacturing Cc., at .$3, in stiff or soft hats.

The Knox productions are conceded to be America’s , finest headgear for men. W e handle this line exclusivelyifpr A s­bury Park. The Tween, an imported hat, made in sixteenth size's, thus fitting the odd-sized heads perfectly, at popular

1 prices, are fully guaranteed as -to satisfaction. The Ward English soft hats are very stylish and cpmfortable.

Our line of underwear is very extensive, comprising

such renowned makes as Root’s American hosiery and under wear, the Duofold underwear— this line is particularly fine for sensitive skins, being wool with cotton lisle or silk next to the body, thus insuring comfort at same time having the benefit of wool for the warmth.

C P V D T C r m I / t O C Ourline of shirts, j ! > O l K 1 L U L L / I K 9 starting with ihe celebrated Earl & Wilson shirts. This line is conceded to be Troy’s best product, down to. a very nice line at popular prices. Iii fact, anything io shirtdom will be found in our line. W e are exclusive handlers of the Redman line of collars. Earl & Wilson’s two for 25c. collars—once used, always used.

H O W A R D L. B O R D E NUATTER AND FURNISHER

712 C o o k m a n A v e n u e , A s b u r y P a r K , N . J«

Page 3: OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, … EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION

rURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910. THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES

MNKSG.SVIM

THE EARTH IS FULL OF HIS PRAISE.

By JAMES A. EDGERTON.

Copyright, 1910,- by American Preas AaaociaJian. .

Hga.tn tbe earth fn stately course has turned Ber face unto tbe vital sun above,

Cttblle eve; unto blm ber soul has -yearned C o speah, through leaf and flower and,

fruit, her love,.Hnd now ber crownfng aeaaon cornea once

■, wore-,£lben he repays her love « ltb jgolden store,

and she Is lavish In her thankfulness 3n d opulent In praise. S o filled Is she

U ltb gratitude sbe would all creatures bless; Row much more thankful, therefore, should

we be.C o Blm who has o ’er sun and eaT tb command Hnd holds them "in tbe hollow o f B is bandl"

I f eartb Inanimate can show ber love Hnd praises, how much more should we,

who feel*pour forth our gratitude to One above,

"Chat Be to us B is love should thus reveal. In all th is beapcned bounty and th is good C hat flows from Bis fu ll heart o f father­

hood.

Hnd bow much In th is trulv favored land Bave. we for deep tbanUsglvlng 1 In all

timeBave never poured from out S o d 's opulent

hand .Sucfe b lessings as have filled our own dear

clime,peace, progress, length o f daye and liberty,

' Our f ather, these and more we owe to Ghee.

C h i n e w a s t b e h a n d t h a t g u id e d iZ la sb tn g tO i H n d le d u s o u t o f d a r h n e s s In to l i g h t .

I t "was C bv love ln Lincoln's soul that won ManlUnd to mercy; it was by Gby might

Chat in achievements th is our age has shown

Such strides as earth before bad never ftnown.

I t wa9 by Chee that we were moved to give C h e. boon. o f ’ freedom unto alien isles.

In C by today bow good it is to live 1 C bv future seems all golden afterwblles.

Bow bast Chou blest our land, Lord, in its youth 1

Oh, keep it ever loyal to C by truth I

■ X -

R E L I E V E

K E ONE 6 > T H ESE LIT TI.E TA BLETS AND TH E PAIN.IS GONE.

“ I liav e aw fu l spe lls ' o f N e u ­r a lg ia arid h a v e docto red - a g r e a t deal- w ith o u t, g e t t in g m uch benefit. F o r th e , la s t tw p y e a rs I Have b een ta k in g D r i 'M ile s ’jA titi^P a in P ills ; and th e y a lw a y s .relieve- m e, I h av e been so b ad • w ith N e u ra lg ia th a t I : so m e tim es th o u g h t I . w o u ld g o crazy . S o m etim es it i s n e c e s sa ry to ta k e tw o o f th e m , b u t n ev er m ore , a n d th e v a re su re to re ­lieve m e.” M R S . F E R R I E R , S4 3 4 L y n n S t., L in c o ln , N eb.

Sold by druggists everywhere, who are authorized to return price of first package • If they fait to; benefit. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.

J)0ES YOtM PLUMBING Q i N E & B A T T E N T I O N I

It ib always best to catch a leak or n plumbing repair when. It first starts, because Sts tendency is to grow woree with neglect.

You will says much annoyaace, as well as tim e-and trouble, by ’phoning dr sending for us when­ever any part o£ your sanitary c-’iiipment appears to be oat of or­der In the least.

■•Home-made" repairs are nmlte- ah if a t best, and are the costliest in the long run—place your plumbing problems on, our shoul­ders, and we will solve them promptly ana satisfactorily.

We are _headquarters for the famous HaineB, Jones & Cadbury Co.’s fixtures. .

j W I L L I A M Y O U N G !P L U M B E R

|6 4 Main Avenue Ocean Grovelfelaphone 428

N, E. Buchanon G A. Smock• President . . Sec. aud Trpas.

Buchanon & Smock Lumber Go.

Dealers In

L u m b e rMillwork and B u ild ers’, H ardware

S e c o n d , Third a n d R ailroad A vos.A S B U R Y P A R K

Solo m anufacturers o f th eA lbem arle brand of C edar Shingles,

P ain ts, Oils, V arnishes and Brusli-■ - es.-:. - ■ , .... ’ ". •’Solo agents fo r K ing’s W indsor Ce­

m ent for M onm outh and Ocean counties.

ALBERT ROBBINSR E A L E S T A T F ■

. IN S U R A N C E . .; -Hotels and Cottage? for Reat

Mortgage Loans

2 2 0 M A I M S T R E E TA S B U R Y P A R K . N . J ,

OS RULE TO BAR CREDITORSEXECUTOR'S NOTICE

C lara C. Morrow an d .W illiam J . Os­born , execu to rs o f C la ra C. R um er, de­ceased, by o rder oC the S u rro g a te of the C ounty of M onm outh, hereby give no­tice o cred ito rs of th e 's a id deceased-to b r in f in th e ir deb ts , dem ands and c ln ir s ngulnst .tho e s ta te , of said do- ceas d, u n d e r; oath" o r affirm ation , w ith ­in 'iv n e m onths from tho seven teen th -day of O ctober, 1910, o r th e y w ill be forever barred x f 'a n y action th e re fo r ag a in s t tho sa id executors,511,10 . CLARA C., MORROW;'.43-52 W IL L IA M J. OSBORN.

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Page 4: OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, … EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION

THE OCEAN { GROVE TIMES SATURDAY, . NOVEMBER 19, .1910.

OCEAN GROVE TIMESJO H N E. Q U IN N , E d ito r. •

E . N. WOOLSTON, P u b lish er,-

P U B LI S H CO t v ^ n v S * T U * D A Y -

* 0 MAIN iV E N U t, dC E A K GROVE

E ntered a t the postoflice a t Occan Grove, N. J., as second-class m attci.

SUBSCRIPTION . RATE.Ono year .............. ..............................-Six months ........... ............. ......... «...Three months ................................. .— .35

Single copies, 3 cents.

A dvertising ra tes furn ished on applica­tion.;

Local, reading notices Inserted for 10 ccnts a line, first Insertion; four or more Insertions, ? 1-2 ccnts n'Hne, cash to ac­company, all hot Ices. • ____

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910,

Oh, We got it good and plenty,And we got it good and strong;

B u t there’s one consolation! •I t cannot be for long!

W hatever may be thQ .fee ling of the average citizen, (he country a t large certainly has a g reat deal, of cause for thankfulness. I t . is not plunged m any costly war6, it is en­joying* a large measure, of .business prosperity, m ost industries are in a

. condition which .enables them to •keep a full force bimy a t satisfactory

v wages, and the crops are so big that a m ere sta tem ent of their size in term s of bushels or dollars conveys a very, inadequate impression of their, value. Standing out large, in the totals ia the corn crop of 3,-

.000,000,000 bushels— and corn ha? been selling lately in-N ew York a t 60 . cents a bushel. For once the axiom, th a t big crops mean low prices does not bold good. It would seem ns if the farm er, of all the peo­ple, had a right to be thankful. And he. has, but lie would have a still bet­ter righ t if the proceeds of his labors •were, not so inequitably divided. Too many non-producers take toll u n til,' when the crops reacli the consumer, they a re marked up to figures which appall the hum ble w age-earner. The farm er is the most prosperous man in the country today, and the rush of pupils to the agricultural schools and colleges proves th a t many are going to seok on the farm s a portion or the prosperity which everyone a t­tribu tes to the farm er. And while i t is tru e , th a t the. husbandm an is so largely favored it is tru e also th a t others, you and all your friends, havfe cause to be thankful. If you will T 'ut slop lo couni your blessings you will find th a t they a re .numer­ous. “O, give thanks unto the Lord, for lie is good and his mercy endur- eth fo rever!”

The early closing, of th e poll's oh election day, sa y .a t sunset, ;has much, tc recommend its adoption again in th is .S tate. F or ohe thing, and the maiii thing, we get the resu lt much earlie r than now, and th a t is w orth a great-deni. Here ih pecan Grove, w itli the polls closing .at seven o'clock on the recent election day, i t was past .the m idnight hour when the election board! completed its w ork . of counting and tabu lating only 553,Votes. Sunset closing would have given us the re su lt ' several hours earlier. We knew th a t Dix had been elected Governor of New York before we learned th a t1 Demo* crats had carried Ocean Grove. Fact! On the. o ther hand, and against early closing, it may be argued th a t many .laboring men need th e tim e to get to the polls after they knock off work. This may have been the case when the seven o’clock closing law was enacted, and the laboring man w as employed up to six o'clock, but it is hardly so now, when e ight hours constitu te a day’s labor. The chief reason for opening the polls a t six o’clock In the m orn ing 'in this State was to give the laboring man ;oppor- tun ity to cast his ballot before going to his work. I t would seem, then, th a t with tho polls-opening tit G a. m, and closing tit sunset there would be am ple tim e for every good citizen to vote. ;

Thanks to Jam es A. Bradley, the road leading into Mt-. Prospect ceme­tery is to be improved, This road' has long needed repairing. W ith characteristic enterprise and liber­a lity Mr, B radley comes to th e , res- eu e when all o ther a venii es of help seemed closed. The . taxpayers; ot N eptune township' a t the recen t’ spe­cial election voted down an appropri­ation of $1,000 proposed for improv­ing the cem etery road; Now th a t Mr.' Bradley has taken .the initiative,- there: is no reason why the township au tho rities may not .direct th a t a fa ir share of the $5,000. annual road appropriation, be used in pu tting the intersecting road, th e highw ay run­ning from Gorlies avenue, W est Grove,-across to Sprjngwoo.d avenue, A sbury Pnrk, in first-class condition and then devote a certain sum each year to - keep, i t in thorough repair . T he im portance of th is1 m atter de­m ands due consideration from the Township Committee.

- je rse y justice is proverbially- sw ift. In view of th is fact it is to be hoped there may be no leaden wings with the' legal form alities in the case of the m urderer of Marie •Smith, whose m utilated body was found on tiie ou tsk irts of Asbury

• P a rk las t Sunday. Poor little girl! Innocent, helpless victim of a beast in hum an guise! The colored man ^Williams, now under a rre st . andcharged with th e horrible crime, may or may not be guilty, a lthough the signs point to him as the person re­sponsible for the awful deed; but in the eyes of the law he is innocent ijntii proven guilty , dnd so legally he is given the benefit of the doubt. Tho blood of this little girl cries out for

/vengeance. Let there, be an early tria l of W illiams, ahd if . l t found be­yond question tha t he is the m urder- erV he should be sent to the felectric chair in a hurry , though, Indeed, in

• the opinion of hundreds of fa thers and m others of o ther little g irls such punishm ent is fa r too m erciful to mete out to the perpetra to r of a double crim e like th a t one under consideration. Fo rtuna te th a t Wil- iiams. was prevented from falling in­to .th e hands of mob law, fo r nt,• doubt he would have suffered wors'S than death. Better, fa r better, th a t ten guilty men escape the fury of the mob than th a t one innocent man may Ue made .its victim. If W illiams is really the m urderer and despoilei

; 'of little Marie Sm ith he cannot long conceal his. guilt.

Our old. friend, the Monmouth Democrat, of Freehold, celebrated the 'W ilson victory by donning a .new dress of type. The Democrat has installed a Unitype m achine, thereby joining the several new spapers of the county, including the Ocean Grovo Times, which have discarded the bid hand method of se tting type. We may pardon the Democrat for Us excess of joy over tho trium ph of its party. We would have crowed, too, had there been anything for the Re­publicans to crow over. .

Rumor says th a t C ount Bonl is again sorting over the American girls and Is looking for an easy m ark. The do llar m ark, beyond, any question.

- F u li m any a ro se 'ls born to blush unseen. Not so with the calam ity howler.

Tho Times has been asked to say tlia t all persons interested In put­tin g tlie New je rsey S ta te Audubon Society on a footing equal to t h a t o£ any sim ilar; society, both as to mem­b ersh ips financial resources and ability to do active and. aggressive work, a re invited to be presen t at* a m eeting to be held a t the Parish House, Grace Church, corner Syca­m ore and Sixth streets, Plainfield, on W ednesday; November 23rd, a t 8 p. in. A t th is m eeting officers for the ensuing, year will be elected, consti­tu tion and by-laws drafted , and p la n s . f o r .m alting the' w ork effective dictissed' ahd form ulated . The Aii-. dubon Society has- for* its object the protection and conservation of tlie birds. I t is a w ork in which every­body ought to feel in terested , for our feathered songsters a re becoming all too few.

Tiie one Republican in th is coun­ty who has cause to give thanks .next Thursday is Billy McDonald, the new mayor of Bradley Beach.

The price of m eat has taken a drop, so we a re told; May i t con*? tiriue to d ro p :u n til; i t drops , irijo the hands of the poor.

T hat eclipse of the moon this week, W ednesday, w asn’t a m arker to the one on. Tuesday n igh t of last week.

H ear , the tale— sakes alive!Princeton 3, Yale 5.

duty of every good citizen to accept the resu lt gracefully and go cheer­fully about h is task .— Red Bank, Standard.

GAZETTE NAMES K AT 7 EN BACH.• ' The public press is already proph­esying th a t Jam es Sm ith, Jr.* .w ill be elected United S tates S enato r;'to succeed John Kefin, when, the Legis­la tu re m eets in jo in t . session next Winter. I f the Democratic party w ants to be good and desires to show th a t the confidence of the peo­ple of New Jersey has no t been t iis-

. placed in turning: the governm ent ofthe S tate oyer • to them,- th a t distin­guished honor should go to F rank S. Katzenbach, 6f Trenton and. Spring Lake.^—Gazette, Spring. Lake;

... / BE THANKFUL. • ■-Time is jogging, right along to­

ward the holidays. .F irst comes the national festival of Thanksgiving. W hile th e . churches continue to .ob­serve the day, its • original religious significance has been largely lost s igh t o f ..1 • A te w : go to church on Thanksgiving Day; very ’.many inore do no t go. Anomalous as i t , may seem, i t is, nevertheless, a f a c t .th a t th e m ore people have, to b e ‘thank­ful for the less . likely a re they to. be th an k fu l Or to p u t i t in w hat would perhaps be a fa ire r way; when: people are prosperous they- are so

• busy enjoying' the .^fniits‘: of ‘their prosperity . th a t they cannot bear to take time ’off to go to the sanctuary to worship, i t is when hard tim es or troubles come ilia t people a re inclin­ed to tu rn toward religious things, to thank a Beneficent F ather for small blessings vouchsafed and to ask for m ore; but when the cornucopia . is full they run away ju s t like many other children, In tent upon the en­joym ent of th e sw eets and forgetful ol the donor.— Freehold Transcript.

EARLY CLOSING OF POLLSIm m ediately a f te r every election

.there is more or less dem and Cor the enactm ent o f a law to provide for the early closing of th e polls. Such agi­tation is even now in progress in tliib State, How long it will la s t rem ains, to be seen. Only once, tw enty years ago or more, a la\v was enacted .clos­ing the polls a t an early hour in tills State. I t caused- a trem endous reac­tion. The next year the Republicans who had enacted the law, ;wert th ru st out of power, the Democrats got contro l and one of th e ir first nets was to repeal the Sunset .elec­tion sta tu te . Yet New Je rsey ought to have an early closing act. New York has one, and no voters, are prevented from casting the ir ballots because of; .the polls .closing a t 5 o’clock. N ew 'Jersey 's voters Would suffer no more than those in Nfew York from such an enactm ent, but New Jersey would .be better protect­ed against repetlters who first vote in New York or Philadelphia -and then come' over in to ' New ; Jersey. Keeping the polls open till 7 o’clock po rm its. too muc\i w ork in the dark and delays the r e tu rn s . : A sunset law m ight be a wise thing,, b u t it„Is doubtful 51 sucli an act. will be pass­ed.— Newark Evening News.- ■ \ ___■

CARE IN AVIATION.j.t is only seven years since the

first- iieavier-than-air m achine was made and many im provem ents have been effected, but no m eans have been devised •for re g u la tin g ' the use ; of these machines.. There atte now . factories producing , aeroplanes, and • the cost is not .by any m eans prohibi­tive; They a re hot so expensive: as autom obiles, and the num ber in use is in c reasing 'rap id ly . E nterprising showmen in, various sections have organized m eets, and -the,gate mon­ey. provides tem pting prizes for.’•ven­turesom e aeronauts.- No doubt many more cities will en te r the .com­petition and will arrange meetings and provide prizes; So long as crowds will pay for admission to the grand stands, there is little rea­son to find fau lt w ith these arrange­ments, The people seem to w ant them . ..... 1

B u t there should be > o m e regu la­tion. F ly ing over cities Id ‘danger­ous to persons on the ground as well as to those in machines. No onei can te ll when o,: screw , : driVer* a monkey wrenoh, or some pieees of machinerjr, may fall from on§ of these machines,' not td m ention tlie possibility of m achine and aViator coming down in a smash. An acci­dental slip of ,a tool m ight cost a life in a crowded •city. S tree t or even in a house, for tin roofs offer little safety from aerial bom bardm ent.

• This is a real - danger, " and de­serves the attention of law .m akers, — je rsey City Journal.

a c c u m u l a t e s w h a t e v e r m o n e y t i c

h a s t o y p e r s i s t e n t s a v i n g * T h e

P r u d e n t i a l T w e n t y - Y e a r E n d o w ­

m e n t P o l i c y i s o n e o l I h e m o s t

v a l u a b l e " f i r s t a i d s ” t o t h r i f t t h a t

a m a n c a n t a k e a d v a n t a g e o f . I t

i s s a f e , s y s t e m a t i c a n d s u c c e s s ­

f u l . I n v e s t i g a t e i t .

T h e P r u d e n t ia l

And Ghristmas bu t five weeks off.

I P re ss- V ie w s f j? a n d N e w s & ?

. HEAR! ' HEjfVR! ' / ; 'Our convictions, are not for sale

and never have been for sale. ,The sam e cannot be said of the editors of som e; of our. contem poraries, how­ever, no m atter how high-minded they m ight w ant others to think; of them .— Matawan Journal.

. HIS POINT OF VIEW. .‘'S tatesm anship?" said Senator

John Kean. “ Do you aBk me to de­fine Statesm anship? Why, it Is getting yourself elected in the Legis­la tu re while the .other fellows, are carrying . the p rim aries.”- —Newark S tar. - ■ . :.v. - .

W HERE THE STANDARD STANDS.The Standard does, not believe

tha t Red Bank, Monmouth county, tlie State or the nation will go. to the dogs because of the e’ection of Democrats. Unlike some others,- it does not. even hope so. This is a governm ent of the people and when^

* people havo spoken it Is the

I f

Schooncr Pum as Reported Safe. .: The schooner Charles 'J ; ' Ditmas, captained by Tyle Curtis, of Point P leasant, whose friends feaieo chat both he and his young wife had.been lost with the:, ship, aud her craw in the recent hurricane is reported snfe a t New Orleans; for which port she sailed from Philadelphia over a month ago.

$ 1 0 0 Rew ard, $100.The readers of th is paper will be

pleased to learn th a t there is at least .one dreaded disease th a t sci­ence has been able to cure in a ll its stages, and th a t Is C atarrh, Hall’s C atarrh Cure is the only positive, cure now known to the medical fra­tern ity . C atarrh being a constitu­tional disease, requires a constitu­tional treatm ent. H all's C atarrh Cure is taken in ternally , acting di­rectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de­stroying the foundation of the ‘ dis­ease, and giving the patien t streng th by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers th a t they of­fer One H undred . Dollars for any case th a t it fails to cure. Send i’o r list of testimonials.

Address F . J . CHENEY & CO.,• • Toledo, O

Sold by all druggists, 75c.Take H all’s Fam ily ♦ P ills :

constipation.

C urren t L itera tu re . .Thanksgiving Day' is the day when

every one sa y s . ho i s . thankful, . and w ants to ea t tu rkey to prove it. .If you haven’t anything, else to . be thankfu l for, you can be thankful you a re not/ a turkey. • ' .

Thanksgiving Day was first ob­served by the P ilgrim s, w h a Were th an k fu l th a t they had five grains of corn apiece. Jn these extravagant times a-m an w ouldn’t; be thankful if he had ten grains of corn— which, shows conclusively th a t we are too prosperous. The tru s ts are doing a noble work in rem edying this evil -.condition. :

People havei various unreasonable reasons for being thankful on Thanksgiving Day,: Some men are thankful they; took a wife, and some are thankfu l they didn’t trike two. Bachelor m a^ds. a re th an k fu l they are not “ horrid bachelors,’’ and a m arried woman is alw ays thankful th a t h er husband h as a good wife. I t is easy to be thankfu l if you -go about it right;-.

B ut the .th ing people are m ost thankful for is the ir - money-—even though they came by i t honestly.. The m ore a man has. the more thankful lie is th a t it isn 't less; and the less a ;man has, the . Iess.>likely he is to be th an k fu l because:iit js« ’t ntore.- Be thankfill, therefore, • IB a t, you haven’t too .m uch to be: th a n k fu l; for. T urkey tastes all the. be tter fo r j coming b u t once a year.— Lipiricott’s Magazine. , . |

A hu rried tr.ip from Panam a in or-J der to discuss with the P residen t the ini port an t sub ject of . fortificiition has resulted in Colonel . Goethal’s persuading President T a ft to m ake ano ther trip to Panam a. There are few g rea t subjects in connection with the work of the Chief Executive w ith which, the President is n o t personally fam iliar. H is knowledge of the de­tails concerning the locks and gigan­tic construction work a t the canal shows w hat an infinite mass of. infor­mation has been m astered. The ,old" habit of “ collecting the evidence” and getting Iiis facts has had much, to do w ith his success in securing1 prom pt legislation and adequate ap ­propriations. His long and varied trav e ls 'h a v e broadened h is vision and brought him in touch w ith all sorts of tem peram ents in tropic and tem perate zones— even those inci­dent to barom etrical changes in po­litical typhoons.

When th e P resident re tu rns from Panam a, Congress will have some In­form ation on the fortification prop os-, ed th a t will surely resu lt in. favor-; able action. The rainy season has no terro rs fo r the form er W ar Secret1 tary,; and" the w orker j on the canal seem to m ake the d irt fiy ju s t a b it faster afte r th e reports of the. P resi­dential parting sa lu te of twenty-one guns have echoed down Limoh Bay. -^-National Magazine.

Anna K lotin , skilled w orker, . an able and clever Russian girl of twen­ty-one, an operative; and trim m er,

earned ?12 a . week. She had been idle twelve weeks on account o£ slack work. F o r four weeks she had n ight work for three .nights a week, and paym ent for tlils extra tim e had brought h er income up to $480 fo r tho'.year.V Of th is sum she;paid $312 ($6 -a w eek) for board and lodging alone in a large, pleasant room w ith a friendly family on the E ast Side. To her fam ily in Russia she had .sen t $120, and she had somehow contriv­e d / by doing her: own washing, male* ing h er own waists and sk irts, and repair ing garm ents le ft . from the previous, year/; to buy shoes and to. pay carfare and all her o ther ex­penses from the rem aining $48;..She had bought five pairs of shoes a t $2 each, and a su it for $15.— McClure’s- Magazine. . . .

' "A nervous breakdown is, as a ru le , the re su lt of weeks, m onths, even years, of s tra in ,” says Dr. Jean •Williams *in W om an’s Home Com­panion fo r November, “and a t al­m ost any. tim e before disaster has overtaken one a complete cliange of habit, th e shu tting , ou 6f waste, the increasing of energy-m aking pro­ducts, perfect re s t until balance has been resto red , would save the day. B u t here we must, acknowledge the g rea test difilculty. The victim s a re so often blind or indifferent to th e ir own physical deterioration until they have arrived a t th a t m iserable s ta te w here only their .own sad condition and num erous abnorm al■ sym ptom s' a re of in te rest to them. We witness -then the appalling self-engrossm ent characteristic of so. many, neurasv Mienics.- Such patients • often fight against, re lief, refuse to co-operate-, ■with' a physician or others who try to aid and encourage-them , and feel, al­m ost insulted if sym ptom s of good health o r improvement are noted. In- such cases effort m ust be directed to­ward the m ental a ttitude , and a t the; sam e .time, and this is very jiriport- an t , the physical basis of a healthy nervous system must-.be obtained.-’

H elp, ih e : H elplesst ;: I have bebn an invalid m any years

and for five years have been sh u t in,I served the people of Ocean Grove since 18S0-w itli vegetables of my own culture.. I bu ilt the H ostetter Cottage in Ocean Grove. Since then 1 have suffered untold agony. I t has been five years since I stood upon my feet; but God is good and allows ihe to engage in an enterprise su it­ed to my condition. I w ant the resi­dents of Ocean Grove to know. I am selling a . sketch o f my life in book form, en titled , “ T rials and T ribula­tions, Mingled w ith Hope.” 2 4 pp, photo., by mail 15c. ^Also, holiday post cards, ten for 15c.‘ Address, C. W. Layton, W eaverdale, 142, F ree­hold 2 / N. J .— 47.

Money to lioan.Money to loan 4>n first bond and

m ortgage In various am ounts. Quick service. E . ; WoolstonjVReal ta te and Insurance, bu Main avenue, Ocean.Grove; N . ; J . - ^ t t ! ■1'■-■A.--

,$25,000 Damage Suit.Orin S. Taber, as ad m in istra to r

of Edward H. Emmons, la te of As­bury P ark , a brakem an on the New Jersey C entral Railroad^ and who died as a resu lt of a fre igh t tra in runn ing oyer him a t Red Bank on January 19, 15)09, h a s !b ro u g h t/ stilt against the railroad company to re-, cover $25,000 damages, and It will be tried in the United S tates C ircuit Court. The train was in two p a rts and while; d rilling one section was run into the standing section w ith such force as to throw Mr, Emm ons from the top of the car and h is head was severed from his body.

R ep ort of th e C ondition;OF Tliu

Ocean Grove National BankOCK AN GROVE, N. J,

At tlie close of business, November io, igto RESOURCES

Loj\M8 nud discounts..........................$194,716 52Overdraft*, secured nud unsecured..... 313 66U. S Hands to secure circtdutloH........ 25,coo 00Premiums on U. S. Ilonjs................... 800 00homls,' BecuriticjJ, etc........ ............... 32,154 JjNanking hgtise furniture nnd fix*

tures........................................... 6,02s 24Due from Notional lmnks (not reserveOL'ents).......... ............... ;.............. 1,235 05

Due from approved reserve agents....... 19,464 06Chuckt«uud other cash itcm s............ : $,55692NoleBof other National Hauks.......... 255 00Fractional paper currency, nickels

and cents................................... ‘ 535 30Lawful money, reserve In bank, viz.:

Specie ...........................95X,egal cender notes i,6S6 00

: --------- - 16,32: 95Redemption Fund with U. S. Treasur­

er (5 pe:r cent, of circulation).;......' 1,250 06T o t a l . . , , , . i „ . . . $303,627 73

LlABtLltiES Capital stock paid in 35,000 00.Surplus fund.,...:...,.,:.....;....1....,.,..... . 10,000 00Undivided profits, less expenses rind ' "•>'

taxes paid..................................... 8.612 78National liauk notes outstaudiuK....... 24.500 00Due to oilier Nationnl banks............. 1.998 rjinie.to Stale ond l'rivate hanks and

hniikeis........................ ................. 5,585 77Individual deposits subject

to. check...............$210,907 56 ’Demand certificates..of de­

posit..................... ...... J,3CO 00Certified cbepks................ 5.»>3 26Cashier's check outstandiuK 3J0 19

— - -217.931 OLBills payable, including certificates ofdeposit for money borrowed ..... . 10,000 oo

Total.......... ............ .....$303,627 73Statr op New jkksbv> 1 ji ’CotTNTV OP MONMOUTII, J

I, T. .A. Miller, Cashier .of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear tliat the above state­ment istrue to the best of my knowledge attd, belief. .

T. A. MILLER, Cashier- Subscribed and sworn to before me this 16th .

day of November, 1910. 'William J. Osiiorn, Notary Public.

Correct—Attest’.T. Nelson I,ili,agohb, •W.'K. Rhadnbr,Wm. Mohan,,

Director*.

REPORT OF THE CONDITION...o r...

Tlio Asbury Park and Ocean Grove BankASBURY PARK,

At tho close of buslneaa,.November 10, 1010IIES0URQE8.

Loans and discounts....;...................,tM7n,648 5TCall I a j h i j s ........... ............................. 60.000 00O verdrufU ................ ............................ 1,83« <88 tocaH, securltlta, eto...M...................' 425,660 13Hauklntr UouseH.......................... ...... 40,00Q fOFiirn ltu round F ixtures............. . 1,844 60O tberrea l e«tnto .............................. 377 21Bonds ivi\d Mortgnges..................... 11,810 00Duo from national, auito and pri­

vate b.m ks and baukG rsand tru s tcom pun to «........................ ............... 210,311 10

CUeckR aud o ther cash Item s........... 6,781 87Cusb ou h an d .................................... 12.-J.405 60

Tolal................................ 82,301,384 05LIABILITIES

C apital Htodk paid in ........... ,',.......... 8100,000 00S urplus luud .................... ................. 100,000 00U uulvlded prolltH, Iobs current.

expense* und tuxos pald;............ 161,810 SUDuo to national, sta te and private

banks uud bankers an a tru s tcom panies ................ ............... 78,671 26

Indiv idual depo'-its,subject, to eheok..... ,.;J1,015,007 83

DoniaUd certlllcates ofdeposit........................... 12,048 01 ■

Certllied obeoks...........2,785 07OaBidor'j* cheeks out­

s tan d in g ......................... 481 42. ■-------------- $1,680,872 81.

ToUil..,.;........................ .82,301,884 06.S ta tk o f New Jkiwey, 1 Counts ot Monmouth, j *

Henry O. WSnPor. president, and Edmtmd E. Dayton, cashier of tho Anbury Park and Oc^an Qn>vo bank, organized under the laws ot tlio wtato of Now .loraoy, located and doing iiuslnews nt Asbury Park In suld. state, being duly sworn, depose and »ay. aud each1 for hlmnHf auito, that tho foregoing report is in all respects correct and true, and shows, tho ‘ actual condition of wdd corporation a t tho close of buslneBR on tho tenth day ot Novombor, A. D. 1010, In regard to each and ovety ot the Items and particulars therein apcnilflfid.

Henhy C. Winso«, President. .Edmund K. Davtun, Casblor,

8 ubsorib*'d and sworn to before me this 0th day of November, A D. 1910.

J esse Minot, Notary,Public.- Corrects Attest:’ • .C O. Clavton, •

A. E. Ballaso,.“JOIIN ilUniJAHD

DI roc tors. ; J

A

Page 5: OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, … EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION

SATURDAY,’ NOVEMBER 19, 1910. THE?OCEAN GROVE TIM ES* t - ' T '-T r ^ ■■ . x

{ P e r s o n a l j | P e r t i ne ritJ|

D aniel S. Reeves aiid i)r. W . 'A, Itobinson, of Ocean Grove, a re up in M aine/ hun ting deer.

• Itev. Dr, Jo h n Hniullcj", of Ocean Grove, last Sunday occupfed tiie pul­p it of th e M, E. cliurcli a t Belford. -

C . Gi B aker, secretary o f the local tY. ' iyt, C. A., w as the speaker a t the E pw orth /League service in St. P a iil’s Tem ple la s t Sunday evening.

Mi’s* H, 31 W ilson and Mrs. Lee Kugle, of the Grove, ^attended the Yale-Erinceton football game a t the la t te r place last Saturday.

J . J . Pooitcr and family on Mon­day! closed tiie lr cottage a t 105 Cen­tra l avenue* leaving th a t day for th e ir w inter homo in Newark.

Jo lin C. Schcttlcr and fam ily, o t th e E vere tt hotel, 4G, E m bury ave­nue, th is w inter are occupying tho cosey cottage a t 98 Asbury avenuo.

D r. G. I j. D. Tompkins, of Mt. H erm on W ay, was called to Sara­toga, N. Y., last Friday to a tten d the funeral of a relative, Mrs. Miles Phelps.

Mrs. M. E . Stull, of the Ivy H ouse, has gone to • her home, in T renton, a f te r spending several m onths here, following the close of h er hotel. /

Mr. and Mrs. C. F. King,- of 13 m- . h iiry aventie, contem plate going South the last of the month. They will pass the w inter in Jackson­

v il le , F la :

C. M; Brown, of W oodbury, was num bered atnong recent visitors. Mr., Brow n has business in terests on the Ocean1 Grove boardw alk in th e sum ­m er tim e. .

Kev; 3>r. H enry \Vheelcr, of Mt. H erm on W ay; last Sunday m orning preached a harvest home serm on in

■ tiie A. Sr. E. Zion Church; Sprlng- •wood avenue, Asbury Park.

A rth u r E.' Sfdwell, the well known tenor, Svill. be one of the soloists a t St. P au l's M. E. . bhurch, . Ocean Grove,' th e coming S u n d ay evening, A musical tre a t .is promised.

C adet 'W illiam M orris, of Ocean Grove, again played, with the W est Point (A rm y) team last Saturday in th e b ig m atch with Villanova Col­lege. The W est Pointers won, 3-0.

, ;Rcv. Dr. S. j . McCutcivcpiv of 134 B ro a d w a y ,h a s gone to E ast Orange fo r an Indefinite stay with; h is son. A lex McCutciieon, The la tte r , is a civil engineer.'

Miss F rances M urphy was called to h er home d t Millbrook, N. Y.( by th e /d e a th of her fa ther during the w eek. She is a teacher, in the school a t Qcean Grove.

Mrs. Marvin Briggs came down from ' Brooklyn las t Saturday to spend the week-end in the Grove w ith Tier: .parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jam es Ross, of 92: Mt. Carmel Way.

• • /Rev. AVillis Reeves, of this place, on Monday evening last' had p a rt in th e revival exercises now progress­in g 'a t th e W est Grove M. E.- Church. H e preached a stirring sermon. -

Rev. l)r. Ballard, of Ocean Grove, wad in New Y ork.City last Sunday and substitued for Bishop W alden as th e p reacher a t the m orning serm on in the Duane S treet M. E. Church.

Tali E sen Morgan, Ocean Grove’s d irec to r of music, lectured las t F r i­

d a y evening in State S treet M.- E.- Church, ;Trenton, on his m ethod of teaching sight-singing. • Wr. Mor­gan will have a class in Philadelphia th is / w inter,

Mr. and Mrs. John Bi. W arden, of Nice, P rance, are spending the week in Ocean Grove with Mrs. W arden’s mother* Mrs. M. E. Covington, and. sis ters, Mrs. Eflle Ham ilton and Mrs. H . M. W ilson.. . '

.Tohn 1 . Knoxv of. 123 Heck ave- nne, w as present a t the opening of th e seventyrseventh annual session of th e Grand Lodge I. 0; O. F „ . in T ren ton on “W ednesday. He rep re­sented • A sbury P ark lodge.

./' 'M rs. H elen Tem ple/ Briglinm, of New York, a t St. P au l’s church on T hursday evening delivered the

..fourth lec tu re in th e Civic Forum course. H er. topic was, "Im m oHali- ty ; o iv A fter, the Sunset of Life is T here no M orning?”

Itev . J . 15. B utler, who recently re­tu rned .from Mexico to spend some m onths In Ocean Grove and vicinity, addressed the , m eeting a t Rescue

/Mission la s t Sunday) afternoon and again in the evening.

Joseph AVIiito and ’ family today (Saturday) sail from New York for th e ir w in ter home: a t P o rt Orange, F la . Mr. W hite is the proprietor of th e Spray View hotel, on the ocean f ro n t h e a r the North End. pavilion.

Mr, and Mrs. \V. S. Connor/ of C entral avenue, have, gone to Haw­thorne, F la ., closing th e i r . cottage here / during th e week. They; Usual­ly spend the first p a rt of the w inter in th e South and theii go to Gatttor-

/nia.

< ;M!ss M. A, K ing, who m ade her hom e du ring th e sum m er and fall a t

•* 57? Law rence avenue, leavies here to­day (F rid ay ) for L ittle Sliver, where she will spend the winter, flrst mak* ing a v is it to New York and Brook*

•lyn. • .

.Mr. and Mrs. Jam es S. Ross, of 92 ,Mt. Carmel W ay, are to spend ‘ the

---- ------ - r-— -— ; ''Winter, in -the South* going, first to p rlando .,F la . They leave here on W ednesday of n ex t week, a r r iv ing a t their destination ip tim e to eat Thanksgiving dinner.

John F . M iller, of ;111 A sbury ave­nue, Ocean.Grove, has d u st purchas­ed the Em m a d a y ton. property a t 3009.F ifth avenue, A sbury Park . It is understood - th a t Mr. . M iller and family will occupy th e ’new purchase as their perm anent 'home.

. Mr. and Mri . Jo h n E , P erry , of 83 Cookman avenue, next week g o , to tlieir southern home a t St; P eters­burg, Fla: They leave here on W ed­nesday w ith the .party, o f which the W etsfords, Mr. Moran and Mr. arid Mrs. Jam es, Ross are m embers. .

Miss Mary Grncey received a warm welcome from patrons of the Ocean Grove postofllee •on'.- Tuesday, when

•6lie' resum ed her-position a s .stam p clerk there. Illness of a severe n a ­tu re kept Miss Gracey. a t h e r homo o n . Lawrence, avenue/ ever! since La- b o r Day/ : / .,. / . V •./•/’’

/A; Ij. Brown, of Plainfield, • a tiri- :smith' form erly in.. th e employ of: W il v liahi; Young, Main aVehue, th is place, was a visitor here on T hursday. Mr.. Brown is very much, in ■ love with Ocean Grove and has hope of. re tu rn ­ing’here to live some tim e in the-fu ­tu re. ■. .

Mrs. M. M. Adams, while a t dinner on W ednesday a t the Moravian cot-, tage, 1.8 Webb avenue, suffered a slight stroke , of 'paralysis . Mrs. Adams Is the owner of the Buena Vista hotel property a t the south­w est corner of Beach and Heck ave­nues. ' ' • . -■/_ . ■/-■•/

Misses Muggie W hite anti Em m a Lawrence, of the Lawrence, le ft the. Grove on Tuesday for a sh o rt visit w ith • the Ia tter’s niece a t • Paterson;/, From th a t plabe they Will go to Au­burn, N.‘ Y-., to spend tiie w inter; with -Miss W hite’s au n t, Mrs. Wil­liam Zepp. .

H enry W elsford and family, of the Osborne House, a n d . W illiam Moran, of the C larendon, a re . booked in the F lorida -party scheduled to leave here for the. south next W ednesday. T heir objective point is- Mt. Dora, F la., where the W elsfords ..have a

iw inter home a id w here Mr. W els- ford is interested in‘ orange growing.'

lio n Johii E . A ndrus, of Yonlcers, the vice president .and treasu re r of tiie Ocean Grove Association, w as in town the la tte r p a r t of las t week. Mr.

.A ndrus - is greatly in terested in the im provements being m ade a t the N orth End pavilion. En, passant, la s t week , he was re-ejected to Con­gress from his d is tr ic tin ' New York ..State.

Mine. Jean e tte Fernandez and W illis Marlowe Jones; who had p art In th e 'co n c ert' in. the F irs t M. E. Church, A sbury ' P ark , : on Mdnday evening, W ere entertained fo r sever­al days thereafte r Jit the . home of Prof. and Mrs. T. E. JSforgan, 51 Ab­b o tt avenue. A. dinner w as given in the ir honor on W ednesday evening, a t which Dr; and/M rs. W illiam Bev­eridge, of Asbury Park', were pres­ent. •’

>irs,. A. ,E.; Curtis, of Saratoga/ Springs, N. Yi, is. visiting Dr. and Mrs, G. L. D. Tompkins* of .115 Mt.- Herm on Way. She. is th e . superin­tenden t of the prim ary departm ent of the M. E. Sunday school,'and herN htiband, .Addison. E. Curtis, besides being superintendent, o f the same Sunday school, is the te ller of-. ' the Citizen's National Bank a t Saratoga Springs.

Miss Marion E nglish, Miss Grace Arthur* Mrs. Charles E. Schanck, IMIss Elizabeth /Ervien, Miss Geral­dine WaUing, Miss V iolet Ett.engef, /Mrs. F. A. Smith, Miss ; Mabel V aughan and Miss Anna W alling, of Ocean Grove,; as a efficient serv itors and w orkers are greatly in terested

, in the fair of - the F irs t: B ap tis t Church, Asbury P ark ; which opened last, Monday evening, to continue through the week.

. Unclaimed Letters,. The following le tte rs rem ain un ­

claim ed in the Ocean Grove postofllee fo r the week > ending W ednesday, November 16; 1. Mrs. • May Anderson, Roger Asli- ton, J r ., Lou. Bacon, M rs.'G eorge S.' Brown, Mrs. Lj^dia Bowen, B eatrice Clayton (2)., Richard, I. Conover, John pook, CharieB S. DeB ow, Qt to Fow ler, Mrs. Irene G ravatt,. Dr. W il­liam Poitts George, Jlrs. Addie H am pton, Mrs. Loweta Heiser, Jack H eIser,.J . Hitchcock, IMrs. Florence H u n t,; F ra n k HuttOn, .Miss E; Ja - burs, G. Wilson Jones, Jack Jones, J. Lancaster, Mies C. Leiner, H arry Lyons, WiUlam Lyons, P. Mehan, M rs .; Lydia Miller, Mrs. •■■■•■'Si' V. S. Muzzy,.Mrs. S. J . Owln, -Mrs. Maggie. OleSf Charles Quackehbush, B enja­min Rose, Mrs. S. A'. . S av ille ,. Mrs. C harles Stand ford, T. A.. ShermanV Mrs. Skinner, B.. Sterling, Miss L au ra E . Smitii, Samuel Steelm ah, .Mrs. Dr. Tom kinsoiu Miss: E . R. Thompson, Charles W agner, J n , W illiam W eightm an, Mrs. M. Wil- 1 lam si .M iss; L aura W itm er,: A shton Rogers, J r . / Fourth-class— Helen L arry , Mrs.-R . D. Lydecker.

Money to Ijoan.Money to loan on first bond and

m ortgage in ' various am ounts. Quick service. E. N. Woolston, Real E s­ta te and Insurance, 50 Main avenue, Ocean Grove, N, ’ J ,--rtf , 7:: , •

Ocean Gives Howell M ajority^. Official election re tu rn s show th a t

Congressman B. F. Howell, of . this d istric t, carried Ocean .county by 101 m ajority .

Governor Says Give T hanks, .Governor F o rt on W ednesday is­

sued his .Thanksgiving proclam ation, in accordance w ith annual custom.

R eal E sta te T ransfers,The following tran sfe rs of r*al esr

la te in this vicinity w ere riio rd o d In the office of th e County Glerk for ihe week ending las t Sattiridny:

M argaret F. Osborn, e t a l,. to George W .. P ittenger, trustee.* - 'Lot 9.23, Embiiry avenue, map Ocean Grove Camp' Meeting Association; Qcean Grove, $1,

C harlotte Conger to Reuben Bi’undage. . Lots 480, 481, Ocean. Pathway, Ocean Grove, $13,000;. Reuben B rundage to John C.

Crevelln'g, - e t al. Lqts 480, 481, Ocean Pathw ay, Ocean Grove, $1.

George . Leonard to Ilu ldah J. Leonard. L ot 260, p a r t 259, 258, Asbury avenue, Ocean Grove, $1.

. Iva I. Attwood, ex’rx, to Jane A; Overington. L ot 3 t8 , Surf avenue, map Ocean Grove Carni) M eeting As­sociation, Ocean Grove, $1.

Samuel W ./M argerum , e t als, lo B ertha B. Astley. L ot 1607, Heclt avenue, Ocean Grove, $2,100.

•Ashbrok Lincoln, et- al, to Elom i C; Conover. Lot 1319; Mt'. Tabor Way,' Ocean-Grove, $500. ' ; ^

. Beatrfce, M. H arrison to/ Beatrlcei M. G arrison ,-2nd. Lot 875, • Heck avenue, Ocean Grove; ?800.

Mary. Ai Tiltori to -Mlhnle A. E l­m er./ Land road Gr;een.v411e to Curtis W hite’s, township N eptune, $1. ■ <

Milton T ilton ; e t al, to Minnie A. Elmer. Land *road Greenville to Cur­tis W hite’s, township Neptun6, $400!

Township of N eptune to GeorgeB. Dodd. Land Boston stree t, As­bury Park , $1. '

A rthur V. P . McDowell to I ra N» Jobes. Lot 52, map Snyder’s addi-^ tion to W est B radley Beach, ?225.

Edwin S. Patterson* e t al, to Ly. • dia A. Morris. Lot CO, map Snyder’s addition to W est B radley Beach, $5.

H erbert W. Stickney, e t al, to. Anna F. L. Stlmson. L and corner Seventh avenue and Park street, As­bury Park, §1.. Jan ies. A. Bradley, e t a l, to Fred;B. Burdge. Lanjl F ifth avenue, As­bury Park , ?1.

M ary G. F erris , e t al, to H erbert E Shubert. L ot 483, section 2, sW est Asbury P ark , $1.

Herm an E.i, S hubert to Cyrus E.. Ferris, Lot 483, section 2, W est Asbury P a rk ;.? 1. ,

A lbert Robins, e t ial, to Joseph H .’ Harris. Lot M attlson avenue, As­bury P ark , $1; v

J. Edward Borden, e t a l ,> to. Jo ­seph W ilkins. L ot Borden ' avenue, Asbury P ark , $1.

George A. Smock, et al, to MaryE. Thornton. L o t 15, Range L, As­bury P ark , $1.

araes E. Borden, et al, to Mary E. Thornton. Lot Second avenue, As­bury P ark , $1.

Eva Benson to L ottie A. Burr. Lot 9.2.3, map F . H. K ennedy, Asbury Park , $ 1.

WIHHN MONMOUTH COUNTYRed Bank— The Monmouth Coun-.

ty P'onltjry C lub . will .h o ld its. th ird annual exhibition a t Red Bank, ou December 7, 8, 9 and 10.

Long Branch— The October honor roll of the Garfield school contains the names of 170 pupils; who were n lther absent nor ta rdy during the m onth. ;

-Red Bank— D istrict Deputy C. E. Brown, of E lizabeth, who represents the Modern Woodmen of America, will sooh pay a visit, to Red Bank in an effort to establish a cam p of th a t society here.

Shrewsbury— Oyster . borers . - In large quantities, have appeared in the North Shrew sbury riyer this sum m er and fall. The borer i s . a snail w ith an extrem ely hard and sharp drill.

Keyport— A- drill w ent through the thumb of Leon W allace, of E ast Keyport, while he was w orking in Conover & Young’s mill ' a t that place, and it was hecessary to take the machine ap a rt to release the member.

Wayside— One n ig h t recently thieves entered th e . stable o f CharlesE. Slocum and sto le h is bay m are, ■valued a t $200, and a buggy belong­ing to his son-in-law^, The .'Outfit

■ w as traced next m orning as fa r as O akhurst, a n d . there all trace of it was' lost.- ; ./

S h rew sbury -M iss '•* Nellie Casey, daughter of John Casey, of Shrews­bury; has been in the Long Branch hospital,, undergoing trea tm en t for a broken bone in h er cheek. She w a s riding; a bicycle one n ig h t re­cently when she collided w ith a col­ored man also rid ing a. bicycle.

Matawan— On a recent n ig h t a cat belonging to. Mrs. C harles Van B runt entered the open oven door of the stove and the nex t m orning the door, w as closed w ithout realizing th e cat was there. L ate r Mrs. Van B run t went to use ‘the oven aud found the cat had been, suffocated.

Eatontow n— A blind horse owned by Rens S k u llh a rt, ' tu rned out * to graze one n ight Recently, w alked in­to the church yarq and placed its feet through a cellar window; I t was found in this position in the morning, badly cut by broken glass,, and' bleeding freely*

K earisbu rg^A num ber of; / the young women of K eansburg liave or- ganlzed themsolveB in to a ‘‘Gossip

. C iub /' v patterned afte r . th e \VeIl-- known "L adles’ Social Circle*” of Middletown township; They ineet

{every Tuesday afternoon a t the homo \of one of. the members. .

Red Hill— From th is section of Middletown township the childreu Will be conveyed In a stage to . the school a t the expense of th e hoard of education; V ictor McClusky, a farm ­er; has the contract to carry the children, and lie had bu ilt a glass en­closed stage , to accommodate th irty p eop le ..., '•/.; .

Elberon—-W ork has been sta rted on the new Elberon library . The library will be of . concrete and stone, and will occupy the triangu la r site a t the foot of Lincoln avenuo. I t will be a modern structu re , costing U pwards of $7,000, and will contain a lecture room and spacious reading room.

Atlantifc .H ighlands— In th e case

of Hugh L. M erritt vs. A. L. Gorlin, both of A tlantic Highlands, in which the plaintiff sued Gorlin for $3,000 damages for in ju ries adm inistered to him when the defendant threw him from his sto re las t Ju ly and broke his shoulder blade, the plaintiff was allowed dam ages of $300.

Seabright— F ailing to hear th t warning signals Joseph Strom eyer dr6ve, direetly in fron t of a tra in a t Seabright. The wagon was struck fairly:'in the; m iddle by the locomo­tive, and cut in two.- Strom eyer and the horse were throw n several feel against the/ base of- thV railroad gates, bu t both received only minor injuries. .

Belford— The Belford postofllee was entered on a recent night. En­trance was gained by prying open, a sh u tte r w ith a crowbar. D. W. Van- Note, th e postm aster, had removed all the money excepting. $2, which was tak en .' • The thieVes also took $2 worth of stam ped envelopes, fifty postal/ cards, a couple of boxes of cigars and. som e tobacco. .

Red Bank*— George Hawley, a ne­gro, ^vas seint to /th e county ja il to aw ait the action of the grand ju ry on a. charge of stealing a gold,watch a u d ic Ii a r rii, a n . o ve r c oa t : and a su i t o f clothes from Fred W. Hope’s home cri Bioad stree t, Red Bank. ' Hawley gained en trance to th e house by a rea r door- While the family .were in the fron t of the house. He was heard upsta irs ,.how ever, apd was recognized as he m ade his escapt cu t of the back door.

BISHOP’S SERMONS(Concluded from first page)

You do no t know w hether it is day or n ight oh the sea, or w here you are sailing today. You do no t know w hether your face-w ill be lighted, with the sinile some day, when the winds seem to be favorable ,/ or w hether your, hands w ill be harden­ed and cram ped w ith clutching the ropes o f th e sh ip ; b u t In the day-or in the n igh t the ship is sailing home. And it fs a good th ing for us to re­mem ber th a t o ther day, th a t other blessed hour, when Insklp, and Hughes, anid Adams, and Janes, and FitzG erald, and Palm er, and Cook- m ah, and Myers— these- sain ts of God; and then those mighty, tower­ing, m ajestic sa in ts of the olden day th a t saw the windows open and caught th e ir glimpse of divine glory. They sliall be down a t the dock to m eet us when our ship comes sail­ing home. I t is w orth while to stand a little of the spray in your face; it Is w orth while to take your watch in the n ig h t; it is w orth while for you to have your place a t the wheel as It may chance 'that the great . Captain, shall give His order. T rust Him. The n ig h t w ill break, the storm will turn and pass away and the ship ivill come sailing home. And thanks be unto M ini “ which hath made us m eet Jo be partakers of the .inheritance of- the sain ts in light',” ..... • • ' ■ •

*. Driving Association’s Ofilcers,A t the recent annual m eeting of

the Freehold Driving • Association these d irectors "were chosen: iiid- ward Tayior, Charles McCue, P eterF. Conover, \V alter C. O’Leary, O. W. F. Randolph, G. M.-F. Rando'pn, .W, /H erbert VanDerveer, G arret A. Denise, Dr. W illiam E. Truex* Theo­dore Pope, G arre t D. Carson^ Cap­tain A.. M. B radshaw ,‘W. ’F^ Brophy, ^ L, Buckeiew, W illiam S. • Holmes.

.The directors organized by elect­ing O. W, F, Randolph, president; P eter F . Conover, vice president; W.F. Brophy, vice president; Dr. W il­liam E. Truex, secre ta ry ; G arre t A Denise, treasurer.

Van’s Grocery TalkColder weather and Thanks­

giving near at hand make us think of the good things so appetizing and needful for this time of the year. Apples and cranberries, white grapes and oranges, grape-fruit and ba­nanas.1' New cider—just the sweet juice of the apple, not fermented. ; Then, there’s the mincemeat, citron, orange and lemon: peel, raisins,; currants and the spices for pies and puddings. .

We’ll take orders fpr poul­try, too—turkey^, ducks and chickens. A boiled ham is also seasonable, and you know I always carry the finest in stock. Burk’s, as well as the bacon. Have Burk’s fresh sausage, frankfurters and scrapple, too—and you know there’s none better. Almost forgot the molasses, that sweet, sugary kind, so fine for cake and caiidy.

No need to say anything about the canned goods.

Sauer kraut? Sure! Bully!W hy, the coffee! Pretty

near skipped that. Thirty- five cents will buy a pound can of Leggett’s Premier cof­fee, which has no superior Don’t believt it ? W ell, the proof of the pudding is not chewing the string, but in the eating. And so it is. about drinking Premier coffee. Try it—you’ll buy it.

L. v a n G illu w e Ocean Grove. New Jersey

The Doctor and the Telephone

' A N Y l i v e s a r e s a v e d e a c h y e a r b e ­c a u s e t h e d o c t o r i s r e a c h e d p r o m p t l y b y t h e B e l l T e l e p h o n e . F r o m t h e

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

Consultations with Specialists are easily arranged by means of the Bell Long Distance Service.

Have you a Bell Telephone?NEW Y O R K TELEPHONE COMPANY

Every Bell Telephone Is a Long Distance Stations ia ra

For Men, Women, Boys, Girls and Ihe Little Folks

It is the height of wasteful­ness to buy poor shoes in order to save money; but when you can buy good and carefully examined shoes at the same price, and often less, than you pay elsewhere for the poor

kind, it is a distinct saving to buy at Baker’s. We never go near factories that make questionable shoes; for you shall never buy an unworthy shoe at our store, no matter bow lit­tle you pay for it. That is why it is always safe to save on shoes you buy at Baker’s, as hundreds in this vicinity kuow^_

" Buy al Baker's and Save Money ”

C H A R L E S M . B A K E RT he S h o e M an of A s liu ry P ark

Franklin Bnilding, Emory Street and Cookman Ave., Asbury Park

N. J. TAYLOR P residen t

T. A. M IL L E R Cashier

$3 JACOB STIL ES Viuo P residen t

E. M. F IE L D S A ssistant Cashier

SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES ij

' a n d 'U P

The Ocean Grove National BankA s s o c ia t io n B u ild in g , O cea n G rove, N e w J e r s e y

Solioits jo u r bank ing business and offers every advuntago consistent ■with safe method*.

Capital . . . $25,000.00 Surplus and Profits $17,000.00

DIRECTORSN. J. Taylor, 9. D. Woolley, Wm. Moran,- T. Nelson I.iUagore, John Hulihart, Thomas

Wyncoop, Jacob Slile*, C. V. Hurley, W. K. Bradner and T. A, Miller. •

Asbury Park # Ocean Grove BankCor. Mattlaon Awe. and Main S t., Asbury Park

( Cor. Main Ave. and Pilgrim Pathway, Ocean Grove

O aplta l, S u rp lu s and P ro fits ,

$ 3 1 5 , 0 0 0

T O T A L R E S O U R C E S

$ 2 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0

Founded and Built on Sound Banking PrinciplesA ll business en trusted to us treated coulldontlal. Issues foreign and dom es­

tic drafts, le tters of credit, bauk m oney orders, and tr.iusuots a general bank ing business Safe deposit boxes to ren t a t reasonable ratos.

OfvicbhsH enry C. W insor, P residen t 0. C. Clayton, Vice P residen tE dm und E. Dayion, Cashier Jesse Mluot, A ssistant CashierF ra n k M. Millor, A ssistant Cashier H. A. W atson, A ssistant C ashier ’

DniEcrons ",T. F . Appleby, A. E. Ballard, 0. 0. Clayton, Jo h n H ubbard , Honry 0. W insor

Organized February 28, 1903

of the city of Asbury Park, N. J.

C a p ita lS u r p lu s

$50,000$ 5 o , o o o

Prank B. Conover‘ ■ Heury dteinbach.

DOARD OP DIRECTORS:James P. Ackerman William A. Berry S. P. Hazelrigg

> M. I«. itamroan . Clarence S. Steiner James M. Ralston WIUIAM A. BERRY, Cashier

Transacts a general banking business and olfers □I every facility consistent with safe methods.

Page 6: OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, … EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION

THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910.

I BUYING A I PLACE

T h e P ric c W e n t V e ry H igh ,

T h e n D ro p p e d

By LUCY K. WYNKOOP •;>Copyright, 1910, by American Press'

Asocial ion. V -

A young man pulling a boat on a NcwKnglnml hike rested on Ills oars before a plank landing, on which stood a young woman evidently waiting for something.

;_/• "Beg pardon,” lie said to her, “ is• there n road behind those houses up -thereleading down to the railroad sta- tfon a t Pnrkvlllc?” . ‘

;.,V .."Yes; there is,” was the reply.The young innn gaped about him ns

; though interested in the lay of tlie• lai\d( lie. was really interested hi the ; . girl,; who was tjulte comely. lie was

trying to think of some other question to ask her in order to keep up a con*

- .v e rsa tion.“Can you tell tue who occupies tlmt

white house up on tlmt crest?”.he ask*. *d.

“Dr. Kgerton.”There was another pause. The re­

plies were so exactly to tho point that they did not Invite any fnrher ques­tioning. However, the.young man was

. not to be dropped....' “ I’m looking for n place like th a t on

this lake,” he. said, “I wonder if it could bo bought.* -

“ I suppose there’s hardly a piece of property in ,the world th a t cannot be bought if the purchaser is willing to give ti large enough price.”

'•I've looked over all these New Eng­land lakes with a view to buying n summer residence; and I like, this bit of w ater better than any of tlieim My mother and sister won’t go to.hotels, and I don’t like them myself. We

• wish a place where we fa n go as soon as spring opens and slay till late In the autumn.”

The young lady evinced no interest in the young:m an’s family plans and rnude no reply.

“That place up there would suit iis exactly” lie continued. “I would like

• to spend alj the rest of my summers there.. The view must be IIno.”

“There would be no harm in your trying to buy It,” said the girl. “Von might write a note to the owner ask­ing if any.j>um you would be prepared ,to pay would he accepted.”*. ^'ihaiik you very much for the sug­gestion.”

At tiiat moment there were sounds of motorboat engine explosions, and a launch was seen making for th“ land­ing. I t snon pulled up tin re under rare of a single boat man. Tiie young Jady got aboard and. \yilhoul so tmieii as a look at tlie oarsman, was carried away.

“Mighty fine looking girl,” he said to .hiinsHf—“well but plainly dressed and witli an air of* ‘being somebody.*I wonder who she is.”

Ja.ek A born was ,an enormously wealthy young man. having inherited.,

. the bulk of his father’s property, and was accustomed to having anything money could bhy that he desired. There was something unique lu the Egerton place U nit'struck his fancy. He couldn’t very 'well build such a place. To begin with, he couldn’t get tbe site; then It would require half a century to grow the trees. Besides, lb ere was tin. old fashioned look about the whole place tlmt could not be Im­itated. As the young lady had said, there would be no harm in trying to buy it, anti he resolved to drop the owner a note asking if lie would con­sider an offer.

.He did so and received a reply writ­ten Iu .a woman’s hand as follows:

. Dr. Egerton desires me to acknowledge the. receipt of your note usking If tin offer ' for this place will l>o considered and to

. Biiy that It has been in the lCgcrion fam­ily so many years that 'there is at pres-

. but no intention on the part of the own­er to sell It. However the doe tor would IlKo to know-what it would bring. Youth

:■ :• truly; . " ' SAit Al I II.' M'CA UT H Y, ’■ ’ S c a i 'rU iry .

•/ Aborn . wns snllielenily versed in- business methods to waste no further time )u corn-spondencM*; he called upon D r / :Kgerton for a conference, lie wds received- by Miss Met’artliy. a middle aged Indy, who told him tliat the doctor liad gone lo the -city, inn that she (the secretary) hnd charge of such business m atters as ret pi i red at-, teption In the doctor’s absence and bad

v power to act. Aborn asked what the •property would bring If offered openly for sale, and Miss McCarthy said she thought it would easily sell for $:5<M)00. Whereupon Aborn made an offer .of $40,000 for itv - The secretary sakl that she would, transmit the offer to her principal and would write him.

\ Jn* due time .a note came to Aborn stating brie liy that his offer would not

. bV accepted." 1 Ic was <pi|tc ready to. raise it, but dhl not like dealing through

thinly party. He called again on the doctor, but was again disappointed' at not seeing hiju. The doctor was nt home, but. very busy. Aborn )Wf word with tiie secretary that he would raise his bid to JjCVO.OOO.„ A reply to' this came to him that

-astonished him. It was this:'Pr. KKcrton desires me to inform Mr.

Afcprn that, Inquiries having-been. nru«.do as to his .llmmelal standing and his abil­ity .to ! pay for any p«rchn«e ho might make,, the responses aro perfectly satis-- factory. Hat the doctor has also been Informed’ that Mr. 'Aborn* Is «mo of ihosa young men "'ho, having Inherited largo

think they can ncnuiro anything they fancy. Surely,.thero is no property without a price, but tho price, on tho Ks^rlon pluca is in proportion' to Mr.

Aborn^u; onorm;nts -for.tune, • i t Is enor­mously high. Yours truly: . '• ■ :

‘ S All AIX II.M ’CARTHY. . Aborn w as not-only astonished at

this reply; he- was 'm a d / At first he determined to drop the m atter in con­temptuous: sileiiiio, bill he w as too irri­tated to do this. Besides, be was .curi­ous to discover. >vliat. sort of man this doctor was who would go so fa r out of ids way io insult a man whose only fa tilt was a desire lo possess the.Kger- ton homestead. He determined .-to ' make one more eirort to soc him. lie

- called; l iut again was olil iged to 1/0' content with; seeing I lie sue rota o \ the doe t o r! ji ay i iig agn ingon e to the ci t y :'on inipormiit business.

'“ Is this* doctor,*’ lie. asked in ah irri­tated tone, ’ Va reguIitrly • eduirn ted phy- siclan or n utiackV”. . • -•

"Dr. Egerton Is !?omething -higher, t ban .even.a regularlyeducsi ted physl- elan. Tiie doctor’d ti tie is. doctor of philosophy.”

“What, then, does he do for a liv­ing?” ; -■ *.•'■; . ., “The doctor is. a sociologist.” .

“Oh, 1-see; has something to tlo with the running of the town charities.” •“City charities principally.’’.“I know a nniii who has such a posi­

tion, but lie doesn’t get*much of a sal­a ry /’ .. . . .

To this there was'no resji'onse.“ Weil/; continued Aborn. “ I wish you

would 1 ell ibis*sociologist that he’d iiet- te r cut oiii his degree till he has learn­ed tb tre a t his fellow men witli proper civility. I had a perfect; right to Hi- . quire whether-lie would sell his place and was. led to believe tha t an ofl’er • would be’.acceptable even if hot ac­cepted, Then I receive an”—

'‘You liave not yet offered enough. The doctor holds the property, far above Its intrlusic* wortji .on account of its having, been ;so long ju tlie ‘fanilly.” /

A born j ‘ be! ng i a figry, t h oiigh t how lilee it would ini to offer a price this insulting sociologist could not afford to -d ec lin e /:• >• v “Very well,” he. said, “ tell him I'll ^iye .hlni .$100,000 for it. .When wilt he be a t home?”

‘■Tomorrow.” ,“1 ‘II ca 11 fi>r the reply.”Aborn looked over the premises as

lie went aWay ami determined to give double tlie ; priee oftefed if necessary, buy ad jdimug tracts * and inake. the place ii paradise: TUoujilv he did,uot kn03v. It, all this fever to .possess the place was born of ids desire to have, liis own way In .everything and to. ' take revenge for having becii told the. truth. / .■■' . • :. . . *

The next morning AbiU’ti was .row­ing on the lake when lie m et.the girl lip'luid seen on tlie hind ing. She was lu a canoe. . •

!T»«g. pardon,” he said., “but*'—The girl stopped pitddliug and waited,

. i*xieriiajts yoii wijl ren'iem ber sqg-. gosling that. I write the owner of the white liouse ujv there asking if he ’ would like to sell the place?”

“ Well*:” "“What kind of a .nian Is lie any­

way?” ' '•“Iir. Kgci’tou Is a very level headed

person . Any tiling the doc tor * tells y< >u has weight, to it.”

“11‘in: l ie ’s no gentleman.’* '•; “Tlie* doctor's ve.i:y- plain spoken.”- •

“I sliouid think he is /’“I Aw )k\ m y ■suggest ion .hasn't led to

anything d'usagreeable.” .“Ob. the suggest ivni: was very sensi-' ’

bie as .Wei 1 as very k in d /’ .. / / <jXs tiie place for.saleV* ', ■; ; •'I sii'j iiiosb it. is. lit:t for. a man who;

gets probably $.75 a input li for running the poor he's*mighty Independent.”

The girl made no reply to this. 2n- tlecd, she' indicated that the dialogue didn’t Interest her by putting her pad­dle In the water. Aborn dipped his oars, and they pulled apart.

Inuring Lire nfteruobu Aboru called a t Uiv Egerton’s to learn if $100,000 would buy a place worth not over a third, of that amount. • hud‘given, tip any. expectation of seeing-the doc-, tor. Indeed, he. ra ther tliouglit it bet­te r lie jsbould/'Uot. H e feared ho would be tempted to punch the man's

. head. H e was standing in the draw­ing room looking out through a win­dow .on the juke* when, hearing a rus­tle of womali’s clothing behind^ him, b e : turued, expectiug to see: the secretary j

. W hat was hI.M aiuazemeUf. to see the g(ri iie had m et Ilrst on. the lauding anti tiie sa m e . morning iu a canoe, i i e r eyes were bubbling .wUli mischlef.

“W-w-)iat does i .'jis l i i e a n h e s ta j i i - ,mered. . • ' r‘-

“ You ca I led t o see U r.. Egertou, did you not?”

. .“YeK” .* . -.: *• “ i ani l)r/E gerton .” :

•YiijiV” • V 1• "Yi's. i mu CorncUn Egerton, I'll. !

.'. “1 see.';11 was ' sen rceiy 'ueeeSsary: for him

to add anything to ihese hyo simple woi'U s, f i >r 11 was ey icjcut t hat li is eyes had been opened. • v .- '■ ■■ '■

•;.Vt>ry .stupid of .me,' wasn' t.; 11 ?”. “lie seated. -1 owe you an apology. Tliii temptation was too strong for me.” *

“How about that information you got about me?*’

“Made out of whole cloth.”“Your, secretary?” * , ■“My a tin t/’“Sho said something about your run­

ning a city charity bureaju.”“Ileayen lias . blessed me w hir great

w’eaIth. I <•<mslder iiiyselt’ simply as •its dispenser. In order to dispense it intelligently I studied sociology.". “Heaven, has a iso glyeii me -great wealth, but it- hasn’t oqcurred to mo to give It away till a fter iny death, when I shall have no use for it.”' “ Retter adopt my pluh.” *

“Do you really own this houseV”“Yes, but I own another l^like bet­

ter, You may lmve this one for what T. consider It. worth—§20,000.”

“D onor . • . ' *A year later the doctor went with

the house. ’

. }

COUNTING THE PEOPLE.f irs t Census Proposal In England

Raised a Fine Row;I t was iu 1753 th a t ti proposal to

count the people was; first mnito. Thom as. Potter, sou of tiie archbishop of Canterbury and member ‘for St. Germans, introduced in that year a bill “for taking atul registering an, an­nual account of the total number of the people and of the total number of marriages, births and deaths and also of tiie total num ber of poor receiving alms from every parish iiiid extra .paro­chial place in G reat Britain.” I t was in evitable, of course^.that" directly tills proposal was. made the precedent Of K ing David should, be . quoted. And many wero.tho jeremiads iis to the al- ternntive evils wiiich wbuld befall tlie country. Tlioso submitted to David were mild -in^comparison. Mr. -THoni­ton, motnber fo r York city, said:

“I did uot believe th a t .there w as any se t of men or indeed any Individual of the human species so presumptuous and so abandoned as to make tho pro­posal we bavo ju s t heard. I hold this subject to bo totally subversive of the last remains of English liberty. The new bill will direct the Imposition of

,new taxes, and Indeed the addition of a very few . words will make it the most effectual engine of rapacity and oppression tiid t w as ever used a g{i lust an injured jieoide. Moreover, an an­nual register of our people will ac­quaint our enemies, abroad witli our -weakness,” - .• . ..

M atthew Ridley, another opposing member, added th a t h is constituents looked oh the proposal: as. ominous and feared lest some public misfortune or. an epidemical distemper should foi- low th e ; numbering. However, the bill passed the commons only to lie promptly rejected' by the lo rds/; Not until. iSOO. Tv*as the proposal again made, and on this occasion it was brought .to a successful issue. The •ilrst census'of England and W ales was taken in March, 1801.—W estminster Gazette. • •

GENEROUS '.GEORGE.Washington’s Tips and' Compliments to

P a t ty an d P olly , 'Those who take tipping in the some­

what, solemn spirit o f . the social inves­tigator may find their minds enlivened by tiie perusal of an. excerpt from the w ritings of our first president, which shows w h a t.a graceful turn apprecia-. tion and. courtesy may give to the cus­tom. ., ;• - /• •

In 17S9, on Ills return from his New England progress, Washington lodged a t -T aft’s Inn, a t . Uxbridge, Mass*, wliere the dpraestjc Service—as at many inns in the country-—was per­formed by th e ;landlord’s daughters. Somewhat later- W ashington wrote to ’Air. T a ft: . .'

H artfo rd , 8 N o v em b er/1180. Sir—B eing Inform ed th a t you-have given

m y nam e to*‘one of your sons and called ano ther . a fter. M rs.. W ash ing ton 's fam ily, and being ,. m oreover, .very ‘ mucli pleased w ith ' tho- m odest and innocent looks, o t : you r tw o daugh te rs , P a t ty an d Polly, I do for these renson.s-send each o f’.thcso : girls a pieco o f Chintz, and to P a tty , who bea rs th e nnniQ: o f M rs. W ash ing ton-and who w aited .upon us nioro th a n P olly did,I send: 5 guineas, With w hich she m ay b u y -herse lf an y li ttle ojriiaments slio. m ay ! w an t, o r slio inay dispose o f them In any o th e r m anner m oro agreeab le to herself.

As I do n o t give tliuso tliirjgs w ith a view t o . kayo i t ta lked of. o r even to Its being khoutri, th e less th e re Is ijaid about, I t th e b e tte r you ..will-please me, b u t th a t 1 m ay be surp. th e ch in tz and money .have g o t sa fe to hand lo t F a t ty , w ho I dare- say is equal to it-,.-write mo a lino Inform ing mo thereof; d irected to “The P residen t of th e U n ite d 'S ta te s a t N ew ‘York.” ’ I wish you and you r fam ily w ell and am your hum ble se rv an t, GO. W ASHINGTON.

\Presence ot IN m d .

A visitor to an mNiu.c asylum waa *yoIking in the grotiuus/ wiien a man came up to him aud eiitered into con- versn tion. Aft er walking a boil t for bo me ti me, dlse.usslug topics suggested by the place, the two se t put on a tour of inspection, the. man, apparently an, official. Inviting the visitor to go Pver the asylum. At length they reached the foot; of a (light of steps, .up which* the gtiide led- the way, and a t the top the visitor found himself out upon the roof, n iieight of more than a .hundred feet .from- the ground. As they gazed below ills companion startled hi til sud­denly by- proposing:to see who, could Jump farthes t toward the . grounds! Not until then had It dawned upon the visitor that liis guide Was tund. ' Mer­cifully he was a mail of ready w it;and his w it saved tlie inadman's life. ..”0h , apybody can Jump down,” said the vis­itor. “Let us go down and see wlio can jump, to the top /’ The madman thought It a good idea, and. retracing their s te p s /th e two began their jum p from the enrth instead of from th e ' roof. ;

The Mammoth Cave Rat.The. cavern rat found in the Mam­

moth cave . is . of a • soft binish color, .with .white neck and feet, i t has enormous eyes,. black a s /n ig h t, :.vbut quite unprovided witli an iris ,./T hese eyes are perfectly ,insensible to light, and wliea the expcritnent has been made of catching a cavern ra t and turning it loose In bright sunlight it

.blunders about,-striking itself against i everything, & unable to provide itself

with food and finally falls down and dies. In its native depths, however, it is able to lead a comfortable enough existence,ns its euormousiy long whisk­ers- are so extremely sensitive th a t they enable it to find its way rapidly through the darkness. The; principal food of the .cavern ra t consists of a kind of largo cricket of a pale yellow color and, like most other cave dwell­ers, itself perfectly blinll.

The Shark Is a Sloyv Swimmer.One ill service nature has done the

shark—namely, th a t of placing a triau-. gular fln on his.back which acts as a danger signal and gives warning of his approach. Happiiy the ,sh ark has not; been gifted with sufficient sagacity;to be aw are of this peculiarity, .for had he been so ho, would unquestionably abandon his habit of swimming close to- the surface of the w ater and would in th a t case, be enabled to / approach his victim unobserved., The shark is. a Blow swimmer for his size and strength. Byron observes, “As darts the dolphin frbin the' sh a rk /• B ut .Byron was a poet and does not appear to have been a close observer o f tho habits of In­habitants of tlie w ater or he. would have ‘-knownthat- a shark wou id have no more chance o f catching^a dolphin than a sheep; would of overhauling a h a re . '

Sardine Fishing.In mirdimi lislilng there are many

uncertainties. There is a lweutyrelght foot rise' and full o f tide iii the bay, of Pumly, and especially consthu*ted wppden. picket: inciosures; are staked out hi the wiUoiy to gather in the llsh. Last, season p man erected an inclo- suro iu w h a t1 he supposed to be excel­lent Ashing territory, litit got nothing." He dep.lpred :his loss aiid for a time failed, to • go near It; “Why don’t you ficlne it again V” /somebody asked., “W bat’s the use ?? hereplled.vVLet mC try it.” ’ the other ■ pprslstedt “Yes, aiid you jiiay have all the; Ilsli you get,” Tlie other man pulicil put $1,700 worth a t one haul.—Frank IJesile’s.

A Sailor’s. Hands,A sailor is betrayed' ‘by his hands,

though his. gait might betray lilm. They are peJtnianently ha If shut,; Walk­ing, talkhvg or sleeping the sailor lias his hands half shut and could not open them flat if he tried. Tills is the re- Bult of. years of cllitiblng and pulling ropes,-—Loudon Chronicle. ..

The Joke on Her.The f rien d -Y o u r wife doesn’t ap­

pear to he l.n very good humor. Hus­band— No;’.she tlilnks I’ve invited you to dinner.—Jean Qui Rlt.

I -

The Lilies.Two thousand years ago it^wa^ sup­

posed that water lilies closed their flowers a t night and retreated, fa r un­der. w a te r/to emerge again at.sunrise. This was Pliny’s view, and It was. not impeached until the EJngllsij . botanist John Ray In 10S8 first doubted its veracity. The great lily of Zanzibar, one of the grandest of the JlJy family, opens Its* flowers, ten inches wide, be- tweeu 11 in the' morning and 5 In the afternoon. They are of the richest royal blue, with from 100 to 200 golden stamens in the center', anti they remain open four or five days. I t Is not gen­erally known that th e re 'a re lilies, that have nocturnal ha bits—niglit bloomers as well as day bloomers. They are very punctual timekeepers, too, open­ing and closing with commendable reg­ularity.

- , , ' . .. i?. •-

Bunyan's Wic^-* Gate.In the village of ElStow .there is

abundant-m aterial;that is visibly asso­ciated with John Buuyau. The isolat­ed church tower coutains the very bells hi the ringing of which Bunyan rejoiced and afterw ard trembled. Above all there must be mentloued the wicket -gate which figures early iii tiie story of “ I’ilgrim’s Progress.” The wicket gate of “VUgrlm’s' Progress” is eom mo illy represented as a garden gate or a iurUpiiie gate, bu t ireally tlio term /denotes it sniall doorway cu t out of a large door. Concealed behind a tree a t tlie. west cud of Elstow cliurch is ju st such a small doorway in the broad wdoden surface of the great door. Through- .this lowly opening Bunyan mhst often have passed when a boy.—Harper’s Weekly.

The Major’s Value., “Major Bunks,” said a veteran, “was

a pompous chap. The boys had a good deal of fun once over his exchange.: “It seems that on a very dark night

n stalw art Confederate took the major, prisoner. This fact, ogether with the narrative of tiie prisoner’s return to camp, w as sigualed to headquarters tersely:

“ ‘Major Bunks, captured during night match, exchanged later for two plugs tobacco/ M.

.Doctors':Are More Thorough Now, -A physician in a d.iuner' In Denver

sneered a t certain Biblical miracles..“Lazarus/’ lie said, ^was raised from

the dead,'and.yet 1 don’t see any dead folks being, raised, in our time.”

“No/’ said ii clcrgyhmii, an eminent Biblical scholar, with a .smile. “Mod­ern tnedlcaI .science has progressed too far for that, eh?” -*Washington Star.

Conciliatory,Hend WaTter idignlfjed and pompoUsi;

—Have you ordered,• sir?. Despairing Patrou— Yes, I pi’dered a porterhouse stea k ha If /a n hour ago. and j . wish , to apologize ^fbr tny rudeness. With your permission 1 wili withdra w 'It as an order and reuew it as a suggestion. —.Chicago Tribune.

'.- Comparisons,Small Tommy—My pa’s awful sm art.

Little Elsie—What does he do? Small Tommy — lie ’s • a mechanic and makes locomotives. Lit t ie Elsie—T hat's noth­ing. My pa’s a commuter and makes two tra ins every day.—Cli Icago News,

■ - Good and Evil.Nothing is truly good, to a innn which

does not m a ke 11 1 in; jus t y; tenipera t e, courageous a ml free, iiiid; nothiug <*an be evil to a man which does hot give him the contrary dlsposltion.—Marcus Aurelius. ' / • -

Significant Siqnals, .“Do you not see the handwriting ou

the wall?” askwl.theJ’oreboding frlenu.“No.” replied. Senatdt^Sorghum: “the

headlines in the newspapers are enough for me,”—Washiugtou Star^

T h e ' Splendor' ' ■ of Em pire

seldom fails to m anifest itself in th e a rch i­tectu re, fu rn itu re , a n d furnishings o f th e period , a n d th e N ap o leo n ic e ra w a s 'n o excep tion . Its im press is found in th e dec o ra tive sty la kpoWR as “ E m p ire .”

In the houses a n d furnishings o f m an y rep resen ta tiv e A m e ric a n fam ilies o f to d ay ,'1 y o u w ill easily recogn ize ' the. “ E m p ire” trea tm ent.

A n o tab le ex am p le in hou se furnish­ings is T h e E m p ire P a tte rn in T o w le S t e r lk i 'g S i l v e r .

The EmpireW e . com m end: T h e E m p ire to o u r p a ­

tro n s as a m ost d es irab le p a tte rn — charm ­ing inV its g racefu l outlines, a n d w ell w ith in reaso n a s to cost. Its b e a u ty is en h an ce d w ith a soft F re n c h . G ra y F in ish . T h e design is one of su c h 'a p p ro v e d w o rth th a t an yone selecting a n E m p ire p iece in sterling fo r gift pu rp o ses c a n feel w ell assu red of its v a lu ^ a rid app ropria teness, A g rea t varie ty of p ieces su itab le a s gifts is show n b y

A . W ; C o r n e l i u s , J e w e l© * *A s b u r y ParJt, N. J., ^

R E L I A B L E W E D D I N G G I F T S

The style of wedding gifts this fall is far out-of-tlie-or- diuary, odd and “ different” pieces, aud.to.iueet th{s demand I have made preparations long in advance and am now ready with va full line of interesting, useful and ornamental gift tilings of exceptional quality, greater than I- have ever shown before If you are in doubt about wliat to give let us make a few suggestions.

Teaspoons, iifter-<llmier coffee spoons, ■tablespoons, forks, knives, oyster forks, b u tte r spreads, pie servers, cold m eat forks, ereiun ladles, sa lt sets, teu-strainers, tom ato servers, bre/id 'trays, • eako plates.

646 COOKM ’ N ' AVENUE A, W. CORNELIUS ASBURY PARK

NEW JERSEY / C

JO H N J. ME.LICKE. R. tUKE, M anager

5 6 2 C o o h m a n A v e n u e , A s b u r y P a r k , N . J .

H e r e - i s ' W h a t Y o u H a v e B e e n

W a i t i n g ' f o r — A n n u a l S a l e o f

You linow from past perform ances ivhnt a saving of m oney th is sale means..You also know tbe goodness of L ion B rand Shirts.

This sale consists of fancy Neglige Shirts with uuffs a ttached and d e tn o h - ' e d .in th e fpliowing m aterials: Im ported and dom estic m adras, Panam a cloth, silk aud linen and Soisette silk , sizes l i to 17 J. F ancy stiff bosom shirts, w ith attached and detached cuffs pf percales an d m adras cloth, sizes 14 to 18,

$1.00 Negligees

$1.50 Negligees

$2.00 Negligees

. $ .65

. 1.15

. 1.35

$2.50 Negligees . $1,65

$3.00 Negligees . . . 2.00

$100 Still Bosoms . '. . .65

$1.50 Still Bosoms 95c. /

C O M E W H I L E A S S O R T M E N T I S B E S T

. ss j-M A bS E S T O S , because it rioi.: not require coating or painting to preserve i t .

J-M Roofing resist? fire, nist and wear,, and is weather and acid-proof, because made of mineral products, A sbestos and Asphalt Cement. Will outlast any other prepared roofing made.

Easy lo appiy—we furnish full instructions.M'F'D BY H. W. JOHNS-MANVILLE CO.

FOR SALE BY

^^^SlLASjW. BARTON, Carpenter and Builder yj= U ^ P o sto U Ice B o x 2092, OCEAN GROVE, N. J. V /

R e s id e n c e , W EST GROVE, N . J .

SEXTON & HAVILANOB r i c k B o a r d l n i , L .lvor>y, S a l e a n d E x c h a n g e

.South of Main Avenue G ates, Ocean Grove, New JerseyToloplidnolNo.TtOB

Carriages of ovory'deseriptlon und nil tiie la tes t styles. Ail k inds ot, ru b ­ber tire wagons, eto.

Closed onrrmgos for woddingh am! funera ls a speolnlty Tally-ho and straw -rida outtUs furnished a t sh o rt r.otk:. . B Parding by day, weok or m onth G ontle'horses fo r ladies’ use.

t t

Page 7: OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, … EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION

v ts s s w ^ v-v m-'.-vm;.:

m m m m .SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910.

Vr"'

THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES

Copyright; l9ld, by American Press A ssociation.

Returning from shopping, 1 opened my reticule to take out-some samples when, to my surprise. 1 found entirely different contents from what l had ex-

: peeted. In short. 1 hnd laid my own reticule dotfn on a conn ter and picked up pne'belonglng to some one else. •

Among the nrtieJes Ii found inside wns a slip of paper, on which was written:

D earest LIttIo M ary—Meet mo n t tho fountain tomorrow, a t 5 o'clock. I havo mndo all arrangem ents. * W o'w ill Do m ar­r ie d 'a t tho rec to ry and tako tho evening tra in for B. Don’t lot your roars get tho better of you. Rem ember, 6 o'clock sharp.I will bo ther,o half on hour earlier. If you th in k . you had better coino veljed carry-vlolota . Vour loving. j.

Tuesday.Fifteen years before I hnd. received

ju st such a note. Indeed, there was something similar In the handwriting, of the two missives. Then I. had mar­ried a’ man whom I had been obliged to leave before' the honeymoon was over. .

A sudden thought struck me. How would It do for me to keep this girl's appointment a trifle ahead of time, im­personate her* yelled and witli violets?. I could And out whether she was abodt to wreck her future or marry a true man. I f the former, I might save* her.-

At half past.4 I sallied forth, bought the violets of a street flower.vender on the way-and a t a quarter to 5 entered the square. 1 knew • welt tiow to as­sume a hesitatingestep, for 1 bad ” been there'' before. - On nearing the foun­tain, looking out lo r J., 1 saw n man looking eagerly at. the violets in my hand, but of an age more suitable to an elopement with me than a young girl. As 1 drew nearer something in his face and figure appeared, familiar to me. Then 1 stopped, overpowered w ith astonishm ent / •

No, I was not mistaken. He was tbo man who had beeu my husband. Fif­teen years make a marked difference in one’s appearance, and th e y , h a d / changed him inore than they usually change men.

1 was -now more than ever bent on playing the part. He Joined me, and In a whisper, as though I had lost my voice through excitement, 1 said: “Take me where we can talk. I have something to say to you." . He replied th a t his aii to was waiting on th e street and led the way there. I got in the auto, and he ran it out of the town.

“X am not. satisfied about this pre­vious marriage of yours,” 1 said.

“Great heavens I Haven’t we gone over th a t sufficiently? You have heard my explanation, and the las t time w e ' m et you expressed yourself entirely,

' satisfied”“1 don’t like your laying the blame

on your wife. If we were to have trouble’ and separate I suppose you would lay all the blame on me.”

He turned to look a t me as though taken aback a t my words. He could not see my face for my veil, but his eyes were fixed on that as i f they would pierce i t

MYott women are all alike,” he said presently. “We men no sooner stand you on your feet than you fall down again. Here a t the last minute you are bringing up w hat I have been a t each infinite pains to settle.”

“But, tfell me, don’t yon blnmo h er? ’ "No, 1 don’t. I blanya myself rather

than her. A newly wedded’ pair aro like two persons floating down a tortu­ous channel full of rocks and stings! I t is the man’s part to keep his head and st#er tbe boat. , 1 supposed that honeymoons were always what tho ' name implies. 1 found my wife a prey to all sorts of temporary emo­tions—one moment loving, the nest i r - .

• rltablc. the next hesitating, the .next despondent I should have known that this, a t least to some temperaments, is. a condition to be expected—a reaction upon realizing that one’s fate is irrev­ocably linked with nnother personali­ty. Besides, she was very young. You dro ten years older than she. was a t th a t time, nnd 1 confess I have looked to you for more steadiness. 1 am much disappointed.”

•*A woman of my age should have more sense than to elope.”

•‘You know the rensou for th a t If your father and mother had not an ab­surd prejudice against your marrying a divorced man we might be married sensibly, ns becomes oD . age.” .

“Your tlrst marriage having been a case of elopement, I should suppose. considering that it resulted disastrous- , ly. you would not care to try it again." .,

“Tlie elopcwcnt has nothing to do , with either case. Two people elect to unite. The method of their dolug so is a mere m atter of sentiment.” ...

There was a silence for n time—at least nothing .but the; chugging of the auto. We weft? both thinking, he probably of tho/fickleness of woman,1 of bow a trllle may turn the whole current of two lives. Tor years 1 had considered that I had married n brute. True, 1 hnd mourned tliut he had.turn­ed out to be such, but 1. had not doubt­ed th a t my interpretation of him waS

^ correct And now I found him accus­ing himself of a want of . tact in his former treatm ent of me.' his bride, and

^laying no blame on me \vliatever.I believe that feelings may be con-'

veyed without outwurd. signs. . ,1 felt

that hfs heart was not in this secdnd marriage; Possibly 1 may have judged by something ih his to tie. possibly by an absence of desire in his Words. He was too. rational, for a (ever, i ' won1 dered if he were not bent on marriage to escape iotielitiess or to help him to bury a melancholy memory. 1 deter­mined to apply a test.

"You have, been considering me, vac­illating,” 1 said. “Now you seem to be undecided yourself.,. And I am' not quite sure but yoh are r ig h t Suppose, a fter we are, married you should meet your former bride. .Suppose she Should admit th a t in n condition new to her! a very young girl, she had, tried your patience severely: that she had mis­taken you;>that she deplorod the break between you and her and would give years of her life to undo what she iiad done. You would then look upon your m arriage with me as a chain of Slav* cry.”

He said nothing for some time. When bo did ills, words tbriled mo:

“Candor compels me to adm it, that I wotild.” ‘

I leaned back on the cushion as though much disappointed. I am not sure, bu t I practiced the deception ofa. sigh’ His mood vyas;.indicated by the speed he was driving the macb ine. 1 was tempted to .tear J off my veil and throw my arms about his neck. ' But I dared not; As his bride 1 iiad. been a girl. , Now I was approaching mid* die age. Another denouement to this singular freak o f fate occurred to me. T would go with him to the church, then reveal myself.

“Well,” 1 said,7“it is time, tha t we stop this backing and filling. I shall show you that I have more steadiness than you suppose. Come: turn about Let us go to the rectory.” . .

•Without a word he turned bis ma­chine, and we were soon speeding in the; opposite direction. Neither spoke for some time. I wondered of. what: he was thinking. Perhaps .that, lone­liness which comes over a single man after he has passed tiie heyday of youth would now be ended. Or was he thinking of his bride of fifteen years before? When, we drew up a t the rectory, before alighting, be said

“There is yet time to reconsider this most important step in your life. If you have not perfect confidence in me I beg of you to withdraw before it is too late.”

“I f there is vacillation now i t is in you, not In me.”

He got out of the nuto, but not with the springy step of n. groom. I knew he was swayed by two opposite cur­rents. Whatever were his feelings, he'

‘ would not recede from the position he had taken.

We were received by the rector, who had been expecting us for some time. He placed; us before a mantel, took up his prayer book and waited for me to take off my veil.: Slowly I unwound it’ and when removing, the last fold tu rn­ed and looked a t the groom.

He had not seen me since I was eighteen. Now. I was thirty-three, but. he knew mo a t once—that Is. be knew mo ns soon as h^ could recover from bis astonish men t And the fact that his bride was the same as he bad stood by years before rendered th a t as­tonishment rather a confusion of ideas than a natural impression. H e stood looking a t me, dazed. ; > • .

“Gwenl” he exclaimed a t last.With the. two men looking a t me, the

one waiting to know w hat the scene meant, the other how I came to lie there in place of the woman he expect* ed, it was incumbent on me to make an explanation,. I did so to the rector, telling him briefly the circumstances. When I had finished I turned to. my groom, wondering w hat expression I would find there. I saw a t once'; tha t he was eager to know what would be the outcome of this contretemps. Did. i t mean punishm ent revenge, os would it lead to a reconciliation? I replied, to the question asked by his. eyes, with my lips.' I gave him a smile. With a profound sigh of relief he turned to the clergyman and said:

“Proceed I’’ ; .The rector seemed puzzled. Evi­

dently the situation flustered him^but, being in holy orders, with a. cHurch-

• man’s antagonism toward marrying' divorced people and a churchman’s pleasure in reuniting those ;who havev been separated; he was not long in re­covering his . equanimity. He looked at' me for my assent.. But he looked in vain. . 1 gave no a ssen t Neither did I* express d issent He looked to the groom 'for instructions and doubt-/ less received them, fo r ; without fur­ther delay he begun the ceremony.

N either; man was quite sure what would be the outcome until the ques­tion was asked me, “Will you take this mnu to be your wedded husband ?’’I hesitated for a moment, then said firmiy, “I ;will.”

Both men gave a sigh p?' relief. ..A n d 'so it was th a t. ' while 1- was sep­arated for Of teen years from toe. roan1I. loved and. who loved the, by. a senses; iess tiff, 1. \yas reunited to him by* a marvelous. coinci(Wuce. Had not the woman he was-;to Imye made his sec­ond Wife put bis note iu bet reticule and left i t oii ii.-'counter; bad 1 ;not taken it up by mistake, I would not have been in the rilck of time in a .po­sition to take What belonged to me and appropriate It .to myself. The reticule . was hers; the man was mlno,

j , 1 never nsked lily; husband how he explained matters; to the woman Witli whom he had intended to elope. . I considered it nnut\ of my business. Moreover. 1 was not Interested^!! It. But I did ask him If he did Jot sus­pect that the woman beside him in the auto was. not the oiie he expected to ’

. mcnt. He told, me th a t while he did not suspect me.'he felt that there was something In 'th e situation foreign to what was Intended. My voice, Ue said, was the only.real difficulty In the way of a perfect deception.

I Wit AI\IU nbA TH ER S.

A Coat of Theso Means Excruciating Torture to tho Victim.

Feople who read of tarring and feathering know that the punishment Is a very unpleasant one, b u t few im­agine" how terribly painful mid dan­gerous it Is. Hardened ta r is very hard to remove from tlie skin, and when feathers are added it forms a kind of cement tha t sticks closer than a brother. As soon as tiie ta r sets the victim’s suffering begins. I t contracts as it cools, and every one of the little Veins on the body Is pulled, causing the most exquisite agony. The perspira­tion Is ontlrely stopped, and unless the ta r is removed death is certain to en- buo.

But the removal Is no easy task and requires several days. The ta r cannot be softened by the application of lieat and m ust be peeled off bit by bit, sweet oil being used to make Ihe proc­ess less painful. The irritation to the skin is very,great, as ,the hairs cannot be disengaged, but m ust lie pulled out or cut off. No man can be cleaned of t a r 'l l a single day, ns thif pain of the

j operation would be too excruciating for endurance, and until this is doiie bo •has to suffer from a pain like that of10,000 pin pricks. Numbers of men have died under the torture, and none who have gone through it regard tar nnd feathering as anything but a most fearful infliction.

.TOBACCO IN THE ARCTIC.Resource of Miners When They Can

Neither Chew Nor Smoke.“W heii; t he wind is blowing thirty,

miles an hour a nd the tem perature is 40 below it is some cold,” said a m an: from Alaska. “If a niari used tobacco in the ordinary way out of doors dur­ing such w eather and got his lips wet through smoldug a pipe or chewing he would’be ap t to get into trouble. F irst thing he knew he*d have his lips erack- ed, and they would be raw aii winter long; , . ■ / ' 1

“The regulars stationed a t the mili­tary posts up in Alaska found th a t if they tied a tobacco leaf; iii their arm ­p it previous to undcslred duty, they would become, v.ery, sick and could pass the post surgeon for hospital, getting rid of detail work ‘ they wanted to avoid. •

“The miners up there learned some­thing of this and found th a t the tobac­co craving could be satisfied, by bind-, ing a quantity of the leaf either in the arm pit or against the solar plexus. This avoided broken and bleeding lips during, the winter, and they weren’t' pro vented' from smoking indoors as, well if they wanted to. I t was the out­door smoking or chewing th a t made all th e trouble."—New York Sun.

Way to Treat Venison,The sportsman was explaining to a

few Of Ills uninitiated friends.“I f yoil don’t like venison,” he said,-

“it is because it has n o t been prepared properly. I think I know the kind you havo tried to eat, and I agree with you i t is not fit. After the deer has been shot the carcass probably has been allowed to. lie around until the blood has discolored the meat .and really has almost tainted i t Few; hunters dress their game carefully enough. As soon' as a deer is killed th e carcass should be thoroughly bled, skinned, the entrails removed and the

'm eat hung up in the dry a ir for some hours. Thorough and prompt bleeding is of the utm ost importance. Venison prepared in this way Is comparatively light In color—th a t is, i t Is a clear, bright red, and the fa t is white and clean. There is no strong, rank taste.” New York1 Press.

. Rovenge.“Stop!” The . brakes o f th e . motor

Were suddenly applied, a pandemonium of whirling wheels ensued, and the mo-, torist came face to face with Consta­ble Coppeni, who hnd..been hiding in the liedge. ;']

“Excuse me, slr,”;.srtid the portly po- llcemau, taking but bis; notebook and pencil, “but you exceeded the speed lim it by- two : miles over a measured piece o f road.” . v

“I J have, done iiothing of tlie kind,” retorted the m otorist,‘‘and, besides”—

“Weil, if you dou’t believe rne l ’U call; the sergeant, bein’, as it-w as -im as took the time. He’s in the pigsty yonder.” ' . . ;. “Don’t trouble, Itobert ” * the other

hastened to reply. “ I would sooner pay fifty lines, than disturb the ser­geant a t his meals!?’—London Answer's.

Faithful Woman.I tell you that women, as a rule, are

more faithful I imn men—ten timps more, faithful, l never saw a, man pursue his wife Into the very ditch and dust of degradation and take her in bis arihs. I never saw u mau stand at th e ; shore where she vras wrecked, waiting for the waves to . bring back her corpse to. his,arms,; biit I. have seen a woman With her. white arm s l |f t a man irom the mire of degradation and hold him ;to her bosom as if he were an angel.—Ingorsoll.

His Way.of Doing.“Could the cashier of th a t company

explain the muddle in the books?” “He said he would clear it all up.” “Did lie?’’ . ,“No, b e . didn’t clear it up. , iHe

Cleared o u t”—Baltimore American.

Ungallant, *tfemlerson—liver m e t witli any sell-,

vus accident while traveling? Hen- peck—Did 1? I m et-m y wife while traveling abroad..

IVonble springs from idleness and grievous toll from needless ease.-- Franklin. •

Little Pitchers.In a certain small town there are

two young women whose favorite oe* cupation has been to discuss the af­fairs of their neighbors. Having met for that purpose one^ifteniooiu they found themselves blocked. in the in­dulgence otN their pastime by the pres­ence of tlie {Jinnli daughter of the hostess. A slight . indisposition of some .sort prevented sending the child out of doors,-so they were forced to put up with her presence, doing their best, however, to nullify I t

Something eatable was produced and an absorbing now game Invented which she could play quite by herself, so they breathed freely and began.

The talk a t length reached a point involving the latest scandal of tbe neighborhood nnd the retailing of some Inside information . which . must not become public property. A hurried look a t the child on the flodr found her apparently so occupied with lier game that it seemed quite siife to go on if one observed a decent,discretion. Voices were accordingly lowered and direct allusion Veiled,' bu t when the m atter hnd been thrashed out to their satisfaction the. child raised lier eyes’ and remarked with deliberation and emphasis:

“I hear, I know, I understand, and I ’ll biab!”~^New York Times.

An Indian's Joke.Indians extract no little quiet enjoy-

meht from w hat, seem to them to be oddities in the speech, manners and customs of white people. . An Arapa- hoe stepped into the store of a trader one day to purchase some tobacco. T t * trader’s son was. in charge of the place. Now, this son was a t that em­barrassing stage of growth when tiie voice ie changing, so that, he never could tell whether tenor tones' would Issue from his lips or babylike fal­setto or do profundis bass. On this occasion when the Indian asked for tobacco the youth’s bass notes held the right of way, though they were speed­ily followed by ascending toues up to a squeaky falsetto,‘ H e asked the Indian, “Will you have fine cut tobacco or a plug?” beginning in a growl and ending in birdlike so­prano.

The Arapahoe listened gravely to this voctfl variety and then without a smile reversed the process and, beginning with the youth’s highest note and end­ing with his lowest, scaled, “I think I ’ll, take some plug.”—Southern Work­m an; •

Books and Their Care,Books on shelves may be seriously

injured if packed too tightly. When quickly pulled out. for use the top of the book is likely to come off. More­over, the constant pressure, if too great, will loosen the whole bacic in time and the friction in putting upon and taking from the shelf mars the covers. On the other hand, a reason­able . amouiit of lateral pressure is. necessary. If placed on the shelves too loosely the leaves tend to open and admit dust, dampness and conse­quent mildew, hi the case, of heavy volumes the weight of the leaves will be found resting on the shelves if the books are placed to o ,Ipqsely,; This is likely to make tiie backs concave. Badly painted shelves are another "source of injury to. books! Care should be taken when pain t or vamifeh is. used tliat the surface is perfectly smooth, hard and dry; when the books are put in place and that the surface will re­main so during variation of tempera­ture or liumidlty;—Housc Beautiful.

An Anecdote of Pope.There isi an.old auecdote of.A lexan­

der Pope concerning one of tiie old watermen who were employed for many years In rowing Pope on the Thames. . Pope .was . in the ha b it; of having his sedan, chair lifted into the p u n t I f the weather Was ffne lie let down! the glasses; , if ^Old he pulled' them up. Ile 'W'Uild sometimes say to the waterm an: '■ • .•

“joiin, 1 mu' goiug to repeat; some Verses. Take care to remember then} the next time I go out.“

When th a t time Caine Pope would say: -.- •' ... . ......

“John,- where are the verses l told you of?" ’ ';'

**I have forgotten them, sir.”“John, you are a bloj-kliead. i must

w rite tliein ilowu fo r you.’’ , ;■ ....;: John salci .’tiiat no one' thougiit ot saying when, - speiiklhg . of iiim, "Mr. rope,” but;, tha t lie was a I ways^cal led tvMr.{ Alexander.” ‘ '** .

Not by Exclusion.He—I had .a hard time getting a

good wife. . . *She—Goodness! Have you been mar-'

rled several times?nOh, no. But 1 courted my present

one-six years.”—Philadelphia Ledger.

“ Exercise and. Rest."W hat is the relation between exer­

cise and rest? Work is that a t which we m ust continue* whether interesting or not, whether we are tired or hot. I t used to be thought that the prime requisite of rpBt was the use of facul­ties other than those involved in the labor of the day. But there is such a thing as fatigue which goes deeper than daily work. We can work so hard as to become exhausted—too ex­hausted for any kind of work. Per­haps this is will fatigue. I t is coming to be regarded as fundamentally true th a t rest from such fatigue demands continuity; that, for example, four pe­riods of fifteen minutes each of rest is not the equivalent of one hour’s rest; th a t a man who goes on a vacation and takes'liaIf an hour of bis business wrork every day is doing the same thing as the man who had a horse with: a sore back. He kept the saddle on only a few minutes each day, but the sore did not have a chance to lieal. Best periods must be sufficiently eon-. secutlve to overcome consecutive fa ­tigue.—Luther H. Gulick In North American Review.

C h ee rfu ln ess and C holera.A ' cheerful, disposition is held by

some doctors to be the best" protection against cholera. When this disease first visited' Paris in 1S32 a notice was issued advising the inhabitants “to avoid as vfar. as possible all occasions of melancholy, and all painful emo­tions and to seek plenty of distractions and amusements. Those -with a brig;ht and happy temperament are not likely to be stricken down.” This advice‘■was. largely followed, and even when chol­era w as claiming over a thousand weekly victims the 'theaters and cafes were thronged. The. epidemic w as in Borne quarters treated as a huge joke, and plays and songs were written around it. Rochefort wrote a play, "Le Cholera Morbus,” which proved a big success*' and' - another ■ production on the same lines, “Paris-malade,” also had a long run,—London Chronicle.

Got His Number,Uncle Zeph ;had had some troubla

gettlhg about on the cars aiid com­plained* of thp employees. ’‘When a Conductor is uncivil to you talie his number,” ; said his nephew, '

Two days later, uncle came in some­what battered, but'looking trium phant “ I g o t the number,” ; lie said, w ith a, satisfied air, .“but I had to grab the Mill cap too,”—puffalo Express.

New York and Lang Branch R, R

• Tim e-table in effect Oat. 2, 1910.

Stations in New York.Central R ailroad of New Jersey,

L iberty S treet, W est 23d S treet, All R&i! R oute. •

Pennsylvania Railroad, C ortlandt, Desbrosses and W est 23d Streets;LEAVE , OCEAN GROVE AND Af-

BURY PARK; •F o r New York— 6.15, GM , " 6.65;

7.15, 8.00, 8.17, 8.50, 0.20,I I .3 0 a. m.; 1,13, 2.20, 3.30, 4.00,5.30, 7.00, 8.30 Saturday only. Sundays from North Asbury P ark D epot,'7 .2G, 9.14 a. m., 4.15, 5.34,C.25, 7.48, 8.30.P. m.

f o r Elizabeth and Newark— G.15, G.45, 7.15 Newark only, S.17 New­a rk only, 8.00, 0.20, 1 1 .30 'a . m.,1.13, 2.20, 3.30 Newark only. 4.00-5.30, 7.00, 8.30 S a tu rd ay , only. Sundays from North Asbury Park

. Dej>ot, 7.20, 0.14 a .m ., 4.15, 5.34, G.25, 7.4S Newark; only, 8.30 p. m . • . . . . • . V .

F o r Red Bank, Matawan and P e rth ' Amboy—-0.15, G.4 5 Rod Bank only,

G.55, except Perth Amboy, 7.15 Red Bank only, 8.00 Red Bank only, .8.17 Red Banlc only, 8;50, 8.20, : J 1.30’ a. m., .1,13, 2.20, 3.30 Red . B ank only, 4.00, 5.30; except P erth Amboy, 7,00, 8.36 Saturday only. Sitndays from Nartfci Aabury P ark Depot, 7.26, 9.14 a. m,, 4.15 except P erth Amboy, 6.34 except P erth Amboy, 6.25 except P erth Amboy, 7.48 Red Bank_only, 8.36 p. m.

F o r Long Branch— G.15, 6.45, 6.55,7.15, 8.00, 8.17, 8.50, 9.20,0.48, 10.15, 10.35; 11.30, 11.44,а, m., 1.13, 2.20, 2.2S, 3.30, 4,00, .5.30, 5,34, 6.50, .'6.58. 7.00, 8.00, . 8.36 Saturday only. Sundays from N orth Asbury P a rk Depot, 7.26, 9.14, 11,10, 11.44 a. m..4.15, 5.34, 6.25, 7.48, 8.3G p. m.

F o r Belm ar, Spring liake andM anasquan— 1,45 Mondays ex­cepted, 6.18, 6.44, 6.56, 7.28,

, 7.57, 10.20, 10.54, 11,40 a. m.12.27, 1.19, 2.03 Saturday only,2.22, 2.50, 2.57 Saturday only,3.25, 3.59, 5.17, 5.20, 6.07,б.1G, 6.30, 6.48, 7.02, 8.07, 10.55 p. m. Sundays from N orth As­bury P ark Depot, 1.42, 5.46, 11.00 .

• 11.20 a. m „ 12.24, 4.22,' .5,11,5.55, 7.09, 10.28.p. m.

F or P oint P leasant—-1,45 Mondays excepted, 6.44, 6,5.6, 10.20, 10.54 ■ a. m„ .12.27, 1.19, .2.03 S a tu rd a y only, 2.22, 2.50, 2.57 Saturday only, 5.17, G.07; 6.18, .. 6.30, except Saturday, 0,48, 7.02, 3,07;10.55 p. m. Sundays from No. As­bury P a rk Depot, 1.42, 5.46,1.1.00, 11.20 n. m., 12.24, .4.22, 5.5E,. 7.09, 10.28 p. m.

F o r Freehold and Jam esburg '/!a Sea G irt and Penna. R. R .— 6.18,7.26, 7,57, 1:1:40 a, ra , 3.2S- 3.59,5.20 p. m. Sundays from Nortlj Asbury P ark Depot, 5.11 p. m.

F o r T renton and P hiladelphia via ' Sea Girt and Penna. R, R.— 6.18,7.26, 7.57, 11.40 a. m „ 3.2E, 5.20 !>. m. Sundays from N orth A sbury; P a rk Depot, 5.11 p. m.

F o r Toms River. Mt, Holly, darfi,- den and Philadelphia, M arket St. W harf, via Sea Side P ark— C.5G a. m ., 2.50 p. m. Sundays from North Asbury P ark Depot, 4.22 p. m.

F o r Freehold via Matawan and C, R. R. of N. J.— 6.56, 8.50, 11.30 a. m., 1.13, 4.00, 5.30 p. in. Sun­days from N orth Asbury P a rk Depot, 9.14 a. m., 4.15, 8,36 p. m.

F or T renton aud Philadelphia via Bound Brook Route— 6.15 except

' T renton, 6.06, 8.50, 11.30 a, m.,2.20, 4.00, 7.Oil p. m. Sundays from N orth Asbury P ark depot,7.26 a. m., 4.15, 6.25, 8.36 p. m.

FROM NEW YORK FOR OCEAN GROVE AND ASBURY PARK.

Leave L iberty S treet via C. R. R of N. J.— 4.00, 8.30, 11.30 a. m., 1-.20 Saturday only, 4.45; 5.30,6.30, 9.00, 12.01 m idnight. Sun­days 4.00, 9.15 a. m. 4.00, 8.30 p. m.

Leave W est 23rd S treet via C. R. R. of N. J .— 8.20, 11.20 a. m ., 1.00 Saturday only, 4.30, 5.20, 6.20,8.50, It.f>0 p. m. Sundays, 9.05 a. m., 3.50, 8.20 p. rh,

Leavo W est 23rd S treet via Pennri,R . R.— 8.55, 10.40 a. m „ 12.25,3.25, 4.25, 4.40 except Saturdays,4.55 p. in. Sundays, 9.25, 10.25a. m., 4.55 p. m.

Leave C ortlandt and Desbrosses Sts.. via Penna. R. R.— 9.00; 10.50 a. .

III,, 12.30, 3 ,4 0 ,.4.'30, 4.50 except, Saturday, 5.10 p. m. Sundays,9.30, 10.45 a. m,, 5.00 p. m.

GEORGE V. SNEDEN, IActing Supt. N. Y. & L. B. R. R.

GEORGE W. BOYD,G. P . A. Pennsylvaia R. R.

W. C. HOPE; 'G. P. A. Central R. R. of N. J.

New Jersey CentralTrains irom Qo«in*Croye

For New York. Newark and Ell«ib<itb,«.15,. 6.55,. *fl.OO, 8.E0,. U^0 a . M. 2.20, 4.00,’ 7.00,8.88 p. u. C uttirUHyB only) Biuidays fi-ora North Aflhury Pnrk 7.2U a.m.; 4.15, 0.125, 8^0, p. u .

For Easton, ReUUpljeni, Allentown and Mauch Chunk, (U6,6.55,11 JO a . w,; 2.20 (4.00 tn E»hton, P. w.). Sundays from North Asbury Park, 7.C6 a. m.« 4.16p. m.

For Wilkeh Bo.rre, ^ksinnton, Reading, Hor- rlsbitrg, G,r5 A. 2.13) p. m. Sumluy 7.Ci! u. in.

* Nt«* York ouly,W. O. Hesi.uk, Vice PreaXand Oon, Mgr-

W, O, Hope, OoeienU fup*ct3B«r iVgenl.10-7-10 ,

J A S. H. SEX TO N

Director and embalm irSupt. Mt. Prospect Cemetery ''

A largo oauortroent of Caaketfl, •tc., • constantly on hand. Flower* of any design at abort notice.

Parlor* and Office 159 Main Street, Aabury Park. N. J.

Office .phone 21 House phone 88-1*

j }

Page 8: OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, … EIGHTEEN, NO. 47 OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 ONE DOLLAR THE YEAR BISHOP S SERMONS IN PAMPHLET FORM PUBLIC DEMAND REPRODUCTION

THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES 'SATDRDA r , NOVEMBER 19, 1910.

LOTTERY IN ITALYG am bling U nder th e A u sp ic es of

th e G o v ern m en t.

T H E DRAWING IN PUBLIC,

ftn E ager, E xc ited , T u rb u le n t C row dW a tch es T h is C erem ony W ith In ­te n se In te re s t—T h e P rize s a n d th eC hances of th e P laye rs.

King Humbert 1. made the rules for the public lottery of Italy:

F irs t—The public lottery Is tempora-■ rlly matutninud by the favor of the Itate under tbe following laws.

■ Second.—It Is administered by the■ minister of finance, under whom the chiefs are chosen for their respective

‘ functions.' Third.—The lotto.Is formed by nine* ty, numbered from 1 to .00, inclusive, live of which draw n by chance deter-

■ mine the successful.. .I Fourth.—One cuu “play the lotto" In

lhe.following maimer;Oh one number (very rarely played).On all live numbers (very rarely

'played).On two numbers—the “ambo.”On three numbers, which is known

is the “terno.”On four numbers, which Is known as

• the “qudterno/’• F ifth.—When one number is played -the winner is paid ten times and ahalf his output; when two numbers

. are played the winuer is paid 350

. times his output; when three numbers are. played the winner is paid 5,250 times his output; when four numbers are played the winner is paid 00,000 times his output. Therefore if one has

' by any chance bought a Mo. 1 ticket• and wins the four numbers (quaterno) ho wins $00,000.

At 5 o’clock bn every Saturday after­noon, throughout all Italy the drawing

; Df the lotto takes place. In Naples v the ceremony is held a t the end of a

foul, filthy alley known as tho Impre­st^'back in a great courtyard, in lull riew of the people on the balcony of sin old palace. From early In the .aft­ernoon until the fatal hour the streets of Santa Chiara nnd the alley till up with the crowd whose hope on this flay is to be deceived. The'streets are always , so full of life that for this axtra crowd, jostling, pushing and sager, there would seciii to bo no place. It is comprised of the very poor; Tho better classes watch for the telephone or. the showing of the numbers in tho rarious banks in the city to discover their fate, but in the Impresa the crowd of people is as dense ns a shad­ow. There are many here who havo ptfid their last cent for a ticket.' There are many here who are in debt for the 3hocs they wear aud will never bo able to puy for them. But a t the stroke of tho church clock the blinds of the bal­cony open and tbe paraphernalia o f ' the lotto are brought out~a long green table, on which is placed a crys­tal ball bound with silver, arid an iron box containing ninety other little box­es, in wliieb the ninety numbers are locked by the state. The officers of this performance are coolly indifferent, and the only.figure deserving of note Is that of the little orphan child, dress­ed In snowy white, chosen by law from the orphan asylum to draw up from the crystal ball the five magic num­bers.

At tho sight of these familiar, looked for objects the crowd begins to cry and chant, to beseech and evoke. I t begs the little orphan child to draw well. And the child in his white robe, his innocent eyes on the mass of peo-

. pie, looks down on-the beggars -with their yellow locks and on the appeal-; Ing mass. One by one the balls are taken out from their sealed btixes, dis­played to the people and dropped into

< the big bowl.. They have blindfolded the little bata- bino, and he stands on u chair, for he is only, eight years of age and is small, in full sight of the people. The balls hav­ing been shaken around for the last

.. tim e,, the child puts his hand in and draws. The first number that he pulls

. out is called forth—"Xo.O." Now, every• Italian who has bought No. 5 for place

has either won or lost. No one holds th is.num ber in this crowd, however,

" and there is n murmur—and a fresh adjuration for the child to draw well The people who have drawn for the terno and the quaterno still have their chance. The child draws again, this time N6. 47, and tho holders of the

. terno are now the interested ones, for• the next will, be their last chance. Tho

enthusiasm breaks forth again with murmurs and cries aud prayers, and the quiet .child before tbe urn in his white dress hears theib and trembles, for he knows th a t ho is menaced. Be­fore tbe people there is a blackboard, and a man posts up the numbers ns they are drawn—5, 47, 11, 10 and 80. And this series of five is discussed; yelled at; challengpd. m rsed. for not one In the crowd lias drawn a fortu­nate number. The child’s eyes are un­bound, nrnl he is put down and set free. The balls are returned into their boxes sealed up nnd carried away un­der the eyes of the crowd, which after waiting for a moment, unable to be-

' Hove its ill rortunc, breaks up and dis­rupts. Apathy is thrown upon the ma­jority as much ns such a sta te of mind Is possible, to a Neapolitan mass as they, begin in groups to discuss the failure o f their schemes and their com- blnAtJons.—Marie Vau Vorst in H ar­per’s Mm gazine.

N ovel U se o f a B illboard .During a recent run on a western

bank a billboard was set up In the street, where the line of depositors were gathered, and Its frank statem ent of the bank’s condition did much to restore confidence. Many people drop*, ped out of the line after reading the sign, which bore this legend: “This bank can pay every dollar on deposit. I t is one of the strongest banks on the Pacific coast It has been your friend. Jealous competitors have worked to bring you here. Every person in this line should show their loyalty by

1 leaving .a t once, Your money 1b safe, j Why, tfaen. remain here doing an un- I kind and foolish thing? Break ranks.” j The run lasted , thirty-six hours, but

the bank stood the strain and remain; ed solvent An enterprising merchant took advantage of the Incident to se­cure a novel advertisement for bis store, i t happened that he was, pre­pared to move into the adjoining build* ing and tbe picture of the crowd be­fore the bank had the appearance of heading for his. new quarters. A cut of this picture: was used for his an­nouncement, the legend reading. “Your money is safe if you follow the crowd to”— giving the name of his own es­tablishm ent—Bookkeeper.

.Toy Is more divine than sorrow, for Joy Is bread and sorrow is medicine*— Beecher.

A C ordia l W elcom e,A well known American portrait

painter, armed with a full length por­tra it study taken off the stretcher and rolled under his arm, ventured to call on Whistler one Sunday morning. His modest knock brought the. great man to the door, says a writer in Great Thoughts. Opening it a little way, he thrust out his head and demanded Ir­ritably: •; * .

"W hat brings you here? W hat do you w ant?” ... V- : .

The artist stammered out th a t he was a student and bad a study th a t be would much like to show Whistler.

W histler said, “M^m-m—just w ait a minute I” and, rushing back into the room, he turned every picture vrtth its face to the wall and removed from the easel the canvas on which he was engaged. Then, motioning the Amer­ican in, be Bat down and saicl: “Now, what, do you want?' You know I’m fearfully busy today, but s it down—elt down!”

A P uzzled A r tis t . .Of unsigned paintings the Dussel-

dorfer Zeitung tells an amusing story, which may interest picture buyers. Achenbach, the German artist, enjoy­ed a vogue some years ago. A certain collector bad bought from an a r t deal­er a seascape represented as .a •genu­ine Achenbach. Afterward i t was pronounced to be a copy. The buyer brought an action against the dealer, who turned the tables by declaring that bis picture was genuine, and the other was a copy.

Achenbach himself was summoned by the courts to tell which waB which. Amazed a t the absolute similarity of the two paintings, he gazed a t them for,a long time, inspected them.closely, front aud gack, sniffed them and then frankly admitted he could not tell which was the original and which the copy.

A ;Town In the Philippines.Santo Domingo has a population of

about 2,000 'and is entirely different from any other town in the Philip­pines. In the first place, all the ^build­ings are of stone, whitewashed. The roofs are made of cogon grass, closely trimmed so as to afford ho purchase to the severe typhoons which Bweep over the Islan d B . Tho streets are about twelve feet wide, many of them paved with stone. Some walls extend along both sides of the streets their full length, giving: them the appearance of lanes. The walls are about three to five feet in height broken a t intervals fo r . entrance to tiie yards, which la turn are separated from each o ther by stone walls. Most; of the yards are clean and exceptionally neat and a t­tractive.—Manila Times.,

T h e W h ite o f an E gg.The white of an egg is made-up of

little cells filled with albumen.. By beating the white these cells are rup­tured and oxygen from the a ir is iri- cibsed.; which- gives the wtilte and light appearance to beaten eggs. The white of a stale egg wili not inclose as much oxygen, will not. be as light and as easily digested as th a t of the fresh egg and, of course, less valuable. The importance of beating the egg in cold, pure air Is readily seen.

C om plete L ives.W e should all strive to make our

lives complete. Many people only half Uve, . Health without usefulness, intel­lect without unselfishness, pleasure^ without duty—these are incomplete and unsatisfying elements of living. \

How T h ey Do It.In a hotel in a certain city is the

following notice:/'Boarders are taken b y . the day*

flreek or month. Those who do not pay promptly are taken by the neck.’- — Lipplhcott’s. v ’

A Luxury. :“B u t” objected the heiress, "I ha.ve

been accustomed to every luxury.” “That’s all the more reason why you

should marry me,” replied the Impe­cunious suitor. “I*m a luxury myself,”

: C ourage .• W hat one: needs to cultivate is a,

tenacity of purpose thnt will not; quail nor turn aside, a courage tha t in emer­gencies ; dares;■ -to; separate f ro m th e crowd, tliat never recognizes d efea t

L a u g h te r,Laughter is recommended as a cure

for indjgestton. It looks easy to the person wlio is not. aflllcted with .indi­gestion.—Toledo Blade.' 'v

I

J. S a t u r d a y A f t e r n o o n

a n d E v e n i n g

SalesI n A H D e p a r t m e n t s

(EmuyatujAsburg park, Jtee#

Heat W h e r e y o u w a n t i tW BEN YOU W ANT IT NO SMOKE, NO SMEUL NO TROUBLE

Do you know tliat with: a Perfec­tion Oil Heater without any fuss or bother yon can quickly warm any cold room in the house ?

As easy to operate as a lamp. It can be carried about fron room to room.

f *4o m '$ 2 .7 0 U p

A fle a fs l o r ’B u s s e l l & E r w in M annfw e- Snrlna Co. B u ild e r s ’ H a r d w a r e , B e n |.

. M oore & Cio- SfilxesI P a in ts a n d M nr- e s e o . - n m i ' & b n i b e r i C eleb ra ted V a r n ish e s .

Snyder &yRpbinsT ele p h o n e 318 : 153 M a in S t . , . A s b u r y P a r k

LEWIS LUMBER COMPANY

Doors, Sash, Blinds, Frames, Mouldings, Hardware, Paints, Oils, Etc Sacketh Piaster Board i

SO U T H 7VmiN S T R E E TA s b u r y P a r k , N . J .

1 on PramiJM. B ranoh Yard, Spring Lake, New Jeraoy

Are You Planning to Remodel?I f you contemplate remodeling

your pre»ent home now or is the near future, you should study the subject of Plumbing.

A little knowledge oh the subject will be beneficial to you in tha selection o f the best material and fixtures and in their proper location throughout the home.' I f you will call and consult us, we will

give you attractive literature on modem sani­tation and will show you the samples o f 'SStemdaRl* Ware we have in our.showrooms.

A N D R E W VA N CXEVE. P L U M B IN G AND B E A T IN G CS .--p ilg r im 'P a t h w a y , 1 O c e a n G r o v e , N . J ,

We W ireG a s o r E le c t r ic C h a n d e l ie r s , G a s o r E le c t r ic

R a n g e s . In f a c t , E V E R Y T H I N G G A S o r E L E C T R IC a t

R. Loew en herz Co.(Noxt tho Fostofflco)

603 Mattison Avenue, Asbury Park

of ; pianos is being the greatest success we have ever had.

Of course our Lakewood store has increas­ed pui output, but we have never sold so many pianos right here at home as we have sold during the last few weeks.

Every piano put on sale is a really good instrument for the price asked.

You may buy any one of them with confi­dence and on verysm all payments. Includ­ed are a few new pianos sent us as samples and two or three styles that have been changed in this year’s catalog.

The sale represents some of the best pianos made, and satisfaction is guaranteed.

B r i n g t h i s a d v e r t i s e m e n t w i t h y o u a n d i t

w i l t be a c c e p te d a s t h e s e c o n d p a y m e n t o n a n y

p i a n o p u r c h a s e d d u r i n g t h i s sa le .

TUST1NG BUILDING MATTISON AVENUE o n d BOND STREET

: ASBURY PARK '

SEXTON & HAVILANDB r i c k B o a r d i n g , L . lv a r y , S o l o a n d E x c h a n g e

; STABL-E®S outh of Main Avenue G ates, Ocean Grove, New Jersey

1 . T o ld p h b n o N0 .UQ8

Omrlagea of every description.and nil th a latent styles. A!1 h inds of ru b ­ber tire wagons, e to . , . .. ... , .

Pl.osed vjrriagoe ^or-.we^tllngi . a n ^ ’funei-als'.a speoialtyi MiTidly-Bo and ■w-rido ou tflts lu rn ish ed a t shoi t notioe; B oarding by' day, w eek o r inantiiBtraw- ________

G entle horses fo rlad ie t ' use.

,

Many Bargains in Cottages and Boarding Houses

W h y n o t o w n a h o m e in O c e a n G r o v e ?

A f u l l s i z e lo t a t 3 2 M c C lin to c k S t r e e t .

P r ic e $ 1 2 0 0 .

C o n s u l t m e f o r b a r g a in s .

E . IN. w o o e s t o p sRBftL ESTATE. AND INSURANGB48 Main Ave., Ocean Grove, N. J.

The Bernstein Tlif«c»pieoe tied

r' ■ *' ' • - •’/ V '

B e d d i n g R e d u c e dGathering Up Odds and EndsAll now stock, however, b u t i t is b e t­

tor to m ake subatanthi! reduotions now thun to carry over until nex t sobsod.

This is of ad van tafro to you, for beds und m attress prices have beeu out to a fine figure th a t will compel buying.

B e tto r buy now while th is Bale is go in g on.

KENYON BEDDING STORE; B*!cU B o n d in g , O lln S t , O0 V.

OCEAN GROVE, N . i .